The Index travelled
through the jungle and its path, from season to season, moved like a mad
snake, feeding the earth with minerals stolen from the mountains,
soaking the soils and leaving an abundance of life in its wake. The
Index descended to the fertile plains of Ternoulie, where its caresses
had seen the birth, over the seasons, of a mighty city-state.
The
river that flowed through its heart, ringed by a multitude of bridges,
fed an important trade with the rest of the continent. From the point of
view of a winged creature, the city appeared like a huge red speck
marbled with green in an infinite ocean of jungle. It really did look
like a heart.
All
around the city, rice paddies reflected the sky, followed by outskirts
and settlements where foreigners, merchants and travellers lived. A
thick wall of brick and compacted earth then delimited the city itself, a
dense tangle of buildings, streets, gardens and temples. The denser
southern part of the city was home to most of the population, as well as
popular markets, temples, warehouses and workshops. The great gateway
to Yaloumbalis was also located here, named after the city where, almost
a thousand kilometers to the south, the road that began at Ternoulie
ended. To the north of the Index, beyond the bridges, stood the most
impressive temples and pyramids. It was also the administrative and
diplomatic heart of the city. There were palaces, libraries, baths,
gardens and markets where the most precious goods were traded. In the
center, a terraced palace housed the family of the King of Ternoulie and
diplomats who came to defend the interests of their city or kingdom.
From
the roof of the three-storey building where he stood, in the shadow of a
canvas screen that draped him in bluish light, Pastel observed the
imposing silhouette of the royal palace, flanked by towers and pyramids,
which, despite the distance, remained the central visual element of
Ternoulie.
"Imagine how many people gave their lives to build this palace and these temples." Pastel asked aloud.
"Definitely
too many," Tamo replied, grimacing as he changed a bandage on Pastel.
Red hairs had stuck to the fabric. "It's disgusting."
"You didn't have to do it. I can take care of it if you find me too repulsive."
"Repulsive?
Never!" Tamo, who had been leaning over Pastel's paws, moved toward his
face. Pastel shuddered when their whiskers met, their wet muzzles
against each other. Pastel looked into the big brown eyes he knew by
heart. Deep inside, he discovered something new. Something cold,
something serious. "He's changed," he couldn't help thinking, before
swatting the idea away like a fly.
Tamo
moved his body closer to Pastel's, who felt his warmth. "But is it
contagious?" Tamo whispered in his friend's ear, who was dying to hold
him close without the shackles of his bandages and clothes.
"I don't know." Said Pastel, who felt Tamo sigh into the fur of his neck.
Tamo stepped back, his eyes shining. "New priority number one: finding you a cure."
"Isn't priority number one to go back to the steppes?"
"That's
the ultimate priority, but the cure is the first step." Tamo
approached, held out his hand and pretended that a pain prevented him
from touching Pastel. He collapsed to the ground dramatically and said,
"You see, I can't build a resistance in this state. I'm dying for your
skin."
Pastel burst out laughing. "Maybe he hadn't changed after all," he thought with a smile.
"I can't believe you're here." said Pastel, still amazed to have finally found the chestnut-eyed fox.
"Me
neither." Tamo replied, still lying on the ground, suddenly pensive. He
directed his gaze to the veil above him. "From flame-covered plains to
mountains, then basket houses. Everything has changed so fast. Even the
dead seem fake. I don't even know which is more surreal, my dreams or
reality. And now a city full of dinosaurs... and monsters."
"Aren't dinosaurs monsters?" Pastel said jokingly.
Tamo
gave him a serious look: "If only the doudou were the only monsters,
Pastel. If only they were. Monsters are people like us... like you.
Panthers, dogs and even foxes. Traitors. Who exploit kill and... in a
mad game scheme to take more and more." Tamo sat down and glared at the
palace skyline. "The monsters are dogs who wear multicolored veils and
decorate their fur with glitter of pure gold. Pastel if you knew what
we've seen here, what I've learned from those who rule here and the
absurd wars they persist in waging. The same species that burned our
cradle is ravaging this jungle!" His voice choked.
Pastel
remained stunned, his throat constricted. He leaned over Tamo and
stroked his back. Tamo's angry words "The monsters are dogs" echoed in
his head.
