The Great Alta Saga Omnibus

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The Great Alta Saga Omnibus Page 48

by Jane Yolen


  Jenna smiled. “I know that, my love. But still we must do what the heart reminds us. Sister? Are you ready?” She held out her arms.

  Skada smiled, her arms out as well. “Ready, sister.”

  THE LEGEND:

  There are two tales told about White Jenna and how she returned to Alta’s cave. One is told by women and one is told by men.

  The men’s story speaks of a sledge on the cliffside, where, years ago when the Wilhelm Valley was mined for gold, it was discovered before an entrance to a cave. The sledge held the long bones of a man bound to it with bindings of leather and gold. Still, the men say, on moonlit nights two women can be seen running naked through the glades, women compounded of starlight and water. They run through the glades, past the rocky cliff, step over the long bones, and disappear into the cave just at dawn.

  But the women tell a different tale. They say that White Jenna carried her lover, King Longbow, in her arms through the cave to the grove where Alta greeted them. And there they were made young again, and hale. They wait there, with their bright companions, feasting and drinking, until the world shall need them again.

  THE MYTH:

  Then Great Alta took down her hair, both the golden side and the black, and lifted the dark and light sisters out of the abyss of the world, saying, “You have come at last to the end of this turning. Whether you go forward or whether you go back, whether you go left or you go right, whether you go up or you go down, the end is the beginning. For each story is a circle, and each life a story. The end is the beginning and only I am the true end and only I can begin the circle again.

  Here Ends Book 2:

  White Jenna

  THE WISDOMS OF THE DALES

  The heart is not a knee that can bend.

  Telling a tale is better than living it.

  Fish are not the best authority on water.

  When a dead tree falls, it carries with it a live one.

  Wood may remain twenty years in the water but it is still not a fish.

  If your mouth turns into a knife, it will cut off your lips.

  Miracles come to the unsuspecting.

  Spilled water is better than a broken jar.

  There is no medicine to cure hatred.

  Does the rabbit keep up with the cat?

  Words are merely interrupted breath.

  The sun moves slowly but it crosses the land.

  You must set the trap before the rat passes, not after.

  Better the cat under your heel than at your throat.

  No tracks, no trouble.

  Three are better than one where trouble is concerned.

  Spring berries are for dye and dying.

  Downy head and thorny spine/On the roots you safely dine.

  Hunger is the best seasoning.

  A foolish loyalty can be the greater danger.

  Wicked tongues make wicked wives.

  Laugh longer, live longer.

  Sleep is the great unraveler of knots.

  Not to know is bad, but not to wish to know is worse.

  The day on which one starts out is surely not the time to begin one’s preparations.

  Do not measure a shroud before there is a corpse.

  In the wrong, in the Rest.

  Better in the Rest than in the battle.

  They stumble who run ahead of their wits.

  Sisters can be blind.

  Sleep is death’s younger sister.

  The heart can be a cruel master.

  A cat who boasts once is a cat who boasts once too often.

  No blame, no shame.

  It is a fool who longs for endings, a wise woman who longs for beginnings.

  It is best to eat when the food is before you than go hungry when the food is behind you.

  In a flock of black birds, t’would be harder to miss one than find one.

  The gift horse is the swifter.

  A crow is not a cat nor does it bear kits.

  The swordsman dies by the sword, the hangman by the rope, and the king by his crown.

  An hour can spare a life.

  A man’s eye is bigger than his belly and smaller than his brain.

  In war one takes quickly and saves regrets for the morning.

  Stand in the way of a cart and you will have wheelmarks across your face.

  If a man calls you master, trust him for a day; if he calls you friend, trust him for a year; if he calls you

  brother,

  trust him for all ways.

  Perfection is the end of growing.

  First up, first fed.

  First up, finest fed.

  Experience is rarely a gentle master.

  Stories feed the mind when the belly is not full.

  Kill once, mourn ever. (Kill twice, mourn never.)

  If you have no meat, eat bread.

  Belief is an old dog in a new collar.

  In the council of kings, the heart has little to say.

  To kill is not to cure.

  A stroke may save a limb.

  You cannot cross the river without getting your feet wet.

  A warrior has no conscience until after the war is done.

  In a fight, anything is a sword.

  Forever is no distance at all.

  A dream is worth a little sleep.

  Every end is a beginning.

  No one stands highest when all stand together.

  If you rise too early, the dew will soak your skin.

  One is not a multitude.

  The grape brings slow death.

  The mice may have the right but the cat has the claws.

  Women’s promises are water over stone—wet, willing, and soon gone.

  Measure a cook by his belly.

  Better to be safe than buried.

  THE MUSIC OF THE DALES

  The Ballad of Langbrow

  2. When Langbrow first was made the king,

  Proclaimed by all his peers,

  He opened up the prison gates

  That had been closed for years.

