This is the fourth chapter of the story begun in xiang.

samhain


Perched on their overlook, the two friends sat cross-legged, enjoying the serenity of the whispering canyon. The northerly wind played among the many-colored leaves, bringing a soft, rasping song echoing to them from below.
"You’re right about the storm," said Shan Yu, squinting into the sky. "There’s a halo around the sun."
Lasuluun spat out his grass stalk and stood up, dusting his hands. "Well, let’s see what tomorrow holds for us, then. If the horses are due today, we might be able to see them come in from above. You with me?"
They hiked several hundred feet higher in silence, the only sound the crunching of long-dead scrub branches under their boots. Amidst the joint firs and sage, the leaves of small, succulent herbs were yellowing as their roots prepared for winter.
Lasuluun and Shan mounted several false peaks before they finally reached the summit. One of Sukhe’s sentries was there, sitting on a flat rock and whittling a small chunk of pine as he gazed out over the southeastern flatlands. He had seen them coming from a distance, and as they came near, he rose and respectfully greeted them before returning to his watch.
The village lay more than a thousand feet below them now, and they could view the plains in every direction. The southeastern edge of the steppe where they stood dropped severely as sheer, rocky cliffs for hundreds of feet. At their base, huge stones dotted the grasslands where they had tumbled and lain eroding for thousands of years. Tucked into the foothills, around the bend from the village itself, they could see eight large corrals made of loosely connected split pine rails. In one of them, a herd of shaggy yaks were lazily cropping the grass, and grazing around them were many piebald, dark-faced sheep. The other corrals were empty, though Shan Yu estimated that each could hold two hundred horses without crowding. Small chutes were fenced off at the end of each of the empty corrals, offering a confined space in which a wrangler could safely handle and examine a flighty horse herded in from the larger enclosures.
More surprising was a large, rectangular building constructed of great, round logs. The roof was made of pine timbers and sun-baked clay, and appeared to have been coated with pitch and resin. It was not quite Chinese in appearance, though it seemed as if its architects might have seen, or at least had described for them, Chinese roofs. Perhaps they had attempted to imitate them.
"Look at that," said Shan Yu scanning the area appreciatively. "It’s hard to believe a settlement like Urga has grown here since we last passed through. I’ve never seen anything like that outside of China. Looks big enough to hold everyone in the village!"
Lasuluun nudged his friend’s arm with his elbow and motioned with his chin. A plume of dust was rising at the mouth of the valley about ten miles east of the corrals.
The sentry spied the herd at almost the same time. He rose, took an enormous breath, cupped his hands to his face and dropped an ear-splitting whoop down on the village, his entire body tensing with the effort. He turned to the neighboring peaks and repeated the call for the other sentries. The sound of his voice echoed for several moments, bouncing along the canyon walls. He waited, watching the village below. A minute later, an answering call rose faintly from below, voiced by at least ten men.
The sentry turned to Shan Yu and Lasuluun, his tanned face deeply creased in a wide grin. He raised both fists and gestured triumphantly to them. They were going to war!
Shan Yu raised his own fist in reply, then turned to Lasuluun. "Right on schedule." He sighed. "I was getting tired of all this peace and quiet, anyway. I hope this healer of theirs shows up soon. We can use an extra pair of experienced hands. We need to get moving."
The two watched for a long while as the growing dust cloud spiraled skyward for a distance, then dropped back down behind the herd as the horses drifted closer. Eventually, they could make out the multi-colored bodies surging together at a steady trot. There were more than two thousand, collected from the herds of dozens of central and southern tribes who had agreed to send them as relief mounts. Sukhe had pledged his people to prepare the horses while soldiers from the other tribes went ahead to the high desert meeting ground. Riding at the flanks of the herd were about a dozen horsemen. They trotted easily alongside, casually rounding up any strays that lagged behind or attempted to break for the foothills.
