LAUREL WINTER
SKY EYES
THE FIRST TIME I MET SKY Eyes, I thought she was blind. Her eyes were
clouded
white-blue, with no black circles in the middle, no white back ground. I thought
she was blind, and then she looked at me and saw that I was seven years old and
my mother
was sick with something that ate her until her arms were brown sticks
and my father
wouldn't admit it and I wanted everything to be back the way it
was, but knew--even
then--that it could never be that way again.
I don't know how I knew this, but I did.
She
also saw that I had been sent to her against my will to bring back some
healing potion to
cure my mother or, more likely, some soothing potion to help
her die. This latter she gave
me, a slender, black vial, accepting the single
coin from my small, brown hand, but the
knowledge in her cloudy eyes held me.
She saw that we were just come to the village and not
likely to move on. And she
saw deeper -- the strange patterns of thought in my child mind,
that I had taken
care to hide even from my mother.
"Oh, Jamillah, the person you could be,"
she said, touching my chin with a cool
finger. "Are you brave enough? Are you cold enough?"
I ran then, without words, but she didn't seem to mind. "You'll come back," she
called.
Never,
I told myself, frightened in a way that made my very bones quiver beneath
my flesh. How had
she known my name? I wanted to dash the vial of soothing
potion against a rock, for I could
feel peaceful death within it. I would have
smashed it, too, but for the fact that I could
also feel painful death whenever
I touched my mother. Old knowledge, for a child of seven,
that caught in my
throat. Sometimes I didn't speak for days.
I was the one who fed my mother
the potion, a drop at a time. The neck of the
vial was just large enough to admit my
smallest finger, let it emerge,
glistening. Her lips held what smile they could as I
touched the finger to her
tongue. Then her eyes would glaze slightly, as the pain left her.
And a bit of
her life went, too.
The vial didn't last as long as she did. I couldn't bear to
give more than a
single drop, couldn't bear the sleep that so mimicked death when I gave
her two
drops in quick succession. She lingered and I was sent back to Sky Eyes with the
empty vial. This time we hadn't even a coin.
People talked when they saw me slowly walking
up the street with the black vial
in my hands. People always talk as if children cannot
hear, or, if they do hear,
cannot understand. Since I hadn't spoken for weeks now, and no
one believed I
would again, they didn't even bother to lower their voices.
"That poor,
strange child."
"What her parents are thinking, sending her to that witch.... "
"Ah, but
she's a girl, so she should be safe. I don't allow my son to even speak
to that woman."
"What
will happen to the child when the mother dies?"
By then my cold feet had taken me to the
door of Sky Eyes's hut. The black,
empty vial gleamed in my hand. Before I could knock on
the rough wood the door
opened to me. "Come in," she said. "No need to stand in the cold --
or listen to
poisonous gossip." This last she said clearly, in a voice that carried to at
least three of the gossipers. They walked swiftly away whispering to each other.
She led me
in to the flickering warmth, but my shivers did not decrease. Her
eyes were clear, pale
blue -- winter sky blue -- without the clouds that had
drifted through them before. I moved
my mouth to ask why, but the sounds had
forgotten how to come out. No matter; she knew my
question.
She gave the merest shrug. "No one knows, least of all I. Some say my mother
spent
too much time looking at the sky when she was carrying me inside, looking
at the sky and
wishing to be somewhere other than where she was. And then I was
born and she was." She
paused for a bare moment and continued matter-of-factly.
"My mother died when I was born.
At least you've had yours for seven years."
I stared at her. No matter how many people
whispered about my mother's impending
death behind my back, to my face it was always,
"...when your mother gets
better.... " Even my father, when he sent me for this soothing,
killing potion,
sent me with lies about medicine to make her strong, make her well. But I
knew,
and so did my mother, and so did Sky Eyes. I gravely held out the vial.
"Poor child,"
she said, taking it in a small, neat hand. "You couldn't bear to
end it quickly, could
you?"
Pain filled me.
"The best thing is usually the hard thing," she said. She went to a
stained
wooden table and anchored the vial in a lump of reddish clay. She stuck a small
funnel
into the slender black neck. "If it's too easy -- like telling a child
her mother will live
instead of admitting she'll be dust before the month is out
--" She poured a thin, gleaming
stream into the mouth of the funnel, a mere
thread of liquid. "If it's too easy, it's
likely wrong."
She quit pouring almost as soon as she'd begun, when even an inexperienced
child
could tell the vial was nowhere near full. She took the funnel out and placed it
in a
basin of water. She rinsed her hands and dried them on her gray skirt.
"Can you remember
that?" she whispered, seating the stopper firmly before
handing the vial back to me. "The
best thing is usually the hard thing."
Traces of clay marked the black. I didn't have to
nod to show her I would always
remember; she knew. She closed her eyes and was an ordinary
woman, tired, but
with traces of beauty that nothing could erase. "Go now," she said. "Be
quick or
the cold will eat your feet."
She hadn't mentioned payment, and I scurried for the
door, half afraid she would
demand a coin I didn't have, but she was silent. As I left
though, she
whispered, just loud enough for me to hear, "Come back to me."
I didn't linger
on the way home, although the tiny vial felt heavy to me, as
though it contained an entire
world.
My father let me into our room, which had one bed, continuously occupied by my
mother.
When he slept, which wasn't often, he crept next to the wall and made
himself as thin as
possible. I slept next to the fire atop a folded blanket and
beneath my mother's cloak. The
room smelled sick, stale, hopeless, but somehow
the cloak had retained a warm, sheep smell.
Aside from the clothes we wore, our
few belongings were stacked near the wall, still packed
in bundles. Something
about that made me uneasy, but Father could not be bothered to think
about them.
We had been traveling toward Shaboor when Mother's sickness had demanded we
stop;
he still maintained that we would be going on soon, soon, when she was a
little stronger.
He spent all his time with her, stroking her face with his
fingers or laying cool cloths on
her forehead -- switching to hot when cool did
no good. Nothing did any good. She just lay
there dying.
She was awake now, her lips drawn back in a grimace of pain, too weak even to
weep. "You have the medicine, Jamillah?" Father asked. "She gave it to you?"
I nodded.
"Quickly,
then. The waiting is so hard for her."
I went toward the bed, but I couldn't force my feet
to move quickly. The best
thing is usually the hard thing. My father gave me a little
shove. "She's
waiting."
I stood by the bed and looked for her smile, but it had been eaten
away by the
pain. The lines in her face belonged to a woman who had lived her whole life
and
was ready to die. The best thing...I lifted the vial and she moved her lips. I
moved my
own, trying to bring words out. Goodbye. I love you. Please tell me
what to do. Neither of
us could speak, though. I leaned over and kissed her
wasted cheek. The hard thing...I
removed the stopper and tilted the vial,
watching the thick, shining potion trickle into
her mouth.
Father watched me from the middle of the room. He knew what I was doing, but he
just stood and watched until it was too late and then he ran to the bed with a
cry and
snatched the vial. "What are you doing? You are giving her too much."
He slapped me, hard,
which he had never done before. I buried myself in the wool
of Mother's cloak and let my
tears lead me into sleep.
SOMETIME in the night, while I slept, my mother died and my
father left. I awoke
to angry voices in the hall. " -- gone and she's dead and that child
without a
tongue in her head. What are we supposed to do with her?"
I didn't want to open my
eyes, but I couldn't stop myself. My mother lay
terribly still in the bed, with her hands
arranged across her chest. The bundles
were gone. All that was left was me and the cloak I
slept under. And the black,
empty vial on the night table.
The fire was out; the air against
my face cold. I wanted to silence my ears as
well as my voice, but the argument in the hall
continued to invade.
"She could sweep up and scrub the pots perhaps."
"I will not have her
here! Do you know what she did?"
"She's a mere child." The fat man who did his wife's
bidding; he'd slipped me
sweets before when she wasn't looking.
It was the wife, the
innkeeper herself, who hissed now. "She killed her own
mother."
Suddenly there was no warmth
in the cloak, no warmth left in my body. I began to
shiver violently.
"Now, you can't know
that."
"When I was up to start the bread, I heard him crying, 'what has she done, what
has
she done?' and then this morning the woman is dead and the daughter left
behind with the
empty poison bottle. Maybe we could sell her to pay the bill for
the burial and the room."
