August222011

story by circularrunning

Silence

            “A gift” is what people called them.  And they were—sort of.  The composer’s ears were more amazing than anyone else’s who’d ever lived.  They could hear notes that no one else could, except of course for the dogs that liked to follow the composer around on his morning walks.  It was because of those ears, that the composer wrote the most amazing music anyone had ever heard. 

            For a while, before he became famous and was still living in the small town he grew up in, his neighbors would walk by his house just so they could listen to his music as he wrote it.  These neighbors, to the man, woman, and child, all came away feeling as if they were the luckiest people in the world.  They didn’t always agree what the music had done for them.  Some said that things that had bothered them before they listened to the music seemed small and inconsequential afterwards.  So, they believed that the composer’s music made problems shrink.  Others argued that the music had not done a thing to their problems; rather, the music had made them bigger inside somehow. 

            This argument didn’t seem so important to the composer.  He was just glad to see that people were happier after they heard his music than they were before.  What the composer did not find out was that with time, his neighbors would all come to be sad.  That feeling that made everything else seem less important or made people feel larger inside, whichever it was, had a price.  Months later for some, years for others, they would wake up and find that they missed their worries and their problems.  The ones who felt that their problems had shrunk wished for them to grow again like a dead flower once loved but now dead, and the people who believed they’d grown, now wanted more than anything to be returned to a normal size.

            As the composer became famous and he moved out of the small house in his hometown, more people got a chance to hear his music.  And just like with his neighbors, they were affected in the same way, though something seemed lost in the translation to larger venues.  Listeners would come away from concerts feeling happy, though not ecstatic, and the sadness they all eventually felt, was also less.

            The composer sensed the change, and he didn’t like it.  Why, he wondered, was his music less powerful than before?  There wasn’t much point, was there?  If people weren’t affected by his music—made truly happy by it—then why go to the trouble of writing it?  He struggled and struggled at his piano to come up with the right sounds, and he kept trying different techniques: more notes, more rhythm, less silence.  As a result, his music became complex and pieces became longer and longer to the point that they were starting to have the opposite effect of what the composer intended.  People were starting to become less interested in his music and less moved.

            The composer decided he should stop writing music for a while, and that instead he should just listen to the world.  He went on walks, long walks, and then he started riding a bicycle so he could go on even longer trips.  It was never enough sound, though.  At one point, he became convinced that his legs were against him, as if their exhaustion was nothing more than a plot against the happiness of his ears.  It was an odd belief, and if the composer would’ve reached out to a friend to tell him about it, that friend would’ve made him see how silly he was being.  But the composer, thinking he was too busy for friends, kept his theory to himself. 

              As it turned out, the composer was actually half-right about what was going on. Though his legs were like anyone else’s: just legs, dumb bone and muscle.  His ears were not normal, at all.  They not only heard things no one else on two legs could.  They were also self-conscious, like small greedy animals that at some point had attached themselves to the side of his head.  To make things worse, they weren’t just hungry for sound.  They were miserly and secretive—so secretive that without the composer ever knowing it, as he passed through town after town on his tours, they were collecting all the sounds they heard:  children laughing and crying, and couples whispering and shouting, old women snickering, old men cursing, and of course their favorite, music of all kinds. 

            Then, his ears went beyond the sounds people made to doors creaking and cracking, and cars running and rumbling, and dogs barking and bellowing.  And when they were done with that, the composer’s ears moved on again to sounds that no one (not even dogs) could hear:  flowers yawning in front of the sun; statues bracing themselves for rain; dust forming on pictures in old people’s homes. 

            This went on for some time—a very long time.  But if they had had any sense about them, the composer’s ears would’ve stopped.  More than anything, the composer wanted to sit down somewhere and write music that used all the sounds he was carrying around with him, but his ears pushed him forward, kept his legs moving until one day, his ears heard the most terrible sound they could imagine: a silence coming from the composer that they had never heard before. 

            You see the composer’s heart had collapsed, broken under the weight of all the sounds of the world.

            

Tags: /lit /fables /legend /fairy tale /writing /fiction /music