Time
passed relentlessly.
A gray cloud enveloped the camp. A gust of cold descended from the
sky, filling hearts with ominous forebodings, dark thoughts, and the
feeling that hope had shattered.
That very hope of dominating the trade along the great routes had
failed to unite the Tuguluk Council, which had so often served as a
beacon in the storm. The lack of unity was evident; no one could halt
the ambition that was beginning to chart the clan’s path.
As they exited the chieftain’s yurt, a violent downpour
scattered everyone present. Each participant continued their journey
alone, sharing neither thoughts nor fears.
It was a warning from nature itself: one must always heed not only
words but also what was happening around them. The sound of rain
striking the earth, the streams, and the puddles insisted on this
ancient message.
Sora remained in a corner, trembling with anxiety. Her nose
reddened, her eyes wet and restless. Something inside her whispered
that perhaps it was best to let time pass.
For a week, she wandered silently through the camp. Every morning,
her large marten coat, with ochre and deep red felt
trim, protected her from the cold. Her fox-fur hat
was adorned with a small wolf tooth, a protective amulet inherited
from her mother.
Her wooden ring engraved with a bird symbol
thrummed with the energy of the taiga, as if the forest spirits were
watching her every step.
She sat on one of the large stones and saw ürde approaching.
Altan Kür’s daughter had become one of the most beautiful and
sought-after young women in the clan.
She wore a red felt tunic, reserved only for
women of the ruling classes: a symbol of power, sensuality,
and authority. Her braided belt held
amulets of bone and amber; a wooden carving of a deer hung at its
center, guardian of her memory and soul.
A tiny bone falcon dangled from her necklace, an omen of promising
futures. Her silver and copper rings, engraved with runes and inlaid
with amber, enhanced her intuition and protected against betrayal.
Her long black braid, adorned with red threads and beads, sealed her
destiny and her place in the clan’s traditions.
—My little Sora —ürde said as she reached her side.
—Admirable ürde… what brings you to the edges of my busy
universe?
—Perhaps… —she paused, gazing into Sora’s clear eyes— to
help you piece your dreams back together.
A flash of memory struck Sora: a great black horse,
its muzzle white, neighing restlessly. She gripped the reins tightly;
the animal thrashed.
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Her foot found the copper stirrup, adorned with a
carved deer, and she vaulted into the saddle. The horse sensed her
fear and reared.
Then, from nowhere, a young woman with a dark braid appeared.
Calmly, she took the reins, stroked the horse’s forehead, and
soothed it. Sora exhaled in relief.
—You always appear when I’m on the edge of the precipice —she
said, wrapped in that memory.
—Be careful of your cousin Taimur —ürde replied, sitting
beside her—. He is not to be trusted.
—Do you say that because you are still resentful of him?
ürde looked away.
—You know the whole truth. He promised to wed me and then
repudiated me, claiming we hadn’t paid the agreed dowry. Lies.
Her eyes filled with pain; such a gesture marked a woman forever.
—Why do you think he did it?
—They say his mother arranged a marriage with the daughter of
the Banuk clan, Kygyrz.
—Do they really say that? —Sora asked, surprised.
—Open your eyes, Sora. He is ambitious, without limits. And you…
you are only a step on his ladder.
Sora’s mind shattered into fragments impossible to reassemble.
But she understood something more: —the protection of a woman
does not depend on men, but on the cunning of women who know the
invisible threads of the clan.
A falcon crossed the skies of the taiga, followed
by a sharp-eyed eagle gliding from the pines. Nature seemed to
recognize ürde’s strength and Sora’s determination. A future was
waiting to be woven, full of magic, cunning, and unseen protection.
The next morning, Sora saw Taimur emerge from his yurt. Tall,
imposing, and elegant, larger than most men in the clan, he wore a
deep blue tunic, with a leather belt and
silver buckle holding a small dagger.
His tall fur hat, adorned with amber beads and
feathers, and his deer-hide boots gleamed in the morning moisture.
Taimur held the reins of his long-maned black horse
when he sensed Sora’s piercing gaze. He turned slowly and met her
eyes with a half-smile on his lips, recalling the magic of that
afternoon by the river when he had watched her in secret.
She never knew, but that memory burned in his mind, igniting a
wild and uncontrollable desire. The image of her silhouette bathed in
warm sunlight, moving freely and unaware of the gazes upon her, her
dark hair falling across her shoulders and her torso reflected in the
water, consumed him, filling his thoughts with reckless craving.
That afternoon, his heart drowned completely in unattainable
desire, condemning him to live in deep resentment and fanning the
fire of wanting to overturn all that was established just to one day
have Sora at his side.
Taimur lowered his eyes, mounted his horse, and rode away from the
camp without a word, leaving behind a trail of tension,
desire, and contained danger that Sora could feel even from
a distance.
Under the rain, Sora returned to her yurt. The wood smelled of
damp smoke, the felt of wet earth. Her father sat by the fire, his
gaze deep and weary. Sora knelt and placed her hands over his.
—Father —she said firmly—. ürde needs your help. Let her be
my lady-in-waiting. That way she will be protected from Taimur and
his mother’s schemes.
Her father studied her in silence. Asking the Chief of the Council
was no game; it was stepping into quicksand. Denying that protection
could bring unseen consequences.
—When one woman asks protection for another, the clan trembles
—he finally said—. But I will do what I can.
Sora nodded. In her heart resonated an ancient truth: —the women
of the clan do not raise their voices in the Council, but they hold
the threads that decide its course.

