Chapter 18
Daze did not have that many riddlers. He did not trouble with glyph priests or lords; he could not be bothered to learn how glyphs worked, and certainly not how to allow worshippers to make use of them. His preferred method of initiating those to him was through riddles and conundrums, to twist the minds of those he brought to what he called enlightenment, and what any well-trained philosopher could prove to be a state of casuistry, double-think, and mental chicanery designed to persuade any ordinary person that black was white, and that their belief structure was flawed, and that they were somehow unreasonable. The circular arguments did not work on most of those who belonged to a truth cult, but could have a profound effect on the unwary to argue from a position that sounded reasonable until dissected. Daze offered his followers rewards according to their needs, asking only from each what they might be prepared to give; and it sounded reasonable until some poor sap, wondering why he was giving more and getting less than some others realised that it was a recipe for free-loaders to claim needs beyond their true needs and claim their efforts were not able to aspire to anything as tiring as work.
As such, Daze noticed that one of his riddlers was suddenly unable to worship properly and was cut off from him. He was sore wrath, but could do little about it.
And he and Selen had a plan which would also punish the toróg and their wretched tróglings. Selen had some control over pulling at the forces of the earth, and she sought for a source of underground fire. Her power was waning with the moon, but still she coaxed it through underground chambers, and forced it through fissures, building pressure.
oOoOo
“How can we stop other people like this Myopsos?” asked Pempios. He had asked Pythas and Chrysandion to a meeting, with such people as they thought suitable.
“Carve a truth rune on every flagstone in the town square, suffuse them with power, and anyone standing there and lying gets zapped,” said Kaz.
“That’s a lot of carving,” said Pempios.
“Depends how fancy you want it,” said Kaz. “A mining cantrip makes a trógling fingernail able to gouge rock; a dozen trógling could do it overnight. Then a joint ceremony from the truth cults, which include Thyella, who could add a little lightning to the mix, and job done.”
“Of course, it might cause some problems for those merchants whose stock-in-trade is a degree of exaggeration....” said Pythas.
“Into each life some rain must fall,” said Kaz. “We’ll have the most honest merchants in the world.”
oOoOo
It was the method of the riddlers to cause trouble in public places, and two other persons were identified spreading lies in the market place, once the glyphs were installed quietly overnight, and activated by Chrysandion, Pythas, Harkon, and Thyella, each working from one corner. The ripple of raw power over the flags as the glyphs were activated was satisfying; and the first catch of the day was a young sneak-thief claiming to know nothing of a missing apple.
The merchants were outraged, until Hraazaz, who was a respected trader, pointed out that it would add to their reputations if they admitted small flaws, and would catch out foreigners trying to deal in rubbish.
And then there were two riddlers. One named Glossos operated by the expedient of spreading quiet rumours. His attempts to spread scandal about Pythas’s private life were accompanied by a number of yelps and tiny lightning bolts. This made him easy to identify, and he found himself challenged to an honour duel by a trógling.
Relieved that he could easily handle such feeble beings, Glossos agreed, and a duelling space was cleared. Glossos did not trouble to discover the name of the person he held in contempt, but it would probably not have enlightened him any more than he already believed himself to be to know that the trógling was a female named Rynn. As he doubled down on his calumnies by making filthy speculations about Rynn herself, Rynn called death duel.
Glossos died wondering how this absolute massacre had come about.
Rynn was given a good wide berth. And she smiled.
The second riddler, Convobulos, liked to make public declamations and use his oratory, which was very skilful. He soon realised that out and out lies were punished, and worked around this with half-truths and speculation; but he settled into his stride and fell back on his usual rhetoric, which essentially boiled down to the good citizens of Mesolimnos being cheated by their city council and leading cults.
“Have you ever wondered where the gold on the golden dome of the Solosian temple comes from?” he cried. “It is from exacting payments from honest citizens not to be accused and convicted of crimes AAAAGHOW!”
“Can we arrest him now?” asked Pempios.
