((Contains material of an adult nature.))
The Goddess Moon. Even the Arctrans who followed the Nine called it that. A night of magic, of mysteries, of wishes made and promises kept, it came about once every five years - a night when both moons rose into the sky, full bellied and bright. There was not a single soul in the True Queen's armies who begrudged staying another night in this place, to allow the Wild Ones to honor their Goddess with song and life. The clans had moved themselves away from the main encampment during the day, understanding that they did not wish to disturb their new-found allies with their celebrations beneath the bright glow of the Goddess Moon, and with the movement of their own camp, they had brought with them the Royal tent, with all its trappings. Kari willed it, and Kari's will was the Goddess' word.
Thus it was that, as the two moons rose high over the dancing bonfires of the Wild Ones' camp, Ariana stood a little outside her own tent, surrounded by the joyful solemnity of these astonishing people in their devotion to their deity, the being who had preserved her own life for seventeen years. Wrapped tightly in her cloak, she watched as the next generation of Goddess-sworn warriors gave their allegiance to their clan; as men and women fell into the terrifying charm of their own ecstasy; as voices rose all around her, each word devoted to the Goddess who looked down on them. It was beautiful, and frightening, to be in their midst and yet not a part of the wild celebrations all around.
Rory looked on in wonder, right beside Ariana, feeling strangely shy again, despite all that was going on around them. The nomads were obviously not shy. He wondered what it must be like growing up among them. He envied them in a way - he envied their freedom, for one thing, but not because he regretted his place or his duty as the Queen's chosen consort, but only because he had never really known what that feeling was like, and he guessed Ariana had likely not either.
The two of them stood together, bathed in the warm candle light from the tent, in the heat from the leaping bonfires, and the silver cold of the moons light from above them. "I never really understood," Ariana said softly as she watched the wild play around them. "I've seen them reverence the full moon before, but this ....They have so much love for their Goddess. Why did they want us to be here?"
"It is a special night, one full of magic. It only comes once every five years, or so Liayna told me. It is a night for wishes, she said," he explained what little he understood of it. Turning to look at her in the moonlight, he was struck by her loveliness, thinking she looked like a goddess herself, with her gold hair falling softly about her shoulders, the silver light of the moon gently illuminating her pretty face.
"Kari didn't tell me anything like that," the young queen admitted, blushing as a naked man burst from the shadows and bowed to them, before turning to walk through the bonfire that without a single hair on his head singed. Swallowing, Ariana took a step back, leaning into Rory's side as she stared. "How do they do that?"
Rory stepped back, too, tugging Ariana with him, eyes wide as the man startled them both, not only with his nakedness. Rory furrowed his brows as he watched both the man and his companions reveling under the light of the twin moons, performing unbelievable feats seemingly without effort or harm. "I don't know," he whispered back, one arm going around her protectively. "It must be magic, I think." Though he wasn't sure what kind of magic. "Liayna said that it's because of the Goddess. They call it the Goddess Moon," he explained further, still not quite understanding it.
She raised her eyes to the sky above them, clear and crisp with winter's breath, to where the two moons shone full against the darkness. "In Phalion, my tutors used to say that an oath spoken on the night of the Goddess Moon can never be broken, that the Twin Gods walk Arctra in the light of the two moons. They believed it. I never did. I didn't want to live in a world where the gods walked the earth and did nothing to help us."
"What do you believe now?" Rory asked, his voice quiet, almost afraid to raise his voice for fear he would break the spell cast by those twin moons. He wasn't quite sure what he believed. Like her, he hadn't believed in much of anything most of his life, and yet he had seen things he could not explain any other way. "Perhaps it just takes time, Ari. Seventeen years can't mean much to immortals."
"I don't know," she admitted quietly. "Kari's Goddess saved my life, and killed my brother to do it. The High Priest of the Nine acknowledged it, and swore by the Nine that I am my mother's daughter. But I don't know if I believe in the gods, or the Goddess."
A low voice spoke from the shadows to their left. "It does not matter that you do not believe, vipsana. Leniniya believes in you." A tall woman, thankfully still garbed in furs, came into the light, her smile gentle and almost sad as she looked at the young couple. "Goddess-touched, for the Goddess-child," she said softly, reaching to touch Rory's shoulder first, then Ariana's cheek.
