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<p>This story takes place in the Central Rim of the Soronan Desert, but
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the world is bigger than this region. The wind blows counter-clockwise
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around the planet. The top of the planet is referred to as Yoramawa, and
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it’s bottom as Yoralo.</p>
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<p><img src="media/map.jpg" /></p>
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<p>Directions in Wiktopher are written in Finic:</p>
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<p>Saa’mu(sawa’muko) — against the wind<br />
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Saa’ta(sawa’atae) — with the wind<br />
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Yora’mu(yoramawa’muko) — towards the soul of the land<br />
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Yora’ta(yoramawa’atae) — away from the soul of the land</p>
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<h1 id="voice-of-the-ilk">Voice Of The Ilk</h1>
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<p><img src="media/fauna.ilk.png" /></p>
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<blockquote>
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<p><em>The giant walkers of the Soronan desert. There are three Ilk in
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existence: Oto, Bala and Vol. To communicate with each other, Ilk
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produce low-frequency vocalizations at high amplitudes.</em></p>
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</blockquote>
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<p>Today was Naming Day in the Ilk village of Volare<a href="#fn1"
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class="footnote-ref" id="fnref1" role="doc-noteref"><sup>1</sup></a>.
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For the occasion, many came to place flowers and herbs on Lupen’s
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doorstep. The different varieties made the entrance to the house appear
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overgrown, and wild. No one bothered to knock, they knew that Lupen was
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likely too busy for visitors.<br />
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This Verido <em>was</em> busy, busy searching for the missing piece
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to complete the ceremonial outfit. Lupen sighed upon seeing the state of
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the house. The floor of the main room was littered with many objects,
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pieces of unfinished projects, attempts at honing a skill, any skill.
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Lupen had tried to learn to knit but the resulting hat was a disaster
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and was now used as a tea cozy. Lupen had watched others knit before,
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the motions were familiar to these eyes but these hands could not
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replicate them. Everyone had a skill, but perhaps Lupen’s was the art of
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cluttery.<br />
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Lupen paused the search to sample a batch of licky root<a
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href="#fn2" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref2"
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role="doc-noteref"><sup>2</sup></a> tea that had been steeping since
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yesterday’s first sunrise outside. The dark roots of the plant, heavy
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with liquid, lay at the bottom of the bottle. The brew was tucked in the
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growing amassment of plants near the entrance to the house. The drink
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was syrupy and sweet. “Yep, it’s ready,” Lupen said, wrenching the
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bottle from the fuzzy arms of a plant that had encircled the bottle
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overdark, with the goal of reaching the precious beverage. Lupen carried
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the bottle back inside, careful to avoid the carpet of delicate leaves
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and stems, allowing them to breathe their last in peace. Licky root was
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grown here, Lupen walked to the base of Vol’s nape everyday to harvest
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it. Few plants could thrive up here, the altitude did not permit much,
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but shroos, and small garden herbs were plentiful.<br />
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<em>Si Re ___ Fa</em> A whistle. “Look at <em>you</em>! All dressed
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up and fancy-like!”<br />
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Lupen spun right around to look at Rosmus, a neighbour and close
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friend. Rosmus stepped over the plants carpetting the pathway leading
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into the house. This Verido was taller and an annum<a href="#fn3"
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class="footnote-ref" id="fnref3" role="doc-noteref"><sup>3</sup></a>
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older than Lupen, with hair standing on end, higher than anyone in
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Volare.<br />
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Lupen <em>was</em> looking more dapper than usual, dressed in
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traditional ceremonial wear consisting of a necklace of blue thread
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hanging over a bare chest, with a knee-long patterned cloth wrapped
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around the waist, the cloth was superimposed with a woven isilk<a
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href="#fn4" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref4"
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role="doc-noteref"><sup>4</sup></a> mat. “Since the second sunset,
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that’s how long I’ve been looking for each piece. But I’m <em>still</em>
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missing a thing.”<br />
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“Your hair looks real nice!” Rosmus said, impressed.<br />
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Lupen’s hair was short on the sides and long at the top where it
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slumped forward and dipped partially over the forehead. During special
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events, Verido people dyed their sand-coloured hair and faces using the
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crushed pigments of the fruit of the looberry<a href="#fn5"
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class="footnote-ref" id="fnref5" role="doc-noteref"><sup>5</sup></a>
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plant. Lupen had covered up most areas, but the paint was too thin,
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leaving visible pale broad streaks of tan skin. “I ran out of looberries
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halfway into it.” Lupen admitted. When applied correctly, the blue paint
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covered everything from the bridge of the nose to the top of the
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head.<br />
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“Doesn’t show.” Rosmus lied, holding a basket. “Oh! I got you a
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gift! Thought we could hang around here and plant these trumpet flower<a
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href="#fn6" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref6"
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role="doc-noteref"><sup>6</sup></a> bulbs! In a quarter annum they’ll
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start flowering! And when they do… well, you <em>know</em> what I’m
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getting at! No one else tends to your need for intoxicants like I do,
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eh?”<br />
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“<em>Your</em> need you mean. Your house is full so you’re looking
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to invade mine, a space moocher is what you are,” Lupen said, “anyway,
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why are you trying to keep me here? You know what’s going on
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today.”<br />
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“Yes but I’ve decided that we’re not going to that,” Rosmus
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said.<br />
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“Oh, is that so?”<br />
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“I’ve been making decisions for you for a long while now, don’t tell
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me you’ve just noticed it.” There was a bottle strapped to Rosmus’s
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belt, full of red liquid with a wrinkly fruit floating inside. “I
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brought kabacho<a href="#fn7" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref7"
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role="doc-noteref"><sup>7</sup></a> for us to drink! It’s been soaking
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for a full annum. It’s going to be <em>real</em> strong!”<br />
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Lupen laughed. “As much as I’d like to just sit around and drink
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with you all day I’ve <em>got</em> to go. I don’t have a choice.”<br />
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“You <em>do</em> have a choice.” Rosmus corrected. “You think you
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don’t, but you can do whatever you want. Come on, don’t you think it’d
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be more fun to do <em>this</em> instead?”<br />
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“Fun. Yea, sure. It sounds fun, but the ceremony’s more important, I
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think.”<br />
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“Who <em>cares</em>,” Rosmus said, “why go at all? I mean, you
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already <em>know</em> you won’t be named Voice<a href="#fn8"
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class="footnote-ref" id="fnref8" role="doc-noteref"><sup>8</sup></a> so
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you know, why bother?”<br />
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“Tradition.”<br />
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“Right. Don’t you think it unfair though? To be part of a contest
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with a predetermined result? Mago’s family has always been Voice, since
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Volare’s time, and that’s not about to change! When you think about it,
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there’s really no point in you being there at all! Come on, give me a
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mug that I can fill.”<br />
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“It’s just like you to say something like that…” Lupen said, busy
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upturning the place, finding other things thought to be lost, but these
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stayed in their spot, to be forgotten and rediscovered again at a later,
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more convenient time. “I’m going. Don’t ask me again.”<br />
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Rosmus, lacking a mug, took a sip of kabacho straight from the
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bottle instead, then struggled for a moment, trying to finish a thought,
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having much trouble getting the lips and tongue to cooperate. “So you’re
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fine with pretending you can win this?”<br />
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“I’m not pretending! Ah, it doesn’t matter. I’m <em>fine</em> with
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it is what I’m saying.” Annoyed, Lupen moved to the other side of the
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room to look behind a table. “Ha! It’s here! I’ve found it!” The long
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blue scarf had been hiding there this whole time, wedged between a table
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and the wall. Lupen put the scarf on, coiling it tight. In truth, this
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wasn’t an official part of the Naming Day ceremonial wear, but Lupen
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wanted to wear it anyway. The scarf was a gift from Levi, Lupen’s mapa<a
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href="#fn9" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref9"
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role="doc-noteref"><sup>9</sup></a>. “Anyway, I could never be Voice.
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Mago’s better suited for it.”<br />
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Rosmus sighed, lips stained red with kabacho. “Did you ever think
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that maybe you’re always under-performing because you know you can’t
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win? That whatever you do won’t change the outcome, so you don’t
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try?”<br />
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“I’ll find something else I’m good at. I’ll see it more clearly when
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this thing is over. I know it.”<br />
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Rosmus set the kabacho on the ground, found an amusing hat and
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decided to keep it. Ros then picked up a koutra<a href="#fn10"
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class="footnote-ref" id="fnref10" role="doc-noteref"><sup>10</sup></a>
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from the floor and tried to play it, holding it by the neck, stringing
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the isilk threads. “Lupen, singer songwriter?”<br />
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“I’d need a better koutra, that one’s got a problem.”<br />
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Rosmus played a short song to test the instrument, fingers dancing
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across its top-face. The notes were pleasant, and echoed through the
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house. Rosmus smirked at Lupen, and began to sing, “a quartet of
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strings. Harmonious singings.”<br />
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“Yes, yes, I get it, I get it. It’s me… <em>I’m</em> the problem…”
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Even while admitting this, Lupen eyed the stringed instrument with
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resentment. “I’ve got to go.” The Verido moved toward the door, stepping
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over objects to get to it, but came up to the bottle of kabacho and
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decided to take a sip. “For my nerves.” Lupen said.<br />
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“Hey! What if you actually did become Voice?” Rosmus yelled. “We
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could go drink at The Ear<a href="#fn11" class="footnote-ref"
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id="fnref11" role="doc-noteref"><sup>11</sup></a> all day! Best view in
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all of Volare! No one would come to bother us up there!”<br />
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“Now <em>that</em> would be sacrilegious!” Lupen said with a laugh,
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before breaking into a run. The centre of the village was nearby but the
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first sun was high, at any moment the ceremony would start.</p>
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<p>Mago was standing in front of the Volare town hall, an imposing
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edifice on the lowermost area of the Ilk’s nape. There were people
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everywhere, wrapping looma<a href="#fn12" class="footnote-ref"
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id="fnref12" role="doc-noteref"><sup>12</sup></a> vines around poles and
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hanging wreaths of dried bibiskiss<a href="#fn13" class="footnote-ref"
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id="fnref13" role="doc-noteref"><sup>13</sup></a> on doors. The
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volunteers stood on top of tall, skinny ladders, swaying gently from
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left to right with the motion of their world.<br />
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Much of the happenings in Volare are tied to what is commonly
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referred to as kaala. Kaala, the rhythm of Vol’s heartbeat, is used to
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count the time, to rock children to sleep, and to measure their
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advancement towards their next stop. A giant pendulum erected in the
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town square swayed too, a wheel of numbers counting up each time the
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weight swings to one side. When the number hits seventy-eight, a disc
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drops from the top of a pole. After ten discs, or ten horos<a
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href="#fn14" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref14"
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role="doc-noteref"><sup>14</sup></a>, the pole is switched out with an
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empty one, marking the start of a new day.<br />
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To withstand the motion, Volare architects build tall, narrow
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houses, that twist and bend without breaking. Each structure is built
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around a central pillar positioned in the centre, with each floor
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permitting a fair degree of sway. Whenever Vol rocks to the right, the
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first floor of the houses also moves that way, but the second floor
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moves left, and the third to the right, and so on. This wobbling effect
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kept the structures intact.<br />
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A disc dropped from the top of the pole then, marking a new horo.
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<em>Re <em>.</em> Re .___ Re .._ SiFa Fa._.</em> Someone whistled in
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Ilken<a href="#fn15" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref15"
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role="doc-noteref"><sup>15</sup></a>, loud enough for the entire city to
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hear.<br />
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Mago gulped. Naming Day processions were supposed to start at the
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seventh disc drop of the day. Unlike Lupen’s, Mago’s ceremonial outfit
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was without wrinkles or dust. The Volarian’s short, sandy hair was heavy
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with decorative beads.<br />
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Mago likes to climb, and does well in most sports. Today, Mago
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appeared less confident than usual, eyes looking up at the Ilk’s
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towering head, fidgeting with the ceremonial necklace.<br />
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Everyone waved at Mago, smiling and saying things like: ‘Good luck
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in there!’ or, ‘You were born to do it!’ Mago wondered if they said
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these same things to cousin Lupen too, the townspeople were kind, and
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weren’t known to play favourites.<br />
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“Mago!” Armyn, Mago’s mapa, called out, waving a hand to try and get
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their attention. Armyn was bound to a push-chair, ferried around by a
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younger Verido. “Mago! Anyone in there?”<br />
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Mago groaned. “I don’t have to say <em>yes yes</em> at every word!
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You know I’m listening mapa…”<br />
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“Well, I want to hear you say it.”<br />
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“I’m nervous, okay. You know I am!”<br />
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“Yes, but you forget that I went through the same with cousin Levi,
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and my mapa went through it too with cousin Laggra. I’m here, right now,
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telling you that you have nothing to worry about! Our family line is
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strong, and I know firsthand who’s the best for the role.” Armyn said,
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smiling up at Mago. Levi had taught Lupen how to be Voice, but then that
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job fell onto Armyn to teach them both. “It happened ages ago, but
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looking at you now, it’s strange… like going backwards in time.”<br />
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“Cousin Levi was really good. I heard the stories. Levi almost got
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the title.”<br />
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“Yes, that’s true. Levi would have done many more great things, but
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we can’t think about what could have been, we’ve got to focus on what
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is! Lupen is good, but lacks your focus my love!” Armyn’s eyes darted
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back for a moment, “I have to go! They’re waiting for me. I’ll see you
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there!” Armyn was wheeled away, disappearing into the town hall, passing
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under a banner that read ‘Voice of Volare naming ceremony’.<br />
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A small child stood near the banner, trying to sound the words
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written on it in Ilken with little success. “That doesn’t sound right at
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all.”<br />
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“You almost got it.” Mago said, with a kind smile, “Here, watch me.”
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Mago’s hands moved into place, cupping the mouth in the right way. Mago
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took a deep breath, stomach clenching, and then out came a series of
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soft whistles. The sounds varied in length, pitch and rhythm.
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Otherworldly, metallic almost. This song was played quietly because the
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receiver was nearby, but for Verido people Ilken was a loud language,
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usually reserved for long distance communication.<br />
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Mago whistled a second time to make sure the child had heard it
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right. “See? Voice-of-Volare. Now you try it. Watch your pitch on the
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vowels.”<br />
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Eyes wide, the child positioned both hands and lips in the same way,
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and tried again. Most Verido people could not speak it, but many liked
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to try. Only Voices had the training to carry words far. They could not
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vocalize like an Ilk, but for their size, they could produce the loudest
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sound in the desert.<br />
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“Do you really talk to the Ilk?” The child asked.<br />
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Mago smiled. “No. Not yet, but if I become Voice then yea, we’ll
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talk everyday!”<br />
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“Wow!” The child said, starry-eyed.<br />
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Volare villagers were setting up a small stage near the town hall
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onto which they would be playing music later. Mago loved the sounds of
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the donmol<a href="#fn16" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref16"
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role="doc-noteref"><sup>16</sup></a> and the koutra. All children in
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Volare were raised with music at their lips and fingers.<br />
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Lupen arrived to take Mago’s side. “Well, well! If it isn’t the
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Tongue Wart of the Ilk!”<br />
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Mago grabbed Lupen’s left ear, twisted, and pulled it. “Think that
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if I keep your ear like this for five days it’ll shrivel up and fall
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off?”<br />
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“Ow! Ow! I’ll tell everyone you tried to cripple me!”<br />
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“They’ll think you did it to yourself! You <em>do</em> hurt yourself
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a lot.” Mago said, twisting it harder.<br />
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“Ow! Well yes, but not on purpose! You think I like pain?”<br />
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“You like attention, so who’s to say!” Mago paused then, “hey, why
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are your lips red?” Mago said, releasing Lupen’s ear. “You reek of
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kabacho! You fiend! You’ve been drinking!”<br />
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“Before the ceremony? I wouldn’t dare,” Lupen said with a sly grin,
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while trying to get some feeling back in that pained ear. “As if you
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could hold it like <em>that</em> for days…”<br />
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“Oh, you know I totally could and would.” Mago said, trying to reach
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for Lupen’s ear again, but then stopped, noticing the scarf. “Levi’s
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freaky scarf!”<br />
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“Long isn’t freaky.” Lupen protested.<br />
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“I love it. Coiled around like that, it makes it look like you have
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no neck. Why did Levi make it so long again?” Mago asked, grabbing the
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end of the long, long blue scarf, fingers stroking the neatly woven
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Isilk threads.<br />
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Lupen shrugged. “Who knows. Lev just kept adding lengths to it,
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saying I would need it long. Never really gave me a straight answer when
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I asked why. That was near the end anyway, one of many strange things
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Lev did. Though I can’t imagine how long it would have been if I hadn’t
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hidden those last bundles.” After a long pause, Lupen spoke again.
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“How’s Armyn doing?”<br />
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Mago shrugged. “Mostly fine. Health has deteriorated fast this
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quarter though.” Seven days ago, Armyn was able to walk, but now the
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shroo<a href="#fn17" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref17"
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role="doc-noteref"><sup>17</sup></a> infection had moved into the lungs.
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“Hasn’t gone up to The Ear in days.”<br />
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“Yea, it happens fast.” Lupen put a hand to Mago’s shoulder then, to
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offer comfort. “So, when’s The Leap<a href="#fn18" class="footnote-ref"
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id="fnref18" role="doc-noteref"><sup>18</sup></a>?”<br />
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“Soon.” Mago said.<br />
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“Well, I’ll be there for Armyn, and for you.” Lupen said, with a
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reassuring smile.<br />
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“Did you feed Henbi today?” Mago asked, but seeing Lupen’s
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expression it was evident that Henbi had not been fed. “I ought to take
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it in, you’re too forgetful to take care of smellydough<a href="#fn19"
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class="footnote-ref" id="fnref19" role="doc-noteref"><sup>19</sup></a>.
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You can’t keep abusing it like that you know?!” Mago said with a sigh.
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“I’m surprised you haven’t killed it yet.”<br />
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“I know, I know,” Lupen said, guiltily. “I always remember to do it,
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eventually.” In fact, Lupen kept a bag of woodgeon berries[^20] right
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next to the jar of bubbling wet flour. “I even ground berries this
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morning, I just got distracted that’s all.”<br />
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A large crowd had gathered around them at the town hall. The two sun
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were about to set. It was time. Everyone quieted down, and watched as
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the doors to the town hall opened. Lupen gulped. Even a funny-looking
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scarf wouldn’t be enough to calm Mago’s nerves now. But Lupen always
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knew what to say in such times…<br />
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“Let’s go inside, <em>oh</em> Venerable Nose Hair of the Ilk!”<br />
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“Hey don’t say that too loud!”<br />
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Mago chuckled as they both entered the building. The crowd cheered,
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waving flags of blue isilk, shouting their names.</p>
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<p>In Volare, there were no mansions or grand palaces. The town hall was
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an important, modest-sized building, its walls bore painted murals,
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images of the Ilk’s travels as well as a depiction of their founder and
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great leader Volare. The table sitting the village’s council members was
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covered with an embroidered isilk cloth, featuring stylized relief
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images of clouds and suns. The two now stood before 6 council members.
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Armyn was sitting on the far left, smiling and waving at them.<br />
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“Happy you could join us. Today, our Armyn, seventy’be annums old,
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is retiring after a lifetime of service,” the appointed speaker from the
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council said aloud, smiling at the two Voice candidates.<br />
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Armyn bowed. “I will miss being at The Ear, but my body is giving me
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clear signs that it’s time to let someone else delight in this
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experience. I’ve learned much of the world through Vol. I’ve no doubt
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that the new Voice will do grand things. I have personally trained both,
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||
and am very, very proud of them.” Armyn glanced at the two cousins
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fondly. “I will be preparing to Leap from Vol’s snout five days from
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||
now, I will want to speak to each of you before I go. You, whom I love.”
|
||
Saying these last words, Armyn’s open hand turned into a fist. “I will
|
||
carry this love with me.”<br />
|
||
“We will all bear witness to it, a Leap is a grand thing,” the
|
||
speaker said.<br />
|
||
Armyn smiled at this, as did Mago. Lupen remembered when Levi leapt
|
||
off The Snout. Their friends all gathered to watch, but they remained at
|
||
the base of The Neck since The Head was reserved for family. After
|
||
Levi’s Leap, Lupen was given a seed to sow in the town nursery.<br />
|
||
A musician began to play the donmol, an instrument with a flat back,
|
||
triangular-shaped sound holes, four double strings, a long neck, and a
|
||
raised fingerboard. The song was a re-telling of the history of this
|
||
city and of its founders. Lupen favourite moment was whens the three
|
||
founders, Otora, Balandri and Volare, first encountered the Ilks. The
|
||
three giants were gathered at the foot of a mountain in the Central Rim,
|
||
grazing on sweet grass. Volare stepped up first, sure-footed, bowing at
|
||
Vol’s hoof. The song was famous to the residents of Volare, but Lupen
|
||
could listen to it again and again without tiring.<br />
|
||
After playing a last note, the musician motioned for Lupen to
|
||
continue the song in Ilken. To become Voice, the candidates always
|
||
performed the last chorus on their own, as proof of their mastery of the
|
||
language. Lupen did well enough, despite missing a few notes, while
|
||
Mago’s performance was pitch perfect. There were other tests, which
|
||
included recitations and improvised verses, again, Mago triumphed while
|
||
Lupen’s lacked finesse.<br />
|
||
The last part of the ceremony consisted of a public reading of their
|
||
full family tree by Volare’s appointed Pattern Reader<a href="#fn20"
|
||
class="footnote-ref" id="fnref20" role="doc-noteref"><sup>20</sup></a>.
|
||
Every Verido’s skin bore patterns, a series of lines and dots, etched in
|
||
deep like the veins of a leaf.<br />
|
||
“Disrobe please,” said the Reader, standing up and approaching Lupen
|
||
first. The Reader was short, and had long wispy eyebrows, that tickled
|
||
the young Verido’s face. Mago caught this, and held back a laugh, a
|
||
smile danced on both of their mouths. The Reader’s finger followed the
|
||
blue lines on Lupen’s chest, racing down the arms and then down the back
|
||
before ending on the face, muttering names and words in a hushed voice
|
||
for some time. “Lupen, Levi, Laggra and Lunav. Direct descendants of
|
||
Volare, same klorea<a href="#fn21" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref21"
|
||
role="doc-noteref"><sup>21</sup></a> coursing through your veins. Very
|
||
good.”<br />
|
||
Then came Mago’s turn, the Reader followed the patterns, mumbling.
|
||
The set of wrinkled hands then touched a patch of rough skin. A burn.
|
||
The Reader looked dismayed. “I can’t read you.” The finger lay on an old
|
||
wound, carved there on Mago’s backside. Armyn was distraught, recalling
|
||
the event. Years ago, the Ilk stepped into a deep crevice. The violent
|
||
motion made the city on the creature’s back tremble. Armyn, a hot kettle
|
||
in hand, lost control and the scalding liquid left a lasting mark on
|
||
Mago.<br />
|
||
“But you know my family! We’ve been at the Ilk’s ear for three
|
||
generations!” Mago explained, red-faced. “What does it matter if you
|
||
can’t read it? There’s no denying where I come from.”<br />
|
||
The other councillors shook their heads, disapprovingly. All present
|
||
in the room knew the family yes, everyone in Volare did, but the
|
||
councillors were superstitious, and tradition was tradition. Appointing
|
||
someone with a muddy pattern, they said, would offend the Ilk, and they
|
||
couldn’t risk it. At these words, Mago froze. These words shocked Lupen
|
||
too. Armyn said nothing while the rest argued, they said the word
|
||
‘muddy’ often, each time hurting Mago further.<br />
|
||
Then the council came to an agreement. The Reader spoke up, “Lupen,”
|
||
Mago’s eyes fell to the floor, avoiding Armyn’s gaze, “you will be the
|
||
bridge between us and our Great Carrier Vol.”<br />
|
||
Both had undergone the same teachings, but there was never any doubt
|
||
that Mago would get the role. Can I refuse to be Voice? Lupen wondered.
|
||
No. Mago would never think of being Voice now, not after what they said.
|
||
There was nothing to do. The festivities were already beginning. Someone
|
||
was outside announcing the good news. As per tradition, a ceremonial
|
||
wreath made of braided isilk hairs was placed on Lupen’s head, along
|
||
with the robe worn by all Voices. Lupen wasn’t happy, and could sense
|
||
the same in Armyn.<br />
|
||
The Reader led Lupen outside to face the crowd, hands threw fistfuls
|
||
of dried woodgeon berries in the air and all began to sing. Rosmus stood
|
||
there, still in plain clothes, laughing, and waving a bottle of
|
||
half-empty kabacho.<br />
|
||
Should have stayed home, Lupen thought.<br />
|
||
All chanted, repeating Lupen’s name like a mantra. The world was a
|
||
blur, a mess of people amassing close and saying kind things. The eldest
|
||
of each family added a single bead to the wreath, after a while the
|
||
weight of it was giving Lupen neck pains.<br />
|
||
“You speak for us all when you’re up there! We trust in you. May
|
||
your presence at The Ear grant us many more annums on Vol’s back,” the
|
||
Reader said, adding yet another bead to the wreath.<br />
|
||
It was tradition for the Voice to climb to Vol’s ear during the
|
||
day’s festivities. The people would sing, dance and play games while
|
||
awaiting Lupen’s return the next morning. Wreath and all, the Voice
|
||
climbed up to The Ear alone, pushing through the tall tangles of hair on
|
||
Vol’s spine.<br />
|
||
The stomach in tangles, constricted by obligation, and
|
||
responsibility, Lupen found it hard to swallow, or breathe, even taking
|
||
steps was difficult. “I’m going to be sick,” Lupen said, afraid that
|
||
vomiting too could offend Vol. “What if I say the wrong thing, what if I
|
||
get everyone… thrown off.” The Voice’s vision began to blur at the
|
||
thought of getting everyone killed. “A looberry fell and fell from the
|
||
mountain top,” Lupen began to sing a song aloud to try and chase those
|
||
thoughts away, a song common to Volare children. “It rolled and rolled
|
||
down down down into the yellow yellow sand. Along came a snakadil<a
|
||
href="#fn22" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref22"
|
||
role="doc-noteref"><sup>22</sup></a>, and they began to play and play,
|
||
but it soon began to cry and cry. The looberry berry longed for home,
|
||
but the snakadil did not know what to do.” After singing it, Lupen
|
||
regretted the choice of song, and swallowed sick all the way up to The
|
||
Ear.<br />
|
||
On arrival, Lupen stopped to stare at Vol’s large, tufted, parabolic
|
||
ears, wondering what distant inaudible sounds they could perceive. It
|
||
was a calm, windless day. The horizon was hidden by a distant sand
|
||
cloud. All Lupen could hear was the faint noise of music of the
|
||
happenings in Volare, this, and the sound of the Vol’s breathing. Even
|
||
after being told many times what to do, and what to say to the Ilk,
|
||
standing here now Lupen seemed to have forgotten it all. Before the
|
||
Voice could say anything, the Ilk spoke. Vol spoke in rythmic hums and
|
||
grunts, a version of Ilken adapted to Verido-ears.<br />
|
||
Paying close attention to the length and pitch of each sound, Lupen
|
||
understood. “No wind.” The Voice said in Ilken, smiling. “Want to hear a
|
||
song I wrote?”<br />
|
||
Vol’s ear twitched at these words, listening closely. Lupen pulled
|
||
out a tiny instrument that looked like a comb with flexible prongs and
|
||
began to play a song. The Ilk seemed to enjoy it, its ears twisted at
|
||
every second note.<br />
|
||
As time passed Lupen became more comfortable. The Ilk gave
|
||
periodical updates on the weather or the terrain. Lupen listened to the
|
||
whistled conversations between it, and the others of its kind. There
|
||
were two other giants, the Ilk of Otora and the Ilk of Balandri, they
|
||
too carrying cities with Verido people. Few could hear Ilk communicating
|
||
with each other, and yet it was widely known that their conversations
|
||
spanned the entire desert. Veridos were able to detect some of their
|
||
low-frequency seismic communication.</p>
|
||
<p>The next morning, the festivities were over, Lupen descended, but
|
||
once again, was forced into more activities and celebrations with the
|
||
village people. All the while, Lupen thought of Mago, hoping to stop by
|
||
the house. Lupen did go later that same day, but Armyn let no one
|
||
inside.<br />
|
||
Lupen gave up, and went to see Rosmus instead. The tall-haired
|
||
Verido was busy grinding carapace shavings with a giant mortar and
|
||
pestle. “How was it up there?” Roz asked.<br />
|
||
Lupen smiled. “Amazing. Could have stayed longer, but um…I’m not
|
||
feeling too good. I’m worried about Mago.”<br />
|
||
“Mago needs time, that’s all…”<br />
|
||
“Did you know about the burn?”<br />
|
||
Rosmus did not look at Lupen, and continued to pulverize some more
|
||
shavings, “No. It’s silly though isn’t it? This whole thing? Muddy! What
|
||
nonsense. Mago’s lineage was clear as day.” Rosmus mixed a handful of
|
||
powder with the juice of a looma root, and began to massage it into
|
||
shape. “Land-dwellers name themselves, did you know this? Pattern
|
||
Reading, as it is now, has become a matter of superstition. Vol doesn’t
|
||
care about patterns or klorealines. We do. We rely on half-baked rituals
|
||
because we are afraid.” Rosmus said.<br />
|
||
“Afraid… of what?” Lupen asked, but in truth, did not want to know
|
||
the answer.<br />
|
||
“That our future is not certain, and that your presence at The Ear
|
||
doesn’t guarantee a thing.”<br />
|
||
While talking, Rosmus had shaped the soft mass into a recipient, and
|
||
was about to start carving shapes onto the outer sides of the bowl, but
|
||
decided instead to reach into a bag for an object, which was then placed
|
||
onto Lupen’s lap. “Here, I made you a tea cup.” The teacup was mottled
|
||
grey with a blue hue, it had a bulbous shape, and Rosmus had coiled a
|
||
decorative isilk braid around its handle. “You can tie it to your belt
|
||
with it, carry it around, maybe have a cup at The Ear. Tea will help you
|
||
think.”<br />
|
||
“I already have a tea cup.”<br />
|
||
“Yea. I’ve seen it. This one is better.” Rosmus grabbed the cup
|
||
again, and set it atop Lupen’s head. “It’s a Thinking Cup. Forces you to
|
||
look at the world, makes you question everything. If you need to have a
|
||
long think, fill it with tea and set it atop your head. It works, you’ll
|
||
see.”<br />
|
||
“I don’t need a cup of tea on my head to think,” the Verido said,
|
||
removing the cup from its perch. “I’ll look ridiculous.”<br />
|
||
“No, you’ll appear pensive, which will make you look smart.” Rosmus
|
||
said, continuing to crush more powder, amassing enough material for a
|
||
dozen more Thinking Cups.</p>
|
||
<p>Everyday Lupen climbed to The Ear, bringing a new joke to tell. This
|
||
was a challenge that resulted in many sleepless horos, Lupen was busy,
|
||
hard at work composing jokes suitable for an Ilk. It was possible that
|
||
the Ilk did not have a sense of humor, although some annums ago Armyn
|
||
had mentioned something Vol had said about a grain of sand and a mudbear
|
||
at a snack bar. Mago had been certain that this was an attempt at a
|
||
joke. Lupen missed their friendship, they hadn’t spoken in days.<br />
|
||
“We don’t want to see anyone.” Armyn had said, dishevelled. After
|
||
the ceremony both went home, and had not come out since. The only person
|
||
who had dared to visit was Lupen.<br />
|
||
“That can’t be what Mago wants.”<br />
|
||
“I don’t like what you’re implying,” Armyn said, eyes narrowing
|
||
down, “you can’t come here everyday.”<br />
|
||
“I’m sorry, I know Mago ought to have been…” Lupen stopped, wincing
|
||
at those last, unspoken words. “Please let me help.”<br />
|
||
“A curse has befallen us!” Armyn pushed forward and whispered
|
||
through closed teeth, “it’s Vol, it meant for this to happen. Don’t you
|
||
see? It shook the ground, and made me harm my child! Oh! I will die with
|
||
this pain in my flesh…”<br />
|
||
Feeling sad, Lupen left. Evidently Armyn was not well, but Mago was
|
||
likely worse. Was this the end of their friendship? They were family,
|
||
Lupen couldn’t stand the thought of losing them both, but insisting
|
||
further at this point would only cause them more harm.</p>
|
||
<p>Every day Mago had dreams about pushing Lupen off Vol’s head before
|
||
waking up, feeling nauseous and guilty. Lupen was a friend, getting rid
|
||
of this rage was more important than grieving. There was no telling how
|
||
such thoughts could affect Mago’s mind. Already there was an itch there,
|
||
a dark sludgy patch that consumed up all the good thoughts. The only way
|
||
to get rid of that feeling was to find Lupen and to apologize for
|
||
disappearing. It was time to move on, there were plenty of things to do
|
||
on the Ilk, in fact Lupen had hoped to become a Hand<a href="#fn23"
|
||
class="footnote-ref" id="fnref23" role="doc-noteref"><sup>23</sup></a>
|
||
of the Ilk, like Levi had been.<br />
|
||
“That’s right, I could be Hand,” Mago thought. Levi wanted to be
|
||
Voice, but after being denied the role, had adored being Hand. In fact,
|
||
Levi’s work had saved Vol from a major digestive system infection many
|
||
annums ago, one that threatened the creature’s life. It was a worthy,
|
||
important role.<br />
|
||
Mago finally left the house but did not find Lupen home. A strong
|
||
wind rushed inbetween the buildings, sounding like a long wailing cry.
|
||
Mago gazed up at the Ilk’s head, most of it already engulfed in a thick
|
||
cloud of dust, and concluded that this is where Lupen was. During stormy
|
||
weather, someone had to stay at The Head. If ever something bad
|
||
happened, Vol would communicate it to The Voice, who in turn would
|
||
translate the message, whistling it to the Hands who would attend to the
|
||
problem.<br />
|
||
That morning Lupen had communicated that a storm was coming, so
|
||
people in the city closed their shutters and wrapped scarves around
|
||
their faces. Once at The Nape of The Neck Mago tied one end of a braided
|
||
isilk rope as a security line that ran along Vol’s spine. Hands made use
|
||
of these safety lines often.<br />
|
||
And so began the long, arduous climb to the head. The wind
|
||
increased, but this wasn’t Mago’s first climb in such conditions, and
|
||
the safety line was enough. Mago used the thick hair on the Ilk’s spine
|
||
as handholds, and quickly arrived at the top.<br />
|
||
Lupen stood next to The Ear, which looked like a giant fuzzy plant,
|
||
dark on the outside and pink on the inside. Once in a while the ear
|
||
would twist, the Voice caressed it, in an attempt to calm the giant.
|
||
There was little shelter on the head, nothing to keep the sand from
|
||
grinding you down. Lupen wore a scarf and a thick cloak. Vol’s eyes were
|
||
cloudy, a third eyelid drew across them and acted as a protective
|
||
curtain, a lot of particles lay trapped in its eyelashes too, they did a
|
||
good job of keeping the vision clear. The tiny specks looked like
|
||
insects trapped in a web. Their thick coats insulated them from the
|
||
intense heat radiated from desert sand, and their gait and wide feet
|
||
help them to walk without sinking.<br />
|
||
The Voice was too busy scanning the horizon to notice that someone
|
||
else was there. The rope tying Lupen to the Ilk lay on the ground. Mago
|
||
was waiting for the right time to step forward, but couldn’t gather the
|
||
courage to do it.<br />
|
||
Finally, their eyes met. Lupen turned, yellow eyes showed through
|
||
small openings in the blue scarf. With a back to the wind, Lupen pushed
|
||
a bit of scarf away to reveal a smile concealed underneath.<br />
|
||
“I’m sorry I didn’t congratulate you, and that I avoided you… and my
|
||
mapa’s behaviour…”<br />
|
||
“You should be Voice Mago, not me.”<br />
|
||
“Please don’t say that.”<br />
|
||
“I mean it. Vol keeps correcting my Ilken. It’s embarrassing.”<br />
|
||
Mago smirked at this, but did not feel worthy of Lupen’s
|
||
kindness.<br />
|
||
“We’re still friends right?” Lupen asked.<br />
|
||
The Ilk let out a groan to warn them of an incoming gust. Both
|
||
Verido braced themselves for impact. Sand swept Lupen up into the air,
|
||
as a flurry of yellow grain swallowed the world. Mago stayed put, belly
|
||
on the ground, holding onto the security line. When the wind eased
|
||
enough to stand up, Mago grabbed Lupen’s tether, the air was still thick
|
||
with sand, making it hard to see. “Hold on!” Mago screamed, but there
|
||
was no weight on the other end.<br />
|
||
“This can’t be real.” Then came the end of the line. “Lupen!”</p>
|
||
<h1 id="bed-of-dust">Bed Of Dust</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/fauna.hyroo.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>Hyroos are large creatures with big rounded ears and strong hind
|
||
legs. Their snouts are large, they can smell and hear things from far
|
||
away. These beasts are known for being able to run and jump long
|
||
distances with little effort, they grow in moist environments, although
|
||
they are thought to be extinct.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> “Returning to the earth is good. There’s no pain there. It’s a
|
||
return to normality. Yes! Normality. I remember being grown. I couldn’t
|
||
see or smell… but I could hear things. Singing? Someone was singing to
|
||
me! Wow. I remember that..! Um. I wonder what else is rattling around in
|
||
here? Can I remember life as a seed? Or life before that? Ah. No, I
|
||
can’t remember. There was only darkness. Darkness is scary. How can I
|
||
know I exist without seeing or feeling anything? But wait, rocks exist,
|
||
and they can’t smell, see or feel… well at least I think they can’t.
|
||
Maybe that’s what it was like to be a seed, and before I was even made
|
||
into that, and before a rock was a rock. I felt nothing then, and after
|
||
I die I will feel nothing. It’ll be the same. That makes it okay doesn’t
|
||
it? Yea, it’s okay. This is okay. I’m okay.”<br />
|
||
A great dark mass met with Lupen’s body, followed by a great wave of
|
||
pain. And then, nothing.</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p>The seed, the light, we sow, we sow.<br />
|
||
A leaf, a child, I grow, I grow,<br />
|
||
My heart, my mind, hello, hello.</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> Lupen, eyes closed, was becoming part of the desert once more.
|
||
Soon, Lupen would be just a word.</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p>Together, forever.</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> Bits of rope lay in the sand. Small breaths escaped from Lupen’s
|
||
mouth.</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p>Below, below.</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> “It’s time.” The bones and muscles agreed, but the brain refused
|
||
to give in. “No one is letting go!”<br />
|
||
“But we’re broken! It hurts!” The left arm and its corresponding
|
||
muscles cried out in pain. Then, came a rush of adrenaline, the body and
|
||
the mind stopped quarrelling and began to work together again.<br />
|
||
Lupen looked around, but the Ilk was gone.<br />
|
||
Lupen’s toes buoyed to the sand’s surface. “They’re all gone.
|
||
Everyone is gone.” Lupen wanted to cry. “Why didn’t I die from the fall?
|
||
This is cruel, too, <em>too</em> cruel!”<br />
|
||
With the two suns perched high above, without cover or water, it
|
||
wouldn’t take long for death to come. “What is the point of
|
||
<em>this</em>!” The Verido cried out, angry at the desert, weeping at
|
||
the thought of never seeing Volare again. No tears came, the body
|
||
couldn’t spare the moisture, the skin felt tight, as if pulled in
|
||
different directions, crisp, broiled by the two suns. The scarf had
|
||
disappeared in the fall and moving to search for it was out of the
|
||
question.<br />
|
||
I’m useless, Lupen thought. Then this mind became tired of
|
||
thinking.</p>
|
||
<p> Lupen woke again later to more pain, and more sorrowful thoughts.
|
||
Although at this point, even the brain had too little energy and will to
|
||
conjure up anything positive.</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p>A leaf, a child, I grow, I grow…</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>This song was soothing. Lupen’s cheek lay flat on the sand, eyes
|
||
unable to point skyward because of this heavy, heavy head, eyelids
|
||
drawing down over the eyes. “No wait, not yet!” Lupen’s yellow eyes
|
||
exclaimed, they’d found something moving in the distance.<br />
|
||
An Ilk? No. Smaller than an Ilk, but big. Very big!<br />
|
||
The figure was coming this way. “This better not be land sickness
|
||
playing tricks.”Now <em>that</em> would be cruel.”<br />
|
||
The closer the figure came, the more details Lupen could make out.
|
||
There was a tall rider sitting atop a furry, large-eared beast. They
|
||
were enormous from afar, and even more so up close. The rider
|
||
disembarked and walked over, carrying a blue scarf. Levi’s scarf. It
|
||
looked tiny, held between the giant’s thick digits. A pair of heavy
|
||
knees crashed onto the sand floor, the stranger’s head towered high
|
||
above, obscuring one of the two suns.<br />
|
||
“Hello Lupen of Volare,” the rider’s voice boomed, startling a flock
|
||
of Passari Tremblers.<br />
|
||
The giant had dark hair, sharp facial contours, eyes like silver
|
||
marbles, and carried a thick yellow robe that resembled the desert. The
|
||
robe was as large as a dune, and could serve to shelter a fair-sized
|
||
group of people. The most impressive detail was the height of this
|
||
being, thin with proportions that dwarfed most. Now, those silver orbs
|
||
stared at Lupen’s broken body.<br />
|
||
“How do you know my name?!” Lupen exclaimed, startled by the
|
||
stranger’s words.<br />
|
||
“It’s written on your face, remember?” The rider replied with a soft
|
||
smile. “I’m Uno.”<br />
|
||
The Verido was growing weaker, drifting in and out of sleep. Uno put
|
||
a finger on the side of Lupen’s head. “Look up at the sky. Protus is
|
||
out. Name all of the skyrocks that you know, loud so I can hear.” The
|
||
giant said in a commanding voice.<br />
|
||
When Verido children were young, they’d make a game of naming all of
|
||
the known bodies in the sky. The names were difficult, so anyone who
|
||
could remember them all won the game. The majority of the skyrocks<a
|
||
href="#fn24" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref24"
|
||
role="doc-noteref"><sup>24</sup></a> were not visible to the naked eye,
|
||
but the children were taught that they were up there. No one remembered
|
||
who had named them, they just passed the names down through generations.
|
||
Protus was one of the moons in view now. Encela was another.<br />
|
||
Lupen knew many of the names, but was too tired to remember them
|
||
all, “Baladavos.” A fear gripped Lupen then, was Uno here to carry this
|
||
body into the next world? Was there such a place? “Cencitris.
|
||
Naxagorus.” Was this giant the embodiment of death, or a hallucination?
|
||
There was a chance that the pain in this body was so grand that it
|
||
brought forth these visions. In a moment, these colourful visions of Uno
|
||
and the beast would vanish from the world, and the darkness would take
|
||
over, “Liminik. Omoretus.” The darkness did not come. Uno and the beast
|
||
were very stubborn hallucinations. Thinking about skyrocks kept Lupen’s
|
||
mind away from the growing allure of sleep.<br />
|
||
Uno began unfastening sheets of rolled fabric from the beast’s back,
|
||
all the while humming a tune that reverberated all the way down into
|
||
Lupen’s core. The tune was soothing, like a salve, it helped to quiet
|
||
the pain, “Retna. Alpaninsis.”<br />
|
||
Uno pulled out some long poles and put up a tent, then laid a
|
||
vibrant orange carpet inside it. Another bag lay strapped to the furry
|
||
creature’s side, Uno grabbed it and began to unload its contents. A
|
||
collection of herbs, a small kettle, mugs, some grains, plates, a crate
|
||
of waterstones<a href="#fn25" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref25"
|
||
role="doc-noteref"><sup>25</sup></a> and a bag-full of other
|
||
miscellaneous items.<br />
|
||
Uno walked back over to Lupen, “you’re only missing
|
||
Aristollo.”<br />
|
||
“I’ve never won the skyrock game,” Lupen breathed.<br />
|
||
“That’s okay,” Uno said. The giants scooped the Verido’s body up
|
||
with ease, and carried it inside the tent gently.</p>
|
||
<p>While Lupen slept, Uno stayed close, sitting at an arm’s reach,
|
||
reading through a pile of old books, a thick finger rapidly tracing from
|
||
the top to the bottom of every page. The rest of the time, Uno was
|
||
cooking and caring for Lupen’s wounds, leaving the tent every now and
|
||
again, but never for long.<br />
|
||
At one time, Lupen noticed that Uno held a copy of A Tale of Three,
|
||
covered in annotations, but could not gather enough energy to ask about
|
||
it. Overcome by a sudden wave of fatigue, this body and mind agreed that
|
||
it was time for another nap.</p>
|
||
<p>“You look better,” Uno said one morning, offering the patient a cup
|
||
of lemilim<a href="#fn26" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref26"
|
||
role="doc-noteref"><sup>26</sup></a> tea.<br />
|
||
Lupen nodded, sadly, feeling better only physically, “yea. Part of
|
||
me does anyway. You don’t have anywhere to be? I feel bad to keep you
|
||
here like this.”<br />
|
||
“Everything heals in time. The sand doesn’t blame the wind for
|
||
shifting it around day after day, and the wind doesn’t know guilt. Take
|
||
your time.”</p>
|
||
<p> Uno was quiet, and did not always care to answer questions, but
|
||
declined them politely.<br />
|
||
“Why do you carry so many books?” Lupen had asked once.<br />
|
||
“They are my anchors,” was all Uno had said.</p>
|
||
<p>Like every other first sunrise they’d spent together, the giant
|
||
served tea, a mixture of medililly<a href="#fn27" class="footnote-ref"
|
||
id="fnref27" role="doc-noteref"><sup>27</sup></a> and lemilim herbs.
|
||
“Great for circulation,” Uno would say.<br />
|
||
Lupen did not know how much time had passed, but had noticed that
|
||
the wind outside was getting stronger everyday. A constant strong wind
|
||
in this area meant that they were in the gusty season. I’ve been here a
|
||
long while, Lupen thought.<br />
|
||
All places in the Soronan Desert were gusty at some point or
|
||
another, but the Ilk walked with the wind and seasons, staying ahead of
|
||
the gusty time of year. The Verido people were blessed with good weather
|
||
all annum along. Storms could still happen on the back of an Ilk, but
|
||
they were rare.<br />
|
||
Today, Uno seemed especially aware of the surroundings. After
|
||
serving tea, the giant’s silver eyes scanned the skies and the horizon,
|
||
before stopping on a mountain. “Drink your tea. You need to be in good
|
||
shape if you’re going to climb that mountain,” Uno said with a grin.
|
||
“That one.” A long finger pointed to a tall mountain in the distance, a
|
||
thick layer of clouds obscured it’s upper half, “all the way to the top
|
||
is what you said, right? Very brave of you.”<br />
|
||
“What? I never said that. You’re crazy,” Lupen replied, “I’m better
|
||
than I was, but I’m not fully healed.”<br />
|
||
Uno scanned the Verido’s body, stopping at the face. “You’re healed
|
||
enough.” The tall being spoke in a calm, inspiring, authoritative voice,
|
||
but those silvery eyes had the power to lull you into doing almost
|
||
anything, they could see past the flesh and pulled at your
|
||
insides.<br />
|
||
“Why would I want to climb that mountain?” Lupen asked, eyes now set
|
||
on the mountain, wondering if it had always been there. Uno had cast a
|
||
spell on the world, the mere mention of a mountain had spawned one into
|
||
existence.<br />
|
||
“My friend came back today,” Uno said, walking out of the tent,
|
||
“come, let me introduce you.”<br />
|
||
Lupen felt too weak to stand, but Uno pretended not to notice.<br />
|
||
“Come!” Uno insisted. Lupen stood up, groaning, hands grabbing onto
|
||
anything they could, crawling over to the entrance of the tent.<br />
|
||
“Lupen, meet Kit!”<br />
|
||
Images of a tall rider sitting atop a beast resurfaced. Kit was a
|
||
large big-eared creature. It had light-coloured fur with black spots
|
||
spattered all over. Two dark spots sat over its eyes, giving Kit a
|
||
constant air of severity and general discontent.<br />
|
||
“I thought hyroos were extinct…”<br />
|
||
It occurred to Lupen then that like the mountain with no name, Uno
|
||
was familiar. Lupen remembered a story with giants that towered above
|
||
the clouds and spent all their time admiring the passing skyrocks and
|
||
far away lights. They kept their eyes to the skies, but then one day, a
|
||
skyrock landed at their feet and they looked ground-ward, watching
|
||
sandstorms forming and dissipating. Green things began to sprout from
|
||
the ground. The tall ones witnessed this change with great interest,
|
||
they were delighted to see the green spread. They spent so much time
|
||
looking down, that they began to shrink.<br />
|
||
“Foolish stories for fools like you!” A young Mago had said once,
|
||
“if there was anyone that tall out there we would have seen them!”<br />
|
||
“It’s you,” Lupen mumbled, eyes fixed on Uno, unable to draw breath,
|
||
it was like the air had vanished from the world. Nothing in the
|
||
environment had changed. This was awe.<br />
|
||
“What was it like in the early days of the world?” The Verido asked
|
||
suddenly, eyes full of wonder.<br />
|
||
Uno laughed. A thunderous, but friendly laugh that did not confirm
|
||
or deny it. Lupen spent the rest of the day watching the ageless giant.
|
||
Uno’s head did not reach the clouds. Lupen tried to imagine what other
|
||
great creatures lived in the desert.<br />
|
||
The nameless mountain came back to Lupen’s mind then. “I’m going to
|
||
climb you.” The next day, Lupen shared this intention with Uno, who
|
||
smiled and denied ever having introduced the idea in the first
|
||
place.<br />
|
||
“Good idea.”</p>
|
||
<p>One morning Uno got up and began packing up the carpet, the herbs and
|
||
the waterstones. It was time to go. Before they parted ways, Uno handed
|
||
a copy of The Tale of Three to Lupen.<br />
|
||
“For you,” the book was bound with beautiful red thread, made from
|
||
an unknown material. Even the paper was different, it was textured and
|
||
had a blue tint. “I transcribed it from a rare original. It’s all true,
|
||
all about your people. You’ll enjoy it.” There was another gift too, a
|
||
small sheet of fabric rolled up tight and folded over itself so that it
|
||
was now the size of a small loaf of bread. Uno also gave Lupen a single
|
||
short banabo<a href="#fn28" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref28"
|
||
role="doc-noteref"><sup>28</sup></a> pole. “Fabric is hard to come by in
|
||
these parts. You can use it for shelter.”<br />
|
||
“Thank you.” Lupen presented a gift too, Levi’s blue scarf. “My mapa
|
||
did tell me I would need it long, maybe it’s because it was meant to be
|
||
yours.” Uno accepted it, with many thanks said. It appeared tiny on
|
||
Uno’s neck, the piece of fabric could not go a full two turns around it
|
||
so the giant wrapped it around once. Uno took a liking to it straight
|
||
away, carefully rearranging the knot, as if handling the petals of a
|
||
flower.<br />
|
||
Uno climbed up on Kit’s back, sending a flurry of sand flying around
|
||
them.<br />
|
||
“Aristollo was an Iridi, and a good friend of mine, reminds me of
|
||
you, actually.” As the giant said this, right before Kit bounded up high
|
||
and far into the horizon.</p>
|
||
<h1 id="mountain-with-no-name">Mountain With No Name</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/fauna.vennec.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>Vennecs are strong, resilient creatures. They can walk a long
|
||
time without being hungry or thirsty. Vennec carry water in their humps
|
||
and store grains in their cheeks.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>Lupen, carrying a bag full of waterstones, loaves of teaweet<a
|
||
href="#fn29" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref29"
|
||
role="doc-noteref"><sup>29</sup></a> bread, and a few dried root
|
||
vegetables, headed toward the mountain. Lupen’s couldn’t walk well, or
|
||
fast, but made good time, arriving just as the first sun rose over the
|
||
horizon.<br />
|
||
On the climb, there was no evident road or path to take, Lupen
|
||
progressed slowly, climbing faces of jagged rock, finding cracks and
|
||
creases for support, stopping often to eat, sleep, or to watch the world
|
||
below get smaller and smaller. The mounting altitude was comforting,
|
||
like being on the back of an Ilk. The sand plains stretched past the
|
||
limits of Lupen’s vision, what looked unfamiliar from the ground was
|
||
easy to recognize from up here. Their former campsite was just a few
|
||
dunes saa’tae of the mountain.<br />
|
||
Lupen eventually arrived at a point on the mountain that exceeded
|
||
the height of an Ilk. “If I were a giant, this scene would be most
|
||
ordinary! Oh yes! With a flick of my finger, I could brush that dune
|
||
away or pinch a new one over there!” Lupen said with a laugh, gesturing
|
||
over specific points on the horizon.<br />
|
||
Soon thick wet clouds engulfed everything in sight. The air became
|
||
moist. “Like breathing water!” The walls were perspiring, stained with
|
||
green. Lupen’s climb slowed to a crawl. It wouldn’t take much to send
|
||
this body over the edge.<br />
|
||
“One fall was plenty.” Lupen mumbled.<br />
|
||
Then finally, Lupen’s hand reached up to find a grip, but instead of
|
||
a rock, it found wet moss.<br />
|
||
The Verido rose, gazing at the top of the mountain with no name. The
|
||
summit was flat and full of shrubbery and flowers. The smell was
|
||
dizzying. Mesmerized at the sight of a bright purple flower, Lupen’s
|
||
knees met with the damp ground. The flower had massive petals, arranged
|
||
in tight rows and bound together by a single fuzzy yellow button. Little
|
||
droplets of mildew had accumulated on the petals, resembling jewels. “Is
|
||
any of this <em>real</em>?” Lupen asked, fingers catching some of the
|
||
droplets to taste them.</p>
|
||
<p>Amongst the flowers and wet leaves was a red-haired being, asleep,
|
||
chest rising and falling with every breath, pink lips curved into a
|
||
smile. All these things made for a bizarre, yet wondrous sight. Verido
|
||
people liked to colour their hair, but no dye could produce a red like
|
||
that. The tone was so rich and so vibrant that it burned these eyes.
|
||
This creature was unique, different, with round ears.<br />
|
||
Lupen took a step back, keeping a line of tall grass between them.
|
||
Awakening to a stranger could be unpleasant, Lupen thought. There was
|
||
also a chance that this person did not care for the company of others,
|
||
why else would anyone be alone up here? Perhaps this place was a refuge,
|
||
a place of rest, or some sort of secret garden. It didn’t appear that
|
||
anyone else had ever come here. The grass was tall and thick, it had
|
||
been allowed to grow unhindered for many, many annums. Lupen gulped
|
||
then, realizing how careless it had been to climb up here, to a hostile
|
||
place without a clear goal, and wondered if Uno knew that someone lay
|
||
here, atop the mountain.<br />
|
||
There was no shelter here, no pots or a table, not even a kettle,
|
||
but there were fresh herbs everywhere. These nostrils could sense many
|
||
different varieties, but could not put a name to them. Every passing
|
||
moment revealed something new and amazing, but Lupen’s attention was on
|
||
the one with red hair. “I ought to call you something. How about Saffa?”
|
||
Lupen waited for a response for a short while, then nodded to no one.
|
||
“Saffa it is, until you wake up anyway. What question should I ask you
|
||
first? Where’s your kettle?” Lupen thought this one funny. “What is this
|
||
plant? And that one? What about this one? Yes. So many plants to ask
|
||
about, maybe I can take some home!” The Verido paused then, there was no
|
||
more room for grieving in this heart, there was no point.<br />
|
||
With all this thinking and speculating Lupen thought that a long
|
||
time must have passed, “no one sleeps forever, right?” Saffa did not
|
||
stir, the slow breathing continued. Lupen sighed, impatient, but knew
|
||
better than to disturb the sleep of another without good reason. Lupen
|
||
would have to wait for a cue, a yawn, maybe some stretching or some
|
||
wrinkling of the eyes. After much waiting, the sleeper still lay there,
|
||
not a yawn or hint of eye wrinkling.<br />
|
||
The mountain was quiet. Lupen watched the flowers all day,
|
||
undisturbed. There was an astonishing variety of plants, some sat atop
|
||
lanky stems, others had long green fingers, curling around bits of
|
||
neighbouring grasses. A beautiful rosary of dew drops accumulated on
|
||
everything. Saffa’s skin bore these silvery jewels too, the result of
|
||
the occasional droplet of water slipping down the centre of a leaf, and
|
||
dripping onto this living canvas. Saffa’s torso now had a complicated
|
||
motif all over it, thousands of little wet eyes.</p>
|
||
<p>After many days, burdened by disquietude, Lupen decided to try and
|
||
speak to the stranger.<br />
|
||
“Ahem—” clearing the cobwebs from this throat was the first step,
|
||
“he-hello?” A quiet voice was key, no sense in startling Saffa into
|
||
wakefulness. No answer. I’ll have to be a bit louder. “Hello?” Again, no
|
||
answer.<br />
|
||
A fear gripped Lupen then, what if Saffa was stuck in a state of
|
||
perpetual sleep and couldn’t wake up? Lupen could still wait a few days
|
||
longer. Dwindling supplies wasn’t an issue, there was enough plants and
|
||
water here, but loneliness was a factor to consider. Verido people lived
|
||
in groups and were seldom left on their own. Lupen imagined being here
|
||
for annums, this Saffa-waking vigil seemingly unending. Maybe this was a
|
||
trap? To keep people here until they were too tired to move, and then
|
||
plants would sprout from their ears and make a garden of their flesh.
|
||
Haunted by such thoughts, Lupen decided that staying here forever was
|
||
not an option, but leaving meant that the Verido would always wonder
|
||
about the one sleeping in the bed of grass.<br />
|
||
“Just a few days longer, then I’ll leave.”<br />
|
||
The air at the foot of the mountain was always thick with sand, but
|
||
here it was fresh and clear. Its perfume varied depending on the time of
|
||
day. Lupen imagined a flower guild, busy regulating smells using a
|
||
timetable with slots allocated to each flower type. There was no need to
|
||
protect the skin from the harshness of the desert. Lupen had no need of
|
||
a sweater either, it sat at the waist along with the vest that was
|
||
underneath. Lupen found a spot in the grass next to Saffa, then sleep
|
||
grabbed hold and would not let go. The flowery scent permeating the area
|
||
could rob travel-worn visitors of their wakefulness.</p>
|
||
<p>Lupen dreamt of a city erected on the back of a giant hyroo, on which
|
||
the inhabitants had braided its fur into elaborate houses. The leaflings
|
||
would play hide-and-seek in the forest of hair. A hatter made elaborate
|
||
hats from the fur, twisted into high spirals or matted into various
|
||
geometric shapes. Life here was idyllic and peaceful. Lupen was a hyroo
|
||
whisperer and would go to the head to laugh and whoop with the hyroo,
|
||
the sound travelling far across the world. In the dream, Mago arrived
|
||
and shouted so loudly that it threw the city, along with all its
|
||
inhabitants off the hyroo’s back. Lupen fell into darkness. The hyroo
|
||
leapt from one planet to the other, and bodies were adrift in space.
|
||
There were no stars, and the hyroo vanished in the distance. Even the
|
||
suns had gone. Lupen felt nothing, and began to weep.</p>
|
||
<p>Then, a loud noise woke up Lupen. The whooping sound from the dream
|
||
was real! Looking up, Lupen saw a large figure passing through the thick
|
||
layer of clouds above, it landed opposite of the bed of grass without a
|
||
sound and without disturbing the droplets on the leaves. The beast had
|
||
large round ears, like Kit, in fact, it looked very much like Kit
|
||
although its fur was different. Lupen didn’t know very much about
|
||
hyroos.<br />
|
||
“Is that you Kit?”<br />
|
||
Sitting up, mildew trickled into the grass from Lupen’s chest. That
|
||
fear of bodily intrusion by plants returned, but these ears had no
|
||
sprouts, and the mouth and nostrils were also spared. Lupen thought then
|
||
that perhaps Saffa had arrived around the same time, and exhausted, had
|
||
lain here for a rest.<br />
|
||
The beast let out a laugh then, a high-pitched noise causing
|
||
droplets to slide off their beds. This was definitely the sound Lupen
|
||
had heard in the dream. The creature was a hyroo, like Kit. It moved
|
||
over to Saffa and went in for a good long lick. Saffa yawned and
|
||
stirred, then smiled, lips curving and carving a new shape for the
|
||
cheeks. Then the arms and legs stretched out, Saffa’s hands found the
|
||
tip of the beast’s snout and moved to caress its large head. All the
|
||
while, the beast kept its eyes on Lupen, Saffa’s eyes opened and
|
||
followed its gaze and stopped upon the stranger. They stared at each
|
||
other for a long while, but Saffa’s silvery voice broke the
|
||
silence.<br />
|
||
“Can I have that?” Saffa asked, reaching forward and tugging at the
|
||
isilk sweater wrapped around the Verido’s waist. Lupen blinked, and
|
||
undid the sweater, handing it over without hesitation. Saffa slipped it
|
||
on, then put a pink nose in it to smell it. “Hmm! Smells like sand and
|
||
earth! I can smell the hands that made it! Ah! I love sweaters, they say
|
||
so much about a person and of the world. Every fiber tells a story you
|
||
know! I can smell yours, most of all.” Saffa took a deep whiff of it
|
||
again. “You wear this a lot!” Saffa smelled the fibres some more, and
|
||
looked at Lupen again, wide-eyed. “Oh oh oh oh oh…ohh… ohhh oh!” This
|
||
Oh-ing did not stop for some time. “Oh. Oh oh! No no no!” Saffa said,
|
||
reaching forward and putting their foreheads together. “You’re lucky to
|
||
have survived a fall like that! Oh, I’m glad your bones are
|
||
better.”<br />
|
||
Saffa was alive and full of energy. Lupen didn’t know what to say,
|
||
this fool of a tongue had somehow gotten itself into a terrible knot,
|
||
plus all this talk of sweaters was confusing. Saffa left the bed of
|
||
green and went to look at some flowers, body swaying from side to side
|
||
as if there was a song playing no one else could hear.<br />
|
||
Saffa turned to face Lupen. “Are you ready to go? I’m dying to get
|
||
down there to see what’s changed!”<br />
|
||
Lupen swallowed hard. “Um. Wait. I have so many questions!”<br />
|
||
“Nope! No questions! I forbid all questions unless they are about
|
||
food, but I will say this! My name is Eka, and that fuzzy beast is,” Eka
|
||
paused, as if trying to remember something important. “Hush! We are Eka
|
||
and Hush!” Eka said, a hand brushing bits of red hair behind rounded
|
||
ears. Hush, the hyroo, let out a whoop, taking a seat by Eka, who was
|
||
inspecting Lupen’s face. “Lu-pen. Sky beetle! Lovely! Will you come and
|
||
see the world with me?” Without waiting for an answer, Eka climbed up on
|
||
Hush’s back. “Let’s go Lu!”<br />
|
||
Lupen was too stunned to answer. Eka’s arm shot forward and gripped
|
||
the Verido’s collar, then, with a yank and a pull, both were sitting on
|
||
the beast. Eka smelled like wet grass, a curtain of soft hair draped
|
||
along the forehead and parted on one side, allowing those piercing red
|
||
eyes to show. Seconds after that, Hush pushed off the ground with its
|
||
powerful hind legs, bounding high and away from the mountain top,
|
||
piercing the layer of wet clouds, the sandy world below coming into
|
||
view. Eka laughed, while the other passenger tried not to scream. Hush
|
||
made a few dampening landings, before its paws reached the warm yellow
|
||
soil.</p>
|
||
<p>Both slid from Hush’s back. Eka laughed at the state of the Verido’s
|
||
hair and brushed a hand through it to comb it back into place, the blue
|
||
dye was all gone now, washed away by both wind and time.<br />
|
||
“Where should we go first?” a round, and pink button nose pressed
|
||
right up to Lupen’s tanned, flat nose.<br />
|
||
Lupen’s eyes became round, lips curling inwards, with cheeks turning
|
||
a deep shade of red.<br />
|
||
“You’re so timid!”<br />
|
||
Lupen pulled away then. “Not timid! Shocked! You were unconscious
|
||
just a moment ago! This is weird.”<br />
|
||
“Do you always call things you don’t understand weird? If you want
|
||
weird-weird look at this,” Eka’s ears wiggled about, independent of each
|
||
other, waiting for a reaction.<br />
|
||
The Verido smirked and mirrored the ear wiggling. To finish, the
|
||
Verido’s flute ears unfolded and flared open, before twisting back into
|
||
shape. Eka watched the trick and laughed aloud. “Here’s a weird-weird
|
||
move I bet you can’t do.” Lupen said. A whistle tunnelled out from the
|
||
Verido’s rounded lips, a poem in Ilken.<br />
|
||
Eka’s smile would broaden and narrow depending on what was being
|
||
said in the poem. Was it possible that Eka knew Ilken? Lupen stopped,
|
||
turning red again. “Did you understand the lyrics of the song?”<br />
|
||
“Something about a beautiful Saffa flower on a green mountain,” Eka
|
||
said, smirking still, “I’m flattered.”<br />
|
||
Lupen couldn’t believe it. How is it that everyone out here
|
||
understands Ilken? The Verido was going to ask, but didn’t have time
|
||
because Eka had wondered off, running through the sand, kicking up loads
|
||
of it while laughing.<br />
|
||
“Do you know a city called Inepril?” Eka asked, kicking up more sand
|
||
while exaggerating a walk.<br />
|
||
“Vol went by it a few annums ago, not much left there though. When
|
||
the waterstone well went dry, everyone left.”<br />
|
||
Eka paced back and forth, making a mental note of this. “Um. Okay!
|
||
Then Montore it is!”<br />
|
||
“Why do you want to go there?”<br />
|
||
Vol stopped there every annum, Montore was modern and exciting.