“You could bring a civil case against him,” said Pythas. “But it’s not really a crime. And it’s demonstrably a lie. That had to smart; one of those lightning bolts bounced off the pavement and went right up between his legs.”
Both men winced.
Kaz had talked fast to her friends. They had it covered.
“Drink a toast to the honest and fair administration of this city!” said Protasion. “You had had it proved that your fears are unjustified.”
A selection of young men with bottles demanding that the orator should drink a toast with them, and not taking no for an answer, was an excuse to lock him up as drunk and disorderly.
He was still hungover when a trógling cut through the floor of his cell.
“You said a lot of things others would not say,” said Dron. “Come with me.”
Convobulos followed. He might not be thoroughly satisfied to have made so puny a convert, but getting out of prison was good.
“Where are you taking me?” he asked.
“To meet some of your colleagues,” said Dron.
Convobulos was startled when Dron suddenly disappeared, unaware that there were secret exits in the passage he was in; and he pushed forward with his feeble lamp and fell into a bridge caisson which is where the trógling had lured the last of the nekrosti, to fall apart in due course. They had not yet managed to completely disintegrate; but they were able to disintegrate Convobulos fairly successfully. After all, they were, after a fashion, colleagues of his. Dron’s philosophy ran that those who have truck with the undead should not complain if they fall foul of them.
He had made a neat job of mending the prison floor, but left the passage there.
You never know when a way out of a prison came in useful.
Convobulos was a wanted man, of course, for a prison break, but the word went round that he was not going to be found.
oOoOo
The last of the bloodsuckers in Selenopolis was tracked down and killed on the dark of the red moon, his power at lowest ebb, even if sustained by Selen herself. Ralthur handed over control of the temple to another Alethosi priest-lord, from the time when the worship of Alethos was not banned in the Empire, before Alethos made his displeasure felt about the death glyph being used as a means of execution. Ralthur returned to Mesolimnos to quietly marry Sjorgi without fanfare, surrounded only by friends and family. The party went on late. Kaz went out for a breath of air, and came back in, frowning.
“There should be a sickle moon tonight, of the Blood Moon,” she said. “The ravaged blue moon is clear enough, so it isn’t cloud cover; normally you get a glow at least.”
“I suppose it’s too much to hope for that whipping away her power base has made her collapse and die?” said Protasion.
“Unfortunately, unlikely,” said Kaz. “I know what Rogaz and I have to do, and it isn’t yet. I have a bad feeling about this.”
“I have calculations about when, too, and it isn’t yet,” said Protasion.
Kaz continued in her bad feeling, and asked Alethos to spend the next night with her; which was also bereft of any sign of the red moon. Some people were celebrating this, but Kaz was not among them. Alethos, well aware that any chicanery on the part of Selen would have Kaz needing all her wits about her, distracted her until she slept.
Kaz awoke, screaming at dawn; and she and Alethos found themselves dragged to the place of the dead.
Thyella also awoke.
“New volcano! Got to go,” she said to Harkon.
Harkon sat up. He went looking for Kaz, and found her gone, Iphianira sobbing in the arms of her nursemaid.
“Oh, crap,” said Harkon.
Outside, it was still dark.
And the reason it was still dark was that the moondisk of the red moon was in front of the sun disk, the sickle of its waxing glowing triumphantly.
It did not take Harkon long to realise that a new volcano had killed Trógling somewhere, and he flitted to the halls of the dead to support Kaz, as Alethos was likely to be too busy.
Kaz was already there; also Daze, looking triumphant, Rogaz, angry, and Tor.
Tor scowled.
“You! You stole my wife away!”
“Zog’s a friend of mine,” said Harkon.
Tor stared.
“You mean it wasn’t political?”
“Pollonis is a friend of mine too,” said Harkon. “But I’m a sucker for a man in love.”
Tor assimilated this, then put back his head, and laughed.
“Well, I can forgive a slight done in friendship,” he said. “Truth to tell, she was getting rather whiny anyway. Put it here.” He held out a hand.
