Metaphysical Story
The 12th Spirit
by StarFields
Once upon a time and in a land that was not unlike ours in many
ways, it came to pass that one of the ruling groups had fallen into
disrepute; and all the members of the group as well as their families
were being hunted, jailed and killed for all manner of evil doing they
may or may not have committed.
As luck would have it, one young man had been away on travels when
this had happened; and when he came back, he found himself a sought
traitor, with a big price on his head and his family dead, his lands
in ruins.
In great fear of his life, he fled.
There was no safe place left for him to go to; there was no-one who
would offer him shelter, take him in or hide him, and so he went north
east, as far as he could go, into an old, old forest, where no-one
lived at all and no-one had lived for as long as anyone could now
remember.
He walked and stumbled for many, many days; his only food was berries
he would find, and other fruits of the forest; nuts from the abundant
trees, and water, fresh from the small rivers there.
He wasnt used to hardship, and although he was a sensible young man,
he had not used his sensibility for much other than for leisure and
for pleasure in his life.
Here, in this vast, old forest, where the first leaves were falling
gold and red and made his footsteps hushing, rushing reminders of his
flight, he was at a loss more profound and more lonely than he had
ever known.
But he kept on walking as there was nothing else left for him to do;
and when it rained, he would sit beneath a bush or in the shelter of
the roots of a great tree and huddle in his cloak, that once had been
the height of fashion and was never meant to be his only blanket, only
means of dryness, warmth or comfort in the world.
The nights were cold now, and the mornings were of mist and chill;
still, the young man walked on, lost in the forest which took away the
thoughts and feelings about all those things which were now of the
past, and all those things that once had been, and now no longer were
for him.
How long he walked, we cannot know; but one day, and as the morning
had long given way to gentle sunshine streaming through the oldest of
the trees, he came upon a clearing, where grass grew luscious and the
green of luscious bushes reflected in the surface of a deep, still
lake.
By the side of the lake, there were the ruins of what must have been a
large and stately building once; now, there were walls still standing,
and stones thrown here and there; between them there grew forest
flowers and a host of berry plants, all greater and finer looking than
he had seen elsewhere in the forest, and as though this was a place of
magic, where magic flowed from the very ground below and gave all
living things a special charge and sanctuary where they may flourish
to their greatest height and realised potential.
When the young man saw this place, he knew at once that it was most
enchanted, and he knew at once that here, he had found a home within
the forest, that this place would help him rest, and heal, and that it
would now take him in and give him shelter, that his long journey of
confusion had finally come to an end.
For the first days, and how many there were, we cannot know, he simply
slept and rested in the ruins. He found a part where something like a
house did still exist, and three of four walls were still standing.
There was a hearth, still stout and bearing an ancient chimney, and a
roof above; he collected dry leaves to make his bed and be his blanket
too in the coldness of the nights, and then he set about to look
around, to see what he might find and that might help him live here
and survive the coming winter.
He found old pots made of earth and clay to carry water in; he found
pieces of wood to burn in the hearth and even found a rusty old sword
which he laid aside with a notion to sharpen and clean it with a stone
in the coming nights of winter.
All through this time, he slept deeply, never dreamed and in the days
he didnt think of anything at all. In the silence of the forest he
simply lived and worked to make this place a home as best as one who
has no knowledge of the ways of home craft, carpentry or masonry might
manage.
He collected berries and roots and nuts to dry and store, and one day,
as he explored the ruins, he found beneath a layer of creeping vines
and dark green ivy what appeared to be a set of steps that led down
into the ground, in darkness.
He was excited by this discovery; there may be hope of stores of
things, and some might still be now of use to him, and so he fetched a
little burning wood to be his torch and climbed the stairs of stone
with care as they were covered in debris that had been falling there
for many, many years.
The deeper he went, the less the leaves, the little sticks and stones
became and then, there was only dry dust remaining. He found a
pathway, deep below, with a rounded ceiling made from big and finely
fashioned blocks of stone, and he followed through this passage way
until it opened up into a chamber.
This chamber was empty, square in shape, save for a single old and
very heavy looking set of shelves made from sturdy old black wood at
one end.
He was not disappointed or disheartened; this place was very old and
it would have been most surprising to find anything at all, so he
counted his blessings to have found the heavy wooden shelves and
thought that he could use those to make a front for his apartments, to
keep out the wind and snows which would be soon to come.
So he put down his piece of burning wood and tried to move the shelf,
and move it he did, and when he moved it, he saw that there was a door
hidden behind the heavy shelf, and that this door was made of metal,
not of wood, and that it had a great locking bar which secured it from
the outside.
What might this be? he wondered aloud to himself, and set about
trying to raise the crossbar which was most ancient and quite rusted
into the iron hinges which were holding it in place.
But finally, the crossbar gave way, and he pulled the door open.
There was a strange movement of air, very cold air that made him
shiver and feel most disconcerted for a moment, but then he got his
piece of burning wood and stepped inside the room he had discovered.
And there, on the floor in a large and wide room, deep underground,
there lay the skeletons of monks, still in their cloaks, a great many
of them, with their heads close together and their feet pointing
outward, and their bony hands still folded on their chests as they had
been for an eternity.