As the riders approached the enclosures, half of them broke away and galloped ahead to open the corral gates. Effortlessly, the remaining herdsmen pushed the nervous creatures forward. Some of them shied, probably never having seen a fence. Firmly pressed, they bolted inside, tossing their heads and fanning their tails in alarm as they trotted as far from the humans as they could. It was not long before all the horses were milling about in five corrals. A few of the calmer beasts slowed down and began hungrily cropping the dense, drying grass carpeting the enclosures.
"Nicely done." Shan said.
"Want to take a closer look?" Las offered.
"Might as well see what kind of horseflesh we'll be riding."
Saluting the sentry, the two set off the way they had come. Beyond the brow of the summit, and out of the sentry’s sight, Shan Yu glanced furtively to be sure no one could be watching from above or below, then sent Lasuluun a silent dare from beneath his brows. He sprang down the slope, taking gigantic, gravity-assisted leaps from precipice to loose earth and sliding half the way down on his heels. Las was right behind him, stumbling and panting with the effort of the race. They inhaled as much dust as air, each laughing breathlessly at the others’ missteps and falls.
"This is really stupid!" Lasuluun chortled, sliding past Shan Yu on his backside.
"You're right, Eejee! We could break a leg!" Shan Yu puffed, spitting dust.
As they neared the treeline where the ground leveled, both of them lengthened their strides until they were running full out.
"Then we’d have to stay here and relax for a few weeks!" Las gasped, as he pulled past Shan Yu, beat him to the first line of trees and trotted to a halt, wheezing.
Huffing deeply, Shan Yu pulled up beside his friend. They looked at each other’s dust-caked faces, as if suddenly remembering why they were there. As he caught his breath, Las put his hands on his hips and gazed back up at the slope from where they had come.
"That’s not going to happen, is it," he said, suddenly sober. "We both have scores to settle."
Shan Yu clapped him lightly between the shoulder blades and continued walking down the hill. "Then let’s go see what we have to work with."
Shan Yu led the way, travelling along the slope towards the center of the canyon. The soft rush of the runoff called to them long before the spicy, earthy aroma of willows, alders and birches told them they had found the stream. They walked along water-smoothed boulders until they found a flat area where a deep, swirling pool had formed. Shan knelt beside the water, leaned over and buried himself to his waist in the icy water, sending a few large, speckled fish darting for the opposite bank. He stayed underwater for a moment, standing with his hands on the pebbled bottom, then pushed himself out quickly, gasping from the cold and sending a great spray of silver droplets arcing behind him. More to humor his friend than for any other reason, Lasuluun rinsed off as well before they continued downstream and found their way to the village.

They emerged from the trees into the village square. Gaitan and Batu, still enjoying the company of the women under the great beech tree, were lounging there among them, being hand fed a midday meal. Gaitan spied his commanders, rose halfway and gave a sheepish salute as they walked by. Batu did the same.
Shan Yu raised an eyebrow at the brothers and motioned them to be at ease, but said nothing.
Out of their earshot, Las remarked, "Think they'll share?"
"I thought you were more discriminating. You'd take their leftovers?"
"Depends on how long it's been since I've eaten."
Shan Yu scanned the square and nearby paths. "I don’t see Ulan anywhere. You don’t suppose..."
Lasuluun gave a low, appreciative whistle. "That’s got to be a new record. Even for him."
As they left the square and walked the dirt path towards the small pasture where their horses had been left to graze, they were met by Sukhe and a small group of riders. The village chieftain cast a puzzled glance at their half-wet, half dust-caked clothes.
"Funny weather up there..." said Las, trailing off as a sidelong glance told him that Shan Yu was once again the stern commander.
"I’d like to take a look at the herd," he said.
"I was about to suggest it," said Sukhe. "By your leave, I will take you around the bend to the corrals."
Lasuluun bent close to Shan Yu. "Want me to round up the others?"
"No." Shan Yu gave an indulgent grin. "They need this break. Besides, I have a feeling that if you tried to ‘round up’ Ulan right now, he might put an arrow through your eye." He gave Lasuluun’s shoulder a light tap with the flat of his hand.
