Okay, folks, this is what happens when you let germaphobia take over.
Atlantis Rising
The sun sparkled through 
    the very white
sky 
    down on the white
pillars 
of Atlantis.  
      It was 
   a very clear
day--the air was almost perfumed.  
The dampness soaked, 
         sponged up
the dust particles 
     and the
centrifugal winds blew everything 
away from the land.  
For that is how the Atlantians wanted it 
   to be.  
They wanted no winds from 
       the
outside.  No blowing in 
     of noxious
vapors, 
no weeds tumbling in tainted soils, 
  worse yet, no earth
that had gone 
        dead and
infertile.  No rivers ran 
 into Atlantis, no
river running tars 
  into the lakes, and
piers, sticking the water 
             vessels
in place.  
This was Atlantis, zenith of beauty 
   divine, where the
trees rustled the air 
 to create the soft
zephyrs.  Where the water jumped 
    from the oceans
directly to fall 
          upon the
land, and no foreign waters 
had interloped on this oasis of isolation in three 
     thousand
years.  
Atlantis was immaculate. 
  Inside a pink
marble dwelling S stood 
at a basin, washing the fruits, that she had picked 
   that morning.  Seeress L was acting head seeress
 for Atlantis and the
cherries really 
       did not need
washing.  Nothing did 
in Atlantis.  This
was why the sun shone 
   so pristinely in
Atlantis.  
Between the magicians 
       and the
seeress, Atlantis would be yet 
  today.  But a darkling broke through 
one day. 
       He masqueraded
as an immaculate drop 
  in the air.  When the magicians saw him, 
 they coaxed him 
     into their
sterile paradise.  
And then he changed 
   to a boy, a golden
boy 
       with golden
curls, 
and was soon chosen to be pruned 
 for the
brotherhood.  They were those 
who kept the lands clean. 
      He became
master magician and spent his days 
thinking of seeress L 
   while he
contemplated drop 
 by drop 
which to admit 
         into the
promised land of Atlantis.  
In his boyhood form, Darkling had seen S.  She sat 
  in still repose of
a statue high 
       atop a
hill.  It was her time 
of transmutation. 
She sat there 
 contemplating the
evil virus. Soon, 
                                                  soon, in a few
hours, days, 
                            
she would see the cretins. 
        Cretins
crawled on her skin, slithered in 
   and out of her
pore, inside her womb, to the tip 
of her body hairs. 
They would rear 
        on their
thousand legs in exultation.  
  S was still
defiled.  
She felt them and screamed. 
   She jangled her
body, throwing it 
          on the
ground, smearing her breasts 
  against the sharp
rocks to annihilate 
the filth from her body. 
S tore at herself 
       for days.  Picking each virulent disease 
       from her body.
Darkling had watched 
in humored fascination as S lay close 
to self annihilation. 
In the form of droplets, 
     he had rained
down upon her then, to quaff 
  her sores.  
Darkling took S back 
       to his
dwelling, a canopy of monolith leaves 
    that upended in
rising prayer in the sun 
  and in the rain,
shielding and closed, folded, 
          clasped
together in sorrow 
during the sometimes, 
     the limbs would
let a few drops of rain 
   through and
changeling asked them 
to do this 
       for him for
S’s wounds were grievous.  She slept 
  in delirium,
tearing at herself 
 screaming of the
wretched filth 
       on her.
Darkling pinned her arms 
     down to her side
and kneeled above her. 
Phobia had given her almost 
      a man’s
strength and he had trouble 
    keeping her
down.  Once, she seemed 
 to sense what he was
and blindly kicked 
    out hard.
Darkling rolled over 
in pain and S slept soundly 
       the rest of
the evening.  After a few days, 
 S subsided into
beatific repose.  
  Her face was
smoothed of all feeling, 
like the marble statues the Atlantians favored and the 
       marble
dwellings and lived in. 
       Her hair fell
about 
          in dark
waves and masses. 
Darkling took a handful 
  and breathed in
deeply.  
  Her lips were red
and swollen 
          from the
fever, her cheeks sunken 
         and
aquiline, black, dark, 
    aquiline flower, 
an exotic delicacy.  
  Her body was
scabbed 
and bruised.  The
tiny breasts 
      were torn, the
nipples pulled to such 
   an extent they
constantly stood erect.  Her legs 
   looked as if a
bird of prey had leisurely 
sunk in its talons 
          and
scraped.  
 Even the insides of
her legs 
     had not been
spared. 
  Darkling
shuddered.  He could see 
         her thighs
in their perfection without 
    the dried blood
and in her bleedings.  It was 
    a sin.  
This cleansing of Atlantis 
       had reached morbid
heights.  
    Darkling reached
for S, her eyes slightly askew, 
          
