By Rebecca Morn
Chapter 2
Augury
Afternoon, Day 22, Frostfall, 792 H.R.
One month and sixteen days later...
Returning to Eleahome had been a calculated risk. In
fact, Kozen was well aware he'd be safe nowhere in Telaria, but the capital
itself represented the most dangerous place of all. Coming back here would
have been unimaginable had King Leopold himself been present.
Fortunately, it had become a long-standing tradition
for the winter court to be held each year in Old Telaria, the former capital
on the far east coast of the kingdom. Leopold and his huge retinue departed
over a month ago--leaving Eleahome emptier than usual, with many of the
nobles and courtiers gone, too. A large proportion of the Royal Guard also
left with the immense caravan, and nearly all of the Elite. Guardsmen still
patrolled the city, although in far fewer numbers than at other times of the
year.
Reflecting the winter court tradition, it was as if
Eleahome itself rested during these frigid months, going into a kind of
social hibernation. Those people still in the city--which was most of the
population--nevertheless tended to stay indoors, even when the weather was
good. Merchants hawked their wares, but often reduced the hours during
which their carts, stalls, and shops were open for business.
And whenever it snowed, which was frequent here in
winter, everything froze into even greater immobility for days at a time.
Afterwards, when the skies relented, the city only bestirred itself a
little, like a great bear turning around drowsily, before settling down to
renewed slumber.
This did not mean Kozen felt free to walk Eleahome's
sparsely traveled streets freely, though. Even if there were no standing
orders concerning him, the last thing he wanted was for word to get back to
Leopold somehow that he'd been here. If not for the necessity, and the lack
of any other known options, he wouldn't have risked coming here at all.
What's more, Kozen couldn't be positive there were no
orders for his capture. After all, it's not like I can walk up to a
guard and ask, "Hey, can you tell me whether you're supposed to arrest and
execute me if I'm found in the capital?" he mused bitterly to himself.
Nevertheless, it still felt ironic to be skulking like
a sneak-thief about the streets and alleys in the city he knew so well.
Here was the narrow street known as Potter's Lane--even though there were no
potters or kilns along it, only a single tailor's shop and a number of tall
wooden houses. Beyond the end lay two streets at a fork, one known as
Harbor Way, and the other called Tannery Row (which, in fact, did boast four
leather tanners along its smelly length). And some distance behind Kozen
was the large open space known as the Free Market, so named because you
didn't need any sort of guild license to sell there, just a cart and a
willingness to defend your favored location in the cobblestone-lined
square. Some merchants, of course, had been in their particular spot for so
long that everyone pretty much accepted their 'ownership' of what was
otherwise public property. For instance, Kozen noticed Augustin the
Moneychanger in the same location, right next to the Harpers Street entrance
to the square, that he'd been occupying for the last twenty years or more.
Kozen had come this way after viewing Eleahome's Church
of the Great Ruler. It was a grand, imposing building of rough-hewn granite
and polished marble, with arches and crenellations, high steeples, and a
number of tall bell towers. Most of these last sounded only for services or
high holy days, but one tower's bells were used exclusively to ring the
hours--the only measure of time that most of the inhabitants of Eleahome
would ever experience, save the sun and stars above.
The church was also one of the places that remained
well-guarded, even in winter. Two guards at the doors, and two pairs on
regular patrols around the outside. Kozen knew as well there were even more
Royal Guardsmen inside. Short of actually becoming akin to a sneak-thief,
Kozen came to the reluctant conclusion that he had little hope of gaining
easy entrance to the church library--that is, assuming they hadn't moved all
those records to a more secure location, as Archbishop DiMarisol had
recommended at Kozen's hearing before the Bishopric.
Regardless, since Kozen was no longer a priest, they'd
never allow him into that wing of the building anyway. Once recognized at
the church entrance or soon after, as would certainly occur at some point,
his entire 'quest' would be over before it began.
In time it might come to that, breaking into the
library somehow. On the other hand, since he didn't even know what he might
be looking for--and what documentary evidence would constitute proof of
Leopold's wizardry--it made sense to set this goal aside for the present.
Therefore, Kozen decided to follow up on his other
lead--to find someone whose very existence was mere rumor, one of those
"everybody knows" kinds of tales. He needed to find one of the last
surviving priests of the Old Faith. So in the bars and taverns in the lower
and middle class neighborhoods of the city, he began making discrete
queries.
Eventually, Kozen's luck turned both good and bad at
the same time.
Good, in that he found out how and where he might
locate the hidden priest.
Bad, in that upon deciding that the savory aroma of the
beef and dumpling stew was too good to pass up, someone eventually
recognized him.
He'd taken every precaution. Everywhere he went, he
kept the hood of his cloak up, thankful for the frigid weather that made
such not seem out of place, even indoors. From deep within the folds of
woolen cloth, Kozen kept his voice pitched low as he asked his questions.
By now, of course, he knew how to phrase it, so as not to raise alarm or
suspicions. During his second stop, after hissing him to silence and
pulling him aside, the old woman who'd been serving tables said she couldn't
help him finding what he'd been looking for. But she could show him
how to ask properly.
So now, in this fourth tavern-inn--an establishment of
moderate quality not far from the Eleahome harbor, one street over from
Harbor Way--Kozen noted with satisfaction that the barkeep wore a thin red
cord tied around his left wrist. This was one of the signs the old woman
had told him to look for, showing Kozen her own faded string. She'd also
given him the name of a nearby tailor's shop where he could obtain one for
himself.
At the bar, Kozen slid three coppers toward the
man--one more copper, actually, than the price written crudely in chalk on a
board above the bar--and asked for a mug of this season's ale. When this
was delivered, he asked softly, "I am looking for my father. Have you seen
him?"
The barkeep's gaze flicked down momentarily, and noted
both the red cord around Kozen's left wrist, as well as the way his hand
rested casually atop the polished oak surface of the bar itself. Three
fingers showing, with thumb and smallest finger tucked under. "I might've,"
said the barkeep. He was an older gent, with only a fringe of gray hair
around the back of his head, and dark brown eyes. "Who should I say is
asking after him?"
"Just his son, a pilgrim," Kozen answered in the ritual
formula taught him by the old woman. Then he made his real query, sliding a
small silver coin across the bar to join the coppers, "I really do need to
find him. It's an urgent matter and my time is short."
Peering at him intently as if he were slightly
nearsighted, the barkeep nevertheless scooped the coins off the polished
wood. "Very well, 'pilgrim,'" he said. "Word has it today he's begging
near the Free Market. Just listen for the old codger who can't carry a
tune, hollerin' at the top of his lungs. You can't miss him."
"Thank you," Kozen replied, and that was when he asked
about the beef stew, which really did smell marvelous. He'd not eaten all
day, and his empty stomach was insistent. Since it was fairly early yet in
the day, he decided he could spare twenty minutes, then go find the priest.
He felt fairly certain he'd heard the "old codger" when he'd passed through
the Free Market square earlier, too. The barkeep was right: At first, Kozen
had thought someone was badly injured and calling for help--then he
recognized the barely intelligible words of a ballad, being yelled more than
sung.
After receiving his food, Kozen picked a table in the
corner that was the poorest lit, deep in the shadows--and even helped this
along by surreptitiously blowing out the nearest oil lamp. With a large
bowl of piping hot stew, a thick slice of coarse bread, and the mug of ale
before him on the knife-scarred table, he nevertheless kept his hood up and
his head down as he ate. His small pack lay right next to his feet, leaning
against one boot. There were perhaps a dozen other patrons in the tavern
room, all men, and none seemed to be paying him any especial attention.
Every now and then, a serving girl made the rounds, bringing drinks and
laughingly fending off a playful grope.
Despite all these measures, he was only halfway through
the bowl of stew when he became aware of someone striding purposefully
towards him. A big man, well over six and a half feet tall, with light
blonde hair and blue eyes. He looked to be in his forties, but hale and
strong, and his squarish face was openly friendly. He held his hand raised
in greeting, until Kozen looked up and asked quietly, "Yes?"
"Sorry to bother you, friend," said the big blonde man,
smiling. "But I'm hoping you can help settle a bet between me and my friend
over there." He indicated a short, rattish-looking man, seated at a table
not far from the hearth. The smaller gentleman lifted an earthenware mug in
acknowledgement. The big man continued, "Tom there says you'll say I'm
crazy, that it's just a resemblance and you probably get asked about it all
the time. Me, think you're actually him. So which is it?"
"Actually who?" Kozen asked, though he dreaded knowing
would come next. He set down the spoon and drank some ale to clear his
mouth. It was beginning to look like he might not get to finish this meal
after all.
