Aedaliegh of Arceldör · Short Stories

Writing Worlds into Being

It’s been a while since I’ve posted on this little blog I came to love. In August 2015, I made a commitment to spend 15 minutes everyday writing or doing some other form of creativity. The finished products were posted here.

When the year ended, a tiny little short story began growing into a novel, which I’ve spent the last 3 years writing and tweaking (and rewriting and retweaking). Here’s a section that is near and dear to my heart.

Aedaliegh of Arceldör Chapter 1, Part 2.

FInal Installment



“Aedaliegh Van Hoeflich, I won’t tell you again. Stop fiddling with that bow and help me wash these clothes.”

Aeda looked up at her mother sitting on the other side of the room and groaned, “Ma, can’t it wait? I’ve about figured out how to fix it.” The string of her bow had snapped off the limb the day before, and she was currently trying to mend it by the fire. The evening before she had smoothed the top of the limb with sandpaper and created a new hole. Now all she had to do was reattach the bowstring. The bow was worn. It’s edges were smooth from wear, and the leather grip was slowly coming off, but Aeda couldn’t imagine giving it up. Her father had brought it home on her fifth birthday. He had walked into the house and immediately placed it’s pale wooden frame in her lap, her grin reaching to his ears.

Her mother had gasped. When her mother had asked him to get a bow for her birthday, she had simply meant for him to buy a nice pink ribbon- perhaps one made of silk- for Aeda to wear in her hair. But her father was a hunter, and his mind had immediately slipped into a daydream of teaching his only child to hunt alongside him in the forrest. He had not even considered another meaning. Aeda’s mother had been furious, but when she saw how her daughter had clutched the bow to her chest like one might hug a doll, she had shrugged her shoulders and simply let the matter pass.

“I’m almost done, and you had promised to help me. I won’t tell you again, so you best get your little legs over here.”

Her father was in the corner leaning against the hearth, sharpening stones for arrow points. His face reflected the bright orange glow of the fire. This was Aeda’s favorite time of the day. They would sit together by the fire and smooth pale wood into shafts and rocks into arrowheads. They were set to go hunting together after the harvest was over. She looked at him, silently begging for him to intervene- to tell her mother that she was allowed to stay right here beside him, but instead he leaned towards and whisper with a wink, “Go help your mother, little deer. I’ll see if I can’t finish your bow.”

Aeda sighed dramatically, but she knew there was no pointing in fighting with either of them. She handed her bow to her Father and dragged her feet to go and sit with her mother beside the table. She sat on an old wooden stool leaning over a large tub of water. Her father chuckled as Aeda sat down on the stool with a loud crash beside her mother.

She submerged her hands in the lukewarm, milky water and picked up the first piece of cloth her hands touched. Pulling the pale grey garment in and out of the water multiple times before beginning to scrub it against the water board. Her mother washed clothes like a musician might play a song, filling the house with drum beats made of swishing water and soaked cloth. Aeda fell in line with the rhythm made by her mother’s graceful, sun kissed hands. The fire crackled softly, and her father mimicked it sounds as her struck stone against stone. She could hear their neighbor singing an old country lullaby to her baby as she rocked him to sleep. This was melody of their every day, and it was her favorite song. The whole village came together under the stars and played their own kind of instrument.

Aeda looked at her mother, hunched over the basin of water. Her brow was furloughed, signaling that she had already lost herself in another thought. Aeda didn’t look anything like her mother. She had olive brown skin where her mother’s was a deep brown. Her mother was one tall tree of sharp angles, and she was rounded and sturdy like her father. Yet, everyone told her she was her mother through and through. Their outsides may not resemble each other, but their hearts were of the same mold. Aeda watched her mother stare into the fire, and she knew what what she was thinking.

Her mother never stayed in the present world for long. She was always trying to remember old stories, or dreaming about what the future might hold. The towns people knew her mother by another name: they called her Legende.

Aeda peered up at her mother through her lashes and smiled, “Before the mountains had begun to sprout and the rivers took their shape, the earth was but dirt, a void and lifeless expanse.”

