First came gods, and their power was unbound
They shaped demons in their image
Gods dreamed, that they might know limits.
Demons ruled, though they numbered few
They bred with beast and tree
Demons lusted, that they might be gods.
Then came woman, and her brood was plentiful,
It grew upon the earth like stalks of grass
Men built, that they might conquer death.
While the gods slumbered.
-Transcribed from oral histories in the manuscript of Jabari San, scribe to the Golden Magisters of Namu, c. 3117 by the Ummran calendar.
Zhura walked the muddy trail that wound through the forest from the village to the Little Mongoose River. It was early in the day, so only a few young girls passed by, carrying heavy water jugs atop their heads to market. The girls chatted and giggled with each other, sparing not even a glance in the direction of the young herb-witch.
Zhura sighed, well aware that this was her fate. She, and the crone she served, birthed babies, cured fevers and healed wounds. But when the villagers were not ailing, they shunned the healers, because herb-witches trafficked in the magical secrets of life and death.
She hiked up her skirt, baring her muscled calves, to step carefully along the great flat rocks that banked the lazy channel of the river. The morning sun shone through the trees, dappling the water like gold, twinkling upon dew-spotted leaves like so many diamonds. The air smelled of mud and orchid blossoms, and the faint smell of cook-fires.
Zhura was used to being alone, much as it sometimes pained her. She was an orphan, who had never known her kin. Menga, the ironsmith, had raised her with his own sons, and apprenticed her to the old herb-witch as a small girl. He used to say Zhura had distant cousins in one of the villages in the north. But he had never taken her there. Now that she was grown - a woman of eighteen rains - what did it matter? That family was foreign to her, and might as well have been in Namu-on-the-sea for all it mattered to her life.
She left the area where the washerwomen often spread their laundry on sun-drenched rocks, venturing into a stretch of the Little Mongoose where bush and trees grew thick and wild along the water. Zhura wouldn't normally come this far upriver. Predators often lurked along the edges of the village of Boma, coming to the river to drink or to find a straying chicken or dog. If she found a good specimen of
wentago
leaf, she would uproot it to plant in the crone's garden, so she wouldn't have to venture as far.
She was picking her way upstream, looking for the copses where she knew the shrub grew, when the cries came from behind her.
"Help! Anyone! Please!"
Zhura clutched her short staff and pack tightly as she rushed back along the bank the way she'd come, careful that her sandals wouldn't slip on wet stone.
A woman lay upon one of the rocks beside the water. Her ankle was wedged between two flat boulders.
"Thank the Merciful Mother!" the woman said when she spotted Zhura. "Can you help me?"
"Yes," Zhura said, hurrying over. She set down her gear and laid on her belly, peering between the rocks where the woman was stuck. The skin on her leg was unbroken, but it would probably bruise.
"Don't try to pull your leg straight out," Zhura said. "Swing it along the length of the crack."
As the woman obeyed, Zhura couldn't help noticing how alluring she was, and how scantily clad. The green skirt she wore was slit to her hip and slung low enough to reveal her pelvic bone. Her bright yellow halter bared her navel and the upper halves of very healthy breasts. The brightness of her clothing contrasted with her smooth mahogany skin, a shade not unlike Zhura's own.
Though the woman was at least ten rains older than Zhura, her skin was unwrinkled and unblemished. She wore a dark mass of tight braids - almost as thin as single strands of hair - that fell over her breasts in heavy black tresses.
Her neck, wrists and ankles hung with charms of bone and shell and horn, the kind most people wore as wards against demons. From ear to collarbone, the woman was marked with tiny ritual scars, darkened flesh that spotted her like a cheetah, but were mainly hidden by her thick hair.
The woman winced as she swung her leg free. Zhura examined the scrapes around the ankle, and then went to her pack. She came back with gumwood bark, a dollop of coconut oil and a small mortar and pestle.
"I'm an herb-witch," Zhura explained. As she worked, she eyed the woman's waterskin. "Wash the ankle," she said. "This will take but a moment." Zhura glanced at the jungle around them. "What were you doing this far upriver?"