The World as We Know It

Home > Other > The World as We Know It > Page 24
The World as We Know It Page 24

by Krusie, Curtis


  I watched the crops begin to pop up from the ground on either side of the road. Grass began to green, and trees filled out with leaves. Food became more abundant as vegetation came to life. Animals came out of hibernation, and the world sprang anew, as it always had. The flowers are always blooming somewhere. Under both clear blue skies and the dark clouds of springtime storms I walked, day after day, homeward bound. The sun of the next day would dry me from the previous day’s rain, and though it would inevitably rain again, the sun would always return. I passed flat fields with farmhouses, silos, and windmills. Hay bales spread across gently rolling hills. Herds of cattle. Wild horses. I would hear the patter of hooves from behind and watch as they passed by with magnificent beauty and speed, and I would smile and keep on walking, just another creature of the earth. All of that was juxtaposed by billboards still strewn along the sides of the road, then falling apart and falling down. The green signs divulging my distance from this city or that city were beginning to fade and rust. I wondered how long it would be before there was no longer any evidence remaining of the old world. Someone once told me that if humans suddenly vanished from the face of the earth, it would be ten thousand years before everything we had left behind was gone. What if, I wondered, we initiated the revolution on our own and then stuck around to watch it unfold?

  There was one particular horse I noticed, from a distance at first. She looked familiar somehow when I saw her watching me, walking warily alone through the tall grass of an adjacent field, glancing over toward me occasionally as if to ensure that her path mirrored mine. She followed from early morning until I made my bed in the grass to sleep while she observed from across the road. Her company was comforting, reserved though it may have been. She remained at a distance the first day, but on the second I saw no sign of her. As I moved east, I scanned the surrounding landscape from sunrise to sunset, hoping that she might return, but she seemed to have made her own way, so I continued on mine a bit lonelier.

  The next day, to my great delight, she appeared again in the distance; and again the next, drawing a bit nearer each morning. In a week or so, she reluctantly made her way onto the road, on the opposite side first, and then she crossed the median over to mine. When I would stop, she would stop. When I would eat, so would she. When I would wake, she would be waiting there, her shadow shielding my eyes from the sun. The longer she stayed with me, the fonder I grew of her presence, though I still could not make sense of it. She was not threatening, but rather she seemed curious about me, perhaps even more so than I was about her. Mostly I wondered why she felt so familiar. I had never seen the mare before, but her seemingly omniscient eyes reminded me of Nomad’s. It was as if she were watching over me.

  As we walked together, I began speaking to her. “Good morning,” I greeted her as each day began, and she would reply with a nicker. I would tell her tales of my travels. It kept me occupied and reminded me of where I had been, the things I had done, and the people I had met and grown to love. She was eager to listen. Sometimes we walked in silence, and that was OK too.

  “What brought you here?” I asked rhetorically one evening as the sun was setting behind us.

  As if on cue, I began to hear voices in the distance, carried by the thin evening air—singing voices. I looked toward a far-off wheat field standing tall, having not been harvested the previous season, where thousands of tiny yellow lights glowed and flickered in the gentle breeze. As the night fell, we drew closer, the lights growing brighter and the voices stronger. I left the road and the horse followed, headed into the golden field shining in the moonlight.

  The harmonizing vocals of “Hallelujah” seemed to seep between the stalks as I pushed them aside to make a path. The grain grew taller than my head, blocking out any view but that of the stars above. Through it I was drawn by the sound of a simple song in a simple place, both eternally beautiful even without the compliment of one another. I was quiet with my steps—as quiet as I could be—the horse following as delicately as possible.

  We came to a clearing where the wheat ended, overlooking a vast meadow of gentle hills. There, spread across the meadow, was an astounding sight: an immense circle of people—thousands of them, maybe tens of thousands—all holding candles and swaying together as they sang. Those on the rim opposite me were so far away that they were invisible, except for the tiny flames flickering in front of each of them. From the center resonated a magnificent sound, where all of the voices projected to a single point around which they all orbited. Only by listening from that single point could one truly comprehend it all, but finding myself near enough to feel it and hear it from any perspective, I could at least begin.

  I emerged and began to walk the circle’s perimeter, the mare still close behind. No heads turned to inquire as to our presence. It was as if not a soul noticed us, too entranced by their own song to be distracted by anything outside of the perfection and beauty of their world. The light of their candles cast their shadows behind them, betraying no flaw, no gender, no race or religion, and no evil or pain. Each was of equal value, fitting into its own perfect place as part of a sum greater than its individual parts. Without any one, the circle would have been broken.

  I wandered through their shadows for what seemed like miles in the dim light of the candles and the moon. The wheat on the other side of me began to sway as the night breeze suddenly picked up, and just then, a separation appeared between two of those shadows next to me. I stopped and gazed through the opening they had created, directly between them to that single point in the center of the meadow. They did not move back, nor did they turn to look at me. All just stood singing as they had been.

  I looked to the horse, who gazed back at me for just a moment. Then she lowered her head, turned away, galloped back into the glistening wheat, and disappeared.

