I found this piece going over some old writing, and it kind of fits how I feel right now. Kind of, well, inspiring. Ugh. It’s ‘that time’ which, no longer being monthly, is all the more discombobulating.
It is time. I must go within, into the darkness, the depths of my own being, to reclaim that which is lost. With me I bring the blade of truth, my perceptions and all my light and understanding.
I lower myself on ropes and ladders. Spiderwebs are thick in the corners. I continue down, down. A rope ladder dangles into the darkness; it is a long way. Down, and down, and down, and down.
The journey seems endless, but I persevere. I must find myself, bring myself back to me. I must bring me down to the places where I am unoccupied, where I have become stolen territory. I go down to the places where nothing exists–yet I am–or ought to be.
It is warming up. The heat intensifies. I drop my cloak. It flutters into darkness. This frees my movements considerably. Now I can move more quickly. As the temperature rises, a dim light begins to show. The light glows orange, baleful as Hallowe’en. Almost unlight, it reveals little. In the dim, I can discern something in the distance. It looks vaguely pumpkin-like, a dark round orange un-glow.
Mother, Father, Us Who Is, all the faeries and devas which surround, guide and protect me. I call upon you to fill me with loving light and healing power. I call on the truth to guide me on my way, to show me what is real. I am here to save myself. There is no higher quest than this, not for me, not now.
I am breathing deeply, filling my belly with myself, to accompany me on my journey down. As the heat increases, so does the pressure. It becomes more and more difficult to stay present. I fear I might implode. But I persevere.
I seem to sense a presence below me but it is vague, unrealistic. Can it be a figment, a projection of preconceived notions? I release all ideas and images and simply watch what is there. I allow the unfolding of the story to show itself to me, to bring the truth forward.
I have reached the end of the rope ladder. It is still a long way down. I begin to swing. I swing the rope ladder back and forth, far and farther until it whips swiftly back and forth. At the peak of its arc, I leap, hands extended to grab for – what? I don’t know, but I leap anyway.
I land against a hard barrier. I catch myself on what appear to be roots, coils and tendrils on a side wall. Downward I continue, ever down. My purpose burns in me. My sword thumps against my leg in its scabbard. I am strong. I have faith in my own power and ability.
At last I reach bottom, a ground upon which to stand. Now the light has brightened enough so that I can make out the shape of the space I am in. It looms, cathedral like, bare, barren. I call, “Hellooo!”
I seek a piece of myself, she who was lost long ago. I seek the child who was hurt. I seek to remember. I am ready to remember. To re-member, to bind the past to the present, to weave it into the tapestry of my wholeness.
“Helloo! Hello!” I call. I listen. Do I hear an answer? Or is it an echo? I call again, I listen more deeply.
Yes, it is an answer. A small voice, crying, “Help…” A lost voice in the darkness. I increase my speed, running in that direction.
“I am coming! Where are you?”
“I am here! I am here!” she cries—for it is she—I am certain of it. She sobs, frightened. I feel a presence. I slow my steps, suddenly aware of danger. My senses are tuned, tingling. I draw my sword.
“Show yourself!” I call.
“I can’t!” the small voice cries.
“Not you, child, it’s alright. I mean your captor.”
“No! You don’t want to see him! Don’t wake him! No!” She hisses, trying to shriek and whisper simultaneously in her terror.
I continue, feeling sure. My sword’s edge glints orange. The sense of presence grows stronger.
Then I see it. A great dragon coiled around a globe of orange light, within which floats the small figure of a prisoned girl.
The dragon is huge, the size of fifty elephants laid end to end. It sleeps, clasps the ball protectively with its claws curled round it. I cannot approach without wakening it. I breathe deeply.
“Dragon!” I cry. “Awaken! I am here to restore the order which is mine!”
The dragon stirs. The child shrieks in terror.
“No! Don’t disturb it,” she cries. “You don’t know—you have no idea!” But I cannot stop. I must continue my quest. My rage is strong and so is my terror, but it is a hot fear that propels me. I am more frightened of giving up now, of turning back with my quest unfulfilled than I am of anything the dragon might do.
I must succeed. No other option is possible. It is time. I feel it, I know it deeply. I ride the waves of my timing, a feeling of rightness that gives me confidence and, I hope, more power than the dragon right now.
I approach the globe more closely. The dragon still sleeps, which surprises me. I slice into the golden globe with my sword’s edge, making a long opening through which the child can step. I take care not to hurt her. She is small, no more than four or five. She runs to me and throws her arms around my left leg, sobbing.
“Don’t let it get me! Don’t let it take me back!” she wails.
“It’s all right, you’re free now,” I reassure her. “Come with me.”
I leave the dragon there, its great claw clutched around the emptied globe, which slowly dims to black. The child clambers upon my back and clings to me. I begin to climb the wall, but she cries, “Where are you going? We can’t leave!”
I stop and set her down. “My child, I have come to rescue you!” I tell her, astonished. “I have come to take you home!”
“No! I must stay here! This is my home. I want you to live with me here!” Her eyes plead earnestly. “I don’t want the dragon here anymore. I want it to go away. I want everything the way it’s supposed to be!”