|
||
Lupen had heard that many important people lived there. Lupen had never
|
||
stepped down to visit any city while living on Vol, only those who
|
||
exchanged goods with locals climbed down.<br />
|
||
“They make really good babam<a href="#fn30" class="footnote-ref"
|
||
id="fnref30" role="doc-noteref"><sup>30</sup></a> cakes there. Cakes
|
||
paired with a fresh cup of mepperpint<a href="#fn31"
|
||
class="footnote-ref" id="fnref31" role="doc-noteref"><sup>31</sup></a>
|
||
tea.” Eka paused, eyes closed with a hand pretending to hold a cup.
|
||
“It’s like your insides become green! Maybe they really do turn green,
|
||
I’ve never checked. I will get you a cup as soon we get there, and we’ll
|
||
fill your bag so we never run out!” Eka continued, before climbing back
|
||
up onto Hush.<br />
|
||
Lupen laughed and moved onto the hyroo’s back. “So we’ll live off
|
||
mepperpint leaves then?”<br />
|
||
“No, no you can’t. If you eat too much your eyes will sprout
|
||
leaves.”<br />
|
||
Lupen fell silent, suddenly very afraid of mepperpint.</p>
|
||
<h1 id="the-sandfin">The Sandfin</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/flora.cactub.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>A Cactub is a nutritious, bulbous root vegetable. They spend most
|
||
of their time underground, and only emerge at dark to gather moisture
|
||
from the surrounding air. Cactubs are sensititive to loud noises and
|
||
movements, and they temporarily seize when panicked.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>Eka, Lupen and Hush wandered the desert, alleviating their thirst
|
||
with waterstones. Hush could no longer stand to have any weight on its
|
||
back and walked behind them, panting. They could not get to Montore fast
|
||
enough, though the thought of cake and tea did offer some motivation.
|
||
During the walk, Eka sang about babam cakes, listing the ingredients
|
||
aloud. Every song ended with a solo of groans and growls, courtesy of
|
||
Lupen’s empty belly.<br />
|
||
“Ba-ba-ba-bam cakes! Ba-ba-ba-bam cakes!”</p>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p> <strong>Babam Cake</strong></p>
|
||
<p> <em>Ingredients</em></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> Ten babams<br />
|
||
Two marima leaves<br />
|
||
Two avoka nut pods<br />
|
||
Three bushels of nutshroos<br />
|
||
Six bunches of bobonions<br />
|
||
Seven sprigs of dilly herbs<br />
|
||
One bale of teaweet, stemmed and floured</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> <em>Instructions</em></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> Remove skins from babams, and dice into cubes. Boil with a marima
|
||
leaf until soft. While babams are softening, crack one avoka nut in a
|
||
pan and saute diced bobonions and chopped nutshroos. Cook until all the
|
||
liquid has evaporated, then let cook until browned. Chop the dilly
|
||
herbs, add to pan with nutshroos. Mix together and take off heat.<br />
|
||
Drain babams, mash with a stone mortar and let cool. Add teaweet
|
||
flour to mashed babams. Take a handful of dough and flatten into a disk,
|
||
add some nutshroo mix into the centre and cover with more bam dough.
|
||
Crack another avoka oil in a pan, and fry until golden, flip, and
|
||
repeat.</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p> “Please stop singing about food,” Lupen said.<br />
|
||
They tried to ration some teaweet bread, but Hush, hungry, raided
|
||
their stores after the last second sunset. All five loaves had already
|
||
been eaten, the remnants now scattered across the desert floor. So, Eka
|
||
and Lupen sucked on waterstones, slowly drawing out the water.<br />
|
||
“We’re going to die out here,” Lupen said, groaning.<br />
|
||
Eka did not share Lupen’s concerns. “Haven’t you ever walked on foot
|
||
in the desert before? To those who know how to look, there’s always
|
||
something to eat.”<br />
|
||
“Verido don’t walk on the ground,” Lupen said, every mention of
|
||
eating made the stomach whine again, “if what you’re saying is true,
|
||
then why aren’t we finding anything?”<br />
|
||
“Because it’s too hot!”<br />
|
||
“Of course, only idiots would be out here in this heat.”<br />
|
||
“Oh! The things you say Lu, it’s like you’re not of this world! When
|
||
the suns set we should be able to find something.”<br />
|
||
Lupen continued to complain, but in a hushed, low voice.<br />
|
||
Then suddenly, Eka stopped, stomped on the ground a few times.
|
||
“We’ll set camp here,” Eka said, pleased with the spot.<br />
|
||
Lupen was too tired and too hungry to ask why this spot was good, it
|
||
looked like any other spot of sand in the desert. Together, they built a
|
||
makeshift tent using Uno’s fabric.</p>
|
||
<p>After the second sunset, Eka took a seat on the ground just outside
|
||
their tent. “Lu. Pssst! Lu! Come over here!”<br />
|
||
Lupen yawned, rolling over to Eka’s spot outside. Their tent wasn’t
|
||
very big, it provided some shade in the day but did not protect them
|
||
from wind, and most of the space under it was already filled with Hush’s
|
||
gigantic head—the beast could not be persuaded to move.<br />
|
||
“What is it?” Lupen asked.<br />
|
||
Eka pointed over to a collection of little stems nearby, working
|
||
their way out of the soil, their small, round leaves fanning out.<br />
|
||
“Take the one closest to you,” Eka whispered.<br />
|
||
Lupen came to sit beside Eka, and tried to grab it, but all of the
|
||
stems went to hide back into the soil.<br />
|
||
“You’re terrible at this.”<br />
|
||
“This? I have no idea what <em>this</em> is!”<br />
|
||
“Lower your voice,” Eka commanded, “and be still. When the stems
|
||
come back out and the leaves open up, clap your hands together to stun
|
||
them, and then you can grab one. Haven’t you ever harvested cactub
|
||
before?<br />
|
||
”No,” Lupen said. “What’s a cactub?”<br />
|
||
Eka laughed. “Only the best vegetable ever. Look, I’ll do it.”<br />
|
||
Like before, the cactub stems emerged, and the leaves opened up in a
|
||
fan. Eka neared two hands to one of them, and then…<br />
|
||
<em>Clap!</em><br />
|
||
The cactub froze. Eka grabbed the stem and pulled it out. The cactub
|
||
was a bulbous root vegetable, purple and covered in little round nubs.
|
||
They peeled the skin off, and ate slices for dinner. Cactub was soft and
|
||
had many seeds.<br />
|
||
“You can eat these too, or toss them. They’ll grow back from the
|
||
seed if you do that. For every two I eat, I toss one,” saying this, Eka
|
||
tossed one.<br />
|
||
“Eat one,” Lupen said, chewing on a seed, “toss one!” The other
|
||
found its way back into the earth. They did this for a long while,
|
||
eating some, tossing some.<br />
|
||
With food in their bellies, they huddled-in together to stay warm
|
||
and tried to get some sleep. Eka’s finger moved from skyrock to skyrock,
|
||
drawing a line between each one to make constellations.<br />
|
||
“Salarus, Vitali, Neoneve…”<br />
|
||
Eka found another skyrock in the distance, it was lying low, and was
|
||
brighter than all the others. A false star. Lupen had just dozed off.
|
||
“Lu! Something! Over there!”<br />
|
||
Lupen turned to look, long-faced and red-eyed. “It’s dark. We’ll
|
||
check it out after the first sunrise…”<br />
|
||
“Fine. You stay. I’ll be back.” Halfway through the sentence Eka was
|
||
up already and racing towards the point of light in the dark.<br />
|
||
Lupen followed partly because somewhere within lived the fear that
|
||
Eka would leave and never return.<br />
|
||
They arrived at the low star, which turned out to be an avoka oil lamp
|
||
attached to the stern of a vessel, its bow lay half-buried in the
|
||
sand.<br />
|
||
“It’s a sandfin!” Lupen said, circling it, trying to make out
|
||
details in the dark. The hull was painted yellow. It had a single wooden
|
||
mast, and two sails hanging limp from their ropes. Eka pointed to a
|
||
faint glow of a lamp from one of the portholes. Someone was
|
||
inside.<br />
|
||
“Hello? Who’s in there?” Lupen called out, knocking on the
|
||
hull.<br />
|
||
A thin-eyed, short thing, came peering out of one of the openings.
|
||
“Wai’re korei?!” a shrill voice responded. “Nono ask oo out derr!” The
|
||
voice repeated, switching from Finic to the Common Tongue.<br />
|
||
The creature stuck its face in a porthole, the frame contoured it
|
||
perfectly, making it look like the sandfin had a head growing out of its
|
||
side. The creature was a Finiku. The Finiku’s hair was light and wild,
|
||
not a single strand seemed to point in the same direction, except for a
|
||
chunk of hair covered in pinny tar and coiled in a thick braid. Pinny
|
||
tar was a thick, black substance used to protect ropes on a sandfin. The
|
||
Finiku’s hands were also stained with it. Eka giggled, and watched as
|
||
Lupen approached the porthole so the Finiku could see better. Even when
|
||
standing close, the sandfinner’s eyes looked everywhere but in the right
|
||
place.<br />
|
||
“Mai’ia! Noho’uta!”<br />
|
||
“We’re not ghosts!” Eka replied.<br />
|
||
“What? No. We’re fleshy people. We’re right in front of you! Can’t
|
||
you see us?” Lupen asked, perplexed.<br />
|
||
“Iane. Too dark, too dark!” The Finiku disappeared below. They could
|
||
hear noises, as the owner of the vessel searched the cabin for
|
||
something. Then a beam of light flashed in Lupen’s face. “Verido de
|
||
yorala? Impossible. And?” The glow of the light shifted toward Eka, as
|
||
the Finiku searched for whoever this ‘Verido in the sand’ was
|
||
with.<br />
|
||
“An Eka! Yora’nae!” Eka said with a smirk.<br />
|
||
“Friendly?”<br />
|
||
Eka nodded. “Friendly and fleshy”<br />
|
||
“I’m not a mai… uh. Maya? Ugh. I don’t remember the word…”<br />
|
||
“Mai’ia?” Nono said.<br />
|
||
“That’s the one! I’m not a mai’ia. I’m a fleshy too. I’m a Verido in
|
||
the sand now.” Lupen felt uncomfortable and opted to change
|
||
conversation, “I’m Lupen.”<br />
|
||
“The Finiku inched forward out of the porthole and smacked the
|
||
Verido in the head to see if it was opaque.”Orae. Nono now
|
||
believe.”<br />
|
||
“Ow!” Lupen stepped away from Nono’s finger.<br />
|
||
Nono explained to them what had happened. “Sandfin fine, but it no
|
||
move! Why it no move!” Nono’s eyes widened saying this. Lupen saw there
|
||
was plenty of light in the cabin, yet the sandfinner claimed to see
|
||
nothing.<br />
|
||
“Right. Well it’s too dark to do anything about it now. Come daytime
|
||
we’ll help you fix it.”</p>
|
||
<p>The next morning, Nono emerged from the cabin and stood on deck.
|
||
Lupen was up already, unfortunately sleep had not come. It was easy now
|
||
to make out Nono’s features, although their eyes appeared clouded, and
|
||
sickly.<br />
|
||
Eka laughed, arriving at the foot of the sandfin just in time to
|
||
catch Nono trying to shake hands with Hush’s snout. “Nono, this is Hush,
|
||
who was asleep during our introduction.”<br />
|
||
“I see, I see! Yora’nae Hush!”<br />
|
||
They surveyed the damage. The sandfin lay over a rocky patch and the
|
||
rudder was gone, ripped out. Most of the hull looked fine, but the area
|
||
where the rudder had been was now a large gaping hole. Nono leapt off
|
||
the side of the vessel, and went to stand with the others. “Light kink!”
|
||
Nono said.<br />
|
||
“A kink? You serious?” Lupen said, outraged. “There’s a giant hole!
|
||
You’ve got no rudder!”<br />
|
||
“Ia’ia. No problem. Verido is crazy crazy from landsick.”<br />
|
||
Nono’s eyes narrowed down to try and see the hole, then Lupen
|
||
arrived and helped the Finiku closer. “Big hole. Right there!” Lupen
|
||
said. The Finiku was unphased. It was only when Lupen put Nono’s nose up
|
||
to it that the extent of the damage was revealed.<br />
|
||
“Ianae, iane, iane…” Nono’s head shook from side to side, there was
|
||
no stopping it.<br />
|
||
Eka went to stand closer to offer moral support, and even laid a
|
||
hand over the Finiku’s shoulder to try to steady that tottering head.
|
||
“You have materials on board?”<br />
|
||
Nono nodded, the shaking of the head had ceased then too. “Finiku
|
||
dey always ready! We make rudder. No problem. Nono have material, all we
|
||
need!”</p>
|
||
<p>Once all three got to work, Lupen realized just how terrible Nono’s
|
||
vision was. “Who in their right mind would allow someone so blind to
|
||
captain a sandfin?” Lupen asked. Eka only smirked, gathering materials
|
||
from inside the cabin.<br />
|
||
Together, they devised a plan to build the sandfin a new rudder.
|
||
They removed bits of the old one, took measurements. “You sure you want
|
||
to use this? You don’t need a table?” Lupen held a thick slab of banabo
|
||
wood, but then Nono walked up and began to mark it. “Okay then,” Lupen
|
||
said, releasing the table and reaching for a hacksaw stashed under a
|
||
pile of ropes. “It says ‘Maka’ on the handle.”<br />
|
||
“Renate steel,” Nono said, “sosae’di de yorala!”<br />
|
||
“Best in the land.” Eka translated.<br />
|
||
Lupen cut the banabo board for the paddle, while Eka was carving an
|
||
old oar with a blade to make the new rudder post, and Nono was busy
|
||
retrieving bolts and nuts that would fit it. All the surfaces of the
|
||
cabin had something laying over top, and every crack was filled with
|
||
tiny stray bits of hardware.<br />
|
||
Lupen was fascinated by the sandfin, they were a common sight while
|
||
travelling on the Ilk. The winged vessels looked tiny from up there, the
|
||
colour of their sails and the dust rising with their passing was all
|
||
Lupen could make out.<br />
|
||
“What’s that?” Lupen asked, pointing to a barrel stored on deck,
|
||
“plumpkin juice?”<br />
|
||
“Kapo.” Nono said.<br />
|
||
“Poop,” Eka translated. Seeing the look on Lupen’s face, both
|
||
laughed.<br />
|
||
Lupen had heard of this, but did not think it was true. Nono
|
||
explained that while the sandfin had no need of fuel there was always a
|
||
barrel stored on this vessel to give to others. “Montore fiendling, dey
|
||
say it ‘miracle fuel’, make life easy! Why use hand when derr is masheen
|
||
dey say. Beobug<a href="#fn32" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref32"
|
||
role="doc-noteref"><sup>32</sup></a> dey sell dis dream to Finiku, give
|
||
masheen… but wat appen when it break? Dey no can fix, dey no store fuel.
|
||
Beobug come to fix, den dey ask for coin! Beobug create… dependency,
|
||
dae’na? Before, Finiku depend only on sawa te kira!”<br />
|
||
“Wind and sun.” Lupen said, happy to know that this mind knew a few
|
||
Finiku words. Everyone in the Soronan Desert used these two words. “I
|
||
don’t understand what Ilk kapo has to do with fuel.” Lupen said,
|
||
perplexed.<br />
|
||
“Beobug sandfin follow Ilk and take it! Den, Beobug process it on
|
||
sandfin. Very profitable! Nono mapa say, ‘If Nono captain Beobug
|
||
sandfin, Nono make good coin’,” Nono’s head shook again, “Mapa say dis,
|
||
but Nono is like grand-mapa Etyl, care only to sandfin. Nono listen to
|
||
voice of sawa te kira. Coin mawani’ia oro.” Nono said, putting a hand on
|
||
the heart.<br />
|
||
“Coin has no soul,” Eka said, “Etyl is your grand-mapa?” That name
|
||
is known all over! First one to travel the whole of the land by
|
||
sandfin!”<br />
|
||
Nono nodded. “Orae orae! Did it alone too!”<br />
|
||
Nono repaired the hole, and completed the construction of their
|
||
makeshift rudder, fitting it to Etyl’s stern, all the while, listening
|
||
to Nono telling stories of the early days of sandfinning.</p>
|
||
<p>After a day of hard work, Nono tested out the rudder and saw no
|
||
problem with it. The hull was missing paint, but was otherwise
|
||
immaculate.<br />
|
||
“Nono offer ride to Tiputa, come aboard fleshies!”<br />
|
||
Lupen and Eka hopped aboard. Nono said that the sandfin could use
|
||
the extra weight at the stern.<br />
|
||
They unfurled the sails and set course for Tiputa, plowing through
|
||
the sand, leaving a golden cloud in their wake. The sandfin was running
|
||
downwind, with two cream-coloured wings pulling it along. The wind
|
||
freshened, and the sands began to wash over the deck but handling a
|
||
vessel with a crew of three was easy. Eka made sure the sails had good
|
||
shapes, while Lupen kept an eye on the horizon, careful to avoid rocky
|
||
patches, there was no trusting Nono’s eyes. Nono kept mistaking dunes
|
||
for other sandfins.<br />
|
||
The Finiku offered to make dinner, serving them something that stank
|
||
of pomparu with an unappetizing grey colour. Lupen joked that it had
|
||
probably been scraped off of the hull.<br />
|
||
“Do you know many other sandfinners?” Lupen asked.<br />
|
||
“Orae, Nono know many many, but Nono tink dey not so so good.”<br />
|
||
Lupen’s mind conjured up images of sandfins in piles lining a city,
|
||
their hulls full of holes with squinting Finiku captains at the wheel,
|
||
unaware of the fact that their vessels lay broken and unmoving. “Light
|
||
kink!” They all said aloud together.<br />
|
||
Eka could not believe that Nono was a bad sandfinner, no one trained
|
||
under Etyl could be terrible. After spending many days together they
|
||
noticed a pattern, Nono’s vision was worse after drinking from the
|
||
waterstone tank. To extract the water out of the stones there was a foot
|
||
pump in the galley, the pump pressed the stones down, funnelling the
|
||
water up a tube to the sink. Eka and Lupen, who still used their
|
||
personal stock of stones for water as to not to impose on Nono’s limited
|
||
supplies, deduced that the water was to blame. One morning they opened
|
||
the tank and found it infested with mudbears, tiny insects that burrow
|
||
in waterstones and secrete a toxin. Eka offered the Finiku waterstones
|
||
from their supply, and after a while Nono’s eyes cleared up.<br />
|
||
Nono returned to the helm. The Finiku could read the sand and sky
|
||
well, and knew to adjust sails right as conditions changed. The sails no
|
||
longer sagged, the vessel was stable and soon they arrived at their
|
||
destination. On arrival, Nono thanked them for their help.<br />
|
||
“Nono fill waterstone tank in Kippu. ‘It clean!’ dey tell Nono, but
|
||
not so, not so! Nono tink better to go back to help. Sick eyes… is
|
||
dangerous, dae’na?”</p>
|
||
<h1 id="tiputa-pit-stop">Tiputa Pit Stop</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/fauna.pomparu.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>A creature, feared by all, because of its horrid stink. The
|
||
pomparu likes stinky things, it is drawn to them. The word ‘pomparu’ is
|
||
sometimes used as an insult to mean foul-smelling.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>Tiputa, along with other towns like Kippu, Tiu’va, Inepril, and
|
||
Renate, exists primarily as a relief station for travel-worn
|
||
visitors.<br />
|
||
The town’s shops line a single road, suggesting that a traveler
|
||
would leave as quickly as they have come, with every service just a
|
||
short walk away. All the buildings are triangular, built with a slant
|
||
pointing saa’ta as to align with the prevailing winds. Strong winds,
|
||
known in these parts as Shriekers, pass through every 10 days, and
|
||
during this time all activity in the town stops. Many travelers come
|
||
through Tiputa to re-supply, to repair, but take off as soon as they are
|
||
able to avoid the Shriekers.</p>
|
||
<p>Today Finiku workers are outside, with their banabo leaf brooms,
|
||
brushing the sand from their storefronts, beating the dust out of their
|
||
floor mats and window shutters, knowing that all of this work would be
|
||
likely undone the next day.<br />
|
||
No one seemed to mind having to redo the work. Each could start a
|
||
small task and finish it moments later, with plenty of time to start and
|
||
finish many more. Savoring a cup of tea was counted as a task task, so
|
||
was buttering a slice of muckwheat<a href="#fn33" class="footnote-ref"
|
||
id="fnref33" role="doc-noteref"><sup>33</sup></a> bread with bonan<a
|
||
href="#fn34" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref34"
|
||
role="doc-noteref"><sup>34</sup></a> puree. Some argued that every bite
|
||
or sip or breath or step ought to be tallied and counted, others
|
||
preferred different metrics, such as making someone laugh or smile, like
|
||
brushing the dust from a mat, it serves to embellish the town.<br />
|
||
Eka was wandering through town, eyeing the yellow sand clinging to
|
||
every house, filling every crack, as if looking for a way inside. Eka
|
||
appreciated the desert filling gaps as its way of helping to strengthen
|
||
old structures. People on the street stopped their work to wave and say
|
||
a friendly “yora’!” A diligent troupe of children armed with brooms
|
||
furiously brushed the sand away from the main road, laughing and telling
|
||
jokes as they did, making a game of the task.<br />
|
||
The main road was made of flat stones. Eka enjoyed the sound the dry
|
||
fronds produced when brushed against them. The children were not aware
|
||
of it, but there was a rhythm to their brushing. A song came to Eka’s
|
||
lips then:<br />
|
||
“Brush the sands, sweep the lands,” Eka’s voice got louder, “-brush,
|
||
brush, brush,” and then went lower, “sweep, sweep, sweep!”</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p>“Brush the sands, sweep the lands! Brush, brush, brush! Sweep, sweep,
|
||
sweep!”</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>Busy singing, Eka didn’t see that someone was standing close by. A
|
||
Finiku with a long white river of hair blocked the path. The stranger
|
||
stared at Eka’s sweater. A pair of eager hands hovered close to
|
||
it.<br />
|
||
“Arraaaa! W-werr did you g-get d-dis?!” said the Finiku in the
|
||
Common Tongue. They wore a red jacket overlapping a shirt of delicate
|
||
soft thread and ending with frills at the neck and cuffs. “I will do
|
||
<em>anytting</em> to get dis shirt! Wat do you want for it?”<br />
|
||
The Finiku was gripping the sweater now, feeling the threads with
|
||
greedy fingers.<br />
|
||
“You want coin?!”<br />
|
||
With every question the Finiku’s stream of hair became more and more
|
||
disheveled. Eka tried to back away, but the stranger still held onto the
|
||
sweater.<br />
|
||
“It isn’t mine to sell,” Eka managed to say.<br />
|
||
Most would think it easy to break away from someone so little, but
|
||
the stranger held on, as if hanging from a cliff.<br />
|
||
“Please! I must own it! I’ll do anytting to get it!”<br />
|
||
With all of that pulling, the seams at the bottom of the shirt
|
||
ripped. The Finiku let out a horrified squeal. “Wat did I
|
||
<em>do</em>‽”<br />
|
||
Eka put a finger through the hole in the sweater, wiggling it on the
|
||
other side.<br />
|
||
“This unforgivable. I am monster. Orae! Orin will mend you.” Orin
|
||
said, addressing the sweater. Eka did not think this was necessary, but
|
||
the crimson-clad Finiku would not listen and led the sweater, as well as
|
||
its wearer, over to one of the triangular houses.</p>
|
||
<p>The house had a red roof and outer walls. Eka wondered if everything
|
||
inside was also red and imagined a house with objects, walls and floors
|
||
that were so red that they were indistinguishable from one another. A
|
||
carving over the entrance to the house read ‘Orin, the Tailor’, with a
|
||
second one underneath it with the words ‘Now Retired’. The signs had
|
||
green lettering, dispelling Eka’s fantasy of this place being an
|
||
all-crimson fun house.<br />
|
||
“You make clothes? Convenient.” Eka said.<br />
|
||
“Orae, orae. Well, Orin used to. Mind da low ceiling!”<br />
|
||
Eka entered the space on two knees, and could only stand up fully
|
||
once reaching the centre of the house, the area where the ceiling was
|
||
highest. Orin’s workshop had angled walls filled with spindles of
|
||
colourful fabric. Between the spindles lay frames with endorsements of
|
||
past commissions from various famous characters, including a signed
|
||
portrait of The Luminary Moera<a href="#fn35" class="footnote-ref"
|
||
id="fnref35" role="doc-noteref"><sup>35</sup></a>. On the ceiling hung
|
||
clothing Orin had made, favourite pieces from past and current
|
||
projects.<br />
|
||
In a far corner of the house was a small mattress, and a table with
|
||
a giant empty bottle, that Eka was certain once contained bonan wine.
|
||
There was no room to cook, and no food either. Eka had seen a small
|
||
restaurant on the other side of the road which likely doubled as a
|
||
community kitchen.<br />
|
||
The tailor grabbed a needle, and then reached for a thread wound
|
||
around one of the many spindles on the wall. The dark-coloured spindle
|
||
Orin chose had very little thread left and was soon empty, all of it now
|
||
bound to Orin’s needle. The tailor’s hands were shaky at first, but
|
||
steadied when the point of the needle came in contact with the shirt.
|
||
The tailor, moving with machine-like precision, the thread, disappearing
|
||
into the sweater, and the hole quickly coming to a close. The thread on
|
||
the needle was the same colour and material as the shirt, Orin had just
|
||
enough fibre to finish the repair. In the end, it was like it had never
|
||
ripped at all.<br />
|
||
Orin used to live in Edonor, a place that, Eka made a point to say,
|
||
made the very best peagram<a href="#fn36" class="footnote-ref"
|
||
id="fnref36" role="doc-noteref"><sup>36</sup></a> pancakes. The Finiku’s
|
||
great-great mapa opened a shop there many annums ago. Because the shop
|
||
was so popular, Orin had had no time for anything other than
|
||
clothes-making. The tailor had an itch to make different sorts of
|
||
clothes, more risqué items, but the customers always asked for the same
|
||
thing: copies of copies of copies, all copies of past works, nothing
|
||
new, nothing exciting. It was then that this tailor decided that it was
|
||
time to retire to Tiputa, where Bou, a relative, now lived. Orin did not
|
||
produce new clothes anymore, but continued to help mending holes or
|
||
strenghtening seams.<br />
|
||
“I’m sorry I can’t give this shirt to you, my friend’s mapa made it
|
||
you see! After I get some new clothes, it won’t be mine to keep,” Eka
|
||
explained.<br />
|
||
“Orin understand, and apologize for da un-towardness. It been long
|
||
time since see isilk, but no matter,” while saying this, Orin glanced at
|
||
Eka’s frame, already making calculations, “you want outfit? I will make
|
||
you desert travel set. I keep tread that would suit you. Orae, orae!
|
||
Come, come!”<br />
|
||
After picking out some colours the tailor pulled out a flat banabo
|
||
braid, each division with markings at specific lengths indicated by red
|
||
stitches. It took some time to measure Eka’s frame, because unlike
|
||
Orin’s usual customers Eka was tall. The redhead sat on a stool,
|
||
extending an arm or leg forward as required.<br />
|
||
“Orin never see anyone with round ear like dis.”<br />
|
||
“That is due to centuries of erosion.” Eka said.<br />
|
||
Orin laughed. “Bou own repair store next door, Eka stop by, you two
|
||
get along me tink” After jotting down all of the numbers, the measuring
|
||
braid returned to Orin’s belt, secured alongside a set of assorted
|
||
needles in a shroo leather sleeve, and a single bobbin.<br />
|
||
“You keep these with you always?” Eka asked.<br />
|
||
“Never leave widout dem! Dis is tailor’s weapon!” Orin went to stand
|
||
on another stool, a hand over the heart. “As long as Orin live, no
|
||
fabric will be left unsown, and no pant leg left askew! Ianae! Orin will
|
||
not allow it!” Even if standing on a stool, Orin still had to look up at
|
||
Eka. “It ready after second sunrise tomorrow.”<br />
|
||
As payment Eka offered to help at Bou’s repair shop, Orin agreed.
|
||
There was always a lot of work to do there, and with the Shriekers
|
||
coming in three days Bou would have a lot of customers.</p>
|
||
<p>Eka wandered over to the repair shop next door, which used to be
|
||
green, Eka could tell, but like Orin’s place most of the colour had been
|
||
ground off. There was still colour left around the door and windows, and
|
||
on the underside of the roof, but there too had begun to flake off. Like
|
||
the interior of Nono’s sandfin the little workshop was full of tools.
|
||
Instead of thread and clothes, the ceiling and walls were covered in
|
||
bits of metal and wood. There was some order to the chaos, with objects
|
||
organized by shape and material. All the long cylindrical objects shared
|
||
space on a shelf, coiled lines of varying thickness, colour and length
|
||
populated another.<br />
|
||
The owner glanced at the tall stranger who stood there at the door.
|
||
“Come back later. No time today.” Bou was dark haired, pale-skinned, and
|
||
enveloped in a pair of tattered overalls, which were stained with grease
|
||
and covered in holes. Those tears must be torture for Orin, Eka thought.
|
||
How had these openings escaped the tailor’s needle?<br />
|
||
“Orin is making some clothes for me and I offered to help you here
|
||
in your shop as payment,” Eka said, knees on the ground and wearing a
|
||
great big smile. “Yora’nae. Eka’re.”<br />
|
||
“Yora’. Bou’re.” Bou craned a large head to one side to see the part
|
||
of Eka obscured by the top of the door, “Eka know it dirty, dirty work
|
||
orae?”<br />
|
||
“That’s okay,” Eka copied the head motion, “a favour for a
|
||
favour!”<br />
|
||
“In Tiputa no one do work widout promise of coin. Eka better like
|
||
grime, grease and gross. Today we have pomparu problem, it stuck inside
|
||
sandfin sand scupper. Den, we fix broke water pump, owner tink it smart
|
||
to press juice out of plumpkin. Dis list, it go and it go. Still want to
|
||
elp?”<br />
|
||
Eka nodded. Bou looked at what the outsider was wearing, and walked
|
||
in close to touch the fabric of the sweater Orin had mended. For a
|
||
second, Eka feared the same reaction in Bou.<br />
|
||
“Blue isilk,” Bou said. The greasy shop owner’s green eyes went
|
||
round. Bou’s eyes had a wonderful shine to them, they appeared
|
||
glass-like with minuscule herb gardens growing inside of them. “Volare
|
||
Verido make dis for you? Verido no export isilk anymore.”<br />
|
||
Not many people could tell the shirt was made from Ilk hair, even
|
||
fewer knew that the hair of the desert walkers had a a subtle
|
||
pigmentation, it could be either blue, green or red. Eka wondered what
|
||
the tailor thought of Bou’s profession, they were family yet their lives
|
||
were so different.<br />
|
||
“This belongs to my friend,” Eka explained, “Orin really loves isilk
|
||
huh?”<br />
|
||
“Hm. Orae. To Orin mapa, seeing isilk… it like finding gost of
|
||
friend at door, a friend you tink dead.” Bou’s fingers brushed over
|
||
where the hole in the sweater had been. This repair was visible to
|
||
experienced eyes. “Grand-mapa Nok have store in Edonor. One day, Nok
|
||
bring back spindle of blue isilk. Suspicious no? Illegal, Bou tink.
|
||
Later Orin inerit business, but blue isilk? It all gone by den. Nok make
|
||
isilk suit, then jump into Rupture in it. Orin is sad to see isilk so
|
||
fine fade into nothing. Never make big project wit it, never will
|
||
because Verido no trade it now. Bou tink Eka need know dis.” Bou didn’t
|
||
give Eka a chance to reply, and walked over to a closet, pulling out a
|
||
large pair of brown overalls and a mostly clean undershirt. “Because it
|
||
dirty work, Eka need wear dis.”<br />
|
||
Eka changed into Bou’s undershirt and overalls. The clothes fit, but
|
||
there was a lot of room in there for another Eka or two, and the pants
|
||
had turned into shorts. Seeing this, Bou gave Eka two heavy notcott
|
||
knee-pads.<br />
|
||
The first task, was to try and get a pomparu out of a pipe. The
|
||
sandfin was moored in front of the shop, its owner was at the snack bar
|
||
having a drink, Bou waved from across the street, shouting a word in
|
||
Finic to say that the work would likely be done today. Both moved to the
|
||
back of the sandfin, once there Eka caught a whiff of the pomparu and
|
||
gasped, hands moved to cover up both the mouth and nose. It had been a
|
||
long time since Eka had encountered one.<br />
|
||
“Nohi sosae’ia’re dae’na? Pomparu smell burn da nose. First time Bou
|
||
smell, no eat for many day. Smell make all food taste like rot.”<br />
|
||
Bou grabbed a jar from a pantleg pocket, dipped a finger in it and
|
||
scooped out a thick glob of purple gel. Then, without warning, Bou
|
||
smeared the purple gel under Eka’s nose, near and around the nostrils.
|
||
Now both had a thick purple mustache. “Better, orae?”<br />
|
||
“Lavendiri<a href="#fn37" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref37"
|
||
role="doc-noteref"><sup>37</sup></a> flowers! Good trick!” The fresh
|
||
scent would help cover up the nasty pomparu fumes. Bou also had a thick
|
||
scarf on to keep the smell out, and passed one to Eka. The scarf was
|
||
just enough to block the stink entirely while keeping the lavendiri gel
|
||
from drying out too quickly.<br />
|
||
The butt of a plump pomparu was sticking halfway out of the scupper,
|
||
its four back legs were dangling in the air while the four forward legs
|
||
were wedged inside. The pomparu’s colourful spots were hard to see
|
||
because its body was brown with dirt.<br />
|
||
“Pomparu like strong smell. Sandfinner ferment bobonion<a
|
||
href="#fn38" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref38"
|
||
role="doc-noteref"><sup>38</sup></a> aboard, dis one try follow smell
|
||
but now stuck.”<br />
|
||
It was common for people to make a pile of rotting food outside of
|
||
town to get their attention, and to keep them there. Tiputa did have a
|
||
pile like this, Eka had seen it, but this sandfin had acquired the
|
||
pomparu while on transit.<br />
|
||
“Is it dead?” Eka asked, noticing its legs weren’t moving.<br />
|
||
“Iane. If pomparu dead we no stand around to talk about it. It make
|
||
lavendiri gel rot, and we go bury face in sand. But even like dis, it no
|
||
help, smell stay.” Bou paused, recalling something that happened.
|
||
“Friend find dead pomparu once, smell so <em>so</em> bad dat dey rip
|
||
nose off. Crazy’di’naa? Pomparu smell bad, but Bou blame da crazy on
|
||
Kavava<a href="#fn39" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref39"
|
||
role="doc-noteref"><sup>39</sup></a>. Kavava make brain loopy, Bou no
|
||
friend chew it too too much.”<br />
|
||
Eka’s eyes widened, imagining someone without a nose. “How
|
||
horrible.”<br />
|
||
“Wen it come to pomparu, some say no nose better! Bou carve new nose
|
||
for friend out of banabo, add color wit ground lavendiri flower. Friend
|
||
love it, call it poronoso’di’no, to mean my special purple nose.
|
||
Tawari’ia’di. No touch pomparu. Eka say goodbye to <em>all</em> friend
|
||
if do dis. The smell, it <em>no</em> come off!”<br />
|
||
“So, um. Shall we do this thing then?” Eka’s nose was eager to move
|
||
on to some other task, it had no desire to be replaced with a
|
||
poronoso’di.<br />
|
||
Bou covered the inside of the scupper opening with avoka oil, and
|
||
reluctantly did the same for the area around the pomparu’s body, all
|
||
while wearing multiple thick pairs of pinny-tarred hempa gloves. Then,
|
||
Eka shoved the small end of a broom through the pomparu-free end of the
|
||
opening while Bou held it down with both hands.<br />
|
||
“Ready?”<br />
|
||
Eka pushed with such force that the pomparu came flying out and went
|
||
rolling inside of Bou’s workshop. Bou shrieked, tore the broom from
|
||
Eka’s hands and ran inside, but it was too late. The floor was covered
|
||
with a stinky green discharge, and some had slipped under the various
|
||
piles of materials. The slimy curvaceous thing was pushed with the
|
||
bristled end of a broom, out of the workshop, out of the city, away from
|
||
all the houses. Already some of the villagers were outside, noses
|
||
pinched and afraid of what this smell would do to the town’s shops. They
|
||
all scurried about, covering the pomparu drippings with ground lavendiri
|
||
leaves and other strong-smelling herbs, while others scooped it up with
|
||
shovels and brooms, that would have to be discarded after. All had
|
||
purple gel mustaches.<br />
|
||
Bou took Eka’s side, the broom was at the edge of town with the
|
||
pomparu, marking the spot where it was so no one would go near it. Those
|
||
creatures were slow, and Bou had plans of putting a bowl of soured
|
||
muckwheat far out into the valley to lure it even further away.<br />
|
||
Eka looked at the putrid drippings it left behind. “Wow. All this
|
||
came from one pomparu?”<br />
|
||
“Look like Bou add ‘burn workshop’ to to-do list…”</p>
|
||
<h1 id="beobug">Beobug</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/fauna.woth.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>Messenger woths are sturdy creatures, they fit in the palm of
|
||
your hand. They have excellent memories, and can travel long distances.
|
||
Many use them as a means of sending messages to other cities. They can
|
||
carry items many times their own weight.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>Lupen was enjoying a mug of bonan wine at the local snack bar at the
|
||
edge of town, where Eka and Nono had agreed to meet later that
|
||
day.<br />
|
||
Bonan wine was an alcoholic drink traditionally brewed in Finiku
|
||
villages, each had its own recipe. Some added herbs, or used other fruit
|
||
as a base. It wasn’t uncommon to give some of yours to a friend, the
|
||
restaurant owner Javi explained.<br />
|
||
“Sosae’di de yorala!” Noticing Lupen’s vacant expression, and
|
||
understanding that the Verido didn’t know Finic, Javi said it again in
|
||
the Common Tongue. “Best in the land!”<br />
|
||
“Sosae’di de yorala, sosae’di de yorala…” Lupen repeated, determined
|
||
to remember this time. “Think others in the land say this too about
|
||
their wine?”<br />
|
||
“Orae,” the restaurant owner said, “but dey is wrong!”<br />
|
||
Lupen laughed. “I’ve had bonan before. Cut thin and dried as chips,
|
||
never as a drink. How do you make it?”</p>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p> <strong>Bonan wine</strong></p>
|
||
<p> <em>Ingredients</em></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> Two stalks of bonans<br />
|
||
A quarter pail of waterstones</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> <em>Instructions</em></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> Let bonans ripen for seven days after harvest, cut bonans and add
|
||
the squeezed liquid from waterstones. Do not stir the mixture.<br />
|
||
After one day, squeeze the liquid from waterstones and bring to a
|
||
boil in a hot pot. Add to bonans, and leave to stand for another day.
|
||
During this period, fermentation will occur.<br />
|
||
Filter the water through a cloth, and consume the filtrate as bonan
|
||
wine.</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p> Lupen enjoyed conversing with Javi, that is, until Gree showed
|
||
up. Gree was also a Finiku and captain of one of the Beobug supply ships
|
||
Nono had mentioned. Gree took a seat by the Verido, despite there being
|
||
unoccupied seats all around. Gree’s big bulbous green eyes matched the
|
||
Beobug uniform, with dark hair licked tight, so tight that the Finiku
|
||
could not frown.<br />
|
||
One of the gigantic supply vessels, with the name Beobug II painted
|
||
on its side in yellow letters, was moored outside of town, it had two
|
||
masts and a green hull. Gree was the captain of Beobug II, and before
|
||
Lupen could ask Gree was already explaining how Ilk kapo was treated to
|
||
be turned into gas to power machinery and vessels in Montore.<br />
|
||
Lupen knew about Beobug, the Volare elders didn’t like them, they
|
||
thought it was disrespectful of them to follow the Ilk. In cities Ilks
|
||
would eat their weight in teaweet, and when it was on the move again
|
||
Beobug was always there to catch its kapo.<br />
|
||
Gree threw an arm around Lupen. “Nono good friend to you dae’sa? You
|
||
arrive on same sandfin. Gree see dis.”<br />
|
||
“You want something?” Lupen asked.<br />
|
||
“Hm. Gree see dat Lupen like to speak plain.” Gree said with a
|
||
smile. “Nono best sandfinner. But package delivery is waste of talent.
|
||
In Beobug fleet, derr two ship. Gree steer Beobug II, but Beobug, lead
|
||
sandfin, need captain. Gree ask and ask but always, Nono say no. I ask
|
||
too much! Lupen ask for Gree. Voice of Ilk can do anytting, orae?”<br />
|
||
Mentioning being Voice was a mistake, Lupen regretted it, blaming
|
||
the bonan wine. Seeing that the Verido was hesitating, Gree spoke again.
|
||
“Lupen talk to Ilk! You autority! Use dis title to get good ting for
|
||
<em>you</em>!”<br />
|
||
“Are we still talking about Nono? I don’t understand why a title is
|
||
so important.”<br />
|
||
“Lupen forget, Voice is grand being! If talk big, make all around
|
||
listen.” Saying this, Gree sharply elbowed the Verido in the ribs.<br />
|
||
“I don’t know.” Lupen said, attempting to move away but Gree’s arm
|
||
was unyielding. “You really think being the captain of a vessel that
|
||
recycles Ilk kapo is worthy of praise?”<br />
|
||
“Orae!” Gree threw their hands up into the air. “No limit to da
|
||
energy! Montore no more wait for wind! Beobug give city great great
|
||
success! Gree swim in coin! No poor, no pain. No more, no more!” Gree
|
||
said, eyes aglow.<br />
|
||
“Wind is free. And when there’s no wind well, you wait.” Lupen
|
||
said.<br />
|
||
“Lupen seem to tink Verido taint-free,” Gree’s bulbous eyes were set
|
||
on the Verido, narrowing for a moment, “all you take free ride on Ilk.
|
||
How long you do dis for, umm? One ki’annum? Up derr, it keep you from
|
||
worse of desert. Lupen always safe on Ilk, no understand true misery.”
|
||
The captain smacked the top of the Verido’s thigh then, causing the sand
|
||
embedded in the isilk clothes to rise. When the dust settled again Gree
|
||
laughed. “Well, Lupen learning dis now, orae? You are eer in da dust wit
|
||
us.”<br />
|
||
“The Ilk is a friend. We co-exist.” Lupen retorted.<br />
|
||
“Dis wat Beobug do too,” Gree turned to the restaurant owner,
|
||
raising two empty mug. “Mou ipaya Javi!”<br />
|
||
Javi nodded, pouring a generous serving of wine to both, a bit of
|
||
the liquid overflowing outside their mugs.<br />
|
||
Lupen noticed a patch on Gree’s arm then, “what’s that?”<br />
|
||
The captain lifted up a green sleeve to show the full patch, pressed
|
||
onto the skin. “Is lunch. Much better den real ting, oro!”<br />
|
||
“Yoroi’di!” Javi said, inspecting the patch. “Babam cake! Good
|
||
one.”<br />
|
||
Lupen was unphased, “aah I see, I see… another Montore industry.
|
||
Another way to amass coin, another path to titles.” An empty mug sat in
|
||
Lupen’s hand, “did I drink all of this just now?” Gree’s mug was also
|
||
empty, but Javi was there to fill them right back up again.<br />
|
||
“Industry mean progress.” Gree said, leaning into the Verido.<br />
|
||
“Progress means coin…” Lupen replied, bored with the
|
||
conversation.<br />
|
||
“Coin is future Voice of Volare Ilk.” Saying this, Gree slapped
|
||
Lupen in the back, resulting in Lupen nearly spitting out a mouthful of
|
||
wine.<br />
|
||
“What is there to do with so much coin?” Lupen said, coughing and
|
||
trying to move away from Gree, again, with little success.<br />
|
||
“Lupen new to desert, much to learn,” saying this, Gree pulled out a
|
||
shiny golden coin, which now found itself into the palm of Lupen’s hand.
|
||
One side bore a poorly-chiseled face, and the other had Montore
|
||
inscribed on it along with the number one hundred. Lupen was going to
|
||
return the coin but Gree refused it. “Keep coin, is payment for favour
|
||
Gree ask. Lupen ask Nono for Gree, orae?”<br />
|
||
Lupen nodded, pocketing the coin. Gree then stepped off of the
|
||
stool, jelly-legged, and returned to the crew aboard Beobug II.<br />
|
||
Lupen stayed at the bar, unable to put a phrase together.<br />
|
||
Javi laughed. “Eat muckwheat dumpling, healthy wit bobonion, dilly
|
||
herb and looma root. Verido like looma root, orae? Wawa’de, will imbibe
|
||
bonan in belly.” Javi pushed a plate of steaming dumplings in front of
|
||
the Verido. “Eat, eat.”</p>
|
||
<p>Having finished all deliveries, and now armed with a tall bottle of
|
||
plumpkin<a href="#fn40" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref40"
|
||
role="doc-noteref"><sup>40</sup></a> ale, Nono felt it necessary to
|
||
treat the fleshies to a drink. All three gathered at Javi’s snack bar,
|
||
savoring their drinks, although Lupen had opted for tea this time.<br />
|
||
Eka, still wearing the coveralls, told them about Orin, Bou, the
|
||
incident with the pomparu, the fixing of the waterstone pump and all the
|
||
other items on the list they’d been tasked with. Lupen spoke of the
|
||
encounter with Gree, and told Nono about the favour.<br />
|
||
“Dis komororo ask Lupen to ask Nono to captain Beobug sandfin? Ia’!
|
||
Ianae!” The Finiku’s head began to shake and the shaking did not stop
|
||
for some time. Eka wondered if their friend was stuck in a loop and
|
||
needed help, but Nono recovered moments after that. “Ia’ is wat Nono say
|
||
and always say to Gree!”<br />
|
||
“Being on a sandfin like that must be impressive. Why not do it?”
|
||
Eka asked, remembering the large green sandfin at the edge of
|
||
town.<br />
|
||
“Yorala’no mai aini’re de mutau’wi, coin ianae.” Nono said with
|
||
pride.<br />
|
||
“The way of the land is perpetuated in righteousness, not coin.” Eka
|
||
translated, grinning.<br />
|
||
Both Eka and Lupen laughed at this. Nono went on to say that they
|
||
were both grown on the same plot of land, because of this Gree tink dat
|
||
dey are close. “Wen young, Nono travel on sandfin, but Gree stay in
|
||
Tiu’va, talk much, make mapa tink Nono useless! Say Nono waste time, dat
|
||
only good job is Beobug job. Komororo…” Nono said, cursing at the air,
|
||
“Beobug do scam. All profit, no work. No one know dis, but Beobug
|
||
sandfin need no captain, only fiendling to do scam.” After saying this,
|
||
Nono leaned in to whisper to them. “Nono follow Beobug sandfin always.
|
||
Ponopo follow Beobug II, anodder wot follow Beobug I, Beobug III. Nono
|
||
go to village after fiendling leave, and Nono correct misdeed!”</p>
|
||
<p>As the evening went on Nono began to tell sandfin stories, like the
|
||
one about the notorious Dorake’s passage, known to have buried countless
|
||
sandfinners over time. While Nono was talking, a small creature flew
|
||
over to them, and landed on the table. It had short antennae, and
|
||
delicate yellow hairs all over its body. “Dis Ponopo. Ponopo carry
|
||
message for Nono, have good memory and know desert well.”<br />
|
||
Ponopo fluttered off the table and landed on Eka’s head.<br />
|
||
“Wow! A woth[^42]! Yora’nae Ponopo!” Eka said, watching Ponopo hover
|
||
back down onto the table, landing near a puddle of spilled plumpkin ale.
|
||
The woth began to mop it up, its antennae wiggling as it drank.<br />
|
||
Nono pulled out a small wooden box, laid it out on the table and
|
||
opened the lid. Six round eggs sat in it, laying over a soft tan
|
||
blanket. “Wot egg,” Nono told them, “Nono carry many.” Nono’s hand
|
||
reached into the box and picked up an egg. “Dis wot egg ready, but wot
|
||
only come out when it find someone it like. Woth is loyal, it follow you
|
||
always.” Nono reached over the table, grabbed Eka’s hand, and placed a
|
||
single woth egg in it. As soon as the egg came into contact with Eka’s
|
||
skin, the white egg turned sky blue.<br />
|
||
“It’s blue!” Eka said, amazed by the unborn woth.<br />
|
||
“Blue? Wot egg never blue,” Nono said, looking very confused, “no no
|
||
no matter! Put finger on egg. Do gentle, gentle stroke.”<br />
|
||
Eka did as Nono instructed and put a finger on the egg, stroking
|
||
it.<br />
|
||
“Less stroke, good good wot!” Nono continued. The blue egg cracked
|
||
open after only a single stroke. “Impossible.”<br />
|
||
Lupen and Eka watched as a new woth emerged from the egg. It had a
|
||
blue body, covered in light blue hairs, it had long antennae, and even
|
||
longer wings.<br />
|
||
“Sakoi’di! Strong wot!” Nono said, shaking their head in
|
||
disbelief.<br />
|
||
Eka knew many things, but knew little about woths, although this one
|
||
did appear larger than Ponopo. Nono grabbed a measuring stick and jotted
|
||
down every detail, the colour of its hairs, the length of the wings and
|
||
of the antennae, the diameter of the eyes too. Everything. “Nono visit
|
||
atchery to ask question to friend. Friend know much about wot.” Nono put
|
||
the stick away, and continued to marvel at the quality of Eka’s
|
||
woth.<br />
|
||
“What should we name it?” Lupen asked Eka.<br />
|
||
“Ianae! You no choose name! Wot choose,” Nono said, waving a finger
|
||
at them, “is no easy to guess name!”<br />
|
||
“Yea, I mean, the name could be anything! How long did it take you
|
||
to guess Ponopo’s name?” Lupen asked.<br />
|
||
Nono took a long sip of plumpkin ale. “Five annum, but only after
|
||
Nono take bad, bad erb. For Nono friend, take long time. Fourteen
|
||
annums.”<br />
|
||
“Fourteen?!”<br />
|
||
“Orae, orae! Mu-mu-mu-mu-mumford. Wot stutter, make guess
|
||
difficult,” Nono paused, “wot listen wid or widout name, but name make
|
||
connection strong! Some tink wot no choose name, dat dey wait to ear
|
||
name it like.”<br />
|
||
Eka hoped it wouldn’t take that long, a fourteen-annum long guessing
|
||
game did not sound fun. “You’ve got an easy name, isn’t that right
|
||
Tom-tom?” A finger traced along the soft hairs on its back. The woth
|
||
went about its business, and joined Ponopo on the table to get some of
|
||
that sweet plumpkin juice.<br />
|
||
“Tom-Tom?” Lupen said with a laugh, “it looks more like a Pino.”</p>
|
||
<p>After an evening of unsuccessful name-guessing Eka and Lupen said
|
||
goodbye to Nono, who gave them a map with areas marked in red of the
|
||
desert between Tiputa and Montore. “Dis place. Many floater[^43]. Many,
|
||
many danger. Take care when near, fleshies.”<br />
|
||
They raised their tent in a clear space outside of town. Bou had
|
||
given Eka an extra length of fabric to extend the size of their shelter.
|
||
They had sown the two pieces together, and now two and half travelers
|
||
could lie under it—Hush agreed to laying halfway outside of the tent, so
|
||
the other two could have room.<br />
|
||
“I would have loved to keep traveling aboard the sandfin,” Lupen
|
||
said, watching the unnamed woth tracing shapes through the air. They
|
||
wondered if this was its way of communicating its name, they spent a
|
||
long time trying to decipher it, but it turned out to be complete
|
||
gibberish.<br />
|
||
Eka agreed. “They’re wonderful aren’t they? Wish the cabin was
|
||
taller though, I hit my head on the cross beam too many times during the
|
||
voyage.”<br />
|
||
Lying in the tent, Lupen thought about name-giving. Verido had their
|
||
names written on their faces, but this wasn’t true for everyone. “Did
|
||
you pick your own name?”<br />
|
||
Eka didn’t answer right away, brows furrowing as if in deep thought.
|
||
“Yes, I’ve had many names though.”<br />
|
||
“Do you remember being grown?”<br />
|
||
“Nope, but I have slept for long periods of time. I imagine being
|
||
born is like waking up after a long, long sleep.”<br />
|
||
“What about dying? Where do you suppose we go after we’re
|
||
dead.”<br />
|
||
“Your body stays right here.”<br />
|
||
“What about my mind? Where do you think that goes?”<br />
|
||
“Think about the time before you were grown. That was an okay time
|
||
wasn’t it?”<br />
|
||
“I guess so. Well, I don’t remember…”<br />
|
||
“We’re all part of the grand sweater that is our universe. We are a
|
||
single thread, and together we form a complex design, criss-crossed into
|
||
a variety of patterns. Sometimes these individual patterns unravel, but
|
||
they’re not lost, they remain part of the grand sweater. Nothing ever
|
||
disappears entirely,” saying this, Eka began to unravel Lupen’s sweater,
|
||
tugging on a loose bit of thread.<br />
|
||
Lupen noticed this, and moved closer to help undo it. “I like this
|
||
analogy.”<br />
|
||
“Analogy? You mean you don’t adhere to the idea of a
|
||
sweater-verse?”<br />
|
||
Both spent the evening unravelling the isilk sweater until it was
|
||
back to not being a sweater at all, just a collection of thread.<br />
|
||
Lupen lent Eka a vest to wear, and together they cooked up a pot of
|
||
bobonion soup. They ate it with some slices of toasted muckwheat bread.
|
||
Then, they recited poems about the sweater-verse until they fell
|
||
asleep.<br />
|
||
Lupen did not dream of death, but dreamt of a world where everyone
|
||
was made of fabric, their skin and clothes knitted together. Children
|
||
made a game of unravelling each other’s arms, while the adults scolded
|
||
them. Lupen was in this dream, and there, hanging from the side of
|
||
everyone’s wrist was a thread, connecting Verido to Aodals, to Finikus,
|
||
to Terins, to looma roots, to every grain of sand, and to skyrocks too.
|
||
This thread bound all things, both known and unknown.</p>
|
||
<p>The next day, Lupen and Eka spent time with Bou. They had finished
|
||
their tasks early, so Bou closed the store for the day and introduced
|
||
them to some of the locals. They ate plenty of muckwheat bread, a local
|
||
specialty. The bread was served with fermented sagery jam and thin
|
||
slices of sun-dried totomites.<br />
|
||
One of Bou’s friends had Vennec babies and insisted on showing them
|
||
off. Vennecs were large, humpbacked, furry beasts with thin snouts,
|
||
large pointy ears and a long slender neck. The vennec babies were asleep
|
||
in a pile, it was hard to tell where one started and another ended.
|
||
Soon, the babies were on their feet, and ran circles around them. Eka
|
||
laughed, stroking their soft hairs. Lupen’s face was buried in the fur
|
||
of one of the larger cubs.<br />
|
||
“Vennec too young now, but in one annum you come back. Vennec become
|
||
strong, make good travel companion.” The vennec grower said.<br />
|
||
Having a pup now would be impractical, as they had much travelling
|
||
to do. Lupen liked the idea of adopting a vennec. “You look like an
|
||
Aristollo.”<br />
|
||
“Aristollo?” Eka said, eyes wide and glancing over at the Verido.
|
||
“But that’s the name of a—”<br />
|
||
“Skyrock? Yes, I know that.”<br />
|
||
“No. Well yes. But it’s also the name of an—”<br />
|
||
“Iridi?” Lupen’s mouth curled into a smile, it was nice to appear
|
||
all-knowing for once, a rarity around someone like Eka.<br />
|
||
“Yes again! Wow! Lupen you know <em>everything</em>!”<br />
|
||
“I know a hundred ways to prepare looma roots,” Lupen began, “but I
|
||
don’t know the story of Aristollo. I’d like to hear it if you know
|
||
it.”<br />
|
||
“It’s not my story to tell. We’ll find someone to tell it to you,
|
||
and on the way, you can tell me of the hundred ways to prepare Looma
|
||
roots.”<br />
|
||
“I really couldn’t.”<br />
|
||
“Yes, well, the muffled cries of your stomach pairs well enough with
|
||
my singing,” Eka said.</p>
|
||
<p>Back at their camp, Lupen held a hand up, making a landing platform
|
||
for the woth. They had been gifted a little portable house for their new
|
||
friend, a round glass ball with a hole on its side to be used as a door.
|
||
Inside, was a lining of soft banabo fabric, so that the woth could
|
||
easily find a spot in there and stay hidden. The ball was wrapped in
|
||
yellow thread and had a permanent attachment to Lupen’s belt. Bou had
|
||
left the gift hanging at the entrance of their tent.<br />
|
||
“Rest well Duster,” but the woth did not react.<br />
|
||
“Not even a twitch,” Eka said, looking at the sleeping messenger,
|
||
“it’s a nice name, maybe it didn’t hear me say it?”<br />
|
||
They weren’t sure what the rules were. How would the woth react once
|
||
it heard its own name? Maybe it would flutter extra harder, or would
|
||
change colour again? Lupen wished they’d asked Nono more questions, but
|
||
the Finiku had left after the second sunset for another delivery, both
|
||
suspected that Gree had something to do with their friend’s hasty
|
||
departure.</p>
|
||
<p>The following morning, even before Eka had time to slip on some day
|
||
clothes, Orin appeared at the door a bundle in hand. The clothes were
|
||
ready and the tailor was eager to see them on Eka. Eka changed into the
|
||
new outfit while Lupen brought the Finiku some herbal tea, served with a
|
||
slice of lemilim and some grated sweet root. The tailor was unusually
|
||
quiet, and stared at the Verido.<br />
|
||
The trousers were loose, yet tight in all the right places, reaching
|
||
up over Eka’s midriff and held there without the need for a belt. The
|
||
undershirt looked plain to the untrained eye, but it was made of banabo
|
||
fibres. The stitching was reinforced around the neck and shoulders. Orin
|
||
even made a scarf with sleeves, large enough to throw over your head for
|
||
protection from sand storms.<br />
|
||
“You are a true master! These are wonderful!”<br />
|
||
Orin’s face reddened at those words. “Oh it’s nothing, really! It
|
||
pleases me that you like it.”<br />
|
||
“Like? I <em>love</em> it!” Eka said.<br />
|
||
The tailor had not noticed then, but Lupen had moved to the end of
|
||
the room. The Verido came back with a large bundle of thread and placed
|
||
it onto the Finiku’s lap.<br />
|
||
“Vo-vo-vo-lare isilk?” Orin said, voice high with emotion.<br />
|
||
Lupen nodded. The thread of the sweater was re-bundled and bound
|
||
with a matching blue ribbon.<br />
|
||
“Now you can make something for yourself with it,” the Verido
|
||
said.<br />
|
||
Orin began to bawl, fingers curling around the precious bundle of
|
||
thread. “T-t-this is t-too much,” there was no stopping those tears,
|
||
“y-you be t-too k-kind.”</p>
|
||
<h1 id="skyrock">Skyrock</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/fauna.seshell.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>Seshell krabs are pearly white creatures that bear a shell with a
|
||
face. It is thought that if you do them harm, they will remember your
|
||
face and chase you down.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>This is the tale of a lonely piece of matter. It was once part of
|
||
some other, larger body, but they’d since parted. There was no way to
|
||
measure how much time had passed since then, which was just as well,
|
||
because time didn’t matter out here. Skyrock had seen much of the
|
||
universe. It no longer grieved for home, nor did it fear the unknown.
|
||
Contrary to what it first thought, the great expanse did not inspire
|
||
fear, it was soothing, and everything made sense here. The celestial
|
||
bodies danced with one another, locked into a slow waltz.<br />
|
||
Skyrock rather liked the time it had spent adrift, but then it
|
||
neared the atmosphere of a yellow planet and was pulled down onto it. It
|
||
lost much of its mass in the descent, but still had enough to cause a
|
||
great big fuss when it struck.<br />
|
||
Now, Skyrock was faced with a new reality, but it knew that one day
|
||
the waltz would resume, and so its mind quieted.</p>
|
||
<p>It sat idly for many annums. It saw the suns and moons pass many
|
||
times. It wasn’t tiresome, on the contrary, it celebrated each passing
|
||
and would count them up.<br />
|
||
“…”<br />
|
||
Skyrock did not know how to count, but it liked to try.<br />
|
||
It was about to assign an outrageously large series of what it
|
||
thought to be numbers and letters to this next moon passing when some
|
||
travelers stopped a short distance away. A shell lodged itself in the
|
||
foot of their furry companion, and the riders were forced to
|
||
dismount.<br />
|
||
One had hair like a sun, and the other hair like sand with a face
|
||
like the sky. Skyrock gave them names then: Sun and Sky-sand. They were
|
||
fascinated with the shells that covered the ground, and began to search,
|
||
to try and find the most beautiful shell of all.<br />
|
||
Skyrock wondered if perhaps it too qualified as a shell. Sun found
|
||
one that was turning and coiling and somehow ending back onto itself.
|
||
Sky-sand had dug up a shell of a most peculiar shape, it had a face
|
||
carved into it. Skyrock knew these well.<br />
|
||
“Um. Lu. That’s a seshell krab,” Sun said.<br />
|
||
Multiple pairs of legs came pushing out of the sides of the shell,
|
||
along with a set of tiny black eyeballs sitting atop lanky strings of
|
||
skin. Sky-sand screamed and dropped it to the ground. This amused
|
||
Skyrock, oh the sounds these fleshy ones could make!<br />
|
||
The seshell krab began to throw bits of broken shells over itself,
|
||
burrowing deep into the ground. It was not rare for one of them to
|
||
burrow underneath Skyrock, and to cause it to shift to a new place—this
|
||
too was fun, each time it happened it wondered where it would shift to
|
||
next.<br />
|
||
“Are they <em>all</em> alive?!” Sky-sand said, breathing hard. “Not
|
||
sure I like the idea of standing on a sea of living things…”<br />
|
||
“No no, just the ones with faces. Avoid those if you can. They’re
|
||
bad tempered. If you mess with them they’ll chase you to return the
|
||
favour. They never forget a face.”<br />
|
||
“What if they only saw half my face?” Sky-sand said, coiling a piece
|
||
of blue fabric to conceal part of it.<br />
|
||
“Then all who share your upper face are in trouble. Bit selfish
|
||
don’t you think?”<br />
|
||
“What if I had no face?”<br />
|
||
“Then everyone’s a potential victim.”<br />
|
||
Sky-sand’s eyes widened. “Scary.”<br />
|
||
Sun started to whistle a tune and found yet another impossible
|
||
shape: a flat shell coiling and again, ending back onto itself. “Look at
|
||
this one!”<br />
|
||
Sky-sand seemed to envy Sun, wishing to find an interesting shell
|
||
too. Then, Skyrock caught the eye of this sky-faced scavenger and grew
|
||
nervous, no two-legged land dweller had ever come this close to
|
||
it.<br />
|
||
“Beautiful,” Sky-sand said, eyes aglow and nearing a hand to
|
||
Skyrock.<br />
|
||
“Disqualified!” Sun shouted, Skyrock fidgeted with ever-growing
|
||
excitement. “That’s a skyrock, not a shell.”<br />
|
||
“Really? I thought they’d be bigger than this.”<br />
|
||
“They lose bits of themselves when they fall out of the sky.”<br />
|
||
“Oh. That’s sad isn’t it? Losing bits of yourself,” Sky-sand said,
|
||
looking at the rock from all angles.<br />
|
||
“You lose bits of yourself all the time too, you know.”<br />
|
||
“You mean like, skin and hair and things?” Sky-sand said, trying to
|
||
picture this body worn down to the size of a fist.<br />
|
||
“Does it makes you sad?” Sun asked.<br />
|
||
“Not really. Um. I don’t know why I said that.” Sky-sand’s fingers
|
||
traced around the flat face of Skyrock then, “there’s nothing sad about
|
||
you Skyrock. You’re the most experienced of us all, and too beautiful
|
||
for this ball of dust.”<br />
|
||
Skyrock felt proud. It was in a most wonderful state. Time and
|
||
weather had smoothed down its exterior. The two land dwellers were very
|
||
impressed with this, and decided to transform its body again, in a very
|
||
big way. Skyrock was ground down further, and shaped into two pendants,
|
||
a string was tied to one end. Skyrock was now split in two, it hung
|
||
around the necks of each land-dweller. It could see itself on the breast
|
||
of the other, it was a most unusual sight. Skyrock relished in this new
|
||
perspective.<br />
|
||
How wondrous, it thought.<br />
|
||
Sky-sand and Sun returned to their fuzzy companion, and left the sea
|
||
of broken shells behind.</p>
|
||
<h1 id="an-oasis">An Oasis</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/fauna.floater.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>A round floating creature, that changes colour depending on its
|
||
mood. It is orange when normal, red when angry, and yellow when
|
||
confused. If threatened, the creature will throw itself upon an enemy,
|
||
its skin is like goo and sticks to its victims. The skin can become as
|
||
hot as hot coals, prolonged exposure can kill.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>Lupen and Eka made a detour to a hollow, despite Nono’s warnings that
|
||
the place was dangerous. The weather that day was not cooperating, and
|
||
this particular detour offered better conditions. They were instructed
|
||
to transit quickly, but their sore feet made walking fast
|
||
difficult.<br />
|
||
Near the hollow, Hush stopped after seeing spotted round creatures
|
||
hovering in the distance, they had black points for eyes, long fluttery
|
||
wings and tiny slits for mouths. The hyroo would not move forward,
|
||
fearful of the strange beings ahead.<br />
|
||
“Whoa! Look at those!”<br />
|
||
Eka grabbed Lupen’s shoulder, “remember what Nono said.” These
|
||
creatures were familiar to Eka, but little was known of them because
|
||
usually people made a point of avoiding them.<br />
|
||
The Verido took a step forward, the creatures turned a solid red
|
||
colour and flew towards them. Eka leapt onto Hush and reached over to
|
||
grab Lupen’s collar, but one of the creatures latched itself onto the
|
||
hyroo’s side and another to Lupen’s chest. Their bodies were sticky like
|
||
goo, and burned like hot coals.<br />
|
||
In a panic, Hush bounded fast and far into the distance. Eka kicked
|
||
at the soft gooey body to get it off, but it would just bounce back into
|
||
shape. Hush landed with a roll, sending all passengers cascading onto
|
||
the ground before rubbing its side on the sand and clawing at the
|
||
parasite with its hind legs. Clawing was not enough to get this
|
||
spherical creature to let go, Lupen even tried hitting it with the butt
|
||
of a mug, nothing worked. Hush leapt into the air again, as high as Eka
|
||
had ever seen it jump. The beast became a point into the sky, just
|
||
another skyrock orbitting the planet.<br />
|
||
There was no way to help Hush now, and so Eka went to assist the
|
||
other victim. The creatures had burned through Lupen’s vest and
|
||
undershirt already. Lupen was in agony, twisting on the ground.<br />
|
||
“I can’t get it off!” Eka cried, trying to pry it off using a rock
|
||
as a barrier.<br />
|
||
Moments later, Hush returned, the parasite was gone but the skin
|
||
where it had been had been stripped of all fur. This is how they would
|
||
get rid of them: altitude and cold. Eka whistled for Hush and climbed
|
||
onto its back, pulling Lupen along.<br />
|
||
“Take us up again Hush! As high as you can!”<br />
|
||
As before, Hush jumped high and fast. The parasite quickly abandoned
|
||
its host. When they landed again, they were a good distance away,
|
||
leaving the fluttery fiends behind.<br />
|
||
Lupen lay on the ground, speaking through gritted teeth. “Those
|
||
things, why did they attack us?”<br />
|
||
“They’re territorial, I know that, but there’s usually not so many
|
||
together in one place.”<br />
|
||
There was a logical explanation, but right now Eka focused on
|
||
crushing waterstones over Lupen’s wounds to help reduce pain and
|
||
swelling. The injury was covered to keep air and sand from the seared
|
||
surface. Hush received the same treatment. It was nearly dark, and with
|
||
two wounded it was best to set camp here.</p>
|
||
<p>That night, the skin around Lupen’s burn had become red, swollen and
|
||
sore. Eka prepared some tea laced with herbs to prevent infection, but
|
||
lacked many key ingredients. Staying out here was not an option and the
|
||
next town was too far. Tomorrow, Eka would try and search the land for
|
||
the missing herbs.</p>
|
||
<p>Eka prepared nuni nuggets for everyone. Nuni was a starchy stuber
|
||
with bright yellow flesh, it had a taste and smell that could best be
|
||
described as being robust. Lupen loved nuni, more for the manner in
|
||
which it stained the inside of your mouth yellow than for its flavor.
