The Halo
The Halo C. Dale Young In the paintings left to us by the Old Masters, the halo, a smallish cloud of light, clung to the head, carefully framed the faces of mere mortals made divine. Accident? My body launched by a car's incalculable momentum? It ended up outside the car. I had no idea then what it was like to lose days, to wake and find everything had changed. Through glass, this body went through the glass window, the seatbelt snapping my neck. Not the hanged man, not a man made divine but more human. I remember those pins buried in my skull, the cold metal frame surrounding my head, metal reflecting a small fire, a glow. All was changed. In that bed, I was a locust. I was starving. And how could I not be? I, I . . . I am still ravenous. |