Back then, before the Beast came to the Land Behind
the Mountains, back before a curse was set upon the women of that land, there
lived a girl.
Her father had died long before she was born, and her
mother didn't re-marry until much later.
So, the task of naming the child fell on her mother's shoulder. And she named her daughter Sun-On-Moss,
though it was usually shortened down to Moss.
They lived in Darklight village, a part of the
Crescent Tribes, near the Gray Wood. And
it was the Gray Wood that caused Moss's life to become a story told and
retold. Though her part is mostly
forgotten. The people of Southlands, as
it is now called, usually only remember her elder brother, Foxeye. The boy who was lost in the Gray Woods - and
returned.
But here, her story will be told.
In the year that the mango crop was struck with
blight, Foxeye came of age to make his passage; he was now seventeen. Moss was fifteen, but that was no
matter. Nothing of importance happened
to a girl at that age. The girls of
Darklight never married until sixteen or, on occasion, older. Her birthday was a little over looked in the
shadow of her brother's rite into manhood.
Moss loved her brother, and he loved her. When little, and had time to play, it was
always with each other, despite the difference in age.
Moss stood near the stake and waved him off, calling
blessings that the Lights Above would shield him. Watching as he disappeared into the
Wood. She had no doubt he would return -
and he would get something amazing, at that.
As they had gotten older, they had spent more and more time apart. Girls were not supposed to spend their free
hours with the boys like that, even if they were brother and sister. But still would talk, when they could.
And they would wonder about the stories told. About the beasts young men would bring back
from the Gray Wood.
That had been Foxeye's dream. He wanted to kill a beast that would take him
down through their land's lore forever.
Moss would laugh or smile quietly.
She didn't quite believe what the old ones would say. The Gray Woods were probably roamed by wolves
and panthers - dangerous animals, but nothing fantastic. Whatever Foxeye got would be amazing, but not
magical.
Still, she wished....
All her life... she had wanted to enter those trees. She had always been too scared to do it,
though. Not without a rope tied around
her so she could find a way back.
But even ropes do not protect as well as one might
hope.
Foxeye had been in the Gray Woods for two days. It was a long time, longer than any lad of
Darklight village had ever been in there.
And then... the rope went slack. Moss was in her family's hut, preparing a
meal when she heard the cries. She
hurried out and caught the words people were saying.
"... He is lost."
"The rope..."
"My brother, his son was lost the same way."
Her skin turned an eerie pale, and Moss ran.
She pushed through the people, never minding when her
bare feet cut on rocks, and raced to the gorge.
The crowd broke around her, and she saw her mother. Hunched on the ground, weeping, while her
husband tried to quiet her.
Men were pulling the rope out, and she saw the end
appear; frayed and cut, without her brother.
Foxeye was lost.
It cannot be said that Sun-On-Moss was a coward. No more did a day pass after her brother was
lost before she went to the gorge by the Gray Wood again. It was deserted now, and she should have been
dressed in red, with her family, mourning for her brother. Weeping over the loss of one close to you was
not given much time amongst the Crescent People. Three days of silence in their home, red for
the dead one's still blood, and then life went on.
But Moss was not at home, nor was she wearing red.
Her dress of skins was a plain brown. And she approached the edge of gorge looking
determined. Hidden under it was a look
of fear, but Moss tried to ignore that feeling.
She stepped to the edge... and began to climb
down. The rocks were sharp and hot with
the heat of the day. And her hair in a
long, thick dark braid was heavy on her back and seemed to gather the moisture
from the air. But she didn't stop, not
until she was at the bottom. She rested
there for a few minutes, allowing herself a few sips from her water skin. But she didn't drink much before she tucked
it back in her sack. It would need to be
saved.
She was going into the Woods. She was going to find her brother. And she wouldn't come back - though she might
die in there, and her bones lie in that foreign place away from all she knew -
she wouldn't come back until she found Foxeye.
There was a river at the bottom. Boats were fastened to the shore. Most of them were on the near side, but
one... only one was across it, where the Gray Woods began.
Moss climbed into one on her shore and untied it. Immediately the river took hold of the boat,
and Moss had to struggle with the paddles.