"Why, Captain Athesis, of course!" the blonde giant
boomed. "The scourge and hero of Roan's Run, who else? If so, I'd be
honored to take Tom's money and buy you a drink with the winnings. And then
maybe another with my own coin!"
"You're mistaken," said Kozen. "Sorry. Guess I just
look like him--maybe it's the beard."
"Ho ho!" laughed the blonde man, with immense good
cheer. "I think not, your honor! It's without the beard that you look like
him--and now that I see you up close, I'm certain you're he. I was there,
at the ceremony when old King Stepan himself gave you the medal for bravery
and valor. Border guard, fourth company--we were in Eleahome on leave when
we heard about it. Sergeant Nedrick Crippetti, retired, at your service,
sir!" The former sergeant sketched a quick, awkward salute, obviously many
years out of practice. "Come on then, it's all right. You're among
friends, Captain! Please, let me refill that drink, sir, and you can tell
us the tale, if you would. I'd give anything to hear it from the hero
himself. So would Tom and probably everyone else here."
"Hero!" spat another man from a table nearby. This one
was heavyset, with two more sitting with him who looked enough alike they
had to be close relations. But whereas the blonde giant was effusively
friendly, this one frowned sourly as if it was the expression his face
habitually wore. His hair was lanky, dark, and noticeably oily, his beard
thicker but just as inexpertly trimmed. "He's no gods-rotted hero!" the
heavyset man continued angrily. "If you could ever bring yourself to step
foot outside the city walls, Ned, you'd find they tell a very different
story in the southlands. Captain Kozen Athesis is nothing more than a
filthy, vicious butcher who massacred an entire village of Narans. Women,
children, and toothless old men--defenseless, and slaughtered like cattle.
Tell it to our people, the ones the Narans slew in revenge, not that I can
blame 'em. That son of a whore started his own private war--and then
disappeared like a craven coward! I even heard a rumor not long ago that
the church Excommunicated him. It's not a free drink he deserves, but a
gibbet!"
"Figures you'd take their side, Liast, seeing as how
you and your brothers all come from those parts," argued Ned, his good cheer
evaporated in an instant. Jabbing a finger at Liast, he growled with
menace, "Ain't nothin' but traitors down there anyway, with half the
villages and farmsteads married into those copper-haired savages across the
border. I always thought that scraggy beard of yours had more red in it
than is decent. So who was it? Your grandpappy? Or is it more recent than
that?"
From there, the argument went downhill rapidly. Chairs
were kicked back. Liast and his relations immediately jumped on Ned,
throwing punches wildly. Ned's friend Tom broke his mug against the side of
their table. Wielding the mug handle and attached shards like a
punch-dagger, he joined the fray, along with three men from over near the
bar. The barkeep who'd assisted Kozen earlier whispered to the serving
girl, who fled the tavern room, her face gone ashen white.
His meal abandoned unfinished, Kozen counted himself
lucky to have managed to get out of there in one piece. It shamed him to
admit it, but it had helped that Liast and his kin were considerably
outnumbered by the supporters of "the hero of Roan's Run." With everyone's
attention on the open brawl, Kozen grabbed his small pack and slipped out
through the kitchens.
As he circled around to the main street, he saw it was
just as well anyway that he'd left. Ahead of him, the serving girl from the
tavern pelted down the cobblestone road. With her long skirts hitched up
nearly to her knees, she hollered loudly for the city guards.
Fortunately, she was heading towards the docks, and the
guards stationed there. Kozen turned away and went the other direction,
back towards the Free Market square.
A shame, he thought to himself. That
probably would've been a decent and clean place to spend the night. So much
for word not getting around that I've been here...
*
* *
The codger who couldn't carry a tune turned out not to
be at the Free Market anymore, Kozen soon found out. Eventually though, he
did manage to track him down, several streets away, eating a day-old popkin.
The old beggar had just bought it from a pie man closing his stall for the
day; by time Kozen approached, the merchant was already gone inside the
house behind it. Although only mid-afternoon, most of the shops and stalls
in these neighborhoods were already either closed or in the process of it.
Even the Free Market square had been emptying when Kozen passed through a
short while ago.
Remembering the ancient tales about how the clerics of
old had managed to overcome the wizards, it had been with this in mind that
Kozen first approached the one he sought. Finally seeing him up close,
though, he wondered if this had been worth the effort at all. A more
unlikely prospect didn't seem possible.
The old man was gaunt and emaciated, his skin marked
with so many age spots, they threatened to crowd out the natural,
parchment-like pallor. His remaining whispy gray hair hung to his shoulders
like long cobwebs. He'd have been tall once, but now he was so hunched
over, he lost a full head's height and the curve of his upper back
threatened to become a hump. Between a nose grown long and downturned and
pair of bushy white brows, his eyes were brown, with the left a distinctly
lighter shade than the right, obviously dimmed with a cateract. The codger
hunched within a patched and re-patched brown wool cloak that had probably
never been much to begin with, and the rest of his clothes--a long and
much-repaired tunic over a pair of trousers, plus a mismatched pair of
boots--were no better.
In short, Kozen concluded, a beggar. And not a very
good one, by all appearances. Nothing's to be lost for going just a
little further down this path, he thought. Briefly waving his left hand
with three fingers raised, Kozen said quietly, "Hello father. I come as a
pilgrim, to ask your aid."
"Eh?" the old man asked querulously, the bony hand not
holding the popkin cupped around a large jutting ear, shaking visibly.
"What's that? Yer countin' pigeons? Why'd anyone want to do that? They're
nothin' but flyin' vermin. I ain't yer Da, neither. I never married and
all my bastards are girls. Go 'way!"
Not willing to speak any more loudly than he had
already, Kozen instead leaned in closer and repeated his greeting. Just in
case the old man was genuinely hard of hearing, and not shamming. Unable to
avoid noticing that the codger apparently had not bathed in quite some time
either, Kozen nevertheless added, "I seek the priest of the Old Faith."
"Don't know no such person," the old man replied with
annoyance, although Kozen thought he detected a gleam of suspicion in the
rheumy brown eyes, deep in their nest of wrinkles. "Great Ruler's church is
the only lawful one there is, and everybody knows it. Now shoo! Can't ya
see I'm eatin'? Or have ya always been a rude git?"
"Just because something's illegal, does not mean it
doesn't exist," Kozen argued, and held out his hand, with a single large
coin cupped in it, which the old man regarded with narrowed eyes.
Indicating the silver crown with a nod, he said, "Go on, take it. With
this, you can do better than a meat pie that likely explains the absence of
stray cats around here."
"Hmmh," the other grunted, but snatched up the coin
anyway, making it disappear into his shabby cloak. Taking another bite of
his popkin almost defiantly, smacking his lips, he grumbled, "Not sayin' I
know this outlaw priest of yers, but what ya want from him if'n I did?"
"You know as well as I, how the Telarian church has
lost its way," said Kozen. "As have almost all the clergy throughout
Lunare, even those who follow other gods. It's become all preaching, and no
doing. About accepting things as they are, rather than daring to ask for
specific help now and again. Sometimes such help is necessary--and
warranted."
"I know no such thing," complained the old man around
the mouthful of dough and meat. With a horny thumbnail, he hooked a small
bit of gristle from between two yellowed teeth and, after glancing at it,
flicked it onto the snowy ground. "Those priests also say that presuming to
ask for anything is rude and disrespectful. That it's better to have faith
without questions or demands."
It was with some small amusement that Kozen knew full
well he'd found exactly the man he'd been looking for. The 'senile old
fool' act was only that--a sham. Even as he watched, the hidden priest
straightened from his stooping slouch, and his speech began losing most of
its quaver and the lower-class mannerisms. Though clearly an extremely aged
man, he no longer looked as if he was but one short pace away from his own
grave. They'd each acknowledged the other as what he seemed, even if
neither spoke it aloud.
"So now the prayers are said in words that nobody
understands--sometimes not even the priests," Kozen countered, still
speaking quietly. "The few 'miracles' allowed here in Telaria are only
those authorized with the expressed consent of the Bishopric council. Only
during the most hallowed ceremonies are the candles lit without a taper, or
the Celebrant levitated above the worshippers briefly--and only the Bishops
do this. It's much the same, if perhaps to a lesser official degree,
elsewhere in other kingdoms and in the Empire. Clerical powers everywhere
have been disappearing through apathy and atrophy. To what purpose?"
"Mayhap," the old man acknowledged. "But rumor has it
a few country priests remain who still have some power and can help heal the
sick and so on."
"And when these country priests pass away, they'll be
replaced by younger ones who don't even know that much. Ones who then will
claim that death by wet-lung or a burst heart is actually the will of the
Great Ruler."