There was still no warmth in the world, but I stood and drew the cloak around
me. It
dragged on the rough floor. I walked past the bed that held my silent
mother and went to
the window. It opened easily, I knew, for we had frequently
tried to air the room of the
sick smell -- never successfully --despite the
winter.
Our room was on the ground floor,
looking into a narrow alley. I pulled myself
up on the frame and swung my legs through. The
cloak caught on a loose nail.
When I pulled it free, a long curl of wool ripped off. Then I
was gone, leaving
my mother to the cold. I don't know what the innkeepers said when they
found I
was gone, but I imagine they were relieved for different reasons: he that he
wasn't
forced to deal with the idea of selling me, and she that she wasn't
forced to deal with me
at all.
I had never come out through the alley before. The backs of the buildings --
unpainted,
rough -- were much different than the fronts. The wind whistled
between them, diving
through the gaps in my cloak. I didn't want to come out
just in front of the inn, where
they might see me, so I ran along the alley
until it spit me onto a street. Thin ice broke
under my bare feet, cut my
ankles. I was crying, but silently, tears freezing on my
eyelashes and cheeks.
By the time I'd stumbled around and found myself in familiar
surroundings, my
teeth were chattering so hard that I couldn't have spoken had I been
otherwise
able to. By the time I reached Sky Eyes's door, I could barely walk. I crept up
the steps, and fell against the door. My feet were numb, and my fingers, and my
heart. I
couldn't even knock, but lay there thinking that I should. The wind
burrowed down the
gaping neck of the cloak. Too cold. Too penetrating.
The door opened and I sprawled into
warmth. Sky Eyes lifted me. "I'm sorry that
you had to do what you did," she said, "but I'm
not sorry you did it." She
carried me to the fire, shutting out the cold with a push of one
bare foot. She
wore only a loosely tied robe; her grip on me shifted it from one shoulder
and I
could see the swell of one breast and its brown nipple. Her eyes were golden and
rose
and violet, a sunset giving over to dusk. I was too deadened by cold to be
embarrassed.
"Who
is it?" asked a young male voice. Over her shoulder, I saw one of the
village boys, wrapped
in a bedsheet. His shoulders were bare and sweaty and so
was the rest of him, I knew,
beneath the sheet. He glowered at me, impatient at
the interruption.
She set me down on the
hearth stone. "Her name is Jamillah." She was touching my
feet now, although I could barely
feel it. She frowned. "Her mother just died
and her father has abandoned her. She's going
to live with me and be my
student."
She pulled her gaping robe shut. "Put your clothes on,"
she told him. "I'm done
with bed for the time being."
"But --" he said, and then did as he
was told. It made me angry in a way that I
didn't understand at all, that he would just
stop in the middle of that curious
dance adults did, with hardly an argument, merely
because she said so. I think
even then I realized how hard it would be to defy her myself.
She ignored him then, although I watched him through my half-frozen lashes, as
he awkwardly
struggled into his pants, dropping the sheet in the process. I had
seen glimpses of my
father in the mornings or evenings, getting into and out of
the bed he shared with my
mother before she sickened, but never a well-muscled
young man, still hard with passion. It
made me uneasy, but still I looked.
Sky Eyes took hot water from a kettle near the fire and
mixed it with cold in a
large, shallow bowl, then dripped something light green and
fragrant into it.
"Sit with your back to the wall here," she told me. I ended up with my
feet and
hands in the bowl, knees bent up to my chest and the bowl directly before me.
The
scent of the water and the pain of returning sensation in my hands and feet
made me feel as
if I were floating through a burning sea.
The boy came up behind Sky Eyes as she was
dampening a cloth in the water. He
ran his hands down her back. "Go," she said. "I've no
time for you now."
"But we haven't finished --"
She gave him one steady look of her sunset
eyes, which were almost entirely gone
to violet now. He left without another word.
She
sighed. "I do like to bed that boy," she said, "when it's convenient. Ah,
well, he'll be
back."
My pain was not enough to conceal my embarrassment and surprise. She turned the
steady
gaze on me. "I am not used to having children about," she said, "although
the villagers
would have that I am despoiling their male children. In my mind,
there is nothing evil or
dirty about sex, as long as all participants are
willing and reasonably grown up. There is
more harm done in half the marriage
beds in this village than is imagined in mine. I will
not pretend that I am a
celibate priestess." She bathed my face with the cloth. "So if a
lusty young man
knocks at the door, let him in." Her mischievous grin faded into total
seriousness.
"If any of them -- or any else -- ever touch you against your will,
you have my permission
to kill them."
I burst into shaking tears at that statement, and Sky Eyes held me,
oblivious to
the water spilled on her robe. "You did what you had to--no, not what you had
to; what you could. You did the hard thing, the best thing, and now her pain is
over."
I
cried harder, clinging to her with hands that burned with ice. I wanted to
hear that it
wasn't my fault, that my mother hadn't died at my hands. Sky Eyes
drew back and held my
shoulders. "You did it. Neither of us will pretend
otherwise. If you do not accept that, I
will bundle you up and carry you back to
the innkeepers to be sold for debts. You choose."
My tears died within me, and the last of my childhood. I nodded. "I'm sorry it's
so," she
said, hugging me to her, "but with ability comes responsibility. I
don't know yet if your
mother would have thanked you or not, and your father
certainly did not, but I think that
you will someday believe you did the best
thing." She wiped away my tears with the fragrant
cloth, examined my hands and
feet. "Well, you won't be running away for a day or two. Let's
get you into my
bed now -- since I'm not using it at the moment." She winked one
gray-violet eye
and carried me to a big bed. The four posts had lengths of black silk tied
to
them. She deftly unknotted them.
I must have looked as curious as I felt. "Sometimes, if
you wish it --or your
partner does --" she began, placing the cloth in a covered basket.
Her voice
trailed off and a faint flush came to her cheeks. "Never mind for now."
Later that
day, Sky Eyes pulled boxes of dusty bottles out of a small storage
room. She hung
mismatched cloth to disguise the tall shelves that covered three
of the walls: yellow, with
slender green lizards printed on it; solid purple;
red and blue striped. Only one wall was
left to show cool, gray stone with a
wooden door in the center of it.
She had no other bed,
so she formed a pallet of blankets and pillows on the
floor. "Here," she said, carrying me
in and setting me down. "Birdy has a nest
now. And I have my bed back -- just in case I
should need it." There were hooks
on the back of the door that had held dried herbs; the
air in the tiny room
still smelled of them. On the highest hook she hung the cloak which
was the only
thing inherited from my mother.
"I'll be going out now," she said, running one
hand along the wool lining. "If
any beautiful male creatures come by, tell them to wait a
few minutes for me --
or a number of years for yourself."
Then she was gone and I was alone.
I had never had a room of my own before.
She was gone for some hours, during which I
drowsed in and out of dream and
thought, not always sure which was which. The vial, held by
my winter-kissed
hands, approached my mother's lips. I tried to stop, but the hands moved
of
their own will, tilting the vial, pouring -- and then the face changed and it
was Sky
Eyes, her eyes as night black as the vial itself. "The best thing," her
voice a mere
breath, "is the hard thing. Is it so hard to forgive yourself?" And
then my hands were
holding the vial to my own lips and I was drinking a deep,
endless drop. And crying.
I
hadn't heard her return, but my cries brought her in to me. "I don't know what
to do," she
said, taking me into her arms. Her breath held the scent of wine;
her eyes were deep summer
blue with clouds floating across them. "Comfort is not
a coin I am often called to give."
She let me rest against her shoulder for a
moment and then set me back in the pillows. "I
can't take your pain away and
wouldn't if I could. No comfort now, but someday you will be
able to use it."
My sniffling subsided, not because of her less than tender words, but
because I
had worn out. Too much had happened in too little time. My eyes drifted shut.
Sky
Eyes touched my face. "I hate them," she said, her voice hard and vicious.
"I hate them
all."
The next day she slathered my hands and feet with gel and wrapped them with
strips of
cloth, wound round and round. "You are too big to carry far," she
said, "but I don't think
you can -- or should -- walk yet. Stand up for a
moment." I did, biting my lip against the
pain. She draped my mother's cloak
around me, fastening the throat clasp, and put on her
own. Then she crouched
down, facing away from me. "Climb onto my back."
