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* * * * * * * * * * *

 

 

THE SHADES OF TIME AND MEMORY

(Book Two of the Wraeththu Histories)

           

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From
Wraeththu: The Dream
, by Ferminfex Jael

 

The Prophet Athanorax of the Sulh was once asked: are we now all that we shall be?  He did not reply, but merely drew a line in the sand with the toenails of one foot.  With the other foot, he stamped upon the line, until it could be seen no more, and then he walked away.

            It is a fact that history is but a line in the sand, muddled by many feet, until the line itself can no longer be seen.  There are those who remember it, and tell of what they saw.  They say the line went this way or that.  They say a scorpion ran along it, or perhaps a lizard.  Others might say that the line itself was in the shape of a lizard, but who can tell?  There are some who profit by this state of affairs, and become the shining stars of our race, and there are some who are doomed to be forgotten.  Certain names are purposefully erased from the line, while others are remembered, when perhaps they should have vanished into oblivion.  One thing is certain, Wraeththu will never be all that it can be, for the harlings of tomorrow will either look back upon the past with fond remembrance for a lost Golden Age, or believe that the times they now shape are far superior to all that went before.  In each view, lies striving and dissatisfaction.

            Did Athanorax know the truth of it all?  Was this why he made his faithfully recorded statement about it?  Again, who can tell?  If he knew, he did not say.  He climbed a mountain and stared at the clouds, or went to an inn and got drunk.  All that remains is the question, and it is not right one.  Answers, in some ways, are easy.  It is the question that eludes and slips away.  The right spell, the right magic.  All in the words.

 

 

From
The Aralisians
, by Ishtir har Parasiel

 

The story of the Aralisian dynasty is the mythology of Wraeththu.  Each character blazes from it like a comet.  How much is truth?  How much is fiction?  Are gods made this way?  That Thiede brought his Tigron, Pellaz Cevarro – later Pellaz har Aralis – to Immanion, to rule in his name over the united tribes is true.  It is also true that in the year ai cara 30, Thiede  transformed and left this world.  What is not so certain is whether he was actually murdered by the one who came to rule at the Tigron's side: Calanthe.

            Never has a name been so loaded with meaning.  When he came to Immanion, the entire world cried out in fear and ecstasy.  An idea, more than an individual.  He was like a god, in that wherever he laid his feet he created change, and not all of it was good.

 

 

 

 

 

Introduction

 

 

 

In the early times, two events specifically shook the world of Wraeththu from its innermost core to its outermost etheric body.  The first was when Pellaz-har-Aralis, who eventually became Tigron of Immanion, died and was reborn into new flesh.  Only the most insensitive of hara remained unaffected by that, and even they were no doubt plagued for several days afterward, by strange dreams and unaccountable bad tempers.

 

            The second event was, in some ways, more dramatic and devastating than the first and this was when Calanthe, erstwhile chesnari of Pellaz, stalked like a dark angel into Immanion and faced Thiede, progenitor of all Wraeththu, in his inner sanctum.

 

            Some say they fought for possession of Pellaz, others that they warred for power, and yet more claimed that it was a symbolic preordained ritual, in which Thiede transcended the boundaries of earthly existence and fulfilled his ultimate potential.  Around the world, different tribes clung to different versions of the myth and you can be sure their particular preferences flavour greatly the context of their spiritual beliefs.

 

            What is known for certain is that Calanthe went to Immanion, the city of the Gelaming, and claimed what he believed was his.  Pellaz was left without Thiede, his mentor and creator.  With Thiede gone, who knew what would happen?  At that time, Wraeththu knew so little about themselves and Thiede had left them without sharing any of the knowledge he had.  Had Cal liberated them from a harsh dictator, or  left them vulnerable and ignorant with no greater power to protect them?  Only time would tell.

 

            For most hara, when the phoenix of Wraeththu was newly-hatched from an egg of flame and still in danger of falling from the nest, the only way to receive information from halfway across the world was through the subtle ethers, and much of what is channelled from this puzzling realm is subject to personal interpretation, error and bias.

 

            Immanion lies in the heart of Almagabra, a warm country whose landscape seethes with ancient spirits and capricious gods.  An implacable ocean lies between this land and Megalithica to the west.  News, as it was carried across the waves, was often changed or forgotten completely.  Sometimes, when a snippet of information reached some cold, forgotten corner in the north of Megalithica, it was nothing more than a worn out thread, a ghost of a whisper or a lie.  When information such as this became intertwined with a har's psychic vision, you could almost guarantee the conclusion he reached about what really happened bore no resemblance whatsoever to the truth.  In such ways were new myths made, expanded upon and believed. Pellaz and Calanthe became a legend, to be feared or adored according to your beliefs and where you lived.

 

            Many hara had good reason to fear the Gelaming, the tribe who believed themselves to be the greatest of all.  For, in Gelaming eyes, if you did not ascribe to their beliefs, you were an enemy of all Wraeththukind.  Sometimes, the Gelaming were right in this assumption, but sometimes not.  If your history was suspect, it was best to hide it and flee to a far location, like the City of Ghosts in Northern Megalithica.  Best to forget the name of your previous tribe and pray that nohar came looking for you.  Better still: keep your secrets to yourself.

