Slow Turns The World (27 page)

Read Slow Turns The World Online

Authors: Andy Sparrow

BOOK: Slow Turns The World
5.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

When waking came there were many sensations before Torrin's eyes opened.  There was the feel of sunshine on his face, of the heavy woven blankets that wrapped his body in a warm cocoon, there was the sound of birdsong and the scent of many flowers drifting on a gentle breeze.  And there was a hand upon his brow, warm soft skin with a tender touch.  He blinked in the daylight for a moment, then closed his eyes tightly again as the sunlight flooded in.  Then he looked again and focussed on a face that hovered over his.   He saw eyes as blue as a baby’s and hair gold like the sunlight that shone upon it; but the tide of sleep was still upon him and he sank back into the realm of slumber.  When he next awoke there were voices around him and he lay for a while listening, rising slowly from the realm of dreams.  There was a man speaking close by, the voice was gentle in tone yet strong in its resolve.

“It would be best to leave him, Soola.  If he is strong he will live.  He is not of any tribe that we know and others of his kind are likely close behind.  If they are armed as well as he, it would be better if we walked again.  The time is due for it and all are prepared.”

The voice that replied was female and it too was gentle in tone, but strong also.

“Father, I have tended this man through the time of snow, when all else said he would die.  I will not leave him now for the wolves to find.   What you say is true, he is not of the tribes we know.   But did you see the many maps he carried, of lands we have never trodden?  I guess he is a pathfinder sent far ahead to find a new road for his people.  Whatever his story we should know it.”

“Soola, is it we that need to know his tale or is it only you?  When you were a child sitting at my feet you begged me always to tell of the strange places I had seen, and of all the people met along the road.”

“Is it wrong to know more of the world, Father?”

Torrin became more awake and opened his eyes to see the two people standing over him.  There was the woman Soola, whose face had hung in his dreams since that brief moment of earlier awakening, and her father; a lean, tall man whose gray hair hung in long plaits.

“I have not come with others.”

Torrin managed little more than a croaking whisper.  Soola knelt beside him and laid a hand gently on his brow; her father looked down uneasily at them both.   She put a wooden cup to Torrin’s lips and he gulped down a sweet and warming brew.  When he spoke again his voice was stronger.

“I am Torrin of the Vasagi.”

“Vasagi?” said the father doubtfully.  “We know of no such tribe.”

“You would not, for we walk where the sun is setting, half the way around the world.”

The eyes of Soola, already bright and alluring became wider and more beautiful.

“You have come across the whole world?”

“Aye, and seen many things; some I wish I could forget.  Do you know of Etoradom?”

She looked at her father, who gave a small shrug and a shake of his head.

“If you do not,” said Torrin, “then you are blessed.  I am in the service of a… chieftain… of that… tribe.  I am sent to find the city of Dh’lass.”

“Dh’lass?” said the old man, shaking his head. “We do not know this place.  It is not on our path.”

“Then I must go another way,” said Torrin, and Soola looked with sadness at him.

 

Torrin's strength soon returned and he rose from his bed.  He found himself led by Soola to where the people of her tribe had gathered, a short walk, rising to a craggy hillock, which looked out upon the world.  He could see that the ridge he had climbed was but the tail end of a long spine of hills that rose gently and enjoyed the warmth of the rising sun.  Forests, emerald green with new life, swept rising and falling across hill and vale into the distance.   The fallen snow was already nearly melted away and the sound of waterfalls carried across the land, mingling with the ever-chattering birds.   The tribe that were the Haranda, all hundred strong, squatted on the sun-warmed rocks while Soola’s father, their chieftain, gave them counsel.  He stood upon a slab of stone, listening quietly as a younger man spoke to those assembled.

“We should cross the river before the ice melts, or we shall not cross it at all.”

Another voice sounded from the group.

“That will not happen yet awhile.  We need not hurry so.  This land is plentiful and the hills beyond the river are riven with dark valleys.  The animals do not hurry so why must we?”

The chieftain pondered for a few moments before responding.

“It is my judgment that we should move westwards, nearer to the river but not yet over it.  Until the herds make their crossing we shall wait too.  We will make ready to walk now.”  

