Birth, death and marriage. These were the three most important events in life. These were also the occasions where Ivory, as the shaman's apprentice, was now required to play an important part. It was Glade whose role was the most vital, particularly with regards to giving birth. Her midwifery skills were in greatest demand during the summer, as this was the time of the year when most women gave birth. Sadly, Glade and Ivory were also in attendance for the sombre duty of burying the bodies of a quarter of those same newly-born who the spirits had deemed were not to stay long in the world.
If death took away an older member of the tribe, especially a man, the solemn ceremony of commemorating the passing of his life was conducted by Chief Cave Lion. A man had to reach adulthood and to have wed to be so honoured. Fortunately there had been only two deaths that summer, apart from that of Ivory's mother. Glade recited songs of a dirge-like nature in these ceremonies whose lyrics she fashioned to celebrate the virtues of the deceased.
Weddings were occasions of great rejoicing. These ceremonies were always led by the chief. The principal duty for the shaman and her apprentice was to provide intoxicants and song. There was only one wedding that summer and that was between Elk Antler and Dandelion. Ivory's feelings were decidedly mixed. Even while she was being coached by Glade in the words and rhythm of the wedding song, Ivory lamented that it wasn't she who would be taking the wedding vows. Rather than give her away, the chief was much more likely to just fuck her.
As Ivory became more confident in her role as the shaman's apprentice, she also became steadily more convinced of the spiritual value of the sacred rites. This was very much in spite of Glade's scepticism. Ivory believed the rites awakened the spirits with at least as much conviction as Glade insisted that they were an empty pantomime whose main value was to satisfy the villagers' need for ceremony and mystery.
"You don't have to believe in the spirits to act as their messenger," Ivory argued. "They're still there. Can't you feel them?"
Glade shook her head sadly. "The only spirits in the rituals are those awakened by alcohol and hemp. If you wish to believe in the validity of the rites and their efficacy don't let me persuade you otherwise. I often feel like a fraud. Perhaps it's best that my successor should be someone with faith. But you have much more to learn. The nights will only get longer and the harsh winter trek is not much more than a moon away."
Winter was the season of hardship. It brought want, sometimes starvation and always death, especially amongst the children. This was the season when the shaman's services were most in demand and this year Ivory would share in her duties. She would help bury the dead, comfort the living, and seek succour and benison in the most unpromising wintry valleys. Already the swallows had flown off, the mammoth herds were restless and the sky was streaked by migrating geese. Sometimes there was a sprinkle of snow on the grass at night. Every morning the earth was hard with the night's frost. Soon, it would snow and not melt in the morning sun. Then the villagers would have to trek southwards away from the carpet of white snow that only the hardiest animal could survive.
"What if we stayed here all winter, like the Reindeer Herders?" Ivory asked Glade. "There are musk oxen, elk, hare and fox."
"Then your tribe would no longer be the tribe of Mammoth Hunters," said Glade. "There are no aurochs. No rhinoceros. The snow drifts cover every tepee from the frozen soil to the height of a man's waist. There isn't enough food for everyone to survive the winter. If the village dwindled in size through starvation to no more than a handful, Chief Cave Lion would be saddened to have dominion over only as many people as he can count on one hand."
"I always feel sorrow when we depart in the winter," Ivory sighed. "It must be blissful to live in one place all the time. Didn't you feel sad when you left your village by the river all those years ago?"
"I did," Glade admitted. "Very much so. But I was a child of the forest. It also pleased me to wander freely under its canopy."
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The Forest People were the only refugees who felt any joy at being in the woods when they gathered together well away from the river. The Knights made up a third of their number. Only two villagers came from other tribes and they had come only because they were the Forest People's lovers. Some Forest People, like Macaque, had come because they couldn't bear to be parted from their lovers, but most abandoned the river village because they didn't wish to yield their hard won freedom to Queen Mimosa's tribe.
It was a sombre gathering. The refugees were anxious that Lady Geranium's warriors might pursue them so they spent a restless night under the tall trees, aware that the following day they would need to get much further away. Glade was now part of a ragged troop in a mostly unfamiliar forest and she had abandoned some of her closest friends and lovers. Macaque and Dignity were amongst the refugees but not, Glade was sad to see, either Tree Shrew or Fern.
It wasn't until after more than a day's travel that the company felt sufficiently safe that they could risk the noisy pleasures of sex. When the Forest People did so, their lovemaking was altogether more restrained than the traditional wild orgiastic coupling.
There was no real discussion as to where the troop should go beyond that it should be as far as possible from the plains where Queen Mimosa ruled. The troop processed along the meandering river, which they relied on to satisfy their newly discovered appetite for fish and other river life, but stayed mostly within the shadow of the trees at the forest edge.
The river steadily changed in its character as the refugees wandered. It became wider. It was joined at intersections by other rivers and streams. At first the river was shallow enough for the refugees to wade over, so their trail alternated from one bank to the other according to how easy it was to proceed. After a while, it became too wide to cross so easily. It was also much more dangerous. Hippopotami and crocodiles frequented the deeper waters in much greater numbers. The river had now become much less friendly, although there was a corresponding increase in its bounty of fish, water fowl and otter.
It also became obvious that Glade's troop weren't the only people in the forest. They found the charcoaled remains of fires had been abandoned for no more than the passage of a single moon. There were signs on the trees and forest floor that others had recently wandered along the same animal trails that they were following.