Her mother opened one of her eyes, and smiled. The rhythm of her hands changed from a choppy drum beat to a slow serenade. Her mother’s steady voice rang out and began to paint pictures into the cold air above them. “In the heavens above dwelt the gods. One day, Adamos, the god of color, came across this blank expanse and he was saddened by it’s lack of beauty. He inquired of the gods as to whom it belonged, and when he found that it had no one. He fashioned for himself thirteen helpers – both male and female- to share in the creating with him. He gave each of his thirteen helpers blank canvases and colors with which to paint. He outstretched his arms and freed them to fill the canvases with beauty and wonder and joy- whatever they could think of. Floortje…”

Aeda’s mother stopped the story and opened her eyes, “I’m afraid I’ve forgotten their names. Would you help me?”

Aeda nodded gleefully, she knew the story by heart. She sat up straight over the bucket of water and tried to remember how her mother and told it, “Floortje began to paint the rose, with bright red petals and dark greens stems. Tuur made the Oak tree with it’s wide trunk and branches that stretch from one end of the forrest to the other.” Aeda paused, trying to remember the others.

“And Steren?” Her mother added, helping her through the story.

“Oh, yes. Steren crafted the mountains and valleys and Kalb drew all the beasts and animals like the squirrel and the moose. Even the wolf was his idea, though I don’t think he planned on them having teeth that sharp. Kalweh designed the most beautiful dresses and blouses so that they all looked like gods themselves.  Oh, and then there Acker who drew tiny little seeds that grew into all kinds of vegetables and fruits. …. and then… and then….”

“Hulbrecht.” Her mother reminded her.

“Oh yes! Hulbrecht…. What did he do?

   Hulbrecht saw a great mass of water, and so he formed the sea. And Wy painted rivers that flowed out from it.”

“That’s right,” interjected Aeda.” She put her finger on her mouth and bounced it on and off her lips. “Okay, so there’s also Miena, Acker’s wife, who filled the waters with fish. And then finally Blythe, who put the small little lights in the sky.”

“Very good.” Aeda’s mothered cooed, still scrubbing a blouse with soap.

“And when each of the thirteen…”

“You’ve forgotten one,” Aeda’s father chimed in from across the room.

“No I haven’t.”

“That was only twelve.”

Aeda and her mother both did a quick count of their fingers and Aeda realized indeed her father was right. She pinched her nose and squinted one idea, trying her hardest to think of who she had forgotten.

“I’ll give you a hint.” He father teased, standing up from his place beside the fire and joining them to finish the laundry. “We put it in our supper.”

“Thyme!” Aeda shouted. “The thirteenth was Thyme and he made all the herbs and spices.”

“I’m glad we remembered that one,” Aeda’s mother smiled. “Or else our dinners would be quite bland.”

They all let out a small chuckle, and her father took hold of her mother’s hand and smoothed his thumb over her palm.

“And when each of the thirteen,” her mother continued, “completed their designs, Adamos came and whispered life into the painting, and they moved out of the canvases and began to fill the dark world. Mountains rose from the expanse, and trees sprouted out from the dirt. Beasts began to roam the fields and vegetables were planted from food. But there was one of the thirteen who did not design anything for Adamos to finish. He name was…

“Ermelinda!” Aeda exclaimed. “Ermelinda only sat and watch as all the others spent everyday painting and drawing. So, Adamos came to her, and asked her why she wasn’t painting anything. And she said to him…

Aeda’s mother stood up from her stool and with a dramatic flourish, put her hand on her husbands should and pointed out the window. “I do not paint, my King, because I can not stop thinking of the creations my friends have already made. What if Floortje painted her flowers onto a tree of Tuur’s? What if Steren caused the earth to rise over Wy’s water? What could we create together? We work as thirteen, but what could we create if we worked as one?”

Her mother let out a big sigh and sat back down on her stool, and continued.

“Adamos saw what Ermelinda did. He saw the dogwood and the waterfall, though they had yet to be named as such.”

“And then, he told all the others that they should start working together to make even more beautiful things! They could work in pairs or in groups of three, four, five, or even six!”

“And why, my little deer, did Adamos ask them to do that?” Aeda’s father asked her.”

“Because he realized that they were stronger together?”