There was not much Rory could say to that, knowing Ariana's history. How could he defend the gods and the Goddess after everything they'd both been through' But what Velasca had done wasn't their doing or their fault, was it' He was about to point this out when another voice broke in unexpectedly and he turned to find a tall woman there whom he assumed to be one of the nomads. He arched a brow at her statement, wondering if she meant what he thought she meant by that, but who was she and what was her interest in them, other than the obvious. He visibly flinched at her touch, pulling Ariana closer against him, though he sensed no danger there. He said nothing, but stood close by, waiting for Ariana to speak.
The wild woman drew her hand back as the young queen stepped deeper into her consort's protective arm, her smile never shifting. "I am Arora, Doma of Clan Kirun," she introduced herself. "I meant not to frighten you."
Ariana swallowed, biting her lip as she glanced to Rory briefly. "What is it you want with us, Doma?" she asked the woman, calm despite her wariness. She had learned not to treat any Wild One with anything but equal respect.
Arora's smile deepened as she inclined her head to them both. "The Goddess gives many gifts on the night of Her moons, if we have the courage to ask for them," she told the young pair. "I believe there is a question you should ask together."
There was something oddly familiar about the woman, though Rory couldn't figure out what it was. It was almost as if he'd seen her or met her before, but he couldn't remember where or when. He relaxed a little when she introduced herself. It was highly unlikely any of Velasca's assassins would dare infiltrate the camp again now that they were on high alert, and even less likely one would disguise herself as a clansman. "What question is that?" he asked, wondering what she was getting at. He had several wishes he'd like to make if he was given the chance, though those wishes might differ from Ariana's.
There were many answers to that question, but Arora chose the simplest. "To teach you love," she said gently. "The love you have not yet learned; the love that is promised to you, if only you have the courage to reach out for it." Her eyes, pale and green as the sacred pools in the hidden woods, lingered for a long moment on Rory as she spoke. "Many gifts come from love." Her gaze fell to Ariana once again. "To dance beneath the Goddess Moon is a rare privilege for one not born to the clans, vipsana. Will you dare to take that first step?"
The Goddess Moon. Even the Arctrans who followed the Nine called it that. A night of magic, of mysteries, of wishes made and promises kept, it came about once every five years - a night when both moons rose into the sky, full bellied and bright. There was not a single soul in the True Queen's armies who begrudged staying another night in this place, to allow the Wild Ones to honor their Goddess with song and life. The clans had moved themselves away from the main encampment during the day, understanding that they did not wish to disturb their new-found allies with their celebrations beneath the bright glow of the Goddess Moon, and with the movement of their own camp, they had brought with them the Royal tent, with all its trappings. Kari willed it, and Kari's will was the Goddess' word.
Thus it was that, as the two moons rose high over the dancing bonfires of the Wild Ones' camp, Ariana stood a little outside her own tent, surrounded by the joyful solemnity of these astonishing people in their devotion to their deity, the being who had preserved her own life for seventeen years. Wrapped tightly in her cloak, she watched as the next generation of Goddess-sworn warriors gave their allegiance to their clan; as men and women fell into the terrifying charm of their own ecstasy; as voices rose all around her, each word devoted to the Goddess who looked down on them. It was beautiful, and frightening, to be in their midst and yet not a part of the wild celebrations all around.
Rory looked on in wonder, right beside Ariana, feeling strangely shy again, despite all that was going on around them. The nomads were obviously not shy. He wondered what it must be like growing up among them. He envied them in a way - he envied their freedom, for one thing, but not because he regretted his place or his duty as the Queen's chosen consort, but only because he had never really known what that feeling was like, and he guessed Ariana had likely not either.
The two of them stood together, bathed in the warm candle light from the tent, in the heat from the leaping bonfires, and the silver cold of the moons light from above them. "I never really understood," Ariana said softly as she watched the wild play around them. "I've seen them reverence the full moon before, but this ....They have so much love for their Goddess. Why did they want us to be here?"
"It is a special night, one full of magic. It only comes once every five years, or so Liayna told me. It is a night for wishes, she said," he explained what little he understood of it. Turning to look at her in the moonlight, he was struck by her loveliness, thinking she looked like a goddess herself, with her gold hair falling softly about her shoulders, the silver light of the moon gently illuminating her pretty face.
