Flashback Terra Nullius

The death of Ruhama the Beauty, from the tents of Jezrahiah, of the Sons of Rapa

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The Wilderness of Cyphrus is an endless sea of tall grass that rolls just like the oceans themselves. Geysers kiss the sky with their steamy breath, and mysterious craters create microworlds all their own. But above all danger lives here in the tall grass in the form of fierce wild creatures; elegant serpents that swim through the land like whales through the ocean and fierce packs of glassbeaks that hunt in packs which are only kept at bay by fires. Traverse it carefully, with a guide if possible, for those that venture alone endanger themselves in countless ways.

Terra Nullius

Postby Arandia on June 14th, 2015, 5:25 pm

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18 Winter 514


They must have loved her, the men in Ruhama’s life. Of men there had never been a shortage; they paraded one after the other in coats of inexhaustible colors and varieties. They must have loved her. Or at least they had seen something in Ruhama that made them soft and heroic like the fairytale men in the stories Arandia liked to tell.

Hassam of the tents of Jeorah, of the sons of Jeroab. Dark and rough like Zulrav’s spit, but tender to Ruhama and to her daughter. Arandia remembered goat hair on everything, and straight white teeth, and the smell of spice on his clothes and the tips of his fingers when they played with string. All this in Yahebah, the worship of Yahal wet on the lips of every passerby under their window.

Nanuk the Jeweler, fair-skinned and beautiful like a woman. Arandia remembered his long hair and his four arms, and the way his back was always straight and proud. In Ahnatep they sang and made merry, every night stumbling in from one feast or another, until the sun and honey of Ahnatep threatened to suffocate Ruhama, and they absconded under Shuuda towards the verdant lands of Cyphrus.

Ioanis Reddawn. The first Arandia saw of him was the crown of his head, as red and fierce as a smear of blood against the green grass. And then his eyes, his sloping brow, a giant of a man with a gentle voice and even gentler hands. Arandia was shaking like a leaf, wet with dew and tears from a sleepless night listening to the strange noises that the Sea of Grass makes in the dark. Damp and hungry like newly hatched starlings, Arandia and Ruhama were escorted to the strange horse city and into the man Ioanis’ protection.

They must have loved her. But who did Ruhama love? Who, in fits of delirium that the fever brought, did Ruhama reach out to and say “my love” to? “My darling, my groom.” Who did she see?

Arandia, cooling Ruhama’s burning face with pieces of wet cloth, listened to her mother’s fever dreams in the suffocating tent. Ioanis was away, riding to Endrykas to fetch a healer from the medicine tents. In the dark Arandia plied her mother with tisanes from Serai, tried feed her to keep her strength up until the healer came, but Ruhama wouldn’t eat or drink. She lay on her back, and in one of her lucid moments reached for Arandia’s hand.

“Tell me a story,” Ruhama said, the vowels and consonants of Shiber, that liquid language, tripping over each other. “My jewel, come lie with me and tell me a story.”

Bedroll and rug rustled underneath Arandia’s legs as she lay down beside her mother and they put their arms around each other’s waists. Ruhama’s arms were warm, like waterskins that had been left to bake out in the hot sun.

“There was a girl,” Arandia began. “A long time ago, when the world was still young. She had a mother, and a brother, and a sister, and a dog, and her life was full of love and laughter. And though they were poor they lived well and happily in a green land, with flowing rivers and lakes. One day the girl went out to the river to catch fish for her supper, when she heard someone call out. ‘Oh, oh!’ the voice cried. ‘My paw, my poor paw!’”

Ruhama coughed. Her narrow body shook. She saw spots of white on the backs of her eyelids.

“The little girl looked around and lo, she saw a lion the size of a horse, black as night with eyes that burned like the summer sun. It was crying out in agony. ‘Oh!’ it cried. ‘My paw, my paw! There’s a thorn stuck in my paw! Little human girl, please help me!’

The little girl was afraid that the lion would eat her, but it cried out so piteously that the girl could do nothing but take mercy on the lion and look at his paw. The thorn was small, so small that the girl could scarcely believe that a big lion like that would make such a fuss about it. But the girl was kind, so she pulled the thorn out. And she pulled, and she pulled, and she pulled. As she pulled the thorn grew wider and longer, until very soon the girl had pulled an entire branch out of the lion’s paw, then the trunk of a tree. Then more and more branches until there was a great tree with many millions of roots. And the girl, she pulled and she pulled until there was nothing left of the lion, but only that tree stood in its place.

On the tops of that tree, there were stars. Below, in the roots, there were the fruits of Semele’s womb. And the girl, entranced by the beauty of the tree, sat at its roots for a hundred days, never becoming hungry or thirsty.”

Arandia let the words come out of her mouth, drunk on darkness and the smoky air of the sick bed. Ruhama’s breath rattled beside her, sounding for Arandia like the sifting sands of the desert.

“For a hundred days,” Ruhama whispered, “never becoming hungry or thirsty.”

“Yes,” Arandia said.

“And then what happened?”.
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Last edited by Arandia on June 14th, 2015, 9:54 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Played by: M.D.
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Arandia
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Terra Nullius

Postby Arandia on June 14th, 2015, 9:24 pm

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She sat there for a hundred days, never becoming hungry or tired or thirsty. Never wanting, never needing. She was aware that there should have been a cramp in her spine, or that her eyes should have hurt from staring, and that her lips were dry. But she sat there for a hundred days.

Never tired. Never hungry. Never thirsty.

In the shade of that great tree it was always night. Its root system, connected to hundreds and thousands of trees that spanned the whole of the world, held her small, ailing body in its arms. The wood breathed. It smelled of sodden peat and mud. Unseen insects crawled into her ears and up her limbs. She was as still as the trees.

