We all gathered around, ready to listen to the stories that had been
passed down from generation to generation. To be honest I’d heard the
stories many times over in my thirty years of life, this evening wasn’t
for the benefit of myself or the other adults here in our community, but
mainly for the children within the group.
I guess that the fables we were used to were no different to stories all
children listen too, all children believed in fairy tales, knights in shining
armour and beautiful princess at one point in their lives, but these
stories had more meaning, and in some sense, they were true. Well, we
couldn’t disprove them, how could we, we were living, breathing
representations of those stories, so I guess we had to just take them at
face value.
The gathering in the town hall was a quarterly ritual, the Olders and
the pregnant mothers had the seats while the rest of us either sat or
stood around the stage and the periphery listening in. As our Historical
Leader started, you could see the kids looking up at her, wide eyes and
full of anticipation, this would be their first time to hear our histories
and being as they have just become of age, it was going to be shock to
the old system, I can tell you.
The town hall was a wooden structure, basic in its boxy form, clear
glass window adorned all sides to allow as much light in as possible,
the strong oak floors were worn and had been walked over many,
many times in the past, the whitewashed walls were bright, a little too
bright, at certain times of the day, they seemed to blind you with the
brightness they omitted, no pictures, posters or decoration was hung
on them, just plain, white, and bright. It always boggled me as a child
how they stayed that way, well the answer is not so magical or
mystical, the whole place is painted every year, so that blew the
fantasy of an otherworldly building from my mind quickly, especially
when I have been selected on more than one occasion to do the
redecoration.
The hall sat squarely in the lands we called home, all the buildings were
built concentrically around this building, making it the first thing you
saw when you opened your front door or looked out the windows.
I guess if we were able to view our land from above, it would look like
some weird spider’s web of buildings circling over and over again, we
were a lucky community, we had running water courtesy of the river
that ran through our land and the mountains above that every year
during spring, it managed to fill the river and, alongside that, our holding
ponds. We also have the means to create electricity in the form of
wind converters, and we had enough land to sustain crops of many
grains, vegetables, fruits, and farmland for rearing animals for milk and
meat consumption, we were a lucky group. I sometimes hate to think
what would happen if disaster struck and one of those ‘luxuries’ was
taken away.
Tucked away from the circles stood the main hub of activity, again in a
circular pattern, the hub held most of the buildings that you didn’t
want to see, that would mar the beautiful views we had, the hub
consisted of the forge, tannery, slaughter house, and linen row where our
clothes were made, grain stores and warehouses holding the groups
goods before it being shared amongst us all, this area was a blot on
our peaceful landscape and was strategically hidden by hedges and
evergreen trees to mask not only the noise and ugly aesthetics but the
smell.
We were very lucky indeed, as a group we hardly ever suffered from
sickness, we were a healthy bunch, but that didn’t mean when
something serious occurred we were without the means to help and if
the worst happened, we had a cemetery. Within our culture, we didn’t
bury our dead, we burnt them, It makes perfect sense to me, I mean
bodies took up space, and long ago, there were rumours that the
deceased could affect our water and food stocks by accidentally
poisoning them, I don’t know how true this was, but I’m glad we didn’t
have to find out. Now, once our loved ones were burnt, we placed the
ashes in small earthenware jars and add a small name plaque to signify
who was laid to rest.
This practice I had since learned was not for the benefit of the
deceased, but purely for those left behind. Somewhere you could go
and feel close to those who you had lost. Growing up in this place, it
was our belief that none of our existence stayed, we, well, our souls
ascended. It was a bitter pill visiting that place. While others took
comfort in having their someone close. For me, it was just another
reminder of how alone I was. My parents were not here. No plaque, not
jar and no place I could seek comfort. I was told the day after that
fateful evening, my parents were gone, never to been seen again. But
nothing of their person had remained. At aged ten, it never fully sank
in what they were saying. In adulthood, it made more sense. Only
those who committed the most hideous sin and took their own life
ended up that way. The only reminder they had ever existed was a
scorch mark of where the action had taken place. If not for that mark
or marks in my case, it would be as if they never existed at all. My
parents had chosen to leave me alone in this world. As safe as I was
with my other blood relatives, not knowing their reasons for such
actions and ultimately knowing I wasn’t enough of a thought to stop
them cut me to the bone.
The cemetery like everything around here was also circular in shape
with the oldest plaques in the middle and the newest snaking their
way around, it was surrounded by a circular wall of evergreen plants, I
always liked the trees, never changing, green, and full throughout all
the seasons. It was a peaceful place for many, and though it left me
empty, it was somewhere I went to when I needed some time alone to
think. Though most knew of my situation, they never ever bothered
me there.
Whether it was due to a level of guilt or a genuine action of kindness, I
would probably never really know.
The cemetery and Hub were somehow connected yet tacked onto the
main areas, two circular bubbles added onto the outside of the main
area, I guess the shape you would see in your mind was that of ears
added on top of a head or a flower that was almost through the game
of he loves, ‘he loves me not’. Inclusive yet separate.
Our whole land was tucked away in very dense woodland our land
looked as if it had been carved out of the forest, I had always assumed
the trees that had been removed were used to create the buildings we
resided in, but that was just a guess, we still had a mass of numerous
trees, bushes, and flowering plants, this is all you could see.
It looked like one day it would creep up on us and consume us and take
it back to when it was just forest and bushes, but so far, we were safe,
no such secret creeping of the forest had occurred.
We were told as children that our land had a circular wall surrounding
it with no entry or exit, this made any movement in or out practically
impossible, though I’ve heard whispers that some people have scaled
the walls to sneak a look outside, I never knew if this was a truth, but
to be honest, I wasn’t too bothered either way. After all, I just never
cared if these stories were true or not. I didn’t really care what was out
there and cared even less if someone at some point had gazed over
the top.
I walk toward the front of the hall and glance around before the real
reason were here commences. Smiling to myself, I realise that where
I’m standing now, and it seems to be the spot I tend to gravitate towards. It’s
funny how over the years, actions become habits.
I suddenly have an involuntary shiver run down my back, making my
skin rise with goose bumps, I know it’s not just the anticipation, I guess
it’s just this place, this building, these stories that make me feel like I’m
living in some sort of fairy tale, one day, yes, one day I vowed to myself,
I’d find the truth, seek out the Others, and then return to either prove
them right or blow these stories out of the water, I was just biding my
time.