Pastel
hated seeing his friend like this, his tail rolled between his legs, his
fur bristling and his ears pressed against his skull. But suddenly, he
thought of another coat, gray this time. In a flash he saw his father in
the mountains again. Batto, who turned and looked at his son, his left
eye as ice but his right eye golden like his son's eyes and as
comforting as a summer breeze. His father, the dog who loved him. He
remembers the confusion and anxiety he felt then.
Love,
pain, anger, melancholy. These emotions filled Pastel in a jumble. He
shook his head as if to banish them, and looked up at Tamo, who was
suddenly on his feet and holding out his hand to help him up. "Pastel we
have... I must leave you, I'm going with my father and some lemurs to
meet a weapons merchant. We'll be back before dark."
"You talk as if you didn't want me to go with you."
"Oh
Pastel it's not that I don't want to, it's that... it's complicated.
It's dangerous we haven't explained everything to you yet, the work we
do with certain guilds, mercenaries, lemurs, you know?"
"I see..."
"Why don't you go and get yourself treated. Ask Tabi."
Tamo raised his hand to stroke Pastel's left ear.
"See you later, then. Don't die." Said Pastel sketching a small smile.
"Of
course not! Besides, I'm not allowed to die before you're cured!
Ultimate priority!" Tamo climbed down the stone stairs into the building
that housed the clandestine foxes.
Pastel
was once again alone on the roof, under the tropical sun. The sun had
moved across the sky and the blue shadow had shifted. He looked up.
Between the clouds, silhouettes of birds. Pastel wondered what the world
looked like from these heights. He wondered how his steppes would look
from up there.
"What a privilege it would be to see the cradle from the vantage point of the clouds."
***
"You're
... you're not coming with me?" Pastel asked, observing the large black
rectangle that pierced the base of the pyramid. They were on the
outskirts of a public square where makeshift stalls had been erected.
The merchants, who seemed to sell just about everything, seemed to have
settled into a dense cluster that was difficult to navigate, but which
had the advantage of remaining in the shadow of the pyramid for a good
part of the day.
"I'm
not allowed... hihi. I was banished after stealing a jade statuette
when I was little. Besides, we lemurs worship a different God. But don't
worry, it's a refuge for all the needy and it's cool. Ask for asylum,
show your wounds and a mage will help you."
"Good. Thank you then, Tabi."
"It's my pleasure! Thats what friends are for!"
Pastel stepped into the white stone shadow and turned to ask: "And this statuette, is it in your village?"
Tabi,
who was already moving away, replied, leaping backwards: "No, I've lost
it!" She stuck out her tongue and disappeared into the human tide of
the market, just as Pastel had already seen her disappear into the dense
foliage of the jungle.
Pastel
returned to the shadows and his vision quickly became accustomed to the
absence of any light source in the opening, which became a long
corridor, like a rectangular cave with walls decorated with fine
bas-reliefs rich in animal and plant silhouettes. Soon he emerged into
the largest interior space he had ever entered.
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It
was an immense, rectangular room where the only light came from a few
copper basins where wicks burned in oil, but above all from skylights on
either side of the room which, as Pastel stepped into the space,
projected what appeared to be columns of light that crossed the room
diagonally. The contrast with the voluminous stone columns created a
strange effect of positive and negative volumes juxtaposed. Between the
full and the empty.
The
air smelled of humidity, incense smoke and burning oil. The space,
which at first had seemed empty to Pastel because of the contrast with
the bustle outside, was in fact well and truly occupied. Panthers, dogs,
birds and capybaras occupied the space, but in silence. Along the side
walls, altars were set up in angular alcoves, with people kneeling in
front of statuettes on large carpets. Elsewhere, people murmured and
drank tea. A little further on, someone seemed to be napping.
At
the far end, a large black and glossy statue represented a grimacing
creature whose morphology was a mixture of feline, reptile, bird and
rodent. A streak of light landed on the stone creature's legs,
illuminating a carpet of greenery. Curious, Pastel moved towards the
statue, but someone nearby suddenly stopped him.
"Tssss tssss! Stop right there! Your paws!"
Pastel turned to see a capibara dressed in a long green toga.
"I beg your pardon? My paws?"
"You
must wash your paws before leaving the gate. Come along." The dark-eyed
capibara with his heavy eyelids guided him slowly towards a small
fountain that lined the opening to the outside and which Pastel hadn't
noticed on entering.
