Throw-the-Bones – An Excerpt from Desert Song

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This is an excerpt from Desert Song, a novel by Rivera Sun. You can get a copy by supporting the Community Publishing Campaign.





Up a long, winding ravine, tucked into a pocket meadow, lived a seer named Throw-the-Bones. Her home – if you could call it that – was a hide-covered lean-to half dug into the earth. A sod roof of desert grass grew above it; a rangy, horned goat bleated at them from on top. A desert chicken scratched in the dirt out front, scraggly-feathered with a flopping ochre comb. A dry bone-and-branch fence ringed the hut, white and stark, bleached by the blazing blue sky. Tala nudged Zyrh through the listing gate then slid off to push it shut.





“Leave it
open,” a voice croaked out, dry as a spiny toad.





A hunched figure
staggered toward them. Dangling locks of hair masked her face. Her grotesque
cloak of rodent skulls, crows’ beaks, birds’ feet, and shed snakeskins lurched
with every step.





“You’ll be leaving
quicker than you came,” the woman rasped. “They all do.”





“Not Tala,
Throw-the-Bones, you know that,” Tala called out soothingly.





“What’s
that?” the figure cried with surprise, pushing back her matted hair and
shading the sun from her eyes. “Tala? Well, that changes things. Come in
for tea!”





Ari Ara blinked as
the bedraggled figure dropped the rasping voice and tossed off a tangled wig.
The slender, middle-aged woman cast aside the cloak with a look of disgust. She
patted the stray wisps of brown hair back into place and straightened her
spine. She wore a clean tunic and a bright blue belt. The wrinkles around her
eyes creased at Ari Ara’s astonished expression and she burst out laughing
merrily.





“The ole
cloak-and-croak act is just to scare away unwanted visitors,” she said,
“but a friend of Tala’s is a friend of mine.”





She winked and squeezed
Tala around the shoulders. Ari Ara dismounted and followed the other two
toward the hut. The woman turned with a brisk, no-nonsense attitude and eyed Ari Ara.





“You must know I’m
Throw-the-Bones, but who are you? Potential Tala-Rasa?”





Ari Ara shook her
head.





“Ari Ara
Shirar en Marin.”





Throw-the-Bones’ mouth
dropped open. Her eyes rolled back in her sockets. A tremor shuddered through
her. Tala calmly pinched the woman’s nose, held her mouth shut, and counted to
thirty. At thirty-three and a half, Throw-the-Bones threw Tala off, gasping.





“Thanks,”
Throw-the-Bones coughed out. “Ack. That was a strong one. Good thing she
didn’t come on her own.”





Tala let the wheezing
seer lean on zirs shoulders and lurch into the shade of the hut.
Throw-the-Bones settled in a chair as the young songholder gathered a trio of
small cups along with a little clay teapot. The youth opened the lid and
sniffed cautiously.





“Just a bit of
spring mint,” Throw-the-Bones told the youth. “Nothing to worry
about.”





She threw back her
first cup and gestured impatiently for another while Ari Ara stood frozen
in the doorway with an appalled look on her face, wondering what had just
happened.





“Visions,
love,” Throw-the-Bones explained, pointing to a three-legged stool and
gesturing for the girl to sit. “Such a bother, really.”





“Wh-what would
have happened if Tala hadn’t held your nose?” Ari Ara asked, tentatively
sitting down.





Throw-the-Bones
shrugged.





“Maybe I’d wake on
my own a few hours later . . . or not.”





She shivered despite
the red flush on her skin and sweat beads on her brow.





“Given the
strength of these visions, I might never have come out of them, though old
Stew’s trained to peck me back to life if I don’t feed him his grain on
time.”





She pointed to the
chicken, which stretched his neck and crowed before strutting out of sight.
When Ari Ara turned back, Throw-the-Bones’ sharp eyes were fixed on her
face.





“What did you
see?” Ari Ara asked, clutching the edge of the stool and steeling
herself. There was already one prophecy about her and it wasn’t pleasant. To
her surprise, the middle-aged woman simply rolled her eyes and shoved her cup
across the rough surface of her table for more mint tea.





“Oh no, it doesn’t
work like that. Not even for you, though I’m sorely tempted to make an
exception.” Throw-the-Bones leveled a stern look at Ari Ara.
“No, no, if I risk death to see your future, you’ve got to pay prettily
for that knowledge.”





“But I didn’t ask
you to see my future!” Ari Ara objected.





“Precisely. Which
is why I don’t charge for seeing, only for telling. I’ll be keeping my vision
in my silence until you’re ready to pay.”





“You won’t tell
anyone else?”





“Certainly
not!” Throw-the-Bones retorted, looking insulted. “That’s unethical.
Didn’t you explain?”





The last was directed
accusatorily at Tala, who simply shrugged. The woman blew an exasperated sigh
and turned back to Ari Ara.