It wasn't easy, with
my awkward, bundled limbs and two cloaks to deal with, but
she finally staggered to a
standing position. "It's a good thing you're only
seven," she said. "At twelve you may well
have to carry me." She had to let go
of one of my legs to open the door, and I almost fell
off.
She started laughing. "This will give them something to gossip about." She shut
the
door and grabbed me again, readjusting before she tottered off into the
wind.
When we
reached the low stone building, she pushed the door open without
knocking. I had had no
idea of our destination, but this place, cold by design,
revealed its nature by the bodies
stretched or twisted or curled up on the
narrow benches that hung in tiers from the walls.
A death house. A place where
the corpses of those unfortunate enough to die in winter were
kept until the
ground thawed. I wanted to run on my bandaged feet, but Sky Eyes carried me
to
the low bench where my mother lay. She let go. I tried to cling to her, but my
bandaged
hands gave out and I slipped to the floor beside my dead mother.
A thin layer of frost
covered her skin and clothes and hair, sealed her to the
bench. "Look at her expression,"
Sky Eyes said softly.
I made myself look. Under the frost, her mouth was slack, her teeth
barely
showing. Not drawn into that grimace of pain. Her hands were still arranged
across
her chest; my father's work, no doubt. He had comforted the dead and left
me huddled on the
floor. A sudden rage flared within me. He had known she was
dying, had known that the pain
easer was a life drainer, had known that I would
end up killing her. He had known and let
me do it and then blamed me for it.
A rough howl escaped me. I ran my hands over my
mother's face, her hands, her
frost-coated hair. Tears melted trails in her white frost
shroud. "No," I said,
my voice thick and awkward. "I didn't mean to."
"You did," said Sky
Eyes, looking at me through pink-tinted dusk. "You made a
choice, a decision, and carried
it out. You acted -- though it was perhaps the
hardest thing you will ever do in your life.
Poor child, that you were called
upon to do the hardest thing so young."
I hated her, for
not letting me lie even to myself, or to the dead. At the same
time, her words had a
curiously lightening effect. How hard could life be, if I
had already done the hardest
thing? I had yet to learn that the many smaller
hard things, common as dust, were more
wearing than the one hardest.
Fortunately, she didn't tell me, but let me discover it
myself, in the years to
follow.
"I'm sorry," I said, laying my face on my mother's cold
cheek. This time Sky
Eyes did not contradict me.
WHEN I HAD cried myself out and we were
both shivering violently, it was time to
leave the death house. I had to crawl up on the
edge of my mother's bench to get
on Sky Eyes's back, so stiff and clumsy were we both. I
found my gaze drawn to
the other bodies: several old ones who had found this last winter of
their lives
too harsh; a young woman with her dead child clasped upon her chest, both
pulled
into death by the birth; a large bearded man with terribly whitened hands and an
odd,
peaceful expression.
Sky Eyes nodded toward him. "They say that freezing to death makes one
warm and
sleepy, that there is no pain. I can feel that in him. Can you?"
Even as she asked
me, she was showing me how to do so. Almost against my will,
my mind threaded itself into
his death. Yes; it was a comfortable death, as was
the death of the old woman on the bench
beneath him. I jerked away from the
wrenching denial of the young woman who held her child
only after her life had
bled out of her. Sky Eyes stopped. She turned her head and looked
back over her
shoulder at me. "Do you want to feel her death?"
I held very still, afraid
that the shivering within me would be interpreted as
assent or denial. Would it be a
terrible thing to know? Would I regret it? Yet I
could not refuse. I nodded and let my mind
touch the last minutes of my mother's
life.
Release from pain. Regret that there would be no
more minutes of life, but
acceptance that it had to be that way to escape the consuming
pain. Shock and
sorrow at the knowledge in my eyes. Then nothing. Life flowing from her in
a
thin stream, until there was no more left in her.
I didn't notice that Sky Eyes had even
started walking until we were out of the
death house and down the street. Tears froze on my
cheeks. "You'd be better off
not crying now," she said. "Or your face will freeze and the
frozen-hearted
bitches of the village will be imagining that I am torturing you."
I stopped
crying and let my head rest on her left shoulder. Perhaps it was
torture, but it was the
torture of sudden, rapid growth. I fell asleep and
didn't wake until she let me slide to
the step outside her door.
"You are heavy," she said, opening the door with hands that
shook. "Perhaps it
is different when a woman has raised a baby from the first; the strength
in her
back and arms would grow along with the child. I must be an imbecile to begin
this
way."
Her words would have stung had she not, even as she was speaking, led me gently
in and
settled me on the hearth. She knelt beside me and stirred the embers with
a stick which
burst into flame. She built the fire up to a rage and leaned on
one arm, looking at me with
those summer blue eyes. "What a first lesson: how to
speak with the dead. There's no doubt;
I'm an imbecile." She affected the
childish expression of one who had but a small portion
of wit.
My mouth twitched into a smile and she dropped the pretense. "Ah, you must have
been
starved for humor if my poor performance is enough for you. I suppose I
will have to do,
flaws and all. Shall we have soup for supper? Or breakfast, I
guess it would be."
I had
never had soup for breakfast before, but then I had never listened to the
dead before
breakfast either. Of the two, I preferred the soup.
It was not the last time I ate soup for
breakfast, not the last time I listened
to the dead. Sky Eyes didn't put her attention to
knowing the proper foods to
eat at the proper times. Or perhaps she did know and just
refused to obey the
rules that the rest of the women followed: gruel or night-soaked grain
in the
morning; a hearty midday meal of freshly baked bread, meat, whatever fruits or
vegetables
could be found; soup and leftover bread, maybe a sweet, in the
evening. We were just as
likely to start baking bread near sundown and eat it
outdoors when the rest of the village
was abed, butter dripping from our fingers
as we pointed out stars to one another.
Sometimes, stars in her eyes echoed
those overhead.
Most frequently, we had no formal meals,
with each of us foraging through the
supplies whenever hunger bit. I ate a ten-day's worth
of sweeting once, but Sky
Eyes said nothing. She didn't have to; my stomach spoke more
firmly than any
reprimand. More than that, though, there was an odd restraining factor to
such
freedom. The mere thought that I could eat anything I wanted whenever I wanted
meant
that in our pantry there was little of the luster that the forbidden
holds.
The luster
glimmered on the knowledge she withheld for vague future times when I
was "older." That
curse of children -- to be forever too young for whatever is
currently tempting. It did not
occur to me that the opportunities she did give
me -- listening to the dead at seven; being
told openly about sex as a fine,
natural thing long before my woman hair began to grow;
eating or sleeping as my
body required it, not to the schedule of some adult -- were far
beyond the
rights of the other village children.
They despised me.
Sky Eyes never suggested I
go out to play with them, but neither did she
discourage me the first time I thought to. It
was spring of the first year with
her, my hands and feet fully healed from the winter kiss.
A group of children
were floating chips of wood along the wagon tracks that had filled with
water
the night before, splashing barefoot in the mud. Their parents were so relieved
to
have them out of the house after a long winter underfoot that the washing up
task ahead was
being completely ignored. Even the cleanest were spattered and
freckled with mud. I looked
from the window to the table where Sky Eyes was
sorting herbs. "Go if you wish,' she said.
There was more she wanted to say, but
she only tightened her lips and let me discover some
things for myself.
The taste of mud. The feel of a bony foot on the back of my neck,
pressing my
face into a deep rut until I couldn't hold my breath any longer. The deliberate
release, after I had been choking for several seconds, that would not allow me
to believe
it had been any sort of accident. The sudden quietness of children
who are no longer
playing but have moved into the work of being cruel.
For some, cruelty was no difficult
task. The tall girl who tripped me as I went
past her to see the boats and the boy with the
scarred cheek whose foot held me
down were the worst. I was more angry, though, at those
who were clearly uneasy,
the ones who formed the words and thoughts in their minds -- we
shouldn't be;
let her go; don't -- and yet said nothing.
When I struggled up to my knees,
sputtering and coughing, the front of my dress
completely blackened, they were all standing
around me in a ragged circle.
