A story, a story!Yes, tell us a story, old grandmother. A story about great battle!No, tell us a story about love!Eww, no! Let's hear a story about a place we've never been!Very well, children. A story about battle, about love and about a place you've never been. Have any of you ever been into the Great Jungle? No? Then let me tell you one of its darker secrets, a tale of love and rejection, of strange and long-gone peoples. A tale of betrayal and battle.
Once upon a time there were three young girls-
Were they sisters?Not as such, but they shared a fate. The first of these girls was Hethesla, daughter of the wise woman Hiana of the Wind Rock tribe. Hethesla was the fleetest of foot, the quickest of arm and eye in all the jungle. Not even the best hunters of her people could match her with the throwing spear, could stalk prey as well as she or move as quick. She was fair, she was skilled, she was the envy of her tribe. Yet for all her speed and skill she was proud, vain and presumptuous from years of flattery by her kinsmen. Many sought her hand as wife, but none could meet her standard.
The second girl was Aenna, daughter of both the clan chief and Wynne, the wise woman of Sunset Hill. Though not as fast, not as fair nor as loved as Hethesla, Aenna was reknowned and feared as the greatest killer in the jungle. With spear, knife and handaxe she had led her people on dozens of vicious raids on neighbouring tribes during her short youth. What she lacked in grace she made up for in sheer rage - commanding the absolute respect and terror of her people. Yet the fear that surrounded her isolated her. Aenna was lonely and unloved for all her respect, a truth which caused the fires of rage that made her such a powerful warrior to burn even hotter.
The third girl was Cybele, a girl of no great birth but possessed of a simple beauty. Cybele was born of the Grey Lake tribe, a clan of peaceful and contemplative fishermen. Though no great warrior or hunter, Cybele possessed a keen mind and a talent for seeing the truth in the statements of others.
One day, Hethesla was hunting alone in the woods when she spied a white doe, the symbol of the god that favoured her people; Tirchid, the Nimble. Seeing this as a sign, Hethesla gave chase to the deer for many miles, though it always stayed one step ahead.
The very same day, Aenna was alone beneath the Sunset Hill practising with her spear and shield when what did she see but a golden monkey in the trees. The monkey was throttling a bird, tearing it apart with its hands. It gave a wild screech and fled into the deeper jungle. Seeing this as a sign from Mangang, god of Rage, Aenna followed in pursuit.
Elsewhere in the jungle Cybele sat with her spear, fishing. She caught sight of a parrot as bright and coloured as polished jewels preening itself in the trees. The parrot called and hopped away a few branches, looking back as if to see if she would follow.
"Go on thy way, fool parrot!" Cybele laughed. "Everyone knows your pride and showing-off will lead to your end. Now begone, I must fish for my dinner!"
Cybele and her people all laughted at the parrot, for they knew it was the sign of Cawpaw, the parrot god that an old mad woman had once tried to teach of in their tribe. They had stoned the woman to death and seen away such folly.
Cybele heard a soft rustle and looked up to see a scarlet viper where the parrot had been, the bird dead on the forest floor below. The viper stared directly at Cybele, almost as if challenging her, then slithered away into the forest. Now Cybele may have been no fool, but she was curious and the activity of these jungle spirits intrigued her. She took her fishing spear in hand and followed the serpent into the forest.
All three girls followed the beasts until they found themselves in a glade where a young man stood, the most handsome man any of them had ever seen. He wore bright, soft cougar furs and carried a great shield and spear, the mark of a great hunter and warrior. They were amazed to find each other and asked who he was.
"I am Caeron," said the man, "chief of the Sunrise Forest people and chosen of Ogdi, the hunter. I followed a cougar, Ogdi's spirit animal, to this place."
"How strange," said Hethesla. "I followed the white doe of Tirchid to this grove."
"And I the monkey of Mangang," said Aenna.
Cybele, being wiser, said nothing of how she had come to the place, but was first to sight the lady in red.
Somehow, without any of them truly seeing her approach, a woman garbed in scarlet snakeskins had appeared in the grove. Her face was comely, but her eyes were colder than the grave. She bore a golden apple in one hand, which she placed in Caeron's hand.
"To the fairest, this is due. Choose," she said, then turned and stepped into the wood where she seemed to vanish completely. All eyes fixed upon the apple, for it seemed the most beautiful thing each of them had ever seen.
"The apple is due to me," said Hethesla. "None of you can deny I am the most beautiful of us. I am the fastest, the most skilled, and all of my kin in the Wind Rock know this. Choose me, Caeron, and I shall teach you to be as skilled as I. My tribe shall join yours and pass on the secrets of the hunt, of speed and skill."
"Don't be a fool!" said Aenna. "Could you put up with her forever after boasting? Whatever she might say about her features, I have more passion. What is beauty without life? Choose me, and I will take you as my husband and fill each of your days with passion. More than this, you will have the aid of my tribe. Surely you know that there are no more feared warriors than the Sunset Hill? Choose me, and together we could conquer all of the Great Jungle!"