“And what did they create?”

“Well… Tuur and Acker created the apple tree. Floortje and Kalb painted the peacock. And I think Era and Hulbrecht created rain so that Acker and Thyme’s crops didn’t always have to be planted close to the rivers.”

“Well done!” Aeda’s mother exclaimed. “You’ll have replaced me in no time.”

“I could never.” Aeda blushed. “You finish Mama. The ending is my favorite part.”

“Oh very well. Finally, Adomas created the sun, and called it to rise in the sky and disappear for half the day. He declared that when it rose, the thirteen should toil and work, but when it sank beneath the earth, they should sleep and rest until it rose once more. And so the earth was filled with beauty and wonder, and they sat by the Sea as the sun sank beneath the earth. They ate of the fruits they had created with their own hands, and drank the wine of their own imagination.  When the land was filled and their work was done, the thirteen came to Adamos and they asked what they were to do now. And Adamos told them, we shall enjoy what we have made.”

It was now Aeda’s father who stood. Assuming his most kingly stance, he spoke in a deep voice, “We shall enjoy what we have made. We shall work the ground and rule over the lands together. Each of you shall take a partner of their own, and we shall spread across the lands, each pair in charge a section. We shall watch over it with great care. We shall have children and we shall teach them to create and to rule, just as we will do.” And then he turned to Ermelinda and asked her to join him.”

Her father held out his hand to his wife and lifted her up off the stool to face him.

“Adamos offered his hand to the wise Ermelinda and  asked her to stand beside him for the rest of the eternity. That very night the two were wed, and the twelve fashioned crowns out of gold and silver and placed them on their heads.”

Her mother placed a hand on her fathers check and whispered softly, “And so the two began to rule over the lands, and the twelve spread out amongst the them. Tuur and Floortje traveled to the forest and made their home there. Steren and Kalb took the the Northwest Mountains, and settled in a cave. Holbrecht and Wy built the first ship, and lived on the sea, and traveled the rivers. Acker settled south of the sea, where the soil was rich, and Miena went with him. His brother Thyme, and his wife Kahweh, settled just east of him, at the bank of the mountains. And finally, Blythe and Era settled in the eastern valley just before the castle where Adomas and Ermelinda dwelt, watching over the lands from their castle on Jhoeksteen Mountain.

They called the realm “Arceldör” for it was pleasant place filled with beauty and ruled in goodness. And so, they began to build their homes and have children to fill them. Their children married with one another, and had children of their own, and the land of Arceldör was filled with life and beauty, and people to revel in it.”

Her mother took Aeda’s head, and drew it to her. For a moment, they stood their together hands and hearts joined together. The neighbor’s baby began to cry, and it broke the still, quiet moment.

“Little deer,” whispered her father, “its time we went to bed.  We all need rest for tomorrow. Let’s try and shut our eyes.”

Her mother picked up her crutches off the floor and maneuvered her way to standing. One of her crutches slipped beneath her weight, knocking the wash basin over and covering the dirt floor with the milky water.

Her mother groaned, beat the dirt, and then laughed. “You think after six months I’d have figured out how to use these things.”

“Go on to bed, you two.” Her Father said, helping her mother off the floor. “I’ll clean this up.”

Her mother’s newfound disability didn’t seem to bother her parents as much as it did Aeda. Tears began to roll down her face, and Aeda could bear it no longer. She ran to her bed and flung herself down on the mattress, covering herself completely with blankets as the tears continued to fall down her cheeks.  Her mother held a hand up to her father, and followed her to the bed. As gently as one might pull off a cloth that’s been covering a wound, she pulled back the blankets covering Aeda’s face.

“Mother,” Aeda choked out quietly, “Do ye really think Adamos and Ermelinda are happy with the way things are now? If they created the lands and animals to be good and beautiful, then why, “Aeda paused and sucked in a breath before letting it all spew out. “why does winter make people sick? And why do the wolves steal our livestock? Why does the land not give us enough food to make our bellies stop grumbling? Why does the King work us so hard and pay us so little?”

