Once
there was a river with a tall palm tree by it, at the mouth of the
ocean.
Actually,
River herself lived by Palm Tree and spent a good deal of her time
gossiping with Sea and anybody else who stopped by to get a cool
drink from her sweet waters. As it so happens, one of her
time-to-time buddies was Moon, who came infrequently, what with
having to travel so far all the time, but when she came, she brought
tales of distant places and old hard laughter. Part of Moon's
job, other than traveling with Sun, was to make sure that Water
got to every place that could handle it. So she come to gather
up buckets and buckets from the edges of River and Sea to make Rain.
River was jealous, since she already had the water, but never
let on.
Sea
wanted to know when would be the next time Moon was coming around
to get her water and River said it was never the same time twice
in a row, so how would she know. They both looked up into
the night sky and realized that it was pretty dark save for a few
stars trying to show off. Moon was on her way.
It
just happened that Moon was getting tired of being up there all
the time with no neighbors to speak of, what with the stars being
so far away, she couldn't even yell, "yoohoo!" to get
the latest news. She treasured her trips to River, Palm and
Sea's home. Too bad she always had to go back after a few
days. Catching herself, she realized she was already through
the Tight Airs and needed to get into her earth get-up. Walking
quietly through the forest, she arrived at the clearing that marked
the shoreline and made a bee-line for Palm, the single tallest thing
out there.
As
she made her way there she heard some people talking all bad about
the moon that they saw the other night, like the color was off,
or it revealed itself funny-like which means somebody's gonna lose
a baby, or…she was a pretty nice character and was shocked to discover
that folks used her as an excuse for just about anything.
River had been talkin', determined to bring the high and mighty
low.
As
far as Moon knew, "people did all they business by my light,
even though they pretended that it was the Sun," the reality
was that he just made it hot enough for things that people planned
and arranged by her light to prosper in his. "Menses,
tides, fishes, growing seasons, cloth making," oh she could
just go on! "All those things because of me, Moon!"
Her salt-sea blue wrapper just flapped angrily behind her
as she marched on towards Palm.
Closer,
she began to feel sad. She had sacrificed everything for
everybody and now they were angry with her, she could at least have
neighbors. By the time she reached the mouth of the Sea,
she had pretty much shaken the whole thing off, clear that you can't
please everybody.
Now,
since River had hatched her plot to convince people to distrust
Moon, Sea had become a little agitated. Though River thought
that she should be able to distribute rain all by herself and didn't
need no too-pretty Moon no way, Sea was very clear that without
her, moon that is, stuff would just be odd. She understood
that her pretty dancing for which she was held in high regard had
a lot to do with Moon, though she wasn't all that sure how.
-"SWAAAAAHHROOMMM
PAH! This gas is giving me trouble. Too much
trouble. River, it's like I'm being sucked down into my own
stomach."
-"Maybe
you should change what you drink," said Palm in his customary
wry way.
-"Oh
shut up," yelled River, "everybody know I got the sweetest
water there is."
-"This
true," said Palm, "but not the only water, and not exclusive
water."
Sea
thought about that: "It is true that our waters meet and its
none too clear to me why it even stop being saltee wher-- SWAAAAAHHROOMMM
PAH!" Night fisherman were just struggling to
get ashore. Nothing seemed to calm Sea down, but she didn't
seem to be particularly angry, for which she was also fabulously
known. All those bad thoughts River was having, was making
it difficult for Sea, since she was so connected to Moon.
They were throwing off the rhythm.
Moon
arrived to find the atmosphere around her three friends more than
a little odd. What's the what she asked. Oh, nothing
said River we were just wondering when you were gonna get here.
It did take longer than usual. Sometimes I just get
in a groove you know, close to some folks who can really throw a
party and I just want to stay. They chitted and chatted for
a while. Moon began to collect her water, sensing she had
interrupted something.
-"Oh,
you don't have to go so soon," said River.
-"Well,
I do, I'm a bit off schedule, gotta make up the time somewhere and
you all must be tired of my tongue."
-"SWAAAAAHHROOMMM
PAH!"
-"Sea?
Are you alright."
"I
don't think she is, look at her running all crazy like that.
Hey, come back! Where you going?"
-"SWAAAAAHHROOMMM
PAH!"
-"Girl,
you better see somebody about that."
-SWAAAAAHHROOMMM
PAH! UMUP! SCHASCHASCHASCHA OOOOOOP! HMMMMMMM."
Palm
lay all bent down, looked almost broken. River's mouth was
jammed full of logs, sand, old ships, chains and animals that were
no longer among the living. And Sea and Moon were gone.
It took days for people to clear off the beach and open the River's
mouth. A gal like that like to gossip that much, you better
believe she was getting her talk in somewheres else: there had been
flooding all up into the fields and villages off her banks.
As for Palm, he was playing possum and managed to make it through,
except now he was gimpy, leaning a bit to the right, cursing at
River to stop wetting his feet so damn much.