"You could use a bit of a break yourself, brother. Don’t come along if you’d prefer to stay here and relax a bit." He cast a meaningful look at the women surrounding Gaitan and Batu.
Las followed his gaze and laughed. "No. You're right. I'm not desperate enough to take what they leave behind. Let's go."
The men made their way to the pasture at the edge of the village where their horses grazed. Shan Yu’s mare spied her master and trotted up, ears pricked.
Sukhe watched with surprise. "You do seem to have a way with the beasts."
Shan Yu pulled his mount’s hackamore from the fence and slipped it over her head while Lasuluun walked over to his own horse. His eyes roved over his mare, instinctively checking her for injuries or lameness. "I do like them."
"Then you will find it easy to work with Tianlin," said Sukhe.
"I’m eager to get started," Shan Yu said. "Hope your Tianlin shows up by tomorrow."
"She’s never late for important things," said Sukhe. He looked away up the canyon and seemed distracted.
Shan Yu mounted and wheeled his mare to stand beside Sukhe’s mount. "Tianlin is a woman?"
"Oh...did I not mention that?" Sukhe was still staring up the canyon, and seemed to be completely lost in thought.
Lasuluun rode up, disturbing Sukhe’s reverie. "Let’s go!"
Sukhe and his riders led them out of the village and onto the plains. As they rode, Shan Yu was struck by the spare beauty of the steppe. It had been many years since he had traveled in such prairies. Not since he had gone to live far north in the taiga. From this level, the grasslands rising across the plains to the southeast had a sweeping grandeur even more magnificent than when viewed from above. Between rocky rises, each level fanned into high prairie that rolled for miles, broken only by the jagged black of huge slate boulders thrusting up from beneath the skin of the mountains. The north face of the mountain dropped ragged, shelved cliffs into a densely wooded canyon.
With a soldier’s eye, he assessed the landscape across which they would travel in a few days. The blind rises between the prairies and the lack of protection afforded from below troubled him. His small band, occupied with driving a herd of thousands, would find it difficult to scout the flat surfaces of the higher steppes. It would be easy for a hostile force to mount an ambush from above.
He tried to dismiss his misgivings. No one was likely to cause trouble. The local tribes were allies. Still, he promised himself to send scouts ahead of his company when the time came to climb those steppes. And he would keep the herd close to the edge, near the canyon. An enemy might be loathe to lie in wait there, for fear of the deadly drop so close by.
Sukhe roused him from his contemplation, offering him and Lasuluun some jerky from a pouch hanging at his pommel. Both politely refused the first offer, accepting only after it was proferred a second time. Shan Yu grasped his distractedly, reflexively thanking Sukhe with a Chinese bow of his head that surprised Lasuluun and told him that his friend was preoccupied.
Sukhe followed the Khagan's gaze. "Choosing your path? Up the steppes and over the range into the desert?"
He nodded, absently chewing a strip of jerky while still studying the lay of the land.
"Tianlin lives in that canyon," said Sukhe. "The wooded one bordering the rising steppes."
Shan Yu looked at him in surprise. "She doesn’t live in the village with you? That doesn’t seem very safe."
The old chieftain smiled. "She stays with us for long stretches, but usually prefers the solitude. I have tried to get her to at least spend the winter with us. She did for a couple of years, but then went back to her little stone hut in the canyon. She is quite safe there. Not only do I post sentries to watch over her, but she is widely known to the local tribes as a healer and shaman. They would be foolish to do her harm. In the eight years she has lived with us she has shown us spirit paths that were unknown to our people before." He rubbed the blue snarl of tattoos twisting across his skull. Shan Yu looked at them more closely, not recognizing their foreign patterns or style.
Sukhe continued. "Her ancestors traveled from the far West. They were healers, musicians and bards who migrated for years across wild western lands and then along the Silk Road before they finally reached China and settled in Lo Yang and in a little harbor village north of Chien K’ang. Tianlin’s grandmother was a powerful udgan. It is through her that Tianlin channels her own magic."
