Five Barley Loaves (Matthew 14: 13-21)

Last night Herod threw a huge party for his friends. It was the talk of the town this morning and they reckon that people will talk about that party for years to come. Everybody who was anybody was there. The climax of the evening was when Herod arranged for his latest girlfriend to be given the gift of her dreams – the head of John the Baptist. Apparently it was presented to her on a plate. Herod’s cronies thought it was all highly entertaining. Just thinking about it makes me feel sick. It makes all of us feel sick – that is, it makes all of us Jews feel sick. It’s hard enough to cope with those Romans stealing our country, taking our hard-earned money and imposing their own law on us, but for them to turn around and behead one of our prophets! I was outraged. We all were. We don’t expect much of the Romans, but they stooped to a new low when they murdered our prophet.

We, Jews, didn’t know what to do. What could we do against the might of the Roman army? Here we were, living in our “promised land” but we felt impotent. We felt hurt. We felt ground-down. We felt downtrodden. We felt oppressed. We felt powerless. We felt lost. Some of us felt as if God had turned his back on us.

That’s what was on everyone’s minds this morning. That’s what we were all talking about when we met. Then someone mentioned that a man called Jesus was in the district. They said that he was a cousin of John the Baptist. We decided to head off to see this man Jesus for ourselves, to hear what he had to say, because we didn’t know what else to do.

When we arrived, Jesus was just arriving in a boat. He seemed surprised to see the crowds that were waiting for him. Jesus looked tired but he got out of the boat and walked over to the crowds. I watched him, wondering whether Jesus would use this opportunity to give a rousing, political speech. But he didn’t. Jesus simply walked among the people, greeting them, chatting to them, listening to them and blessing them. After a while, Jesus sat down under a tree and people began to bring their sick to him. People didn’t seem to need to hear political speeches. They seemed to be content with Jesus simply spending time among them. There was a sense of peace here and a sense that now was a time for rest and healing for everyone. Time moved on but nobody seemed inclined to leave.

After a while Jesus’s close friends approached him and started to talk to him, pointing at the crowds as they spoke. “It’s getting late; it’s time to go,” we thought to ourselves. But Jesus didn’t seem inclined to leave either. He spoke briefly to his disciples. We saw them head off and speak to some people in the crowd. They returned to Jesus and appeared to hand him some bread. Jesus looked down at the collection of food, stood up, arms outstretched. “Friends,” he called out, “Let us pray”. We all stood and bowed our heads. “Father in heaven”, he continued, “I have before me five barley loaves and two fish. You know each one of us. You love us and you know our needs. Bless us now as we sit, as friends, for this meal. In your love, bless us with what we need.” Jesus and his friends then instructed us all to sit down in small groups.

Jesus’s friends then approached each of the groups and appeared to be distributing loaves and fish for people to share. And while people passed around this bread and fish, they unpacked their own food and shared it with those in their group. Then one group which had plenty of food passed bread over to one that had very little. People smiled their thanks and sat and chatted with others in their groups. Somehow a crowd of thousands of strangers transformed into small groups of people who were concerned for each other and who were willing to reach out, help each other and support each other. There was a sense of family, of belonging, of contentment that was almost tangible. When everyone had finished eating, Jesus’s friends gathered all of the left-overs. They filled twelve baskets! Imagine, twelve baskets from five barley loaves and two fish! Darkness began to fall and we all started to drift home.

When we walked to meet Jesus this morning, we saw ourselves as five thousand people oppressed by Romans. But as we walked home again in small groups made up of old friends and new companions, we saw ourselves as people of God. We now felt a sense of family, of community, of belonging. We had a sense of being loved and cared for and we had a sense of being safe in the hands of our God. In time to come, others will say that today was the day that Jesus fed the five thousand. But I think that Jesus did more than that; not only did he feed the five thousand, he healed the five thousand!

© Claire Murray

Bartimaeus (Mark 10:46-52)

My name is Bartimaeus. A long time ago, when I was a child, I was able to see. I remember a beautiful world bursting with colour. I remember clear skies and a bright sun. I remember dark skies that were filled with thousands of twinkling stars. I remember a huge striped rainbow that appeared in the sky, just like magic and stretched right across my city. I remember tiny flowers, the same colour as the sun that grew in cracks in the pavement. I remember my mother’s laughing face, her eyes filled with love, as she played with me. I remember being ill, being in bed for a long, long time. I remember hearing hushed, worried voices. I remember hearing my mother cry. I remember slowly getting better and regaining my strength. But something terrible had happened; my eyesight was gone. I remember that for a long time after that my mother never laughed.

I now lived in a different world. It was a world of sounds, noises and voices, a world of many textures and sensations, a world of scents and smells, a world of tastes and flavours, a world without colour, a world without light. My new world lacked all of the beauty that I had once been able to see. But it lacked something even more important; freedom. I could no longer walk where I pleased; I needed someone to guide me. And as for running … well, that was out of the question.

