《Silence》IV
Advertisement
IV
The next day, after an early and lonely lunch, Fr. Ignaty went to the cemetery, for the first time since his daughter’s death. It was hot, deserted, and quiet, as though the summer day was just a lighted night, and yet out of habit, Fr. Ignaty would straighten his back with diligence, throwing harsh glances, thinking he was still the same as before; he noticed neither the new and tremendous weakness in his legs, nor the fact that his long beard was now completely white, as though a cruel frost had struck it. The road to the cemetery followed a long straight street that climbed slightly upward, with the arch of the cemetery gate gleaming white at the end of it, looking like a black, ever-open mouth, edged with shiny teeth.
Vera's grave was in the back of the cemetery where the sandy paths ended, and Fr. Ignaty had to wander through the narrow trails that followed a broken line between the green mounds, all forgotten and all abandoned. Some crooked monuments came up here and there, green with old age, along with some broken fences and heavy big tombstones, grown into the ground, pushing it with a sullen, senile anger. Squeezing up to one of these stones, was Vera’s grave. New sod on it turned yellow, but everything around it was in green. A rowan hugged a maple, and a wide-spread hazel stretched its pliant, bushy-leaved branches over the grave. Fr. Ignaty sat on the neighboring mound, taking a break. He looked around after a while, and glanced at the sky, clear and deserted, with the torrid hot disc hanging absolutely still; only then did he realize the deep, incomparable quiet that is essential to a graveyard, when there is no wind to rustle with dead leaves. Once again Fr. Ignaty thought that it was no quiet, but silence. It spread all the way down to the brick walls of the cemetery, crawled heavily over, and flooded the city to stop in a single possible place—the tenaciously, stubbornly silent gray eyes.
Advertisement
Fr. Ignaty shrugged, his shoulders getting cold, and put his eyes down, on Vera’s grave. Staring at the short yellow stalks of grass, uprooted somewhere out of a vast and windy field, yet to get used to the alien soil, he couldn’t imagine Vera lying down there, beneath that grass, two arshins below him. Her being that close seemed unfathomable, bringing confusion and strange anxiety to his soul. She, who disappeared forever in the dark deep of infinity as Fr. Ignaty used to think, was here, nearby... making impossible to grasp that yet she’s not here and never would be. It seemed to Fr. Ignaty that saying some word his lips almost sensed or moving someway would make Vera rise from the grave, tall and beautiful as she had been. And not only Vera would rise but all the dead people, so frightfully palpable in their solemnly cold silence.
Fr. Ignaty took off his wide-brimmed black hat, tidied his wavy hair, and whispered:
“Vera!”
Embarrassed of a random stranger hearing him, Fr. Ignaty stood up at the mound and looked over crosses. No one was around, and he said again, louder this time:
“Vera!”
It was his old voice, cold and demanding, and strange it was that a demand so strong would go unanswered.
“Vera!”
The call was loud and persistent, and each time it faded, there was a minute when Fr. Ignaty thought he could hear a faint answer from down below. After looking around once again, Fr. Ignaty removed his hair out the way and pressed his ear to the sod’s bristles.
“Vera, tell me!”
The next horrific moment Father Ignaty sensed something grave and cold pouring into his ear and freezing his brain; he felt Vera’s talking, and her talk was that same long silence. It becomes more and more anxious and terrifying, and when Fr. Ignaty tears his pale as a dead man’s head off the ground, the air seems to shudder and tremble with booming silence, as if a wild storm has broken at this horrendous sea. Silence is choking him; it rolls its icy waves over his head and moves his hair; it crashes against his chest that groans under the blows. Whole body shaking, eyes casting glances sharply and aimlessly, Fr. Ignaty slowly gets up and with a lasting, agonizing effort tries to straighten his back and pull down his shoulders. He pulls it off. Lingering by intention, Fr. Ignaty dusts off his knees, puts on his hat, triply crosses the grave, and walks steadily until he stops recognizing the familiar cemetery and loses his way.
Advertisement
“Lost!” chuckles Fr. Ignaty, stopping where the path forks.
But he wastes just a second, and then takes a left, for standing and waiting is out of the question. Silence is haunting him. Exuded by green graves, breathed out by gray crosses, in suffocating wisps it comes out of the pores of the earth, fertile with corpses. Fr. Ignaty walks faster and faster. Stunned, he circles around the same paths, jumping over the graves, bumping into the bars, hands getting caught in the scratchy tin wreaths, soft fabric tearing to shreds. The only thought of escape remains in his head. He dashes from side to side and, finally, runs soundlessly, tall and terrific, his cassock flying and hair streaming in the air. Even a corpse risen from the grave would have been less scary than this wild figure of a man was, running and jumping, his arms swinging, his face mad and distorted, the muffled wheezing coming out of his open mouth.
