WHY JOSE SOLIQUEZ MATTERED TO GOD
by
Paul Corusoe
© Copyright 2011 Paul Corusoe
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License Notes
This free short story may be freely copied, distributed, reposted, reprinted and shared, provided it appears in its entirety, without alteration, and the reader is not charged to access it.
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Cover Design by Paul Corusoe
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What I Nearly Forgot
The Tailgater
Crabs
Dirt
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Map of Dreams...Mr. Corusoe's fast paced suspense thriller novel
To investigate Carl Jung’s theory of a collective unconscious, a PhD student uses the Internet and advanced data mining software to gather and analyze dream journals from around the world. His research reveals odd, unexplainable patterns. Where one dream ends, another begins, even though the dreamers are complete strangers. Unique objects appear in one dream and reappear in another. When the student discovers the dreams interconnect to form a map, he is murdered, leading his deadbeat brother and estranged wife on an international race to recover the map's ancient treasure. Along the way, the troubled couple are opposed by murderous forces of the religious underworld who want to keep the map's secret lost forever.
Find them all at:
WHY JOSE SOLIQUEZ MATTERED TO GOD
Jose Soliquez was dying. His brother was in the next room, and he heard him say it. “I don't think he will make it through the night. Do you?” There was a pause, and then Jose's wife Solinas spoke so low he could not hear her words. But Jose knew what she said without hearing. Her voice was unmistakable to him, for they had been married 32 years and now had one grandchild. The only sound he knew better was that of the sea, where Jose had made his living for nearly 60 years.
Jose dozed and dreamt his father was teaching him how to tie a fisherman’s knot. Over and over Jose worked the line and pulled, but the knot would not form. Every time it became a tangled mess, and in his dream Jose would start over and over again, always trying but never succeeding. It was a restless sleep, and Jose awoke in anguish. A small oil lamp, made from painted clay, dimly lit the small room. Its yellow light cast ghostly, smoke colored shadows on the white, adobe walls. Jose’s brother's weathered face appeared, the deep creases on his brown skin darkened by worry. “Are you thirsty Jose? Would you like some water?” But Jose was too weak to respond. Death would come within the hour.
As a young man, and like all young men, Jose had been restless and angry and full of mighty hopes. His village was part of a great empire, which thrived for hundreds of years in a deeply forested land found along the turquoise blue waters of the Caribbean Sea. In modern times, archeologists would study the empire and ponder its mysteries. But in Jose's day, the empire thrived. The streets were lively with happy people. Markets were full of abundance: red, yellow and green striped fruits from deep within the emerald forest, tasty nuts roasted chocolate brown over smoldering coals, and fat, silver fish Jose and his friends brought from the sea. They were never hungry, and yet…Jose was restless. His mind was always hungry.
Jose stirred in his sleep, and Solinas noticed he had stopped sweating. His skin, now gray, was dry and cool. She wiped his face with a wet cloth, and his eyes opened but did not focus. He smiled and remembered.
Like all the women of the village, Solinas had black hair and coffee brown skin. She wrapped her small, perfect figure in the bright colors of her village, and always wore a fragrant flower behind one ear. But it was her laugh that captured Jose’s attention. It was a lilting and merry sound, and reminded Jose of a particular lavender bird that flew low over the olive colored waters of the mangrove swamps where Jose would fish. Upon their marriage, Solinas’ Uncle had given the happy couple a special gift: a small gold coin, strangely marked with unknown letters and the image of a man's head. The Uncle had traded for the coin with foreign visitors, who were not often seen in the empire. So the coin was rare, and Jose and Solinas kept it in a soft blue cloth near the head of their bed. They only used the coin on special occasions: to bless the births of their children, and once for something tragic.
Jose and Solinas had six children in all: five daughters and one son. Only three of the children survived into adulthood. Two daughters died as infants. But the son lived to be 12 years old, long enough for Jose to begin living his hopes through the child. Like most fathers and sons in the village, the two were very close, and when Solinas watched them together, it made her heart very glad. The son's death was impossibly hard on the whole family, but especially on Jose.