"Wash
your paws here and dry them on the carpet. First time in a Syra temple,
isn't it? Come on. Syra welcomes you." The fountain was a small,
open-mouthed stone panther, and water poured from its open mouth and
eyes into a small basin. The capibara gestured for Pastel to step into
the basin and wash his paws. The soiled water then flowed slowly to an
opening beneath the panther, this time in the shape of an open-mouthed
fish.
"Good. Good" approved the capibara before guiding Pastel along the temple wall, over a mat, then up to an altar.
"Eeeeh, you... are you a temple mage? I've come to seek asylum and to be helped to heal a wound."
The
capibara nodded slowly, closing his eyes and said, "Like all of us.
Like all of us. I'm not a mage but a simple servant of Syra. Syra will
heal your wounds with the echo of your prayers. Each of these altars
will heal a different wound in you. You must have healed each of your
wounds before approaching the central altar of Syra".
"... I understand, but I also have... physical wounds. On my skin, you see? An infection."
"Good,
good. Make your way along the path and if you still need help, perhaps a
mage will come along." The capibara walked slowly away, eyes
half-closed, leaving Pastel a little confused by the little statue.
"'Right,'
said Pastel simply, looking around. He then noticed how the others,
sitting by the statuettes, spent a few minutes before walking slowly to
the next one and so on. On either side of the long hall, eight altars
followed one another. "I don't suppose they'll want to treat me if I
don't comply with their rituals." Pastel thought with a sigh, walking
over to the altar to kneel on the wool carpet. He looked at the
statuette of a black snake and the bas-reliefs all around, which,
illuminated by the basins, were sometimes covered in tallow that
accentuated the contrasts in the motifs.
"Dear
serpent spirit... or god. Dear Syra, whoever you are, thank you for
welcoming me into your home... and protect my people... I hope you get
on well with the spirits of the plains... thank you" Pastel murmured,
not quite sure what to say. He thought of Mamalou and wondered what she
would have done in his place. "How can you pay homage to a god other
than your own? The spirits of the plains protect the plains... Syra
protects the jungle and its inhabitants." he thought. He thought back to
the first impression the jungle had made on him as he left the
mountains. His impression of entering a living organism, powerful and
chaotic. "Here, too, the spirits protect me."
He
rose to his feet and prostrated himself before the other altar, each
time carrying other thoughts with him. Finally arriving at the far end
of the temple, he turned towards the huge black statue. Only then did he
realize that it was so shiny and lustrous not only because the black
stone was polished, but because a fine drape of water ran over it,
flowing from the creature's eyes and from some hidden orifice in the
beast's impressive details. The water flowed over the statue and landed
at its feet, on a huge stone base covered with a vibrant green wet moss.
Pastel stepped forward, fascinated. The moss seemed to absorb the water
like a sponge. The fluffy carpet of moss came to a sudden halt at the
edge of the large rectangular block around which the water flowed into
small channels that carried the water back into the shadows behind the
statue.
Pastel
thought of the stone under his armpit. It was warm. The fox closed his
eyes and concentrated on what he was feeling. In his chest, the weight
had dissolved a little. His thoughts were less erratic than they had
been that morning, less carried away by worry and speculation. He
realized he could silence his inner voice and simply observe the
movement of his impressions, just as his gaze had earlier observed the
delicate moss. Something brushed against his arm and his heart suddenly
leapt.
"Excuse me,"
he heard a soft voice whisper. He opened his eyes. Next to him, a raven
in a green toga was leaning over the pedestal, and with a pair of
tweezers in his hand, he was delicately trimming the edge of the moss
slab before depositing the tiny scraps in a small black bowl. Finally,
he turned his head towards Pastel. His dark plumage glistened with
purple and blue reflections.
"Hello
I..." Black eyes watched him silently with intelligence. "I've come to
seek asylum and the help of a healer for the wounds on my skin."
The
raven nodded and placed the small tongs in the small bowl. The green
toga slipped over his arm, revealing his long black feathers, like a
second cape.
"Of course. Syra welcomes you. What is your name?"
Pastel hesitated. "Pastel. I'm Pastel"
"And I'm Paleato, minor mage of the temple."
"Minor
mage," Pastel murmured, following the winged creature as it slowly
guided him to an opening at the far end of the room. "I invite you into
the sacred courtyard," Paleato said laconically as if in prayer. His
outstretched arm was edged by long feathers. Pastel then noticed that
under the raven's wrist was hidden in the feathering a second joint and
another segment of wing, folded against the arm.