"Kari didn't tell me anything like that," the young queen admitted, blushing as a naked man burst from the shadows and bowed to them, before turning to walk through the bonfire that without a single hair on his head singed. Swallowing, Ariana took a step back, leaning into Rory's side as she stared. "How do they do that?"
Rory stepped back, too, tugging Ariana with him, eyes wide as the man startled them both, not only with his nakedness. Rory furrowed his brows as he watched both the man and his companions reveling under the light of the twin moons, performing unbelievable feats seemingly without effort or harm. "I don't know," he whispered back, one arm going around her protectively. "It must be magic, I think." Though he wasn't sure what kind of magic. "Liayna said that it's because of the Goddess. They call it the Goddess Moon," he explained further, still not quite understanding it.
She raised her eyes to the sky above them, clear and crisp with winter's breath, to where the two moons shone full against the darkness. "In Phalion, my tutors used to say that an oath spoken on the night of the Goddess Moon can never be broken, that the Twin Gods walk Arctra in the light of the two moons. They believed it. I never did. I didn't want to live in a world where the gods walked the earth and did nothing to help us."
"What do you believe now?" Rory asked, his voice quiet, almost afraid to raise his voice for fear he would break the spell cast by those twin moons. He wasn't quite sure what he believed. Like her, he hadn't believed in much of anything most of his life, and yet he had seen things he could not explain any other way. "Perhaps it just takes time, Ari. Seventeen years can't mean much to immortals."
"I don't know," she admitted quietly. "Kari's Goddess saved my life, and killed my brother to do it. The High Priest of the Nine acknowledged it, and swore by the Nine that I am my mother's daughter. But I don't know if I believe in the gods, or the Goddess."
A low voice spoke from the shadows to their left. "It does not matter that you do not believe, vipsana. Leniniya believes in you." A tall woman, thankfully still garbed in furs, came into the light, her smile gentle and almost sad as she looked at the young couple. "Goddess-touched, for the Goddess-child," she said softly, reaching to touch Rory's shoulder first, then Ariana's cheek.
There was not much Rory could say to that, knowing Ariana's history. How could he defend the gods and the Goddess after everything they'd both been through' But what Velasca had done wasn't their doing or their fault, was it' He was about to point this out when another voice broke in unexpectedly and he turned to find a tall woman there whom he assumed to be one of the nomads. He arched a brow at her statement, wondering if she meant what he thought she meant by that, but who was she and what was her interest in them, other than the obvious. He visibly flinched at her touch, pulling Ariana closer against him, though he sensed no danger there. He said nothing, but stood close by, waiting for Ariana to speak.
The wild woman drew her hand back as the young queen stepped deeper into her consort's protective arm, her smile never shifting. "I am Arora, Doma of Clan Kirun," she introduced herself. "I meant not to frighten you."
Ariana swallowed, biting her lip as she glanced to Rory briefly. "What is it you want with us, Doma?" she asked the woman, calm despite her wariness. She had learned not to treat any Wild One with anything but equal respect.
Arora's smile deepened as she inclined her head to them both. "The Goddess gives many gifts on the night of Her moons, if we have the courage to ask for them," she told the young pair. "I believe there is a question you should ask together."
There was something oddly familiar about the woman, though Rory couldn't figure out what it was. It was almost as if he'd seen her or met her before, but he couldn't remember where or when. He relaxed a little when she introduced herself. It was highly unlikely any of Velasca's assassins would dare infiltrate the camp again now that they were on high alert, and even less likely one would disguise herself as a clansman. "What question is that?" he asked, wondering what she was getting at. He had several wishes he'd like to make if he was given the chance, though those wishes might differ from Ariana's.
There were many answers to that question, but Arora chose the simplest. "To teach you love," she said gently. "The love you have not yet learned; the love that is promised to you, if only you have the courage to reach out for it." Her eyes, pale and green as the sacred pools in the hidden woods, lingered for a long moment on Rory as she spoke. "Many gifts come from love." Her gaze fell to Ariana once again. "To dance beneath the Goddess Moon is a rare privilege for one not born to the clans, vipsana. Will you dare to take that first step?"