Last Dance of the Golden Butterflies

golden_butterflies-wallpaper-1440x960

‘Golden butterflies are the people you love but whom you lose,’ the grandfather told his granddaughter, not knowing she was about to see her very first one. A poignant story exploring the profound relationship between a wise grandfather and his curious granddaughter as they wait together for rain on a stormy evening. Through their tender conversation about the “golden butterflies” – the old man’s metaphor for departed loved ones who return with each rainfall – the narrative delves into themes of mortality, memory, and the cycle of life and death. The grandfather’s gentle explanations about sadness, understanding, and the beauty found in loss create a touching meditation on grief and remembrance. This bittersweet tale captures the innocent wisdom of childhood confronting the reality of death, culminating in a deeply moving conclusion that transforms the granddaughter’s understanding of love and loss forever.


The sky was intermittently dark. Each period of darkness ended with a lightning flash. Each flash was succeeded by a deep growl up above in the belly of the clouds. The light breeze smelled of a subtle promise of rain.

The old man with his head full of bushy, silver hair, stood quietly in the verandah. His cloudy, brown eyes were open, but looked at nothing in particular. Instead, they were filled with the grey shadows of memories.

‘Grandpa! What are you doing outside?’ The little girl walked out in search of her old friend.

‘I am waiting for the rain, child.’ He looked at her, smiling with affection.

‘Why are you waiting for the rain, Grandpa?’ She was one curious child.

‘Because that is what old men do. They look at the grey skies and wait for the rains.’ He answered softly.

‘But it had been raining. It has just stopped.’ The girl motioned at the wet grass.

‘Yes, the rain has stopped, but it will come again.’ The old man said while looking up at the heavy clouds, ‘The giants are still here with their great bellies heavy with rain.’

The little girl looked up and scratched her head. Sometimes she failed to understand the apparently simple words of her loving grandfather. But still she loved him.

She loved his old man smell - the Old Spice aftershave and the bittersweet smell of pipe tobacco. She loved his old man face, with its countless deep lines and the bushy hair in bad need of thorough brushing. And she loved his old man talk, which was always full of memories and stories, and nostalgia.

‘Why do you love rain, Grandpa?’ She persisted.

‘Hmm!’ He thought for a while and then answered kindly, ‘Because they smell good, my dearest. They smell of wet earth and they smell of the circle of life.’

‘Yeah! They do smell of wet earth.’ She inhaled deeply. ‘But what do you mean by the circle of life?’

‘Once, many million years ago, the elements made love and water was born. The warmth of the sun killed the water, and its soul became the vapors. The vapors float upwards and finally reach the clouds. Then the clouds growl and breathe new life into the vapors, and the raindrops start falling. They fall, and the earth appears larger and larger with each yard that they fall. The drops fall onto the parched earth, and they form happy puddles. And finally, they wait for the rising sun to die and become vapors again. This is the circle of life.’ The old man narrated the tale slowly and deliberately, choosing the simplest possible words.

‘That’s sad, Grandpa. I don’t like death.’ The little one was quite sensitive for her age.

‘Death is not the end, child. It is the beginning of a new circle of life.’ He smiled. ‘The puddles evaporate. The vapors float back above and form clouds. Then it rains again. The circle is repeated.’

‘So they come back……….the raindrops?’ She asked excitedly, ‘They always come back. Don’t they?’

‘Oh yes, they do. They always do, child.’ He breathed with obvious relief at her happy excitement.


 

Both the old man and the little girl sat down on the wooden stairs and started waiting for the return of rain. He placed his hand protectively around his granddaughter’s delicate shoulders and drew her nearer.

‘Grandpa?’ She asked after a while.

‘Yes, child!’ He knew the question-and-answer session was not over. In fact, it was never over. But he knew she loved asking questions, and he loved answering her questions.

‘Do you love rains only because they smell of wet earth and the circle of life?’ She asked.

‘No.’ The old man smiled, ‘I also love rain because it brings along the golden butterflies.’

‘Golden butterflies?’ The little girl’s eyes started shining with interest. ‘What are golden butterflies? I have never seen one.’

‘Golden butterflies are the people you love but whom you lose somewhere on the path of life.’ The old man told her while caressing her shoulder softly. ‘Whenever it rains, the golden butterflies come flying along with the thick drops of rain. They play and dance in the rain, their golden wings gleaming with the moisture. And I watch them. In fact, I love the golden butterflies more than the rains.’