The old man momentarily regained the faraway look he had worn at the village pasture. "We have something very important planned for this night." He looked directly into Shan Yu’s eyes. "I am hoping at least as much as you that she arrives by this evening."
Shan Yu looked off towards the southern mountains where Tianlin was probably travelling at that moment. He smiled, imagining a strong, weathered old priestess, still handsome, with bright eyes and long, grey hair tied back with tassels and ceremonial beads and bones. He had known a few other udgans, female shamans. Unbeknownst to any but Lasuluun, he felt a greater kinship with them than most other men of the steppes might, for his mother, Kong Mei, had been a strong woman and a follower of the Dao. He wondered what he would find in this Tianlin Udgan who had been born and raised in China.
The sound of whooped greetings floated to them from the distance. The horse herders were rounding the bend and coming to meet them. Urging his mount into a canter, Sukhe broke away from the group. As he met the rider at the head of the wranglers, the two grasped forearms and Sukhe leaned far over to wrap the younger man in a one-armed embrace, thumping his back with gusto. As Shan Yu, Lasuluun and the others rode up, the elder turned to them, his eyes shining.
"This is Qaidu, my first son."
Qaidu extended his arm to Shan Yu, who gripped it and nodded a greeting.
"I am honored to meet you, Shan Yu Khagan," said Qaidu, studying the famous chieftain’s visage with some awe. "It will be my greatest honor to ride at your side to win our ancestral lands back from the Khyatad."
"Kaaje sends word to you, Son," said Sukhe. "She says that tomorrow is all she has been living for."
Qaidu turned to his father with a wide grin and gave a guileless, open laugh. "She’s all I’ve been able to think about on this trip!" Suddenly realizing how he must have sounded to his future military commanders, he looked askance and cleared his throat behind his fist. But the smile did not leave his face. "I made it back just in time."
Sukhe turned his mount and began leading the group towards the corrals. "You needn't have hurried," he said wryly. "Tianlin has not arrived yet."
Qaidu’s eyes widened slightly. "She hasn’t? But tonight..."
A barely noticeable change of expression from Sukhe told him to be silent. "She’ll be here. She’s never late for important things." His face softened. "I almost hate to load all these rituals on her at once just as she returns." He gave a sharp laugh and urged his horse into a swift trot. "But she’ll get over it!"
Lasuluun turned to Qaidu as the two of them rode abreast. "From the sound of that exchange, I'm guessing that you're about to have your wings clipped. You're being married tomorrow?"
Qaidu nodded. "When you see Kaaje, you will envy me my loss of freedom." He smiled. "I've been waiting for this for months. Tianlin is bringing supplies for the wedding feast all the way from Chien K’ang. I can't believe she's so late. I guess that means you have not met her."
"No. Just heard the name tossed around."
"She’s different."
Shan Yu looked over, but the young man did not elaborate. "I am honored beyond measure that the Khagan himself and his famous warriors will be joining our celebration," he said.
Shan Yu and Lasuluun exchanged brief glances.
"It is our pleasure to join your family for this great occasion, Qaidu," said Shan Yu.
"By your leave." He looked to Shan Yu for permission to ride ahead to catch up to his father. The Warlord granted it with a silent nod.
Once Qaidu was out of earshot, Shan Yu spoke from the corner of his mouth, trying not to laugh. "So in order to keep peace with our mighty ally Sukhe, we bless his son's wedding with our august presence."
"I could not be more excited," Lasuluun said, maintaining a serious face. "Ah, well." He switched to broken Chinese. "Food and fodder must precede troops and horses.’ Isn’t that what they say in your old home town?"
Shan Yu winced. "You need to work on your pronunciation. I think I know what you meant, but it’s not what you said."