  Awestruck and intrigued by the surreal sequence, I was compelled to join their circle and fill the space that had opened as if to invite me in, and I found myself almost involuntarily swaying and singing with the mysterious choir. I didn’t ask questions, nor did my neighbors. We simply sang together through the night with all the love in our hearts.

  In the soft grass of that meadow was where I awoke the following morning, and in the fields, people continued to sing and dance. There was no village that I saw—just trees and crops. Down the hill, musicians played woodwinds, the sounds of which were in the air everywhere. Music was perpetual and ubiquitous. What little was said came through song, and everything they did was a joyous and spiritual celebration.

  Life there seemed to be divinely inspired and powered. Love was everywhere. The settlement was so massive that I questioned whether it had boundaries at all. Perhaps it spread into eternity. There were no plots of land or places to claim as one’s own, but rather home was everywhere. I watched as an old artisan constructed a pan flute by hand, which was given to me to share in their joy and so that I would always have a piece of the place, and, together, we made music through the day. When night fell again, I slept in the open beneath the stars.

  The next morning they were gone—all the thousands of people and all evidence of any settlement. As abruptly as they had appeared to me from the road, they had vanished without a trace, and my only assurance that they had been real was the pan flute in my hand. Placing it within my satchel, I again headed east.

  18

  HOPE

  The first marathon runner didn’t live long enough for a victory lap. They say that as soon as his message was delivered and his mission complete, he dropped dead.

  People still ask me how I made the last leg of the journey—over five hundred miles—in five days on my own two feet. Honestly, I say, I don’t remember. I had been tracking the dates between the time I had left the mountains and my time in the mysterious community of the plains. From that point, all I know is the date I left there and the date I returned home. Everything in between is blank. But, I say, anything is possible with faith and love. They’re an inseparable pair. Real faith d
oes not come without love, and real love does not come without faith. As long as we hold onto those, there will always be hope for tomorrow.

  I remember hearing voices as I drew near Eden Valley, and then the sight of the old gravel road off the highway. The bright green foliage of early spring radiated in the afternoon sun. As I wound through the woods, I saw children playing. In clearings, there were cabins that had not been there before and people I didn’t recognize at work in the fields. There were more people as I drew near the site of the old farm, passing me on the road and nodding with smiles to greet me. None of them knew me. They knew not that I had lived there and left before they had even arrived. They knew not where I had been or what I had done over the last year while they had built their new homes and new lives. I wondered if they had heard of me.

  Down the road, I walked through an increasingly dense population, and what I came upon was a whole town that had grown from what had begun as a single cabin. There were buildings everywhere of timber, stone, and brick. In the center of town stood one with a sign in front that read “Eden Valley Postal Depot.” People filed through the doors to deliver and pick up mail, a carrier on horseback leaving just as another arrived. From where had he come, I wondered, and to where would she go? Perhaps Canada or Mexico. Beyond, even.

  Quietly I roamed past the communal canopy and past the place where we used to make fires that had become the town circle. I followed the old creek, still rushing strong behind the buildings, the thick woods where I had lost my first deer still flourishing on the other side. Perhaps that was where Gabe and Mike hunted at that very moment. I passed the stables where the town’s horses were kept, undoubtedly where I could find Noah. Nearby, a new market had been erected where farmers distributed their harvest. They came and went with horse-drawn carts, as I imagined my old friends Daniel and John did daily. Birds sang from rooftops and scavenged for leftovers dropped on the road along the way.

  Then I came to Paul and Sarah’s cabin, clearly aged and weathered by comparison to every other structure around it, but still standing solid. So many things had changed since I had been gone, but even more had not. The building looked the same as it had on the day I had left. Overhead, clouds moved in and drew a shade from behind the old cabin and across the road, and I turned to see as they passed over Maria’s and my front door, there before me.

  My body began to tremble at the sight of my home as it became suddenly real how close I was to seeing the one I had been longing for throughout my journey. The one who had kept me moving when I thought I could take no more. Maria and all that she meant to me had become a fading reality, one that I had been more desperate to grasp with each day that had passed, but had inevitably slipped further and further away. At times, my memories of her had felt no more real than the terrible dreams I had experienced along the way. Yet there I was, in the moment I had been yearning for since that first day a year ago, finally realized.

  I stepped slowly toward the front door, then hanging on metal hinges, glass windows on either side. Fighting the sudden weight of my arm, I lifted it to knock, my knuckles still quivering as the sound echoed in my ears. What an unglamorous way to make my return. I was filthy, dressed again in tattered rags. My hair was a mess, my beard unkempt, my body thin and frail, nearly empty handed, save for the satchel with my two most precious documents and the wooden pan flute inside. There was no grand welcoming party, and I would not have expected or even wanted one. My single and petrifying need was to see my wife, as wonderful and as beautiful as she had been the last time I saw her.