  He opened up the prison gates

  With just one little key

  And all the men condemned within

  Straightways were all set free,

  Straightways were all set free.

  3. When Langbrow first was made the king,

  He killed the callous crew

  That tortured many a fine woman

  And slaughtered not a few.

  That tortured many a fine woman

  And brought them many a shame

  Till Langbrow came to rescue them

  Returning their good name,

  Returning their good name.

  4. When Langbrow first was made the king,

  The country did rejoice

  And sang the praises of the king

  With cup and wine and voice.

  We sang the praises of the king

  And of his Whitsom Jen

  And of the men who followed him,

  And also the wom-en,

  And also the wom-en!

  Anna at the Turning

  2. Sweet in the springtide, sour in fall,

  Winter casts snow, a white velvet caul.

  Passage in summer is swiftest of all

  And Anna at each turning.

  3. Look to the meadows and look to the hills,

  Look to the rocks where the swift river spills,

  Look to the farmland the farmer still tills

  For Anna is returning.

  4. They laid her down upon the hill,

  Rosemary, bayberry, thistle and thorn,

  And took her babe against her will

  On the day the child was born.

  5. They left her on the cold hillside,

  Rosemary, bayberry, thistle and thorn,

  Convinced that her new babe had died

  On the day the child was born.

  6. She wept red tears, and she wept gray,

  Rosemary, bayberry, thistle and thorn,

  Till she had wept he
r life away,

  On the day her child was born.

  7. The sailor’s heart it broke in two,

  Rosemary, bayberry, thistle and thorn,

  The sisters all their act did rue

  From the day the child was born.

  8. And from their graves grew rose and briar,

  Rosemary, bayberry, thistle and thorn,

  Twined till they could grow no higher,

  From the day the child was born.

  Ballad of the Twelve Sisters

  2. A handsome sailor one did wed,

  Rosemary, bayberry, thistle and thorn,

  The other sisters wished her dead

  On the day the child was born.

  3. “Oh, sister, give me your right hand,”

  Rosemary, bayberry, thistle and thorn,

  Eleven to the one demand

  On the day the child was born.

  The Long Riding

  The Trees in the Forest

  Sister’s Lullay

  King Kalas and his Sons

  2. The Hound was a hunter,

  The Hound was a spy,

  The Hound could shoot down

  Any bird on the fly.

  The Hound was out hunting

  When brought down was he

  Alone as he rambled

  The northern countrie.

  3. King Kalas had three sons,

  And three sons had he,

  And they rambled around

  In the northern countrie.

  And they rambled around

  Without ever a care.

  And they were the Bull

  And the Cat and the Bear.

  4. The Bull was a gorer,

  The Bull was a knight,

  And never a man who would

  Run from a fight.

  The Bull was out fighting

  When brought down was he

  Alone as he rambled

  The northern countrie.

  5. King Kalas had two sons,

  And two sons had he,

  And they rambled around

  In the northern countrie.

  And they rambled around

  Without ever a care.

  And the names they were called

  Were the Cat and the Bear.

  6. The Cat was a shadow,

  The Cat was a snare.

  Sometimes you knew not

  When the Cat was right there.

  The Cat was out hiding

  When brought down was he

  Alone as he rambled

  The northern countrie.

  7. King Kalas had one son,

  And one son had he,

  And he rambled around

  In the northern countrie.

  And he rambled around

  Without ever a care,

  And the name he went under

  Was Kalas’ Bear.

  8. The Bear was a bully,

  The Bear was a brag,

  His mouth was brimmed over

  With bluster and swag.

  The Bear was out boasting

  When brought down was he

  Alone as he rambled

  The northern countrie.

  9. King Kalas had no sons,

  And no sons had he,

  To ramble around

  In the northern countrie.

  Though late in the evening

  The ghosts are seen there

  Of the Hound and the Bull

  And the Cat and the Bear.

  Death of the Cat

  2. It was early, so early

  In the graying of the morn,

  When we sang of the days

  Before the Cat was born.

  And how from her mother

  She was so swiftly torn,

  As we laid her in the earth

  So long and narrow.

  3. Come all ye young fighting men

  And listen unto me.

  Do not place your affections

  Upon a girl so free.

  For she’ll take the mortal wound

  Another meant for thee,

  And you’ll lay her in the earth

  So long and narrow.

  The Heart and the Crown

  2. Her horse was pure white

  And his horse was gray.

  She wanted to go

  But he asked her to stay.

  She gave him her heart

  And he gave her his crown.

  But they never, no never

  Went down deny down deny down.

  3. Her eyes were pure black

  And his eyes were so blue.

  She wanted him strong

  And he wanted her true.