I look around. Even though the globe has stopped glowing, the light in the space has brightened. I realize that the glow is emanating from the little girl herself, an orange shimmer that seems, now, more joyful than baleful to my eyes.
“This is my place,” she repeats, speaking slowly and emphatically, as if I am stupid. “This is where I belong. This place has to be healed, not just me. I am the place. Without this place, you’re dead, don’t you know that?”
What she says makes sense, though I am reluctant to accept it, for it makes my task much more difficult than I had at first thought. I wish I had brought help with me. It is not a simple matter of rescuing the child from the dragon. I must somehow make the dragon leave.
Or slay it. I shudder at the thought. I don’t want to kill anything. I am afraid to kill. I am a warrior who is afraid to kill. My rage rises with my gorge, clawing at my throat, calling me coward, fool. The little girl looks at me sternly, with glowing amber eyes. She sees straight into my heart, and she doesn’t like what she finds there.
“Don’t listen to it!” she insists. “That’s the dragon! It’s waking up now! It can talk to your insides and make you hate yourself so it doesn’t have to do anything! It’s a lazy dragon, you know!”
I turn, and there it is, gazing back at me with great golden eyes. I recognize the look in those eyes. It is the same look that the voice in my throat would have if I could see it. Revolted, I retch the voice out. I vomit and it lays in a puddle at my feet. Reeling, I clasp my sword and raise it in the dragon’s direction. The voice speaks to me from the puddle of vomit, but from there, it hasn’t the strength of conviction it had when it was in me.
“Look at yourself,” it sneers. “You are puny and helpless, a coward. How can you face me?” Contempt ripples on the surface of the puddle of puke, like an oil slick. I scuff it into the ground, scattering the oily globules and stomping them flat until the voice falls silent.
I turn to face the dragon. I stalk toward its silenced form with my sword raised. The vast bulk slowly uncoils and looms above me, dim and shadowy but for the huge, hot eyes which see all my dark secrets and hate every one of them. It cannot speak, but it can breathe its fiery breath on me. I have no protection from the breath of dragons.
Then the child steps forward and raises her hands. A glassy orange force field shimmers into the air between us and the dragon. It’s fiery exhalation licks at the shimmering barrier ineffectually. I can feel the heat of the flames, but they cannot touch me. She has protected me.
I am astonished. The victim has become savior. She waves me forward commandingly, says, “Cut off one of its claws. That’s all you have to do. It can’t stand pain or dismemberment. It will try to stop you but if you succeed, it will leave. It will have to.” Her voice sharpens as I hesitate. “Go! Now!”
She shoves me ahead of her. I stumble forward. Between myself and the dragon, I see an orange shimmer that lets me know that I am safe from its flames. I gather my resolve and begin to run. The dragon releases another belching gout of fire, but is thwarted by the force field.
It lifts its right forepaw to swipe at me. Its taloned foot is larger than I am. The great claws pass through the barrier as though it isn’t there. I am ready for it. The child screams, “Now!” I slice at the massive thumb-claw with all my force. My blade is sharp; the razor-taloned digit thumps to the ground before me. Great viscous drops of dark blood hiss and sizzle on the ground.
Screeching horribly, the dragon thrashes. Grasping its severed claw with its left forepaw, it launches ponderously into the air and flaps, batlike, into the distance. A great dark void yawns momentarily, through which it exits my world.
The dragon has gone.
“Never return!” I cry. My voice echoes and reverberates in the cavern as though a thousand voices were shouting. The child’s pure voice cries with mine, fierce and triumphant. At the end, there is only a vast tolling silence.
I turn to the child. “What now?” I ask her, humbly. “What comes next?”
I meet her steady gaze. “Now, we get to work.”
“What shall I do?”
She directs me to where the globe lay split and blackened upon a bed of bright orange grass. “You must help me fix it,” she explains. “I need it.”
I examine it closely. Along the edges of the cut my sword had made, a faint light is pulsing. I draw the sword and lay its blade flat against the rent, and the cut edges begin to seal. Carefully, I use the sword’s magic on the gleaming edges to stitch the sides of the cut. It looks messy, but at last the hole is mended.
The child frowns at the puckered, scarred edges. “That won’t do at all,” she says. She passes her own hands gently along the scarred seam. The puckered edges ripple and smooth. When she has finished, the globe is full, plump and unscarred.
Still, the sphere is dark. Its light is gone, but the child is unconcerned. She enters the closed globe as easily as a mermaid slips under the water’s surface, and the interior begins to glow with her own orange light. She laughs, a high tinkling joyful sound.
The globe wobbles, then slowly stabilizes to rise into the sky. “Come with me!” she cries, her hand reaching toward me outside the shimmering sphere. She tugs hard, pulling me in with her. I startled by her sinewy strength. I gasp reflexively and find that I can breathe quite well, though the air feels oddly thick and sweet, like syrup. I look out. We rise, like a great balloon filled with warm air.
Within the small sphere, there is plenty of room for the two of us. It is surprisingly comfortable. The space is gracious; the floor is soft and padded with plush velvet and silken pillows.
I drop my sword, which falls unimpeded through the bottom of the sphere, turning end over end to land, point first, with a soft thunk on the ground, now far below. The child laughs and swims in the thick air.
I am home.