YOU
CAN FEEL IT IN YOUR BONES
BETWEEN THE TIGRESS AND EUPHRATES RIVERS
A Congealing of Spirits on an Island
By Izzy Ess of Spiritualness
Luke
could feel it in his bones. A storm was
brewing. He was sailing quite alone in
his small sailboat on the lake behind his cottage. The wind was picking up. It was all he could do to steer toward the
shore of Bathurst Island in the very middle of Lake Bathurst. Bathurst was becoming hard to see as rain and
sleet bombarded him. Exhausted and
soaking wet, he grounded his boat on a small sandy beach, jumped into the
shallow water and pulled his boat completely out of the water onto the sandy
dune. He pulled his sail down and
secured it. Looking around, he spotted a
kind of hut in front of the pine trees in the middle of the tiny island on
which he found himself. Running hard and
dodging rain drops, he got to the open door of the thatched hut and stepped
inside. Luke surprised a scorpion which
scurried off toward a tiny hole in the floor boards and disappeared under the
floor. He found a cupboard with some dry
towels and towelled off. Ensuring that
the hut was unoccupied, he took his clothes off and dried himself. There was an oversized old sweater in a
drawer of a small dresser. He pulled the
sweater over his head and pushed his arms into the sleeves. He retrieved an old pair of sailor’s pants
with a rope for a belt. He stepped into
the old pants and tied a bow with the rope.
He’d already taken off his Nike boat-top shoes and turned them upside
down to drain the water out and let them dry.
The wind was getting fiercer.
Suddenly, the thatching on the roof was blown away. He spotted a trap door in the corner of the
one room hut and lifted up the door.
Underneath, there was a spiral stair case made of wrought iron. He descended.
Luke was surprised that there was
a stone constructed dungeon underneath the floor. It was huge, perhaps a hundred feet long and
a hundred feet wide. And, in the middle
of the dungeon was a fireplace with a blazing fire. The fire provided light and heat. Around the hearth were old fashioned wooden
Muskoka chairs. He sat in one and
enjoyed the warmth of the wood log fire, and fell asleep.
When
he awoke, he tried to sit up but couldn’t.
He had been strapped tightly into the chair and couldn’t wiggle
free. His arms were tightly held by
leather straps, as were his legs. A
blanket had been used to cover him. It was
comfortable but the restriction of his arms and legs and waist did not allow
him to arise, at all. Luke’s eyes became
accustomed to the dimness of the glowing logs, on top of which some flickering
remains of the blazing fire in front of which he’d slept. He startled when he saw a women with a spear
appear in front of him. She wore an
animal skin outfit with a single shoulder strap. She had a husky, sexy voice and told him, he
was safe and quite secure. She warned
him not to struggle or to try getting out of the old chair. Her left breast was exposed and indicated
someone who was about thirty years of age.
Her shoulders were quite broad and muscular. Her legs were long and shapely. Her feet were bare.
“Greetings,”
she said with a Richard Burton English accent.
“My name is Hildegard. You can
call me Hildie. What’s your name, my
handsome slave?”
When
Luke attempted to reply, his voice was hoarse.
He cleared his throat and was able to say, “Lucas, Ma’am. Most people called me Luke. Where in effin’ Hell am I?”
“I
call it Effinhell, myself,” Hildie quietly replied and smiled. “I come from Effingham in England. I’ve been here for over a year. I don’t keep count of the days, so I’m not
really sure how long it’s really been. I
have some bad news for you and us. Your
boat was struck by lightning and is now a pile of ashes. The sail may still be useful because the rain
had soaked it and it singed but didn’t burn.
The name of the boat was still legible.
It was the Mariah, eh? The wind
has let up and it’s not raining as hard as it was when you arrived last
evening. You’re comfortable, I
hope. You must be hungry and thirsty and
stiff, I assume. Breakfast is getting
done. Would you like me to undo your
straps so you can stretch and walk off your stiffness.” She looked at his groin as she uncovered him
and smiled. “May I help you with this
other kind of stiffness?”