"How do you know it's not for the best?" asked the
priest, watching Kozen closely. "Those same fables say that the clerics in
the olden times got those powers and abilities from the gods to fight the
evil wizards. With the wizard magic long gone, what purpose do these powers
have anymore, except as a temptation to a different kind of evil. Maybe
we're better off without them, have you considered that?"
"I can't speak to that point," Kozen admitted,
gesturing with an open hand. "But it's a question only meriting
consideration if there is no wizardry to oppose anymore."
Fixing him with an intent gaze, the elderly priest
demanded, "What makes you say there is? Eh? Tell me that, son. Wizardry
is forbidden, everyone knows that. Has been for a thousand years."
"I should think the reason obvious," said Kozen.
"Because I've seen it."
"So you say," the old man replied skeptically, as he
finished his popkin, wiping the grease from his hands on a nether corner of
his moth-eaten cloak. "Assuming you're not just having me on, what makes you
think I can do anything to help? What do you really want? An entire silver
crown is a lot of money just to argue theology with an old fool. The Great
Ruler's priests will do it for free--provided you're smart enough to agree
with them publicly, whatever you might actually believe."
"True," allowed Kozen. "But of all the organized
religions of Lunare--even if it was possible for me to reach any of the
others outside Telaria--it's the Church of the Great Ruler that's fallen the
farthest from what it once was. So I came seeking you, because I'd heard
that the Old Faith remained faithful to the traditions."
"Aye, it has, for the most part," admitted the priest.
"On the other hand, rumor has it that the Charhai stayed truest to their
ways. Wouldn't help you though, since they don't talk to outsiders."
Kozen nodded and said, "Even if they did, they're too
far to be of use to me. So I seek the next best thing."
"'To be of use,'" the priest repeated. "So it's not
the Old Faith itself or any other teachings you're after now is it? You're
not looking to learn anything, you just want someone who can work miracles,
is that it? This isn't about wizardry at all, I'll wager. Let me
guess--you've got a sick relative at home, and your own cleric says simply
to pray. And you prayed and nothing happened. Do I have it right?"
"No, it is as I said," Kozen insisted. "I happen to
know to a near certainty that someone has somehow found the lost lore of
those wizards--and has been using it. He has to be stopped, or we all risk
another holocaust."
"Know?" inquired the old man, tilting his head and
raising his right eyebrow almost comically. "Or believe?"
"All right," admitted Kozen, shrugging. "It's belief.
I have no proof, but the circumstantial evidence is compelling. And
compelling enough for me to risk my life in the attempt. What I need is
power to surpass his, which appears to be both considerable and increasing.
Can you help?"
"I should ask you, Brother Athesis," said the other,
laying a gnarled forefinger alongside his long nose. "Why don't you find
the old clerical power for yourself. If Tos isn't listening to his priests'
prayers anymore, maybe you should ask one of the other deities."
Damn... recognized again, Kozen fumed silently.
This ill-advised visit to Eleahome was devolving towards seemingly
inevitable disaster. He dare stay not one hour longer than necessary, he
knew now. "I am no longer a priest. I'm...Excommunicate. There is no god
or goddess whose ears would be open to anything I might say. That is why I
want you to ask yours, if you are willing and able. I'd have thought this
obvious by now."
The priest of the Old Faith laughed as if he found this
uproariously funny. "Oh, you have put yourself in a fine barrel of brine,
haven't you, son?" he chortled, slapping his knee. "I suppose that thinking
yourself soulless does make things easier in some ways though, doesn't it?
Think you can't sin because you're already damned, right?"
This was going nowhere. With growing irritation, Kozen
demanded, "Look, will you or will you not help me? You already knew who I
was, so surely you'll also realize that I dare not stand here all day
debating metaphysics with an old heretic."
Sighing, the priest sobered quickly. "I'm sorry, son,"
he apologized. "I wasn't poking fun at you, truly. But I'm too far past my
prime to be of much help to you. And even if I wasn't, the Triune God is
one who...well, he's never been one to meddle directly in the affairs of
men. There's some, like Jonas and Acquiel for instance, sending dolphins to
rescue sailors lost at sea, or Laurallin with her healing. Tos used to be
favored by warrior-priests--and don't you be giving me the wall-eyed look,
it's true and you know it. Seems to me, it'd be one of those who'd do you
the most good, if it's a genuine reborn wizard you intend to fight."
Irritation giving way to dejection, Kozen asked without
hope, "Then can you possibly guide me to one who does have the power I
need? Not a rescuer of sailors or a healer. Rather, someone with the means
to oppose wizardry directly?"
The other looked down, giving it several moments
thought before answering. "Aye, possibly," he said finally. "The
Three-in-One isn't much for those other things I mentioned, but there is one
area he's known for. His specialty, some might even say."
"What's that?"
"Auguries, visions, and prophecies," said the wizened
old priest, whose actual name Kozen was destined never to learn.
*
* *
Kozen would've preferred to spend the next several
hours in the comfort of a tavern taproom somewhere. Or anyplace warm.
However, with word of his presence in the city sure to be spreading, he
dared not risk anyplace where there'd be people.
Instead, he spent the time waiting in a narrow tenement
alley, in the cold. He'd stacked and arranged a number of the large wooden
boxes he found there, most of them broken in some manner or other, into a
kind of haphazard shelter. A crude structure solid enough so it wouldn't
come crashing down upon him when he crawled into this improvised nest; not
so well-ordered that it would draw unwanted attention. Inside, he huddled
and shivered, wrapped tightly in both cloak and bedroll.
Overhead, visible through the gaps in the crates, the
gray wooden buildings on either side of the alley seemed to lean drunkenly
towards each other, less than five feet apart at their third story
rooflines, but at least they cut the chilly wind somewhat. If only the
occasional shifting breeze didn't bring the smell of emptied chamber-pot
contents his way from time to time...
Before long, the inadequate half-eaten bowl of stew
from earlier became but a memory and a regret. He berated himself for not
grabbing the bread, or something from the kitchens, on his way out of the
tavern earlier. Kozen tried to nap, but sleep came only fitfully as
afternoon slowly turned to twilight and thence to night. Every time there
was the slightest noise, he snapped wide awake, hand dropping to his
sword-hilt. Once, when he heard the squeak of a rat, he felt a momentary
panic--but these rodents turned out to be of the ordinary kind, not
Abominations.
After speaking with the priest, Kozen had wanted to
proceed right away, get his answers all the sooner so he could leave the
city as soon as possible. The priest had demurred though, saying the effort
would be considerable, and that he needed to pray and meditate for a long
while before beginning such an exceedingly taxing invocation.
Kozen was to come to the old bell tower, the ruined
remnant of King Chelgar's former castle stronghold, an hour after midnight.
No sooner. Furthermore, he was to bring a substantial donation of gold. In
reply to Kozen's angry glower, the priest had said blandly that even an
illegal church needed money to operate. Apparently, Kozen thought to
himself, the Old Faith's meager followers were proving inadequate to their
own religion.
Either that, or the decrepit priest merely knew a
desperate man when he saw one. He wouldn't be the first holy man to gouge
every possible coin from someone in need, and he'd be far from the last.
When the church bells rang the midnight hour, Kozen
awoke from his light, chilly doze. The ringing peals echoed across the
city, a sound so familiar, so representative somehow of all the things he'd
lost, it wrenched at his heart. So many things, gone...
Although he was certain he'd never pray again, there
was still a use to be had in being able to meditate quietly. Besides, he
needed to get himself fully awake and clear-headed for what would come.
Thus, when the bells silenced and all that remained were the inevitable
constant city noises of Eleahome itself, Kozen crawled out from his hiding
place. He resettled himself beside the stacks of crates, sitting
cross-legged on the rough, ice-crusted cobblestones. It was hard both on
his backside and his knees, but these were merely pains. And pain could be
dismissed as nothing more than an unwanted sensation.
With steady breaths, he slowly emptied his mind of
everything. The feeling of the hard stones under him. The tickle on the
back of his head. The scratch of his wool cloak. The sights and sounds of
Eleahome. Even the cold faded from awareness. He kept his eyes open,
though, for it would not do for someone to come upon him unaware. Kozen
similarly listened in case any should try to sneak up behind him.
Not a terribly satisfying or effective way to meditate,
but it served its purpose.
No one came, however, and time passed with glacial
slowness. When he judged that roughly half of that first hour had passed,
Kozen climbed to his feet and made his way southwest, into the more
prosperous sections of the city. Fortunately, the half-moon provided
sufficient light for his dark-adapted eyes to make out the way.
Rickety wooden buildings gradually gave way to
better-constructed ones, and eventually to larger homes and businesses of
brick and stone. He even passed not far from the outer castle
walls--something he wouldn't have dared, had King Leopold been in the city.
