username + id: buddabup + 470772
maru name: Hyacinth
prompt: I offer a sacred festival in her honor.
On the eve of the Festival of Hyacinth, just after the last golden rays of the sun have dipped below the horizon, Marumis far and wide extinguish their hearthfires and begin a temporary oath of silence. They do this to symbolize the passing of their loved ones beyond the veil, leaving their homes darker, colder, and quieter.
Feast of Remembrance
The festival-goers attend a massive banquet with enough food to feed the whole town. Somber and silent, Marumis eat and reflect on the lives of those theyโve lost throughout the year. There are empty chairs scattered around the tables, for the dead to sit and enjoy this moment with the living. They feast on bone bread with honey, wine of the harvest for the old and special milk tea for the young. Other blue Marumi delicacies like butterfly soup, stuffed indigo milk cap mushrooms, grilled blue skink, sweet noodles dyed with blueberries (lovingly dubbed โsweet bloodlesโ by the youngins), and elderberry cobbler are enjoyed with silent reverence.
The Dance of Chains
After dinner, Marumis dance shackled together with chains and bells in the intricate Dance of Chains, where somehow the chains never tangle. This represents that even death cannot hold back the spirit of a Marumi. While they remain shackled in its embrace, the joys of their life will still echo through this world. This marks the end of the silence as Marumis sing and sway in celebration.
โจContests!
Hyacinth, named for the story in Ancient Greek myth, is incredibly fond of her namesakeโs flower. The aromatic blooms are often placed on Marumi graves. Every year, there is a Hyacinth Contest to see who can grow the largest and most fragrant blooms.
When a Marumi passes, itโs customary for the family to grow out their fur and hair. During the Festival of Hyacinth, Marumis will braid each otherโs hair in intricate ways and adorn themselves with flowers, hair cuffs, and charms. This symbolizes that sorrow brings growth and interconnectedness. Theyโll then cut these off and throw them on the pyre at the end of the festival.
Hyacinth loves a long, beautiful tale, even if itโs a tall one! Marumi elders will take turns telling odysseys about their passed loved ones. Doesnโt matter if itโs faithful to the truth or not, as ghost stories are rarely factual anyways. The Marumi with the best tale will be rewarded with Hyacinthโs blessing. She grants them a vision in their sleep that night of those gone before, allowing them to exchange words with the loved ones they miss. Every year, they tell the tale of Hyacinthโs Beginningโฆ
Hyacinth was once a young mortal Marumi with a beautiful pale blue pelt unmarked like the fresh fallen snow. She learned from her grandmother, who learned from her grandmother, the ways of a death doula. Hyacinth took this work incredibly seriously, viewing it as a sacred task to facilitate a peaceful, and even joyful, transition past the veil to rest among the stars. She meditated often throughout the days and watched the stars gleam and grow every night, naming them for the Marumis that had gone.
When it was her grandmotherโs time, Hyacinth was suddenly overtaken with grief and fear, unlike any death she had witnessed before. She ran. Past the outskirts of the village and into the forest, she ran until her breath could no longer keep up with her. There she stayed next to the river for an entire night, grieving and screaming at the stars. When she returned, her grandmother had finally passed, and Hyacinth had missed that most sacred moment, when her grandmother breathed her last and entered the veil. She cursed and wept and her pelt grew much darker as she retreated from the world.
She searched and searched for a time and place she could pass through the veil to see her grandmother once more. Hyacinth felt a burning desire to apologize for running from her grandmothers death, abandoning her in those last fragile moments. On the eve of winterโs beginning, just after the last rays of sun left the horizon, Hyacinth extinguished her hearthfire and placed the light in a lantern, using it to guide her through the darkness. She ran through the forest until she came to the familiar clearing, and washed her paws in the river. She trembled as she drew concentric circles with salt. Finally, she sat in the middle of the circles and began to chant until she threw down her lantern, lighting the salts ablaze.
She awoke in a marshy swamp, the mist and frog-song overwhelming her senses. She trekked through the Isle of the Lost. One by one, her ancestors approached and begged her to turn back. Hyacinth pressed on, ignoring them as they came. As they reached out to stop her, their souls became imprinted on her coat.
Hyacinth then climbed a staircase carved into the Mountain to the Stars. Every step felt like a hundred years, and she was exhausted by the time she reached the peak. As she reached the stars she spotted her grandmother, and began running, kicking up stardust that littered her pelt.
Her grandmother was bound in the chains of death, fixed in her place among the celestial sky. She glowed brightly but could not speak, as she was lost in a tranquil stupor. Hyacinth wrapped the chains around her body and tail and pulled as hard as she could. With a loud snap! the chains broke and her grandmother blinked in confusion.
Suddenly, they werenโt alone as the maru of Death appeared before them. Hyacinth begged for just a few minutes with her grandmother, so that this journey wouldnโt be for nothing. She had passed the point of no return, Death could not spare her that fate, but he was grateful for her service of shepherding souls into his embrace. Death took pity on Hyacinth and allowed her one last goodbye. Tearfully Hyacinth and her grandmother hugged and said their goodbyes. Her grandmother gently wiped away her tears and forgave Hyacinth for running. Then it was time to meet Death.
Hyacinth breathed deeply, and Death once again took pity. He transformed Hyacinth into a specter in his cohort, that she may live in his service forever. From that day on she became the Maru of the veil, remembrance, fire, and sorrow.
At the end of the festival, every Marumi gathers around a massive pyre. Copper chloride is scattered over the wood to create massive swirling blue flames that seem to reach the stars. Marumis will dip torches into the blue bonfire and carry the flames to light their hearths once again to symbolize the return of their dead, renewed in the heart of Hyacinth; their memories preserved by the living fire.