《Unliving》Chapter 402 - Village Hospitality
Advertisement
“Call it weird, but more often than not, the harsher a place is to live in, the more hospitable its natives tend to be. Probably those people just knew all too well how hard life is, and understood that a little kindness can at times go a long way.” - Saying by Theodore Ancona, philosopher-scholar from Elmaiya, circa 310 FP.
In the end, the three of them arrived at the village they planned to spend the night in just an hour or so before sunset.
It was a quaint little village, with only thirty or so longhouses, though given how in smaller towns and villages the locals often shared such houses, at times with multiple families living in one, that could mean anywhere up to a hundred households easy. Like most inland villages in the Jarldoms, the locals relied heavily on animal husbandry for their living, and had large sheds built for their animals, often right next to their homes.
The habit of sharing houses between multiple families also made more sense when one placed the animals into consideration. It was easier for multiple families to pool resources and build one large shed to house all their livestock together, rather than have them spread over several places. The gathered livestock also made survival easier in wintertime for those animals, with the larger amount of warm bodies to huddle with.
From what Aideen could see, the locals mostly kept local breeds of bovine and ovine animals, ones that had adapted to the extreme cold over many generations and grew thick coats of wool on their bodies. The cold weather of the Jarldoms meant that the great lizards that were commonly used as ranch animals or beasts of burden in the west would not survive there, necessitating the locals to use their own stock instead.
Advertisement
For the most part, the locals went with the natural cycle of seasons, where their livestock mostly gave birth in spring and were sheared in summer for their wool. By the time late autumn came, their wool would have regrown to an adequate length, and the best of the livestock – typically a prized male or two along with as many of the healthiest females that the family could afford to feed through the winter – were set aside to be kept, while the rest were butchered for their meat.
That meat would then be eaten in festivals or sold to the cities to fund their living for the next year, with a portion of it preserved by the wealthier families who could afford it. For that purpose, some houses had small sheds built near the main building, where the meat would be allowed to hang so that the natural temperature and humidity would preserve it for the long term.
Other than preserved meats, villagers from small villages like these relied on grain purchased from cities in exchange for their meat, as well as certain breeds of vegetables suitable for growing in the cold, icy soil of the region. Even as the three of them walked through the village, they saw some villagers harvesting small potatoes – each barely longer than a thumb – that grew in bunches like grapes as well as narrow, long purple carrots out from the soil. They also saw a village woman dig into the piled up snow in her garden to harvest a head of plump cabbage that grew underneath the blanket of snow.
The three of them headed to a house that seemed well-to-do – it would just be rude to bother those who were already in hard times, after all – and asked if they could stay the night. The welcome they received was a warm and enthusiastic one from the rather portly middle-aged matron of the house, who they soon learned was a mother of twelve, with children ranging from young toddlers to strapping young men and women in their early twenties.
Advertisement
She had apparently outlasted all three of her husbands – bearing four children for each – and now lived with her eldest children supporting the family instead, with her fourth husband being a rather young lad who was probably not too much older from her oldest son. Then again, with the local culture, it was common for widows to remarry, and fertility was seen as a very desired quality.
Where the man of the house was terse but polite, the warm and friendly matron was clearly the one in charge – not an unusual case when the men were the ones who married into the household as was the case here – of the place. She was all too happy to host the travelers and even gave them warm, enveloping hugs that made all three of them think of their mothers, despite how the matron was obviously younger than any of them.
As for the longhouse the family of fourteen lived in, it was a simple place, with a workbench on one end of the house – the husband as well as some of the older children made crafts out of bone and ivory that they sold to help support the family – and a cooking area on the other end. The central area of the house was where most everything else was done, serving as the living, dining, and sleeping area all at the same time.
Like most places in the region, the outhouse was built separate from the house, closer to the small field that the family grew vegetables on, so that the waste could be used to fertilize the soil. Similarly, there were no bathrooms in the house, as the villagers were used to bathing in the nearby river that ran past their village instead.