The magic in the story had run out, and Aeda could here the cracks forming in her mother’s voice. “So many questions my love, and all of them good ones, but let’s leave them for another night when the harvest is over. Tomorrow, we shall celebrate and dance and tell stories the whole night. And I promise to answer all the questions you can think of.”

“Tomorrow then.” Aeda sighed. And she fell asleep dreaming of what it would be like to live under a king like Adamos.

Aedaliegh of Arceldör · Short Stories · Songs · Spoken Word

Stomp ( A Folk Song)

Okay,y’all. I need your help. Below you will find an excerpt from the (children’s) novel I’m working on. It’s a scene I’ve been playing with for a while, and simply can’t figure out how to make the *stomp* part work in print. So, I would love and appreciate your input and ideas on how to best convey what I see and hear in my head. This is group effort, so y’all chime in.

bonfire-painting
Nikolai Astrup’s Midsummer Eve Bonfire, 1912.

 

Tonight, it was the Gehimni people who were given the honor of entertaining. More than twenty Gehimni men and women ran around the fire, hollering and making noise. It snowed in the Gehimnis for nine months out of the year, and so most of the bed had long beards that covered the majority of their face, and the women wore long skirts made of animal skin with all kinds of braids strung about in their hair. Suddenly, the Gehimini performers stopped running around the fire, and the women took their spots in a circle on the ground. A man began to strum a mandolin, as the others began to stomp their feet to his rhythm. The men threw their knees high up in the air only to bring their smashing back down with the force of a ten horses. Each of the Gehmini men fell in sync with one another until one man threw his head back and howled at the top of his lungs, Ooooooooooooohhhh, and the other men followed his lead.

I’ve seen the mountain tops and I’ve gaped at the sea,

but never has this wanderer beheld a beauty such as thee.

I’d scale the mountains tops and sail across the sea,

if you’d be waiting for me with a white dress and a ring.

 

Yer nose is as pointy as the snowy peaks,

and yer eyes are more emerald than the evergreen.

I know I ain’t much to look at, my darling sweet,

but I got heart a gold somewhere underneath.

 

My heart when it saw you went *stomp stomp stomp*

And my lips started singing this horrid song.

But my dear please know that if you love me so,

I’ll sing this song to you until we’re grey and old.

 

I’ve got a house here in these woods, I bet yer Papa would be proud.

‘Gotta fireplace and a porch that goes all around,

but I’m stilling miss something, perhaps a spritely frau.

So what do ye say, will ye marry me now?

 

The women sitting on the edge of the crowd jumped up and joined arms with the men, and together they danced a polka around the fire. They weren’t the best of singers, but that didn’t stop every single man and woman from singing, or rather yelling, at the top of his or her lungs. If only they would sing on key, they’d be quite good. The entire camp was mesmerized by them, and they joined in with the stomping and clapping with just as much vigor as if they had known the songs their entire lives.

 

Darlin’ let me dance with you until this night ends.

Yes, come a little closer. I don’t mind those hairs on yer chin.

Yer back is strong from plowing and I sure do love yer apple pie.

Oh, you’re the only woman who could ever catch my eye.

 

My heart when it saw you went  *stomp stomp stomp*

And my lips started singing this horrid song

But my dear please know that if you love me so

I’ll sing this song to you until we’re grey and old.

Yes, I’ll sing this song to you until we’re grey and old.


Also, would English speaking children know what a “frau” is? Can I use that word in a “fantasy” novel?  Thoughts? Comments? Suggestions?

Aedaliegh of Arceldör · Short Stories

A Fortress for Aeda, Final Installment

SO.  MUCH.  JOY. as I finish Aeda’s story after weeks and weeks of finals & paper writing & sending kids off to kindergarten. It’s nice to finally be able to push the publish button. If you’re new to the series, you can read the first part here. Enjoy friends.

P.S. Special Thanks to my editor & encourager Lauren Wolfe who has edited thousands of my grammatical errors and listened to every plot hole I’ve had to overcome. FInal Installment

A Fortress for Aeda is currently under construction. Come back later for some exciting news.