As they reached the corrals, Shan Yu pulled his mare alongside the split pine fencing of the nearest, placed a hand on the top rail and vaulted over it to dismount. The horses did not run from him as he walked among them. He visually examined each one, occasionally stopping to run his hand along a leg or rump where a wound showed red. Those would be treated tomorrow. He chose one beast at random, took its muzzle in his great hands, and, speaking softly to it, prized its mouth open to look at its teeth.
Lasuluun walked up. Shan Yu relaxed most of the force he had used to hold the horse’s mouth open, but still held its muzzle as the horse loudly champed its jaws and twisted its head slightly to escape the strong grip. Shan tilted the muzzle up for Lasuluun to see inside the horse’s mouth as it chewed, working its tongue along its palate.
"If this one is any indication, we’ll have some filing to do," Shan Yu said. "Take a look at what those molar spurs have done to his tongue." He released the horse and looked around at the other beasts milling nearby.
"Some of these mares will be staying with you, Sukhe," he called out. "Look at this one!" He slapped the flanks of a dark bay mare whose belly bulged wide on either side. "She'll drop that foal before three sunsets. Why did they even send her?"
As Sukhe walked up, the horses shied away. He shook his head, clucking his tongue in disapproval. "I don’t know. Some of the tribes’ horsemasters don’t seem to have as much sense as ours. I gave our boys orders to bring the herd--not sort through them. Well, the little mother horses will be safe with us through the winter. Maybe safer than where they came from."
Shan Yu spent more than an hour strolling through the herd, gauging the amount of work ahead of them. He decided that the task could probably be done in two days, even if the storm broke and robbed them of a few hours tomorrow.
"They look good," he said, clapping the dust from his hands as he and Lasuluun emerged from the corral. "Most of them seem in fine shape." His gaze strayed to the great timber building at the base of the hill. "We saw that from above. Very unusual."
"That is our Great Hall," said Sukhe, as the three of mounted. "It was built apart from the village on that spot because when Tianlin first walked there, she sensed it was holy ground. That's not to say we don't use the structure for mundane things," he added. "At the moment, it's packed full of the weapons and supplies you sent for, and more will be coming with Tianlin. Before you leave, we'll array everything for your inspection to be sure nothing is amiss.
"We also use the Great Hall for rituals and celebrations, especially if the weather is unfriendly. In fact, tomorrow…" the old chieftain quickly looked up at Shan Yu.
"Khagan," he said almost sheepishly, "Since your arrival, I have made no mention of my eldest son's wedding. I am assuming that the Avar messenger I sent to keep you abreast of our preparations has already extended my invitation that you join us for this great feast."
"In his haste to rejoin his own camp, the Avar seems to have forgotten that part of his message," Shan Yu said. "But I have already told Qaidu that we will be honored to join your clans for your family's important celebration."
Sukhe straightened and scowled off to the west. "I'll flay the boy if I ever see him again! Avars! Can't trust them."
"I can be trusted," Lasuluun said, leaning forward with a teasing spark in his eye.
Sukhe's jaw dropped slightly as he gave the famous Master Tracker a stricken look. "Lasuluun Noyon," he said. "I did not mean that as it sounded. I think perhaps I should keep my speech to war and horses and leave the social niceties to my women!"

By the time the group had made their way back to the village, the smells of early evening meals were rising from the firepits at the gers. Almost as they arrived, they saw Ulan strolling the path with his paramour. Both wore looks of relaxed bliss.
"A new record," remarked Lasuluun.
Shirchin had joined Gaitan and Batu, each of whom had their huge arms draped around the comparatively tiny forms of their admirers--one under each arm.
"Evening, Noyon," Shan Yu greeted them with mock formality. "I hope your day of leisure has prepared you for the real work tomorrow."
"By your side and at your command, Shan," Gaitain grinned up at him. "This place makes me feel like a teenager again."
"Well, try to keep that attitude," said Lasuluun. "We're expected at a wedding celebration tomorrow after the day's work with the horses."
