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The sun floated up from the sea and painted away the
darkness. Myael watched intently as color bled into the
mountains, noting every blend and variation of red and blue and yellow. He listened as birds announced the coming of day, particularly to the way their voices mimicked the mingling spectrum of light which played upon the rock and soil as it cascaded through the valley. Flowers seemed to light from the darkness like candles, floating upon a sea of green as the shadows fled. He could hardly believe that only twenty years earlier the world had been on fire. Dawn is a resurrection. He thought this and noticed a grasshopper perched upon his metal wrist. He raised it to his face. With its bulbous eyes it seemed to peer at him and everywhere at the same time. I will call youBrehna. I had a friend named that once, and you look a bit like him, at least in the eyes. Myael stared intently at Brehna and Brehna at him and everywhere. I know who you are now, my friend Brehna, but I dont know what. Do you know what you are? Brehna responded by springing into the air and disappearing into the sea of grass. Hmmyou are a jumper, Brehna. I dont think the other Brehna was a jumper; he could fly, though. At this the grasshopper shot from the grass and landed upon Myael once again, this time upon his shoulder. A grass jumper. Brehna leapt from Myael and disappeared into the high grass once more, this time for good. Goodbye again, my friend Brehna the Grass-jumper. Myael opened his wings, a shimmering sweep of emerald light blazing from a mechanism which had unfolded from his upper back with a whirr and click. A low buzzing swelled as he started into the sky and the sound softened to a hum as his speed leveled off. The day had taken full hold of the Earth now, and from up high it looked more like swirls of paint on an artists pallet than a planet. Reddish-brown rock jutted from the green forests surrounded by blue waters. The tops of fluffy white clouds pulled apart like cotton candy in an eager childs fingers as he passed over them. Here the birds held dominion just as the angels once had. But that was a long time ago. Myael had always enjoyed the beauty of this place. He loved the trees and the many shimmering waters. He loved the birds and cows and squirrels. He loved even the spiders and snakes. But there was one creature that Myael did not love, or even like-- although he thought them to be the most beautiful of alland that was Mankind.
Mankind had once lived upon a planet which produced more food than any of them could ever have eaten. It grew from the trees above their heads and from the ground beneath their feet. It stood in herds upon the plains before them and swam in abundance through the waters which ran pure all about them upon the earth. One could fill his or her belly and quench his or her thirst with very little effort at all. But Mankind scarred the land with cities and became disconnected from nature. Food was no longer in abundance all around them; it had to be earned. They were forced then to labor for their food in trades and in factories and in office buildings that rose like swords against the Heavens. The waste these produced was dumped into the waters. Soon they could not drink from the streams and lakes. Tainted water was processed and pumped into their homes reeking of chlorine. Pure water was now coveted far away and shipped to them--if they could afford to pay a premium for it. It burned their stomachs and sickened their bodies. They labored even more to pay for pills to mask the pain and still they marched like drones to perform the processes that perpetuated this madness. They spent hour upon hour laboring to attain that which had once been all around them. Those who couldnt work became a burden to those who did, and those who could found themselves working to support these as well, working still longer and harder to pay for that which had once been free. Before the end the people were sickened and dehydrated and exhausted. They were easy prey for The Dark Kind when the gates were opened.
Myael flew over the land for much of the day, stopping periodically to admire the changing landscapes. Finally, as dusk crept up from beneath the world, he looked Eastward to ominous pillars of black smoke rising like jinn rubbed from magic lamps from a black scar upon the landscape. It was places like these he disliked the most. The cities of Man had spread like cancer upon the skin of the Earth. Myael couldnt understand their purpose. He was a little glad that Hell had opened up and destroyed them before they could spread any further, but also felt a twinge of remorse for the horror the people must have experienced.