Her arms screamed with the pain of the exertion as she tried to make it
across, but she wasn't strong enough!
She couldn't do it! And the river
was carrying her away.
Her eyes darted frantically around, hoping for... she
didn't know what.
Uselessly, she shouted out. One word, and that word was lost in the roar
of the river: "Help!" But there was no one to hear her cry, and
Moss knew it... or so she thought.
Her hands still held the paddles. With one last desperate attempt to control
the boat, she struggled to push against the water.
To Moss, it felt as if hands had suddenly grabbed a
hold of the handles next to her's. And
the paddles pushed in her grasp, rowing against the current, taking her to
shore.
The boat struck the land. Moss sat, shocked, then came to herself and
jumped out. She ran along the shore, and
when she glanced back, the boat had been swept away.
She journeyed beside the Wood until she came back to
the place where Foxeye's boat was tied.
There, she took three things from her sack: a stake, a hammer, and a
coil of rope. Moss pounded the first
into the ground, tied the rope to it, and then the other end of the rope around
herself. Filling her skin quickly from
the river, she turned back to the Gray Wood.
The place she had always dreamed of entering. But in her games of childhood, she had always
been a courageous exploring warrior maiden, setting off to discover what lay
beyond. Not searching for her lost
brother; and never scared. And she was
scared, for Foxeye, and for herself.
But she had to, for Foxeye. For him.
She ran into the trees, not stopping until she was far
in, for fear that she would be too afraid and go back.
Moss was in the Gray Woods.
Nothing happened.
The Wood was quiet, seemed darker than she might have thought, but
nothing unusual like the stories.
Nothing unusual, except for how still it was. In these trees, the softest song of a bird
would sing like a battle cry. And Moss
was weary of the silence.
Still... there was nothing to be afraid of here. She carefully stepped through the trees,
parting the underbrush. Hours must have
passed for her, but what little of the sky she could glimpse through the
branches showed no sign of darkness. If
Moss noticed the strangeness of that (for it had been late afternoon when she
had descended from her village, and must be near night now), it didn't bother
her. And she searched through the Gray
Woods for hours. Finally, her legs could
carry her no more. Moss located a firm
tree and climbed it. The bark was
rougher than any in Darklight, and the branches larger. But it was a tree, and Moss had climbed them
since she was old enough to remember.
She had gone up trees to pluck fruit for gathering, or when playing with
her brother.
Moss spoke in a near whisper. "Foxeye... I'll find you.... I will,
brother."
And she settled in her branches, and fell asleep. It was calm and quiet all the while Moss
slept, until...
When she awoke, there was talking. Moss didn't move, trying to figure out where
it was coming from.
"No, no - you mustn’t go along da River - go by a
Rudiobus Path - that's is the way to go."
A second voice responded, deeper, and though the first was spoken
quickly, this was quicker.
"Da Merry Folk? - No, - they wouldne let me -
they wouldne let others - why not da River? - He's a pal a mine."
"He's is not!"
The speakers babbled and squabbled. They seemed to want to go somewhere, and were
arguing over the best way to get there.
Moss had pinpointed where the voices were coming from: above her. She looked up, but couldn't see
anything. Still, she could hear them up
there, they sounded right above her head.
Anxious to find out who it was, Moss shifted to try
and better see. The tree shook with her
movements, and the voices stopped.
She stopped too, scared of what might happen.
"What's a that?" The first voice asked, hissing out a whisper.
"Oh, a! - down there - you see?"
There was a fluttering noise. With no time for Moss to do anything, they
suddenly appeared on the branch right there, the space of an arm above her
head.
The creatures she saw were almost like birds. Almost: their bodies were like an eagle -
except for the talons, which were gnarled and three of them turned the wrong
way. But their heads were what stood
out. For their heads looked like a
man's.
Moss opened her mouth and tried to speak, but all that
came out was a noise like a croak.
"Here's - what's a is it?" The one on the left spoke, it was the one
with the higher voice. Its feathers were
brown, while its companion's were gray spotted with white. The gray and white one didn't answer, but
eyed the girl. And his talons curled.
