
Once upon a time, before our time, when
the world was much newer, there was a mighty Walker. We may call him Nimson. In the years of his strength he was said, by those who chatter, to be 12 cubits tall. This is a
bit of a mystery, but mystery is good for the soul, is it not? It begets humility
sometimes.
This Nimson was an observant and
reflective fellow. He spoke little. He watched carefully.
He had observed several tribes of
man, those who live no longer, and also those who have survived until the
present day. He had judged them, from afar, to be difficult, restless, and
quarrelsome, but also instructive to observe.
Once this mighty Walker was out
doing a bit of hunting, he used a spear by the way. He passed through the
forest of his home, relishing the beauty of the tall trees, listening to the
songs of the birds, gazing rapt at flowers, feeling the wind moving over the
earth. He was so enchanted by it all that he walked on further than usual until
the trees gave way to grasslands. He stood for a moment, judging whether to go
further into unfamiliar territory, but finally told himself, “Yes, it is good.”
So on he went. The grasslands spread out before him, mysterious, and open to
the sky.
There were no trails there, just the
endless grass waving languidly in the wind. It was almost hypnotic. Nimson
walked on wondering what sort of prey might live in this tall endless grass.
At last he noticed that though the
land appeared to be flat, it was not utterly flat. There were dips and hollows
which appeared suddenly when he came upon them. Some had springs of water
birthing small streams that wandered off to the next low spot. He was charmed.
He stopped and lapped the water, then walked on.
Night came, and with it a brilliant full
moon. He was getting hungry.
The wind brought Nimson the smell of
some kind of smoke. It wasn’t just wood smoke. There was something else in the
scent. Something about this scent interested him. It beckoned.
Then
he saw firelight. Realizing that it must be a campsite, he drew silently near.
There, in the glow of the flames, he
saw a woman of the tribe of modern man. She wore a straight garment of tanned
leather and long dark hair hung about her shoulders. It was not apparent whether
she be mother or maiden. She was alone except for a horse, tied to a bush nearby. This small horse happened to be covered in bundles and such.
Over the fire, she had laid a large
round thing like a shield, he thought. Upon its surface were laid pieces of
meat, the source of the strangely scented smoke. Nimson had eaten boars, so he
knew pork when he smelled it, but this was more than just pork, there was
something different about it.
He wasn’t afraid of her. He feared
nothing. And he was curious.
Nimson stepped out into the
firelight. Before her eyes he stood there impossibly tall, clothed in his own
covering of jet black hair, with a face like a man’s, but different somehow. He
had amber colored eyes and an inquisitive expression.
She took him in with a quick glance
and then smiled up at him.
“Are you hungry, Warrior?” she
smiled her coyote smile.
“Perhaps I am, Woman,” he answered,
noting the smile.
“I have meat here, Warrior. Honied,
spiced, and smoked boar’s flesh. Will you eat?” said she.
“I have never eaten meat touched by
fire, Woman,” said Nimson. “It smells very good.”
“Sit, and I will serve you,” she
said, edging close and gazing boldly up into his face.
Nimson sat on the trampled grass
near the fire. The woman fished some pieces of meat off of the metal object,
laid them on a flat wooden vessel of some sort and then she laid the plate, for
of course it was a plate, near him where he sat cross-legged on the trampled grass.
“Warrior, if you will come with me
and be my love, and live among my people, you shall have meat such as this
every day. Together with you, I will rule over the lives of men and women, for
you are very powerful!” said the dark haired woman with intense, shining eyes
of pale blue.
Nimson laughed and rose to his feet
once more, without touching the cooked meat waiting for him on the wooden plate
on the grass.
Fasting, he left her there, walking
back into the moonlit tall grass, following his own trail toward his home in the
forest. He stopped at the spring again and drank.
He stood then, wiped the excess water
off of his face, looked up at the moon, tucked his spear under his left arm and
walked again.
Once, as he walked, he snorted derisively.
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