|
||
They ate many on the trip, and made bets on who’s mouth would be most
|
||
yellow. Eka placed the leftovers, the skin and tips of the nuni into a
|
||
jar along with some brine to pickle for a few days.<br />
|
||
The food was divided into three plates, but before breakfast could
|
||
be served, a plump leaf-tailed orange hound appeared at the entrance of
|
||
their tent, mouth agape, gushing with saliva. Eka wondered where this
|
||
leafhound[^44] came from, but glancing behind the hound, Eka’s eyes
|
||
locked onto a distant point of colour, a spot of green.<br />
|
||
“Is that where you came from?”<br />
|
||
The hound barked, triggering a series of faint yaps and yips, all
|
||
coming from the faraway green smudge. A pool of clear slime had
|
||
accumulated at the animal’s feet, dripping from its long purple tongue.
|
||
Eka cut a piece of nuni, tossed it over, watched as their visitor
|
||
gobbled it up, and waited for more, its antennae-like ears twitching in
|
||
anticipation.<br />
|
||
“You really like that, huh?” Eka said.<br />
|
||
Breakfast was served, although Lupen was in a feverish state and
|
||
couldn’t eat. Hush had no problem eating, and despite Eka’s warnings
|
||
helped itself to Lupen’s portion.<br />
|
||
“Yea, yea. I know. I know you’ve got two stomachs,” Eka said,
|
||
caressing the hyroo’s fur, “right now you’re the mapa okay? You take
|
||
care of Lu while I’m gone.”<br />
|
||
Hush’s ears twitched at the word ‘gone’. While not familiar with the
|
||
letter making up the word it recognized the sound and length and
|
||
associated it with a moment of prolonged absence, a thing it didn’t
|
||
like. Hush let out a pained whine, lowering its head into Eka’s
|
||
hands.<br />
|
||
“I won’t be far, just listen for me,” Eka said, fingers brushing the
|
||
contours of the hyroo’s large parabolic ears. Hush yielded then, letting
|
||
out a yip and taking Lupen’s side.<br />
|
||
Eka smirked, and turned to the orange hound. “Okay! Let’s get
|
||
going!”</p>
|
||
<p>Both walked out of the tent and into the desert. The wind was down,
|
||
and the suns felt extra hot. The leafhound followed Eka closely,
|
||
well-aware of the existence of a secret piece of nuni, hidden in the
|
||
palm of Eka’s hand. The leafhound stayed close, as if to make sure no
|
||
one else would get it.<br />
|
||
Gradually, the point of colour expanded into a row of trees. At its
|
||
centre there were patches of colour, each colour corresponding to a
|
||
different crop. There was no way that this place had come into being on
|
||
its own, this improbable oasis was the work of a devoted carer. Looking
|
||
further, Eka glimpsed a few of those horrible floaters hovering around
|
||
the green piece of land. It would be impossible to go near it without
|
||
them noticing. If one of them did, without Hush or Lupen around to help,
|
||
Eka and the hound would be in trouble. The orange hound seemed calm, not
|
||
bothered by their presence. Eka assumed that it had come through here
|
||
once already, and yet it had not suffered any harm. Had they not seen
|
||
the hound? Maybe it knew of another way inside. Eka’s eyes were looking
|
||
out for any movement in the oasis. There were many other leafhounds
|
||
there, one of them was chasing a floater that had wandered a bit too far
|
||
inland. The floater turned yellow and backed away, returning to the
|
||
outer perimeter.<br />
|
||
Eka returned to camp, the faithful leafhound trailing behind. Using
|
||
the nuni as a lure was brilliant, Eka thought. They would make their way
|
||
inside with the hound, drawn close by the irresistible allure of the
|
||
yellow tuber, and keep the floaters away all the while. Hopefully, this
|
||
hound was scary enough to protect all three of them and grant them safe
|
||
passage into the oasis. Eka packed the tent and supplies, and the
|
||
injured Verido was secured onto Hush. The group marched towards the
|
||
oasis, stopping at the edge, waiting.<br />
|
||
Lupen opened one fatigued eye. “Eka no… we can’t.”<br />
|
||
“It’s okay, we’ve got a guide this time.”<br />
|
||
The hound was at their side, mouth dripping with saliva. The last
|
||
bit of nuni in hand. Eka stepped onto the grass, marking the entrance to
|
||
the oasis. The spheres reacted. They raced over but did not attack, not
|
||
while the orange mutt was there. Eka gave the leafhound half of the
|
||
piece of nuni, it swallowed it whole and waited for the rest.<br />
|
||
“Mind guiding us all the way in?” Eka asked, “I promise you’ll get
|
||
the rest, and more!”<br />
|
||
The hound yipped, and led them deeper into the oasis. The spheres
|
||
had all gathered around them, but left a corridor for them to walk
|
||
through. Their skin color changed from red, to orange and back to
|
||
yellow. Lupen was hiding under the fabric of the tent, feeling dubious
|
||
about the whole idea. The round creatures stared, but did not
|
||
move.<br />
|
||
Eka was glad that they were safe, but then noticed other hounds in
|
||
the oasis staring at their little group. None charged at them, or made a
|
||
sound.<br />
|
||
Lupen breathed a sigh of relief, and Eka offered the rest of the
|
||
nuni to the hound, caressing its head. “Good job hound!”<br />
|
||
Someone was shouting from the top of the hill, then came running
|
||
towards them brandishing a rake. A Terin, dark skinned, dark haired,
|
||
two-toed with thick limbs, head covered by a rimmed hat made from banabo
|
||
leaves. The hat was secured with a cloth tied under the chin. “Waldek!
|
||
What did you do? <em>No</em> one is allowed in here! You know
|
||
<em>this</em>!” Waldek, their guide into the oasis, yipped and wandered
|
||
off, nose to the ground, searching for more food.<br />
|
||
“I love your green place!” Eka said, brightly.<br />
|
||
“Leave! This is my property!” The Terin said, getting ready to push
|
||
the group back, but then noticed the hyroo and froze mid-step. “A hyroo?
|
||
Rare creatures, very few grow… hyroos need lots of moisture, a temperate
|
||
climate. How is this possible?”<br />
|
||
Eka could see the farmer’s fascination for Hush, but right now they
|
||
had more pressing matters. “Those things out there attacked us, my
|
||
friends are hurt.”<br />
|
||
The Terin was distracted, eyes fixed on the hyroo still. “There has
|
||
been talk of receding genes, of young ones hibernating in the soil and
|
||
awaiting the proper conditions to grow. Yes, yes. This is what must have
|
||
happened…” but then a frown replaced the expression of wonder, “staying
|
||
here? Impossible. You’ll have to go somewhere else.”<br />
|
||
Eka removed the scarf, revealing a red head of hair, “time, shelter
|
||
and medicine, in exchange for 3 questions about my friend Hush.”<br />
|
||
“How will I know your answers aren’t lies?”<br />
|
||
“You can trust me.”<br />
|
||
Those eyes, and those same rounded ears, the Terin thought, then
|
||
spoke aloud in a quiet voice, “similar, but different.” Dirty digits
|
||
scratched at the wood of the rake, nail beds brown with soil, there were
|
||
bits of it stuck on the clothes too. The farmer then glanced over at the
|
||
sick Lupen, laying a hand on the side of the Verido’s face, then
|
||
brieftly put two fingers to the side of Lupen’s throat, grabbed the chin
|
||
to see the tongue, and then lifted an eyelid to see the eyes. “Umph,
|
||
your friend had another accident, before <em>this</em> one I
|
||
mean.”<br />
|
||
“Yea,” Eka nodded, “fell off an Ilk.”<br />
|
||
“Well, that explains a lot. No Verido in their right mind would
|
||
choose to leave an Ilk. And before that?”<br />
|
||
“I wasn’t there before that, but now that I think of it, my friend
|
||
<em>is</em> very accident prone. Not a lot of world experience, if you
|
||
know what I mean…”<br />
|
||
The Terin took a deep breath. “You can stay until your friend’s
|
||
condition improves, but you can’t wander around my grounds without me
|
||
saying so, and you can’t touch <em>anything</em> unless given to you. Is
|
||
that clear?”<br />
|
||
Eka nodded in thanks. Lupen breathed out a weak, but heartfelt thank
|
||
you. The Verido was sweating profusely, eyelids heavy, drawn down by
|
||
many tiny invisible hands.<br />
|
||
“I need some medililly herbs to treat my friend’s wounds.”<br />
|
||
The Terin promised to bring some fresh sprigs over later, returning
|
||
to the house atop the hill.<br />
|
||
Hush started to whine then, with Eka nodding to every grunt and
|
||
growl, “yes I agree. Our host is overprotective, and has a big heart!
|
||
I’m glad you picked up on that.”<br />
|
||
Eka raised their tent, helped Lupen inside and sat down to watch the
|
||
orange dogs walking through the fields. They looked at every single
|
||
crop, their antennae prodding them gently, as if they were asking them
|
||
about their health. The oasis was divided into many parts. The front had
|
||
fresh produce, like karonins<a href="#fn41" class="footnote-ref"
|
||
id="fnref41" role="doc-noteref"><sup>41</sup></a> and babams, teaweet
|
||
and other grains sat in between the vegetables and the small house atop
|
||
the hill. Eka could see a space contoured by tall hedges behind that,
|
||
but the green fence made it impossible to see what was inside.<br />
|
||
Waldek would come by their tent often to check on them. A very good
|
||
mapa, Eka thought.</p>
|
||
<p>Later that day, the voice of the Terin sounded outside of the
|
||
tent.<br />
|
||
“Hello Zucca!” Eka wandered out, “you can call me Eka, and that
|
||
trumpet-eared invalid in there is Lupen.”<br />
|
||
“How do you know my name?”<br />
|
||
“Oh, your leafhound Waldek told Hush, and Hush told me because I
|
||
don’t speak leafhound, not <em>well</em> anyway. I always mix up the
|
||
subtleties in the yaps. Don’t get me started on the yips! It’s a very
|
||
tonal language, not easy to master, and there are <em>so</em> many
|
||
dialects!”<br />
|
||
“I don’t like lies, or jokes. I’m going to apply your friend’s
|
||
medicine. I don’t want to hear any more nonsense.” Zucca prepared two
|
||
medililly poultices. The soft, moist mass was applied to Lupen and
|
||
Hush’s wounds, and wrapped carefully with a clean strip of notcott
|
||
cloth. “What is the name of the mountain you spoke about, where the
|
||
hyroos grow? It’s within the Central Rim isn’t it?” Zucca asked, eyes
|
||
locked on the hyroo. The large-eared creature was resting now, coiled
|
||
into a tight ball with its head hidden. Its body expanded and contracted
|
||
with every breath. Zucca put a hand to the hyroo’s side, inspecting its
|
||
fur.<br />
|
||
“It hasn’t got one, places without names remain strangely
|
||
unseen.”<br />
|
||
“You won’t say. You think I’ll tell?”<br />
|
||
“I’m telling you the truth. It <em>hasn’t</em> got one.”<br />
|
||
“Okay. Fine.” Zucca was displeased with this answer. “So then, how
|
||
long do hyroos live for?”<br />
|
||
“Two haty’annums? Maybe? It really depends.”<br />
|
||
“And how old is Hush?”<br />
|
||
“Less than an annum old, Hush is very green,” saying this, Eka
|
||
turned to caress the back of the sleeping hyroo.<br />
|
||
“They grow that big in just one annum? Remarkable.”<br />
|
||
“That makes three questions!”<br />
|
||
“No, no. That first one doesn’t count. I didn’t get an
|
||
answer.”<br />
|
||
Eka thought about this for a moment, then shrugged, “okay, you get a
|
||
redo.”<br />
|
||
Zucca nodded before leaving the tent, that last question needed to
|
||
be pondered carefully.</p>
|
||
<p>The next day, Hush was sitting outside the tent with Waldek, healthy,
|
||
gnawing contentedly on a stalk of spicy gingin root. Under the cover of
|
||
darkness, their leaf-tailed guide had snuck a pile of fresh produce for
|
||
them. Zucca’s words came to Eka’s mind then: ‘Take only what is given to
|
||
you.’ Zucca had not intended on Waldek helping them. “Technically, we
|
||
aren’t breaking any rules…” Eka said, eyeing Waldek.<br />
|
||
The orange critter let out a yip before returning to its meal, it
|
||
had helped itself to some of the items in the pile. Eka smiled, gathered
|
||
some produce and began to cook breakfast.</p>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p> <strong>Pan-fried mapple toast</strong></p>
|
||
<p> <em>Ingredients</em></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> Two mapples<br />
|
||
One grated sweet root nub<br />
|
||
One avoka nut<br />
|
||
Four teaweet bread slices<br />
|
||
One pureed bonan<br />
|
||
One lanivanil bleen<br />
|
||
One waterstone</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> <em>Instructions</em></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> Cut open lanivanil bleen and scoop out insides. Mash bonan with
|
||
back of spoon, and squeeze one water stone overtop until empty, add
|
||
lanivanil bleen paste and mix well. Put aside.<br />
|
||
Peel and cut mapples into cubes and grate a nub of sweet root. Put
|
||
pan over source of heat, when hot crack open avoka nut and empty the oil
|
||
in the pan. Add the cubed mapple and the grated sweet root, pan-fry
|
||
until caramelized. Keep aside.<br />
|
||
Dip the slices of teaweet bread in the bonan puree mix, and cook in
|
||
a pan until the sides have browned.<br />
|
||
Serve the slices with a generous scoop of caramelized mapples.</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p> “I made you some toast! Eka style!” Eka said, presenting this
|
||
tasty creation to the bed-bound Verido.<br />
|
||
Lupen was awake, and was looking much better. “Whoa! Fresh mapples!
|
||
Zucca let you take them?” With eyes now closed, the patient took a bite,
|
||
as if the momentary absence of one sense could heighten another.<br />
|
||
“It was a gift from our friend Waldek. Our little secret! Oh! You’re
|
||
going to <em>love</em> this place Lu! It’s full of greens and oranges
|
||
and purples and—”<br />
|
||
Yesterday, Lupen had been too sick to take in the details of the
|
||
oasis, but now beyond the fragrant poetry of the mapple toast, this nose
|
||
detected hints of sweet norcorn<a href="#fn42" class="footnote-ref"
|
||
id="fnref42" role="doc-noteref"><sup>42</sup></a> and teaweet in the
|
||
air.<br />
|
||
“—and blues!” Eka finished.<br />
|
||
“Looking forward to seeing that,” Lupen said with a smile, before
|
||
taking note of the poultice, “thanks for taking care of me.”<br />
|
||
“Sure Sure! Zucca made that poultice for you though, that’s what
|
||
healed you up.”<br />
|
||
“Oh. I’ll thank Zucca too then.”<br />
|
||
“You’d better! Medililly takes ages to grow, it was kind of our host
|
||
to spare some,” Eka said.<br />
|
||
After their meal, they removed the poultice and checked the wound,
|
||
the inflammation was down.</p>
|
||
<p>Under the midday suns, Lupen and Eka sat in front of their tent,
|
||
playing the game Nohi’yara to pass the time. They had jars covered with
|
||
a thin cloth, and each person had to smell and guess the spice aloud.
|
||
Whoever got the most right won the game. Lupen picked up another jar to
|
||
smell it.<br />
|
||
“This is a tough one. Rosemeric? I think?” And passed it to
|
||
Eka.<br />
|
||
“Thymin.”<br />
|
||
Lupen frowned, jotting down their guesses, “no way that’s
|
||
thymin.”<br />
|
||
Eka smirked, picking up another jar to smell. “Popmeg.”<br />
|
||
Lupen took the jar in turn, and frowned. “Popmeg? Yea
|
||
<em>right</em>! It’s dilly.”<br />
|
||
“You know, it’s okay to make the same guess as me.” Eka said,
|
||
grabbing the last jar to smell it, “dilly.”<br />
|
||
Lupen was going to start complaining about how unfair the game was
|
||
because Eka knew everything about everything always, but then they heard
|
||
Zucca yelling outside. They peered out through the opening of their
|
||
tent, spotting the Terin chasing pale winged insects out of a plumpkin
|
||
field.<br />
|
||
“Oh! You have mosslings<a href="#fn43" class="footnote-ref"
|
||
id="fnref43" role="doc-noteref"><sup>43</sup></a> in your produce!” Eka
|
||
said.<br />
|
||
“Can’t get rid of them. They hate lemilim grass so I planted some to
|
||
keep them away, but I’m beginning to think they’ve developed a taste for
|
||
it. Curse these things, they make everything rot!” Zucca said, breathing
|
||
hard, tired from chasing after them.<br />
|
||
Lupen had stayed near the tent, sipping tea, content despite the
|
||
ever-present chest pains. The oasis had a voice, speaking through the
|
||
rustling of the various plants. A concerto of greenery. There were not
|
||
many around to listen, a handful of hounds, the caretaker, and Eka.
|
||
Zucca and the hounds were producing all of this food for themselves,
|
||
with no one else around to feed, that is unless there was a village of
|
||
tiny people over there in that walled garden by the house. Lupen brought
|
||
up the topic later that day, when tasked with peeling babams for their
|
||
meal.<br />
|
||
“Let’s ask the vegetables!” Eka set the peeled babams down in a pot
|
||
and wandered over to the fields, stopping near a mossling-infested
|
||
karonin patch, “hey there, how are you all feeling?” Eka paused, then
|
||
laughed aloud, “yea, those mosslings are relentless, aren’t they?”<br />
|
||
Lupen watched from afar, frowning. “Stop it. You do not speak
|
||
vegetable.”<br />
|
||
Eka responded with a quick shush, then resumed the conversation. “So
|
||
what’s the deal with Zucca anyway?” Eka pressed an ear against the side
|
||
of a karonin, listening for an answer, “oh! A <em>secret</em> you
|
||
<em>say</em>?”<br />
|
||
Lupen watched, resisting the urge to ask about what the karonin was
|
||
saying. Asking would mean giving into this prank, but then again Eka
|
||
knew a lot about the world, perhaps there was such a thing as Vegetable
|
||
Speak, a language of light and vibrations. After a short conversation,
|
||
Eka rose and wandered back over to Lupen.<br />
|
||
“So um, what did the karonin say?” Lupen asked.<br />
|
||
“It said that there is something valuable here,” saying this, Eka
|
||
covered these ruby eyes with two hands and uncovered them just as
|
||
quickly, “hidden away!”<br />
|
||
“Valuable? You mean like a treasure?”<br />
|
||
“Like a secret,” Eka corrected, pressing the point of a finger hard
|
||
on Lupen’s nose before continuing to peel some babams.<br />
|
||
The thought of a secret was intriguing, but likely false. Even so,
|
||
Lupen could not sleep, haunted by the idea of a treasure, drawn by
|
||
mystery and the unknown. If Zucca had a secret it would be somewhere
|
||
near the house, that whole area looked very sheltered and private.</p>
|
||
<p>The next day, Lupen got up before the first sun. Zucca was awake
|
||
already, standing in the fields, tending to the crops and far too busy
|
||
to notice anyone else was up. Lupen knew better than to break into
|
||
someone’s home, and instead decided to circle it, hopefully this would
|
||
satiate this Verido’s curiosity.<br />
|
||
Lupen arrived near, but the tall green hedge blocked the way and
|
||
there was no break in its branches, no way to see through the thickness.
|
||
Lupen put an arm’s length in it, to see if it was as thick as it looked.
|
||
“Um, thick indeed,” Lupen said, but then froze. Waldek was here,
|
||
standing close. “Hey Waldek! We’re friends right? You’re not going to
|
||
tell on me are you?” Lupen said in a low voice, stuck halfway into the
|
||
hedge, scarf and hair caught into the branches.<br />
|
||
Waldek let out a quiet bark, and then another.<br />
|
||
“No no no shush, shush!” Lupen begged. Getting out of the shrubbery
|
||
was harder than getting in, its branches curled inwards and refused to
|
||
let go, “I can’t get out!”<br />
|
||
Waldek caught the scent of food in the air, from Eka making
|
||
breakfast and ran off, leaving Lupen alone in the hedge. “Oh good, oh
|
||
good…” Lupen tried to wriggle out, but the only way out of this would be
|
||
to break branches, and then Zucca would know someone had been here.
|
||
Going inside, giving in to the pull of the branches was the best option.
|
||
With a grunt and an ow, the Verido popped out of the other side, clothes
|
||
full of leaves, and skin full of scratches. The hedge now had a
|
||
Lupen-shaped hole, a weird not-quite triangular outline that made the
|
||
hedge look like it was in mid-cry. This supposedly inoffensive excursion
|
||
around Zucca’s house had turned into a break-in. The branches of the
|
||
shrub and its curly fingers made me do it, was hardly an excuse. Lupen
|
||
could not accuse the karonin either, blaming the words of a rotten
|
||
vegetable would do no one any good.<br />
|
||
“What am I doing,” the Verido took a step back, but another orange
|
||
leafhound began to bark and growl from inside the compound. Lupen kept
|
||
as far away from the hound as the hedge permitted, fitting back in the
|
||
Verido-shaped hole, and in this instant, Lupen saw what the hedge was
|
||
concealing. A vast green field full of unborn children. The reason that
|
||
the hound was so miffed, was because Lupen had almost crushed one. “Oh
|
||
hey, I’m sorry.”<br />
|
||
The hound’s antennae-ears caressed the near-crushed child gently,
|
||
all was well, its protector was content. Although it did not approve of
|
||
the intruder’s proximity, and with a push of the nose, the leafhound
|
||
nudged Lupen away from the field. This place was full of little green
|
||
nubs pushing out of the soil. Some had leaves that had different shapes,
|
||
and colours.<br />
|
||
“This is a nursery.” Lupen said, amazed.<br />
|
||
Lupen had seen nurseries before, they had a small one in Volare, but
|
||
at most the village had two children growing at once, this place had
|
||
many more. A nursery this size explained the need for a large and
|
||
reliable food source. Zucca had planted enough to populate a small city.
|
||
After circling the field, under the watchful eye of the hound, Lupen
|
||
moved closer to the house to look at a calendar on a wall, marked with
|
||
possible birthdates. There were bags of grains, as well as a giant stone
|
||
bowl with a yukwood mallet. Lupen ran a hand along the insides of the
|
||
bowl, and tasted. “Granulated teaweet berries!” Teaweet was a widely
|
||
consumed grain, but this teaweet was different, it had a strong aroma
|
||
and tasted sweet, clean and fresh.<br />
|
||
Lost in thought, Lupen had only just noticed a figure moving inside
|
||
the house. It was time to leave. The Verido hurried back towards the
|
||
bushes. Precipitated by the fear of being discovered, Lupen kicked dirt
|
||
over the footprints, threw the broken branches back into the hedge, and
|
||
pushed through the dense thicket before emerging on the other side.</p>
|
||
<p>“You <em>do</em> realize I was making fun of you. Zucca <em>does</em>
|
||
have a secret though, that much is clear,” Eka said.<br />
|
||
“There’s a nursery in there! Full of tiny people like we said! A
|
||
nursery encircled by hedges. There’s tons of grains, and rows and rows
|
||
of growing children!” the Verido paused then, “think Zucca’s raising an
|
||
army?”<br />
|
||
Eka laughed at this, “definitely. They’ll be carving swords from
|
||
karonins, and helmets from hollowed-out kyabe!”<br />
|
||
Just then, they heard barking outside. The hounds were likely
|
||
chasing away another floater, but then there were strange voices,
|
||
followed by Zucca’s classic line: “Get off my land!”<br />
|
||
Lupen and Eka poked their heads out of the tent to look at the
|
||
scene, Zucca was at the edge of the oasis with a band of leafhounds,
|
||
barring entry to a vennec-pulled wagon and three travelers.<br />
|
||
“You need to leave!” Zucca said to them.<br />
|
||
One of the travelers raised an empty sac of grains to show that they
|
||
were in dire need of supplies.<br />
|
||
“Leave <em>now</em>. There will be consequences if you don’t!” Zucca
|
||
yelled again.<br />
|
||
“You’d prefer we die then?” One of the travelers said.<br />
|
||
Zucca pulled a handful of green herbs out of a side pouch and tossed
|
||
it at them before pulling away. The hounds, too, backed off as the
|
||
floaters came rushing in, attracted by the scent of the herbs.<br />
|
||
Lupen watched, cringing as multiple floaters latched onto the skin
|
||
of the smallest of the group. The victim fell on the ground, screaming,
|
||
as the others tried to get them off. Lupen’s chest still ached from the
|
||
recent attack, “we’ve got to help them!” The Verido turned to Eka, who
|
||
had already left the tent and was now riding Hush. With a quick motion,
|
||
Eka grabbed the collar of the injured traveler, and together they jumped
|
||
up high toward the sky like they’d done before. Altitude and cold, two
|
||
things they knew worked against them. The other two travelers boarded
|
||
their wagon and ran away, urging their vennec forward.<br />
|
||
Zucca did not fail to see that Eka had helped them, and the farmer’s
|
||
angry eyes moved to Lupen. “You’re with <em>them</em> aren’t you? They
|
||
sent you ahead didn’t they? I trusted you!” The leafhounds stayed at the
|
||
edge of the oasis while Zucca moved toward Lupen, flipping the rake
|
||
around and aiming the end of the handle at the Verido’s throat.<br />
|
||
Lupen did not move. “You <em>can</em> trust me Zucca!”<br />
|
||
“Then why’s your friend helping them?” Zucca spat.<br />
|
||
“Because Eka is kind.”<br />
|
||
“What about you? Are you <em>kind</em>, Lupen?”<br />
|
||
“I like to think I am, yes.”<br />
|
||
Zucca’s face was warped with rage. “You were in my nursery today.
|
||
Don’t deny it! I know you were there! What did you see? You stole from
|
||
me didn’t you?”<br />
|
||
Lupen knew it was dumb to think that their host wouldn’t find out,
|
||
only a blind person could have missed that large hole in the hedge. “I’m
|
||
sorry. I <em>did</em> go, but I took nothing.”<br />
|
||
“I’m sick of this! Of people like you coming in here, feigning
|
||
kindness to steal from me!”<br />
|
||
Lupen was afraid of what Zucca would do in this heightened state,
|
||
then Eka landed back in the oasis with Hush and the injured traveler.
|
||
“Why did you bring that filth back in here!?” Zucca’s voice was becoming
|
||
shrill with fury.<br />
|
||
“We need to care for these wounds,” Eka said, carrying the injured
|
||
traveler, which did not help to suppress Zucca’s growing anger.<br />
|
||
“I made a mistake letting you come in here.” Zucca’s hand dove into
|
||
the side pouch again, but Lupen grabbed the Terin’s arm.<br />
|
||
“Don’t do it! <em>Please</em>.”<br />
|
||
“That’s sweet grass, that’s what attracts the floaters!” Eka said,
|
||
hand on Zucca’s pouch of herbs.<br />
|
||
Zucca couldn’t push Eka away, those ruby eyes had a soothing quality
|
||
to them. Eka and Lupen learned then that the valley around the oasis was
|
||
full of patches of sweet grass, planted there purposefully, to attract
|
||
the floaters and to keep people away.<br />
|
||
“You’ve been feeding those things? Do you know how many of us have
|
||
been hurt?” The injured traveler said.<br />
|
||
“You think I don’t <em>know</em>?!” Zucca’s voice adopted a deep,
|
||
menacing tone. The caretaker looked tired of fighting and arguing. “I
|
||
take no pleasure in hurting others, I really don’t, but I don’t have the
|
||
energy to keep intruders away on my own anymore, I don’t have many
|
||
hounds left.”<br />
|
||
They convinced their host to let them heal the wounded traveler. It
|
||
was uncharacteristic of the Terin to trust strangers like this, but Eka
|
||
inspired trust. Round ears. People with round ears, according to this
|
||
Terin, were known to be kind.<br />
|
||
After the second sunset, from their camp in the oasis, they could
|
||
see that the wagon was still out there. A fire danced in the distance,
|
||
signalling their presence. Eka had sent the woth over, to instruct the
|
||
other travelers to stay close, to make no attempt to come to the oasis,
|
||
that their friend would be cared for, and returned to them the next
|
||
day.<br />
|
||
The woth fluttered back after the message was delivered, “thank you
|
||
Crumpet,” but alas, the woth did not answer to that name and went to
|
||
rest inside of its glass house.</p>
|
||
<p>Zucca, Lupen, Eka were in the tent. The Terin decided not to rest
|
||
until all the intruders had gone away. Eka’s nose had discerned all the
|
||
ingredients used in Zucca’s poultice, and had re-created it using herbs
|
||
that Waldek had once more secretly provided. Of course, none of this was
|
||
lost on Zucca. The farmer eyed both Waldek and the poultice with
|
||
suspicious eyes.<br />
|
||
“All they want is food. Surely you can spare some?” Lupen
|
||
asked.<br />
|
||
Zucca was busy filling a pipe with dried bonan leaves, after
|
||
lighting it, the Terin took a few deep puffs. The whole tent was soon
|
||
filled with the smell of bonan. “They <em>never</em> just want
|
||
food.”<br />
|
||
The Verido looked puzzled. “What do you mean?”<br />
|
||
“Land, food, and seeds.”<br />
|
||
“The children…” Lupen said in a low voice, but Zucca had seen the
|
||
word on the Verido’s lips.<br />
|
||
“What made you trespass into my home Lupen?”<br />
|
||
“You have so much produce, more than enough to feed yourself and
|
||
those hounds for annums. I just wanted to understand. Besides, you can’t
|
||
know that people will want more, the travelers just wanted a bit of
|
||
help.”<br />
|
||
“You’re right, I can’t know, so I prefer to assume that they’re
|
||
false, it’s safer for the children and I.” The Terin dipped a finger in
|
||
some of the pipe ash and drew a symbol on the tent wall, a circle with a
|
||
diamond shape in its centre.<br />
|
||
Lupen eyed the symbol carefully, but did not recognize it.<br />
|
||
Zucca took another long puff from the pipe, before exhaling again.
|
||
“You Verido live very sheltered lives, don’t you? It’s the Irideri city
|
||
emblem,” then sighed, exhaling yellow smoke. “Iridi people are obssessed
|
||
with chloromyce shroos, a plant with unique properties. They discovered
|
||
it about a ki’annum ago. Harvesting them was hard work, Iridi workers
|
||
had to spend days in the dark digging. They didn’t want their people to
|
||
do grunt work, so they began to enlist workers from neighbouring cities
|
||
to do the harvesting for them. At first, there was promise of
|
||
compensation, they would be housed and fed and allowed to live in one of
|
||
the fastest growing cities in the Soronan Desert. Empty promises.
|
||
Workers were confined to the caves, they were not allowed to mingle with
|
||
the Iridi people in the city. Evidently, as news of the horrid work
|
||
conditions traveled, few enlisted. The Iridi then decided that their
|
||
only option was to capture workers. Their first target was Ministe,
|
||
where I lived at the time. The city was quickly overrun with Iridi
|
||
soldiers, and many of my friends were taken. Those who could fled to
|
||
nearby villages. They soon became overcrowded, as a result many were
|
||
forbidden from planting their young, but it was just as well because
|
||
malnutrition was rampant, and not many could produce healthy seeds.”
|
||
Zucca paused to refill the pipe with fresh bonan leaves.<br />
|
||
“The Iridi had a steady flow of chloromyce shroos, but their leader
|
||
Moera was greedy, and tired of dealing with Terin workers. My people
|
||
work hard, but we’re stubborn.” Saying this, Zucca’s hand rolled into a
|
||
fist. “Moera decided that they would have to grow their own workers
|
||
instead, only then, would they be fully submissive. Myself, along with a
|
||
handful of other Terins, built the Suvalba Sanctuary, where a mapa could
|
||
come and sow their young in a protected environment. It was a secret
|
||
location, and it worked well for many annums, but then a group of Iridi
|
||
soldiers got word of it. They raided the sanctuary and took all of the
|
||
unsown seeds, and destroyed the rest. I escaped with a collection of
|
||
seeds, and some of the resident leafhounds. Losing the sanctuary was…
|
||
hard, harder on the parents that had trusted us with their young. We
|
||
weren’t soldiers, we couldn’t fight back.”<br />
|
||
“Alone, I searched for a place to start fresh, somewhere far and
|
||
hidden. While on the outskirts of Montore, I met two strangers in the
|
||
desert who told me about a place that was still invisible to the world
|
||
and that could host such a project. Tired, and desperate, I followed
|
||
their instructions. I found the place. It was perfect. There was a great
|
||
recess in the land, surrounded by large irinwood trees, and rows of
|
||
fragglebush on the ground. This was no mirage. It was a miraculous
|
||
remnant of the old world. The trees and shrubs would protect the new
|
||
sanctuary from sand dunes shifting in high winds and from the eyes of
|
||
curious onlookers. In the hollow, I found a boundless waterstone pit.
|
||
But there was nothing growing there, getting it to the state it is now
|
||
took a long time, and a lot of work.”<br />
|
||
“I’m glad they never found this place,” Lupen said, relieved.<br />
|
||
“The Iridi might have expanded much further, if it hadn’t been for
|
||
the loss of their Luminary Moera. No one knows what happened, but it was
|
||
enough to stop the armies from advancing further. The next leader, Bao
|
||
The Bright, put an end to it. Now with a reliable source of workers,
|
||
they stopped the raids and closed their city to the world.” Zucca’s eyes
|
||
had burned through the tent wall, parted the row of irinwood trees,
|
||
shifted the sand dunes and split whole mountains to better watch
|
||
Irideri, to make sure that the Iridi city was still dormant, still
|
||
closed to the world. “May those brutes never leave the Andenuis
|
||
again.”</p>
|
||
<p>The next day, Zucca allowed Eka and Lupen to view the nursery, while
|
||
Hush and the hounds were left in charge of the patient in the tent.
|
||
Everyone on this dust ball was born in the earth, from seeds. A willing,
|
||
and healthy parent could sow a seed, and eventually the seed would grow
|
||
into a child. This could take a long time, depending on the state of the
|
||
soil and temperature. Some could only grow in the dark, others in
|
||
high-moisture environments, even altitude played a part in the growing
|
||
process. On their birth day, a carer would sever their roots, helping
|
||
each child out of the ground. The children needed protection and good
|
||
nutrition to thrive. The leaves on their heads would fall in time, and
|
||
like the roots, they left no marks behind.<br />
|
||
Zucca pointed to the markings on Lupen’s face, “those lines are a
|
||
remnant of when everyone lived in the wilds. The Verido didn’t have
|
||
colour on their faces then. The colour segregation of your people is
|
||
unfortunate Lupen, I rather liked the subtleties of the patterns from
|
||
before, like veins on a leaf. These colours are so vulgar.”<br />
|
||
Lupen wasn’t sure what to say, looking at the patterns on these arms
|
||
in silent embarrassment. The Verido recalled when these patterns were
|
||
coloured blue, it was a painful process. The people of Volare were proud
|
||
of the colour, it was a tribute to Vol, their carrier and protector. The
|
||
festivities around this event were extravagant, everyone in the city was
|
||
there baking looma root pies, organizing glider races and whistling
|
||
contests. For Lupen, the party was even more grandiose given their
|
||
relation to Volare. Now, thinking of it, perhaps these colours did serve
|
||
to separate their people…<br />
|
||
Eka put a hand on Lupen’s shoulder, giving it a squeeze. “It looks
|
||
nice blue,” saying this, before ruffling up the Verido’s pale head of
|
||
hair, dispelling all feelings of unnecessary shamefaced-ness.<br />
|
||
Zucca went on to explain that bearing seeds was a complicated
|
||
matter, anyone could start bearing seeds after a certain age. Though not
|
||
all would grow into children. A hungry and tired person would produce
|
||
nothing at all. Greenery too was a rarity, and it was the same for safe
|
||
planting grounds. Many stopped sowing. For the better part of history,
|
||
Terins were responsible for the steady, and healthy growth of children.
|
||
This dependence on outside help was the main cause for the world’s
|
||
growing depopulation problem. Levi had spoken of a Terin living in
|
||
Volare, that cared for the seeds, but this was long ago. Growing up, the
|
||
Verido had no memory of a Terin living amongst them. This raised many
|
||
questions, had the elders done away with this practice?<br />
|
||
“Have you ever planted one of yours?” Lupen asked Zucca.<br />
|
||
“I owe it to all of the mapas who entrusted me with their young to
|
||
finish the work I started in the Suvalba Sanctuary. Planting my own
|
||
would be selfish. These children are my responsibility, their needs and
|
||
safety are above my own.”<br />
|
||
Conversations with Zucca always seemed to take a dark turn, it would
|
||
always end with Lupen feeling terrible.<br />
|
||
Eka had wandered to another part of the nursery, accompanied by
|
||
Waldek who was excited to show how big the leaves of the children in the
|
||
far end of the field had become.<br />
|
||
“I guess I don’t really want to sow seeds either.” Lupen said to
|
||
Zucca, eyes on a leaf, part of a row reserved for Aodal children. “My
|
||
reasons are selfish. I’ve always had pressure to do it. Because of my
|
||
connection with the Ilk, and to Volare… it was always expected of me. I
|
||
would have to sow a seed, to raise another Voice. It’s kind of a big
|
||
deal. Now that I left, my branch of the family has ended. I feel bad to
|
||
say it, but I’m sort of, you know… relieved.”<br />
|
||
“Don’t dwell on it. You would make a terrible mapa,” Zucca said,
|
||
looking at the leaves of a nearby growing child.<br />
|
||
Lupen laughed, Zucca’s honesty was brutal at times, but correct in
|
||
this case. “Yea. Maybe.”</p>
|
||
<p>Lupen returned to the tent midday, to check on their patient.<br />
|
||
“Can you help us?” The patient was awake and sat up, despite the
|
||
wounds being fresh. A pair of thin hands shot forward and grabbed onto
|
||
Lupen, saying it again again, but with more confidence this time. “Help
|
||
us.”<br />
|
||
“To do what exactly?” Lupen wanted to look away, but couldn’t.<br />
|
||
“We need food if we hope to make it back to Kippu. All the usual
|
||
places we go to find cactubs or gingin roots, were empty… it’s never
|
||
happened before.”<br />
|
||
“This annum’s been tough, I heard. I’m sure we can convince Zucca to
|
||
part with some produce.”<br />
|
||
“That would be wonderful. By the way, my name is Laris.” Laris began
|
||
to relax, releasing the Verido and melting back into the bed. “You’ve
|
||
been here a while then? Have you seen the nursery?”<br />
|
||
“Why do you ask?” Lupen replied, unsure if it was a good idea to
|
||
speak about this.<br />
|
||
“Children are such a rarity these days, I’m of bearing age but it
|
||
just isn’t working out you know? It’s probably for the best, I can
|
||
barely feed myself.” Laris paused. “Do you think it is cruel to create
|
||
more life in such times?”<br />
|
||
“I’ll talk to Zucca. I promise.”<br />
|
||
“What about you? Would you bear children, I mean, if you could?”
|
||
Laris asked.<br />
|
||
“No.” Lupen replied, but was shocked with how quickly this was said.
|
||
“I mean, I don’t know, really. I feel like I don’t know anything about
|
||
anything! One of my good friends told me once that I was always
|
||
underperforming, so afraid of failing to achieve great things that I
|
||
continued to fail. I lack confidence in a lot that I do, and I’m
|
||
wondering if my ‘not wanting to bear a seed’ is just another fear I
|
||
have, of failing.” Lupen noticed then that Laris had drifted off to
|
||
sleep, and laughed. “Rest well.” The Verido said, smiling, relieved that
|
||
this little speech had had no spectators.</p>
|
||
<p>Lupen decided to go and speak with Zucca again, walked around the
|
||
property, past the Verido-shaped hole in the bush, and entered through
|
||
the front door of the house, which was built in the Montore style, a
|
||
mixture of mud, sand, waterstones and dried grasses. It was a tall cube,
|
||
with several shorter annexes all around, where several holes had been
|
||
carved into every side, to allow the air to enter through one end and to
|
||
flow out of the other. A series of decorative lines, crisscrossing each
|
||
other, were carved into the outer walls. Lupen noted that the lines were
|
||
exactly the thickness of Zucca’s finger, the farmer had likely drawn the
|
||
pattern by hand before the material had set.<br />
|
||
The front door of the house opened onto a narrow passageway, which
|
||
ran straight through the building, opening onto the nursery in the back.
|
||
At each side of this passage were spaces bordered by half walls. The
|
||
space on the left housed large recipients that were integral to the
|
||
house, filled with soured and salted plumpkins. The pickled food was
|
||
weighed down by large stones. Lupen could see that a thick, leathery
|
||
skin had formed on the surface. This skin, Lupen had learned, was a
|
||
byproduct of the pickling process, it was possible to dry it and to use
|
||
it as a sponge for cleaning. On the ceiling near the windows wrinkly
|
||
mapples hung from their stems, shriveled, dusted with the bloom of their
|
||
natural sugars on their surface. Zucca liked drying mapples, and during
|
||
their tour of the house yesterday had explained how at a certain stage
|
||
each fruit had to be massaged once a day to bring the sugar content to
|
||
the surface.<br />
|
||
Along the walkway stacks of dried norcorn, and several other
|
||
dehydrated vegetables, were packaged into neat bundles of dried bonan
|
||
leaves. Each bundle was wrapped using a single leaf, held together
|
||
without string by a series of tucks and folds.<br />
|
||
Lupen entered the nursery then, and saw Zucca adding waterstones to
|
||
a large hopper, with its bottom opening onto a set of thick rollers. A
|
||
windmill overhead would turn the rollers and crush the waterstones,
|
||
water would then flow down small trenches running through the crops,
|
||
flooding the area gradually.<br />
|
||
“Can’t you give them supplies?” Lupen regretted the abruptness of
|
||
the question, but didn’t know how else to ask.<br />
|
||
Zucca continued to work, heaving another armful of waterstones into
|
||
the hopper. “What did that vagabond tell you, hm?”<br />
|
||
“The same thing they told you. They’re hungry.”<br />
|
||
“And, like I told you and Eka, this is about more than food.”<br />
|
||
“You can’t be sure of that! You may kill them if you don’t help.
|
||
This is what I know.”<br />
|
||
“Dying, yes. That may be true, but that’s only because they spend
|
||
all their time begging for food. They should try gardening, or learning
|
||
to forage, instead of living like parasites.”<br />
|
||
“Laris told me the harvest was poor out there,” Lupen said, “I
|
||
thought you cared about all life.”<br />
|
||
“I do,” Zucca replied, irritated, “I’ll give them food and they’ll
|
||
ask to stay, then they’ll ask to see the nursery. The nursery makes
|
||
everyone lose their minds. Many feel that this world has too many unfed
|
||
mouths. Mouths. What about minds, I wonder? No one wants to learn.
|
||
Hardly anyone can name all of the plants that grow where they live. Yes,
|
||
I could teach the younger ones how to sow and care for food. I could do
|
||
that, but I can’t teach adults.” Zucca’s voice was gentle, even if the
|
||
words were harsh, the farmer knew better than to be angry in a nursery.
|
||
The children slept in the ground, their leaves swaying from side to side
|
||
as they dreamed good dreams. “Nowadays most prefer the comforts and
|
||
conveniences of a town, rather than finding their own food in the
|
||
desert. There’s plenty out there, but it takes time, it is difficult,
|
||
and you can’t be picky. The absolute guarantee of comfort and safety is
|
||
all anyone ever cares about now.”<br />
|
||
The Soronan Desert had plenty of nomads, but every annum, more and
|
||
more settled into towns, lured by the promise of stability. Lupen spied
|
||
a sign on the back of the house.</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>Wherever you tread, greenery will follow.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> Eat one, toss one, Lupen thought.<br />
|
||
Zucca noticed the Verido’s wandering eyes. “My people used to find
|
||
all they needed out there. We’d walk from garden to garden, sow as we
|
||
go. Many don’t like what I do because it is so laborious, but as I said,
|
||
their lives matter more than mine, I’ll do it even if it means I don’t
|
||
have time for anything else.”<br />
|
||
“But if you had help?”<br />
|
||
Zucca’s hands were gripping so hard at a waterstone that clear
|
||
liquid was seeping out of the hard skin, from tiny cracks zigzagging on
|
||
the sides. “Everyone is false.”<br />
|
||
Lupen swallowed hard, “Eka told me that those who grow up in Montore
|
||
aren’t taught these things anymore. If they don’t know what’s important,
|
||
then how is it their fault? I mean, I didn’t know what a cactub was
|
||
until Eka taught me. You said it yourself, you’ll teach the children to
|
||
care for themselves. Why not teach travelers?”<br />
|
||
“You would have me care for this land <em>and</em> a school for
|
||
inept gardeners? I’ve got no time for it. Besides, grown adults do not
|
||
change their ways… they just don’t. They lie, they come to steal, and I
|
||
won’t give them any more of my precious time.” With this, Lupen was
|
||
ordered away. At least the hounds couldn’t talk, they only yipped and
|
||
yapped to report a problem. “You will leave with that vagrant tomorrow.
|
||
I’ll deal with my own problems. I always have.”<br />
|
||
“You know not everyone is like this. I’m sure you can all live here
|
||
together. You’ll need help to raise all those children, right? Give them
|
||
a chance,” Lupen insisted, in a near-begging tone.<br />
|
||
Zucca eyes darkened then, lines formed in places where there had
|
||
been none previously. “You understand nothing. Get out. Gather your
|
||
things and go.” With this, the Terin moved away from Lupen and climbed
|
||
up a ladder leading to the second floor of the house, disappearing from
|
||
view.</p>
|
||
<p>Lupen returned to the tent and told Eka everything that had happened,
|
||
the conversation with Laris, and the one with Zucca too. Eka was running
|
||
fingers over Laris’s face, even in sleep, the traveler looked worn-out,
|
||
near-spent.<br />
|
||
“Zucca wants us to leave,” Lupen said, hurt by the Terin’s
|
||
indifference.<br />
|
||
“Then, we will do what Zucca says.” Eka replied. “You know, back in
|
||
the old days, Terins used to do check-ups on the Ilk. They did this
|
||
every annum, back when Ministe was still standing. The Voices would
|
||
report to the Terins on the annum, on the pains the Ilk may have
|
||
mentioned. When Ministe fell, a Terin boarded the Ilk of Volare, taught
|
||
your people how to care for Vol, and helped to create the Hands, as you
|
||
know them. Terins can see sickness and health in others, it’s
|
||
second-nature. They’re the carers of the world.”<br />
|
||
Lupen swallowed hard then, “when the carers are as spent as Zucca,
|
||
what does that say of the state of the world?”<br />
|
||
“Get some rest,” Eka said with a smile, “it’s late.”<br />
|
||
All went to sleep, but not Laris, who had overheard their
|
||
conversation. In the dark, the patient left their bed and went over to
|
||
the house atop the hill. The strong scent of the medililly poultices
|
||
covered up all smells, no leafhound could smell Laris. Laris pushed
|
||
through the hedge, like Lupen had done, and arrived on the other side,
|
||
where slept, row after row, unborn children with green tops sticking out
|
||
of the soil. They looked beautiful under the moonlights, casting tiny
|
||
shadows. To Laris, this field was a thing of cruelty, this land would
|
||
not keep its promise and would not stay green. Panicked, Laris’s hands
|
||
dove into the dirt, fingers wrapping tightly around the stem of a child.
|
||
“You won’t suffer like I did. I won’t allow it.”</p>
|
||
<p>Zucca awoke to tend to the usual early day chores. Walking into the
|
||
nursery, the Terin froze, Laris was sitting in the nursery, hands full
|
||
of dirt and head hanging low.<br />
|
||
“Why are you here?”<br />
|
||
There was a long silence, but eventually, Laris spoke up. “I wanted
|
||
to rip out every single one. To spare them of all misery, but I couldn’t
|
||
do it.”<br />
|
||
Zucca stepped forward and looked around to make sure that all of the
|
||
children were safe. Laris had done nothing, all swayed gently in the
|
||
early first sunrise breeze, calm and content.<br />
|
||
The Terin was relieved, and could resume breathing again. Zucca
|
||
grabbed hold of the intruder’s arm, but the fingers found a food patch,
|
||
“you’ve been living off of this crap?” Upon close inspection, there were
|
||
other food patches decorating this stranger’s skin, all expired, all
|
||
sucked dry. The Terin took a seat down in the mud, in-between rows of
|
||
greening leaves, and began to peel the patches off one by one, careful
|
||
not to hurt Laris. Like a leafhound searching for parasites on a plant,
|
||
Zucca’s fingers searched around for patches. “No one ever tell you that
|
||
you can’t live off patches? What a ridiculous invention, these are no
|
||
substitute for real food…”<br />
|
||
Zucca’s tranquility surprised Laris. Despite being handled by
|
||
gentle, caring hands, these limbs could not stop trembling. “Everyone in
|
||
Montore uses these.”<br />
|
||
“These,” Zucca began, removing yet another patch “are expired. They
|
||
can help a little when fresh, but not like this.”<br />
|
||
Laris’s eyes threatened to spill all of their water, “the crew of a
|
||
passing Beobug sandfin sold us a crate-full.”<br />
|
||
During yesterday’s events, blind with rage, Zucca had failed to
|
||
notice how thin Laris was, with arms that weren’t the same length. One
|
||
was visibly shorter, the ears bore this same kind of unevenness. In the
|
||
old days, keeping children healthy and safe was all a Terin needed to be
|
||
happy. It was easy to forget that everyone was a greening thing once,
|
||
small and frail.<br />
|
||
Zucca accompanied Laris out of the compound.<br />
|
||
As they walked through the fields together, Laris glanced at the
|
||
endless supply of produce. “You have false-mosslings in your
|
||
produce.”<br />
|
||
“What are you talking about,” Zucca said, hurrying ahead, wishing
|
||
Laris would not talk—this little walk was painful enough.<br />
|
||
“False-mosslings. They mimic mosslings. They have curly antennae,
|
||
and are impervious to lemilim grass. They hate mepperpint. I can’t read,
|
||
but a book saying it was read to me.”<br />
|
||
Zucca froze in mid-step, having never before heard of
|
||
false-mosslings. Both continued to walk in silence, to the encampment
|
||
where the others travelers were waiting, a leafhound had come along. The
|
||
two travelers moved out of the wagon to greet Laris. “Thank you for
|
||
helping Laris,” one of them said, careful to avoid Zucca’s eyes. Like
|
||
Laris, the two had uneven limbs, and their skin was see-through and
|
||
fragile. Zucca was embarrassed to stand there with a fleshy body. The
|
||
travelers helped Laris onto the wagon, and urged the vennec onward.
|
||
Zucca went back into the oasis with the leafhounds.<br />
|
||
Eka and Lupen were awake, and noticed the bed was empty, saw the
|
||
group leaving in the distance. They kept their promise to Zucca, and
|
||
were now pulling the tent apart and packing away their gear. They did
|
||
not address their host. Zucca walked to a field of herbs, and picked out
|
||
a handful of fresh meppermint, then went over to the mossling-infested
|
||
fields and distributed some in a plumpkin patch that had been plagued by
|
||
these pesky insects. Zucca waited for a moment, nothing changed. With a
|
||
sigh, the Terin walked off but then noticed a mossling flying past, and
|
||
then another. All had curly antennae. The pests began to fly off in
|
||
droves. “False-mosslings. How elegant.” Zucca laughed.<br />
|
||
Eka saw the insects flying away, looking for another place to nest,
|
||
and smiled. “You did it! Mosslings are leaving!” Saying it loud enough
|
||
so Zucca would hear.<br />
|
||
“False-mosslings,” Zucca corrected. “Didn’t used to have these here.
|
||
It’s something new, something I didn’t know.” A rush of emotions
|
||
overcame the Terin then. “I thought the world had nothing more to teach
|
||
me. Not everyone is equipped with the knowledge to save themselves. I
|
||
mistook this for lethargy.” Terins were supposed to care for others, not
|
||
just in the growing phase, but throughout their lives too. People never
|
||
really stopped growing. “I’ve made a huge mistake.”<br />
|
||
Eka held a hand out. “Not yet you haven’t.”<br />
|
||
Zucca and Eka climbed onto Hush, ready to go intercept the travelers
|
||
aboard their wagon. Before leaving, the Terin looked at Waldek. “You’re
|
||
in charge. And as for you Lupen,” the Terin smiled at the Verido. A
|
||
first. “Don’t. Touch. Anything.”<br />
|
||
Lupen laughed, and did as told.<br />
|
||
Hush disappeared into the distance, and later returned, leading the
|
||
wagon back into the oasis. A meal transformed their faces completely,
|
||
the three looked less translucent, solid and warm. The Terin agreed to
|
||
teach the travelers to grow food, in exchange for help around the
|
||
fields. To start, they would be fed and housed for an annum. It was
|
||
difficult for Zucca to commit to longer than this, the Terin did not
|
||
trust others yet, but one annum seemed reasonable, and after perhaps
|
||
they’d be granted an extension, or better yet, permanent residence. The
|
||
travelers accepted, they had no ties to any city.</p>
|
||
<p>The next day, with Zucca’s permisson, Eka and Lupen filled their bags
|
||
with fresh produce. They all stood over a mapple bush, picking the fruit
|
||
by hand. Lupen grabbed hold of an oversized mapple, its ribbed skin
|
||
glistening under the suns. The Verido peeled off part of the outer layer
|
||
and took a big bite. “This doesn’t taste anything like that other mapple
|
||
I had, it’s so bitter,” Lupen said, nose wrinkling, resisting the urge
|
||
to spit out the piece, “it hurts my face.”<br />
|
||
“You really know nothing of the world,” Zucca said, reaching into
|
||
the mapple bush and picking out another fruit, checking the underside of
|
||
the fruit, and the area around the stem before handing it over to Lupen,
|
||
“you’ll like this one. Finish that other one first though, I don’t
|
||
tolerate waste.”<br />
|
||
Lupen reluctantly swallowed the bitter fruit.<br />
|
||
The Terin glanced at Eka then. “You’re also a carer aren’t you? Do
|
||
you think that making green places and growing children really matters?
|
||
On a grand scale I mean… say, you were flying over this rock we all
|
||
inhabit, or if your head reached high above the clouds.”<br />
|
||
Eka, mouth full of mapples, couldn’t answer right away, so Zucca
|
||
decided that this was something that would be better left unasked. “What
|
||
is your favourite food?”<br />
|
||
Eka swallowed the bits of mapple, smiling. “I like noranges<a
|
||
href="#fn44" class="footnote-ref" id="fnref44"
|
||
role="doc-noteref"><sup>44</sup></a> a lot, bit rare though.”<br />
|
||
The Terin disappeared inside the house, and returned with a small
|
||
pouch made out of weaved norcorn leaves. Inside the pouch was a single
|
||
seed. “Plant this seed in a green place. It needs a lot of moisture and
|
||
shade, when the leaves grow broad full suns is fine. In a few annums
|
||
you’ll get some noranges.” Zucca explained that this seed had been
|
||
salvaged from the Iridi raids at the Suvalba Sanctuary. Their host also
|
||
gave them two fresh noranges from the only tree on the property as
|
||
thanks. “Keep the seeds,” Zucca made a point to say.<br />
|
||
“It will be planted in the greenest of places, I promise,” Eka said,
|
||
before eyeing Waldek the leafhound who sat there at their feet, wagging
|
||
its leaf-shaped tail. “Keep your friends safe okay?”<br />
|
||
Waldek barked, before turning to Lupen, its antennae prodding
|
||
Lupen’s legs and chest. It let out a whine then, but Zucca stepped in.
|
||
“Don’t you have work to do?” The orange hound barked again, and moved
|
||
off into the fields with the others. The Terin handed Lupen a bag of
|
||
medililly herbs. “Brew a leaf with your tea, a leaf a day,” Zucca paused
|
||
then, a thick hand coming to rest on the Verido’s shoulder, “make it
|
||
part of your routine. A leaf a day. Easy to remember. You’ve got enough
|
||
here for a long while, but come back and see me when you run out… well,
|
||
before you run out.”<br />
|
||
Lupen accepted the gift, acknowledging how precious the leaves were.
|
||
“A leaf a day, got it. Thank you.”<br />
|
||
The two left shortly, their bags plump with fresh supplies. They
|
||
wished Laris and the travelers well, thanked the leafhounds, and the
|
||
farmer. Zucca watched as the two, led by Hush, disappeared behind the
|
||
row of canopied trees.</p>
|
||
<h1 id="montore">Montore</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/fauna.durdle.jpg" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>Durdles are shy creatures that like to retreat within their
|
||
shells, they move very slowly and sleep for most of the day.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>“I really couldn’t let you in, not without identification!” A young
|
||
worker said, from behind a desk equipped with heavy bars.<br />
|
||
“We don’t have that in Volare!” Lupen said, getting hot in the
|
||
face.<br />
|
||
“I see.” The clerk reached for a pamphlet and handed it over to
|
||
Lupen through an opening in the bars. The pamphlet read: ‘So you don’t
|
||
exist.’<br />
|
||
“What is this?”<br />
|
||
“If you want to exist in the eyes of Montore you need a piece of
|
||
identification.”<br />
|
||
“A piece of identification that tells others who I am? That’s
|
||
stupid.”<br />
|
||
“It’s the law.”<br />
|
||
The clerk reached under the desk and pulled up a durdle, a creature
|
||
with long ears and a spiked shell, it had a tag stuck to one of its
|
||
spikes with the writing ‘D-126’. “See. Even D-126 here has an ID.”<br />
|
||
“Okay, <em>fine</em>. Say I want to get an… <em>ahy- dee</em>, where
|
||
do I get it?”<br />
|
||
“You’ll need to visit the next stall, Specter<a href="#fn45"
|
||
class="footnote-ref" id="fnref45" role="doc-noteref"><sup>45</sup></a>.
|
||
Next!” the clerk called, eager to move on to another customer.<br />
|
||
“Specter?” Lupen stormed off, looking for that next stall the clerk
|
||
had mentioned. The stall was easy to find, it had a long line of people
|
||
standing in front of it, a long, long line, snaking around Montore’s
|
||
outer wall, and lined with colourful tents.</p>
|
||
<p>The city of Montore sat on a hilltop enclosed entirely within a
|
||
single, continuous wall, made from rammed earth and decorated with
|
||
geometric motifs. The tops of large hempa sails were visible from the
|
||
ground, raised high on a ledge atop the wall so that nothing could
|
||
disturb the wind. The sails lay over a rotating circular track,
|
||
following the whole top of the city wall. The orientation of each sail
|
||
changed depending on the wind, their motion was slow, but constant,
|
||
powering the city.<br />
|
||
On one end of the city, a wall extension was in progress. Wooden
|
||
scaffolding lay in place, with workers standing on the top of the wall
|
||
with long ramming poles, pressing and packing the soil down into the
|
||
mold. Lupen approached a young Terin standing in line, “hey, how
|
||
long have you been waiting here?”<br />
|
||
“We’ve both been in line for 5 days.” Lupen followed the voice and
|
||
turned around, meeting with the forehead of another Terin. “I’m Kuzi.”
|
||
Kuzi wore a notcott bandana, a long, white loose-knit shirt, and a
|
||
colourful scarf. Kuzi’s line neighbour was indeed unresponsive,
|
||
standing, but just barely.<br />
|
||
“Lupen,” Lupen said, “that long? For an ahy- dee?”<br />
|
||
“Yeesh, you’re saying that real weird.”<br />
|
||
“Saying what weird?”<br />
|
||
“Nevermind.” Kuzi said, “waiting in line is a good job. It pays
|
||
well, well, it pays enough for a quarter kavava root.”<br />
|
||
“I don’t understand.”<br />
|
||
“Someone’s paying us to wait in line for them, while they stay in
|
||
one of those tents out there. When I reach the desk we switch places and
|
||
I get paid! There’s always people willing to pay not to wait. They get
|
||
what they want, we get what we want, it’s perfect.”<br />
|
||
Lupen estimated that it would take at least seven days to reach the
|
||
front desk, “seven days is too long.”<br />
|
||
“Yea, it’s long long, but it’s the only way any of us can afford
|
||
kavava root. I just ran out, I’m usually careful to have some left for
|
||
my time in line, but you know, it is difficult to reason with yourself
|
||
when you’re on kavava,” Kuzi said with a laugh, “can’t believe I went
|
||
through the whole thing…”<br />
|
||
Lupen noticed a root laying in the hand of the person standing ahead
|
||
of them in line. The Terin was in another world, body swaying slowly
|
||
from side to side, mouthing nonsensical words.<br />
|
||
“Every surrogate in this line is here for kavava.” Kuzi said.
|
||
“So everyday, you wait in line to earn coin for kavava, the wait is
|
||
so long that you consume your entire kavava supply purchased with the
|
||
coin earned from your previous time in line, so when you reach the front
|
||
desk you get paid and spend it all on more kavava, then you find someone
|
||
else to wait in line because you know you’ll run out again waiting. That
|
||
is psychotic Kuzi.”<br />
|
||
“You don’t know anything about anything.”<br />
|
||
Lupen frowned and was about to leave but then asked another
|
||
question. “I was wondering, do you know a Zucca?”<br />
|
||
“If I know azucca? What’s azucca.”<br />
|
||
“Zucca. It’s a name.”<br />
|
||
“Azucca’itsaname…? No, sorry. Don’t know one. Hell of a name though,
|
||
would sit real long on an ID.”<br />
|
||
“Are you done wasting my time?” Lupen asked, impatiently.<br />
|
||
“Way I see it you’re wasting <em>mine</em>. I might start being
|
||
useful if you throw a coin or two my way though…” the Terin said with a
|
||
wink, presenting an open hand.<br />
|
||
Already, Lupen hated everything about Montore, even those living
|
||
outside its walls. The Verido gave the Terin a rotten look before
|
||
walking away.<br />
|
||
“Come on now Specter, I was kidding. It’s a thing called humor,
|
||
learn about it! <em>Every</em> Terin <em>knows</em> about Zucca. Has
|
||
something of great value I heard. Many go out into the desert to look
|
||
for it, but most never make it back. I bet you know that though, being a
|
||
friend to Zucca! If you know the location and tell the guards I bet you
|
||
and I could get ahead in line real fast! There’s a guard right there,
|
||
see? Hey! Hey <em>you</em>! Guard person!”<br />
|
||
Lupen wanted to run away, but the Terin gripped the Verido’s vest
|
||
collar. A tall guard in uniform walked towards them.<br />
|
||
“Kuzi, I wish you wouldn’t call me guard person…” The guard said,
|
||
offended by this.<br />
|
||
Lupen spied a name on a piece of ID pinned to the front of the
|
||
guard’s green blazer, the tag read ‘Averet’.<br />
|
||
“Averet here has a fear of being perceived as ordinary,” Kuzi said,
|
||
turning to Lupen.<br />
|
||
Averet’s face turned red. “I’ve got grand ideas! There are plenty of
|
||
things I want to do with my life! This is not my forever job you know, I
|
||
am <em>not</em> going to spend my life making sure kakava addicts, like
|
||
you, don’t fall down a ditch…”<br />
|
||
“This Specter and I know the whereabouts of Zucca!” Kuzi then
|
||
blurted out in a hurry, before Lupen could react.<br />
|
||
Lupen tried to deny it all, but the response was delayed, unnatural.
