Saturday, January 31, 2015

I have found the Geats!

The map is from the 12th century, but the Geats were there LONG before that ... just wanted to pop this in ... theirs is the blue area with the Swedes in yellow.

Here's an 'earlier' version: it's supposedly from the days of Beowulf ...


Not that they were ever lost, mind you.

It's just that I've only discovered them.

I ask you: how is it that I could have lived so much of my life in North Dakota and Minnesota, where there are plenty of Swedes and Norwegians, and never once in all that time heard a single word about the Geats?

No, it had to wait until I get started on ALIANORA, which takes place during the time of the Vikings, and am in the middle of researching a long-standing trade (friendly) relationship between Dunnottar and Sweden (going back to previous research about the name itself and a possible connection to a Swedish king called Ottar and his ancestors) ... and there were the Geats, smack in the middle of good old Sweden.

Me being me, I saw that word and immediately thought, 'Hey, that's a lot like Getae - I'll make them related to Alaric, but not let on until later in the book!'

Right.

THEN I looked it up.

O_O

I had been getting a chuckle about the Getae of the North having an on-going trade thing with Dunnottar for a really long time without even knowing that they might be related ... and the chuckles went straight into outright laughter when I read about the logic of a serious argument some centuries back when some claimed that Sweden had defeated the Roman Empire.

Because the Geats were Getae (read Goth, read Celt, read Alaric) and a part of Sweden, therefore it was Sweden who triumphed over Rome. Apparently there was a big to-do about it between Swedes and Spaniards in the 1400s.

And I can't help thinking, 'Wouldn't our Alaric have gotten a laugh out of that!'

Yep, and me being me, what have I done, besides putting all of the above into a public blog?

You guessed it. Got the relationship between Alaric and the Geats into the story line first chance I got.

*sigh*

I never could keep a secret.



Goodbye January!



Somehow seeing the end of January always makes me feel like SPRING is right around the corner.

Birds singing in the dawn, green grass everywhere, flowers shouting their colors, rainbows and roses and all that good stuff.

It's always a nice little feeling, saying goodbye to January, while it lasts.

Of course it never lasts long.

Take tonight, for instance.

Goodbye January ... and hello sub-zero temps as February comes along.

Where are the singing birds?
Where are the shouting flowers?
Where are the green lawns?
Where are all those rainbows and roses and such?

Not here, that's for sure.

Here and now, there's snow on the ground and more in the forecast. There are ice-slicks everywhere. There are plummeting temperatures.

We are still in the throes of winter, with or without January.

Even so, the greening gets closer day by day. 

We can stand February. It's three days shorter than January. 
Then comes March - it often brings blizzards howling down on us ... but not always.
And April is right behind it. April is never ever EVER as wonderful as we think it ought to be, but guess what. Sometimes it is. 

Me, I'm seriously looking forward to May Day.

Because that's really when it all begins, the greening, the singing, the shouting, and the rainbows and roses are on their way!

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Feedback on The Mamm Books is Consistent!

Readers of The Mamm Books have all been saying the same thing  - from the first to the most recent, the consensus is that they're liking the sensation of 'going home/back' or 'being there' or 'listening to the Story at the hearth fire'. 

That makes us happy, it does indeed.

SO ...

Since Danann was adamant about immediately following Mamm; and we've jumped about three thousand years as a consequence; and history has been erased; and he and Sidhelagh and Ullin are the only ones who KNOW any history as a consequence (remember we've jumped to the year 3487 and the electronic slate of history was wiped at the year 3000, long after the physical libraries were destroyed) ... guess who gets to tell the Story of the intervening years.

Since the roundhouse is rebuilt on Dunnottar, we're going back to the Story-telling at the hearth fire. Whether our three (Danann, Sidhelagh, and Ullin) will be the only ones Storying remains to be seen. Don't forget the 'current' Characters are very much like to the 'ancient' ones ... and they've been given the Memories in the Sidhe way, so inside their heads the Story 'lives' ... but I have a feeling they aren't going to be telling it. It's going to be our three, with maybe some input from the Sidhe of the Ages along the way. 