 

Aedaliegh of Arceldör · Short Stories

A Fortress for Aeda, Part 5

9b319ebe0c26f8206854f2ea7ccad6a6Thursdays and Fridays can be crazy. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve read this over and over. The rush to get it done, the emails to my friend and editor, the rereading and rewriting and hair pulling, but I would be lying if I told you I didn’t love this whole process though. And in the end, I get to wake up all excited like Christmas when I was kid. “I get to post my story today!” We’re almost to the end of Aeda’s story, but if you’re new here, You can find the first installment here. And with all my rambling complete, here’s A Fortress for Aeda, Part 5.


A Fortress for Aeda is currently under construction. Come back later for some exciting news.

Aedaliegh of Arceldör · Short Stories

A Fortress for Aeda, Part 4

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Hi Friends! Welcome to Part 4 of my short(ish) story  A Fortress for Aeda. This story has become so much more than I originally intended it to be, and I couldn’t be more thrilled. To start at the beginning, go here to find Part 1.

And thanks for stopping by.

You’re the G.O.A.T.

Or the wolf, whichever you prefer.

 


 

A Fortress for Aeda is currently under construction. Come back later for some exciting news.

Aedaliegh of Arceldör · Short Stories

A Fortress for Aeda, Part 3

When I started this little blog experiment, I made a promise to push past the hardships and the apathy no matter what. I’ve failed at that more than I have succeeded, including this week.

Ever feel like you can’t focus? And you start to do something productive, and then you find yourself on facebook or netflix or amazon video (insert any website here, really) more times than you can count?

Welcome to the last week of my life as it applies to writing. I just didn’t feel like it. And when I tried to write, I really didn’t like what was coming out. And now that I’m about to hit the “publish” button, I’m still not that happy with it. But it’s Saturday and it’s the best I can give this week, and sometimes I realize that, in of itself, is enough.

If you’re new to the story, you can find Part 1 here and Part 2 here. Enjoy friends.

 

River rocks

 

A Fortress for Aeda is currently under construction. Come back later for some exciting news.

Aedaliegh of Arceldör · Short Stories

A Fortress for Aeda, Part 2

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Hi friends! Thanks for stopping by and giving me your time! If you’re new here, this is
Part 2 of my 6(ish) Part short story entitled “A Fortress for Aeda.” You can find A Fortress for Ada Part 1 here. If you’re not new, you may have noticed I changed the spelling of my characters name. Yep, yes I did. That’s all I have to say about that. 🙂

So, sit back. Drink your cup of coffee. And enjoy the next section of Aeda’s story.


A Fortress for Aeda is currently under construction. Come back later for some exciting news.


For Part 3 of Aeda’s Story, click here.

Aedaliegh of Arceldör · Short Stories · Uncategorized

A Fortress for Aeda

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This is the beginning of a story that’s been forming (consciously) in my heart for over four  years, but I like to think it’s been writing itself for much longer. I didn’t intend to start Aeda’s story at this point in my life. This story deserves a better writer- a kinder one-  a more clever one than myself. So, my plan was to obviously wait until I was older and wiser (so, like 27?) but I can’t really keep it quietly sitting in my heart any longer. But instead of giving you the ever growing 17 page document that currently saved to my desktop, I’ve decided to edit and “publish” it a few pages at a time. For the next 6 (ish) Saturdays, I’ll be posting the next installments of Aeda’s story.

So, today, with much anticipation and excitement in my heart, I bring you…

A Fortress for Aeda, Part 1.

Update: A Fortress for Aeda is currently under construction, but you may find an exert from the story below.


She was sitting on the floor lacing her boots when she heard it: the crack of a tree limb. Her hands stilled as she listened to surrounding forest. Leaves crunched beneath footsteps like war drums growing louder with each new beat. Careful not to make a sound, she stood up and slipped silently across the dirt floor.

Someone was in the forest.

She was found.

She peered out the window and waited for the noisemaker to appear, squatting down low so that only her eyes peered out through the small slits in the wooden shutters. Her fingers brushed against the smooth wood of her bow as she loaded it with an arrow. She took a deep breath in through her nose and exhaled through her mouth.

“Animals know when there is danger around,” he father had told  her the first time he took her hunting. “But if you can control your breathing, they won’t sense anything is wrong.

