Their One Night Of Freedom |
THE DANCE OF DIS Under the full moon, the creatures danced. Some of them twirled, and some of them pranced. The figures were dark, they were just silhouettes. But I knew they saw me, as they did pirouettes. No two were alike in shape or in size. One had a tail, another three eyes. “Creatures like these, I’m sure I’ve not seen,” I told my companion, whose name was Irene. “I have once,” she replied, “on a night just like this. They come from a place, a place that’s called Dis*.” “Dis?” I asked her. “Of this place I’ve not heard.” “Look in Webster’s,” she answered, “and you’ll find that word.” “So why do they dance?” I asked of my friend. She said, “Their life on this earth has come to an end. “But though their bodies in life have been laid in the ground, does not mean their souls are still not around. “The one night they have to get away from that place is when the sky shows the stars and the moon its full face.” I watched as they danced in the light of the moon, and when the stars went away they returned to their doom. *According to Webster's New World Dictionary of the American Language (1984), 'Dis' is defined as: 1. Home of the dead 2. God of the lower world 3. Hades Also: https://www.thefreedictionary.com/dis |