My Bitter Coat

             I wrapped myself in a bitter coat.  It smelled of leaves from the bottom of the pile, without sun, where worms burrow and life rots.

             The coat fit snugly, but occasionally, I shook it upon others and wounded their eyes or soured their smiles.   I was without smiles myself, for the venomous coat left no room for joy.  Then I did not want the coat for it began to burn my skin.  But I refused to drop it, even when angels tried to pull it from me.

             I became lost in the coat, for it expanded and covered all of me.  I was terrified and I ran, stumbled and ran.

             Then I fell into a pond.  My feet hit the slime on the bottom, and I complained in disgust.  But the algae and slime were cool, and they softened my feet.  They slid over my prickled knees and soothed them too.  Then a minnow swam into my coat with me.  He turned and swam out. 

    I watched him escape, but I was afraid to try to escape for he swam below my submerged chest, and I couldn’t see where I would go if I swam out.  So I plunged below.  Spiny weeds brushed my face.  Still I swam. 

    My lungs heaved, and I floated up.  The water broke from my face, and wind slipped over my lashes, gingerly drying them.

             The coat was gone, my body light.  I tried to climb from the pond, but my jellied legs wobbled.  Above me stood the people I had scorned. 

    They ran to me.  Pulling on my arms, they dragged me into the light and helped brush the sand from my hair.

             My mud-smeared eyes looked to them, but they wiped the mud off too.  Then I cried, and they cried with me.  And because of them I knew the power of seventy times seven.