But I have heard people say that when someone loses one of their senses, they are given another gift instead. For some it is the ability to sing or to dance. For others it is to be a good judge of character or a good organizer. For some it is the gift of storytelling. For me, my gift was my imagination and boy did I use it! In the evening I would replay in my mind all of the sounds, smells and textures that had made up for me the events of the day. In my mind’s eye I would paint onto these scenes colours and characters of my own, based on my earliest memories. So, while I lived my daily life in darkness, I would escape in the evenings and in my dreams into the multi-coloured world of my imagination. I felt blessed.

Money was desperately short in our house and yet I was unable to work. Did I mention that you don’t need to be able to see to be able to feel hunger? I had to beg. Every day one of our neighbours would take me by the arm and lead me down to the city gates. There I would settle down by the roadside so that I could beg from travellers as they passed by. I would call out to them and raise my hands up as I begged them for money. My arms used to get sore with tiredness. Many wealthy people walked straight past and ignored me, the fragrance of their perfume hanging on the breeze when they had gone. Some people treated me like something they would scrape off the bottom of their sandal and kicked me out of their way. Sometimes children made fun of me, flicking stones at me and laughing because I couldn’t see the culprits. But I liked the farmers. They were more sympathetic and many evenings they gave me bruised or damaged produce they had been unable to sell. When evening fell, my neighbour would return and guide me back to my home.

Travellers entering the city had many tales to tell; I would listen to them as they passed. Recently many of them were talking about this man called Jesus of Nazareth. And what tales they had to tell! Jesus was a preacher who spoke about the love of God. He said that the poor would own the kingdom of Heaven! Imagine! Imagine a beggar like me having a place in the kingdom of Heaven! Travellers said that Jesus was an ordinary man. He was a carpenter by trade and he spent a lot of his time with fishermen. He understood ordinary people. He mixed with the rejects of society. He spent time with tax collectors and prostitutes and wasn’t interested in trying to impress the authorities. In fact Jesus had got into trouble with the Jewish leaders. And Jesus didn’t just talk, he healed people, people like me! I heard stories about lepers being cleansed, lame people being able to walk and dying people being healed. Someone even said that he had given a blind man back his sight! Imagine!

In the evenings, as I thought back over the events of the day, I found myself thinking about Jesus and wondering about the man. I imagined what he would look like, what he would sound like. I imagined the excitement that would be in the air when he was speaking. I thought about him laying his hands on people and healing them. I wondered if there was any chance of Jesus coming to my city, Jericho. If he came, would I be able to persuade my neighbour to take me to hear him? If Jesus came, would he heal people here in Jericho? Would he heal me? Then I scolded myself, telling myself to stop getting my hopes up. I would try to think about other things instead. But thoughts of Jesus kept coming into my head and my heart would start to race with excitement. Somehow, with Jesus, all things seemed possible!

Then one day Jesus came to Jericho! I was sitting by the city gate as usual and the air was buzzing with excitement. Jesus had arrived earlier that day and was spending the day in the city. Travellers leaving the city for Jerusalem brought tales of people being healed. I had no way of getting to the city centre by myself; my neighbour would not return until evening. So I waited and waited. As I waited, I wondered whether Jesus might pass by. This was the gate travellers used to go to Jerusalem. If Jesus was going to Jerusalem, he would come this way. I sat in my usual spot and waited. I begged as usual, but I wasn’t really interested. I was waiting for Jesus.

Late in the afternoon the atmosphere became charged with excitement. Jesus was on this road, the road out of Jericho. He was coming this way! I was beside myself with excitement. I pressed myself flat against the wall and listened. I heard people saying, “He’s coming, he’s coming!” and I felt people start to move away from me to where Jesus must be. Then I heard people shouting, “There he is!” I couldn’t believe that Jesus was so coming so close to me after all this time! I started shouting out as loud as I could, “Jesus, Son of David, have pity on me!” I called again, and again, and again. This was my chance and I wasn’t going to let it pass me by! “Jesus, Son of David, have pity on me!”, I shouted. People pushed me and kicked me, telling me to keep quiet. I think I was an embarrassment to them. I didn’t care! “Jesus, Son of David, have pity of me!” I stretched up my head and moved it from side to side, trying to judge from the noise where Jesus was. I cupped my hands to my mouth and roared again as loud as I could.

A murmur went through the crowd, “the blind man … he wants to speak to the blind man!” Someone shouted to me, “Hi, blind man, he wants to speak to you!” I couldn’t believe my luck! I leapt to my feet, throwing my cloak down on the ground in my haste. I was able unable to see anything but I rushed forward nonetheless. Strangers’ hands guided me to through the throngs of people and I found myself standing in an empty space. Someone held my arm, walked me slowly forward and then halted. I heard a gentle voice say, “What do you want me to do for you?” I couldn’t believe that this was really happening; it was like one of my daydreams! This must be Jesus, speaking to me! “Master, let me see again,” I gasped. “Your faith has saved you,” Jesus replied. As I stood there, an image began to appear, blurred at first but becoming clear. Standing there before me was a man. He was smiling at me and in his eyes I saw the same look that I had seen in my mother’s eyes as she had played with me as a child. I was overjoyed. As Jesus turned to continue on his journey I ran after him, bursting with excitement, telling anyone who would listen that I could see!