  She gave him her heart

  And he gave her his crown

  But they never, no never

  Went down deny down deny down.

  4. Come all ye fair maidens,

  And listen to me,

  If you want your young man

  To be strong and free

  Just give him your heart

  And he’ll give you his crown

  Just as long as you never

  Go down deny down deny down.

  Well Before the Battle, Sister

  The One-Armed Queen

  Jane Yolen

  For Elizabeth Harding

  and Louisa Glenn—

  They know why

  One to make it,

  Two to break it,

  Three to carry it away.

  —An old prophecy

  one

  Rivals

  THE MYTH:

  Then Great Alta took the warrior, the girl with one arm, and set her in the palm of Her hand.

  “There is none like you, daughter,” quoth Great Alta. “Not on the earth nor in its shadow. So I shall make you a mate that you might be happy.”

  “And why must I have a mate to be happy?” asked the one-armed girl. “Do you, Great Mother, have a mate? And are you not happy? Perhaps I could be your blanket companion.”

  “To reach too high is to fall too far,” Great Alta replied.

  THE LEGEND:

  When the White Queen Jenna was still alive, she brought her three children to the town of New-Melting-by-the-Sea where she still, herself, had cousins.

  The children were twin boys and a girl whose short cropped hair and leather trousers led her to be mistaken for a third boy.

  The queen planted a rowan by the old Town Hall, the boys each planted a birch. But that night, the girl sneaked out from the encampment and broke off the tops of her brothers’ saplings, leaving only the rowan standing whole.

  In the morning she confessed, her crime and was whipped in front of her mother by the head of the royal guards with switches from those same damaged trees.

  But lo! After the queen’s entourage left the town, the rowan tree died. However, the birches grew round and about one another, twisted and twined.

  You can see them there still by the tumbled wall. They are old and weathered, their trunks supported by metal poles. They are so grown together, they are often mistaken for a single tree.

  THE STORY:

  The queen’s party had passed by the Old Hanging Man early in the day, but the weather was so foul, nothing of the rocks could be seen. Jem and Corrie had been fighting since dawn, the sort of squabbling that seemed to be made up of endless name-calling. Even the queen’s good captain Marek could not keep them separated for long.

  “Is it the weather?” the queen asked, peering into the gloom. “Or the nature of this place?”

  “It is the nature of the boys, Jenna,” Marek said, his long friendship with the queen allowing him such familiarity.

  “It is the nature of all boys,” Scillia complained.

  Her mother shot her a sharp glance.

  “Well, it is,” Scillia muttered. The stump of her left arm ached, which was odd. It was not an old wound that could be expected to pain her in rain or cold. She had been born without the arm and for her to be one-armed was as normal as for her brothers to ha
ve two. But somehow today, riding next to her mother on the endless track, her brothers quarrelsome as pups, she felt an ache there as if she had but recently lost the limb. Reaching up with her right hand, she massaged the shoulder and partway down the stump.

  “I will rub oil into your shoulder when we rest, child,” the queen said. Scillia did not like the servants to touch her.

  “I am fine, mother,” Scillia answered. “If only the boys would be silent.”

  But they would not. Or could not. Calling one another “Catch-pole” and “Woodworm,” “Gar-head” and “Toad,” they had settled into a rhythm of slander, beating the names back and forth between them till it got to be a game that eventually had them both laughing.

  Scillia only scowled the more.

  “It is a boy’s nature to make games of troubles,” Marek remarked to the queen. “And a girl’s nature to disapprove of game-playing.”

  Jenna sighed deeply and ran a hand through the fringe of her white hair, “I thought, my dear old friend, that we fought a war not thirteen winters past over such gross statements: A boy does this, a girl does that. It does not become you to speak this way.”

  He smiled wryly at her. “Don’t we say in the Dales: A snake sheds an old skin but still he does not go skinless.”

  She had the grace to laugh back at him. Shaking her head, she added, “Then I will expect to have to skin you now and again. Just for old time’s sake.”

  “As you wish, my queen.” He saluted and kicked his horse into a trot till he had caught up with the boys. By riding between them and telling them some of his old war stories, he managed to turn their attentions elsewhere and the game of calumny was ended.

  “Why do you put up with him, mother?” Scillia asked when Marek was too far away to hear. “Why do you just make light of such things? Why do you …”

  Jenna turned to her daughter. “Do you remember the old saying, Before you make a friend, eat dirt with him?”

  Scillia shook her head. “I always thought that a particularly dim bit of wisdom.”

  “Not if you had eaten the dust of travel and the clods of battle with him. Not if you had buried dear ones and had him weep silently by your side.”

  “Battles and wars. It is all you ever talk about.”

  Jenna’s face went first red, then white. “I talk peace and pacts, child. I talk of rebuilding lives.”

 

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