Friday, January 23, 2015

What The Heck ... DANANN Ain't Even Hit the Shelves Yet !!



And I have to get more copies to go onto those shelves - a lot more.

'WHOA!' sez I.

Then I remember what my dad says: Never holler WHOA at a horse race.
Especially when your horse is leading the pack.

Considering that he isn't even fully out of the gate yet, DANANN has gotten off to a fine start.

It's almost a little scary.

Ha. No it's not. It's just Danann being Danann.

Come to think of it, Danann can be a little scary. It's that under-stated Power of his I think. We haven't seen him lose his temper, not really - not yet, anyway.

But there are books yet to be written, my friend. Alianora, Sass, Caileen, Aine, Merri and, wrapping it up for us, Sidhelagh herself. The times they will cover? Vikings, Crusades, Pre-Reformation, New World, Today, and the time between today and DANANN. I think. You know these Characters - just about anything could happen. Mamm morphed into a circular set with dual story lines, DANANN arbitrarily decided he was going to be next, as he's 'SUPPOSED to be next, Atonement or not' ... I THINK Sidhelagh is going to wait but honestly can't be sure. 

No matter how you cut it, Danann is not going to just sit down and shut up. He and Sidhelagh have places to go, people to see, things to do, and a Legacy to preserve and protect. I don't really see them giving up or giving in. I just don't think they have it in them to do any such thing.





Saturday, January 17, 2015

DANANN Preview





Family to family
Friend to friend
Free to the free
Faithful to the faithful
From future to future
Foe to foe
Until the end of eternity

My oath on it.






Danann is for Stonehaven
And the Fireballs
Who Protect and Preserve
Things that matter

You have gifted me this book

I gift it to you in return
With respect
And admiration

Thank you Stonehaven.




FROM OUR READERS
“Hi Shiela! Thanks for sharing the story with me, I really enjoyed it! The history and story line are nice, but I especially enjoyed how it was never just about the WHAT; rather, the circumstances and events always served to introduce us to and tell us about the WHO -- all the lovely characters you've portrayed so beautifully. It's the same way in real life, I think. It's always about people (family and friends) and what's dear to those people (faith and freedom) which gives us hope for the future. Thanks again, my friend!”
-          Nathan Pitchford about Mamm of Dunnottar
"The books are about both families and nations, People holding it all together during turbulent times, living their personal and spiritual lives while defending their lands and culture to pass on to the next generation. In short, the books are about Family, Friends, Freedom, Faith, and Future."
-           Phil Cohen about The Mamm Books
“I felt like I was ‘there’. Like I was right there with the rest of them listening to Mamm telling the Story at the hearth-fire of Dunnottar. Hurry and finish writing the next one so I can go back!”
-          Pam Marsh about Mamm of Tarnos
“Shiela, I finished the first one this weekend--loved it!”
-          Susan Neuharth about Mamm of Perth




Introduction
They Are My Song is a series about a family, one that was founded more than 1500 years ago. We first meet them in They Are My Song, the book from which all the rest spiral out and return to in one way or another.

The Mamm Books take us even further back in time as Mamm of Dunnottar tells the Story of her heirloom under-bed storage chest and its Keepers over the generations leading up to her own.

Danann, on the other hand, carries us far into the future of even our own time. Danann and Sidhelagh make an irrevocable Choice in They Are My Song the book and find themselves in Atonement, separated from one another and having only their Voices to share with their family.

Unable to hear one another or have any direct contact whatsoever, their grandlings Brann and Dothann figure this out and begin repeating aloud the words they hear in their ears, the Voices of Danann and Sidhelagh, so that the pair can at least know what the other is saying.

It is in Danann that the two of them complete their Atonement and are reunited … in the year 3487 … three thousand years from the time they were separated by their own defiance.

Much has changed in the interim of course. They are shocked and appalled by some of what they find upon their return. They are pleased and proud about others.

And some things seem not to have changed much at all.

Danann and Sidhelagh return to a world getting ready to go to war – but it’s not like any war they have before encountered.

The skies are guarded by the Airborne; no attack on Earth can come from the skies.

