"One Day" - Short Story
I found
myself on this magnificent, velvety-soft, yellow object with delicate, rounded
edges, after a powerful storm on a dark night that seemed as if it was the
night the universe was being built from the beginning. The two mountains vibrated to their very core
from the thunder. All night long the sky
washed the dirty surface of the earth clean, while the flashes of lightning
severed the dark horizon into terrifyingly beautiful pieces… The grandeur of Nature one might say. The moment of my own birth, I might say.
The moment
of every birth is blessed and full of pain like those of the storm and of my
own flash of lightning. And afterwards a
wonderful calm all around me and inside me.
I came… And I don’t know how many
times I have been born and died, again and again on this planet.
Full of
curiosity about the world, at the crack of dawn I began to hear the birds waking
up, in the distance a vehicle emptying dirty things and sweeping them up close
to it, leaving dirty smoke behind it and over us. And then this smell filled my nostrils, the
smell of the damp earth, full of the scent of hidden seeds waiting to sprout
forth, of the little living creatures waiting for the rain in order to breathe,
to eat, to live. Life…
And I, an
observer on this beautiful yellow object that is offering me its hospitality
for I don’t know how long. I hope and
pray with all my soul that I am lucky enough to live a little longer, to see as
many things as I can in this wondrous world where I have come. I looked up, I saw some enormous creatures
flying and their wings glowed golden in the sun like the wings of angels. Looking around me, green grass, in other
words huge spears of green grass, lay very close to me. Tall and tiny, diverse and beautiful yet all
perfect in their own harmony, some motionless, some pass and walk by in front
of me, all of them full of life.
And then
the wind blew. I closed my eyes and let
the melody embrace my ears. When the
wind blows the whole forest whispers prayers.
You don’t have to do much, just close your eyes.
And after
that came the sun. A blinding light that
covered and embraced the entire forest.
It doesn’t choose where it will cast its light; it sheds its glow
everywhere, without distinction. An
overwhelming moment, this touch of light.
I saw many
of my sisters disappear, greedily sucked into the earth. Others evaporated and rose hastily up in the
clouds, from where they had come. And I,
afraid, awaited my turn. Yet I was in a
clearing, among many pine trees and pine needles that for the time being kept
the temperature low and preserved the morning dew, so I had been spared for
now. But I could see my time would soon
be up. I felt it and I didn’t like it.
Suddenly I
felt myself shrinking and contracting and I didn’t know what was
happening. A black and yellow creature,
a bee, began to drink of my being. I
welcomed her and she repaid me by singing to me, thanking me and then left
hurriedly heading for her own fascinating community to prepare the nectar of
Nature. Quite a long time went by,
according to my calculations it might even have been an eternity and I
delighted in Nature, gazed at the white clouds racing above, heard the rustling
of the leaves in the forest and closed my eyes feeling God speaking to me.
And then I
heard loud footsteps that made the ground tremble. I saw two huge figures standing over me. A beautiful child with its mother had come
for a walk in the forest. “Look, Mama,
the daisy is crying!” said the child who had bent down to pick my flower. “It’s the morning dew, sweetheart,” replied
the mother. Indeed I now looked like the
tear of a young child. And as the child
picked the flower it made me fall into its tender little hand too and soon what
was left of me, lay on the ground. My
own enjoyable day had also ended. Until
next time…
Story: Alexandra Belegrati
Translation: Elly Petrides