At full speed Fr. Ignaty popped up at the open space with the small cemetery church gleaming white on the edge of it. On the bench by the narthex, a little old man sat dozing, a pilgrim apparently; two beggar women quarreled beside him, pouncing at each other, and cursing.
When Fr. Ignaty came up to the house, it was getting dark, and he saw the light in Olga Stepanovna’s window. Dusty and ragged, boots and hat on, Fr. Ignaty went straight to her room and fell on his knees.
“Mother... Olya... Take pity on me!” he sobbed. “I’m losing my mind.”
Banging his head on the edge of the table, he sobbed violently, bitterly, like a man who never cried. Then he looked up, believing a miracle would happen, and his wife would speak and pity him.
“Darling!”
With all of his big body he reached for his wife; the look of gray eyes met him. It bore no regret or anger. She may have forgiven and pitied him, but there was no pity or forgiveness in her eyes. They were mute and silent.
The entire dark and empty house was silent too.
May 1–5, 1900
Advertisement
- In Serial57 Chapters
I got an SSS-Grade unique skill
On December 31, 2090… at 11:59 pmA large meteor comes hurtling into earth. But, contrast to what was expected, it was destroyed even before it lands.At the same time…
8 2196 - In Serial14 Chapters
Life Reset
The entire series is now complete! the six-book are available in Amazon Kindle here(note only the first several chapters are available here on RR) For news and subscribing to the newsletter, please check out my site: http://liferesetlitrpg.com Or join my Facebook author's page: https://www.facebook.com/Liferesetlitrpg A LitRPG Novel. Synopsis:After being betrayed and cursed by an extremely rare spell, Oren, a once powerful and influential player, found himself as a 1st level Goblin!Without even a fraction of his previous power, he vows to somehow pull through and seek revenge on those who betrayed him.His greatest advantage are years of personal gaming experience and thorough knowledge of the game's world. But first, he has to figure out how to survive long enough playing what is basically a low-level fodder monster! Note: Only the first 5 chapters of book 1 & 2 are available here. Main themes: Character leveling, Settlement building, adventure.Updates: once a week, usually on Tuesdays. Disclaimer:Once completed, I intend to publish the book via Amazon as an ebook.The published book will undergo tweaks and adjustments, as well as a professional editing. Those changes would NOT be published here in RR.
8 202 - In Serial46 Chapters
To Forge a New Dawn
Rot festers beneath a nation's glory, unheeded by those who rule. In the humble halls of the Archives, one scribe cannot stay silent in the face of corruption. One spark ignites the flame that will consume the world. As the scribe unites an army to topple an empire, he gains followers whose loyalty and ambition will outlast his own. This is a tale not only of ascension, but of the order and turmoil that flourish in the wake of a revolutionary. Five paths intersect under the scribe’s vision of a new order, driving the ebb and flow of power throughout the land. Cover art by Fuyu Dust.
8 116 - In Serial12 Chapters
Front Tide
He was stranded. Lost, surrounded, and no way out. -- The cover is done by iillya. You can find him in Reddit.
8 68 - In Serial6 Chapters
Allucivita
What if the dreams you had every night was an actual happenings of another world, and you just had no idea it was happening? Venelyn Harris was a Somniamortales, a human that travelled between two worlds through dreams. By the day, she was only an ordinary college student. But what she didn't remember was by the night, she was busy being a Guardian Captain of her team, fighting the Umbras that threatened Briamundus, her "dream world". Everything was fine until the Umbra, dark spirits that the Guardians faced, turned into a bigger, ancient threat that spread throughout the whole Briamundus. Worse yet, it also started to seep onto her homeworld, the Earth, creating chaos in the whole world. It turned her entire life upside down. Now, it depends on the Guardians to save the world. Both worlds.
8 150 - In Serial55 Chapters
A Mechanical Daisy
Two hundred years have passed since the Order of Ash laid waste to the planet, taking millions of lives, and changing the world forever. Peace had been achieved and technology advanced from the repurposed war machines. Swords and sorcery to radios and flying ships, dozens of races more connected than ever before. In one horrible act the Kingdoms are reminded of what the Order of Ash can do. The youngest princess of the Magi Kingdom is assassinated and the immortal Blodwyn rises from her prison. To escape drowning in grief and hoping to use all of her Druidic knowledge to end the war before it can truly start, Diana, the eldest princess, leaves the palace with those that trapped Blodwyn all those years ago. Diana is joined by Jonah, a Traveler from Earth, left for dead in the ocean upon arrival. Together they discover that the Order has not been idle the past two hundred years, and that the Heroes joining them are not so heroic.
8 139

