On the Sea Beneath the Sky
A Story by Treo LeGigeo
Feel it, in your heart, in your bones. It is always as so, the night a star falls.
Golden
flickers danced on the pale faces of the circle, hushed whispers
wafting out from the gathering by the glowing coals. It was the third
night of the coming-of-age, the no-longer-little ones from each of
the surrounding tribes taken out together in the openness of the
untamed world. There were a few in the group that stood out,
discernible even in the thick coverings of the night. There was
Jiu-yeil, son of the carpenters, impressive form already bulging with
strength and muscle more fitting of a man twice his size. The
brothers, Senniare and Elieten of cloth-maker, sat donned in simple
but the finest of all their travelling robes. And very slightly apart
from the throng of a dozen others was the quiet Meiella, orphaned as
an infant, niece of medicine woman.
The air was cool, but the
wind only light. As the flames burned low, a tall figure stepped out
of the shadows--Och'jiana, the leader of the rite. She was neither
old nor young, hair pulled back in the habit of the female smiths,
fingers callused and scarred from metal and fire in the unmistakable
pattern of the forge-work of her fathers. She was not beautiful, but
her face held that radiant allure of the exotic, and of the far-off
hills of her homelands. The children hushed, and she began to
speak.
Cast
your gaze above us, here, and see how clear the sky is. Yonder is the
moon, at its fullest, that grand silver disk. The clouds are few,
pulled back from that inky black veil. And there--look there! That
streak of white fire, a star from the fields above. Have you seen
such before? No? Well, I have, just once, when I was very young.
There is a story, in the North, one that my mother used to tell me as
a child.
Ah,
now it is that the breeze begins to pick up. Feel it, in your heart,
in your bones. It is always as so, the night a star falls.
But
alas, I get ahead of myself. First I should begin this evening by
thanking the brown earth that we walk on, the lush leaves that feed
up, the gushing rivers that give up life. This world of ours is old,
even if our people are young, for things have not always been as they
are today. Once, there was a vast race that thrived on this land, but
not one with it as we are. Instead, they were a people of war, living
off blood and battle. A brutal people, but also a glorious people.
And their centre lay in the all-powerful Priesthood, holy men and
women dedicated to knowledge and might, who ruled in their wisdom
from their temple up in the Ulfarre Mountains.
Among
the many names that can be remembered--the gold-maker Gevaki, Yosimet
who slew the beasts, Mayarey the wild mother, and many others--there
are two which have earned themselves a special place in utterance.
Those, were of the Twins, the greatest warriors that had ever been
seen to fight, who in battle fit together as much as they seemed to
repel in appearance. There was Efaluac, dark and large, a frightening
bulk of a man. And forever at his side was his sister Engeliq, fair
hair cropped short from her pale cheeks and bright green eyes, form
so thin and spindly that those who had the fortune of laying eyes
upon her could scarcely believe she could bear a sword much less
wield one. United, they flowed like the river through the silt, the
wind through the trees, melding together in a single unbreakable
entity. Under their dual command, the forces that they lead pushed
out the boundaries of these peoples even further then previous
generations had dreamed, and within these ever-expanding edges there
lived in boundless wealth and culture.
The
day that the Twins turned their gaze out to the wide ocean of
Soaulrei, many hearts were heavy, for none who had ever tried to
cross those waters had ever been seen again. But when brother and
sister set out in their heaving wooden ship, they returned from more
wonders than just the rolling waves.
They
had found a land, so they told, so far out west that it touched the
evening sky. A land where women wore golden rings in their flesh, men
carved pictures down their bodies, and cities were built in crystal.
From that day on, Efaluac and Engeliq became the bridge to those far
shores, those marvellous tales and treasures.
But
so it is, that the storytellers never speak of long-thriving peoples,
or of prosperous times. No, the words that we remember are only those
that tell of beginnings, or ends.
And
so it was, that one day they brought back what would pave the next
way. It was something the likes of which had never been seen before,
sort of a gem, that glowed not quite white but not quite anything
else, shining with the clearness of the night.
"It
is sky's fire," Engeliq said as she stood before the Priesthood,
the wondrous jewels studded in a cold iron chain around her neck,
"plucked out, set as a gift."
"And
a gift only," added Efaluac from beside her. "They don't
give it for trade."
But
it was not to be, for the Priests had grown used to the wealth that
had flowed so steadily from the Twins' campaigns, and in this brief
respite they would not accept mere trickles. For a little time things
continued as they were, all except for that brilliant band at
Engeliq's throat, but finally the order came.
"We
want more," they said simply.
"But
there is no more that they give."
"Then
we shall take them."
The
two refused, for those of the Evening Land were their friends, their
allies in peace and honour, but the greed of the Priests was not to
be swayed. They pushed, they threatened, but the men had grown to
follow their commanders alone through the long toils and victories.
And it was then, that the Priesthood made their first mistake.