Myael touched down in a small cemetery which sat in the center of a ring of bare maples high upon a hill. At one end it was corralled by asphalt and what had once been a steady stream of braying, wheeled machines rolling perpetually toward unknown destinations, now nothing but burned-out husks of rusting steel. At the other end, the land dropped off and, through a break in a high stone wall, the burning city could be viewed in its horrible entirety far below. Here another angel perched beneath the dark cloth of its ancient cloak beside an old man in tattered clothing drifting close to death. Why do you still do this, Elias? Myael came around to face the other angel. Its face was lost in shadowy folds of fabric. Heaven is lost to us, my friend. We must find a new purpose. The dark angel continued to stare at the old man from the shadow. I want them to know, Myael. I want them to know what Ive done. You made a mistakethat is all. Let us go from here. I beg you, my friend, let us leave this city together and find a new way. I must tell them my story. I need them to know why they must linger here. Elias caressed the dying mans cheek with a withered, colorless fingervery much unlike Myaels mechanical oneand he stirred. The man awoke and narrowed his bloodshot eyes, straining to look upon Eliass features through the shadow but could not. Myael bent to one knee in front of the old man and looked up at the hovering wraith he once knew as brother. Dont do this, Elias. Elias failed to acknowledge Myaels plea. The old mans mouth gaped open, milky threads of spittle stretching across his toothless maw as he began to whimper softly. Myael rose and walked back around the bench, his back to Elias. This is madness. Reliving the past will not redeem you. Redemption, brother? It is not redemption I seek. What, then? I do not understand this. Elias. I will not endure this anymore. If you ever find a way to sever yourself from this torment, seek me out. Farewell, brother. Myael paused a moment, not expecting a reply but half- hoping for one nonetheless. It did not come. Decidedly, he leaped into the sky, jetting away on wings of light. From atop a ruined building, Myael looked down mournfully upon the park where Elias was telling his story. Myael knew the story. Myael had lived the story with him. It was the tale of he and Eliass coming to this world. Metatron had commissioned them as Deathangels to guide the souls of the pious to Heavens gate, but Elias betrayed The Word to avenge a girl who reminded him of a love he had lost in another life. That was when he lost his beauty to the flame and the souls of Mankind were cursed to walk the Earth forever. But that was ancient history. Now the world had begun to renew itself. Or, as Myael thought of it, resurrect itself. Somehow the universe had become the Godmachine. Life no longer needed machines to sustain it. Myael did not believe that The Makers could have conceived of this. He imagined that whatever was responsible for creating life now must be the force that created even the First Children, ancient as they were. Goodbye, Elias.
Elias watched as Myael streaked away into the night and became nothing more than a pinpoint of light in the distance. When the point of light was no more, he rolled his head back toward the old man. I loved oncelong ago.
Myael soared high above the ocean. A copper road lay upon it as the suns apex slid below and he thought then of the Ghostwalk, of the way to Heaven. How many souls had he and Elias led upon the shimmering path? Countless. He remembered then the many talks he and Elias had as they ambled through battlefields, harvesting souls from bodies which were much too young to have fallen away from them. Myael soon came upon a shore at the base of a cliff where black water lapped a beach of glittering sand. Atop the cliff a great forest of twisted deadfall rolled out for miles before him. He glided over the treetops, tapping at the tops of a few with his hand as he flew, watching the furry scirus, as he had named them, skitter away along the branches. At the edge of the wood began a vast desert littered with expanses of glass where great energies had been released. Upon one such expanse, a lone wagon drawn by a pair of crocodile- skinned steeds lurched and teetered across jagged breaks in the glasss surface. Its cargo shifted clumsily beneath a tattered tarpaulin at the drivers back and he looked up from beneath the brim of his sun-bleached fedora as Myael passed overhead to expose a weather-beaten face bearing a horrible grimace. Myael dismissed this as coincidence, as no human could see a Deathangel unless it was the angels desire or said human had met with his or her demise. So Myael soared on. Over the crest of a shining dune, Myael spied a troop of armored soldiers rolling across the desert upon many wheeled machines. They were pointed toward the direction of the little wagon. These did not look up. He had heard tale of Unions armies driving back the Dark Kind, but had never seen Union, rumored to be an android infused with the minds of a thousand men siphoned from its unwilling prisoners. Its armies were born of the dead. Fearless and tireless, they made Unions rule absolute.