"She's a dummy," said the tall girl. "She's not even crying."
I touched my face. Amazingly, she was right.
"She probably can't," said someone else. I
didn't see who.
"I saw her crying." This was a boy with black curls almost hiding his eyes.
He
spoke in a whisper. "I was looking out the window. She was riding on the witch's
back in
the cold and crying."
"Really, Ketrin?"
He nodded, his beautiful hair dipping down.
"Witches
don't cry," said someone behind me. "Maybe she's not a witch."
"That's stupid," said
another. "My father says there are no witches, just
healers."
"She's not crying now, is
she?" asked the tall girl, ignoring the comment about
healers. She stepped closer. "She's a
witch now. The innkeeper says she killed
her mother. I heard her tell my mother."
They drew
back a fraction, but apparently fear was not enough to overcome
curiosity. Or cruelty.
I
didn't move. This was not a time to be angry, not a time to leap up and claw
at her with my
muddy fingers. She was too big and the others were on her side --
or at least not on mine.
My whole body and mind were tense and alert. I made my
face smooth and calm and just looked
at her.
She didn't expect that. I sensed her confusion; a second later she stopped.
"She's
not worth it. Little dumb witch brat. Let's go slide on the hill." She
turned and ran off,
making sure her first step sprayed dirty water on me.
The others followed her. About half
of them splashed me. Most of the rest
avoided my eyes. Only Ketrin hesitated, giving me an
apologetic smile before he
left.
I hated him most.
I knelt in the mud for a long time, until
the mud drying on my face made me feel
as if my skin would crack and fall off if my
expression changed. It wasn't until
a cart came sploshing toward me, the driver yelling
obscenities, that I moved.
Sky Eyes said nothing when I came in. She pulled the mud-caked
dress off over my
head and helped me into the big tub, already filled with gently steaming
water.
She dipped up handfuls of water and poured them over my face and hair.
As the mud
loosened, so did something within me, and I began to sob. Then her
whispers were pouring
over me as well, "I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry." Tears
poured from her cloud gray eyes
until her face was as wet as mine. Witches did
cry -- if that was what she was -- just not
in front of people like the tall
girl and the boy with the scar. People like Ketrin.
I never
did go to the village school. Sky Eyes didn't laugh at the school
teacher when he came by
to inform us that I should be educated. At the time, I
was measuring out -- to the drop --
the various ingredients that made up a
sleeping draught. The directions were written in Sky
Eyes's neat hand: one part
this to three parts that, and so on. She had told me to read
through the recipe,
see that I had all of the components to hand, and make as much as
possible, with
the limiting factor being whatever there was the least of. I was nine.
"Could
any of your students do this?" Sky Eyes asked.
"Certainly," said the teacher, after a
hesitation. He was a youngish man, very
tall, who had lived in the village for only a few
years. To my knowledge, he had
never before been to our house, but I thought by the way Sky
Eyes had greeted
him, how she had held his hand for just a moment longer than necessary
when he'd
offered it, that he would be back.
"Without supervision at each step?" Sky Eyes
took a sip of tea and looked at the
man over the rim of her cup. "And would you then drink
the sleeping draught,
keeping in mind that it contains bone leaf, which --in larger
proportion --
makes one sleep to the point of death?"
I continued my task, measuring and
mixing, but my hands were suddenly cold. Bone
leaf. Sleep to the point of death. I knew how
to make the potion in the black
vial now, as well as administer it.
The teacher gave her a
rueful grin, as if to concede the point. "She does well
at her reading and figuring," he
said, "but there are other things one learns at
school --"
Sky Eyes set her cup down and her
eyes went stormy. "Things like which hurts
most, the nose bleed after a slap or the soul
ache after some vicious
name-calling? Would you really have her learn that?"
The teacher
dropped his face into his hands. "No, no, you're fight. I would try
to protect her but it
would not be enough. She would be hurt and I would be
guilty." He looked up at me. "You
have a fine mind; I can see that. I would have
liked having you in my school but chances
are you would not have liked it. Is
your potion done yet?"
I had just begun funneling the
liquid into a rack of clean, gray vials, with the
rune for sleep scratched on the front of
each one. I nodded, and he handed me a
coin. "For when I have problems sleeping."
I
stoppered a vial and gave it to him, pleased by this evidence of faith.
He stood, and Sky
Eyes did as well. "You must come back," she said. "If you are
having problems sleeping."
The look she gave him, her eyes half-lidded storms,
accented her meaning.
Even at age nine,
I could sense his mixture of apprehension and desire. Desire
won. He held out his hand
again, although that was less common than doing so on
greeting. Sky Eyes extended her own
and their fingers met in something that was
more than half caress. Yes, he would be here
soon, making sounds that filtered
through the stone walls of my room.
THE SCHOOL MASTER did
come by, always late at night, when he supposed I would
not know. He didn't know just how
fine my mind was, that it could pick up his
thoughts and emotions as well as precisely
measure out the most complicated
potion. I sometimes saw him on the street when I was out
on errands for Sky
Eyes; he spoke kindly to me.
Sky Eyes was right, though. He couldn't have
protected me from the other
children. They tormented me at every opportunity, flinging
stones, animal
droppings, names. My legs grew long and I discovered that this gave me a
speed
which few of them could match. For a while, the girl who had tripped me the
first time
could catch me, but it wasn't long before she turned her attention
from childhood cruelty
to flirting with the older boys.
Ketrin never became my defender, but he at least never
participated in the
viciousness. If he was alone when he saw me, he would greet me. I
stopped hating
him. Other than Sky Eyes and some of her men, he was the closest I had to a
friend -- I couldn't afford to hate him.
At nine, my fascination with sex was tinged with
disgust. The disgust did not
last.
The fascination did.
I kept the hinges on my bedroom door
well-greased, and sometimes slipped out to
look at Sky Eyes and whoever happened to be
sharing her bed at the time. They
were mostly -- but not all -- young. Occasionally, one of
the older widowers or
unmarried bachelors came to the door, ostensibly for some potion or
other.
She told me this after the widower who ran the mill had been by. I watched them
from
the space between the table and some crates. Through the slats in the
crate, I could see
them stroking each other and plunging and shuddering. "No,"
she said, softly, with a catch
in her voice. "Oh, no." But it did not sound like
a command to stop. His silver hair fell
over her face like rain at dusk. He slid
his hips from side to side, over her, slowly,
slowly. Her fingers clutched the
sheet and she arched her back, and then they were moving
together, explosively.
My own fingers moved between my legs. I didn't know why it felt
good, only that
it did. Maybe I gasped. Maybe she had always known that I was watching and
where
I watched from.
At any rate, after he had gone, with one lingering touch and an even
longer
kiss, she called me out from my hiding place.
I was eleven. I had been there for four
years, long enough to know that she
would not hit me, no matter what I did. Still, my
stomach quivered as I stood
up.
She wore the same silk robe as she had the day I came to her
door half-frozen.
"Are you satisfied?" she asked. "Did you see what you needed to see?"
Whatever
I had expected, it wasn't this. Her cheeks flushed faintly. "It must
seem strange to you,
but it isn't. You'll discover it soon, whenever you are
ready."
My hands came up to my chest
and touched the tiny breasts there. It didn't seem
possible that I would ever have a
woman's figure, even though I already had the
beginnings of a woman's desire. One thing I
did have to know, though. I made
myself speak, my voice hoarse with disuse. "Touch
yourself?" Heat rushed to my
face.
Sky Eyes laughed. "Oh yes. When there is no one in my bed
-- or there is, and
he's inept and clumsy. Not everyone you bed will know how to please
you, so
you'd better know how to please yourself. Here, I have a gift for you." She
darted
back to her bed and took something out of a wooden chest. A long, curled
feather, orange
and yellow, streaked with blue. "The tailfeather of a
shennikan," she said, handing it to
me. "I like to stroke myself with one, my
arms and legs and breasts. And especially my
throat."
My fingers curled around the slender shaft of the feather. I must have looked
surprised,
because she laughed again. "Of course I touch my sex parts -- but
that doesn't mean I
ignore the rest of my body. Or my mind. Sometimes I can
bring myself pleasure just thinking
of hot, young bodies and lengths of silk --"
She turned bright pink. "I never imagined a
conversation like this, though." She
swatted my behind. "Take your feather and your
fantasies and go to bed now."
