by Rena Barron
I shrink when her eyes land on me—only the whites visible. “What?” I ask, not knowing what else to say. I’ve seen her in trances before but never anything like this. Something shifts in the air. “Grandmother, what’s wrong?”
“Leave!” she shouts, staring over my shoulder. I jump to my feet and whirl around. The tent flutters and the unlit jar of oil sparks to life. I back away. No one’s there, but a new, unfamiliar magic rushes into the room. Magic not coming from Grandmother and definitely not from me. Magic that I can’t see, only feel slithering on my skin. “You do not belong here, green-eyed serpent!”
Spittle shoots out of Grandmother’s mouth as she barks the last words. Sparks of magic—tribal magic—fill the room. It lights on her skin. Her whole body begins to glow. The bones rise from the ground and spin, caught in an impossible windstorm.
I clench my fists as her magic sweeps through the tent. It flits against my arms like moth wings. I want to flee, but I don’t move. It won’t hurt me.
Grandmother’s head snaps backward so hard that her spine cracks. I gasp. Soon we’re both shaking. She leans to one side, sweat pouring down her face. For the first time, she looks old and fragile. I kneel next to her.
“It will pass,” she says, straightening herself up again, though she’s still panting.
“What . . . what was that?” I stutter.
“Have you seen the green-eyed serpent in your dreams, child?” she asks, her voice sharp.
“What?” My teeth chatter, and I hug my shoulders. The tent is cold in the aftermath of the strange magic. The space feels too small, the air too thin. Something bad was here—something powerful enough to challenge Grandmother. “I don’t understand.”
She clucks her tongue, then glances at the curtains separating us from the rest of the tent. They stand as stiff as sheets of metal until she draws a loop in the air with her finger and they become cloth again. “Enter, Oshhe.”
My father bursts through the curtains with so much force that he halfway rips them from the ceiling. His expression is panicked as he looks between us. Upon seeing that we’re all right, he lets out a deep sigh. “Honored Chieftain,” he says, bowing. Then his voice softens. “Mother, what happened?”
“It’s hard to put into words,” Grandmother says. “Please join us, son.”
Oshhe squats beside me, his eyebrows pinched together. “Are you okay?”
I nod and lean against his side. He wraps his arm around my shoulders. He’s warm and smells of grass and sunshine, and his embrace calms my nerves. “To answer your question, Grandmother,” I say. “No, I haven’t seen a serpent, green-eyed or not, in my dreams.”
“I think you better explain, Mother,” Oshhe says, his voice calm—too calm. He only uses that voice when he’s not happy.
“There was someone here . . . something.” Grandmother shakes her head as if clearing away cobwebs. “Someone who does not belong. Perhaps a relic from the past, I do not know, or an omen of the future . . .”
Again Grandmother speaks in riddles, but her voice shakes a little. Whomever, or whatever, this thing is, it’s rattled the great Aatiri chieftain, and that scares me too.
“She—the green-eyed serpent—possesses magic I do not know,” Grandmother finishes. “Magic that feels very old and very powerful.”
“Magic you don’t know?” Oshhe questions, one brow raising. “Was it . . . an orisha?”
“An orisha here?” I blurt out. “In the tribal lands?”
I can’t imagine the orishas in the tribal lands any more than Heka in the Kingdom. Though the tribes acknowledge that the orishas exist, they hold Heka above all. In the Kingdom, the orishas take precedence, but the citizens come from all walks of life and so do their deities.
“No, not an orisha,” Grandmother says, her tone reluctant. “Something else.”
“A rebirth, perhaps?” Oshhe says. “A powerful witchdoctor who has cheated death.”
Grandmother massages her temples. “I can’t be certain. I need to talk to an old friend who will know more. It will take time to reach her, for she does not walk these lands.”
A chill runs down my spine. Grandmother is the Aatiri chieftain. I’ve never known her to not have an answer. She’s one of the most powerful witchdoctors in the tribal lands, in all the world.
“You haven’t said what this green-eyed serpent—what she has to do with me,” I say, unable to hold my question back any longer.
Grandmother regards me again, her eyes bloodshot. “In truth, I do not know, Arrah.”
