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Dragonfly Song

Page 20

by Wendy Orr


  at a cat,

  white like Milli

  balancing on the balcony’s edge,

  and wishes

  she was under her sanctuary rock

  with Milli-Cat and the kittens

  and especially

  Gold-Cat.

  She wishes so hard,

  that the cat leaps

  from balcony to seats below

  trots around them

  to above the acrobats’ pen

  and jumps down

  to Aissa’s shoulder.

  22

  IN THE MOTHER’S ROOMS

  The Mother comes to the arena three days later. She’s in a curtained litter chair carried by four men; two young priestesses walk behind twirling their sun parasols, their flounced skirts up over their ankles. The Mother isn’t wearing as much gold as she had at the bull dance, but she looks just as much a queen.

  Aissa had been right when she’d thought The Lady of Ladies. Long ago, in a battle of the gods, the earthshaker bull defeated the earth mother. He destroyed her palaces so that invaders could come from over the sea and build their own kingdom. But only the goddess of the earth can bring new life and the crops in their seasons, so although the bull god’s king can make laws and armies, he can’t rule this land without the goddess’s priestesses.

  There are many of them, but this woman is the matriarch of all – which is why she’s known as the Mother.

  Now the Mother has come to see Aissa.

  Her two attendants try to look as if they’re not as curious as everyone else when the Mother orders Mia, ‘I want the girl who called the cat.’

  Mia pales as she salutes. Aissa is one of her best trainees, and she has a duty to defend her.

  ‘With respect, Mistress,’ says Mia, ‘the girl doesn’t speak.’

  The Mother raises an eyebrow, intrigued. ‘Not at all?’

  ‘Not a sound.’

  ‘Interesting. But there’s more than one way to call a cat. That’s the girl I want.’

  Mia salutes again and crosses the ring to where Aissa is practising one-handed handstands. She’s fallen over more than she’s stood; she’s sweaty, dusty, and her hair’s frizzing out of its plaits. She’s nowhere near fit to present to a priestess.

  ‘I don’t know what she wants,’ Mia murmurs, trying to wipe the worst of the dust off Aissa’s nose before leading her back to the Mother’s chair. ‘Remember: you haven’t done anything wrong.’

  Aissa’s surprised at Mia’s distress. None of the acrobats believed that Mia even had a heart.

  But she knows something that Mia doesn’t: it’s her fault that Zeta was gored. She deserves to be punished. She stands in front of the litter chair, head bowed.

  The Mother pulls the curtains back to study her. ‘Open your mouth – and lift your head, girl . . . so you do have a tongue! You just choose not to use it.’

  She snaps her fingers imperiously. Mia and Niko stand to attention.

  ‘I’m taking her. I’ll send you a slave as a replacement acrobat.’

  ‘But Mistress,’ Niko dares, ‘this girl has a real chance as a bull leaper. Would it not be possible to find another slave for your purpose?’

  ‘Slave?’ snorts the Mother. ‘A girl who can call beasts is no slave. She’s a priestess.’

  And just like that, life changes again.

  Life whirling

  as if it’s done so many cartwheels

  it doesn’t know which way is up.

  A last look –

  Luki saying words only Aissa can know:

  ‘Snake singer!’

  The others shocked to silence

  till Mia barks,

  ‘Do you think you’ll learn handstands

  standing on your feet?’

  She sounds like Mia again

  and the acrobats leap to their hands.

  While Aissa

  in her dancer’s shorts

  follows the girls in their flowing skirts

  up the road to the palace

  into another new life.

  The Mother’s wing of the palace is a labyrinth of rooms. They’re all joined, leading from one to the other in complicated bends and twists, sometimes through corridors, sometimes up stairs. It takes Aissa weeks to learn her way around. She never does figure out how to reach the Mother’s chamber on her own; maybe she’s not meant to.

  And she’s never sure just how many priestesses there are. Their order is as complicated as the rooms. The Mother is the head, with six Sisters under her. Each of the Sisters has assistants, and then there’s a cloud of young priestesses and trainees who float to wherever they’re needed. Aissa is one of the cloud.

  Introducing her that first day, the Mother says, ‘Aissa doesn’t speak, but she’ll sing when she’s ready. She has a rare gift and the goddess has a use for her that I don’t yet know. Welcome her well.’

  The giggles don’t start till the Mother leaves the room.

  ‘How can she not speak?’

  ‘What, never?’

  ‘I’d go crazy if I couldn’t talk!’

  ‘We’ll go crazy if you don’t stop!’

  ‘Why does the Mother say she can sing?’

  ‘What’s her gift?’

  ‘Didn’t you see the cat go to her yesterday?’

  ‘The Mother’s cat? Went to a bull dancer?’

  ‘Very strange.’

  They find her a cot in a room with three other trainees, and show her how to wear the long skirt with a crossover blouse tucked in at the waist. Her dancer’s shorts and top disappear into the palace washing; her wolf cloak stays in the dancers’ dorm. She can’t imagine the cloak here. The girls would complain that it stinks. It does stink, just a little bit, but she’d like to smell it again.