Meeting Jesus is something that I never tire talking about. Sometimes I get the impression that people are jealous of my encounter with Jesus. And do you know what? I don’t blame them! Meeting Jesus is the most wonderful thing that has ever happened to me.

(c) Claire Murray

Untouchable (Matthew, 9: 18-26)

The woman stood at the edge of the square. It was a busy day, a market day, and people hustled and bustled around the sellers. In a far corner of the square a crowd had formed. People had gathered to hear the travelling preacher, Jesus. The woman could see people thronging around Jesus, pushing to get to the front. There were rumours that Jesus could heal people by laying hands on them. That’s why the woman had come; that was probably why many of the other people had come too. But Jesus’s friends were there to stop the crowd from getting too close. The woman watched as a lucky few were selected by his friends and were allowed to approach Jesus. Jesus appeared to listen to them, gaze at them, bless them and lay hands on them. Across the square, the woman groaned, longing to speak to Jesus, to be blessed by Jesus and to be healed by Jesus. But the woman couldn’t even get close enough to hear what Jesus had to say; in Jewish society, she was an outcast.

The woman had been ill for a long time. For twelve years her life’s blood had been draining out of her in a slow trickle that was unstoppable. This loss of blood had left her pale, weak and lethargic. Expensive, fruitless visits to doctors had left her penniless. Each night as she fell asleep she prayed to her God to help her, to somehow make this bleeding stop. Each day she awoke to find herself lying, again, in her own blood and her heart would sink.

The woman was unable to provide for herself and was forced to depend on the charity of others; that was embarrassing. Each day she felt herself judged and condemned by people who considered her condition to be a punishment from God; that was humiliating. Worst of all were the feelings of rejection and isolation that came from being an outcast. People avoided her since to touch her would mean that they would become unclean themselves. No-one had held her hand or laid a comforting hand on her arm in many years; she was untouchable.

Yet throughout the twelve years the woman had never lost hope. From an early age she had been told about God’s love – how God had known her before she had even begun to exist – about how God loved her as a mother loves her child – about how God guided her with leading strings of love. She had given up trying to understand why God had given her this illness but she remained convinced that it was part of God’s plan for her and that he would heal her. The woman had heard stories about Jesus: he had cured a blind man; he had cured a man who had been lame; he had cured a man who had been possessed. Surely if he could cure them, he could cure her … if she could only get close enough?

A flurry of activity broke out in the corner of the market place where Jesus was. A well-dressed man strode in. He bowed before Jesus and appeared to be talking to him. From a distance he looked like an official, although that seemed unlikely; an official wouldn’t defer to a travelling preacher. Puzzling over this the woman continued to watch as the official hurried away, followed by Jesus and his friends. The crowd rushed along afterwards, apparently excited by whatever had been said by the official.

The woman looked over at the crowd that now followed Jesus. People appeared to be excited, calling out to each other and gesticulating. The crowd had been distracted by the official. Maybe people wouldn’t notice her if she came along too? Maybe if she followed the crowd she might be able to get close to Jesus since his friends appeared to be as distracted as everyone else? If she could just get close enough, she might be able to reach out to touch him. If she could even get close enough to touch his tunic, maybe Jesus could heal her. He had healed those other people and she had prayed so hard for so long! This seemed like a heaven-sent opportunity to get right up beside Jesus! This was her one chance and the woman felt compelled to seize it!

The woman joined the crowd and glanced around. No-one appeared to have noticed her. As Jesus hurried along, the woman stretched her hand past jostling people and, as she did so, Jesus’s tunic brushed against it. The woman gasped and stopped in her tracks; the crowd surged past. The woman stared after Jesus, amazed. She felt different! Her lethargy had lifted and without needing to examine herself the woman knew that her bleeding had finally stopped! Just as that realization struck her, Jesus turned round and looked directly at her. He knew! He knew that she had touched his tunic and that she was healed. Looking the woman in the eye Jesus called out to her, “Don’t be afraid; your faith has saved you!” Then Jesus turned away and hurried off after the official.

The woman remained standing in the market place, staring after Jesus. Her heart soared; her days of being untouchable were over!

(c) Claire Murray

Trying to Lose My Shadow

I stand in the town square.
I am about eight years old.
I have something important to do today,
someone important to meet,
something that I have to give away.