A tree branch filled with bright yellow leaves pulled back and a man emerged from the thicket. His deep brown cloak and hunter green tunic made it seem as if he were one with the forest, a small tree who had just decided it would rather stand in the clearing. He crossed his arms and studied the dilapidated cottage, as if considering what might be inside.

This was not the first traveler who had passed by her cottage in the last three years she had lived there. Perhaps if she had met him earlier, she would have thought twice about the signet ring he wore on his right hand or the golden crest pinned on his cloak. But now she only concerned herself with details she thought were necessary: Was he armed? And how could she overcome him? Nothing else mattered.

He wasn’t a particular well built man, rather average. His soft brown beard was well trimmed, and his hair, though well combed, contained spots of grey. This knowledge brought the smallest grin to Aeda’s face. A well groomed beard meant that this man was no woodsman or farmer, but rather a comfortable gentleman. She had defended her cottage against men far bigger and rougher than this man.

He took a step towards her, and she snarled. He could not have come at a more inconvenient time. She had made a rather fine plan to go hunting and chop wood today. She didn’t have the time to be bothered with this stranger. She would scare him off quickly and then she could resume her plans.

“You’ll find no hospitality here,” she called out. “It’d be best if you kept walking to the next village. If you hurry, you can make it there before dark and I won’t have to waste an arrow on you.”

The man halted in the middle of his step and held his hands up in the air.

“You must be Aeda.”

Short Stories

Amelia and the Diamond Freckle

This has been a story almost 3 years in the making. It’s near and dear to my heart. It’s been an oral story, simply being told from memory for the past 3 years. I tell this story any time a child asks me, “Whats the sparkly thing in your nose?” Being a Preschool Teacher, this happens quite a bit. Of course, I tell them the truth eventually, that I do indeed have a nose ring. But it never gets old to see the looks of amazement on their faces as I tell the story. So, I figured it was about time I sit down and record this silly story in print. And today, I release to the masses. Please enjoy Amelia and the Diamond Freckle.

Screen Shot 2015-08-26 at 3.09.41 PM“Hi, my name is Amelia O’Connel and I have a diamond freckle. Can you see it? Look really close now? Closer!There, Can you see it now? Right there on the tip of my nose.

I know what you’re thinking. “what an odd place for a diamond. Why don’t you wear your diamonds on your ears or around your neck or something?” Well, I didn’t get to pick where I put my diamond. You see, I was born with it. Yes, it’s true. I, Amelia O’Connel was born with a diamond freckle in my nose. Oh, don’t look at me like that. I’m not the only girl in this world who has ever been born with a diamond freckle in her nose. There are a lot of girls who have diamond freckles in their little noses… well at least with diamonds on their face. My mother, and my grandmother, and my great grandmother, and my great great grandmother and my great great great grandmother… and all my grandmothers before that… even my great great great great great great great GREATEST grandmother. You better believe it! My great great great great great great great GREATEST grandmother was born with a diamond freckle in her nose. I’ve got her picture with me right here!

Shall I tell you the story of how my great great great great great great great GREATEST grandmother came to be born with a diamond freckle in her nose? Well, I guess the story really starts with her mother, my great great great great great great great GREATEST great grandmother, Felicia. I think she kind of looks like me.You see, she lived in the far, far, really FAR away place called Ireland. Grandmother Felicia had just married my great great great great great great great GREATEST great grandfather, Garrard. They say my Grandfather Garrard was an adventurer. He traveled all across the world looking for pretty things like paintings or flowers, but Grandmother Felecia always liked when he brought home pretty things to wear. Those were her favorites. And one year, on her birthday, my Grandfather Garrard brought her home a diamond necklace. He must have loved Grandmother Felicia a lot. They loved each other so much, and my grandmother treasured that necklace more than any other gift. She never took it off. When Grandfather Garrard was away on one of his adventures, it would help her remember that He loved her and he was always coming home. No matter how lonely she got.

