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Uncle Sero meets the Drearies
It all began so well…
“My, what a beautiful morning!”
- Bluebell cried and was out of bed in an instant. It was a fine
morning indeed. The sun was already shining, the clear sky was
unusually blue, and the birds were chirping at the top of their
voices, while in the distance the rapid Light River sang and
rustled.
“I’d better hurry and get going
if I want to pass Daisy, or she’ll get to school first as usual.”
Bluebell shook her head to put
her disheveled hair in order, doused her face from the watering can,
grabbed an apple, the first one that came to her hand, slapped on
her old blue hat that looked much like a bluebell, and, slinging her
book bag over her shoulder, darted out onto the street. As she ran
past a puddle, she stopped to wink at her reflection, and then ran
on. At the corner of the street she nearly knocked old Uncle Sero
off his feet, but as soon as she found her nose nestled against his
white beard she bounced right back and called out cheerfully:
“Oh! Good morning, Grandpa
Sero! Please don’t be angry with me, I’m in a big hurry.”
“Well, run along then, and may
the Fairies keep you!”
Bluebell was out of sight in no
time, but Sero kept standing there looking far into the distance,
where the Black Mountains could be seen looming on the horizon.
Something he couldn’t identify was bothering him, and now he decided
to visit She-Who-Tells-Fortune and ask her to look into her magical
Red Poppy, into the very heart of it, to learn what
waits the Flower Country
in the near future.

She-Who-Tells-Fortune lived at the
very end of the street, in a small house under an old fly-agarics
mushroom. Its red roof with white spots on it looked rather lopsided
– but what made up for it was that nary a fly could be seen in or
around her house, and even birds avoided flying close by and did not
disturb her with their noise.
The Red Poppy grew in the
courtyard of She-Who-Tells-Fortune’s house. No one except her could
peer into the heart of it. The Red Poppy would let her into its
secrets, and she was the only one to know them. Old Sero had lived
to remember many of those who had tried to peer into the Red Poppy,
but they all had died or gone mad and been driven away to live in
the Swampy Marshes among frogs and water spiders.
Old Sero was going slowly down
the wide paving stones and there running towards him were school
children He saw their motley little heads sweeping past, as they
greeted him in their clear voices and his heart filled with joy. He
was quite close to the house of She-Who-Tells-Fortune when he heard
Hoguar, the House Guardian, barking. The dog would never let himself
bark for any trivial reason.
“Something has happened,” Sero
thought and hurried on. In only a minute or two the house of
She-Who-Tells-Fortune came into sight, its gate open, and shaggy
Hougar was there, standing at the entry and barking. Sero went over
to him and gently patted the back of the dog’s fluffy neck.
“Come on, boy, what is it?
What’s disturbing you?”
Hougar wagged his tail in a
friendly manner and went running back into the courtyard. Sero
followed him.
There in the courtyard, right
at the foot of the Red Poppy, sat three Dwellers of Dreary Town.
Their sad faces spoke for themselves. Dreary Town was renowned for
the fact that its citizens never smiled or laughed or looked glad at
all. When the sky above the town was clear and blue, they would say
that rain and muck would follow it anyway, sooner or later. When the
sun was bright, they would keep saying that heavy clouds would come
to obscure it. In spring, when cherry-trees began to blossom in
their town, the citizens would become even sadder, for they were
sure that soon a harsh wind would spring up and all the blossoms
would be swept away, or birds would come and peck the cherries, or
green caterpillars would appear and eat all the leaves, and so on
and on. That’s the way they were, those Dreary Town Dwellers.
As Sero entered the courtyard,
the Drearies sprang to their feet and greeted him respectfully. Sero
raised his hand to salute them in his turn and then asked what had
brought them to this place.
“We’ve come to see
She-Who-Tells-Fortune, but she’s not home yet, so we are waiting for
her here.”
“I have also come to talk to
her – let us wait together, if you do not mind. As for now, would
you tell me what happened and why you are in need of seeing
She-Who-Tells-Fortune?”
“Uncle Sero, you are surely
aware of the festival coming next month, Blooming Magic Flower’s
Day, the main celebration in the Flower Country? But the fact is
that there is very little water in the Blue Lake now. The
Light River is growing shallow before our very eyes, and no one in
the Meadow Kingdom knows the reason. It’s become hard to search for
springs of the Living Water. We used to find them by following the
Drinking Deer that lives in the Deep Blue Forest, but it has been
long since he came to our call. We’ve come to She-Who-Tells-Fortune
in need of help. Perhaps the Red Poppy will tell her why the Light
River is getting shallow and what we should do to save the Living
Water and have the Blue Lake fill up again.”
“Well, it is right for you to
have come here, and I will wait for She-Who-Tells-Fortune too, here
with you, if I may.”
The Old Sero sat on the bench
kindly pushed towards him by one of the Drearies, and closed his
eyes. He began to dream of the past, the Green World where he had
been born and the Flower Country he lived in. He remembered the
Colored Worlds, some of which were only known to him from the
legends and tales told by his father, Ariel, a Dweller of the
Azure
World, yet there were some he had gone through himself. He could
remember clearly and distinctly much of what he had experienced, but
many things had begun fading from his memory like a dream, leaving
only a resounding echo of longing in his soul.
He still remembered the elder
days when the Green World stood as one undivided land, inhabited by
its dwellers, the happy Zelmirs. But, as time went by, the Green
World began to change until it fell into several Kingdoms. Many
feuds and wars were then waged between them. Long after, there in
the Green World was formed the Forest Kingdom, from which the Meadow
Kingdom was later separated, at the very edge of the Green World. So
far, it was quiet and peaceful in the Green World. The Flower
Country where he lived was a part of the Meadow Kingdom, and, seen
on a map, appeared not very great, but it was inhabited by happy
creatures who called themselves the Flowers.
Kolukor, King of the Meadow
Kingdom, often invited Sero to visit him, and Sero could always give
him practical advice, for he was old `indeed and had seen much.
Old Sero half opened his eyes,
but saw the Drearies still sitting beside him, which meant that
She-Who-Tells-Fortune had not yet come. So he reached back into his
memory.
He loved the Flower Country and
was happy to live in it, but many nights, when no sleep would come
to him, he would think of the
Azure
World. His father had often told him about it, and his father’s
tales were now evoking vague recollections in Sero’s mind. According
to those tales, the way to the Azure World was long and difficult.
Impassable deserts and swamps, secret woods and the Cold Ocean, the
lands of Gresobs along the Road and the dominions of the tenacious
and wily Six-Armed One lay on that way – but, as his father used to
say, all those obstacles could be overcome by someone who was
steadfast in his purpose.
“Remember, my son,” his father
had often told him, “ that the blood that runs in your veins is that
of the Azure
World Essences.”
Sero also remembered his friend
Deglas who used to tell him that there was a chance to get from the
Azure World into the White World, and that somewhere in the Colored
Worlds was the Scintillating Stone that could open the Gates to the
White World, although no one had found it yet. Deglas had never
mentioned where that Scintillating Stone was supposed to be hidden,
but those who heard his tales would keep hope in their hearts that
one day it could be found, and then the Gates to the White World
would be open for everyone.
Never did Sero assume that in
the near future things in the Flower Country would turn out in such
a way that some Flowers would have to go through all the Worlds to
find the Scintillating Stone.
Old Sero stirred and
opened his eyes. The sun had been shining red-gold on the treetops,
and he reckoned that he would not have to wait much longer.
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