Moss scrambled back, trying to get out of the
tree. She fell. Her rope caught on branches when she fell,
and tightened around her middle as the line went taunt. Moss panicked, she couldn't breathe! Wildly she pulled at the rope, and it came
loose, dropping her three more feet to the ground.
She lay there, struggling to get in air, and saw those
things swoop down.
Moss pushed herself up to stand. The creature landed in the lowest branch of
the tree.
"What's you? - Rudiobus? - Butannaziba? -
or..."
Moss burst in before it could speak again. "I am Sun-On-Moss, daughter of
Quickhawk, from Darklight village."
"Oh - mortal - sounds a mortal - a
mortal!" The gray and white one
said.
It flapped its wings, and Moss held up her sack in
case she should need to defend herself.
Her arms shook and felt weak, and she dropped the bag.
She took a step back.
The gray bird flew away with a flap, calling to its companion. The brown one paused a moment, and looked at
her, almost kindly. But it was hard to
take comfort from a beast half human half animal, especially when they had
talons so sharp.
"You go back - not meant for a here - no, no, no,
not for Woods - stay off Paths - off da Paths, not for a you! - listen to
me!" Then took flight and
disappeared.
Moss crumpled to the ground and lay there for a long
time.
Of course, eventually, her water skin began to get
low. Moss's rope caught on the trees and
underbrush as she went. Searching and
calling for Foxeye. Her voice grew
hoarse, and she went quiet.
The creatures had spoken of a river; she might find
that, somewhere in here. The Gray Woods
scared her. There were those... things,
and the quiet and, not matter how far she went the she didn't run out of
rope. That worried her.
Food had been packed, and Moss ate some of it. Then she went on.
But when she made her way through the Gray Wood this
time, something was different. One step
and it changed. The air grew dark. Moss had never thought air could do something
like growing dark, but it did. And
smells vanished, except for one thing - smoke.
It was not the fresh smoke Moss would smell from a cooking fire, but
heavy, horrible, choking smoke.
She coughed, wiping at her eyes. And then seeing what gave off the smoke. Through the trees, she could see them. Women, dancing and whirling, made of
smoke. They shifted, becoming long and
tall, short, or like a horse, with long legs.
And interchanging with each other. Four of them - two broke apart, now six. They danced.
Some faded away and disappeared.
New ones came.
Moss backed away.
A scream wanted out, but they would hear her.
She stumbled back, and just as suddenly as it had
happened, it all disappeared. And Moss
ran away as far and as long as she could.
The trees around her never changed, and she grew used
to them; it was better than before. If everything
was calm like this, she wouldn't mind.
She liked the quiet better than what else the Wood was capable of doing
to her. Then, after a long time, she saw
a break up ahead. She stopped.
"Foxeye?"
She called. Then she said again,
louder, “Foxeye! Brother, are you
there?"
Out of the corner of her eye, Moss thought she saw
something. She turned to it, but there
was nothing but trees.
Moss looked back up ahead, and hurried toward it. The trees began to thin and Moss stepped into
a clearing.
She stopped, taken back.
Everything was dead.
The grass was brown, and there were stumps of trees. The ground dipped slightly in front of
her. And the ground in the dip was
cracked and bare.
Moss hesitated.
It almost looked like... a path.
Those - those things, the bird-beasts, they had warned her about paths,
or something to that extent. But, if
they had said paths were bad, wouldn't paths be good? Moss was unsure. They, of course, couldn't be good. Not if they looked like that. The stories she had always thought ridiculous
- Lights Above, how wrong she was! - never had good coming from the Gray
Wood. Any beasts within them were
evil. The Wood itself was evil, too.
"Who is there?"
Her grip around the sack tightened, and Moss
gasped. The voice had come from the
ground, from the dead cracked ground.
Moss took a step back, then spoke. "I am Sun-On-Moss... from Darklight
village."
It was quiet, then it seemed to her like the ground
sighed.
"Ah... I knew someone would come... He told me
so, and I listen, now."
Moss stared at the ground in wonder and fear. If it weren't for Foxeye, she would run out
now back from the Gray Woods and up the gorge to the Land Behind the
Mountains. Of course, if it wasn't for
Foxeye, she wouldn't have come into the Woods in the first place.
It spoke again.