‘Why can’t I see them, Grandpa?’ She so wanted to see those magnificent creatures.

‘Hmm……!’ The old man searched for an answer, ‘Because you haven’t lost anyone yet, my love. But no matter how much I detest the fact, you will lose those whom you love. And they will all become golden butterflies.’

‘Does it make you sad or happy - looking at the golden butterflies?’ She asked.

‘A little bit of both, I guess. It makes me sad when I think of my loss. But it makes me happy when I think of the sweet memories we once made.’

 ________________________________________________________________________

 

For a few moments, they sat together in silence. Both were thinking of the golden butterflies and listening to the silence of the rainy night. The silence was thick. It was as thick as a slab of invisible butter. One could almost slice it with a blunt-edged knife.

‘Grandpa?’ The child gently pulled on his gnarled hand again after a while.

‘Yes, child!’ He patted her hand in return.

‘Have you ever observed that it grows very silent just after a rain?’ She looked up into his face and asked. ‘I mean, before the crickets start singing and before the fireflies begin their magic dance of lanterns?’

‘Yes, it always grows silent just after a rain.’ The old man looked far into the night. ‘Legend says that it rains when the gods weep up above in the skies. Maybe, silence is a mark of respect for the suffering of the gods.’

‘Do you really believe that, Grandpa?’ She smiled naughtily, and the old man chuckled softly in return.

‘No! Of course not, child. The gods never suffer. That is why they are gods.’

‘Then why does it fall silent just after a rain?’ She repeated her question.

‘I believe the silence is the world’s acknowledgement of the sadness of life.’ The old man said.

The little girl remained quiet. She did not understand the sentence, but she did understand sadness. She understood it through her grandfather. In her happy world, he was the only sad entity. But still she loved him because, despite his sadness, the old man never failed to love her.

‘Why are you sad, Grandpa?’ She asked him hesitatingly.

‘Because I have spent so much of my life, little one.’ The old man ran his fingers lovingly through her silky hair. ‘I have found out that life is sad. And with time, I have learnt to love sadness.’

‘Why do you love sadness?’ She asked, and her grandfather smiled. He was expecting this question.

‘Because sadness brings along understanding - the understanding of life and the purpose of life.’ He answered thoughtfully.

‘Why don’t you like happiness?’ She was always ready with another question.

‘I don’t like it because it dulls my senses and makes me numb to the pain of others, around me.’ He replied.

‘I don’t like happiness too.’ The little girl announced firmly.

‘Ha! Ha!’ The old man laughed and then grew serious, ‘First, you get all the happiness you deserve.’ He waved his index finger in front of her tiny nose. ‘Only then do you have the right to like or dislike it.’

 


 

Suddenly, a thick drop fell on the little girl’s forehead. She looked up. Rain was starting to fall again. She looked at her grandfather. He was looking up too. The lightning flashed and the thunder cracked. She moved closer to him for comfort. Thunder frightened her.

‘Grandpa?’ She asked in a small voice.

‘Yes, child!’ He answered while patting her little hand reassuringly.

‘Can you see the golden butterflies?’ She searched the rain-filled sky.

‘Oh yes! I can see them. I can see them all. They are all floating down, riding the thick raindrops and dancing in the rain.’ The old man said dreamily.

‘Is Grandma one of those butterflies?’ She asked.

‘Oh yes! She is the biggest golden butterfly of all - the shiniest and the most magnificent of all of them.’ He smiled sadly.

‘Say hi to Grandma from my side.’ She so wanted to see her,  the most magnificent of all golden butterflies.

‘I will, child. I will.’ The old man said affectionately. ‘Now run back inside. Leave me alone with my golden butterflies.’

The little girl kissed the rough cheek of her grandfather and ran back inside. But before entering the door, she looked back at the old man. There he was, sitting under the pouring rain. The rain plastered his hair to his forehead, and the drops slid down his cheeks in torrents.

‘Grandpa?’ She shouted over the din of the falling rain.

‘Yeah?’ He answered without looking at her.

‘You know, I find rain very sad.’ She shouted, her eyes filling up with tears.

‘And why is that, little one?’ The old man’s question was almost drowned in the noise of the falling rain.