Her words knock the taste from my mouth. The Litho boys would’ve beaten me if not for Essnai and Sukar’s help. The boys’ magic had been feeble and nothing special, yet still too much to handle on my own. Now this? My mind slips back to the sacred circle again. Why couldn’t Heka gift me with magic? “Am I in trouble?”
“I will not lie to you,” Grandmother says. “I do not think she means you well.”
“But you have an idea of what she is,” Oshhe says, his face blanching.
Grandmother’s voice drops low—the way one utters an unspeakable secret. “I don’t want to speculate.” She scoops the bones into her lap, her hand shaking. “It’s best if I consult with the other edam first . . .”
“Grandmother!” I beg. “Please . . . you know, don’t you?”
She worries her fingers across the bones, still refusing to meet my eye.
“Mother,” Oshhe says, his jaw clenched, “speak your mind.”
“The green-eyed serpent,” Grandmother says after a weary breath, “is said to be a symbol of demon magic.”
Silence falls upon the room and Grandmother’s words hang like a noose between the three of us. Demons are myths, legends. Stories that parents tell to scare their children into behaving. The scribes teach us that the orishas saved mortal kind from them. Back home we call someone who sucks the joy out of life a soul eater. It’s meant as a harmless insult—one inspired by the tales that demons feasted upon kas. Everything I know about them comes from those half-forgotten stories. People fill in the gaps in the folklore with their imagination. The scribes say that the orishas erased the full memories of demons from our minds to protect us. Now Grandmother’s telling me that demons are real, and one is very much alive.
“It’s impossible,” my father whispers, the news stealing the strength from his voice. “There has to be another explanation. Demon magic has been gone for thousands of years.”
“Yes, I know,” Grandmother says, closing her fist around the bones.
I rub the back of my head, feeling the onslaught of a headache. The vision has Grandmother scared too. She’s trying to protect me, but I want the truth. I need to know if the green-eyed serpent is a demon . . . how could it be possible and what does it mean? Could this be the reason my magic is asleep, or why Heka’s grace had only touched me in passing in the sacred circle? I’m reaching for straws, but I ask anyway, “Does this demon have anything to do with my magic not showing?”
“It’s possible,” Grandmother says, her voice so very tired. “There’s much in this world that even I cannot perceive. As I said, I must consult with the other edam. Together, we may be able to find an answer.”
My father’s practiced calm gives away to frustration. “How do I keep Arrah safe?”
Grandmother thinks long before answering, “I do not know, but we’ll find a way.”
I don’t miss the uncertainty between her words. I’m irritated that they need to protect me. If I had magic of my own, I could protect myself. My mind reels with the grim news. Not only has Heka forsaken me his gift, but things are much worse. I once laughed at stories about demons, and now I know that one may walk in my shadow.
She does not mean me well.
Re’mec, Orisha of Sun, Twin King
Tell me again, sister, why do we tolerate such disrespect from these tribal people? I have a mind to stomp out their lives like the ants they are. They think magic is a gift. A gift! How can they be so foolish? Magic is
a curse for mortal kind, and in time they will use it to destroy themselves. Who knows that better than us? We saved their world once, and I’m not of the temperament to save it again. I should take another nap. Twenty years wasn’t enough. I grow tired.
Heka is to blame for our new troubles. Had we not lost so many of our brethren in the War, we could have stopped him from giving them magic. Now we find ourselves in this new predicament.
It’s not that I’m sentimental. This world can burn today and I will have forgotten it by tomorrow. It means nothing to me. It’s the principle of the matter. We gave everything to protect them from that bastard Demon King, everything. Now this is how we’re repaid for our sacrifice, our kindness?
I’m sorry, dear sister. I know that the blood moon is your time. It is your way of remembering our fallen brethren, as the Rite of Passage is mine. As he’s done for a thousand years, Heka has come back to ruin your bereavement. His very presence is an act of pissing on our siblings’ graves, if we had bodies to bury. Or do they burn bodies now? I forget what’s popular these days.
