Ever Present Past Silently and slowly, Death raised its hand. “Sold! – to the man in the cloak.” The fellow to Death’s right turned towards It and furrowed his salt and peppered brow. Death sat unmoved. “Our next item is the gleam of a youthful eye,” said the auctioneer as he walked across the stage and pulled a corked flask from his sack. The grizzled fellow leaned forward, lost for a moment. “Extracted, distilled, concentrated, and bottled. Still fresh, still pure – untainted by life’s fatigue. We’ll start the bidding at five-hundred doubloon pieces; do I hear five hundred?” The man broke from reverie and two tired fingers shot upward. His eyes, suddenly fierce, narrowed at Death. Death sat unmoved. “Five hundred. Do I hear seven-fifty?” Death raised its hand. “We have seven-fifty. Do I hear one-thousand? On-n-ne thousand? Going once, going twice, sold! – to the chap in black.” The man grunted and looked at Death again. “Next up we have a giddy squeal of fascination, snatched from its owner before he’d noticed or cared.” The man gripped the wood of his chair and looked toward the dirt. “Mint condition: devoid of doldrums and barren of boredom. We’ll start the bidding at three hundred, that’s three hundred doubloons. Do I hear three hundred?” The man had stopped listening. He stared at something that wasn’t there and a drop of memory left his eye. He stood up, wiped his face dry, and began to hobble away. “Sold! – to the gent in the hood.” The man stopped. He curled his hand. Then he walked back and threw off Death’s hood and saw the face of a child; doubloons covered Its eyes. |