Chronicling the Moon (Fiction)

Before disappearing behind a cloud, Dita replied, “Of course, Truman, Earth is your home.”

“Would you build me a bridge, if I asked you too?”

Dita understood I didn’t mean literally, so she smiled and replied, “Depends where you’re traveling, Truman.”

“Back to Earth,” I clarified with a grin. “Would you build me a bridge should I return from the moon?”

My eyes grew heavy, my thoughts effervescent.  Before slipping into my slumber, Dita blanketed me with a parting spell…

“Although you are waning, when I think of you, I will start to glow…”

When I was alive, I believed that witches were loveless old hags who preyed on children and worshiped Satan.  This stereotype, I’ve since discovered, couldn’t be further from the truth.

Not only are witches caring and often beautiful, they’re also extremely devoted to God… or rather, God’s return.

I wouldn’t compare witches to nuns; they live by a very different code. But I’d argue nuns look spoon-fed when compared to the sacrifices of the witch.

I’m more inclined to compare witches to warriors.  While she may not wield a sword or slay her opponent on a battlefield, a witch’s wounds run deep, and her threshold for pain is unparalleled.

I was once an altar boy who aspired to be a priest.  I never consider myself the haunting kind, never imagined that in death I’d be defending witches… But unique circumstances have brought me here.

This blog is a chronicle of my mystical journey, my travels through time with witch named Dita.

Our story offers a different take on the dark and a caution about the light.

This is the truth about witches, the unsung daughters of God.

Respectfully,

Man on the Moon.

 

“Patient 28”

                  

At the height of the lunar eclipse on December 21st, 2010, a Jane Doe known as Patient 28 disappeared from her room at Sabbath Day Asylum.

I was her doctor.  And this blog is my confession…

Patient 28 was registered into Sabbath Day Asylum on the morning of June 21, 2004.  On arrival, she was catatonic, unresponsive to external stimuli.

What records we received indicated our Jane Doe was 33 years old.  She was an unknown identity, it appeared, by design.  In addition to having no name, Patient 28 didn’t have any fingerprints.  The tips of her fingers were smooth.  She wasn’t mutilated.  Patient 28 was born this way.

What records we received for Patient 28 came sealed in an envelope: a post-it note on a photo, paper-clipped to a letters and 3 checks.

The 1st letter was signed by B. Grin, Esquire and instructed Sabbath Day to cash the first check immediately.  It was enough money to cover 7 years of care for Patient 28 at a generous rate of inflation.

The 2nd check was a donation to Sabbath Day Asylum, enough money to cover ten 7-year stays at a generous rate of inflation.  But this check was postdated January 1, 2011… as was the 3rd check, but this one was made payable to me…

The instructions were explicit.  Patient 28’s stay at Sabbath Day Asylum was contingent upon me, the managing physician, caring for and treating her.

At the time, I didn’t realize I knew her.

Aden Moss

                  

The 2nd letter was a handwritten note from Patient 28.  It was dated six month prior…

Paradise Not for Me

“There is a light above my head.”

                  

Executioner, Jean Rombauda, didn’t realize Anne Boleyn had requested him by name, nor did the French swordsman recall meeting her in the past.  Still, while everyone knew about Henry VIII’s infamous second wife, Jean couldn’t shake the feeling that Anne Boleyn’s execution on May 19, 1536, was more personal than routine.  The experience was uncomfortably familiar, like he knew the Queen and, worse yet, had beheaded her before.

Seconds before being blindfolded, Anne Boleyn locked gazes with Jean Rombauda.  When she noticed her reflection starring back, she smiled and whispered something.  While no one other than Jean knew what she had said, it was evident the executioner was visibly shaken, uncharacteristically sympathetic to England’s condemned Queen.  Out of kindness, he committed to slicing off her head with one forceful blow to the back of her neck.  And as he swung, as if to grant Anne Boleyn the perception of living a few seconds more, Jean Rombauda shouted, “Where is my sword?”

Jean Rombauda never repeated what Anne Boleyn had whispered to him.  Spooked by the experience, he distanced himself from any notoriety that came with being the Queen’s executioner.  He eventually stopped performing executions altogether and moved to the french countryside, where alone he lived to be a very old man.

Years later, on the moonlit night of an old man’s death…

Ill with a fever, Jean Rombauda counted along with a distant church bell.  Upon hearing an unexpected thirteenth toll, he opened his eyes one last time.

Beside his bed, paying her respects was a hooded woman covered in white lace and ivory silk.  By candlelight, the regal woman’s diamonds sparkled like a constellation in the sky.  She seemed more celestial than human, so Jean asked, “Are you an angel, here to escort me to heaven?”

The woman chuckled and lower her hood.  “Who are the angels,” she asked? “Surely, not me.”

After removing a glove, the woman leaned in and caressed her exposed hand along Jean’s cheek. “We have never met, dear heart,” she explained. “But you knew my mother, you knew her well.”

Jean squinted at the visitor through his fever.  The woman’s frosted skin glowed iridescently like the moonlight, yet her insanely red hair burned like a torch.

When Jean realized who the woman was at his bedside, he shed a tear and asked, “Are you here to avenge your mother, Your Grace? Have you come to collect my soul?”

“No, Executioner,” the woman replied, while tucking wisps of grey hair behind his ear. “I am here to set you free.”

Bedridden in a stone cottage on the French countryside, alone with the Virgin Queen in a sliver of time that proceeds the midnight hour, an old man named Jean Rombauda exhaled a final time.

As he did, Queen Elizabeth I waded deep into the eyes of her mother’s executioner.  After a spell, she smiled at Anne Boleyn’s reflection starring back at her.  Together, the two witches then recited the words Jean Rombauda, the executioner, had refused to ever speak…

“My life goes on but not the same. Into your eyes, my face remains.”

                  

  • Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

  • Follow on Facebook

  • Top Posts & Pages