I look round the town square.
I see you sitting on a bench
and I go over to you.
You smile and gesture to me
to sit down beside you.
I sit down and hold out my hand to you,
fist closed.
You say,
“What have you brought me today, Claire?”
I open my fingers.
In my hand lies a small, grey, angular stone.
“It’s this,” I say
and I place the stone in your hand
for you to look at.
The wee stone has been worn smooth
with years of being carried in my hand.
You turn it over in your fingers and ask,
“Claire, tell me about this.”

“It looks like a stone,” I reply,
“but it’s not just a stone.
It’s what I want people to think of me.
It’s what I want people to think of my singing.
I want people to like it.
I don’t want anyone to say,
‘Shut up! You’re ruining the song!’”

You consider this. Then you ask,
“Have you decided
what you are going to do with this?”

“I don’t want it any more”, I reply.
“I want to get rid of it.
I need to get rid of it.
I’ve carried this around
for such a long time
that it almost feels like part of me.
Sometimes I hardly notice it at all
and it feels light,
like a grain of sand in my pocket.
Other times it feels so heavy
that I can barely lift it.
At those times it leaves me so tired
that I can’t face letting people hear me sing
because I feel afraid
of what they might think of it.
I have tried to get rid of this many times
in many different ways
but it keeps coming back
and I find it in my pocket again.
It’s just like trying to lose my shadow;
it won’t go away.”

“I’ve come to you today,” I continue
because I know that I can’t do this
on my own.
I know that you won’t do this
on your own.
But I know that this is something
that we can do together.
Will you help me
to leave this behind
so that I can sing without worrying
about what other people think?
Please?”

You think about this for a minute.
Then you say,
“There’s something you need to understand
about all of this.
This won’t be easy
and it won’t be instant.
There is no quick solution.
This is something that you have to work at.
Does that make sense to you?”

“For a long, long time you have felt a need
to have other people like your singing.
It has been really important to you.
Are you ready to let go of that now?”
I nod.
“That’s the first step”, you say
“and it’s a really important one.
The next step is for you
to throw away that stone.
Are you ready to do that?”
I nod.
“Would you like us to do it together?”
Again, I nod.
You look around you and ask,
“Now where would be a good place
to put your stone?”
You look over at the river
and your eyes light up.
“Do you think the river would be a good place?”
I smile, “Yes, I like throwing stones in the river!”
“Off we go then!” you say.

We walk over to the river
and stand side by side at the water’s edge
watching the water sparkle in the sunlight.
“Would you like to throw it in there?” you ask.
“Yeah”, I reply.
“You should throw it”, you say,
because it belongs to you.”
Are you sure you want to do this?”
“I’m sure”, I reply.
“Okay, then. I’ll count you in.
You throw when I say ‘Go’ …
… Ready, steady, GO!”

I throw the stone
as hard as I can.
We watch as it arcs through the air
and dips down tinto the river
where it disappears with the tiniest of splashes.
It’s gone.

“That’s the second step done”, you say.
“Do you know what the next step is?”
“I know what it is,” I reply.
“When the stone comes back
I have to throw it back in again”.
“That’s right”, you say,
“because it will come back
at some stage.
In fact, it may come back many times.
And each time it does, you just have to
face up to it again,
like you did today.”

“Will you help me again?” I ask.
“Of course!” you reply, smiling.
“All you have to do is call me
and I’ll be there to help you
any time,
every time.”

We turn and walk back to the town square
together.

(c) Claire Murray

One Man’s Story – Working in the Vineyard ((Matthew 20: 1-16)

I left my house before daybreak,
slipped out before my wife awoke,
left her and the children for the day
and walked in darkness to the market.
Others had got there before me,
eager like me for a day’s work,
a day’s food on the table.

The landowners arrived,
only a handful of them
and there were so many of us!
We crowded up around them,
jostling to get to the front.
The landowners barely looked at us.
They pointed to a lucky few
who followed them eagerly,
relieved at having been chosen.
They had the luxury
of a hard day’s work in the heat
with the promise of a fair wage
to sustain them.
The rest of us moved away in disappointment,
found a place to sit down,
ready to wait just in case
someone would hire us.

The sun rose higher in the sky.
The landowners returned.
We rose to our feet eagerly
and again crowded around the landowners
who again picked out some of us
but not me.
There was no work for the rest of us.

Heat and dust and silence now
in the hottest part of the day.
The lucky ones find some shade.
We think of our families at home,
my beautiful wife wondering
if I have been lucky,
whether we will eat
at the end of this long day.
Nobody leaves.
We have nowhere else to go.

A third time the landowners enter
and we all rush forward,
desperate for work.
I try to look strong, keen.
I push my way to the front,
trying to be seen by the landowners.
But there are so many of us
and so few of them.
I am not chosen.
My heart sinks.
What are the chances
of me finding work now?
And if I do, I’ll receive so little for it.
I remain in the market place.
Even if I get a few coins,
enough just to take the edge off our hunger …

It’s a long, dry day in the heat.
Another time the landowners arrive and leave
without me.
I remain in the market place, disconsolate.
I’m aware that there’s a slim chance
that someone might choose me
to run an errand
or to work for even a few hours.
I stay because of that chance
and for another reason –
I can’t face going home
to see the disappointment
in my wife’s eyes,
the unspoken worry,
the hunger of my children.
I had such high hopes this morning
and they have all come to nothing.