“The bone fence,
the skull cape, the raspy voice; that’s all for show. Idiots come to me to find
their true loves or destinies. Most of them have lives so dull it pains me to
wade through the visions.”





She rubbed her temples.
People lived. They tended goats. They met a girl. They married a boy. Children
were born.





“Everyone
dies,” Throw-the-Bones sighed, “and I always see that. It’s where I
get most of my knowledge, though no one likes to hear that. I peek in at the
funerals, count the wedding rings and scars, notice how many children have
gathered, and look for any telltale callouses on people’s hands. That’s enough
to hint at a life . . . though occasionally, I see more. Wars and
famines. Bold lives and cowardly deaths. Simple existences and perfect
happiness. Long-living elders and easy exits. Short flickers and sudden
snuffing outs.”





Throw-the-Bones’ face
grew shadowed. Her fingers clutched the clay cup hard enough to turn her
knuckles white.





“I can see why you
wouldn’t want too much company,” Ari Ara said gently. “I’m sorry
if hearing my name caused you distress.”





The brown-haired woman
looked up. Her eyebrows lifted.





“In all my
years,” she murmured, “no one has ever said that.”





She held out her hand
and squeezed Ari Ara’s palm in gratitude.





“When the day
comes that you face a crossroad of no clear choices, come to me, and I will
tell you which way you went.”





“You could tell
her now,” Tala pointed out, “and spare her the trip.”





Throw-the-Bones
snatched the teapot away and sloshed some more in her cup.





“You are both too
young to know the wisdom of anything,” she grumbled. “Especially you,
cheeky Tala. Such impertinence! Do I tell you how to sing the old songs? No.
You do your job and trust me to do mine.”





Tala looked
sufficiently chastened . . . at least until the youth tossed Ari Ara
a hidden wink behind the seer’s back.





“But none of this
is the question you came to ask, is it?” Throw-the-Bones asked suddenly
with a sharp astuteness, looking from one to the other.





“I need to find my
friend Emir Miresh,” Ari Ara explained.





“The Marianan
warrior?” Throw-the-Bones asked in surprise.





Ari Ara nodded and
related the tale of how she lost him.





The woman listened with
a troubled expression. She tapped her fingers on the wooden table in agitation.
She grimaced.





“Oh, I hate
this,” she groaned to Tala. “Take the cups and fetch the bones.”





Tala cleaned everything
off the battered table. Ari Ara stared at the surface . . . the
blackened gouges looked like a map . . . ah! She tilted her head; it
was the desert. There were the mountains, the foothills, the winding streams
and rivers. Thin red lines wove in intricate patterns through it all,
perplexing her. She reached out to touch the web. Throw-the-Bones slapped her
hand away.





“Don’t meddle. I’m
going to find your friend’s bones, living or dead.”





Ari Ara blanched.





Tala returned with a
basket of old bones, large and small, some shiningly clean, others with bits of
gristle still attached. Throw-the-Bones began to ask her a series of questions
about Emir.





“Short or
tall?”





“Tall.”





She picked out the tiny
fish and bird bones and discarded them to the side.





“Old or
young?”





“Young,” Ari Ara
answered, watching the woman’s hands fly as she tossed out the cracked and
yellowed old bones.





“Color of
eyes?”





“Uh, blue, I
think,” Ari Ara stammered. She hadn’t really thought about it.





“Hmm, not clear
enough,” the seer answered. “Stout or slender?”





“Slender.”





“Water or
fire?”





“Water. He’s like
a river when he moves.”





Each time she answered,
Throw-the-Bones sorted out more bones until the choice was down to two. She
weighed them in her palms, thinking, then set aside one.





“Here, hold
this,” the older woman ordered, tossing the other vertebra to Ari Ara.





“Ew!” she
screeched, dropping it with a disgusted grimace. There were still red tendons
attached to it.





Throw-the-Bones eyed
her, shook her head, and picked the bone up.





“Hmm, how about
this, then?” the woman asked, turning suddenly and snatching something off
the high shelf behind her.





It was a strange stone,
smooth with time and a river’s touch, black as ink, and warm against Ari Ara’s
palm.





“What is it?”
Ari Ara asked, holding it up to the light.





“An old thing from
long ago,” Throw-the-Bones answered. “A tree’s heart turned to stone
by lightning. A bone that is not a bone.”





She stretched out her
hand. Ari Ara gave it back. Throw-the-Bones nodded approvingly as she rolled
back her sleeves and weighed the lightning stone in her palm.





“Your friend has a
very old soul and a truly good heart. If we find him, don’t lose him
again,” the seer advised her. “You do not find friends like him every
day.”





Ari Ara nodded
silently, suddenly hot with embarrassment over the way she’d treated Emir. Throw-the-Bones
began to chant in a low voice, cupping her hands around the lightning stone.
She shook her hands, slowly at first, then rhythmically, chanting faster and
faster until she opened her palms above the table. Her eyes traced the arc of
the fall to where the stone landed squarely with a single thump, no bounce, no
spin.