‘It is because rain hides your tears very well.’ She brushed her cheeks with the back of her hand and ran back inside.

 


 

It rained all through the night. For a while, the little girl watched her grandfather from the window. He kept sitting in the rain motionless. But he was smiling. She was almost sure of it. And she knew why he was smiling. He was watching his golden butterflies dancing in the rain. Then sleep came over, and she slept, dreaming of the love of her grandfather and the golden butterflies.

Morning came, and it was still raining. The little girl got up and looked outside her window. Her grandfather was still sitting where he was, the previous night. She hurriedly climbed down the stairs and ran outside.

The old man was almost sprawled on the stairs. His eyes were closed, but there was a most wonderful smile on his sleeping face.

‘Good morning, Grandpa!’ She lightly kissed his wet forehead. It was cold as ice.

‘Wake up, Grandpa!’ She shook his shoulder, and the lifeless body of the old man slid to one side.

The little girl knew something was horribly wrong. She thought of calling her mother. But something caught the corner of her eyes. It was floating above the rose bushes, gleaming in the rain. She looked closely and couldn’t believe her eyes. It was a golden butterfly - her first golden butterfly.

But the old man was wrong. The sight of the golden butterfly did not make her happy at all. Instead, it made her sad.

Sehnsucht – The Circle of Wistful Longing

A devastating circular narrative where five lives intersect in a single afternoon, each envying what the next possesses.

The story has been made into a multiple award-winning short film by my dear friend, Naqi Khawar. It is available for you to watch at:

https://youtu.be/1_pWkF5ulYo?si=svUABXzH6wueJZlr

_____________________________________________________________

Anna is sitting naked on a high-backed chair and is looking at her sad reflection in a cheap, aluminum-framed mirror. It is a small and sparsely furnished room in a grey, depilated apartment building.

There are two plastic chairs, placed in a corner, piled high with dirty laundry. A small TV is mounted on the wall. It is on mute, and the faded screen is alternating between static and a music video featuring a few garish characters from hell.

There is a double bed in another corner, and it is covered with a dark purple quilt. It is presently occupied by a naked, hairless man. He has a pale complexion and a bulging beer belly. His hairy belly button looks like a single eye staring back.

Two lamps are placed on side tables on each side of the bed. One out of these is throwing a red glare across the room, while the other is dark.

The room smells of cheap sex and sweat, and the stink of unwashed bodies. The room smells of desires, repeatedly fulfilled and repeatedly regretted.

The man gets up slowly, grabs hold of a soiled towel from a chair, and wipes his hairy and shriveled genitals. He examines the towel after the deed, and disgusted with what he sees, throws it on the floor. As he starts getting dressed, a tattered wallet slips out of the back pocket of his trousers. He picks it up, opens it, seems frustrated by what he sees, and puts it back in the pocket.

Anna gifts the man with a cold, hard glare, and her hand automatically starts inching towards the red panic button. The man understands the glare and looks unceasingly at the panic button. He knows the implications of Anna pressing this button. Once pressed, two burly gentlemen in cheap polyester suits, with shining boots and dead eyes, will appear, just like demons summoned by magic.

The man thinks of the steel toes of the shining boots, and fear creeps into his shrewd eyes. He is aware of the pain, which can be caused by the marriage of steel toes to his groin.

‘Fuck!’ He whispers, pulls out the wallet, and throws a few bills on the bed.

Anna duly observes the action and mentally counts the bills. Her hand withdraws from the red button.

The man looks at the inviting curve of Anna’s hips peeking from under the chair’s back and licks his dry lips. He checks his wallet and finds it almost empty. Groaning with disappointment, he gets out without a second glance.

Anna gets up, locks the door, and clicks the safety chain is in place. Picking up the soiled towel from the floor, she wipes herself down between the legs. Then, she picks up a cheap, disposable lighter, lights up a cigarette, and walks out on the balcony.

Anna examines the street below, oblivious to her naked body and the cheers from a few workers passing by. She is more interested in a couple. They are hurrying through the light, early afternoon rain, making splashes in the small pools of rainwater.

The couple looks married. The man is tall and is wearing a dark-colored overcoat. His female companion is also wearing a dark overcoat and is tightly clutching his arm. Suddenly, she slips in the water, but the man’s quick reflexes prevent her from falling. She looks up at him with a small, grateful smile. The couple walks on and vanishes around the corner.