"I didn't used to. I didn't used to listen... I was a river,
once...." It paused, and Moss gazed
at what she know realized was a dried up stream bed. It called itself a river, but was too small
for that.
"I can take you where you need." The stream bed said. Moss bit her lip.
It went on.
"Come, follow me. Step into
me, I will show you where."
Moss stepped back away from it, but a whisper spoke in
her ear.
Follow. Trust
Me, and trust him.
She could trust the voice. She knew she could, and Moss did not question
where it came from.
Her feet were tired and sore, and the dust of the
stream bed stuck to them as she stepped in.
"Good," The voice murmured from beneath
her. "Walk along me. And let me tell you my story."
Each step was cautious, but Moss followed the way
before her. And Moss listened. This is what the old, dried stream said:
"I had a name, back when I was wet and free and
water ran over me. But I do not use it
anymore." It paused, and Moss did
not say anything. She kept her eyes
ahead to where she went, but the clearing with the dead grass and stumps went
on forever.
"I once met Goldstone, and we would run together,
our water mixing. And I heard His voice,
but I did not listen. He said He loved
me..... Maybe I believed Him, I don't
recall. But I did not listen. I was young; my water was fresh, and I was
free... I was free...."
He - somehow, it seemed a he - was silent. Moss spoke.
"What happened?"
"I dried up.
Lume is bright, and does not mean to be, but is cruel. My water was taken, and no more flowed. What was left seeped into me, and then I was
dry. Dry and alone; and I knew, then - I
know now. I am still here, but I am
dry. He loved me. The One Who Names Them loved me." The last words sounded wondering and
prideful, and the stream spoke as though he clung to them.
The stream came to an end, and the trees started.
"Here, go here." The stream bed said.
"Go into the Woods now, and go where you will
find him. He told me he is near."
His words made no sense. Moss stepped from the dry bed, and paused a
moment. The stream murmured again,
softly.
"He loved me... but I am dry, and I did not
listen. I still hear Him. And I heard you would come. And I heard about him... and I saw him. I was told by Him. But it is too late; He will not want a
cracked bed that once flowed with water."
"But if he loved you so, would not he love you
still?" The words burst out of the
girl.
A sound startled Moss, and she glanced around in
bewilderment. It sounded like water
dashing against rocks. She did not
understand, but that is how rivers and streams laugh - even if they have no more
water.
"Yes!"
The stream cried. "Yes! I come to Him.
"Go to Him, Sun-On-Moss, mortal girl! And find him.
Yes! Yes!"
The voice died aware.
And Moss stood there for a moment before she continued into the Wood.
Her water ran out.
The skin was dry. But Foxeye was
in the Gray Wood still.
"Fox- Foxeye...."
She called, and stumbled, tripping on a root. Moss did not get up. She let go of her sack and empty skin,
pushing them away. A few tears trickled
on her cheeks. "Foxeye!" She shouted.
"You cannot be lost! I'm
here, I came to find you!"
The tears poured out.
Moss could not go on. She wasn't
strong enough, she couldn't last on her own.
She had no water.
"Where are you, brother? Help me..." She would have said, 'find you.' but could
not go on.
Without hope, her face pressed to the ground, and
alone.
But she was not.
Moss did not realize that until she felt something press her hand. Fear shot through her, but then it was
overwhelmed with something else.
Something flowed into her with that touch. And when Moss slowly turned herself and
looked up, she saw a man crouched next to her.
He was not a creature, like those women, and the bird-beasts, but he did
not seem the same as her either. His
skin was pale, and his hair not quite as dark as the people from the Land. But Moss sensed there was more than that.
Moss stared up at him, and the last tear slipped down
her face.
"Do not cry, Moss." He spoke.
His voice was gentle but firm.
Words pushed at her mouth, and her face quivered, but
the words would not come out.
His right hand held hers, and his left reached and
wiped away the tears that clung to her face.
"I have been here. Will you
listen?"
She shook her head.
"I am not of your land," She finally said.
The man smiled, but his face looked sad.
"You are not of this land, no. But even if that would matter, you are
mine."
"No," She said, and part of her told her not
to be scared, but she was. "I am
not. And you don't want me. I... I am worn - I would not do you any
good.”