Another question, though. I hesitated. "Old ones?"
"Ah,
sometimes they're the best. The young have the energy -- but the old have
knowledge. They
know how to touch and move to please a woman. At least the ones
I invite into my bed." She
looked at me seriously. "Be careful who you invite
into yours, when you are ready to do so.
Search them for sickness, in body or
mind. And I will not take a man who has a wife."
She
slapped her forehead. "What am I saying -- telling one who hasn't had her
blood yet not to
bed married men. You poor child, to have me for .... "Her voice
trailed off, but we both
knew her thought. For a mother.
I had never called her mother, which wasn't unusual, as I
rarely spoke. More
importantly, though, I had not allowed myself to think of her as a
mother. I
wasn't sure she would welcome that. Now that I knew she would, I wasn't sure
that
I could. It pleased me though, to have the option.
"Thank you," I whispered.
"You're
welcome." As I was closing my door, she said, "Just be discreet."
Was she giving me
permission to watch? I didn't know and I didn't ask. There was
too much going on in my
head, not to mention my body.
Men were not the only visitors, though. The same women that
despised Sky Eyes,
that gossiped about her and futilely forbade their sons to come near
her, they
came for abortifacients, joint easers, the silvery drink that brought one out of
a dark mood, a dozen other things.
A few came secretly for Seeings and Knowings, sneaking
through the alleys and
tapping the back door with shaking fingers. If we sensed the visit
soon enough,
one of us would race to the door and open it just as she raised her hand. Mean
perhaps, but it enhanced belief. For some reason, those who sought Seeing or
Knowing were
always women. Did the men not know? Not believe? We talked about it
whenever a woman left,
the knowledge of the vision uneasy in her mind. Sky Eyes
was of the opinion that men
thought they knew and saw everything already. I
thought perhaps they didn't know we could
do such things.
Seeing and Knowing...the women didn't really understand either. They came
with
simple, specific questions: Will I have a child? Yes or no. Once though, when
the
answer was yes, we both got the dreadful image of a daughter with brain
enough to breathe
and no more. That time, Sky Eyes shook her head sadly. "No
child this time. I'm sorry. Let
me give you a tincture to help you deal with
this pain." The brew also contained a ridding
potion. There was no half-dead
baby born to that young woman.
When will my husband return
from the high lakes? Never, alas. But we didn't tell
her that he had taken up with a
mountain woman, that they laughed when they
thought of her, waiting back in the foothills.
Instead we let her keep the
warmer image of his body floating in the clear, cold water of
the lakes, fallen
in returning to her.
Seeing and Knowing. But not telling all. Perhaps it
was good that the men did
not come, and the women infrequently. Seeing and Knowing was not
precise and
simple and clearcut, as was the brewing of potions.
We were kept busy gathering
the ingredients in the fields and forests, along
streambanks, past the tree line of the
nearby mountains. Or trading for the more
exotic substances that the traveling peddlers
brought through.
There was one, a small man with a head as bald as a stone and skin as
black as
shadows who always spent an extra day or two in the village, much of it in Sky
Eyes's
bed, with scent sticks burning in a smoky circle. She smiled whenever she
saw him leading
his long-necked pack beast, its mane fluttering with bright
ribbons. After he left, she
always cried.
His name was Ta, unusual in this area, and he spoke with a strange lilt to
his
voice, peppering his speech with words from another language. I couldn't always
figure
out the meaning from context, but I didn't care. He called me Jami-bird
and measured
himself against me, back to back, on every visit. At eleven, my
head was already even with
his, although he teased me that it was my hair that
made me seem so tall. He was
fascinating, and in my fantasies I most frequently
imagined that Ta would be my first
lover, small and dark, singing to me in his
rich voice as he sang to Sky Eyes.
Eventually he
was my lover, but not my first.
I WAS FIFTEEN, or nearly that anyway. Sky Eyes had gone
climbing for bone leaf,
which was found only above the tree line, in the shadows of
boulders where
pockets of soil had collected. It was used in many of our potions, from the
sleeping potions and pain-killers to the abortifacients and life-drainers.
Normally we went
together, but my adolescence was testing us both, and she had
stalked off at daylight with
an extra collecting bag, enough food for two days,
and a blanket. "Don't expect me until
tomorrow," she'd snapped.
I had stared at her sullenly, thinking fierce, uncaring thoughts,
watching her
struggle to open the door with too full hands. Not offering to help.
She didn't
say it -- I'll give her that -- but her mind did play with the
thought: why did I take her
in? Part of me wanted to fly back to that winter day
and tug myself in the wrong direction,
whisper words of discouragement, let the
girl who would become me freeze in the snow.
Maybe
if I had been close with some of the others who were clumsily groping
between being
children and adults, adept at neither, I would have realized that
such conflict was normal.
Part of growing up. What had to happen on the way.
But I did not, and neither did Sky Eyes,
who had grown up without her own mother
and was as isolated from the rest of the village as
I was. I sat on the bench,
smoldering with anger and resentment, a tall girl with slender
limbs, ordinary
brown eyes.
When the knocker sounded, I almost didn't answer. My mind was so
busy turning
over my misfortunes that I had no idea who had come. Probably another woman
who
needed soul or belly cramps eased. Or one of the village elders, aching for some
joint
salve. But I knew better than to let my tiff with Sky Eyes interfere with
business, so I
dragged myself to the door and arranged my face in a neutral
expression -- if not
welcoming, then at least not actively hostile.
It was one of the young men; I didn't know
his name. He drew back when he saw
me, surprise almost palpable. And desire. For him, right
then, no one existed
other than Sky Eyes.
"Is she here?" he asked. "I need a -- a potion."
I just looked at him, his desire igniting the same within me. He was taller than
I, but
just by a little, with light hair and skin. The neck of a vial glinted
between his fingers.
I could almost feel his hand on my breast. I opened the
door further and he came in,
looking around for Sky Eyes, not seeing me.
All I wanted to do was make him see me. Make
him want me. I touched my hair,
felt smooth silkiness rather than tangles. Yes, I had
combed it this morning:
deep brown, almost black, with more than a touch of wild curl.
Would he see that
hair while looking for Sky Eyes's silvery gold? Would he want to stroke
my brown
skin?
I closed the door behind him and he looked at me. "Where is she?" And then he
looked again, seeing me, remembering things he had heard. "Ah, you're the gift
who doesn't
talk."
I wanted to talk. I opened my lips and took a breath, but no words would come
out.
"Is Sky Eyes here?" he asked again, watching for the reply this time.
I reluctantly shook
my head.
"Oh," he said.
His disappointment cut through the stillness that inhabited my
throat. "Wait," I
whispered. With a boldness that astounded me I reached out and took the
vial
from his hand. Plain clay brown, but the rune scratched on the front of it --
the
symbols for male and female intertwined -- meant that it had once held
aphrodisiac.
I felt
my cheeks heat up. The aphrodisiac was in the storeroom where I slept,
behind the
lizard-printed cloth. My hands grew sweaty and I almost dropped the
vial. Could I do this?
I gestured for him to follow me.
In the small room, I could feel his breath on my shoulder
as I lifted the cloth
aside and reached for the bottle of aphrodisiac. I took off the
stopper with a
practiced curl of my little finger that allowed me to use both hands and not
set
the glass stopper down.
Inside, I was shaking like pinch leaves in a breeze, but my
hands were steady.
Aphrodisiac was a thin, sweet potion, easy to pour. I filled the vial
and handed
it to him, uncorked. Then, while he was still watching me, I tilted my head back
and poured some from the bottle into my mouth.
His breath caught. He was seeing me, seeing
the jumbled pillow bed on the floor,
the open vial in his own hand. I set the bottle back
on the shelf, replaced the
stopper, let the cloth fall back into place.
Desire burned in me,
fanned into flame by the aphrodisiac. I wanted to touch
him, touch myself, be touched.
"Should I drink it?" he asked, his voice low.
My eyes said yes. He heard.