The pretty young girl under Batu’s left arm leaned forward and exclaimed excitedly, "Yes! Kaaje and Qaidu are to be married tomorrow!" She glanced up at Batu and smiled meaningfully. "Kaaje is only Qaidu’ first wife."
Batu blanched and sputtered, "Yes. Well. You have to start slowly, you know. One at a time." He shot Shan Yu and Lasuluun a grimace over her head.
Shirchin, sitting with his back against the great beech and polishing his blade, was studying his work closely. The corners of his eyes crinkled. "Sometimes one is enough!"

Shan Yu and his company joined Sukhe, Baaja and their sons shortly after sundown and shared the evening meal by their fire. Sukhe seemed even more distracted than he had that afternoon.
"Tianlin will be here," Baaja soothed. "Everything is prepared. Sometimes, you know, she does these things for a reason."
"Yes. To drive me to distraction!" Tight-lipped, Sukhe shook his head and took Baaja's hand. He looked around at his family and guests. "I have directed my people to bed down early tonight. That way, everyone will be rested for tomorrow's work with the horses and for the celebration. But we will leave the torches burning tonight." His voice dropped to a barely audible whisper, and he seemed to be trying to convince himself of what he said. "I know Tianlin will be here in time for this Samhain. Junden's spirit called to her. Tianlin will not fail her."
Batu glanced uneasily over at his commander. The big man was straightforward in his dealings, and he disliked such mystery and secrecy. "Maybe all of us should bed down early," he suggested, giving Gaitan a conspiratorial wink.
"Good idea, Batu," agreed Shan Yu. The visitors rose, thanking their hosts, and made their way to their gers. Shan Yu called his men close to him and spoke quietly as they walked.
"I don’t know what’s going on any more than you do. But it’s clear that Sukhe is involved in some spiritual matter that does not concern us. So I suggest that no matter what you might hear, you just close your eyes and keep sleeping." He gave Batu and Gaitan a dry look. "Or whatever."
A low chorus of "Yes, sir’s" met him as they reached their gers. At the sound of approaching voices, the muffled sound of giggling came from inside Batu’s and Gaitain’s ger.
"Brothers," announced Ulan, "you have the place to yourselves. I have made other arrangements for myself this night." He saluted them all and disappeared into the darkness.
Batu disappeared into the ger. Before following his brother, Gaitan looked around and grinned at Shirchin, Lasuluun and Shan Yu. "With all the hiking and running around you great warriors did today, I guess you’ll be needing your sleep. See you in the morning!"
"Well," said Las, watching the tent flap swish down behind Gaitan’s back. "Seems they spent their day more productively than we did."
Shirchin snorted good naturedly. "Maybe if you ask Gaitan nicely, he’ll share."
Lasuluun made a face. "I’m not desperate enough to want their leftovers. You’ll give me nightmares with that talk."
"Come on," said Shan Yu, lifting the flap of their own ger and motioning Shirchin and Las inside. "There's still tomorrow night to make up for missed opportunities."
"Now that I think on it, I did have a pretty good time at Shirchin’s wedding."
"I'm surprised you even remember, after all that arkhii," laughed Shirchin. "Anyway, we'll have the last laugh tomorrow when those two worn out pups get trampled for not paying attention to what they're doing!"
"If I know Gaitan, he'd say it was a fair trade," said Shan Yu.

Shan Yu lay staring into the darkness. He was not sure whether it was vague worries about the upcoming herd drive or a day of too little physical activity keeping him awake. The muffled sounds of lively coupling in the neighboring ger did not make his insomnia any easier to bear. With an annoyed sigh, he rolled over and pulled one of the sheepskins over his ears, shutting out everything but the tedious recycling of tomorrow’s concerns in his brain.
He must have fallen asleep, for when he opened his eyes to the darkness, the night was very still. Yet something had awakened him. A sound, lost to his half-dreaming memory. He threw off his covers, crept to the door of the ger, pushed aside the flap and stood in the doorway. The torches had gone out. The icy sparkle of countless stars and a needle-thin sliver of light curving around the dark grey circle of new moon gave the only light between the silent village and the black sky. Needles of frost were growing from the ground. His breath smoked faintly in the darkness.