Luke
couldn’t say no to this kind offer and nodded. It felt wonderful when she bent over and took
his stiffness in her mouth and tongued it.
He reached a climax quickly and shot his hot load into her throat. She smiled at him as he unclenched his eyes
to see her now as truly beautiful. He
offered his services and she smiled again.
She nodded her consent and did a backward bend presenting Luke her
private parts which were exposed by her positioning herself in front of Luke’s
face. He bent his head forward and
licked her clitoris until she screamed and convulsed.
“Thank
you Lucas. That was grand. It’s been a while.” She did a neat gymnastic nip-up to a standing
position over Luke and slowly undid his restrictive straps. Then she shook his hand with a very firm
grip. Luke responded with his own firm
grip. She held on to assist his getting
to his feet. He felt a little unsteady
but recovered quickly. Luke lunged for
her but she was prepared. She punched
him in the stomach and he fell to his knees in pain. She menaced him with her serious-looking
spear and he held up his hands in a gesture of surrender. Hildie smiled and said, “If you do that
again, I’ll spear you through and hang you on the wall and eat your flesh for
lunch. Understood?”
Luke
nodded his head and let his arms fall to the floor. Hilda helped him stand, all the while keeping
the spear point aimed at his heart. He
gently pushed the spear aside and said, “You win, my pretty lass. I will co-operate and be a model
prisoner. I am your prisoner, aren’t I?”
“I
was wishing for a partner, Luke. I don’t
want a prisoner. I need assistance and
you’re the first person that I’ve seen for a long time. Deal?”
She offered her strong hand and he grasped it firmly and said quietly
and submissively, “I’m your man Friday, Ms. Hildie. I am really hungry. I haven’t eaten since yesterday morning. Whatcha got?”
Hildie smiled and kissed him lightly on the cheek. “I have a duck on a spit over the fire. It should be ready now. All I have to drink is some cold water from a
spring that supplies it close to my dungeon.
I searched your boat. You had
nothing to eat on it. But you did have
some unscathed cans of beer. Would you
like some?” Luke smiled and said, “Oh
would I!”
The
new couple ate the well-cooked tender duck and guzzled down the warm Budweiser
beers after clicking the cans together in a silent toast to their fresh
partnership. Thereafter, while it was
still pouring outside, they walked around naked and brought each other up to
date on what had been their former lives:
Luke
was a successful doctor in Toronto where he had a large practice as a
Psychiatrist. He had finished his
medical school at the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto. He completed his residency and qualifying
examinations at Henderson Psychiatric Hospital in Hamilton, Ontario. He was divorced and had no children. He had come to Bathurst in the cottage
district in Northern Ontario for a well-deserved break, some rest and
recreation. After his divorce, he had
dated several women, mainly nurses at the hospital and mainly for one-night or
one-weekend stands.
Hildie
was a nurse in Effingham and had been living with a young physician who had
left her for a younger nurse. There had
been no children and she had had two induced, first trimester abortions. Basically, she avoided men and dating and
spent her leisure time with female friends, in bars and restaurants. She had decided to travel to Canada for a
long vacation to do some quiet thinking about herself and her relationships
with kith and kin. Her large family in
Effingham was quite supportive and she spent a lot of time with her siblings on
a large farm north of London, England.
She still thought a lot about the doctor, whom she thought had loved her
for about three years before he split and took off with his other woman, who’d
been waiting for their splitting up. She
had rented a cottage on the mainland, probably in proximity to Luke’s. She had taken up sailing and had been trapped
on Bathurst Island, just like Luke. Her
boat had been destroyed and she had survived by building her underground
shelter and eating whatever fish or fowl she could spear. In addition there was the fortuitous finding
of a fresh water spring and rivulet and several bushes full of wild berries
that didn’t poison her and were quite delicious when ripe.