Suddenly, unexpectedly,
at the eleventh hour
one of the landowners strides
into the market place.
I see him first and run to him.
He nods at me and sends me over
to one of his men.
Such relief!
I’ll get something.
It won’t be much
but it’s better than nothing!
A few other lucky ones are selected
and we follow the landowner.

I arrive at the vineyard
and am directed to the fields.
The work is hard
but nowhere near as hard
as the long, anxious wait
in the market place.
I become absorbed in the work
and the hour passes quickly.
A bell sounds on the farm
and all of the workers assemble
to be paid.

To my surprise the landowner calls up
all of the last arrivals first.
I don’t know what to expect,
but I don’t expect much!
The first man goes up
and to everyone’s astonishment
he receives a whole denarius!
A whole denarius for an hour’s work!
He’s delighted
and a sense of anticipation spreads
through the crowd.
The next worker goes up.
He, too, receives a denarius.
My turn now –
and I joyfully receive a whole denarius!

I can’t believe this!
I’m so relieved!
I can go home now
and present this to my wife
who will slip out and buy food
for our wee family.
I leave the vineyard and start the journey home.
I’m delighted and puzzled.
I was only there for one hour
and the landowner gave me so much.
I didn’t deserve that. I really didn’t!
I’ve never met anyone
who treated people like that before.
What an unusual man that landowner is!
I can’t wait to go home
and tell my wife all about this.

(c) Claire Murray

The Damp Crisp

Claire speaks:

It’s one of those
Lord-I-am-not-worthy-days
I try so hard
but I just don’t seem to be able
to put my trust in you
the way that I would like to.
I try not to,
but I worry and fret about things
that never materialize.
And I scold myself saying,
“You see, you shouldn’t have been
worrying about that!”

I know that, Lord.
I try not to,
but fail.
I feel devastated by my failure,
yet another reminder
of how I proved unable to trust in you.
I feel so disappointed in myself.
I long to place my trust in you
and then I fall at the first hurdle.

It’s not you who’s the problem, Lord;
it’s me.
I know that you love me
completely,
that you accept me
exactly as I am.
The trouble is …
… I don’t.
I turn my back on myself
in my disappointment.
I reject myself.
I feel like a failure.

Lord, please help me to love myself
just the way I am.

God replies:

Claire,
never lose sight of the fact
that with me
it’s the thought that counts.
You tried your hardest
to place your trust in me.
That’s all that I wanted.
What I need
is for you to give me the gift
of you trying your best.
When you really try to do something
for me
then you have given me
the raw material that I need
to my work,
to fulfil my purposes –
you have given me the precious gift
of your will.

You came before me at Mass today,
disappointed in yourself,
feeling that what you had to offer me
was something wholly insignificant.
You pictured yourself presenting to me
a total mess,
all that you had to show
for your best efforts.
I didn’t see a mess,
I saw something precious,
of incredible beauty
that held all the more splendour
for the fact that you were blind to it.

Do you remember how Niamh
used to sacrifice one of her favourite crisps
and would present it to you
smiling, as you were
in the middle of a phone call?
Do you remember how touched you were
by that gesture?
By the fact that she had taken something
that was precious to her
and had let you have it instead?
Do you remember how your heart swelled with love
at the gesture?

Do you remember how you smiled to yourself
as you accepted each damp crisp
and munched it immediately,
mouthing to her
that the crisp was lovely
because that was what Niamh wanted you to do?
And do you remember
why each crisp was damp?

Because your wee Niamh,
full of the best of intentions,
had been unable to resist the temptation
to lick all of the flavour off each crisp
before presenting it, as a gift, to you!

Was her gift of a crisp
any less precious to you?
Didn’t you just think
that your wee Niamh
was simply wonderful?
Didn’t you think
how blessed you were
to have a daughter who displayed
such love and generosity?
Didn’t you think
that your Niamh was great?

When you knelt before me
at Mass today
and presented to me
the precious gift
of your best effort,
my heart swelled with love and pride
and I was delighted
with My Claire.

Claire,
your best is always
good enough for me.
Remember that you’re not supposed
to do everything on your own;
that’s why I’m here.

Be at peace.
Rest in my love,
always.

(c) Claire Murray

Palm of His Hand

I live just downstream of Tullyrusk Bridge. It’s an exciting stretch of the river in which torrents tumble, bubble and swirl joyously as the river rushes towards Lough Neagh. It’s a place of great beauty with tall trees, cool stone, gurgling water and filtering sunlight. A dense carpet of fallen leaves lies all year round. Many creatures share my home with me: kingfishers who streak past overhead; yellow wagtails who flick their way across the river stones; herons who frighten me as they stand statue-still at the water’s edge; squirrels who scamper along the fallen trees that traverse our river.