|
||
“I’m just a traveling potter! I make pots! I don’t know anything about
|
||
anything! Well, I know about pots! But that’s really <em>it</em>!”<br />
|
||
Kuzi knocked on the side of Lupen’s head with a closed fist, as if
|
||
to check if it was hollow. “There is definitely something swishing
|
||
around in there. And I thought Veridos were good storytellers…”<br />
|
||
“I made this cup!” Lupen said, ignoring Kuzi and showing Averet the
|
||
cup Rosmus made. The grey cup was tied to a braided isilk lanyard linked
|
||
to Lupen’s belt.<br />
|
||
Kuzi slapped the cup out of Lupen’s hand. “<em>Zucca</em>, Averet!
|
||
Come on, you’ve heard of the one with the green place, yea? Well, we’ll
|
||
tell you where it is if you let us skip the line.”<br />
|
||
“As if either of you would know where it is, least of all
|
||
<em>you</em>, Kuzi.”<br />
|
||
Whenever Lupen tried to tear away, the Terin found some other limb
|
||
or piece of clothes to grab onto. As Kuzi tugged away, a norange fell
|
||
out of Lupen’s vest pocket and rolled onto the ground.<br />
|
||
Both the guard and Kuzi froze at the sight of it.<br />
|
||
“A norange.” Kuzi said, releasing Lupen and going to grab the
|
||
colourful piece of fruit instead. Kuzi held onto it, stroking the bumps
|
||
on its surface gently, like stroking the soft hairs on the head of a
|
||
newborn. There was a hint of sadness in Kuzi’s eyes. The Terin put a
|
||
nose to the fruit, smelling it, and whispering softly into it. Averet
|
||
reached forward and tore the fruit away, inspecting it from all
|
||
angles.<br />
|
||
“Where did you get <em>this</em>?” A question aimed at Lupen,
|
||
although the guard’s eyes were fixed on the fruit.<br />
|
||
Kuzi leapt at Averet and stole the norange before running away,
|
||
grabbing Lupen’s arm in passing before darting into the crowd. The guard
|
||
rushed after them, but soon lost sight of the two runaways.<br />
|
||
“A norange…” Averet whispered. If it weren’t for the fruit bits
|
||
still stuck under these fingernails, Averet would have thought it to be
|
||
a hallucination.<br />
|
||
Kuzi stopped running once they had gone far away enough, breathing
|
||
hard, the norange in hand.<br />
|
||
“You lost your place in line! Weeks of waiting!” Lupen said.<br />
|
||
“Doesn’t matter,” Kuzi replied, eyes still on the fruit. “You really
|
||
were at that oasis.”<br />
|
||
“Yea, you thought I was lying? This was a parting gift. I’d never
|
||
heard of noranges until I was given one. My friend knew, though.”<br />
|
||
“Noranges were thought to be extinct. I thought the plant and seed
|
||
had gone up in flames with Ministe and the rest. Ah, I love the smell of
|
||
noranges warmed by the suns! Some have tried to synthesize the smell and
|
||
taste, but it’s not the same. I forgot how fragrant it was. So sweet,
|
||
yet so bitter.”<br />
|
||
“You can have it,” Lupen said with a smile. “It’s yours to
|
||
eat.”<br />
|
||
“I love the smell, but I also hate it, it brings back memories I’d
|
||
prefer to forget.”<br />
|
||
Lupen knew why. After the Iridi raids many Terins had grown
|
||
lethargic. They stopped growing food and lost their connection with the
|
||
soil. Kuzi’s eyes were set on that fruit, having a silent conversation
|
||
with it. The Terin then smiled, breaking out of the trance and throwing
|
||
the fruit up in the air before catching it again in mid-flight. “Thanks
|
||
for the gift. Seems like I owe you big now, eh? I’ll get you an ID, I’ve
|
||
got some connections.”<br />
|
||
“Yea, that’d be great! I need one for my friend Eka, too.”<br />
|
||
“Not a problem,” Kuzi eyed Lupen curiously then, “why do you want to
|
||
get into Montore anyway? It sucks in there.”<br />
|
||
“We’re in the mood for some babam cake and tea.”</p>
|
||
<p>The next morning, Lupen and Eka went to wait at the foot of the new
|
||
wall that was being built. Kuzi had instructed Lupen to wait there, but
|
||
now the second sun was nearing midday, and their helper was a no-show.
|
||
They wandered back over to the town entrance, making sure to avoid any
|
||
guards, while keeping an eye open for Kuzi.<br />
|
||
By then, the story about a Verido in possession of a real norange
|
||
had reached the ears of many other Terins. Many of the ones standing in
|
||
line for IDs glanced at them as they walked past.<br />
|
||
“Hey!” One of them called out. “Is it true that you’ve met
|
||
Zucca?”<br />
|
||
Lupen nodded. “Yes, but keep your voice low.”<br />
|
||
“Got any more of those noranges?” Another yelled.<br />
|
||
Eka did have one left, but wasn’t sure if it was a good idea to say
|
||
so.<br />
|
||
“I’ll get you an ID for one!” One Terin said. “I’ve got coin, you
|
||
want coin for it? What about kavava?”<br />
|
||
“Uh oh,” said Eka, noticing the amount of attention they were
|
||
getting. Some guards turned, tipped off by the many Terins beginning to
|
||
encircle them, shouting offers.<br />
|
||
Then, the woth moved out of its glass ball, and reached into Eka’s
|
||
pocket, pulling out the last norange. The woth took off with it,
|
||
carrying it high and above everyone’s head. Eka let out another “Uh oh,”
|
||
followed by, “Humhum come back!” All of the surrogates in line were
|
||
staring at the brightly coloured fruit, jumping into the air to try and
|
||
grab it. The guards saw it too, now, hurrying over. The woth hovered out
|
||
of their reach, and flew over the main entrance and inside the city. A
|
||
crowd followed, a mix of surrogates, guards and visitors, all reaching
|
||
for the fruit.<br />
|
||
“Norange!”<br />
|
||
“Get it, get it!”<br />
|
||
A mob was chasing the woth inside the city, Eka and Lupen,
|
||
following, were able to get inside.<br />
|
||
“That woth is brilliant! A first-class instigator of change! A
|
||
genius!” Lupen said, running inside, shouting the war cry: “Cake and
|
||
tea!”<br />
|
||
“Cake and tea!” Eka yelled while laughing, mimicking Lupen. “You’re
|
||
going to start a riot!”<br />
|
||
“I’m just an opportunist, the woth is the mastermind!”<br />
|
||
The woth landed on top of a high building, setting the norange on a
|
||
visible but inaccessible place, and waited. Out came several “ooohs”, as
|
||
well as a succession of reverent “aaahs,” from the growing collection of
|
||
admirers at the foot of the building.</p>
|
||
<p>Eka and Lupen ran deeper into the city, past buildings and street
|
||
vendors, until they arrived at the town’s public square, a clear space,
|
||
encircled with tiny stalls selling a variety of flavored food
|
||
patches.<br />
|
||
“Get your bobonion soup patch here! Best in the city!”<br />
|
||
“In the mood for some mapple pie? Get the patch right here, right
|
||
now!”<br />
|
||
The floor of the city was paved with stones, but dusty, with bits of
|
||
debris here and there. Young workers stood around with brooms, there to
|
||
catch spent patches. The people of Montore threw them over their
|
||
shoulders when they were done, mirroring the habit of throwing away
|
||
remains of fresh fruits and vegetables. The desert and small critters
|
||
consumed the peels quickly, but not the same could be said of those
|
||
patches.<br />
|
||
“What do you do with the collected patches?” Eka asked one of the
|
||
children.<br />
|
||
The child pointed to a building adjoined to the outerwall.<br />
|
||
“And what happens when the building’s full?”<br />
|
||
The child cocked a head to one side, “I guess they’ll put it in
|
||
another building…”</p>
|
||
<p>Every house, or business in this city had thick yellow walls made
|
||
from a mixture of mud, sand, waterstones and dried grass. They were
|
||
constructed in a way to remain cool in the day, and warm once both suns
|
||
had set. A large building topped with a dome sat at one end of the
|
||
public square, adorned with the Montore insignia, the same symbol
|
||
stamped on the face of every coin. A dozen green flags perched on the
|
||
roof gave the building some colour.<br />
|
||
In the middle of the city was a thick beam with a large wheel around
|
||
it, spinning slowly. Eka noticed that the beam and wheel were connected
|
||
to a much larger cog, built under the city. Following one of these long
|
||
branches, Eka arrived into a bakery. Inside, another one of these large
|
||
beams came out of a hole in the floor, behind the counter where the
|
||
baker worked. This secondary beam had a series of smaller branches and
|
||
cogs attached to it, leading to a flour mill.<br />
|
||
“Whoa!” Eka said, kneeling down near the hole in the floor around
|
||
the beam to catch a glimpse of the underground mechanism. “This is
|
||
brilliant!” The city was built on top of a huge cog, powering devices in
|
||
the businesses of the city. In the bakery, the beam had an arm that
|
||
could be repositioned to power a grain mill, or a dough beater.<br />
|
||
“You shouldn’t mill so much muckwheat!” someone said, “we sell so
|
||
little now, no one wants any! Why waste it?”<br />
|
||
The baker sighed, and glanced over at fresh loaf of muckwheat bread.
|
||
“People in this town need to be reminded of what real food looks like
|
||
and smells like, Ira!”<br />
|
||
“They’re going to shut us down, Avril. We need coin to keep this
|
||
place running.”<br />
|
||
Eka overheard the conversation, and was sad to hear it. Eka carried
|
||
these words back to Lupen, who had somehow gotten dragged into a Montore
|
||
tour group. Leaving it was hard, everyone kept pushing them from one
|
||
place to another.<br />
|
||
“The town operates on a schedule!” A tour guide said to a group of
|
||
visitors. “During rush horo, the strongest in the city come to give the
|
||
master cog a boost by spinning it faster manually! Food patch production
|
||
increases dramatically during these times to meet the increased demand,
|
||
otherwise, the cog spins at a continuous and consistent speed, made
|
||
possible by the outer cog, powered by the wind. But remember, currently
|
||
Beobug is trying to build a new system that would remove the need for
|
||
wind! Imagine! A city that runs all day, everyday no matter the
|
||
weather!”<br />
|
||
Lupen and Eka followed the guide. They found their way into a
|
||
factory that made sweet-tasting food patches. On arrival every one was
|
||
given a sample, the guide gave Eka and Lupen a babam cake patch.<br />
|
||
“It’s just like having the real thing! Try it!”<br />
|
||
Eka gave the patch a sniff, followed by a quick lick. “Um,” Eka
|
||
thought, giving it another lick, “I can sort of taste it.”<br />
|
||
Lupen licked the babam cake patch too, “yea, I mean. It’s
|
||
fine?”<br />
|
||
The tour leader continued to talk about the factory. “Our
|
||
Grand-Leader Monty had the idea for this wonderful product! It has saved
|
||
countless lives, and propelled this city to fame!”<br />
|
||
“Monty?” Lupen said, loud enough for others to hear.<br />
|
||
The entire group turned to look at the Verido.<br />
|
||
“You mean to say you don’t know the Grand-Leader’s name?” One of the
|
||
tourists asked.<br />
|
||
“Oh, well I was kidding! Of course I know!”<br />
|
||
“Smooth.” Eka whispered.<br />
|
||
“Yea? Then when’s Monty Day, hm?”<br />
|
||
All eyes were on Lupen. “Um. Today?” Lupen said, tentatively, tipped
|
||
off by the decorations in both the town and the factory.<br />
|
||
The group then relaxed. “That’s right! Today is Monty Day,
|
||
celebrating the Green Day of our Grand-Leader!”<br />
|
||
Lupen was eager to get away from this group of zealots. As soon as
|
||
the tour group made its way to the gift shop, the Verido and Eka snuck
|
||
out.<br />
|
||
“I’d like to give this Monty a piece of my mind,” Lupen said,
|
||
unimpressed with the factory, as they walked away the Verido continued
|
||
to lick the babam cake patch. “I hate the idea of this patch, but I
|
||
can’t stop licking it.”<br />
|
||
“It’s not bad,” Eka noted.<br />
|
||
Lupen gave the patch a last, long lick, but then stopped to look at
|
||
it. “Now, what do I do with this?”</p>
|
||
<p>Eka and Lupen spent time exploring the city, determined to see every
|
||
shop that the great cog was powering, like a woodshop, where the cog
|
||
turned a metal wheel to cut giant logs.<br />
|
||
Eka wandered into Alkarawin, the oldest library in the Soronan
|
||
desert, its emerald-tiled roof visible from anywhere in Montore. The
|
||
complex was home to hundreds of ancient texts written by renowned
|
||
scholars and thinkers over the years. The library had two giant irinwood
|
||
trees guarding the main entrance. The branches of the tree were heavy
|
||
with small wooden discs, hanging from thin ropes, each disc had words
|
||
carved onto its faces. Visitors who came from far to visit Alkarawin
|
||
would come here to offer knowledge to the library, inscribing a short
|
||
story, or fact to the wood of a disc. At the end of every annum, these
|
||
were removed from the trees, tallied, and gathered to form new texts. A
|
||
small basin lay near the door where visitors could wash their hands and
|
||
feet, a symbolic act of cleaning the mind and body prior to
|
||
entering.<br />
|
||
Clean and centred, Eka entered Alkarawin, and stepped into a square
|
||
room, with books lining the walls from floor to ceiling. Books stored
|
||
near the ceiling were accessible via a small elevated walkway, built
|
||
around the room and accessible with a ladder, this room branched out
|
||
into several smaller alcoves, each featuring a unique ornately-painted
|
||
yukwood ceiling.<br />
|
||
Eka wandered onto the higher walkway, fingers tracing along names
|
||
embossed on the bindings. Eka spotted a blind librarian browsing through
|
||
books on a nearby shelf, helping a customer find a specific tome,
|
||
fingers reading the text quickly before moving into another section. The
|
||
librarian pulled out a book and then handed it over to the visitor in
|
||
silence. The visitor breathed a low ‘thank you’, and made for one of the
|
||
many reading alcoves. The librarian turned to Eka then, waiting for a
|
||
book name. “Habitants of the Dark please,” Eka said, in a quiet voice.
|
||
The librarian’s hands returned to the shelves, hunting for the book Eka
|
||
requested, they skipped down many rows of books, fingers touching the
|
||
wood between each row to identify the right section, and after finding
|
||
the correct shelf, the hands stopped, having identified the book. Just
|
||
as the worker handed the book to Eka, a horn sounded outside. Eka
|
||
thanked the Librarian, and hurried down the stairs, following the
|
||
sound.</p>
|
||
<p>Outside, the main city square was filling with people, who gathered
|
||
around the central beam of the cog. Two Montore guards held a ladder
|
||
near the rotating beam. A Finiku walked out of the crowd, climbed the
|
||
ladder, and after reaching the top, made a short elegant hop from the
|
||
last step to the top of the beam.<br />
|
||
“Dot! Dot! Dot!”<br />
|
||
The crowd cheered. Dot smiled and raised two arms to the sky,
|
||
causing the cheer to become even louder.<br />
|
||
“Monty! Monty! Monty!”<br />
|
||
The character standing on the little rotating platform wore a bright
|
||
green ensemble with the familiar Montore emblem in the back. “Monty love
|
||
you all! And dey tank you for your hard work! Montore can no be great
|
||
widout you!” The crowd cheered once again at these words. “Production of
|
||
food patch ees at all-time high!” The crowd cheered again, as Dot began
|
||
to list their yearly accomplishments aloud. Lupen suddenly remembered
|
||
Gree’s coin, and pulled it out from a side pocket to look at it.<br />
|
||
“Oh! How did you get this?” Eka said, eyeing the coin.<br />
|
||
“Gree gave it to me, I don’t know what to do with it though. My
|
||
spirit doesn’t feel elevated at all.”<br />
|
||
Eka smirked, grabbed the coin from Lupen’s hand, and disappeared
|
||
into the crowd.<br />
|
||
“Eka? Eka! Ah, never mind. I’ll just wait here, <em>alone</em>.”
|
||
Moments later, Lupen’s eyes found a familiar face. Kuzi was sitting on a
|
||
crate near the bakery. Lupen rushed over. “You forgot to meet us!” The
|
||
Verido stopped talking, noticing that like the other Terins in the line
|
||
outside of town yesterday, Kuzi too was high on kavava.<br />
|
||
“Oh, hey Lu-Lu!” Kuzi said, smiling stupidly.<br />
|
||
“Kuzi, you didn’t…”<br />
|
||
Kuzi looked at the Verido with red eyes, and groaned. “I didn’t even
|
||
taste the norange. Not one bite. I’m <em>so</em> weak.”<br />
|
||
Lupen sat down, shoulder to shoulder with Kuzi. Both said nothing,
|
||
sitting together with Dot’s voice in the background. Just then the woth
|
||
returned, carrying a small bit of norange peel around. Lupen grabbed the
|
||
peel, and handed it over to Kuzi, “you can taste it now.” The Terin
|
||
pushed it away.<br />
|
||
“No. I don’t like how it makes me feel.”<br />
|
||
A curious onlooker noticed the norange peel. “Norange!” Word of the
|
||
norange on the rooftop had traveled, everyone in town knew about it. Dot
|
||
stopped speaking then, words falling on deaf ears as the crowd gathered
|
||
around Lupen. There was nowhere to run this time. The guards arrived,
|
||
recognizing both Kuzi and Lupen.<br />
|
||
“You two!” The guard gripped Lupen’s arm, then began to search for
|
||
the piece of ID. “What! No ID either?! We’ve got a Specter here!”<br />
|
||
“I’ve got ID! I exist! See? <em>See</em>?” Kuzi yelled, fumbling
|
||
around for it, but the guard didn’t want to hear it, and both were
|
||
dragged away from the main square and into the courtyard of building
|
||
with the Montore emblem, and were asked to stay there.</p>
|
||
<p>The space was enclosed by 4 walls, with two doors, one leading inside
|
||
the courtyard, the other, inside of the main building. Unlike most of
|
||
Montore, this place was a lush garden, bursting with colour and life. A
|
||
giant yukwood tree grew in the centre, providing shelter from the high
|
||
midday suns.<br />
|
||
Lupen thought the place beautiful, but wondered what lay beyond the
|
||
second door. Like the first, it was a heavyset door with deep carvings
|
||
of intertwining branches and leaves, and a single golden knob in its
|
||
centre.<br />
|
||
Kuzi gave Lupen a shove. “Why’d you have to get me involved?! Is
|
||
babam cake and tea code for something?”<br />
|
||
“I didn’t do anything! Everyone here just gets real crazy whenever
|
||
there’s mention of noranges! I didn’t know that would happen!”<br />
|
||
“You can’t just go flaunting extinct fruits around!” Kuzi realized
|
||
something then. “That’s how you got into the city.”<br />
|
||
“Yea, me and a ton of others.” Lupen smirked. “Another
|
||
accident.”<br />
|
||
“They’re going to put us into a mill and grind us into food
|
||
patches!” Kuzi yelled.<br />
|
||
“It’s your fault! You were supposed to meet us, but instead you went
|
||
on a kavava bender!”<br />
|
||
Kuzi began to fight Lupen in the courtyard, although the fight
|
||
occurred mostly on one side, and less so on the other. The Verido didn’t
|
||
know how to fight, and instead made a dance of it, avoiding the
|
||
onslaught of fists with ease because Kuzi’s movements were sluggish,
|
||
still high on root juices. Their fight was interrupted by Averet, the
|
||
guard.<br />
|
||
“Hey! Stop that!” Averet instructed them to follow, and brought them
|
||
in front of a large door, made of carved banabo. “Whom does this belong
|
||
to?” Averet asked, holding the norange peel.<br />
|
||
Lupen didn’t put a claim to it, having no desire to get ground up
|
||
into anything. Kuzi addressed Averet then. “How would I have a norange?
|
||
I was raised here and never left, same as you.”<br />
|
||
The guard blinked, then gripped Lupen’s arm. “Right. Come with me,
|
||
Specter.”<br />
|
||
“I bet the food patch version of you will be <em>disgusting</em>!”
|
||
Kuzi shouted, just as another guard arrived to escort the Terin
|
||
outside.</p>
|
||
<p>Lupen gulped as the large carved banabo door opened, revealing a
|
||
thick curtain, obscuring both the room and its occupant. “Go,” Averet
|
||
said, pushing the captive onward. Lupen took a few steps forward, found
|
||
an opening in the fabric and pushed on. A young Terin, dressed in a
|
||
green robe was on the other side. “You’re the Specter, the norange
|
||
smuggler?”<br />
|
||
“Smuggler? That’s escalating things a bit don’t you think?”<br />
|
||
“Follow me,” the young Terin said, pushing past yet another set of
|
||
curtains. On the other side, Lupen’s fingers found moss clinging to the
|
||
fabric. Small trees grew from holes in the ground, their roots raising
|
||
the tiled flooring. There was a large gap in the ceiling, bringing light
|
||
into the room. The walls were covered with notes, and drawings. A large
|
||
ornate table lay at the centre of the room, buried in a blanket of
|
||
greens, with plants wrapping around its legs. Some of the chairs
|
||
encircling the table lay on their sides, with pieces broken off, used to
|
||
build other projects. A painting of the table as it once was hung on the
|
||
wall.<br />
|
||
“The norange thief is here.”<br />
|
||
“What? I’m no thief!” Lupen retorted.<br />
|
||
A Terin with greying hair and a thin young face rose from behind the
|
||
table, head reaching just over a mound of moss. “Where did you get that
|
||
norange?” The Terin asked, nonchalantly, speaking low and slow while
|
||
bending down again to check over the leaves of a nearby plant.<br />
|
||
“If I said, I’d betray a friend and endanger lives,” Lupen replied,
|
||
bending down to look under the table to see what the Terin was doing.
|
||
“I’m sure I don’t have to tell you who it’s from though…”<br />
|
||
“You are correct. I am happy to learn that Zucca was able to save
|
||
some norange seeds,” the Terin said, moving from one plant to another,
|
||
“norcorn patties just aren’t the same without norange sauce.”<br />
|
||
Lupen observed that the Terin wore a simple pair of tan hempa pants,
|
||
scuffed at the knees. “So um, are you Monty?”<br />
|
||
Monty stood up again, slowly, to look at Lupen only to find that
|
||
Lupen’s head wasn’t there. “Not what you were expecting?”<br />
|
||
Lupen mimicked Monty’s movements, and stood up again. “No, not at
|
||
all… you’ve got all these plants, yet you’re feeding others false food,
|
||
then there’s the Beobug goons and their sandfins. Hard to believe it all
|
||
comes from you.”<br />
|
||
Monty laughed. “It’s been a while since I’ve heard someone attacking
|
||
me for my ideas,” Monty said, yellow eyes now fixed on Lupen.<br />
|
||
“Yea well, I’ve got a problem with pain, and misery,” Lupen
|
||
replied.<br />
|
||
Monty smiled, composed and calm as ever. “The food patches helped
|
||
feed refugees during the Iridi raids.”<br />
|
||
“Did you know that Beobug employees sell expired patches to the
|
||
hungry for coin?” Lupen was proud of this rebuttal.<br />
|
||
Monty thought about this for a moment. “And you’re blaming
|
||
me.”<br />
|
||
“Yes, yes I am.”<br />
|
||
“I don’t have as much control over others as you might think.”<br />
|
||
“People in this city aren’t eating real food anymore, and everyone
|
||
is obssessed with coin…” Lupen wanted to stop talking but the words kept
|
||
coming out.<br />
|
||
“Coin was supposed to be a way to simplify exchanges in the city. It
|
||
was really a good idea, but great ideas have a way of growing, and
|
||
changing as more and more heads and hands get involved, and big ideas
|
||
require more hands and heads. I’ve let go of the helm many, many annums
|
||
ago. I had more energy back then, it was easier to steer, but now…”
|
||
Monty sighed, “I just decided to stop having ideas.”<br />
|
||
Lupen took note of all the drawings and books scattered in the room,
|
||
clearly Monty wasn’t done having ideas. “You mean you decided to stop
|
||
telling others about them.”<br />
|
||
“Yes, I suppose you’re right. The giant cog was my first idea, my
|
||
best one. It is designed to run forever you know, with little
|
||
maintenance, but then no one can do anything when the wind is down.
|
||
Waiting didn’t used to be a problem, but the city has grown, and with
|
||
all the transients we get demand is increasing and Montore can no longer
|
||
afford to wait. The new system will work day and dark..”<br />
|
||
“Did you ever tell anyone all of this? That it’s a bad idea? Maybe
|
||
if they heard it from you they’d stop?”<br />
|
||
“Those who live in Montore see it as an undivided blessing. For me
|
||
to criticize modernity is to criticize the needs and wants of my city,
|
||
and of those we invite within its walls.” Monty replied.<br />
|
||
“So Montore will just keep growing forever, and ever?” Lupen
|
||
said.<br />
|
||
“You would have me kick people out to reduce demand?” Monty asked
|
||
the Verido. “Just as the wind changes the shape of dunes in the desert,
|
||
Montore will too be shaped by those who inhabit it. I’ve decided to
|
||
instead focus on this room, it is small, and because it is small, I only
|
||
need my own head and hands and I quite like that.” Monty stood up then,
|
||
and began to walk around the room, stretching arms and legs and stopping
|
||
in front of a large portrait hanging on a wall.<br />
|
||
Lupen took note of a painting on the backwall, it resembled the
|
||
portrait carved on the coin, “that looks nothing like you.”<br />
|
||
“If I were to go out there on the city square right now, they
|
||
wouldn’t believe I was Monty.” Monty too stared at the painting, then
|
||
turned so Lupen could compare details. “My artist got carried away, they
|
||
thought I needed to look more imposing, more angular. It’s why I’m here
|
||
really, and that no one can see me. If they did, they’d throw me out,
|
||
thinking I was a pretender. Anyway, I am tired. Dot has the helm now.
|
||
Staying here, at least I’m safe and free to think up ideas all day,
|
||
everyday…”<br />
|
||
“Yea. You’re comfortable while people suffer.”<br />
|
||
“People have suffered long before your time and mine. I was
|
||
wondering, how did you get Zucca to give you that fruit?”<br />
|
||
Lupen bore a sad expression, eyeing the entrance. “If you want to
|
||
know the full story you’ll have to walk out of here with me. How about
|
||
it? It’s Monty Day after all.”<br />
|
||
Monty smirked, “I would have really enjoyed hearing that story. For
|
||
you to know, and me to wonder I suppose.” Saying this, the grand leader
|
||
continued to look after the plants in the room, checking the leaves for
|
||
signs of malnutrition with much love and care, like a leafhound
|
||
would.<br />
|
||
“Why did you ask me in here?” Lupen asked.<br />
|
||
“Curiosity. A Verido with a norange, a hyroo and a round-eared
|
||
companion together, <em>very</em> unusual.” Saying this, Monty glanced
|
||
at Lupen once again, the pair of yellow eyes appeared focused, quietly
|
||
dissecting the visitor.<br />
|
||
“I’ll add that story to the pile, in exchange for you to tell your
|
||
people the truth.” Lupen teased.<br />
|
||
“Goodbye Specter.”<br />
|
||
Lupen let out a deep sigh, there was nothing to do then but leave.
|
||
The Verido glanced at Monty’s second hand. “What now? What happens to
|
||
the ones who don’t exist in the eyes of Montore? Do I get ground up into
|
||
food?”<br />
|
||
The green-clad Terin laughed, “the things people think we do.
|
||
Sometimes I wonder why we bother making laws at all, stories like this
|
||
keep people in line better than our laws ever could.” With this, Lupen
|
||
was escorted out of the building. “You need to leave the city right this
|
||
instant.” Monty’s second hand watched as Lupen stepped into the main
|
||
square, and heading towards the city gate. The guard kept close, to make
|
||
sure the Verido didn’t decide to take a detour on the way out.<br />
|
||
As Lupen was escorted out of Montore, Kuzi stood by, watching. Eka
|
||
stood near too, chewing loudly, eating chunks of freshly baked babam
|
||
cake. “D’you know where I can get some mepperpint tea around
|
||
here?”<br />
|
||
Kuzi looked over, catching the scent of fresh babam. “No, I don’t
|
||
really know.”<br />
|
||
“Do you want some?” Eka offered, putting a slice of cake under the
|
||
Terin’s nose. “I could eat it all myself, but that would make me a
|
||
glutton. You eating a bit would make me feel like less of one.”<br />
|
||
Kuzi was hungry, having forgotten to buy some food patches. “Sure,
|
||
more for you than for me though.” Kuzi bit into the pastry. The texture
|
||
was bouncy, and airy, it offered little resistance. A piece was torn
|
||
off, and passed to the next point in line. This experience of eating was
|
||
so intense, so enjoyable, that Kuzi began to shiver. “There’s gingin in
|
||
it! I love gingin! Well, I used to…”<br />
|
||
“Enjoy it, this is likely the last cake the bakery will ever make.
|
||
It’s closing tomorrow, not enough people buying food. A real shame. They
|
||
make amazing breads too, Avril and Ira I mean, they’re the real deal!
|
||
Soon they’ll be gone. Extinct, like the noranges.”<br />
|
||
Kuzi stopped chewing, feeling sad. This was usually the point where
|
||
the Terin would start ingesting some mind-numbing kavava…<br />
|
||
“Oh! Now I remember,” Eka began, “Avril’s grandmapa Moki was the one
|
||
making the mepperpint tea! The shop had a garden outside, it was a
|
||
popular place back in the day. Some Terin was working there too, the
|
||
only one who really understood mepperpint. I miss it. But you know… if
|
||
you drink too much of it—”<br />
|
||
“—It makes your eyes sprout leaves,” Kuzi finished, with a weak
|
||
smile.<br />
|
||
Eka nodded. “Exactly! Alright. Have some more cake. I’m going to go
|
||
for a walk now.”<br />
|
||
Kuzi stood there, a giant slice of babam cake in hand, staring at
|
||
the bakery. For some reason, Kuzi had forgotten it existed, stuck in a
|
||
perpetual kavava haze. The fog had cleared, and the world had much more
|
||
detail in it. Without a moment’s hesitation, and drawn by the smell of
|
||
muckwheat, the Terin walked to the bakery and went inside.</p>
|
||
<p>Lupen was at their tent outside of the city, waiting for Eka to
|
||
return. Hush was there, conversing with the woth, listening to a
|
||
re-telling of today’s events.<br />
|
||
Eka arrived before darkfall, finding Lupen in the tent, but there
|
||
was something different, something unusual…<br />
|
||
“You’ve got a cup on your head, you know that right?”<br />
|
||
“It’s a Thinking Cup,” Lupen said, with a sigh, knowing all-too-well
|
||
how ridiculous it looked.<br />
|
||
“Wow! Is it working? Are you having some great thoughts right
|
||
now?”<br />
|
||
Lupen removed the cup then, staring into it. “No. Maybe it’s because
|
||
there’s no tea in it…”<br />
|
||
Eka presented a slice of babam cake to the dispirited Verido. “I did
|
||
not find mepperpint tea, but this cake stands well enough on its own.
|
||
Try it.”<br />
|
||
“Mission failed,” Lupen said.<br />
|
||
“How so?”<br />
|
||
“On getting some Montore babam cake and mepperpint tea.”<br />
|
||
“No, I think our excursion into Montore was a success! We learned
|
||
many things today, and we made lots of friends.”<br />
|
||
“Friends? Everyone here thinks I’m a fiend. Did you not see my walk
|
||
of shame?”<br />
|
||
“I did, I did! You’re Montore-famous now!”<br />
|
||
“Great,” Lupen moaned, “but I was hoping we could help
|
||
somebody…”<br />
|
||
Eka hugged Lupen then, “is that what you think we’re doing? Helping
|
||
others?”<br />
|
||
“Yes? Maybe? I don’t know.”<br />
|
||
“We came here for cake and tea.”<br />
|
||
“Yea. Yea, you’re right,” saying this, Lupen took a bite of the
|
||
babam cake. “Oh wow! This is <em>so</em> good!” The woth moved out of
|
||
its glass house, eager to get a bite of this famed pastry, even Hush was
|
||
intrigued. “I’m not sharing, sorry!” Lupen said, but both approached,
|
||
eager to sample the remaining chunk of cake. Lupen was pinned to the
|
||
floor, with Hush chewing on the end of the cake and the woth eating
|
||
stray crumbs off its snout. “Yea yea, you’ve got two stomachs…”<br />
|
||
The next day, the gang packed up their tent and gear and left
|
||
Montore.</p>
|
||
<p>Later that same day, Kuzi had sold the last of the kavava in exchange
|
||
for coin to pay for more pastries at the bakery. This sell, helped to
|
||
convince Ira to keep the bakery open, at least for another day or two.
|
||
Kuzi sat in the city square, looking at the townspeople, and ate
|
||
bread.<br />
|
||
“Hey Kuzi, keeping out of trouble today I hope,” Averet said.<br />
|
||
“For now,” Kuzi replied with a grin.<br />
|
||
There was a pause, but Averet spoke again. “Do you know where I can
|
||
get some norcorn patties around here?”<br />
|
||
“I’d ask Avril’s bakery.”<br />
|
||
“Bakery?”<br />
|
||
Kuzi pointed to it. “Yea, it’s where I got this bread. You want to
|
||
try some?”<br />
|
||
Averet grabbed a slice of bread, and took a bite. “It’s <em>so</em>
|
||
moist! Why do I never buy real bread? Thanks, I’ll visit Avril later, to
|
||
ask about the norcorn. You see, I kept this piece of norange peel…”</p>
|
||
<h1 id="little-light">Little Light</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/flora.chloromyce.shroo.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>A type of fungus that emits strong phosphorescent light, it grows
|
||
in caves, underground where there is no light. It is an object of desire
|
||
for the Iridi, who have fought wars in its name.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>“Irideri,” Eka said, “home of the Iridi! That’s where we’re going
|
||
next. The monks there make the <em>best</em> chloromyce shroo noodles.
|
||
They glow in the dark! Plus if you eat too much the soles of your feet
|
||
become iridescent.”<br />
|
||
“Monks who make noodles?” Lupen said, while caressing the spot
|
||
between Hush’s ears, who had carried them much distance and now demanded
|
||
payment in the form of a head massage.<br />
|
||
“Oh yes! At the end of every annum, Iridi monks go deep underground,
|
||
into the chasms of the Andenuis and spend ten days there, alone,
|
||
meditating. When they emerge, they prepare the noodles to celebrate the
|
||
new annum. It symbolizes a renewal of the self, a shedding of your old
|
||
skin kind of thing.”<br />
|
||
“Alone? In the dark? For a ten days? Oh no no no, I could
|
||
<em>never</em> do that. I mean, it’s scary isn’t it? You’re in the dark,
|
||
there’s no one around to talk to, or to touch you. It’s like you’re not
|
||
really there.” Lupen said, swallowing hard. “If I don’t feel or see
|
||
anything, how do I know I exist?”<br />
|
||
“Oh, precious Lu. If you’re thinking that you’re nothing, you are
|
||
something. You are a <em>thinking thing</em>.”<br />
|
||
The Verido made a face, processing the words, “I’m a thinking thing.
|
||
Thinking things are not nothing.” A reassured smile formed on Lupen’s
|
||
lips. “Having iridescent feet would be fun. I still don’t want to go
|
||
meditating in a cave alone though, I hope that’s not required to eat
|
||
chloromyce noodles.”<br />
|
||
“We shall see!” Eka said, tearing away from Lupen for a moment and
|
||
reaching into Hush’s saddle bag for a book bound by banabo thread with
|
||
silvery writing on top. “This book is going to tell us everything we
|
||
need to know about Irideri.”<br />
|
||
“Where d’you get that book?” Lupen asked, having no memory of it
|
||
ever being around until now.<br />
|
||
“Borrowed it from the Alkarawin library in Montore.” Eka said.<br />
|
||
“How are we going to return it? I’ve got no plans to go to Montore
|
||
again… couldn’t even if I wanted to.”<br />
|
||
“I’ll woth it back.” Eka said, smiling at the woth, asleep in the
|
||
glass ball on Lupen’s belt.<br />
|
||
“Is that something people say? ‘I will <em>woth</em> this letter to
|
||
you?’” Lupen asked.<br />
|
||
“It’s something I say, and that others ought to say.” Eka said,
|
||
showing Lupen the cover of the book, it read <em>Habitants of the
|
||
Dark</em>.<br />
|
||
“I had a long talk with Zucca about the Iridi, they ruined a lot of
|
||
lives. They raided all those villages for workers, destroyed the Suvalba
|
||
sanctuary, all that because they didn’t want to harvest the chloromyce
|
||
shroos themselves. It’s horrible. Why are they so dependent on them
|
||
anyway?”<br />
|
||
“That’s because of The Luminary, Moera, the first ever Sovereign of
|
||
Irideri. Moera loved the stuff.” Eka opened the book and began to turn
|
||
the first few pages. It was an old tome, the pages, like the binding
|
||
thread, were also made from banabo fibers. “I’m going to read the story
|
||
out loud! I’ll make voices and everything.”<br />
|
||
“I don’t care to hear it, I already know how it ends.” Lupen
|
||
said.<br />
|
||
“Shush, shush, this is not for you, this is for Hush and Wormple the
|
||
Woth.” Eka said. The woth stirred inside its glass ball, but did not
|
||
rise to the name Wormple. Eka flashed Lupen a smile and began to read
|
||
aloud…</p>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<h3 id="habitants-of-the-dark">Habitants of the Dark</h3>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> Moera rose to power in the early days and united the five
|
||
villages built inside the protective ridge belt of the Andenuis. These
|
||
villages were combined and named Irideri. Under the order of Moera, the
|
||
townspeople spent ha’annums[^] digging at the mountain side, they built
|
||
foundries, to make the tools necessary to erect a beautiful walled city,
|
||
worthy of their ruler. The Iridi people lived in the light in those
|
||
days, but everything changed when they found chloromyce shroo in the
|
||
underground caves.<br />
|
||
Moera was enthralled by their beauty. The Sovereign called upon the
|
||
best artisan in the city and asked that the chloromyce be embedded into
|
||
jewlery.<br />
|
||
Moera was having tea under the high midday suns when the artisan
|
||
presented the gift of the crystalized shroo, wrapped in a silvery cloth
|
||
adorned with a bright yellow ribbon. Moera undid the ribbon, but once
|
||
presented to the suns the shroo exploded in a thick cloud of spores, the
|
||
spores entered the Sovereign’s eyes, rendering Moera blind.<br />
|
||
The chloromyce shroos, the kingdom learned, could not be exposed to
|
||
daylight. On that day, Moera declared that the suns were a menace and
|
||
decreed that all should seek the light of the chloromyce shroos
|
||
instead.<br />
|
||
The residents of Irideri began to sleep in the daytime, living in
|
||
the dark. The only light present was the one emitted by the glow of the
|
||
chloromyce shroos.<br />
|
||
The Crown began to ingest chloromyce shroo powder, with the belief
|
||
that in time these eyes would be healed. Eventually, the custom spread
|
||
through the village, where people mirrored the actions of their Monarch.
|
||
Ingesting chloromyce shroo powder permitted them to live healthy lives
|
||
in perfect darkness, and their vision too adapted to the low light.
|
||
Fresh shroo spores were dangerous, it is why Iridi people kept them in
|
||
closed, glass balls, but when dried they lost their irritative
|
||
qualities.<br />
|
||
Overtime, Moera developed a sensitivy to loud noises. A servant
|
||
could be executed for dropping a spoon on the ground. From that moment
|
||
on, all citizens of Irideri left their shoes at the entrance to the
|
||
palace and walked barefoot inside. This practice of silence was widely
|
||
adopted. The entire kingdom learned to make as little sound as possible,
|
||
they kept their voices low.<br />
|
||
When Moera left this world, the heir to the throne, Bao The Bright,
|
||
assumed the role of Light of Lights. The army was disbanded, the mining
|
||
sites outside of the city were shut, and the kingdom of Irideri shut its
|
||
doors to all foreign visitors.<br />
|
||
Ingesting chloromyce shroos made the habitants of Irideri sensitive
|
||
to light, causing mild phototoxicity, strengthening their hatred of the
|
||
suns. Over just two generations, their skin greyed and their eyes
|
||
darkened. Such is the story of the Iridi, the habitants of the dark.</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p> Eka read on. “They see clearly in the dark. It says here that the
|
||
chloromyce shroos speak to them, they see words and colours in
|
||
them!”<br />
|
||
Lupen laughed. “I can see words and colours too, all I have to do is
|
||
eat some bad herbs…”<br />
|
||
“Ah! So you <em>did</em> listen!” Eka said. “I bet you’ll be
|
||
impressed with the Iridi once you see the city. Well, if we get to see
|
||
it. It’s hard to get inside I’ve heard.” They could already make out the
|
||
shape of the mountain in the distance. The second sun was setting,
|
||
leaving room for the moons and stars to shine. “Things have to be
|
||
different now.”<br />
|
||
“I hope you’re right.” Lupen wanted to believe that the Iridi had
|
||
abandoned their former ways. “Second sun is coming down, let’s set up
|
||
camp.”</p>
|
||
<p>As the second sun fell over the horizon, the people of Irideri were
|
||
waking. The kingdom slept during the day and came alive at dusk. In the
|
||
palace, Kurono, the Young Light of the realm, was already out of bed.
|
||
Kurono wore dark robes that shimmered in the light of the chloromyce
|
||
shroos. Part of Kurono’s hair was sculpted into a bun, held up by silver
|
||
wiring and adorned with colourless jewels, the rest was down and stopped
|
||
short of touching the floor.<br />
|
||
Hair arrangement, as well as clothing, was important in Irideri.
|
||
Your outer facade was a reflection of your inner self. Untidy hair
|
||
communicated that you have no discipline, that your thoughts are
|
||
cluttered, but having a well-sculpted head of hair is a sign that your
|
||
life is in perfect order.<br />
|
||
Iri was helping the Young Crown get ready. The servant’s face was
|
||
covered by a mask from the nose down, which was a symbol of silence, of
|
||
servitude, a reminder to others that Iri were not allowed to speak.
|
||
Servant-wear was simple, with little skin visible, aside from the eyes
|
||
and forehead. They had no eyebrows, no discerning physical traits or
|
||
means of producing an expression.<br />
|
||
Iri always had a tall silver rod in hand, topped with a T shape.
|
||
Dangling from one branch was a glass ball, and in it, a glowing
|
||
chloromyce shroo. In public, Iri shadowed Kurono and made sure that the
|
||
Monarch-To-Be was never unlit. Most of the kingdom was kept dark, making
|
||
the presence of a royal in the room the centre of attention.<br />
|
||
“Playroom Iri.” The Young Light said with a sigh, knowing that being
|
||
in a room designed for play without a playmate wouldn’t be much fun at
|
||
all. There wasn’t anyone around to play with. Iri was a good servant,
|
||
but a poor playmate because all who served Irideri could not talk unless
|
||
spoken to. Iri had even fewer privileges, they couldn’t eat, sleep,
|
||
walk, or move without Kurono saying so. All servants of the Light shared
|
||
a single name: Iri.<br />
|
||
Today, nothing amused Kurono, not even the large collection of
|
||
puzzles filling the room. These contraptions had been more friend than
|
||
any living person, but all had been solved and held no more
|
||
secrets.<br />
|
||
“Will you dance with me Iri?” the Young Light asked suddenly.<br />
|
||
Kurono spoke to Iri often, having an ear to talk to with a mouth
|
||
bound by law meant that anything could be said without fear of
|
||
punishment.<br />
|
||
Iri flashed an open hand then, which meant: Have no illusions about
|
||
me. I am not worthy of language. I am nothing.<br />
|
||
“Would you deny a request by your crown-to-be?” Kurono asked with a
|
||
smile. “Dance me with <em>now</em>, I demand it!” The Little Light stood
|
||
up and went to take the servant’s hands. Iri could not refuse.<br />
|
||
Kurono lead the confused Iri into a waltz. “Do as I do.” Iri
|
||
followed Kurono’s steps well enough. After a while it was difficult to
|
||
tell that this Iri had never before danced a waltz. Iri had been part of
|
||
Kurono’s life for a long time and knew many things, like how this Young
|
||
Light enjoyed overcooked peagram dumplings, and the smell of Montimori
|
||
flowers.<br />
|
||
“I’ve been thinking about this a lot,” the Young Crown began,
|
||
“you’ve never given me any gifts on any of my past Green Days. I am
|
||
<em>very</em> upset about that.”<br />
|
||
Iri began to sweat, upsetting Kurono was punishable by death.<br />
|
||
“Don’t worry! I know what I want you to give me,” both stopped
|
||
dancing then, but Kurono kept hold of the servant’s hand. “I want…no, I
|
||
<em>need</em> to hear your voice.”<br />
|
||
Iri appeared calm, but the organs inside were all twisted up into
|
||
knots. With every breath came great pain. Once again, an open hand came
|
||
to pass in front of the servant’s face to mean: I am nothing.<br />
|
||
“I know I’m asking a <em>lot</em>, but I promise you I won’t tell.
|
||
You’re the only friend I’ve got, and I’m sick of doing all the talking.
|
||
No one here listens to me, but you do! Surely, there are some beautiful,
|
||
unique thoughts in that head of yours. I want to know what they are. I
|
||
want to know <em>you</em>.”<br />
|
||
The servant motioned with a hand: I am nothing.<br />
|
||
“I’m <em>ordering</em> you to speak to me Iri.” The Crown-To-Be
|
||
demanded, with mounting irritation.<br />
|
||
Iri was conflicted. The rules of the realm forbade servants of the
|
||
Light to speak, but the Young Crown demanded it. The purpose of an Iri
|
||
was to do what was asked, but doing it meant breaking another rule.
|
||
Rules would be broken either way. Making a decision was
|
||
impossible.<br />
|
||
Irritated by this silence, the Young Light moved forward and tore
|
||
the mask covering Iri’s mouth. Kurono hated silence and rules, perhaps
|
||
now with it gone Iri would speak.<br />
|
||
Even without the presence of that physical barrier, the servant’s
|
||
lips produced no sound. The servant followed the laws of Irideri. Now,
|
||
with lips unmasked, Kurono could see the Iri mouthing the words. I am
|
||
nothing. I am nothing.<br />
|
||
Kurono’s teacher Mura came at the door then, but could not enter,
|
||
the door had been locked from the inside. “Young One! It is time for
|
||
your history lesson!”<br />
|
||
Kurono stuck a tongue out at the closed door. “I don’t want to! Go
|
||
away!” Then, went on to pinch Iri’s nose, “you’re going to have to open
|
||
your mouth to breathe sometime!” Iri’s mouth remained shut and the face
|
||
contouring it turned a deep shade of blue.<br />
|
||
Mura was in the hall still, muttering behind the closed door. “Our
|
||
Brightest will <em>not</em> be pleased with you Young Light!”<br />
|
||
“I don’t care!” Kurono yelled, eyes fixed on Iri’s face, watching it
|
||
turn a deep and unsightly purple colour. “You’re not going to die like
|
||
<em>this</em> are you?”<br />
|
||
Iri had no death wish, this one could not serve Kurono, or the realm
|
||
if dead. The servant’s mouth opened, and Iri took a deep breath.<br />
|
||
Kurono gasped. Iri had no tongue. Back in the old days, those who
|
||
knew things the Crown deemed unsavoury had their tongues and vocal cords
|
||
cut out. Kurono thought that this custom was long gone, the previous
|
||
monarch thought it was too barbaric. The Young Crown’s eyes moved to
|
||
Iri’s neck and spied a number hidden under the collar, the number “10”
|
||
written in flesh. “10? What is <em>this</em>?”<br />
|
||
Iri hurriedly pressed a finger to the Young Light’s lips with a low,
|
||
“shush!”<br />
|
||
Kurono had never seen Iri behave like this. The servant’s face was
|
||
warped by fear. For the first time there was a display of personality
|
||
coming from this Iri, something that had long been hidden away.<br />
|
||
When Kurono tried to speak again, Iri put a whole hand over the
|
||
Young Crown’s mouth. They locked eyes, both were shocked at what was
|
||
happening. Kurono did not try to stop Iri.<br />
|
||
Mura’s voice resounded in the hallway once again. “I am
|
||
<em>very</em> upset with you Kurono. Now, where is that key…”<br />
|
||
Iri panicked at the thought of having touched the Little Light
|
||
without permission. Hearing the sound of the teacher fiddling with the
|
||
door lock, Iri tore the mask from Kurono’s hands and put it back
|
||
on.<br />
|
||
The door opened with Mura looking very displeased. “I will not ask
|
||
again. Iri, walk Kurono to the study hall”. Mura left, leaving them
|
||
alone again.<br />
|
||
Iri walked to the door, and Kurono followed the servant to the study
|
||
hall, all the while staring at Iri’s neck and thinking of the number
|
||
inscribed onto it, wondering what it meant and why it was there.</p>
|
||
<p>Focusing on today’s lessons was impossible. The number 10 was
|
||
emblazoned in the Young Light’s mind. 10. 10 what…? Kurono
|
||
wondered.<br />
|
||
After a while, Kurono’s brain conjured up images of 10 tiny workers
|
||
at the crook of Mura’s nose, getting ready to go on an expedition inside
|
||
the left nostril. The teacher did not fail to notice that the student
|
||
wasn’t listening. After the lesson, they went to inform Demeri. Telling
|
||
Demeri was not done out of concern for the young student, but to make
|
||
clear that this was not their fault.<br />
|
||
After Kurono’s lesson, the Light Of The Realm, Demeri, came to the
|
||
study hall. Demeri was tall, made taller by an elaborate vertical
|
||
diadem. The diadem kept the Light’s hairdo together, pinned in the
|
||
centre, like the knot of a giant bow. “Kurono, light of my life, what is
|
||
the matter?” Demeri was followed by many servants, careful to keep the
|
||
monarch well-lit. The light shone on the robes, reflecting off the
|
||
layers of dark fabric, fanning out in all directions, like the petals of
|
||
a flower.<br />
|
||
“Your teacher tells me you had trouble focusing today. You must tell
|
||
me if you need a replacement. There is no play of light that can rightly
|
||
conceal Mura’s growing collection of wrinkles, it’s dreadful.”<br />
|
||
“Isn’t it true that Bao The Bright forbade the cutting of tongues?”
|
||
Kurono asked suddenly.<br />
|
||
Demeri, surprised, glanced at the Iri before giving a reply. “Is
|
||
this what Mura has been teaching you?”<br />
|
||
Iri looked tense, in pain, as if burned by fire.<br />
|
||
“My Iri has a number. 10, it says,” Kurono continued, sitting
|
||
upright in the chair to appear more confident, “why?”<br />
|
||
The Light of the Realm stood up. “Enji, take Kurono back to the
|
||
playroom.”<br />
|
||
Kurono wanted to scream. Enji accompanied the Young Light out of the
|
||
study hall. Iri followed, but before the servant could step out, Demeri
|
||
shouted another order. “You stay here Iri.”<br />
|
||
Kurono’s misbehavings were often the cause of Iri’s time spent in
|
||
rehabilitation. Everytime the Young Light complained of the Iri, it
|
||
resulted in what was commonly referred to as ‘rehabilitation’. Iri
|
||
always reemerged transformed. Kurono was always happy to have Iri back,
|
||
with things being as they were before. But this time felt different.
|
||
Kurono was scared.<br />
|
||
“No! It was my fault! Don’t do this!”<br />
|
||
Enji shut the door and forced Kurono back into the playroom, as
|
||
requested. “You have to stay here Young One, the Brightest In The Realm
|
||
commands it,” the guard said, before locking the door from the
|
||
outside.<br />
|
||
“Don’t hurt Iri, please! It was <em>my</em> fault!” Kurono cried
|
||
through the thick of the door.<br />
|
||
There was some silence, then Enji spoke. “This is not the first time
|
||
Iri goes to rehabilitation Young Light, don’t worry. A servant will be
|
||
returned to you shortly.”<br />
|
||
Kurono listened to Enji’s footsteps. They grew fainter and fainter,
|
||
until all sound and echo quieted.<br />
|
||
<em>A</em> servant.<br />
|
||
The way Enji phrased it stuck in Kurono’s mind…</p>
|
||
<p>The next day Iri was not there to brush Kurono’s hair. One of
|
||
Demeri’s servants came to do it instead and answered no questions.
|
||
Fortunately at breakfast, Iri stood at the door, unharmed, like all
|
||
those other times after returning from rehabilitation.<br />
|
||
Demeri was sitting in front of a small table, covered with a dark
|
||
cloth. On the table lay a simple breakfast of mugiko porridge and fresh
|
||
nukaberries. The meal was served in dark earthenware that sparkled under
|
||
the light of the chloromyce shroos. A servant was pounding an ear of
|
||
dried chloromyce shroo into a powder using a large pestle and mortar.
|
||
Once the shroos were pulverized the servant took the pestle away from
|
||
the bowl, bowed and backed out of the room. As soon as a servant left,
|
||
another walked in to transfer the powder into a shallow bowl using a
|
||
thin banabo scoop. The servant then set the serving bowl on the table
|
||
along with the breakfast. A long line of servants stood outside, each
|
||
holding a different tool, waiting for their turn. Each Iri was good at
|
||
doing one thing, and they practiced this one skill everyday. Each action
|
||
took the same time, and used the same number of moves, choreographed to
|
||
perfection.<br />
|
||
“10,” the Sovereign began, “is a marker given to some of our
|
||
workers. That is all.” “You didn’t like that I asked.” Kurono
|
||
said.<br />
|
||
Monarch Demeri dipped 2 spoonfuls of powdered chloromyce shroo
|
||
powder into a cup of warm water, then proceeded to gently stir it into
|
||
the drink, drawing a swirl of light. “I did not like your tone
|
||
Kurono.”<br />
|
||
“And the tongues?” Kurono insisted.<br />
|
||
“What about them?” Demeri asked, taking a sip of chloromyce-infused
|
||
tea.<br />
|
||
“Iri has no tongue. I thought Bao The Bright had made that practice
|
||
illegal.”<br />
|
||
“If I hear that name one more time I shall erase it from the history
|
||
books.”<br />
|
||
Kurono took a sip of tea as well, thinking hard, trying to find ways
|
||
to get some answers without angering Demeri.</p>
|
||
<p>Number 10 went back to having a lackluster persona, muted, without
|
||
worry or fear. This worried Kurono. The Young Light was suspicious, and
|
||
so that morning when the servant was asleep Kurono went to look for the
|
||
number on the Iri’s neck. The number on the skin had changed to 11. This
|
||
was not the same Iri.<br />
|
||
Kurono knew the ugly truth. Every complaint about an Iri resulted in
|
||
an exchange. Iri would go to rehabilitation and be replaced by another
|
||
with a new number carved onto its neck. Kurono did not want to think
|
||
about what happened to an Iri in rehabilitation, were they sent back in
|
||
the mines? Were they tortured? Killed? “What have I done…” The Young
|
||
Light whispered. Kurono remembered sending an Iri to rehabilitation for
|
||
breathing too loud, for walking too funny, for blinking too often, and
|
||
sometimes Kurono asked Iri to be sent away out of boredom. Kurono felt
|
||
like a fiend. “10 lives…” After that, no complaint was made of 11, in
|
||
fear that this Iri too would be harmed. Going to Demeri for answers was
|
||
impossible. Kurono felt more lonely than ever, with no one to confide
|
||
in, with no way to know what had really happened to Iri number 10.</p>
|
||
<h1 id="tent-village-of-renate">Tent Village Of Renate</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/fauna.papilion.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>Papilions travel with the wind and in the hairs of passing
|
||
habitants of the Soronan desert. It is said that when they find suitable
|
||
soil, they burrow and later grows into Hespers. ‘Having papilions in
|
||
your throat’, means being kept from speaking due to anxiety.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> “So! If the tunnels <em>are</em> guarded, how are <em>we</em>
|
||
going to get in?” Lupen asked, standing in Hush’s shadow. The suns were
|
||
very hot today, but the large furry beast did not seem to mind.<br />
|
||
“In? No no no,” Eka said, head shaking in a Nono sort-of-way.<br />
|
||
Lupen’s eyes narrowed down. “So… no to noodles then?”<br />
|
||
“Yes to noodles! That hasn’t changed.” Eka replied, mouth watering.
|
||
“The monks live in a tower overlooking Irideri, set on the highest peak
|
||
of the Andenuis. It lies <em>just</em> outside of Irideri, that’s what
|
||
Aristollo says in the book I borrowed anyway…”<br />
|
||
Lupen’s eyes widened at that name. “What did you just say?”<br />
|
||
Eka grabbed the book and opened it to the first page, the title
|
||
<em>Habitants of The Dark</em> was written in black ink, and underneath
|
||
it, was the name Aristollo.<br />
|
||
“No way!” Lupen grabbed the volume, as if happening upon a rare
|
||
flower. “A writer,” Lupen began flipping through the pages, wondering if
|
||
there was any information about the author. There wasn’t. “Why didn’t
|
||
you tell me Aristollo was a writer?”<br />
|
||
“You didn’t ask.”<br />
|
||
“So Aristollo was in Irideri back then, when it was closed off to
|
||
everyone! How did the book make it out? What <em>else</em> do you know?”
|
||
Lupen’s curiosity grew with every mention of the name.<br />
|
||
“It’s not my story to tell.” Eka said, grabbing the volume again to
|
||
put it away in the bag hanging from Hush’s side.<br />
|
||
“You think the monks would know?”<br />
|
||
Eka shrugged. “Only way to know is if we go!”<br />
|
||
“So if all goes well we’ll get to eat chloromyce noodles up in monk
|
||
tower, to catch a far-away glimpse of a city we’re not physically
|
||
allowed to visit, but all of this depends on whether or not we find the
|
||
tower, and whether or not the monks allow us to eat their noodles. Oh,
|
||
and guards might catch us. Did I miss anything?” Lupen asked.<br />
|
||
“With iridescent feet! It’s worth a try! I mean, the city’s been
|
||
closed to foreigners for something like…fa, no…” Eka paused, counting up
|
||
the number of annums inaudibly, “two haty’annums[^]!”<br />
|
||
“Not <em>that</em> many, couldn’t have been <em>that</em> long.”
|
||
Lupen said.<br />
|
||
“Were you there Lu?” Eka asked, nose pressing up onto Lupen’s.<br />
|
||
“N-no.” Even after all the time they’d spent together, being so
|
||
close always made this Verido uncomfortable. “Wait, maybe I was! No one
|
||
is ever nothing, that’s what you said! I was a seed, probably? Well, no
|
||
maybe not even that… but I <em>was</em> something!”<br />
|
||
Eka’s hands came to rest over the sides of Lupen’s face. The
|
||
Wonder’s delicate fingers traced along the blue patterns etched in the
|
||
Verido’s skin. “That’s right. You are a lovely strand Lu, everchanging,
|
||
but never gone.”<br />
|
||
Lupen’s ears began to redden, and the rest of the face followed
|
||
suit. “Haty’annum and a quarter! I read it in a book once.”<br />
|
||
Eka’s eyes moved past Lupen’s left shoulder, focused on some distant
|
||
object. “Whoa! Look at that! Someone’s there!”<br />
|
||
Lupen groaned. “I really, really <em>hate</em> this game.” Red’s
|
||
eyes could see mirages for what they were, but the same couldn’t be said
|
||
for Verido eyes. This gave the Wonder an opportunity to get a few laughs
|
||
at Lupen’s expense. The last time they had encountered such an event,
|
||
Lupen had asked a mound of sand for directions, the time before that,
|
||
the Verido had a very long and embarrassing one-sided conversation with
|
||
a tree about the nutritional benefits of bibiskiss. The worse thing was
|
||
the tree, <em>my</em> hallucination, didn’t even agree with me, Lupen
|
||
thought.<br />
|
||
“It’s true! The truest of truths! Has a funny-looking head
|
||
too!”<br />
|
||
“You really think me a fool don’t you?” Lupen wasn’t ready to be
|
||
made fun of again, not so soon. Hush lifted a nose to the sky, trying to
|
||
catch a scent. For a second, the Verido wondered if Hush, too, was in on
|
||
this joke. Risking humiliation once again, Lupen turned around to try
|
||
and see what Eka was pointing to. “Oh, so there is! Never seen anyone
|
||
with a head like <em>that</em>.”<br />
|
||
“A hat then? Hats do have a tendency to get more and more outrageous
|
||
with time. A hatter I met in Montore some annums ago made one so large
|
||
it doubled as a dwelling.” Eka said, arms extending outward, to show the
|
||
size of said hat.<br />
|
||
Hush carried them over to a lone figure sitting on hot sands, it had
|
||
a large metal prism for a head, it had many faces, each one bore a
|
||
symbol. There was no order to it, no logic, the faces were sized
|
||
differently and there was no repetition in the symbols themselves. When
|
||
they called out to the prism-headed stranger, the figure recoiled,
|
||
curling into an even smaller shape.<br />
|
||
“That’s not a head.” Eka said. A symbol lay burned onto this being’s
|
||
back, a circle with a diamond shape in its centre. “That’s the Irideri
|
||
emblem.” There was also a character carved in the flesh of the
|
||
stranger’s neck…<br />
|
||
“Ten.” Lupen and Eka said aloud together.<br />
|
||
“That’s not an Iridi is it? Would they do this to their own?”<br />
|
||
“Eka sighed.”No, you’re right they wouldn’t. This is an
|
||
Aodal.”<br />
|
||
“Aodals are much taller than this usually aren’t they?” Lupen asked,
|
||
saddened by the thought of someone suffering like this.<br />
|
||
“Stunted growth,” Eka said, “from malnutrition, and from living in
|
||
the dark. Workers in the Irideri mines aren’t allowed chloromyce, and
|
||
because they don’t get any, they get sick.”<br />
|
||
Hush had a nose to the ground, catching a nearby scent, the hyroo
|
||
followed it and stopped at a mound, pushing sand off the top with its
|
||
snout, off of something that was buried there. First, a shrivelled hand
|
||
came into view, then a torso. Hush continued to brush sand off,
|
||
revealing the rest of it. It was small, grey, wrinkly, with skin like
|
||
leather, and like Ten, this body also had a character carved into its
|
||
neck.<br />
|
||
“F.”<br />
|
||
Lupen and Eka began to dig through the soil, both had the same idea.
|
||
F couldn’t be left here for someone else to find. They put the body in
|
||
the hole and Lupen placed a piece of cloth over F’s face, then they
|
||
covered the body with a thick duvet of golden sand. The two stood at the
|
||
place where the hole had been, hand in hand.<br />
|
||
“What do Verido say on Leaping Days in Volare?” Eka asked.<br />
|
||
“We say nothing. We instead focus on recalling good memories with as
|
||
much detail as we can. Then, we take those good thoughts into ourselves,
|
||
thusly preserving our loved ones in our hearts.” Lupen’s hand closed
|
||
into a tight fist, coming to rest over the heart. Eka did the same.
|
||
Lupen’s attention turned to the prism-headed creature sitting on the
|
||
ground. “They send their workers out into the desert with metal heads.
|
||
Why?”<br />
|
||
“Punishment? Sending them out here with those things on is a death
|
||
sentence. They can’t eat or drink, plus there’s the heat of the suns.
|
||
They don’t last long out here.” Eka whistled for Hush to move near Ten,
|
||
to shield the prisoner from the suns. Ten reacted to the change in
|
||
temperature, hands coming to rest over the burnt flesh. “Lu, put a hand
|
||
to Ten’s chest, and then take Ten’s hand onto yours. I’ll do the same.
|
||
After that we won’t be strangers anymore.” Eka said with a soft
|
||
smile.<br />
|
||
Lupen did as told. After Eka had done the same, both noticed that
|
||
Ten appeared more relaxed.<br />
|
||
“I bet they put those heads on as a warning to others too, of what
|
||
can happen if you mess with Iridi people.” Lupen sighed. “How are you so
|
||
great in situations like this?” Lupen asked Eka, “you’re calm and always
|
||
seem to know just what to do…”<br />
|
||
“When it comes to helping others it comes easy, had you been alone
|
||
you’d done the same.” Eka’s fingers traced over the prism on Ten’s head.
|
||
The shapes and pieces on its surface were not random, every one could be
|
||
pushed and moved to a new place. It was an elaborate puzzle. Eka soon
|
||
stopped touching it, realizing that every bad move resulted in the prism
|
||
shrinking. There was no way to pry it off this poor child’s head. “We
|
||
can’t leave Ten here and we know we can’t go to Irideri. There’s a
|
||
village just a day’s walk away, we’ll go there.”<br />
|
||
The woth slipped out of its glass ball and fluttered ahead to show
|
||
them the way.<br />
|
||
“How does it know where to go?” Lupen wondered.<br />
|
||
“Good internal compass,” Eka replied, chasing down the woth as it
|
||
disappeared in the distance. “Slow down Plit!” Eka called out to the
|
||
woth.<br />
|
||
“Do you really think that any woth in its right mind would answer to
|
||
the name Plit? Oh no… what if this woth actually <em>is</em> crazy? What
|
||
if its name is a sentence, and that the sentence isn’t actually a
|
||
sentence at all but a succession of random words? Or that the words are
|
||
not words but just strings of random letters? What then!? This woth is
|
||
crazy Eka!” Lupen said. The Verido was relieved to see that it did not,
|
||
in fact, answer to Plit, although there was no real way to know if the
|
||
woth was of sound mind or not.<br />
|
||
Hush bounded forward, carrying Ten on its back. Soon, Lupen joined
|
||
in, climbing behind Ten to make sure that their guest wouldn’t slip
|
||
off.</p>
|
||
<p>It took them half a day’s time to get to the village, with Eka and
|
||
Lupen taking turns on Hush. They arrived at the famed tent village of
|
||
Renate.<br />
|
||
Historically, Renate was an open bazaar, a place of exchange with no
|
||
permanent residents. Nowadays, many artisans made Renate their home, but
|
||
still kept to the tradition of temporary housing. Most tents were kept
|
||
up by flexible banabo poles and had walls of fabric, offering less
|
||
resistance to wind while providing a cool shelter. Each tent was unique,
|
||
with walls of varying colours and patterns, some were weaved from banabo
|
||
fibre, others from lesser-known materials like hampa, or notcott. There
|
||
was no visible organization for the placement of the tents, in fact this
|
||
village had few rules, and no official leader. The people here liked it
|
||
that way, Eka said.<br />
|
||
When they arrived, they approached a group of children playing in an
|
||
open area between tents, they’d heard of these prism-headed prisoners,
|
||
but didn’t have time to answer questions because all of their attention
|
||
quickly turned to Hush. The children combed the hyroo’s fur with their
|
||
fingers, along with repeated ‘oohs’ and ‘aahs’. This caught the
|
||
attention of an older villager, who’d been busy sifting sand and rock
|
||
from a batch of freshly dug lanivanil bleens. The villager left the
|
||
basket and bleens on the ground and hurried over, urging the kids to
|
||
move away.<br />
|
||
“Hush is not dangerous.” Lupen said.<br />
|
||
After successfully shooing the kids away, the villager shook their
|
||
head, “nan nan. Nan ti…” and then pointed a finger toward Ten
|
||
“<em>ti</em> estre! Volubi, seklo vi. Rappida!”<br />
|
||
“Follow me, quickly,” Eka translated the end of the conversation.
