Part 1 - Genesis
God looked down on the earth. There were many
things there that he had
made. There were men and women; tillers of
earth, carriers of water and
hewers of stone. There were birds in the
air and creatures that swam
in the sea. There were powerful volcanoes,
ocean waves and small breezes
that rustled the bushes and played about the
tops of the trees. There were
cities of great wealth and power, towns which
heard his voice and followed
his law and there were villages, hamlets and
great modern capitals which
did not. Everywhere God looked upon what he
had made. But he did not see
the man.
God knew the man. The man was his. And God
searched upon the earth for
the man that he knew – but did not find him.
God looked in the forest,
but the man was not there. He looked in the
city, searching through apartments
and houses. In the bus depot and in the
library, in the cinema and in the
shopping centre he looked - but the man was
not there. God combed every
field and pasture of the country, he lifted
the streams and felt beneath
their beds. He sifted the sand by the sea
shore - but the man was not to
be found there. God ran his
fingers upon the ridges of the
mountains and through the grains of sand in
the desert – but he did not
find the man. So he created him.
God closed his fist about the nothing. He
stretched and pulled it into
shape. God carved the shape upon his hand and
fashioned the man. He made
him to stand upright and shaped his feet and
limbs. He put his likeness
upon his face and his mark upon his forehead.
He breathed his life into
the man, and he was.
The man lived on the earth. He knew his
Father. The man lived in the
city, in the house of his parents. He was
small. His mother would hold
his hands in hers and help him to stand. She
held the index fingers of
her hands to the man. He curled his small
fists around them. The man began
to walk upright upon the earth. His mother
would help him to walk to the
garden and back to the house. She would laugh
as he swayed on his small
feet and her laugh sounded like the water to
the man. The man knew his
mother.
The man played with his sister. They had a
swing set and a small slide
in their garden. The man would play all day in
the garden and wait for
his father to come home. His father would
catch the man in his arms and
throw him in the air. The man would laugh. He
knew his father and his mother
and his sister. When the weather was fine,
they would eat dinner in the
garden beneath the pear tree.
The man walked with God. When he was small,
he did not see God every
day but he knew him and he could hear him. The
man began to talk. The man
talked to his father and his Father answered.
Sometimes the man did not
know what to say to his Father so he said
nothing. Then, he sat with God
in the world. The man began to know the world.
The world had a back garden
and a house and a front garden. The front
garden had a drive running through
it. On the drive was a red car and behind the
car was an orange gate. The
man could see through the gate and the car
could go through it but the
man could not.
The man began to grow. He had short spiky
hair and skinny legs and pointy
knees. His teeth were a little crooked because
he fell and bit the world
and his teeth were a part of the world now.
The world was a house and the
back garden. The world was a front garden, and
the drive in the front garden
and the gate and the footpath up to the shops
and the footpath down to
Mary Meacle’s house. The world was the car and
school and church before
school and grandma’s house and sweets and the
park and the library on Fridays
and walking home from school with his mother
and bananas.
The man liked the world most of the time.
When the bananas were brown
and it rained and he fell and scraped his knee
he did not like the world,
but this did not happen all the time. He told
his father about the world
and God understood. God loved to see the man
he knew in the world he had
created.
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Part 3 - Redemption
The man opened the door
of the car. He felt dead.
He looked across the intersection and saw
the woman lying upon the road.
Her legs were in the car, but her head was
on the road. A crowd of people
were beginning to gather. The man was
afraid. He walked across the intersection
and looked at the woman. She had silver
brown hair and a small face. Her
eyes were closed. The man was afraid. He
began to walk away. The people
murmured as he passed. He began to walk
faster. The murmur became a buzz.
And the people closed about him in a ring,
forcing him back towards the
car. The man began to cry. Cold, salty tears
began to fall from his eyes,
and he turned back to the woman fallen out
of her car. A pool of blood
was spreading around her head. The blood was
dark brown. The man had always
thought that blood was red. A large, strong
man had approached the car
and was looking at it. There was blood on
the door jamb, and on the floor
of the car where the woman had fallen out.
The man was afraid. He looked
at the green car, and the road, and the
woman’s car, and the woman. He
had done this.
The strong man turned
to him and was about to
speak. The man did not want to hear what he
was going to say. He knelt
down and picked up the woman. The strong man
started to shout, but the
man did not care. He picked up the woman and
walked towards the crowd.
They stiffened for a second. The man pressed
the woman towards his chest
and ran into the center of the people. They
parted easily as he ran, but
they started to shout, and run after him.
The man was afraid. The
man began to run with the woman in his arms.
Blood from the woman’s head
was on his shirt. He tried to straighten her
in his arms as he ran, but
the blood fell down her hair and dripped
onto his jeans. He tried to keep
her forehead level with the ground, facing
up to the sky, but it kept slipping
as he ran from the crowd down the street,
across the estate towards the
beach. The woman was difficult to carry. The
man could not run as fast
as he was able because he was carrying her.
But the man knew what to do.
He had to get to the beach, and talk to God.
God would understand. God
would heal the woman. God would make the
blood go away again. The
people shouted and began to give chase. The
man was afraid and ran faster.
He flexed the muscles in his legs, and
pushed off on the balls of his feet,
and breathed with his nose. One, two, three
and four he counted in his
head as he ran. The man could hear the crowd
running behind him, but they
were not catching up. He turned his shoulder
as he ran, steadying the woman
against his elbow. Some of the crowd had
stopped and turned back to the
cars. Only some people continued to run
after the man. The man could see
the strong man in the midst of them. He
turned his head and ran for the
beach.
