The Spirit Quest: Part 4
Submitted by dmuth on Fri, 2006-02-03 12:57.
Lion King Fanfiction
CHAPTER 10: THE PATIENCE OF AIHEU
The sweat rolled down Metutu's face, dripping off the end of his
nose and making it itch. But he didn't dare raise a hand to wipe it
away. He glared fiercely at the Euphorbia he was trying to uproot.
Makedde had cautioned that he needed the plant undamaged; the virtue of
the roots lay right at the skin. Scraped, they were almost worthless.
Metutu was locked in mortal combat with the plant. He bared his
teeth and grinned at the root. "Sooner or later, you're going to be
conquered, and I'm going to laugh at you! You hear me??"
Of course the plant did not hear him. Metutu felt a little
foolish arguing with it. He looked at the sensitive root endings
exposed to the air and decided against using the sharp wooden digging
stick Makedde had given him. Sighing, he set it aside and used much of
his precious water ration to moisten the soil. Then he worked with his
fingers to carefully scoop away the mud. He hissed in irritation as he
felt his fingertips scrape against the small rocks embedded in the mud,
but continued to uncover more and more of the plant until it finally
gave up. Metutu had managed to outthink a plant, and he grinned in
triumph.
"Stupid old weed! Did you really think you could win against my
superior intelligence??"
Metutu bore the hard-won prize back toward his home in the baobab.
The sun was hot, and he had no water left to quench his thirst. Worse,
the mud that had caked on his hands was hardening into a cement that
served to irritate the scratches in his skin. "Next time I'll think to
bring more water."
There was a patient with Makedde. Uwezo looked miserable, and he
was. Metutu was hoping to find Makedde alone to share his moment of
triumph. And though he was loathe to interrupt a patient, he felt he
should quickly show his brother him the bulb. "Hey, look what I got!"
Makedde looked up a little upset. "That's nice. Right now I'm in
the middle of....oh, look at your hands!"
"Oh, I scraped them."
"Why not go pound your head on a rock while you're at it!"
Makedde sighed at the reckless youth. "God only gives you one pair of
hands. There will always be more bulbs."
Uwezo laughed. "You know, that reminds me of...." He winced.
"My sore throat. Sorry."
Makedde turned back to examining Uwezo. "Metutu, the Bedango
extract is right in the...." He looked around to point, but Metutu was
already rubbing down his hands. "Hfff, well pardon me!"
Metutu dried his hands and stood next to Makedde to watch Uwezo
describe his symptoms in dreary detail.
"I couldn't sleep last night," Uwezo droned on. "Today, however,
all I wanted to do is sleep. Then when I lay my head down my pulse
pounds in my ears. Tic tic tic all the time. I have a headache and my
throat is sore. And there's this dryness in my nose."
"Not to mention the itching under your arms," Metutu said.
"Yeah, that too." He looked at the young mandrill. "I didn't
know you were a shaman too?"
"Not yet," Makedde said. "So great Metutu, what is your
diagnosis?"
"Brother, that sounds like Dol Sani."
Makedde burst out laughing, along with his patient. "Dol Sani is a
CHILDHOOD disease. And, well, LOOK at him!"
The rather robust mandrill was a bodyguard for Kinara. He smiled
indulgently. "Oh PWEEZE don't tell my mommy!"
"So you've never had it before?" Metutu asked.
"Well no."
"That's right. You were an only child and you grew up on the edge
of the village." Metutu looked at Makedde with a wry grin.
"But he MUST have had it at SOME time," said Makedde,
unbelievingly. "Everyone gets that growing up. I mean, it's almost
tribal law." He laughed.
Metutu shrugged. "I guess so. Still, the itchy arm pits. I was
asked for my opinion...."
Metutu climbed down to collect more herbs. He resolved to make no
more diagnoses that day.
"That's a fine young brother you've got there, Makedde."
"Indeed, Uwezo. He's come a long way." Makedde chuckled as he
bent over him again, his sensitive hands exploring under the other
mandrill's jaw, testing the glands there. "I remember when you couldn't
GET him to use his own hands to pick up something. Now I can't get him
to keep his hands off..." he broke off, frowning. Makedde sat back and
looked at him. "Did you say your joints ache?"
Uwezo looked at him, confused. "Yes, a little. I'm not old
enough for the Mifupa, am I?"
"No, that's different." Makedde stroked his chin and grinned
wryly. "By the gods, I think he's right! You DO have Dol Sani!"
Uwezo looked worried. "How? I will be a laughingstock!"
