The Power of Bones, as Razkar knew, was not a "showy" or theatrical craft. At least not to the observer. Those practicing it would feel a whirlwind of djed buffeting them as doors were pushed aside and things perhaps best left to rest were recalled... but to everyone else, it seemed laborious.
Not Razkar. He knew the power simple carvings and runes and the blood to seal the deal could bring about.
"We shall begin..."
Mayla did not waste time. He placed a small wooden box onto the... wait... not wood. It was bone, so old and burnished that it was yellowed and even harder, each bone pressed together and hinged so-
-when it opened, he could see the even more ancient carving tools inside. The picks and tiny hammers needed for what they would do.
"Do you know the appearance, Razkar?" She said, but not her words had the trace of an intoning, a benediction or a curse, neither younger Myrians knew. "The pattern of the binding circles?" He voice dropped into a whisper. "Have you seen it...?"
Razkar nodded, face still and serious by the single cooking fire inside the hut. He reached out and turned the massive skull with one hand, so all three of them could see it, and stabbed a finger down, just above the middle of it's forehead.
"The main circle will be here, and it will be larger. Around it... will be three others."
His finger moved again slowly, and pointed out three more locations around where the largest circle would be. Two above it, on the left and right, rising above like horns or wings... and the last underneath it, just above the bridge of the nose.
Mayla "hmm"-ed at that last one, Wolf recognizing the strangely universal appraisal of a trade person, not a witch. A bony finger pointed steadily at the bottom circle, or where the circle would be.
"The curve of the eye sockets would make that one difficult, but I think I can accomplish them. Do you remember our last arrangement, Razkar?"
The male nodded. "You carve the circle, and I make the words... and give the blood." He couldn't stop himself from adding. "And will safeguard us both while we summon what is beyond."
Mayla's eyes glistening with amusement once again and with one slow but deft move of her hands, her cowl was pulled back-
Razkar willed himself not to react. He felt Wolf stiffen next to him and actually managed a wry smile.
"You are a model of informed preparation, Honored Elder?"
Mayla smiled, stretching the ash-and-ink mix covering her face from neck to hair. Dozens, perhaps scores of bones were woven and braided into her hair, almost to the point he thought they were her hair, and every one had a tiny rune of image scratched into it.
A jawbone from some long-dead and much-ferocious creature was attached to her chin, dragging out her smile into something even more chilling. And crowning her visage, the Eye of Myri, much like Razkar's, shone in blood from her forehead.
"Think you I need to be reminded of my duties to my clan, child?"
"No, Honored Elder. Please forgive any impertinence."
Another dry, rasping chuckle, and Mayla's hand reached out to drag the skull towards her. Wolf blinked. So old and wrinkled, and yet she pulled it over without the slightest tremor in her fingers, other hand selecting a heavy pick without even looking down.
"No words from here on, children..." Mayla said, shifting the skull so it faced her and staring down at it. "Keep your minds focused on the task..."
Silence after that... and then scratching. Scraping. Digging. No movement save Mayla's twisting and grinding hands as she began to gouge the circles into the skull of the Dhani. And then... the murmuring. The whispers. First they came from Mayla, her lips barely moving yet words spilling forth in a long and almost non-stop litany. Wolf could barely make them out, and wondered if they were the same as the ones Eagle was muttering-
That was when she realized he was muttering, too. Eyes fixed on his prize, his Elder and what was being crafted, his whisper seeped into the air.
"Praise be to Myri, Queen, Mother and Goddess... our light in the darkness... our strength against the storm..."
Not Razkar. He knew the power simple carvings and runes and the blood to seal the deal could bring about.
"We shall begin..."
Mayla did not waste time. He placed a small wooden box onto the... wait... not wood. It was bone, so old and burnished that it was yellowed and even harder, each bone pressed together and hinged so-
-when it opened, he could see the even more ancient carving tools inside. The picks and tiny hammers needed for what they would do.
"Do you know the appearance, Razkar?" She said, but not her words had the trace of an intoning, a benediction or a curse, neither younger Myrians knew. "The pattern of the binding circles?" He voice dropped into a whisper. "Have you seen it...?"
Razkar nodded, face still and serious by the single cooking fire inside the hut. He reached out and turned the massive skull with one hand, so all three of them could see it, and stabbed a finger down, just above the middle of it's forehead.
"The main circle will be here, and it will be larger. Around it... will be three others."
His finger moved again slowly, and pointed out three more locations around where the largest circle would be. Two above it, on the left and right, rising above like horns or wings... and the last underneath it, just above the bridge of the nose.
Mayla "hmm"-ed at that last one, Wolf recognizing the strangely universal appraisal of a trade person, not a witch. A bony finger pointed steadily at the bottom circle, or where the circle would be.
"The curve of the eye sockets would make that one difficult, but I think I can accomplish them. Do you remember our last arrangement, Razkar?"
The male nodded. "You carve the circle, and I make the words... and give the blood." He couldn't stop himself from adding. "And will safeguard us both while we summon what is beyond."
Mayla's eyes glistening with amusement once again and with one slow but deft move of her hands, her cowl was pulled back-
Razkar willed himself not to react. He felt Wolf stiffen next to him and actually managed a wry smile.
"You are a model of informed preparation, Honored Elder?"
Mayla smiled, stretching the ash-and-ink mix covering her face from neck to hair. Dozens, perhaps scores of bones were woven and braided into her hair, almost to the point he thought they were her hair, and every one had a tiny rune of image scratched into it.
A jawbone from some long-dead and much-ferocious creature was attached to her chin, dragging out her smile into something even more chilling. And crowning her visage, the Eye of Myri, much like Razkar's, shone in blood from her forehead.
"Think you I need to be reminded of my duties to my clan, child?"
"No, Honored Elder. Please forgive any impertinence."
Another dry, rasping chuckle, and Mayla's hand reached out to drag the skull towards her. Wolf blinked. So old and wrinkled, and yet she pulled it over without the slightest tremor in her fingers, other hand selecting a heavy pick without even looking down.
"No words from here on, children..." Mayla said, shifting the skull so it faced her and staring down at it. "Keep your minds focused on the task..."
Silence after that... and then scratching. Scraping. Digging. No movement save Mayla's twisting and grinding hands as she began to gouge the circles into the skull of the Dhani. And then... the murmuring. The whispers. First they came from Mayla, her lips barely moving yet words spilling forth in a long and almost non-stop litany. Wolf could barely make them out, and wondered if they were the same as the ones Eagle was muttering-
That was when she realized he was muttering, too. Eyes fixed on his prize, his Elder and what was being crafted, his whisper seeped into the air.
"Praise be to Myri, Queen, Mother and Goddess... our light in the darkness... our strength against the storm..."