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The Girl with No Name
Forward by Master-Historian Maritza Ortskt-Dukovna
Every
country has its legends; the stories of people whose lives have
transcended historical reality into that strange space between truth and
fantasy. The Grand Duchy of Upper Danubia (or the Danubian Republic, as
we prefer to call ourselves today) is certainly no exception to that
common trend throughout humanity. In our case we have the stories of the
Ancients, the Byzantine Priests who converted us, the exploits of King
Vladik the Defender and his son-in-law, and songs about the Nymphs who
defended the Duchy when almost all of its men had been killed.
However, Danubia�s favorite story has always been the saga of the
Girl-with-No-Name. She shows up in historical records starting around
1750, and seems to have completely disappeared around ten years later.
According to witnesses who claimed to have seen her, she was the
prettiest, smartest, and nicest young woman imaginable. However, she was
condemned to always be on the run, tormented by the Destroyer who
followed closely behind her. In earlier versions of the story, the
Destroyer, who at the time still was identified with the Christian
Beelzebub, had a semi-human form and rode on her shoulder. Later, the
story goes that she was running from the Destroyer. Because the
Destroyer could never quite catch her, the Destroyer�s vengeance was
inflicted on anyone the Girl-with-No-Name tried to love.
The Girl-with-No-Name�s adventures began at her home in Rika Heckt-nemat.
The legend claims that she was so beautiful that the town�s other women
couldn�t bear to look at her, and demanded that the council�s elders
order her executed. The Girl-with-No-Name made a pact with the Destroyer
to escape, and as soon as she was gone, the Destroyer condemned everyone
in the town to die from the plague. The girl-with-no-name ran from
province to province, trying to find love, protection, and peace. Many
men loved her, and all of them died tragically. When the
Girl-with-No-Name fled to Dan�bikt Moskt and the Grand Duke fell in love
with her, to punish the Duke, the Destroyer burnt the entire capitol.
In the end, no one knew what became of the Girl-with-No-Name. For a
decade she wreaked havoc on the people who crossed her path and then
vanished without a trace. She became the favorite subject of campfire
songs and a story to scare children, especially boys and teenagers. I
think every mother in Danubia is guilty of telling her sons to avoid
strange women who seem too beautiful to be true, especially ones in the
woods or on the roads, because somewhere the Girl-with-No-Name continues
her tormented voyage.
In 1855, on the 100th anniversary of the Great Fire that destroyed the
nation�s capital, the famous Danubian poet and song-writer Dang�ckt T�k
compiled the stories of the Girl-with-No-Name into a song, which,
although over-simplified, continues to be the best-known version of the
legend.
The girl condemned to wander�
The anguish in her soul�
Her Path in Life is destruction�
The darkness rides her shoulder�
In her eyes there�s nothing but pain�
She will reach out to you�
Yes, you�re the one who�ll save her�
But take her hand�
�and her kiss will seal your fate�
The Destroyer holds out his bait�
�and for you, oblivion awaits�
One important job of the historian is to attempt to reconstruct the
events that inspired a legend. Many historians will reject a legend on
impulse, only to later discover archeological or documentary evidence
that does indeed offer proof that events described in the story actually
did happen. I take a different approach, because I believe that most
legends are embellished truth, not pure fantasy. Those stories exist for
a reason: they were based on something that at one time was factual.
Therefore, we must start our investigation by taking these ancient
stories at face value and only dismiss details as we find direct
evidence that discredits them. Even when events turn out to not have
taken place as described by the chroniclers, we can use other research
to reconstruct what actually did happen and often end up with a
narrative that is considerably more interesting than the one given in a
simplified campfire song.
The Girl-with-No-Name always fascinated me. As is true for many defiant
Danubian children, I remember several times going out into the forest
and looking for her, and receiving the switch for my efforts. As an
adult, I pursued plenty of �serious� historical research endeavors, but
in the back of my mind I always wanted to find the truth about the
Girl-with-No-Name. Whenever I looked at church records and personal
diaries for other projects, I always hoped to find some reference to
her.
My search narrowed when I read the diaries of a city councilman written
during the years immediately before plague struck down Rika
Heckt-nemat�s population. One paragraph that fascinated me focused on
the punishment of a peasant girl called Danka Siluckt in the early
summer of 1750. He described her as unusually pretty for a peasant,
mentioned that she worked for him, and added that she was sentenced to
the pillory for stealing apples. She was then either expelled from the
town and fled, or thrown into the Rika Chorna by the city guards to
drown. The councilman complained that the mystery of the girl�s
disappearance kept him up at night and troubled his conscience.
An account from the town priest for the same time period corroborated
the councilman�s diary entry. The clergyman added that Danka Siluckt was
viciously mistreated by the townsfolk, especially the women, while she
was restrained on the pillory and that it was a shame to see such a
pretty girl treated in such a harsh manner. Surly the Lord-Creator would
punish the city for such an immoral act. Interestingly, the priest also
seemed unsure whether Danka Siluckt drowned in the Rika Chorna river or
somehow managed to escape the city.
So, I pursued that lead, suspecting that the Girl-with-No-Name had
started out as the peasant Danka Siluckt. I followed clues around our
country, establishing a time-line of her journeys and the events of her
life. The search was not easy, because Danka was forced to assume
different identities during her travels, but I am confident I accounted
for the ten years of her wandering.
My research took me to the Seminary in Star�vktaki M�skt, the University
in Seb�rnekt Ris, the Vice-Duke's compound in eastern Danubia, and the
site of the True Believers' Convent in Novo S�kukt T�k, just to name a
few places I visited. I took it for granted Danka was in Dan�bikt M�skt
during the Great Fire of 1755, and found numerous references to a
concubine called "Sister Silv�tya" in the diaries of the Grand Duke�s
advisors, castle matrons, and song-writers. The most important clues I
found for that period of her life were in the memoirs of Mayor
Alex�ndrekt Bul�shckt, the founder of the southern town of
Mal�nkta-Gordn�ckta, in which he described his escape from the Great
Fire with his family and a woman who had been one of the Grand Duke�s
mistresses.
I am also convinced I know where Danka Siluckt ended up, after having
read the diaries of the Orsktackt family, which they so graciously
shared with me. During his later years, the estate-owner kept a journal
of his city�s progress and politics, while his second wife, Vesna
Rog�skt-Orsktacktna, wrote extensively about the farm and the growing
Orsktackt family. She also wrote some lines about what Rika Heckt-nemat
was like before the plague, and other comments about various places she
had seen while traveling around the Duchy. Those entries convinced me,
more than anything else I researched, that Danka Siluckt, "Sister
Silv�tya", Vesna Rog�skt-Orsktacktna, and several unnamed women who
briefly appeared in other towns, were all the same person, who ended up
being known as the "Girl-with-No-Name".
So, years ago I started looking for the Girl-with-No-Name, and I found
her. Danka Siluckt�s story inspired me more than I can put into words.
She was not a tragic figure at all, but instead an incredible young
woman who overcame tremendous odds in a Duchy that was much harsher than
the comfortable country we live in today.
As I traced her footsteps, I felt I got to know Danka. She�s part of me,
as she is part of everyone who is a citizen of Danubia. And�as best as I
could reconstruct it, this is her story...
Chapter 1
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