Date: Fri, 8 Apr 2016 14:45:19 +0100 From: tpickles Subject: Thai Pan - chapter 15 THAI PAN : A JUNGLE TALE This is the final chapter of Thai Pan. The complete book is now available to download to your e-book reader, smartphone, tablet and computer. This and other titles first published on Nifty are now available at https://payhip.com/tompickles Please do support Nifty with a financial donation - whatever you can afford - to keep publishing this wonderful archive of stories. We love writing like this and none of the authors are paid. http://donate.nifty.org/. ....................... The ending of Chapter 14 ...................... At last, one strong voice rang out across the clearing. "The Third and Final Ritual of Transferring and Transforming the Seed is complete." It was Muni's voice coming from directly behind my head. It was he who was holding me. "We honour Pan, a wise and courageous leader. He has grown into a man filled with wisdom and insight. We acknowledge him as a wise elder!" There was a great shout from the boys in the clearing, accompanied by cheers and stamping of feet, and lots of hugs and embraces. Several boys ran forward to greet the young adult elders who had been involved in the ritual. There was a sense of joyous excitement and exhilaration. I watched as suddenly Deep ran forward from beside the fire. As he approached me, he dropped to the ground. He crawled forward between my legs. In a quiet voice that probably only I and Muni could hear, he said, "I'm so proud of you, Pan!" Before the festivities got too raucous, Muni spoke, "Tonight we will celebrate. I don't doubt that Pan will need plenty of care and rest tonight, and that some of you will provide this for him. In the days to come, I will visit him in the village. I will talk with him and with many other boys. The significance of tonight will become clear to everyone. For now, though, I invite you all to enjoy this night!" CHAPTER 15 I recall very little about the rest of the evening. I know that we celebrated together – boys and elders – and that lots of people came up to congratulate me and tell me how effective I was as the leader of the village, or how good I was at listening to boys and helping them work through their difficulties. I tried to meet some of the other young male elders who had attended the ritual and whom I'd not met before. I wanted to catch up with Muni, to find out what had been happening back in my home village, but he just said that we would talk more in the days to come. My body felt completely different. It was filled with a strange energy from the Ritual that had spread throughout me. And, at the same time, I also felt drained and very tired. I reckoned that so much had flowed through me, my body needed time to recover. My mind couldn't settle. Even though I'd been blindfold throughout the Ritual, images of what I imagined had been happening kept intruding. And not just images from the Ritual; memories of all that had happened over recent months. My emotions were all over the place: excitement, sadness, tiredness, elation. Before too long, my friends realised that I was struggling to stay awake and engaged. Nong and Kong came up to me and offered to accompany me back to the village. I'd already had a brief rinse in the river after the Ritual, but now they made sure I had a good shower. They led me to my bedroom and helped me climb into bed. I fell into a deep sleep very quickly. I woke a couple of times during the night. At first, I thought I had been left alone in the bedroom to sleep undisturbed. Then in the dim light I saw a shape lying across the foot of the bed. It was Deep, fast asleep. He must have come into the room to check on me. The next time I awoke, Deep was still there but he had moved. He was curled up behind me on the bed, his arm across my chest. When I moved slightly, he opened his eyes. "I wanted to make sure you were OK," he said, "Do you want anything?" "Some water would be nice," I replied. He went off to fetch some clean water from the kitchen area and brought it back to me. Later in the morning he would bring me some breakfast to eat as well. oOo A day or so later, Muni came into the village. I don't know where he had been living, but I assumed it was with the other elders somewhere out there in the jungle. Apart from during the Ritual itself, none of the other boys had met him before. He spent quite some time chatting with different groups, being shown around the village, and offered food and drink. After a couple of hours, he came to find me. "This village has changed so much," he began. "How do you mean?" "The huts have been improved and are now more comfortable. The farming area is more extensive. There are proper paths to get around. When I first came here, it was all so much simpler; it didn't look like it had changed in generations." I asked him when he'd first come to the village. "I was a boy then – probably no older than you. The elders in my village had sent me. They could see what I might grow up to become. The way it happened is pretty much the same today. As I told you before, I'd been watching out for you all through your life, and when the time was right, I introduced you to the