With hood up though and his cloak tightly furled about himself, Kozen didn't
worry overly about being discovered. Only every now and then had he passed
someone or a small group of people hurrying on their way somewhere or other,
everyone keeping to themselves.
Beyond the castle, however, the buildings along the
avenues declined somewhat in quality, as if gone to seed. Homes and shops
that had once seen better days, but which were in a no longer quite
fashionable locale. A short distance further, just as the bells rang the
hour once more, Kozen drew near to the ruins he sought.
Set apart from everything else atop a small rise, the
gate and bell tower dated back to King Chelgar's day, Kozen knew. This
would have been over a hundred years ago, when the independent kingdom of
Stromis had been annexed back into 'Greater Telaria.' For whatever reason,
upon Eleahome's defeat and the deliberate demolition of Chelgar's old
castle, these remnants remained--a section of wall with a large, open
gateway through it, and a tall bell tower just beside.
An old story had it that after defeating Chelgar's
forces, Willem ordered the castle taken down, and the stones reused in the
construction of the newer one now occupied by King Leopold, to the
northeast. The tale further said that for some reason, that command was
simply never carried out fully. That the orders had been always thwarted by
an odd series of coincidences, and thus the gate and tower remained
standing.
Interesting that this should be, because under normal
circumstances, the land alone still would've been considered quite
valuable. Someone ought to have finished the demolition and built
something else here by now. Yet no one had.
Whether any of the tales were true or not, it was to
here that Kozen came. The only thing that surprised him at all was that no
one else seemed to have guessed the current purpose this place served. Now
that he knew, it should've been rather obvious.
Once he came under the cover of broken stonework and
drifts of old snow, he looked for any sign of pursuit or observation, but
detected none.
Moving then from shadow to shadow, Kozen quickly
crossed the remaining distance to the bell tower. When he reached the thick
postern door at the base, he thumped it thrice with his fist. The dull
sound did not carry all that well. When nothing happened for a minute, he
knocked again, somewhat harder.
This time the door opened, the elderly priest standing
there clad in elegant but threadbare heavy green robes--vestments, clearly.
Beyond him, inside the large tower and lit only by the silvery light of the
waxing half-moon, Kozen could make out the dim shadows of a jumbled ruin.
Great heaps of stone and broken wood loomed high. Silently, the old man
gestured Kozen inside and closed the door.
It was nearly pitch black inside, and Kozen waited,
thinking the priest would light a candle or lamp. But no, instead his hand
was taken by another that felt more like bone than skin and flesh. The
priest led him unerringly through the debris, along an obviously memorized
twisting path. Only after they passed through another doorway and to a
descending set of stairs did the old man finally release Kozen's hand.
Very softly, in the darkness, the priest whispered, "Fersai."
There came a flickering, like fire, but of a peculiar
greenish hue. Kozen couldn't see its source, however, because the priest
was turned away from him. By time the the other turned back, the green flow
had been replaced by a brighter golden one--a small brass oil lamp in the
priest's hand, now lit. "Didn't want to risk the light being seen,"
explained the priest, coughing a little, the motion making the tiny flame
quiver. "Cracks in the walls."
Before they continued, the priest told Kozen he could
leave his pack behind an overturned table just outside the stairs. Kozen
did this, after removing his heavy winter cloak and stuffing it into the
pack.
After an interminable descent down the narrow, spiral
stone staircase, they reached a series of corridors. It seemed a virtual
maze down here in these catacombs, but the priest led without hesitation.
They passed through countless halls and rooms and chambers. Most were
empty, but some few were filled with old bits of broken furniture or other
garbage, long picked-over for anything of worth; one room even had a small
natural spring running through it, partially flooding the floor.
Eventually, they reached a pair of large, ornate, but rotting oak doors.
The old man pulled one open and, with the lamp, gestured for Kozen to go in.
Together, they entered the Old Faith temple under the
city. Even as they passed through the doors, the priest began chanting
softly, in words Kozen did not recognize.
In contrast to the rest of what he'd seen down here,
the temple was a large, well-lit chamber of worked stone, clean and
well-maintained, about forty feet wide by about twice that deep, perhaps a
little more. A series of torches burned in cast-iron brackets along the
back wall, as did candles in similarly-styled iron holders along the sides.
Polished wooden benches arranged in precise rows filled most of the small
temple, the high ceiling above supported by pairs of thick stone columns
running the length of the chamber, sixteen in all. Still more candles
adorned the altar at the far end--a large, heavy, unadorned oak table
standing upon a dais reached by three marble steps. Two chairs of the same
wood were positioned on either side of the altar. Unlike the doors at the
entrance, all the wood furniture in here looked to be free of dust, in good
repair, and glistening with fresh oil.
About ten feet up on the wall behind the altar, over a
stylized bas-relief of the sun, an intricate statue stood in a dome-shaped
niche. The statue depicting the head of a lion was nearly the height of a
man and made of a silvery metal. It shone and glittered in the
candlelight. Platinum? Or Mithril? Kozen wondered, but couldn't
tell. It certainly wasn't mere silver. A wide arch of gold crowned the
statue's niche.
Without a doubt, the thing would be worth a king's
ransom. Kozen could not help but feel a stab of resentment, unconsciously
comparing this with the money he was to be charged for nothing more than a
'vision.'
Ahead of him, the priest in his heavy green vestments
turned to the right and gestured with one withered and liver-spotted hand,
indicating Kozen should follow. The old man wouldn't look at him though,
nor did he cease the droning chant.
Kozen, however, remained unmoving, still staring at the
lion statue. He felt as if he was standing on a precipice, and a sensation
like vertigo made the room spin around him. It turned slowly, first
clockwise, then counterclockwise, the whole world revolving on an axis that
was the statue. Only the lion remained a fixed point of stability as the
universe wheeled around it.
Initially, Kozen thought he was looking at nothing more
than a very realistic lion's head, a masterpiece of sculpture, to be
sure--setting aside the value of its metal--but only that. Soon, he
realized this wasn't just an ordinary, generic depiction. Rather it was
The Lion, the statue somehow conveying the symbolic epitome of all
things the great cat represented in lore and myth. The eyes of the Lion
gleamed with reflected candlelight and the flickering made the halo of its
mane seem to wave, as if in a breeze. The mouth stood partially open,
revealing a row of sharp fangs, ready to tear and rend. Behind the Lion,
Kozen could almost see the rustling grasses of the Joran plains. Staring
into the Lion's eyes, he felt a pang of fear and hunger, like prey
recognizing the inexorably approaching predator.
He found himself thinking about strength and will,
courage and fierceness.
Unbidden, a memory rose within him. Kozen remembered a
time, years ago, when he undertook the Long Fast.
He fell into the memory, unbelievably vivid, as if into
a dream.
* * *
Kozen lay unmoving, curled around himself in the small,
square cell. The once-white robe he wore was now splotched all over with
gray and brown, except for two darker spots near his knees. His hands and
face were filthy, and his hair pointed in all directions. He was musing, in
a half-panicked, half-excited way how when he'd ran his hands through his
hair this morning (Had it been morning? He couldn't know...), two fairly
large clumps had come loose in his fingers. His hair was falling out?
It would grow back. Sure it would. Just as soon as he
started eating again, which should be tomorrow if his count of the days past
was correct. He was not sure because he'd kept the number in his head, and
without food, his memory had become uncertain. He might have made marks on
the wall, or found some other means of recording the number, but such things
were forbidden.
If only he'd been allowed to bring some books from the
Great Library--or even a single book, which he would have read and re-read
gladly, cover to cover. But this was forbidden as well.
His gaze was inevitably drawn back to that which
occupied the other half of his cell: A large platter filled with
fresh-baked bread and fragrant, aged cheese. Beside the platter stood a
goblet and a pitcher, filled with fine wine. Even though there were no
light sources within the cell, the small barred opening in the locked door
and the cunningly placed torches beyond it created a stream of golden light
that shone upon the food, making it seem like a gift from the Great Ruler
himself.
Although his cell was small and cramped, Kozen's
position in it, with his back against the rear wall and his legs clenched up
to his chest, made it only more so. He kept his eyes open, though, because
that was the only way he could keep from snatching up the bread and cheese
and stuffing his mouth with it. "Tomorrow, tomorrow," he kept whispering to
himself. One more day...
As a former soldier of the Royal Guard, he was used to
privation. After all, what soldier hadn't gone for a day, two days, or even
a hand of days on short rations? But this was far, far worse.
