Chapter 16
“You winked,” said Kaz, to Erytheon, as the meeting broke up.
“Sometimes I see in broad without Fate’s words taking me over, and it gets the point across without argument,” said Erytheon. “I don’t see a trógling, or a toróg god; I hear a dedicated fighter against all that is wrong in the world, and a distraught young man whose beloved is kidnapped by another. Mycota is one of my own god’s pantheon, and if she cannot bring her beloved to meet her parents, there is something wrong with the world. And our god listens to his seers, so do not worry.”
“Are many prophecies made up like that?” asked Kaz, disconcerted.
“No, most are visions reported without passing through the conscious mind of the seer,” said Erytheon. “But sometimes a few judiciously croaked words saves hours of interpretation of the true seeing of oneself and others.”
“You are a wise man, and I honour you for your honesty to me,” said Kaz.
“You are an incipient hero of a god of truth. I’d be a fool to try to lie,” said Erytheon. “I am grateful to be alive in such momentous times, and to have the privilege to meet gods and heroes and those who can bring about the downfall of chaos. I know your importance, and my first prophecy was, ‘Out of the shadow comes the dawning, to cure darkness and light.’ But it was not considered more than a subsidiary prophesy and the ‘out of the shadow’ part was taken as ‘from obscurity’ rather than literally.”
“A lesson to us all in reading prophecies,” said Kaz.
“Well, someone who will live forever and desire death knows that is very literal,” said Erytheon, dryly.
“Good point,” said Kaz.
There would be two parties to make up. Harkon would accompany Zog to deal with Mycota’s bodyguards, with most of their usual party, Svargia, Evgon, Kuros, Protasion, Lelyn, Polia and Vulk.
“The appeal to Solos is as follows,” said Protasion. “Though Mycota accepted hospitality by eating a meal, the provision of offspring pays off that acceptance, and Mycota has born Tor two children, Toxia and Fthysia, so she has more than paid off a simple meal.”
“What of other meals under his roof?” asked Harkon.
“His obligation to give, if he planned for her to stay,” said Protasion. “This is all according to the Great Book of Law, which Tor used to claim that he had the right to keep Mycota. The previous questing was before she had had any children, and hinged on a breach of promise case. According to Tor, he told Mycota, when she visited at his request to seed his halls with fungi, that if she ate with him, she signified her willingness to marry him. The meal provided was a traditional toróg marriage proposal meal, which Mycota did not know, but ignorance of the law is not usually considered a defence. She accepted the hunted meat prepared by Tor’s own hand, with the three ceremonial fungi, garnished with coriander and fennel. However, she has provided a life for a life, so she has the right to leave him.”
“And she probably doesn’t know that, either,” said Harkon. “As Glyph lords of a martial god go, you’re a very good lawyer, Protasion.”
“The law is a weapon to wield as much as a sword,” said Protasion. “I can thrust and parry with law, which is a form of truth, even as I can with my sword.”
“You’re talking yourself into presenting the case to Solos,” said Harkon.
“Now what a case that would be!” said Protasion. “The pinnacle of the law career I never had. But he’s going to want loopholes; having to decide against his daughter must have been heartbreaking.”
“I’ll go with Kaz,” said Hraazaz. “A toróg’s senses might be useful.”
“I am going, too,” said Rynn. “Someone has to look after Phaedros.”
“Hey!” said Phaedros.
“It’s a stern duty, but we Alethosans are good at that,” said Rynn, winking.
“I am staying well out of it, to avoid the wrong sort of gods war,” said Alethos. “Other than being available to co-ordinate timing, of course.”
“Speaking of war, when we went off, the Selenites had been thrown out without boots or horses, yet here they are back and fully equipped,” said Kaz. “Were we gone long enough for a runner to be sent to Selenopolis?”
“Ah, no, and we have egg on our faces for what happened,” said Pythas. “It turned out that some of the city guard had been Bedazzled by deliberate attempts on the part of Trickster worshippers to use riddles to draw them into his cult, and they let the whole damn lot of them back in overnight. They collected their boots and other equipment and we woke up to find them back in place. Next thing that happens is that notices are passed out to all on the census as taxpayers to the effect that if we are taxpayers, and don’t worship one of their filthy cults, we are to be charged a surtax as compensation. And I will say this for Erippion Windblown, he has courage, and he used a cult spell of Thundervoice to go around the city, inviting all to a ceremonial burning of illegal tax documents, come prepared for trouble. And their attempts to control the crowd led to being thrown out again, but they managed to evacuate most of their supplies whilst we were fighting. We threw out the traitors, too, and replaced the city guard with ranking Pollosians and Alethosi. And the tróglings raided the records of Librax to see what prophesies the Selenites have which might be written there.”