first ritual and sent you out to find the village. My first time here, I stayed a year." I asked him how often he'd been. "This is my fourth visit. Sometimes the village is empty for several years. Then a new group of boys find their way here. When I first became an elder, I came back here to learn more about myself. Then, ten years ago, I was part of the elder group that lived outside the village but kept a protective eye on the boys who were living here then. I don't know how long this village has been here. But through many generations it has been the place where boys and young men would come in order to grow, be initiated and find their way to becoming elders." We sat in comfortable silence for a time. Maybe Muni was reflecting on his previous visits. I considered arguing with him about the fact that when I'd set out from home, he'd told me he didn't know where my destination was. But then I realised that if he had told me, I would just have pestered him for more information, and the impact of discovering this special place for myself would have been lost. Besides, the Village of Lost Boys wasn't really my destination. It was just a place on my journey. Where I might go next was the destination towards which all these experiences were leading. Some of my thoughts must have been evident to Muni – or else he also possessed mind-reading skills. "We need to talk about what happens for you next, Pan." I looked at him, waiting patiently for him to continue. "As I said in the Third Ritual, you have excelled as the leader of the village. You have matured in wisdom and inner knowledge. Your work here in the village is done." My heart sank. Right now, I didn't want to leave. My friends were here. The village worked well. My life was comfortable. But Muni continued: "No-one can stay here for ever. This is a liminal place, a place where transitions occur. The village is the threshold from which you go out into the world to live your life and serve other people with wisdom, courage and insight. That is your true role. Despite your young age, you are a wise elder. Your role now is to serve others." "How do I do that?" I asked. "In the same way that you have learned here, Pan. You live alongside other people in villages and communities. You make yourself available to them. You listen to them and guide them where you can. You listen to your inner voice. You take all the shared knowledge and insight from the Seed. You love them. You are their respected elder." "But where do I go? How will people know me? Why would anyone listen to me?" I was beginning to panic now. "To answer your last question first. Men and women will listen to you for just the same reasons as the boys in this village listen to you. They respect you. And they recognise the authority, integrity and insight that you hold. Now for the practicalities. To begin with, you will go back to your own home village. People there will welcome you. You will become one of their elders. In time, you will travel more widely as people start to talk about your knowledge and skill. You will visit other communities, spending time with their people. Just as I have done for many years. In the early days, I will be available to mentor you, but my time is passing. Increasingly, you may come to take on my position. One of important roles you will have is to recognise future boys and young men who have the calling to become elders. You will do for them what I have been doing with you." "Will I leave this village for ever?" "I cannot know, but I doubt it. There will be more boys to follow you. There will be gatherings of elders. I think you will return here in the future. But by then, there will be very different boys living here." "And what happens to the boys who are living here now?" I suddenly felt very protective of all those whom I had cared for. "They will continue to live here until each feels ready to leave. More of the boys will become ready to complete the Third and Final Ritual. Then they too will become elders, ready to go out into the world to serve others. And many boys will find the healing, strength and courage to leave and make a success of their lives." A silence fell between us. I could feel the pain of leaving already. "There are two important tasks for you to consider before you go," Muni began again. "Firstly, the village will need a new leader – someone who can command the respect of all the other boys; someone who will lead them in his own way, without trying to copy your style. Secondly, many elders choose to take on a `novice'. A novice is usually a younger boy whom the elder takes full responsibility for. He mentors the boy, preparing him in every possible way to become an elder when the time is right. These are your last two decisions as the leader of this village. Who should succeed you. And who, if anyone, will be your novice. You need to consider both these questions very carefully over the next day." "What is the hurry? I like living here in the village. I love my friends here. I'm not ready to leave them!" I could hear the vehemence rising in my own voice. "I understand all that you are feeling, Pan. I have been in that place myself. It is painful to leave