And then, softly but unmistakably in the distance, came the rhythmic sound of drums. The cadence set chills dancing through him. The driving sound pulled at something deep inside him, rarely touched. They were coming closer. Perhaps a dozen drums and various other percussive instruments. Some had the hollow clack of long-dried bones. Others the hissing rattle of rain in the trees. As the players drew near, the rhythms of each instrument wove together and spread apart like a flight of wild birds.
Up the hill, the torches outside Sukhe’s ger flickered one by one and flared to life. The old man was standing in the doorway, waiting, a staff in his hand. Along the path to the chieftain’s ger, more torches tentatively sparked, then licked high, sending translucent circles of gold to banish the dark.
The drums were at the outskirts of the village. Their thrumming snaked along the paths, echoed from wall to wall of the canyon and through the clustered gers. Dark forms appeared, moving sinuously along the paths. He could see no faces; each was completely veiled in black. Behind the black-veiled forms came wildly outfitted dancers, their shoulders draped with dried grass and bells that hissed and jingled in time with the drummers' cadence. Their masks, fiercely painted with great slashes of white, gold and orange, were skulls and demon heads, floating with disembodied grace between the torches and up to the waiting chieftain.
Shan Yu drew back into the shadows of his ger, not wishing to intrude, but unwilling to stop watching. Lasuluun and Shirchin were suddenly behind him.
"I thought you said..."
Shan Yu raised a hand to silence Lasuluun, but was unable to look away from the scene. There were perhaps forty participants in the bizarre parade. They continued to weave between the torches and gers after the first of them had reached Sukhe’s door. A circle of torches was moving steadily through the writhing crowd. At its center was a form completely robed and hooded in black. The figure glided purposefully towards Sukhe and stopped before him. With a long, shuddering rattle and hiss, the drums fell silent. A wave of woodsmoke incense rolled down from the hillside. Shan Yu recognized the aromas of juniper and cedar, but other essences were unfamiliar. They seemed to creep inside his head and swirl there, making all he saw seem more of a dream than a dance of flesh and bone.
Sukhe dropped to one knee and the black-clad leader placed darkly wrapped hands on his skull. Low chanting floated through the sudden silence. The voice was deep and soft. Shan Yu could barely make out the foreign, unfamiliar words. The torch bearers around the chieftain and the black-robed form closed in, raising Sukhe to his feet and spiriting him away into the darkness. The drum cadence began again, carrying the strangely solemn group into the forest. The wild rhythm knocked back and forth among the trees as shadows danced on the dark canyon walls in the golden torchlight. When they reached a spot close to where Shan Yu and Lasuluun had ended their race that morning, the reflections halted and quivered against the darkness. Again, silence.
Lasuluun gave a low whistle, but none of them spoke through the thick magic hung in the air. Slowly, Shan Yu pulled the drape back over the door, retreated to his pile of furs and sat there, straight-backed and cross-legged. He heard Lasuluun and Shirchin settle into their own furs.
He denied his impulse to leave the confines of the tent and seek the source of the magic. Something very personal was happening between Sukhe, his priestess and his people. He wondered if it might even be dangerous for him to intrude. The frosty silence seemed even more alive than the voices of the drums. It hung in the chill air like a stone about to drop.
And then, a new sound.
Every hair on his body rose at the song taking wing through the stillness. He had heard women sing before. He knew the formal chants and songs of roving musician-bards who provided music for rituals and ceremonies. He had heard the cheery songs of nomadic minstrels. He had known the singing of village women intoning their working songs together and mothers singing their children to sleep.
But he had never heard a voice like this one.
The sound was high and pure, as crystalline as the icy stars above him and as warm as the furs rising around his hips. He left his resting place again, found himself at the door of the ger. He stared up the canyon from where the song came. Deep inside him, something stirred. He had heard that voice before. Had known it intimately, perhaps in some lifetime past. His heart beat faster. Which of the village girls possessed this voice?