You don’t have to remind me of our failures, Koré. They haunt my every thought. I should’ve known that we’d only postponed the inevitable. After five thousand years, I hoped that it wouldn’t come to this, but the beast stirs even now. We must act before it’s too late.
Alas, sister, as always you’re right. I could not stand by and let this world come to an end. I couldn’t do it then, and I won’t do it now. I love it too much, and that is my greatest failing above all else.
Four
It’s never easy returning to Tamar after spending time in the tribal lands. I’m bone-tired and more than a little cranky from sleeping in a tent the entire time. The whole trip took a month. Eight days of travel each way with the caravan, and two weeks at the festival. We arrive in the middle of the night, and I’m so relieved to be back home that I go straight to bed. Mere hours later, I wake buried in pillows and sheets that smell of lavender and coconut. They were fresh and cool last night, but now they’re ruffled and sweat-stained. The curtains around my bed keep out most of the sunlight, but some slips between the gaps and I can’t fall back asleep.
This was supposed to be my year—the year that I can finally say that I have magic too. The year that I hold a light in my mother’s shadow. Even an ember would’ve been enough for me. I tell myself for the one hundredth time that there’s still a chance, that I can’t give up. But hope is a fleeting thing when met with repeated failure.
Since the first night of the blood moon, I’ve dreamed about magic. The good dreams always end with some version of me possessing Heka’s gift. I step out of the sacred circle so powerful that the edam name me a witchdoctor on the spot. I glide on a cloud like the Aatiri in the opening ceremony. I leave my body to wander the spirit world and find Heka waiting for me underneath a palm tree. I come back to Tamar and tell Rudjek, and for once he’s speechless. When I wake up, still on the edge of sleep, a sense of peace settles over me. But the moment never lasts.
In the bad dreams, I step into the sacred circle and the edam stop their dance. The valley falls silent and one by one they turn their backs to me. Or the Litho boys drag me out of the circle, kicking and screaming because I don’t belong. Or as punishment a witchdoctor turns me into a ndzumbi to live out the rest of my life doing their bidding.
I shake my head. Dreams aside, Heka’s magic rejected me. That was real. And that’s the hardest thing to wrap my mind around. Yes, I have gifts, but what good are they if I can’t use magic? What will these gifts do to protect me from the green-eyed serpent if she decides to show herself again? What if next time she can’t be sent away? Seeing how powerful she’d been against Grandmother—it’s possible that she’s the reason my magic hasn’t shown.
I pull the sheet up to my neck and screw my eyes shut. Terra is shuffling around my bedroom, so I pretend I’m still asleep. She usually hums to herself while she prepares my bath, but this morning she’s quiet. Ty, our matron, along with Nezi, our porter, have been with our household all my life. Nezi bought Terra’s indenture contract two years ago, after her father’s debtors caught up with him. Terra told me that they would’ve cut off his hands had she not agreed to work off his debt.
Before I can bury my face in a pillow, she pulls the curtains back and the full brunt of the sun blinds me. In Tamar, the sun is also called the eye of Re’Mec, but right now more colorful names cross my mind.
“Twenty-gods,” I curse, shielding my eyes. “Is it eighth morning bells already?”
Someone clears her throat and I bolt upright—it’s not Terra. A short, stout woman with gray cornrows stands at the foot of my bed with her fists on her hips. She purses her lips in that way that leaves no doubt that she means business.
“Ty!” I slip out of bed in an instant. “Pardon my language. I thought you were Terra.”
She stares at me and blinks twice, and I brush the wrinkles out of my nightgown and stand a little straighter. Ty never comes herself. This isn’t her domain. She does all the cooking, and Terra takes care of the rest of the chores.
She shakes her head and taps her foot, a sign that she wants me to hurry up.
My cheeks warm as I rush into the washroom where my bath is waiting. I don’t linger long. Then I slip into a fresh cotton robe that smells like home. I inhale deeper, taking it in, trying to push the tribal lands out of my mind. When I return to my room, it’s pristine. The white sheets are as smooth as stretched papyrus, the pillows stacked in a neat row. Cold stabs through my slippers as I pad across the stone floor to my vanity in search of my favorite balm.
