From: John Hughes (nysalor@spirit.com.au)
Date: Tue 06 Aug 1996 - 13:31:03 EEST
Hiya folks
I been real quiet of late, with the real world and a new job catching up in
a big way.
Things are quietening down a bit at last, and Questlines 2 is firmly in my
thoughts.
Here's a Far Point tale, broadly based on my home storytelling campaign.
Hope you enjoy
John
________________________________
THE FINEST MUSIC
A Far Point Bloodline Tale
"'The wind's strength is that it ever changes.' This understanding was my
initiation gift, my Making Way, given by the powers of the wilderness when
they made me a man. It came to me in the uplands, blind and starving in the
gors, running and screaming as my animal totem tore me into seven pieces.
Then the rain came, friend of all things, the giftbringer. With it the
south wind, and it was that wind that spoke to me."
"This is what the south wind said... "
"The Tribe of the Storm is a warrior tribe. The tribe of the Air is a
fighting tribe. Our weapon is the wind, and the strength of the wind is
that it ever changes. This is a rune-truth. Listen and understand. The wind
is never the same."
Braggi Afraid-of-the-Dark
Lagerwater Stead.
CanisTame, 1624.
We are gathered together now as single heart and blood.
Let the sweet cedar smoke of the story fire be as air in our lungs.
Let ancestors and flesh gather close and listen to my tale.
It is a gift to be remembered.
My clan is Tresdarnii, my tribe is Tovtaros. Orlanth is the god of my blood
and Odayla the Hunter is my guide. I tell you now of a journey midst the
gors and the gallt, the forest and the waste of the Far Place.
This is the way of it. By our feet we went that Sea Season from Lagerwater
Stead on the winding trail down to Jaskors Hold. Our destination was the
ring fort at Ironspike, in the cattle-rich lowlands. Kierston the
Lawspeaker rode with us, and in her train three ponies packed with winter
furs and sweet resin gums, Lagerwater's grudging tribute to Conla the
Tovtaros king.
Our journey took us under the ice-blue shadow of Hard Edge, and then across
the lightning-seeded ridges of Three Breast Mountain to the twisting
forests that clothed the escarpment in such deceptive beauty.
We journeyed not the short path, the path of the raider;
Nor the hard path, the path of making;
But the beauty path, the path of the hunter.
I remember it was early FlamalTame, and all the world was new. The
awakening passions of the Goddess touched us all, and the gors and the
gallt whispered with the promise of new life and power. It was a yellow day
and the very air hung heavy like amber.
Yet there was little joy in our walking. It was a time of stagnation and
anger, of clan against clan and tribe against tribe. It was the time when
Harvar Ironfist sat in his high white tower in Alda Chur, and when Conla
Brightshield our king moved openly against those loyal to the ways of the
Storm. At Lagerwater, the ancient wound of kinstrife had split and festered
once again. It was a time of blood and a time of tears:
Blood in the air,
Blood in the eye,
Blood on the burnished blade.
We were all young warriors for the most part, for it was then as it is now:
the white hair guards the stead while the dark hair ranges free. By the
Sword's Truth I tell you that we were burning and angry and afraid. There
had been a weapontake at Lagerwater on the eve of our parting, that the
clan might decide how to respond to the treachery of Conla our king. The
meeting was a bitter one, with threats and ill-considered oaths uttered
over the sacred hearthstone. Father spoke against son, Sun against Wind,
Orlanthi against Yelmalian, blood against blood. Even the women had argued
against each other. It was the old curse, the curse of the Ridgeleaper.
Kinstrife.
Happy indeed is the tribe that has no past.
Was the sword and spear our answer? We were young, we were Orlanthi, it
seemed an honourable way. Yet draw a sword against a king and you can throw
away the scabbard. Draw a sword against kin and you kill yourself. The
Lawspeaker Kierston had counselled restraint. Some had openly called her a
traitor to the Storm, a traitor to the clan. The fires of anguish
threatened to consume us all.
Stone beneath our feet and stone in our chests.
So we walked in uneasy silence. Sunlight flowed golden and slow like honey
across our faces, Humakt's Wind whispered cold at our backs, and the
skydome darkened with the promise of storm to come.
There were fingersmore in our party: I walked with my lodge-kin; there was
also Kierston the Lawspeaker, the Vingan warrior called Cradledaughter, and
Harli Virginland in her first journey beyond the hunting camps of the
Uplands. This was before the time of mourning, before the affliction of the
Hero. No skald knew of those women then, the tribes did not yet know their
song.
Yet I say to you that the Lawspeaker was deserving of praise-words even
then, and so I give you staves that we now all know....
Loyal Kierston, stead-strong, faithful,
She the law-shield of Tresdarnii;
As the Cold Sun in its splendour,
As the LongDark in its chill.
Loyal Kierston, heart-strong, truthful,
Vision-wise who saw the future;
Far-voiced speaker of the high clans,
Tongue of copper, hand of bronze.
