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Chapter 33. The Fire of the Bonfires

  Among

  all secrets, only those that wound the heart cannot be hidden.


  On the wide prairie of the Altan Sülde, where

  the golden spirits had watched over the land since a time no elder

  could clearly remember, the gathering of the forty-two clans of the

  Golden Mountains was held every year.

  It was far more than a council.

  It was the moment when the peoples of the steppe remembered who

  they were.

  For several days they remained there to celebrate Djajyl

  Bur, the festival of the solstice, when the sun reached its

  greatest strength. During those days the clans decided the division

  of pastures, the summer migration routes, and the alliances that

  maintained the fragile balance among the peoples of the steppe.

  Yet before the council began came the Night of the Bonfires.

  The night when the young left childhood behind.

  The night when the spirits descended to listen.

  Across the prairie the forty-two bonfires burned in a vast circle.

  From afar they resembled a crown of fire resting upon the dark

  grass. Each flame represented a clan. Each fire was a lineage, a

  story, a memory shaped by wars, pacts, and generations of men and

  women who had ridden beneath the same sky.

  The wood crackled softly.

  Thick trunks of larch burned slowly, releasing an intense scent

  that filled the air of the prairie. It was a deep fragrance—sharp

  yet sweet—that spoke of the ancient forests of the Golden

  Mountains, of endless winters and camps raised at the edge of the

  wind.

  Smoke rose in twisting blue columns toward the star-filled sky.

  Above them stretched an immense darkness scattered with

  constellations and wandering comets.

  At the center of the great circle the drums began to sound.

  First one.

  Then another.

  Then many.

  What began as a solitary heartbeat soon became a deep, powerful

  rumble, like distant thunder rolling beneath the earth. The drums

  were stretched with horsehide and mounted on frames of dark wood. The

  men who struck them used leather-wrapped sticks, drawing from them a

  sound that was heavy, resonant, alive.

  Each beat cut through the air.

  Each beat made the eardrums tremble.

  The sound was not only heard.

  It was felt in the chest.

  It was felt in the bones.

  The elders said this was the rhythm shamans used to summon the

  spirits of the ancestors.

  And that night, beneath the vast sky, no one doubted the spirits

  were listening.

  At a respectful distance from the great circle of fire the other

  clans had gathered.

  The flames illuminated ceremonial garments with shifting

  reflections of red and gold, revealing the complex hierarchy that

  governed the lives of these steppe peoples.

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  Each social rank wore colors that marked its place in the world.

  The heirs of the great chiefs wore kaftans of deep crimson—the

  color of ancestral blood that legitimized their authority. Their

  garments were embroidered with golden threads forming solar eagles

  and celestial deer, ancient symbols of power.

  Warriors wore shades of emerald and dark blue, colors that

  signified loyalty and clarity of spirit in service to their leaders.

  Wolf and fox pelts rested upon their shoulders, and ceremonial

  daggers hung from their belts.

  Artisans and merchants dressed in vivid yellows and oranges,

  bright colors meant to attract attention and celebrate prosperity.

  Further back, in the shadows, the herders gathered in browns and

  blacks—the colors of the earth that nourished them all.

  Yet the true differences were not the colors.

  They were the adornments.

  Belts made of interlocking plates of gold.

  Brooches set with turquoise brought from distant lands.

  Necklaces of red coral.

  Feathers from the golden eagle.

  Every detail spoke of power.

  Every ornament was a silent declaration of wealth and alliances.

  That night one figure drew every gaze.

  Sora.

  Chosen that year as the Princess of the First Flame.

  Among the daughters of the forty-two clans she represented the

  promise of the future.

  She wore a long tunic of dark red felt, soft and carefully

  pressed. Its surface absorbed the firelight and returned it in warm

  reflections. Along the edges of the garment ran delicate embroideries

  in golden silk depicting flying deer—sacred creatures believed to

  guide the peoples of Altai between the worlds.

  A light cloak of white ermine rested upon her shoulders.

  Around her waist a red leather belt shimmered with plates of gold

  and turquoise, each representing an alliance between clans.

  On her forehead rested a delicate articulated diadem of gold. From

  its center hung a single drop of turquoise that touched the space

  between her brows.

  Yet beneath those ceremonial garments lay something no one could

  see.

  The night before, inside a tent set apart from the camp, the

  shamaness Guman had marked her skin.

  Juniper smoke had filled the tent, thick and fragrant.

  By the flickering light of a small fire, bone needles had traced

  upon Sora’s shoulder the image of a winged feline—the guardian

  spirit of royal bloodlines.

  Each puncture had been a pact with the spirits.

  Each line, a step toward destiny.

  Not far from the circle of fire stood Chinggis Yud.

  That year’s chosen Prince of Spring.

  He wore a long blue-black kaftan embroidered with confronting

  griffins and eagles with outstretched wings.

  Across his shoulders rested a heavy cloak of white wolf fur, the

  ancient symbol of the ruling lineage of the Khorza clan.

  From his belt hung a ceremonial dagger whose hilt had been carved

  from ivory.

  Yet he too bore a recent mark.

  The night before, the shaman Erlik had traced

  upon his chest the symbol of the descending falcon—the sign of

  rulers.

  Bone needles had pierced his skin while the drum beat steadily

  beside them.

  When the tattoo was finished, Erlik placed his hand over the young

  man’s heart and spoke quietly.

  “Now the spirits know who you are.”

  The drums continued to thunder.

  Then suddenly one fell silent.

  Then another.

  Slowly the gazes of the clans turned toward the outer edge of the

  circle.

  From the darkness a rider appeared.

  It was Taimur.

  The Wolf of the East.

  His black horse advanced at a slow, steady pace, almost floating

  over the grass. The braids of its mane were decorated with small

  beads of bone that chimed softly with every step.

  Taimur wore a long black kaftan embroidered with silver wolves

  running beneath the moon.

  Across his shoulders lay a short cloak of grey wolf fur.

  When the firelight reached his face, murmurs rippled through the

  gathered clans.

  The son of two peoples.

  The living symbol of alliance.

  A man admired by many.

  Feared by many more.

  Taimur dismounted.

  And in that moment Sarai saw him.

  Sarai, sister of Chinggis Yud, stood among the daughters of the

  Khorza chief.

  Firelight touched her face and made the turquoise stones at her

  belt shimmer.

  When her eyes met Taimur’s, time seemed to pause.

  The murmur of the clans faded into the distance.

  The bonfires crackled softly, as if whispering among themselves.

  Taimur had not come thinking of her.

  He had come thinking of alliances.

  Of negotiations.

  Of the future of the clans.

  Yet in that instant he realized something no warrior wishes to

  discover in the middle of a gathering of power.

  Every plan he had made had just changed.

  A few steps away, Chinggis Yud was watching.

  And in his gaze there was something more than curiosity.

  There was intuition.

  Because he knew that among the forty-two fires of the clans, a new

  flame had just been lit that no council would ever be able to

  extinguish.

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