Then there are the visitors, the people. Most of them don’t visit for very long. They appear on the bridge and stare downstream, then cross to the other side and glance upstream. Five minutes and they’re gone again. Only daydreamers, lovers and children linger. They squeeze between lines of barbed wire and slide down the bank to wander among the trees, paddle in our river, gaze at the sky and look longingly into each other’s eyes. They savour the beauty of our river for a while and disappear again.

The Man is different. I see him by our river every single day. He spends a long time here each time he comes. I catch a glimpse of him as I swim by. I startle at his appearance and swim away to hide behind a rock. From there I can watch him in safety. The Man lies on a flat piece of ground that juts out into our river and scans the surface with his eyes. I notice that he is staring right at the rock where I am hiding. I dart back behind my rock and hold my breath. I don’t need to juke out again; I know that he is watching me. I can sense it.

Then I feel him calling me. He speaks to my heart. I don’t know how I understand him; I just know that I do. He calls to me, asks me to come to him, asks me to give myself to him, to be his. Giving myself to him is something that I want to do; it’s what I was made for. I long to give myself to him and I try to give myself to him and yet I hold back. Every day The Man calls me. He asks. He doesn’t demand or force. He asks, gently, patiently, persistently. For some reason it is important that I go to him of my own free will. I am afraid. I don’t understand. I flee.

Yet even as I swim away I know that I can trust The Man; I have been with him already, a long time ago. Word had spread that a mink had come to our river and was hunting all of the small creatures. I had never seen him but I knew how merciless the mink can be, killing even when he is not hungry. When I swam in the river each day anxiety overwhelmed me. No matter where I went there was always the chance that the mink would appear; nowhere was safe for me. I lived in constant fear. I grew thin. I stayed in the deep pools of the river, afraid to venture out.

Rain fell for days on end and then finally stopped. As I hid, resting, in my pool a shadow fell across the surface. I panicked, convinced that the mink had come. Terror coursed through me and I swam as fast as I could to escape. In my panic I tried to swim upstream. The river had swollen and I was swimming against a strong current but I was determined to flee from that mink. I swam as hard as I could but made little headway. I felt the river take hold of me and slowly carry me downstream again, towards the shadow. In my weakened state I couldn’t resist the pull of the current.

The river carried me back into my pool and I lay at the bottom, exhausted and helpless. I felt the shadow as it passed over me again and glanced upwards. To my relief I saw that the shadow wasn’t the mink after all. My relief was short lived. I realised that the shadow was that of The Man and that he was stretching his arm down into the water right beside me. I was absolutely terrified. I had seen The Man many times. It seemed as if he had always been by the river and many times I had heard him call to me. But I had always been too frightened to go to him. I knew what men did with fish. They tricked them into swallowing cruel hooks that tore their mouths apart. Then they dragged them out of the water. The lucky ones were killed instantly by a blow to the head; the others suffered the longer death of suffocation. The Man reached down into the water and slid his hand beneath me. I felt him raise me slowly to the surface. I made one last attempt at escape, but all I managed was a barely visible flick of my tail. I was powerless.

I waited for the moment when I would break through the surface of the water that gives life to me, for the moment when I would gasp and in desperation breathe in that deadly air. That moment never come. The Man cupped his hands together and held me, gently, just below the surface of the water. He peered down at me and I heard him murmur, “Wee Fish, Wee Fish, what have you done to yourself? Look at the state you’ve got yourself into!” The Man continued to gaze at me with twinkling eyes. “Have you not heard me calling you? All you needed to do was to come to me; I would have given you rest; I would have protected you.” He continued, “Wee Fish, you can trust me, you know. I will always be here for you; you only have to call”. The Man held me there, in his cupped hands, safe and sound in the water. I felt my body relax against his hands. I slept. When I awoke I was back in my pool. The Man had gone.

The Man comes to our river every single day. I sense him watching me. I feel him calling to me. I see him as he stretches out on the river bank and looks down into the water. He rolls up his sleeve, reaches his arm down into the cool water and calls to me. He calls me to come to him, to give myself to him, to be his. I can think of one word that describes The Man perfectly: irresistible. Another word describes me perfectly: called. I hear his call and I swim over to him. I swim around the hand that reaches down to me. I brush against it on all sides as I swim around it. But somehow I’m still afraid and I hold back. I find it so hard to give myself to The Man, this gentle man, who gives himself to me.

Every day The Man calls to me and every day I try to give myself to him. And I hope that one day I will have the courage to place myself where I belong; at rest, in the palm of his hand.

