TS: 66th of Winter, 509 AV
What: The Second Day of the Day of the Dead Holiday
Where: Center of Taloba, the Plaza, and the Trading Square
They started at midnight, the festivities for the Day of the Dead. Yesterday, the first day was always quiet. Solemn... remembering. Paying their respects to the departed. Families mourned those who had died before their time. They paid homage to Dira, the Queen of the Dead, the Goddess of Death. The great temple saw plenty of activity, and the great stone steps were dripped red with blood that poured from the altars as the sacrifices were made. Jagara cattle, pigs, barrabarra, some of the enormous jungle peafowl with their colourful plumage and enormous tails, chickens, wild turkeys... with a few exceptions, if the Myrians could catch it and kill it leading up to the Day of the Dead... well, then it was very a likely conclusion that it would end up on the altars and in the earthen hearths.
Ancestral worship was common in Taloba. A great amount of respect was paid to the dead and departed, and to the few Myrian ghosts who still lingered. That wasn't to say that they didn't have their share of ghosts - most of the ghosts who hung around Taloba were those of the victims, seeking revenge on their killers. But when they got to be too much for one of the priestesses or shamans to deal with, well, that was when a 'specialist' from Black Rock was escorted to Taloba to take care of the miscreant. But that was a rare sight to see, though always one that the Myrians tended to enjoy. But not today. There was no errant troublemakers to disrupt the festival. But those who could think back would remember the Day of the Dead of 500 AV, when the Shadow Guard had dealt with a number of angry, angry spirits. That had been something to behold... and had not yet been repeated.
Every home in Taloba had an ancestral altar, and when the Day of the Dead began, on the 65th, these altars were loaded and decorated with food and puqua, a popular fermented Myrian drink, and juices. They believed that the essence of the food would be consumed by the spirits of the dead, and later on, the food would be eaten by the living members of the family. Bones and skulls and wildflowers, particularly Dira's Passion, a heart-shaped flower that ranged in colour from deep violet to black with little flecks of white near the base of the petals, also adorned the altars. The first day of the festival was always quiet, but now, today...
Today was the celebration.
Myrians worked hard, and earned the right, therefore, to play hard. The atmosphere was as different from the solemnity that had hung over the great city as day was to night. It was early afternoon, now, and the decorations had been sprung. Tskannas had been painted with with all sorts of washable paints, and hung with bone decorations and more flowers. Families and children were painted by younger priests and priestesses, their dark skin marked, their tattoos and family ties highlighted. Torches were lit, and the air was filled with the scents of people, of animals, of roasting food. The drums rumbled throughout the city in a chaotic harmony, the pounding beat matching the natural rhythm of the city, and the crowds were gathering throughout the large city, beginning to line the streets and the empty Trading Square. Normally it would be bustling, busy with those who sought to sell their goods, but no one was bothering with that now. Food would be produced in due course, and the city would have one massive potluck, every family providing something to share with friends and family.
The parade would begin soon, stretching from the gates down the main street of Taloba to the Temple and Myri's Palace. Joyful anticipation was in the air, and Tskannas trumpeted to each other, as if they sensed it. Longbills called to each other, perching on the ledges of the buildings, as if to watch the proceedings.
As it was said... work hard, and party harder.