My great-uncle, the storyteller
And have I told you about my čika-Dobra?
He was a storyteller and a painter.
Whenever I was sick, he would show up
with presents he had made himself:
merry-go-rounds that would spin
if placed above the heat,
illustrations of life in Medieval Venice,
dreamy landscapes, fairies and princes,
steam engines and windmills and trains.
Then he would tell me stories,
about heroes and battles,
kings and shepherds and swords.
And in my feverish dreams that night I would see
Cinderella and Icarus,
Orsino and Carmen and a pair of tigers.
ballerinas in red slippers
and vampires and witches and lamps.
And Ravijojla the Fairy, killing a man
who had dared sing on her mountain,
then picking a handful of herbs
and nursing him back to life.
And years later, sitting in a History class,
or in a dark movie theater
I would remember the story
as one of his own.
I would recognize the hero
as someone I used to know
back when I roamed the world of magic
in my dreams.
GloPoWriMo Day 12

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