-
Once, a long time ago,
-
there was a powerful hermit
named Lok Ta Moni Eysei.
-
He had three promising students:
-
Moni Mekhala,
the brilliant goddess of the seas,
-
Vorachhun, the princely
manifestation of the earth,
-
and Ream Eyso, a demon whose
heart burned with passionate fire.
-
Lok Ta wished to bestow a gift
upon his most deserving student.
-
To determine which of the three that was,
he announced a contest:
-
whoever first brought back
a glass full of morning dew
-
would be master of this mysterious gift.
-
When dusk came, Vorachhun
and Ream Eyso ventured into the forest.
-
They left not one leaf
or blade of grass untouched,
-
impatiently shaking
the precious fluid into their glasses.
-
When they returned to the hermit’s hut,
-
they found Moni Mekhala sitting patiently
with a full glass of morning dew.
-
She had left her shawl out overnight
-
and won the contest by simply
wringing out the fabric over her glass.
-
Proud of all his students,
and loving them like his own children,
-
Lok Ta surprised all three with gifts.
-
He turned the dew Ream Eyso
collected into a diamond axe,
-
Vorachhun’s into a magic dagger,
-
and Moni Mekhala’s into a crystal ball
unlike anything ever seen.
-
Soon Ream Eyso grew covetous
and decided he must have Mekhala’s prize.
-
He and Vorachhun tried to woo the goddess
so they could get the precious gem.
-
But, after she rejected their advances
and flew off,
-
Ream Eyso resolved
to take the crystal ball by force.
-
Ream Eyso flew through the air
in search of Moni Mekhala,
-
propelled on by a jealous rage.
-
On his way, he encountered Vorachhun
and attacked him,
-
knowing that the righteous prince would
never allow him to steal the crystal.
-
The demon gained the upper hand
in the heat of battle,
-
and hurled Vorachhun
against the side of a mountain.
-
Sure of Vorachhun’s death,
-
Ream Eyso continued his search
until he finally found Moni Mekhala.
-
He demanded that she
and her friends either submit to him,
-
the most brilliant of Lok Ta’s students
and rightful master of the crystal ball,
-
or die like Vorachhun.
-
Mekhala, without fear,
refused and flew off into the clouds,
-
hoping to draw the demon away
from her friends.
-
Ream Eyso took the bait, ripping through
nimbus after nimbus in his crazed pursuit.
-
Once far enough away,
Mekhala confronted her pursuer.
-
Ream Eyso made one last demand
but the goddess remained unfazed.
-
Enraged, he began
to swing his diamond axe.
-
Before he could hurl the weapon,
Mekhala threw her crystal into the air.
-
As it climbed the height of the sky,
-
it emitted powerful flashes
of lightning that blinded the demon.
-
Ream Eyso let his axe loose
in wild desperation.
-
As the weapon flew through the air
it cut through clouds,
-
creating deep rolling peals of thunder.
-
And when the lightning and thunder mixed,
-
precious seeds
of water fell from heaven: rain.
-
Mekhala drew close to Ream Eyso,
now blind and impotent without his axe.
-
She pondered what
she should do to the murderer.
-
Remembering the kindness
and love of her teacher,
-
Moni Mekhala chose compassion
and flew into the sky.
-
Shortly later, Ream Eyso regained his
strength, found his axe, and followed her.
-
Thunder, lightning, and rain continued
to dance across the earth.
-
Some drops fell on Vorachhun
and revived him,
-
his skin golden like
a rice field ready for harvest.
-
Grabbing his magic dagger,
-
he flew into the sky in search
of Ream Eyso and Moni Mekhala.