At
last River was clear, but Sea had run out way far on her plain,
and couldn't nobody see her. Worst of all, Moon had gone
missing. The fishermen were having to walk miles before they
could put in and then was nothing live to be found, only smelly
floating fish, scales slimy with death. To add to the mess,
there was now a drought on, and nobody, not even River, could get
it to rain. It seems that Sun had gotten pretty angry that
his lady friend had left him without so much as a goodbye--so what
they was always too busy for sweetness, didn't he say good morning
and goodnight to her every day? He was scorching up the sky
something bad. Things were, to say the least, awful.
If
times were hard above water, they was sweet sweet sweet beneath!
It seems that in her pain, Sea caused a tidal wave, which
woke up Volcano, who, after she shook off her sleep had moved around
the rocks sand mud just enough to make a new beach, or rather a
nice apartment for Sea and her sister-friend, Moon. Yes,
Moon had been taken down, down to the depths of the Unknown only
to find lots of creatures that glowed like herself and who had good
rhythm and threw great parties. Sea was content, with Moon
so close she had no fear of anymore indigestion. And so them
grouper fish was just a blowin' their music and the Fishtail people
jammin' on their shells, it was a real festival every night--Moon
had come home! They had shown her secret roads and alleys
that led to forests and rivers and more people, people with legs
like she was accustomed to seeing. Sea would just come on
in and swim around with the River gals there, whom she had meet
before along time ago, but had forgot about since the last time
she had had this, let's just call it "problem."
And everything was sweet and nice, cause Moon had come home to the
Great Glow. But above, way above in the other dry place,
things were hard and bitter.
Everybody,
including Palm, had given up on Moon ever being recovered, the fishermen
had gone out everyday at dusk with water lanterns, hoping that like
would attract like, but they had no such luck. The only thing
that they noticed was a persistent thud, almost like a song, but
ain't no rhythm they ever had heard, so they shrugged it off like
the noise their ears understood it to be. Except one fella.
He was a thoughtful type and where everybody else just heard
random thuds and slaps, he was certain that it had special meaning.
Now this is true of any noise that you hear, but whether
or not you decide to stop and listen properly and long enough to
get the message it may as well just be a bunch of banshees screamin'.
Now, anyway, he was wrapping his mind around it, this underwater
noise, and trying to figure out what it was. He was a pretty
good musician as well, which is often the case with people that
spend all their time trying to out-shimmy water, so he knew to hear
the silences first, the margins, and that would take him into the
heart.
Seemed
like every time they went out there, some sort of noise was happening.
He soon convinced everyone that there was in fact some SOUND
coming from the bottom of the Ocean which had the only effect of
scaring the rest of the boating party off, since every body know
that a singing and talking fish is a bad thing indeed. But
he persisted and soon had the idea to build a special water listening
contraption out of shells, scales and fish guts--like cancels like.
Down
beneath, Moon hadn't thought more than twice about Sky, Sun, Palm
and River; let alone no Rain. She felt good, People
here had a special rhythm just for her, just like they had for River
and Sea on the Upside, that's what you call when you on the Under.
So she loved that place something fierce and Sea was no help
in trying to get her to leave since she was feeling too good herself.
All
the songs that people sung to Sea on the Upside had always seemed
half done, but here, they remembered the whole things. And
boy did those songs go on and on, just like Sea herself.
From shore to shore, you couldn't handle much more! Battty
bat bat bat, batty bat bat bu, batty bat bat bat bubu, batt bat
batty batbatbatbat buh u buh batty. And
on and on. Moon's lick was something like ting a tong a batty
baty bop babop tinga tinga batty bop bop boit boit boit batty batty
ting tong bop. And when they had the nerve to run the two
rhythms into each other, OH MY what a fish fry!
Most
folks was dead except the ingenious, so our brother the fisherman
was still making his dusk trips out to sea to find Moon and beg
her to come back. He put his special listening device into
the water and had a realization: what would he do if he understood
what he thought he was understanding? Dance? Swim? Die of
fright? Plead? That's what he'd do, he'd sing back
a plea. It didn't quite work out that way. At that
moment that he was doing all of his what ifs, he had already jumped
into the water and was swimming down towards the music, entranced
by the sounds which now felt like a big heart wrapped around him.
He swam and swam, and there he saw her, the Moon, in get-up-and-jam
Big Glow clothes, which, quite frankly, is too much for an Upsider
to handle. As he opened his mouth to beg, he took in
water, sinking down towards the dance floor. Without a hesitation,
Moon rushed up towards him and wrapped herself around him.
Sea gave her a push and she flew far back into the sky.
People
on the shore who had seen the fool jump off into the water--as they
had expected him to have done a long time before--witnessed the
great surge of water and light and marveled as Sea swam back to
shore, full of fish. But that strong light was immense and
it just kept on going into the darkness. And there it was,
the moon. People stood around with their jaws dredging the
sandy shore. A little girl looked up and said, "Look
ma, there's a man in the Moon!"

Photo by Mark Haun
(c) 2002
Anna Beatrice Scott, for performance rights, contact
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