The sounds of hammers filled the high-noon air. The sky overhead a clear sheet of cloudless sky. A tropical perfection hung over the village as teams of men milled about the new house being raised at the edge of the village. These men, drawn away from the fields came from two families coming together to partake in a wedding ritual, the construction of a new home for a newly wed couple.
Walking down the gently meandering hillside the hovel was being build on, Nyutien came to inspect how the action was going. Though he did not personally count the newly wedded couple as anyone particularly close to him, activity was all the same an attractive fair to observe played out in the village and the appearance of their village chief would be a high-honor. The two now coupled were of modest station, and attention to their prominence was patronage as much as awarding them a material stipend to support and reward them for their work.
On the far-side of the project, the newly married couple stood watching in giddy anticipation as the house went up. They had been married just several days before and already the rising home was getting beyond the simple framing stage and there was a very home-like quality to it. A thatched roof rose high over the frames with a bowed top beam that extended far out of either side, a solid long palm tree cut and formed when the marriage preparations were still virgin and under way.
It is how this small community had grown, spreading itself out with each and ever coupling of adults. To the fledgling beaurecrats, it was a sign of growth beyond the central seed that had rooted long ago and Nyutien smiled wide in the shade of his wide-brimmed, fur hat.
Nyutien was becoming an older man himself. His frame was large and fit, but these muscles were waning in recent years and he had a stockier look. Like many in the village he had farmed as a youth, though not as dedicated as many others. He built his house from stone when his father still lead the village and grew in the back a vegetable garden with his wife. He kept soil and chlorophyll stained hands wrapped firmly behind his back in the sleeves of a robe of thinly strung cotton, enough to keep him modest, but without becoming overcome with the heat and humidity of high-summer.
His hat, nearly as wide as the beams were long at the tops of homes kept from his eyes the harsh sun. The sun's light had long drawn his eyes into narrow slits from squinting for so long into its bright glow and the hazy reflections off the Great River nearby. He awoke in the mornings on a room that faced the north, to the river. When he would rise from his wife's side from the wicker and thatch cot he called a bed the morning glow would shine with a fury from the misty river with a fury greater than that of any high-noon.
And while Nyutien walked with a back bent over, it was not a bend that suggested he had won it with long painful toil, leaning over rich red and brown soil with a hoe in his hands. It was the arced bend one got leaning over a desk, writing daily accounts and signing them off in wood-planked scrolls. It was a legislative osteoporosis that put the bend in his spine.
He stepped to the side of the road, letting a boy leading a cow laden down with chords of fire-wood past. Nyutien tipped his hat to the skin-tanned youth and he answered with a polite bow before moving on his way with only a quiet and stifled “hello” passing from his lips. As he passed, he looked back home and watched with anticipation and wonder as the workmen went about their trade. He stroked his fingers through the wild and thinning beard that radiated from his sagging cracked face in every direction, like the rays of that afternoon sun that hung over head.
Behind the waiting couple, holding each other in their arms and chattering excitedly as they watched their house go up the rest of the village stood behind him. Not totally as a single concentrated entity, but an ocean of fields of grain and managed groves of trees surrounding clustered islands of familial homes. It was practice as much as tradition that the marriage of two young adults, where the son was eldest of his family took his bride to an unseeded corner or edge of the village and set down a new home. From there they'd begin a new family.
The marriages of second, third, and fourth borns added to their parents home, slowly building up into clustered complexes of living space where when the parents died the second born would take over with their brothers and their wives, or even set the foundation for a new familial cluster.
The very core of the village of Sü was made in this way. A wild circular concentration of homes built and added to over the years. Inherited and re-purposed. Burned down and rebuilt again. Put on the auction for bartered goods; it was this that Nyutien oversaw when it came to regular civic duties. He and his brother, and their aids recording the transactions as they happened and signing them off in a strict observance of order.
Duty and role was the order of the day. And of the week, and of the month. When their ancestors came here that was all they had left of the old world. And it was what they would seed in the new world. It was what spread as homes were put up and moats of farm fields planted around. It was what hid behind palisades of wood and stone that guarded many and the oldest of these farmsteads. It was what was guarded through the point of spears and the tips of arrows when it came to dealing with the savage hunters of the realm who did not look up to them as something higher, something better.
And it was daunting work to see it done, but it was homes being put up on the ground such as this that made it all the reward. Something to look forward to seeing when the doubt were in place and there was fear. But they had made it a century so far, they would make it another century again. Nyutien's son would continue the pattern as well, as would his, and on in the cycle of life and death. This newly married couple, they were a sign of that much.
