Read The Lightning Dreamer Online
Authors: Margarita Engle
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Weighed down by my visions
of an unhappy future, I wander
through the maze of caves,
with only a small candle
to light my way.
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One chamber resembles a palace
carved from sapphires
and diamonds.
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In another chamber,
ancient people left bright
red and black paintings
of frogs and birds
on water-smoothed walls.
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In some chambers, jagged crystals
are shaped like heads and hands,
as if spirits
had turned to stone.
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Beyond the eleventh chamber,
no one has ever ventured.
It is said to be the jaw
of hell.
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I peer into the gloom, then turn
and make my way back outdoors,
to a sunlit moment
of decision.
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I will ask Tula to marry the man
who is loved by Carlota, leaving
my sweetheart free to remember
that she once loved me.
No brilliant playwright
could ever have imagined
a more ironic
and devastating scene.
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Just after I realize that I've fallen
in love with Sab, he asks me
to marry
someone else.
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My answer will have to shatter
his scarred heart
along with my broken one.
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If it's trueâas the old storyteller
promisesâthat souls can rise and soar
in dreams, then I must be a night-flying
bird with clipped wings. Will I ever
be brave enough to sing
in sunlight?
Tula has refused to marry
the man on the spirited horse.
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She calls my request horrible,
insisting that marriage
without love
is just one more
twisted
form
of slavery.
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She is right.
I am human.
We carry our tangled emotions
to the storyteller, whose age gives
the wisdom of experience,
but in place of clear advice,
Sab's godmother gives us
a parable, a story
about a house filled
with mirrors.
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By the time her tale ends,
Sab and I both understand
that we are living reflections
of each other's
freedom dreams.
When I asked Tula to marry
the gallant gentleman,
I imagined that she loved
no one,
but my godmother's tale
of mirrors
helps me see that Tula
loves me
and I have been
cruel,
just as Carlota is cruel
to me.
Love is as tricky as a wall
of mirrors that make
narrow hallways
seem open
and wide.
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Sab is startled when I invite him
to marry me, but I must admit
that I am not completely
surprised
by how readily
he refuses me.
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His devotion to a childhood love
is as much a part of his goodness
as the courage that sent him
running through flames
to save
a burning child.
If I could love Tula,
I would.
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But love
is a wildly
unpredictable
hurricane wind,
not a swirling
blue ocean
with peaceful
shores.
There was a time
just a few hours ago
when I felt breathless
with hope
for a future with Sab,
but now I feel smothered
by grief.
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I miss the company
of orphans.
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No one else has ever seen me
as I really amâan outcast,
a wanderer, condemned
to explore
the unknown world
of human emotions . . .
We remain friends,
close companions.
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Tula and I agree
that we will never grow bitter,
never see each other as enemies.
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If I could have a sister,
I would choose Tula.
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If I could plant a garden
with wings, the feathers
would be her wandering
words.
I long for love's joy
for myself, but I also wish for Sab's
true happiness, even though
it means that he will find joy
with someone else.
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So, while he dreams
of a thousand ways
to change Carlota's
rigid mind,
I dream
of a million ways
to change my own
stubborn heart.