parted.  He fingered the scabs,
fury 
 rising in him.  This body 
     should be for
loving except 
     for the guilt of
a regimented 
superstitious society. 
The innocent 
   were dragged down, killed 
       by their own
hands. He kissed 
  the lacerations
like kissing dew 
in a flower bud 
         so as not to
spill it 
              or
drink it up.  
     The scabs were
not completely dried 
 yet, were still
moist.  Darkling’s hands 
    drew higher, up
to S’s sex, where even 
  this she had not
spared.  Indeed, focusing most 
       of her
ravings, and attacks.  
He assuaged it softly, introducing himself 
          
nonintrusively, as a gentle breeze, stirring, 
 but frictionless.  S whimpered 
 and lifted her eyes
weakly.   
     “Is it gone?”
She asked.
  “It was never
there,” Darkling assured her.
     “But I feel
it.”  S begged weakly.  “I can feel 
       each one viral
creature crawling 
                 
over me without shame, defiling me. 
And me 
       allowing them
to multiply.”  
“There’s nothing left of them.”—Darkling.
     “Then,--I
passed?” S.
“Yes,” he, sickly.
He moved his fingers 
         more
insistently.  And, she 
hesitated. “Are they still there?”
“No, you are clean.”
     “How can it be
when I still feel them?”
“Your tactile senses need a bit 
     of pruning.  You’re overly sensitive 
to the wrong things”. 
   And Darkling drew
up S’s fever high 
       and broke
it.  
Afterwards, S lay again, 
           calm, clean untroubled, and a tear 
  had slipped from
her sleeping eyes.  
  She awoke one night
      