|
||
They could sense the fear in the villager’s eyes. They were led to a
|
||
large tent on the outskirts of town. They could hear the sound of
|
||
someone beating into a piece of metal inside.<br />
|
||
“Atedu nio citi.” The villager said, slipping into the tent.<br />
|
||
“Are we in trouble?” Lupen asked Eka, “also, what language is
|
||
that?”<br />
|
||
“Aodan, and no no, we’re fine.” Eka replied.<br />
|
||
The clanging stopped. A tall and brawny character stepped out,
|
||
eyeing the one with the prism for a head. “I’ll take care of it
|
||
Lussa.”<br />
|
||
“Danki, danki Maka,” Lussa said, bowing to the two strangers before
|
||
scurrying away, disappearing behind a row of tents.<br />
|
||
The group was hushed inside, as if they had a secret that needed to
|
||
stay hidden. They learned that the tent owner’s name was Maka, a
|
||
metalworker, thick with muscle. The metalworker’s body appeared to be
|
||
made of rock. Maka had short white hair, crowning the head and face.
|
||
Maka showed great interest in Ten. “No one’s ever found one alive. I’ve
|
||
tinkered with one other of those head prisons, found it on the desert
|
||
floor. Couldn’t keep it for long though, it had to be returned because
|
||
those Irideri guards come and look for them.”<br />
|
||
“Really? Why would they do that?” Lupen asked.<br />
|
||
“Maybe they can’t make more…” Eka mused.<br />
|
||
“That’s a good guess,” Maka said, “but we don’t really know, truth
|
||
is we prefer to leave the metal heads where they are, because having
|
||
them around scares people. No one here wants to give the Iridi a reason
|
||
to threaten us again. It’s why Lussa brought you here, we don’t want
|
||
anyone to see. The young ones aren’t afraid because they haven’t lived
|
||
through the Raids, but the older generation fear anything that has to do
|
||
with the Iridi. They won’t want the prisoner to stay here for that
|
||
reason.” Maka walked over to Ten, inspecting the poor child’s wounds.
|
||
“Poor kid looks very weak, I have something for that,” Maka helped the
|
||
young prisoner to the far side of the tent. “So,” Maka began, “why help
|
||
a stranger?” The metalworker helped the child onto a bed and began
|
||
applying medicine to the wounds.<br />
|
||
“I suffer from acute empathy.” Eka said.<br />
|
||
Alarms went off in Lupen’s head then, the brain opening up thought
|
||
drawers in succession, searching for an answer that too, would impress,
|
||
but the drawers produced no such miracle. “Can you <em>believe</em> it?
|
||
I wanted to say that <em>exact</em> same thing! Embarrassing when that
|
||
happens! When you have the exact same thought as someone else, but they
|
||
say it first and you wanna be an individual so you <em>try</em> to come
|
||
up with something new, that is, you know, unique, but you can’t because
|
||
that first thought was just so, so good…”<br />
|
||
Maka stared for a while, then started to laugh with gusto. “You’ve
|
||
got beautiful minds. I like you both already.” The brawny Aodal walked
|
||
back over to their side of the room, with a box in hand, taking a seat
|
||
on a metal stool that Lupen could tell, had been handcrafted. “I can’t
|
||
open the prism, but I know someone who can help you.”<br />
|
||
Lupen’s face brightened at these words. “Really?”<br />
|
||
“Possibly. It’s a topic I’ve long avoided with my apprentice, but
|
||
everyone has to face up to their past sometime, don’t you agree? I’ll
|
||
take you over there after lunch, you two must be starving!” The
|
||
metalworker reached into a box, a sort of cooling box, similar to the
|
||
cold pot in Lupen’s house in Volare, and pulled out some teaweet bread,
|
||
jam and dried sausages. Maka began to cut slices of teaweet bread,
|
||
laying the pieces out onto a wooden board along with some the sausages.
|
||
“My apprentice came to Renate many annums ago, broken and near-dead.
|
||
Villagers here were ready to cast the poor thing back out into the
|
||
desert, who can blame them… Iridi have a bad reputation in these parts,
|
||
I’m sure I don’t have to tell you why…”<br />
|
||
“Your apprentice is an Iridi?” Eka said, surprised.<br />
|
||
“That’s right.” Maka uncovered a crock of spiced mapple jam, scooped
|
||
out a portion for the group and ladded it into a small wooden bowl
|
||
before setting it down with the rest of the food. “Eat, eat! All local
|
||
products. Made those plant sausages myself, a mix of spices, teaweet
|
||
flour, bobonions, nutshroos and plurple bleens.”</p>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p> <strong>Sausages</strong></p>
|
||
<p> <em>Ingredients</em></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> One medium size bobonion<br />
|
||
Three bushels of nutshroos<br />
|
||
Two minced gewrik cloves<br />
|
||
One full stalk of stemmed aroot bleens<br />
|
||
Five dips of fermented choko paste<br />
|
||
One avoka nut<br />
|
||
Tree sprigs of smoked papakitas<br />
|
||
Two crushed lemilims<br />
|
||
Three crumbed slices of teaweet<br />
|
||
Six stalks of plurple bleens, stemmed and floured</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> <em>Instructions</em></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> Mince the bobonion and the nutshroos. Sauté together with the oil
|
||
from a cracked avoka until they have softened, and that all of the water
|
||
from the nutshroos has evaporated.<br />
|
||
Add all of the other ingredients to a stone bowl and mix together
|
||
into a smooth batter. Using a heavy pestle will make the job easier. Add
|
||
a bit more plurple flour if it’s too moist.<br />
|
||
Take some of the batter and roll it into sausages, pan-fry with some
|
||
avoka oil and serve with your choice of topping!</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p> Lupen and Eka thanked their host, grabbed a slice of teaweet
|
||
bread, and added a dab of mapple jam with a slice of sausage on top. Eka
|
||
took a bite, but hesitated to take another. “Ten must be
|
||
starving…”<br />
|
||
Ten was still resting in the corner, Maka didn’t look concerned.
|
||
“Don’t worry, Ten ate. It was the first thing I did. It’s my number one
|
||
rule: empty bellies must be filled at once!”<br />
|
||
Lupen didn’t understand. “How?”<br />
|
||
“Food patches.” Maka explained, pulling one out of the pocket of a
|
||
work apron.<br />
|
||
Lupen couldn’t believe it. “Oh, not <em>those</em> again…”<br />
|
||
Maka laughed. “Yes I hear you, not everyone likes these, but when
|
||
the Iridi were attacking the cities, everyone was on the run and these
|
||
saved many lives. Good nutritious food was hard to come by, health
|
||
problems arose and these came in useful. A sandfin comes by every now
|
||
and then, always brings a crate-full of the stuff. Not one of those
|
||
Beobug scammers, a solo traveler, on a sandfin with a yellow hull.
|
||
Renate suffered much loss during the Iridi raids a stranger brought us
|
||
our first crate. Kindness was in short supply in those days, you can
|
||
imagine the look on the people’s faces when a tall stranger arrived here
|
||
with it”.<br />
|
||
“<em>Tall</em> you say?” Lupen glanced over at Eka, half-expecting a
|
||
reaction, but the Wonder had other preoccupations.<br />
|
||
“Think I can give a few slices of teaweet to Hush?”<br />
|
||
Maka smirked. “Kids outside are giving your friend plenty of good
|
||
grub, saw them trailing behind Lussa with basket-fulls of
|
||
nutshroos.”<br />
|
||
“Oh, I hope they’ll figure out that Hush will eat as long as there’s
|
||
food. That hyroo’s appetite is insatiable, it’s been compared to the
|
||
Rupture, in the way that it has no bottom.”<br />
|
||
“I’ll let the kids know.” Maka said with a warm smile.</p>
|
||
<p>After the meal, Eka, Lupen, Maka and Ten marched over to the
|
||
apprentice’s home, erected far from all others. The tent had no visible
|
||
openings, all the panels were bound with clumsy, heavy stitching. Some
|
||
panels looked better than others, it seemed that its maker had improved
|
||
over time. It was tradition in Renate that all who came to live here,
|
||
make their own tent from thread and needle, with local materials. Maka’s
|
||
apprentice had a different life before, not one where you were taught
|
||
the art of thread-work. “You have to promise not to tell anyone that Iri
|
||
is in Renate.” Maka whispered.<br />
|
||
“Iri?” Lupen said, “that’s a derogatory name isn’t it?”<br />
|
||
“I know it is, but my apprentice insists on it,” Maka explained. “So
|
||
you won’t tell right?”<br />
|
||
“Promise!” Eka said.<br />
|
||
Lupen also chimed in. “Will tell no one.”<br />
|
||
“Good, good. You see, Iri did not leave Irideri by choice. My
|
||
apprentice served in the Court of Light, but deserted after an
|
||
unfortunate series of events. Iri will not like that I’ve told you this,
|
||
but I have a feeling that I can trust you.” Maka found an opening in the
|
||
tent and put a head inside. “Iri, some people here to see you.”<br />
|
||
“For work?” Iri asked from inside.<br />
|
||
“Yes, you can call it work.” Maka said, turning to the three
|
||
visitors, whispering. “Whatever you do, you’ve got to make Iri help you.
|
||
Do not leave this tent without the promise of help.”<br />
|
||
Eka and Lupen nodded, hands searching for a gap in the fabric of the
|
||
tent, after finding it they slipped inside. The outer fabric of the tent
|
||
was thick, it kept most of the light out.<br />
|
||
Iri rose when they entered. The apprentice had a thin face and an
|
||
equally thin build, a loose hampa knit shirt hung off of one shoulder.
|
||
The Iridi’s hair was short, dark and wavy. Iri’s eyes were black, well
|
||
adapted to a life out of the sun. “Who are you?” Iri asked, scanning
|
||
them from head to toe.<br />
|
||
“That’s Eka, I’m Lupen and this one is… well, we call this one Ten.”
|
||
Lupen dragged the youngling from behind them, putting the prism into
|
||
full view of their host.<br />
|
||
Iri’s eyes widened as shameful memories of Irideri came streaming
|
||
back. The face of their host seemed to have gone an even paler shade of
|
||
grey. “Better to spend your energy on the living,” the apprentice said,
|
||
inaudibly cursing at Maka for sending those strangers over here.
|
||
Thoughts of Irideri were irritating, Iri made a point of never thinking
|
||
about that place.<br />
|
||
“You must not have helped many to say this.” Lupen said. Eka elbowed
|
||
the Verido, insulting their host would not help their case.<br />
|
||
“I don’t deny it. I don’t help the dead. It’s pointless.” Iri said,
|
||
uncaring.<br />
|
||
“From what Maka told us, you were near dead too when you first
|
||
walked into Renate. People helped you,” Lupen retorted.<br />
|
||
The changes in Iri’s face were small, eyebrows furrowed slightly,
|
||
the apprentice was angry but appeared annoyed most of all. These subtle
|
||
face twitches did not rightly convey the Iridi’s true feelings. “I still
|
||
had a leg to stand on. This prisoner will never be rid of that head.
|
||
Within seven days, Ten will be dead and you will have needlessly
|
||
burdened yourselves with guilt over it.”<br />
|
||
“Is that the truth?” Lupen asked, “Maka said you would know what to
|
||
do.”<br />
|
||
“Maka was wrong.”<br />
|
||
Eka insisted. “Please help. You <em>must</em> know
|
||
<em>something</em>.”<br />
|
||
The apprentice appeared to be troubled, remembering what had
|
||
happened all of those annums ago, when arriving here in the village…</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> “You have to let me in. I can’t go back out into the wilds, I’ll
|
||
die!” A young Renzo, dressed in tattered traditional Iridi robes was
|
||
standing at the Renate city border, hair disheveled, the veil of
|
||
perfection gone. Renzo’s legs were travel-worn and threatened to buckle,
|
||
but the pride of an Iridi was such that one would never kneel or show
|
||
signs of weakness, even when in pain.<br />
|
||
Renzo had first sought refuge at the city of Edonor, but met a lot
|
||
of hostility there. Many disapproved of the presence of an Iridi,
|
||
whispering insults under their breath. “How dare you come into our city
|
||
with <em>that</em> face!” They would say. “Do you wish for death?”<br />
|
||
To the older residents of Edonor, this stranger was a harbinger of
|
||
war, many still carried scars of that time. Seeing an Irideri soldier
|
||
stroll through town was cause for concern, were there others coming? Was
|
||
this the beginning of another time of fear under Iridi rule? Not all
|
||
were reserved in their hatred, some would come near, ready to fight.
|
||
Renzo, young and fearless, did not take kindly to insults, which only
|
||
served to aggravate things.<br />
|
||
The city of Irideri had been closed off to the outside for many
|
||
annums, but that did nothing to soothe the pains inflicted on the land
|
||
during the Raids. No Iridi of this generation knew how the rest of the
|
||
world perceived them, their history books gave no account of all the
|
||
death and pain. Renzo was the first Iridi to step foot in Edonor since
|
||
the raids had ended. That day, Renzo discovered what awaited residents
|
||
of Irideri dumb enough to leave the security of the Andenuis. Some
|
||
residents of Edonor had pain in their hearts, and revenge on their
|
||
minds. There was another city, a village, a day’s walk away called
|
||
Renate, but like Edonor the people there too had knives for eyes.<br />
|
||
“If the desert wants you dead, there’s no escaping it.” One of the
|
||
Renate villagers said, throwing a stone. “Your people chased our
|
||
ancestors from their lands! Iridi foot soldiers forced entire villages
|
||
to flee. If they didn’t leave, a life of darkness and death awaited them
|
||
in your mines! Entire families lost! Because of <em>you</em>!” A shower
|
||
of words and stones.<br />
|
||
Renzo, burdened with all of the wrongdoings of the Iridi, tore off
|
||
the set of traditional Iridi robes, throwing the mass of dark fabric at
|
||
the villager’s feet. “I’ve deserted! I’ve got nothing to do with all
|
||
that!”<br />
|
||
The traditional robes added a lot of volume to an Iridi, it made
|
||
them look imposing and strong, without the added plumage Renzo looked
|
||
painfully frail. Renzo hoped this gesture would be enough to convince
|
||
them of the legitimacy of this desertion, but the people did not show an
|
||
inch of compassion. One of the villagers took some steps forward to spit
|
||
on the discarded set of Iridi robes. “A killer without a cloak is still
|
||
a killer,” and then proceeded to kick mounds of sand onto it.<br />
|
||
Renzo was afraid. No one would ever accept an Iridi into their
|
||
village. There was nowhere to go and returning to the desert meant
|
||
certain death. “Please.” Renzo fell on bended knees, that veneer of
|
||
composure, gone. “I am nothing. I’ll do whatever you say. I’m yours to
|
||
command.” Renzo leant forward then too, face in the dirt. “I am Iri,
|
||
lower than low, akin to dirt. I relinquish my name and rights, I am not
|
||
worthy of a name.”<br />
|
||
Maka, a well respected citizen of Renate spoke up. “Very well then,
|
||
you will live.” The other villagers whispered amongst themselves.
|
||
“But that’s an Iridi!” one said, clutching a stone.<br />
|
||
“Not anymore.” Maka replied, walking up to the despondent Iridi.
|
||
“Come.” Maka instructed.<br />
|
||
Renzo insisted on being named Iri. Maka refused, but when the young
|
||
Iridi stopped eating in protest the metalworker saw no other option. Iri
|
||
wanted this, as penance for the wrongdoings of the people of Irideri.
|
||
Maka trained the young Iridi to work metal, while giving regular
|
||
teachings of the world Irideri had kept hidden all these annums.
|
||
Deprived of chloromyce shroos, the youngling’s grey skin lightened and
|
||
became less sensitive, allowing for more time in the suns.</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> Now with more annums on, Iri could see that this was a way to
|
||
repay Maka’s kindness. Iri’s lips were quivering, these foreigners were
|
||
not going to leave, they were determined to save Ten.<br />
|
||
“Only one person can open it,” Iri breathed, voice heavy. “Hori, a
|
||
puzzle maker perfected the design.” Seeing their faces light up, Iri
|
||
finished the thought, “but Hori died.”<br />
|
||
“There must be plans for it somewhere in the city?” Eka asked,
|
||
tentatively.<br />
|
||
Iri’s mind was racing. “Plans, yes, it’s possible, but entering the
|
||
city is difficult, impossible even.”<br />
|
||
“If the city is so impenetrable, how did you manage to leave it?”
|
||
Lupen asked.<br />
|
||
Iri was eyeing the Verido with growing animosity, unaccustomed to
|
||
questions.<br />
|
||
“Please.” Eka’s silvery voice broke the silence. “We’ll tell no
|
||
one.”<br />
|
||
Iri’s lips curled inwards, remembering that promise to Maka. “There
|
||
is a hidden entrance, but you can’t think of going, they’ll catch you
|
||
and you’ll have prisms fitted to your heads.”<br />
|
||
“We’ll be alright, Eka’s the muscle and I’m fast on my feet,” Lupen
|
||
said.<br />
|
||
“You cannot hope to survive this…” Iri said.<br />
|
||
“What kind of creatures would we be if we allowed Sixteen to die?”
|
||
Lupen said.<br />
|
||
The cogs in this Iridi’s heart were thick with rust and getting them
|
||
to turn required some effort. “Ridiculous.” Iri said, with much disdain.
|
||
“I’ll take you, but that is all.”<br />
|
||
“I’m happy you’re coming with us,” Eka said. “Will the entrance be
|
||
guarded, you think?”<br />
|
||
Iri’s throat felt dry and coarse, irritated by the constant stream
|
||
of words. Most times the apprentice was alone, working in the dark, with
|
||
only tools and metal as companions, they were not great
|
||
conversationalists and Iri liked it that way. “Hardly anyone knows about
|
||
it, save a handful of guards. I imagine most have forgotten it exists,
|
||
there was no real reason for its construction you see, it is unlikely
|
||
that my people would have ever undergone a siege.” Iri paused then, eyes
|
||
staring at the floor, as if in shame, “only we excel at the art of
|
||
savagery.”</p>
|
||
<p>They spent the next few days putting convincing Iridi wardrobes
|
||
together. If they hoped to go in the city unnoticed, they would have to
|
||
look like locals. Maka still had the apprentice’s former robes, Iri had
|
||
wanted to bury them but the metalworker knew that this young Iridi would
|
||
need them again someday. With the help of a tailor two tents over, they
|
||
made two additional robes for Eka and Lupen to wear, using the first as
|
||
a model. The townspeople had heard of Iri’s return to Irideri to help a
|
||
prisoner and the two strangers, they thought it noble and did their best
|
||
to help in any way they could.<br />
|
||
“Silence is highly prized in Irideri. Wearing a scarf is symbolic of
|
||
that, and in this particular instance, it will also help to conceal your
|
||
foreign features. Iridi now mostly speak the Common Tongue, so you’ll be
|
||
fine, but don’t ask too many questions, speak clearly and concisely.”
|
||
These last words were for Lupen.<br />
|
||
Lupen stood in full Iridi wear, the blue of the Verido’s face was
|
||
somewhat visible, but Iri pulled the hood down further to conceal it.
|
||
“Keep it low, always.”<br />
|
||
“I can’t see anything!” Lupen cried, arms flailing.<br />
|
||
Eka laughed, the colour of Red’s eyes were also difficult to hide,
|
||
not much could be done to mute their intensity.<br />
|
||
“You will keep your heads down and address no one unless necessary.
|
||
If you must talk to someone, again, keep your gaze to the floor. People
|
||
will not think it strange, it is a sign of respect. They will accept
|
||
this.” Iri explained.<br />
|
||
Then, came Iri’s turn to change into traditional Iridi wear. Wearing
|
||
these was difficult now that Iri knew the Iridi’s violent history. The
|
||
robes hung heavy on these shoulders, thick with guilt, all of the lives
|
||
lost adding to the weight, their blood and anguish woven into the
|
||
fabric.<br />
|
||
Iri couldn’t stand it.</p>
|
||
<h1 id="kingdom-of-irideri">Kingdom Of Irideri</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/flora.conk.shroo.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>Conks are hard, woody, cave-dwelling shroos. They are found in
|
||
mountainous areas, and used to make a variety of objects. Conks can also
|
||
be eaten, but the texture makes it difficult to chew.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>“Things will be different. It’s been more than 10 annums,” Maka said,
|
||
with a hand on Iri’s shoulder. Iri was now a few heads taller than the
|
||
first time they’d met.<br />
|
||
Iri’s face betrayed little emotion, as if carved from stone. “Thank
|
||
you for your help.” Now in Iridi wear, with trimmed hair and skin
|
||
without grease, the apprentice was unrecognizable. The effect was so
|
||
strong that Maka had asked the villagers not to come today. Many people
|
||
in Renate still suffered from mental and emotional stress, courtesy of
|
||
the Raids, and seeing Iri like this would likely worsen their
|
||
condition.<br />
|
||
“You left your name at the gates of the city, it’s only right that
|
||
you should take it back now.” Maka said.<br />
|
||
Iri’s gaze wandered to the ground, and began mouthing the words:
|
||
“Iri, not worthy of kindness, not worthy of a name either, not ever,”
|
||
then spoke aloud, “I won’t.”<br />
|
||
“Do I need to hammer it out of that stubborn head of yours?” Maka
|
||
asked then, eyebrows raised.<br />
|
||
Iri shifted uncomfortably in the set of Iridi robes, “but the
|
||
others…”<br />
|
||
“The others are fine with it.” Maka said, with a kind smile.
|
||
“Please. You are one of <em>us</em> now. The wars of the past were the
|
||
fault of many, you don’t have to suffer forever. Let go of your shame,
|
||
and be free.”<br />
|
||
The young apprentice returned the gesture, putting a hand to Maka’s
|
||
shoulder. Iri practiced saying the name in this head, but saying it
|
||
aloud was difficult, painful, as if the name itself were poison. “My
|
||
name is… Renzo.”<br />
|
||
“Renzo,” Maka said softly, smiling, “don’t forget this, you are one
|
||
of us now Renzo. Be safe.”<br />
|
||
The people of Renate were too kind, too forgiving, Renzo
|
||
thought.<br />
|
||
Maka watched as the group left, their figures dissolving in the
|
||
distance. The metal worker had planned to say many more things, but
|
||
decided to keep them for Renzo’s return.</p>
|
||
<p>During the voyage, thoughts of Irideri came and went in Renzo’s mind,
|
||
unhindered. These thoughts had long been buried, but now they were
|
||
buoying back to the surface. Back then, being a guard in the Court of
|
||
Light was all that mattered, but now Ren could no longer relate to that
|
||
guard.<br />
|
||
The group was walking towards the Andenuis, the longest mountain
|
||
range in the Soronan Desert, forming a continuous highland along the
|
||
kowamata edge of the Central Rim. Irideri was built on a plateau inside
|
||
the sawamu-most ridge. Each member of their little travel party took
|
||
turns on Hush to rest. Ten had priority, it was too dangerous to walk in
|
||
the desert without sight. The last thing they wanted was for their
|
||
prism-headed friend to fall into a crevice.<br />
|
||
“Why did you leave Irideri?” Lupen asked Renzo suddenly.<br />
|
||
“You don’t need to know this.”<br />
|
||
“Did you do something bad?”<br />
|
||
“Quiet yourself.”<br />
|
||
“You were a guard in the Court of Light right?” Lupen asked,
|
||
unabated.<br />
|
||
“It’s a wonder you can hear the sounds of the world with all of that
|
||
talking,” Renzo said, pulling a hood on as if to keep some
|
||
privacy.<br />
|
||
“Talking <em>is</em> a sound of the world! Like the sound of the
|
||
wind and the chime of a bell.”<br />
|
||
“Bells don’t ask questions,” Renzo retorted.<br />
|
||
“So you speak bell then?”<br />
|
||
Eka smirked at this, trying to imagine the grammar and rhythm of
|
||
bell language, but knew that if Lupen was allowed to continue this
|
||
interrogation that Renzo would never warm up to them. The woth agreed,
|
||
it flew out of its glass house and onto Lupen’s nose.<br />
|
||
“Pity it didn’t land on your mouth,” Renzo sneered.<br />
|
||
Lupen smiled at this. “As if <em>that</em> would stop me!”<br />
|
||
By then the woth had moved to Lupen’s cheek, wondering which part of
|
||
this Verido’s face to protect next, fearing a fist coming to it very
|
||
soon. Eka smacked the back of Lu’s head, thus concluding this mess of a
|
||
conversation.</p>
|
||
<p>A day later, the group arrived at their destination. The mountain
|
||
range was in sight. It took them another half-day to round it to get to
|
||
the sawaata-most end. The path was long, and dotted with rocks.
|
||
Eventually, they arrived at a chasm.<br />
|
||
“This is our path.” Renzo said, pointing downward.<br />
|
||
“I see nothing.” Lupen said, gazing down into the gap.<br />
|
||
“That’s because you’ve got the eyes of a day walker,” Renzo
|
||
explained, “even Iridi have difficulty seeing it. You’ve got to look at
|
||
it from a specific angle.”<br />
|
||
They decided to stop here to wait for daybreak to make their descent
|
||
into the city.</p>
|
||
<p>When a sliver of the first sun peered over the horizon, Renzo showed
|
||
them the secret stairway. It was imperceptible to the eye at a distance,
|
||
carved into the chasm wall.<br />
|
||
“These lead to a tunnel that exits inside of the city walls.” Renzo
|
||
looked over their disguises to make sure that nothing was missing, then
|
||
unrolled an old hand-drawn map of the city, laying it on the
|
||
ground.<br />
|
||
“You drew this? It’s beautiful.” Eka said, noting the details in the
|
||
drawings. Every street was named. Many of the houses too had the name of
|
||
the resident inscribed.<br />
|
||
Renzo placed a finger to a spot on the map, circled in red. “This is
|
||
where Hori used to live. Iridi are conservative in their ways. The house
|
||
will be there. Although it’s likely someone else will have moved
|
||
in.”<br />
|
||
“Think the puzzles will still be there?” Eka asked.<br />
|
||
“Hori’s work was famous. If they’re not there, asking at the house
|
||
is our best bet. As I’ve told you before, don’t ask too many questions,”
|
||
Renzo said, eyeing again Lupen while saying this. “And keep your hoods
|
||
on!” The Iridi grabbed the edge of Lupen’s hood and pulled down hard.
|
||
“Avoid all eye contact. Take this map with you, keep it hidden.”<br />
|
||
“It <em>was</em> on!” Lupen cried, adjusting the heavy hood, “I
|
||
don’t have eyes on my chin you know…” Eka grabbed the city map,
|
||
rolled it up tight and slipped it into a pocket sewn on the inside of
|
||
the robe. Ten had to stay out here in the desert with Hush. “Stay out of
|
||
view, move with the shadow of the mountain to keep cool. Keep our friend
|
||
safe mapa Hush.” Eka said, nuzzling the beast’s snout.<br />
|
||
Eka, Lupen and Renzo slipped their scarves on, and pulled their
|
||
hoods over their heads before venturing into the mouth of the chasm.
|
||
They started down the stairs, hugging the wall, the path they had to
|
||
follow was narrow and the chasm itself was wide and deep. Lupen was no
|
||
stranger to great heights, but found it difficult to manoeuvre in this
|
||
thick Iridi robe.<br />
|
||
“If I fall, you’re going to come and get me, right?” Lupen
|
||
whispered, swallowing hard.<br />
|
||
“Do like me,” Eka had parted the front of the robe to better aim a
|
||
foot on each step, “I know that falling is <em>your</em> thing Lu, but
|
||
try not to do that today please, thanks.” While saying this, Eka smiled,
|
||
waiting for a reaction.<br />
|
||
“How is it <em>my</em> thing?!” Lupen said, outraged. “Falling
|
||
<em>so</em> isn’t my thing…”<br />
|
||
“Quiet! Don’t fall Lupen. You fall, you die.” Renzo whispered.<br />
|
||
Soon, the stairs ended and they arrived at a tunnel, carved into a
|
||
wall. The group walked back to back, hands grabbing the robes of the
|
||
other person ahead. Renzo could see in the dark, but they could not.
|
||
They walked underground until the tunnel opened onto a space between the
|
||
palace walls and the mountain face. Renzo described the various areas,
|
||
warning them of changes or dangers.<br />
|
||
“It gets narrower here,” Renzo explained, “walk sideways, back to
|
||
the wall.”<br />
|
||
The group walked shoulder to shoulder, sections of the vertical
|
||
stone faces were built at a slant to further confuse the eye. “Watch
|
||
your heads.” Renzo whispered. This uneven walkway led them to the main
|
||
street. Looking back, it was hard to discern the path was there at all.
|
||
The texture and slant of the walls gave the illusion that this was a
|
||
closed space, making it the perfect escape route, visible only to those
|
||
who knew it was there.<br />
|
||
“Never seen anything like this.” Lupen said, noting the colour and
|
||
texture of the surrounding buildings, white, translucent almost, marked
|
||
with patterns of swirling bands of cream and brown. All structures were
|
||
connected, built wall-to-wall. They all used the same materials but the
|
||
facades bore elaborate carvings unique to each building.<br />
|
||
“These represent the family that owns the house,” Eka explained in a
|
||
whisper. “Every family lives under the same roof.” The faint glow of the
|
||
chloromyce shroos lit up the front of each house, hung from clear glass
|
||
balls.<br />
|
||
Near the highest peak of the Andenuis stood the palace, an imposing
|
||
octagonal structure rising along the mountain face. The main facade was
|
||
decorated with large bas-reliefs of a circle with a diamond shape in its
|
||
centre, and stylized depictions of the chloromyce shroo. These
|
||
decorations sat on the cornice above the scupltured panels on the first
|
||
floor.<br />
|
||
“Beautiful,” Eka said, admiring the details.<br />
|
||
Some guards were patrolling the streets but paid no attention to
|
||
them. Their disguises were good, Renzo had made sure of it.<br />
|
||
“You’ll be going down this street, it’ll be the ninth house on the
|
||
right.” Renzo whispered. “If you get lost…”<br />
|
||
“We’ve got the map, yes, but wait… you’re <em>not</em> coming with
|
||
us?” Lupen asked, worried.<br />
|
||
“No. I’ll meet you back at the tunnel in eighty pulses.” With little
|
||
explanation Renzo disappeared, pushing deeper into the city.<br />
|
||
“Pulses?” Lupen said, confused. “Yea, pulses,” Eka pointed over
|
||
to a shroo-covered crystal erected high in the centre of the city,
|
||
visible from everywhere. The crystal would pulse from dim, to bright
|
||
very quickly. “That’s how the Iridi count time.”<br />
|
||
“What are we gonna do? We’re <em>never</em> gonna pass for Iridi!”
|
||
Lupen said, panicked at the thought of being discovered. “They’ll put
|
||
prisms on our heads! This is revenge for earlier, for what I
|
||
said!”<br />
|
||
Eka grabbed Lupen’s shoulders. “Renzo couldn’t have come with us.
|
||
People don’t forget the face of defectors.”<br />
|
||
“This won’t work. Your eyes are ruby red and my face is blue
|
||
Eka!”<br />
|
||
“They won’t see our faces. Keep it under the shadow of your hood.
|
||
We’ll be fine. You believe me right?” Eka’s voice had a soothing quality
|
||
to it, it calmed most people, but Lupen remained unaffected, unsoothed.
|
||
They’d been together long and overtime it seemed to have lost its
|
||
sedative qualities.<br />
|
||
“<em>How</em> are you <em>not</em> scared?!” Lupen said.<br />
|
||
“Oh I <em>am</em> scared,” Eka admitted, “but also excited! Think of
|
||
the chloromyce noodles!”<br />
|
||
“Ugh. I feel sick.”<br />
|
||
Eka grabbed Lu’s arm then. Both walked down the street, counting
|
||
houses as they did. Soon, they found Hori’s street, and then the ninth
|
||
house on the right. It appeared that after the puzzle maker’s death, the
|
||
house had been converted into a museum. Eka noted the opening times
|
||
carved into the wall above the door.<br />
|
||
“What if we don’t find anything?” Lupen whispered, walking close to
|
||
Eka.<br />
|
||
“Then we’ll make a new plan.” Eka replied, pulling the Verido closer
|
||
to the house.</p>
|
||
<p>They walked up a set of white steps and up to the doorsill. A small
|
||
silver bell hung on the outer wall, Eka stretched a hand out and tapped
|
||
the bell to alert the people inside of their presence. No answer. They
|
||
were going to tap the bell again, but saw a silhouette behind the veiled
|
||
doorway, houses in Irideri had fabric for doors. Someone was coming. The
|
||
silhouette put an arm out and pushed the curtain aside, revealing a
|
||
long-haired Iridi wearing a dark grey robe, with a neck and wrists
|
||
decorated with silver trinkets.<br />
|
||
“It’s very early you know, what do you want?” The museum owner said
|
||
in a sleepy voice.<br />
|
||
“Forgive our intrusion,” Eka said, eyes and face low, “we are from
|
||
the colonies. We’re here on a short short visit. We’ve always dreamed of
|
||
seeing this place, but seeing as we are leaving in the mo…evening, would
|
||
it be okay to trouble you now for a quick visit?”<br />
|
||
“Colonies?” The museum owner said.<br />
|
||
Eka nodded. During the raids the Iridi established colonies in
|
||
far-away camps, used as relief stations for soldiers but also as
|
||
temporary camps for captives. It was rumored that two of these were
|
||
still active, inhabited by both Iridi and liberated slaves of the
|
||
Crown.<br />
|
||
Lupen had doubts that this would work. No one knew for certain if
|
||
the colonies really did exist. But then, the Iridi put a finger to their
|
||
nose. “Yes <em>of course</em>! The <em>colonies</em>.”<br />
|
||
“We are <em>such</em> fans of Hori’s work!” Eka said.<br />
|
||
At these words, the Iridi smiled. “I’m happy to hear it! It’s a
|
||
dying art, and I mean that quite literally. May be grim to say, but this
|
||
body is deteriorating quicker than I’d like, my brain is hot with ideas
|
||
but this shell does not give a damn. Please, please, come in, come
|
||
in!”<br />
|
||
Bariton, the museum owner, invited them inside for a drink. Lupen
|
||
and Eka could not refuse. Bariton was second to Hori, they were not
|
||
related, but they were very close. The Iridi made puzzles too, but
|
||
admitted that they weren’t as good as Hori’s work. When the puzzle
|
||
master died, Bariton took possession of the house to preserve its
|
||
appearance and contents, turning it into a museum. All over the house,
|
||
puzzles sat on shelves, contraptions of all shapes and sizes, for all
|
||
levels of skill.<br />
|
||
“Hori was truly unique,” Bariton told them, “could see patterns in
|
||
the world others couldn’t. My dear one had a bright mind. A unique
|
||
vision. Where I saw nothing, Hori saw opportunity.” Bariton grabbed a
|
||
puzzle off a nearby shelf to show them. “This is one of two. The other
|
||
is in the palace, in little Kurono’s playroom I imagine.” The old Iridi
|
||
tried to solve it, but could not remember how. “Our Little Light loves
|
||
these puzzles, Hori designed hundreds for Kurono. I like to think that
|
||
it’s thanks to Hori that our Sovereign-to-be’s mind is as sharp as it
|
||
is!”<br />
|
||
Lupen glanced around the room, eyes searching for images or plans of
|
||
that prismatic puzzle. None were visible. Perhaps Hori did not consider
|
||
it worthy of display, many would agree. “Those head prisms are
|
||
<em>quite</em> something too aren’t they?”<br />
|
||
Bariton sighed. “Yes. They’re a puzzle maker’s dream. A true test of
|
||
patience, very difficult to solve. Our Monarch, the Light of Our World,
|
||
found out about it and asked Hori to the palace, asking for the design
|
||
be altered, well, enlargened I should say… to fit a person’s head. This
|
||
was a difficult annum for Hori with Noko dying just a quarter annum
|
||
before. Imagine, your most <em>prized</em> design used to hurt others…
|
||
what kind of legacy is <em>that</em>?” The Iridi paused, wondering if
|
||
these strangers would pass these words on to others. One could be killed
|
||
for speaking ill of the monarchy. “What do <em>you</em> colony-folk
|
||
think of Demeri?”<br />
|
||
“Demeri is a tyrant.” Lupen said aloud without thinking, but then
|
||
realized it was dangerous thing to say to an Iridi, even if it was the
|
||
truth. “What I meant to say is that Demeri is so so <em>so</em> lovely!”
|
||
These words had little weight to them, Lupen knew it. ‘So so lovely’
|
||
lingered in the air like a fart. “Forget I said anything. I’m an
|
||
imbecile, <em>that’s</em> the truth.” The Verido dribbled, shrinking
|
||
deep into the Iridi robes. Any moment now, the guards would come and
|
||
take them away. They would die with heads of metal walking on hot
|
||
sands.<br />
|
||
The old Iridi laughed. “You colonists are such liberals! I envy
|
||
you.”<br />
|
||
Lupen let out a nervous laugh. Eka smiled.<br />
|
||
“Hori continued to make puzzles for Kurono after that, but denied
|
||
making the prism. The hatred of this thing brought us close though I
|
||
suppose.” Saying this, the Iridi began to fiddle with a distinctive
|
||
trinket, a bracelet, hugging Bariton’s wrist. It was thick, metallic,
|
||
with connecting block criss-crossed with lines. Like the prism, these
|
||
pieces could be moved to a new place. If Bariton did this, it would
|
||
change the design of the bracelet. “Another puzzle,” Bariton explained,
|
||
“a gift from Hori. Clamped it on my wrist while I was asleep one day. It
|
||
cannot be removed unless it is solved. As you can see, I have failed my
|
||
beloved in this.” The Iridi smiled at it, running a finger along one of
|
||
the gaps in the metal. “How Hori would laugh to know that it’s still
|
||
unsolved… the damned thing has been on my wrist for fourteen annums.
|
||
<em>Quite</em> a sense of humor that one.”<br />
|
||
Eka laughed. “Never helped you solve it?”<br />
|
||
“ ”When alive? No. My dear one was hard-headed, determined to have me
|
||
find the solution alone. Then with the death of Noko… well, we forgot
|
||
about it. And you know the rest. A sad tale. I apologize for boring you
|
||
with it. Others here don’t like to speak of such things, it’s what Hori
|
||
liked most about me. I speak freely, and because I do most think me to
|
||
be eccentric. In fact, if you were to repeat my words to others, you
|
||
better believe that they’d roll their eyes. ‘That kook is at it again,’
|
||
they’d say. Well, this kook is a freethinker hiding under a veil of
|
||
senility. Best place to be if you ask <em>me</em>.”<br />
|
||
Eka laughed again. “You’d fit right in at the colonies.”<br />
|
||
Bariton gave Eka a wink. “Maybe it’s time for a change of
|
||
scenery…”</p>
|
||
<p>They spent a long time with Bariton, talking about Hori and the
|
||
puzzles. Eka liked this house and its owner, both were warm despite
|
||
exhibiting few colours. They had a tour of the house, tried to solve
|
||
some of the puzzles. To Lupen’s amazement, The Wonder had difficulty
|
||
with them all.<br />
|
||
“Wow, we <em>finally</em> found something you’re bad at.”<br />
|
||
Eka reached forward and pulled Lupen’s hood down deep. “Yea well,
|
||
you’re a cactub licker.”<br />
|
||
“You should talk! You uh, you stinky, stupid butt!”<br />
|
||
“Oh dear. I’ve got to teach you to insult me better,” Eka
|
||
said.<br />
|
||
They stopped with the name-calling battle when Bariton re-entered
|
||
the room with cups of freshly-brewed herbal tea. They drank tea for some
|
||
time, and still, had not found any way to open that prism.<br />
|
||
“Does Hori draw plans for the puzzles?” Eka tried.<br />
|
||
“Hori? No. Never. Was all hidden away in that mind safe, didn’t want
|
||
others using them to cheat.”<br />
|
||
“Can <em>you</em> solve the prism?” Lupen said. It was bold to ask, but
|
||
they had been here too long already.<br />
|
||
“You really <em>are</em> interested in that prism aren’t you?”<br />
|
||
“Yes,” Eka admitted, “we enjoy puzzles, and it being the
|
||
<em>hardest</em> one…”<br />
|
||
Bariton smiled. “Hardest is right! No one has solved it, aside from
|
||
Hori that is… but no one else was taught the solution. Hori died rather
|
||
suddenly. It’s why Demeri reclaims those heads from bodies out in the
|
||
desert. Not many know this, but the head opens when there’s nothing in
|
||
it! It can be re-used in that way, but it is impossible to slip it off a
|
||
live person, not without breaking their heads off. Forgive the graphic
|
||
nature of this story. It’s a grim affair. Hori and I had many troubled
|
||
sleeps about it.”<br />
|
||
Eka enjoyed their time with this Iridi, but they would not find help
|
||
for Sixteen here. They needed to find Renzo. “Thank you <em>so</em> much
|
||
for your hospitality, but we should go.”<br />
|
||
Bariton nodded. “I hope you enjoyed the house and the ramblings of
|
||
<em>this</em> kook.”<br />
|
||
“That last bit is what I enjoyed most.” Eka said.<br />
|
||
“Me too.” Lupen added.<br />
|
||
The Iridi too seemed to like them very much. “I have something for
|
||
you, let me get it.” The museum owner disappeared into another room,
|
||
returning moments later a puzzle in hand. It was a mid-level one,
|
||
octagonal, made of cast iron and decorated with engravings. “This is the
|
||
first puzzle Hori made. I kept it but it was destined for Noko. I’d like
|
||
you to have it. It’s never been solved. Not that I think I couldn’t do
|
||
it, but I just can’t bring myself to try, it wasn’t made for me to
|
||
solve. But, it’s time someone else had a chance with it. An unsolved
|
||
puzzle is a sad, sad thing.”<br />
|
||
Eka accepted the gift, putting it in a pocket inside the robe.
|
||
“Thank you. I’ve really enjoyed our conversation.”<br />
|
||
“Comeback any time. Oh! And um, be careful out there…” Bariton
|
||
warned, opening the door for them. They heard sirens wailing in the
|
||
distance then, Bariton watched as Iridi guards came running down the
|
||
street and toward the palace.<br />
|
||
Eka was nervous. “You don’t think?”<br />
|
||
“I hope not.” Lupen said, afraid. They said goodbye to their host
|
||
and left. A few moments had gone by, Eka regretted having stayed there
|
||
so long, Ren had advised against it.<br />
|
||
“What’s going on?” An Iridi asked one of the guards from a bedroom
|
||
window.<br />
|
||
“Word is that the deserter Renzo was sighted in the city. Our
|
||
Luminary will be pleased.”<br />
|
||
“They’ll hurt Ren!” Lupen whispered. Both kept themselves hidden for
|
||
now, trying to think of a plan.<br />
|
||
Eka looked determined. “No they <em>won’t</em>!”<br />
|
||
Both traversed the city, as fast as their feet could carry them. Eka
|
||
whistled for Hush, a distinctive sort of whistle, sharp and
|
||
melodious.<br />
|
||
“Hush is on the other side of the mountain!” Lupen said.<br />
|
||
“You, speaker of Ilken, should know just how far the sound of a
|
||
whistle can travel! That paired with Hush’s parabolic ears!” Eka lay
|
||
hands over an existing pair of ears, to make them appear larger.<br />
|
||
They looked at the sky. A large shape had bounded up into the clouds
|
||
and was coming down fast. Hush landed on the rooftop of a building,
|
||
cracking the tiles. Ten was sitting on its back, gripping the mane of
|
||
fur, hard.<br />
|
||
“Wonder what Ten thinks is happening, must be confusing.” Lupen
|
||
said, watching the Hyroo take another leap down to meet them at street
|
||
level.</p>
|
||
<p>Monarch Demeri’s face turned a pale shade of grey when told of the
|
||
news that Renzo had been spotted in Irideri. “Is it really Renzo?” the
|
||
Sovereign asked, swallowing hard. Demeri and Kurono usually stayed up
|
||
late, having tea in the Moon Room. Servants were there to serve drinks,
|
||
Demeri’s cup was already dosed with chloromyce shroo powder.<br />
|
||
“Are you sure?” the Light of Lights asked again, lips
|
||
quivering.<br />
|
||
“Yes my Brightest, the traitor was seen in the courtyard, somehow
|
||
bypassed the security there and vanished.” Enji, head of the guards,
|
||
explained.<br />
|
||
Demeri appeared distraught. “<em>No</em> one disappears.
|
||
<em>You</em> were outwitted! That is unacceptable. You are not worthy of
|
||
your post general Enji. This is the second time you’ve failed me. You
|
||
<em>will</em> find the traitor, or I will have a prism fitted to
|
||
<em>your</em> head!” Enji bowed to Demeri, apologetically. “As you
|
||
command.” With this, the general and subordinates disappeared.
|
||
Kurono remembered this person, this Renzo, a former guard of the
|
||
Court of Light. The Young Light was very young then, but the words
|
||
Demeri used then to speak of Renzo were bad ones indeed, it appeared
|
||
that this guard could do nothing right in the eyes of the Light Of The
|
||
Realm.<br />
|
||
The Monarch left the room in a huff after the announcement,
|
||
determined to have guards at every door. Every soldier was looking for
|
||
Renzo in the palace. The building was enormous. Many rooms were
|
||
unoccupied while others housed few items, if one could infiltrate the
|
||
place it would be easy to live in here for annums, unseen.<br />
|
||
“No one sleeps until that filth is found!” the Sovereign yelled, in
|
||
a shrill and unpleasant voice.<br />
|
||
Kurono could hear Demeri moving in the palace, screeching out
|
||
orders, and rather enjoyed it. Kurono drank tea alone, and even drank
|
||
Demeri’s cup. The Brightest had been too distracted to touch it. Kurono
|
||
gave a half-suppressed laugh while downing the whole thing, adding some
|
||
extra spoonfuls—a touch of rebellion felt good every now and then.</p>
|
||
<p>After tea, Kurono was asked to stay in the playroom with Eleven. A
|
||
guard stood outside the door. Word was that there were two foreigners on
|
||
a rabid beast attacking the palace. There were people running, yelling
|
||
out orders, their voices passing through the thickness of the door.
|
||
Eventually, even the guard at the playroom door was obliged to take part
|
||
in the hunt. With an ear pressed to the door, Kurono could hear the
|
||
guard’s steps growing fainter.<br />
|
||
“This is <em>amazing</em>.” Kurono said, the quietness that reigned
|
||
in the realm was a real bore, now the palace felt alive, chaotic. There
|
||
was no way to know if what was happening was good or bad, but it didn’t
|
||
matter. The disobedient Lightling commanded the Iri to stay inside, left
|
||
the playroom and proceeded to wander the palace. Kurono had only just
|
||
turned the corner when ahead, stood a stranger, an Iridi but with
|
||
foreign clothes—an uncommon sight. The stranger smelled of earth, their
|
||
feet were brown with it, they’d left marks all over the floors. How
|
||
delightful, Kurono thought, picturing all of that dirt entangled in
|
||
Demeri’s pristine hair.<br />
|
||
The stranger was out of breath. “You’ve grown,” seeing the Young
|
||
Crown there, Renzo swallowed hard, “you know who I am Little
|
||
Light?<br />
|
||
Kurono nodded, speaking in a quiet voice.”No one can anger Demeri as
|
||
well as <em>you</em>.”<br />
|
||
Renzo had penetrated the palace using a secret entrance, the same
|
||
that was used to escape the palace all those annums ago. Renzo left
|
||
Renate with the goal of passing through Irideri unseen, that was the
|
||
plan, but near the palace Ren crossed paths with a guard. Face to face
|
||
with a former collegue, Renzo lost control, a barrage of rage and
|
||
sadness came flooding out. “That’s right, I’m back! Tell Demeri! Tell
|
||
everyone!”<br />
|
||
Now, Renzo stared at the Young Royal, determined to speak the truth.
|
||
“Are you going to tell on me?”<br />
|
||
“No, Demeri makes me angry too. It’s all lies, all the time. Too
|
||
many things are kept hidden from me and I don’t like it.” Kurono
|
||
replied.<br />
|
||
Renzo could hear footsteps down the hall and retreated into a room,
|
||
beckoning Kurono to follow. Both quieted, waiting for them to leave. “I
|
||
know many things that Demeri would hate me to reveal,” Renzo said in a
|
||
whisper.<br />
|
||
“Ah! It’s Renzo! The dangerous deserter!” A voice shouted from
|
||
behind them. The history teacher, Mura, had been in the room this entire
|
||
time. They’d only just emerged from the closet, but returned within it
|
||
right away.<br />
|
||
Renzo looked at Kurono, ignoring Mura. “They’re coming, but you have
|
||
to hear and believe what I’m about to say to you now. You are
|
||
<em>not</em> Demeri’s child. Your true mapa, Hori, was ordered dead so
|
||
that Demeri could take you.”<br />
|
||
Guards rushed inside. Renzo moved to fight them, to the sound of
|
||
Mura squealing in the closet. The fearful professor opened the door and
|
||
motioned for Kurono to enter. Kurono had always hated Mura and stuck a
|
||
tongue out in defiance before continuing to listen to Renzo. “Why? The
|
||
Iridi wouldn’t give me a title if I wasn’t of royal klorea! How do
|
||
<em>I</em> know you’re telling the truth?” Kurono asked.<br />
|
||
Renzo knocked one guard over the head and smacked the other in the
|
||
gut with the butt of a chloromyce shroo-lit lamp. “You are good at
|
||
puzzles. Hori was too.” The deserter gave another blow to the head of
|
||
the second guard, the glass bowl around the lamp’s head shattering upon
|
||
contact, plunging the room into complete darkness. Saying this, Renzo’s
|
||
face cracked into a smile. Renzo’s cheeks ached, from a lifetime of
|
||
still-facedness. “You were taken as a baby, because Demeri could not
|
||
bear any healthy seeds. Demeri stole you away, couldn’t admit to being
|
||
incapable of producing an heir.”<br />
|
||
Kurono was shaking. If this was true, this life, all of it, was
|
||
false. “How do you know all this?”<br />
|
||
Renzo felt sorry for the Young Light, but there was no other way to
|
||
disrupt the order of things here in Irideri. This had to be known. “I
|
||
wanted Demeri to like me. I did all that was ever asked of me. So when
|
||
asked to…” Renzo paused, reluctant to divulge this bit of information,
|
||
“when asked to take Hori’s life, I could not refuse. But even
|
||
<em>that</em> wasn’t enough, it wasn’t enough to earn Demeri’s respect.
|
||
I was desperate and it was a mistake. I regret it, deeply…”<br />
|
||
Renzo remembered that day well. Hori was working at the foundry,
|
||
alone. Ren came and hit the puzzlemaker over the head with a length of
|
||
metal. The blunt force killed Hori instantly. The event was thought to
|
||
be an accident, that the piece of metal had fallen from above and had
|
||
struck the Iridi dead. The foundry building was old, no one suspected
|
||
foul play.<br />
|
||
Just then, more guards came bursting into the room. Renzo could not
|
||
fight so many. “I’m no different than Demeri. No less evil. I’ve wronged
|
||
you. I’m so, so, sorry.” Renzo said, in a low voice. At least now Kurono
|
||
knew the truth.<br />
|
||
Enji walked ahead of the others. “You will not talk, you will not
|
||
gaze upon our Young Crown. You are Iri, lower than dirt.” Saying these
|
||
words, the general’s face showed great disgust. “Belly to the floor
|
||
insect.”<br />
|
||
Renzo did not do what was asked and continued to eye Kurono. “Your
|
||
<em>real</em> name is Noko, don’t forget it.”<br />
|
||
Enji grabbed hold of Renzo and tackled the prisoner down to the
|
||
floor. “Quiet yourself Iri!”<br />
|
||
Renzo, now with an ear pressed to the floor, could hear that
|
||
something was happening below. Something was inside the mansion and
|
||
making a real mess of things. Then, voices shouting the name Renzo could
|
||
be heard.<br />
|
||
“I’m here!” Renzo answered, shouting through the floor.<br />
|
||
“My failure to capture you all those annums ago tainted me. I won’t
|
||
fail our Brightest <em>this</em> time.” Enji said.<br />
|
||
“There is no honor in carrying out the orders of a dictator.” Renzo
|
||
said.<br />
|
||
Enji pressed a foot on the prisoner’s cheek. “You are not worthy of
|
||
words, therefore not worthy of a tongue…”<br />
|
||
More guards came, all helped pry their victim’s mouth open. One
|
||
pinched Renzo’s nose closed, while another reached for the tongue. The
|
||
deserted struggled from under them, unwilling to give in.<br />
|
||
Then the guards all stopped talking, hearing something panting in
|
||
the hallway. A wild animal? They could hear someone talking too, “Eka I
|
||
can’t see a <em>thing</em>!” followed by another voice. “Grab that
|
||
lamp!” Then they saw a spot of light in the hallway, growing larger, and
|
||
a large animal came bursting into the room, with some riders on its
|
||
back. A large, big-eared creature stood there, snarling. Hush rushed at
|
||
the guards, chasing them off. Enji did not leave straight away, but
|
||
another snarl did it. The general fell away to the back of the room with
|
||
the others.<br />
|
||
“You okay?” Lupen asked Renzo, sliding off Hush and helping their
|
||
companion off the floor.<br />
|
||
“Yes, but we need to leave.” Renzo replied, bright-faced and glad to
|
||
still have a tongue to speak with.<br />
|
||
Lupen eyed Renzo curiously, wondering if chloromyce shroo light
|
||
could deceive non-Iridi eyes. “You’ve got a weird curvy slit in your
|
||
face that wasn’t there before.”<br />
|
||
Renzo laughed. Lupen did not know whether to be happy or fearful in
|
||
this moment.<br />
|
||
Eka noticed Kurono there in the corner, eyes wet with tears.
|
||
“Kurono?” Eka asked, tentatively, pulling the hood and scarf off. Kurono
|
||
backed away, having never seen a foreigner before. The three would leave
|
||
soon, but before they did, Eka pulled a puzzle from the robe and handed
|
||
it to the Young Crown. “A gift for you from Bariton. You like puzzles
|
||
<em>right</em>?”<br />
|
||
Kurono took it. It bore a marking, like all the others in the
|
||
playroom. The name Hori was burned deep onto its base. Kurono began to
|
||
turn and twist all its parts, solving it within second. “My mapa made
|
||
this…” It didn’t feel weird to say that. Kurono remembered the smell of
|
||
metal and heat from burning coal, these were the smells of Hori’s
|
||
workshop.<br />
|
||
“Hori made that one too.” Renzo said, pointing to Ten who was
|
||
standing by the entrance.<br />
|
||
Kurono saw the number on the prisoner’s neck. “It’s you!” Without
|
||
hesitation, the Young Light took Ten into a loving embrace. Then, these
|
||
eyes fell upon the prism. “It’s a puzzle?” The prisms too had been kept
|
||
secret, another of Demeri’s lies, Kurono thought. The Young Crown’s
|
||
fingers scanned the face of the prism carefully. “I <em>know</em> this.”
|
||
Fingers began to move the pieces around, it took a few moments, but
|
||
then, there was a loud clicking sound and the head fell away into
|
||
pieces. All in the room stared, wide-eyed, believing that the prism was
|
||
unsolvable.<br />
|
||
Now freed of the prism, Ten looked terrible, pale, thin and
|
||
confused, but when the Iri’s eyes fell on Kurono they regained a bit of
|
||
their former vigor. Ten scanned the room and the people in it, there
|
||
were two foreigners, Renzo, a large eared beast, and a handful of guards
|
||
all piled up in one corner. Ten had no knowledge of anything that had
|
||
happened, but didn’t care. This Iri was alive, and Kurono was here.
|
||
Nothing else mattered.<br />
|
||
“We need to go.” Renzo insisted, but right then the doorway filled
|
||
up with more guards. Hush growled, they backed away, but pointed their
|
||
iron swords forward.<br />
|
||
“Kurono! Come!” Enji insisted, but the Young Crown did not listen
|
||
and moved away.<br />
|
||
“Is Demeri here?” Kurono asked.<br />
|
||
“I am.” the guards moved partly so that the Light Of The Realm could
|
||
see. Though they made sure that nothing or no one could get close enough
|
||
to harm their beloved. Two iri stood near, keeping Demeri illuminated.
|
||
When Demeri spotted Renzo, the Monarch’s pale lips twisted, like a
|
||
venomous creature ready to strike. “Kill this Iri. Do it now.”<br />
|
||
The guards hesitated. All feared the strange creature bearing its
|
||
teeth at them, also the first set of guards were witness to the truth of
|
||
Kurono’s life. Enji was deep in thought.<br />
|
||
“You had my loyalty. My body was yours to command. You used me to
|
||
kill Kurono’s mapa, to steal Noko for you. I obeyed, without question. I
|
||
worshipped you. I would have taken this secret with me to my death. All
|
||
I ever wanted was to serve you. But you were disgusted with me, with
|
||
what you had me do, and so you preferred to order me dead!” Renzo yelled
|
||
back, pained by the memory.<br />
|
||
Young Renzo was raised without a mapa, having succumbed to disease,
|
||
but the child showed promise and was adopted into the Royal Guard. Ren
|
||
revered the Monarch, the Light Of Lights, although this love was never
|
||
returned. Demeri used the orphan’s love and devotion to inflict pain on
|
||
others. Renzo did all that was asked, but did not expect that taking
|
||
Hori’s life would leave a scar.<br />
|
||
“As you said, your body was mine to command. It is my privilege and
|
||
birthright. You failed to remove yourself from the world when I asked. A
|
||
true worshipper would not have failed me in this.” Demeri said. “Guards,
|
||
rid the realm of this taint.”<br />
|
||
The guards inched forward, but Enji spoke up again. “With respect my
|
||
Brightest, it is disconcerting to hear that Kurono is
|
||
illegitimate…”<br />
|
||
At these words, all the other guards paused in mid-stride, their
|
||
general was wise and was second in command after their leader Demeri.
|
||
Kurono, who had been silent for a long while, glared at Demeri. “You
|
||
stole me away! How could you!”<br />
|
||
The Brightest lost some radiance then, Demeri appeared on the verge
|
||
of tears. “My womb failed me so many times. Then I found out I was
|
||
unable to produce children at all. I could not fail the realm, my
|
||
ancestors. I could not do it. I was broken inside, then… then I
|
||
<em>saw</em> you,” the monarch said, looking at Kurono, “a beautiful,
|
||
healthy child, wandering about the palace halls. The child of a
|
||
puzzlemaker. I pictured a crown on your head, your tiny body in my
|
||
arms…”<br />
|
||
“So you kept me for yourself and had Renzo kill my mapa!” Kurono
|
||
said, eyeing Renzo, eyes watering, “and Demeri betrayed you.”<br />
|
||
“To avoid death I ran away. Left my home, everything I knew and
|
||
loved.” Renzo said.<br />
|
||
“Had I known…” Enji said in a whisper, eyeing Renzo.<br />
|
||
Demeri laughed. “Don’t delude yourself Enji. You would have done as
|
||
I asked!”<br />
|
||
“What you have done,” Kurono began, addressing Demeri, “is
|
||
unforgivable!” At that moment Kurono skin began to glow. The Young
|
||
Light’s skin appeared translucent, swirls of colour forming at the
|
||
surface.<br />
|
||
The guards began to whisper amongst themselves. In the realm of
|
||
Irideri, the people followed the brightest light, and in this particular
|
||
moment, the room was lit by the young Kurono. They lowered their weapons
|
||
and set them down on the floor, then all in the room bent the knee. The
|
||
Young Light flashed a confident grin at Demeri. Demeri did not protest,
|
||
there was no higher power than the Light.<br />
|
||
Eka looked at the puzzle box, the one Kurono had solved. “Hori built
|
||
these puzzles for you, to teach you how to solve the prisms!”<br />
|
||
Renzo nodded. “When a mapa is separated from their child…” Eka
|
||
nodded, “It’s another way to connect! Bariton told us Hori was always
|
||
ashamed that these creations were used to harm others.”<br />
|
||
Iridescent tears streamed down Kurono’s cheeks “Maybe this was my
|
||
mapa’s way of teaching me to correct those wrongs…”<br />
|
||
“Isn’t anyone going to ask why Kurono is glowing?” Lupen whispered
|
||
to Eka, then.<br />
|
||
Eka put a finger to Lupen’s lips. “Shu-shu-shush Lu blue!”</p>
|
||
<p>Later that day, Kurono appeared in full illumination before the
|
||
people of Irideri. There was no doubt in their minds that this was a
|
||
sign, it was time for a new leader.<br />
|
||
Enji approached Kurono after Demeri’s downfall. “I am yours to
|
||
command my Brightest.”<br />
|
||
Kurono nodded, gently tugging at the general’s pant leg. Enji
|
||
stooped down, but as was tradition, could not, would not, set eyes on
|
||
Kurono. “I’d like you to look at me, as you would any other.” Kurono
|
||
said.<br />
|
||
“That would be dissrespectful.”<br />
|
||
“I thought you were mine to command?”<br />
|
||
“Yes. I apologize.” Enji said, looking at Kurono then.<br />
|
||
“Very good. A good first step! There will be many more changes, we
|
||
have a lot to talk about, starting with the workers in the mines.”<br />
|
||
“Yes, Light of Lights.” Enji said, before standing up again.<br />
|
||
Kurono moved to discuss changes in Irideri with another advisor.</p>
|
||
<p>Enji caught sight of Renzo leaning on a balcony railing, staring at
|
||
the city below, lit up by the gentle glow of the chloromyce shroos. Enji
|
||
went to stand there as well. “I envy you.” The general said.<br />
|
||
“How so?” Renzo kept eyes on Irideri’s complex network of streets,
|
||
rediscovering it from a distance.<br />
|
||
“Years ago,” Enji began, “if Demeri had asked me to kill Hori I
|
||
would have done it, like you, without question. Then, if <em>I’d</em>
|
||
been ordered dead, and that’s where we differ, I likely would have
|
||
driven a blade into my own chest. I would have never questioned our
|
||
Brightest’s reasoning for wanting my death. I always wondered why
|
||
<em>you</em> didn’t do this. Couldn’t understand why you ran away, it
|
||
made no sense to me at <em>all</em>.” Enji sighed. “I’ve never had a
|
||
mind of my own. When you left I never stopped wondering, why you chose
|
||
to do what you did.”<br />
|
||
“That sounds exactly like having your own thoughts Enji…”<br />
|
||
“I suppose you’re right.” Enji said.<br />
|
||
“Growing up we were told that when death was near, we’d
|
||
<em>feel</em> it in our flesh. Every part of our body would feel light,
|
||
liberated and ready to return to the sand. When faced with death my body
|
||
felt <em>heavy</em>, and I was hurt, and afraid. I looked over then, and
|
||
I <em>saw</em> myself running away, away from Demeri, through the door
|
||
and outside of the palace, through the secret mountain pass and into the
|
||
desert. I thought this was a fabrication of my mind, with my body still
|
||
with Demeri in the Moon Room… but my physical body was many mirits away
|
||
by then, running in the desert.” Renzo laughed. “When faced with death,
|
||
my body chose to run, and it seems like I let it.”<br />
|
||
Enji processed this information for a moment, with a bit of
|
||
difficulty. Facing death, and talking about it were two very different
|
||
things. “A guard obeys orders and does not think. I fit that
|
||
description, but you never did.” Enji sighed. “You know, it wasn’t the
|
||
same after you left. You were friend to me. No one else played Hako half
|
||
as well as you.”<br />
|
||
“You were ready to cut my tongue out back there.” Renzo said, eyeing
|
||
the general.<br />
|
||
“You left me alone with a bunch of dullards. I was angry, I guess.
