Chapter 4, Pig and Shovel.
Seltheen looked around from the top of
a lone tree while Yar saw to the mules and the wagon. She hoped he
knew what to do for the poor exhausted creatures, but right now it
was more important for her to watch for enemies. After about half an
hour she came down having seen no sign of anyone coming. “How soon
can we move?” she asked. “We can move now” responded Yar. “We
just have to turn off the road and take it slowly. This meadow is
deceptive; it has hard subsoil, almost as good as a road. And the
plants will soon spring back, hiding our tracks from casual
detection. Now you see that clump of pale pink flowers over there?
With the big fleshy stems? Bring them. Bring everything, the flowers,
the stems and the bulbs. I’ll make something for our bumps and
bruises.” That night as she fell asleep, Seltheen mused on her
people’s long habit of making neighboring populations fear them.
That certainly helped soften up resistance to a raiding party. She
had never considered how the practice might have negative
consequences. Then it occurred to her how rare it was for single
rinkers to meet those consequences. In previous generations each such
journey could make a saga. Now it was becoming commonplace, ever
since the rinkers had been forced to stop attacking others. Curse
those nildrer!
They crossed the meadowlands without
further incident.
Three days later, Seltheen finally got
to do some serious hunting. Yar had made a deal with the leader of a
small village. The village would give them shelter, supplies and some
attention from their smith, carpenter and other local artisans. And
all they had to do was kill a marauding pig. All Seltheen had to do
was kill it, of course. And she was sure he had misrepresented their
relationship, both personally and professionally. This was confirmed
when she saw that they had been offered a single hut to sleep in.
She took out her annoyance on the pig.
She killed it with a single thrust but broke her spear in the
process.
She explained things to Yar. “If the
carpenter and I have managed to understand each other, it will take a
few days to properly prepare a new shaft. And then another day for
the smith to fit my spearhead to it. Until then, we are staying,
that’s all there is to it!” Expecting an argument, she folded her
arms and assumed her best expression of implacability. But Yar didn’t
argue. He just shrugged and said there was no hurry. Meanwhile, the
villagers were scouring all of their biggest pots. There were even a
couple of washtubs and a trough. Several piles of wood had been lit
inside a small barn. Some were to heat the various vessels and some
were for smoking. A group of adolescents was sluicing out entrails
and hanging them from posts. A frail old grandfather was picking
through a pile of savory greens. He muttered their convoluted names
thoughtfully. A young mother wielded a scraper over a mottled hide
while her children collected stiff shaggy hairs in a bag. There was a
lot of pig to process.
Seltheen studied the fields surrounding
the village. It was the best way to avoid looking at the villagers.
More specifically, it was the best way to avoid looking at their
skin, so much of which was on display. Below the waist the chuudibs
wore mainly loincloths or mid thigh length skirts, or occasionally
short pants. Above the waist they wore sleeveless shirts and vests.
When they felt cold, they just added something heavier over all of
it. Sometimes there would be more covering for protection, but it was
flung away as soon as it wasn’t needed. And if it wasn’t cold and
the job was really dirty then--- Oops, she suddenly realized that the
ditchdiggers in the distance were working entirely naked. Well, many
of the children were naked too, but that didn’t bother her because
that was part of rinker custom as well. But long before adolescence
every rinker child acquired a decent sense of propriety. Yar had good
naturedly needled her about her attitude. Rinkers were so proud to be
free of the many fears and quirks that hampered civilized folk, but
they had the biggest nudity taboo of any known culture. Weren’t
they proud of their hard won physiques? Seltheen refused to discuss
it. It was something a stonedweller would never understand.
Spit roasted kidneys and blood
fortified the stew at dinner. Definitely food for a warrior. What
surprised Seltheen was the lavish praise for the scooped out slabs of
bread that the meal was eaten from. Back in the Rinks baking was a
function of the Unclan, the group of outcasts and unfit in each tribe
who were not part of any clan but did the menial labor for all. No
one would ever praise an unclanner, neither they nor their work was
worthy of it. Still, she had to admit, this bread was the best she’d
ever tasted.
