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Chinonso Ani @Myloved $3.87   

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The first image is a garden of palms where light drips like oil from fronds. Two men bend over a table clothed in linen the color of old bones. The elder lifts a quill that is not a quill but a splinter of sun, drawing circles in the air above pages that breathe. The younger presses his brow to his palm, as if the weight of the open books has become his skull. Between them, three volumes lie stacked like altars, their edges gilded by the same fire that melts the candle beside the cross. The text is unreadable, yet the elder’s lips shape it into silence. The younger’s ear drinks the hush. Palms arch overhead, green vaults where parrots once nested scripture. Now only the rustle of leaves turns the page. The second image is dusk settling into the same garden. The elder now wears spectacles that catch the last gold, his beard a white river pouring over the open book. The younger kneels on stone warmed by the day’s prayer. A single candle stands sentinel between them, its flame a thin monk reciting vespers. The books have multiplied; one rests in the elder’s hands like a child, another lies on the table, its spine cracked open to a verse that bleeds light. The elder’s finger traces a line that is not ink but incision. The younger’s eyes are closed, yet he sees. Behind them, palms fade into shadow, their fronds now black calligraphy against the sky. The air smells of wax and frankincense and the slow rot of parchment. The third image is nightfall, or perhaps the moment before dawn. The elder stands behind the table, hands clasped over a rosary of red beads. The younger kneels lower, forehead almost touching the open page. Two books lie side by side, their texts facing each other like mirrors. A brass censer exhales a thin ghost of smoke that curls around the words. The elder’s robe is the color of ash after fire. The younger’s is the color of water before it remembers the river. Palms lean in from the edges, their trunks braided like ancient scribes. The candle is gone; only the books glow, as if the scripture has learned to photosynthesize. The elder’s mouth is closed, yet the younger hears. The younger’s eyes are open, yet the elder sees. The fourth image is the same garden, the same table, the same books, but now the elder is seated, the younger still kneeling. A small wooden bowl rests between the open volumes, filled with dark liquid that reflects the sky. The elder dips two fingers and marks the younger’s forehead. The mark is not a cross but a spiral, the same spiral that once etched the stones in the dry riverbed. The books are closed now, their covers clasped with bronze serpents. The candle has returned, taller, its flame steady as a heartbeat. Palms sway though there is no wind. The younger rises slowly, water dripping from his robe though he never entered the river. The elder smiles without moving his mouth. The scripture is no longer on the page. It is in the spiral on the forehead, in the smoke from the censer, in the rustle of palms that have begun to speak in tongues of green.

Chinonso Ani @Myloved $3.87   

109
Posts
2
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