In
the tallest room of the tallest tower are my precious idols. This is where I
spend most of my time in worship. I fashioned these idols carefully so that
they would be everything I ever wanted, and I wait for them to love me back. I
pick them up and turn them over and over in my hands, trying to make them love
me. I press them to my heart and kiss them and speak words of adoration. I
serve them, I devote my time and energy to them, I sacrifice my life for them.
But it is never enough, and I keep giving more and more and hoping for them to reply.
But these idols are made of stone. They are perfect, beautiful, cold, and
lifeless. They are also safe, because they cannot hurt me, they cannot walk
away from me, they cannot reject or abandon me.
They are on a pedestal, and they are mine.
Mara pushed the heavy cart away
from the house, over several mounds of sandy, grassy earth to the well-worn
stone path, rolling the squeaky, wooden wheels over the rocky path towards the
beach. She moved rather quickly, wanting
to avoid the guilt which followed closely behind. Mara turned back just once to see if Achor
had left.
He was still standing in the same spot
looking after her, a satisfied look on his face. Several rejected flower petals
were scattered on the ground at his feet, glowing bright white and abandoned
against the dark soil. Achor stood there by her vineyard, watching her until
she was out of sight. Then he turned and walked silently back to the shadows of
the Valley.
Mara looked down at the
broken, mangled roses. She felt conflicted. She realized she might not see him for
several days now. When he retreated, that was always when her vigor for writing
returned to her in full measure. But then, eventually, the absence of Achor
would make her lonely and she would run out of things to write, and then like
clockwork he would return to her side without a word, somehow already knowing
that she was lonely and missed his influence.
Mara was loath to admit that
when she sent him away it left a hole in her life. She had come to depend on
his attentive presence. At times she was secretly glad for the way his
criticism motivated her to attain perfection.
And now she couldn’t shake
the haunting truth of the words Achor had said to her before Mara departed. “You
mismanage the white roses and make so many mistakes with them.”
The shaming words followed
her with every step she took. There was so much truth in his condemnation.
Painful truth- the kind that goes unaddressed for many years through denial and
avoidance.
That night when she got
home, Mara was able to compose many powerful words in her journal, ones which
told the story of past hurts and present hopes. Writing was the healing balm
for the doubts that Achor had inflicted on her heart.
~*~
A few days later Mara was feeling especially motivated
and got an early start towards the beach. It was then that she noticed that more
seagulls were in the air than usual.
She was going to her normal
spot to search for breakfast, and brought along her cart in case she found any
unusual treasures to carry home. She never knew what the ocean would leave
behind on its shores- rare rocks, shells, or driftwood, pieces of lost
treasures- delightful relics of ancient stories that she would never know...
…broken and fragmented remnants of the past that had been broken and refined by the intentional and consistent pressure of the rolling sea.
Bits of worn-out stories that had been made new by a powerfully destructive love.
She pushed her cart across
the stony road while avoiding precarious ruts and rocks on the path. On each
side of the pathway stood tall seaside grasses which moved with even the slightest
breeze. The trail came close to the
shores of the bay, and the familiar smell of seashells and driftwood reached
her nose as she came closer to the beach.
A gap between the rolling hills allowed a wide view of the coastline.
Mara looked out on the
water, remembering again the floating object she had seen there several nights
ago. Had it been a whale, or was it indeed
a boat? She found herself slowing down
to study the rolling motion of the water, searching for the unexpected.
As the empty wooden cart bounced over the sandy road, she thought
again of the wild and majestic man in white from her dream. Though she knew it was an empty curiosity, she
stared intently in all directions, walking slower to take everything in around
her. What she was looking for, she
didn’t know for sure.
Forging
ahead, she turned away from the tiny path and continued on her way down the
hill through uncharted grasses. As Mara approached
the sand, she noticed a group of seagulls suddenly take flight into the air on
the opposite side of the beach, squawking loudly in protest. They flew up from their nesting area, which
was blocked from her view by another grassy hill on her left. The tall dry grass tickled her ankles as she
strode down the hill.
As she came closer to the
water, a sudden gust of salty air blew her gold-spun brown hair off her shoulders.
With brazen freedom her dress billowed out, molding to her legs in front and
trying to take flight behind her. She
put her hand on her head to hold down her over-sized tan sunhat, which she
always wore to keep the sun off her face, and pressed her other hand to her heart. Her eyes closed and she paused to honor the current of the air.
She was a picture of regal repose.
She was a picture of regal repose.
