The lights
curtain across the night sky, scarlet and emerald, gold too. We collect
them all, but it is the amaranth and amethyst hues that are worth the
most, for they are the rarest. Hundreds of light traps stud the snow
covered slopes, carefully guarded by well wrapped, anxious owners and
their silent beasts. There are certainly more comfortable ways of making
gelt, but none so beautiful. No one ever loses that feeling of awe.
Each time it is as if you are seeing
the magic for the very first time.
A
peculiar noise accompanies the lights; a cracking, whistling, urgent
whisper that never fails to make my skin tingle with a feeling of icy
despair. I strain to hear what they say, but catch no more than an
indistinct murmur. Some claim they can understand the voices, that they
prophesy our downfall. That may well be, for in truth no one can do this
work for long. It invades your dreams, weakens the mind and lures you
to the edge. Once insanity crooks its finger, it is a rare man who is
strong enough to refuse to follow.
The
trick is to get out before things go too far. Recognising when that
point has arrived is an art in itself. The many ragged, skin-and-bone
vagabonds, ranting at the heavens in the nearby spice mining towns are
testament to that. They rage at angels only they can see, and cower from
invisible marauding creatures sent to torment and terrify. The lights
will have their revenge on us in the end. It has been said that those
who succeed in moving on in good time are cursed anyhow. Their fate
follows them, sickness can strike at any moment, accidents lie in wait
around every corner, and suicide comes as a welcome release for those
whom the voices never leave.
This
is our way of life. Every great family has their own allotted section
to set their traps in and when their familial council nominates them,
those chosen must fulfill their destiny. It would be unthinkable to
refuse. Our
existence has been transformed by hues and shades, pigments, stains and
tints. Our world is now suffused with colour and we could never return
to our old monochrome lives.
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