“This is Moragh’s
Stronghold,” Throw-the-Bones stated, pointing to a black mark slightly
east of the stone. “You last saw Emir here, just to the northwest.”





Ari Ara nodded.
Throw-the-Bones picked up the lightning stone. She repeated the chanting and
shaking, though the words changed slightly. A crackle of energy snapped through
the hut. Her hands split open. The stone fell. It hit the mark northwest of the
Stronghold then spun and spun and spun along the red lines, wavering from one
side of the table to the other, traveling the length from north to south.
Finally, it came to rest in the Middle Pass of the Border Mountains.





Throw-the-Bones scowled
and harrumphed in surprise. Ari Ara opened her mouth to ask, but the woman
lifted her hand for silence.





“Tala, sing the Truth-Telling
Song.”





“But – “





“Do it!”





All the hairs on Ari Ara’s
arms rose up as the two voices joined, one singing, one chanting. The air
tightened as if bound by an invisible noose. Throw-the-Bones shook the stone
between her palms. Her whole body rattled with the gesture, quicker and
quicker. Then, the woman’s hands flew open. The lightning stone hit the table
and spun in place for a long moment. It fell at the exact same spot as before
in the middle of the Border Mountains.





Tala squinted at the
table. Throw-the-Bones scowled and folded her arms over her chest.





“That,” she
stated flatly, “was not what I was expecting.”





Ari Ara couldn’t
stay silent any longer.





“What? What does
it mean?” she blurted out.





Throw-the-Bones’
fingers stretched out.





“There is where you left him.” She
pointed to the first spot then moved, tracing the wandering pathway of the
second toss. “This is where he has been . . . or will be,”
she said. “It’s never exactly clear.”





“So, he’s alive!” Ari Ara
cried in relief.





“Maybe,” the
woman answered with a scowl. “Maybe not. A spinning bone indicates that
someone is on the edge of life and death, spirit and mortal life. I have never
seen a bone dance the threshold line as long as that. It is strange.”





Throw-the-Bones tapped
her chin.





“The third toss is
where you will meet again. Here in the Border Mountains. But your friend still
spun the spirit-mortal dance. Why would anyone move him over all that distance
if he were sick or injured or near death? That, I cannot understand.”





She had thought the
bones hid the truth on the second toss; that’s why she had Tala sing the Truth-Telling
Song. The melody made the bones fall honestly.





“Whatever that
was, it’s speaking the truth.”





“When should I
meet him there?” Ari Ara asked, pointing to the mountains.





Throw-the-Bones looked
up, eyes clouded and distant.





“Do not seek him.
Your paths will find each other.”





Then she shivered out
of her reverie, stoked the fire, and refilled the teapot. She bustled about the
hut, ignoring Ari Ara’s pestering questions, packing away the bones,
replacing the odds-and-ends on the table, tossing a handful of grain to Stew
the Chicken. Tala quietly rose and gestured to Ari Ara to follow; they’d
get no more out of Throw-the-Bones.





“Wait.”





The woman’s voice
stopped them as they left. She snatched the lightning stone off the table.





“Take this.”





“I couldn’t,”
Ari Ara protested.





Throw-the-Bones shook
her head.





“It is tied to him
now. I can’t use it again.”





She grabbed Ari Ara’s
wrist, turned her hand over, and placed the black stone in the girl’s palm.





“There is the
matter of payment, too,” Throw-the-Bones said sternly.





“I have little –
” Ari Ara began.





The woman held a finger
up to her lips and tilted her head as if listening . . . or
remembering.





“You will travel
the dragon ranges, the desert ridges, the marshlands, the desert sands,”
she chanted in an odd, distant tone. “Your paths will crisscross past the
Crossroads, but your eyes will not meet until after the women and warriors
collide, and the exile is exiled from exile.”





Throw-the-Bones’ eyes
rolled back in her head. She shivered. The woman’s limbs shook from head to
toe. She gasped as if she was resurfacing from a deep dive into a cold lake.
She braced her trembling palms on the table.





“For
payment,” she croaked, “you will promise me something.”





“What?” Ari Ara
asked warily.





“When the young
warrior returns, the old warrior will ask for your help. You will give
it,” Throw-the-Bones stated firmly.





A shiver and tingle ran
through Ari Ara’s spine. She nodded.





“No more questions now,” the seer insisted. “I have no more answers for you.” She hustled them out the door, onto Zyrh, and beyond her gate. As the latch clicked into place, she eyed the redheaded girl riding away. She had no more answers for Ari Ara Shirar en Marin, not until they next met on the long road called life.





____________________





This is an excerpt from Desert Song, a novel by Rivera Sun. You can get a copy by supporting the Community Publishing Campaign.

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Published on December 02, 2019 12:07
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Sit around and have a cup of tea with me. Some authors are introverts, I'm a cheerful conversationalist who emerges from intensive writing bouts ready to swap the news, share the gossip, and analyze p ...more
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