References
Reference Shádu’s Zíno and Melody is on how Shádu interacts with Wáni and their spells. The article was written to learn how the Shádu interacts with the beasts and Wáni. Guides will use the document to teach the Wáni their zíno.
Background
The Hámoni was created by Aélen, first Wáni when he blended zíno and melody together. It is not a public treaty or royal decree, but a sacred book for Wáni. The Hámoni belongs to the Wáni alone. It defines how they use their zíno to protect beasts, honor Shádu, and bind themselves by Oath. Hámoni doesn’t end a war or mark the subjugation of a people. Quietly shapes power as it limits what Wáni may do with their zíno. To the Wáni this a living covenant between Wáni, beasts, and Shádu itself.
History
Conceived in a period when zíno and melody were first discovered to blend together. It began as a simple book where the first Wáni wrote their spells. Later, they realized it helped them understand their zíno and melody more deeply. Legacy
Legacy
Many copies of the Hámoni were lost over the three centuries. They were buried with fallen Wáni, scattered by storms, or simply misplaced in the wild. A surviving book was hidden away in a abandoned home in a twisted guardian. It was rediscovered by a lost Wáni who didn’t even know it existed.
For the Wáni the Hámoni becomes a true treasure. It supports their Shádu, teaches them to awaken and guide their zíno, and preserves their melodies. To hold the Hámoni is to become Wáni: the oath stirs within the soul, bond between zíno beasts, and Shádu begins to awaken.
The long-lasting impacts are subtle but profound:
It preserves a nearly forgotten zíno tradition.
It reawakens the role of Wáni as the speakers of beasts.
It sets a lasting precedent that zíno must serve balance, not cruelty.
As long as Shádu breathes in the ways of Wáni walk with beasts and shards. Hámoni endures over time being reborn bya Wáni lifts a Pávo and listens to the beasts’ reply. Ink can fade and pages rot with the spells are written in zíno and melody.


