Fall 55, 512 AV
Contrary to what one might believe, the Harvest Festival – the biggest festival of the year, apart from the Morning of the Moths maybe – didn’t have anything to do with agriculture, although the Symenestra maintained a few small fields in the wilderness above Kalinor. Notok was when those Symenestra that had left for the surface in previous seasons to look for surrogates returned. The festival always took place in early fall, before the snow began to fall and made travel even more dangerous than it already was. Every Harvester, no matter where he or she had gone, tried to be home by then and present their surrogates to their families, secretly hoping that they would win a prize with her.
The surrogates, different kinds of humans and Kelvic for the most part, were often smuggled into Kalinor, their faces hidden under cloaks and then locked away so that nobody would be able to see them before the big beauty contest. While they were hidden, they received all kinds of beauty treatments and only ate the best food, and precious silk gowns were made for them. The women dreaded – and in some cases actually welcomed – the day when they would be put on display in front of a few hundred venomous Symenestra.
In the meantime a gigantic feast took place in the gathering hall where the usual furniture had been replaced with rows upon rows of tables and chairs. Everybody, from small children to old people, had been helping with the meals that were served. The cooks had been up since before dawn. There were different kind of soups, sweets, vegetables and of course the ever popular Bruka, a blood based stew. The people of Kalinor had the choice between at least a dozen different beverages.
The Harvesters did of course receive seats in the center of the hall so that everybody could see them. They were the guests of honor. Even those that had only gone on a gleaning rather than bringing back surrogates received special treatment.Their contribution to Kalinor was just as valuable, although they would of course not participate in the contests that took place during the festival.
The Harvesters that had returned to Kalinor this year had faced much greater danger than those that had gone to the surface before, with the terrible djed storm and the events following it, and thus they received even more attention than they normally would. Those that remained behind had done everything they could to make the city beautiful for their return. All the houses had been cleaned and repaired and decorated, and the thick ropes that connected them had been washed.
In the gathering hall itself garlands of silk and precious gems that shimmered in a multitude of different colors decorated the walls. The tapestries that had been made for the Morning of the Moths still hung there as well. For the duration of the festival at least Kalinor was the most beautiful city in Mizahar.
Contrary to what one might believe, the Harvest Festival – the biggest festival of the year, apart from the Morning of the Moths maybe – didn’t have anything to do with agriculture, although the Symenestra maintained a few small fields in the wilderness above Kalinor. Notok was when those Symenestra that had left for the surface in previous seasons to look for surrogates returned. The festival always took place in early fall, before the snow began to fall and made travel even more dangerous than it already was. Every Harvester, no matter where he or she had gone, tried to be home by then and present their surrogates to their families, secretly hoping that they would win a prize with her.
The surrogates, different kinds of humans and Kelvic for the most part, were often smuggled into Kalinor, their faces hidden under cloaks and then locked away so that nobody would be able to see them before the big beauty contest. While they were hidden, they received all kinds of beauty treatments and only ate the best food, and precious silk gowns were made for them. The women dreaded – and in some cases actually welcomed – the day when they would be put on display in front of a few hundred venomous Symenestra.
In the meantime a gigantic feast took place in the gathering hall where the usual furniture had been replaced with rows upon rows of tables and chairs. Everybody, from small children to old people, had been helping with the meals that were served. The cooks had been up since before dawn. There were different kind of soups, sweets, vegetables and of course the ever popular Bruka, a blood based stew. The people of Kalinor had the choice between at least a dozen different beverages.
The Harvesters did of course receive seats in the center of the hall so that everybody could see them. They were the guests of honor. Even those that had only gone on a gleaning rather than bringing back surrogates received special treatment.Their contribution to Kalinor was just as valuable, although they would of course not participate in the contests that took place during the festival.
The Harvesters that had returned to Kalinor this year had faced much greater danger than those that had gone to the surface before, with the terrible djed storm and the events following it, and thus they received even more attention than they normally would. Those that remained behind had done everything they could to make the city beautiful for their return. All the houses had been cleaned and repaired and decorated, and the thick ropes that connected them had been washed.
In the gathering hall itself garlands of silk and precious gems that shimmered in a multitude of different colors decorated the walls. The tapestries that had been made for the Morning of the Moths still hung there as well. For the duration of the festival at least Kalinor was the most beautiful city in Mizahar.