Makedde patted him. "Nonsense. Nothing will be said by me or
Metutu. Just tell them you have-hmmm--acute pediatric aesthenia."
"I'm glad you think my Pediatric whatever is cute, but let's just
say that I have the flu and leave it at that."
"Fine." He gave Uwezo an elixir of Protothecus milleri. "Now
drink this."
"Ugh! It smells nasty."
"Dwink it or I WILL tell your mommy!"
Uwezo did not appreciate the joke, but he did appreciate
blackmail. He downed the awful remedy that left him reeking of sulfur.
"Oh gods!" He took the water gourd offered by Makedde and downed it all
in a couple of gulps. "Ugh! Nasty stuff!"
He turned to leave. "You're welcome," Makedde said grimly. As
Uwezo walked away, Makedde watched him. He muttered, "You DO have a
cute pediatric aesthenia...." Laughing, he thought about Metutu's
emerging diagnostic skills. "I have to tell him about it."
Hearing a noise below, he looked down. "Metutu, I want to tell
you something."
But it was Kinara, his father. He looked upset.
"You could live a little closer to the ground, like civilized
folk." Kinara was short of breath.
Makedde sighed. "What can I do for you, Father? Those backaches
again?"
Kinara said, "Haven't you done enough already?"
"What do you mean by that?"
"I know the love Metutu has for you, and I would not begrudge him
anything. But I will NOT stand by and watch you corrupt him."
Makedde opened his mouth to protest, but was cut off. "Oh, no!
Don't you try to deny it."
"Why, because I give him a little work to do? It's good for the
soul."
"PAH!" Kinara growled. "A little hard work is fine. But you
have filled his head with dry grass! Lion stories! Meat-eater
religions where a lioness nurses cubs with her own blood! My gods, did
you think I would want my son to hear that perversion!"
"It is NOT perversion! I try to respect all people's beliefs when
they are sincere about them, but a god that lies and steals is no god of
mine. I have dared to hunt out the God whose love is unconditional and
whose heart is pure."
Kinara thumped his staff down. "At least you don't deny it. You
were always too honest to lead our people effectively, so I didn't mind
when you wanted to be a shaman healer. But now you heal the body while
corrupting the spirit. Who says that Pishtim--may he increase--lies or
steals?? Since he is the source of all things and all truth, he can
change the truth as he sees fit, and he can take back what he has given!
See that you don't offend him with your impious ranting!
"Me impious? Father, don't you know your own son better than
that? Hasn't love given you eyes to see or ears to listen?"
"Don't think I don't still love you, for I have worked to keep
your secret from the council. I've stuck my neck out for you, and I'll
continue to do so, but I will NOT have you taking Metutu from the true
path! I'm sorry, Makedde, but you are no longer his teacher. I'm
sending him to live with Busara. He will teach my son the old ways that
have sustained us for generations. He will be made worthy to take my
place when I die. Gods, how I wish I'd done better with you! I wonder
if I could have done or said anything different. You send me to my
grave with many regrets and a broken heart!"
"Father!"
"I warn you not to try and interfere. Don't presume too much on
our ties of blood, for I am still your leader and you are still my
subject, understand?"
"Completely, SIR."
"Don't sass me boy! You're not too old to get a few licks from
your old dad, and I'm not so sure they wouldn't do you some good!"
He whirled and left, descending the tree so abruptly that he
almost fell to the ground.
The shaman sat on his haunches and sighed. He gazed at the
painted drawings on the side of the tree's bole, where a stylistic
portrait of Metutu was emblazoned on the bark. "The gods will have
their way. Father, you have pulled him from the creek only to plunge
him in the river." He looked through the swaying branches of his home
to the bright azure sky above. It was a bittersweet victory, just
another thorn between himself and his father when once they had been so
close. "Touch his spirit, Aiheu. Bless my father in his darkness, and
shine the light of wisdom into his heart."
CHAPTER 11: HOMEWORK
Metutu eyed the cliff wall warily. The caves were only a few
minutes walk from the lush aerial homes of the rest of the troop, but to
the superstitious mandrills, they were a completely separate world. Few
dared to venture there. Busara's wisdom was legendary, but so were his
eccentricities. Metutu remembered hearing stories that he sacrificed
goats on nights of the full moon in exchange for powers from the evil
Makei. But Kinara had always insisted that his Chief Scribe was kind
and patient. "You would love him. I could kick myself for not
introducing you long ago."
Metutu had seen Busara from a distance once or twice, but had
never been introduced. That was a real shame, for he was rather fond of
Asumini, and he was curious about her parents. He was about to explore
the great mystery, and he was more than a little nervous.
