"I think you should at least see the Chavena, Hirem." Kavala told him, and the Benshira felt an electric shock shoot up his spine. Taking a low breath, Hirem glanced up at the brilliantly blue sky, painting the canvas with imaginary cords of silver and gold. It will happen, he told himself, trying to comprehend what the experience of glimpsing the chavi might be like. Today, tomorrow, at any point that I wish... I will be able to gaze upon the cords that tether mortal life to the divine. I will be able to witness the purity of creation in a method my old Rapas would never have dared to dream up. And that is just the start, for if I am truly a Dreamwalker, I will do much more than observe. I will learn how to track chavi, how to trace the passage of lives, how a soul endures death. I will be able to understand the unrealized dreams of all mortal kind. It was a momentous prospect.
Amidst the quiet chirruping of distant birds, Hirem fancied that he heard a faint voice calling out his name, the echo of a great master summoning him to action once more. Hirem... Hirem... your destiny awaits...
The voice was not new to him - he was intimately familiar with this sensation of being summoned - but only rarely did he feel ready to chase after the call. The last time he had done so, Yahebah had ended up weeping in the aftermath. But things have changed since then. I have grown older. I have grown wiser. I have faced evil and lived to tell the tale. More important, he would not be along... he had Kavala to depend upon. Hirem smiled at the woman as she continued to speak, silently grateful for her presence. “Finding a balance is key. You can’t survive knowing everything immediately." She was right, of course, and Hirem vowed to take that advice to heart in his education of what it meant to be Cytali. I am done running after my destiny, he told himself, resolute. My destiny is here, within the walls of this Sanctuary. Now I must make sure I am up to the task. Gentle instruction, slow experimentation, gradual understanding... he needed patience if he was going to become worthy of joining the Dreamwalkers. Patience is not something I have always been abundant in... But Kavala is patient. She can help keep me on the right course throughout this long journey.
“Tasival and his brother Ralac are actually Akontak. If you look close you’ll see their scales and gills." The Konti then said of the children, leaving Hirem dumbfounded. "Gills?" he repeated, staring back at the slumbering Ralac. Can I really been so blind to have missed the gills and scales these children possess? It cannot be... Yet there were gills on the Akalak boy, marking him as someone unlike the rest of his race. After realizing what he missed, the Benshira settled back on the grass and ran a hand through his hair. "Akontak," he murmured, trying to get used to the word. Everyone tells me that Akalak only breed more Akalak, and Konti only sire Konti. To think that the warriors of Riverfall and the seers of Mura, when paired together, create something new and powerfully gifted... perhaps it is a sign from the gods? Perhaps the Akalak and Konti belong together? It certainly made sense to Hirem, thinking back on the obvious strengths each race possessed and the natural cooperation that existed between them. "To be blessed by both Wysar and Avalis is truly a sign of greatness," he murmured, his eyes full of Ralac and Tasival and the strangeness of their appearance. "But will they find be able to find themselves a place in this world? Obviously they have a home here with you, but elsewhere..." His words trailed off, for he could not easily envision a world without Kavala. I suspect that death itself will not keep this woman from her children. No, they will not be lacking for guidance.
While Kavala saw to her rapidly cooling wax - Hirem knew little of the process and was enthralled by watching her proceed through every step - he attempted to explain a little of his faith. "Faith in Yahal always came easily to me," he admit, his eyes fixated on the rapidly cooling kettle. Is that ice forming on the outside? Is this more of Kavala's magic at work? "From the moment I could first speak, I knew of Yahal. Before the sun, death, fate, life itself... there was Yahal." The Benshira spread his arms out wide, mimicking unfurled wings. "We are taught that he is watching our every step, both in the now and in the future. He knows where we've been, where we are, and where we are going. To believe in him is to trust that where you're going is where you want to be." He took a deep breath, realizing that he was always quick to forget this next aspect of Yahal's domain. "But it's not just about faith in him. We are also required to have faith in ourselves - doubt creates fear, fear gives birth to avarice, and avarice leads to corruption. You must be certain that you are doing everything you can, when you can. In a way, Yahal rewards our strength of character with strength of will. It is the simplest thing in the world to follow his path, but very difficult to maintain it."
“I like bees.” Kavala said, initially taking Hirem aback. Confused, the man raised a brow and listened for her explanation, thinking that there must be some deeper meaning to her words. But the more the Konti spoke, the more he realized that she was just speaking about something she was passionate about... and that, in itself, was meaningful. We are very different people, he mused, wondering exactly what divided their outlooks. I have spent my entire life looking for what is important, despaired of ever finding it in the wide open world... I have been looking for my calling. Kavala has built her calling, out of stone and magic and wax and family and friends. She resembled a bee herself: productive, orderly, a gift to the world around as well as to her hive. He'd never call her a bee, of course, but it was amusing to imagine the Konti as such. And if she was a bee, then he...
He was more like wax. Rough, incomplete, inconsistent. Ready to be transformed into something else.
But none of his thoughts seemed to matter in the aftermath of what Kavala had to say next. “Family is important. And most people don’t get to choose theirs. I feel lucky that I got to pick mine out. I’d like you to be part of mine, if you would like." His cheeks immediately flushed, Hirem tried to look over to Kavala's eyes but found that his gaze couldn't quite meet hers. That is... quite an offer, he thought, remembering that northerners kept their families more closed off than the Benshira. Northerners seemed more concerned with protecting their loved ones than admitting new lambs into their flock, which, given the danger of the world outside, was fair enough. For Kavala to say, "You can be a part of my family"... it took his breath away. Part of him immediately balked at the offer, thinking that he was not a fit person to join any family, let alone Kavala's beautiful, peaceful home. But, overwhelmingly, Hirem wanted to accept. "I'd - I'd be honoured," he whispered, beaming at the Konti. "I will not disappoint you," he added, offering her a deep nod of his head.
Hirem let out a sigh immediately afterwards.
Family....
I'm part of a family...
Kavala's family. The family of the Sanctuary.
I am part of a family! Nothing seemed as important as this single thought.
With a start, the Benshira threw himself onto his feet, careful not to disturb the nearby slumbering babes. "You're right, it is getting far too warm!" He declared with a smile on his face, spying the nearby Tasival peeking into a shrub. "And it makes little sense to me why one little troublemaker should be spared a bath." Leaving Kavala then, Hirem approached the Akontak child with a creeping step, a grin spreading across his features. The boy might have seen him coming if he wasn't so distracted by a nearby flower, allowing Hirem to sweep him off his feet. "What do you say about that, Tasival?" Hirem crowed, lifting the boy - heavy though he was! - onto his shoulder. Taking the youngster's amused giggles as a sign of approval, the Benshira hurried over to the centre of the Sanctuary's courtyard, stopping alongside the wall of the pool. The water's surface reminded Hirem of a desert oasis, making him chuckle to himself as he kicked off his sandals.
Stepping into the pool, shivering at the sudden cold, Hirem sat on the edge and brought Tasival down to rest on his lap. "That was an adventure!" he exclaimed, staring into the water. I suppose Tasival has nothing to fear from it, considering he has gills. The Benshira let the boy slide into the pool and swim slowly in circles, admonishing him whenever he started to splash too much. "Behave yourself!" He crowed jokingly. "You don't want to embarrass yourself in front of your mother!"