PART 2 THE ADVANCING DARKNESS
CHAPTER I THE SMELL OF STONES
Kassa and Gina smiled at each other as they strolled through Sula Lassal with their friends Lalaka and Yossa. Having just stuffed themselves with freshly fried losso, they were now sucking on delicious candied fruit. But more than the food, it was being able to treat their friends that made them feel so good.
“Luisha is the treasure of the king of Kanbal,” the chieftain had told Tonno and Kassa when they finished relating their story. “Only he has the authority to sell it.” And he had given the stone to Yuguro with instructions to take it to the king.
Kassa had known that he was right, but it still hurt to see him take it away. As if Yuguro had read his mind, he asked them to wait. He returned shortly with a heavy sack full of silver coins and placed it in Tonno’s hands. “I know it can’t compare with the true value of luisha,” he said, “but let me give you three thousand nal as a payment. This priceless information could save our clan.”
Tonno looked stunned. It was a huge sum of money, enough to feed his family for two years.
“Now here’s what you should do,” Yuguro continued. “Tell everyone that Gina and Kassa found a piece of lyokuhaku in the river and brought it to me. Although it’s unusual, it does happen sometimes, and one stone would be worth about three thousand nal. No one will doubt your story — they’ll think you just happened to get lucky.” Then he fixed his piercing gaze on both of them. “But you must promise me one thing: Don’t tell anyone about the luisha or the traveler. And make the rest of your family promise too.”
Tonno and Kassa agreed. The reward was an amazing piece of good fortune. “I won’t have to go away to work this winter!” Tonno yelled as soon as they reached home. Joy lit the faces of Kassa’s mother and grandmother, and they talked late into the night about how to spend the money. Then Tonno gave Kassa and Gina two hundred nal each, along with a lecture about not wasting it. As one nal was enough to buy twenty losso, they could hardly believe their luck.
Gina was disappointed by the restrictions on their story. She had been looking forward to Shisheem’s reaction when she showed him the hakuma. But she soon hit upon another plan. “I know! All I have to do is say that I went into the cave on a different night. I’ll wait till things have settled down a bit, and then I’ll make him pay for teasing us!”
As they walked through the village, Kassa decided to buy some losso for the Herder People who worked for his family. Warriors like Shisheem who belonged to the chieftain’s line rarely had any dealings with these little people: They paid them milk and wool for looking after their goats, but that was all. Warriors like Kassa who belonged to branch lines, however, grew up with them as if they were part of the family.
Of course, there were clear distinctions between the warriors and the Herders. The Herders worked for the warriors, not the other way around. They never went to school, and they never married warriors or even commoners. They remained Herders all their lives. But Kassa spent most of his time with them after school, tending goats on the crags. Likewise, Gina and his mother worked with Herder women and girls weaving woollen cloth and tilling the fields — jobs his mother far preferred to spending time with her brothers’ wives. In fact, she was so active and vivacious that Kassa suspected she had been just like Gina when she was a girl.
Before they left Sula Lassal, he and Gina each bought a bag of thirty freshly made losso. Now that their initial excitement had died down, they were anxious to escape from the marketplace. News of their good fortune had spread quickly and shopkeepers called out to them wherever they went.
“Wouldn’t your mother enjoy some of these fresh spices?”
“Gina! Kassa! Come see what I have here!”
After parting from Gina and their friends, Kassa began climbing the steep, rocky slope. The clear autumn air bore a faint hint of snow. The higher he climbed, the more the world around him expanded. He gazed down at the land, which rolled far into the distance like waves on the sea, and marveled at what a beautiful world the god Yoram had made. The story of the creation ran through his mind.
In the beginning, there had been only whirling darkness. From this burst the first flash of light — Yoram, the god of thunder, or the “Backless One.” The front of his body was the Great Light, while his back was the Great Darkness. He was the god of both the blinding thunderbolt and of the darkness from which it emerged. The ancestors who founded the nine clans were born from the body of the Great Light: from his right and left ears, Musa and Yonsa; from his right and left eyes, Muro and Yonro; from his right and left hands, Muga and Yonga; from his right and left feet, Muto and Yonto; and from his nose, Na. Kanbal, the ancestor of the royal line, was born last of all, emerging from the god’s forehead. It was he who established the kingdom of Kanbal over the Yusa range. The Great Darkness likewise birthed children who founded nine other clans, and the line of kings that ruled the Mountain Kingdom beneath the Yusa range.