The waters are guarded by the Waterborne; no attack can come from the waters.

The earth itself is protected by the Earthbound; no attack can come by land.

The realm beneath the earth’s crust is protected by a most powerful magic; no attack comes from that realm.

The people of Earth are at peace; they do not create this war.

Yet there comes an attack. Earth goes to war.

It is perhaps the most ancient of warfare, and the most deadly.

But how can anything or anyone have gotten through the defenses of Earth?

With what weapon is this attack launched?

And how do you fight something that is invisible, a creeping darkness that strikes the mind of man?

With every weapon at your disposal, with every army at your command,


Danann

On Dunnottar in the year 3487, three thousand years after that fateful battle in which Danann and Sidhelagh began their Atonement, they’re reunited. They are their own true original selves, but things in the world have changed in a lot of ways.

Being Sidhe, they have naturally kept up with the changes.

Being not-Sidhe we have no idea what the heck might be going on fifteen hundred years or so in our future.

So we’re going to go along and see what we can see.

While much in the world has changed (to put it mildly) the basic geography remains the same.


Earth has divided itself into four geographic identities:
-       Northwest (North America),
-       Southwest (South America),
-       Northeast (all of Europe and Asia),
-       Southeast (Africa).

These are known as the Quadrants, are we surprised?

And then there are ‘The Isles’ which belong to nobody except their own selves, no matter where they’re located.

Now The Isles, however scattered, share a culture that is wholly different from the Quadrants. Greenland is called Northisle; Australia is called Southisle; the reasons are obvious.
Centreisle – well Centreisle is Hawaii.

There have been other changes.

There are no heart attacks – those were one of the first ailments addressed by the technology of long long ago. Nobody faints, either; blood pressures have been regulated in all for about as long as hearts and other organs and body parts have no longer been necessarily made of human tissue. Nobody has panic attacks, or physical deformities or mental illnesses. There is no disease. Should someone accidentally hurt themselves they are quickly and automatically renewed. Nobody dies young, or of old age, or by accident, or by any means other than their own choice, for that matter. At age thirty each and all choose the duration of their own lifespans. Those who choose ‘forever’ are not allowed to reproduce as no replacements will be needed for them. All parents are therefore over the age of thirty and the population has stabilized itself over the many generations. Not many opt for the ‘forever’ option as the choice includes having to go into retirement at age seventy and spend the rest of that ‘forever’ monitoring the many electronics and technologies of the world.

Another part of the way things are in 3487 is the utter absence of the knowledge of anything whatsoever that took place before the year 3000.

The libraries having been long destroyed (as it is believed) the only knowledge to be found is by electronic means – and at some point everyone’s electronics have been entirely wiped free of the history of the world before 3000. Nobody knows anything at all except for the way it has been for the past 487 years since the forming of the Quadrants. It’s as though there was nothing before that. History has been effectively deleted.

And so the world is at peace.

The Quadrants are confined within their own borders, their people governed entirely within those borders with nothing whatsoever to do with the rest of the world. Each has resources abundant enough to suit them and all are content with whatever culture they have been born into. The Islers roam at will; they too are born into their own culture and are well content with it.

The heavens have been explored as extensively as mankind’s technological advances have made possible. Several likely ‘homes’ have been located and several large vehicles have set out to explore them further, the pioneers of the skies. These groups have been gone for a very long time; since they left before the year 3000 nobody even realizes they ever existed. Therefore, whether or not they have succeeded on their quests is something nobody’s even curious about. At any rate, not ALL of Earth’s population has remained on Earth.

Since Danann knows more than I do about what the situation has been and is, let’s listen to his Voice tell us a thing or two:

Danann speaks
Beneath the earth’s crust lie more nations.

One of those is where my mother grew up, among the Gentle Ones. Stilicho the Getae General stole her and took her there as a three-year and there she stayed, grew up, fell in love, and married.

When I was large in her belly, she was sent to Dunnottar as it was there I was to be born, together with Sidhelagh as Spirit Twins; her mother too was destined to give birth before the hearth-fire of Dunnottar.

As soon as my mother was safely on her way, my father sealed not only the entrance gate that she used but all of the gateways to the nations beneath.