Metutu mused over this as he observed the coming and going of the
birds high overhead. They wheeled and chirped, their colorful plumage
flashing in the sun as they went about the daily business of gathering
food and hauling it to their nests at the top of the cliffs. Some of
them were weaver birds, constructing elaborate nests that hung like
baskets made out of carefully woven grass.
"Enjoying the view?"
He gasped and spun, whirling to see Asumini standing behind him, a
look of amusement on her face. "What do you want, Metutu? I can't talk
long; father is expecting a new student soon, and I have to go meet
him."
Metutu grinned. "You just did. I'm going to be a scribe!"
Her eyes widened disbelievingly. "You?" She laughed. "Oh,
that's good, Metutu! You can tell them how to escape leopards. I'm
sure you'll have the situation under control!" She added, "I was being
perfectly serious. He should be here any moment."
"Asumini, that is no way to treat a guest, is it?" The old voice
was gentle, with only a hint of reproof. They both turned to see Busara
leaning heavily on his staff. His wizened features bore the scars and
furrows of age, but his eyes were bright with intelligence, crowned with
wonderfully expressive eyebrows. His kindly smile was as warm as a good
hug. "Please show Metutu inside, and get him settled in. We have much
to discuss, and it is already high sun."
Asumini looked at Metutu, unable to hide her surprise.
It was the first time that Metutu had been in a cave. He stepped
back into the refreshingly cool recess. Expecting things to be pitch
black, he found to his delight an invention lit the passageway. "You
like the lamps? They burn rendered fat. My Asumini scavenges carcasses
to make sure I never run low. You have to get there quickly you know,
before the hyenas snatch up everything."
Now it was Metutu's turn to be surprised. He looked at Asumini
with new respect.
The twinkling lights were like stars in the night, but much
brighter. As they got further into the cave, there was what Busara
called his "tree trunk." It was a shaft of stone that reached from the
floor to the ceiling, and Metutu fingered it with wonder, for it had not
been carved but formed of its own accord. There Busara stopped him.
"Tell me, young buck, do you know where Mano is?"
He says quietly, "I have no idea. You'll have to ask Minshasa."
That was the pass phrase by which Aiheusists in hiding recognize each
other.
Busara took the boy by the arm. With almost pleading in his
voice, he said, "I know you are the son of the chief, but I also know
why he sent you here. Now I ask you in all sincerity to tell me you are
not here to spy on me. That before the gods all you seek is the truth
for your soul's sake."
"That is all I seek," Metutu said. "My father teaches me that the
gods argue among themselves, that they have been known to cheat and even
steal. My brother tells me that the creator is perfect and holy, and
that he loves us all. I want so bad to believe he is right. I watched
the birds just now. I cannot believe that the beauty I see, and the
good things I feel when I see it came from petty, thieving, lazy gods
that must be bribed to bring the rain and heal the sick. If I were God,
I'd do those things to make people happy."
"Let me tell you why I believe. Son, you are much closer than you
think to the source of faith. Aiheu is not a secret hidden under a
rock. The work of his hand is everywhere, filling the world with beauty
and wonder. Open your heart and take it in. The hardest task would be
NOT to believe."
In the golden flickering light of the lamps, Busara's kindly face
looked almost godlike. "Look, son. See the paintings?"
Metutu looked at the walls. They were covered by paintings much
like the ones on Makedde's baobab, but done with such skill and artistry
that it took Metutu's breath away.
"I have to keep the lights out in this place when Kinara comes
calling. I wish they could be visible to the public, where the words of
comfort they represent could become bind to their hearts and settle in
their minds."
Metutu was humbled. "I'm sorry I called you an evil sorcerer.
You know, we kids grew up telling stories about sacrifices of goats by
the light of the full moon."
"Once I was brought a goat carcass. I had to cut it up for some
sick lion cubs. It might have been a night of the full moon--I don't
know. All I know is that I couldn't let them starve to death." Busara
shook his head. "And to think that I love children so much. Perhaps
you will put in a good word when gossips tell their tales?"
"I'll try."
Metutu looked up and down the wall. He recognized many of the
paintings from his brother's work, but one thing was missing. "Where is
your story? I bet it's interesting."
Busara smiled. "I like to think so. Let me see your hands." He
took a look at Metutu's palms by the lantern light. "They are young and
fresh, not used to hard work." His own were callused. "Hard work is
part of my story." He tugged at his gray beard. "Worry about my
daughter's future. Her first case of Dol Sani and her near death from
pneumonia." He drew his finger down the deep lines etched in his
cheeks. "Long hours of study, tending the sick, teaching lore, crying
tears and smiling smiles." He drew his finger across the deep wrinkles
on his forehead. "Late nights with sick lion cubs and a couple of
leopards. Oh yes, my story is plainly written. The youth has been
pulled from my outside, but inside I still feel like the young buck that
earned these."
