Writings from November of 2007 to April of 2009, or maybe the middle of 2010. |
11-16-07 Every time I pass the cemetery at the foot of old St. Mary's hill the grass never seems to grow and even with the passing cars the air remains still. Birds circle the headstones while I continue along, climbing the pathway lined by the remains of those who've done wrong. And in each still-born moment the birds sing "Beware the souls of St. Mary's hill... home to those who lived to be killed." I take some pictures before I let the scene allow its presence to lurk and get the best of me. I long to find the church in hopes of easing my pain so that this sacred ground doesn't have to bear my name. Dusk is settling over all. Do I press on or go home? I can confess to the pastor or make my way back down the trail with my sins, alone. I go in this still-born moment while the birds sing "Beware the souls of St. Mary's hill... home to those who lived to be killed." I cut across the grave toward the steps of the church just as the pastor backed up in his pale black hearse. I said, "Father can you heal me? Can you help me to see? I've been wrong; I seek forgiveness." He said, "Son, do you believe? Boy, do you believe in me?" I knelt as if I were to pray but he let me in. He turned on the lights and with a snort he said with a grin, "Is it what you've done of that unto yourself you cannot bring?" I wept in this still-born moment but I could still hear the birds sing "Beware of the souls of St. Mary's hill... home to those who lived to be killed." I felt the warm filth of fear as he reached and I started to run. He cackled as I headed for the hill, asking myself, "What have I done?" Oh, what have I done now? Be not the dreaded reason. Be not a fallen season. Be not the cause of failure. Be not the dreaded reason. Hurriedly I chose not to look back as I heard a door slam. Illuminated by headlights, I lost breath but not the holy man. What I thought was a fence was Old Man Cinders' monument. He died back in '86 but why on his soul did I trip? We used to play on his lawn as kids 'til we set it aflame. We teased his dogs and made fun of his name. Bloodied and bruised, I screamed for absolution. The birds circled over me still-born and I could hear them sing "Beware the souls of St. Mary's hill... home to those who lived to be killed." The pastor stopped his hearse and I thought I had a chance to live. He helped me up, opened the door, shoved me in and howled, "How I love the feeling of defeating sin!" I could only whimper while he hummed an old hymn. As we made it up the hill he sang "Be not the dreaded reason. Be not the rotten season. Be not the cause of failure. You, son, are the dreaded reason." Every time you pass the cemetery at Old St. Mary's hill, the grass never seems to grow. |