The Gentle Ones wish only to be let be. Their world has been sealed against all for thousands of years; they have no wish to become remembered.

And so it has remained.

We have been among the Sidhe of the Ages for three thousand years, Sidhelagh and I, watching.

We have watched the many wars, the many attempts to seek peace, the learning of the people of the world.

We have watched nations rise and fall.

We have watched as the people of the world have tried to bring to themselves order and balance.

We of the Sidhe have watched it all.

We have seen ash on the waters of the earth. We have seen clouds of smoke filling the skies. We have seen many and many die but many and many have also been born.

Although there have been times we have wished to help, to intervene, we have been stayed by the Holy Trinity. The Mother will not unleash us but bids us watch only.

And so we do. Mostly. Only rarely will the Mother let loose the leash of Her will.

One time Sidhelagh and I defied the Mother, one time only. We have been in Atonement for three thousand years as a consequence, separated from one another, our Voices alone left for us to share with our family.

And so the long years pass, one after another after another. Our People grow as generations pass, one after another after another.

Two only in each generation are Given, by the Trinity. ears with which to hear our Voices. We know these two always before they are born, and so as they take their first breaths it is our Voices they hear in their ears.

They know us not any more as Danann and Sidhelagh of Dunnottar; the generations have long passed in which our People knew us as Danann and Sidhelagh. But these two in each generation, they hear and know our Voices. We remain near to them as they make their way to Dunnottar, and they always succeed in their journey.

They know not why they are Called to Dunnottar, but they heed that Call and it is to Dunnottar they go. and it is on Dunnottar, once in each generation, that Sidhelagh and I can communicate. It is precious to us. These hearing ones are well-loved and protected always.

They are descendants of Brann and of Dothann, who as younglings took pity on us and Spoke aloud our words so that we two could ‘hear’ one another.

And so it has been.

For three thousand long years, so it has been.

  
The Dunnottar folk have been scattered around the globe. For a thousand years their lines grew outward and spread to the far reaches.

For another thousand years those lines remained stable, in place, growing in power and strength:  physically, financially, intellectually, in influence and in spirituality (although they have become unaware of this last, it has nevertheless been a part of the whole).

For the last thousand years the lines have been finding their ways to one another, reconnecting and distilling over generations, making their way back to a recombined power that none could have possibly imagined.

As the strengthened lines come back together they result in a family whose roots, could one trace them, lead through the twists and turns of time straight back to Dunnottar.

Is it a fluke that the names they bear, this generation, and the personalities they present, closely match those so loved by Danann and Sidhelagh three thousand years ago?

No, it’s fiction-writing.

Or Destiny.

Take your pick.

Now, the current generation can’t imagine that they are so very different from those around them.

Yes, they know about the Voices coming to Brann and to Dothann, of course. It’s a family thing that goes back for generations.

Yes, they recognize that they as a family group seem perhaps more interested in learning and knowledge, more perceptive in many ways, than the general population.

Yes, they acknowledge that there are times when all feel an urgent necessity to hasten to one place or another whether it seems to make any sense or not. And when they get to wherever it is, they inevitably find that their presence has indeed been urgently needed.

They realize that they have inherited not just phenomenal wealth and influence, but the sagacity to wield their power with justice and compassion. It is what they have been born to and it is a responsibility they will not turn their faces from.

Theirs is a Legacy not only of wealth and power – the more important Legacy lies in the Choices they make about what they hold most dear. Of this Legacy they have yet to learn.

Still, what they do not see is that they are indeed quite very different from most folks.

Danann and Sidhelagh, having watched through the Ages, watch now … and smile.

Let’s go for a bit, while Danann and Sidhelagh are busy with their smiling, to Brann and Dothann, and the family who will come with them to Dunnottar.

Brann’s family is seated to the North, up in Northisle where the summer days are very long and the winter nights equally long. Brann’s parents, Aine and Kalann, together with his Aunt Caileen and Uncle Talorc, control vast expanses of what was once a mostly barren island. The before generations began making changes – using knowledge, willpower, influence, and wealth, they made changes. The barrenness began to shape itself into what has become a most distinctive and beautiful, if still rather wild, part of The Isles. Working with the terrain and the climate rather than against them, this family has created a productive and happy home for their people. And there are many more people living there than one would expect. Caileen, Talorc, Aine, and Kalann are the Keepers and the Protectors of the north.

