[--------------------------------------------------------------------------] ooooo ooooo .oooooo. oooooooooooo HOE E'ZINE RELEASE #852 `888' `888' d8P' `Y8b `888' `8 888 888 888 888 888 "A Year in the Making of a 888ooooo888 888 888 888oooo8 Waiting World" 888 888 888 888 888 " by Basehead 888 888 `88b d88' 888 o 9/28/99 o888o o888o `Y8bood8P' o888ooooood8 [--------------------------------------------------------------------------] There came a time in the young boy's life when he needed more than a wind in the trees, and the company of his imaginary friends. He needed something to be immersed in, something that would swallow him whole. The times he sat among the autumn leaves and the branches and cradled the thought of this thing were his pride and joy. The rain gods heard the conversations he had with himself, and were displeased. They rained down on his private moments and sent him fleeing into the house for shelter. Everything the boy owned refused to move of it's own free will. He cursed his bike and his toys and his mattress, but they heard nothing. Three large dolls that sat upright in three chairs around a small table in the corner stared blankly, their button eyes showing no signs of life. When he poked about their eyes and neck, shouting, they just slouched and sagged lower and lower in their seats, and their expressions of sardonic amusement remained fixed. At night the clouds settled into thick white pillows on which sat stale air and the cries of beasts too numerous and frightful to imagine, and the boy's mind raced. He sometimes imagined one of the great black horned cats with its red eyes would hop on to his windowsill and pad across the floor to where he lay in bed, only to vanish when it might have been upon him instead. He left the windows wide open each night, and when he awoke, he tasted the stale air in his lungs and prayed night had passed. When snow came, it brought no joy, only a chill so great that the boy needed to bundle up in bed to avoid freezing to death. He knew the winterbirds would come soon, and he thought how he might sit upon the place where the autumn leaves once were, his breath puffing clouds of condensation in the air, and wait for one to land on his finger. Then he would capture it in a tin he'd made for his new friend, holes poked in the lid, and tell it to sing for him when he became restless. No winterbirds came. At least, none landed on his finger and so he walked among the hills blanketed in white, his small footsteps getting lost in the drifts, until he could barely see the chimney of his house. There he lay on his back, making snow angels, and wishing one would come to claim him. Much to the boy's delight, the days became longer (slowly, but surely) and the snow turned to rain, and he could no longer hear the winterbirds. Sitting in the stone doorway on the porch, he enjoyed the bright sky, and when dusk settled he saw fleeting lines of dissipating light shoot across the brightness like comets, and in his mind's eye he imagined a great many witches on their magic sticks, sprinkling the night down on him little by little, and he was comforted in his coming to believe that someone else was aware of his existence. The sun baked the ground now and the frozen lakes thawed. The boy would crawl out on to the pond on all fours and try to find a weak spot, all the while imagining the great icy underworld he might find beneath, filled with sights and beings and happenings that would amaze and astonish him. There would be the first telling crack, then they came faster and faster, and suddenly that great world beyond was not what he'd expected and he wished himself onto the shore. Somehow he would wake up shivering and damp and clammy in his bed, and there would be a fire going. When he became hungry he might have called out but he knew it wouldn't matter. More than once the boy made attempts to conquer the highest trees he could find. There would be many other houses and boys like himself, he thought, if he could only make it to the top of the highest tree and look around. No matter how high he climbed, there seemed to be one more branch above him on which to step, and he became too tired to climb any higher. Wearily, he descended and he thought he could see woodland creatures racing across the ground below the tree and he stepped down and down further as fast as he could in hopes that he might follow one to it's home or where it fed, and live as it lived, for he was tired of living his own life. There would be nothing to follow when he hurdled the last branch and stood on the soft mud at the base of the trees. When the nights once again to grow longer, and the foliage about him turned all the colors of the rainbow, he wondered if he might again challenge the rain gods to take away the only thing that brought him satisfaction. He still longed for that feeling of total immersion, however damaged his dreams had become. It was perhaps that day or a day very near to it that the boy felt older than his years. He would not find happiness in the places he was searching, and so he set off on foot in a straight line toward the sinking sun, and he left his world behind. The papers would speak of tragedy, but the young man knew better. [--------------------------------------------------------------------------] [ (c) !LA HOE REVOLUCION PRESS! HOE #852 - WRITTEN BY: BASEHEAD - 9/28/99 ]