  Her room is simple by palace standards, and more luxurious than anything in the Lady’s Hall. Dolphins leap across the frescoed floor; the walls and ceiling are covered with flowers. There’s a soft fleece on the bed and a rug to cover herself with. And there’s a mirror, a bronze mirror, just for these four apprentices.

  It doesn’t take long to work out how important that mirror is. The goddess of this land demands beauty: a priestess doesn’t leave her chamber until her face, body and clothes are all perfect.

  ‘Haven’t you ever worn make-up?’

  The girls aren’t being cruel; they’re just curious. They were all born in the palace and have never thought about the very different lives around it, the peasants and slaves who don’t have time for beauty. How could Aissa be chosen as a priestess if she hasn’t worn make-up?

  So Aissa learns

  to dip a brush

  into a pot of black kohl,

  closing one eye

  to outline and enhance

  without too much smudging;

  smearing lashes to make them thick,

  not blinking till they’re dry.

  She powders her face white

  and paints her lips as red

  as a mulberry thief’s –

  though she doesn’t eat mulberries now

  because they stain her fingers

  and clean white blouse.

  Make-up takes time

  but hair is worse:

  combing, brushing every morning

  and night again;

  different plaits on different days,

  curls and twists

  tied in bunches,

  caught by a hair band

  or cut in a fringe.

  Her roommates

  love to try something new,

  combing out her thick curls,

  but when Aissa combs theirs

  her hands tremble –

  the last hair she’d combed

  was Zeta’s,

  who was gored by a bull

  just hours later –

  and if that was Aissa’s fault,

  she’d rather clean privies

  than curse a priestess.

  Which isn’t saying much

  because
the palace privies

  don’t stink or need buckets of earth –

  just a servant waiting

  outside the closed door

  with a jug of water

  to flush the pipes clean.

  And though Aissa’s glad

  she’s not doing the cleaning

  or even the flushing

  she squirms inside

  at someone else

  doing it for her –

  until the day

  she opens the door

  and sees Zeta waiting

  with the jug.

  Zeta salutes, stiff and formal

  but Aissa hugs,

  laughing, crying,

  till Zeta hugs back.

  Aissa questions –

  the dancers’ shrugging sign

  that she can’t use

  with the priestesses

  who share a language

  and have enough friends

  to chat with

  that they don’t need her.

  ‘The healers cared for me

  till I was well.

  I was lucky –

  I’d rather clean

  than face a bull.’

  Zeta lifts her blouse

  to show the wound,

  still a red and angry scar

  that Aissa touches

  gently

  with the love that Kelya

  and the wise-women taught.

  ‘Thank you,’ says Zeta,

  kissing Aissa’s hand,

  not understanding

  that Aissa would rather

  thank her

  for being alive.

  In the weeks that follow

  she sees other dancers

  who’ve become slaves.

  They’d been afraid to meet the eye

  of the dancer

  becoming a priestess.

  Once, going back to the chamber

  to return her jacket

  as the day warms,

  she sees the potter’s daughter.

  Aissa’s stomach clenches,

  remembering

  spit and hate –

  until

  the girl comes closer:

  not such a big girl,

  not a kind girl

  or a mean girl,

  just a girl

  dragging a leg

  from her dance with the bull,

  sweeping Aissa’s floor –

  but alive.

  Tears welling,

  Aissa reaches to hug her

  as she had Zeta

  but the potter’s daughter

  jumps back in fear:

  she can’t see No-Name

  in this painted priestess

  and waits for a blow

  that must come with this trick –

  so Aissa smiles

  and waves, ‘Never mind,’

  and the potter’s daughter decides

  she reminds the priestess

  of someone else

  from long ago

  but even so,

  there’s something

  that makes her feel strange,

  and after that

  she trades her chores

  rather than sweep that room again.

  But this year’s cast-outs

  call her ‘Lucky Aissa’

  behind their hands

  and are glad to see her,

  so that Aissa wishes

  Squint-Eye and the twins

  and most of all,

  the Lady,

  could see her being so lucky,

  living like a priestess’s daughter

  with only those two tiny scars

  to tell of the journey

  that’s brought her here.

  Maybe the goddess doesn’t care

  as much about scars

  or strange little thumbs

  as the Lady thought.

  Life as a priestess isn’t all hair and make-up. The goddess demands beauty, but it’s simply the background to the true rituals. And the true rituals aren’t so different from the ones at Aissa’s home. The bull god rules in public, but the Mother still talks to the house snake to read the future, and in a room on the top floor, sings the sun to rise each morning.

  It’s still dark when a servant lights the way from their chamber with a flaming torch. Aissa follows up the stairs with the other apprentice priestesses, and stands at the back of the room. She can just make out the shadowy figure of a woman in front of the windows.