Dothann has been raised in Southisle. He and his older sister Merri train for the responsibilities which will become theirs, which are indeed theirs already as members of this family. Though they are yet younglings they are an active part of the management of the massive southern holdings. Their parents Alianora and Drustann, and their Auntie Sass and Uncle Thann – these are the Keepers and the Protectors of the south.

Mamm and Alaric, Elders of this family, hold the reins of both north and south in their hands as they maintain control from their home in Centreisle. This isle is tiny in comparison to the expanses of Northisle and the even greater expanses of Southisle. Yet it is from this little isle that the entirety of The Isles is governed.

Granted, The Isles doesn’t take much governing. Each and all of the individual isles are independent, regardless of their size. From the tiniest speck of rock with three people on it, in an inland lake, to the enormity of Southisle, each governs itself as it sees fit.

The Isles is loosely-held but tightly-knit.

One would think that such a widely spread out ‘nation’ would be at risk, vulnerable to the larger Quadrants.

Not so.

It is their very diversity and dispersion which serves to protect them.

Because they are so widespread, their loyalty is extreme, their protectiveness of one another is without parallel, and the quickness of all in coming to the aid of any is legendary. They are everywhere, unconfined.

They didn’t have to prove themselves too many times before the Quadrants came to understand that it was best for all concerned to let them be.

Borders between Quadrants have been closed for many hundreds of years by the time 3487 rolls around. The only ones who really go anywhere are the Islers. Nobody impedes their freedom of travel; since nobody else ever goes anywhere, nobody cares what the Islers do or where they go. They’re free to travel at will, even those who live deep within the boundaries of the Quadrants.

            And there is someone else we must meet.

There is one, not an Isler, who has also recently begun to travel about among the people of the earth.

Of no great size, innocuous in appearance, indeterminate of age, he poses as an Isler as he moves among the people of the Quadrants, ignoring the closed borders. As none except the Islers ever travel, the deception is easily maintained. He has several others traveling, sometimes with him, sometimes separately.

Where they go, a sense of dissatisfaction follows, dissents arise, thoughts of harm to others enter the minds of otherwise peaceful persons. Contented people start finding things to complain about. More than a few begin eyeing their neighbors with suspicion, sure that plans are secretly afoot to rob them or otherwise do them harm – and they begin to want to beat them to the punch and increase their own possessions at the expense of their neighbors.

This is Aduan.

He and his handful of cronies are few in number but they carry with them everywhere great sacks of tiny seeds. The seeds can and do reach places that Aduan and his followers themselves cannot reach directly. They fly on the winds of the world and find homes where they can grow to maturity.

The homes they choose are the minds of the people of the Quadrants.

Like a plague of weeds does this crop take root and spread in the wake of Aduan.

He looks behind him and he chuckles to himself.

‘They cannot take on the entirety of the world,’ he mutters, ‘and the world will soon stand in  tattered shreds once more, a wonderful place in which to grow my garden.’

As the seeds of discontent, greed, suspicion, malice, and angst take root and begin to sprout, they cast hard dark shadows that grow quickly.

Dark vines they are, and their tendrils have the strength to grasp and hold all that they encounter; invisible though they may be, they have the capacity to carry to many the darkness that springs from the sprouted seeds Aduan spreads so gleefully among the Quadrants.

A few he takes great pains to plant carefully and to nurture by his own hand; these soon grow to gargantuan proportions and overwhelm with cold darkness those minds he has so carefully chosen.

And so the unseen darkness spreads.

And so Aduan laughs.

His plan goes well this time.

It is to his chosen few in each Quadrant he goes in person, and to each does he speak of secrets of great power and wealth which lie beneath the ground of the earth they know.

At first they sneer.

‘There is nothing unexplored in our world. We know all there is to know about what lies below and what lies above. Do not try to deceive us.’