The
next time the Twins were called forward, it was into a trap. Engeliq
was seized, and the two lieutenants that had accompanied them as
guards were killed as they stood. Efaluac was arrested for
treason--but in name only for there was no trial or official
dealings, no time for anyone to begin to think.
By
the end of the night, three corpses were hurled from the Priests'
hold. And the sister without a brother found herself walking down the
long steps under the early rays of dawn, head held high and the
splatters of her comrades' blood worn on her robes like a badge of
honour. She was allowed to go free, the decision made that the woman
would be harmless alone, that the effort of removing another so
beloved could be spared. That, was their second mistake.
It
took Engeliq seven suns and moons to find the bodies of her
companions, thrown so crassly into the tangled forests at the base of
the mountain. The men who had served her she took back to the capital
where they were given the warrior's death they deserved, ashes
scattered out over the same fields of battle where their sweat and
bile had pooled through the endless summers and winters of bloodshed.
But her brother, she left. Around him she built a great silver
coffin, above the soft earth, and vowed that he would not be buried
until the world had paid for what they'd done.
Engeliq
walked until her feet were torn and her eyes were shot with red, not
letting herself rest until she'd stepped back into the soil of her
own camp. And there she called every man and woman to order, and they
followed. For whatever loyalties they had to the state, none could
ever be as strong as the ones to their fellows in iron and
dust.
They
needed no rank or edict, held together by the fierceness of their
battle-crafted hearts as they marched down to the beaches where the
legions of the Priesthood were preparing to sail. And on the morning
that they planned to advance they woke to see a jungle of masts
stretching out over the water, the people of the Evening Land who'd
heard the tidings on the wind and had come to fight for their honour
and that of their betrayed comrades.
What
came next could not quite be called a war, but a wild storm of
devastation. Even with the loss of their foremost generals, the
forces of this race had a thousand years behind their strength, but
the far peoples fought like none that they had ever met before. It
was a clash of steel against moon-tipped spear, man against being,
silhouetted against the blood-coloured western sky.
And
when it was done, the once-great order had been ripped to shadows.
The rich cities were reduced to pebbles, scattered survivors left
scrabbling in the dust, and the victor stood in the ruins of the
Temple, breast shining with the beautiful and terrible stones that
had driven the priests to their destruction. Among the spilt blood of
both friend and betrayer who had met their end on the no-longer-holy
ground, she declared "The priesthood is dead!" and the far
people who had fought beside her bowed and turned to the sunset,
sailing way on their fleet never to be seen again.
Engeliq
bore her brother up the mountainside, to the place where he had first
fallen. There, she laid him to rest in the ashes of the last age, so
that his body could be the root of the new one. An age where people
didn't live for the thrill of the kill, where no band of devotees
could command the lives and blades of all. An age where people lived
for each other, and the land.
And
here, our tale is almost at a close. Engeliq stayed on the peak for
three cycles of the moon in mourning for her lost sibling, then
disappeared from the eyes of history. Some say that she took her ship
and set out once more across the sea, becoming the last person who
would ever find the land that touched the sky, that the lights she
wore around her neck rose her up to become the stars of night. And
every now and then you can see one fall, down to this realm birthed
from Efaluac's blood. Brother and sister, if only for a moment,
united once more.
But
that is only one ending, for there are some among the further tribes
that whispered of a wild woman who lived in the foothills of Ulfarre.
She was fair, and so frail that it looked as if she might blow away
in the wind, with a strangely clear gaze that always seemed to see
through you, watching, judging. And it wasn't until many years later
that a young metalworker, a blacksmith's apprentice, stumbled across
a cave in the mountainside. Within he found nothing except for some
basic tools, a few shreds of clothing, and an old twisted necklace so
covered in grime that the colours of the jewels were no longer
discernible, laid out like an altarpiece on a wide silver frame.
And
that is the story that they tell in the North.
Come
now, the hour is late. It is time for rest, the journey continues in
the morning.
So
Och'jiana turned away, leaving the weight of the words relayed that
night sitting heavy in the air as the young ones settled down to
sleep. And as the woman bent down to scoop up a handful of dirt to
douse the flames, a small gust fluttered the robes around her neck.
In the last flash of firelight, every eye swore that they saw a
glimpse of a brilliant band pressed against the soft skin of her
throat, studded with gems that glowed not quite white but not quite
anything else, shining with the depth of the sky, the land, and the
future.
© 2013 Treo LeGigeo
Author's Note
Reviews
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D***n good story ! Well written with great pics in my head to go along with it. A fine, fine job. I enjoyed this very much.
Posted 11 Years Ago
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12 Years Ago
Thanks! I do have a lot of fun writing these kind of stories, I'll see if I get a third idea.
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12 Years Ago
Oops, that's another American/British difference. But thanks, glad you enjoyed!
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12 Years Ago
oh ok. Sorry lol I should just learn all the words lol
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Author
Treo LeGigeoSydney, NSW, Australia
About
I'm from Australia, so some people may find that I spell things differently. I love writing and have had a couple of publications of short stories and novellas under a pseudonym.
I started .. more..
Writing
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