The song trembled through the trees, and nothing else existed. It was wordless at first, soaring in a minor key. And then came words--foreign, rarified. The image of Sukhe’s blue tattoos, a network of squared knots and dragon heads, flashed through his mind. Why did he know that voice? What ancient spirits were being conjured by the power of that song? What strange magic had brought him here?
He rose and stood silently before the ger, his quickened breath leaving him in great clouds of steam. He lifted his palms and arms slightly and tilted his head back, assuming the position of a shaman receiving the powers offered by the earth and air around him. It was all he could do to remain there and not seek out the conduit of those powers, the lone voice. He closed his eyes and let the sound shiver around him, felt the spirits fly through him. He suddenly felt as much a part of the ritual hidden in the canyon as if he had been standing there, side by side with Sukhe.
As he stood silently in the icy night, a strange warmth crept about him, sealing him away from the cold. His head seemed to float above his shoulders, and faint shapes began to play against his closed eyelids, taking form from the shimmering rush of blood in his sight. A face. Barely there, it floated, pale, blurred. A woman’s face. Dark, with bright, dark eyes and high, sharp cheekbones in her broad, handsome face. And then it was gone.
A voice whispered against his temple. He could not make out the words. It came again, louder.
"Chinua," the whisper was the rustling of dry leaves. "Sayan Chinua."
His breath caught in his chest and he swayed slightly. Sage wolf. Where had he heard the words before, spoken in such a hissing whisper? But before he could recall, a great wave of rushing sound enveloped him, tearing away the words and the memory of them. He was alone in darkness once more. Hoofbeats. Hundreds of them against snow-packed earth. A flash of red cloth, a chamois skirt swirling against the snow. Blood. A raging scream cut short by a wet blow. Blood across his eyes. Darkness wrapped him like a bearskin. He could not breathe.
The darkness rolled back to blinding light so strong that he could see nothing. He felt, rather than heard the deep rumble as if it came from inside his head. The brilliant light about him flickered, sparkled, became a great cloud of spraying snow racing down upon him. A crushing avalanche of snow. Pinpricks of icy crystals burned and melted against his skin. His body jerked as if struck from behind. He was being pressed down, smothered in a blue-grey shroud. Blinded. Breathless. Trapped. Darkness enveloped him, and the vision faded.

When he opened his eyes, the dark moon had strayed to the west, and sat poised on the jagged horizon. It had been several hours, but he was not tired. Had slept, standing in his place? Yet through his felt clothes, he felt only the slightest chill. His heart was pounding.
Movement at the edge of the trees caught his eye. It was the participants in the rite, returning home. They were Urga villagers again, talking amongst themselves with relaxed voices. Many had removed their masks, and were carrying them under their arms as they ambled to their gers. Breathing deeply, Shan Yu squinted through the darkness. Some of the unmasked dancers looked unnaturally pale. But before he could look more closely, they disappeared into gers and down the paths of the village.
Shan Yu retreated into the shadows of the doorway and dropped to one knee, suddenly spent. In the distance, a single torch lit the way for Sukhe. Beside him walked the priestess, her hood thrown back over her shoulders to reveal, not the wizened, grey-headed shaman he had imagined, but a relatively young woman. Her face and hair seemed to be somewhat lighter in color than those of the village women, but it was too dark and she was too far away for him to make out more than that. Once again, he heard her deep voice speak in quiet tones to Sukhe. Then the old chieftain locked her forearms in traditional embrace, disengaged himself and disappeared into his ger. The priestess turned away and walked alone over the top of the slope and out of his sight. He would have to wait until morning to learn more about Tianlin. He hoped that she or Sukhe might tell him whose high, shimmering voice had trapped him and held him while the strange visions invaded him.
This time when he returned to his furs, he had no trouble falling into a deep, dreamless sleep.

copyright Dana Krempels 1998


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