thereafter.  Darkling was beside 
       her
sleeping.  The trees had stopped 
     lifting up their
prayers and had bowed 
             down
clasped hands for the night, 
content.  The stars
were shining 
   myriads in the sky
so low 
   and close S
reached out.  
“Try for something closer, 
       and use it as
a step.” Darkling said, took her 
     hand and kissed
her, 
and then his lips to hers. 
“Will it count?”—she.
“Of course.”
“You should have left me be.”—she. 
“I was only trying to help. “
“You cannot.  And
should 
       know better
than that, Darkling.”
“Your wounds were-- mortal.”
      She--“The least
of my concern.”
“When do you go?”
          “When I am
pure 
to be a temple priestess.”
“Pure enough to have me come flocking on to you?”—sadly 
     and smally
smiling. 
“I must share my purity.”
“And I thought hot moved to cold.”  Darkling 
     flicked his
tongue like a lamb.  S moved.  Darkling continued, 
“Well, perhaps when I’ll feel 
         like a bout
of purity soon.  Until then,” and 
Darkling entered her in full, retearing 
     the scabs as his
did so.  He fell gently 
    above her,
licking each wound 
as it were a marvel, and wrenched 
         himself in
her 
  until she felt
nothing 
but the blood oozing between her legs.
That was the last he had seen her 
     before she had
presented herself 
     before the
temple.  Her wounds 
 had been cause for
much 
        jubilation.  Here, was a Atlantian 
       who could
devour from her body the evils 
that beset the land. 
They would share 
       in her
purity.  The men  present, 
    brotherhood and
magician had clamored 
for her.  
The seeresses had worshipped her.  Seeress S 
     was marked.  She never healed.  No, 
   it seemed that her
body grew 
       in sores.  The scabs grew 
in a profusion of jeweled colors.  
         She was
their brilliant sacrifice 
         to
immaculacy.  
Every evening she stood 
      between the
main temple pillars, a gauzy 
   petallike dress
fluttering about her 
   finely lined
body.  Her hair was pulled back 
       and tied with
vines.  When she recently 
cleansed a sickly, her hair fell askew, 
          astray, and
about her face in love curls.  
     Her arms were
bare, revealing 
     the skin pulled
tautly over bones 
that made indentations 
      where the
shadows played between her bosom and the light 
   fell on shoulder
grooves, 
          marked with
the higher love to which Atlantis 
was rising.  
Darkling stood from afar, leaning 
   on a marble pillar
that stood alone in the street.  
    It held no home,
no place of worship, only stood 
because it stood and enjoyed 
   its glaring
functionless unabashed.  
    The Atlantians
had not dared to pull it down.   
     Darkling climbed
the temple steps as the sun 
fell behind the high temple, behind the pillars 
   where S stood, the
light razing 
the edges of her silhouette.  
The shadows between her bosom 
       grew darker,
her body was etched 
   in light, and
shades of gray 
gave roundness to her flesh.  An illusion.  
         Her body was
spent, desiccated.  
       The blood had
flowed perpetually.  
She had served the Atlantians of the land.  They 
       were cleansed.  And now 
  it was time for
them to divest themselves 
  of the possibility
of future contamination.  
Darkling halted 
               a step
before he reached S and fell 
           to his
knees, burying his face 
           between
the whispering folds of her robe.  
   He could smell the
fragrant stagnance of blisters 
    and the fetid
welts.  
He took her hands in his, finer 
       than a
newborn’s.  The cuts 
 were not there.  He looked up.  
S--“I need them to work.” 
She looked puzzled.  
   “Your face.”  
D--“I flew into a tree limb.”
     S took his face
in her hand 
        and smoothed
the disfiguring mark 
like stone before the wind. 
        In the wake
of her touch lay new skin 
      and from her
fingertips dribbled blood.  “No!”  Darkling 
gripped her wrists away from him.
S--“I must.  It heals
me.  
     You heal
me.  Remember, dear 
         Darkling,
when I was on 
 the mountaintop, and
you brought 
      me home.  
         Did you
expect to change me 
                as
well as save my body?  
  For all my
sickness, 
      better to slake
the dry cuts 
  than grapple with
the morbidity of Atlantis.  
I am her daughter 
     
consummate.  Millennia of
preoccupation 
   with the
microscopic squalors of the body.  
   Do you think 
         we could have faced our souls?   Disease keeps us 
alive, it keeps us 
      moving to
cleanse ourselves.  And I told them 
   that purity would
be the termination of life.  
   They
resisted.  They laughed.  
They said that I would baptize them 
            and lift them up. Soon they will not 
    understand purity
for the children grow up 
not knowing darkness, filth 
    and the blackness
that comes to the soul 
    when the light
blinds the eyes.  
Fly away, Darkling! 
              To
something lasting, a land, 
      a love, a
fancy.  Better a joyful condemnation 
    than a bleak
salvation.  For myself, 
I stand here 
          when the
waters will give us our final 
baptism.”  The people
of Atlantis had a plan.  
         They would
now forever 
     protect Atlantis
from the evils of the world, 
                 the
voracious, toxins, the venal efflusions, 
exhumes.  
    They would encase
Atlantis.  
Darkling rose and lifted S 
       by the waist
and bore her to a corner.  
      The stones lay
cold beneath her spine, cooling the sores 
   upon her
back.  
Darkling found her beneath 
      the many folds
of her dress.  She was sickly 
  to the sight.  “Do I offend you, 
righteous Darkling? 
Is my body too unclean 
       for you
now?  Now that I have cleansed 
  a thousand
Atlantians?  Will you riff me aside 
       as the rest
when they have partaken 
of my functionality? 
                           
