The Feast
“Father! Father! Someone’s coming!”
Two ragged snot-nosed children, brown as the earth that baked them in its dust, came running into the little hut. The father, who was sitting on his haunches smoking a local weed, broke into a wheezing cough that racked his skeletal frame.
“Someone’s coming!” The younger one danced in front of him, and received a resounding whack on his head as a reward.
“A man is coming.” The mother hovered in front of the door with a naked toddler clinging onto her filthy skirt, and another in her arms.
Her husband simply grunted, and continued his smoking.
The visitor was a young foreigner, clad in the usual sturdy gear of a backpacker. He was red and sweaty, with pale blue eyes and large hands.
The children ran up to him, laughing and greeting him with howls and cartwheels. He grinned back at them, and searched in his pockets for some candy. He tossed a few mints to the ground, and the children scrambled to pick them up, fighting each other off.
He came up to the door, and joined his hands, bowing low before the mother.
His greeting evoked a shy smile as she disappeared within, and a few minutes later, the man emerged. They sized up each other: one a bag of bones, clad in a loincloth and stooped, the other bursting with health, robust and hearty. They spoke no common language; their bodies did the talking.
The foreigner soon made himself comfortable. The children gathered around him, curious and invasive. Through gestures and signs, they began communicating somewhat.
“Why are you so far away from the village?” the foreigner signed.
“We are not allowed inside,” the man signed back. “They will stone us if they see us around. Stone us or beat us. We cannot go inside any village.”
“Why?”
The man shrugged. “We are considered dirty, not like them.”
“You mean, untouchable?”
“Whatever.” The man seemed to lose interest, and began smoking again.
The children were now helping the mother prepare a fire. She then rolled a large cauldron onto the fire, and poured water into it.
“A feast?”
“Yes.”
The foreigner was used to it. In every village he visited, they touched his white skin in awe, checking to see if the white color had rubbed off onto their fingers. Everywhere he went, they feted him and threw lavish feasts. At first it was an embarrassing novelty; now it was what he expected, as if it were his right to be celebrated.
He rubbed his stomach and grinned. “I’m hungry!”
The man threw an odd glance at him and looked away. He hesitated, as if trying to make up his mind how to respond. Finally, he offered the foreigner what he was smoking. The latter accepted the pipe cheerfully–some of these local concoctions were incredible.
A few potent puffs saw the foreigner relaxing, his mind drifting into a blissful trance. Perhaps it was all for the best, for he never knew when the pipe slipped from his fingers, when he slid to the ground unconscious, or when the sharp knife slit his throat.
“We won’t go hungry for a week now,” the man said, as he collected the blood that spurted out into a mud cup.
The mother looked on with greedy eyes, while the children whooped with joy.

Loved this! Wonderful story!
Comment by Bob Eccles — February 10, 2009 @ 6:22 pm
[...] am happy to share with you the news that The Feast is now up on [...]
Pingback by The Feast « Thought Raker — February 10, 2009 @ 11:38 pm
A great gruesome story.
Comment by jennifer walmsley — February 15, 2009 @ 9:18 am
I liked this one because it caught me off guard. I became so caught up in what the stranger would do that I didn’t consider what he would have done to him. Good job.
Comment by joshua scribner — February 24, 2009 @ 2:02 pm