I felt light and
heavy at the same time, unsure if I was about to fall down or
float to the ceiling. I
dropped to my knees on the bed, my skirt pooling around
me. He followed.
Sky Eyes had told
me there might be pain the first time, and there was, but not
much. The touching. His mouth
on mine. The passion running inside me.
When we were spent, he pulled his trousers on and
covered me with a blanket the
color of autumn leaves. "That was fine," he said, his voice
lingering on the
last word. "I must be going now." He shyly held the vial out for a refill
on the
aphrodisiac. I wrapped the blanket around myself and stood up, suddenly awkward
with
my bare shoulders and wild hair. Pouring was more difficult with my elbows
clamped tight to
my sides to hold the blanket in place, but I managed. "Well,"
he said, "I must be going."
He handed me two coins, for the two fillings of the
vial, and then he was gone.
I danced
around, tripped on the trailing edge of the blanket and fell on my
jumbled bed. I laughed
and cried and touched myself to see if I felt different.
Yes, there was a difference. I
wasn't a girl anymore.
It was late the next morning when Sky Eyes returned, pale bone leaf
protruding
from her collecting bags, grassy blanket slung over her shoulder, shoes scuffed
and dusty. Her expression was wary when she entered, but it changed almost
immediately.
"Who was it?" she asked softly.
I didn't know his name, I realized, but she caught his
image from my mind and
nodded. "Rashi. A good lover. Not terribly imaginative, but .... "
I couldn't look at her any more, embarrassed almost to tears by the thought that
she knew
what it was like to bed him, how he liked to run his fingers down a
woman's sides, letting
the touch trail off at the hips.
Her tight voice made me look up. "This is going to be more
difficult than I ever
imagined." Her face was pale, with red spots on her cheeks. "I don't
think I can
talk now." She dropped the bags of bone leaf on the stone floor and walked to
her bedroom, her back very straight.
She was jealous, I realized with a shock that dried
incipient tears. She
couldn't deal with a young woman who was actually going to act on the
theories
of sexuality she had spouted so glibly to a child.
I picked up the discarded bone
leaf and rinsed it in a bowl of clean water,
being careful to handle it by the dry stems
and not immerse my hands. It was
more poisonous when swallowed, but it could cause a
certain deadness in the
fingers, and an air of confusion. Sky Eyes was jealous. The thought
seemed
ludicrous. I clipped the bone leaf to a drying string.
My thighs felt sore from the
previous morning's activities, which gave me a
rather perverse pleasure. I carefully lifted
the bowl of tainted water and
carried it to the back. We had a special place where we
poured such things, on a
deep bed of gravel which we covered with a board to keep birds and
animals --
including the human kind -- from being affected, inadvertently or otherwise.
Sometimes,
children would sneak into the fenced yard and snatch pebbles, which
they dared each other
to suck on. The board deterred them little, but Sky Eyes
insisted.
I had just replaced the
board when I heard the door open behind me. I looked and
saw Sky Eyes holding a mug. "Thank
you for hanging the bone leaf," she said.
"You should drink this now." I took the mug and
sniffed.
"To ensure that you will not have a child."
The liquid was sweet, but with a
metallic aftertaste. I shuddered and finished
quickly.
Sky Eyes picked the blossom from a
bird flower. Yellow pollen clung to her
fingers. We used the pollen in a grainy potion for
head pain, the pinktipped
petals in a mixture for burning that produced a calming aroma.
"I'm sorry," she
said. "I didn't know I would feel this way --and I don't know what I'm
going to
do about it. I'm not used to not knowing." She gave a short, rueful laugh.
"Maybe I
could brew myself a potion. Or one for you, to turn you back into a
child, and keep you
one."
I tried to find a smile, failed.
She looked at me again, her eyes tinted the yellow of
sunrise turning to day.
"No, you're not a child and will never be again. So I will deal
with you as a
woman. If a man comes for me, he comes for me. Not you. If a man comes for
you,
I will not interfere. Understand?"
I understood, and was sullen all over again. All the
men and boys who came for
Sky Eyes were not to be touched or teased or invited to my bed.
Who would come
for me, anyway?
Ketrin.
My almost friend. His body had lengthened and
strengthened, but the black curls
had not changed. And neither had the smiles he gave me:
apologetic smiles that I
rarely returned. I got the feeling that he still saw me as a
skinny,
mud-blackened seven-year-old who would not cry, no matter how much she wanted
to.
Two days after Sky Eyes returned, he came.
I opened the door, as Sky Eyes was in back,
checking the darkberry stems we had
set out to sun dry. Ketrin stood there, his smile more
tentative than usual.
"Ah, hello," he said, beginning to extend his hand, faltering,
dropping it to
his side. "I've come for a -- potion." His face reddened, and he let his
hair
fall, covering his eyes. "You might be too busy."
I truly didn't know what I was going
to do until one hand opened the door and
the other gestured him in. What did he mean by a
"potion." Aphrodisiac? He
didn't have a vial with him, and he had never been one of Sky
Eyes's lovers. Had
he talked to Rashi? Without intending to, I found in his mind that he
had.
Perhaps the boys and men were ignorant of Seeing and Knowing, but they knew --
or soon
would -- that the mute girl who lived with Sky Eyes shared her fondness
for sex. Rashi
hadn't known my name either.
The air thickened around me. I wanted to die. I wanted to go
back three days and
shut the door in Rashi's face -- or, at the very least, choke on the
aphrodisiac
as I poured it into my mouth. I turned away from Ketrin, again unwilling to
show
him tears.
"Jamillah?" He touched my shoulder. Lightly. Briefly. Not as a lover would.
"Are
you all right? Should I go now?"
If I moved, I was afraid the tears would escape. At
the back door, I sensed Sky
Eyes, her arms full of darkberry stems. Her mind touched mine,
took in the
situation. She didn't come in.
"Jamillah? I didn't really need a potion." He
didn't want me to turn around any
more than I wanted to. "I just wanted to talk to you.
Perhaps we could go
walking sometime."
Still I didn't move. "Ah, then," he said. "Goodbye."
He opened the door. Before he could go out, before he could close it, I said,
"Yes."
He
hesitated. "Tomorrow, then." Since I wasn't looking at him, I couldn't be
sure, but it
sounded as if he were smiling.
Sky Eyes came in the back after he closed the door. She
dumped the stems on the
table. A few wrinkled fruits fell off. "I was afraid your lover
wouldn't leave
before I was as wrinkled as these."
"Not my lover," I hissed. Anger dried any
thought of tears.
"He will be," she said. She spread a cloth on one end of the table and
picked up
a single stem, tapping its base firmly on the table so the dried darkberries
would
fall on the cloth. She tossed the stalks aside; we used them to help start
the fire. "He
has beautiful hair."
My fingernails cut into my palms and she laughed. "I won't touch your
precious
Ketrin, unless he touches me first."
Something froze within me. I wanted to scream
that he would never touch her, but
my mind showed otherwise. A Knowing. His arms around
her. His black curls
tangled with her pale hair. His face reflected in wintergray eyes.
Her
laughter died. "I'm sorry," she said, her voice soft as petals.
The next morning I wove a
green ribbon into my hair and tied a yellow scarf
around my waist. I will not let you take
him, my mind said to Sky Eyes, when
Ketrin smiled to see me. She just glared at me and
turned away, thinking as if I
would.
We went into the summer morning with a waterskin and a
pouch of nuts and more
dried diolla fruit than I should have taken B unlike darkberries, it
was rare,
hard to pick from steep mountain cuts, and it dried into practically nothing.
Sky
Eyes knew I had it, but she said nothing.
It felt as if everyone watched us as we cut
through the village, heading for the
tallest hill this side of the mountains, almost a
mountain in its own right. We
hadn't discussed where we were going, but it wasn't hard to
pick the destination
out of Ketrin's thoughts -- a small cave with a curtain of vine over
the mouth.
He thought it was his alone, a secret place, but Sky Eyes and I had been up
there
many times. If we were going very high in the mountains gathering, we
sometimes slept in
the cave to get us just that much closer. Or, late on a
return trip, laden with full
collecting bags, we stayed if we were too tired to
make the final descent to the village.
Ketrin was having a hard time deciding what to say, and I certainly did not help
him. The
steepness of the slope was a good excuse, and we did little but cast
shy glances at each
other as we climbed.
