by Cayenne on April 7th, 2010, 4:10 am
Siiri:
As she worked, the warrior no doubt noticed that the smell of blood and fresh meat had attracted the attention of various dogs, cats, tigers, and other such predatory pets that the savages kept around. It was a killing day - the number of sacrifices could well reach a thousand or more - and every single one of them would be consumed. Not necessarily tonight, but over the next while. Cook scolded one of the dogs that got too close to to the Charodaen female, aiming a swing with her bare foot. The wily beast ducked the leathery limb deftly, and slunk away to hide at a safe distance. The large tigers had far more sense (and training!) than to get so close.
Siiri and Deja kept on chopping the spicy peppers. Deja was beginning to look at her with a slightly alarmed expression as the chopping progressed - Siiri's fingers and hands kept visibly swelling. Cutting was getting harder as her digits were refusing to cooperate. But they worked in tandem, reducing the large pile of peppers, and filling up the bowls. Cook checked on them often. "We'll be spreading these seeds, later," Deja made a stab at conversation as she worked. "The stems will go to the tskannas." Sometimes Siiri heard her humming to the drumbeats in the distance from another part of the city. Siiri was a warrior, after all, but today, she was one more hand joining in mutual suffering under her great-grandmother, and that made them a little closer to equals. Deja may have been younger, but her cooking skills far outweighed Siiri's.
Cook checked on their progress again once the peppers were done, using the blade of Deja's knife to sort through the basket of chopped peppers, clearly immune to the suffering the pepper's juices caused her assistants. After stirring the chopped vegetable, Cook finally put the knife down. Clearly, she was satisfied. She eyed Siiri's hands, then, and clicked her tongue. "Deja, go get the milk," she told her great-granddaughter. Never mind the fact that Deja's hands were also somewhat swollen -- you didn't chop the number of peppers she did and not get burned. But the girl didn't complain. She was clearly used to pepper burns, and she knew better than to not do what your elders told you to do.
Deja, sainted Deja, returned with a clay jug of milk with a shallow basin. "Put your hands in there," Cook instructed Siiri. "Lay them flat in the bottom." She nodded to Deja, who carefully poured the thick, creamy milk over Siiri's aching hands. The milk was cold, almost shockingly so. It wasn't so easy to keep things cold in the steaming jungle, but the Myrians were resourceful. The cold milk brought plenty of immediate relief - the swelling went down, the burning faded, and she found that she was regaining the dexterity that the swelling had so utterly decimated. When her hands looked normal again, and she had full control of her fingers, it was time to let Deja have her turn to soak her fingers. She didn't need half the time that Siiri did, but the girl had been cooking with such ingredients for a lot longer. She had learned the ins and outs of using them. "Get the garlic ready," Cook instructed the pair now that they. "Six heads will do the trick." The elder was off to check on the female, then, checking to see how well the bleeding was done, and leaving the pair of them to it.
Deja pulled out six fist-sized bulbs of garlic from the basket, and a wooden bowl to put their work in. "Now," the teenager puffed her cheeks before exhaling and deflating. "Garlic has a trick to it," she told the warrior. "It's usually very sticky, and so peeling can get difficult. Great-Grandmother wants us to crush it and mince it, so here's what we're going to do," she selected one of the broader, flat blades - one of the smaller cleavers - "is position the blade like this," she put the flat of the blade over the garlic, "and crush it once. It helps get loosen the skin." She demonstrated, thumping the butt of her hand against the flat of the blade, crushing the garlic bulb underneath her knife. The blade was set aside, and now she had loosened the skin enough to neatly peel it off and toss in the bowl with the pepper stems. "When you have the skin off, you can start crushing and mincing the cloves. Mincing is just finely chopping," Deja told her, and began to demonstrate how to do that before smiling up at Siiri. "Give it a shot."
Shari:
Myri nodded at Shari's thanks, and reached out to grasp her forearm, clapping her on the back in the traditional greeting and parting gesture of the Myrians. "Good... Work hard. The parade is going to start soon, Shari of the Poisoned Arrow, daughter of Geas. Enjoy yourself, and walk with pride. Do not forget that what you do is crucial to the survival of Taloba." Myri stood back, smiling down at Shari, before releasing her arm with a nod. She turned and made Her way up the rest of the stairs. Upon reaching the top, the Goddess-Queen disappeared beyond Shari's sight, into the temple.