As the people dispersed the old man beckoned Soola and Torrin to approach him.  He cupped Soola's face in his hands and kissed her forehead tenderly, then he looked Torrin up and down appraisingly.

“My daughter has tended you well.  Will you tell me now why you have come here?”

Torrin sat with Soola and her father, and told them of the Vasagi, and all that had happened since he was parted from them.  Soola listened, captivated by the tales of ships, great cities and distant lords.   He showed the maps he carried and then studied intently those of the Haranda that were laid before him, until he pointed his finger to the end of a chain of mountains that were drawn there.

“It must be here,” Torrin said, “that the city lies.”

“To reach this place,” he was told, “you must go eastwards to where the high mountains form a ridge.  If that ridge is followed south you will stay warmed by the sun for the remainder of your journey.  But there is danger for the snows are melting and sliding from the mountainsides.  It will be a perilous road.  For now, at least, you may travel with us and show how skilled the Vasagi are in the ways of hunting.”

 

So Torrin walked with the Haranda and discovered the world that they inhabited.  The sun rested no higher in the sky than in the lands of the Vasagi, and yet its light was of a different quality, golden and honey hued.  They walked forward through forests of rianna, the sunshine speckling the ground in a bright dancing mosaic as gentle breezes rocked the treetops.  Through all his life with the Vasagi he had walked among such trees in their golden-brown autumn beauty, but here they filled the sky with the vibrant green of young leaves.  There were glades where constellations of flowers pushed up through lush new grass and filled the world with scent and colour.  

The women of the Haranda wove crowns of petals and blossom around their hair and sometimes, with girlish laughter, on the head of some proud hunter, dozing on a fragrant sun-warmed bed.  In shadowy dells and ravines huge icicles dripped away upon the diminishing drifts of snow, filling the streams with chill lively waters that tumbled from rapid to waterfall or plunged into deep clear pools.  Squirrels scurried away as they passed and deer cantered between the tree trunks, but not always before the hunter's arrow struck.  They ate well, the lean meat of the deer made delicious by the herbs of the forest.  

 

Torrin slumbered, aware that the waking time was nearly due.  He heard soft footfalls creeping towards him and opened one eye just enough to see a vague shape moving tentatively amongst the surrounding ferns.   He waited until the hand was about to grasp at his neck and then caught it swiftly in a firm grip.

“I have you!  Now I need my spear to finish the job.”

“Don’t be so sure, hunter,” said Soola, and with her free hand she emptied a jug of ice cold water over him.  

He chased her, shrieking, through the camp, jumping over the many still sleeping bodies, ignoring their rudely woken complaints.  When he caught her he lifted her over his shoulder and carried her off into the woods.  She made a token resistance, squirmed unconvincingly and battered him quite gently with her clenched fists.  She struggled more furiously when they came to the stream and she saw the clear waters of the plunge pool beneath her.   And then, instead of dropping her into the water, he jumped in too, still holding her.  After the shocked gasps of the chill drenching came laughter, and then they scrambled back onto the grassy bank and rested in the warming sun.  

Soola, he had discovered, was as tough and strong-willed as she was beautiful.  She could run through the forest nearly as swiftly as the deer that she pursued and did not balk when the moment came to shoot an arrow through its heart.  She would climb the highest trees to bring down eggs, laughing at those below who turned their heads away and could not watch her balancing fearlessly on the narrow branches.  Soola was never far from Torrin, urging him to tell more tales of his travels, or showing him the beasts and plants of these dawn lands.  She was devilish in her laughter, first showing him some soft fruit, then sending it flying towards him when his back was turned, then running off into the forest with enticing taunts.  

Sometimes she was like Turnal, and then she was like Varna; but often she was like none other than herself.   But, though he found beauty and delight in her, he knew she was a chieftain’s daughter and he was a passing stranger offered hospitality, a stranger who would soon go on his way.   So when they lay together by the pool he did no more than squeeze her hand and hold it tight in his.  Then he told her of his wife, of the child he had never held, and how, above all things in the world, he wanted most to be with them.  She lay beside him, saying nothing, but clasping his hand ever more tightly when the wistful sadness made his voice falter.