I don't know what would have happened had we drunk from the waterskin
on the
steep part, but our hands were too busy grasping rocks and sturdy rooted grasses
to
help in the ascent. It wasn't until we reached the cave and collapsed side by
side that
Ketrin unslung the waterskin from his back and took a long pull before
passing it to me.
The expression on his face might have warned me, but I was so thirsty that I
could think of
nothing but drinking, how good it tasted, how
He reached for me as the first giddy waves of
desire hit me. "Jamillah," he
said, as he laid me back into the cave, stroking my face, my
throat, my breasts.
My own hands were busy, running over his chest and down over his hips
and the
curve of his buttocks, pressing him against me.
We didn't even undress. I unlaced
the front of his trousers with frantic fingers
and he lifted my skirt. "You are so
beautiful," he murmured into my hair, his
breath warm in the hollow beneath my ear. "So
beautiful." His hands lower now. I
moved under him, and then we were moving together.
It was
better than the time with Rashi, for there was no pain, and I knew what
to expect. Too,
there was something about Ketrin that had captivated me for
these eight years, ever since I
had seen him in that ring of silent children.
And he had never shared Sky Eyes's bed.
When
we had satisfied ourselves, we lay together, my head on his chest, my face
hidden in my own
hair. The questions I read in his mind were echoed in my own:
what had happened? I had put
plain, fresh water in the skin and -- and then I
had gone to fix the ribbon in my hair. Sky
Eyes must have poured out some of the
water and replaced it with aphrodisiac. It didn't
take much, especially when
attraction existed already.
But he thought I had done it. "Sky
Eyes," I whispered. "Not me." I tried to
straighten my skirt, as it was bunched about my
waist. It wasn't a long skirt,
anyway, but the shorter skirt to be worn with cloth or
leather leggings, so
useful when climbing or riding. Some women wore them always, but I had
always
enjoyed the feel of soft cloth swishing against my bare legs.
Ketrin helped me
straighten my skirt, and then rolled away from me to lace his
trousers. We were both
self-conscious and embarrassed by the sudden, wild
passion we had exhibited. Not all of it
could be explained by the aphrodisiac,
diluted as it was.
I sat up and pushed my hair back,
carefully not looking at him. The discarded
waterskin lay on the ground near me, by some
quirk tossed aside in such a
fashion that the mouth of it leaned up against a rock. Only a
little had
spilled.
We had drink, if we were willing to drink it.
Turning just a little, I
saw Ketrin also looking at the hide container, also
coming to the same conclusions. He
blushed and dipped his head. "Sit closer," he
said, patting the ground next to him. I
scooted over and leaned against him,
feeling suddenly trembly. "I'm thirsty," he said
deliberately, reaching past me
for the waterskin, his arm brushing my breast. "Are you?"
After a hot, anxious second, I nodded. The grin he gave me was not apologetic
this time.
"Thank you, Sky Eyes," he said, holding the bag out as if in salute.
"We might as well
drink it all this time."
I opened my mouth and he gave me a long drink, took one himself.
Back and forth,
until the bag was empty and we were reeling with passion.
This time we took
our clothes off, explored every inch of sensitive skin. There
was no more embarrassment, no
more hesitation, only my brown body against his
pale one.
After two more times when we
seemed to be trying to get inside each other's
skin, we dressed. There was no more
aphrodisiac, no more water. We fed each
other the nuts and the tiny amber globes of dried
diolla fruit.
"We had better go," Ketrin said, glancing at the sun through the sparse
curtain
of vine. I nodded and stood, running my hands over my hair.
"It's no use," said
Ketrin. "You are well and truly mussed. Wild. And lovely."
He kissed my forehead. "Come on
then."
We were just as silent on the way down.
I didn't let Ketrin come in with me, just
pushed him gently into the lengthening
shadows. I was starving and my throat was very dry.
I didn't know whether to
thank Sky Eyes or scream at her.
In the end, I did neither. Sky
Eyes was in her bed with someone; I wasn't sure
who. I filled a clean skin with water and
took it to my room, with a whole roast
bird that she had left for me by the trickling
stream in the cold box.
My fingers were greasy and my stomach full when I crept out later
to wash and
pee. Sky Eyes was in bed still, alone now, not asleep.
"Goodnight," she called
softly. "I hope you enjoyed it."
As usual, I said nothing.
IF ONLY I could say that Ketrin
and I were as happy as we had been that
afternoon. If only the image of the two of them
entwined hadn't burned in my
head -- it hadn't happened, but it would, and that poisoned
me. Even when we
were together in my bed, I was angry. At Sky Eyes; at Ketrin; at myself,
for
somehow letting it happen. I didn't tell him what was to happen, but every time
he
smiled at Sky Eyes, every time he spoke politely to her, I scowled. I stopped
talking
entirely, which made being with him more difficult.
"Should we stay here today?" he asked
me quietly, standing on the step. I shook
my head.
He sighed. Insects, stickery plants,
rocky ground -- all those deterrents to
bedding outside flew through his mind. "All right
then, let's go."
The image again, the two of them together, flew through mine. Ketrin lying
back
on Sky Eyes's sheet as she bent over him. No, I didn't want to go out into the
dust,
either. I shook my head again.
Ketrin stepped back. "You don't want to stay; you don't want
to go. I think you
don't even want to be with me. Fine, then. You don't have to."
He turned
and left, taking the steps in one angry movement. I was alone. I was
alone. I was alone.
The image. Over and over.
I couldn't leave or he would think I was following him. I
couldn't go in to face
Sky Eyes. I walked down the steps and around the house to the back,
where I
picked the heads from tall feather grass with vicious snaps of my fingers.
Sky Eyes
came out a few minutes later. "Ketrin wants to see you. I'll send him
out." She looked at
the ground, littered with the decapitated feather grass.
"When he's gone, sort through
those and preserve the ripe ones. Why couldn't you
have waited a week? Over half of those
are wasted now."
Ketrin wasn't smiling when he came through the door. "I'm sorry," he said,
as
soon as Sky Eyes left us alone. "I just don't know what to do sometimes."
And you think I
do? I wanted to say. You think I understand myself --let alone
you ? I just want to love
you and have you love me and be able to forget about
this picture in my head. I want to be
just an ordinary girl. But I had never
spoken so fluently in my life, and I couldn't start
now. I bent down and picked
up a few ripe heads, rusty gold, lighter hull tips waving in
the breeze.
"Say something," he said. "I know you can."
Everything I had ever wanted to say
gathered at the back of my throat, a choking
ball of unspoken words. The feather grass
heads were light in my hands, tickling
my palms. I picked up another. Tears dripped, but my
back was to Ketrin, so he
didn't see.
"I don't think this is going to work," he said.
Sorrow, anger, frustration --
his voice was tight with all of them. If you'd just talk to
me beat in his mind.
I sorted through the heads lying on the ground. To preserve them, one
washed
them thoroughly and packed them in clear, glass jars, then poured oil over them.
After
a year, they would be softened enough to eat, a delicacy. A pity I had
broken them early --
next year we would run short.
The door closed behind Ketrin and he was gone. Sky Eyes left
a few minutes
later; I heard her go, received her brief message in my mind, Gathering. I'll
be
back tomorrow. There was nothing we needed desperately, but I was too upset to
be more
than dully grateful that she was giving me the time and space to grieve.
Ta came in the
night, found me sitting by the fire with salt tracks dried on my
face. "Not the tears of a
child," he said, his voice rich, the firelight
glinting off his smooth, perfect head. "You
have gone and grown up on Ta;
haven't you, Jami-bird." He ran dark thumbs down my cheeks,
brought his hands up
to his mouth and tasted. "Not child tears at all." He did it again, a
slow,
deliberate stroke, and his moistened thumbs loosened the tautness of dry tears.
I
turned my face until one thumb brushed my lips. We both shivered.
"Ta can help," he said.
"My brown one. My Jami-bird." He kissed my mouth and my
chin and my cheeks and my eyes.
After a time, I was kissing him back. He tasted
of strange spices.
"You are not so sad now,"
he said, pulling away. "Ts will let you sleep."
