A bridge to a calling bell

Tersiiska Bridge
A bridge from the Africa section of Animal Kingdom, Orlando FL.

They say the universe is streaming out so fast we can’t see the light of it, but we imagine it.  Vast gleaming stars reflected in our own still stream of deep water thoughts, prayers and doubts and tears.  The tinkling bell bird calls from the trees past the bridge. The calling bell at the mountain top deep rings to bridge that thought, that if only we look down we might frightened see the mighty electric eel of desire through our reflected selves.

We might meet on that bridge one day and holding hands, suddenly forget the birds, the bells and the mighty deep and look out to the star’s so fast away into the sky their light has not yet reached, the bridge.

Photo: Tersiiska : flickr copyright 2014

This work is fictional – all rights reserved CJSmith 2014

Agave Abstract in the Outback

Tersiiska Agave Abstract Three men roared up the path to the outback pub.  Shaking only some of the dust off they each walked up to the bar.  Leaning on the bar the first guy, an office worker in the city on the coast, said..  Bartender he signalled..

Tequila !.  

As an aside to the others he commented “you know I really like to get away down the road and get the bike to hit it’s straps”… “gives me a sense of tranquility”.

At which point the second guy, a poet said, “when I get on mine, it’s turbo fairly sings the body electric as I fly down the road..and that’s peace AND quiet for me”.

“Tequila ! ” said the bartender – sliding three shots down the bar.

They all drank with the requisite ritual of lemon and salt.

Holding the empty shot glass in his hand and sweeping it in the air, the rocket scientist from Woomera said “Listen boys, back in 1957 when they were doing the tests out here, I used to get on my bike and it would take off like a rocket.  She’d fly so fast and break the sound barrier… you could hear a pin drop.

Tequila !!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photo: Agave Abstract – Tersiiska:Flickr – used with permission.

Time passing a happy moment in the square

Chris Smith - Le Halles St Claire Grenoble

There’s the faint sound of the clock tick being drowned by the bubbling in the fountain. Apart from that minor motion it had been quiet that morning in the square.   Later the market had opened as normal and fast sales of fish cheese ham wine meats olives and all sorts of produce got revving up throughout the day.  That morning too, a local couple had gone to work in the midst of an argument. He to his office some miles from the square and she to her own boutique just a short walk away. She’d stormed out of the house and caught a bus into town instead of normally getting dropped off by her husband.  On the strength of that, he decided to get in his new convertible and get to the office car park early.

When the offices closed for the day, she walked down to the market having calmed a little and waited for her husband to pick her up.  Normal time being 6:30pm in winter as it was.  As she sat by the fountain and thought through the day she somehow regretted being so impetuous with the email she’d sent that afternoon.  ‘How dare he’ … ‘just go buy a sports car like that’ .. who was he trying to impress ?’. she thought.  It was cold on the fountain step outside the hall and when the normal time ticked past she felt she should probably give him another chance.

His nice fast black car slowed a little as it drove through the square about an hour later.  Looking out the window he saw her there waiting. ‘Stupid’ he thought and sped off at a great rate.

For some reason possibly the effect of the fountain and the clock she felt happy.  If he came back around the block, well then good.  If he didn’t well then good for that too and begone with the car.

A Lock for Distraction

The sun is waking us both up earlier.  Getting out of bed this morning was easier with the temperatures warming up. With the extra time I decided that enough with procrastination, I would venture out into the bush, brave the early morning spiders on the path and head up to the summit of the hill.  It should be a good walk and climb and I’d be back about midday.

Yet how many times had i put off the climb, always one imagined rationale after another.  Mentioned in bars or at  the dinner table, being too busy or too many conference calls.  So definitely glad to be making it after all that time not making it. Actually I had never been before and that momentary fear of the unknown had frustrated my minor ambitions in the past.

 

As i neared the summit however – fork in the path led off slightly down and around to the southern darker side of the mountain.  The bush got thicker and darker even mid morning and a bit of scrambling and blackberry bashing ensued to get to get along and see how it ended up.  As it happened I came across a bush cabin in the path, probably 50 years old, made of shingles of stringybark and crudely cut.  It had a door and a window and a fireplace outside in a small clearing leading up to the sky.  It was quiet when I stopped and looked around.  Couldn’t see anyone.  No birds.  Just me creeping along the path in a kind of frightened way.

The door had an ancient roman style lock on iTersiiska lockt, far older than the cabin itself obviously.  We’ed only been in the country 200 years, and the lock was older than that no doubt.  It was in fact locked, so the bolt would not pull back.  I tried to see through the window but the reflection on the glass was too bright for me to see clearly in. Calling out though just echoed through the bush with a kind of no-one-else-here sound.  Creepy.

Well this was not getting me to the summit so I turned back, but as I got back to the main ascent path, suddenly had a fit of curiosity and ventured down the mountain – not up.

As I walked down the plan came to mind.  I would get a portable saw, strong enough to cut through the metal of the lock to open the door and just see what was inside. 

Down in the town I found just what i needed and started lugging it back up the mountain in my backpack.  My wife called up on my cell phone:-

‘Where are you ?’

‘Just on the way back up the mountain honey,…. I’ve come across an old cabin and just want to try to get in and take a look’.

‘Ok well don’t be all day !.  I’m expecting you home this afternoon’ – she said.. click.

I quickened my steps up, breathing hard carrying the extra weight of the saw.  Finally made it back to the cabin.  Went up to the door and  thought hard about the destruction of the lock.  It was obviously an old lock.  How could I saw it through and then what would it be worth.  Wouldn’t that also be kind of break and enter ? A terrible fit of conscience got me and I just couldn’t do it.  I sat down wondering what I’d do to pick the lock.. Who would even know how it operated.  Just a simple hole in the outside of some casting.

Time for a drink perhaps.  I sat down drinking fresh water from the walking flask and wondering for a while.  How to get into the cabin ? How to pick the lock ? How not to break the lock or break the door or break the window…and would I even make it up to the summit – which was my real objective after all.  Who would put such an ancient lock on such a bush cabin.  Had anyone even been inside it inside the last half century ?.

I got up and left again, this time running out of time, I went down the mountain at a loss and returned home.

 

 

Photo courtesy of Tersiiska on Flickr – all copy rights reserved.