If I am the cleanser 
          where does
the sickness go?  They raised me up 
                  to throw stones at me.  Leave me, 
darkling, before you stone me.”
     He brought
himself 
       down on her,
sobbing, 
turning his eyes from this misplaced soul 
   in a mismatched
body and soul.  S lay 
   underneath him,
engulfing his sobs 
           in her bosom and whispering to him 
 of different places,
         sordid lands
where she would see him 
         soon.  
     He lifted
himself and swallowed her in his arms.
“Come with me S. 
Come with me and I’ll scrape 
            every
last scab from your body 
           and bury
you in righteous disease.” 
   And he began
scrawing at the crusty skin, 
       sucking at the
flowing 
blood and throwing his body 
                 over
hers to stop the disease.  
   S laughed softly,
lowly.  “What will it be, 
     my
Darkling?  Will you save me 
or change me?  to
save me 
         is to defile
me.  to change me 
      is to heal
me.  you cannot have 
both.”  Darkling
rose,
      howling to his
feet, dragging S’s body, 
      rasping her
knees 
                       
against the cold stones.  
 They reached the
entrance where Darkling 
   raised her high 
                  
and cast her down 
                        
the temple steps, a bundle 
of wisp and blood 
            and
laughter.  
The Sorcerers gathered in a ring and raised 
    their upturned
palms to the sky.  
    Two points, on
opposite sides 
       of the land of
Atlantis, appeared 
with a fiery fearsome silence.  
   These two points
elongated, becoming lines, 
               curved
lines that began encircling 
Atlantis, lines encircling, rising from the holy waters 
   of the land of
Atlantis 
                    
rose its way into a ring above the land.  
     A division,
clear 
     and absolute 
            so that
the birds flying at that moment 
who were unlucky enough to get caught 
     in the growing,
rising ring, fluttered 
         and writhed
until the growing band 
choked them still.  
  It grew up 
     and it grew
down, the line of circle became a surface, 
   encasing the
rarefied air 
            and the
whiter light of Atlantis.  
The air was pushed up and down, 
     creating mammoth
winds and tidal 
     waves.  
  The water rushed
upon the land 
         as the
weight of the semidome 
lowered itself upon the earth.  The waters rumbled 
     in discord at
being severed and roared in 
     to devastate the
crystalline encasement.  The weight 
was too much.  
          Atlantis
was sinking.  
  The Magicians
scrambled incoherent 
   unweaving spells
as the waters 
fell from atop, for there was only a small circle 
       at the top of
the dome 
still missing 
and the seas fell in heavy torrents 
      from above,
cracking the magicians skulls wide open 
   for the foam to
sizzle them 
             in a
thousand different directions.  
The sky and earth trembled 
   and Atlantis,
slipped, dipped, 
     and bobbed, the
zenith of civilization, 
like a fish out of water 
     into the oceans,
as the dome closed in 
        on itself,
sealing the top 
     and the bottom of
Atlantis in its watery tomb.  
For millennia more, a bird of prey 
   could be seen
swooping 
     down towards the
water, its talons 
at the ready, its curled, 
curved, hooked nose open 
         to snap at
he waters 
     all the cretins
of the sea which floated 
at the surface and flagellated 
              where
the currents bore them, millions of them, 
  uncountably
infinite, naked to the seeing 
eye, yet there nonetheless. 
And the bird 
     takes these
endless dives, soaring up 
    and falling down,
to keep the waters 
               around
Atlantis clean, for the sepulcher 
                   
which holds a thousand sets of bones means nothing 
to it save 
  the turgid waters
around the bones washed white 
       with sores of
a delicate frame, 
     its hips still
swaying 
               in the
current.  
***************************
Later, another time, another place.
  “S, there’s
something crawling 
        on you.  
        I can see it,
almost.  But it is certainly there 
    as you and I.  
              And I
can feel it, can’t you feel it?”
She looked at her arm, perfectly white 
     and round, and
brought it 
        to her
mouth.  “Mmm, yes, and it tastes 
  so good.”  she purred. 
   “Hold me a little
tighter, love, 
          I want to
keep the buggers 
between us warm. 
Even they need love.”  
   He pulled her
closer while the buggers crawled 
          their ways
upon 
and between them, the friction 
    of their motion
and bodies igniting a fury in S 
    and Darkling that
burned for many nights.  
 
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