|
||
Also, a tongue is not required to play Hako.” A near-imperceptible smile
|
||
appearing at Enji’s lips.<br />
|
||
Renzo knew this look and what it preceded. Soon, Enji’s mask would
|
||
crack off too.<br />
|
||
Enji’s eyes thinned down into slits as the first sun began to rise
|
||
in the distance, then looked away, pained by it. “The suns don’t hurt
|
||
your eyes?”<br />
|
||
Renzo’s eyes kept to the horizon, smiling still. “No. Not
|
||
anymore.”<br />
|
||
Enji tried to stay next to Renzo, but had trouble looking at that
|
||
growing sliver of light. “How can you <em>stand</em> it.”<br />
|
||
“Better get used to it. I sense a very big change is coming.”</p>
|
||
<h3 id="hako">Hako</h3>
|
||
<p><img src="media/hako.sonozai.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> Hako is a capture game popular with Iridi soldiers. Each player
|
||
carries a <strong>Sonozai</strong>, a set of four dice with a braided
|
||
hempa string, a thread which binds all things (dark and day). Seasoned
|
||
players make and carry their own, made out of soft stone.<br />
|
||
Hako is played with <strong>eight six-sided dice</strong>, each of
|
||
the six faces has <strong>four triangles</strong> with are either
|
||
<strong>smooth</strong>, or <strong>textured</strong>.</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p><img src="media/hako.1.png" /></p>
|
||
<ul>
|
||
<li><strong>Soli</strong>. Day, light. Smooth side</li>
|
||
<li><strong>Nocta</strong>. Dark. Textured side</li>
|
||
<li><strong>Son</strong>. Dusk. Side with two connected textured
|
||
triangles</li>
|
||
<li><strong>Nos</strong>. Dawn. Side with two disconnected
|
||
triangles</li>
|
||
<li><strong>Nulalun</strong>. Null-moon</li>
|
||
<li><strong>Grandalun</strong>. Full-moon</li>
|
||
</ul>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> Players each pick a texture, and begin with four dice. Each turn,
|
||
a player rolls a die and try to surround a die in play, with four
|
||
triangles of its own texture.<br />
|
||
After playing their last die, players must pick one in play which
|
||
was not played last, and that does not create a floating die. A floating
|
||
die is has no immediate non-diagonal neighbour. The game ends when a
|
||
player surrounds a die with four triangles of their texture.<br />
|
||
In this example game, the player with the smooth triangles wins.</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p>On the eve of the coronation Lupen and Eka were given free reign over
|
||
Irideri. This was the first time any sovereign had allowed foreigners
|
||
inside. They wandered the city, escorted by Enji. The general pointed
|
||
out various sights, including Bao The Bright’s childhood home and the
|
||
Kangoku, a library containing writings from the city’s best current and
|
||
past authors. The Iridi enjoyed writing, many did it. Because paper was
|
||
a rarity in the city, there was only one copy of every book. The authors
|
||
could not produce drafts, and so they planned the work in their heads
|
||
and voiced it out to a letterer in one sitting.<br />
|
||
If someone wanted to read a book they had to do it on-site. Today,
|
||
many locals were sitting in the common room, a book laid out on a mat as
|
||
they sat cross-legged in front of them. Everyone wore isilk gloves, a
|
||
thread visible to experts like Lupen. Although, the fabric had been
|
||
stripped of all colour.<br />
|
||
When Lupen asked Enji about it, the general said this: “I don’t know
|
||
anything about colour, having never seen an Ilk in real life. Moera, our
|
||
Luminary, and our First Light, commissioned twenty pairs from a tailor
|
||
in Edonor.” This is all Enji knew of it.<br />
|
||
Lupen noticed then that there were fewer than twenty people reading,
|
||
concluding that the readers could not exceed the number of gloves
|
||
available.<br />
|
||
An Iridi stepped forward then, wearing one of the twenty pairs,
|
||
holding a copy of <em>The Wind in Passage</em> by the writer Gurahem.
|
||
The Iridi was a worker here in the Kangoku.<br />
|
||
“Would you like to read? Or to be read <em>to</em>? That is also an
|
||
option.”<br />
|
||
“I’ll do the reading, if you’ve got gloves to spare!”<br />
|
||
The librarian nodded, and produced a pair for Eka to wear. The
|
||
gloves were soft, comfortable. Eka found a copy of <em>Wise
|
||
Sproutling</em>. The book was bound in white thread with the cover made
|
||
from conk shroos.<br />
|
||
“They grow well here in the mountains. They are hard, woody,
|
||
cave-dwelling shroos, perfect for making paper. The fibers are strong
|
||
and durable, they hold up well to inks. My grand-mapa was the first to
|
||
produce them.”<br />
|
||
“I would love to see the process!”<br />
|
||
&nbsMoerap; “We’ve got no books to make today, but know that it
|
||
warms my heart to have outsiders having interest in this. My grand-mapa
|
||
dreamed of a time when foreigners could come and read these. Books need
|
||
to be read, by as many as possible.” The librarian said.<br />
|
||
“I think that dream is about to come true.” Eka said.<br />
|
||
During the entirety of the conversation, Lupen was busy inspecting
|
||
the white gloves, wondering which Ilk the thread came from. “Why not
|
||
keep the original colour?” Lupen interjected.<br />
|
||
“A request by Bao.” the Librarian said, “the kingdom bares no
|
||
colour, as I’m sure you’ve noticed. Our people prefer shapes and
|
||
texture.”<br />
|
||
Lupen remembered how Zucca had disapproved of the art of skin-dying
|
||
in Verido culture. This was similar. “Why not use a material that is
|
||
already white?”<br />
|
||
“Isilk is the softest and most durable thread in the Soronan
|
||
Desert.” The librarian replied. “It doesn’t damage the conk shroo paper,
|
||
it’s impermeable too.”<br />
|
||
“You are a true treasure,” Eka said to the library worker, “a wealth
|
||
of knowledge.”<br />
|
||
The librarian would have blushed, but seeing as colour was
|
||
considered to be an extravagance, decided to bow the head in thanks
|
||
instead.</p>
|
||
<p>After a very busy day at the Kangoku, Enji accompanied the two back
|
||
to the palace for a midday outing with Kurono.<br />
|
||
All sat together in the Moon Room, drinking cups of freshly-brewed
|
||
chloromyce shroo tea. Renzo had gone to harvest the chloromyce ears
|
||
alone, since the workers were on leave.<br />
|
||
Lupen stared at the cup of sparkling tea. “There’s colour in this. I
|
||
thought colour was considered a bad thing in Irideri.”<br />
|
||
Kurono smiled. “It isn’t a bad thing. We like colour. It’s absence
|
||
makes it all the more precious. Colour exists in the food we eat, and
|
||
the liquids we drink. We bring this colour into ourselves, it’s all we
|
||
need.” The Iridi had a ritualistic approach to everything, how they made
|
||
their tea or prepared their food. It was a form of praise, of thanks.
|
||
Kurono’s eyes locked onto Lupen’s face. “You wear your colours with
|
||
pride. I would like to see what life in a Verido city is like.”<br />
|
||
Lupen forced a smile. “I hope you get to.” This subtlety was lost on
|
||
Kurono.<br />
|
||
“I haven’t told you the truth.” Kurono began, addressing all who
|
||
shared the room. Because the guards were outside, Kurono could speak
|
||
freely. “Everyone in the realm has one cup of chloromyce shroo tea per
|
||
day, with a teaspoon of powder swirled in, no more, no less. When news
|
||
spread of Renzo, Demeri left the room and I helped myself to a second,
|
||
and third cup. Then when Renzo told me the truth of things I was so
|
||
angry! I became hot in the head… I think the extra rations of tea
|
||
combined with this caused my skin to glow.”<br />
|
||
Eka smirked. “Overdoses of chloromyce and the complex chemistry of
|
||
our bodies can cause skin to flare up, to glow! In the old days people
|
||
made a game of it.”<br />
|
||
“Eka! You knew <em>too</em>? Why didn’t you tell me?!” Lupen said,
|
||
wounded to have to learn this now.<br />
|
||
“It’s an uncommon and little known side-effect. Affects one in five.
|
||
Most people get some glow out of it, but it is usually very dim, and
|
||
localized.” Eka explained.<br />
|
||
“Like the soles of your feet!” Lupen said.<br />
|
||
“Please don’t tell anyone that I owe the throne to a skin
|
||
condition.” Kurono said, and all in the room laughed.</p>
|
||
<p>That evening, there was someone at Bariton’s door. “My
|
||
Brightest!”<br />
|
||
Kurono stood there, wearing a lovely multi-layered gown. The fabric
|
||
shimmered in the light of the chloromyce-lit alleyway. The Young Crown’s
|
||
hair was down, coming short of touching the floor. A simple diadem sat
|
||
atop Kurono’s head, with tiny bead-shaped chloromyce embedded in the
|
||
metal. Ten was there too, wearing a grey robe and simple cloth head
|
||
covering. “May we come in?” Kurono asked Bariton.<br />
|
||
Bariton was embarrassed by the mess, but tried to appear courteous,
|
||
disappearing into the kitchen to prepare some tea. In the meantime
|
||
Kurono and Ten stared at the puzzles, the palace playroom had copies of
|
||
each of one. Back then servants weren’t allowed to handle any of
|
||
Kurono’s things, but Ten recognized the puzzles, and knew how to solve a
|
||
few. The museum owner returned with a tray topped with a kettle and a
|
||
single cup. “Forgive me Bright One. This cup is rather old.”<br />
|
||
“Don’t worry yourself, this is perfect. Might I trouble you for a
|
||
second cup? For my friend Ten.”<br />
|
||
Bariton blushed then, and then began to nod rapidly, “oh yes yes!
|
||
Right away!”<br />
|
||
Kurono inspected the cup of tea, wondering if Hori has ever drunk
|
||
from this particular cup. The cup had a crack, but Bariton, or perhaps
|
||
Hori had repaired it, filling the gap with dried farawood sap. The
|
||
repair was visible. Kurono loved how they had made no attempt to
|
||
disguise it, the crack was beautiful, it was now part of the history of
|
||
the object.<br />
|
||
Bariton returned and served Sixteen a cup of tea before sitting
|
||
down.<br />
|
||
They spoke for a long while. Bariton shared stories about Hori, and
|
||
the museum. “Hori would be happy to know that you’ve been here. When
|
||
Noko died…” Bariton paused, “I don’t know if it’s proper to say, but
|
||
Hori felt an obligation to you, to help you in any way. The way Hori
|
||
spoke of you, it was like you were family.”<br />
|
||
Hearing those words, Kurono swallowed hard. “It’s okay.” Kurono
|
||
reassured Bariton. “There is a banquet tomorrow, to celebrate my Green
|
||
Day and coronation. I’d like you to come.”<br />
|
||
Bariton had no words. The museum carer was visibly touched, and
|
||
tried hard not to cry. Crying in front of royalty was hardly
|
||
respectable, Bariton thought.</p>
|
||
<p>The banquet took place in the Garden of Light. All the tables were
|
||
decorated with common sumiras, their soft heart-shaped petals sprinkled
|
||
with chloromyce shroo powder. The powder caused the petals to
|
||
scintillate under the garland of shroo lights hanging above. The menu
|
||
included vegetables and fruit native to the land, like kiari, and
|
||
gorins. Kiari were sweet root vegetables, with a bushel all connected at
|
||
one end. The kiari was roasted over a fire, people would then tear
|
||
pieces off and eat them as is. Gorins were cut and cooked down into
|
||
puree with some sweet roots, and eaten as a sidedish. In the absence of
|
||
light the produce was dull and grey, but under a chloromyce shroo they
|
||
would emit rainbow-like patterns, even when cooked.<br />
|
||
Eka wished Zucca was here to see this.<br />
|
||
Renzo made a toast to Kurono, holding a luminescent drink that
|
||
looked like liquid starlight. All raised their mugs and began to shout
|
||
in unison:<br />
|
||
“All hail Kurono! Light of Lights! Irideri’s Brightest!”<br />
|
||
The day ended with a master of shadow puppetry, performing a play on
|
||
the outer wall of the garden, a comedy involving Kurono and the
|
||
foreigners. Lupen laughed hard, belly aching with every joke. Eka
|
||
clapped with much fervor, these hands continued to vibrate long after
|
||
the clapping had stopped.<br />
|
||
All went to bed late, exhausted from the day’s events. The city was
|
||
quiet. All slept. All, except for Renzo. Renzo had skipped the puppet
|
||
show to visit Demeri’s quarters. The former Sovereign was free to roam
|
||
the grounds, but had no more governing power.<br />
|
||
Eka and Lupen never did find out how the visit went, but Renzo
|
||
appeared lighter, happier. The metalworker’s apprentice had found
|
||
peace.</p>
|
||
<p>After the festivities were over, Eka, Lupen and Ren announced their
|
||
departure to their host. Kurono made sure that their bellies were full,
|
||
and gave them enough supplies for the trip back to Renate. They stood
|
||
together at the edge of the city.<br />
|
||
“You won’t stay?” Kurono asked Ren. “I’d like you to be my advisor.
|
||
You would be good at it.”<br />
|
||
“I still have things to do in Renate, I’ll comeback someday. I
|
||
promise.” Ren bowed lightly, thanking Kurono. “You will be a good, just
|
||
leader.”<br />
|
||
Kurono smiled. “These are hard times, but my people are resilient!
|
||
I’ll do my best!” The Light turned to Eka and Lupen, giving them two
|
||
gifts. The first, was a set of five blank conk shroo pages, the
|
||
librarian had insisted on it. The second, was an ear of dried
|
||
chloromyce. “You’ve returned my friend Ten to me and helped to uncover a
|
||
terrible secret. Is there anything else I can I do for you?”<br />
|
||
“We ask that this same hospitality be given to all who visit,” Lupen
|
||
said, Eka agreed, “Oh, and um, could we have some chloromyce noodles? Or
|
||
is that a monk-only thing?”<br />
|
||
“I’ll woth a fresh batch over to you in Renate.” Kurono said.<br />
|
||
“Wow, it really <em>is</em> used as a verb!” Lupen said.<br />
|
||
Ten came to Kurono’s side, even after being freed of servitude
|
||
they’d insisted on shadowing the Light, finding happiness and comfort in
|
||
it. Kurono treated Ten as a friend, forbidding the use of masks and of
|
||
the name Iri. When asked to choose a name, Ten kept the number.<br />
|
||
“Really? That’s hardly a name…” Kurono had said. Ten insisted on it,
|
||
so Kurono never asked again.<br />
|
||
Kurono watched as the foreigners disappeared back into the desert.
|
||
“Would you like to start living in the day again?” The Light asked Ten.
|
||
“I would love to see the suns.”<br />
|
||
Together, in silence, they watched the stars above. Kurono took
|
||
Ten’s hand. Ten’s body stiffened, with eyes growing as round as full
|
||
moons. Kurono laughed, dragging them back toward the city entrance.
|
||
“Lots to do! Let’s get to it!”</p>
|
||
<h1 id="the-ilk-town-of-balandri">The Ilk town of Balandri</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/fauna.snakadil.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>Snakadil are shy reptavians, the hide in the sand. They have a
|
||
habit of latching onto those who pass too close to them, and it is
|
||
difficult to persuade them to let go.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>When the group arrived back in Renate, they stopped at the edge of
|
||
the city, feet over an invisible grave in the sand. Many annums ago, a
|
||
guard from the Court Of Light had died here. Lupen and Eka did not know
|
||
that this spot marked an important moment in Renzo’s past, but they
|
||
stopped too, mirroring their companion.<br />
|
||
A crowd gathered at the city border then, they moved toward the
|
||
travellers carrying lavendiri leaves. They tossed them into the air,
|
||
welcoming them back into the village.<br />
|
||
Maka pushed through the crowd, rushing over and pulling Renzo into a
|
||
hug. The metalworker wept. Lupen had sent the woth ahead with a message,
|
||
a story about a former Iridi guard doing a lot of good in Irideri. Maka
|
||
had begun to cry then already.<br />
|
||
“Not so hard!” Ren said with a laugh.<br />
|
||
A laugh. Maka couldn’t believe it. Renzo never used to laugh.<br />
|
||
“Hard is all I can do, you know that!” Maka replied, speaking as
|
||
curtains of tears cascaded onto the front of Ren’s robes.<br />
|
||
Lupen flashed Eka a smile. “All thanks to Mapoleon the woth!” The
|
||
woth returned, coming to land in its glass ball. It did not respond to
|
||
this name either, and started picking the dust out of its wings.
|
||
“Mapoleon <em>was</em> a great name though…” Lupen grumbled.<br />
|
||
Eka shrugged. “Woth heart wants what woth heart wants.”<br />
|
||
“Ma-ma-ma-poleon?” Lupen tried. The woth did not react, it ignored
|
||
the Verido and returned to its glass ball. “<em>Not</em> a stutterer.”
|
||
Lupen made a mental note of this. “Oh no, what if it speaks Finic? What
|
||
do we do <em>then</em>?”</p>
|
||
<p>Maka offered a tent to Eka, Lupen and Hush for their stay here in the
|
||
city. “You are family now,” Maka told them, “to me, and everyone in
|
||
Renate.”<br />
|
||
They erected the tent together, on the outskirts of town in a space
|
||
reserved for travellers. The tent had yellow and blue threads, made from
|
||
tightly-woven hampa. Maka positioned a tall banabo pole vertically,
|
||
before burying it deep into the sand. “This tent is also a gift, its
|
||
yours to keep, whether you choose to stay, or not.” Previously, the
|
||
group had used a small length of fabric donated by Uno as a tent, but it
|
||
was not large enough to accommodate Hush. Although, Hush preferred to
|
||
think that the tent was not large enough to accommodate Lupen and
|
||
Eka.<br />
|
||
“Thank you!” Lupen said, voice muffled, trapped under a sheet of
|
||
fabric. Eka raised another section of the tent up with a second banabo
|
||
pole, freeing Lupen from under the prison of fabric.<br />
|
||
After erecting the third pole, Eka moved over to Hush to ask for
|
||
their friend’s approval for acquiring this tent. If they decided to
|
||
leave, Hush would likely have to carry it. “Think you can carry this for
|
||
the group? We’ll only take it if you’re okay with it.”<br />
|
||
Hush thought for a moment, then yapped and yipped three times.<br />
|
||
“That’s a yes! Well, three times yes!” Eka translated.<br />
|
||
“Great! Thank you thank you thank you Hush!” Lupen said.</p>
|
||
<p>Eka, Lupen and Hush stayed in town a while. Everyday, a different
|
||
villager would come forward to invite them to tea, to play cards at the
|
||
tavern, or to go on excursions in the canyons. Lupen enjoyed the brief
|
||
moment of stability, of feeling part of a community again. The Verido
|
||
enjoyed travelling, but missed the little things that only the sedentary
|
||
could do, like planting a garden, or steeping massive quantities of tea
|
||
for days to share with neighbours. Lupen knew a lot about the plants
|
||
growing on the Ilk. High-altitude gardening was hard, but Verido could
|
||
grow shroos with ease. They also grew hardy plants that could thrive in
|
||
little soil, like looberries, loomas, kabacho, trumpets, plumpkins,
|
||
bibiskiss, woodgeons, yellow brushfins and licky root. Lupen knew how to
|
||
grow all these, knew what they liked and needed, but could not say the
|
||
same of the ones here in Renate. They did not know each other yet, only
|
||
those who spent many annums here could know them enough to care for them
|
||
well. These eyes, ears and mouth craved familiarity.<br />
|
||
Maybe we could stay here a while, Lupen thought. I have friends
|
||
here, friends I can count on, and learn from. Committing to a city
|
||
though was difficult, this Verido couldn’t do it, and did not want to
|
||
think about why that was.</p>
|
||
<p>Soon, a voice whispered at the ear of their little tribe, calling on
|
||
them to keep going. And so, Eka and Lupen decided to leave, but first,
|
||
they had to gather supplies.<br />
|
||
Both went around the village to find food and other items for their
|
||
trip onward, by then their little group had gone through most of the
|
||
stores donated by Sovereign Kurono. They had received a fresh batch of
|
||
chloromyce noodles by woth, and had gobbled it all up too. In fact, the
|
||
soles of Lupen’s feet were still irisdescent.<br />
|
||
“Is this normal? Am I dying?” The Verido had asked many times since
|
||
then, sincerely worried, but Eka would only laugh.</p>
|
||
<p>“Was this really baked this morning?” Eka said, inspecting the loaves
|
||
of bread produced by the local baker, each one more solid than the next.
|
||
“Um. Maybe Maka could use this one as an anvil…” Eka said, banging the
|
||
loaf on a bababo pole, but regretting it instantly as it caused the
|
||
entire tent to shake.<br />
|
||
The baker had not noticed this, and continued to knead dough,
|
||
working up a sweat. Eka wondered if those hands could knead rock into
|
||
shapes too…<br />
|
||
“The Ilk is late. When it arrives we’ll have better stock. In the
|
||
meantime you’re going to have to make do with what’s left on these
|
||
shelves. We mix in half norcorn meal, I’ve had to cut back on teaweet to
|
||
make sure we can feed the Ilk.” The baker watched Eka eyeing the loaves,
|
||
and smiled. “If you let it rest for with ripe bonans. The moisture will
|
||
help soften the dough. Then if you soak it in stew, or soup or whatever
|
||
it’ll be easier to chew. It may have less teaweet, but it ain’t less
|
||
healthy. You’ll work up a strong jaw eating it!”<br />
|
||
Another villager overheard their conversation about the Ilk.
|
||
“Sometimes Ilk change their route you know, depending on the weather. I
|
||
just hope it gets here soon. We’re down to babams and kyabe, and even
|
||
<em>those</em> we’re running out of!”<br />
|
||
“I thought Renate had loads of fermented kyabe always?” Eka said,
|
||
remembering seeing caverns of barrel fermentations. Another villager had
|
||
showed them the massive underground stores.<br />
|
||
“Yes, but we can’t give any to transients, yield was bad this annum.
|
||
Caverns are usually filled to the ceiling with four layers of barrels,
|
||
but we’re down to one.”<br />
|
||
Eka nodded. “Understood. Got to feed your own first.”</p>
|
||
<p>Lupen was busy trying to find directions to the next city on their
|
||
list. They already had a map but it was old and needed corrections.
|
||
Renate housed a cartographer, working from a tent on the kowamamu side
|
||
of town. The dwelling was easy to find, because its centre pole was tall
|
||
and fLu a striped black and red flag, a flag used to mark the location
|
||
of businesses. The cartographer’s tent bore a map of the tent city,
|
||
transients would often gather there to look at it, to find out where
|
||
things were. Renate had doubled in the last ha’nnums, and kept
|
||
expanding. Lupen approached the tent, stepped inside and was glad to
|
||
find its occupant there, scratching away at a map spanning the entire
|
||
room. Lupen looked at it, and saw the writing atop it saying
|
||
<em>Edonor</em>. The map was complex. Edonor was gigantic, it’s size
|
||
rivalling Montore. Most shops were there. While looking it over, Lupen
|
||
spotted Nok’s workshop, tucked between a dye artist and a hatter. This
|
||
was the former workplace of Orin, Bou’s mapa.<br />
|
||
“Nok’s shop!” Lupen exclaimed, the sudden sound startling the
|
||
cartographer.<br />
|
||
“Have you been standing there long?” The cartographer breathed, hand
|
||
to the chest.<br />
|
||
“No, no…” Lupen said, feeling rather guilty, “you’re busy, I’ll come
|
||
back later.”<br />
|
||
The cartographer adjusted a set of thick spectacles, eyeing Lupen
|
||
carefully. “Busy, yes. I’m always busy. Since I never stop being busy
|
||
you ought to ask me what you need now, and it’ll be up to me to tell you
|
||
whether I can help.”<br />
|
||
“Oh, well my friend and I are going to Edonor. We need corrections
|
||
on our map, it’s a bit, um, aged. We heard there was a new village
|
||
between it and Renate.”<br />
|
||
The cartographer nodded, and then waved a hand, asking for Lupen to
|
||
come forward. Lupen approached, walking over the map and avoiding
|
||
newly-painted markings. The Verido unrolled the map and laid it over the
|
||
floor, then went down on hands and knees, mirroring the cartographer’s
|
||
position.<br />
|
||
“I’m Lupen.”<br />
|
||
“Mapoleon,” the cartographer replied, eyes on the map.<br />
|
||
Lupen’s eyes widened then. “Really? Like the name I tried to give
|
||
our woth, what a coincidence…”<br />
|
||
It was no coincidence. Earlier that morning, Lupen had passed in
|
||
front of this very tent and had seen the name. The Verido forgot, but
|
||
the mass of muscle inside this head did not. It thought this combination
|
||
of letters interesting, and put it away for later use.<br />
|
||
Mapoleon’s eyes studied Lupen’s map, hands already busy correcting
|
||
mistakes, adding new bridges, danger areas and such. “Didn’t happen to
|
||
see an Ilk on your way over here did you? It’s late.”<br />
|
||
“An Ilk is coming here?” Lupen was sweating now. “Which one?”<br />
|
||
“Ilk of Balandri,” Mapoleon answered, “supposed to arrive soon, we
|
||
hope.”<br />
|
||
Lupen glanced outside through an opening in the tent, heart beating
|
||
so hard it threatened to break out of its enclosure. Soon, Mapoleon
|
||
finished adding corrections. Lupen thanked the cartographer and hurried
|
||
back over to their tent. Eka wasn’t back yet, and Hush was resting, fast
|
||
asleep in a recess in the ground—a sure way to keep cool. One side of
|
||
the tent was open, to let air transit through. Lupen took a seat,
|
||
waited, with eyes on the horizon. Memories of Volare rushed into Lupen’s
|
||
mind, memories of a place this Verido wanted to forget. Then, Lupen
|
||
heard people shouting.<br />
|
||
“It’s here! The Ilk of Balandri is here!”<br />
|
||
The Ilk arrived from yora’ta, not its usual path. The whole town was
|
||
a swirling mess. People amassed empty carts and bags, gathered tools and
|
||
extra hands. All were getting ready to help unload the Ilk. Lupen saw a
|
||
tall ramp, with people running up the steps to greet the visitors. This
|
||
ramp wasn’t unfamiliar to Lupen, but these eyes had never seen it from a
|
||
ground perspective. From down here, the ramp looked frail and unsteady,
|
||
swaying from side to side as people scaled its many steps.<br />
|
||
The Ilk arrived at last and came to stand by the platform. Ilk were
|
||
impressive creatures. They were skinny, long-legged, had giant
|
||
three-toed feet, long thin faces with a great big set of horns. On their
|
||
backs, they carried a small Verido town.<br />
|
||
“The Ilk of Balandri is here!” The people of the town shouted,
|
||
relieved. Already, caretakers prepared bags of teaweet grain to feed it
|
||
with. Renate villagers hoisted bags over their shoulders, and ran up the
|
||
ramp and up to the top. Others were busy brushing the sand off the Ilk’s
|
||
skin, picking rocks from its toes. Other workers moved tents, to make a
|
||
pathway up to the town. People would be coming on and off of it for
|
||
seven days.<br />
|
||
“This is so exciting!” Eka said to Hush, having just returned to
|
||
their camping spot in the city. Hush lifted its head to stare up at the
|
||
Ilk, unimpressed. Next to the hyroo, was Lupen, who bore the same
|
||
disinterested gaze. Hush continued to sleep, but Lupen could not stop
|
||
watching the Ilk. Eka went to pat Lupen on the head, but didn’t, due to
|
||
the presence of a cup, full of tea. Eka wanted to say something about
|
||
it, but chose to ignore it.<br />
|
||
The quiet town from this morning had turned into a bustling open-air
|
||
market. Various vendors and store owners from Balandri were setting up
|
||
shop in the centre of town, between masses of tumbling weeds, dry sweet
|
||
grass, lavendiri bushes and blue plovies. The place was full of life and
|
||
colour, people laughing and shouting. Eka took a seat and watched, the
|
||
market was set up right near their spot. Already, some Balandrians were
|
||
exploring the city. Like Lupen, they had ears like delicate flutes of
|
||
skin, and they all bore tattoos and colours on their faces. Balandrians
|
||
had red tattoos, rather than blue like those from Volare.<br />
|
||
Eka was glancing from Lupen and back to the people of Balandri.
|
||
“Dont you want to say hello Lu blue?”<br />
|
||
“To what end?” Lupen said, reaching for the Thinking Cup, taking a
|
||
sip of tea, before putting it back up on its pedestal.<br />
|
||
Eka took Lupen’s side. “Suit yourself! Ilk are impressive though
|
||
aren’t they?”<br />
|
||
“Nearly 578 mirits tall…”</p>
|
||
<p> The Voice of the Balandri Ilk was walking through town, Lupen
|
||
took note of it. They’d never met, but Voices were easy to recognize.
|
||
They all wore the same robe. Lupen wanted to hide, but found that no
|
||
other part of this body agreed with this plan.<br />
|
||
Eka gave a loud whistle then, a song that held no secrets to Verido
|
||
ears…</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> <em>(….)Si-Re Re(..) Mi(</em>.*) _ _ _Fa-Sol(..)*</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> The sound caught the ear of Klev, the Voice of the Balandri Ilk.
|
||
Klev’s eyes turned toward them. Lupen’s dumb body was stuck to the spot,
|
||
but it was too late now because Ilken was a dead giveaway. Klev pushed
|
||
through the market and vendors, and arrived at their little camp. By
|
||
then, Eka had wandered off, to leave them alone together.<br />
|
||
“The desert is loud huh?” Klev said, smiling. “You are far from home
|
||
Volarian.” The Balandrian could not read Lupen’s name, as the tattoos
|
||
were partially hidden under a scarf, but the blue ink was a clear
|
||
indicator of which city this Verido belonged to. Klev noticed the cup,
|
||
but like Eka, thought it might be better not to ask about it.<br />
|
||
Lupen nodded, shyly. “Yes, though technically that would depend
|
||
entirely on its whereabouts…” Only those with a birthplace with legs
|
||
could say this.<br />
|
||
“I admire you! It’s very brave to venture out into the world like
|
||
this, you must have seen much of the desert!”<br />
|
||
“I have.” Lupen said, while a confused soup of pride and sadness
|
||
swished around in this gut. Lupen was happy to have traveled the land
|
||
and to have met its people, but over time, a hard lump appeared on the
|
||
side of this head. Whenever thoughts of Volare circulated in this brain,
|
||
the lump latched onto the memories like a thirsty shrewbat and gained
|
||
mass. Then, the simple act of standing on one’s legs became difficult,
|
||
the weight of it unbearable on Lupen’s soul. “Any word of Volare?” Lupen
|
||
managed to say, a hand massaging the ghostly-protrusion on this skull
|
||
back down, accidentally knocking the cup off. Lupen caught it, but the
|
||
tea spilled onto the floor.<br />
|
||
Klev’s eyes moved to the ground then, staring at the puddle of tea.
|
||
“Moving towards the Yorama’tae Ash plains, last I heard.”<br />
|
||
“Yorama’tae Ash plains?” Lupen said, alarmed. “But that would take
|
||
them to the Rupture.”<br />
|
||
Klev shared Lupen’s concerns. “It’s what I’ve heard. Word is that
|
||
the Ilk of Volare is um… word is that it’s dying. It’s why I
|
||
<em>had</em> to come and speak to you when I saw you were of Volare. I
|
||
don’t know if you know this, but their Voice fell and died last annum.
|
||
It pains me to be the bearer of so much bad news, but I thought you’d
|
||
want to know. It’s been an emotional time for us all.”<br />
|
||
Lupen wanted to cry, but was too stunned to produce any expression
|
||
resembling grief. The Verido’s face was eerily devoid of emotion.<br />
|
||
“Bala, our Ilk, has been behaving strangely. They impart fewer and
|
||
fewer thoughts, it may just be due to grief but I am worried…” Klev
|
||
continued, in a lower voice, “we’re <em>all</em> scared, afraid that
|
||
both Bala and Oto will follow Vol into the Rupture. If this happens,
|
||
what does that mean for our people?” Klev’s arm also extended out toward
|
||
the market. “And what about them? They rely on us to transport goods and
|
||
food between cities.”<br />
|
||
Lupen thought of a conversation with Rosmus then, and on how their
|
||
future on the Ilk was uncertain. “Not certain…” Lupen muttered. Then
|
||
went on to thinking about Mago. What are you doing Mago, why is this
|
||
happening? Surely you would have found the words to dissuade Vol. “Maybe
|
||
all of this is my fault.” Lupen said. “The Voice of Volare isn’t dead.”
|
||
Saying this, Lupen removed the scarf, revealing the tattoos.<br />
|
||
Klev appeared confused, but then read Lupen’s name. This name was
|
||
famous to all Verido now. “Your voice was heavy with grief, and now I
|
||
know why.” The Voice of Balandri put a hand to Lupen’s heart, “I am
|
||
relieved you’re alive Lupen, but I don’t believe your death was the
|
||
cause of all this.”<br />
|
||
“How do you know?” Lupen managed to say, fighting back tears.<br />
|
||
Klev smiled. “I don’t, but believing it will be a burden to you. Put
|
||
it out of your mind, for now, it will cloud your judgment and hinder any
|
||
attempt at meaningful action. Until you know the truth, it’s useless to
|
||
you.”<br />
|
||
Lupen nodded, swallowing hard. “You’re right.” The Verido then too
|
||
put a hand to Klev’s heart. “Thank you. I needed to hear that.”<br />
|
||
“So what will you do Voice of Volare?”<br />
|
||
“Meaningful action.”<br />
|
||
Lupen did not waste time, parted ways with Klev and went to visit
|
||
Mapoleon the cartographer once more. “I need whatever update you have
|
||
for Dorake’s pass, the Ash Plains and all the way to The Rupture.” Lupen
|
||
then spent a long time convincing Mapoleon to do the work. The
|
||
cartographer had concerns, and was desperate, trying to convince the
|
||
Verido not to take The Leap. “I swear to you, I’m not going there to
|
||
die.” Lupen said.<br />
|
||
“You’d better, I do not want to be the one marking the road to it.”
|
||
The cartographer finished adding the desired modifications.</p>
|
||
<p>Map in hand, Lupen returned to their encampment then. “Eka!” Lupen
|
||
began, “change of plans, we’re going yorama’tae to intercept Vol.”<br />
|
||
Eka lay over Hush, arms laid out over its sides, caressing the large
|
||
furry beast. “Okay Lu, yorama’tae we go!”<br />
|
||
The Verido eyed Eka carefully. “You don’t want to know why? Or is it
|
||
one of those situations where you already know why and that I’m an idiot
|
||
for asking.”<br />
|
||
Eka was already ready to go, standing upright. “Less thinking, more
|
||
doing!”<br />
|
||
“I’m scared Eka.”<br />
|
||
Eka had anticipated this sudden shift in mood, and was already
|
||
halfway to Lupen, coming for a hug. “I know.” They stood in each other
|
||
arms for a long while.<br />
|
||
“If we walk we won’t make it on time.” Lupen said, breaking the
|
||
silence, eager, and anxious to find a solution.<br />
|
||
“I think I know how.” Eka said.<br />
|
||
Eka led Lupen to the area in town where transients moored their
|
||
sandfins. Hush accompanied them on this trek, and bounded ahead toward a
|
||
broken vessel, laying on it side. Its sails were in tatters, and its
|
||
hull was dry and punctured. It bore the name Toronka. Lupen walked over
|
||
to it, and climbed into the cabin to assess the damage. “It’s not
|
||
looking too bad! But who does it belong to?”<br />
|
||
“I don’t know, but I know who knows.” Eka said, gesturing to another
|
||
sandfin moored in the area, a vessel with a yellow hull bearing the name
|
||
Etyl.</p>
|
||
<p>They returned to the site hoping to find Nono there. Lupen could see
|
||
someone was in Etyl, a light was on. This resembled that day long ago,
|
||
when they’d spotted the sandfin in the dark.<br />
|
||
“Nono’s home.” The Verido said, relieved.<br />
|
||
“Kiao’ri Nono!” Eka shouted.<br />
|
||
They heard lots of noise inside, and then Nono’s head pushed out of
|
||
one of the portholes, like the firs time they’d met. Nono’s eyes were
|
||
healthy, and quickly found them in the dark. “Kiao’ aikana dii!” Nono
|
||
shouted, smiling. “Come in! Come in!”<br />
|
||
They all went inside Etyl, sitting around the small table in the
|
||
main saloon. A small avoka oil lamp hung over the table, attached to the
|
||
ceiling. Etyl was in better shape than the last time they’d met, the
|
||
tools were organized in drawers and secured in boxes with lanyards, even
|
||
the floors were free of debris. Nono had recently waxed the floors,
|
||
Lupen could smell a mix of lemilim, cactub fat and salts. Nono was in
|
||
the galley, busy serving up oversized mugs of bonan wine. The bottle was
|
||
as tall as Nono, and was stashed near the companionway door, wedged
|
||
between the stairs and the sink. Lupen could see many more bottles
|
||
stored behind that one. Nono came to set the tall mug in front of Etyl’s
|
||
guests.<br />
|
||
Lupen eyed the mug, wondering if bonan wine could induce a headache
|
||
by proximity. Eka threw an arm around the Verido’s shoulders then. “We
|
||
have time for this okay? Don’t worry.”<br />
|
||
Lupen loved hearing Eka say this, because it always turned out to be
|
||
true.<br />
|
||
Nono eyed Hush for a moment, with its head peering inside and the
|
||
rest seated outside. “Ipaya?” Nono said, offering the hyroo a mug. Hush
|
||
gave it a lick, but did not enjoy the taste. Nono laughed, and instead
|
||
served the hyroo a bowl of mashed babams. “Sou mawani te dodon
|
||
oro!”<br />
|
||
“Good for the soul and the stomach!” Eka translated. “Looks
|
||
delicious! Enjoy Hush!”<br />
|
||
Hush licked up the entire contents of the bowl in a second, then
|
||
proceeded to lick its own snout in search of stray crumbs.<br />
|
||
“What brings you here?” Lupen asked Nono.<br />
|
||
“Nono deliver teaweet from Montore for Balandri Ilk.”<br />
|
||
“Oh? Renate villagers asked for extra feed?”<br />
|
||
“No, no, no. Teaweet ees gift!” Nono corrected.<br />
|
||
“From who? Why?” Lupen asked, perplexed. People in Montore weren’t
|
||
known for their generosity.<br />
|
||
“Nono know who, but told no say… but Nono say dis. Balandri Ilk go
|
||
to Montore before go to Renate <em>always</em>, when Ilk late to
|
||
Montore, someone see problem for Renate’wati. Dis make Montore donor do
|
||
rare, kind thing.”<br />
|
||
Lupen laughed. “That’s okay, I think I <em>might</em> know
|
||
who.”<br />
|
||
Despite having little evidence, Lupen knew who was responsible for
|
||
this generous donation. There weren’t many well-endowed philanthropists
|
||
in Montore. This bit of good news warmed this heart, and it offered
|
||
comfort. Lupen knew the residents of the Soronan Desert would find ways
|
||
to continue exchanging food and goods, even without the Ilk. The Verido
|
||
raised a mug-full of bonan wine. “To those who care!”<br />
|
||
“To those who care!” They all said again, together.<br />
|
||
“Do you know if Toronka belongs to anyone?” Lupen asked Nono
|
||
then.<br />
|
||
Nono thought about the name for a moment. “Iana. Belong no one, ees
|
||
sad.”<br />
|
||
Lupen’s eyes lit up then, with the Ilk in town it would be easy to
|
||
find parts to repair it. This was a weight off this Verido’s shoulders.
|
||
They drank their wine, and Lupen once again failed to catch Nono
|
||
re-filling their cups. Preventing a Finiku host from filling your mug
|
||
was an impossible task, because refusal was seen as modesty.<br />
|
||
Eka leaned into Lupen then, “you know, if you don’t want Nono to
|
||
refill your cup, drink slow…”<br />
|
||
The Verido had much to learn about Finiku drinking etiquette. Lupen
|
||
did not get sick, having eaten enough muckwheat bread and plurple bleen
|
||
sausages to soak up the alcohol and lessen its effects.</p>
|
||
<p>The next day, they marched over to Ren’s tent to ask for help to
|
||
patch up the holes in Toronka’s hull. Ren agreed. They didn’t have to
|
||
ask Nono, the Finiku was already hard at work mending an old sail. For
|
||
many annums, Nono kept a sail in Etyl’s bilge as a backup, but forgot it
|
||
there. Now, the sail had holes in it. “Ora, ora, sail still good. Nono
|
||
fix, Nono fix!”<br />
|
||
Lupen and Eka repaired the rudder and mast, but faced a problem when
|
||
they saw the state of the lines onboard, the hampa fibres were worn and
|
||
brittle, they had to replace them, but Nono had used up the last of the
|
||
hampa thread to fix the sail. Eka asked around town, but found out that
|
||
Renate suffered a shortage of hampa, even banabo was difficult to come
|
||
by this season. For a moment, Eka considered using the poles holding up
|
||
their tent but Nono said that this wood was too dry, it had to be cut
|
||
fresh when used to weave ropes.<br />
|
||
Eka thought for a moment. “Hm. What else can we use?”<br />
|
||
Nono looked up at the Ilk then, and Eka followed the Finiku’s
|
||
gaze.<br />
|
||
“Of course!”</p>
|
||
<p>Eka told Lupen, who went to ask Klev. Verido did not export isilk
|
||
anymore, but would never deny one of their kin. Klev secured enough hair
|
||
for their project, and again, Nono stepped in to do the work, delighted
|
||
with the quality of the material.<br />
|
||
“Ara ara! Soft dii! Ees perfect!” First, the Finiku cut all hairs
|
||
the same length and tied the ends together. Then, divided the bundle
|
||
into three. Nono’s twisted the three sections, holding onto two bundles
|
||
between fingers, with the third bundle set between toes. Nono began
|
||
twisting them all in the same direction, the bundles wrapped around one
|
||
another forming a rope. Eka watched the process, and was soon able to
|
||
replicate the work. They twisted and spliced isilk hairs together all
|
||
day, whilst Nono sang sandfinner’s ballads.<br />
|
||
When the ropes were ready, Lupen climbed up the mast to run the
|
||
ropes through the new blocks Maka had made. The blocks were made of
|
||
mappLuood, a very strong and dense wood, they had a light coating of
|
||
avoka oil to protect it from the weather. Mapplewood was Nono’s
|
||
recommendation, and Maka was able to source some locally from a fellow
|
||
artisan. Despite never working with this wood before, Maka’s work was so
|
||
good that Nono requested more for Etyl. Eka was happy to see that both
|
||
were getting along, and was grateful for their help and presence, their
|
||
combined experience was an incredible asset.<br />
|
||
Once Lupen was finished feeding the ropes through, Eka eased the
|
||
halyard, slowly, giving the Verido ample time to apply pinnytar to the
|
||
ropes on the way down. Lupen arrived back on deck, hands black and
|
||
sticky.<br />
|
||
Nono gave them an extra container of pinnytar for their trip, “eet
|
||
protek rope from kira!” Nono said.<br />
|
||
Lupen smelled like pinnytar for the rest of the day, and realized
|
||
that this was a smell this nose associated with Nono. It was the scent
|
||
of a seasoned sandfinner.</p>
|
||
<p>After many days of hard work, came time to test Toronka.<br />
|
||
On the first run, Lupen got the sandfin stuck in a sandbank, on the
|
||
second, the tiller came loose. The third and fourth run revealed even
|
||
more problems, but after that they found less and less. On run number
|
||
’ce, the sandfin surfed on the desert plains beautifully. Nothing
|
||
rattled or threatened to break off. They proceeded to stocking it up
|
||
with food and supplies for the journey ahead.<br />
|
||
Soon, the sandfin lockers were full with bags of teaweet flour,
|
||
crates of waterstones, plurple kyabe, sweet babams and mapples.</p>
|
||
<p>On the eve of their departure, they organized a small gathering with
|
||
friends. They made a fire, and laid out a fabric tarp on the ground to
|
||
sit on. That evening, Klev played traditional Verido music, Maka cooked
|
||
for everyone, and Ren told Iridi legends. This, paired with Nono’s
|
||
sandfin stories made for quality entertainment.<br />
|
||
Klev presented Lupen and Eka with a bottle of kabacho, which they
|
||
shared with others on the spot. Lupen savoured every gulp. Klev played
|
||
the donmol, fingers stroking the four double strings, improvising a tune
|
||
that only other Veridos—or wonders like Eka—could interpret. Lupen
|
||
smiled, attentive to the lyrics. It was about mountains that could not
|
||
kneel, moons that could not sleep, and of fires that could not touch.
|
||
Eka was standing, busy expressing the meaning of the song to the other
|
||
guests through exaggerated gestures. Nono and Renzo watched, each mind
|
||
interpreting the pantomime in their own way.<br />
|
||
“Ara ara! A durdle! Ora! It hungry! And it no can swim.” Nono
|
||
said.<br />
|
||
“No, no, it’s about the journey of a great warrior!” Renzo
|
||
corrected.</p>
|
||
<p> After the song, Nono began reciting a poem about a loose bit of
|
||
thread on Renzo’s pant leg.</p>
|
||
<p> <em>Bit of standing thread,</em><br />
|
||
<em>Many sand eet long to see,</em><br />
|
||
<em>But blade come, too soon.</em></p>
|
||
<p> Nono inched forward and cut the bit of tread away with a blade,
|
||
cackling. Everyone roared with laughter. Nono then proceeded to fill all
|
||
empty mugs with kabacho.<br />
|
||
“Drink fleshy! Drink!” Nono said, tapping the bottom of Lupen’s cup,
|
||
causing some of its content to spill.<br />
|
||
“I am, I am!” Lupen cried.</p>
|
||
<p>All in the group were merry, all but Nono and Eka, they too had
|
||
consumed the same amount but as usual, it had little effect.<br />
|
||
“Eka, Nono want to say,” Nono said, moving close to the red-head,
|
||
“Nono stop by Edonor to talk to frend who know about woth.”<br />
|
||
The Finiku filled up Eka’s mug again. Experiencing thirst in Nono’s
|
||
presence was impossible, Eka thought, the Finiku knew the level of
|
||
liquid present in each mug at all times and insisted that their bottoms
|
||
remain unseen.<br />
|
||
“Eet bad luck.” Nono had once said.<br />
|
||
“We haven’t found the name of our woth friend yet.” Eka said.<br />
|
||
“Nono know Eka find soon,” Nono replied, “Nono tell frend detail of
|
||
wingspan, antenna and color of da woth. Dey say eet <em>super</em> woth!
|
||
Dey grow big big!” Saying this, Nono’s arms spread wide, spilling half
|
||
the contents of a mug onto the sand floor. Then, Nono’s body relaxed.
|
||
“Long, long ago, der ees more big big thing in desert, and now, not so,
|
||
not so. But, when Nono young, Nono see rare creature. Nono remember
|
||
well…” Saying this, Nono’s eyes glassed over. “Nono teki kira te sawa no
|
||
mawani…”<br />
|
||
Maka overheard the last bit of their conversation, and eyed Nono
|
||
then, in disbelief. “You saw the soul of the suns and the wind?”<br />
|
||
Nono drifted to another place, recalling something that had happened
|
||
annums ago. Nono began to tell the story, switching to Finic, speaking
|
||
in a low voice so Eka could translate for everyone.</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> When I was young, I went to the Rupture with my mapa and my
|
||
grand-mapa Etyl. Etyl was sick, and decided that it was time to take The
|
||
Leap.<br />
|
||
In the Ash Plains, near the Rupture, the ground was black with ash.
|
||
I was scared, but I never did say it, because this was an important day
|
||
for Etyl and I did not want to ruin it. Together we walked to the edge
|
||
of the chasm. We sat near it for a long while, talking, drinking tea,
|
||
sharing muckwheat bread… but then, before dark, came time to say
|
||
goodbye. Without a word, I watched my grand-mapa leap into the chasm,
|
||
and disappear into the dark.<br />
|
||
We stayed there, but I could not sleep. I got up, and went to stand
|
||
on the edge of the Rupture again. I knew my grand-mapa would not be
|
||
there, but I found it comforting. Then I saw a giant figure. Its long
|
||
legs passed over my head. In passing, it sent swirling clouds of ash
|
||
into the air. The ash stained my clothes and skin, and obstructed my
|
||
vision for a moment. I cleared it away from my eyes, and just in time to
|
||
catch the giant stepping down into the Rupture!<br />
|
||
Then it was gone…</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> Eka said, stopping as Nono took a breath. All were listening,
|
||
gathered around the fire and enthralled by Nono’s story.<br />
|
||
“I’ve heard a similar story,” Klev said. “My friend Uggi was up
|
||
late, observing the reflection of the moons on the dunes below. Uggi saw
|
||
a tall shape in the distance, moving. Its legs spanned entire dunes.
|
||
Uggi went to grab a glass to see its features in detail, but lost sight
|
||
of it.”<br />
|
||
Maka nodded. “A giant left crates of food patches for people in
|
||
Renate during the Raids, our people would not have survived without
|
||
it.”<br />
|
||
“No one spoke to the giant?” Renzo asked.<br />
|
||
“No,” Maka began, “all they saw was the crate at the edge of the
|
||
village and a tall frame, riding away.”<br />
|
||
Renzo also had something to share, related to Maka’s story. “I’ve
|
||
spent the greater part of my life in a walled-city. Like you Klev I did
|
||
not see one with my own eyes, but I heard stories. During the Raids at
|
||
the Suvalba Sanctuary, soldiers stole seeds to bring back to Moera. One
|
||
day, all awoke to the blood-curdling screams of a soldier. The soldier
|
||
was shaking, claiming to have seen some kind of apparition wandering
|
||
through the camp. No one else had seen it, and so they ignored it. On
|
||
another day they saw leafhounds trailing far behind them, following
|
||
them. Again, they ignored it. They arrived in Irideri, and noticed then
|
||
that their bags had holes in them. They’d lost much of their seed cargo
|
||
on the way here. They lied about it, of course… no one wanted to suffer
|
||
wrath of our Luminary.” Renzo smiled. “Soldiers would never admit to it,
|
||
they’re too proud, but many thought that someone had pierced the bags in
|
||
the dark, and that the leafhounds trailed behind to gather up the
|
||
seeds.”<br />
|
||
Lupen couldn’t believe it. The raid on the sanctuary was a horrible
|
||
event. Zucca had saved many lives that day, and would be glad to know
|
||
that someone else, a giant, some apparition, had saved many more.</p>
|
||
<p>The day ended with everyone sleeping around a dying flame, all, but
|
||
Lupen and Eka. Both were lying next to each other, gazing up at the sky.
|
||
A question burned at Lupen’s lips. “You didn’t look surprised when you
|
||
saw me at the top of the mountain.”<br />
|
||
“Surprised? No. Happy? Yes.” Eka said with a kind smile.<br />
|
||
“If not me, then someone else?” Lupen said, feeling small and
|
||
unimportant.<br />
|
||
“No. Couldn’t have been anyone else. Couldn’t have happened any
|
||
other way,” Eka said, rolling over and throwing an arm around Lupen’s
|
||
middle. “Others have come before you, but you weren’t born then so you
|
||
have a good excuse.” Eka said with a smirk.<br />
|
||
“You’re getting real tall,” Lupen noted.<br />
|
||
“You noticed that, huh?”<br />
|
||
“When I met Uno, it was difficult to have a conversation. Uno was
|
||
always sort of… detached. Mind was elsewhere. Is that what will happen
|
||
to you?”<br />
|
||
The Wonder said nothing, but pulled Lupen in close, until they were
|
||
cheek to cheek, belly to belly. Lupen’s eyes locked onto the skyrocks
|
||
above. “Why aren’t you two together?”<br />
|
||
Eka was drawing invisible pictures on Lupen’s back. “You could ask
|
||
the same of the Ilk.”<br />
|
||
“Oh. Well, they used to be together,” Lupen began, “but then they
|
||
agreed to help us. Verido did this too. We used to be together. One big
|
||
tribe. Separating made more sense though, even if it was hard.”<br />
|
||
“You’ve got your answer, I think.” Eka said.<br />
|
||
Lupen gazed up at the moons then. “I wish I could live
|
||
forever.”<br />
|
||
“A good life is better than a long one Lu, and whether a life is
|
||
good can’t be determined by its length.” Eka said, recounting countless
|
||
instances of short, great lives. Eka would never forget them. These
|
||
lives shone brightly in the Wonder’s head, like a skyrock-studded sky.
|
||
Eka’s hand slid over Lupen’s skyrock necklace. “Remember what I told you
|
||
about skyrocks? They look small from here, but they come from far, far
|
||
away, and there they are giants. You too are a giant to someone, and you
|
||
shine brighter than you think.”<br />
|
||
As Lupen drifted off to sleep, Eka began reciting constellations.
|
||
“Salarus, Vitali, Neoneve…” Eka’s eyes set on the sky, and took note of
|
||
a shooting skyrock. A rare event. A name came to mind, an old name,
|
||
belonging to a dear, dear friend that was now long gone. The name never
|
||
left Eka’s mind. “You came as quickly as you went my dear friend
|
||
Wiktopher. We had a lot of fun though…” Eka said. Suddenly, the woth
|
||
crawled out of its glass ball and fLu onto Eka’s head, wings fluttering
|
||
wildly. It then began to shimmy its body from side to side, wiggling its
|
||
antennae. When it settled, Eka smiled, “I agree, it is time someone else
|
||
bear this name,” and began to stroke the ends of the hairs on its back,
|
||
humming.</p>
|
||
<p>The next morning, Lupen woke to the sound of arguing. Nono was awake,
|
||
standing at the foot of a Beobug sandfin. It had come to moor here in
|
||
the dark. The vessel had kinked Nono’s vessel while docking, an accident
|
||
that Nono believed was deliberate.<br />
|
||
Lupen walked up to Nono, then looked up and noticed Gree at one of
|
||
the portholes. Lupen whistled, the sound cutting through the air, aimed
|
||
at the large Beobug vessel, “Gree! Come down! Stop hiding!”<br />
|
||
“Gree no hide!” Gree shouted back, exiting the sandfin in a huff,
|
||
ready to smack whoever had said this but then noticed who it was,
|
||
expression softening. “Araaa! Voice of Volare! An honor!”<br />
|
||
“Stop right there,” Lupen said, putting a hand forward “did you
|
||
wreck Etyl on purpose?”<br />
|
||
“Oh no no no no…” Gree said, in a Nono kind of way.<br />
|
||
Nono was furious, and jumped onto Gree’s back, pulling the Finiku’s
|
||
ears and screaming into them. “Komororo’ia!” Gree was running in
|
||
circles, unable to dislodge the attacker. Both switched to Finic then.
|
||
Lupen understood nothing, but could guess what they were saying, because
|
||
their fight was an old one. Nono thought Gree had wrecked Etyl on
|
||
purpose, to force Nono’s hand in becoming a Beobug captain. Of course,
|
||
Gree denied it all, yelling, struggling to pry Nono off. Nono was the
|
||
strongest of the two, with legs hugging Gree’s middle and hands tugging
|
||
at the Finiku’s ears, like one would pull on carriage reins. When the
|
||
captain of Beobug II continued to deny the damage, Nono grabbed onto
|
||
Gree’s nose, a finger pulling at each nostril.<br />
|
||
Gree’s eyes started to water then. “Iaa! Nono iana!”<br />
|
||
Lupen thought it tempting to separate them, but thought that Gree
|
||
deserved it.<br />
|
||
“Okai okai! Gree admeet eet!” Gree shouted then. “Eet no meestake!
|
||
Beobug II bump ento Etyl.”<br />
|
||
Lupen sighed. “Now why did you do <em>that</em>?”<br />
|
||
Nono let go, slipped off and moved to stand next to Lupen, eyes thin
|
||
and angry. “Eet <em>because</em> Gree have rot een da belly…”<br />
|
||
Gree’s face turned red and puffy then, hands curled into tight
|
||
fists. “Iana! Ees because Gree angry! You no understand dat Gree get
|
||
Beobug job to empress Nono!”<br />
|
||
“Nono don’t care,” Nono said, disinterested. Lupen nudged the Finiku
|
||
then, seeing as Nono wasn’t being very kind. “If Gree want to do
|
||
something that Nono like,” Nono began, “leave Beobug job! Go home to
|
||
mapa to correk lie about Nono.”<br />
|
||
Lupen’s eyes widened then. “Is Gree… part of your family?” Lupen did
|
||
remember Gree saying that they’d been grown on the same plot of land.
|
||
Gree spent time at home with their mapa, jealous, and told lies about
|
||
Nono. “Wow! You were grown together!”<br />
|
||
Nono nodded, but was not proud of this fact. “Orae. Gree and Nono
|
||
grow togedder. But stem of Gree rap around Nono, like snakadil do!”
|
||
Saying this, Nono’s hands wrapped around this throat. “Gree suffocate
|
||
Nono already den, and today Gree never stop to try to smodder
|
||
Nono!”<br />
|
||
“Nono have always reject Gree!” Gree complained.<br />
|
||
“Even wen seed, Nono want notting to do wit Gree.” Nono spat.<br />
|
||
Lupen remembered what Zucca had said about children in the ground.
|
||
They developed links to one another, and the sadness of one could affect
|
||
its neighbour. Since both were grown together, linked-up, they had
|
||
developed a bond unlike any other. Gree depended on Nono, more than Gree
|
||
cared to admit, and Nono wanted to get away after being trapped early in
|
||
life. Nono’s revulsion of Gree was sown early…<br />
|
||
“How about you two sandfin together?” Lupen suggested.<br />
|
||
“Lupen crazy. Nono no work for Beobug fiend.” Nono said, disgusted
|
||
with the idea.<br />
|
||
“Aboard Etyl.”<br />
|
||
“But if Gree do dis, eet leave Beobug II wit no captain…” Gree
|
||
said.<br />
|
||
“Gree no <em>worry</em>. Beobug find odder lazy captain
|
||
<em>easy</em> <em>easy</em>,” Nono said with a laugh, “Gree have
|
||
<em>no</em> talent.”<br />
|
||
“So it’s decided then! You’ll travel together from now on,” Lupen
|
||
said.<br />
|
||
Nono realized what Lupen had said. “No no no no no…” but before Nono
|
||
could no-no any further, Lupen let out a loud whistle, so loud that even
|
||
the Ilk of Balandri turned its head to find its source. It silenced both
|
||
Finiku, a whistle like that commanded respect.<br />
|
||
“No fair for Nono! Ees bad bad <em>bad</em> idea.”<br />
|
||
“Maybe it’s time to revisit the feelings you have for Gree. It
|
||
sounds like you never really gave Gree a chance. You are family, and
|
||
family, like community, is important. It’s, it’s everything…” Saying
|
||
this, Lupen’s eyes started to water. Then came a stream of emotions.
|
||
Lupen sat on the ground, body shaking, overcome with grief.
|
||
Inconsolable.<br />
|
||
Both Finiku stared, uncomprehending. They thought themselves
|
||
responsible. They gathered around the Verido, trying to offer comfort by
|
||
standing close.<br />
|
||
“Iane harioki’ia’re…” Nono said, in a gentle voice, hand over
|
||
Lupen’s shoulder. Gree did the same. They looked at each other then,
|
||
sighing. “Ok.” Nono said, “Gree and Nono travel togedder. Nono patient.
|
||
Nono promiss.” Gree was about to wear the Beobug cap but Nono slapped it
|
||
away. Both Finiku continued to bicker, but more quietly this time,
|
||
discussing how to cohabit on Etyl.</p>
|
||
<p>Lupen was on the ground still, unable to calm down. This is when Klev
|
||
stepped in. The Voice of Balandri went to sit next to Lupen, holding
|
||
them close, whistling in Ilken as a way to quiet Lupen’s heart. “I have
|
||
to go home.” Lupen managed to say.<br />
|
||
“You <em>are</em>. Toronka is ready,” Klev said.<br />
|
||
“But even if Vol <em>doesn’t</em> die, how can I go back? They’ll
|
||
think I betrayed them.”<br />
|
||
“You fell,” Klev said, “how is that a betrayal?”<br />
|
||
“I never tried to tell them that I was alive. I could have done this
|
||
but I didn’t, I instead chose to let them sit with the pain of my death.
|
||
I never wanted to be Voice, maybe I did want to fall…”<br />
|
||
“Your reasons are your own Lupen, but you have to remember that they
|
||
know and love you. They’ll understand why you did what you did,” Klev
|
||
said, “maybe you were meant to fall, meant to come here, to meet Eka, to
|
||
learn about the world. If what I think is happening with the Ilk
|
||
<em>is</em> happening, we’ll need someone like you to help us adapt to
|
||
life in the dust. I don’t like to think about it. In fact, I’ve been
|
||
land-sick all day.”<br />
|
||
“I’d be a bad teacher,” Lupen said. But then, Lupen began to think
|
||
back on everything that had happened, and a different picture began to
|
||
form in this head. Lupen was strong, resilient, understanding and
|
||
caring. These were the qualities of a teacher, of a good teacher.
|
||
“Okay.” Lupen said then. “Okay,” Lupen said again, standing up. The
|
||
Verido looked up at Bala, and began whistling to the Ilk.<br />
|
||
The Ilk of Balandri was eating teaweet and stopped in mid-chew to
|
||
listen. After Lupen’s message, Bala swallowed and turned its head
|
||
downwind. It took a deep breath, its sides and throat bulging. A low,
|
||
deep sound pushed out of its throat, reverberating through the town and
|
||
across the desert plains. As it sang, the whole town stopped to listen,
|
||
even if they could not understand its meaning.<br />
|
||
Klev listened to the message, and smiled. “They will be happy to
|
||
hear you’re alive.”<br />
|
||
Lupen nodded, “Yes, I think so…”</p>
|
||
<h1 id="toronka">Toronka</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/flora.licky.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>Licky root is typically grown for its roots, which may have
|
||
anti-inflammatory and antibacterial effects. This plant is very hardy,
|
||
it grows in high-altitude, like mountains, but also thrives on the back
|
||
of the Ilk. Verido people like use the roots to make tea.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>That morning Lupen got up early, eager to set eyes on Toronka again
|
||
after dreaming about it. In the dream, a tiny Verido wandered Toronka’s
|
||
insides, feet running along bolts and nuts and hands tracing along the
|
||
grain of the woodwork. Many yukwood trees were felled to build this
|
||
vessel. People of the Soronan Desert thought of trees as records of
|
||
history, the libraries and archives of their world. Reading the growth
|
||
rings in the wood was like moving backwards through time. Each ring
|
||
marked important events in the tree’s life throughout the ages.<br />
|
||
Now, the full-size real world version of Lupen stared at the vessel
|
||
with its patched hull, up-cycled sails, hand-woven lines, and was
|
||
proud!<br />
|
||
The Verido saw Maka near Toronka, knees in the sand and hands deep
|
||
in a bucket filled with a thick, purple substance. Beside the bucket lay
|
||
a basket of wet glistening plurple bleens. Maka had strained them to
|
||
make grease. Lupen had seen other villagers in Renate do it to use as
|
||
decorative paint. The grease was thick and wet, but would cure after a
|
||
day of full suns.</p>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p> <strong>Plurple Bleen Grease</strong></p>
|
||
<p> <em>Ingredients</em></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> Ten stalks of plurple bleens, stemmed<br />
|
||
Five avoka nut pods<br />
|
||
A half pail of waterstones</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> <em>Instructions</em></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> Press liquid from waterstones into a large recipient, discard
|
||
skins, and add plurple bleens in liquid. Let plurple bleens soak for a
|
||
day. Strain bleens, but reserve liquid.<br />
|
||
Crack the avoka nuts, and pour the oil into the liquid, mix well.
|
||
Then, place recipient over a hot fire, and until liquid content is
|
||
reduced by half. Dip a stick in the mixture, if it stays upright on its
|
||
own, then it is ready.<br />
|
||
Use plurple bleens in another dish, like as a base for bleen
|
||
sausages.</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p>All contributors were awake now, they gathered around the bucket to
|
||
dip their hands in it. They took turns stamping their gooey palms on the
|
||
sandfin’s stern. With these markings everyone would know that restoring
|
||
Toronka was a collaborative effort.<br />
|
||
Lupen noted the different sized hands, and could associate each one
|
||
with its owner. Nono’s hand was nearest to the ground, small and covered
|
||
with cracks due to annums of handling ropes. Renzo’s hand was
|
||
medium-sized with thin fingers, while Maka’s print was the largest, it
|
||
was textured with thick rounded fingers. Eka’s hand was small, bigger
|
||
than Nono’s.<br />
|
||
“Your palms are <em>very</em> wrinkly Eka.” Lupen noted. “Like an
|
||
old licky root rind.”<br />
|
||
Eka was getting the last basket of supplies onto the sandfin,
|
||
“m’yeaaa, or like your face when you’re complaining about something,”
|
||
Saying this, Eka smirked and disappeared inside the cabin.<br />
|
||
“Well, my face <em>doesn’t</em> do <em>that</em>…” but creases
|
||
formed on Lupen’s face then from scowling. The Verido stopped, fingers
|
||
rapidly flattening down the newly-formed creases. “Okay, okay. It
|
||
<em>does</em> crease up a bit.”<br />
|
||
Lupen looked at Toronka’s hull again, seeing the Verido hand print.
|
||
The palm on the hull had lines and dots, resembling growth rings on a
|
||
tree, and like a tree, these patterns told a story. The Verido thought
|
||
of home, but for once these memories weren’t intertwined with sadness,
|
||
this mind had learned that this wasn’t a very healthy thing to do.
|
||
Thinking of home was pleasant again.<br />
|
||
Eka arrived outside to pour tea into the mugs of their companions.
|
||
All had slept around Toronka, all but Nono who preferred sleeping on
|
||
Etyl. Lupen passed some bonan leaf plates around, each one had slices of
|
||
toasted muckwheat bread with a generous portion of spiced bam purée.
|
||
Klev and Ren refused a plate, having not yet recovered from yesterday’s
|
||
drinking.</p>
|
||
<p>After breakfast, Nono boarded Toronka and inspected the deck, outer
|
||
hull and rigging again. The Finiku’s big wet eyes scanned every part,
|
||
followed every rope from working to bitter end. The hands inspected
|
||
every knot, and even the feet got to prove their worth, their bottoms
|
||
stomping down hard to sound the deck for abnormalities. After a thorough
|
||
inspection, Nono climbed up to half mast to make an announcement.<br />
|
||
“Good good good work aikanae’wati! Toronka ready to fly!”</p>
|
||
<p>There was no breeze to sail away with yet, but Nono had seen signs of
|
||
its coming. Once in a while, the Finiku would climb up the mast to look
|
||
at the horizon. “Orae! Sawa come. Sawa come soon!”<br />
|
||
Eka was spending time with Hush, caressing the beast’s large
|
||
parabolic ears. “I’m sorry you can’t come with us on Toronka.” The hyroo
|
||
had grown too large for a sandfin, even Eka could not stand upright in
|
||
the cabin. The Wonder caressed the hyroo’s soft cheeks and head, hands
|
||
grabbed the sides of the beast’s snout. “We’ll come back for you soon. I
|
||
promise.”<br />
|
||
Nono had more deliveries to make and had plans to leave after
|
||
Toronka, the captain was already busy filling Etyl with packages. Gree
|
||
too was aboard the sandfin. The Finiku wore plain clothes and had
|
||
altered the Beobug cap to continue to wear it, but even the modified
|
||
version angered Nono. The company logo was gone, but it was difficult
|
||
not to associate the colour with the brand. Gree was busy taking boxes
|
||
from Nono’s hands, carrying each one below deck. It warmed Lupen’s heart
|
||
to see them together, but knew that it wouldn’t be an easy transition.