"Moss, I do not mean to harm you."
Her face shook, and she looked down. "Even... I still... I am not worth
anything. These Woods have scared me,
and I can't find him." She didn't
explain, for he seemed to understand. He
seemed to already know. "I'm so
weak... tired... thirsty... please...."
His hand stroked her hair, and he spoke in a kind
voice. "I can help you Moss. Stand up.
Come with me."
Moss shook her head.
"I'm not of your land. I
belong to the Land Behind the Mountain.
I need to go back. I am not like
you, here."
"Would I not love you still?"
Moss looked up.
The man was standing, and His hand was held down to her.
"You are... you're the one the stream spoke of -
the one who..." Moss didn't know
how to finish. But she stood up. She took His hand, and found herself in His
embrace.
"I have loved you, child. Sun-On-Moss.
You have wandered far in search of your brother, but you will not find
him in here. Without a Path in the
Woods, he is lost, and cannot be found."
Her heart felt like it stopped beating, but He went on.
"You will not find him, but I can help you. Together, we shall find Foxeye. Moss, will you follow me?"
Moss looked up at him.
Slowly, her face began to tighten, and she pulled back, breaking away
from him.
"No... this is a trick. You are from the Gray Wood, creatures in here
can't be trusted. You are... this is a
trick, you mean to do me harm! I won't
let you take me!" She turned before
he could say more. Moss stumbled into
the Wood, running away from him.
Something moved in the trees ahead of her. Foxeye - it had to be him, it had to be
Foxeye.
She rushed after it, her sack left where she had
dropped it. "Foxeye! Brother!
It is Moss!" She crashed
through the Wood. Again, something moved
before her, and it seemed to lead Moss on.
But finally it disappeared. Moss
stopped, heaving in and out, her eyes darted quickly around her. There was a noise. She jerked to her right. There, staring back at her, cuts covering his
arms, the skin of a squirrel in his hands, a cut rope hanging from his middle,
was Foxeye.
She grabbed him before he could vanish like the smoke
women. And they clutched each other.
Foxeye remember nothing of what had happened. He had been hunting, and his rope and gotten
cut. And then... he couldn't remember
anything else. It had seemed like no
time had passed since then. But he had
been gone for a day after that, and Moss must have been in the Gray Woods
searching for many days, she insisted.
But it didn't matter.
They kept hold of each other and began to trace her
rope back out. Moss tried to ignore the
fact it would take them too long to get back.
They did not have water, they would die.
But the Wood played by different rules than any land of Mortals.
It seemed less than an hour, when Foxeye cried out,
and she followed his pointing hand to where the Wood ended.
He began running, her arm jerked and she was dragged with him. As the left they Gray Wood... Moss saw a
flash of gold, almost like the fur of an animal, darting through the
trees.
But she went with her brother, back to her land.
If you would like to vote on this or any other Goldstone Wood Fan Fiction, email me at aestengl@gmail.com with the titles of your top three picks. Winners will be announced September 1st.
6 comments:
Rebekah, this story was so intriguing, and the atmosphere so eerie and thrilling. I actually want to know more about what happens to these characters after the end--does Moss ever truly understand the nature of the One she met?
No... silly girl to not see what is in front of her, so blinded by what she had before thought, no.... She never does.
*Sigh*. I think I'll go and cry now at the thought.
Ooo, what an eerie setting. So brave of Moss to search for her brother! But she didn't believe the Prince. Such finite triumph when she found her brother but such infinite tragedy when she left the Lumil Eliasul. I hope she returned to him.
I'm so glad to find another story set in the era close to the events of Starflower. A nice depiction of a sister's love. Very interesting that she rejected the Lumil Eliasul's help, but I think he helped her anyway. At least, I hope that was him who led her to Foxeye. Or, is it possible that it was a certain Beast who had seduced the young man into giving him entrance to the land? Hmmm. I hope the former, but its intriguing either way. Excellent job. God bless you.
Well done! This story was very haunting, but there was joy when the stream found its Maker, and ultimate sadness when Moss rejected hers. I loved the setting of the Wood and the way you described it so well.
Thank you all! But I don't think I got Lumil Eliason's lines right.
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