First of all, the time without any food at all had
never been this long before. What's more, he had always had some task to
keep him busy, even if it was just putting one foot down in front of the
other on an endless dusty road. Or the back-breaking work of digging a
latrine.
No, what made this far more terrible was that he had to
spend every single waking moment--and even some sleeping moments--completely
and painfully aware of a delicious meal not more than an arm's reach away.
With his eyes open, and especially with the tears that
occasionally came and blurred his vision, he could almost pretend that the
food was an illusion, a false image sent by the Evil Ones to tempt him from
his fast. When his lids fell closed, however, something worse than the
sight of the food tempted him: The smell.
The scent of the oven-fresh wheat bread filled his
nose, and with it, the savor of the small crock of melting butter. Under
the pervasive odor of the bread was the tang of several different
cheeses--the mellow, sweet cheese that was Eleahome's own specialty; the
sour blue-and-green veined cheese of North Ulmber; the bright yellow (and
very spicy) variety from the desert people, the Charhai, in the east. And
mingled with all these smells was the unmistakable--and terrible--aroma of
Larandian white, Kozen's favorite wine.
Every day, the food was different. Yesterday had been
especially bad, as the platter contained a large pot of steaming beef stew,
filled to the brim. With tears streaming helplessly down his face, he
couldn't pull his eyes away from the chunks of skillet-browned meat, the
pieces of gravy-coated potatoes and carrots. The smell, so delicious, so
awful, made him retch and gag sometimes.
Even after the hot food cooled, its odor lingered in
the tiny cell. Kozen thought he could even detect the smell of all the
previous days' uneaten meals pervading the very cloth of his robes.
At a time Kozen supposed was morning--though it could
have been noon or evening or the middle of the night for all he knew--a
white robed figure would arrive to take away the old food and leave in its
place something new. While the brothers took up the platter, examining it
carefully to see if anything had been disturbed, Kozen would be given his
only permitted sustenance of the day, a large flagon of lukewarm water.
Some days they gave him two, although how they decided this, he could not
figure.
Each day's meal was different, yet every time they left
a pitcher of Larandian white. Do they know? Kozen wondered. Were
they bringing that particular wine precisely because it was his
favorite? It was no secret among those who knew him, but still...why?
Kozen's six-foot tall frame filled much of the cell,
and although he could have spread out some and made himself more
comfortable, he couldn't bring himself to do so. To unbend at all would
bring some portion of his body in contact with the offering of forbidden
delicacies, and somehow he knew if that happened, he would break his
fast. "Tomorrow," he croaked. "One more day, and I'll be free to--"
But he couldn't complete the thought without feeling
the skittering fingers of madness, pulling and tugging him toward the
sustenance just a few feet away. It seemed as if a vast hole had opened in
his stomach and mind and soul were sliding, swirling through it, like water
down a drainpipe.
The few times when he could pull his gaze away from the
food, it inevitably drifted toward the bottom of the locked wooden door and
the odd scratch marks near the bottom.
Once, in the acolytes' commonroom where all sorts of
gossip was wont to spring up, he had heard one young brother-aspirant
whisper that those who failed the Long Fast stayed locked in their cells,
shut away until they were able to go an entire thirty day period without
touching the food. Some, the acolyte went on, failed so completely that
their minds snapped. Even if they did through some miracle manage to
complete the Long Fast, the brothers who took care of the mad ones could no
longer dare to let them out.
Could the last occupant of this cell have been one
of those poor unfortunates? Kozen wondered.
Perhaps failed brother would have been a frail
stick-like figure, gobbling and swilling down the food when it was brought
each day, stuffing himself, yet receiving no nourishment from it. Each day
when new meal arrived--the grilled mutton steaks, dripping with savory
juices, the steaming egg noodles, the fruit-filled sweetrolls--would this
crazed, failed acolyte leap upon it, stuffing his mouth, barely pausing to
chew as he filled his distended belly?
Maybe he spent days, months, years, squatting in the
corner, his eyes blazing with hunger and madness, dreaming of roast turkey,
buttered potatoes, sweet cream-filled pastries. Maybe the scratch marks on
the door were his feeble attempts to claw and dig his way through, to make
his way to the kitchens below where he could eat and feast and gorge
himself. And when he finally died, after years of raving madness, could not
his spirit have remained behind to torment and tempt those who occupied his
old cell?
Eventually, sleep came to Kozen, a long, lonely, black
time without dreams. Dreaming took energy and he had none.
After an unknowable period of time, Kozen woke to hear
the sound of the key being turned in the door lock. Blinking several times,
he tried to stand up. I will meet them on my feet, was his thought.
Today! he rejoiced. I've won!
He managed to heave himself upright, but a wave of
dizziness washed over him. He took two tottering steps and slumped against
the cold stone wall. One of the white-robed brothers came in to remove the
untouched platter of bread and cheese. As he put it on a small, wheeled
cart, the second brother did as he did every day and came in to examine
Kozen.
Kozen himself could see nothing of this brother's face,
which was lost in the shadows of his raised hood, the only light coming from
behind him.
Still, as Kozen gazed back at the blank darkness, a
soft white hand gently lifted his unshaven chin and stared into his
green-gray eyes. For the first time, as he noticed that hand, he realized
it was small and slender, the fingertips delicate and pointed.
A woman? he wondered. I didn't know the
Brothers of the Long Fast admitted women.
He was still marveling over this fact when the hand
withdrew, and he felt a touch at his chest. Looking down, he saw the
"brother" held a large cracked ceramic flagon, filled with more than a quart
of warm water. Kozen knew it would taste ever so slightly of the pinch of
salt they added to it. The small, feminine hand pushed it at him again.
What? Kozen was confused. Something was
terribly wrong here.
Dumbly, he took the flagon and drained it. The flagon
was taken way, and refilled from a pitcher on the cart. He drank that as
well.
With a sudden realization, Kozen realized that he's
somehow miscounted the days. Today would not be the end.
But then which day was it? A moment of panic washed
over him and a tightness closed his throat. Sick with fear, his stomach
threatened to disgorge the only sustenance it would receive today. Would
tomorrow be the end? Or the day after?
Another, more terrifying idea emerged from the black
pit of his belly: What if the brothers had decided that he'd gone insane?
The one who looked into his eyes, what if she saw madness in him? Would
they imprison him here forever?
The horror turned his knees to mud. He sank down with
his back to the wall, legs folded up against his chest, and fists clenched
tight against the wide open "O" of his mouth.
Out in the torch-lit hallway, the first brother
uncovered a roast pheasant, stuffed with walnuts and glazed with mint jelly,
surrounded with baked potatoes and onions. He took the tray into the cell.
After setting the platter down on the floor, he added a clean goblet and a
fresh pitcher of Larandian white.
* * *
With a feeling akin to the panic he'd experienced back
then, Kozen forced the unwanted memory away. Blinking, he realized he was
still in the temple under the castle ruins.
What in fact happened was that his count had been off
by a single day. He'd managed to resist eating the roast pheasant, and in
time his maddened panic faded into a near-delirious doze. The next thing he
knew, when he came more fully back to consciousness again, two brothers were
helping him down the corridors, his feet barely touching the floor. They
took Kozen to the Infirmary, where he would be slowly reintroduced to food
and drink, his shut-down stomach and bowels coaxed back to their normal
functioning. The lost hair hadn't been due to the privation, either;
rather, Kozen had pulled it out, unknowing.
In the years since the Long Fast, those moments of
doubt and terror continued to haunt him. Every now and then, he still had
nightmares about it. In those, the Fast never ended, and he became the
insane, capering monk of his imaginings. Upon waking from these, he was
always hard pressed to bring himself to eat anything at all.
Now, in this strange, forgotten temple of the Old Faith
beneath Eleahome, Kozen did not like the fact he seemed to have been forced
to relive it, in a manner more vivid than any nightmare or ordinary memory.
Was this what the old priest had meant when he said the Triune God
specialized in visions? How could that best-forgotten horror possibly be of
any help against Leopold?
Despite the seeming duration of the dream or vision or
whatever it was, Kozen saw that in reality only mere seconds had passed, not
hours. The old priest just now reached the back corner of the rows of
benches, about to start down the aisle between them and the stone wall. He
paused a moment and, without stopping his low, rheumy chant, gestured again
for Kozen to follow him.
Shaking himself into motion, Kozen finally followed the
priest, but his eyes kept wandering unwillingly back to the lion statue. It
made him uneasy. Obviously, it held some kind of power.
After a few steps, Kozen lost sight of the altar and
statue, his view blocked by the stone pillars. He glanced upwards, trying
to follow the polished pink-hued granite to the high ceiling but could not.
The torches lit only the first fifty feet or so, and the columns continued
up into the blackness for an unknowable distance.