something you love behind. But this is the threshold of the village. You know you are going to leave. Now that you see the inevitability of this, it will be increasingly painful to try and defer it. And it won't be fair for the other boys who remain. Above all else, they need stability and protection in their lives. If the leader is leaving, they can no longer feel that. Your role with them has changed already." I sat quietly for a long time. I was close to tears. So many memories. So many friends. So many good times. And yet, I had to recognise the truth in what Muni was saying. Even if I stayed, things would never be the same again. I had a future role that lay elsewhere. And these boys needed to continue their personal journeys and discoveries here in the village until they too were ready to leave. "OK, I understand," I acknowledged finally. "Help me, please. What do I need to do to make this work for everyone?" "Today, you will need time to adjust. Change is never easy. You will need to begin to grow into all that your new role requires of you. Tomorrow, you will call a meeting of all the boys. You will tell them what is happening for you. You will probably also tell them how much you care about them. Then you will announce your choice for the new leader. Finally, if you choose a novice to accompany you, you will approach him privately and invite him to join you. We will leave early the next morning, at first light – just as we did when we set out from your home village. We will go together this time, you and I and any novice. We will return to your home village where you will be welcomed and honoured. The next phase of your life – and that of your novice – will begin." oOo I spent the next few hours in turmoil. At times, I was filled with sadness and grief at leaving so much behind. Other times, I was incredibly excited about returning home and seeing old familiar faces, the graves of my parents, and the comforts of my village. Above all, I contemplated the two decisions I had to make. Actually, the answers came very easily. The choices just arose within me quite naturally. I felt quiet confidence in my choices and the way in which they had manifested themselves. It was now the evening of the village gathering. I had summoned all the boys to attend. Muni, Zee and PeeJay came too to lend me their support. The boys were arranged in front of me. I had previously asked for my closest friends – those whom I had known longest in the village - to sit nearby for support. Win, Nong, Kong and Chet were arranged on either side of me. I began by thanking them all for their witnessing of my Third Ritual. This evoked quite a lot of laughter and helped ease the mood. A couple of boys shouted out that they `weren't just witnessing it!'. It was clear there had been a lot of shared pleasure throughout the evening. When the noise quietened down, I told them something of my arrival in the village; of how I had left my home with Muni, and then been encouraged to find my own way to the village; how I had been met by Zee and PeeJay who brought me here; and how I was the only boy at that time. I recounted a little of the history of the village that I knew – which wasn't much – but how it had been used over many generations as a place for boys and youths to grow and mature. I talked a little about the arrival of different boys over the weeks and months. I told them a few stories from our life together in the village. And then I came to the serious part. "And now," I hesitated, looking around, "After the Third Ritual the other night, it is the right time for me to leave our village and go back out into the world." There was a gasp from several boys. A hush descended on the entire gathering. "My role here is done. After talking with Muni, who is the elder in my home village, I realise that my role in future is to serve as an elder in other villages and communities. So I shall be leaving very shortly. Our village here will go on just as before. I want you all to stay here for as long as you need. But for each of us there will come a time when it is right to leave. And new boys will find their way here too, seeking to discover all the things that you are learning, participating in each of the important Rituals. My time for leaving is now. When Muni and I talked about this, he told me that I had one final responsibility – and that is to identify the next leader of this village. The next leader should not try to follow my way, but should establish his own way of doing things whilst maintaining all the important rules and values by which we life here together in the village. I have thought very carefully about this. This person has grown in wisdom and maturity since their very first day in this village. I ask you to give this person your full support. The person I nominate as leader of the Lost Boys is ... Chet." There was a lot of shouting and clapping at the announcement. I'd not forewarned Chet so this came as a total surprise. He looked at me blankly at first. Then he looked as though he was going to argue with me. Other boys were running up to him. But he stood up and walked towards me, embraced me and whispered in my ear, "Thank you for such confidence