After the edge had been taken off
everyone’s appetite, the villagers looked to Yar. “Showtime!”
he announced with a big grin. Or at least, that’s what she assumed
he’d said. He took out his fuunok and brushed the metal strips on
its face gently. He made it hum, then buzz, then ring. He began to
sing strange looping tunes in the long liquid syllables of the
chuudib language. A hand squeezed Seltheen’s arm. She turned,
startled, and found herself facing one of the villagers. “You are
the carpenter’s son, I believe”, she said. “Did you need
something?” He smiled, and ran his fingers along her face. Whatever
he said was outside her limited chuudib vocabulary, but his meaning
was unmistakable. “Oh”, she said. “Do you know somewhere warm
and dark? Lead on.”
Yar watched her go. Good to see her
getting along with the natives. He studied his audience. Peasants.
“Good sturdy peasant stock”, as writers and officials liked to
put it when trying to flatter such people. They were in a good
location, fertile, well watered, close enough to other chuudib
communities to trade but not close enough to be dominated by any of
them. More importantly, they were apparently far away enough from any
rinker incursions to feel safe. Hmm, people who feel safe in real
life tend to like danger in their stories. So, then. He accepted a
fresh drink and began.
This is the story
of the Traveling Shovel of Death.
A long time ago,
far away in the gorvij lands, there was a storyteller. More than a
storyteller, actually. She was a minstrel, a person with a lot of
skill in the performing arts. None of them are as good as me, of
course, but she came close, being one of the best. But even the best
occasionally come up short. Not me, of course, I mean the best of the
regular entertainers, other than Yar the Magnificent.
The minstrel was
spinning a new tale extemporaneously. It was full of mystery and
suspense and terror. She had her protagonist, a plucky farm girl not
unlike some that I see here, hiding in a barn from a shadowy band of
attackers. They were closing in fast. And that’s when she, the
minstrel that is, suddenly ran out of ideas. She had cornered herself
as well as her character. But she was a professional and kept her
cool. She pretended to have a coughing fit and took a long drink to
cover herself. I don’t do that. When I cough it means my throat is
dry and I need a drink for real. Like, cough cough, right now. Oh
thank you.
The minstrel looked
around. She was outside at the time, speaking to a group of miners on
a fine evening much like this one. She saw a shape in the darkness,
just beyond the fire light. There was something leaning against the
wall where she could have sworn there was nothing a moment ago. She
strained to see what it was, realized it was a shovel. Inspiration
struck! She had her protagonist find a shovel under a pile of old
burlap sacks. She dragged it out and raised it just as the leader of
the attackers came around the corner. She lashed out in blind panic
and somehow managed to slice into the woman’s neck, killing her
instantly. The others ran off, never to be seen again. At the end of
the story, the protagonist flung the shovel into a river because she
was horrified by what she did and didn’t want to be reminded.
I say the end of
the story, but I mean the end of the story the minstrel told. Because
there was another ending, what sophisticated literary types call an
epilog. You see, two days later, one of the people who had been
listening to that story, took the shovel that had inspired the
minstrel, and bashed in the head of a neighbor he’d been feuding
with for years. He was hanged for that killing. Afterwards, no one
could find the shovel.
Now the number of
performers in this world is relatively small, and most of us wander a
lot. So we often cross each others’ paths and when we do, we swap
stories. This story has spread and it seems to give rise to further
inspiration. Sooner or later, every performer will tell a story in
which someone gets killed with a shovel. At the same time, there are
also many reports of people being killed by disappearing shovels in
real life. This has led some to conclude that it is all the same
shovel, manifesting itself both in the world and in people’s minds.
It has come to be known as the Traveling Shovel of Death. So, if
you’re a performer like me, whenever you tell this story, you
always look around. Let’s do that right now, shall we? Look around
you. Lo-o-ok a-a-r-rou-ou-nd! Are there any shovels in sight? No?
Good.
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