As Kozen and the priest turned the frontmost corner and
started toward the dais, he was able once more to see the altar. Against
his will, his gaze slid back again up toward the statue's niche. With a
shock that caused him to miss a step and nearly trip, the statue no longer
depicted a lion's head.
It was The Hawk.
How can that be? Kozen wondered, baffled.
Trick of the light?
Like the Lion's eyes, the Hawk's also glittered in the
torch- and candlelight. Even from this distance, Kozen could see the
delicate tracery the feathers in its upswept wings. Its beak stood
partially open, as the Lion's mouth had, and a tiny star of light shone from
the downturned razor-sharp tip.
As he drew closer, Kozen thought the look in the Hawk's
eyes reminded him of someone. It was comforting, the gaze of the Hawk, but
hard--rather like the love of a stern father.
The vision seized him as a raptor would seize a rabbit,
and hauled him away. Kozen could almost hear the Hawk's piercing screech.
* * *
Kozen and his father walked together in an open field
near his home, a field laying fallow this year and filled with
sweet-smelling clover. It was a sunny day of early summer, the sky clear
but for a few, inconsequential puffs of vapor high in the otherwise unmarred
azure. Sunlight streamed down from almost directly overhead, bright but not
fierce.
For his own part, Kozen was filled with the surging
excitement that any boy of twelve years old will feel when he's doing
something for the first time, something once forbidden. His heartbeat raced
and he felt a powerful urge to gallop from one end of the field to the
other.
He did not run, however, because his father was
watching him and he wanted to look mature.
Kozen smiled up at his father, a man with rough
features, somewhat scarred by the pox he'd caught as a child. He'd always
refused to grow a beard though, and in his meticulous fashion shaved every
morning. His hair was thick and brown, though graying, much as Kozen's
would be in thirty years' time. His eyes were a bright, piercing blue, eyes
that stared through you, eyes that seemed to know everything that
went on in your mind and heart.
Alton Athesis was not looking at his son now though,
as they came to a halt, but rather at the three bales of hay stacked about
twenty yards away. In front of the top bale hung a foot-square swatch of
white cloth, crudely daubed with lampblack to make a large "X." Behind the
hay were several thick planks, placed at an angle between the top of the
bales and the ground. The crossbow bolts that went through the hay would
hit these and either stick to them or be deflected down. In neither case
would the shafts be lost, and this was an important point. "Crossbow bolts
never come cheap," his father had said on more than one occasion. "Nor are
they easy to make. You just ask a fletcher someday."
Kozen's father carried the crossbow, an old weapon from
the one of the many wars with Nara, over two decades ago. It, too, was
scarred and pitted like his father's face, but the device still functioned,
and his father always kept the wood oiled and the spring-steel prod strung.
When he practiced with it, which he did once each month except during the
coldest part of winter, he always restrung the crossbow with a new
gut-string. The used ones he discarded, even though they usually showed
little sign of fraying. When Kozen asked why, his father had explained that
not only could a broken string completely destroy the crossbow, you could
lose a few fingers or get yourself a broken arm or leg at the same time in
payment.
Kozen almost never missed these practice sessions,
though until today he had only watched.
Now standing in the sunlit field, Kozen's father braced
his foot in the iron half-ring bolted at the front of the crossbow stock and
drew the string. With a small click, the trigger mechanism caught and held
it. Then, he reached over his shoulder and pulled one of the bolts from the
quiver slung across his back. He placed the bolt in the groove on the stock
and nocked it snug against the string, stroking the stiff fletches with a
forefinger to be sure they lay evenly.
Finally, he handed the crossbow to his son. "Careful
there," he rumbled as the boy reached eagerly for the weapon. "Keep your
hand away from the trigger until you mean to shoot it. And never--I mean
never--point it at anything you don't mean to shoot. Not even when it
isn't cocked or loaded."
Sobered, Kozen accepted the crossbow from his father.
He held it away from his body, but not too far, as if it were both a
poisonous viper coiled to strike and a priceless, fragile vase.
"No, no--hold it like you mean it," Alton said, almost
as if reading his thoughts. "If you don't master the weapon, the weapon
will master you. And probably shoot you in the foot for your trouble."
Kozen straightened and tried to emulate the way he'd
seen his father hold it, the butt under his right arm and the stock in his
left hand, with his right hand helping to support it. It wasn't nearly as
easy as his father made it seem. Already, the immense weight of the thing
dragged the front end down.
"Careful when you aim, and don't pull that trigger
until you're sure you're gonna hit the target," Kozen's father said.
"Chances are, you'll miss the first few times anyway. But so help me," he
poked a finger at Kozen's chest. "If you shoot wild and lose the bolt, I'll
take the cost of it out of your hide."
Kozen swallowed and nodded. "I'll be careful, sir," he
said in a voice that almost didn't crack.
Alton crooked one side of his pox-scarred
mouth in a half-smile and took up a position a step or two behind him, arms
crossed and his legs spread firmly. "When you shoot it," he said, "keep the
stock up against your shoulder. Hold it steady and sight along the bolt and
through the hole at the end. Both eyes open. And when you're ready to
fire, release your breath and squeeze the trigger. Squeeze! Don't pull or
jerk!"
Solemnly, Kozen did as he was told. At first, he
couldn't find the sight, but there it was, mounted on a small adjustable
metal frame near the front of the stock, just beyond the prod. It took him
several seconds to master the trick of seeing the target through the hole
while keeping both eyes open. Eventually, he positioned the middle of the
"X" target in the hole. Kozen breathed out and squeezed the trigger. When
it didn't fire, he pulled harder. Surely it should have gone off by now,
he thought. His chest grew tight, needing air now. He considered telling
his father that maybe the mechanism was jammed somehow--
Suddenly, the crossbow fired. The shot went wild,
missing the hay bales by yards. The bolt flew into the woods at the far
side of the field, swallowed by the thick foliage.
Kozen turned around with a lump in his throat. I'm
sorry, he wanted to plead. I thought it wasn't working right--
The threatened beating paled beside the thought that
perhaps his father would never let him fire the crossbow again. That he
would look down on his son, and tell his friends at the tavern, "Yeah,
that's my son out there, the clod, the one who'll never amount to anything."
Wordlessly, his father held out his hands for the
weapon, and just as mutely, Kozen gave it to him. His father cleared his
throat and said, "You made a mistake. You know that don’t you?"
This is it, he'll disown me any minute now,
Kozen thought, unable to speak. He settled for nodding.
"You didn't squeeze steadily," his father said.
"Probably because you didn't know how much pressure it would take to fire
the crossbow. So you jerked the trigger and lost the bolt. An
understandable error, but now you know. I could have let you fire it empty,
but the lesson would not have been as well-learned as I'm sure it is now."
Bracing the stock with his foot as he re-cocked the string, he added, "Don't
let it happen again."
He loaded a new bolt and handed the crossbow back to
his disbelieving son. With a movement of his head, he indicated that Kozen
should try once more.
As Kozen aimed the crossbow, the boy heard his father
say in a low voice, "Same thing happened to me the first time. We’ll go
look for that bolt later. Might not be completely lost."
Alton didn't see the grin on his son's face.
Kozen released his breath and squeezed the trigger. The crossbow fired.
The bolt passed clean through the upper right corner of
the target and made a loud thunk as it slammed deep into the wood planking.
* * *
As the vision faded, Kozen remembered that a month or
two later, he had lost a bolt into the woods, and his father kept his
promise and had taken the cost of it out of his backside and in extra
chores. On the other hand, the crossbow lessons continued anyway, through
that summer and three more; by the last, the boy had grown strong enough to
cock the bow himself, though with some difficulty. Kozen had no siblings,
and his mother died some years back of typhus, when he was only seven.
Though grief had driven them apart, this activity drew father and son
together once more.
The year he turned fifteen, Kozen had asked his father
if he intended to give him the crossbow someday. The senior Athesis simply
laughed at the notion. "Give you my crossbow?" he'd said with incredulity.
"Are you addled, boy? You'll get this one when I'm dead, and no sooner.
The steel prod alone is worth a fortune. I paid dearly for that weapon,
with years of my life as a common soldier, and if you really want one you'll
do the same. Join the King's army."
And so Kozen had done, two summers later, and served in
the Royal Guard with distinction, rising steadily from enlisted to officer
rank. Upon being promoted to captain, he even re-swore his oath of fealty
to King Stepan himself, Leopold's father.
Kozen did inherit that old crossbow, in time. However,
by then he had no need of it, and ended up selling it for the money to buy a
decent officer's horse and a better sword than was standard issue. The old
crossbow was indeed valuable, spring-steel being a relatively rare
commodity, but Kozen learned that his father had been exaggerating somewhat
as to its real worth.