“I’d be more willing if you weren’t chaos tainted,” said Harkon.
“What? You dare call me chaos tainted?”
“You use undead.”
“I don’t do the same as that bitch,” said Tor.
“Dead should be dead,” said Harkon.
“Bodies left over are no more than dead meat,” said Tor. “Depths of Hell! Have I been quarrelling for all time with Alethos because he thinks my people bind back the souls?”
“It’s what happens, to an extent, with nekrosti, which are mindless, but the soul is trapped,” said Harkon, reaching mentally to Alethos to share this.
“Not mine,” said Tor. “I animate the bodies only, and it’s considered an honour; and they rot down to become skeletons, not held in chaos stasis without rotting like hers.”
“That... makes a difference,” said Harkon. “Perhaps, to avoid being associated with her, you could agree to only using them as temple guards?”
“I suppose so,” said Tor.
Harkon took his big hand. The handshake was very rough, but then, Harkon had known it would be.
“That was well negotiated,” said Alethos. “I do believe that he was unaware that some of his undead of recent times had their souls trapped.”
Harkon went to stand with Kaz, who looked sick with apprehension.
“She pulled up a volcano in the middle, I surmise, of a Toróg settlement,” he told her.
“Oh! That explains why suddenly I heard voices cry out in brief terror and pain which then became calls for me to be here for them,” said Kaz. “Alethos is sorting the souls, and reminding trógling that they now come to me by default, and must choose if they wish another god. Daze is going to be disappointed.”
Alethos came forward with souls, toróg of all kinds, most of the high toróg going to Rogaz, some darklings and most great toróg to Tor.
As trógling souls clustered by Kaz, a few going to Rogaz or Tor, Daze looked outraged.
“Where are mine?” he demanded. “This cannot be, that settlement was isolated enough that they should not have heard of this upstart godling! I made them, they belong to me by default!”
“They belong to the mother of trógling by default,” said Alethos. “As has been prophesied since the dawn of time.”
“No! It was a sacrifice to get their power!” cried Daze. “A beautiful plan, and the sacrifice of all those nasty little wretches to be mine! You shan’t have them!” he lunged towards Kaz, who herded her souls behind him.
Tor hit him on the nose.
“You made them, hah? You admit it, you filthy chaos scum! I will rend you limb from limb!”
Daze, horrified, made good his mistake, and fled.
“That, O, Tor, is my job, when the time is right,” said Kaz. “One who was made by him must be the one to undo him.”
“I don’t do all this mystical shit,” said Tor, truculently.
“Then our cause is lost, and the blue moon will never be healed,” snapped Kaz.
“Listen to the Daykaz!” said Rogaz.
“She’s the Daykaz? I could swallow her whole!” said Tor.
“I doubt it,” said Kaz. “I am the child of prophecy who lives forever and desires death; and all the signs have been fulfilled. This adventure by Selen we did not anticipate.”
“It was in one of the old texts,” said Harkon, reluctantly. “Protasion was having conniptions over how it fitted in, and decided it was an allegory; ‘When the light of the sun is blocked by the moon, then shall the dawning know that the days of the trickster are numbered, and the number is found in her recovery from the act of violence; for her power must be full before she can be destroyed.’ We were counting down from her losing Aima, but it is the fact of using power to do this. I’ll have to go over it again with him, but I suspect that will mean the year round since you last confronted him, on the solstice again.”
“I suppose we have a timeline at least,” said Kaz. “You were going to tell me at what point?”
“Closer to the time,” sighed Harkon. “We thought it would be the equinox. But the full moon is the day after that; it actually falls on the solstice.”
Kaz sighed. She had souls to see to.
Harkon loaned power to help Kaz get her new acquisitions stowed in their halls next to those of Alethos.
Thyella turned up.
“Harkon, we have to get the skybull and skycow to help drag Selen’s moonboat from in front of the sun!” she gasped. “She is holding his light to ransom, having lurked in the nightsphere for two nights to gather her power to block him off!