Ty sorts through the shelves of clothes in the armoire next to the window. When she doesn’t find what she’s looking for, she crosses the room to the closet by the door. On the way, she fluffs one of the velvet pillows on the settee in the center of the room. She’s not the most cheerful person, but today she’s more somber than usual. It isn’t one of her bad days, but definitely not one of her good days either.
While she’s searching through my clothes, I go to the shrine next to the bed. Dust coats my collection: my very first bone charm, the one that my father gave me at Imebyé. The Kes necklace made of crystal beads to bring good luck. Two clay dolls, which Oshhe and I made to honor two of his favorite aunts, long since passed. In the right hands, these things amplify magic and our connection to the ancestors. But in my hands, they are only trinkets. No one touches my shrine, as is the Aatiri custom, so the whole lot of it needs cleaning after weeks away. I reach for a rag, but Ty clears her throat behind me again.
“Yes, you’re right.” I sigh. “I can do that after my lessons with the scribes.”
I mean after I see Rudjek. I wrote him a letter before we reached the city and gave it to Terra to deliver. If all goes well, he’ll meet me after my lessons in our secret place by the river.
When I turn to face Ty, she holds up a flowing teal sheath. It’s breathtaking, the way the sun catches on the beads and gathers on the fine silk. Essnai and her mother gave it to me on my last birth day. Ty may not usually help with my clothes, but she should know the sheath is too formal for lessons with the scribes.
“I don’t think that’s quite appropriate,” I say, heading to the armoire. I dig through piles of folded clothes and pull out my sea-blue tunic and matching pants. Ty shakes her head and lays the sheath on the bed alongside a beaded belt and jeweled slippers.
Before I can protest again, my mother sweeps into my room, her gold Ka-Priestess’s kaftan rustling in her wake. The space between us feels too small and I cringe, as if caught doing something wrong. The morning light glows against her honey-golden skin, and her amber eyes shine like rare gemstones. When Oshhe and I got back last night, Arti was at the Almighty Temple. The seers sometimes hold vigils for days, so it’s never a surprise if she’s not home. I’ve always counted myself lucky then. It’s easier to avoid her.
My mother is the definition of beauty. Her ebony hair flows down her back in loose curl
s, threaded through with pale crystals. She bears Tribe Mulani’s softness and curves and small stature compared to the Aatiri. I am somewhere in the middle, taller than my mother, but much shorter than my very tall cousins. Although the resemblance between us is unmistakable, next to her, I might as well be a squat mule.
She never comes to visit me here. I can’t guess the meaning of this—unless she’s talked to my father already, and she knows.
Arti peers around the room, examining its condition, before her eyes land on Ty. The two women exchange a look—one of understanding that I’ve seen shared between them many times before.
Ty has never spoken to me, nor to anyone for that matter. I’ve heard her mumbling in the kitchen when she’s alone, but she stops as soon as someone else comes near. I don’t know why she doesn’t talk. My childhood questions about it always went unanswered. No different from Grandmother hesitating to answer my questions about the green-eyed serpent.
“You may leave us, Ty,” Arti says, tilting her head to show respect.
When Ty is gone, Arti’s sharp amber eyes fall upon me. “I trust that you’re well.”
“I am, Mother,” I say, resisting the urge to glance away. “Thank you for asking.”
“Your father told me what happened at the Blood Moon Festival.” Her attention shifts to the altar, and she wrinkles her nose. I can’t tell if she disapproves of the mix of tribal trinkets or the dust. “It’s time to let go of this foolish dream of having magic. Mulani show their gifts at a very young age. If it hasn’t happened by now, it won’t happen at all.”
My mother speaks in a matter-of-fact tone that sets my teeth on edge. She might as well be talking to a stranger on the street. Her words sting in my chest and leave me speechless.
She brushes her hand across the sheath. The luminous pearl of her Ka-Priestess’s ring shimmers in the sunlight. As her hand glides over the fabric, the color of the pearl changes from onyx to slate to cyan. “It’s a shame to come from two powerful bloodlines and have no magic at all. No Mulani in my family has ever been without. But there is nothing to be done about it.”