|
||
Nono was tense, and Gree was quiet.<br />
|
||
“How’s it going so far?” Lupen had asked, with Gree out of
|
||
earshot.<br />
|
||
“Eet ees… how you say in da Common Tongue? Full of da mind and da
|
||
body pain,” Nono replied.<br />
|
||
“Painful,” Lupen corrected.<br />
|
||
“Orae fleshy. Very very pain-full for Nono,” Nono said, glancing at
|
||
Gree on Etyl with feigned affection, “but Nono <em>try</em>.” Saying
|
||
this, Nono spotted Gree adjusting the standing rigging and began to
|
||
yell. “Ianae! Ara maha! Tawari’ia!”<br />
|
||
Gree gave Nono a dirty look and continued to adjust the lines. “Nono
|
||
mutau’ia, kora sosae’di…”<br />
|
||
Nono stormed back on deck and both continued to bicker in
|
||
Finic.<br />
|
||
Renzo was standing not too far away and had witnessed the argument,
|
||
knowing that Lupen did not speak Finic, Ren translated. “In short, too
|
||
many captains.” Ren said, drinking some plumpkin juice, a good
|
||
ingredient to help calm a troubled stomach.<br />
|
||
“How’s your head?” Lupen asked.<br />
|
||
“Like it is filled with rocks,” Renzo said, massaging a painful spot
|
||
between the eyes and the bridge of this nose. The alcohol had long
|
||
exited this body but its effects lingered, the bonan wine had made a
|
||
quarry of Renzo’s brain, “but you, you look fine? How is this
|
||
possible…”<br />
|
||
Lupen smirked. “Trick is to drink slow. Suffered from head rocks
|
||
many times before I learned.”<br />
|
||
Renzo groaned. “Yes yes, but I put my hand over my cup. Nono must
|
||
have filled it through the gaps in my fingers while I wasn’t
|
||
looking.”<br />
|
||
“I saw a durdle licking your fingers this morning. Are your hands
|
||
sticky?” Lupen quizzed the headache sufferer, with an ever-widening
|
||
grin.<br />
|
||
“No,” Renzo made a face then, “well, not anymore.”<br />
|
||
“You sure it’s okay to leave Hush with you?” Eka asked Renzo then,
|
||
joining them near Toronka. Hush was sitting near the bow of the sandfin
|
||
in the shade. Children were gathering around the hyroo now, stroking its
|
||
fur. A mess of tiny hands ran through its mane, separating the soft
|
||
hairs like teeth on a comb. Hush had a crowd of appreciators around at
|
||
all times. The large beast did not mind this, and seemed to enjoy the
|
||
attention.<br />
|
||
Renzo nodded, stroking the side of Hush’s head. The apprentice
|
||
offered a sip of plumpkin juice then, Hush would not dare deny such an
|
||
offer and started to drink. Ren gripped the cup well so the beast
|
||
wouldn’t lick it up by accident. As the hyroo was drinking, the children
|
||
did not stop brushing, they laughed as the beast spilled plumpkin juice
|
||
everywhere, little wet orange droplets spattered even those waiting for
|
||
their turn in the back of the group. Renzo smiled—this mouth had learned
|
||
a new trick and was eager to practice.<br />
|
||
Eka caught the smile, and was as determined to catch many more
|
||
before they left for their trip. “Vi ana tribu.” Eka said to Ren.<br />
|
||
At these words Ren froze. Words spoken in Aodan transported this
|
||
mind to another time and place. Its rhythm was comforting, better than
|
||
music, like re-discovering a long-forgotten, and favourite childhood
|
||
meal. Ren had learned Aodan while first employed in the Court of Light,
|
||
Enji grew up speaking it, and had taught Renzo over games of Hako…</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> “Nocta,” a hand flashed in front of Renzo’s eyes, showing the
|
||
fully-engraved topside of a six-faced stone die. Enji turned the die,
|
||
showing a smoothed-out face, “soli.” A side with two connected textured
|
||
triangles, “son.” A side with two disconnected triangle, “nos. And the
|
||
remaining sides are nulalun and grandalun,” Enji explained, “I play
|
||
soli. Soli <em>always</em> starts.” Renzo could hear Enji’s voice,
|
||
piercing through the thickness of a time now long gone…</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> A Sonozai[^] hung from Renzo’s belt still, the set of four dice
|
||
sat loosely on their string. “We are one tribe, one family.” The Iridi’s
|
||
face softened. Ren moved closer and put their foreheads together. “Jui,
|
||
vi la ana granda tribu. Tanka koroa Eka.” Each had one hand pressed
|
||
behind the head of the other. They stayed locked together for a moment
|
||
before Eka pulled away.<br />
|
||
“We will see each other soon, yea?” Eka said.<br />
|
||
“Yes. I wish for it to be soon,” Renzo replied, smiling
|
||
brightly.<br />
|
||
Another one for the trip, Eka thought.<br />
|
||
Eka spotted Klev and Nono then, and decided this was a good time to
|
||
say goodbye. Klev was busy braiding a bracelet when Eka came, stopping
|
||
to have a chat. They spoke at length about playing the donmol, and about
|
||
the best technique to ferment kyabe.<br />
|
||
Then, Eka moved to talk to Maka. The metalworker held a box with a
|
||
gift inside. It was full of fresh plurple bleen sausages, appropriately
|
||
paired with jars of mapple jam. “I added loads of grated chilabi to one
|
||
of these sausages,” Maka told Eka with a wink, “not telling you which!”
|
||
Chilabi was a popular ingredient in Aodal cuisine. A hot, pungent
|
||
condiment that would burn the nose, and that could be painful depending
|
||
on the amount consumed. Renate residents liked to play a game called
|
||
Chilabi Plusa, to mean chilabi with something extra.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="chilabi-plusa">Chilabi Plusa</h3>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> Chilabi Plusa is an acting game where the best pretender
|
||
wins.<br />
|
||
Each player has an identical dumpling which they must eat in turns.
|
||
All dumplings contain chilabi, but only one has ten times the amount, a
|
||
quantity enough to make its eater cry, sweat or cough. The goal of the
|
||
game is to hide your discomfort if you got the spiced dumpling, or to
|
||
pretend you got it when you didn’t. It is up to others to guess the
|
||
truth.</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p> Eka laughed. They’d played this game once already at a party. Eka
|
||
had not eaten a spiked dumpling, and neither had Lupen, although Eka was
|
||
very good at pretending and had won the game. Now, it was almost certain
|
||
that one of them would have to suffer its effects.<br />
|
||
Nono was next in line, Eka knelt down to match the Finiku’s short
|
||
height. “By the way, our woth friend is named Wiktopher.”<br />
|
||
Nono’s eyes widened in surprise, “sosae’di!” Nono said, ecstatic,
|
||
pulling Eka in close, the Finiku’s short arms barely able to encircle
|
||
The Wonder. “Nono happy to heer!”<br />
|
||
Lupen also said goodbye, but spent the most time with Klev, chatting
|
||
away in Ilken. Both Verido were using the short form, whistling away
|
||
while the villagers stared, perplexed by the absence of a worded
|
||
conversation. Klev had finished the isilk bracelet, and gave it to Lupen
|
||
as a parting gift. “Now you carry Bala with you.”<br />
|
||
“Thanks, it’s lovely.” Lupen said, fingers stroking the braid, its
|
||
red hue evident under the two suns. Then, the Verido removed the skyrock
|
||
necklace and handed it to Klev. “It’s a piece of skyrock. A reminder
|
||
that the world is bigger than the Ilk, bigger than the Soronan Desert
|
||
even. It’s an amazing place, and there is much to see.”<br />
|
||
Klev took the necklace, eyes locked onto its shiny, smooth surface.
|
||
“Wow. They’re as small down here as they appear up there!
|
||
Incredible.”<br />
|
||
In a changing world this object, Lupen hoped, would offer Klev some
|
||
comfort.</p>
|
||
<p>Eka and Lupen stepped aboard the sandfin, each taking on the tasks
|
||
they’d agreed on the previous day. Lupen pulled on the mainsail halyard
|
||
to raise it, while Eka kept the rope rings securing the sail to the mast
|
||
from catching. Once the sail was all the way up, the rope was tied off
|
||
and Eka moved to loosen the sheet to let the boom hang to one side, to
|
||
catch the wind. Having picked a windy day to cast off, the sail filled
|
||
with air and the sandfin plowed forward, breaking out of its mooring
|
||
spot in the sand.<br />
|
||
All in the village waved as Toronka sandfinned away. Nono held up a
|
||
scarf, the wind catching into it and sending ripples all along its
|
||
length. The others in the group did the same.<br />
|
||
As Eka and Lupen left Renate, they could see the scarves undulating
|
||
in the wind, hundreds of colourful arms of knitted fabric waving
|
||
goodbye. The Ilk of Balandri sang a parting song, the sound resounding
|
||
throughout the desert. This song would catch the ear of the other two
|
||
Ilk, and for a moment Lupen wondered if it could convince Vol to slow
|
||
its pace, or alter its course. Lupen knew that thinking this was silly,
|
||
it was near impossible to dissuade anyone from taking a Leap. Lupen’s
|
||
mind drifted to a day when Levi was still alive, a day they’d spent
|
||
together…</p>
|
||
<p>There was nothing special or important about that day, and that’s why
|
||
Lupen liked it. Levi was feeding Henbi, then put a nose to the bubbly
|
||
and sour smellydough starter, smiling before picking through a sac of
|
||
freshly-picked woodgeon berries. Lupen’s heart ached then, troubled by
|
||
thoughts of Henbi. The smellydough starter had been a family heirloom,
|
||
all members of Lupen’s family had handled it, and contributed to its
|
||
health and growth, feeding it everyday, and eating from it for annums
|
||
and annums. Lupen liked watching it expand and settle during the day,
|
||
like it was breathing. Henbi was likely dead now. Lupen swallowed hard,
|
||
sitting with this loss for a moment before returning to the main memory.
|
||
Levi was crouched down over a large bowl full of dry woodgeon berries,
|
||
hands running through them to shake the skins off. In this memory, Lupen
|
||
was lying in the hammock on the upper floor, with the overhead shutter
|
||
open to invite the suns inside. Lupen’s skin was warm, and this nose
|
||
could detect the subtle fragrance of the woodgeon berries as Levi moved
|
||
them around, these ears also helped to form the memory, remembering the
|
||
sound of Levi’s fingers catching the bottom of the bowl.<br />
|
||
This memory made Lupen happy and sad, these two emotions manifesting
|
||
together at the same intensity. This Verido sat with this wonderful
|
||
memory for a while, and then let it go. That day, Lupen made a plan to
|
||
try and plant a garden in the desert, like Zucca. “I wonder if woodgeon
|
||
shrubs can grow down here…”</p>
|
||
<p> As Renate faded away, they settled into their respective tasks,
|
||
taking bearings, checking the horizon for obstacles, or anything that
|
||
could help them identify where they were. The Soronan Desert had many
|
||
mountains, used as landmarks by countless sanfinners and foot travelers
|
||
to find their way. Traveling by foot, Lupen had learned to read the land
|
||
then already. In the Central Rim, the wind always circulated in the same
|
||
direction. To find saa’ta, all they had to do was walk with the wind at
|
||
their backs. On days without wind, these eyes looked at the sand dunes.
|
||
Each dune was shaped by the wind and the direction of the slant
|
||
indicated saa’ta. Finding yora’mu was easiest after the second sunset,
|
||
all avians slept with their heads pointing in that direction.<br />
|
||
Lupen took notes of all they saw on a map. Toronka was sandfinning
|
||
itself then, bow pointed toward the Rupture.</p>
|
||
<p>About midday, cruelly, the wind died. Lupen kept an eye on the
|
||
horizon for wind, but not a single grain of sand was shifting. With all
|
||
of this time to think, the Verido remembered The Tale of Three, Uno’s
|
||
gift.<br />
|
||
Every page was full of annotations and drawings, Uno had tracked the
|
||
paths of the three Ilks for annums and annums. There was a drawing of
|
||
their world route, along with all of their usual stops. There were also
|
||
notes on the three founders Otora, Balandri and Volare. Uno had been
|
||
there with them. Uno put all of their conversations and meetings
|
||
throughout their lives to paper. In one of the exchanges, Uno told
|
||
Volare about the location of the nesting grounds of the Ilk. The book
|
||
had handwritten letters scattered throughout, one of them was written by
|
||
Volare themself! The letter was a series of notes, like a set of
|
||
instructions on how to play a song. It was written in Ilken. Lupen read
|
||
it, and saw that it was addressed to Uno…</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> Today the Verido have found salvation. To think that the solution
|
||
lies with the giant desert walkers. Our collaboration will ensure both
|
||
of our futures in this desert. I don’t like to think about us, or them,
|
||
falling into nothing. I made the foolish assumption that Ilk were beyond
|
||
death, but their lives, like yours, are finite and near-spent. I will
|
||
keep my promise to you dear friend, we will care for them until the very
|
||
end. Already, I’ve secured dealings with cities, they will provide
|
||
teaweet on passage, and <em>we</em> will carry items for them, and sell
|
||
what we produce using materials that grow on their backs.<br />
|
||
The world really is changing though, isn’t it? Food is scarce. At
|
||
least, it is for giants like the Ilk. You told me that there was little
|
||
room for giants in this new world, but I do not believe it. I know that
|
||
this is me being wilfully foolish again, I cannot help it. I know you
|
||
are tired, and that it is greedy of me to ask you to stay. I will do
|
||
what I can for the Ilk, to spare you and your companion of this
|
||
demanding task.<br />
|
||
I trust this message reaches you safely, have a good rest my friend.
|
||
When you see me next I’ll be dust, but please, say hello anyway…<br />
|
||
— Volare</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> Lupen’s heart was racing. “Volare knew the Ilk were dying, Uno
|
||
did too.” The Verido continued to turn pages, finally arriving at the
|
||
main story…</p>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<h3 id="the-tale-of-three">The Tale of Three</h3>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> During an annum of terrible desert storms three Verido siblings,
|
||
Otora, Balandri and Volare, took it upon themselves to save their loved
|
||
ones from the hardships of the Soronan Desert. The eldest, Otora,
|
||
proposed that they build a vessel, a structure that could keep the town
|
||
moving so they could stay ahead of the weather. All places on this dust
|
||
planet were dangerous at one point or another. After designing this
|
||
vessel they realized that it would not be possible to build.<br />
|
||
Such a project would require too many resources—this detail worried
|
||
Balandri. They would need to dig the earth to mine crystals, further
|
||
damaging the desert. The Verido people had great respect for nature.
|
||
Balandri, in turn, proposed that build a large sandfin. But no one in
|
||
the land could help design one large enough to carry a small city. They
|
||
considered a flotilla of smaller vessels too, but given their sizable
|
||
population and lack of experience sandfinning, it seemed
|
||
difficult.<br />
|
||
Volare, who had once walked along the Central Rim by foot, proposed
|
||
that they walk, but the others did not share Volare’s love of trekking
|
||
through hot deserted lands.<br />
|
||
Volare had many more ideas, but could not figure out a way to keep
|
||
everyone safe. One day, a tall stranger arrived at Volare’s tent. The
|
||
stranger had heard about their predicament. “I have a solution for you.”
|
||
The silver-eyed giant said. The next day, Volare announced to Otora and
|
||
Balandri that there was one other option to consider. Together, they
|
||
walked across the desert to a lonely mountain, following the giant’s
|
||
instructions. They rested in the day, and travelled in the dark.
|
||
Eventually, they reached a mountain, and went through a pass carved in
|
||
its middle. On the other side they found three Ilk, busy grazing on
|
||
bibiskiss and hempawoods. The three appeared thin, and tired.<br />
|
||
The giant told Volare that this was their main grazing ground.
|
||
There were three Ilk, and three Verido siblings, nothing could be more
|
||
perfect.<br />
|
||
The Ilk were as tall as mountains. They had strong backs and legs,
|
||
their feet were wide and gave them stability for walking in sand. In
|
||
terrible storms, they could anchor their toes deep into the soil. They
|
||
had long slender necks, and long snouts with a set of curved
|
||
horns.<br />
|
||
The siblings spent annums learning about these giant beasts, they
|
||
learned how to approach them, and how to communicate. One day, the Ilk
|
||
lowered their heads and invited the Verido on their backs. Each
|
||
befriended an Ilk, and with their permission, they built houses made in
|
||
the hollows of the hard skin on their spines.<br />
|
||
Travelling on the back of an Ilk ensured both their survival. The
|
||
Verido were safe from the weather, and kept the Ilk healthy. The Hands
|
||
worked at keeping parasites away, inspecting every inch of skin from
|
||
head to toe for bruises, and tending to them. One annum two Ilk became
|
||
sick with a rare fungus, but the problem was diagnosed early and the
|
||
fungus was eradicated. Verido could build anything using isilk and
|
||
carapace shavings, materials endemic to the Ilk. The tough carapace
|
||
covering their backs, elbows and knees was an incredible resource. Every
|
||
annum the carapace thickness was measured, and the Verido would only
|
||
ever harvest if it had grown back enough. Food and drink was harder to
|
||
come by, but they found shroos, and mosses. The moss was engorged with
|
||
water, and they found clever ways to harvest it. Overtime, they were
|
||
able to grow favourites from their time on land, like bibiskiss,
|
||
looberries and looma roots.<br />
|
||
Otora, Balandri and Volare taught their children how to converse
|
||
with the Ilk. A child from each mapa took on the role of Voice. The
|
||
Veridos became a race of travelling merchants, craftspeople and
|
||
inventors. They secured agreements with various cities, carrying
|
||
provisions from village to village. They gave away their wares to people
|
||
from Montore, Edonor, Tiu’va, in exchange for feed for the Ilk. The
|
||
desert wilds had grown thin, and could no longer sustain three Ilk, not
|
||
without outside help.</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p>“Wow.” Lupen said, eyeing the various drawings and notes in The Tale
|
||
of Three. One drawing by Volare featured a rough design of the city on
|
||
Vol’s back, another tallied all the residents. Just as the Verido was
|
||
reaching for another letter, the wind rose again…<br />
|
||
“Sails up up up!” Eka bellowed, running to the foredeck to raise the
|
||
headsail, then tied off the line and ran amidships to raise their main
|
||
sail. Toronka started to shift forward, and as the wind continued to
|
||
rise its twin keels cut through the dunes, sending sand flurries all
|
||
above deck.<br />
|
||
Lupen hurried and put the book away to avoid getting sand lodged
|
||
between its pages, but the wind caught one of the letters and sent it
|
||
flying. Eka was there to catch it, and handed the sheet over to Lupen.
|
||
The Verido smiled back, and secured the pile together, putting it away
|
||
inside. Now, it was time to focus on sandfinning again.</p>
|
||
<p>That evening, both took a seat on deck and watched the stars.<br />
|
||
“You tired?” Eka asked Lupen.<br />
|
||
“No, I can take the first watch.”<br />
|
||
Eka nodded, and went inside to sleep. The woth was on deck, hiding
|
||
behind a bulkhead from the wind.<br />
|
||
“How’s your shift so far?” Lupen asked the woth.<br />
|
||
The woth moved its antennae, not because it was replying to the
|
||
question, but because it was busy working bits of sand out of
|
||
them.<br />
|
||
“Do you know what lies ahead Wik? A pass,” Lupen paused for dramatic
|
||
effect, “Dorake’s pass.”<br />
|
||
Dorake’s pass was an opening between two sets of mountains, the
|
||
meeting of two great capes. In this area, the cape effect accelerated
|
||
the trade winds, the height of the surrounding mountains too contributed
|
||
to this acceleration. The day before, Nono had helped them plan their
|
||
route to the Rupture on a map, and the Finiku explained that taking
|
||
Dorake’s pass, although treacherous, was a shortcut and the best way to
|
||
intercept the Ilk. The wind was strong in that area most days, but
|
||
they’d timed their departure after the passing of a dry cold front,
|
||
sandfinning on the trail end of the system. They knew it would take time
|
||
before another would come trailing behind it. Nono had gone through the
|
||
pass many times, unharmed, when countless other sandfins were buried and
|
||
suffocated in its blowing sands.</p>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p> “How did you make it through safely all those times?” Lupen had
|
||
asked Nono.<br />
|
||
“Wen glass fall, sandfinner make sail small. Wen sky yellow to
|
||
brown, sandfinner put anchor down.”</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p> ~</p>
|
||
<p> Nono had many more rhymes to help memorize the signs of incoming
|
||
bad weather, and how best to respond to them. Lupen remembered them all.
|
||
“Ring around kira, all gone is sawa…” The Verido said aloud to the sand,
|
||
the stars and the glowing skyrocks, “not today. Today sawa is with
|
||
us.”<br />
|
||
Toronka sandfinned through the dark. Their vessel’s sails were
|
||
well-balanced, and required little adjusting. Lupen would loosen and
|
||
tighten the sheets as needed, skin black with pinny tar. It appeared as
|
||
though the Verido had no arms, like the environment had swallowed them
|
||
up. Lupen laughed alone in the dark, and then decided to stamp a pinny
|
||
tarred-covered hand on this face. After doing that Lupen laughed even
|
||
harder.<br />
|
||
Eka awoke a few moments later, and climbed out of the cabin. “Time
|
||
for sleep Lu!” But saying this, Eka noted that the Verido wasn’t in the
|
||
cockpit. “Lu?” It was dark, but the sky was clear and the skyrock Retna
|
||
illuminated the entire deck from bow to stern. No Lupen. The Wonder
|
||
returned inside to search there, but that space too was devoid of
|
||
Veridos. Eka returned outside, eyes locking on the dim horizon line,
|
||
wondering if maybe Lupen had fallen overboard. “Oh no… Lu!” The Wonder
|
||
grabbed lines and was ready to turn the sandfin around but then heard
|
||
laughing overhead. Lupen was perched at the top of the mast. Eka was
|
||
relieved, and whistled in Ilken, the sound penetrating distance and air.
|
||
Lupen heard, and started coming down, coming to meet Eka on deck.<br />
|
||
“Beautiful sandfinning, eh?” Lupen said smiling, but then noticed
|
||
Eka’s expression. “What is it?”<br />
|
||
“Thought you’d fallen off.”<br />
|
||
“Sorry if I scared you. It can’t happen though, I’ve got a tether
|
||
and everything, <em>see</em>? With a good knot too.” A line encircled
|
||
Lupen’s middle, and led back to the mast.<br />
|
||
Eka’s eyes inspected the knot, following its twists and turns and
|
||
could see that it had been tied correctly. The Wonder noticed the dark
|
||
hand print on Lupen’s face, “the mark of a true sandfinner,” saying
|
||
this, one of Eka’s fingers traced around the print. “You looked at home
|
||
up there Lu.”<br />
|
||
Lupen nodded, “Yea. It’s like being on a much shorter Ilk, but
|
||
having more control you know?” The Verido stared at the sails, their
|
||
bellies taut, hundreds of hempa strands working together, and thought it
|
||
beautiful, elegant. “Balandri wanted our people to travel by sandfin. It
|
||
didn’t make sense then, but <em>now</em>…”<br />
|
||
“Mind’s a-whirring!” Eka said, “I’m proud of you you know.”<br />
|
||
Lupen’s cheeks reddened, but no one would see the subtle change
|
||
because of the low-light. This Verido leaned forward and planted a quick
|
||
kiss on Eka’s mouth, leaving a pinny-tar lip print behind, then
|
||
unfastened the rope and tied it around The Wonder’s middle. “I love you
|
||
Eka. Good sleepings!” Lupen said, before hurrying below in the cabin to
|
||
sleep.<br />
|
||
Eka smiled, hand lingering on the lip print. “Good sleepings lovely,
|
||
lovely Lu blue.”<br />
|
||
A voice inside the cabin enumerated the skyrocks in the sky,
|
||
“Balavados, Encitris, Naxagorus, Liminik, Omoretus, Retna, Alpininsis…”
|
||
And then this part of the world quieted. Toronka’s voice resounded
|
||
across the desert dunes, the hull creaked and groaned, pushing through
|
||
sand and leaving a deep track behind. Dorake’s pass lay ahead, a
|
||
three-day sail away. For now, it remained a distant concern for Toronka
|
||
and crew.</p>
|
||
<h1 id="lupens-logbook">Lupen’s logbook</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/fauna.passari.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>Passari Tremblers are small, sand-dwelling avians. They’ve got
|
||
long, thin bills, which they use to pick food through sand. They have a
|
||
big, colourful head crest. They are rather skittish creatures. They
|
||
prefer quiet areas, staying away from cities and most
|
||
creatures.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p><strong>Day 1</strong></p>
|
||
<p><em>First sunrise</em></p>
|
||
<p>Hello Logbook. Dorake’s passage is a day away. Our progress is good,
|
||
but slow. The wind comes and leaves as it wants, and when it’s gone all
|
||
we can do is wait.<br />
|
||
Long periods of still desert paired with a clear, clear sky, makes
|
||
it difficult to believe that the wind will ever return. Toronka’s sails
|
||
hang from their ropes, as if asleep. Everything but my mind is still. I
|
||
am impatient, unaccustomed to a carrier dependent on weather for
|
||
movement. The Ilk never had to wait for wind.<br />
|
||
My eyes catch every movement in the sand. Earlier I spotted the top
|
||
leaves of a cactub off Toronka’s stern. Plants like cactubs can survive
|
||
almost anything, that is, unless they fall prey to a hunter. In calm
|
||
weather they emerge to take in moisture and light, but small avians time
|
||
their exits with theirs to take bites out of them. Many of the desert
|
||
perennials I’ve seen have leaves or nubs missing, their flesh covered
|
||
with craters. I thought about the craters in my own flesh then, the
|
||
desert leaves marks on us all.<br />
|
||
I used to think I knew this land well, but I had a giant’s
|
||
perspective, blind to tiny details. From up there, the world below
|
||
looked quiet and barren, but there is so much life here.<br />
|
||
Most creatures here live in the topmost layer of the sand dunes.
|
||
Some live here always, while others dig out temporary homes in passing.
|
||
Many creatures will only ever show themselves under specific weather
|
||
conditions, creatures like hespers. Hespers bloom into existence every
|
||
ha’annum, but have very short lives. They’re in constant flight, soaring
|
||
on wind currents. They go where the wind takes them. That is all they
|
||
can ever do because they don’t have limbs, or wings. I think I saw one
|
||
floating high above the mast yesterday, carried by an impossible wind. I
|
||
climbed up to see it, but by the time I made it to the top it had
|
||
already drifted out of sight.<br />
|
||
There are reptavians flying around our vessel too, the sound of
|
||
their leathery wings evident in this quiet. I’ve never been good at
|
||
identifying reptavians, but Eka can put a name to them straight away.
|
||
Crested-hirudines. They are quick flyers, with red crests on their heads
|
||
and bright green scales on their bellies. Their movements are jerky, but
|
||
precise. They always fly in tight groups, sweeping up together against
|
||
the sky, twisting at great speed. I sat on deck a while to enjoy the
|
||
show, gasping whenever the group narrowingly avoided our mast. They
|
||
would fly near and around it, mesmerized by its perfect
|
||
verticality.<br />
|
||
In Volare we have hololomimos. Small, bulgy-eyed reptavians that
|
||
like to nest in houses. We didn’t used to have them, we think they
|
||
climbed aboard during one of our stops. They like it on the Ilk because
|
||
there are plenty of shroos to eat, but of course this is a problem for
|
||
my people because our food supply is limited. No one wants to harm the
|
||
hololomimos, so now we have volunteers that look for nests to move them
|
||
back on land. When I was last there, the relocation efforts were going
|
||
well. Now Verido nests may have to move onto land too, seems like. This
|
||
effort to move the hololomimos might have been all for nothing.<br />
|
||
Later Eka & I spotted a group of yellow avians with long forked
|
||
tails. They stared at us for a long while, immobile, feet well-set in
|
||
the sand. We stared back. We did this for a while, neither us or the
|
||
avians wanted to be the first to look away, breaking off would mean
|
||
losing the staring game. But then the group all moved at once, quickly,
|
||
scattering before diving into holes in the ground for shelter.<br />
|
||
“Yay! We won!” I had told Eka then, but I then understood the reason
|
||
for their hurry. The wind was back. They had sensed its return and knew
|
||
that when the wind came back, bigger and faster wind-reliant avians and
|
||
winged reptavians would also return, putting them at a disadvantage. In
|
||
other words, it wasn’t a true win.<br />
|
||
Toronka, our winged beast, also relies on the wind for forwardness.
|
||
Its hull creaked as it began to slide forward. I pulled in the sheets
|
||
for extra power, and we started to glide.<br />
|
||
The calm was over, now it was time to fly.</p>
|
||
<p><em>Second sunrise</em></p>
|
||
<p>Every midday I sweep the sand from the deck, but it is an impossible
|
||
task. There is always more sand coming. I clear it anyway. It’s become a
|
||
routine, an activity I’ve come to enjoy. While I sweep I look at the
|
||
deck, I look at the lines, sails and blocks, to make sure all is fine.
|
||
Performing a check is an exercise in accident prevention.<br />
|
||
When Eka gets up, we eat breakfast together. We still have loaves of
|
||
muckwheat to eat, although I choked on a piece of purple bleen sausage
|
||
this morning. I dipped it in mapple jam and it was like eating flames.
|
||
Eka laughed, but never did explain.<br />
|
||
When the two suns have risen, I hide in the shade and read. I’ve
|
||
finished reading Volare’s letters in The Tale of Three. Most letters are
|
||
short messages between Volare and Uno, but there are also poems. I
|
||
rather like them. I plan to memorize them to pass the time and to train
|
||
my ‘poet’s eye’.<br />
|
||
Eka is sitting at the bow, staring ahead at far-away mountains. It
|
||
is a nice, nice day, and I hope it stays that way.</p>
|
||
<p>Having so much time to think is nice, but it also makes me realize
|
||
how forgetful I am. I forgot to ask Renzo about the story of Aristollo.
|
||
I am so distracted most days that I don’t have the mind space to
|
||
remember these things. Out here my eyes lock onto the horizon, and
|
||
thoughts that lie deep inside my brain have plenty of time to bob to the
|
||
surface. All day they transit in and out of my head. Sometimes I latch
|
||
onto a passing thought and hold onto it for a long while to
|
||
dissect.<br />
|
||
I wonder what Eka is thinking about now. I ask a lot, and fear I’ve
|
||
asked too much already.<br />
|
||
Yesterday Eka was thinking about the mountain top. The green place
|
||
that could charm anyone into staying forever. I think about it a lot
|
||
too, and hope that I get to go again. There are plants there that I’ve
|
||
never seen anywhere else. Sometimes I catch their scent in the air, as
|
||
if the wind carries their perfume across the desert, and that my
|
||
nostrils were lucky to catch them in passing. Toronka is comfortable,
|
||
but no place can rival the fragrant mountain top, not even my old
|
||
hammock in Volare.</p>
|
||
<p>I prepared roasted plumpkins for midday. I scooped out the seeds and
|
||
will leave them to dry on deck, weather permitting. The seeds are very
|
||
good to eat as a snack when dry, they are crunchy on the outside and
|
||
gooey on the inside. As taught by Eka, I eat one, and toss one. A
|
||
determined traveller could re-trace our steps by following our trail of
|
||
seeds. I hope that they grow into mature plumpkins, and that they form a
|
||
long green line across the desert.<br />
|
||
The mountains ahead are getting closer and closer. A thick, yellow
|
||
and brown cloud layer is obscuring the top of the tallest peak. Nono did
|
||
say that a cloud of that colour was indicative of rain. Rain. I am
|
||
excited, but also concerned because I remember something else Nono said,
|
||
that if the sky showed that same hue it could mean severe localized
|
||
weather. The sky doesn’t have that shade now, but I’ll keep an eye on
|
||
it.</p>
|
||
<p><em>First sunset</em></p>
|
||
<p>It’s Eka’s turn to prepare food. We had a dinner of bonan chips with
|
||
a looma root stew. Because Bala was in Renate, we were able to get some
|
||
of my favourite produce. We now have a basket-full of looma roots and
|
||
shroos. Wik ate some of the leftover chip crumbs, glad that we are messy
|
||
eaters. The deck was licked clean of all food particles, the same goes
|
||
for the bits lining our fingers.<br />
|
||
Our woth friend likes to walk up and down the side of the mast. The
|
||
wind is a bit stronger now, and Wik is unaffected, its legs anchored to
|
||
the mast.<br />
|
||
The cloud on the mountain ahead is getting puffier, but again, no
|
||
sign of a yellow brown sky. Eka and I prepared the storm anchor. Neither
|
||
of us have ever used it before. We did not experience severe weather on
|
||
our passage to Tiputa on Etyl. Nono explained how to set it up during
|
||
one of Toronka’s test runs. It was easy. All we had to do was to pull
|
||
the anchor out of its locker, and to attach a long rope to it. Then, we
|
||
had to douse the sails, lash them down and throw the anchor off the bow,
|
||
tying the bitter end to a strong point on deck. Doing it during calm
|
||
weather wasn’t hard, but Nono said it might be challenging with more
|
||
wind. I practice my knots to make sure I can do them well, even in
|
||
stressful conditions. Mago would be proud.<br />
|
||
Eka is a fast learner, and always gets everything right on the first
|
||
try. I sometimes wish I was the same. I know that wishing for this is
|
||
useless, because it’s not how I am, and my way of being is also fine.
|
||
Something to remember.</p>
|
||
<p><em>Second sunset</em></p>
|
||
<p>The dark shifts were easy because the wind left us again. I walked
|
||
around the deck reciting Volare’s poems aloud. I did get carried away
|
||
with some of my recitations, but was careful not to wake Eka.<br />
|
||
The last poem I learned, goes like this:</p>
|
||
<p> <em>The Skyrocks alight,</em><br />
|
||
<em>Golden sands mask their colour,</em><br />
|
||
<em>The dark draws a path.</em></p>
|
||
<p> For poetry I know that there are rules, but I don’t know them.
|
||
Despite not knowing I think I will try to write some of my own. Levi
|
||
taught me how to write. We’d practice on flat bits of carapace, dipping
|
||
our fingers in looberry syrup to use as ink. I never got to look at my
|
||
writing for very long though, because I liked the taste of looberry
|
||
syrup too much. As Levi wrote, I was there to mop up the juices from
|
||
previous words and so I never did have time to study the letters to
|
||
better my eye and hand.<br />
|
||
Volare’s writing has an illustrative quality to it, while mine is
|
||
crooked and clumsy. Not two letters are even. Volare’s A’s look the same
|
||
throughout the text. I can see that this is my problem, my letters
|
||
aren’t <em>ever</em> the same. I know what beautiful letters look like,
|
||
but even if I see them in my mind I can’t reproduce them. Sometimes my
|
||
letters shrink to a whisper, or grow big and loud, all in one word. Eka
|
||
said that with practice I will be able to match the image in my head. I
|
||
hope that’s true.<br />
|
||
The sand floor is empty. Not a single creature in sight.
|
||
Strange.</p>
|
||
<p><strong>Day 2</strong></p>
|
||
<p><em>First sunrise</em></p>
|
||
<p>I woke up to a roaring sound. The wind had risen, and the entire
|
||
cabin was shaking. The yukwood hull creaked, as if the walls were
|
||
afraid. There was sand inside of the cabin, covering the stairs and
|
||
floor near the entrance. The hatch was shut, but sand had found its way
|
||
inside, slipping through the cracks and filling every corner. I got up,
|
||
looked outside and found an opaque wall of weather. No horizon. I could
|
||
not see past Toronka’s middle. I went back inside to slip on a pair of
|
||
goggles and a scarf, the speed of that wind pushed the sand at violent
|
||
speeds, and just like sand had gotten inside of the cabin with ease, it
|
||
too would a way inside my nostrils. Too much could hurt you. I followed
|
||
Eka’s tether to the bow, and was glad to find my companion there,
|
||
safe.<br />
|
||
All of the sails were down, and looking ahead I saw a line extending
|
||
out into the sand. The line was taut, and led back to our anchor,
|
||
disappearing behind the yellow veil. We were riding on our storm anchor.
|
||
Eka too wore goggles and a scarf. We both stared at the rope, to make
|
||
sure that the anchor had set. My friend’s red hair had a muted colour
|
||
today, dimmed with dust.<br />
|
||
The quiet world of yesterday was gone.<br />
|
||
In such weather all creatures were hiding in their respective
|
||
shelters. We ought to do the same. Nono had told us that if there
|
||
weren’t any small avians around that it was a sure sign that the weather
|
||
was deteriorating. We should have seen the signs, a barren land is a
|
||
portent of disaster.<br />
|
||
When we were certain that Toronka wasn’t going to blow away, we
|
||
retreated back inside and prepared some food. Eka explained that the
|
||
wind had picked up fast, and threatened to turn us over. A storm had
|
||
come under the cover of darkness. The event I had been dreading had
|
||
arrived.</p>
|
||
<p><em>Second sunrise</em></p>
|
||
<p>Eka and I took turns shoveling sand from the deck. The wind was still
|
||
screaming into our faces, and became more ferocious as the day warmed.
|
||
Erring on the side of caution, we decided to throw another anchor off
|
||
the bow. If our main anchor failed, then we’d have the second one to
|
||
depend on.<br />
|
||
I have no appetite. My stomach is full with worry, and fear. What I
|
||
don’t eat, Eka takes. As usual, the Wonder doesn’t share my fears. I am
|
||
glad for this, because two worriers would not be very useful right
|
||
now.</p>
|
||
<p><em>First sunset</em></p>
|
||
<p>Eka is Toronka’s time keeper, flipping the sand timer every time it
|
||
is empty. The sandstorm makes it difficult to see the position of the
|
||
two suns, and so with the timer we know how much time has passed.
|
||
Knowing is both a comfort, and a source of worry for me. The longer it
|
||
lasts, the more anxious I get, but I also know that every song must
|
||
end.<br />
|
||
The accumulating sand is beginning to bury us. I don’t know how
|
||
we’ll be able to get the anchors out. We went out often on deck today to
|
||
push the sand off from around the bow, but the wind carried more back. I
|
||
wonder if it would not have been better to run with the weather, but I
|
||
remember what Nono said. Running in heavy winds might result in Toronka
|
||
doing a death roll. A death roll means that the sandfin would roll
|
||
either sideways or face first. Few sandfins could recover from such an
|
||
ordeal, the rig would likely break. I bet that’s how this area acquired
|
||
its reputation of being a graveyard for sandfins.<br />
|
||
Many shovel-fulls later, I still can’t eat anything. My whole body
|
||
is on alert, putting aside regular processes to attend to this stressful
|
||
event. Hunger doesn’t happen under stress, nor thirst.</p>
|
||
<p><em>Second sunset</em></p>
|
||
<p>Both of us stayed awake, the noise outside made it difficult to
|
||
sleep. We spent a lot of time stuffing bits of fabric into openings, to
|
||
try and keep the sand out. With time though, the sand <em>always</em>
|
||
finds a way in. It sends fingers of grains through cracks, like soldiers
|
||
to war. Given enough time its hordes would overwhelm, and entomb
|
||
us.<br />
|
||
The mainsail got loose. We could hear it shaking the entire rig. The
|
||
sail was whipping violently above our heads. The two of us went out to
|
||
try and lash it back down again. Opening the hatch to exit, even for a
|
||
second, sent a flurry of grains below. We closed it tight, tied our
|
||
tethers, and felt our way forward, moving towards the mast. The wind was
|
||
much stronger now, and the sand scratched any bit of exposed skin. We’d
|
||
noticed that the rocks in the area were all smooth, and now we know why.
|
||
If we stayed out here too long, we too would start to shrink in size,
|
||
our sharp edges ground off by the weather.<br />
|
||
I had to re-tie the scarf around my mouth and nose many times. The
|
||
wind has skilled and patient hands, able to untie any knot. It did
|
||
manage to loosen my scarf all the way, I could feel sand funneling
|
||
inside my nostrils and into my throat. I plugged my nose shut with one
|
||
hand while Eka rushed over to fasten the knot again. I coughed and
|
||
wheezed from under the strip of cloth, in a hurry to expel the grains
|
||
from my lungs. My throat was burning for a long time after that.<br />
|
||
We tied the boom down again and wrestled the sail in. This was a
|
||
task that required four hands. We folded the sail down in sections, with
|
||
Eka adding rope as we went along. I trust Eka’s knots more than my own.
|
||
It doesn’t look as though the sail cloth was damaged, although we found
|
||
one broken batten. Fixing a batten is not too difficult, Nono had us
|
||
carry spares.<br />
|
||
We were lucky that the wind did not shred the sail. Nono would hate
|
||
me using that word. Lucky. There is no such thing as luck, just good and
|
||
cautious sandfinners.<br />
|
||
Once everything was lashed down well we hurried back inside. I am
|
||
tired now, but I don’t know if I’ll be able to sleep today.</p>
|
||
<p><strong>Day 3</strong></p>
|
||
<p><em>First sunrise</em></p>
|
||
<p>The storm abated, and when it did it rain fell from the sky. A
|
||
gentle, cool rain. We sat for a long while in it, smiling, letting it
|
||
clear the sand from our clothes and skin. It helped strip the sand from
|
||
the deck too. Rain is rare in the Soronan Desert, but the topography
|
||
here is perfect for it. Now that the wind is down, we can see plants
|
||
coming out of the soil, their leaves fanning out to try and catch it.
|
||
The ground is covered in green now, resembling Zucca’s garden in the
|
||
Oasis. Nono told us that this place had many hidden waterstone caverns,
|
||
but no one ever stayed here long enough to uncover them, the area was
|
||
too dangerous. We must not let this beautiful event soften our hearts,
|
||
we must not forget the uncaring and destructive nature of this
|
||
place.<br />
|
||
After the rain subsided, we began the long task of freeing Toronka
|
||
from the enormous sand bank that had engulfed it. The whole front of the
|
||
bow disappeared under a thick, and heavy yellow canopy. Now I understand
|
||
why Nono insisted on us carrying a pair of heavy shovels. The exercise
|
||
helped me find my appetite again then, after a few horos of digging I
|
||
ate half of a muckwheat loaf.</p>
|
||
<p><em>Second sunrise</em></p>
|
||
<p>We are still busy clearing the sand away. The bow is almost free, but
|
||
then we’ll have to try and retrieve the two anchors. Toronka has a drum
|
||
that we can wrap the anchor line around. It has a hole at the top, where
|
||
we can insert a handle to hoist them back up. I tried to use it but
|
||
could not do it, still too much sand. We need to keep digging.<br />
|
||
We keep finding sand inside of the cabin, under floorboards, in cups
|
||
and within the pages of Volare’s book too.<br />
|
||
Sand flies, crawls and hides.</p>
|
||
<p><em>First sunset</em></p>
|
||
<p>We did it. We’ve cleared most of the obstructions away, and were able
|
||
to remove both anchors. Our timing couldn’t have been better, because
|
||
the wind is rising. We are both exhausted though, but sleep will have to
|
||
come later for me. I volunteered to keep watch on deck first. Eka went
|
||
below to rest. I can taste sleep in my mouth. Whenever I feel sleep
|
||
coming I eat a slice of chililly, the sting is enough to keep me awake
|
||
for a while.<br />
|
||
The sails are up and full, we are heading through Dorake’s pass
|
||
under clear skies. The suns are still with us, this too helps to keep me
|
||
awake and alert.<br />
|
||
While in the pass, I saw masts buried in the sand, their bodies
|
||
broken, splintered. I placed my hand over my chest as Toronka ghosted by
|
||
them. Nature’s indifference is cruel, but only inexperience can bury a
|
||
sandfinner. Hearing Nono say that I was nervous, because we didn’t have
|
||
Nono’s expertise. But our teacher assured us that if we kept our eyes on
|
||
the horizon, that if we smelled the air, and that if we listened to sawa
|
||
and the yorala well, we would know that bad weather was coming. ‘If sky
|
||
turn yellow to brown, sandfinner take all sail down.’ Mnemonics worked
|
||
well for me. Nono had said that when you go through Dorake’s pass, you
|
||
make a bet with yourself, that you’ve understood the signs in the sky in
|
||
the clouds and in the air. If you missed any, then things might not end
|
||
well for you.<br />
|
||
Reading the weather is difficult though, there are too many factors. The
|
||
effect of wind on an area depends on topography and on temperature. They
|
||
interact with one another, and when you think you’ve understood
|
||
everything, then a new element is thrown into the mix and their
|
||
interactions produce new conditions. To the sandfinner, to the one who
|
||
doesn’t understand this complex network of interactions and number of
|
||
possible outcomes, this made nature appear fickle, and mean.<br />
|
||
My people are subject to superstition. I am too. I feel good when a
|
||
series of random actions produces a favourable result. And when I do
|
||
these things again, and get the same result this re-enforces my beliefs.
|
||
Wiggle your ears while looking at the suns while singing, it makes the
|
||
wind return. Really, it works. Try it. But when rituals didn’t work,
|
||
then it is a sign that something out there doesn’t agree with me. Well,
|
||
you’ve done it now Lupen, you’ve insulted the weather. The desert hates
|
||
you, and the wind will never fill Toronka’s sails again. Then the only
|
||
thing to do is to find a new ritual.<br />
|
||
It is silly. I know it is, and it is laughable that I continue
|
||
despite knowing this. Sometimes we need rituals. We need to believe that
|
||
there is someone responsible for the weather, or lack of it, and that we
|
||
have the power to change things. Although my time in the desert has
|
||
taught me that we can’t reason with the wind, nor can we will it to
|
||
change direction. My rituals have become a pastime, a game, but nothing
|
||
more. Shouting at the desert while becalmed did little to appease my
|
||
anger. These hands cannot control nature. It is healthier to accept that
|
||
sometimes local conditions produce a destructive event, and that no
|
||
celestial being had anything to do with it. It is nature being nature,
|
||
it buries bodies and vessels without prejudice.<br />
|
||
I thought about the graves out here in the desert, the ones not
|
||
marked by masts. It is possible that we have walked over many bodies
|
||
since our voyage began. If it hadn’t been for Uno, I too would be there,
|
||
buried, forgotten, and unknown to the living. To those laying in
|
||
unmarked graves, I say to you that I <em>know</em> you are there. I
|
||
<em>know</em> you have a story. I will never pass over sand again
|
||
without thinking of you, and of your possible pasts and futures.<br />
|
||
Have a good rest fellow travelers. You are now sand, you make up the
|
||
road that carries our vessel onward. One day I will be sand too, and
|
||
then we’ll have ample time to tell each other our stories.</p>
|
||
<p><em>Second sunset</em></p>
|
||
<p>We made it through the pass in good weather. After Eka and I traded
|
||
places I slept long, and hard. It was the best sleep I’ve had. My mind
|
||
was still empty of dreams. Now, Encela and Protus are out, they light
|
||
our way towards the Rupture. If the wind keeps, and our navigation is
|
||
correct, we will be there the day after tomorrow. We have Etyl’s compass
|
||
and it is helpful to orient ourselves, the needle to yora’mu points
|
||
behind us. Wik also has a good sense of space, it is like it feels
|
||
landmarks like mountains, and deep chasms. Woths are the eyes of a
|
||
sandfinner. They always know where they are.<br />
|
||
I am nervous. I don’t know what I’ll do when we find Vol, and I’m
|
||
not sure what to do if we don’t. I’ve resolved to put it out of my head
|
||
until I see Vol, and by then I’ll be too busy to worry.<br />
|
||
Growing up, I remember Levi putting my ear to the ground, to listen
|
||
to Vol’s heartbeat. I could hear it, resonating through its thick
|
||
carapace. My mapa said it was the most important sound in the world, and
|
||
that I had to listen to it always. Now I think I understand why my mapa
|
||
said this. Vol’s heartbeat was a way to measure its health, historically
|
||
for our people it was also a way to measure the passing of time, but it
|
||
also served to measure the time we had left on its back, a slow
|
||
countdown to nothing, the sound of a spindle gradually emptying itself
|
||
of its thread.<br />
|
||
I plan to spend the dark atop the mast, eyes on the horizon. Being
|
||
up there calms me.</p>
|
||
<p><strong>Day 4</strong></p>
|
||
<p><em>First sunrise</em></p>
|
||
<p>The wind is still with us, but we are the only ones out there. We
|
||
are in the Saa’ta Ash Plains, it is easy to tell because the ground is
|
||
no longer yellow. The desert is black, inverted. I’ve never seen
|
||
anything like it. Vol’s path around the world never included this
|
||
region, with reason… it’s known as the place where all things go to die.
|
||
No one comes here for any other reason, not even as transit.<br />
|
||
I imagined that it would be a scary place, the air thick with dread,
|
||
but it is pleasant. There is life here too. The area is full of sooty
|
||
agocets. Small, wispy, elongated creatures that swim in the black sand.
|
||
We’ve had many dive aboard, startled by our passing. When they land on
|
||
deck they twist and shimmy their bodies until they find the edge of the
|
||
vessel, to freedom. In doing so, they leave little sooty trails
|
||
everywhere. We passed through an area teeming with them earlier, they
|
||
exploded out of the ground and covered the deck in black dust. We
|
||
laughed. No amount of cleaning could rid the deck of all this soot.
|
||
Toronka was now a true creature of the Saa’ta Ash Plains, a moving
|
||
shadow.<br />
|
||
We also saw larger agocets too, rising out of the sand in the
|
||
distance. Some measured up to twenty’hateen mitres, four times Toronka’s
|
||
length. They would launch themselves up, balancing on their translucent
|
||
flukes for a moment before diving back into the sand. They stayed far
|
||
away, uninterested in us and our travels.</p>
|
||
<p><em>Second sunrise</em></p>
|
||
<p>Hello precious logbook, this is Eka. I thought I would write because
|
||
Lupen hasn’t found the time to do it today, too busy trimming sails and
|
||
steering Toronka. We’ve found tracks in the sand, fresh tracks that have
|
||
not yet been covered with sand. I do not think they belong to Vol, but
|
||
it belongs to some other big thing, I believe. The wind is weak,
|
||
affecting our speed. Lu Blue is working hard to catch every puff of
|
||
wind. We were approaching rapidly at first, but this decreasing wind
|
||
sure has bad timing. It’s at times like this that I wish I could take
|
||
enough air into my lungs to blow into our sails, I bet this is something
|
||
an Ilk could do.<br />
|
||
The logbook will end here for now, my Lu needs me up on deck. We are
|
||
going to have to work hard to catch up. Good day to you dearest logbook,
|
||
thank you for allowing your pages to be filled for this purpose, and to
|
||
document Lupen’s thoughts.</p>
|
||
<h1 id="the-big-dark">The Big Dark</h1>
|
||
<p><img src="media/fauna.sootyagocet.png" /></p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><em>Sooty agocets are small agocets that live in the sand, their fins
|
||
pushing them through grains with ease. They like to leap out of the sand
|
||
and to glide to evade sand-dwelling predators, although while in flight,
|
||
they are weak to avians and reptavians. Because their bodies match the
|
||
sand, it is difficult for predators to see them from overhead.</em></p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>Toronka lay quiet in the sand once more, not because the wind had
|
||
left, but because a huge gap in the ground lay ahead, barring their
|
||
path. They stood at the meeting point between two deep chasms, forming a
|
||
squiggly V with it’s two branches extending far, far out into the black
|
||
desert.<br />
|
||
“This isn’t on the map,” Lupen said, standing at the bottom of the
|
||
wide V. “It isn’t on the map!” Lupen realized the irony of denying the
|
||
existence of a thing while standing near it, but could not think
|
||
clearly. “Mapoleon made a mistake.”<br />
|
||
Eka shrugged, “the Rupture is long, and it’s possible that this
|
||
particular part of it wasn’t there until recently. It is difficult to
|
||
map a changing world Lu.”<br />
|
||
Lupen wondered if leaving Hush in Renate had been wise, they could
|
||
have continued on foot together. This part of the Rupture was too wide
|
||
to gap by foot, but would be possible to cross with a hyroo.<br />
|
||
“Come, come. We’ll sail back and find a way around.” Eka said,
|
||
motioning for Lupen to climb back aboard.<br />
|
||
“We won’t get there in time.”<br />
|
||
Eka leapt off the bow and moved to take Lupen’s hand, gently leading
|
||
the Verido back to Toronka. “Don’t worry.”<br />
|
||
In silence, they raised the sails and turned the sandfin around,
|
||
following the fissure in the black sand. Lupen took command of the
|
||
vessel, determined to overcome this latest obstacle.</p>
|
||
<p>Across the desert Toronka fLu. The bow pushed through the black sand,
|
||
leaving a deep groove behind, it drew a pattern across the desert
|
||
visible only to those with eyes in the sky. The ride wasn’t a cheery
|
||
one, but the dark veil drew back once they found a piece of ground
|
||
bridging the gap. Toronka skidded across the narrow bit of land,
|
||
ignoring the dizzying depth present on both sides.<br />
|
||
A chart lay at Lupen’s feet, with lines marking their progress.
|
||
There were several x’s indicating where they had stopped due to lack of
|
||
wind. Every x was added up in this mind, amounting to too much time,
|
||
time they needed to arrive at the widest part of the Rupture before
|
||
Vol.</p>
|
||
<p>All day they labored to ensure that the sandfin moved at top speed.
|
||
Lupen knew Toronka well now, and could optimize its sail configuration
|
||
in any wind. Eka had never seen a sandfin move so fast, so well. Finiku
|
||
were gifted sandfinners, but it appeared as though Lupen too had the
|
||
right set of qualities, or maybe the right motivation, Eka thought. The
|
||
Wonder’s hand reached for the sandtimer, and flipped it once again.
|
||
“Fourth flip since second sunrise,” Eka said aloud so Lupen would hear,
|
||
noting it down in their logbook. Etyl’s old compass twitched, their bow
|
||
heading sawa’mu, or ‘into the wind’ in the Common Tongue. The needle
|
||
always pointed to yorama’mu (yoramawa’muko), another Finiku term to mean
|
||
‘towards the soul of the land’. On the compass face, were Finiku symbols
|
||
for all 4 directions.<br />
|
||
Eka was on top of the mast, the blazing red hair was like a beacon
|
||
burning bright overhead, a lively fire that not even the strongest gust
|
||
could snuff out. The Wonder’s feet rested on one of the battens of their
|
||
large, fan-shaped sail. Lupen stared, imagining a sail made up of many
|
||
tiny hands, hundreds of interlocked fingers catching wind and pulling
|
||
Toronka towards its goal.</p>
|
||
<p>The Rupture began to widen, to a point where it was difficult to see
|
||
the other side. Mapoleon’s map was more accurate now. This part of the
|
||
land was kind to have stayed the same, Lupen thought.<br />
|
||
A curious updraft came from the chasm. It swirled out of nowhere to
|
||
power their sails, carrying shoals of tiny sooty agocets, too small to
|
||
fight the wind and the pull of the sail. The group was carried into it.
|
||
Each agocet remained still, letting the wind current control their
|
||
flight. Lupen noted that the shoal gave shape and colour to the wind,
|
||
describing its movement across the whole of the sail. Eventually, they
|
||
reached the edge of the fabric, regained control, and returned to the
|
||
safety of the depths.<br />
|
||
They were close now. Lupen’s gut was in knots, the constricted
|
||
organs made it hard to breathe. “We should have seen Vol already,” Lupen
|
||
said, voice heavy. The worrying was moments away from evolving into full
|
||
blown panic.<br />
|
||
Eka spoke up then, pointing ahead to a figure sitting near the edge
|
||
of the chasm, with legs dangling in the void.<br />
|
||
“Someone! Ahead!”<br />
|
||
Lupen’s eyes narrowed, trying to make out the shape of the figure in
|
||
the distance. The shape got bigger, wider as they approached. Lupen knew
|
||
who this was, but this time it was them approaching the giant rather
|
||
than the giant approaching them. The Verido brought the sandfin to a
|
||
stop, releasing all sails and letting them flap in the wind. Toronka’s
|
||
hull groaned as it slowed, before coming to a full stop.<br />
|
||
The figure on the edge looked at them, silver eyes admiring the
|
||
vessel. “Beautiful.” Uno said, blinking slowly. Every blink took
|
||
enormous effort, the urge to remain shut growing with every passing
|
||
second.<br />
|
||
Lupen raced to Uno’s side, but before the Verido could say anything
|
||
Uno spoke up.<br />
|
||
“Sit.”<br />
|
||
Lupen was about to protest but Uno said it again, in a more
|
||
commanding tone.<br />
|
||
“Sit.”<br />
|
||
“What? No! I’ve <em>got</em> to save my people!” Lupen cried.<br />
|
||
Uno appeared to have missed several horo’s rest, with sunken,
|
||
clouded eyes, and pale, pale, translucent skin. Although, its surface
|
||
was as flawless as ever, without scar, or blemish. All of the wear was
|
||
concentrated in the eyes. They’d lost their former radiance, resembling
|
||
a piece of unpolished metal.<br />
|
||
“They are safe,” Uno said, slowly, “they stepped off Vol in Tiputa a
|
||
few days ago.” Uno’s large hand patted the ground, again inviting the
|
||
Verido to sit down. “<em>Surely</em> you don’t think Vol would have
|
||
taken them along…”<br />
|
||
Lupen blinked, trying to process all this information. “What about
|
||
the people on Bala, and Oto?”<br />
|
||
“Any moment now, they too will step off. News travels fast.”<br />
|
||
Lupen’s chest felt warm, heart blazing bright fueled by thoughts of
|
||
friends. “But Vol…”<br />
|
||
“Is ready to die.” Uno said, heels rubbing against the side of the
|
||
cliff face, disturbing bits of rock and sending them tumbling in the
|
||
dark. “Your friend will be glad that you are here.”<br />
|
||
Vol had not arrived, not yet.<br />
|
||
Lupen felt exhausted then, the long days of hard sandfinning and
|
||
hard worrying had caught up in an instant. The Verido slumped forward,
|
||
taking a breath, and focusing on that for a while. Breathing in and out.
|
||
In and out. Nothing else mattered in this short intermission between
|
||
moments. Lupen finally decided to sit down beside Uno, eager to
|
||
rest.<br />
|
||
“They’re all safe…” Lupen breathed, back meeting with the black
|
||
sand.<br />
|
||
The hard part lay ahead. Lupen had hoped to deter Vol, but now knew
|
||
that its death was inevitable. Soon, it would arrive and leap into the
|
||
Rupture, disappearing from the world forever.<br />
|
||
Uno spotted Eka’s silhouette aboard Toronka, busy folding sails.
|
||
Once their vessel was secure, the Wonder moved to Toronka’s bow and a
|
||
pair of red eyes found the giant. Lupen saw Uno rise, head moving up and
|
||
towards the clouds. Eka raced over to meet the tall figure, arms locking
|
||
around Uno’s leg. The giant bent down again, and put a hand on the
|
||
sandfloor, palm side up. Eka moved onto it and ran up to grab Uno’s
|
||
cheeks, caressing them gently, fingers inspecting every inch of
|
||
skin.<br />
|
||
The Wonder laughed then, and Uno’s tired flesh remembered how to
|
||
smile, stretching outward, from horizon to horizon. They whispered
|
||
softly to each other for a long while.<br />
|
||
Lupen tried to listen, but could not make out any words. Tired, the
|
||
Verido stopped trying, mind focusing on the event ahead, although a
|
||
curious jealousy began to settle inside this mind. Now that they had
|
||
each other again, neither would have a need for someone else, an
|
||
outsider, a candle with a short wick. Lupen imagined the two locked
|
||
together, unwilling to part, sharing knowledge in a low hushed voice for
|
||
all time.<br />
|
||
Eka glanced down at Lupen then, noticing the Verido’s expression.
|
||
“Caught the gloom bug Lu?”<br />
|
||
“Yea,” Lupen said, “but don’t mind me. You can keep talking with
|
||
Uno. I mean, you two probably have a lot of important things to say to
|
||
each other.” The Verido said, trying to appear less blue, skin changing
|
||
to a deep shade of red instead. Lupen didn’t like feeling this
|
||
way.<br />
|
||
“Oh yes yes, <em>very</em> important things to talk about!” Eka
|
||
said, nodding rapidly.<br />
|
||
“Nothing and nonsense, really,” Uno wheezed, “Eka was telling me of
|
||
a good recipe for looma root bread.”<br />
|
||
“Uno! You <em>wound</em> me! Bread could <em>never</em> be
|
||
nonsense!” Eka said, outraged.<br />
|
||
Lupen laughed. Eka was still Eka, a creature with a big, kind heart
|
||
and eyes for everyone. Laughter helped to suppress the gloom, and to
|
||
quell these silly feelings of inadequacy.</p>
|
||
<p>They sat together on the edge of the Rupture. Eka had prepared
|
||
toasted muckwheat groat tea for everyone. Lupen and Eka had a cup, and
|
||
Uno had the kettle, a vessel ill-suited to quench a giant’s thirst for
|
||
tea, but Toronka had no other larger recipient. Uno had a cup of their
|
||
own, Lupen thought, but could not see it now. The giant didn’t carry
|
||
books, or food, or a tent, and Kit wasn’t here either.<br />
|
||
In the distance they watched groups of people gathering at various
|
||
points to witness A Leap. Their ears caught songs in the wind, cheery
|
||
compositions with notes that clung to the air. The sound bounced off the
|
||
chasm walls, echoing down its long throat, propagated into its various
|
||
limbs. On a quiet day someone on the tail end of the Rupture could catch
|
||
the song, distorted by distance, but pleasant.<br />
|
||
Lupen was growing quite fond of this place. Sooty agocets would
|
||
sometimes fly off the edge of the plateau and into the void,
|
||
disappearing into the darkening dark before emerging back into the light
|
||
again, their small wings carrying them back out. Many came to brush by
|
||
Uno’s large feet, their wispy bodies caressing the toes, and darted away
|
||
when one of them moved, only to return again later, as if the group
|
||
played a game of dare. The agocets liked playing with Uno’s toes, so
|
||
much that now every digit had a small black dusty cap. The people
|
||
attending a Leaping Day paid them no mind, they were far, and focused on
|
||
their loved ones. Lupen was sure that they could see Uno from where they
|
||
were, given the giant’s size, but again, their eyes and minds were set
|
||
on little things today, little things that mattered a whole lot.<br />
|
||
Lupen wondered if this is how Uno was able to move in this world,
|
||
unnoticed. Small people were as blind to big things as this Verido had
|
||
once been blind to the tiny birds and plants on the desert floor. Uno
|
||
was like the wind, the desert and the clouds, a constant presence that
|
||
all took for granted, touching everyone and everything.</p>
|
||
<p>Uno’s gaze was fixed on the chasm. The thin eyes took in the
|
||
blackness, and the rest of this large body too was beginning to give
|
||
into the expanse. The giant was tired.<br />
|
||
So, so very tired.<br />
|
||
Breathing required some effort, a thing that everyday people don’t
|
||
think about at all.<br />
|
||
“Are you going to sleep soon?” Lupen asked.<br />
|
||
Uno took a deep breath. “Yes.”<br />
|
||
“So, what <em>are</em> you waiting for?”<br />
|
||
The silver-eyed giant breathed again, and slowly turned to look
|
||
behind. Lupen did the same, and then caught sight of a large dark shape
|
||
in the horizon growing, and growing. Vol was coming. The colour fell
|
||
from Lupen’s face. The wind blew the sand up around them, as if an
|
||
invisible figure with a giant broom was clearing the dust off a path
|
||
leading to the chasm. Lupen was afraid, but understood then. “You were
|
||
there when Volare, Balandri and Otora built cities on the Ilk…”<br />
|
||
A hard lump formed in this throat. Lupen fell into a half-drowse in
|
||
which memories of Volare were revealed in a helpless depression of
|
||
spirits. The city of Volare, its plants, its people, everything this
|
||
Verido had known and loved filled this mind. Lupen wanted to walk
|
||
through the town square again, to go pick shroos at Vol’s Nape, to see
|
||
the light spilling in from in-between buildings after the first sunrise.
|
||
The heart beat hard inside this chest, and the sound grew louder and
|
||
more painful as Vol approached.</p>
|
||
<p>Step. Ka-laa, ka-laa, ka-laa.</p>
|
||
<p>Step. Ka-laa, ka-laa, ka-laa.</p>
|
||
<p>Step.</p>
|
||
<p>The Ilk’s pace quickened as it neared them. Everyone got up. Uno
|
||
began to whistle, its sound as good, as loud, and as natural as any
|
||
Voice. Eka joined in the singing. Lupen too wanted to contribute, but
|
||
couldn’t, the lump did not allow it. It kept growing, and growing. Lupen
|
||
swallowed hard, nearly choking on it, determined to dislodge it to give
|
||
Vol, a good friend, a proper farewell.<br />
|
||
Lupen’s voice rose, and rose, subduing all other noise in the area.
