The strange encounter of master RadovanA Story by Slaven PosavacIt's a fictional account of the creation of master Radovan's portal in Trogir.In 1240 in Trogir it was about 3 AM and the world was far away from waking up. One man, however, was staring at the nearly finished portal of the Trogir Cathedral like it was a sunny afternoon. Eyes filled with wonder and with a childlike smile he marveled at the perfect example of symbiosis between man and stone. “Alright”, he thought to himself, “I’ll give you this.” Behind the corner of todays City Street, far from the wonderment of this early bird, a faint light appeared. It was growing, becoming stronger and was slowly moving from left to right, left to right, left to right like it was sending some secret message. After a while, crossing the square and leaving stone houses behind it, the light came to and revealed its owner. It was a man of short stature in his fifties, wrapped around his waist was a leather apron that said about its owner more than anything could. The apron has seen better days, it was furrowed, scarred, dirty, torn around the edges, filled with holes but the man wore it around his waist like a shield, like a glove, proudly tucking his left hand on it and gently fondling it. The man stopped, lifted his lantern to better see the stranger admiring the portal. He turned to the right where he was met by darkness. The same thing happened when he looked to the right and in that darkness he couldn’t see anything or anyone except the unfinished portal and the man in front of it. The moon dissolved its threads through the dark and everything had a slight silvery shine and be mindful that this was the time when witches and fey folk still roamed the night-colored roofs. The man stared indecisively and with a touch of fear in his heart at the stranger for a few moments trying to decide what to do. In the end he simply said: “Pardon me” as he hanged the lantern on a wedge protruding from the stone. “You are pardoned”, said the stranger. The man took out a chisel and a wooden mallet that were tucked inside the apron, with a painful sigh he sat on a nearby chair and, with movements as light as a whisper, started to work the stone. The next half an hour, man and the stranger spent in silence. Busy in his work, the man forgot there was someone next to him. In fact, he forgot everything: the little people on fast horses rapidly advancing to his beloved sea, the crusaders that are trying to prove to the world that they are right and others are not. He forgot about his son, a son who would be twenty years of age in two months and to whom he would say: “Happy birthday my son, this piece of stone is for you. It’s not much, but it is forever.” In the nothingness of thoughts and emotions, in that comfort he was interrupted by the stranger. Again they spent some time in silence. The stranger watched the details of the portal, especially the part containing the birth of Christ and the promise of salvation it offers. Here and there he would gently touch a detail and murmured something in his chin. Here and there he would smiled through his nose and then sigh. He was in a world of his own, standing beneath the apostles and the saints like waiting for them to answer him, but there was no answer of any sort, just the clatter of a mallet and the echo of steel. Radovan was getting used to the dark and being alone again but the stranger had different intentions. “I see here that you have Adam and Eve here and the whole ‘first sin’ incident. Also there are saints, Christ and his birth, but there’s this empty part. What will that be if it is not too big of a secret?” curious was the stranger. The stranger continued: “Once there was a, let us say man. He wanted to give people fire, common sense, knowledge, free will be cause he believed that was the only thing that mattered " to be free, deprived of predetermination. His plan went poorly, of course. Perhaps you heard some versions of that story?” Radovan nodded in agreement. “Well, the stories took their tribute over the years and that man has gone. That is, he did not exist in the form he was born anymore, no… the stories changed him. Stories are like this rock of yours, they are eternal, but you have to be a bit more careful with them. They can’t be chiseled, but they can be set in stone. Which should be a rule because stories have that nasty habit to change themselves over time. A hero becomes a villain, a villain becomes a hero, and some of us walk that thin line in the middle.” He stopped talking and left Radovan in silence for a few moments. Radovan was never overtly religious person, but he feared God and was dedicated in his christian duties because that was the world he lived in and he never heard these kind of words and the ideas behind them. From sailors and soldiers he heard of infidels from all corners of the world that give God a different name. He heard of men who have hundreds of gods, of men who worship Eostre under whose feet flowers grow. He heard of Chernobog who cracks skulls with a hammer, but never was such blasphemy so close to him. “You think I should put the memory of my son in this stone instead of God?” he asked the stranger. “Happy birthday, my son”, he said with a smile on his face. © 2014 Slaven PosavacAuthor's Note
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Added on October 13, 2014Last Updated on October 13, 2014 |

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