Under the Rain

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11.23.2006

Microfiction--E Minor

The six strings across the guitar are innocent; innocent and blind, laying helpless in hands that know the sound but not where it comes from. The nineteen frets are paving stones making up a long, unexplored path. The one sound hole is empty.

Teach me something, he says. The request is enticing: teach me anything. But I know what he wants to hear. He must have heard notes fit together in chords before; magic because it seemed to drift out of nowhere. Teach me something, he says—teach me to be God. I know that when the chord is played, he will stay the same; it is the mystery that will fall.

I wind the pegs at the head of the instrument, letting the notes sharpen and loosen for a few moments as the strings align their pitches to the air, to each other. Bring it out into the cold and it’ll go out of tune, I warn him.

The strings across the guitar are so vulnerable, but so beautiful when they are corrupted that it is always a pride to teach the first chord. I maneuver the instrument so that it lies on its side in his arms. E Minor, I say, the easiest chord there is!—one fret, two strings. He looks at me when he presses the strings down; is it so simple?

I smile and sigh, and he strums. And the easiest chord there is floods the room in shades of grey; such innocence tainted so quickly, so effortlessly! The notes fall through the air in twisted braids, like smoke; E Minor, unspoken sorrow. It broods, a despair clinging to sound only for the promise of vengeance.

He listens, astounded; the woeful hum fades. But I could put my ear to the sound hole and it would still be there, reverberating endlessly in the darkness around the guitar’s core.

The strings across the guitar are the strings across my heart; of sound, of sentiment.

You can play a song if you know G, I say, and quickly take the instrument away. My fingers bind the humming strings back down in a different pattern. G is a carefree but suspenseful combination, diluting the dregs of E Minor that I can still hear echoing in the air. The two chords battle with each other even as they fit cleanly into the same dimension. One after the other in a constant pattern, they build the first song I ever learned:

Riders on the storm
Riders on the storm
Into this house we’re born, into this world we’re thrown,
Riders on the storm

11.07.2006

Bit of a Song

Well, it's 10:22, and I've been working on a song. I'm going to post what I've got here; I don't know exactly where this part would go in the finished song if I can ever finish it. It's rather sappy, like my songs tend to be, and it's probably got way too much imagery to be understood. But anyway...


A morning in which love was never seen,
The dream had washed away the space between
Drumbeats on the concrete, running through my veins
And so I walked on as my heart bled rain

Through my face in the mirror leers
One reflection of a thousand years
And a sudden voice came screaming like a gun
Saying, Child, I give you leave to run!

Our flag flies paralyzed above the school
Where I went to a dance dressed in blue
We jumped to the tune
Of a day coming soon
Lit by a thousand stars in one room.

This moment
Is an echo through the caves of time.
But I say, this moment
It was mine.
And we are
Dewdrops on a web rewoven
So the light can shine
And I say, this moment
It was yours
And it was mine.