Ten Minute Tales |
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a different Ten Minute Tale* every day
(except Friday when we have Novel Conversations)
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The
city had grown stone by stone, near the two rivers, which flowed together in a
turmoil. Never quiet here and no boats could make their way through the rough
water. But a city was built and with it a castle, a stronghold, huge blocks to
protect the kings and princes. Bridges were made across the turbulent water and
into the castle so that men and carts could come and go. Soldiers clattered on
the roads and into the keep. Watchmen on the towers, vigilant and stern. This
was a fortress worth its name...
DRACO
It had been a long trek up from
the coast, several moons had grown big and become like the curve of woman when
she was filled with child. And then shrunk away, eaten by the dark. But here was a good place to camp and consider
the earth. To rest. The women sat and made the fire. They carried the magic in
their pouches; it lit twigs and dried leaves. Only three women could do this,
they were the hearth women, the rest stood guard so that the wolves would not
find the secret and the men made a circle around them, their spears and staves
at the ready. Fire was good. Fire kept them safe. Soon they would begin to
build huts here and work the ground for planting. And the goats and cattle
would make the soil alive with their dung and the people could be fed.
When
the spring came the young men, some of them as tall as their mothers, with
voices that had begun to grow deep after years of lightness, went off to begin
their lives as wolves. They shivered in the dawn, looking at the mountains
where they would climb away from the villages full of corn and cattle. This
must be and was known for all time, and was told and retold by the fires at
night. A story they must understand and then they must live the story to make
it part of them. The women whispered how the god had come down among the goats
and strangled one so it would not bleat, and dragged it away to feed. The god
had teeth that could crunch the bones, eat the pelt, lick the blood so that the
ground was dry. And that once a she god had suckled some young, not of the
god’s making, but young belonging to one of the villages. And two boys had
grown strong on wolves’ milk.
And
the seven young men listened and felt proud that some like them had been fed by
the wolves. Now they must live like a wolf, take what they can from the weak,
prowl on the unsuspecting, and when they had proved themselves, they would come
back here and wear the wolf skin and the mask with the other men. There would
be dancing and some would howl while the totem was carried around the fires,
the magic would be stronger each time.
***
A
year passed and five men came back from the mountains, taller and stronger,
brown limbs, scarred backs and tough faces. The women greeted them with
laughter and led them into the heart of the village where the men waited,
standing, arms wide to show they were welcome. And the women held the young men
and inked their arms with symbols and each woman showed them a magic circle that was a dark blue about their
ankles, and whispered that this was eternity.
Goats’
milk was offered steeped in the fly mushroom and all drank. The energy flowed
through and the women sang, high voices reaching to the sky to tell of what
would become when the group was as one. Such strong young men, so vigorous in
their dancing, as the wolf pelts were thrown across their shoulders, the head
masks making them appear even taller and fiercer.
But
three men and one woman, the woman who picked and prepared the fly mushroom,
were leaping higher than everyone and falling to the ground before they leapt
again and again. And the man who guarded the totem signalled for silence.
And
the four told what they could see, the wolf was there, powerful, eyes that
pierced the world, but this wolf had two brothers, there were three heads,
howling or watching. And the three heads had the body of a great armoured
snake.
The
Draco had come, to guard this village and all the villages, to guard the wealth
that was found in the mountains, to guard the secrets that the women owned,
fire and magic. And this night in the
late spring when new life would begin, would make the most powerful of all
people. And the wolf dragon would protect them forever against evil.
***
And
it happened that the world turned many times and the people who were born from
that night of the Draco, built houses and temples, they mined for the gold,
silver and copper in the mountains, they traded back to the coast and beyond.
The houses were full of fine pots, tapestries, marble was used to make benches
and tiny pink and gold shells were embedded into the local stone.
And
the great wealth and all the possessions and knowledge made others angry and
they wanted what was here and came with fighting men from far away.
The
battles and wars were bloody and bitter, the people called on the Draco, and
the women said we will help. And they made several great hollow dragon wolf
heads that were mounted on poles to be held up into the wind where the air
filled and whistled, and the heads shrilled and twisted as if alive. And horsemen
carried these into the battle. High and strong. The bravest of them all, one
scribe wrote, were the people who followed the Draco
And
so the Draco was carried across mountains and rivers, carried through forests
and snowfields, carried up to high castles and onto boats. Other people took
the Draco with them into battle and believed in the strength and magic that was
there. Believed that when people went to their deaths, they went happy, knowing
that the Draco would wrap them in its tail and that they would fly near the
sun, coiled together. Not only fighting people wanted to follow the Draco, it
was told that a huge man, taller than a tree, took the head of the Draco for
his own head and marched into the river with a staff and a cross, fearing
nothing.
But
then the Draco slumbered. Too many wars, too many battles.And the wolf dragon
was made into gold and silver bracelets that the women twisted around their
wrists, no one carried him high in the air, close to the sky where he had come
from. Instead noisy war came from the sky, came from the forests, came up the
rivers. Fighters in glancing armour and others in drab uniform like the trees,
and others who falsely claimed to be the brothers of the wolf dragon and
snarled at any who disagreed.
Under
the great bridge that linked the fortress with the world, the wolf dragon lay;
weary with the fighting and the cruelty. It wanted the magic again and the
young men leaping and dancing, the songs that told the story and to see the
women who knew how to pick the fly mushroom, who knew how to ink the magic into
a man. And in its slumbers the Draco dreamed and the dream was in the river
under the bridge. And the dream whispered every day as the current tumbled the
water past the castle and the water splashed onto the rocks and the dream ran
deep in the crevices of the old stone. And the Draco turned under the bridge
and lashed its tail and lifted its wolf heads and yawned.
On an Amazon near you http://viewauthor.at/HelenHollick |
Oh, wow, that's brilliant - so very delicately written, so poignant. Lovely stuff, Erica.
ReplyDeletea story to make you think!
DeleteA palpable sense of foreboding - or is that just me?
ReplyDeleteNo, me as well... maybe a follow-up story Erica?
DeleteSuch beautiful, lyrical writing - thanks Erica, I really enjoyed this one!
ReplyDeleteFabulous!! Full of atmosphere and mystery Is it a 'real' folk legend? Because it sure feels like it! Brilliant, Erica, brilliant!
ReplyDeleteSpellbinding. And foreboding. Loved it.
ReplyDeleteReply from Erica: Thank you one and all, this story draws on many magic tales to weave something new. I loved writing it.
ReplyDelete