© Claire Murray  (Date unknown)

 

Drummer Boy

The Boy didn’t know where the drum had come from. A couple of years ago he had curled up in an alleyway one night and gone to sleep. When he had woken the drum had been lying at his side. None of the local people appeared to have lost the drum or know where it had come from and so the drum had become his. The drum was long and narrow with goat skin stretched tightly across the top. It had seen better days; the sides were covered with scratches and scores; the goat skin was wearing thin; the leather strap had snapped. The Boy sanded down the drum to smooth out most of the scratches. He replaced the broken strap with an old piece of rope so that he could sling the drum over his shoulder as he walked. He used a sharp stone to scratch his own mark at the base of the drum. It still looked as if it had seen better days but the Boy considered that it just looked well-loved and it was his own.

Day after day the Boy sat cross-legged and played the drum by striking the tight skin with his tiny hands. He experimented with different techniques and was soon able to produce an amazing range of sound. By striking different parts of the skin he could make sounds higher or lower. Using different rhythms he made the beats short and snappy or long and lingering. When the Boy was happy the songs that he played made him want to laugh, shout, sing. When he was scared they reassured him and made him feel brave. When he was simply content they made him want to be still. In the Boy’s mind the drum was magical, able to sense his mood. It felt to him as if he and the drum were one.

As he sat for hours, day after day, playing the drum, the Boy became the Drummer Boy. Passersby began to throw coins down to him as he played. Most days he earned enough money to buy food; some nights he went to sleep hungry. Finding somewhere to sleep at night was a problem. Sometimes he would find a sheltered doorway and sleep there. Other times he would sleep in the alleyways. When it was really cold he would walk to the outskirts of the town to shelter in a barn or stable. He liked the stables because sometimes the animals would let him snuggle up beside them for warmth. But it was a long walk in the dark and it meant a trek back to the centre of town in the morning so that he could earn money there by playing his drum.

One day it had been particularly cold and the Drummer Boy had earned very little money; the Drummer Boy had noticed that people were less inclined to be generous when they were cold and miserable themselves. The Drummer Boy was tired, cold and hungry. He had eaten little that day and felt weary. When night fell he found a doorway and settled down to sleep there but a man came along, swore at him, chased him away and then lay down in the doorway himself. The Drummer Boy reluctantly decided to journey across town to seek shelter for the night.

As the Drummer Boy approached the stable his heart sank. Someone was already there. He could see light shining out from under the door. He tiptoed up to the door to see who was there. As he peeped through a crack in the door he forgot about the cold. He could see two grown-ups in the stable; a man and a woman. They didn’t look that old. They were sitting up on some straw, leaning against the back wall of the stable. The woman was nursing a baby, holding it to her breast. Both grown-ups were gazing in delight at the baby as it sucked contentedly. In the corner lay two cows and a donkey. A candle had been melted onto the top of a rock and it shed its light upon the scene. The Drummer Boy stared with longing; it looked so peaceful, and cosy. This was a little family that belonged together. He was alone, on the outside, looking in.

The woman glanced up and stared at crack in the door. Had she seen him? He slid away into the shadows. Then the woman called out, “Who’s there?” The Drummer Boy held his breath and said nothing, his heart pounding in his chest. The woman called out again, “Who’s there?” To his surprise the woman didn’t sound angry; she sounded almost as if she was trying not to laugh. He took a deep breath, pushed the door open slowly and edged in. The woman and man both looked up. The woman looked kind and had laughing eyes. The man looked quiet and gentle. As he stood there he named the people in his own mind: the Kind Lady; the Gentle Man; the Baby.

The Kind Lady asked, “Would you like to see the Baby?” The Drummer Boy nodded. “Well then, come on in and close the door!” the Kind Lady said. The Drummer Boy gently closed the door and walked over to the Kind Lady. She turned the Baby round so that he could see it. “It’s a boy,” she said, “Isn’t he beautiful?” The Drummer Boy looked at the baby. He saw a tiny face with bright eyes that appeared to be looking at him. Raised against the face were two small fists. The Baby looked perfectly formed and fragile. The Drummer Boy nodded. “Would you like to hold the baby?” asked the Kind Lady. The Drummer Boy glanced questioningly at the Gentle Man. The Gentle Man nodded at him and smiled. The Drummer Boy said, “Yes, I’d like to”. The Kind Lady asked the Drummer Boy to sit down beside her. She showed him how to hold out his arms. Then rising slowly, she bent down and gently placed the Baby into the arms of the Drummer Boy.

The Drummer Boy didn’t know what to think. He was thrilled to be holding the Baby and yet he was terrified that he might drop him. The Kind Lady reassured him, showing him just how relaxed and contented the Baby was. After a few minutes the Drummer Boy gingerly returned the Baby to its mother. He then said to the Kind Lady and the Gentle Man, “I can play the drum. Would you like me to play something for you?” The Kind Lady and the Gentle Man gestured that they would like that. The Drummer Boy sat down cross-legged and closed his eyes. He thought about how peaceful and content he felt right now, about how cosy the stable was and about the love that he could see in the eyes of the baby’s parents. And he played. The music that came from the drum was relaxed and gentle and made him think of sleep. As he played, the Drummer Boy looked up at the young couple and saw happiness and love in their faces. He stole a glance at the Baby and just as he did so he saw the baby give one of those half-smiles that only new babies give. The Baby then closed his eyes and fell asleep. A few minutes later the Drummer Boy fell asleep also, his arm still around his drum.