God was not on the
beach. The man ran across the
sand calling to God. He could not find
him. God was not in the running.
The man was afraid. He clutched the woman
tighter to him to make her easier
to carry, and made to continue running
across the sand. She stirred and
made a small sound of pain. She was not
dead. The man laughed aloud with
relief and turned to thank God. He could not
find him. God was not in the
turning. The man looked back along the beach
and saw that the crowd had
stopped following him, except for one man.
It was the strong man. The man
was afraid. The strong man would take the
woman away. He would bring her
to the hospital where she would die. The
strong man would bind the man
with chains and throw him into a house
forever. The strong man would walk
around the house all day shouting murderer,
murderer, murderer. The woman
was not dead. God could heal the woman. The
man knew he had to keep running.
He turned and cried to God one more time
before he started to run. God
was not in the cry. The man was afraid. He
began to run. He ran across
the sand. The strong man ran across the sand
after the man. The man sobbed
and continued to run along the sand.
The strong man followed the
man. He did not get closer, and he did not
get further away. The strong
man followed the man.
The man ran. He ran
across the beach and up the
road. He ran along the road and across the
river. He ran up the side of
the hill and across the plateau, trying to
keep the woman’s head level
with the sky. He cried out to God, but God
was not on the road, across
the river, or on the plateau. The strong man
ran after him, and the blood
dripped down on his jeans. The man ran
across the plateau. He ran down
the mountainside into the valley. He ran
along the dry river bed and scraped
his hand on the furze bushes. The woman’s
head slipped from the crook of
his arm now and again, and blood splashed on
the ground. He could not support
her head all the time. The man cried out to
God, but God was not in the
valley, along the dry river bed or in the
woman’s head. The strong man
ran after him, and the woman’s head lay over
the crook of his arm, and
blood splashed on the ground. The man ran
along the dry river bed to the
head of the small stream. The man ran by the
small stream as it flowed
into a watercourse coming from the east. The
man ran along by the watercourse
as its height rose, and its banks widened,
until it was a great river that
could not be crossed. And the water
flowed out into a lake. Beside
the lake there grew a tree. And the man
thought it was the tree that grew
at the center of the earth. The tree grew
great and strong, and its top
reached to heaven. And it was visible
to the ends of the whole earth,
and its foliage was beautiful. Its fruit was
low and sleek and green, and
it provided food to all. And the man called
to God, but God was not in
the tree. And the man was tired, and he laid
the woman down by the foot
of the tree. And he thought - Here I will
wait for the strong man to come,
and here I will be safe if God will not
protect me.
The man turned to where
the strong man had been
following him, but he could not see the
strong man any more. He looked
as hard as he could, but he could see
nothing. And a mist rose out from
the ground and came towards the man and the
woman by the man’s tree. And
in the mist the man could hear a voice, and
suddenly the man was afraid.
And the voice said, cut down the tree, and
chop off its branches, and strip
off its foliage, and scatter its fruit. And
the man clung to the tree,
for it would protect him from the strong
man. But he could not save it,
and the top of the tree was cut off, and the
branches began to fall down.
And the woman began to cough, and blood came
from her mouth, and she was
dying. And the man could not see through the
mist, and he cried out to
God. And he could hear him, but God was
terrible now. And the limbs of
the tree were falling off behind him, and
the trunk was razed to the ground
with a band of iron and bronze, with only a
stump and roots left. And the
man was weeping aloud to God, and the woman
was coughing, and blood came
from her mouth, and her life was ending. And
there was a terrible crack
behind him as the earth opened up across the
roots of the tree. And the
man fell to the ground in agony, for his
heart was torn in two. And he
wanted to die, yet he wanted to live, and
his life was ending, and he could
not save her. And as the man lay dying on
the ground, by the roots and
stump of the great tree, a shoot rose up
from the crack in the ground in
the old tree. Faster than the man could see,
a shoot grew into a branch,
which grew into a trunk, which split in
three. And one branch grew to the
North, and one to the south, and one
straight up. And the woman rose, and
lay by the foot of the new tree in the old
tree, and died. And the man
wanted to die too, but he couldn’t because
his heart was still tearing.
And he could see the new tree forcing apart
the stump of the old, as it
grew north and south, and straight up. And
the man wanted to run to the
new tree, but he couldn’t. And he
wanted to walk to it, but he couldn’t.
And he dragged his arm and knee towards it,
and crawled along the ground
to the new tree straight and tall, and north
and south, and fell down on
the land in front of the tree.
The man could hear the
horn. It sounded loud and
continuous. He heard a voice talking to him.
It was not the woman or the
strong man. It was not God. He opened his
eyes. He could see a policeman.
The policeman was talking. The man looked
past him. He could see an airbag
and a tree that had many branches, but one
thick branch from the trunk
grew straight up, and one grew north, and
one grew south. And the front
right nose of the low sleek green car was in
the tree that grew straight
up, and north and south. And the car was
wrapped around it, and the tree
was holding up the car, and stopping it from
smashing into the house behind.
The man looked behind him. There was the
intersection, and a patch of oil,
and the open road. He lifted his right hand
from the wheel and the horn
stopped. It was quiet, there was no one else
talking. The policeman was
saying patch of oil, incredible escape, and
the tree saved you, and you
should thank your lucky stars no one else
was hurt. The man said, I think
I died. The policeman said, you didn’t, but
you might have. And you should
be careful, and where do you live. The man
said, “I think I live in that
tree”. The policeman looked at him
strangely, and took out his phone to
make a call.
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