"All I will ask is that you choose wisely," said Cybele. "I make no claim to great beauty or passion. I am but a simple fisherwoman and so are my people. But I will ask this, that none of you would - why have you been given this gift to give? You say your gods led you here. Is this bright apple the reward for devotion, or a serpent's snare?"
"Do you doubt my faith?" challenged Aenna and Hethesla, and both girls began to berate Cybele.
"Enough!" said Caeron. "I have made my choice."
It was Aenna, wasn't it? I'd pick her.No, duh. It's going to be Hethesla, isn't it? The woman said 'the fairest', and she's the most beautiful.Come on, it's obviously Cybele. She's the wise one, they always pick the wise one."It seems to me that there is only one choice, my friends. Only one is wise, brave, passionate, fast, skilled and beautiful above all. And that one... is me."
Caeron gripped his fist around the apple and all three girls saw the gleam in his eye, the glint of greed stronger than even Hethesla's pride or Aenna's wrath. Seeing him turn to run, Aenna struck out at Caeron with her spear. He deflected it expertly with his shield and kicked her legs from under her before taking flight. Hethesla gave chase but found him fleeter even than Tirchid's doe and though she ran for hours her breath gave out before him. Cybele merely watched the trees for sign of the lady, then departed to finish her fishing.
Weeks passed, but memory of the grove would not pass from the girls' minds. Hethesla, rejected for the first time in her life, could not sleep for anger at her wounded pride. She mistreated her suitors even worse than before and flew into wild tempers at the thought of Caeron and the apple until she swore that she would have his heart for slighting her.
Aenna was not angry as she was used to being, but found her thoughts returning to Caeron's handsome face. She realised that she was smitten and began to dote to such an extent that even her vigour for battle was fading. Above all else, she desired Caeron's heart.
Cybele thought not of Caeron in the slightest, though her mind worked furiously to understand why the four of them had been brought to that grove. She packed provisions in a leather bag and set out through the jungle, travelling from tribe to tribe to ask about the lady in red and the three tribes of Sunset Hill, Sunrise Forest and Wind Rock.
One day, Cybele came upon a village of a people she had never known of, yet strangely only three days' journey from her own village - the tribe of the Viper. Hunters and gatherers, these people prayed to a secret god; not Tirchid or Mangang, nor Ogdi or even Cawpaw, but to a Lady whose name they would never speak, but who was said to travel amongst them in the guise of a scarlet viper. Near the centre of the village she saw a slender sapling with one enormously bloated root, its wood blacker than charcoal.
"What tree is that," Cybele asked, "that grows so black within your village?"
"We call it the Midnight Tree," said a villager. "It grew from the grave of an old woman who died here many years ago, and bore leaves the colour of blood. Seven weeks ago, the tree bore a single golden apple. They say the Lady came and plucked the apple in the night, after which the tree shed all its leaves."
Cybele left the village, armed with this knowledge, and came face to face with the Lady herself.
"Why?" Cybele asked. "Why call us together? Why give that apple?"
"To punish and reward," said the Lady. "To reward you for your people's wit, and to punish them for the stoning of an old crone."
"Of an old- but that was years ago! Before I was born!"
"Three days before you were born, you stoned her. Three days, she crawled in my service before she died. As she left this world, you came into it. Your people slighted my servant, and so you shall bear their punishment. More than this, you will bear it of your own will."
"What curse would you put upon me, that I would accept it willingly?"
"The curse of power, of rulership over the hearts of men."
"I have no desire for power or conquest, Lady. Your promises are as empty as Cawpaw's splendour."
"I assure you, the threat of the Sunrise Forest is not. Have you not wandered these jungles as I knew you would? Have you not heard of Caeron, how his greed has pressed him to enslave more and more of those tribes around him? He would come for your people eventually, but with my gift that time will come all the sooner. The apple is not all that it seems. Beyond just a thing of beauty, the one who holds it is granted the power to speak with great weight; all who hear him will accord his words moment. Caeron has not yet realised the power of the apple, but when he does he will raise an army from the tribes and lay waste to all the Great Jungle."
"Why would you do this?"
"Why? Because I am the Lady! I am Strife, I am Discord and Chaos! Every ill word spoken, every wrathful thought or hateful action, every effort to strive to be better, or to beat the odds, I am there! And because whether you stop him or no, it will punish you and him alike. But you must stop him, if your people you wish to save."
Cybele fought back against the hatred she felt for the goddess, fearing it would only make her stronger.
"How would I save my people, then?" she asked.