Just before dawn the Drummer Boy awoke. For a moment he couldn’t remember where he was. He looked up and saw the Kind Lady smiling over at him. She was nursing her baby again. The Drummer Boy felt that it was now time to leave. He picked up his drum and slung it over his shoulder. He ran his fingers through his hair and went over to the Kind Lady. Kneeling down beside her he said, “Thanks for letting me stay”. The Kind Lady said, “You’re welcome. But I need to ask you something”. She looked at the Drummer Boy, her eyes no longer smiling. “Please, would you give me your drum?” The Drummer Boy was stunned. For a moment he said nothing. The Kind Lady looked at him, her eyes pleading. The Drummer Boy’s eyes filled with tears. How could he say, “No” to the Kind Lady? He slowly removed the drum from his shoulder and placed it gently on the ground at the feet of the Kind Lady. Then he opened the door, edged out, took a final look at the couple and the Baby and at his beloved drum and left.
Outside it was bitterly cold. The sky was clear and thousands of stars glistened above the head of the Drummer Boy. But the Drummer Boy noticed none of this. Warm tears streaked his cheeks and ran cold down his neck. He plodded along the long roads that led to the centre of the town. All he could think about was his drum; it had been able to reflect his moods so precisely; it had enabled him to face his fears. He had felt that he and the drum were one. He thought that his identity had been taken away from him. He had been the Drummer Boy; how could he be the Drummer Boy without his drum? The Drummer Boy felt empty inside, as if an essential part of himself were missing.

The Drummer Boy kept asking himself “What were you thinking of? Why did you give away the drum?” And yet he had really felt that he had no choice. It had been the right thing to do. For some reason he did not understand he had needed to let the drum go. The drum had never really belonged to him; the drum had found him and he had been allowed to keep it for those two years. It had been time to let it go.

Life without the drum was different. Daytimes weren’t so bad. The Drummer Boy could no longer earn money by playing the drum so he ran errands instead. He played with friends. He kept himself busy. He liked being busy because it stopped him from thinking about his drum. Night times were difficult. At night he had time to think and his thoughts would invariably turn to his drum. Sadness would descend upon him. Usually the sadness fell on him like light drops of rain and he could shake it off by forcing himself to think about something else. On the worst nights a deep sadness seemed to penetrate to his soul and no thoughts could drive this out. Those nights felt as if they would never end. Yet even in those nights he remained convinced that he had made the right choice. Even though it seemed impossible, the Drummer Boy was certain that somehow his drum would be restored to him or that it would be replaced. Something would happen to sort out his drum. He was sure of it. He just had no idea how it could happen.

Months passed and summer arrived. One day the Drummer Boy felt restless. He couldn’t settle to brush floors, run errands or collect water from the well. He started to walk briskly, anywhere, just to be by himself. After a while he realised that he was walking in the direction of the stable where he had met the Kind Lady, the Gentle Man and the Baby. He had not returned there since the day he had given away his drum. The people would all be gone by now, of course. He found himself thinking about the Kind Lady and wondered why she had wanted to keep his drum. He also thought about the Gentle Man and the Baby and wondered where they were now. The Drummer Boy looked up and found himself standing outside the stable door.

The stable looked very different by day. From the outside it looked small, dirty and dusty. Swallows were flying in and out of the stable through a gap caused by a broken hinge. The Drummer Boy pushed open the door. Inside it smelt musty. Apart from the swallows the stable was empty. The Drummer Boy could see a pile of straw where the Kind Lady and Gentle Man had sat. In the corner he could see a cleared space where the cattle had been. The rock on the floor still had a candle melted onto it and he could see the place where he had fallen asleep with his drum.

The Drummer Boy walked over to where he had sat when holding the Baby. He tried to lean against the wall but something stuck uncomfortably into his back. He thrust his hand into the straw to see what had caused him such discomfort. His hand struck wood. He turned around and knelt down. Using both hands he cleared away the straw and then gasped at what he saw – a drum! But was it his? It looked like his drum and yet it looked different. The old piece of rope had been replaced by a shining leather strap. The drum had been sanded all over so that all of the scratches were now gone – all but one. Down at the base he could see his own mark, the one that he had scratched using a sharp stone. It was his drum! The Drummer Boy sat down cross-legged on the floor and began to play. The tune that he played was racing, wild, ecstatic; a tune fit to exorcise the deepest of sorrows. He played this wild, rejoicing tune in celebration. His drum had been returned to him and he felt whole again.

© Claire Murray