And the Rune upon her forehead,
Speaker's Rune upon her forehead,
Godi's mark upon her forehead,
Opening the way of Change!
From a noble stead was nurtured,
From a bloodline true and watchful;
Where the rain whispered its secrets,
Where the gors-bled powers moved.
Iron walker of the two-worlds,
Gors-hard daughter now the speaker
Of the law and of tradition;
Godi-blest and god-wrought hero.
On her shoulders marns of kinship,
On her cloak the signs of power;
Five full blessings and ten senses
Which would mark the trails ahead.
And the Rune upon her forehead,
Speaker's Rune upon her forehead,
Godi's mark upon her forehead,
Opening the way of Change!
It was Harli Virginland that led the Lawspeaker's horse forward along those
treacherous and sodden trails. Though no one spoke, Harli hummed some
ancient wordless tune, half to herself, half to the animal spirits and
powers that we passed upon the way.
In time we came upon a twisting stand of horned mountain oaks, dark and
jutting monstrosities older than Time. The roots of these ancient guardians
reach down to hell itself, and their upper boughs press against the
skydome. Skirting the edges of the grove, we sensed within the inhuman
power of the element tribes. Our pack ponies shied, and many of us made
warding with our fingers, for in this season the Lady of the Wild can be
capricious and cruel. The shadows of the eternal gors pressed close about
us.
The Lawspeaker halted then, gazing upwards into the moss-encrusted
branches, where an ice wind whispered to the ever-listening leaves. She
closed her eyes, raising her arms in an act of supplication to the Old
Green Woman and the Son she bore by the Storm.
The rest of us stood silent, unsure of the moment or what it might bode.
Kierston sat without movement upon her mount, arms outstretched, as though
she too had become an ancient horn=E9d tree.
The Lawspeaker in her boldness had accepted a forest vision from the
keepers of the grove.
Slow minutes passed. The cold sunlight drenched us, thick as honey. Shadows
made slow circle. A bearded raven somewhere called herald of a death. The
wind bit. The trees sighed. The gors waited.
And the Lawspeaker opened her eyes. They carried an inner light that was
ancient, numinous, disturbing.
Lowering her arms, Kierston spoke for the first time. Her voice carried a
rich cadence of authority, the calm strength of stave magic that only godis
know.
"What is it, do you think, that is the finest music in all the world?"
"The greeting song of the Earth Women in Sacred Time", said Cradledaughter,
ever-quick with a word or a blade. "The song of joy that greets the sun on
his return from hell."
"A good sound that", mused Kierston, "and one difficult to better. But I
think I know a finer sound."
"The finest music is the ring of a spear head against a shield", cried
Bhorghil One-Eye, who was fated to win either a hero's iron or an early
grave.
"A good sound that", agreed the stead-fast one.
"The finest music is the chant of a healer over a wound sore and mortal",
ventured Erissa Long-Arm, who understood the cost of life and of death.
"The Thunder Shout of young men returning victorious from a cattle raid!",
smiled Danwyr Can't-Be-Moved, who always knew what he wanted.
"The silence that follows a skald's remaking of the past", ventured Ardrun
the White, who had that gift himself.
"The voice of a warrior who has learned from his mistakes", snarled Braggi
Afraid-Of-The-Dark, who knew the Orlanthi way.
"The whisper of a loved one in the darkness by the hearth", mused Lanolf
Wolf-Born, who felt such things deeply.
"The belling of a stag across the gors", laughed Harli Virginland, who
walked close with a Goddess we could not yet name.
"The song of the gamlak under the red moon", said Arson Hunted-By-Bear, for
he was never afraid to kiss the trickster.
"The command of a true Queen or King", spoke Cradledaughter again. "That is
is sweet music indeed." An awkward silence followed that remark.
"They are good sounds all, and indeed sweet music", said Kierston. "But I
am thinking of something sweeter and greater yet."
"Tell us, sister by marriage-bond. Tell us Lawspeaker. What is the sound of
which you speak?"
"The finest music is the sound of the wind over the gors", said Kierston,
as much to herself as to us. "The music of the wind, the music of what
happens. The music of Change. Wherever the Wind blows, there will be
movement and change. And that is the finest music of all."
Our Lawspeaker dismounted then, and made a thank offering to the horned
powers of the grove. The rest of us watched in silence, hearing the sounds
of the eternal gors, the song and message of the wind.
And so we resumed our path of going. From the top of the escarpment we
could see distant Ironspike, and Piddledown Stead where Conla Brightshield
sat, and a vision of half the world besides.
We journeyed in an easy silence. Sunlight flowed golden and slow like honey
across our faces, Humakt's Wind whispered cold at our backs, the skydome
darkened with the promise of storm to come.... and an inner wind stirred
within our souls.
John Hughes
May 1996
------------------------------
End of Glorantha Digest V3 #98
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