The
mage's every gesture was slow and measured. In the half-light of the
temple, he seemed almost to fade into the background, but his dark
plumage occasionally reflected a few flashes of color from the darkness
where he moved, in the rustle of his toga and plumage. He first placed
his bowl on a small table, then guided Pastel through a series of rooms
that suggested just how immense the temple was.
Without
words being exchanged they finally arrived in a carpeted room where a
skylight battled against the shadows; a prism of light illuminating a
green carpet and cushions.
"Good."
The raven finally said, sitting down on the floor. Pastel followed him.
" Do I feel intimidated?" he wondered, trying to understand why his
heart was beating so fast. The raven, with his gestures, despite seeming
barely older than him, reminded him of Mamalou's during ceremonies. The
bird interrupted his thoughts.
"You
have a buzzing energy, Pastel. Perhaps you're compressing something
vast." Pastel thought of steppes and horizons. Paleato continued,
enigmatic: "You can't let the volumes of light disappear." At Pastel's
look of incomprehension, he added, smiling for the first time: "You've
probably noticed, in the great hall of the temple, the columns of light.
The stone columns support the weight of the temple and the pyramid. But
it's the columns of light that support us from within. It's a
metaphor." He rested his hand on his chest. "We live in the volume that
light carves out of the shadow that inhabits us. You need to rebuild
your temple of light."
"I'm
trying..." said Pastel half aloud. Not sure he completely understood
what the crow was trying to teach, but he got along with it.
"Show
me your wounds." Said the mage, this time taking a lighter tone, with
his soft and deep voice. Pastel stood still, looking puzzled, wondering
if the raven was still speaking metaphorically.
"Your real wounds. Your physical wounds you spoke of"
"Ah, yes!"
Pastel
hesitated for a moment, remembering that the dye he always wore on his
face and hands didn't cover his arms. He lifted his tunic, revealing a
ruddy coat that disappeared in places, fading to a blistering red skin.
The raven stretched its neck to observe, without commenting on the
difference in shade between the fox's face and limbs.
"It's
a fungal infection. Unfortunately common in the jungle. It's caused by
humidity. Your fur is not made for these climates. You need to brush it,
bathe it and dry it carefully and often."
"And you have a remedy?"
"Of
course I do. Syra has a remedy for everything. Have you seen the sacred
moss? It's a very rare moss that we grow thanks to Syra and that cures
many ills."
The raven
stood up. "But before you can receive the privilege of Syra's caress on
your skin, you'll have to start by bathing and..." Paleato smirked "and
remove that dye from your coat."
Paleato
moved towards a large stone tub dug into the floor of the room beyond.
Against the wall another panther statuette was this time dry-mouthed,
but when, with a gesture, the raven withdrew a piece of wood from a hole
in the carving, water began to flow and fill the vat. "Take off your
clothes."
Pastel
stood still for a second, then, blushing, removed his clothes one by
one. When he reached the long tunic, he hesitated, then pulled it over
his shoulders. He was completely naked, but Paleato's gaze hadn't
changed. As he crouched to enter the vat, the raven stopped him, its
hand on Pastel's shoulder. Feathers brushed his bicep.
"You
forgot something, didn't you?" Paleato looked Pastel in the eye, but
Pastel knew he was talking about the stone. Though unobtrusive, the
string that held the small pouch under his armpit was visible on
Pastel's shoulder.
"Don't
worry, you're safe here. You can trust me. Your burden will stay close
to you. No one here will take it away from you." Pastel slowly untied
the string. The raven's words echoed in his mind, "burden." How did he
know?
As if he could
read the thoughts on his face, Paleato added: "I can see the weight this
object represents for you. Whatever that pouch contains, you seem to
value it as much as a life." Pastel, half in the vat of lukewarm water,
couldn't hold back an impressed look. "You're very transparent, you
know?" said Paleato, smiling. "Your eyes are speaking." Pastel blushed
and averted his gaze to the tank where he had settled. The water rose
against his body and momentarily relieved the burning of his wounds. He
sighed with relief.
"Good,"
said the raven, still close to him. Pastel felt uncomfortably helpless
without the stone. He glanced at it, then at Paleato. His black eyes,
darker than the black of his feathers, were turned towards him, their
vertiginous depth like a cloudless sky.
The latter suddenly asked. "It's magic, isn't it? I feel it too."