The Sea-Wave

The Sea-Wave by Rolli

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Authors: Rolli
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The Sea-Wave

    I hear the sea. In the deep of night, I hear it. As I lie awake, and often in . . . my dreaming.
    It was a prison. A kind of prison. A cell, of stone. One could hear the sea. It shattered on, the walls. Beading them with water. I could feel this, in the darkness, sliding my hand. My terror was always that the walls would truly shatter. That I would drown, on wet stone.
    The brothers. They came and went freely. Brother Ulgoth was a dark man. His skin, an African’s. When he moved through the halls — I soon knew this moving — it was . . . the moving grass. His robes. I would close my eyes. I would imagine grass, beneath his black feet. I would listen, to the rushing of grass, and then his voice at the grille of the door.
    â€œAre you comfortable?” he would ask me.
    I was so seldom comfortable. I would seldom say anything but: “Yes, I am comfortable.” Our ritual.
    â€œI am so pleased,” he would say.
    And he would move away. I would stand there, listening. To the grass. In the wind. Imagining.
    And there was brother Godslee. He came instantly and without sound. Delivering food, water. I talked with him, sometimes. We talked often. Though never . . . for any length. I would be speaking to him, about some small thing. About food, perhaps. And then I would ask him: “Where is this place?” Or: “What is the name, of this place?” And then he would change. His openness, would close. A curtain. He would say not a word, but turn away. He would pass me my bread, and turn away. He would slide down the hall like the crust of bread, down my throat. He would go. And I would remain. Wondering.
    I was one evening, sleeping. I did not often sleep. The waves kept me awake. Sometimes I slept, for I woke one evening. There was something. The sliding, of something. A familiar something. It was . . . the grass.
    â€œAre you comfortable?”
    I sat up. It was not the time. It was the customary voice. It was the question. But it was not the time.
    I could not answer, I did not. When a man wakes in the night, when he is suddenly woken, he feels . . . he is hanging. From his feet.
    I said nothing. I listened, but heard nothing. It was silent. I lay down. My imagining.
    I attempted, again, to sleep. I was nearly sleeping. But I was again arrested, by a sound. It was the moving grass. Then a breathing, at the door. The grille. And the voice said:
    â€œThe sea-wave comes and goes forever. It rushes against everything forever. Nothing, not iron, survives it. For the sea-wave flows forever. It takes away everything, forever. All crumbs, and the phantoms of all things. Until they’re nothing. Everything, we have. The good things of earth. The miserable things. All suffering. All, is salt. Your bones. They will wash away. It will take them, the wave, away. The Earth, itself, is salt, and will wash away. In the wave. For it comes and goes, forever.”
    I closed my eyes. I close them again, remembering.

If I Were the Leaves, I’d Be Dead

    W hen Tay-Lin comes over, just before, I take the elevator to my room and hide. I’m not afraid of Tay-Lin, she’s pretty and shy. I just don’t like being around people much. I go to my room and shut the door loudly, then open it a crack and listen.
    Mom must value Tay-Lin as a listener because she never shuts up in front of her. Only sometimes do I hear this leafy sound which means Tay-Lin is speaking. When Mom asks her over I know it’s because she’s got something on her mind and she wants to dump it onto someone else’s mind. She talks about things she probably wouldn’t talk about if she thought I was listening. Or if Dad was around. One time she told Tay-Lin she didn’t care much for milk in tea and she never really loved my dad. She married him because it was something to do. It was an uncertain time in her life because she was having seizures. She wasn’t supposed to conceive on seizure meds but

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