DargonZine | Volume 12, Number 4 |
ive tattered and agitated cats rubbed five tattered sides against
the door of a tiny seaside cabin. The frigid wind blowing off the
Valenfaer Ocean was insulting to the temperament of the smallest kitten
-- an orange dappled tabby -- and she hissed her frustration. Normally,
she could have easily slipped under the hide-covered door, but today the
invisible barrier that kept her from her mistress' domain was
inexplicably solid.
A woman's sobs spilled from the cabin and four of the cats
surrendered their vigil, darting away into the gathering gloom.
The little tabby
refused to abandon her post and, with hackles raised, crouched courageously
next to the wall.
A shroud of death enveloped the cabin and inside the last fire
faerie danced the last blazing pirouette as the hearth smoldered to
closing. A desperately ill woman lay on a bed in the center of the room.
Her voice was muffled, smothered under mounds of blankets. "When the
wind is in the east, 'tis good for neither man nor beast." Had Bracie
known, she would have been horrified at the ragged state of her kittens;
but Bracie was dying and beyond the realm of catly concerns.
The cats were the only living things to which she was attached. Her
contact with other people had always been seasonal and understandably
limited due to the remoteness of her cabin -- a good day's wagon ride
from the village of Shireton, on the northwestern coast of Cherisk. This
season's pilgrimage of anxious villagers -- eager for the weather
reader's news of the coming year and the portents for their crops -- had
never materialized. The locals had shunned her, in spite of their
confidence in her weather reading abilities. Bracie understood the
isolation; death was an evil that was contagious and, in the rudimentary
language of all small villages, was never a particular thief.
Bracie had survived the previous winter well enough, ending it with
a quarter of her supply of salted meat intact -- no small feat for those
poor souls who were unfortunate enough to inhabit the remote regions of
Dargon. With spring had come the anticipation of her annual trip to
Shireton for the Melrin festival; Bracie's favorite festival,
symbolizing birth in the cycle of life. The focus of Shireton's Melrin
festival was the wheel of the year. The rise and fall of the seasons
governed life in this part of Makdiar. The land sustained them; what
couldn't be hunted or gathered had to be grown on the tiny parcels of
land allotted by the local lord. The wheel of the year included Bracie's
weather predictions for the future. Only the weather reader, and her
knowledge of the signs, stood between the villagers and the devastation
of a ruined crop.
Bracie had left for Shireton excited to be on her way and anxious
as always to be, at least temporarily, in the company of more than trees
and sea birds. Leaving the cabin, she had knelt down to examine a black
and brown woolly worm -- whose wide brown stripe foretold of a harsh
winter -- when a brief jolt of fire clenched her chest. The suddenness
of the assault had been numbing and had caused her vision to cloud and
the tips of her fingers to burn. Fortunately, the discomfort had quickly
faded and Bracie had dismissed the incident.
Throughout the rest of the journey, Bracie had noticed all the
usual weather signs. The plain of grass that marked her halfway point to
the village was waist high, bearing the same tidings as the woolly worm.
The yellowed moss hanging on the eastern side of the ash and the flies
tormenting her naked arms forewarned her of a sudden afternoon shower,
giving her plenty of time to take temporary shelter. These were all
observations that came without conscious thought for Bracie, just as a
swordsman knows naturally when to thrust and when to block.
Unfortunately, Bracie had never developed the ability to interpret her
own inner voice and the secrets of immortality had been foolishly
ignored. The voice of Makdiar dominated Bracie's heart.
Upon her return from the Melrin Festival, Bracie noticed that her
skin had begun to hang on her bones and that twin circles of death
darkened her eyes. By Yuli, she had known she would not survive the
year.
The wind battered against the walls of the cabin and Bracie's body
trembled, struggling against the invading darkness. She was no longer
able to rise from her bed and she knew that death was near. Bracie
struggled to turn onto her side, believing that any movement was better
than stillness. Lying still frightened her. The dying embers of her
fire, whose smoke had begun to blow back down upon itself, frightened
her as well, but she hadn't the strength to rise and stoke it. She
muttered, "Smoke curls downward, bad weather is on the way." Her
uncontrollable babbling frightened her most of all and as these last
muttered words slid over her cracked lips, her back stiffened. Suddenly,
a bright blue spark exploded inside her head and the ping of separation
-- which was quite distinct -- propelled her from her body. Bracie
floated, climbing like a bird on the wing up to the smoke-hole at the
top of her cabin. Just before spiraling out of the hole and into the
night, Bracie caught a glimpse her body lying on the bed, her chest
slowly rising and falling with each breath.
In an instant, she began to thrash around in nothing, in what felt
like the space between space. Her pain was gone, as well as all other
sensations except those of speed and -- even though her mind rejected
the notion -- the feeling of growing backwards. Suddenly she was
plummeting through warm sunshine and air, hurtling downwards at a trio
of figures below her: a young girl, an old man and an even older woman.
She realized she would hit the child a moment before the collision. With
bone-jarring force, Bracie slammed into the girl and looked out through
her own seven year-old eyes.
Bracie's father whispered softly, "Go on now lass, show some of
those manners your ma taught ya," and he eased her forward with a huge
hand placed squarely on her back. He addressed the old woman kneeling at
her feet, "She's a good girl, Alia. Always was a wanderer, but a good
girl."