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter One

 

 

 

In the early mornings, just after dawn, when the sky was salmon pink and mists curled across the water, and birds flew like the last of dark dreams escaping the shattered towers of the old human city, Moon Jaguar would walk to the edge of the world and stare out to the place where the phantoms lived.

 

            The creatures that lived within the Sea of Ghosts would often come to land and wrap themselves around the broken towers on the shore.  The mist beings could make parts of the world disappear and reappear, and they moved quickly.  It was best to pay them respect.

 

            Seven Wraeththu clans lived in the ruins of the city, and at one time they had been Uigenna, though prudence had forced them to change their name and their customs, following the Gelaming invasion of Megalithica.  Now, they had no tribal name, and in time, no doubt, the clans themselves would become separate tribes, but for now they existed in tenuous alliance.

 

            Moon's father, Snake Jaguar, had come from a land far to the south, but he would never speak of it, no matter how much Moon begged or pleaded for old stories that all harlings loved.  Snake was the shaman of the Jaguar clan and held in great esteem by their ruler, Great Jaguar Paw.  Moon lived with his father, and his father's protector, Raven Jaguar, in the House of Relics, situated very close to the shore of the Sea of Ghosts.  Humans had filled the Reliquary with artefacts that recorded moments of their history, but most of the artefacts had been destroyed during the conflict that had brought the city to her knees some thirty or so years before.

 

            Moon liked the Reliquary: its cavernous dark rooms, its shattered display cases, the bones spilling amid the glass shards.  His own room, high in the building, had probably once been an office, although over time he had adorned it with various items he'd filched from the lower galleries.  His father lived in the far side of the building, and Raven lived in a store room nearby, his senses forever on high alert in case Snake should need him.  Moon presumed Raven had got to know Snake long before the fragmented Uigenna tribe had had to flee to the north, pursued by Gelaming patrols that were intent on rehabilitating any hara whose beliefs did not emulate their own.  Raven lived in ascetic simplicity, in what was hardly more than a broom closet.  It was obvious something very bad had happened to him in the past and that it had affected his mind.  Now, Raven's dedication to Snake was his entire reason for being.  They were not chesna, nor did they ever take aruna together, which in Wraeththu terms was most unusual, if not freakish.  They shared secrets and pain, and this, more than physical or emotional expressions of affection, bound them close.  Snake too was damaged.  Even though Moon lived far from his father, sometimes at night he could hear him limping around his room, never weeping, never sighing – just pacing slowly.

 

            Moon was seven years old, nearly adult, and by then he had realised that other harlings of the clan avoided him, because his father was strange.  Even Great Jaguar Paw feared Snake, because his temperament was inclined to prophesy doom rather than joy.  The privacy-loving Jaguar clan skulked around the shore of the Sea of Ghosts and interacted with other clans only for trade.  Snake, so the other clans said, made sure the rest of the Jaguars were as grim as he was.

 

            A week or so after his seventh birthday, which he'd celebrated alone, Moon went as usual to the shore.  Looking back at the Reliquary, Moon realised for the first time that his father, Raven and himself, although occupying in some regard the same space, lived in isolation from each other.  There were not even ghosts for company.  Since Snake's chesnari had died, not long after Moon's birth, the idea of family had shattered the same way the relics had.  Moon did not feel lonely – he never did – but today he felt different: an echo of some early childhood warning travelled across the great sea.

 

            The dawn was pink and grey, stealing through brooding cloud and there was a metallic taint to the air.  A ship sailed through the mist, towards the docks, some distance to the east.  Somehar in the rigging blew a mournful salute upon a windhorn.  Birds looped drunkenly around the black mast.  Moon squatted on the cracked concrete walkway above the water and stared at the ship, with his hands funnelled around his eyes.  He thought about strolling over to the docks to see who or what might have arrived, but then the vague aches that had plagued his belly for some weeks intensified into a cramping pain and he had to lean forward to vomit into the water.

 

            Moon, like all hara, was rarely ill, so this particular seizure, which could not be ignored, filled him with panic.  In some places the land was poisoned, and those poisons were strong enough even to kill a har.  Moon rarely left his immediate environment, so couldn't imagine how he could have come into contact with such danger, but now, when he stared out over the water, his whole vision was tinged with red and he had a pain in the back of his neck.  He was afraid that, if he moved too quickly, some part of himself might fall out of his body.  He was poisoned and he was too far away from the Reliquary to call for help.

 

            Moon curled up into a ball on the ground and lay that way for a long time.  By the time the sun had hauled itself out of the mist, he realised he had slept and now felt better.  But when he got to his feet, he had to hold his stomach with both hands, because it felt loose and unsafe.  His skin was crawling as if ants were marching all over it.  Slowly, and with great care, he made his way to his father's domain, because despite the fact they rarely spent time together, Snake was the one har Moon trusted in the world.

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