Both
of them were pleasantly surprised by the ease of sexual relations that
occurred. They discussed it and found
they both were always hoping they would find someone to love. It seemed to be love at first sight for both
of them. There was never any urgency to
leave the island. It was obvious that
they were happy to have found each other, even in these odd circumstances. Easily, they established “household” duties
and routines and practically whistled while they worked cleaning up and making
each other comfortable. They gathered
logs and tried to lash together a make-shift raft with a centre post for what
was left of Luke’s sail and some ropes that had survived. The first attempts produced some
possibilities but everytime they tried to sail their crafts, they sank into the
shallow water around the out of the way island.
None of the electronics survived so that no radio contact could be made
with anyone on the mainland. Some small
airplanes fly over the island from time to time, but no pilot apparently saw
them waving desperately. They spelt,
“HELP,” with some rocks on the small sandy beach. That wasn’t spotted by any of the pilots who
flew over, or near, Bathurst Island. Nor
did the fires they lit on the beach attract any boaters that they could see on
the Lake.
About
a year went by, and then, two. Hildie
became pregnant and both of them delivered a healthy baby girl. She was delightful and had a happy
personality. They expanded their
underground dungeon and even built some rooms extending out from the central
area with the fire pit. They built crude
mattresses for their beds and some crude furniture for tables and chairs. They speculated that someone had lived on the
Island some years back and had abandoned some Muskoka chairs which still were
utile. They tried building a small
rocking chair for Suzanne, their happy daughter, who was delighted with her
wooden toys that they contrived. Suzanne
was as bright as both her parents and learned to walk and talk almost right
away. They started keeping track of the
passing days and seasons. They figured
that Suzanne was three years and three months old when help finally arrived.
A
relatively large sailing vessel seemed to be coming right at them when they
spotted it during a picnic lunch on the small beach. They dressed in their make-shift clothes so
as not to greet the visitors stark naked, which was their usual state. They could see the large craft throw its
anchor overboard, about fifty feet from the shoreline of Bathurst Island. They watched excitedly as four sailors in
striped t-shirts and white sailors pantaloons, paddled toward them. There were two women and two men in the
self-inflating rubber raft. Hildie, Luke
and Suzanne waved enthusiastically as the sailors waved back at them with their
paddles uplifted.
Suddenly,
the skies darkened with thunder clouds and it began to rain. It was a driving rain with frequent lightning. One large thunder bolt struck the large
sailboat and it was set afire. Another
self-inflating raft was thrown into the shallow water and four more sailors got
aboard and started paddling toward the other raft and the shore of Bathurst
Island. The unthinkable had
happened. Now there were eleven
stranded, wet and exhausted people on the Island. Everyone exchanged stories in the evening by
the dungeon fire while the duck was roasting.
In
excursions to the burnt up boat, they found some frozen food and bottled wine
that could be brought to shore and consumed.
The electronic gear for radioing was irreparably destroyed. They tried to fashion flares that could be
rocketed into the air. There was never a
response that could have led to rescue effort for the group of eleven new
friends. The arrivals were all siblings
of a large family from Cobalt, Ontario, north of North Bay on Lake
Nipissing. The family had been enriched
by the silver in the silver mine underneath Cobalt. The grandparents had built themselves a
lovely mansion with their silver riches.
The mansion accommodated the miner’s four children. The group that landed was the eight siblings
of one of those children. This sibling
group, four women and four men, were on an extended vacation and had hired the
sailboat recently to sail around the Bathurst Lake. Their aim was to just relax and take a break
from their busy lives in New Liskeard where all of them were very highly
educated professions in the fields of Medicine, Nursing and Law. Later on, they estimated that their mean IQ
was 145 amongst the ten stranded sailors and Suzanne, the only true “NBI, a Native
Bathurst Islander.”
The
group of eleven were very co-operative.
Plans were made to extend the rooms underground and make some fancy
furniture and more mattresses.