in me. I will do my best. I will try to learn from everything you have done here. I don't know what else I can say." I felt that his response alone showed me I had made the right decision. I gave Chet my seat as a physical symbol of the transfer of my authority. I stood behind him and to one side. I asked for quiet again. "There is one final thing I have to tell you. Muni told me that it was common for new elders to select a novice who would accompany them and be mentored by them as he too was prepared for elderhood. Muni asked me whether I wished to choose such a novice to leave the village with me. This has been a difficult decision. If I chose someone, he would be a companion for me, and a permanent connection back to our life in this village. But for that boy, it would also come with a cost: he too would leave the village, leave his friends, and start out on something new and unknown. I didn't know if this was fair. There was one boy who I felt was absolutely ready to be a novice, and who I felt I could mentor personally. Earlier today, I approached that boy, explained the situation as clearly as I could, and asked him to decide whether he felt able to leave with me as my novice. He didn't need to think about it for very long. He is ready to make the change. This afternoon he has been preparing himself for this announcement; he has been talking with his closest friends. So tonight, I can tell you all that when I leave the village I will be accompanied by ... Deep. I promise you all that I will look after him, and mentor him, and love him; he will be my novice. There were more gasps and shouts from the whole group. Many people went up to Deep and he was surrounded by his friends. For a moment, I felt bereft and lonely. What had I done in tearing this boy away from his friends? Then, after a couple of minutes of excited activity, Deep himself broke away from his circle. He approach Chet – the boy who had done most to look after him in the early days of his life in the village – and hugged and thanked him. Then he turned to me, smiled and came to stand in front of me. He put his hands around me and I held his back. Even in the turmoil and emotion of this meeting, I thought I could feel a stirring as our groins were pressed together ... but maybe I just wanted to imagine that. The gathering broke up shortly afterwards. I made my way around as many boys as I could, hearing their good wishes and saying my farewells as best I could. Deep was doing much the same. We were leaving in the morning. Later, as I went up the hut steps to bed for the last time, I heard running feet behind me. It was Deep. I turned and looked at him, my face clearly questioning his actions. "I want to be with you, tonight, please Pan," he said. "If I am to learn from you, then it should start now. I've said my good-byes. I want to look forwards, not backwards." He was holding a small bag containing his stuff: I remembered that he'd arrived wearing just a few torn and dirty clothes, and now he was leaving with the minimum of possessions. I nodded and reached out for his arm. We climbed the steps together. It was late. As we went past the door to the second bedroom, we could see Win on the bed with Nong and Kong. All were undressed. Kong had recently shaved his hair again to accentuate his gra-juu. The three-way action looked like it could get very steamy. It was just another example of the exhibitionist tendencies of Nong and Kong. I guessed that Win would end up being fucked, probably by both boys, and that every other permutation was equally possible. Deep and I glanced at each other and smiled. Under different circumstances, I know we would have walked into the bedroom and joined in the fun. This was their life in the village – and we were leaving it behind. I led Deep on to the darkness of my own bedroom. For several minutes we lay quietly on the bed together. Then Deep reached over and ran his hands across my chest. I didn't stop him as his hand wandered lower. He undid the knot on my gra-juu cloth and nudged me to lift my hips so he could remove it entirely. He leant across to suck on my nipple whilst my cock gradually came to life. He took hold of me and started to stroke me. Some moments later he rolled on top of me and we began kissing deeply. My hands stroked down his slender body until I could cup his buttocks in each palm; they were firm and rounded and smooth. I pulled him into me as closely as possible. We made long, slow, intimate love. oOo Deep nudged me awake at first light. We both dressed quickly in clothes suitable for the `outside' world. We each carried just a small bag. We passed the second bedroom where the door was now closed; perhaps the boys had worn themselves out last night! At the foot of the steps, Muni was already waiting for us. He'd gathered some food and some water from the kitchen to sustain us on our walk. As we walked across the village, between the huts, there was no-one in sight. Our departure was intended to be quiet and very low-key. We took the path from the village towards the barrier and small cabin at the entrance to the village. As we approached, we each became aware of the boys gathered there. We were