Each of the ten clans of Kanbal received their own territory and traveled to it. From afar, they saw only rocky mountains; not a blade of grass, not a tree nor a drop of water blessed the land. But when the clan founders set foot on the territory given to them, grass and trees sprouted from the soil, springs and streams flowed forth, and little people and goats emerged from the ground. The little people were the Herders, who cared for the goats and gave their milk to the clan founders. In return, the founders vowed to protect the land and the Herder People from harm.
This story always made Kassa wonder how merchants and tradesmen had come into being. Physically, they were clearly of the same race as he, so when, he wondered, had the clans split into warriors and commoners?
Suddenly he heard a piercing whistle. He looked up quickly and saw a Herder youth poking his head out from behind a rock. It was Yoyo, a boy he had known since childhood. Although Kassa, to his chagrin, was the shortest of his peers, he always felt like a giant when he was with the Herders. Yoyo was fifteen, like Kassa, but he only came up to his friend’s chest, and even the adults reached no higher than Kassa’s shoulders.
The Herders were a dark-skinned people with bushy gray hair and wide, lively eyes that animated their friendly, broad-nosed faces. They were very tough and wore nothing but leather breeches, except in the middle of winter. The soles of their feet were so hard they could run about the craggy slopes barefoot, and they were as nimble as the mountain goats they tended. The men always carried “eagle chasers,” slender wooden staffs tipped with stone points, to fend off eagles that attacked the baby goats. Kassa had once offered to buy Yoyo an iron tip for his staff, but Yoyo refused, saying he hated the smell of iron.
“You smell good!” Yoyo called out to him now.
Kassa grinned and raised the bag he carried. “I bought thirty losso so you can share them with everyone.”
Yoyo’s eyes grew round with surprise and he swallowed loudly. “Wow! Thanks! It’s just about time for a break anyway. Let’s go down to Spring Hollow and meet the others.” He let out a series of shrill whistles: “Hiyu, hyo, hyo, hiyuwee!” The sound bounced off the cliffs and multiplied. The Herder People could carry on an entire conversation in whistles alone.
Spring Hollow was a thicket surrounding a spring that flowed from a hollow in a rock. By the time Kassa and Yoyo pushed their way through the bushes, four or five other Herders had already gathered there, sitting about and chewing on nyokki, a tree root. Yoyo’s father and grandfather were heating up goat’s milk over a fireplace made of three flat stones. Toto, the oldest Herder male in Musa territory and a clan elder, was there too.
“Grandpa, Kassa bought us thirty losso!”
The men exclaimed at the gift. Yoyo’s father added fragrant koluka leaves to the hot la to make lakoluka, a milky tea, and poured it into bowls. Then they divided up the losso and sat down to enjoy the feast. When they asked him how he had become so wealthy, Kassa repeated what Yuguro had told him. Although he hated lying to his friends, he could not break his promise. Just as Yuguro had said, no one in his own clan had questioned his story, and he was sure the Herders would accept it too.
But as they listened, their expressions changed and they fell silent. It was obvious they did not believe a word he said. Finally Toto the Elder removed the nyokki stick from his mouth and rested it on his knee. “Now listen here, Kassa boy,” he said. “You just keep that lie shut up behind those lips of yours. We’re not saying you have to tell us the truth if you don’t want to, but we don’t want to listen to lies.”
Kassa’s cheeks burned red. “What makes you think I’m lying?”
The Herder People looked at each other uncomfortably. Yoyo shrugged. “Kassa, you just don’t smell like lyokuhaku.”
“I don’t smell like lyokuhaku? You mean stones smell?”
The Herders grinned. “Maybe not to you big people,” Yoyo said, “but to us, all the stones in the caves have very strong scents.”
Kassa frowned. “Are you making fun of me? Even if lyokuhaku does smell, of course I wouldn’t smell like it. I gave it to Yuguro.”
Toto scratched his chest noisily. “The smell of the stones in the cave doesn’t fade away after just a day. Kassa boy, you’ve got a piece of hakuma on you now, right?”
Kassa started. It was true. He still carried the piece of hakuma he had found the other night inside his tunic.
Toto’s sleepy-looking eyes suddenly widened and stared straight at him. “And that’s not all. You smell like luisha, the luminous blue stone. I smelled it as soon as you stepped into this glade.”
Kassa stared back at him, deeply shaken. The Herder People with whom he had lived since birth suddenly seemed like strangers.
Toto thumped his eagle chaser on the ground and stood up. “Hey there!” he said to his fellow Herders. “How long do you plan to rest? The Great Sun in the heavens will set before you know it!”
The tension in the air dissipated instantly as the others jumped to their feet. Thanking Kassa for the food, they hurried off to their work. Soon Kassa stood alone in Spring Hollow with Toto, who was in charge of the fire. He felt overcome with a desolate loneliness.
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