Anna takes a deep drag on her cigarette and wishes she were the woman in the street, safe in the warm embrace of a man - her man.

_____________________________________________________________

The couple is still walking in the street, and the woman is still grasping the man’s arm. They walk on and enter a small pizza place. The man walks to the counter, while the woman removes her coat, and moves towards a small table in the corner. She adjusts the chair and examines her surroundings.

It is a small place with cheap furnishings and old movie posters on the walls. Only one other table is occupied - a tired-looking man, sitting with a small girl, five or maybe six years of age.

The woman eyes the child with interest. She is wearing a beige skirt and a red woolen cap, and is busy finishing her French fries, smeared with ketchup. She eats the last fry and wipes her mouth with the back of her hand.

‘Let’s go, Father. I am full.’ She tells the man, who smiles, kisses her head, and gets up.

The woman smiles at the little girl and thinks of her two children. They were killed in a hit-and-run accident a few years ago. Her eyes start brimming with tears. But then, seeing her husband coming back, she composes herself and smiles at him.

_____________________________________________________________

The man and his daughter walk out on the dark street, him holding the little girl’s hand. She tries to jump into every puddle, sometimes splashing her father’s trousers. But he does not mind, and instead encourages her on with a smile.

The rain has stopped since long, and the sun is beginning to paint everything with a golden-yellow warmth.

The man and the child pass by a small playing area, where a few children are enjoying the coldness of the wet slides. They are laughing in their sodden clothes, and their giggles and laughter catch the fancy of the little girl. She drags her father towards the park. They stand outside the fence, holding hands.

A boy stands out from amongst the small crowd of playing children. Almost as old as the man’s daughter, he is trying to swing as high as possible. Suddenly, he loses his grip and falls. A woman runs up to him, picking him up and wiping his bloody nose.

‘Look, what you have done,’ she sounds scared.

The boy smiles from behind his tears, and his smile calms her down a bit.

Looking at the now vacant and oscillating swing, the little girl looks up at her father with pleading eyes.

‘No, some other day maybe.’ He denies her silent request softly.

He looks at the boy and his mother and envies their happiness. Then, he grabs the girl’s hand and they start walking again. They are getting late. She has cancer, and today is her appointment for the first dose of chemotherapy.

_____________________________________________________________

‘Keep your head tilted upwards. It will stop the bleeding.’ The worried mother instructs her son while they are hurrying home.

‘Don’t worry, Mom. I am fine. Look, the bleeding is almost stopped.’ The boy tells his mother cheerfully.

She examines his nose, and seeing the clotting blood on his upper lip, sighs with relief. They walk on and enter an old apartment building. The lobby and the staircase reek of stale piss and poverty.

They start climbing the stairs. The boy is happy and is hopping up the stairs two at a time. But the woman wishes the stairs would never end. She is thinking of her alcoholic and abusive husband, who is awaiting their return. She imagines him sitting in front of the TV, scratching his hairy belly, and thinking of some new means of torturing his wife.

The woman and the boy finally reach the door of an apartment on the second floor.

‘The door to my personal hell.’ The woman thinks apprehensively, shrugs her shoulders in frustration, and unlocks the door.

‘Back so soon?’ A deeply slurred and sarcastic voice echoes from inside the room.

‘Come here.’ The voice beckons, and the boy quickly runs to his room, scared to the core of his being of his drunk father.

The woman walks to where the man is sitting. She looks at the leather belt, with its heavy, steel buckle, clenched tightly in his hand. A cold shiver runs down her spine.

‘Please God, no.’ She silently prays, but God does not live in the houses of the poor.

The man gets up with a menacing grin. She bends her head with silent helplessness and turns to face the other way.

The man raises his arm, and the belt hits the woman just above her hips. The leather traces liquid fire across her back. She screams in pain, and the man’s smile widens with pleasure.

Once, twice, thrice, the woman loses count and stops screaming after five. Finally, the man is tired and sinks back into the sofa in a drunken stupor.

The woman collects herself and walks out on the balcony. She rests her bruised back against the cold, rain-soaked wall. Tears are streaming down her face.

She looks enviously at Anna, smoking on the adjacent balcony.

Anna throws down the butt and goes back inside.

The circle of longing is complete.