Saturday, May 9, 2009

Star Trek

No spoilers were spawned in the writing of this blog.

Christopher Pike always deserved better than once for yes and twice for no.

The birth of James T. Kirk made me weep openly in a movie theatre.

I have been and always shall be your friend.

Tell my mother I feel fine.

The Kobayashi Maru can be saved.

I always thought I liked ST:TNG better because I loved each of the main characters so well, however, it occurs to me that I loved each of them individually. I did not love them as a unit; they were standoffish to one another in the tone that was set by the all-time loner poet captain, Jean-Luc Picard. The OS crew is a unit, bound by common destiny and a transcendent sort of love. Beyond time, death, and court marshal, they find one another again and again as though magnetically charged to attract each other.

My favorite series has been rebooted. Present me with the pips of rank as a purist and I shall wear them. Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Scot. I am a TOS fan first and foremost from here on out.

Majel is and always will be the soulful voice of the Enterprise.

This is our new mythology people; it is no accident that Iowa echoes Tattooine. The hero has a thousand faces, but He is one.

Gene would have approved.

Kirk is on his Enterprise, and all is right with the worlds.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Beltane '09

The boy walked into class with a tie knotted around his neck. He dressed up to make his speech look better. Tommy was his name. He spoke haltingly, revealing shallow research and very little understanding.

He spoke about Voudun. Voodoo.

As he spoke his choppy, poorly cited sentences, there was something about him that spoke of awe as only a very young man can feel it. He was amazed and knew not what he beheld. It was endearing, bewitching in a naive, ingenuous sort of way. He was unassuming and between two shallow worlds as he lifted a small white board he had set down at his feet. He set it on the rail behind him for all to see.

I smiled a smirk, I shifted in my seat. The snake in my spine uncoiled restlessly and I tasted the classroom air with my tongue. My, my.

The boy called Tommy set a talisman behind him, an invocation. A prayer with no faith behind it has no power. But I knew two things: that the boy Tommy had drawn the charm with his own right hand, and that he had had a thrill in him while doing so. He believed, knowing not in what. He invoked, not knowing the names he called. A boy. Evohe. Dian y Glas in his most guileless guise.

When he was finished, he was upbraided by a bored teacher for poor scholarship. I waited until after class to seek him out.

I called his name three times and prairie blues eyes looked at me, gentle, mild. A boy's eyes, not a man. Scarcely an adult, and not at all in his heart, not yet. As filled with awe as a toddler, as trusting as a babe he listened to me. Winds, I told him. Storm and change. Oya and le Baron Samedi. Big-time pushy spirits. That invocation you're carrying, Tommy, is like a birthday party invitation, with a name and a time, asking someone to come. He seemed to understand.

That was a week ago. Today, wide eyed, he came to me. He pulled a chair in front of my desk, sitting split-legged and open. The world around us disintegrated and I tunneled on him. I pulled to me my mantle, my glamour, my full golden flower of ensorcellment. I don't know whats moved me to do such a thing outside of circle. I was priestess to him, using the allure of the space between the worlds. He ran his hands through his cornsilk hair. Told me his girlfriend abruptly switched her allegiances and that lust stalked him on the legs of new young women who came out of nowhere, following his clean American scent. He told me he felt the wind blowing through his bones and what was he supposed to do now?

A giggle like soft silken bubbles and I can count the beats in his smile before it comes. What to do? He's a child, he can't make the correct offerings of rum or a cigar. I give him an alternate idea, a way to thank the powers that be. He nods, eager and earnest. I would call him baby-witch if I were working as namer, but here I believe I will stand aside. I don't know what he will become.

***
All this was an afterthought to Beltane, which is my anniversary. My husband is so beautiful he makes me cry. He woke me on our day with kisses and the song that I walked down the aisle to become his wife. We spent the day alone, adventuring, reading each other stories, reflecting on where we have been, where we are, where we are going together. He is magnificent, and I am so lucky. A card from the Blues Brother informs us we are now permitted to advance to the next level. A gift from my sweet mother in law sweetens the whole day. A bottle of peach champagne from my mother recalls my bridal shower and I know I am happier now than the day I first tasted it. Lucky, lucky, lucky in love.

Summer is a comin' in...