Two days after the burial, in his grief and anger, Jose took the gold coin from the blue cloth and threw the coin into the sea. “You were supposed to bring me luck!” he cried, “But I have no luck.” Then Jose wept. Solinas noticed her husband growing old after that day. He had been broken, and he had no son.
There was a knock on the thick, wooden door of Jose's death house. The hour had come. “Why don't they answer?” Jose wondered. Sitting up in bed, he could see Solinas and his brother sleeping on mats by his bed. “It must be very late,” he thought. “I will not wake them.” Jose got out of bed and walked to the door. The dirt floor felt cool on his bare feet. Outside, Jose heard the soft call of the night bird, mournful and low. “It is a sign.” Jose thought, so he was not afraid when he opened the door.
Holding up the oil lamp, Jose looked upon a tall man, simply dressed, neither young nor old. His voice was strong. He said “Come Jose Soliquez. Put out your lamp. It is time for us to go.” “Shall I wake Solinas?” Jose asked. His affection for her was so great, like a brilliant gemstone created only through intense heat and pressure and time.
“No, Jose. She will learn later where you have gone. Come now.” the man said.
Jose turned and looked behind him into the small room. It contained few belongings, but the home was rich in memories for him. “Shall I bring my shoes?” he asked, but looking back, saw the man had already left the house and was climbing onto a small, wooden wagon harnessed to a single black mule. Jose put out his lamp and left the house, closing the door behind him. He climbed onto the wagon and sat next to the man.
“Do you know where we are going?” the man asked.
“Yes, I think so.” Jose responded.
They rode in silence through the sleeping village, the steady breathing of the mule keeping time with the rhythmic plodding of his footsteps. The wagon creaked and rattled but was not loud. Jose could hear the leather harness stretching as the mule pulled against it. The only other sound was the night bird, still calling out the arrival of another soul. Soon the village was behind them, and they rode past the forest along the edge of the sea, which was glassy and smooth in the moonlight. Ahead of them, the faintest breath of dawn appeared like a rosy dust over the water. Jose spoke at last.
“Why did I live?”
“To throw the gold coin,” the man said.
“Why?”
“The Lord had need of it.”
Then, in an instant, Jose could see the coin. It drifted for many years through the coral reefs and emerald plants of the sea bottom, sometimes washed over by taupe sands, at other times glittering brightly out in the open. Jose watched in amazement as a large fish, attracted to the coin’s golden shimmer, swallowed it whole in a violent flash of silver. Now Jose and the man followed the fish through vast distances, as if the mule and wagon were a great ship that could fly under the great seas of the earth. Jose was astounded with wonder.
A baited hook appeared. Jose examined the fisherman's knot. It was expertly tied. The fish attacked the hook and swallowed it, and then swam frantically as it w
as steadily pulled to the glistening surface, which shone like a liquid mirror painted with sunlight. Now Jose and the man stood on the shore of a hot, foreign land. Their clothes and hair were dry. A muscular young man with black hair and coffee colored skin pulled the fat fish up out of the water.
“Say, what do you plan to do with that fine fish?"”Jose's companion asked.
“The Lord has need of it,” the young man replied.
Then the young man took the fish, and opening its mouth, pulled out the gold coin in fulfillment of the story found in Mathew 17:25 through 27, which says:
And when he came into the house, Jesus spoke to him first, saying, “What do you think, Simon? From whom do the kings of the earth collect customs or poll-tax, from their sons or from strangers?” When Peter said, “From strangers” Jesus said to him, “Then the sons are exempt. However, so that we do not offend them, go to the sea and throw in a hook, and take the first fish that comes up; and when you open its mouth, you will find a shekel. Take that and give it to them for you and Me.”
Jose’s companion led him to the house where Jesus was staying. As Jose entered, Jesus looked up.
“Hello Jose.”
“Do you know me sir?” Jose asked in wonder.
“I have always known you.” Jesus replied. “I have known your joys, and your sorrows. You have served my Father well, Jose. Today you will enter into His paradise, and be reunited with your son.”
Jose was overwhelmed, and fell down before Jesus. Then the angels gathered up Jose’s soul and took him to heaven, for what is impossible for men is possible with God.