‘Ah but you do not know all there is to know. Beneath the crust of the earth which you know lies a realm of beauty and marvelous secrets which none now remember. The earth is much older than you can know. It did not spring up entire in the year 3000, you know. Have you ever even thought about that?’

‘There is no reason to think of that. The world we know is all we need to know.’

‘Perhaps. But is it all you might WISH to know? If you had the great wealth, the magic power, that lies below, think what you could do with it!’

And so the seeds are nurtured.

It is Aduan who knows the locations of the gateways in Northwest and Southwest; and reveals to these chosen few a hint of his knowledge.

It is Aduan who directs their attention to the one in Northwest, and feeds the ever-growing darkness which has sprung from his seeds.

‘Follow me to Northwest,’ he says. ‘That gateway leads to the one in Southwest, which is forest-bound and difficult to approach from the outside. Along that long path we will find splendor and riches enough for we few, and it is along that path we will find and conquer the secret magic it holds. Follow me. We will rule the world, we ourselves alone, with all to do our bidding and none to defy our will.’

The Sidhe of the Ages watch.

From their broader perspective, they see the tendrils winding out, encompassing the peaceful people of the Quadrants, spreading and spreading and spreading much more rapidly than a person can imagine.

‘Danann and Sidhelagh return only just in time,’ they murmur, ‘and unless they move quickly it may be not in time.’

The skies begin to show small clouds here and there, tiny little dots of clouds that move about in little clusters.

It is the Sidhe of the Ages and they watch, leashed by the Will of the Mother but watching, watching, watching.

They well know what are these dark vines; they know from whence they have sprung; they know the power they wield.

It is when the Islers begin to notice a change in the way the people of the Quadrants look at them that they realize something is happening. They don’t understand it but they see it and they feel it.

The Islers are of mixed bloods but each and all of them have a strain of the ancient Sidhe, long dormant but very much still potent in them.

And so it is that they can and they do see the darkness of the shadows cast by the growth of Aduan’s seeds as the tendrils grow and grow and grow among the Quadrants.

And so it is that the Islers come to Mamm and Alaric with questions.

‘There is a darkness, a sickness,’ they are told. ‘It is spreading in those among whom we live in the Quadrants. They are no longer their happy bright selves but have taken on an aura of dark; they grow cold.’

Troubled by what they hear and by what they see for themselves as they travel among their people, Mamm and Alaric hold their peace. But they begin to Search their own minds to see if a solution can be found.

Within those minds does indeed lie a solution. Yet Mamm and Alaric cannot find their way to it. The ways of the Sidhe have been buried deep deep, even in this family, over the course of the many generations.

While it has grown in strength yet it cannot be reached, not by them and not by any – unless something triggers the realization of its existence and it is brought to life once more.

They have the means with which to battle these dark tendrils … but they cannot find it.

Meanwhile, Aduan has been merrily having himself a most wonderful time, he and his handful of cronies with their big bags of deadly seeds.


They roam the world at will, tossing here a handful, planting there a few extra powerful seeds, throwing whole bushels into the winds and watching their flight, their landing, their rooting, their sprouting, their growth.

. . .


Just for the fun of it, we're going to skip ahead in DANANN and see what we can see ...

...

Smack in the middle of the business meeting is when both Danann and Sidhelagh decide they have to Speak.

Being as they’re in the middle of a formal meeting here, Brann and Dothann aren’t as forthcoming as they usually are when Danann and Sidhelagh Speak. This time all they do is whisper under their breaths. It gets them a couple of annoyed glances but nobody says anything about it.

Danann and Sidhelagh, on the other hand, are furious.

They can’t hear the whispers, and of course are well aware than nobody else can, either. 

Their message is not getting through.

Frustrated, they huff themselves out of the house and go find a few other Sidhe to give them a hand.

Enter the Elders of Dunnottar’s ancient past.

And what a merry party that business meeting turns into, if only there was anyone who could see it besides Danann and Sidhelagh. The two of them are getting a whale of a kick out of watching the originals of all of the currents poking the heck out of themselves, so to speak.

