Hero Wars

Hero Wars
Glorantha
Issaries, Inc.
Market Place
Tribes
  Essays
Library
News
Utilities

Man Rune

Copyright © 2000
Issaries, Inc.

How Pavis Lost its Song

By Mike Dawson

It was that in the time that Seven Tribes blocked the Five Gates, when the cursed Jaldon camped in the Fields of Pavis County, that the walls of the city stood against him, and our city was resolute and unified against him.

Once, among the Noble houses of Ancient Pavis, there was a clan called the Zalosadan, and they were known as friends to all true citizens, and great in the sight of Pavis. They are no longer with us, but we remember them.
Nonarathen Harp-Singer was of that Zalosadan clan, who are fond in our memory. And she was a true Daughter of Pavis, of whom some said was even of the City Founder's blood. She was wise, and kind, and gentle, with a smile that made the blind sigh, and a voice which made the deaf weep.

Nonarathen Harp-Singer and her family, and the city of Pavis were greatly saddened by the trials that they and theirs faced from the Nomads who followed Jaldon. Nonarathen beseeched the Son of Pavis to allow her to go to the cursed Great Khan, and convince him to lift his siege.
And so the Son of Pavis was moved by the tears and song beseeching him, and he bade her "Take this Ivory Harp, which is the Harp of the Temple, and play us a song that all citizens maybe moved by, and with which they may sing along. Play that song, and go forth unto Jaldon, and our voices shall follow you beyond the walls. Let the harmonies of our voices reach the heart of Jaldon, and persuade him we are his friends, not his foe."

So Nonarathen did as the Son of Pavis requested, and took the Ivory Harp, and played and sang a magnificent song on the steps of the Great Temple. All the citizens of the Blessed City were drawn from their villas and joined in to that song. She passed down the temple steps, and at the foot of the steps, a regiment of zebra cavalry bowed down at her passing, mounts and riders both.  Still playing her harp, Nonarathen passed unto the Wyvern Gate, and the guards there turned to watch, and sang. The gates there opened of their own accord to allow Nonarathen to pass, and the wyverns rose up and danced in the air along with the song, though they did not sing. Blueblue the Dancer, Nonarathen's fool, made a angry gesture at them for that.

Nonarathen and her troupe approached Jaldon's Camp, which lay before Wyvern Gate. The pickets there made to ride over and trample her, but their mounts would not be spurred and instead kneeled down as the zebras had. Some nomads fled then, frightened of the power of Nonarathen's song.
Nonarathen went among the camp, and Blueblue showed his master where Jaldon's tent was pitched. Before it was a khan of each tribe, blood man, scar bearer and guard for Jaldon. Nonarathen knew what all khans truly wait for, and what they know they have lost. Nonarathen sang of this to them, and they all wept and allowed her to pass into their Master's tent.

Nonarathen thought that Jaldon most wanted assurance that his people would not kill each other, so that they would survive and thrive. She raised up the Ivory Harp as she entered Jaldon's tent, and she played its secret harmonies, and sang them too, with a song of unity and a way that people can live together despite their differences.

Jaldon, who would kill a citizen by only smiling, listened to that song, and Nonarathen grew hopeful, because she could see that the Toothmaker was hearing the song's message. She sang of how death only brings death, and Jaldon grew sad and looked as if he might cry.
And then he did. A tear rolled down Jaldon's face, and he wiped it away and flung it off his hand, sending it flying across his tent. But there, good citizens, it did not strike the ground to nourish the soil. It struck Jaldon's Death Drum, and gave it a voice.

The drummers and shamans in the camp heard the voice of Jaldon's Drum, and answered it back. 500 drummers beat their war songs and 500 shamans screamed to their beast gods. 50,000 braves clashed their weapons in time.

Jaldon heard that terrible noise, and he smiled. First he smiled to himself, then he smiled at Nonarathen. Nonarathen saw that smile, and her voice broke. Into that break, Jaldon spoke. "You have taught me harmony, and I will have it for me and mine." Then he grabbed the Ivory Harp, and placed his hands on the strings. "Let me show you what tune I can bring forth from these strings, which are made from the gut and sinew of my peoples." With his rider's hand he grasped the strings and ripped them from the Ivory Harp. "Here are reins with which I shall direct Nations." At that moment, all the common singers around the temple died, and all the zebras who bowed down. Also the priests fell, the Son of Pavis wept, and our song died and was forgotten.

With his Warrior's Hand he cast the Ivory Harp in the dirt, and smiled his thanks at the Daughter of Pavis. Nonarathen died.
Jaldon took up the corpse of Nonarathen, and paraded it around the camp, saying the death of a priestess was a great omen of the breaking of the city's walls. There at the celebration, Jaldon took the seven strings of the harp, and bound them each in secret knots with hair from the seven tribe's beasts, and so bound each of those tribes closer to him.
Blueblue the Dancer had hidden in Jaldon's tent, and during the celebration he took up the Ivory Harp where it had been cast, and he fled back to the Blessed City. But the gates had been closed, and the guards were lost in sadness. When Blueblue climbed the walls, he dropped the harp, and so you see the crack in it. But he brought it back, and even without strings, we are happier to have than we would otherwise be.
And so, since that day, no one can sing in Old Pavic, and we keep no musical instruments, and the cursed Toothmaker can unite the Tribes. But because we have the Ivory Harp, we know that it is better to work together than to fight each other.

 Latest revision: 20 Feb 2001, new
Core Runes