Date Published: 5/22/21
An innocent naiad. A wounded boy. An adventure that will change their lives forever.
Plip is a naiad of the Great Waterfall, destined to one day sing the songs that send rain out into the world.
Akino isn’t destined for anything but trouble. His father long gone, his mother working on a plantation far away, he doesn’t really belong in the village below the Waterfall. And the villagers don’t let him forget it.
When Akino convinces Plip to travel down the mountain with him, for his own selfish purposes, he launches them into a world more dangerous than either of them could imagine. A world where people are not always what they seem and the rain does not fall evenly across the land.
Excerpt
Captured
Plip shook
herself and looked about tentatively. Out the opening of the globe, the caravan
of kempelas strode on tirelessly over an endless sea of yellow sand. The bright
blue sky hung low and thick all about them, almost tangible. Plip had the
sensation for a moment that they were actually walking along the bottom of a
great river, surrounded not by sky, but water.
Strange gray
outcroppings began to emerge out of the blue. Porous rock which had been carved
by the wind into sharp, jagged formations, like the teeth of some great
monster.
But the
illusion of water only reminded her how very far she was from the clear streams
of the Mountain. She turned her attention to the orange sphere which housed
her.
It seemed to
be made of thick skin, stretched taut over a strong wooden frame. All about her
were sacks of spices, piles of soft carpets, and various objects of fine metal,
plus a plethora of items she could not identify. But just to her right was a
cage with a very frightened looking bird inside. He was rather small and black,
with a tuft of brilliant blue on his breast and matching blue rings around his
eyes.
He kept
tilting his head back and forth as he watched Plip and hopping left and right
every few seconds.
“Poor thing.
You’re as frightened as I am.”
The bird
shrieked in alarm. His feathers puffed out all around his head and breast,
forming a great black oval and revealing a larger stripe of bright blue. He
shuffled back and forth in a funny little dance. His head seemed to have
disappeared entirely.
Plip watched
silently, thoroughly impressed but a bit confused, until the dance ended, and
the little bird’s feathers settled back into place, revealing his head once
more.
“Amazing!”
Plip whispered.
The bird
hopped backwards, lowered its head towards the floor and tilted its beak up
suspiciously. “You did speak!” he cried, in a shrill voice. “Oh, this is
terrible. What kind of a demon are you?”
“But you’re
talking too,” Plip protested.
“I’m a
shangrila bird, of course I can talk.”
“I never knew
any birds that could talk,” Plip said.
The shangrila
bird ruffled his feathers. “And how many birds have you known?”
“Well, none
really.”
“Hmph. I
thought as much. Birds are wildly misunderstood by bottom dwellers.”
“Bottom
dwellers?”
“That’s what I
said. Most of the world is made up of sky. Or do you never bother to look up?”
“I never
thought of it that way,” Plip admitted, though she didn’t particularly like the
bird’s tone.
“What am I
thinking, trying to explain things to a sprite?” The bird straightened his
neck.
“Who’s a
sprite?”
“You are!” He
flapped his wings impatiently.
“I’m not a
sprite, I’m a naiad!”
“What’s the
difference?”
Plip frowned.
“As a matter of fact, I don’t know. What’s a sprite, exactly?”
“They live in
the clouds,” the shangrila said. “They’re the ones who make it rain…or not
rain, as the case may be.” He began pruning himself absentmindedly.
“They’re not
the ones who make rain,” Plip protested. “The naiads and Weather Masters do
that.”
“What nonsense
are you babbling?”
Plip crossed
her arms in irritation. “It isn’t nonsense, and I should think I know more
about it than you, anyway.”
“Oh, really?
You didn’t even know what a sprite was!” The shangrila crossed his wings
comically.
Plip did a
quick somersault inside her jar. “Well, I’ve never been inside a cloud.”
“My point
exactly.” The shangrila would not look at her.
Curiosity
softened Plip’s temper. “So, what is a sprite, exactly? Do they look like me?”
“A great
deal…though now that I come to think of it, there are significant differences.
You wouldn’t last long in the clouds; you are entirely too solid.”
Plip was
beginning to suspect that there was no real ill will behind the shangrila’s
insults. “And they don’t talk?”
“Certainly
not. They haven’t the capacity for it. They aren’t really sentient, you know.”
“I didn’t
know,” Plip said somberly.
“Well,” said
the bird in a satisfied tone, “you are young.”
“I wonder if
the Weather Masters know about the sprites,” Plip said softly to herself.
“Please, Mr. Bird—”
“Mr. Burung,
if you please.”
“Please, Mr.
Burung, do you know how they make it rain?”
Burung stuck
his chest out and cleared his throat. “Ah, well you see, it’s all rather
involved and multifaceted and one might even say interdimensional.”
Plip’s eyes
grew wide.
“It would take
an expert to explain the process thoroughly, which I am not—though I understand
why you may think I am. But I do think even the experts would agree that it
could all be summed up by the word evaporation.”
Plip frowned.
“Yes,
evaporation is that complicated process by which a cloud sheds its water and
rain falls to the earth.”
“And the
sprites help with this process?”
“Just so. And
it must be quite a messy business, too. For they seem to always be squabbling
among themselves.”
“This is all
so much more complicated than I ever understood,” Plip sighed.
“As is life,”
Burung said with a dramatic sigh, “as is life.”
“I wish Akino
were here.”
“Who’s Akino?”
Burung asked.
“He’s my
friend. He’s clever and brave and used to being on his own.” She sighed again.
“Do you know where they’re taking us?”
“Somewhere
terrible, I expect.” Burung sunk his head into his shoulders. “The Sand Plains
are not known for their spiritual enlightenment. They stopped visiting the
White Temple decades ago.”
“What is the
White Temple?” Plip asked.
“Bless me,”
Burung cawed, “it’s sentient, but it’s a heathen. The White Temple is only the holiest
place in all the lands. It is where the physical world and the spirit world
connect. All those seeking enlightenment find their way there eventually.”
“Have you been
there?”
Burung rocked
back and forth in a self-satisfied manner. “Many times. The White Temple is
located in the center of the forest which I call home. The White Monks are kind
to my people and often choose us as companions for their lifelong journey
toward enlightenment.”
“I had no
idea!” Plip was duly impressed, even if she didn’t fully understand what it was
she was impressed by. “What does enlightenment mean?”
Burung sighed.
“Spiritual knowledge and understanding of Maha.”
“What is
maha?”
“Maha is the
ultimate being, the origin and sustainer of life. The sun rises by his decree.”
“Oh, you mean
the Creator!” Plip gasped. “He taught the first naiads to sing and gave the
Weather Masters their skill.”
“I suppose
so,” Burung looked a little puzzled, “though I have never heard of you or your
weather masters.”
Just then a
man entered the globe, momentarily blocking out the dazzling sunlight and
casting a shadow directly over Burung.
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