They don’t have Voices, per se, but they are Sidhe of the Ages and have plenty of power of their own. They can’t do anything really major on their own recognizance, mind you, because that requires being unleashed by the Holy Trinity, the Mother in particular; but they can plant ideas in people’s minds.

Especially when said minds are inherently, instinctively, intuitively … so to speak … their own. Those little seeds of ideas can grow to prodigious power right quick.

Mamm and Alaric, being the eldest and strongest of both sets of selves, are the first to bear fruit.

Mamm springs to her feet with Alaric rising right beside her, and off they race to the pod garage as fast as they can go.

‘Keep up if you can!’ Mamm shouts over her shoulder as they run.

Well now.

Aine and Caileen are right behind them, running as hard as they can, babies bouncing and laughing in their arms at the excitement of the chase.

‘Caileen!’ pants Aine. ‘Did you know Mamm could run like that?’

‘Never! Are we that out of shape? We’d better get ourselves to a toning facility, Aine.’

‘At least we’re ahead of the others! Run, Caileen, run!’

And so they do.

Nobody is slow to follow on their heels but even so by the time everyone’s in their own pods Mamm and Alaric are already out of sight.

Not that it matters overmuch. Everyone knows where they’re going.

As the whole kit and caboodle of them land at the edge of Stonehaven, they get a few odd looks but nobody really thinks much about it. Mamm and Alaric come and go as they please. Everybody knows them; nobody expects them to behave in any sort of ordinary fashion.

There’s not much conversation while they’re walking through Stonehaven.

Until Danann and Sidhelagh open up with Brann and Dothann, that is.

Sidhelagh starts it.

‘Dothann!’

And Dothann, taken by surprise, says, ‘What?! Dothann!

‘We have to get to Dunnottar.’

And Dothann dutifully repeats what he has heard, as he has since he could first speak, the words of the Voice of Sidhelagh that he hears in his ears.

Then it’s Brann’s turn.

‘We have to hurry,’ he says, because that’s what Danann’s Voice has spoken into his ears.

Dothann and Brann stop and stare at one another.

‘What the heck!’ they say at the same time.

‘Is she talking to you?’ asks Dothann.

‘She? What she? It’s a man talking!’ says Brann. ‘Is he talking to you?’

‘Uh-uh. I think they’re talking to each other!’

‘You think so? Really?’

‘I bet.’

‘Well then why don’t they just do that and leave us out of it?’

‘Because we can’t hear one another’s Voices,’ says Dothann.

‘Yes we can,’ says Brann. ‘We’re hearing each other right now, Dothann!’

‘That wasn’t me, you idiot! That’s what she just said in my ears!’

‘Oh.’

‘Can we please just get a move on here? We have a deadline, you know.’

‘Dothann? Was that your words?’

‘Nope.’

‘It’s pleased I am to hear your words, lady mine,’ says Brann, earning himself funny looks from a couple of old ladies who happen to be passing them on the path through Stonehaven. The old ladies steer a wide berth around Brann.

‘Thanks a lot,’ says Brann to the Voice. ‘They think me daft.’

‘You are daft,’ says Dothann.

‘Dothann? If those are your words, kindly keep them to yourself. And if your lady Voice is going to get all mushy she can keep her words to herself, too. We’ll never be able to show our faces in Stonehaven again if we walk around talking mush to each other.’

‘We’ll behave, won’t we love?’ says Dothann.

‘Aye, my sweet. That we will,’ says Brann.

And that’s just about enough of that for the youngling cousins.

They break into a run that scatters others out of their way and earns them more than one profanity to follow in their wake. Packages are dropped, groceries are spilled, people spin and lose their balance, and Dothann and Brann run for their lives out of Stonehaven. Nobody chases them; they’re all too busy collecting themselves and their packages and groceries.

Once safely out of town and out of earshot of outsiders, the two of them stop and roar with laughter – even though neither of them thinks what just happened is the least bit humorous.

Vengeance complete, Danann and Sidhelagh begin to converse in earnest now, with Brann and Dothann listening in (so to speak), spellbound by what they are saying/hearing.

. . .

