"I don't know." The child said in awe as she looked up at the fungi. The luminescence was hypnotic and Dela couldn't help reaching up to the tables that clung to the wall in thick clusters, curious to what they were exactly. They had a moist, earthy smell, that reminded the girl of mushrooms. Anchor-points of the shelfs practically covered the wall where the clusters were thickest, hiding the old stone and sea-carved cave from better examination. Except in one spot.
It was about eye-level to Dela who approached it and reached out to touch the cool rockface. The clear patch was surrounded by the molds, as if whatever had touched the spot before had discouraged further growth. She couldn't have known why that was, of course, for her interest lay in the image that was etched upon the spot in long-left alone charcoal. "Hey, Vanny lookit." She traced a finger slowly, following the contours in a studious way. When she removed her finger, however, no streak was left, no smudge on the stone made.
The image was simple, really. A charcoal sketch of a figure with radiant lines branching away from it. Beneath the figure was a what looked like a trail, or a cliff maybe with a hole in it and more tiny flecks coming from that hole. Dela tilted her head, wondering at the figures and what they could mean. She touched the figure with the sun-lines around its head and speculated to him, looking up at her cousin. "Looks like Syna, doesn't it?" She tapped the cave/hole and specks coming from it. "But what's that? It looks like something coming out of the ground..."
There was a reason Malkar had brought his daughter and her cousin out this way. The Ankals brother had a love for knowledge and history. His inquisitive nature had been passed on to his only child and, though duty often saw him away from the pavillion to run scout-trails, he always tried to full her curiosity so that she could understand the world better as she grew. And one of the best lessons he could teach her at this age was how the Drykas came to be in the sea of grass and the importance of these caverns and caves by the sea. The children could not see him standing at the entrance, listening to the soft echo of their voices, waiting patiently for one of their curiosities to rise high enough to simply ask the questions he knew would come. He knew of the picture in the cave, something he'd stumbled upon as well when he had been a child himself and one of his relatives (not his departed father, though; he was a proud man who did not favor knowledge above other talents) had brought him too to the caves for a similar lesson. Dela was getting close, though, Malkar could sense it.
Though still curious of the sketch, Delani turned her attention back to the glowing fungi. She had enough interest now to want to investigate the molds and without hesitating, the child pulled one (grunting as she did so) free of the wall. It was thick, she realized first. Or was it dense? Was there a difference? Dela didn't yet know as her fingers explored the striated top. The teal and black shade created a pretty melody of colors that was amplified by the luminescent quality. The rich, earthy scent was equally pleasant, while the underside of the fungus made her think of rock moss, soft and springy. The wonderful odor made her think of Semele in all her gemstone beauty. But why cast it in the darkness of a cave?
Dela brought the fungus up to her nose and closed her eyes as she smelled it, drinking in the pleasant aroma with a childish smile. "Vanny, it smells like Semele. I wonder what it tastes like..." She didn't hesitate to bring it to her lips and take a bite! Chomp! Nobody ever said knowledge wasn't gained without risk.
xIt was about eye-level to Dela who approached it and reached out to touch the cool rockface. The clear patch was surrounded by the molds, as if whatever had touched the spot before had discouraged further growth. She couldn't have known why that was, of course, for her interest lay in the image that was etched upon the spot in long-left alone charcoal. "Hey, Vanny lookit." She traced a finger slowly, following the contours in a studious way. When she removed her finger, however, no streak was left, no smudge on the stone made.
The image was simple, really. A charcoal sketch of a figure with radiant lines branching away from it. Beneath the figure was a what looked like a trail, or a cliff maybe with a hole in it and more tiny flecks coming from that hole. Dela tilted her head, wondering at the figures and what they could mean. She touched the figure with the sun-lines around its head and speculated to him, looking up at her cousin. "Looks like Syna, doesn't it?" She tapped the cave/hole and specks coming from it. "But what's that? It looks like something coming out of the ground..."
There was a reason Malkar had brought his daughter and her cousin out this way. The Ankals brother had a love for knowledge and history. His inquisitive nature had been passed on to his only child and, though duty often saw him away from the pavillion to run scout-trails, he always tried to full her curiosity so that she could understand the world better as she grew. And one of the best lessons he could teach her at this age was how the Drykas came to be in the sea of grass and the importance of these caverns and caves by the sea. The children could not see him standing at the entrance, listening to the soft echo of their voices, waiting patiently for one of their curiosities to rise high enough to simply ask the questions he knew would come. He knew of the picture in the cave, something he'd stumbled upon as well when he had been a child himself and one of his relatives (not his departed father, though; he was a proud man who did not favor knowledge above other talents) had brought him too to the caves for a similar lesson. Dela was getting close, though, Malkar could sense it.
Though still curious of the sketch, Delani turned her attention back to the glowing fungi. She had enough interest now to want to investigate the molds and without hesitating, the child pulled one (grunting as she did so) free of the wall. It was thick, she realized first. Or was it dense? Was there a difference? Dela didn't yet know as her fingers explored the striated top. The teal and black shade created a pretty melody of colors that was amplified by the luminescent quality. The rich, earthy scent was equally pleasant, while the underside of the fungus made her think of rock moss, soft and springy. The wonderful odor made her think of Semele in all her gemstone beauty. But why cast it in the darkness of a cave?
Dela brought the fungus up to her nose and closed her eyes as she smelled it, drinking in the pleasant aroma with a childish smile. "Vanny, it smells like Semele. I wonder what it tastes like..." She didn't hesitate to bring it to her lips and take a bite! Chomp! Nobody ever said knowledge wasn't gained without risk.