Ruhama said that there was no better proof of the character of the spirit than at the point of extreme humiliation. That of the mind and of the body. The Groom was jealous and demanded purity, and only in humiliation, in the humbling of oneself, in service, could one make oneself worthy of Him. A painful love for the World, delighting in every color and flavor. Something fresh, something new, something old and rotten.

So she let the roots embrace her, and she embraced the roots. The tree nourished itself on her, and the earth nourished itself from the roots of the tree, and the air nourished itself from the moisture in the ground, and so on and so on, until all the veins of the world led back to her. Out again. In again. A steady, deep pulse that went through all of creation, spreading out and into the nowhere land of her heart.
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Played by: M.D.
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Arandia
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Words: 27742
Joined roleplay: April 20th, 2015, 12:29 am
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Terra Nullius

Postby Arandia on June 14th, 2015, 10:38 pm

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Arandia woke up cold and coughing from her dream. The phlegm was thick and viscous in the back of her throat. She could taste salt and sweetness as it crackled.
Ma,” she coughed. “Ma, wake up. I hear Ioanis.
But Ruhama did not stir, and the arms around Arandia’s waist were cold as stone.
Ma,” Arandia said again. She spoke in Shiber, in their secret language. “Ma, please wake up.” This, the tongue of Arandia’s love, and of her memory of the burning lands, the tongue of Arandia’s prayers and her songs. Ruhama loved to hear Shiber from her daughter’s mouth, a language they only seldom dared to speak within earshot of a Drykas. Arandia tried to wake her with their secret, but Ruhama did not stir.

The inside of Arandia’s mouth was hot with fever, but her extremities were cold. There was dried spit and tears from sleeping crusted at the sides of her mouth and her eyes. Her head was heavy; she could barely lift it. “Ma,” Arandia said, shaking Ruhama’s body. Ruhama was limp, unresponsive. Ruhama’s crystal eyes didn’t open. Arandia couldn’t breathe.

Presently Ioanis entered the tent, followed closely by another man, lankier and older than him. Nehrar saw Ruhama and Arandia in her arms, and did not have to touch Ruhama to understand that they were too late. Nehrar bent and put his fingers on the corpse’s throat. Nehrar shook his head. Ioanis looked sick. A keening wail, the sound of a wounded animal, issued from Arandia’s throat and reverberated in the tent. It twisted Ioanis’ gut so violently that he, brave Yakhtai, fled from the horror of the sound, out of the tent and on to his Strider’s back.

Nehrar stayed, and listened to the wail subside into the dry, heaving sobs of a mourning girl as the sound of hooves faded into the distance. Arandia’s face had an unhealthy sheen. Clammy sweat dotted her upper lip and her brow. Nehrar sat on his knees beside the bedroll she shared with the corpse of her mother and bid her to drink a vial of something that tasted astringent. He made her chase it down with water. “Come,” he said, gently taking her hand to make her stand on unsteady feet. “Come. You will need more medicine.”

They kept her at the River Flower, sectioned away so that the fever wouldn’t spread. First the fever got worse, and with it came the hallucinations. They made her drink the caustic medicine several times a day, until she was well enough to drink by herself, eat by herself, sit up in her bed. Then she was well enough to stand, though her heart was too heavy to speak.

For days she lingered at The River Flower, trailing Nehrar and Sadara to watch them prepare medicine. Sometimes Denhar dropped in, healing people with his hands, and talking about a goddess named Rak’keli and her boundless generosity. Arandia listened, and she learned, but she did not speak until she and Nehrar were alone one day, sectioned off where he ate and drank and rested in silence for one or two bells at a time.

“I want to help,” Arandia said. She was standing by the entryway, and looking at Nehrar in earnest. Not at her feet, not at her hands, but straight at Nehrar. “I want to help,” she said again, her dark brows bent.
“Help with what?” Nehrar asked.
“With all of this,” she said. “With healing people. I want to serve Rak’keli. I want to serve the people.”
Nehrar was quiet. He used his food knife to put a section of a fig in his mouth and chewed thoughtfully before he spoke again. “Why do you want to serve Rak’keli?”
“Because I want to help,” she said again. “Because there is so much pain in the world, and it’s terrible to see, and there’s nothing I can do about it. Not even for my mother and--” Tears clung to her lashes. She wiped them away with the bowl of her hand.
Nehrar was quiet for some time. He ate his fig; chewed and watched Arandia stand in the doorway. They looked at each other, the silence between them spreading its feelers around Arandia’s spirit. Finally, Nehrar said, “All right. Come. Let’s begin.”.
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Played by: M.D.
Character Model: Golshifteh Farahani
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Arandia
Girlchild
 
Posts: 41
Words: 27742
Joined roleplay: April 20th, 2015, 12:29 am
Location: Endrykas
Race: Human, Drykas
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Terra Nullius

Postby Dravite on June 25th, 2015, 6:41 am

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Arandia

XP Award:

  • Endurance: 1
  • Medicine: 1
  • Storytelling: 1
  • Observation: 2
  • Rhetoric: 1
  • Socialisation: 2


Lore:

  • Remembering the past
  • Ioanis Reddawn: A giant of a man
  • A sleepless night
  • Medicine: Symptoms of a fever.
  • Storytelling: A distraction for the suffering
  • Medicine: Phlegm
  • Shiber: A language spoken in secret
  • Ruhama’s death
  • The River Flower: A place to heal
  • Serving Rak’keli and the people


Notes: Beautifully written. This thread was a pleasure to grade. Let me know if you think I have missed anything here and be sure to edit your grading request!

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