Daily Prompt
2/20/14
Drake Lashly
"Faith is a strange thing" a
voice whispered to me through the thickness of self-desire and
longing that condensed itself into the people who surrounded me. I
looked to the bartender in confusion assuming it was he who hinted at
the possibility of interesting debate. The thick skinned man behind
the counter paid no attention, he was lost in an empty glass that
needed to be cleaned for the next sucker to press his lip to it. The
flicker of the hanging lamp drew my attention away from the idea of
social banter and awoke my senses to my surroundings. The flickering
lamp dangled from the cracked ceiling and slowly swung back and forth
like a pendulum, setting the pace for the entirety of the room. I
adjusted my position on the blood red, uneven stool that cursed my
self-esteem by being just tall enough to force my feet to rest on the
wooden pegs. The fog seemed to pour in from outside and the sound of
rain pelting the old bar echoed through and bounced off the walls.
Surrounded by people bound to their skeletons, not ashamed to show
them in this empty place, forgotten by the world and its god.
The stool to my left was pulled
out of place and filled by the presence of another. The nameless pile
of bones spoke aloud to me, "Faith is a very strange thing my
friend". Unable to reply, my throat parched by the drowning seas of
loathing. I just stared into the man white eyes. His pupils were once
blue, but had faded along with the rest of him as age hindered his
body. A slight smile cracked through his chapped lips as I observed
him. "But what do I know, I'm just an old withering man burdened
by my years" his smile grew and revealed his front teeth. They
glowed a holy whiteness that took me by surprise. As he continued to
speak it almost appeared the insides of his mouth shined brighter
than the room itself.
"Pardon me, but I came with
hopes of sharing. I do hope you don't mind" he paused and saw me.
He raised his hand to the bartender, signaling a round of drinks. The
thick man responded filling the freshly cleaned glass for myself and
pulling another off the shelf for the buyer. "Have you ever
wondered" he took a silent breath and continued. "What happens
when we die?" the man took a swig of his drink and urged me to do
the same. I obeyed, and mustered out what I could, "I've never
given it much thought" I watched my glass, as if I was having a
conversation with it. "Probably for the best. These thoughts could
drive an old man crazy. It intrigues me how we can live day by day
knowing we have something to do. Being given messages, or internal
drives to do things. Then one day, it just stops" a sigh escaped
the man shimmering lips.
A glass hit the ground and
shattered behind them. Two men stood up and grabbed one another by
the collar. They barked at each other like dogs do, until the
bartender whistled and threatened to take away their treats.
Gesturing to the bottle in his hand the two men obeyed and sat back
down where they waited to be indulged in their treats.
The old man never once moved his
glance away from me. He spoke, "Men are bound to be abandoned, to
lose their path. I used to wonder where these fate-less men came"
he looked around. "Now I know" he gulped his indulgence. My mind
drifted back to my own drink in my now smudged glass. "You know,
there's a church right behind this old bar. Not in much better
condition, but it's there living in the shadow of paths end" He
looked to me, wielding a face of interest. I could tell he wondered
if I could comprehend his words. "It's my old church. Gone there
for seventeen years now, and I haven't once stepped foot in this
old bar. I see it every day though, through the churches window.
Every morning the first of the suns light shines down through this
window and it makes this place seem a lot brighter than it really is"
He stopped and drank the golden
brown liquid pouring relentlessly from his glass. The bartender came
back around and stopped in between us, "Last call" the only words
I heard him say all night. The man gestured with his had again and
the bartender filled our bowls. As he left us to our drinks the old
man said, "Now this giant is my final guide, my Shepard" another
sigh escaped.
Silence surrounded us.
Unfamiliar to the man, but a close friend to me. Unable to contain
himself any longer he broke the silence asking me a question I've
never been able to find the words for, "Do you believe in god?" A
chill shot up my spine killing my close friend silence and demanded a
response. My mind crisscrossed and panicked. I looked helplessly at
the man until he spoke again, "Yea, I've been searching for the
answer myself" we shared a sigh. "Every morning at that church,
believe it or not, I was given a message through that bright light.
That message always made me feel like I was getting closer to an
answer, but it never came to me" he took a drink out of his glass.
I did the same, but I finished mine and set it down. I rested my head
in my arms on the cold surface of the table.
The lamp swung and the rain
poured and the man continued to stare. "I never felt a presence in
that church, but those messages were my path. Until I looked past the
light, at this forsaken place. So I followed that light, and here I
am" he took off his jacket and set it on the table. "So here I
am" he repeated. He finished his drink and set the glass on the
table and stood up. As he walked away he spoke again, "Faith is a
strange thing my friend"
I woke in a puddle of my drool.
My mind was a haze of blurred memory. I lifted myself and fought
against gravity. The bar was empty and the only movement in the room
was the lamp, still on pace. The seat next to me was empty, but the
old man's black jacket was still on the table. I reached for it and
stumbled to stand, using the table as a crutch. It was as if I was
out at sea for weeks and just got back to dry land. I gathered
myself, holding the man's jacket I moved to the door hoping to
catch him.
The rain had abated and I stared
off into the clouds with a rather droll manner of awe. Sun broke
through the cracks and pierced my vision. I held the jacket up to
shield my eyes, when a strange realization dawned on me. I wasn't
holding a jacket, but instead it was a black cassock the priests
wear. Images of the church appeared in my head, and my path changed
toward the church.
I walked
in the two large doors, paying no mind to the carvings in the oak of
the door. I walked aimlessly, and yet knew exactly where to go. Up
towards the top of the church there was a large window that flooded
light into the church. There was no movement, and I was with my
friend, silence. I walked past the benches where people would sit
during Sunday mornings and to the spot where the beam of light
touched the ground. There, under the light was a gold plaque with
words engraved in it. The plaque read, "Faith is a strange thing.
Believe it or not, but it lead you here."
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