 

When the tribe moved on again, they found a clearing in the forest around an old stone cottage.  It was a relic from some other tribe, people who did not move so often, who rested long enough to build and plant crops.   A precarious life, thriving while the land is fertile, but then with heat and drought creeping closer as the world turns towards noon.  Or maybe it was after the heat that the farmers lived here, when every passing moon had brought the sunset closer, and their harvests had diminished.  Then they would have to move on, migrating a great distance to find new lands, and risking the anger of all the tribes that thought the new territory already theirs.   The Haranda made camp in the clearing and then Soola's father called all together for council.  Beside him stood an elderly couple; some of those gathered around them were weeping.

“Sad news is upon us,” he said, “Gill and Lucen will end their journey here.  They are decided in this, and beg that those of their family do not ask them to journey further.  Preparations will be made and there will be a ceremony at the next waking time.”

The people dispersed with a subdued murmuring and Torrin found Soola sat tearfully alone.

“It is a great sadness when the old people that we have loved can walk no further,” he said and rested a hand on her bowed head.

“They have always been in my life,” she said, sighing, “and now they will be gone.  Like the others.”

“How is it done?” asked Torrin gently. “Do they eat some herb to enter the sleep from which there is no waking?”

Soola looked up at him strangely.

“Is that what your people do?”

“We must, for there is only darkness and cold to follow, or the Ummakil who delight in killing and eat the flesh of all that walks.”

“You will find our ways are different.”

The Haranda busied themselves stocking the cottage with provisions and sowing many seeds in the surrounding ground.  They feasted when the work was done and every person made a gift to the old couple, then spoke of their kindness and of the many times shared that would not be forgotten.  When the waking time came each member of the tribe bade farewell, some with respectful bows, others with sobbing embraces.  As they walked on into the forest Torrin asked Soola what would become of them, left alone in this place.

“Who can say?” she said.  “The sun will rise a little and the world will become warmer, but they will die of age before the heat grows too strong.  Other tribes may pass; some will be kind people who might share, others may not.   But this is our way and it is better than what you have told me; of what must be done in the land of sunset.”

 

Torrin's journey with the Haranda was coming to an end.  He was led to a hilltop where he could see the first of many mountain ridges forming a long, jagged wall extending southwards.  

“There is the path you must follow,” said Soola's father.  “The land is high and cold but we have skins taken from the grazing beasts of the mountains that will protect you.  And bread made with honey that will give you strength in the barren places.”

Torrin’s leather pack was heavy when he slung it from his shoulder and, with some sadness, for he had come like these people very much, he said his goodbyes.  He came to Soola last, held her and kissed her forehead.

“I will not forget you,” he said.

“No,” she said. “Not yet a while.” She smiled and did not seem too sad, not even when Torrin walked away.

Two long walks and sleeps brought him to a thinning of the trees and the start of a long ascent to the ridge-top.  As he lay, nearly waking, he heard the sound of gentle footfalls, and once again caught a slim wrist in his hands.

“Soola.  You cannot follow me.  Go back to the tribe.”

She pinned him down, kneeling on his shoulders, sat upon his chest.

“You will have to take me back,” she said, “and then bind me to keep me there.  I told my father this when he tried to stop me and he had the sense to let me go.  Anyway, you'll die in the mountains without a guide; we all knew that.  And now you have the best and you must do whatever your guide commands.”

“Soola, you should not come with me.  There is some evil business at the end of this quest; of that I'm sure.  I want no harm to come to you.”

Then she leant down and kissed him, soft, warm and gently, moist lips nibbling at his own, the sensation lingering after she sat upright again.

“Won't you protect me,” she smiled, “with that big sword of yours?”

As she spoke she wriggled a little on his chest and he felt heat seeping through from between her opened thighs.   

Other books

Join by Viola Grace
Courting Death by Carol Stephenson
The Comeback by Gary Shapiro
Red Hot by Niobia Bryant
Seduced by a Stranger by Silver, Eve
Fire and Ice by Sara York
Two for Joy by Mary Reed, Eric Mayer