//------------------------------// // Movement 6 - Reach // Story: The Ballad of Maelewano // by Rambling Writer //------------------------------// Across the desert, ’cross the sands, Did Maele always run. She ran for nights, she ran for days, Until her hooves were numb. And still she didn’t, couldn’t stop; Her hunters were behind. Her constant running wore her down And emptied out her mind. She did not know where she was going But she did not care. Her hunters had not yet caught up; She might escape elsewhere. The hunters’ confidence, meanwhile, Was slowly growing thin. What should have been an easy kill Was causing much chagrin. Though Maele was a single mare, She kept her breakneck pace. The quaggas were quite strong, and yet Could barely keep the chase. But did she eat? Or did she sleep? It seemed to not be so. Determination kept her strong As she did onward go. Beneath the sun, through sweltering heat, Across the rolling dunes, They knew not when the chase would end, But it would not be soon. Back on the plains, Kiburi’s tribe Was hunting the Mbu. With Maele gone, Kiburi thought ’Twas the right thing to do. As Maele was a radical, Some zebras tuned her out. Kiburi was a convert, though; Her words might have more clout. A quagga band they passed close by, The Mbu hiding near. And when Kiburi offered help, Moqapi lent an ear. Kiburi told them of her past, Her friendship and regrets, How zebran unity could be The quaggas’ greatest threat. She offered her experience As one who’d changed her mind. Perhaps she could make arguments To others of her kind. Though she’d be but a figurehead, That suited her just fine. Kiburi’d been a leader once; It’d been a lousy time. Moqapi said Kiburi’s help Did tempt her quite a lot. “But could you help us with those thieves So our bones won’t soon rot?” It was agreed, and with great speed, The tribes were swiftly joined. And then they set their sights upon The quaggas who purloined. With greater strength, the bonded clans Did hit the quaggas hard. They captured one and from her learned The news come from afar. They heard Bililiqada’s plan To govern Maele’s fate And also, through a twist of luck, That Maele had escaped. Kiburi knew how Maele thought And guessed the route she’d take. Perhaps they could catch up to her And make her hunters quake. A sound debate on their next course The two tribes long presided. Moqapi then drew up a plan As soon as they decided. Kiburi and a chosen few Would guess at Maele’s route To find where they might meet with her And take her hunters out. The chance was small that they would meet But there was still a chance. And they’d meet tribes who never had For Maele spared a glance. Kiburi then would draw upon Her past and her great woes To show them how they might unite Against their quagga foes. By Maele’s words, by her ideals, The zebras would be one. They’d forge a bond between all tribes That would not be undone. Farewells were said; Kiburi left. Across the plains she roared. She swore that Maele would not suffer By the quagga hordes. Poor Maelewano was half-dead, exhausted, tired, starving. And yet her path across the desert She still kept on carving. She knew the desert’s end was near; That’s why she was not spent. She’d lose her hunters once she reached A place nobody went. The sacred marsh, Uhlanga great, Her destination was. It was a place few zebras went And then, only with cause. It was a dark and murky place, Had been when magic ruled. The zebras who still named it home Were likened oft to ghouls. But they were not unreas’nable; This, Maelewano knew; She had once saved Kiburi’s life By trading some spears few. She left the desert late one morn And found the marsh by night. The water, trees, the grass, the shade; All these were welcome sights. She staggered through the deepest muck Where she would leave no tracks. She dragged herself to higher ground, Beneath a tree collapsed. And when she finally woke again, She rested in a hut. Her zebra host gave medicine To clear her head right up. Uhlanga’s zebras, though quite strange, Were monsters of no sort. They simply liked their privacy; With crowds they’d not consort. Their magic arts had also died But they’d adjusted, too. The marsh was safe, for ent’ring it The quaggas did not do. Outsiders may have not been loved But zebras were not hated So Maele they’d protect until The hunters’ wrath abated. The zebras of the marsh would watch If in the hunters pressed So Maele was quite safe (for now) And finally could she rest. She asked the marshland zebras if They maybe would consider Her plan to unify the clans, Becoming allies with her. They thought about these words of hers, The hunters near the swamps. They said they might, but only if The bandits they could stomp. When Maele said ’twas possible, They settled in to wait And let the chasers come for Maele; Would they take the bait? The bandits, though, would never go Into the marsh alive. Before they ever made the choice, Kiburi’s group arrived. She’d known that Maele knew the marsh A murksome, dirty place. The perfect place to lose a tail: You’d never leave a trace. At best, a long shot, led by fate. The hunters, though, were proof Their quarry had to be beneath Uhlanga’s leafy roof. And with her friend so close at hoof, Kiburi’s heart broke free. She took the quaggas in the night With shocking savagery. Alone, she struck the hunters down, Her spearwork like a dance, And since surprise was on her side, The quaggas had no chance. Into Uhlanga she near ran, By Maele’s mem’ry pulled. A warrior, though, did hold her back, Her addled thoughts o’erruled. The swamp was dangerous at its best, Much more in dead of night. Kiburi ought to rest herself And search the swamp by light. But with some guards had Maele come, For they had heard the noise. Throughout her body she felt numb; She’d heard Kiburi’s voice. She promptly charged out from the swamp And called Kiburi’s name. Kiburi heard; she whirled around And called out just the same. They found each other in the mud, With gnats and flies about. Kiburi hugged her friend so tight As tears cascaded out. She stammered out apologies For all the things she’d said. The stress had eaten up her mind; It’d only held by threads. But Maele listened not to her Because there was no need; Forgiveness was complete and swift, Ignoring past misdeeds. The two were finally friends again, Reuned that fateful night. Together, they could do great things And make the plains aright. The zebras of the marsh and plains A council did convene. They told each other all the things In recent days they’d seen. Kiburi’d met tribes large and small While on her desperate scramble. No zebra could deny the quaggas Had left them in shambles. Where Maele’s words had gone unheard, Kiburi’s convert tales Had personal experiences, Personal details. She’d never stopped to hear their choice; She’d had a ways to go. But she was sure that Maele’s thoughts From her words now would grow. With Maele back, the plains’ morale Would grow again and soar. She even had a convert now To aid her all the more. They’d cross the rolling plains again With fire in their souls. To break the old tribe structures down Was now their utmost goal. So Maele and Kiburi both, They set off, side by side. They would not stop until the tribes Were fully unified.