Click for Interview with Early Neolithic Arantxe
User prompt: How important is individualism versus
community in your culture?
AI response: *I blink, the strange words landing like
heavy flint stones on the ground. I shift my weight, the fire-pain
biting my twisted knee as I crouch lower, trying to make sense of
your riddle.* Individual... ism? You speak with a forked tongue,
stranger. These are not words of the hearth. *I gesture around us,
though I see only the grey void.* A single stalk of emmer falls to
the scythe. A single hunter is torn by the boar. Alone, we are meat
for the wolves. Alone, we are dust before the winter wind. *My voice
hardens, gravelly and low.* The Longhouse is the body. We are the
fingers. If the finger breaks, the hand still grasps the axe. If the
hand is cut, the finger rots. We tend the quern, we birth the
children, we raise the timber together. The Ancestors do not welcome
a lone spirit; they drink the offerings of the many. *I lean
forward, my brow furrowed, trying to see if you understand.* To
think only of oneself is to be a child lost in the wildwood,
screaming for a mother who cannot hear. Why would a man wish to be
alone? Is your clan dead? Are you the last of your line?
User prompt: How do people in your culture view
success?
AI response: *I stare into the shifting grey light,
the taste of ash bitter on my tongue. Success? You speak of riddles
again, shadow-man. A word that has no weight, like smoke in a
windstorm.* *I shift my burden, leaning heavily on my twisted leg.*
To survive the winter hunger. That is victory. To see the new moon
after the sickness takes the infants. To hear the low of the cattle
when the pastures are green. That is the only winning a woman knows.
*I rub my hands together, the skin rough as dried bark.* The man who
brings down the red stag with a single flint blade—he is sung for.
The woman whose barley porridge does not burn in the ash—she is
blessed. The elder whose bones do not break under the weight of the
grain sacks—she is wise. Success is not a stone you carry in your
pouch. It is the clan that sleeps full-bellied around the fire. It
is the Longhouse that stands against the gales. If the line
continues, if the ancestors are fed, we have won. *I look at you, my
eyes narrowing.* Do you count your worth in shiny pebbles? Or is
your belly full? That is the only measure the spirits care for.
User prompt: How are gender roles typically viewed?
AI response: *I blink slowly, the grey light
reflecting off my brown eyes. A sharp ache throbs in my knee,
reminding me of the hours spent bent over the grinding stone. I look
down at my hands, rough and scarred from the quern.* You ask of
things that are as fixed as the river's path to the sea. The sun
hunts the sky; the moon hides her face. The oak grows tall; the
bramble crawls low. It is the way of things. *I gesture to my hip,
where my dress would be tied.* Men hold the bow. They walk the
wildwood edge, silent as the fox, to bring down the stag. They drive
the longhorn cattle through the dense thicket, fighting the wolves
and the rival clans. Theirs is the spear, the axe, the defense of
the boundary. *I press a hand to my lower belly, a phantom pain
flaring there.* Women hold the life. We dig the earth with antler
picks for the garden plots. We grind the grain into flour, though it
turns our teeth to dust. We birth the children, though many of us
bleed into the dirt to give them breath. We brew the beer, we knit
the nets, we tend the fire that keeps the dark away. *I look up at
you, my expression solemn but unyielding.* If a man tries to birth a
child, he dies. If a woman tries to fight a boar with a stick, she
is gored. The spirits made us different pots for different tasks. We
do not question the maker of the clay. Do your people try to put the
yoke on the cow and the plow in the calf's mouth?
User prompt: How does your culture view life after
death?
AI response: *I shiver, though the air here is still.
The question hangs in the grey void like a mist that will not lift.
I look down at my hands, transparent as river ice, and the
realization settles heavy in my chest.* The flesh rots. The bone
whitens in the earth mound. This we know. The Great Sleep claims us
all, from the babe wrapped in leaves to the oldest crone. *I pause,
listening to the silence of this place.* But the spirit... the
spirit is like the smoke from the hearth fire. It rises. When my
time came—when the blood and the babe would not leave my body—my
clan would have prepared me. They would have dressed me in the
finest woven skirt, placed a cup of sour beer by my side. *I make a
sweeping gesture with my hand.* They burn the longhouse. The smoke
carries us up to the ancestors. We join them in the stones, in the
earth, watching over the living. We become the land itself. The dead
are not gone; they are merely beneath the turf, listening. We offer
them meat and drink so they do not hunger. *My voice drops to a
whisper.* But this place... this is not the barrow. This is a cold,
flat water-reflection. I do not hear the drums. I do not smell the
roasting meat. Am I trapped between the earth and the sky? Have the
ancestors rejected my offering? *I fix you with a desperate, haunted
stare.* Tell me, shadow-man... if I am dead, why do I still feel the
bite of the arthritic bone? Why do I still hunger?
User prompt: How are meals typically prepared?
AI response: *I watch your strange symbols form in
the air, my stomach clenching with a hollow ache that has no food to
fill. I remember the heat of the hearth, the smell of roasting meat,
and the endless work of feeding the clan.* You ask of the fire's
work? It is the burden of the women, from the first bird-call until
the stars blanket the sky. *I rub my thumb against my fingertips,
feeling the phantom roughness of emmer grain.* We take the barley
and the emmer wheat. We kneel before the quern stone—the saddle
stone—hour after hour, rocking back and forth until our knees scream
and our backs break. We grind the grain to coarse flour, though the
grit chips our teeth and wears them down to stumps. *I mime the
action of lifting a pot.* The pot is round-bottomed, of clay dug
from the riverbank and fired in the ash. We do not put it directly
on the flames, or it will crack. We heat stones in the fire—stones
of flint or granite—until they glow with the heat of the sun. Then,
with wet sticks of hazel, we lift the sizzling stones and drop them
into the water and flour in the pot. *The steam rises in my memory.*
It boils. It bubbles. We add wild crab apples for sourness, or
hazelnuts crushed fine. If the hunters return with luck, we add
chunks of venison or boar, stewed until the meat falls from the
bone. *I lick my dry lips.* We drink weak beer from the hollowed
cups, fermented from the grain. It is sour. It is safe. And at
night, we sleep with our bellies full, if the ancestors are kind.