He showed Metutu the back of his hand with five parallel scars.
"To you they are ugly scars. To me they are beautiful. You see, my
lioness sister Asumini was once warm and strong like you and I." He
took from around his neck a grass cord from which hung an ivory fang.
"Once she could bear me on her back without thinking about it. Now I
wear what's left of her next to my heart." His eyes began to grow
misty. "If you learn anything from me, learn this. Love well and for
always. For everything else a shaman does is but leaves and branches."
He patted the column of stone. "Love is the trunk and the root of all
good things."
Busara sat on a prepared cushion of leaves. He motioned for
Metutu to do likewise. "I'm going to tell you a love story. One that
is strange, for it is about a young mandrill shaman and a lioness.
Listen well to my words, for I can make you look, but I can't make you
see."
"Is she the one I heard rumors about?"
"The rumors pale next to the truth." He fondled the relic and
kissed it. "Once I was in search of worldly treasures. And instead I
discovered God. Only I did not recognize the significance of the
moment, for the truth came in the form of a wounded lioness.
"At great risk I tended her wound and saved her life. Her name
was Asumini. It means `jasmine,' and may I say that the flower is more
beautiful because it bears her name?" He put the tooth back around his
neck. "She received comfort to the body, but returned to give me
comfort to the spirit. Everything that came before I count as loss.
Everything that has happened since I treasure. Through her eyes, I have
seen face to face what others only saw dimly reflected. Because of her,
I have seen the face of Aiheu and slept at the feet of Minshasa and
Mano. And I will sit with them when I die, among the great kings of the
past."
"Who are the great kings?"
"Those whose hearts are warm with the joy of service. It is good
to receive eternal life. It is far greater to give eternal love. In
the beginning all animals were brother spirits. In the end they will
all be brothers once more. Some of those spirits will be weak cubs
crying out for milk. Others will answer their cry and say, `Come you
who hunger for my milk. No one shall I turn away.'" He drew close to
Metutu and took his hand. "Aiheu calls to you. He says, `Metutu, feed
my cubs. Feed my cubs.'"
Metutu slowly knelt and bowed his head. Busara rested his hand on
his head and blessed him.
"Aiheu, come into my heart! I will feed your cubs! I swear!"
Busara knelt beside him and put his arms around Metutu. "Bless
you, son! I have lived to see the promise fulfilled in you. The light
will not go out!"
Kinara loved his son, but there was a depth and genuine warmth to
Busara that endeared him to Metutu at once. "When I am Chief, everyone
will see your paintings, and there will be no punishment for worshipping
as your heart dictates."
Tears came to Busara's eyes. "I have lived to see this moment!
Now I can die happy!"
CHAPTER 12: BREAKING BREAD
Busara told him, "Let's celebrate. How about something to eat?"
"Fine!"
"Then come on. We'll prepare it together." A second later Busara
added, "I forget you have servants. Do you know how to prepare a meal?"
"What I don't know, you can show me."
"That attitude will take you places, my son!" Busara put his arm
around the smiling Metutu and led him into the pantry.
The year-round cool of the deeper cave passages made it possible
to store greens in fresh-picked condition for quite a while. Busara
found all the fruit and vegetables he needed in the flickering light of
his lamp.
"I can't believe this!" Metutu saw herbs and fruits that he knew
were out of season. "This is incredible! You're a genius!"
Busara laughed. "I make a mean fruit salad too." He took a mango
and took a sharp dagger from the wall that he used to slice it into this
sections, then dice them.
"What is that??"
"It's a man thing. There was a big male that drowned in the river
a few years back. Very sad, but he was wearing this. I figured he
didn't need it anymore."
"A man thing? But those are cursed!"
"No. The only time it's cursed is when it rests in an evil hand.
Funny thing about those big hairless creatures: for all their
collections of things, they are mortal and full of fears just like us.
Aiheu made us all for one reason or another. I haven't figured out why
he made their kind yet, but it's enough just knowing he had a reason to
show a little tolerance and understanding." He smiled. "They do make
some great stuff, though."
"If you say so," Metutu murmured, looking closely at the dagger
but not touching it.
Later as they ate, Metutu glanced at the tooth of Asumini around
Busara's neck.
"Tell me more about the lioness."