The young man stepped back and stared; he breathed the cold and dusty
air and felt the stone floor spin beneath him, and to center himself
and regain his senses, he counted the bodies of the monks.
There were eleven, all told.
He looked around the room and saw that it was orderly and tidy in all
ways; and he saw too that there were candles still, unlit and dusty;
that there were books that even still below the dust showed shining
glimmers of their gold leaf bindings, and there were treasures,
paintings, altar pieces made from precious metals too, stacked neatly
in the corner of the room.
Slowly and carefully, he walked around the skeletons in their brown
robes, and as he did, it struck him that they were quite small and
slender; these had not been adults, but youngsters, acolytes, and not
grown men as first he had imagined.
The young man did not know quite what to do.
He had no wish to be intruding here, or to disturb that what had
happened and what seemed to still happening within this room; and
knowing not of any purpose, he decided to leave all just as it was for
now, and so he closed the door again and even placed the heavy shelf
back in its old position, climbed from the cellar and sat by the lake
in the late autumn sunshine, thinking not at all and simply watching
the reflections on the water, deep gold and golden red.
There, he fell asleep on the soft grass, and there, he dreamed a
dream.
And in the dream, the centuries rushed by in speed, and once again,
the past was here and now and long ago was real, and what was now a
ruin was a monastery, build to worship God in deep serenity, and there
were roads within this forest, and further out, castles and villages,
full of life and full of people doing what they would and always had.
There was a school here where the ones who felt the calling would
assemble and the older ones would teach the younger, songs and
stories, prayers and what wisdom they had found themselves or heard
from others too.
There was a war, and soldiers came; and as the young man dreamed he
saw all things now unfolding, as the older monks hurried the young
ones to the cellar hiding place with all the riches they had to
protect; and there, they shut them in and told them just to pray and
not to fear, so they would all be safe and that no harm should come to
them.
But the soldiers came and they slew all the monks, and everyone around
they butchered too. They searched the monastery, took what could be
taken, but they never found the acolytes nor all the great and
wondrous treasures that were rumoured to be hidden there and in anger,
they set a fire of revenge upon the monastery so that it was
destroyed.
All who knew about the hiding place were dead; and it was locked not
from the inside, but from the outside, and so it was that no-one came
to finally release the boys who sat and prayed and waited there
within.
Days passed and then, their food and water was all gone; but still,
they talked amongst themselves and they gave each other solace, and
they prayed and sang together, and when one amongst them cried in fear
or hunger, all the others would combine and tell him of the love of
God, and that all things would be well; and so they did not lose
heart, nor did they lose their hope, and even after long they knew
that not a soul would come now to release their bodies so that they
may live a life within this world, they did not fear, nor did they
cry; they prayed and sang and talked of God and all the glories that
awaited them, a different kind of freedom.
As they got weaker, and then weaker still, they lay down together on
the ground, close and with their heads together so they could whisper
still and hear each others voices in the dark, and then they went to
sleep and they began to dream together, and in their dream, they died
together, but never knew that and so still, they lay and dreamed of
God, and all the glories that awaited them, a different kind of
freedom.
And their dream was so beautiful, so restful and so healing, so
relieving of the burdens of fear and nights of darkness, loss of hope
that when the young man joined their dream, he too began to understand
a great many things about his life and that of others in a different
way, and he too began to raise and rise within himself, and when he
did awake, he was a different being by his meeting and his dreaming in
this most enchanted place.
All through the winter, when it came, he slept and dreamed the dream
together with the others, and as the snow settled thickly outside, he
would do his work of keeping clean and alive, warm and safe, and then
lay down to sleep and dream again, and it was there that he brought
his existence then into the dreaming circle, all the things that he
had known, and felt, and tasted, touched, experienced; and it was
there that then the others understood that they were dreaming still
and had not realised that they were dreaming, for he alone did wake,
and wake again, and eat, and fuel the fire, mend his clothes, and
shine the rusty sword with a soft stone most lovingly, and gather
wood, and melt the snow for drinking and to wash his body.
All through the winter, the dream expanded and it deepened; and when
the young man walked on virgin snow, mystical mornings of blue and
enchanted hues of rosy red beneath the distant sun, he would not walk
alone, but all would walk, and all would feel, as all would dream when
he lay down and closed his eyes, when night had come and stars of
radiant light would bless the sky above.
And then, the snow began to melt; the sun grew stronger and the first
and finest blades of grass reached green through crystals left of ice;
and then the young man knew that time was right, and time had come;
and when the ground was soft again and flowers bloomed amidst the
glade and ruins, he lovingly and with the deepest reverence, and with
his own hands, dug the soft dark earth and made eleven graves, all
side by side.
And he went inside and with the greatest care, enfolded each of the
small bodies in their cloaks, and carried them outside, and laid them
there into the ground, and covered them most gently over, so that they
might rest and that the dream would now become reality.
Each one he knew, and each one he knew by name; and when the last one
had departed, the young man too stood up and blessed this place with
all his heart, and left on his own path, to be a king.
StarFields 2005
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