Читать книгу Tales of the Goddessi - Heather Ranier - Страница 5
First Interlude
ОглавлениеA Tale Not Told
The Goddessi had hoped that Kimber’s Tale would take a very different turn. Watching the group move through the World, from the basin of the Seido Bashran through the highgrass and into the meadowlands, the women who were not women saw a chance to change something that had long been on Their minds.
The city of Caelan has long sat suspended above the roiling deep waters of Big River, better known by its Faer inhabitants as Wind River, linking the precipitous northern cliffs and the rolling broken southern plains of Big Valley, again better known as Wind River Valley. The city is connected in various ways to its sisters downstream; the cities of Hlanae and Maelae. Caelan is a busy, bustling metropolis unlike anything seen outside the White Wastes of the north where the Fallen Star’s people rule, but it is also more sedate, almost sleepy. This contrast is a product of the city matriarch’s tight hold on her people and, in fact, on the people of all the cities and thus the entire Faer race.
The White Rel.
Also known as the Good Lady, the White Rel has ruled the Faer since they came up out of the muck on the shores of Wind River. She made them what they are, through endless toil, careful planning, and utter ruthlessness toward anything that might threaten either the peace of the cities or her leadership. The word of the White Rel is the Law of the cities and it is strictly enforced. Anyone unwilling to follow rules is reeducated with extreme prejudice. Those who break the Law of her land are summarily exiled to the great wide World, where their sheltered lives often leave them unable to cope with fauna, other peoples, and even harsh sunslight, leading eventually to madness and finally death. But through this iron-fisted dictatorship, the White Rel has kept a peace so complete that Faera overlooks the sometimes harsh reality of Her people’s lives.
But the other Goddessi are not quite so forgiving. Yet to interfere with Faera’s followers is to invite similar meddling with Their own worshippers. Thus, the situation must be changed by an outside force.
Enter Kimber and her less-than-merry band.
In a Tale not told, Kimber and Cho entered the city of Caelan. They were met by many wonders and the people of the city were kind, in an aloof, confused way, but they were amazed at a rel who spoke and their trust in the White Rel, who could not speak, was shaken. When Kimber moved on, the seeds her visit had planted led to a great revolt, which was unfortunately quashed quite quickly, leading to the exile of hundreds and the deaths of many who leapt from the city ramparts into the all-consuming rapids of Wind River, rather than face life either in the harsh World or under the White Rel’s harsh rule.
The Goddessi were not happy with this outcome and They decided that Kimber should do more. In another untold Tale, Kimber and her compatriots came into the city and as the people began to revolt, Kimber came into herself. She found confidence and became as she most wanted, something more than the wisps of a Tale always in danger of blowing away on the breeze into the lurking darkness.
Unfortunately, what she became was the next White Rel. When the Good Lady was overthrown and locked within the Pillar that upheld the city, the people knew of no other life and set Kimber as their new leader, although she had no understanding of what it entailed. Without direction, the cities began to fail and people grew hungry and inconvenienced and they remembered back to days of peace and security, until their thoughts shaped Kimber into a mirror of the White Rel and she ruled as the Good Lady had, losing herself in the role.
This too was not to the Goddessi’s liking and it angered Faera that the White Rel, whom she loved so well, was treated so poorly. Before the other Goddessi could hatch yet another plan, the Heaven Walker went down upon the World to Caelan and warned the White Rel that a strange cousin to her would soon come and disrupt the peace of her home.
The White Rel readied herself, calling down a great rain from the clouds to assure that anyone coming toward the city would have to take shelter. She went down upon the earth, though not truly, for she hovered so that her feet would not touch the corrupted remains of the World Mother. No Faer, save those exiled by her decree, have touched the earth since they left the shores of the river to live in their sky cities.
But Faera saw that the White Rel would not allow even a chance of disruption to the lives of the Faer. The Good Lady gathered skysplitters in her fists and held murder in her heart. Fearful what would happen if the White Rel were to kill Kimber, Faera warned the Good Lady’s assistant, a young boy whom the White Rel had loved best of all the Faer she had ever known in the entirety of her exceptionally long years. The Heaven Walker commanded the boy to go down to the earth and warn Kimber away. The boy was terrified to leave the city and his lady’s side, knowing he could never return should he set foot upon the World, but he did as he was told.
The boy found Kimber’s hiding place and pleaded with her to go, but the Good Lady soon found them. Fearful of failing in the mission Faera had given him, he attempted to talk the Good Lady out of her plans to kill the other rel. He loved her greatly and knew that she loved him too and was confident that she would see reason.
She did not. She sent him flying so far away that the sky split open and swallowed him up before he could fly beyond its borders and she sent Kimber and Cho and the kite off toward the heart of the killing desert unprepared, trusting the suns and thirst and the terrorous creatures and people of the sands to finish them off, leaving Bre’et and Kipi alone in the World.
The White Rel returned and reigned for many, many years as she had, until the boy she had thrown away returned. But that is another Tale.