Whatever comes to mind before I alter it with the overpaint of time. Mostly satire, poetry and fiction but occasional unreliable fact, as all facts seems to be today. From deepest Notting Hill. London.
Friday, 19 November 2010
Boiling water.
It begins:
'I walked away from it and headed north. Towards evening on the second day the snow came, two hours later I was seeking shelter. Without snowshoes my progress was laboured and awkward. I came across a cave in a narrow ravine; a drift of smoke and footprints in the snow from someone coming from the north; small footprints, a woman or a child.
The cave was lit only by the fire but enough for me to see the woman, dressed in grey, sheen of her hair like a well oiled gun, a woman from an unknown tribe, sitting, heating water.
The makings of some ritual tea ceremony were laid out on a rock.
Startled but unafraid she silently watched as I found myself a place to rest opposite her, the fire between us. In perfect English she said: 'We will wait for the water to boil. I will make tea'.A shoulder gesture indicated the paraphernalia on the rock beside her. 'Then you must leave'.
We sat in silence but for the fire as something foreign to us both crept into the cave and settled within us.
As the water in the pot trembled close to boil she she added a ladlefull of ice cold snow-melt. We sat on in silence.
As the water in the pot trembled close to boil I took up the ladle and added snow-melt to the pot. we sat on in silence.
Into the early hours we sat watching that pot never boil. Finally, having covered me in a blanket, she lay nearby. We slept.
I awoke to find her making coffee. We talked; each to the other brought magic.
On the second morning we departed, heading South. In the cave on a fire rested the pot of water.
Singing as it boiled.
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