Then came that awful business down in Nara and, well,
nothing had been the same after that. At least the father had been spared
his son's shame and dishonor.
With this thought, Kozen returned fully to himself.
Once again, only seconds had elapsed. First the Long Fast, and now this,
he wondered, confused. Why two so utterly dissimilar visions?
The first was merely part of the lengthy process that
went into his becoming a priest of the Great Ruler. Every acolyte of Tos
endured the Great Fast eventually, some more than once. As for the second
vision, Kozen supposed that in a way, the business with the crossbow had
been the earliest genesis of his having become a soldier, and later, an
officer.
If this Triune God was trying to tell him something, he
had not the slightest clue what it might be. Is he taunting me with the
things I've lost?
The old priest began busying himself with lighting more
candles. After this was done, he used a pair of metal tongs to ignite a
small lump of charcoal and, once lit, blew upon it until the nugget glowed
cherry red. With his free hand, the priest removed the top of a large brass
brazier. This sat atop the altar, next to a wooden bowl filled with a heap
of fine ochre powder. After popping the glowing charcoal into the brazier,
he next took up a spoon, of an ornate design similar to that of the tongs.
With it, he measured three large spoonfuls of the reddish powder and dumped
those into the brazier as well, and replaced its top.
Instantly, a thick, green-brown smoke began swirling up
from the filigreed vents in the brazier. A sickly-sweet perfume filled the
air.
The stench of the incense made Kozen want to gag.
The priest only made things worse by swinging the
brazier on its chain, three times about himself, before setting it down on
the floor, where it continued to fume and smoke. Finally, the old man
appeared to reach an end to his chant. He looked over to Kozen and said
simply, "This may take a while. Please be patient. Sit if you like."
Then, he resumed the low, mumbling chant again in his rheum-thickened voice,
and knelt on the bare stone floor before the altar.
In an effort to get clear of the cloying, dizzying
odor, Kozen moved away, down the three steps and toward the frontmost of the
wooden benches. Intending to sit down to wait, but before he did so, he
dared another glance up at niche. To his surprise, the statue had
transformed back into the Lion.
An idea occurred to him, and he took a few paces to the
right. The statue became the Hawk. Back to the left, from a position more
nearly centered before the altar, it was the Lion again. As he studied this
effect, Kozen found he couldn't say exactly when it transitioned from Lion
to Hawk, or Hawk to Lion, and yet it was never both.
Paying no attention the priest now, and trying without
success to ignore the heavy incense, Kozen moved to the left side of the
subterranean temple.
From the left, the statue suddenly became the head of a
deer, The Buck. Kozen counted twenty one points on the huge antlers
rising up toward the golden half-dome; ten points on the left antler, eleven
on the right. The eyes of this incarnation did not gleam, but instead
seemed to absorb light. At first, he thought they were black, but now he
saw that in fact the eyes were a deep, dark purple, the color of the sky on
a moonless night. The color of the spaces between the stars, a void
reaching down to pull you up into the heavens.
An instant later, Kozen found himself reliving yet
another memory.
* * *
Two of the Elite guard escorted Kozen to the council
chamber of the Bishopric, a chamber deep within Leopold's castle in
Eleahome. Each of the guards carried a staff of smooth hardwood, shod at
both end with blunt steel tips. Neither wore armor, but were clothed in a
belted cloth tunic that reached to a point just above their knees, with soft
cotton breeches under it. On their feet, they wore sandals.
Despite the fact that neither had edged weapon or armor
just now, Kozen knew that he--and most other men--wouldn't stand a chance
against them in a fight. Even if there'd been only one of the Elite,
completely weaponless, and himself fully equipped and armed, Kozen would not
have placed a wager on his chances. They were said to be trained in all
manner of combat, with and without arms.
Kozen also noted with interest that the two men
escorting him held their staves on the left. It was said that fully three
out of four of the Elite were left-handed, for reasons no one knew. Not
that it especially mattered which hand held the staff--they could deal out
death equally with either.
The two Elite turned and put their backs to the carved
mahogany doors, one at each. The man on the right said in a voice almost
completely devoid of inflection, "You will be summoned."
Nothing more was said for long minutes. The guards
ignored Kozen as he stood there apparently studying the stylized god-figure
on the door. In reality, Kozen was watching both of them and certainly, he
thought, they watched him, even though they stared straight ahead.
Then, in response to a signal Kozen neither saw nor
heard, the same guard who had spoken before said flatly, "You are summoned."
As one, the guards turned the door handles and opened
the doors. Kozen got one last look at the carven figure on the mahogany,
and realized with some small surprise that it bore a resemblance to King
Leopold. An idealized version, but Leopold nonetheless. Then again, he
reconsidered, maybe he shouldn't have been surprised after all.
He entered the room and saw the gathered clergy of the
Bishopric. The Elite followed him inside and closed the doors, resuming
their motionless stance.
The chamber was dark, with only a few candles guttering
in small, shielded sconces along the walls. A quartet of tall candles in
black iron floor-stands made a square of brighter illumination in their
center, a space several paces from the doors. Knowing what was expected of
him, Kozen went there, taking the position just inside the square.
On the other side of the room, the Bishopric sat in
shadow behind a wide, curved table, its concavity facing towards him. Only
the Bishops' rough outlines could be discerned, aside from the occasional
glint of a gem-encrusted miter or robe, six of them in all. The seventh
figure in the center, though, captured Kozen's full attention, for he would
not be one of the Bishops.
This one was taller than the others, and somehow
conveyed the sense of being the most important person in the room, although
he wore only simple dark robes over his clothes. Even without a crown, this
one radiated authority and an unspoken demand for obedience.
King Leopold, Kozen realized. He found himself
staring into the shadow where Leopold's face would be. From in that black
space, he was certain that two flat, dark eyes stared back into his. Kozen
also felt a disturbing, probing sensation, almost as if one Elite had placed
one of those metal-shod staves against his forehead and was pushing gently,
but firmly.
The largest shape sat just to the left of middle and,
recognizing the massive silhouette, Kozen deduced that he must be Archbishop
Layton. The Archbishop now spoke in a bass rumble, a voice sounding like
two stones being ground against one another, "You are Kozen Athesis, Priest
of Eleahome, Servant of the Most Holy Church."
It was not a question, but the statement and the formal
protocol it represented required a specific reply. "I am he," Kozen
answered, taking a short step forward to the center of the lighted space.
"Do you know why you are summoned here?" the rumbling
voice asked.
Kozen replied, "I believe so, Your Eminence."
"While I sit at this table, in this chamber," Layton
said, "I cease to be your superior, as you have recognized me to be. You
will address your answers to the Bishopric as a whole."
Yes, Your Eminence, Kozen almost said, but
caught himself. "I understand," he said.
"Do you know why are you here?"
Kozen paused a moment, phrasing his reply. "I presume
it has to do with my research in the Library."
"It does," Layton said. "You have been found guilty by
this council of willfully disobeying the right and lawful authority of the
Holy Church. It's also been determined that you did this with premeditation
and conscious intent." The voice paused and, hearing a shuffle, Kozen
realized that Layton was reading from a piece of parchment. How can he
read in this light? he wondered. "Specifically, you were caught reading
forbidden records and information."
The robed-and-hooded shape two to the right from center
moved slightly. "Your actions showed clearly you knew you were doing
wrong. You tried to conceal it. Why did you persist anyway, in flagrant
defiance of the commands of your superiors?"
The words were spoken softly in a woman's voice, and
Kozen knew her to be Bishop Arathia. She also happened to be one of the
most dangerous members of the Bishopric; people she didn't like had a
tendency to disappear or die under very normal-seeming circumstances.
Kozen cleared his suddenly dry throat. "I felt I had
to," he finally said.
"That is not an answer," Arathia said.
"I have no other." The pressure against his forehead
seemed to be increasing, slowly but inexorably. The headache became
painful.
Layton's bass rumble said, "The texts you were reading
covered two subjects, both forbidden. One was dark magic, the conjuring of
demons, imps, and similar evils. In essence, wizardry. Also, details about
the wizard wars. The other information found in your possession included
certain sealed royal records." The miter on Layton's head shifted upward.
"Do you have an explanation?"
The pressure on Kozen's forehead sharpened, became an
iron nail driving into his skull. The unseen eyes of the central figure
bored into him. Through clenched teeth, he said, "I had reason to believe
that the recent increasing reports of unexplained attacks in the countryside
were becoming a threat to the kingdom. I thought it might be related to
what wizards were reputed to have done, long ago. I'd no intent of using
such magic myself."
"That does not explain why you also breached the royal
records."
