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In this tale from Fires of the Old World, the court of Mithila gathers around a bow too heavy for pride, display, or force. Princes come adorned with certainty and leave with shame hidden in their mouths. Above them, Sita waits behind the carved stone of the women’s gallery, knowing that the bow is not merely a test of strength, but a thing long asleep, listening for the rightful hand.

In the city of Mithila, when the evening lamps were being trimmed and the scent of sesame oil moved softly through the halls, old nurses would draw the children near and speak of the day the great bow was brought into the court. Outside, peacocks called from the dark gardens. Inside, the stone floors still held the cool of morning. Each listening face was lit on one side and given to shadow on the other.

For that bow had slept longer than any king.

It lay in the house of Janaka like a storm set down and bound. Eight-wheeled carts had groaned beneath it. Iron chains had bitten the lid of its case. Men who could lift ox-yokes with one hand had strained only to shift it an inch. When at last the chest was opened, the air itself seemed to draw back. The wood was dark as rain-soaked earth. Its curve kept the hush of something once held in the hands of a god, and not yet forgotten by them.

Janaka had spoken his vow before princes, priests, and wandering kings. His daughter would be given only to the man who could raise that bow and set string to horn.

Many came.

They came jewelled, perfumed, acclaimed. They came with lion belts and polished arms. They came smiling the smiles of men too long answered by the world.

The bow did not move for them.

One prince bent over it until a vein stood in his brow like blue thread under skin. Another planted his feet so hard his heel-rings cracked against the stone. A third lifted one end a finger’s breadth, then let it fall and turned away wearing the quick smile by which shame first enters the mouth. Their bracelets clashed. Their breath roughened. The court murmured. Above them, behind the carved stone of the women’s gallery, Sita stood with her hand against the lattice, feeling its cool pattern press the palm.

She had seen the bow before.

As a child she had passed the chamber where it was kept and felt the small hairs rise along her arms. From weight. The thing gathered silence around itself, as a deep well gathers coolness. She knew her father’s vow. She knew too the speech of men who believed strength alone was enough to command the world. Yet whenever she looked upon the bow she did not think of conquest. She thought of waiting.

The days of contest filled the court and emptied it again. Boasts arrived bright as parrots and fell as husks. Janaka’s mouth grew lined. Priests bent together over omens. Some began to murmur that the king had vowed too much, or that no mortal was meant to claim the daughter born of furrow and blessing. The garlands in the hall crisped first at the edges. Dust settled on sandalwood chests. Even the musicians touched their strings more sparingly, as though the whole court had become a room in which something unsaid was listening.

Then the sage came.

 

Continue reading: Fires of the Old World VIII — The Bow That Waited at The Lantern Chronicles on Substack.

 


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