Postby Haibane Shadsie » Fri Nov 14, 2003 8:16 pm
Still, she was an alien here, and thought of her children. She demanded of L’ayela again to send her back home, but the wind dog simply smiled a doggish grin and ignored her. Images of Henrà crying in his cradle presented themselves in her mind, of Jaclyn asking her father “Where’s mommy?” when she got up in the morning, and of Justin calling the police, worried sick about her, fearing her kidnapped, or worse. There would be one of those “Missing Persons” stories on the local news. The police might even label poor Justin as a suspect in her murder; as such things often happened when no bodies were found after a while in those cases.
Tamara jostled herself out of her reveries and snapped back to reality, a very strange reality.
“The world of Rhlem is a world of symbols and Archetypes,” L’ayela said, loudly enough to capture Tamara’s attention. “Um, to explain, our Archetypes are models, roles that people must play out. People of Rhlem are usually born into these roles. They are our destiny, and we cannot change what we are destined to be. Time in this world moves in a continual stream that is made up of Cycles. In all of our history, the Cycles have repeated. Very few records exist telling of a time before the Cycles. The way they have always worked is this: always, there would be a Golden Age of peace and prosperity followed by a time of darkness and war, only to be followed by another Golden Age.”
The dog stretched her wings and licked her lips. All this talking was making her thirsty. She smelled water up ahead on the trail she had chosen to lead her human companion. It would be a short while before they reached it. Tamara would probably need a drink by that time, too.
“Always,” the animal continued, “a Hero Archetype would come to bring an end to the Darkness Age and create the Age of Peace, which would last until he died or even several years longer under his offspring or friends. Then, always, a new age of Darkness would begin, typically with the rise of some powerful wizard or minor king.
“Usually, within a Cycle, to bring about a Golden Age, the Hero needed to defeat the Villain in battle or to beat him in a race to find some powerful object or secret. This Cycle, the Hero and their companions must search for the legendary Ruby of Kaynadala, said to give its possessor the power of Transformation.”
Tamara nodded, and grunted, not really listening. She kept her eyes on the winged dog to make herself look as though she was hanging on every word. Her mind was still on her family, her tiny HenrÃ, in particular. She attempted to mask her worry and to be polite.
“At this time Rhlem is in one of its periods of conflict.” L’ayela explained, “The evil tyrant-wizard, Warrabi, has risen as the head Villain Archetype of this Cycle to impose his cold and bloody rule upon the lands. His armies have taken many kingdoms and in those places, freedom and morality are all lost. Chaos reigns. We are afraid of him taking all kingdoms and subjugating all Peoples. Few are free anymore.”
“Is the Hero and a Companion…whatever…the only Archetypes you have?” Tamara asked, trying to convince herself again that she was asleep, and that this was some psychological game that her subconscious mind was conducting that she had to play out in dream in order to wake up.
“Oh, many Archetypes,” L’ayela answered, “There are soldiers of the Darkness (they are unfeeling people or creatures, and serve Villains for their own gain, or else are slaves held by some evil magic, the latter, I feel sorrow for). Then there usually is the Redeemed Soul, someone who serves the Darkness for a while, then comes to realize their error and comes to the Hero’s side, and, of course a lively assortment of Artists, Tricksters, and the like. As repetitive as my Rhlem is, it is seldom boring.
“The most important of the Archetypes to the Hero, or the Heroine, which you are,” she continued, “is the Hero’s Trainer or Teacher. They are called the same as Companions are and train the Hero in special skills. They also counsel like Companions do.”
As Tamara walked, listening to L’ayela speak of Cycles, of Heroes, of Companions and Villains, the forest seemed to grow steadily less alien to her. It was if she really belonged here, as if her real life was a dream. Am I in some sort of trance? she mused.
L’ayela wondered if this woman was truly the person who was meant to save Rhlem. I sniffed her out, she thought, she smells correct, but what if she ends up like Jairrus? Did I choose this Tamara by mistake? She has young children, for Rhlem’s sake!
The dog shook her head, trying to work out her colliding thoughts as she walked. She looked up at Tamara intently.
I really should have left her in her world... Unskilled, unschooled in combat... she’s an Earth woman who has thus far lived a gentle life. I am a disgrace! I am the failure among Companions! To make not one, but two false choosings... the Creator must despise me to give me such a confused nose.
“What’s wrong, puppy?” Tamara asked, noticing the dog’s head hanging.
Alright. L’ayela decided, I’m taking her back.
“Stand next to me.” L’ayela commanded, standing straight and serious, beginning to spread her wings. Tamara did as told, confused, but believing that it was, for the moment, the best thing to do to listen to the animal in this strange dream she was having.
The wind dog felt a tremendous sting throughout her body and was thrown to the ground with a painful howl.
“L’ayela!” Tamara cried, kneeling down to help the feathered animal, which, to her eyes, had been standing straight and still one moment, and was five feet behind her the next, hurled as if by the hand of an invisible giant.
L’ayela picked herself off the ground, shaking leaf litter from her fur and wings. “I just tried to take you home,” she said, “I was having doubts as to your Heroine status. They’ve been answered.”
“Oh.” Tamara said simply, rather in disbelief of what had just happened. She could think of no more to say. She wanted to go home, but, having decided that she was asleep, and with the sweet, balmy breezes of the forest enchanting her in a most bizarre and pleasant way, she thought that she would awaken when her alarm clock buzzed or when Henrà cried again. She and the wind dog resumed walking.
“I, as a Companion, have special abilities,” L’ayela began to inform in her pedantic way.
“Aren’t you already special?” Tamara asked, “I mean…you are a talking dog with wings!”
“I have a special ability, too,” the dog replied, “I cannot be harmed by any weapon forged of metal - weapons made by human hands. I suppose a spear tipped with stone could harm me, but I have never been unfortunate enough to find out. Swords pass through my being as if I was merely a mist or a vapor.”
Tamara nodded her head. “Um, hum,” she mumbled. L’ayela snorted. Clearly, Tamara was not listening.
“I also have the not-often used talent of passing between worlds. It exhausts me, so I use it only when necessary, like to find you.”
“How many worlds are there?” the new Heroine asked.
“I do not know. I’ve been to six besides this one, my home, including your world. It is an ability shared by all my kind, the wind dogs, unlike my immunity to forged weaponry, which is unique. Others of my kind have told tales of worlds beyond the six that I have traveled to. It is said that there is an infinite number. No one knows for sure. Your world seems central to them somehow - it was a place where a sacred event occurred.”
“A sacred event?”
“I have spoken of Archetypes, of Heroes arising from humble beginnings and ambiguous parentage to rescue Rhlem from evil. The legends say that your world once had someone similar and he, himself, was the Creator of all the worlds. He died in your world, conquering evil in the process.”
A resonance rang in Tamara’s mind. “How?” she questioned; “How would you know about something like that? I mean...you... you are an animal!“
“There are many creatures in Rhlem; you would call them ‘fantastic’, that are more than mere animals. Wind dogs are such a People. We are like humans, beings of three elements, Spirit, Mind, and Body - though we have bodies like those of animals. How the knowledge of some aspects of your world arrived in Rhlem, the specific tale has been lost with the ages, though there is certain knowledge that has existed in Rhlem since the beginning of time - Rhlem’s time and beginning.”
"We will never give up and despair, for we are on a mission from God." __ Hellsing, Vol. 2.