The nail of pain dug deeper into his head, probing. "I
felt the situation might represent a direct hazard to His Highness. I have
no other explanation." Kozen continued to stare into Leopold's unseen face,
his gaze locked there.
"Did you find one?" This question came from Layton,
curiously intent.
"No, I didn't."
Suddenly, the pressure disappeared. And somehow, Kozen
felt certain that Leopold knew he'd been lying. Well, not lying exactly,
but leaving out large portions of the truth.
"That is not sufficient," Arathia said quietly. Then,
to the others she said, "Now you know why I've been insisting we destroy
these evil works. There's no good to be had in keeping them around, and
their very presence becomes an irresistable temptation to men such as this
one here. We risk another holocaust, simply because we cannot do the right
thing and bury this unholy knowledge forever."
Another of the bishops spoke then, one Kozen recognized
as Archbishop DiMarisol, whose dioscese consisted of Old Telaria and its
surrounding lands. He was an unremarkable, portly, balding man in his fifth
decade. More importantly, he was known both as a consummate politician in
the religious hierarchy, and as intensely loyal to Leopold. "Risky, true,"
DiMarisol allowed. "This does indicate we need to take more seriously the
security of these documents--a locked room in a non-public location is
clearly grossly insufficient. However, I would argue that once before, we
lost nearly everything--every record, all the histories, every shred of
advanced knowledge. If not for the contents of church libraries throughout
the crescent, without a doubt we'd have descended into utter barbarism,
using stone tools and living like animals." Arathia looked as if she would
speak, but DiMarisol forestalled her with a raised hand. "We keep this
particular information not for its own sake, for none of us would dare the
blasphemy of wizardry. Rather, we keep it against the possibility of
a return of wizards' magic. If our ancient foes were to come back or
somehow be reborn among the evil, ambitious men among us, we would need to
know how to fight them. Understanding our enemies' powers would be the
first step in any attempt to defeat them."
Arathia seemed about to say more in argument, but
Layton's booming voice interrupted her. "This is a discussion we shouldn't
be having here," he said. "I recommend we table it for another time."
"Of course," said Arathia, "you are wise as always.
Let us discuss this later."
Turning his attention back to the accused, Layton
asked, "Kozen Athesis, Is there anything else you have to say to this
council? Any mitigating circumstances? Any information or defense you wish
to present?"
Kozen was at a loss. What else could he say? "No,
Your Eminence," he said, the honorific slipping out by force of habit. "I
have nothing else."
"Pity," Layton murmured, sighing. He pushed his chair
back and stood with a grunt of effort. "It is the judgment of this council
that you, Kozen Athesis, are guilty of willfully disobeying Church
authority." At this point, the others all stood as well, all except
Leopold. "In addition, you have been judged guilty of wizardry.
"For these crimes," Layton continued after a brief
pause, "you are, as of this moment, stripped of your title of Priest of
Eleahome. This punishment is for the crime of disobeying Church authority."
In a whisper of silken folds, one of Layton's huge arms
gestured toward the guards. The two Elite stepped forward and took hold of
the collar of Kozen's white priest's robes. Together, they both gave a
mighty yank and tore them from his body, leaving him naked but for a
breechcloth and sandals. Kozen strained to resist the urge to cover
himself.
Layton was not finished, however. "Because you
willingly sought out knowledge of the dark arts, you are also hereby
Excommunicate," he said, his bass voice shaking slightly. "You may not set
foot on sacred ground, upon pain of death. To the Most Holy Church, you no
longer exist. Your soul is consigned to the Abyss."
Kozen knew that in being judged guilty of consorting
with Wizards' magic, he ought to have been burned at the stake, or hung and
dismembered. Someone--Layton perhaps--had interceded on his behalf.
"As for breaking the King's seal, that specific crime
falls under his jurisdiction, and therefore it is up to His Highness to--"
"That won't be necessary," the soft voice replied out
of the darkness surrounding Leopold. "After all, what more could I do?
We've already condemned him to eternity in the Abyss. I find that
sufficient punishment for his crimes." There came a brief pause, before the
monarch continued, "However, I must act as protector for the kingdom and all
the people herein, and it's still possible he might cause some mischief. I
therefore declare him outlaw, in fact and in deed. Let none give him aid,
succor, or shelter, lest they suffer the same fate."
"Highness," Layton murmured.
"Yes, Eminence, what is it?" asked Leopold.
"I beg your indulgence, Highness," Layton said. "But
to banish a man like this, outlawed and all but naked to the elements, would
be akin to a death sentence. To survive at all, he would be forced to
further crimes. At least allow him to visit his room before he's ejected
from the city, to dress himself decently and carry away what he will."
"Fine, fine," Leopold said impatiently, waving a hand.
"Let it not be said I lack mercy. Five minutes though, no more."
"Thank you, Highness," said Layton, inclining his
head. "You are indeed merciful."
Kozen felt Leopold's unseen eyes follow him as the
guards led him away.
* * *
With an effort, Kozen wrenched his gaze away from the
Buck. However, even the intricate carvings and inlays of the wall behind
the altar captured his attention. His eye wound its way through the complex
patterns and lines, always leading back to the statue.
He turned and deliberately put his back to the statue
and the altar. Long minutes passed, punctuated by the old priest's endless
droning and the thick green-brown haze of incense.
Now, Kozen felt sure of his impressions before. The
deity of the Old Faith, the Triune God, was fully aware of Kozen's status.
Former priest, former soldier, now Excommunicate and outlaw. Did that then
mean the old man's chanting and ceremony would prove fruitless? Or was it
just this god's way of saying, 'I know everything there is to know about
you'?
Away from Kozen, in long rows all the way back to the
entrance of the Temple, the benches showed the same care as the altar and
chairs: They, too, were dusted and oiled, yet he doubted whether anyone had
dared to worship here since the castle above fell. Certainly they would've
stopped coming after the Great Purge, during Stepan's reign.
Scratching at his graying beard, he counted the
benches. At least two hundred and fifty could have worshiped in this place,
he guessed. But who? he wondered. And why?
He was a little irritated at himself for his lack of
knowledge of the Old Faith, and the other gods and goddesses. He himself
had been taught that there was only one God, only one power for Law and Good
in the universe. Power obtained anywhere else was prone to be tainted and
evil.
If evil is what it takes, Kozen promised himself
silently. Then that's what I'll use. Nothing else matters. Hear that,
Triune God? If you object, let me know.
Behind him, Kozen heard a change in the old priest's
chant. The cadence strengthened and the voice became deeper, as if the old
man had found a passageway through his phlegm-clogged throat. The rhythm
intensified, pounding in time with Kozen's heart.
"...Klarthi, Sessrom, Herndahl..." the priest kept
repeating, again and again, his voice growing still deeper and taking on a
resonance that echoed in the underground temple, as if other voices joined
his invocation. Kozen felt a strange urge to join the chant, though he
resisted and stayed silent.
"...Klarthi, Sessrom, Herndahl..."
He turned around to see the priest now standing, arms
outstretched. A nimbus of ghostly fire covered the priest's hands and head
as he shouted, "Klarthi! Sessrom! Herndahl!"
Silver-white flames shot up from the priest's forehead,
illuminating briefly the upper-recesses of the Temple ceiling. For a bare
moment, Kozen glimpsed carved shapes that looked like woodlands and
animals. The creatures seemed to be in motion, the flora stirred by unseen
breezes.
"Kee-ai Sah!" the priest cried.
The conflagration flared and winked out.
When Kozen's vision cleared several seconds later, the
priest lay in a heap before the oaken altar. Fearing the loss of what he'd
come for, Kozen rushed to and knelt over the priest's body.
Listening, he determined that the old man still lived,
although his heartbeat was slow and labored and his breath wheezed wetly.
Kozen shook him and lightly slapped his face. "Wake up," he demanded. "I
need to know. Did the augury work?"
The priest groaned and opened his eyes.
"Well?" he said roughly, gripping the front of the
priest's robes. "Did it work?"
The frail, ancient man mumbled something. "What?"
Kozen said, shaking the priest toward consciousness. "I can't hear you."
The priest tried to speak, but no sound came. With his
ear next to the priest's mouth, Kozen heard the faint words, which were
little more than barely shaped exhalations.
Then, the other said no more, falling unconscious.
Kozen shoved the priest down and climbed to his feet. For long, long
minutes, he stared up at the statue which, from this position, had turned
back into the Lion.
The words the priest had whispered were these:
David Anthony Burke.
All this for nothing more than a name? Kozen's
clenched fist shook with the rage that threatened to consume him.
(Copyright 2005, all rights reserved. Duplication, retransmission, or
alteration without permission is prohibited.)
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