Initially, they shared their body heats beside each other on the
mattresses. Some of the brothers and
sisters helped each other with their sexual needs, wants and desires. A homosexual couple emerged, which surprised no
one in particular. Incestuousness was
not a major problem with the males and females who were siblings. Even Suzanne was quite co-operative with the
sleeping arrangements and the sharing of the body heats and certain private
parts. No one yelled or screamed at
night, while murmuring and whispering abounded.
Luke and Hildie enjoyed conviviality with all their guests and slept
around, a bit, at first. One particular
brother and his sister were becoming popular because of certain body attributes
that were attractive to the group. They
accommodated everyone that asked to be accommodated without any reservations or
apparent inhibitions. Suzanne was also
popular as a sleeping partner because of her delight at finding something new
to do, or someone new to do a favour for.
A standing ovation was a common morning habit for just about everyone
who was accommodating. All had quickly
realized that accommodation was the way to go, instead of making habits of
adhering to a set pattern of daily life.
The cooking and the cleaning were effortless, apparently. Pitching in with everything made life a happy
thing. Spirituality abounded and a
Heaven here on Earth was quietly established.
About
a year later, the whirring of some helicopter blades, like a track from the
album of Pink Floyd’s, The Wall, get everyone out on the beach, stark naked, to
wave enthusiastically. Another two
helicopters arrived with cables and cradles to get them all aboard. The helipad at Bathurst Hospital drew a huge
crowd of staff to help the group of eleven naked rescued people get blanketed
and led to the ER of the hospital.
Everyone was allowed unlimited calling privileges. Hildie called her kith and kin in Effingham,
Great Britain, to tell them she was safe and sound. The others called their kith in kin in the
Tri-city area of Ontario and in other cities in Southern Ontario. They were all discharged and declared quite
fit to leave. The Group of Eleven
gathered in the cafeteria and suffered through a bland, mundane, hospital
lunch. Reporters arrived from many TVnetworks
and newspapers, locally and from around the world to interview, tape and
photograph the members of the Group. The
crowds dispersed around supper time. The
Group was treated to Bathurst’s finest Restaurant, The Haven, for the supper
hour, which was undisturbed by outsiders.
Hildie
spoke the unspoken deep desire for all of them.
They asked if there was anywhere they could reside that would preserve
the accommodating life-styles that they had developed. The wealthier of them, drew up a plan for all
of them. It was quickly adopted. They would return to whatever place they
called their home and meet again, in six months’ time, on Bathurst Island.
In
six months, they didn’t need the excuse of a thunder storm and lightning strikes
to make a small castle and bigger dungeon on the Island to accommodate all the
members of the Group of Eleven. They had
found their Peace on Earth with Good Will toward the Men and Women and the
Children. The berries, fish, birds and
small animals sufficed for food, forever.
And, the fresh water spring and rivulet, now dubbed, “D’Eau de la
Suzanne,” also flowed forever in the second Eden Garden since Babylon. No Lucifer or Lilith would appear to help
them with their normal needs, wants and desires.
Amen and Hallelujah!
THE
END
© Izzy Sommers, MD
Welland, Canada
August 18, 2013
assuming we are really we and not a figment of someone's imagination, then, the albatross is not extinct but re-emerges in the game of golf, the phoenix rises in the state of arizona and the pterodactyl has been born again as air force one. Of course, the horse was once a tree-free creature with 10 toes and hairy clothes and started in the west and immigrated cross the bering sea as yaks came this way and were slaughtered by the white invading herds of the destroyers of the land and gross polluters of the air and water, eh? Suffice to say that Hudson's bay is being siphoned off by Russians while the Erie lake is being stolen by Americans... oh, soon it will be necessary to be bottling all the fresh air and fresh cool water to be sold in markets by the marketeers and not phoenicians who were friendly and glad-handed as they opened up the Sea of Galilee to everyone who would so peacefully reside in warring countries like Judea, Rome and Persia which had once a queen of jewish origin, esther qua scheherezade. Suffice to say, the whales were rulers of the firmament and only gave up power recently, but how they sang the music of the lord since GENESIS. amen and hallelujah!
ReplyDelete