"She is probably listening right now," Busara said. "She reveals
herself to whom she will as the spirit moves her."
"No, I mean as a person."
Busara smiled. "She is full of love. Love that echoed through
her cubs and now her grandson Ahadi who rules at Pride Rock. Our
spirits are one, bound together eternally with cords that cannot be
broken. She brought my family and I into the light. My debt to her
could never be repaid." He leaned over and kissed Kima. "My wife is
very understanding about this--she shares me with Asumini. I think that
if I'd spent that much time and affection on another mandrill...."
"I would have killed you," Kima said, kissing his cheek. She
turned to address Metutu directly. "Sometimes he sleeps next to her.
At least she waits for him to fall asleep before she sneaks away. But
when she was alive, that was even worse. She would sprawl out in the
floor with Busara snuggled up against her. The two of them would snore
like a thunderstorm. Sometimes he'd rub her stomach and her leg would
kick."
"You talk about her like a nuisance," Busara said with a slight
scowl. "I know you used to spend hours grooming her, picking ticks, and
calling her `Fuzzy love.' And those cubs: I thought you were going to
fight her for custody!"
"Well sometimes she was a nuisance. But only sometimes." Kima
smiled reflectively. "She was always very sweet. Sometimes out of the
blue she would say something absolutely wonderful that would take your
breath away. Then you wanted to hug her and never let go. She was so
wise about so many things."
"They must be great philosophers. And I thought all they did was
hunt."
Busara laughed. "Oh my boy, what constitutes great philosophy? I
remember the way she used to say it:
"You have lots of time to sit about in that odd crossed-legged
stance to do thinking. That kind of time must be wonderful--I spend
much time hunting and tending to my family. But even in my busy life, I
have moments when I feel that small voice inside me speaking truths. I
know what works for me.
"In one way, there are no mothers who aren't philosophers. We use
what works for us, and if you are interested, I would tell you some
truths. For one thing, we see the beauty that surrounds us. The father
sky, the mother earth, the dew on the grass. We know that God is
beautiful, though we have not seen him. You can tell a mother's looks
by her cubs. Even so, we see the beauty of God in everything he made.'"
"My gods!" Metutu gasped.
Busara sighed. "Such pure, beautiful and childlike faith! Rather
than dealing in vague concepts, she brought comfort for the
spirit...words that help us face the pleasures and pains of life. Well
my son, she helped me face them. She lived to be quite old for her
kind, then she came here to die, and she has never left. Sometimes in
the night you can see her keeping watch over me, my blessed Nisei whose
prayers are always before the feet of Aiheu." His eyes grew misty
again. "To think she leaves the blessed presence of Aiheu to tarry in
the shadows with me. She healed my spirit, and all I did was heal her
body!"
Suddenly Busara looked around. "No, I didn't exaggerate!" He
listened for a moment, but all Metutu could hear was silence. "It's
true!"
"Was that her?"
"Yes. She's among us. Apparently she has not revealed herself to
you yet."
"Well ask her to. If you ask her to, she will."
"I believe it. But I will not ask her to. When she is ready, she
will show herself."
Busara's daughter got up and reached down to touch something,
though Metutu could not see a thing. "Is that her?" Metutu asked.
"Yes."
Metutu reached out in that direction. Asumini scowled. "You
drove her off! Give her time--she'll come to you when she's ready."
"Will I know it?"
"She could chew you up and spit you out. I dare say you'll know
it."
"Is she temperamental? I mean, is she good to you?"
Asumini said, "She was a second mother to me. She was very strict
but very kind, like most lioness mothers. I could never get away with
anything because she would tattle on me to Dad."
"I bet you hated that."
"No. She always took good care of me. I only wish I could have
known her well before she died. When I was very young, I remember her
grooming me. That seems so long ago. At least I could hide from her
then." She looks to one side. "Cut it out, Auntie! You know I'm only
teasing." Suddenly Asumini laughs. "In your dreams!"
Hearing only one side of this, Metutu felt odd. Still when
Metutu sat his stick down for a while, it ended up moving mysteriously.
"She is shy with newcomers, but she wants you to respect her existence.
That's her subtle way of saying `hello.'"
"Oh." He looked around uncertainly. "Hello to you too."
Something dawned on him at last, and he burst out laughing.
Asumini looks at him strangely. "You think this is funny?"
"No, I think you are! Your father said Asumini scavenged
carcasses for fat before the hyenas stripped them clean! I thought he
meant you!"
"Are you so sure he didn't?"
Metutu stared at her. "You are kidding--aren't you?"
She grinned. "Well, I might be."
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