And that's about all I have the energy for tonight.
Morning, actually. It's almost five o'clock and were it summer instead of January the sun would be up.

Oh, what the heck.

One more, from much later in the book. I think you might like this. It's fiction, so not going to be precisely all that 'accurate' - but I still think you might like it.

...


Thann doesn’t bother arguing but goes to pick up the end of the chain. Gathering the length of it, he goes to stand with the others at the fire.

‘What am I supposed to do?’ he asks the man standing next to him.

‘Just do what I do,’ comes the answer. ‘We’ll light our fire-balls and then swing them, over our heads and all around about, through the town. They catch whatever bad might be in the air and take it into them as they burn. Then we heave the whole works into the harbour. It’s a cleansing of our town, getting rid of unwanted or dangerous things, giving us a clean fresh beginning.’

‘That sounds like something we all need to do now and then.’

‘That it is, but few do it. Get ready, we’re soon to start. When the Bells Sound their Voices, we’ll light our fires. People throughout the town are going to be yelling and screaming so don’t be shocked by them. They’re chasing things for the fire-balls to catch. Now listen, Thann. Listen for the Voices of the Bells.’

In a very short time every Bell in town starts ringing, tolling, striking, clanging, booming … whether there’s anyone to attend them or not, the Voices of the Bells ring out. It is Winter Solstice and the turning of the darkness.

And the fire-balls are lit while the people yell and scream like banshees.

Thann follows his new friend, but not too closely, through the streets assigned, swinging the fire-ball at the end of its chain around his head, around his body, spinning with it at times, dancing aside if it gets too close. When one arm gets tired, he switches to the other. When both get tired, he uses both for a time.

‘Whew! Glad I didn’t try this before we built that roundhouse!’

After what seems forever, they make their way to the harbour, and fire glows over the water as the balls of flame are cast into the deep and extinguished with a lot of hissing and steaming.

The screams and yells of the people turn to cheers that sound kind of hoarse – this night’s event has been as hard on their Voices as the swinging of the fire-balls has been on the bodies of those who carried them.

Danann comes to find Thann, easily seen as he is taller than everyone and dressed in white.

Thann goes to him and slides his smoky sooty self into the white of his cloak.

‘What now?’

‘Now the bonfires. All around the edges of the town are fires just lighting now, like the one in the square. People are getting rid of rubbish they don’t want any more – and it’s symbolic of getting rid of any bad feelings or whatever from inside of themselves. It all goes up in smoke, you see. We’ll start at the nearest one and make our way all the way around the town. Some people bring along things to put into each fire as they go, but we’re pretty much spectators tonight.’

‘Speak for yourself, spectator! You weren’t the one swinging that ball of fire all over the place! My arms are never going to be the same, nor the rest of me, either.’

‘It’s good for you. Wait until you see what you get to swing in the smithy!’

‘Oh goody. I’m so excited.’

Danann laughs.

‘Here are the others, and here’s your mount. You can ride and rest for a while. Each fire will want us to stop for a moment. They have warm drinks to share with us. Take them, but I warn you, sip sparingly from each. They’re potent, I tell you – and there are a lot of fires surrounding this town on this night.’

‘What about the kids?’

‘They’ll get spiced cider or hot fruit drinks of different kinds. Ours have been warned to sip sparingly as well; they’ll get belly aches if they don’t – and spend half the night having to pee.’

Now Thann’s laughter rings in the night, adding his Voice to the many who are also laughing and singing.

‘And after the round of fires?’

‘After that, we all go back to the square and make a big circle.’

‘Like the one on Northwest, I bet. What a great way to finish cleansing your town!’

‘Yes, it is. It wraps it all up. Now you know why we spend the daytime of this night quietly.’

‘If I’d known we’d be doing all this, I’d have spent it sleeping!’

Danann’s Voice grows deeper but Thann can still hear him clearly through the on-going din.

‘Stonehaven does itself proud on this night, Thann. The people, they are just doing what they do, but they are blessed. They have kept what the rest of the world has for too long been sadly lacking. They don’t realize how special they are … or maybe they do.’

‘I think they know, Danann. I think they know. Else they wouldn’t do what they do, right?’