Woe
to the crawling and creeping insect lives going so slowly about their
routines. The ants in the ground were surely able to replenish their
water supplies and enliven dried-up cisterns, but how many of them
were flooded away needlessly and sent floating down the cement
driveway out of the garden and flush to the street? “We are
not disposable!” I can hear them cry as their little fat red bodies
flowed, turning uncontrollably in the relentless unforgiving torrent.
For
split seconds at a time the electricity in the house would flutter and
invisible fingers turned on disconnected air conditioning units. It
is only a matter of time before battery operated children's toys
begin to chatter and whirl all on their own, arms flapping up and
down like developmentally challenged black-belts turning around
on themselves looking for new playmates.
In
the end calm returned. I suppose that somewhere and for some other
sub-visual form of life a Jonas was thrown off the boat and the
tempest subsided. As the roar turned into a low deep groan and
finally into a whisper and sleep overcame us big people, a tiny
Leviathan swallowed its hapless frightened prey. Somewhere, on the
banks of some newly formed puddle, between the grass and the red dirt
of our garden the beast spit the prophet out. Somewhere, between a
flower patch and a tiny wet hollow in the ground lies the massive
teeming and soon to be repentant city of Nineveh. In the gathering
coolness of the Indochinese night, as the clouds disperse, the earth
lets off its blanket of humid perfume and the heat of the day is
dispelled with the dying winds. Somewhere a desperate creature calls
out despite itself; and despite all historic precedent and logic, the
tiny metropolis lends and ear and listens and turns. Somewhere a
kikayon tree grows and is worm-withered and somewhere in the our vast
expanse of trees, bushes, flowers and wasteland something sits crying
in a lean-to on a mound, its mission accomplished, the damage undone.
The
morning rose cool and refreshed; a chill enveloped the house and for
the first time in months we turned off the overhead fans. As I opened
the front doors leading to the terrace, a wave of vegetative bliss
hit me as the storm-washed garden flared back at my awe-stricken
wondrous gaze. The flowering reds were more red, the green stems more
green ... and of course the blue canopy of the sky a crisp thing, a
firmament new and delicious. For the first time in months the
sluggish pre-monsoon sky was eager and clean and no longer just a
fartful of muggy heat promising days of sustained lassitude and
restless siestas.
This
was a day for action! For deep breaths, for calisthenics! I jumped up
and down, thanking Jonas for his fine work.
If
you wish to see photos of our garden, please click here:
Poetic, philosophic, botanic, why pick? With Mair you can have all of it!
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