But one night when grandfather was away on one of his adventures, a band of very mean men dressed in black worn out clothes and who wanted to steal everything came to the house (you could call them robbers if you wanted, I guess). Well t these men came to my Grandmother Felecia’s house one night and they told her they wanted all her stuff. She was so scared she just started running. But that band of very bad men- they saw the diamond necklace she was wearing and they wanted that too. So, they ran after her.But my grandmother was fast. She ran all the way to the mountains to hide in the hills. But the men finally caught up to her. The cornered my grandmother in a cave, and there was nothing else she could do. So, she did the only thing she could do: she swallow the diamond necklace.

Yes, you heard me right. She swallowed the diamond necklace. That woman was mighty brave. You might call her crazy, but her plan worked. When she swallowed the necklace, one of them men just started laughing. He must of thought my grandmother was crazy too. And all of a sudden, all the other men started laughing too. And so they let me grandmother Felelcia go home. They gave her all the stuff the had stolen back, and they even walked her back home.

But the story isn’t over yet. That very night, Grandmother Felecia became really sick. That diamond did not sit very well in her stomach. She was in a bed a whole week from stomach pains and bad dreams. But grandfather came home and she got better. And in a few months, she gave birth to a baby girl.But would you believe it that when that baby was born, they held her up to see what a beauty she was. And that’s when they saw it, the sparkly something on her cheek. Well, that sparkly something was tiny little bitty- you guessed it, diamond freckle. My great grandmother Illeanna was born with a diamond in her cheek. It was quite a sight to behold, and they just knew it was from that diamond necklace grandmother Felecia swallowed a few months before. They learned to live with it, and almost forgot about it until Ileanna -that’s what they named baby girl- grew up and had a baby girl of her own. And you know what, that baby had a diamond freckle too- only this one was kind of on the right side of her mouth, right about there.
And so, seventeen generations of baby girls and daughters and mothers and grandmothers later, here I am- a proud O’Connel girl with a diamond freckle in my nose, just like my mother and her grandmother and all the grandmothers and mothers before her. It’s know it’s different and maybe a little strange, but It’s a part of who I am. And you know what, I kinda love it.”

The end.

Short Stories

While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks by Night

 followstar  It is now ten days before the Passover. My family and I are making our yearly journey to Jerusalem for the Feast. The winds are cold, so we light a fire and we all huddle close. I have purposely  stopped outside of Bethlehem for the night. These fields that we now overlook hold tales of glory seen many years ago. I still marvel to believe it is all true. Yes, of course it is true. I was there, and the shadows that darken these hills now serve as a reminder of the glorious light that once cascaded down upon them.

     My daughter approaches me and smiles as she catches me glance upon the hills. She scoops up my grandson, toddling near my feet, and sets him in my arms. “Tell them the story, Father. Was there ever a time more fitting than now?” I nod, and just as she has done every year, my daughter sits down at my feet. She calls to her other children and they come sit around her, and fix their eyes on me. I take a deep breathe and begin.

_______________

     “When I was a young man many years ago, I wandered these very hills taking care of sheep that were to be used in the temple during Passover. They had to be perfect, without any spots or blemishes, for they would be offered up to the Lord as atonement for our sins. Their blood would be put on the door posts of all of Israel, while inside we would feast in remembrance of when the Lord rescued us out of Egypt.

     I had taken care of the temple flocks for years, so had my father and his fathers before him. As Levites, it was our service to the Lord. But one year these fields, the very ones in which you now sit, became witnesses to the Glory of God. Look out upon that hill there. Do you see the sheep grazing in the darkness and the shepherds lying down beside the fire? That was us. Then out of this same night sky, an Angel appeared before us, and the hills were suddenly illuminated with more glory than the sun. We fell to our knees in fear, but our eyes were riveted to his magnificence. And then, children, he spoke to us with a voice of a king, deep and strong and filled with the eagerness of a secret long-kept.

Do not be afraid. I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people. Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord. This will be a sign to you: You will find the baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a manger.’

     I stared at him wide-eyed for a few moments, as if the more I stared the more glory I could absorb. What was he saying? The Savior? Here? Tonight? Could it be?  As if to confirm what we had just heard, more angels appeared alongside him, and together they began to sing. You all know the song. I’ve taught it to you. Though I assure you, I have not sung it half as well as the angels with all the glory and splendor of The Lord encircling them. Come now.”

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     And we all begin to sing together, the song of the angels, and now the legacy of my family.

“Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to men on whom his favor rests.

Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to men on whom his favor rests.”

     For a few moments, we sing the lines over and over again. I watch my daughter, smiling over at me as she instructs her children to sing louder. And once more, I feel the Hills are soaking up this song of glory. I set my grandson down beside me and stand up.

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     “That was just as we heard it all these years ago.The angels disappeared and we began to finally peel our eyes away from the sky. Our eyes, filled with the glory that we had just witnessed, darted back and forth to one another. We all wanted to speak but no one was bold enough to make the first sound. A Child was born in Bethlehem. But not just any child – the Savior. The Promised One had finally come. And we were being invited to meet him. Whispering quietly to one another, we began to round up the flocks and head toward the city to find our Messiah.

     It took us only a short while to find the newborn. There, in a shack outside of the city, he lay in a manger: small and red and wrapped in rags. As we approached, he awoke squalling and His mother took Him to her breast. Our band of shepherds stood, once again dumbstruck, trying to wrap our minds around the scene in front of us. The Messiah of Israel was a weak, crying child clutching to his mother. His parents were so young, and so helpless. Were they out here by themselves? Who had delivered the child? The mother, who we came to know as Mary, looked exhausted. Though she sat on the ground, she still had to rest herself against the manger as she held the child. Joseph, the child’s father, knelt anxiously beside her, hands outstretched to help her, yet not knowing how. My father went forward and spoke with them, and explained all that had happened. They looked back and forth between us and Father, and finally Mary smiled at us, and frailly waved us closer. We shuffled into their makeshift home, and Joseph addressed us.

“My wife asks that you would sing for us the Angel’s song. We would like to hear it.”

My father turned to us and laughed as he began to sing, as best as he could, what we had heard only moments before.

     We joined in and began to stumble over a tune resembling the Angel’s. As we sang, Mary took the baby from her chest and laid Him before us. There, lying on the dirt before us, was the hope of Israel. My father wasted no time in approaching the child. He dropped his staff, and slowly walked closer, lowering himself to the ground so that he could be face to face with his Messiah. He planted his hands on either side of the child and looked into his eyes. Faintly, he sang the tune of the angels once more. He was mere inches away from the Promised One, and I simply stood there, clutching an unblemished lamb that in a few days would make atonement for the sins of Israel. I wanted to approach, but this child was the One of whom angels sang. This child was the One whom our prophets had foretold, whom all Israel had been yearning for and seeking. And yet He lay there on the ground beside my sheep.

     All the men took time to go and greet the child. Some dared to pick him up. Some to touch his face, but all I could do was to stand and marvel that the hope of Israel, this small child, was here with us. I tried to search through all I knew about the Promised One. Did the prophets know He would come like this? With Angels heralding his coming, but with no one to attend to him or his tired mother but a band of temple shepherds?

     The Messiah began to cry once more and his father stood to pick him up. As he comforted his child, he walked toward me, holding the child out a little so that I might glance on his face. Still clutching the lamb in my arms, I bent to place it on the ground. With empty hands, I reached out to take hold of the Messiah. I hesitated, for who was I to touch this holy child? But Joseph placed Him in my arms and suddenly I was holding the Messiah as he kicked and screamed. I clutched tightly to his small body, mesmerized and not wanting to let go. “His name is Jesus,” Joseph whispered to me, “And He is to be for all people.”

     Joseph remained there beside me as I held Him. Rocking back and forth, I bent down over his face and rested my hand along His cheek that I might touch Glory. I bent my face low to meet His gaze, and sang the old Passover hymn into his ear,

“Elijah the prophet.

Elijah the Tishbite,

Elijah the Gilaite.

In haste and in our days may he come to us

with the Messiah, son of David.”

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     My children, that night I met the Messiah not just of Israel, but of the world. Even in His majesty, He allowed me to hold Him in his humanity. That very night Heaven invaded earth and The Lord fulfilled his promise to Israel in a way far more glorious than our prophets could have ever inscribed. And alongside the pascal lambs of Israel, I was witnesses to it all.

Stay tuned, for the story of this Pascal Lamb continues. Part 2 to come shortly.