The heavy drums began, sparking a current that traveled through the city. The rhythm was picked up, carried on, passed from person to person. A shout rose up, and then another - the parade had begun, starting at the massive gates at the front of the city. The menacing Shadow Guard, dressed in their raiment of bone and leather, rode their ethereal, massive, bright-furred Tigers, flanking the procession. Their exposed skin was painted and tattooed and pierced, though it was hard to tell just who belonged to what clan. Along the broad street, younger warriors were pounding their feet into the dirt, thumping weapons against shields, as choruses of cheers and music swelled to accompany them. The warriors, some on tigers, some on foot, all wearing armor, marched along.
At the head of the procession, dressed in her own armor of bone and leather, was Myri. She sat stride her enormous tiger, the great beast decorated in its own right, with bones and teeth and stones. A pair of tskanna-tusk blades rested on her hips, and their Queen had a smile on her face as she raised a fist triumphantly. Her skin was decorated with the Myrian war paint, mixing and accentuating her tattoos, and yet, it made her seem all the more real again - that she was one of them. On either side of her were two of the Shadow Guard, each astride their fearsome tigers. There were three females and a male in all, and Myrians could well guess who they were: Miha, Tika, Aira, and Zal... Myri's four children.
The parade continued through the streets - painted tskannas, decorated tigers, senior officers and warriors, the Shadow Guard - it was a spectacle. The Shadow Guard came to Taloba only once a year. They were the select few Myrians who did not return to as newborn babes, but the ones who chose to serve Myri and their people in another capacity. Fire dancers blew flames high into the sky as the ground literally shook under the weight of the tskannas and those in the parade. Like it was a living, breathing thing, the procession made its way through the city until it came to a halt in front of the temple, its tail end swallowed by the crowds as the area around the Temple and the Trading Square were utterly swarmed. Myri dismounted, then, and started up the broad stone steps. Those who had picked the stairs for a vantage point parted for her, as one, letting her pass by, though a few hands reached out to touch her as she passed. When she reached the top of the stairs, the Goddess-Queen turned, overlooking the great swell of bodies below and around her.
The legends said that when Myri spoke, the Myrians listened - in Taloba, or anywhere in their jungle home. Those away on patrols or sentry duty could hear Her speak. "Myrians and denizens of Taloba!" Myri's voice clapped like thunder, and the city, almost as one, fell silent for several moments, before the shouts, whoops, cheers, trumpets, and roars, decimating the silence that had loomed. Deja almost dropped her cleaver, looking on in the direction of the temple, the direction from which their Queen's voice came from, before joining in with a shrill war whoop of her own. "Today, we celebrate Dira, She Who Brings The End!" she addressed the burgeoning horde. "When she decides it is our time to go, we go! We go with honor, we go with pride. We do not fear death, nor what She brings!" There was the beginning of a drumbeat, the undercurrent of energy that was beginning to reverberate once more.
"We are not afraid," Myri continued, "because we know that in the next life, we return. We do not die. We begin again, side by side with those we left behind! We remember those who die, and we honor them. We remember them. We mourn their loss, and we avenge them, if there is vengeance to be had! If our enemies cross one of us, they cross us all! Together we stand. Nothing breaks us apart!" Myri's eyes blazed. She was a warrior, a leader, the Usurper, the Uniter, the Merciless. "We remember our fallen! But do not just cry mournfully over the individuals, the dreams, and influences that have helped make you who you are!" the Goddess-Queen roared. "Dance for them! Sing for them! Honor them! Leap into the air and kiss the sky for them!" Her voice rang out as she paused for emphasis. "Honor the dead! Remember them! Celebrate for them, and know that they walk with us again today!" the Goddess finished, then, as the revelry began again in earnest. Or maybe she just allowed herself to be drowned out by the pulsating drums, by the stomping of feet, by the trumpeting of the tskannas.
"Blessed is She!" a young warrior who had emerged from the crowds to stand beside Shari smiled upwards at their hero, "Blessed is She!" the young woman was probably Shari's age, maybe a year or two younger, and seemed to belong to the Blackened Claws, if the masterfully-tattooed claws on her ample chest, like something trying to force its way out, was any indication. She was dressed in white linen, a halter tie around her breasts and securing behind her neck, and a short loin cloth. They hardly needed more, in the jungle. Her ends of her long, reddish-brown braid was soaked in blood, swinging down her back with her movements. The parade below began to disperse, melding, swelling, as people swarmed. There would be fights in the Training Grounds, dances, songs, and reenactments in the Plaza... so much to do, so much to see. It was always fun to have someone to do it with, now, wasn't it?