"No." I caught hold of one of the loops of
ribbon that decorated his vest. My
voice was hoarse. "Sing."
"Ta singsin only one place," he
said.
I nodded, feeling shy. "Sing."
He looked at me for a long time, his eyelids hooding
his eyes. "Come, then,
little brown bird, my Jami-bird." He led me to Sky Eyes's bed,
already humming
under his breath, a deep droning that eased my hesitation about using her
bed.
"Lie down, Jami-bird, Wanissa shay." He went back to his pack, took a handful of
scent
sticks from a hollow tube, and thrust the thick ends into the fire. Curls
of scented smoke
began to rise and drift.
I was still standing by the bed. "Lie down, my slender one, my
pretty one, my
brown skin." The words were a song to me. I let myself follow them as he
placed
the scent sticks in pitted lumps of clay that had been used for just this
purpose.
Windflower and siella and something that smelled of burning sandal oil,
other scents too
exotic for me to identify. His voice rose with the smoke, in
words or in sounds that
touched the ear without meaning.
He knelt beside me on the bed. His hands were smaller than
my own, and deft, but
he did not hurry. He withdrew the laces of my dress, parted the
bodice, touched
my breasts as if they had never been touched. And they hadn't -- not the
way he
did it anyway. Rashi and Ketrin, my only other lovers, were boys. Ta was a man
who
knew women. Before he had removed my dress, his own vest and tunic and
leggings, I was
infused with pleasure.
"You are a candy," Ta sang, his mouth against my skin, his breath
warming my
woman hair. "You are sweetness. You are a fruit to be tasted."
It was a long
time, hazy with scent and sensation, before he fitted his body to
mine and brought us both
to a gasping climax. He sang and whispered to me, and I
found bits of song in my own
throat, bits of song that twined with his as our
limbs twined together. "My hungry one, my
filled one, my Jamillah." My part was
pieces of a rising and falling tune that was utterly
unlike my usual harsh or
whispered words.
This, more than the exquisite pleasure, filled me
with happiness. "Ta," I said,
after we had finished, letting it be part of a song. "Ta."
"My Jami-bird has found her voice," he said. He gleamed darkly beside me. "My
Jami-bird
sings."
Sky Eyes was a Seer, an herbalist, a wise woman, but no singer. I knew no songs
except
those trapped inside me, only beginning to be freed. Ta sang a lullaby
for me, simple in
tune and meaning, and I listened and listened and finally sang
along, sobbing. "Mother
rocks her baby soft, Mother rocks her baby slow, Mother
rocks her baby warm, and baby falls
asleep."
Somewhere in the center of the singing and crying, I fell asleep.
When I awoke, in
the earliest part of morning, Ta was watching me. "So," he
said, "my Jami-bird, my night
singer, do you still have song in you?"
At first, I thought he meant to share my bed again
-- or Sky Eyes's bed rather
-- but he just wanted to hear me sing. I hummed shyly, hiding
behind my hair,
but the song was there; I could feel it. "Mother rocks her baby soft ....
"My
voice was slight and uncertain, but clear.
Ta's smile was very white in his dark face.
"Jamillah, my sweetness, you have--"
An image hit me and I crumpled and cried out. Ketrin
and Sky Eyes. Ta's arms
around me. Their forms against the curtain of vines. "What has
happened?
Jamillah?" Sky Eyes looking at me through the window of the Seeing, her eyes
Mack,
a sliver moon slicing through the blackness. "Jamillah?" She had Seen me
with Ta, and this
was her answer.
You can't do this, I cried silently.
You did, she replied from the cave, her
mind voice angry and hurt. Why should I
not?
"Jamillah. Tell me what has happened."
The
familiar muteness stilled me, but Ta would have none of it. "You can tell
Ta, you can. Sing
it to me, child. A bit at a time." He held me and listened and
stroked and coaxed. "I will
not let you keep this silence. Tell me."
Somehow, I made the words come out, singing
stubborn bits, stopping to catch my
breath and weep. I told of Ketrin and killing my mother
and Seeing and Knowing
and loving Sky Eyes and hating her. Ta held me like a child, like a
lover, like
a friend. "You are all right, Jami-bird, all right. This is best, the telling.
This is what you must do."
The best thing is usually the hard thing. Sky Eyes's words from
the cold,
wretched time when I was seven. I wept harder, shaking myself to the bone,
shaking
Ta, shaking the image of the lovers from my head.
When I was wept out, Ta rubbed my back,
sat me up, made me drink some tea. The
scent sticks had burnt down to the clay hours
before; there was little residue
of our sensuous night. Ta groaned and touched my face,
which definitely held the
residue of my weeping. "Here you are, sadder than when I came."
I laughed, dribbling tea on the sheets. "Not sadder."
"Perhaps not," he said. He looked at
me. "Jamillah, this Seeing and Knowing, can
you use it at will? Or does it just come when
it comes?"
"Both," I said. He nodded at me to explain, and, after a moment, halting over
longer phrases, I did. "Sometimes, it comes. One can -- try to call a certain
image."
"One?
Can you?"
I nodded.
"Do you want to stay here?" Ta asked, slowly and deliberately. "If you
are happy
-- if you want to stay -- I will say no more."
"Say it," I whispered.
"You could
come with me," he said. "As a peddler, I cannot stay long in one
place, but if you were
there, Seeing and Knowing, brewing potions --we could
stay a hand of days. Maybe even two
hands."
I was silent. Not because I could not talk, but because I did not know what to
say.
I was only fifteen -- not old enough to make that decision. But then, what
about the
decision I'd had to make at seven? Things must be decided when they
come up, not when one
is ready to decide. Sky Eyes had she hesitated to take me?
No. Had she regretted doing so?
Perhaps lately, but on the whole I thought no.
The things she taught me, the things she let
me learn for myself, the midnight
bread we ate under the stars. Could I leave her? Would I
regret doing so?
"Yes," I said, not sure which question I was answering. Of course I would
regret
it, but girls left their mothers all the time, to marry or take up a trade. In a
way,
this would be both, for I could read Ta's desire, mingled with his business
proposal. My
eyes filled with tears again, and Ta gathered me close again. I
laughed through my sniffles
--after being so careful not to show tears to Ketrin
....
"You will miss her," he said, "and
she you. But you will come back. It doesn't
take Seeing and Knowing to know that."
Sky Eyes
face appeared in my mind again, and she too was crying from her night
black eyes. "I'm
sorry," I said, with my voice as well as my thoughts.
So am I, she sobbed. So very sorry.
Ta patted my back, unaware of the exchange. "You must not be sorry. You feel
what you feel.
You are who you are."
I was barely aware of him. "I will come back," I whispered. "You know
I will."
"Of course you will come back," Ta said.
Come back, she said. Oh, come back, my
daughter. Her image wavered and
disappeared, as if our common tears had washed it away.
I
didn't take much in the way of glassware and tools; Ta could trade for such
things. Several
bunches of dried bone leaf, wrapped in paper. I could powder it
myself when we reached
Shaboor, the next stop. Small amounts of other plants
that I would not be able to collect
as we traveled -- plants that were available
in the spring, those that grew only in this
area. The blankets from my bed. My
few dresses and leggings. My shoes. My mother's cloak,
which hadn't dragged on
the floor for two years now.
In the summer heat, I put it on and
buried my face in the wool of the collar,
savoring the warm smell. Sky Eyes had given me
back my mother through the touch
of her death.
But she had given me so much more as well. I
slung the cloak over my arm and
took the shennikan feather from its place on the wall. Not
that Ta would be
unable to please me, but that I could still please myself. Thank you, Sky
Eyes.
I unhooked the yellow cloth, still bright, with the lizards scampering across
it. This
I would take as well, a piece of my home, a part of my life. I folded
it neatly and placed
it on top of the cloak in the smallest of Ta's packs, the
one he had cleared for my use by
redistributing items in other packs. Before I
strapped the top down, I stroked the fabric
and sent a silent message. Thank
you, Mother.
"Ready?" Ta asked, from his place near the
pack beast's head. "Are you sure?"
I nodded, secured the strap. This was a hard thing, but
a good thing, perhaps
the best thing.
"Then we're away," he said. The rhythm of our steps as
we set out brought a new
song to the back of my throat.