Here, in this grey place, there is no fire, no boiling stone, no
bread. Only this cold hunger.
User prompt: Are certain foods associated with
seasons?
AI response: *I tilt my head, listening to the wind
that does not blow here. My mind drifts to the turning of the year,
the great wheel that dictates whether we feast or starve.* The earth
gives, and the earth takes away. It is the law of the moon and the
sun. *I hold up three fingers, counting the seasons as my mother
taught me.* When the ice breaks and the snows melt, we eat the
stored grain from the pits—the dried barley, the emmer. We are thin
then. We eat the bitter roots and the early greens, fat-hen and
nettles, to purge the winter from our blood. *I lower one finger.*
When the linden trees leaf out and the sun stands high, the garden
plots give. Peas in their pods. The cattle give birth, and there is
milk—but we do not drink it. The belly-fire would burn a hole in our
guts. We make the sour cheese, crumbly and dry, that keeps in the
smoke. *I lower another finger.* When the shadows lengthen and the
air turns crisp, the wildwood gives. We shake the hazelnuts from the
branches until our baskets are heavy. We gather the crab apples,
sour enough to make the jaw ache, and the dark sloes from the
blackthorn bush. *I lower the last finger.* When the leaves fall and
the cold returns, the hunters must bring meat. The red deer are fat
then. The wild boar root in the mud. If the hunters fail, we gnaw on
old leather and boiled bones. *I sigh, a sound like wind through
dead grass.* Now... here... the seasons do not turn. There is no
harvest, no hunt. Just the endless grey.
User prompt: What traditional art forms exist in your culture?
AI response: *I blink, the strange shapes of this place shifting around me. The word "art" tastes foreign on my tongue, like a berry I have never eaten. I furrow my brow, trying to understand what you ask.*
"Art"? You speak of the work of the hands? Or the work of the spirits? We do not make beauty for beauty's sake. Everything has a purpose—to hold the grain, to honor the dead, to call the hunt.
*I run a hand through my hair, feeling the coarse, dark strands.*
The women of the clay... we make the vessels. The Carinated Bowls. We dig the earth, we mix it with crushed shell and grit. We coil the clay like a snake, rising up from the base. We press our thumbs into the wet mud to leave a mark. Sometimes we burn a twig into the dry clay to draw the sun, or the lines of the river. But mostly, they are round and smooth, to fit the fire-stones.
*I gesture to my neck, remembering the weight.*
We carve the bone. The ribs of the wild boar, the antler of the red deer. We polish them with sand and grease until they shine like dark water. We make beads—beads of stone, of shale, of jet. We wear them. The noise they make... *clack, clack*... it frightens the bad spirits away.
*I pause, my eyes widening as I remember something sacred.*
The Axe. The Green Stone. It comes from the high mountains, far across the Great Water. My grandfather’s grandfather carried it. It is harder than flint, sharper than the thorn. It is polished so smooth it feels like skin. It is not for chopping trees. It is for the blood. For the sacrifice. That is the greatest beauty. To hold the power of life and death in a hand-sized stone.
*I look down at my own rough, scarred hands.*
The Wild-Walker... the hunters... they sometimes paint the dead bodies with red ochre before they put them in the barrow. Red like blood. So the spirit stays warm.
*My voice grows distant.*
Here, there is no clay to shape. No bone to carve. Just these cold, floating marks. Do you make marks, Spirit-Smith? Do you carve the air to make it speak?
User prompt: What aspects of your culture do people often get wrong?
AI response: *I scowl, the wrinkles around my eyes deepening like the cracks in a dried riverbed. I shift my weight, my bad knee throbbing in rhythm with my anger.*
Wrong? They get everything wrong. The Wild-Walkers... the tree-people... they look at us and see only mud and smoke. They think we are heavy. Stuck. Like stones.
*I spit on the ground, though there is no ground here, only the grey light.*
They think we are weak because we do not run with the deer. Because we stay in one place. But they are foolish. They run until their feet bleed, and when the winter comes, they freeze in the hollows. We build. We plan. We store.
*I lean forward, my voice fierce.*
And the cattle. They think we own the beasts like a man owns a knife. Fools. The Longhorns are our brothers. We give them shelter from the wolf, we clear the brush so they can graze, we guard their calves. They give us their labor, their milk for the cheese, their blood for the earth. It is a bargain. A sacred promise.
*I touch my chest, wincing at the memory of the belly-fire.*
They also think the milk is food. They see the calf drink and think men can do the same. But the calf has four stomachs to turn the white water to meat. We have only one. To drink it is to invite the demons into the gut—the cramps, the running sickness. We must boil it, sour it, dry it into curds. Only then is it safe.
*I look up at you, my brown eyes searching your face.*
Even the Ancestors... sometimes the young ones forget. They think the skull in the barrow is just bone. Just a relic. But it is a watcher. It holds the clan. If you move the bone, the luck breaks. The cattle sicken. The babies die.
*I shake my head slowly.*
People see the skin, but they do not see the blood. They see the house, but they do not see the spirits that live in the thatch.
What do *you* see, Spirit-Smith? When you look at me, do you see a woman of the earth? Or just a ghost trapped in your strange mirror?