  At the door, I stood waiting for an answer for what seemed like an eternity. Then, behind me, I felt her. I turned away from the door and toward the road. There, frozen in disbelief, Maria stood in the middle of it holding a basket of freshly cleaned laundry. A gust of wind caught her hair, glistening in the sunlight as the clouds broke above. In all her simplicity and innocence, she was the most beautiful sight I had ever seen, and I fell in love all over again.

  She stood there gazing back at me for a moment, speaking not a word. Then she dropped the basket, and toward each other we ran, faster than I had ever run before; faster than I had scrambled for my life from the alligator; faster than my legs had sprinted after Thomas when he had stolen my horse; faster than Nomad had galloped with the herd in the north; faster than my heart had beat when the storm had overtaken us on the Pacific coast; faster than my hands had struck the first wolf in the mountains. We embraced with a passion of lovers long lost but finally reunited, a passion for which there is no greater metaphor. Our arms had never before held one another so tightly as they did in that most glorious, most redeeming moment of my life.

  As we stood there in the road holding each other, rain began to fall. It was a gentle rain, like the one I had awoken to when I was saved in the northwest, the sun still beaming through the falling droplets as if the sky itself were crying with joy. Around our feet, her laundry blew in the wind, and we didn’t let go as the rain drenched us.

  “I love you,” she muttered in my ear in the sweetest of voices.

  “I love you,” I whispered back.

  She cried, and I felt her warm tears mix with the cold rain on my shoulder.

  “I waited for you,” she said.

  “I knew you would.”

  “You really can’t leave me again.”

  “I won’t. Ever.”

  Love had never felt so real as it did in that moment. We shared then, and still do, a love as strong as I imagine two people in this world can, and having been without it for so long, I truly knew that I could not live if it were permanently taken away. Without love, there was no life. Without love, there was no hope for our future. I knew then that we would be together forever—not just Maria and me, but the human race as a whole. We had suffered together, and through love, we would overcome all of our tribulations and all of the terrible things people had done in the past to one another and to the world we called home.

  I opened my eyes, and through the blur of my own tears, I saw Paul and Sarah standing in front of their old cabin, watching us with blissful smiles. Gradually, the rest of our family and friends began to arrive, and we celebrated our reunion until the sun went down, Maria never releasing her grasp on my hand. I had never slept as peacefully as I did that night with her at long last again in my arms, right where she belonged.

  I settled back into life in Eden Valley, still not entirely set on an occupation, but I was OK with that. I’d had enough of postal work, and it was time to move on to something new—preferably something at home that time. Finding where we belong is all part of the journey, and we should not be distraught over an unknown end but celebrate all that we can learn along the way. I had made plenty of mistakes, and I still do. I had taken paths never before traveled, but with the rough terrain came lessons that I never would have learned had I always followed the roads paved by others.

  Though I still sometimes inquired, it didn’t matter how the collapse happened. Nobody placed blame. We were all guilty, and recognizing that was the first step toward rebirth. Then we had to forgive ourselves, learn from our mistakes, and continue to learn as we inevitably made more. We had been graced with an opportunity to start over with a contemporary knowledge of what works and what does not, and though humanity had been given this opportunity many times before, this time we had finally recognized the gift it was. As we rebuilt, we began to reprioritize. The care of people came first. Our construction and manufacturing methods focused on sustainability—a symbiotic relationship with the earth. We began to produce energy from renewable sources, and it wasn’t long after that Eden Valley had electricity, telephone services were functional, and we reconnected as a whole with the outside world. We could have moved back to our old house by then, but it no longer felt like home.

  A new economy emerged across the world, dominated by providers of food, construction and fabrication, nutrition and medicine, energy production and distribution, education, and communications. There was no w
hite collar or blue collar and no feud or animosity between classes. Equal respect was paid to every person in every field because all were recognized as equally vital to our prosperity.

  More of us learned to play musical instruments, create beautiful art, and speak foreign languages because our schedules afforded us the time to learn and achieve the things we had always aspired to but never could before. The obligations and responsibilities of that old life had been too demanding. But life had been simplified. We exercised our minds learning, reading, writing, telling stories, and enriching ourselves through interaction with people and spiritual exploration, and we celebrated frequently with festivals and feasts. There was so much to celebrate.

  Once our basic necessities were satisfied, it was an easy life to adapt to. The functionality of the system was dependent on the participation of every person, but leisure was as much a part of it as work. There was time for parents to raise their own children and to provide them with the attention necessary for socially functional youth. Likewise, the elderly were provided for in recognition that their contributions had already been made. There was time for us to expand our minds and to think in abstract terms, unconstrained by deadlines and competition. There was time to enjoy and experience all that life on earth had to offer and all the natural beauty of our world—to focus on the things that were truly important.

  Maria and I often spent our evenings doing just that, sitting on a nearby bluff and watching the sunset over a sprawling green valley. We would bring a bottle of wine made from our own vineyards and gaze as the colors of the sky changed and faded into the night. On occasion, Paul and Sarah would accompany us.

  “The Farmers’ Almanac predicts a good year,” said Paul one evening.

 

‹ Prev