The newly minted husband looked down and saw him, and for a moment his expression froze in mid-conversation with his wife. Then he smiled, and bowed low in respect to the old man. Nyutien bowed lower, and walked away.
Walking down the gently meandering hillside the hovel was being build on, Nyutien came to inspect how the action was going. Though he did not personally count the newly wedded couple as anyone particularly close to him, activity was all the same an attractive fair to observe played out in the village and the appearance of their village chief would be a high-honor. The two now coupled were of modest station, and attention to their prominence was patronage as much as awarding them a material stipend to support and reward them for their work.
On the far-side of the project, the newly married couple stood watching in giddy anticipation as the house went up. They had been married just several days before and already the rising home was getting beyond the simple framing stage and there was a very home-like quality to it. A thatched roof rose high over the frames with a bowed top beam that extended far out of either side, a solid long palm tree cut and formed when the marriage preparations were still virgin and under way.
It is how this small community had grown, spreading itself out with each and ever coupling of adults. To the fledgling beaurecrats, it was a sign of growth beyond the central seed that had rooted long ago and Nyutien smiled wide in the shade of his wide-brimmed, fur hat.
Nyutien was becoming an older man himself. His frame was large and fit, but these muscles were waning in recent years and he had a stockier look. Like many in the village he had farmed as a youth, though not as dedicated as many others. He built his house from stone when his father still lead the village and grew in the back a vegetable garden with his wife. He kept soil and chlorophyll stained hands wrapped firmly behind his back in the sleeves of a robe of thinly strung cotton, enough to keep him modest, but without becoming overcome with the heat and humidity of high-summer.
His hat, nearly as wide as the beams were long at the tops of homes kept from his eyes the harsh sun. The sun's light had long drawn his eyes into narrow slits from squinting for so long into its bright glow and the hazy reflections off the Great River nearby. He awoke in the mornings on a room that faced the north, to the river. When he would rise from his wife's side from the wicker and thatch cot he called a bed the morning glow would shine with a fury from the misty river with a fury greater than that of any high-noon.
And while Nyutien walked with a back bent over, it was not a bend that suggested he had won it with long painful toil, leaning over rich red and brown soil with a hoe in his hands. It was the arced bend one got leaning over a desk, writing daily accounts and signing them off in wood-planked scrolls. It was a legislative osteoporosis that put the bend in his spine.
He stepped to the side of the road, letting a boy leading a cow laden down with chords of fire-wood past. Nyutien tipped his hat to the skin-tanned youth and he answered with a polite bow before moving on his way with only a quiet and stifled “hello” passing from his lips. As he passed, he looked back home and watched with anticipation and wonder as the workmen went about their trade. He stroked his fingers through the wild and thinning beard that radiated from his sagging cracked face in every direction, like the rays of that afternoon sun that hung over head.
Behind the waiting couple, holding each other in their arms and chattering excitedly as they watched their house go up the rest of the village stood behind him. Not totally as a single concentrated entity, but an ocean of fields of grain and managed groves of trees surrounding clustered islands of familial homes. It was practice as much as tradition that the marriage of two young adults, where the son was eldest of his family took his bride to an unseeded corner or edge of the village and set down a new home. From there they'd begin a new family.
The marriages of second, third, and fourth borns added to their parents home, slowly building up into clustered complexes of living space where when the parents died the second born would take over with their brothers and their wives, or even set the foundation for a new familial cluster.
The very core of the village of Sü was made in this way. A wild circular concentration of homes built and added to over the years. Inherited and re-purposed. Burned down and rebuilt again. Put on the auction for bartered goods; it was this that Nyutien oversaw when it came to regular civic duties. He and his brother, and their aids recording the transactions as they happened and signing them off in a strict observance of order.
Duty and role was the order of the day. And of the week, and of the month. When their ancestors came here that was all they had left of the old world. And it was what they would seed in the new world. It was what spread as homes were put up and moats of farm fields planted around. It was what hid behind palisades of wood and stone that guarded many and the oldest of these farmsteads. It was what was guarded through the point of spears and the tips of arrows when it came to dealing with the savage hunters of the realm who did not look up to them as something higher, something better.
And it was daunting work to see it done, but it was homes being put up on the ground such as this that made it all the reward. Something to look forward to seeing when the doubt were in place and there was fear. But they had made it a century so far, they would make it another century again. Nyutien's son would continue the pattern as well, as would his, and on in the cycle of life and death. This newly married couple, they were a sign of that much.
The newly minted husband looked down and saw him, and for a moment his expression froze in mid-conversation with his wife. Then he smiled, and bowed low in respect to the old man. Nyutien bowed lower, and walked away.