Many years ago I was on a train travelling through the Spanish desert when the woman opposite me asked if I would open the window
As soon as I did she expressed her excess milk from the train
I thought little of it until I travelled back through the desert some weeks later
Where there had only been parched sand there were now flowers of many colours
The train slowed down as it passed through the rainbow desert and I took the opportunity to jump from the train unnoticed
Flowers grew in abundance in all directions
The blue ones grew in the shadow of the hills whilst the red and orange flowers clung to the railway lines
As I was taking photographs for my magazine three children approached me and asked for water
I asked the children why they were in the desert so far away from any town
They told me that they were looking for their mother who they had lost
I asked for a description of their mother
Our mother is brighter than the sun shedding rays of light clearer and stronger than a crystal goblet full of sparking water pierced by the rays of the sun
Their description matched that of the woman who had shed her birth milk freely into the desert on my outward journey
I told the children of my brief meeting and they asked that I might stop the next train so that they could board it and further their search
This I did and soon I was alone in the desert again surrounded by the rainbow flowers
I stayed in the desert for the next ten years and made my home amongst the rainbow flowers
The world gradually forgot about me
Until one day during the height of summer when a passing train stopped
A nun and the woman I had briefly met many years previously alighted and walked towards me
The nun smiled and touched my beard
Not many would recognise you now Jack Bill but you have completed God’s task
There is a compartment for you on the train
Return to the world you left behind
Without answering I joined the train
The nun and the woman I had met on the train were standing in the shade of a small tree
They had collected my meagre possessions and had handed them to the guard
As the train gathered speed I noticed that the rainbow flowers were beginning to wilt and soon all I could see was sand
Within days of my return I was again in possession of my previous life and people treated me as I had never been away from the city
I returned to the desert many years later
On the day that the nun died
But in the area where the flowers had once grown I found only sand
Yet in this sand there were many footprints
Some were silver
Some were gold
But all were brushed by the brilliant dust of the rainbow flowers