The ocean
stretched out before her so far that she couldn't quite differentiate it from the
sky where they kissed on the horizon. A
light mist hovered over the water, the ghost of clouds which had been there in
the early morning, before being burned off by the heat of the morning sun. Several feet below the bluff on which she stood
lay the sandy beach, where the waves crashed freely against the shore,
unrestrained and powerful.
She felt the familiar longing
to dig her toes into the warm sand and just sit idly by, watching the endless
ocean stretch out before her. She wanted
to lay there on the sand and simply enjoy her existence within the natural
world. She wanted to stand with her hands lifted up to the sky and sing. She wanted to sit and meditate on the vastness of the sea.
The shore had always been her inspiration for writing, and perhaps, thought Mara, that was just what she needed to find something new to compose.
The shore had always been her inspiration for writing, and perhaps, thought Mara, that was just what she needed to find something new to compose.
Glancing up at the sun and
shielding her eyes, she saw that she still had time before the day was too warm
to forage the shore. So feeling suddenly ambitious, she took off her shoes and
abandoned them and the empty cart at the top of the bluff so she could wander
freely and unhindered along the beach.
She jumped down the short, rocky embankment to the sand below, and the sand crunched delightfully under her bare feet where she landed. The pressure of her steps made cracks in the soft dried sand and left a trail of imprints behind her. She walked across the beach until her toes met the foamy edges of the tide.
She paused and stood there, breathing in the fresh, salty air and listening to the sounds of the waves breaking on the shore. She tilted her head back so that her profile was kissed by the bright sunlight.
She jumped down the short, rocky embankment to the sand below, and the sand crunched delightfully under her bare feet where she landed. The pressure of her steps made cracks in the soft dried sand and left a trail of imprints behind her. She walked across the beach until her toes met the foamy edges of the tide.
She paused and stood there, breathing in the fresh, salty air and listening to the sounds of the waves breaking on the shore. She tilted her head back so that her profile was kissed by the bright sunlight.
She closed her eyes, brought
her hands together at heart center and raised her soul up to the surface of her awareness, drawing it out into the light. And for a
moment she was at peace and all was well. She smiled with deep joy.
But then, pulled by the weary habit of worn repetition, her mind drifted back to Achor, and her soul receded and her countenance fell.
But then, pulled by the weary habit of worn repetition, her mind drifted back to Achor, and her soul receded and her countenance fell.
And then without warning something
cold and clinging touched her feet, enveloping them with a groping heaviness.
Gasping
and stepping back, she saw that there, swishing back and forth in the tide, was
a large, broken stalk of seaweed. Tangled in its mass of cold tentacles was a
discarded string of pearls, bright and shining, peeking out from within.
“When did
this thing get here?” she asked out loud. Curious, Mara reached to pick up a
stick of driftwood that lay a few feet away on the sand and used it to drag the
massive stalk away from the tide. It was
heavy, a great clump of water-logged kelp leaves, so that she had to drag it very
slowly and with much effort.
When it was on higher ground
away from the water, she caught her breath and paused to stare down at the
string of white which peeked out from within. It stood in stark contrast to the
dark oily green of the plant. Mara slowly got on her knees and bent cautiously
over the tangled mess, using the stick to lift some leaves up in order to reveal
more of the strange treasure.
It was radiantly bright, and
it was crafted so expertly that Mara couldn’t imagine how human hands could
have done it. Nothing on the island
could explain this. She sat back on her heels and stared in wonderment. Her
mind raced to understand. She blinked several times in confusion and then continued
to poke and prod the entangled necklace this way and that.
She discovered small letters
on one of the pearls- Tirzah.
“Tirzah” she read it aloud.
She had meant to whisper, but it came out abruptly as a loud and powerful declaration
which echoed and bounced back at her off the rocky cliffs.
And as she spoke the word it
was startling and invasive, like a foreign voice that breaks and shatters the total silence.
The entire flock of gulls on the other side of the beach took off suddenly from their nesting ground, abandoning their young and calling shrilly to one another in excitement. They flew up to land on the cliffs above and settled in to observe Mara from a safe distance, watching her with curious animal eyes to see what she would do next with this mysterious and tangled remnant from the past...
The entire flock of gulls on the other side of the beach took off suddenly from their nesting ground, abandoning their young and calling shrilly to one another in excitement. They flew up to land on the cliffs above and settled in to observe Mara from a safe distance, watching her with curious animal eyes to see what she would do next with this mysterious and tangled remnant from the past...
~*~
Join me here next time for chapter four!
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To go back to the beginning of this story, click here.
To read my public confession of redeeming love, click here.
With deepest gratitude for all my readers-
Rebecca