They bathed in the icy water even deep into winter, a habit that the locals believed would make their bodies stronger and more resistant to illness.
It was a way of living that Aideen and Calais was quite familiar with, both being natives of the southern continent and not on their first jaunt to the Jarldoms. Celia saw everything with curious eyes, however, never having seen a lifestyle quite like it back in the northern continent. After all, it simply never got anywhere as cold, there, much less for most of the year.
Advertisement
- In Serial18 Chapters
Messummer (Capstone Writing Assignment)
|3X Wattpad FEATURED| Messummer's life changes when a futuristic boy stumbles into her ancient world. She must now help him front to his own time before his love for dinosaurs traps him forever. *** Ever since her father's death, Messummer has wanted nothing more than to prove she can survive in her fragile world. She decides to enter her valley's Great Flying Race as a rite of passage. It's a race only the bravest flyers attend. While Messummer is preparing for it one day, she meets a creature she has never seen before. His name is Daniel Matton. He stumbles into her world after a malfunction with something called a "time machine". Fascinated by this new species, Messummer kidnaps him (not that Dan has much of a choice) and takes him on a journey like none other. Of course, that's only after Dan concludes she's not going to eat him. Just when it seems like the two friends' connection is growing, disaster strikes. What starts off as a bonding experience is now a fight for survival. Will Messummer and Dan escape the horrendous Tyrannosaurus Rex, or will the 11.0-magnitude earthquake swallow them before he can even try to kill them? Will Messummer find the courage to tell Dan who she truly is? Will Dan ever return front to his own time? Above all, is their friendship going to survive the calamity? *** *Cover by @AnecdoteofAstrina on Wattpad!* Word Count: 7,000 🥉 3rd place in the April Awards' Short Story Category.⭐ Featured on @Speculative Fiction || Breaking the Space-Time Continuum Reading List.⭐ Added to @Speculative Fiction || Featured Speculative Fiction Stories Reading List.⭐ Featured by @Ooorah in their Tevun-Krus #100 || Dino Punk section.
8 163 - In Serial10 Chapters
Ari
Ever wondered what it’s like to be the sidekick? To not be the one who wakes up in another world? Just going about your day to day life. Meet Ari, the most average of the average. She has no powers, she doesn’t sit next to the window, and worst of all… her parents are still alive. With no grudges to bare, she dives headfirst into the prestigious Volkov academy as a lottery winner. Alas, she has no powers, or does she?(She doesn’t) How will Ari overcome her enemies? Ways that defies all logic and reason because f u.
8 172 - In Serial6 Chapters
The Rift of Syn Doa
Every twenty-six years a rift opens, connecting the Ursei and Shirrah realms. Inside that rift, a magical ore can be found and harvested. This magical ore is capable of granting magic to any species or extraordinary abilities to crafted goods. Both realms fight fiercely over the rare substance, but war is not the only danger. The Doa Shrykes, feral monsters with a voracious taste for blood, await them inside the rift as well. This is a WIP, and subject to change, reorder, and future edits. Upon completion, there is intent to publish. Cover art will change as well. Any suggestions/recommendations, comments, rearrangements, etc. are much appreciated, since I'm trying to beat this into shape and have it be the best it can be. :D
8 75 - In Serial6 Chapters
The Withering of Gold Vol. 3
After killing the only father figure he had, along with losing his enitre family of the orphanage, Effryn must carry the burden for not only himself, but for his only survivng brother--Gale.
8 154 - In Serial88 Chapters
The Three Kingdoms
The main character of the tiger body, the king of the air, to receive a large number of famous generals, famous soldiers, and then find territory, development, and finally unified the world, such a plot is not tired of seeing? Well, change some fresh. This is a novel full of blood, full of killings, for men to see a different Three Kingdoms novel!
8 146 - In Serial8 Chapters
Poems / Tula
This poem was made since I'm in Senior High School
8 70

