77 SU 515 AV
The mother of them all was a gentle thing, a heat against the faces pressed against her for their sleep that was both loving and gloriously benevolent, as if she embraced every one of her children in their slumber and filled their hearts with her love. She did not have literal arms with which to shield her children, but she offered other things. The horses were hers, those great hearts infused with her soil in their blood. She was their mother before anyone else.
Ruari strove to not forget it. When she slept, curled in her tent by herself with her cheek resting to the dirt she left exposed, she never forgot that the earth was her mother.
Her own mother was not as accommodating nor warm as the earth mother. She was different, her love more for herself, for her husband's wealth, and for the spite of her sister-wives, that she didn't have the time to love her children. Ruari understood, though; she'd seen the family for what it was once, when she stood at the height of her mother's knee and grasped at her skirt in fear.
***
"Did you hear about the silver chest?" Ine's gentle voice was a comforting murmur, prying Ruari from her contemplation of the earth. Doe eyed Wynda, poised with tears in her eyes after a boy had pulled her hair, stared at her beloved sister, suddenly acutely aware that neither Gavenia nor Ruari were concerned with her tears.
"Silver chest? No." Ruari murmured, leaning over the book she wrote in. Although Ine had interrupted Ruari mid-word, Ruari quickly finished the sentence before closing the book. "Who made it?" She wondered if the chest were silver, if it were valuable, and which of the craftsmen would have put valuable silver into a simple chest. "Who commissioned it?"
Ine shrugged. When Ruari looked up at her, Wynda was well on her way to climbing onto the woman, her target clearly Ine's head where Ruari expected she'd promptly order Ine around, as if she were a mount. As Wynda climbed an Ine adjusted for comfort, she did manage a verbal response. "Nobody made it. Someone put it there, and nobody can move it. You should take a look at it; I went earlier, and it's quite the sight." Her hands signed urgency, interrupted by Wynda's wayward limbs.
Ruari smiled ruefully at her sister, as if to suggest she doubted she'd be much interested in a mysterious chest of silver, but she knew, deep down, she'd go, if only to gawk at the chest like she imagined everyone else to have done.
She rose to her feet and tucked her book into the waist of her pants. Ine, distracted with the now giggling Wynda, paid the girl no mind as she tried to evade Wynda's seeking arms playfully.