  The first morning everything is so strange and different that when the Mother starts to sing, Aissa still doesn’t understand. How can she call from inside the palace? Then the first rays of sun hit the eastern window. A snake slithers from a pot to the Mother’s arms, and the room begins to brighten. Aissa gazes past the dark figure into the pink and gold sunrise, and feels the song thrill through her body. This is one familiar thing.

  As the song ends and the room fills with soft morning light, she studies the people around her – she’s not going to stop a lifetime of spying just because she’s safe for a moment. Apart from a few well-dressed women and children, most are priestesses, but there’s a sprinkling of men. One tall man with hair as red as a fox and an aura of kingship stands apart. He speaks to the Mother once the snake is safely back in its pot, and something in the way they stand together reminds Aissa of the Lady and the chief.

  ‘Lord,’ she hears a younger man say, and finally Aissa understands. This is the Bull King. When he puts on the god’s mask and speaks with the god’s voice, he’s a priest and almost a god; even without it he’s the most powerful chief in the world. But he is a man, and needs the sun to rise like any other.

  As if to prove it, he sends the younger man – his son, Aissa guesses – to call a servant for breakfast. Small tables appear, fresh cheese and figs, small fried fish and soft breads ... and Aissa, who has never eaten in the Hall except to scavenge under the tables for other people’s leftovers, is sharing breakfast with the Bull King.

  He even notices her once. The Mother points at her, obviously telling her story, and he looks over and nods. Aissa scrambles to her feet to salute, stumbling in her new long skirt. Her stool tips and clatters on the tiles. The king looks amused and a few girls giggle.

  ‘Sit down!’ one of her roommates hisses. ‘You don’t have to do that at breakfast.’

  One of the others picks up the stool for her.

  Aissa blushes and sits.

  A perfumed young man says something that makes everyone around him laugh. Clumsy and bull dancer are the only words Aissa understands – but they’re enough.

  It’s just words, not rocks, she reminds herself, which doesn’t help nearly as much as she would have thought a year ago.

  But my roommate picked up the stool for me.

  That does help.

  That first morning

  is already a memory

  and Aissa now

  moves gracefully in flowing skirts,

  though she and her friends

  are dressed in short shifts

  on a hot and moonless night

  when a sleepy maid

  is sent to wake them –

  for the round-bellied priestess

  who’d washed the bull dancers’ hands

  is labouring now

  to birth her babe,

  and the trainees must watch

  and learn

  the goddess’s work.

  The birth room is dark,

  like Aissa’s cave home

  under the rock

  where Milli-Cat’s

  kittens were born;

  torches flicker

  with just enough light

  to see the ring of Sisters

  against the walls,

  crooning softly

  a song without words,

  calling the baby

  to come out to the love

  of this flower-scented room.

  The priestess paces like Milli-C
at

  and when she stops

  to rock on her knees,

  her cries are louder

  but mean the same

  as the cat’s.

  A wise-woman, old as Kelya

  offers sips

  of honeyed herbs

  to ease her pain,

  while the Mother

  wipes sweat from her face

  with a cooling sponge,

  and calls the goddess.

  Aissa’s friends

  join in the singing

  and Aissa feels

  the song of new life

  flow through her heart –

  though not her mouth.

  The priestess cries loud

  and the wise-woman

  and the Mother

  echo in triumph,

  as a small and bloodied,

  squalling baby girl

  is welcomed to the world.

  The Mother is still waiting

  for Aissa to find her song

  but she is right

  that Aissa can dance.

  It’s a wonderful thing

  that the goddess loves

  to be worshipped in dance

  because Aissa

  loves to whirl and stamp,

  shake her hair and arms,

  spinning wild,

  or circling with the others

  as she did with the wise-women

  in the hills above her home.

  So when the bull dance comes

  on the autumn day

  that light and dark balance

  before the nights lengthen

  into winter,

  Aissa will be

  one of the dancers

  to praise the goddess

  for the bull.

  Except

  when the day comes

  Aissa’s belly

  begins to cramp

  as if she’s eaten

  unripe berries;

  her body

  begins to bleed

  and she doesn’t know why –

  and wonders

  how much blood

  can leak out before she dies.

  But her roommates,

  seeing her face so pale,

  hug her

  and give her clean rags

  to soak up the blood.

  ‘It happens to all of us,’

  they say.

  Then wise-women lead her

  to the goddess’s cave,

  dark and silent,

  to learn the mysteries

  of changing from girl

  to woman.

  Aissa feels so much older and wiser when she returns after her first period that she can’t help hoping she’ll regain her voice. She doesn’t. The only change is that her roommates have become her friends.

  Maybe she’s had so many changes in the last year that one more can’t make any difference. The only thing that’s the same as her life under the sanctuary rock, is the comfort of a cat curled against her in the evenings. And knowing that the Mother’s cat, like the Lady’s, has chosen her, is a very big comfort.

 

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