Alia was northern Dargon's most respected weather reader and she
had recently petitioned the villagers for a fosterling, having not borne
a child of her own to carry on the weather lore. The villagers had been
somewhat reluctant but their reliance on the weather reader was strong.
The thing that Bracie had feared for an entire year had finally
occurred. Her father had decided to foster her to Alia.
Bracie knew nothing about the old woman who lived by the sea and
had never before seen anyone whose face was so marred with wrinkles.
Bracie was prepared to hate her, but Alia's smile was infectious.
"Is that right, young'n? You've taken a liking to Mother Makdiar,
eh?" Alia asked, looking directly into the young girl's eyes.
Upon closer inspection, Bracie decided that Alia was cute, in an
old mother sort of way and she gave one quick nod, "Aye, I suppose."
Bracie's small hand reached out instinctively and slipped into Alia's
gnarled fist. "Can you teach me about the faeries who live in the
forest? Before Ma died, she used to tell me there weren't no such thing,
but I am nae sure." Bracie's face brightened as a torrent of words began
to spill from her mouth, "Ya know, I saw night weeds," Bracie
continued as she bobbed her head rapidly. Deep in the forest, it was.
They were all tramped down and blood red; squashed like. It was the
faeries dancing on 'em made 'em that way and you know what they say
about that. Faeries dance when the weather is fair." She smiled then, a
bright beam of pride. "So, I reckon we'll be having some good weather,
eh?"
Bracie was a beautiful child, with hair the color of harvest wheat
and eager eyes that were the same color as the dark fertile land.
Whatever reservations the old weather reader had, soon evaporated and
she stood slowly, addressing Bracie's father, "Thank you, Zar. I know
this is not easy for you." Alia flashed Bracie a quick, reassuring
smile, "And yes, you're right, she'll make an excellent weather reader".
With a blink of her third eye, Bracie separated from the memory and
was transported to another, later time. Taking stock of her
surroundings, Bracie quickly decided that she was in the forest. It was
night-time and judging by the full moon at its zenith, it was the midway
point of Cahleyna's rule. She knew immediately that she was not alone.
Upon the tail of that thought came the whispered evidence of someone
close by, as if imagining it had brought it somehow into reality. The
voices were coming from the opposite side of a huge grandfather oak and
she willed herself to stillness as the voices grew louder. Bracie
recognized the steady cadence of Alia's ritual voice and her mind
automatically picked up the rhythm, "Squirrels gather'n nuts in a
hurry?"
The reply was immediate, "Causes snow to gather in a flurry".
"When an ox scratches his ear?"
"A rain shower is near." It was then that Bracie recognized her own
voice.
"When he thumps his side with an angry tail?"
"Look out for thunder, lightning and hail."
Bracie's spirit was irresistibly drawn to the two corporeal beings
and she witnessed their exchange like a thief spying on an unwary soul.
"Very good lass. Now the vow."
Bracie's speech grew loud and solemn, "Goddess Cahleyna, to thee I
pledge," she lifted her face to the brilliance of the moon. "As our
forebears did, so do I now and so shall my children do after me. This I
vow forevermore." With perfect precision Bracie continued, "Grant me the
power to stand mighty as the tree, old as the land, strong as the sea.
Reaching to the sky, to the moons and to Kisil-Doon."
Alia continued the consecration, "Great Goddess, take this maiden's
unspoiled hands, these lips, these eyes. Guide them in your ways,
empower them with your honor."
Again, Bracie picked up the steady beat, "In return I pledge to you
my children and their children to come. Never shall I allow the rule of
Cahleyna to be broken."
"Grant her the roots of eternity. Cleanse her with the waters of
life and bind her, now and forever, to Mother Makdiar who sustains us,"
Alia chanted, concluding the ritual of knowing.
Now it was Firil and the wind wailed. The brave little tabby defied
the veil of death and slithered inside the cabin. Moments later, the
physical contact of the cat rubbing against her face forced Bracie into
the present and served as a siren calling her spirit back to the flesh.
With a massive intake of breath that convulsed her body, Bracie
jerked upwards into a sitting position. The kitten was flung aside and
scampered over to crouch in the corner, staring at her mistress with
huge eyes.
The ritual of knowing still rang in Bracie's ears and she felt
Alia's presence in the cabin as she had not since the old weather reader
had died, twelve years past. Alia had given Bracie everything: her home,
all of her possessions, all of her knowledge. In exchange, Bracie had
promised to carry on the weather lore.
Under Alia's tutelage, Bracie had become known as a gentle, yet
powerful reader who took little in exchange for the knowledge that she
gave. Slowly the locals had learned to trust Bracie as they had trusted
Alia and with each new season had lined up at her door, eager for news
of the changes to come.
She had cared for them for many years, helping to predict the best
time to harvest, saving them from harsh winters and warning them of dry
summers to come. All those years, Bracie had thought she was fulfilling
her promise to Alia, but she knew now with a frightening certainty that
she had done no such thing. She would die today or tomorrow and there
would be no one to take up her craft.
Alia's last words to Bracie rang silently in her mind, "There are
lines all about us lass, lines that join every living thing; you are the
knot that binds one to another."
A sudden, vivid image flashed across the field of her mind; the
land spread out below her in all its glory with tiny lines glowing
beneath its skin, radiating in all directions, flowing through
everything.
Suddenly, a tingling in the pit of Bracie's stomach jolted her back
to awareness. She scrambled frantically, shoving the covers from her
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