|
||
Its volume was so great, that all in the area stopped to listen.<br />
|
||
Vol continue to march, following the sound to its source. One of its
|
||
legs landed near them, plunging deep into the sand. It stopped, its
|
||
two-toed foot settling into the ground. The circumference of its leg was
|
||
so big that not even a giant like Uno could circle it. Uno caressed its
|
||
ankle, the fluff on the skin was pleasant to the touch. “You’ll find the
|
||
Balandrians in Renate, and Otorans in Montore Lupen,” Uno said.<br />
|
||
“Wait. You’re not coming with us?” Lupen stammered, but Eka gripped
|
||
the Verido’s arm.<br />
|
||
“Uno’s going to sleep.”<br />
|
||
“How could anyone sleep down <em>there</em>…” Lupen thought of the
|
||
mountain top, and thought it infinitely better.<br />
|
||
“Kit is waiting for me,” Uno said, with a weak smile. The giant eyed
|
||
Lupen fondly, and without another word, the giant began to go down the
|
||
cliff face, inviting the Ilk to follow.<br />
|
||
Eka smiled, and blew a kiss. Lupen was smiling too, but it was
|
||
blurred by tears. Just like the force of a storm could form dunes in the
|
||
desert, Uno helped shape the world to benefit its residents. This
|
||
impossible being would return someday, but Lupen would be sand. This
|
||
would be their last ever encounter.<br />
|
||
“Aristollo and Uno traveled together, didn’t they?” Lupen asked Eka
|
||
then.<br />
|
||
Eka nodded, eyes on Uno and extending an arm around the Verido into
|
||
a tight, tight hug. “For many, many annums. They had a lot of fun
|
||
together.”<br />
|
||
Vol, sure-footed, put a leg forward into the crevasse as if
|
||
expecting to step on land, and the large body began to fall…<br />
|
||
Fall.<br />
|
||
Fall.<br />
|
||
Fall.<br />
|
||
Lupen let out a cry. Eka gripped the Verido’s middle harder. They
|
||
stared as Vol tumbled head first, with surprising grace, straight into
|
||
the abyss. Uno’s yellow cape too was gradually absorbed by dark. Vol
|
||
began to sing as it fell, its enormous frame gradually enveloped by
|
||
nothing. The Rupture amplified the sound, like a great big orchestra lay
|
||
at the bottom of the chasm. The whole area rumbled, dust rose from the
|
||
walls as its legs scraped the edges, and then it was gone. Uno too had
|
||
gone, swallowed by the dust cloud.<br />
|
||
Lupen continued to whistle then, more loudly, and more clearly than
|
||
ever. The song was about the end of an era, of the splendor of a world
|
||
inhabited by giants. Eka listened, eyes in the depths.<br />
|
||
The Rupture felt limitless.<br />
|
||
The two looked down, having quiet thoughts, each processing the
|
||
event in their own way. They stayed like this a while, hand in hand,
|
||
eyes fixed on the dark expanse. The Ilk of Volare was gone, and soon,
|
||
Bala and Oto would follow.<br />
|
||
“Tiputa…” Lupen said aloud then, “we’re going to Tiputa.”<br />
|
||
Eka nodded. “Plot a course! Captain oh captain Lu!”<br />
|
||
“We need supplies.” Lupen said, voice clearing as the weight of the
|
||
day began to lift, like morning fog. There was life after this, just as
|
||
there was life in the Ash Plains.<br />
|
||
“Actually, we’ll stop by Renate first, since its closest. Then,
|
||
we’re going to Tiputa,” Lupen said, lips curling into a slight grin, not
|
||
yet able to form a full smile. The body attached to these lips was eager
|
||
to see the Balandrians again, as well as Klev, Hush, Maka, Renzo, and
|
||
then Orin, and Bou, and all of Volare in Tiputa.<br />
|
||
“Aye aye!” Eka shouted, shooting upright, hands in the air.<br />
|
||
The Verido’s eyes looked inward, busy imagining Verido people on the
|
||
desert floor, struggling, their bodies swaying from left to right and
|
||
their faces green, swallowing back their sick. They would need guidance.
|
||
Guidance, patience and time.<br />
|
||
Lupen was finally ready to take the helm.<br />
|
||
Suddenly, this Verido felt there was an infinite amount of time in
|
||
the world. These eyes could see it written in the air, and in the sky,
|
||
forming a tapestry of opportunities for the future. Lupen was
|
||
excited.<br />
|
||
“Then after that, we’ll go back to Montore for some babam cake and
|
||
tea. Not the food patch kind.”<br />
|
||
“Oh yes, yes, that sounds good!” Eka exclaimed, mouth
|
||
watering.<br />
|
||
Wiktopher the woth landed on Lupen’s head, beating its wings
|
||
wildly.<br />
|
||
“Let’s go sandfinning.”<br />
|
||
Toronka’s sails swallowed the Ash Plain air, taking it into its
|
||
lungs, and pulled their crew along toward their destination. Lupen and
|
||
Eka sat on deck, watching as the second of two suns neared the horizon,
|
||
narrowing to a sliver before disappearing.<br />
|
||
They sandfinned in the dark. Having balanced the sails, both went to
|
||
lie on deck, eyes on the sky and lights overhead. Their fingers traced
|
||
along visible constellations, and together, they recited their
|
||
names.<br />
|
||
“Salarus, Vitali, Neoneve…”</p>
|
||
<p>— <strong>Owari, the end</strong> —</p>
|
||
<h1 id="lexicon">Lexicon</h1>
|
||
<h2 id="locations">Locations</h2>
|
||
<h3 id="andenuis">Andenuis</h3>
|
||
<p>A mountaineous ridge housing the city of Irideri, the realm of the
|
||
Iridi.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="ash-plains">Ash plains</h3>
|
||
<p>Most think that the Ash Plains is a dead zone, where little grows and
|
||
nothing lives. The land is covered with black sands and salt. Terrible
|
||
storms brew there. It is feared by many sandfinnes because of its
|
||
numerous chasms, many have been charted, but new cracks keep
|
||
forming.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="central-rim">Central rim</h3>
|
||
<p>A belt of semi-arable land that circles the planet. Most of the water
|
||
stone wells are situated in this area, others be can found elsewhere but
|
||
may be further apart and more difficult to locate.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="colonies">Colonies</h3>
|
||
<p>During the Raids, the Iridi established colonies in far-away camps,
|
||
used as relief stations for soldiers, but also as temporary camps for
|
||
captives. These stations were equidistant, getting from one to the next
|
||
in cover of darkness was possible — a requirement for Iridi soldiers.
|
||
Most of the camps were evacuated when the raidings ceased, but rumor
|
||
spread that Bao left two standing. These settlements were built over
|
||
mines, known for their abundance of chloromyce shroos.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="dorakes-passage">Dorake’s passage</h3>
|
||
<p>Dorake’s passage is a long pass just yora’ta of the Andenuis Mountain
|
||
ridge, a pass that has claimed many sandfinners over the annums.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="edonor">Edonor</h3>
|
||
<p>The birthplace of Orin the tailor, and their grand-mapa Nok. Edonor
|
||
is a modern city, a fortress, made this way to keep out the Iridi foot
|
||
soldiers during the raids. It is now inhabited by a mixture of Finiku,
|
||
Terins and Aodals.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="irideri">Irideri</h3>
|
||
<p>The capital, and only city of the feared Iridi. The city is
|
||
protected, lying in the mountainous ridge belt of Mount Nui. The city is
|
||
exposed to light, but connects to numerous passes that lead inside the
|
||
mountain itself.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="kangoku">Kangoku</h3>
|
||
<p>A library in Irideri, consisting of books written by its habitants
|
||
only, with hand-made books.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="kippu">Kippu</h3>
|
||
<p>A Finiku road-side town of the Soronan desert.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="ministe">Ministe</h3>
|
||
<p>Ministe is the Terin capital, once a grand and green place, where
|
||
every variety of greenery could be found. They were the main exporters
|
||
of fruits and vegetables, and its habitants often went on long
|
||
pilgrimages to other cities to help them create green spaces. The
|
||
pilgrimages and the exports stopped when the Iridi attacked the city,
|
||
taking all of its workforce to work in the Irideri mines.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="montore-1">Montore</h3>
|
||
<p>Situated on the Central Rim, sanu’mawa of Edonor and Renate, and is
|
||
one of the largest cities of the land, second only to Edonor. It is
|
||
known for its extravagances, for being technologically advanced, with a
|
||
giant wind-powered cog generating power for the whole of the city. There
|
||
is talk of the city converting to gas for power, thanks to Beobug. Food
|
||
patches are prevalent here, and is the main source of nutrition. Coin
|
||
was also invented here, to simplify exhanges. Montore is the residence
|
||
of the Grand Leader Monty.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="renate">Renate</h3>
|
||
<p>Renate is an old refugee town, now the residence of many Aodals that
|
||
has evolved into a massive tent city. Many sought shelter there after
|
||
the Iridi Raids of Moera. A famous steel-master resides there.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="rupture">Rupture</h3>
|
||
<p>The Rupture, although feared by many, is a place of passing. It is a
|
||
deep chasm, seemingly infinite, a rip in the ground. The dying, or the
|
||
sick, accompanied by family, will journey there to take a leap into the
|
||
Rupture.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="soronan-desert">Soronan desert</h3>
|
||
<p>The Soronan Desert is a vast desert wildnerness stretching over the
|
||
Central Rim and the Northern and Southern Plains. It is a continous body
|
||
of sand which occupies most of the planet.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="southern-dust-plains">Southern dust plains</h3>
|
||
<p>A region of flat lands which rims the planet, and where little grows.
|
||
Many sandfinners travel through here to make quick passages to other
|
||
areas, since the land has no protrusions, the wind screams by
|
||
unhindered.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="suvalba-sanctuary">Suvalba Sanctuary</h3>
|
||
<p>After the fall of Ministe, some of the surviving Terins created the
|
||
sanctuary to provide a safe haven for growing sproutlings. It became a
|
||
seed repository, for all the plants in the Soronan desert.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="the-ear">The Ear</h3>
|
||
<p>Where the Voice stands atop the head when speaking to an Ilk. The
|
||
short form of The Ear of the Ilk.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="tiputa">Tiputa</h3>
|
||
<p>A road-side down in the Soronan desert, inhabited by a handful of
|
||
Finiku.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="volare">Volare</h3>
|
||
<p>One of three cities, built on the back of the Ilk Vol. Volare is also
|
||
the name of one of the founders of the three cities, the ones who
|
||
befriended the desert walkers, and that first settled on the Ilk. Lupen
|
||
and Mago are direct descendants of Volare, which earns them the right to
|
||
be the Voice of Volare.</p>
|
||
<h2 id="characters">Characters</h2>
|
||
<h3 id="armyn">Armyn</h3>
|
||
<p>Mapa to Mago, and now retired Voice of Volare due to a shroo
|
||
infection.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="averet">Averet</h3>
|
||
<p>A guard of the city of Montore. Averet longs for bigger things in
|
||
life, but never makes the effort to move towards that goal and complains
|
||
of it constantly.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="bao">Bao</h3>
|
||
<p>The second monarch of the Iridi, also known as Bao The Bright. Bao
|
||
was stern, but just. This leader thought it necessary to put a stop to
|
||
the raids, and attempted to make peace with the world, but it was poorly
|
||
received, given how many were still held captive in the mines. Bao
|
||
thought it best then to close the kingdom of Irideri to the world.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="bariton">Bariton</h3>
|
||
<p>The current caretaker of a puzzle museum in Irideri, former collegue
|
||
of Hori. Bariton is clever and witty, and likes to speak their mind, but
|
||
few in Irideri care to lend them their ears.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="bou">Bou</h3>
|
||
<p>Child of Orin. Bou lives in the road-town of Tiputa. Bou is a
|
||
mechanic, they have a shop in the village and tend to the repairs needed
|
||
by travelers, and inhabitants of the small city.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="demeri">Demeri</h3>
|
||
<p>The Light of Lights in Irideri. Demeri is a stern leader, feared by
|
||
all.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="dot">Dot</h3>
|
||
<p>A Finiku and representative of the Great Leader Monty. Dot addresses
|
||
crowds in Monty’s name, and has many grand plans for the city of
|
||
Montore.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="enji">Enji</h3>
|
||
<p>Enji is the head guard of the Court of Light in Irideri. Enji was
|
||
once friend to Renzo, they enjoyed playing Hako together.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="eka">Eka</h3>
|
||
<p>A round-eared creature with red hair that Lupin awoke atop a nameless
|
||
mountain. Eka is loudspoken, and knows a lot about the world.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="etyl">Etyl</h3>
|
||
<p>A famous Finiku sandfinner, known the world over for having crossed
|
||
the whole of the land alone by sandfin. Etyl is grand-mapa to Nono.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="gree">Gree</h3>
|
||
<p>An old acquaintance of Nono, who cares a lot for coins and titles.
|
||
Gree is the captain of Beobug II.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="hori">Hori</h3>
|
||
<p>A skilled and joke-prone puzzlemaker in Irideri, mapa to Noko, now
|
||
deceased after a terrible accident in the city’s foundry.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="hush">Hush</h3>
|
||
<p>A hyroo and friend of Eka, and the one that carries the two travelers
|
||
across the desert plains. Hush has an enormous appetite.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="kit">Kit</h3>
|
||
<p>A hyroo and friend of Uno. Kit is very large and has spots all over
|
||
its fur coat.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="klev">Klev</h3>
|
||
<p>Klev is the appointed Voice of the Balandri Ilk. Klev is tall,
|
||
confident and out-going, no other Voice steps off the Ilk when it
|
||
arrives at a new town.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="kurono">Kurono</h3>
|
||
<p>The young heir to the throne of Irideri, child to Demeri. Kurono is
|
||
very good at solving puzzles.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="kuzi">Kuzi</h3>
|
||
<p>A resident of Montore, who has a knack for getting into trouble. Kuzi
|
||
is addicted to Kavava, and has difficulty functionning in the real
|
||
world.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="laggra">Laggra</h3>
|
||
<p>Levi’s mapa, the one who built the family home and that helped to
|
||
create the safety line system from the Ilk’s back to the top of its
|
||
head.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="laris">Laris</h3>
|
||
<p>A frail-bodied refugee who has little hope in the world.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="levi">Levi</h3>
|
||
<p>Lupen’s mapa, now deceased. Levi was stricken with an impairment that
|
||
involves a progressive loss of language, behavior and executive
|
||
functions in the end. Levi’s work as Hand of the Ilk saved Vol from a
|
||
major parasitical infection many years ago, one that threatened the
|
||
creature’s digestive system.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="lupen">Lupen</h3>
|
||
<p>A Verido in the running to become Voice of Volare. Lupin is a
|
||
curious, caring creature, but hates being alone.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="mago">Mago</h3>
|
||
<p>Child of Armyn, in the running to become Voice of Volare, and also
|
||
cousin and best friend to Lupen. Mago has a way of being good at
|
||
everything.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="maka">Maka</h3>
|
||
<p>Maka is the unofficial leader of the city of Renate. A kind person,
|
||
trusted by all. Maka is a skilled metal-worker, and mentor to Renzo.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="maliss">Maliss</h3>
|
||
<p>The former head of the Volare nursery, responsible for ensuring that
|
||
the gowing young are healthy, and for keeping the population on the Ilk
|
||
in balance.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="mapoleon">Mapoleon</h3>
|
||
<p>A cartographer based in Renate. Mapoleon has traveled all around the
|
||
Sononan desert to map it. Passing travelers often stop by to communicate
|
||
noteworthy changes, which Mapoleon appends to the main map displayed
|
||
outside thei tent, or to request changes to their own maps.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="moera">Moera</h3>
|
||
<p>Also known as The Luminary, and The First Light, is the first ruler
|
||
of the Iridi people. Blinded and disfigured by an accident, Moera
|
||
announced that the city would live under the light of the chloromyce
|
||
shroos alone, and brought the Iridi people into an age of perpetual
|
||
darkness.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="monty">Monty</h3>
|
||
<p>Grand leader of the city of Montore. Monty is a genius and inventor
|
||
who has propelled Montore to fame, with such inventions as: the great
|
||
cog and food patches.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="nok">Nok</h3>
|
||
<p>Grand-mapa of Orin, a renowned tailor from the town of Edonor.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="noko">Noko</h3>
|
||
<p>Child of Hori, died at a young age.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="nono">Nono</h3>
|
||
<p>A proud, righteous, and skilled sandfinner. Nono is captain to Etyl,
|
||
a yellow-hulled sandfin. Nono has skilled hands, and can repair any part
|
||
of a sandfin.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="orin">Orin</h3>
|
||
<p>Orin is the child of Nok and grand-mapa of Bou. Orin is a skilled
|
||
tailor, trained by their mapa, both worked in their workshop in Edonor.
|
||
Orin loves fine thread, and loves to make risque items, using bright
|
||
colours and complex patterns.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="ponopo">Ponopo</h3>
|
||
<p>Nono’s dependable messenger woth. Ponopo knows the whole of the land,
|
||
and can deliver messages anywhere.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="pumra">Pumra</h3>
|
||
<p>The Reader for the Ilk city of Volare, mapa to Rosmus.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="renzo">Renzo</h3>
|
||
<p>A former guard in the Court of Light, now a metalworker studying
|
||
under Maka in Renate. Renzo uses the name Iri while in Renate.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="rosmus">Rosmus</h3>
|
||
<p>Child to Pumra and friend to Lupen, living in the Ilk city of Volare.
|
||
Rosmus ought to be trained as a Pattern Reader, but cares more for
|
||
pottery.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="ten">Ten</h3>
|
||
<p>An Iri, servant to Kurono in the city of Irideri. Iri was given the
|
||
name Ten by Kurono, after the number 10 in base 16.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="uno">Uno</h3>
|
||
<p>A generous giant, who travels with a hyroo named Kit. Not much is
|
||
known of this being, but it is thought that Uno has been around for a
|
||
long time.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="vol">Vol</h3>
|
||
<p>Vol is the nickname of the Ilk of Volare. Vol has another name, but
|
||
it is long and few can pronounce it.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="waldek">Waldek</h3>
|
||
<p>A clever leafhound and resident of Zucca’s oasis, serving as guide to
|
||
Lupen and Eka.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="wiktopher">Wiktopher</h3>
|
||
<p>A messenger woth, friend to Lupen and Eka. Wiktopher is also the name
|
||
of someone that Eka knew and traveled with, a long time ago.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="zucca">Zucca</h3>
|
||
<p>A Terin and caretaker of a hidden oasis in the desert. Known by many,
|
||
Zucca has a reputation for being a grouch. This Terin has much knowledge
|
||
when it comes to gardening, but is reluctant to share it.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="fauna">Fauna</h3>
|
||
<h3 id="aodal">Aodal</h3>
|
||
<p>There are many Aodals in the Soronan desert. They are tall, and have
|
||
small pointed ears, their skin is brown and their hair comes in a
|
||
variety of browns and blacks. Their faces are relatively flat, and
|
||
round, with thin eyes. They live primarily in cities like Montore and
|
||
Edonor, but are also found in Renate.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="crested-hirudines">Crested-hirudines</h3>
|
||
<p>Crested-hirudines are reptavians with a wide range, spanning the
|
||
entire Soronan Desert. Their head crest is bright red and their body
|
||
scales are blue, shifting to bright green at the throat. They are
|
||
recognizable by their quick jerky flight. They are sociable reptavians,
|
||
a dozen to many hundred pairs will nest close together. The nests are in
|
||
tunnels in the sand. Crested-hirudines are very common, they eat almost
|
||
anything, but they enjoy looberry fruits the most.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="durdle">Durdle</h3>
|
||
<p>Shy creatures that like to retreat within their shells, they move
|
||
very slowly and sleep for most of the day.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="false-mosslings">False-mosslings</h3>
|
||
<p>Insects that mimic mosslings, they have curvy antennae, unlike the
|
||
true mosslings. Unlike the insect that they mimic, they like lemilim
|
||
grass, and hate mepperpint. This is a relatively new species.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="finiku">Finiku</h3>
|
||
<p>A race of sandfinners, or at least, they used to be, many have left
|
||
their nomadic ways to settle in towns. They’re very skilled, and
|
||
dextrous, able to make precise repairs. They are very short, pot-bellied
|
||
creatures, with long droopy ears, and large wet globulous eyes. Their
|
||
skin is tan, their faces round and flat. Finiku also have small hands
|
||
and feet. They love to drink, every household produces their own
|
||
wine.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="floater">Floater</h3>
|
||
<p>A round floating creature, that changes colour depending on its mood.
|
||
It is orange when normal, red when angry, and yellow when confused. They
|
||
have a set of tiny wings on their sides, tiny black dots for eyes and a
|
||
slit for a mouth. They live in small groups, and love sweet grass. If
|
||
threatened, the creature will throw itself upon an enemy, its skin is
|
||
like goo and sticks to its victims. The skin can become as hot as hot
|
||
coals, prolonged exposure can kill.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="hesper">Hesper</h3>
|
||
<p>Hespers are very rare, they bloom into existence every ha’annum, but
|
||
most never see them. They are large winged creatures with soft plumage,
|
||
they remain in constant flight, soaring on the wind. It is thought that
|
||
they have short lives, and that they regress to a polyp stage into the
|
||
earth, to bloom again at a later time. Hespers are thought to be
|
||
immortal.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="hololomimo">Hololomimo</h3>
|
||
<p>Hololomimos are small reptavians without tails, big mouths and red
|
||
eyes. They have furry yellow and orange bodies and scaly heads. They
|
||
have a small wing span, permitting them to fly, but they spend most of
|
||
their time crawling on ceilings and walls. Their thin winged arms are
|
||
topped with hook-like fingers that permit these sorts of acrobatics.
|
||
Hololomimos used to live on nests in mountains, but have adapted to
|
||
living in constructed city dwellings. They’ve been sighted in Montore
|
||
and in Irideri. They primarily feed on shroos.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="hyroo">Hyroo</h3>
|
||
<p>Hyroos are large creatures with big parabolic ears, and strong hind
|
||
legs. They have sand-coloured fur, with darker spots on their bodies.
|
||
Their snouts are large, they can smell and hear things from far, far
|
||
away. These beasts are known for being able to run and jump long
|
||
distances with little effort. They grow in moist environments, although
|
||
they are thought to be extinct…</p>
|
||
<h3 id="ilk">Ilk</h3>
|
||
<p>The Ilks or The giant walkers of the Soronan desert. These creatures
|
||
are old, and walk around the planet all annum long. Its distinctive
|
||
features include its long neck, narrow chest, a heavy pointed tail, a
|
||
carapace and collection of hairs on its nape, throat and shoulders. The
|
||
coat is generally a shade of dark blue, red and green. There are three
|
||
Ilk in existence: Otora, Balandri and Volare (named after the three
|
||
Verido founders). Each Ilk bears a city on its back, its inhabitants are
|
||
mostly self-sufficient, but rely on outside help to feed the Ilk because
|
||
of its immense appetite, and size.<br />
|
||
To communicate with each other, Ilk produce low-frequency vocalizations
|
||
at high amplitudes such that they couple with the ground and travel
|
||
along the surface of the desert. Far away Ilk are able to pick up these
|
||
seismic signals, these vibrations can be detected by the skin of an
|
||
Ilk’s feet, which relay the resonant vibrations. Their large size
|
||
permits great propagation range.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="imperia">Imperia</h3>
|
||
<p>Imperias are considered to be some of the largest flying reptavians.
|
||
They have the largest wingspan, which may reach up to 39 mirits. They
|
||
fly like soaring avians, keeping their wings streched and rarely
|
||
flapping. They have long, strong beaks, that are narrow and widen at the
|
||
end. Their body is grey and white, but their heads and beak are yellow
|
||
and black. They primarily eat cactubs, effectively paralyzing them by
|
||
clapping their wings. Like Ilk, these creatures are more and more
|
||
rare.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="iridi">Iridi</h3>
|
||
<p>The Iridi reside within the protective ridge of Mount Nui in the city
|
||
of Irideri. They revere the light of the chloromyce shroos, their very
|
||
way of life is centred around the harvesting and ingesting of this
|
||
plant. Like the chloromyce, they live and operate in the dark, and sleep
|
||
during the day. Once Aodals, ingesting the shroos have caused them to
|
||
become sensitive to light. The entire realm is alit with chloromyce,
|
||
especially the reigning Light of Lights who wears them.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="leafhound">Leafhound</h3>
|
||
<p>Leafhounds are orange, leaf-tailed and have a set of antennae on
|
||
their heads. They live amongst Terins, there are less of them now
|
||
because of the events in Ministe and Suvalba. They guard nurseries and
|
||
fields of plants, keeping them safe, while checking on their health.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="mossling">Mossling</h3>
|
||
<p>Pale insects that like to burrow inside fresh produce, making homes
|
||
of them. Their presence in the fruit causes them to rot, many farmers
|
||
despise them for it. They hate lemilim grass, planting some near other
|
||
produce helps to keep them at bay.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="mudbears">Mudbears</h3>
|
||
<p>Tiny little insects that burrow into waterstones, they ooze a
|
||
substance that can be very poisonous.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="papilion">Papilion</h3>
|
||
<p>Papilions are tiny fuzzy creatures, that have no visible limbs or
|
||
features. They travel with the wind and in the hairs of passing
|
||
habitants of the Soronan desert. It is said that when they find suitable
|
||
soil, they sink within it and will sprout into Hespers, fabled creatures
|
||
of old. A famous expression makes use of these creatures: ‘having
|
||
papilions in your throat’, means being kept from speaking due to
|
||
anxiety.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="pomparu">Pomparu</h3>
|
||
<p>A creature, feared by all, because of its horrid stink. Pomparu are
|
||
plump, pale, six-legged creatures, they bear spots over their bodies.
|
||
They like stinky things, and are drawn to them. The word ‘pomparu’ is
|
||
sometimes used as an insult, or used to describe a foul-smelling food,
|
||
person or object.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="seshell-krab">Seshell krab</h3>
|
||
<p>Seshell krabs are pearly white creatures that bear a shell with a
|
||
face. It is thought that if you do them harm, they will remember your
|
||
face and chase you to the ends of the deserts. They have a near
|
||
indestructible shell, it is used to make pottery and other hard
|
||
materials. The world used to be populated by many of these creatures,
|
||
changes in weather have caused many to die, but the disintegrated shells
|
||
have contributed to much good in the land. The sheshell krab dust helped
|
||
form a hard membrane around the pearled-up water, thusly preserving the
|
||
water of the planet near the surface.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="snakadil">Snakadil</h3>
|
||
<p>A type of small reptavian that moves just under the top layer of
|
||
sand. When surprised, snakadil suffocate their victims.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="sooty-agocet">Sooty agocet</h3>
|
||
<p>Sooty agocets are small agocets that live in the sand, their fins
|
||
pushing them through grains with ease. Although, they enjoy staying
|
||
still, their bodies buried while their heads stick out. Their bodies are
|
||
black, and they’re only found in the Ash Plains.<br />
|
||
They like to leap out of the sand and to glide through the air for a
|
||
time to evade sand-dwelling predators, although while in flight, they
|
||
are weak to avians and reptavians. Because their bodies match the sand,
|
||
it is difficult for predators to see them from overhead. They eat
|
||
smaller agocets and tiny organisms hidden in the sand, imperceptible to
|
||
most.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="terin">Terin</h3>
|
||
<p>Terins are growers and carers, they have green thumbs and can make
|
||
any garden, and population healthy. Their numbers are fewer these days,
|
||
given the Iridi Raids. They have dark skin, and very bright eyes. They
|
||
have thick foreams, fingers and legs, and have two-toed feet. Their
|
||
physique is overall strong.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="vennec">Vennec</h3>
|
||
<p>Vennecs are large, humpbacked, furry beasts with thin snouts, large
|
||
pointy ears and a long slender neck. Their ears are big to better
|
||
dissipate heat. They are often used to pull heavy carts, because they
|
||
are very strong and can walk a long time without being hungry or
|
||
thirsty. Vennec carry water in their humps and store grains in their
|
||
cheeks.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="verido">Verido</h3>
|
||
<p>Verido are traveling merchants living on the backs of Ilk. They are
|
||
divided onto three Ilks: Oto, Bala, and Vol, and the coloured patterns
|
||
on their bodies reflect this. Verido have sand-coloured hair, and
|
||
trumpet-like ears that stick out horizontally. They enjoy decorating
|
||
their bodies with colourful trinkets. They rarely leave the back of
|
||
their Ilk because of landsickness.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="woth">Woth</h3>
|
||
<p>Messenger woths are sturdy creatures, they fit in the palm of your
|
||
hand. They have excellent memories, and can travel long distances. Many
|
||
use them as a means of sending messages to other cities. They can carry
|
||
items many times their own weight.</p>
|
||
<h2 id="flora">Flora</h2>
|
||
<h3 id="babam">Babam</h3>
|
||
<p>A starchy tuber, pink on the inside, that softens when cooked. Babam
|
||
is nutrient-rich, and grows everywhere.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="banabo">Banabo</h3>
|
||
<p>A tall, tree-like plant. Its trunk is wide and dense and it is often
|
||
used as a material to build houses and other hard structures. Its top
|
||
leaves are often used as brooms and to weave decorative items.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="bibiskiss">Bibiskiss</h3>
|
||
<p>A purple flowery herb that is often infused to make tea. When brewed,
|
||
the colour leeches into the drink.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="bobonion">Bobonion</h3>
|
||
<p>A spicy octagonal vegetable, enveloped in a thick black rind. The
|
||
inside is soft, and can be scooped out with a tool. Bobonion taste just
|
||
as strong as they smell.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="bonan">Bonan</h3>
|
||
<p>A berry, with soft flesh rich in starch covered with a rind, which
|
||
may be orange or purple when ripe. The seeds are roasted and brewed for
|
||
tea, or eaten as a snack. Finiku love to make wine with it. The rind of
|
||
the berry is used to make plates, and other recipients for cooking.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="cactub">Cactub</h3>
|
||
<p>A Cactub is a nutritious, bulbous root vegetable primarily found in
|
||
the Northern Plains, where waterstones are scarce. Their outer core is
|
||
hard, and covered in tiny protrusions called ‘nubs’. These nubs helps
|
||
the cactub move in and out of the ground. The flesh is a white colour,
|
||
and has a markedly higher fat content than other vegetables. It can be
|
||
made into cactub oil, it has a high smoke point, making it the ideal
|
||
cooking oil. Cactubs are a Finiku favourite, served sliced on muckwheat
|
||
bread. They spend most of their time underground, and only emerge in the
|
||
dark to gather moisture from the surrounding air. Cactubs are
|
||
sensititive to loud noises and movements, and they temporarily seize
|
||
when panicked.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="chilabi">Chilabi</h3>
|
||
<p>Chilabi was a popular ingredient in Aodal cuisine. A hot, pungent
|
||
condiment that burns the nose, and that is be painful depending on the
|
||
amount consumed. It is a short, and stout pink rhizome. It is grown on
|
||
the outskirts of Renate, in a valley with a few yukwood trees. Chilabi
|
||
grows over waterstone pits, its roots digging deep and latching onto
|
||
stones. Their roots are strong enough to pierce them. This plant is only
|
||
ever consumed in Renate, as it loses its pungency not too long after
|
||
harvest.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="chloromyce-shroo">Chloromyce shroo</h3>
|
||
<p>A type of fungus that emits strong phosphorescent light, it grows in
|
||
caves, underground where there is no light. It is an object of desire
|
||
for the Iridi, who have fought wars in its name.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="conk-shroo">Conk shroo</h3>
|
||
<p>Conks are hard, woody, cave-dwelling shroos. They are found in
|
||
mountainous areas, and used to make a variety of objects. Conks can also
|
||
be eaten, but the texture makes it difficult to chew.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="hampa">Hampa</h3>
|
||
<p>One of the first plants to be spun into usable fiber, but it has
|
||
fallen out of style in recent annums. Sandfinners continue to use it to
|
||
make their sails, as it is a sturdy material. The plant is large, with
|
||
thick broad leaves. It can be found in the Central Rim, near waterstone
|
||
wells.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="kaba">Kaba</h3>
|
||
<p>The Kaba plant has a thick orange trunk, with thousands of stems
|
||
growing from its sides, each, with a two-headed red flower. These plants
|
||
have the unique property of growing onto other living beings, like
|
||
plants or large creatures. They have a symbiotic relationship. A strong
|
||
alcohol — with numbing properties — is made from the fruit of the Kaba
|
||
plant</p>
|
||
<h3 id="karonin">Karonin</h3>
|
||
<h3 id="kavava">Kavava</h3>
|
||
<p>Kavava is a leafy plant, but the roots is what most people choose to
|
||
use. The roots are harvested, cleaned, dried and broken up into smaller
|
||
bits and sold. It can be chewed as is, or pounded to a powder and made
|
||
into a tea, although it loses some of its ‘numbing’ properties this way.
|
||
If chewed, kavava numbs the mind and body from first sunrise to first
|
||
sunset, it may also cause some minor hallucinations. Many become
|
||
addicted to it.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="lanivanil">Lanivanil</h3>
|
||
<p>Lanivanil plants grow almost completely underground, with just a
|
||
single flower sticking out of the soil. The flower is a bright yellow,
|
||
and is very sensitive to changes in the environment. It is said that if
|
||
music is played near a lanivanil plant, that the bleen will grow to be
|
||
larger and sweeter. Lanivanil bleen pods develop underground, and each
|
||
pod can contain up to three bleen. These pods are circular, the size of
|
||
a fist. Lanivanil is sweet tasting, the roots can be ground up and used
|
||
to augment dishes. The bleen can be eaten as is, or each bleen can be
|
||
sliced open, its insides scooped out, to be eaten or cooked in savoury
|
||
dishes.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="lavendiri">Lavendiri</h3>
|
||
<p>A purple bulbous flower that is often dried and used in homes to
|
||
cover bad smells or freshen a room. When the dried and crushed leaves
|
||
are mixed with a waterstone, the powder thickens into a gel. The gel is
|
||
often smeared under the nose in situations where a nearby stink is too
|
||
strong. This plant also leaves a pleasant feeling on the skin.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="looberry">Looberry</h3>
|
||
<p>A sweet eatable fruit with a hard outer shell, often used as a dye.
|
||
Verido people love looberries, they use it to paint their hair and faces
|
||
blue during special events, it is also used as an ink.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="lemilim">Lemilim</h3>
|
||
<p>A culinary herb with a subtle tang, used fresh or dried. It has
|
||
antifungal properties. It is often steeped as tea.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="licky-root">Licky root</h3>
|
||
<p>Grown for its roots, which have anti-inflammatory and antibacterial
|
||
effects. This plant is very hardy, it grows in high-altitude areas.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="looma-root">Looma root</h3>
|
||
<p>A climbing vine with small eatable cream-coloured heart-shaped roots.
|
||
Verido love looma roots, and even if they aren’t endemic to the Ilk’s
|
||
back, they have found a way to make it grow there.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="mapple">Mapple</h3>
|
||
<p>Mapples are heart-shaped fruits with smooth ribbed skin that grow to
|
||
be the size of a fist. The fruit is a bright orange, but can also be
|
||
spotted with yellow. The fruit should be peeled if eaten raw, but if
|
||
braised the skin will soften and thusly be made eatable. Mapples are
|
||
either very sweet, or very bitter, only those who have experience in
|
||
picking these fruits known which is which.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="medililly">Medililly</h3>
|
||
<p>A rare plant, grown for its medicinal properties. It is hard to grow,
|
||
requiring much water and attention. Medililly takes annums to grow to
|
||
maturity (the only time when the plant gains its healing properties). It
|
||
is used to reduce inflammation. Immersing the leaf in water, and
|
||
consumming the soaking liquid everyday is enough to keep sickness at
|
||
bay.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="mepperpint">Mepperpint</h3>
|
||
<p>A leafy plant with rounded bulbs hanging from a thick central stem.
|
||
Its leaves have a warm pungent taste with a cooling aftertaste. It is
|
||
thought that consumming too much mepperpint can cause your eyes to
|
||
sprout leaves.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="muckwheat">Muckwheat</h3>
|
||
<p>A plant cultivated for its grain-like seeds. These seeds are rich in
|
||
complex carbohydrates, and can be ground down into flour. It is popular
|
||
with the Finiku people, made into bread or cooked into stews.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="norange">Norange</h3>
|
||
<p>A sweet, and bitter fruit with a thick rind. It has a fragant smell,
|
||
and can calm the mind. It pairs well with norcorn patties.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="norcorn">Norcorn</h3>
|
||
<p>The leafy stalk of the norcorn plant produces inflorescences called
|
||
nubs that yield bright yellow seeds. This plant is heat tolerant, its
|
||
root system is deep and reaches deep underground. There are 5-6 seeds
|
||
per nub, these can be ground up and made into flour to make Soronan
|
||
Desert favourites like norcorn patties. The entire nubs and their seeds
|
||
(which are held together by a stalk) can be grilled as is. With enough
|
||
heat, the seeds explode into bright orange puffs which are eaten as a
|
||
snack during special events. There have been events when the environing
|
||
heat was too hot that an entire norcorn field exploded into puffs,
|
||
referred to as a ‘Puff Event’.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="nuni">Nuni</h3>
|
||
<p>Nuni is a starchy tuber with bright yellow flesh, it has a taste and
|
||
smell that could best be described as being robust. If eaten, it stains
|
||
the inside of your mouth yellow for a time.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="nutshroo">Nutshroo</h3>
|
||
<p>A type of fungus that grows in habited areas, like cities, they even
|
||
grow on the skin of Ilks. Many residents promote their growth on their
|
||
own houses, nutshroos like growing on materials like banabo. Banabo
|
||
often has colonies of this fungus already present, residents do not
|
||
strip them of the material, they keep them, this assures a constant
|
||
supply of food.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="peagram">Peagram</h3>
|
||
<p>A type of pulse growing from a thorny bush, with large seedpods
|
||
filled with a green liquid that contain 10-15 peas. It is said that this
|
||
liquid is klorea from past harvesters, and that the pulse owes its
|
||
sweetness and nutrition to this. The harvesters from the old days would
|
||
pick the pods without wearing gloves, and the thorns would cut their
|
||
skin. Everytime a meal with peagram is consumed, the eater thanks the
|
||
harvesters aloud for their sacrifice: “Estre danki.”</p>
|
||
<h3 id="plumpkins">Plumpkins</h3>
|
||
<p>A large purple root vegetable, its skin is covered in scales. The
|
||
scales can be peeled off, revealing the bright and soft red flesh
|
||
underneath. Plumpkins can be processed into juice, or fermented to make
|
||
plumpkin ale.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="shroo">Shroo</h3>
|
||
<p>A fleshy plant that grows in low-light areas. Some varieties are
|
||
eatable, others poisonous and can cause serious physical and cognitive
|
||
dammage.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="sweet-grass">Sweet grass</h3>
|
||
<p>A type of grass that is hair-like and sweet-tasting. Many creatures
|
||
have an intense attraction towards them, especially floaters.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="teaweet">Teaweet</h3>
|
||
<p>A staple grain for all inhabitants of the Soronan Desert. It is easy
|
||
to grow, requiring little water. It is the main feed source of the Ilk.
|
||
Teaweet is used to make bread.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="trumpet-flower">Trumpet flower</h3>
|
||
<p>A plant that grows on the Ilk’s back. The bowl of the flower contains
|
||
a syrupy fluid, often consumed as a very strong and delibilitating drug.
|
||
It is diluted, and served as a drink during celebrations.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="waternilly">Waternilly</h3>
|
||
<p>Waternillies are small plants with long, and complex root systems
|
||
that dig deep into the sand to reach far-away sources of moisture.
|
||
Habitants of the Soronan desert use them to locate waterstone wells,
|
||
they typically grow overtop of such sites in great numbers.Because of
|
||
their ability to find water, they’re a common target for thirsty desert
|
||
travelers. They protect themselves from predators by folding in their
|
||
petals. The outside of the petals secrete an irritant, used to deter
|
||
attackers. If ingested, the poison will attack the nervous system and
|
||
cause generalized paralysis. For a thirsty, dehydrated traveler, laying
|
||
out in the suns can result in death.<br />
|
||
Large avians are well-adapted at hunting them. They beat their wings and
|
||
cover it in sand to soak up the poison, then break it off its stem with
|
||
their talons. Only strong avians can manage this.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="waterstone-wells">Waterstone wells</h3>
|
||
<p>Water stones are found in pockets of air underground, some wells may
|
||
carry as much as thousand stones or as little as a hundred. There are 4
|
||
craters: the Lorana crater, the Toko crater, the Norlok crater and the
|
||
Ratus crater. All of these were once basins full of water. Overtime, the
|
||
water receded into the soil and began to pearl, a result of the
|
||
composition of the sand on the planet, which helped to form a hard
|
||
membrane. Because the planet is mostly sand dunes, some of the craters
|
||
were partially filled.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="yukwood">Yukwood</h3>
|
||
<p>Yukwood grows quickly in full suns and hot temperatures. It is an
|
||
excellent shade, drought-resistant tree, able to grow 80 mirits high. It
|
||
has bright-green foliage with leathery leaves. It produces yellowish
|
||
puffy flowers in the colder season. Sandfinners like to use yukwood to
|
||
build sandfin masts, and interiors. Older sandfins were built out of
|
||
this wood entirely, but that practice is rare now.</p>
|
||
<h2 id="constellations">Constellations</h2>
|
||
<h3 id="encela">Encela</h3>
|
||
<p>One of the moons circling this planet, commonly referred to as the
|
||
twins.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="protus">Protus</h3>
|
||
<p>One of the moons circling this planet, commonly referred to as the
|
||
twins.</p>
|
||
<h2 id="other-food-and-drinks">Other food and drinks</h2>
|
||
<h3 id="bonan-wine">Bonan wine</h3>
|
||
<p>A strong wine made from the bonan plant, a starchy berry that grows
|
||
in the central rim.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="food-patches">Food patches</h3>
|
||
<p>A patch that if applied to the skin ensures good nutrition, it comes
|
||
in a variety of flavors mimicking real food. It was invented by the
|
||
grand leader of Montore Monty, and helped to stave off hunger during the
|
||
Iridi Raids.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="kabacho">Kabacho</h3>
|
||
<p>A fermented drink made from the fermented fruit of the Kaba plant. To
|
||
prepare kabacho, the fruit is left in water to ferment in the sun for
|
||
half an annum. Kabacho has mouth-numbing qualities.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="smellydough">Smellydough</h3>
|
||
<p>A fermented woodgeon berry and water mixture with a strong smell and
|
||
taste. It must be fed everyday to stay healthy. The more it smells, the
|
||
better the flavor.</p>
|
||
<h2 id="entertainment">Entertainment</h2>
|
||
<h3 id="chilabi-plusa-game">Chilabi Plusa Game</h3>
|
||
<p>Renate residents like to play a game called Chilabi Plusa—to mean,
|
||
chilabi with somethings extra— where each gets an identical dumpling and
|
||
must eat it in turns. All contain chilabi, but only one of dumplings has
|
||
10x the amount, enough to make you cry, sweat or cough. The goal of the
|
||
game is to hide your discomfort if you get the spicy dumpling, or to
|
||
pretend you got it when you didn’t. It’s up to others to guess the
|
||
truth. Chilabi Plusa is an acting game where the best pretender
|
||
wins.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="donmol">Donmol</h3>
|
||
<p>A plucked instrument with 4 double strings, a long neck and a raised
|
||
fingerboard. It has a flat back, with triangular soundholes. The donmol
|
||
is played during special events in Verido cities.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="hako-game">Hako game</h3>
|
||
<p>Hako is a capture game popular with Iridi soldiers. Each player
|
||
carries a <strong>Sonozai</strong>, a set of four dice with a braided
|
||
hempa string, a thread which binds all things (dark and day). Seasoned
|
||
players make and carry their own, made out of soft stone.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="habitants-of-the-dark-1">Habitants of the dark</h3>
|
||
<p>A history book written by Aristollo, explaining how the Iridi came to
|
||
start ingesting chloromyce shroos.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="nohiyara-game">Nohi’yara game</h3>
|
||
<p>A smelling game. Jars of spices are covered with a thin cloth, and
|
||
each person has to smell and guess the spice aloud. Whoever got the most
|
||
right wins the game.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="koutra">Koutra</h3>
|
||
<p>A plucked instrument with a small round body, made from a looberry
|
||
shell. The neck is 1 mirit long, and pierces the body. Koutras are
|
||
simple instruments, usually put together by children.</p>
|
||
<h2 id="professions">Professions</h2>
|
||
<h3 id="beobug-1">Beobug</h3>
|
||
<p>The name of a cargo sandfin company in Montore. Beobug sandfins
|
||
follow the Ilks to gather kapo to turn into fuel, a process they’re able
|
||
to do while aboard.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="reader">Reader</h3>
|
||
<p>Those who master the art of Pattern reading, which consists of
|
||
reading the lines present on the skin of every Verido. It is a skill
|
||
passed down from master to student.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="sandfinner">Sandfinner</h3>
|
||
<p>Those who travel the desert by sandfin, a vessel powered by wind.
|
||
Sandfinners are typically Finiku people.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="the-hands">The Hands</h3>
|
||
<p>Short for The Hands of the Ilk. Hands inspect the Ilk’s body for
|
||
signs of disease or wounds. It is dangerous work, many have fallen and
|
||
died while on the job.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="voice">Voice</h3>
|
||
<p>A traditional Verido role, the ones appointed to speak to an Ilk.
|
||
Only descendants of the founders can be Voice. Voices communicate
|
||
messages between the Ilk and the inhabitants of the city.</p>
|
||
<h2 id="misc">Misc</h2>
|
||
<h3 id="annum">Annum</h3>
|
||
<p>An annum follows the growing cycle of teaweet, which takes 240 twin
|
||
sunrises. Habitants of the Soronan Desert communicate time by gathering
|
||
annums in a group:</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p>ko’annum — 640 annums ki’annum — 320 annums haty’annum — A0 annums
|
||
ha’annum — 10 annums</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<h3 id="horo">Horo</h3>
|
||
<p>A unit of kaala, conventionally reckoned as 1⁄16 of a day. The rhythm
|
||
of the world is based on the heart beats of an Ilk, which beats at 80
|
||
beats per quarter horo. There are 320 beats per horo, and 16 horos in a
|
||
day. Days are typically divided by 4: First sunrise, second sunrise,
|
||
first sunset and second sunset.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="iri">Iri</h3>
|
||
<p>Iri is the name given to all who serve the Court of Light, every
|
||
servant shares this name. An Iri has no voice, no opinion and no value
|
||
to anyone in the Kingdom of Irideri.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="isilk">Isilk</h3>
|
||
<p>A sought-after fabric made from Ilk hair. Every Ilk has a subtle coat
|
||
pigmentation that is barely discernible to the inexperienced.</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p>Vol has a blue coat Bala has a red coat Oto has a green coat</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<h3 id="kaala">Kaala</h3>
|
||
<p>An old Verido word to mean ‘time’, an onomatopoeia describing the
|
||
sound the heart of an Ilk makes.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="klorea">Klorea</h3>
|
||
<p>Klorea is any of several related green pigments found in the cells of
|
||
beings of the Soronan desert. It allows them to absorb energy from
|
||
light. Klorealines are important to the Verido and the Iridi.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="klorealines">Klorealines</h3>
|
||
<p>A set of ancestors or line of descent of an important person: the
|
||
survival of a legitimate royal klorealine.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="sandfin">Sandfin</h3>
|
||
<p>A vessel for desert travel, that uses wind to propel itself forward.
|
||
The sandfin is a Finiku invention, in fact, in the old times most were
|
||
nomadic and traveled the desert in this way. The vessel is
|
||
flat-bottomed, with twin keels on either side to prevent it from tipping
|
||
in big weather. A rudder and tiller is affixed to the stern and aids in
|
||
steering the vessel, although the main way to steer with a sandfin is by
|
||
means of trimming the sails, kept up with a tall mast. Sandfinners carry
|
||
a wide variety of sails (made from Hampa), for many strengths of wind.
|
||
Some sandfins, like the Beobug supply ships, are much larger and can
|
||
have two or more masts. These also, use other means of propulsion like
|
||
gas, which they also process and produce onboard.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="specter">Specter</h3>
|
||
<p>Name given to those in Montore who don’t have ID. They are considered
|
||
to not-exist, and cannot enter the city. It is also used as an
|
||
expression, to refer to those who live alone, outside of
|
||
communities.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="mapa">Mapa</h3>
|
||
<p>A term of endearment, used by the child of the bearing parent.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="mirit">Mirit</h3>
|
||
<p>The mirit is a unit of measurement for length in the Soronan desert.
|
||
The length of a mirit corresponds to the height of Mirit, the shortest
|
||
Finiku to have ever lived. Thought to have originated in Montore, with
|
||
people were using Mirit (a stone worker) to measure stones for the great
|
||
outer wall of the city. Of course, they did this for a laugh, but it was
|
||
soon adopted in other cities. People made rods of wood or metal with
|
||
Mirit’s height.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="pattern-reading">Pattern reading</h3>
|
||
<p>The art of reading Verido skin patterns, a skill very few possess.
|
||
The patterns reveal the Verido’s name, as well as their lineage. When
|
||
the Verido come of age and that their patterns stop changing, their
|
||
names are read to them.<br />
|
||
Verido children bear the names of their grand-mapa while waiting for
|
||
their names.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="toronka-1">Toronka</h3>
|
||
<p>Toronka is the name of the sandfin of Eka and Lupen. They salvaged
|
||
the disowned and damaged vessel, that had been left to rot on the border
|
||
of Renate. With the help of many friends, they fixed it up and made it
|
||
their own.</p>
|
||
<h2 id="events">Events</h2>
|
||
<h3 id="green-day">Green day</h3>
|
||
<p>The day that the sproutling was taken from the ground, it is usually
|
||
celebrated within small closely-knit communities. Many throw elaborate
|
||
parties, banquets in the honor of the young.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="iridi-raids">Iridi raids</h3>
|
||
<p>A difficult time for many, when the Iridi sent out soldiers to
|
||
various cities to capture workers to work the Irideri mines, to collect
|
||
chloromyce shroos. This event caused a great imbalance in the world, and
|
||
nearly decimated all of the Terin population.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="leaping-day">Leaping day</h3>
|
||
<p>A special event that takes place when a being is ready to die, rarely
|
||
do beings of the Soronan desert let themselves wilt and expire, most
|
||
choose to leap from a high place to die at a time of their choosing. For
|
||
the Verido, Leaping from the Ilk’s snout is common practice, for others,
|
||
many choose to do a pilgrimage to The Rupture in the Southern Dust
|
||
Plains to do their leap.All believe that when you make the conscious
|
||
decision to die and Leap, your consciousness separates from your body,
|
||
it goes skyward while the body plummets to the ground. All people in
|
||
this world are grown, and so your body falling means it is returning
|
||
from whence it came. It isn’t an end, but a return to normality, closing
|
||
the cycle.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="monty-day">Monty Day</h3>
|
||
<p>The day of the annum when the residents of Montore celebrate the
|
||
greatness of their grand leader Monty. On this day, locals consume bam
|
||
cake foodpatches, and gather in the centre of town to offer tribute.</p>
|
||
<h2 id="languages">Languages</h2>
|
||
<h3 id="aodan">Aodan</h3>
|
||
<p>Aodan is spoken by the Aodal people, but it is a dying language. Most
|
||
Aodals now speak the Common Tongue, but some older residents of the
|
||
Soronan Desert still speak it. Aodan stayed with the Iridi longer
|
||
because of their policy of isolation.</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p>Ana — one, a<br />
|
||
Atedu — stay, wait, remain<br />
|
||
Citi — in, at, or to this place or position<br />
|
||
Danki — an expression of gratitude or politeness, in response to
|
||
something done or given<br />
|
||
Dekon — 18, ten is dek, eight is on.<br />
|
||
Estre — verb. to be<br />
|
||
Granda — adj. big, heavy, large, long, tall; important; adult<br />
|
||
Grandlalun — full-moon<br />
|
||
Jui — yes<br />
|
||
Koroa — noun. heart (physical or emotional). Adj. Feeling (an emotion, a
|
||
direct experience)<br />
|
||
La — particle. separates the subject and the verb (I am happy, vi la
|
||
tanka)<br />
|
||
Mo — appended to words, (emphasis, emotion or confirmation)<br />
|
||
Nan — no<br />
|
||
Nio — this, that<br />
|
||
Nocta — dark<br />
|
||
Nos — dawn, apart, away<br />
|
||
Nulalun — null-moon<br />
|
||
Plusa — something extra<br />
|
||
Rappida — move or act with great haste<br />
|
||
Soli — day, light<br />
|
||
Tanka — adj. good, positive, useful; friendly, peaceful; simple<br />
|
||
Tribu — noun. community, company, group, nation, society, tribe<br />
|
||
Salu — expression of greeting<br />
|
||
Seklo — go or come after (a person or thing proceeding ahead)<br />
|
||
Son — Dusk, together, with<br />
|
||
Vi — noun. I, me, we, us<br />
|
||
Volubi — used in polite requests or questions</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<h3 id="common-tongue">Common Tongue</h3>
|
||
<p>The Common Tongue is the language of trade in the Soronan Desert,
|
||
spoken by all.</p>
|
||
<h3 id="finic">Finic</h3>
|
||
<p>Finic is spoken by the Finiku people.</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p>Aini — to perpetuate, prolong<br />
|
||
Aikana — love (aikana’ia: hate, aikana’wati: loved ones)<br />
|
||
Ara — what<br />
|
||
Atae — with something, appended to words<br />
|
||
Atuhue — Beautiful (atehue’ia: ugly)<br />
|
||
Dae’na? — isn’t it?<br />
|
||
De — in<br />
|
||
Di — appended to word, for emphasis<br />
|
||
Dodon — stomach, used to mean hunger when paired with ‘sui’ e.g.,
|
||
dodon’sui.<br />
|
||
Harioki — happy (harioki’ia: sad)<br />
|
||
Ianae — no (ia, casual). To negate a word, append ‘ia (e.g., Yara’ia,
|
||
bad kind of thinking)<br />
|
||
Ipayae — a drink<br />
|
||
Kauga — heart, middle<br />
|
||
Kiao’ri — (kiao’, casual) Hello<br />
|
||
Kira — sun<br />
|
||
Komokomo — smart (komokomo’ia: dumb)<br />
|
||
Kora — that, this<br />
|
||
Korei — there<br />
|
||
Mai — life (mai’ia, dead, without life)<br />
|
||
Maka — way of doing (yara’maka: way of thinking)<br />
|
||
Wati — I, people<br />
|
||
Maha — perform (an action)<br />
|
||
Mawani — soul (mawani’ia: without soul)<br />
|
||
Mou — more, again<br />
|
||
Mutau— right (mutau’ia, to be wrong)<br />
|
||
Naa — appended to word, for agreement or confirmation No — possessive
|
||
particle<br />
|
||
Nohi — smell, nose<br />
|
||
Noho’uta — warning, stay away<br />
|
||
Okini — adj. big, heavy, large, long, tall; important; adult.<br />
|
||
Orae — yes<br />
|
||
Orae, dae’sa! — yes, that right!<br />
|
||
Oro — asserts a fact that the listener may not know<br />
|
||
Poro — purple, colour<br />
|
||
Re — to be, apprended to other words (eg. Yaga’re, to be wrong) Roro —
|
||
brain (komororo: bad brain to mean idiot)<br />
|
||
Sakoi — strong (sakoi’ia: weak)<br />
|
||
Sawa — wind<br />
|
||
Saa’mu — Short form of sawa’muko, to mean against the wind<br />
|
||
Saa’ta — Short short of sawa’atae, to mean with the wind<br />
|
||
Sosae — good (sosae’ia: bad, unhealthy, negative. sosae’di: very good,
|
||
the best)<br />
|
||
Sui — empty<br />
|
||
Tawari — verb. To touch (tawari’a: don’t touch)<br />
|
||
Te — and<br />
|
||
Teki — perceive with the eyes; discern visually.<br />
|
||
Wai — who<br />
|
||
Wi — manner, state, condition<br />
|
||
Wawa — mouth, e.g., wawa’de, to put in mouth, to eat<br />
|
||
Yara — think<br />
|
||
Yorala — sand, desert, land<br />
|
||
Yora’nae — (yora’, casual) greeting, to talk<br />
|
||
Yora’mu — Short short of yoramawa’muko, to mean towards the soul of the
|
||
land<br />
|
||
Yora’ta — Short short of yoramawa’atae, to mean away from the soul of
|
||
the land<br />
|
||
Yoroi — cool</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<h3 id="ilken">Ilken</h3>
|
||
<p>A, E, I, O, U, Y and H are paired with notes and the rest consist of
|
||
pauses and elongated notes.</p>
|
||
<table>
|
||
<tbody>
|
||
<tr class="odd">
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">A Do</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">B .</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">L ___</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">T ….</td>
|
||
</tr>
|
||
<tr class="even">
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">E Re</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">C _</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">M .__</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">U ____</td>
|
||
</tr>
|
||
<tr class="odd">
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">I Mi</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">D ..</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">N .._</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">V .___</td>
|
||
</tr>
|
||
<tr class="even">
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">O Fa</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">F __</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">P __.</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">W ..__</td>
|
||
</tr>
|
||
<tr class="odd">
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">U Sol</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">G ._</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">Q _..</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">X ___.</td>
|
||
</tr>
|
||
<tr class="even">
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">Y La</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">J _.</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">R ._.</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">Y __..</td>
|
||
</tr>
|
||
<tr class="odd">
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">H Si</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">K …</td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">S <em>.</em></td>
|
||
<td style="text-align: left;">Z .__.</td>
|
||
</tr>
|
||
</tbody>
|
||
</table>
|
||
<p>Example:</p>
|
||
<blockquote>
|
||
<p><strong>VOLARE</strong><br />
|
||
Fa .___ Do ___ Re ._.</p>
|
||
</blockquote>
|
||
<p>To create single vowel sounds or words, the syllable is sounded by
|
||
sliding from <i>Si</i>, toward the target vowel. For instance, to make
|
||
the sound O, or Ho, the sound will be that of a sliding tone from
|
||
<i>Si</i> to <i>Fa</i>.</p>
|
||
<section id="footnotes" class="footnotes footnotes-end-of-document"
|
||
role="doc-endnotes">
|
||
<hr />
|
||
<ol>
|
||
<li id="fn1"><p><strong>Volare</strong>. One of three cities, built on
|
||
the back of Vol, an Ilk. Volare is also the name of one of the founders
|
||
of the city bearing this same name.<a href="#fnref1"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn2"><p><strong>Licky root</strong>. Grown for its roots, which
|
||
have anti-inflammatory and antibacterial effects. This plant is very
|
||
hardy, it grows in high-altitude areas.<a href="#fnref2"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn3"><p><strong>Annum</strong> An annum follows the growing
|
||
cycle of teaweet, which takes 240 twin sunrises. There are 10 annums in
|
||
a ki’annum.<a href="#fnref3" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn4"><p><strong>Isilk</strong>. A sought-after fabric made from
|
||
Ilk hair.<a href="#fnref4" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn5"><p><strong>Looberry</strong>. A sweet eatable fruit with a
|
||
hard outer shell, often used as a dye.<a href="#fnref5"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn6"><p><strong>Trumpet flower</strong>. The bowl of the flower
|
||
contains a syrupy fluid, a very strong and delibilitating drug. It is
|
||
diluted, and served as a drink during celebrations.<a href="#fnref6"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn7"><p><strong>Kabacho</strong>. A fermented drink made from
|
||
the fruit of the Kaba plant.<a href="#fnref7" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn8"><p><strong>Voice</strong>. A traditional Verido role. Only
|
||
Voices can speak to an Ilk.<a href="#fnref8" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn9"><p><strong>Mapa</strong>. A term of endearment, used by the
|
||
child of the bearing parent.<a href="#fnref9" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn10"><p><strong>Koutra</strong>. A plucked instrument with a
|
||
small round body, made from a looberry shell. The neck is 1 mirit long,
|
||
and pierces the body.<a href="#fnref10" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn11"><p><strong>The Ear</strong> Where the Voice stands atop
|
||
the head when speaking to an Ilk.<a href="#fnref11"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn12"><p><strong>Looma root</strong>. A climbing vine with small
|
||
eatable cream-coloured heart-shaped roots.<a href="#fnref12"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn13"><p><strong>Bibiskiss</strong>. A purple flowery herb that
|
||
is often infused to make tea. When brewed, the colour leeches into the
|
||
drink.<a href="#fnref13" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn14"><p><strong>Horo</strong> A unit of kaala(time).<a
|
||
href="#fnref14" class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn15"><p><strong>Ilken</strong>. A whistled language spoken by
|
||
Verido Voices, playable with an instrument. It is used to speak over
|
||
long distances, and to converse with the Ilks.<a href="#fnref15"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn16"><p><strong>Donmol</strong>. A plucked instrument with 4
|
||
double strings, a long neck and a raised fingerboard. It has a flat
|
||
back, with triangular soundholes.<a href="#fnref16"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn17"><p><strong>Shroo</strong>. A plant that grows in low-light
|
||
areas. Some varieties are eatable, others poisonous and can cause
|
||
serious physical and cognitive dammage.<a href="#fnref17"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn18"><p><strong>Leaping day</strong>. A death ceremony which
|
||
involves leaping into the Rupture, or from the snout of an Ilk.<a
|
||
href="#fnref18" class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn19"><p><strong>Smellydough</strong>. A fermented woodgeon
|
||
berry and water mixture with a strong smell and taste. The more it
|
||
smells, the better the flavor.<a href="#fnref19" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn20"><p><strong>Pattern reading</strong>. The art of reading
|
||
Verido skin patterns. A patterns reveal the Verido’s name, as well as
|
||
their lineage. When a Verido comes of age their patterns stop changing,
|
||
and their names are read to them.<a href="#fnref20"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn21"><p><strong>Klorea</strong>. Any of several related green
|
||
pigments found in the cells of all beings of the Soronan desert. It
|
||
allows them to absorb energy from the light.<a href="#fnref21"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn22"><p><strong>Snakadil</strong>. A type of small reptavian
|
||
that moves just under the top layer of sand. When surprised, snakadil
|
||
suffocate their victims.<a href="#fnref22" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn23"><p><strong>The Hands</strong>. Hands inspect the Ilk’s
|
||
body for signs of disease or wounds. It is dangerous work, many have
|
||
fallen and died while on the job.<a href="#fnref23"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn24"><p><strong>Skyrock</strong> Skyrocks are celestial bodies
|
||
in the sky.<a href="#fnref24" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn25"><p><strong>Waterstones</strong> A liquid preserved in a
|
||
hard membrane, protecting it from evaporation. The water can be
|
||
extracted using a press, or a heavy tool. It’s also possible to draw out
|
||
the liquid by putting the stone in the mouth, the water will seep out
|
||
from a collection of pores on the stone’s surface.<a href="#fnref25"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn26"><p><strong>Lemilim</strong> A culinary herb with a subtle
|
||
tang, used fresh or dried. It has antifungal properties.<a
|
||
href="#fnref26" class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn27"><p><strong>Medililly</strong>. A rare leafy plant. It is
|
||
hard to grow, requires much water and attention, and takes annums to
|
||
grow to maturity (the only time when the plant gains its medical
|
||
properties). It is used to reduce inflammation.<a href="#fnref27"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn28"><p><strong>Banabo</strong> A tall, tree-like plant. Its
|
||
trunk is wide and dense and it is often used as a material to build
|
||
houses and other hard structures. Its top leaves are often used as
|
||
brooms and to weave decorative items.<a href="#fnref28"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn29"><p><strong>Teaweet</strong> A staple grain that is easy to
|
||
grow.<a href="#fnref29" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn30"><p><strong>Babam</strong> A starchy tuber, pink on the
|
||
inside, that softens when cooked.<a href="#fnref30"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn31"><p><strong>Mepperpint</strong> A popular leafy plant with
|
||
rounded bulbs hanging from a thick central stem. Its leaves have a warm
|
||
pungent taste with a cooling aftertaste.<a href="#fnref31"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn32"><p><strong>Beobug</strong> A Montore company that owns
|
||
cargo sandfins. The sandfins follow the Ilks to gather kapo to turn into
|
||
fuel.<a href="#fnref32" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn33"><p><strong>Muckwheat</strong> Grain-like seeds with a
|
||
nutty taste, used to make breads and stews.<a href="#fnref33"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn34"><p><strong>Bonan</strong> A berry with soft flesh rich in
|
||
starch covered with a rind, which may be orange or purple when ripe.<a
|
||
href="#fnref34" class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn35"><p><strong>Moera</strong> Moera, also known as The
|
||
Luminary, and The First Light, is the first ruler of the Iridi people.<a
|
||
href="#fnref35" class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn36"><p><strong>Peagram</strong> A type of pulse growing from a
|
||
thorny bush, with large seedpods filled with a green liquid that contain
|
||
10-15 peas.<a href="#fnref36" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn37"><p><strong>Lavendiri</strong> A purple bulbous flower that
|
||
is often dried and used in homes to cover bad smells, or to freshen a
|
||
room<a href="#fnref37" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn38"><p><strong>Bobonion</strong> A spicy octagonal vegetable,
|
||
enveloped in a thick black rind. The inside is soft, and can be scooped
|
||
out with a tool.<a href="#fnref38" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn39"><p><strong>Kavava</strong> An addictive root that when
|
||
chewed numbs the mind and body, it can also cause minor
|
||
hallucinations.<a href="#fnref39" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn40"><p><strong>Plumpkins</strong> A large scaly purple root
|
||
vegetable. The scales can be peeled off, revealing the bright and soft
|
||
red flesh underneath.<a href="#fnref40" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn41"><p><strong>Karonin</strong> A fruit with a warty
|
||
assymetrical shape and a hard rind. The inside flesh is crunchy, eatable
|
||
raw, and has a pungent, slightly spicy flavor, varying in intensity
|
||
depending on its growing environment.<a href="#fnref41"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn42"><p><strong>Norcorn</strong> A plant on a stalk that
|
||
produces inflorescences called nubs that yield bright yellow seeds. With
|
||
enough heat, the seeds explode into bright orange puffs which are eaten
|
||
as a snack during special events.<a href="#fnref42"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn43"><p><strong>Mossling</strong> Pale winged insects that like
|
||
to burrow inside fresh produce, causing them to rot.<a href="#fnref43"
|
||
class="footnote-back" role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn44"><p><strong>Norange</strong> A near-extinct, sweet, and
|
||
bitter fruit with a thick rind. It has a fragant smell, and can calm the
|
||
mind.<a href="#fnref44" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
<li id="fn45"><p><strong>Specter</strong>. The name given to those in
|
||
Montore who don’t have ID, who don’t yet exist, and that cannot enter
|
||
the city. It is also used as an expression, to refer to those who live
|
||
alone, outside of communities<a href="#fnref45" class="footnote-back"
|
||
role="doc-backlink">↩︎</a></p></li>
|
||
</ol>
|
||
</section>
|