"Go to Caeron willingly. Offer him the free support of your people. Offer him yourself. Offer him whatever he wants but make sure he knows that the two greatest threats to his rule, the Sunset Hill and Wind Rock, will come to this village within the week, to meet and plot to destroy him. Have him come to this place with all his men, to crush them whilst he can. And when he arrives, when battle begins, seize the apple for yourself. Once you have it you will have the power to stop this war, to end it with your words."
"But surely Caeron would oppose me, even as persuasive as this apple would be?"
"That," the Lady laughed, "will not be a problem." She waved a hand and faded into nothingness. Alone once more, Cybele found herself faced with a choice - to carry out the Lady's plan and use the apple to save her people, or to flee and risk eventual conquest at Caeron's hand.
Yet Cybele was not the only one with a choice to make. The Lady appeared twice more that day, at evening and midnight. At dusk she visited Hiana of the Wind Rock tribe. Hiana, being a wise woman of the world, knew the Lady upon seeing her and prostrated herself in respect. The Lady bade her rise.
"You have served me well over these many years," said the Lady, "and have prospered for your service. I come to grant you a boon and in return place another service upon you. Your daughter, it seems, is greatly angered at a man."
"She is, my Lady. No matter how I try to calm her, she swears that she will kill him, yet by her own admission he is faster and more skilled than even her."
"Then go through the wood and seek out the village of the Viper Tribe. Drive out the people who live there and look for a sapling growing from a grave. Cut down the trunk of that slight tree - there is enough for you to carve a single spear from the wood. This spear, when thrown or held, will always strike the target at which it is aimed. With this spear your daughter cannot fail to kill the man she hates."
"Thank you, oh Lady! But what is the service you beg in return for this boon?"
"A simple one. Should the day ever come that your people no longer have need of you, you are to go into the world and seek out the people of that tree's village and teach as many of them as you can the secrets that your mistress taught you. Should you do this, you must teach any apprentices you take to do the same."
In addition to this, the Lady taught Hiana a secret rite to allow her to determine the people of the Viper Tribe, just by looking at them.
At midnight the Lady appeared to Wynne, of the Sunrise Hill. As with Hiana she enquired as to the state of Wynne's daughter. Wynne complained that her daughter was in love with Caeron and could not cease thought of him. The Lady promised her that if she were to go with her tribe and drive out the people of the Viper Tribe, they would find a tree with one bulging root. If she were to dig up that root and carve from it a drinking cup, any person who drank from that cup would fall in love with the first person they saw thereafter. In return for this boon the Lady commanded that if Wynne, as Hiana, should ever no longer be needed by her people, then she should search the world for the Viper Tribe and teach them what she knew. To Wynne also the Lady taught the secret of discerning the Viper Tribe.
With all this done the Lady grew tired, but before she rested she returned to the village of the Viper Tribe and marked the blood of each of them. Every one of these Viperkin would thereafter know one another as being of the Tribe on sight, and so would all of their descendents, no matter how far scattered their people might be. She charmed also a nest of scarlet vipers and whispered to them their own task to fulfill...
With the Lady's seeds sown, how would it all fall out? Well, that's a story not to be continued on an empty stomach!
Aww!Worry not, we'll finish this tale soon enough, though your aunt seems anxious you eat whilst the food is hot. And if a humble storyteller might have an extra plate? Why thank you, very gracious of you. But yes, we'll continue this story soon enough.
Did they take the Lady's offer?Soon, soon! But let us say that if they had, then Hiana and Wynne's apprentices might still be wandering the world to this day, trying to find the Viperkin. You might never know those apprentices to look at them. They might be priests. They might be merchants.
They might even be storytellers.
The Lady causes the Midnight Tree to sprout from Elti's grave.
The Lady plucks the Apple of Discord from the Midnight Tree and gives it to Caeron.
The Midnight Tree has just enough wood to produce both the Certain Spear and the Cup of Seduction.
The Lady grants the blessing of Viperkin to all members of the Viper Tribe. The blessing is inheritable.
The Lady teaches Hiana and Wynne a simple rite to detect Viperkin.
The Lady informs Hiana and Wynne of the location of the Midnight Tree and gives them a conditional instruction to pass on their teaching to the Viperkin (only if their own tribes no longer have need of them).
The Lady suggests to Cybele that she gain control of the Apple of Discord to prevent Caeron from eventually setting his sights on conquest of the Grey Lake.
The Lady enchants/instructs a nest of vipers living close to the Viper Tribe village such that, should the village be attacked, the vipers will lead the inhabitants in many different directions to safety.The Apple of Discord gives the holder the power of great persuasion.
The Certain Spear is a wooden spear of the same hardness and strength of steel that can be thrown or used in melee and will unerringly hit any target, provided it is visible to the wielder or thrower (and there is enough space for the spear to pass through).
The Cup of Seduction forces the drinker to fall in love with the first person they see.
The Viperkin can detect other Viperkin on sight. This comes as a sensation of mild recognition, even if they have never met before. This blessing confers no other powers, save to identify the descendants of the Viper Tribe.