NEW VERSION! Night one: The Girl With the Red Raven Feathers in Her HairA Chapter by A.R. ElviraThe first story in a series of nine featuring the girl with the red raven feathers in her hair. If you like the art of story telling with a adult aimed fairy tale style then you'll like this.In South
Asia, where the days boil and the nights simmer, it is said there was a bird
that once existed unique to that area: The South Asian Red Raven. The species
dwindled into nothing long, long ago, and no official record is kept of it ever
having existed at all. Except perhaps, if record of her one day proves to be
anything more than an old wives tale, a story regarding a young girl no older
than 18 who kept the bird’s feathers in her hair. She moved constantly
throughout South Asia on foot. The last place she set her filthy foot in was a
tiny village on the very outskirts of West India. It was considered so rural
and isolated that no one actually grouped it with India itself or bothered
giving it a name. On that day so long ago, in that town so far away, the South
Asian red raven species moved from being endangered, to extinct and the girl
was never seen again. The girl
with the raven feathers in her hair cooked meringues. In every place she set
foot in. She didn’t need to carry equipment or utensils, because she was so
well known for her meringues that when her leather feet touched the earth of a
new city or town the shop keepers came running. As the baker did, in the small
town in East India. He knew that if she allowed him to take her in and use his
kitchen he would have enough business in that one day to feed his families and
support the little town for the next month without work, as people from all
over Asia rushed as fast as they could to the tiny, provincial town without a
name. The girl
never asked for money, or payment in anything worth having. She asked simply
for raven feathers. She would accept nothing except the red embellishment, for
which she tucked in her hair with her collection of others. Killing one of the
birds was forbidden as the species waned, and so people had to find other
methods of getting a feather. First, a person would have to find one, then to
sneak up on one, and pluck a feather from its body, like precious a jewel, only
to watch the treasure chest shoot off in a flurry of angry squawks and chirps. Then as
tradition dictated (from which tradition is unclear, only that it was
tradition), they quietly thanked the raven for its generosity for the gift they
had given them, and then on that same day travelled as fast as they could to
the little town where the baker, with a calm, pleased look in his eye, stood by
his shop front, greeting the gathering crowd. The
raven feathered girl’s meringues were not particularly delicious, in fact, many
knew better recipes and had better cooking talent. On Fridays, you could even
taste salt in her poorly cooked dessert. It wasn’t the food that encouraged
people to go for miles to find her raven feathers though, it was what she said
to them when her hands touched theirs in passing their meringue. Sometimes
it was nothing. A quiet nod as she adjusted some feathers in her hair, a small
smile. Other times it was what seemed like nothing. A strange language, of
which only the word ‘octopus’ could be understood. Or a string of completely
unrelated words. Sometimes the receiver would blink blankly in response, but
smile at her never the less, and take their leave. Other times their eyes would
snap open wide. ‘My
dream,’ they would gasp, ‘that was in my dream.’ And
everyone would look at her in awe as she used her strong arm to beat eggs and
sugar together. Other times her words were far more substantial. Tell your
mother you love her, before tomorrow night. Return home and look under the bed.
Stay out of so and so’s way. The baby will be male. And her advice always
proved to be of great importance, her predictions always proved to be right. News
about her spread faster than she travelled. Rumours about who or what she was
accumulated. She could only be a reincarnation of Lord Ganesha himself, says the
baker. While the jewellery seller only shakes her head when asked, her gold
necklace with Jesus Christ hanging off it jangling against her neck, her lips
tightly sealed from what seems like a mixture of disbelief and remorse. They
all had their stories, their ideas about her. But there was one whose ideas
were more meaningful than any other. He was a
broken boy. Some say his intentions were to capture her heart by offering more
than any other. Others say it was simply curiosity. The baker tells the tale as
if he had been there, explaining how it was all a terrible misunderstanding, a
mistake. The jeweller just looks out to the horizon silently, unable to speak
of the event. The true
reason was this: He was paid. He was desperate, a street rat with nothing to
his name. He would be insane to pass up the opportunity of so much money. It
wasn’t romantic, it wasn’t planned or thought over so many times that it
sounded like the right thing to do, it was just a transaction. As cold as a
winter’s morning. The Raven
Feathered girl had asked for payment first, she always did. He reached into his
bag and pulled out something heavier than any feather could have been. It was
strange, because she wasn’t beating, or cooking yet. Just standing behind a
clean kitchen counter, watching her first customer of the day. As if waiting
for him. He dropped the raven on the counter, still warm. Its feathers were as
red as the blood that trickled across the table.
The girl
plunked a glistening ruby tail feather from the lifeless form, and walked away.
The crowd was too numb with shock to do anything, never would they consider
killing something as rare and sacred as a raven, and they feared her response.
Would she turn any moment now in fury? They almost anticipated a screamed curse,
maybe the skies would open up and their town would be destroyed, maybe the
drought would return. But she did nothing, just faded into the everlasting
dust. © 2013 A.R. ElviraAuthor's Note
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Added on April 21, 2013Last Updated on June 20, 2013 Tags: raven, magical realism, magic, animals, girl, short story, tale, asia, red, feather, short, fable, descriptive, dream Previous Versions AuthorA.R. ElviraAustraliaAboutceaselessly, i return to the art in the written word, no matter where i have strayed. My name is A.R.Elvira. Sometimes I use Titania, because I like using Shakespeare's names, but call me what y.. more..Writing
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