Little Bear
46th of Glade, 124th Year of the Age of Steel
"As soon as I was seven, I was a sacred basket carrier," the noblewoman reminisced as the costumed girls—and some few boys—danced a slow, shuffling thing to the music of double-flutes. "Then at ten, I was a corn miller for the foundress, and shedding my saffron robe..." She gestured elegantly toward the ursine milieu.
"The festival is not difficult to explain:" interjected a pedantic voice, "in exchange for the very advance of culture implied by the killing of wild animals, an advance for which adults were responsible, the children are obliged before marriage—indeed before puberty—to undergo a period of ritual wildness.
"Lunatics before the moons," he went on. "Remembering the gifts of Aedrin, the seasonal shifts of nature, the cycles of Nerix's influence, and growing out of their stylized bear skins, becoming civilized elves."
"Pardon," said the king, his voice soft. The local chatter died down as all strained to hear what he might say. He touched the pedant's arm, nodding to the lady. "Please do continue without me." Silence trailed him like a cloak, then began to spark anew when they saw whither he was headed.
"Take the mooncakes, for example—"
"Aye, my body is ready for the mooncakes!"
A serene smile was, by some accounts, his most charming of accouterments. His robes were simple, but layer upon layer of diaphanous spidersilk that was well suited to the watery light of the palest of the moons, most visible on that evening. Tiny crystal beads and seed pearls clustered here and there like dew gathering. Smiles greeted him, and obeisance was made as he swam through the fine folks gathered on that side of the peristyle.
Already had the procession of children carried palm fronds from the temple in the deme Vrauron, and the sacrifices had been made. Now they watched the dance for the Moon, for Nature, remembering the move from wildness to civilization, and any number of hidden wisdoms their forebears had encoded into religious practices. There was no true orthodoxy upon the subject. The pedant's interpretation was as valid as the king's, though he didn't deign to share his thoughts, opining when one ought to be experiencing.
As he passed a common woman struggling with a fussing babe in arms, he smiled benevolently, laid his hand upon the child's head as in a benediction. Whether by oneiromancy or the practiced hand of a father, his touch and his simple blessing appeased the infant who might one day wear the saffron chiton themself. The woman went from embarrassed to grateful quite quickly, dipping into a respectful bow as he continued on. The peristyle was crowded, but not a crush. Smaller rituals were being held elsewhere, and there would be mooncakes throughout the city. Those who came to witness the main event came for their own reasons, and were respectful of other suppliants' comfort.
"Do you remember what you dreamed that night you were a little bear, my love?" he asked when he stopped, shoulder to shoulder with his eldest progeny, who had been wrapped in a silence and a buffer of space much as her father had as he walked among his people.