Day 12 of Spring, 510 AV
Riding training (self-mod)
For anyone who had met her, it would have been difficult indeed to believe the attention-loving, show-stealing Siana could remain comfortably by herself for any period of time longer than a few minutes. Yet here she was, seated cross-legged on a cushion in a small anteroom adjoining the Arvinta's communal meeting hall, muttering to herself intently and scratching notes on a scrap of parchment. As much as she enjoyed the spotlight, even Siana knew that some of the most important moments of a performer's life were spent in solitude creating, preparing and rehearsing a show. Besides, the raised voices from the meeting hall kept her company, while providing her with a surprising amount of privacy. She could wail, shriek, sing, or drum her heels or fingers, and for sure, she could practice her recitation.
During the last week or so, she had been working on a tale about a brave messenger who rode across Taldera to reach the Ice Palace on the first day of spring and seek out Queen Morwen's divine aid for his winter-ravaged Hold. It was said he arrived at the Ice Palace on the verge of death and had gasped out his message with his final breath. The messenger's journey had merited only a brief mention in a greater epic about the devastating storms that raged across Taldera during the three-hundredth winter after the Valterrian. However, something in the heroism and tragedy of the tale had fired Siana's imagination, and she resolved to retell it in honor of the nameless messenger's courage. Perhaps someday, her tale would even be included as part of the great epic.
Scrunching her nose, Siana crossed out a redundant simile and nodded in satisfaction. Now, she just had to rehearse it. She closed her eyes, the better to hear just how her voice sounded as the words rolled off her tongue. How the story was told mattered just as much as what it told. Siana cleared her throat.
"Times had been very hard in the north," she intoned, "where the people lived their entire lives not only on the edge of the world but also on the edge between life and death…"
On she continued, describing the straits to which the messenger's Hold had been reduced. She tried it out with different tones of voice, from soft and sorrowful to shrill and alarmed. She proceeded with the families of the Hold coming together and deciding to send a messenger to Queen Morwen as soon as she returned to Avanthal to beg her help. Siana warmed to her subject, spontaneously making wide, sweeping gestures with her arms to illustrate her points.
But when she came to the part where the messenger saddled his trusted windrunner and prepared to ride through chest-high snowfall, Siana heard a faint but unmistakable snicker. She pauses and tilted her head curiously, wondering if someone else had come inside the room. Perhaps she'd just imagined it, or maybe it had come from the meeting hall outside. She went on with her story.
Then she heard snickering again when she lingered over describing the horse in detail, from its flowing mane to its smooth, gleaming coat to its distance-devouring stride. Siana gritted her teeth and tried to ignore it. As she went on narrating the messenger's journey, though, the snickers verged on outright laughter, until she could hardly stand it.
Finally, during the climactic chase scene where the messenger was being pursued by a pack of dire wolves, she heard a loud chortle. Siana's eyes flew open. "Gods have mercy," she growled. "Whoever is making that noise, just…just… argh! Just show yourself!"
From the doorway, a tall, lanky figure stepped out from the shadows and waved hello. Siana narrowed her eyes when she recognized it as one of the boys who worked in the Hold's stables. There were five or six of them in all, and she saw them all so seldom in her everyday life that she couldn't even recall this one's name. Rial, was it? Something like that? No, Kiali – that was his name. Curly-haired and olive-skinned, he was a year or two older than she was and reputed to be much better around horses than around people.
"Took you long enough to notice," he said by way of greeting. "I thought I heard some funny noises coming from the back rooms, so I decided to check. It turned out the noises were even funnier than I thought!"
"How long have you been standing there?" she demanded, glaring at him. "And what's so funny? Was there something wrong with the story?"
Kiali shrugged, though his eyes flashed a brilliant green that Siana sensed indicated amusement. "No, the story wasn't too bad. Kind of slow and needs more action, but it's decently entertaining. No, I was laughing because it's obvious you don't know anything about horses. When's the last time you stopped by the stables, girl?"
Bursts of color danced across Siana's eyes in response to the question, which left her perplexed and irritated. "Girl? My name is Siana, thank you," she replied, lifting her small chin haughtily. "As for the stables, I pass by it every day. I'm not a complete stranger to horses."
"Well, you were right that messengers usually favor windrunners, Siana," the boy conceded. "But first of all, you described your windrunner as being…uh…how did you put it? 'As red as blood, with a mane like fire?' Very pretty, except windrunners always have pale coats, like white or grey. If you saw a red horse in our stables, it was probably a sleigh horse, not a windrunner at all."
Mentally, Siana started adjusting some lines of her story, replacing incorrect adjectives with new ones. "That doesn't sound like an awful mistake," she said at last. "I can easily change the horse's color."
"Of course," Kiali replied. "But there's more. Second, you'd have to be a fool to ride a Windrunner through the kind of snow you were talking about in your story. Anytime there's snow above your ankles, a good rider would choose a frostmarch. Windrunners are much faster, but they're just not surefooted enough to navigate through heavy snow or ice. A frostmarch won't travel at the same pace, but it won't break a leg during the trip either."
"But a frostmarch just doesn't sound right! " Siana cried out. She knew she sounded foolish, and the knowledge made her feel all the more defensive. "When you think of making swift journeys, you think of windrunners. Even the word 'frostmarch' sounds slow and plodding."
Kiali stared at her incredulously. "You've never ridden a frostmarch, have you?"
Siana opened her mouth, then closed it, and then opened it again. "I've never ridden a horse at all," she admitted. "I don't know how to."
"You don't know how to ride a horse?" Kiali gaped at her as though she had just sprouted antlers from her head. "No wonder you were getting everything wrong in your story. Come with me, right now. I'm going to teach you how."
"Now?" Siana exclaimed, startled.
"Now," the boy repeated, taking her arm. He glanced out the window. "There's nothing but a mild spring snow outside, so it won't be too cold if you bundle up a little. Besides, you want to get your story right as soon as possible, don't you? Think of all the audiences that'll laugh at you if you tell any more stories with horses in them. Put on your furs and let's go."
In a much shorter time than Siana could have believed or would have liked, she found herself being dragged outside toward the Hold's stables. Inwardly, she had to admit that, while she did pass by the stables every day, she'd never been inside once. He opened the door for them and hurried past to check on the horses, who let out soft whinnies of greeting when they saw him. As Siana watched, he strode before the stalls for a few minutes before stopping at one and gently leading out a sturdy, graceful horse with a dappled grey-and-white coat. When the horse stopped alongside her, she realized the top of her head barely cleared its back.
"This is Misty. She's the horse we use to teach children how to ride," Kiali told her, as solemnly as though he were making formal introductions. He began to take down bit and bridle, saddle and other riding tack down from the wall. "Saddle up, gi- I mean, Siana. Let's start with your first lesson."