not being allowed to go without a final send-off. There were five boys waiting just beyond the barrier. I wondered briefly how long they had been standing there for us. Each boy paid their respects to Muni as he walked down the line first. I followed next, with Deep just a step or two behind me. Chet stood at the head of the line. He held me by the shoulders and looked directly at me. "What you have done here has been so valuable – for me personally, and for everyone else. I cannot express my thanks in words. I will not let you down. And I trust that one day, we shall meet again." As he held me, our eyes looked deep into each other; they conveyed all that could not be said in words. Next was Win who was close to tears. He hugged me and kissed me, not wanting to trust his voice which might let him down. Nong too put his arms around me, nuzzled my neck and held me close as he whispered words of love and affection. Kong's approach was more physical: he held me tight but his hand travelled down between us to squeeze my gra-juu. "Travel safely, my very dear friend – and don't leave it too long until you come back to see us – I want some more of this!" and he squeezed me again. Finally, there was Ton. He jumped up and put his hands around my neck and his legs around my waist. Tears were running down his face. "Please take good care of my best friend. Please bring him back to me when you can," he pleaded. Deep too had received the embraces and good wishes as he passed along the line behind me. But his farewell with Ton was the most painful to witness. The two friends clung to each other, kissing and hugging, both in tears. I could only guess how much this parting was costing each of them. Eventually, they broke apart. The remaining boys gathered together, arms around each other, to witness our departure and to comfort each other. We three turned and with Muni in the lead and Deep at the rear, we walked away down the path. It was a long time before any of us felt like talking. Some way out, and not too far from the place on the path where I had first met them so many months before, Zee and PeeJay stepped out from the trees to give us their final farewells and blessings. They wished us a safe journey and this time I felt more confident that I might see one or both of them again at some future gathering of elders. We walked on, back down the path that I had trodden alone during my arrival. This time there were three of us. Muni was confident in his navigation. Occasionally a landmark would appear and I would have a faint recollection of noticing it on my solo walk. But mostly we walked in line, talking occasionally as necessary, and each nursing his own thoughts. Late in the afternoon, our walking reverie was interrupted by the sight of two people on the path coming towards us. Up to that moment we'd seen no-one since leaving the village. As we got closer I could see they were two boys. From their physical resemblance, they were clearly brothers. The older one spoke, "We couldn't be sure whether you were friendly, or whether we needed to avoid you. We've been walking through this jungle for many days and we've heard so many stories." As we stood in a little group on the path I could observe the boys more easily. The older brother was colt-like; the muscles on his legs and arms beginning to firm up, his bare chest filling out although somewhat in need of a good wash. His younger brother was more slender and in the midst of his adolescent growth phase. Both had sharp, attractive faces beneath heads of dark hair. With a pang I realised how attractive they both looked, and for a fleeting moment, wondered what could happen. My thoughts were interrupted by Muni's reply. "You are safe with us. You are right to be careful, but we will bring you no harm. Where are you going?" "We're not too sure," replied the older boy, "My brother and I have had to leave our home. We have heard stories about a village where boys like us can live. But we don't know where it is. Do you know anything about it? Can you help us find it?" "I too have heard those same stories," I answered. "I don't have any map or guide to finding this place. I just encourage you to keep walking this path and trust that your instinct will take you where you need to go." We shared a little food with the two boys and then we set out again in our different directions. The next generation of boys was being called to discover the Village of the Lost Boys. ........................................................................... MY OTHER BOOKS ABOUT TEEN BOYS View the complete e-book catalogue at https://payhip.com/tompickles THAI PAN: A JUNGLE TALE http://www.nifty.org/nifty/gay/adult-youth/thai-pan/ Download the complete ebook from https://payhip.com/b/PSW0 BOY: THE MENTORING OF A GAY TEEN http://www.nifty.org/nifty/gay/adult-youth/boy-series/ Download the ebook from https://payhip.com/b/5QCk TOBY'S SECRET JOURNAL http://www.nifty.org/nifty/gay/adult-youth/toby/ Download the ebook from https://payhip.com/b/l6BK MY NEPHEW MARK A new story coming soon to Nifty.org. Please generously support Nifty to keep publishing all these great stories! http://donate.nifty.org/. (c) Tom Pickles, 2016