The sound of gunfire from behind caused Myael pause. He hovered over the vast desert in contemplation, looking back the way he had come and then forward again. After a moment he doubled back toward the caravan of soldiers. He arrived shortly at the site of a massacre. The ghosts of frightened children milled about the ruined wagon as undead soldiers clambered back into their vehicles. The odd wagon- master was nowhere in sight. Myael dropped to the glass surface as the vehicles lurched westward. Do not be afraid. Come to me, children. He gently led a young boy away from the pile of ash that was once his body. The children quieted and gathered about Myael. You are beyond harm, little ones. There is nothing more to fear. A young girl peered up at Myael, eyes deep and wide. Are you an angel? I am. Are you going to take us to Heaven? Not Heaven, no. But I can take you someplace better than this. Six lights upon Myaels head came to life, two red; two blue; two yellow, and he knitted a doorway atop the glass. With another play of light the door opened. Inside now, little ones. There is a garden I have created for you beyond. The children passed through cautiously until only the young girl and Myael remained. Go along now. I dont want to. I want to go to Heaven. She spoke softly but Myael sensed her willfulness. She would not be swayed from her decision easily. The way is lost, young one. I am sorry. I was lost in the woods once and I found my way home by following the geese. They fly south in the winter, you know. The honking-fliers, you mean? Yes, I had noticed. We could do that, couldnt we? Hmm. You are a thinker. Do you have a name or shall I give you one? I have one. Myael lifted his brow expectantly, but the girl only stared up at him. Is it a secret, little thinker? Massie. My name is Massie Kensington. Myael made a face as if he had caught wind of something foul. Dont worry, I will think of another for you. Whats your name? Myael. Myael proclaimed proudly. Massie crinkled her nose. Ill think of one for you, too. Myael furled his brow but Massie didnt notice. Her attention was pointed toward the sky where winged figures could be seen soaring through the clouds toward a mountain in the distance. Taking Myael by a forefinger, she began to lead him in their direction. Myael looked up but could see nothing but the clouds above. Where are you going, little one? Massie pointed toward the mountain set upon the horizon. Following the geese. Myael continued to stare up at the sky as he followed. After a moment he lifted the girl from the ground and placed her on his back, her legs resting on his wing mechanism. He alighted into the sky with his little passenger and started toward the mountain in the distance. As Myael drew closer to the mountain, he could now see the winged figures darting through the clouds. They were fast, faster than he was willing to go with the child on his back, and when he attempted to move close enough to view one clearly it would dart away again deeper into the clouds. They reached the mountaintop in a short while and Myael could see clearly a jagged rift torn in reality behind a withered bush. The rift burned red and yellow and green against the purple sky, its edges crackling like the edges of water thrown into a pan of hot oil. Massie gasped. Its on fire. That is no fire, little thinker. Fascinating. Its the gate to Heaven; I know it is. Where it leads I cannot know. This is wrong here. This should not exist. I wish my friend Elias were here to see this. Is he an angel like you? An angel, yes, but not like me. He was more like you once. Myael could see clearly now the forms of the figures in the clouds as the creatures dipped in and out of the rift. They possessed humanoid forms but had the features of animals and rode upon wings of either feathers or a thin membrane stretched between long fingers which grew from their backs. Are those angels? I have seen creatures like them, but they cannot be here; unless. Myael stepped cautiously through the rift in a blinding flash of light.
At the edge of the hill overlooking the ruined city, Elias stood in contemplation. Behind him, the old mans spirit stood lamenting over his corpse sprawled lifelessly on the ground before him. Far in the distance a burst of white light bounced against the heavens. Elias snapped his head upward, revealing the ruin of his face. Myael. With a step, bone bled over his ruined flesh and bony splines unfolded from his back, coming alive with a flash of black light and lifting him off into the moonlit sky.
Myael emerged on a mountaintop overlooking a plush green valley. The sun shone brightly down on a twinkling river which twisted out of sight like a glimmering, never-ending snake. Jutting from the rock face, a castle had been carved into the side of the mountain upon the back of a great stone bird. From its hooked beak a tremendous waterfall gushed, down into the twisting river far below. Is this it? Is it Heaven? Not quite, little one, but I know this place. If the Ghostwalk still exists here, we may be able to get there.
Barry, Dan. Chronicle of An American Execution. Norton Sampler: Short Essays For Composition. Cooley, Thomas. New York. W.W. Norton & Company. 2010. 9780393929355. Pp. 66-69