“Sounds like you were all busier than we were,” said Kaz.
“And wiser now than we were then; and ready to be on our guard at all times,” said Pythas. “They suspect the sewers now, as well, but have no idea about other tunnels running from them.”
“I got word that every drainage culvert now has a guard and has been stopped with an extra grill,” said Rynn. “I directed mining trógling to find a way to add tunnels into thickets of oleander on the banks of the river, short of the outfall.”
“Well done,” said Kaz. “There’s enough tangle of vegetation to slide into, to keep the enemy confused.”
“I was thinking of building some living caves as well, so we could maintain forward positions,” said Rynn. “There’s a big old tree fallen as well, and if we can get someone who knows wood, as stone-carving cantrips won’t work, it seems to be hollow, and if we can clean it out inside and put some peep holes through, that would be a good base.”
“Requisition someone with forestry knowledge; there’s bound to be at least one,” said Kaz.
“I know just the lad,” said Pythas. “Told me he never wanted to see another tree in his life; but sometimes, duty is stern.”
Rynn sniggered.
“I said the same about caves, once,” she said.
“Won’t light shine out of spy holes and give the position away?” asked Phaedros.
“Manned by trógling; we use our darksense and have no lights,” said Rynn.
Setting up ways round those drain exits discovered and watched by Selenites kept Kaz occupied as they waited for the time of fruits to come round, at which point those going to the underworld would go upriver to the temple they had set up in the former Ghostlands. Watch points were set up and provisioned, and volunteers set to man them. It was sought after by newly-married trógling couples to have some privacy, in conditions so much better than former slavery that they declared it luxurious, even with two couples sharing a watchpost so someone could be on duty whilst the other pair enjoyed uxorial time together. It worked out well, used to hard work, the trógling were conscientious about performing their duties, so much less arduous than those they were used to.
oOoOo
“We’re getting to know this route rather well,” joked Kaz, as she set off with Hraazaz, Thyella, Phaedros, and Rynn, whilst Harkon, Zog, and the rest of their party sailed north over the great lake to the mighty fungus fields north of Melokome, in the foothills of the Toróg mountains.
“The timing will become more critical when we get to the temple and set off down the path to the underworld,” said Rynn. “That’s going to be scary.”
“You don’t have to come, if you’d rather not,” said Kaz, gently.
“I’m going,” said Rynn. “Someone has to babysit Phaedros.”
“He can take care of himself, if need be,” said Kaz.
“Debatable,” said Rynn.
“Oh!” said Kaz. “It’s like that, is it?”
“Yes,” said Rynn, not pretending to misunderstand. “He’s cute.”
Kaz nodded.
Zalmox and Alcitha welcomed Kaz and Rynn warmly, and their companions warily. Thyella was keeping her divine aura under control, and Phaedros only glowed when he got over-excited. “This is a major mission, then?” said Zalmox.
“A vital one,” said Kaz. “It may be a side mission for me, but it is vital to happen when it happens.”
“I was sorry for you when I first heard that prophecy and I still am,” said Alcitha. “It isn’t easy to have to live up to something like that, and it sounded pretty harsh.”
“Oh, I’m reconciled to it,” said Kaz. “But it does mean I have to count days to do things at the right time, rather than pursue personal development at my own pace.”
“Zalmox and I will do what we can, whilst being glad it isn’t us,” said Alcitha.
“Basically, it’s be here whilst we head down the path to the underworld,” said Kaz.
“I don’t mind going when it’s my time, but I can’t say I want a preview,” said Zalmox.
oOoOo
Harkon and his companions called in at Kallos. Here, he found Commandant Skerynos very willing to see him.
“Sword brother! I hear you are one of the close companions of the prophesied one...” said Skerynos.
“Aye, and she’s on a mission to the underworld, so no, I can’t introduce her,” said Harkon. “How are you getting on with Erippion?”
Skerynos made a face.
“Do you know Erippion?”
“I have that dubious felicity,” said Harkon, dryly. “His motives are good.”
“Yes, one cannot doubt that,” said Skerynos. “He was enthusiastic in evicting all Selenites.”
“I never figure out how the windy ones manage to get anything done when they are obliged to poetise before fighting.”
“He bought a trógling and freed it, as is required, renamed it ‘Erippion’s mouth’ or EE-em for short, and has the trógling do the poetising whilst he does the posturing... er, gets ready to fight.”
Harkon sniggered.
“I said I know him, not that he’s a friend of mine. He does posture, but at least he treats trógling with more respect and circumspection since he irritated our Kaz, who is a pint-sized powerhouse.”
“Our lord did tell me to give respect to trógling,” whispered Skerynos. “Do you need anything?”
“No, our lord just told me to pop in and see how you were,” said Harkon. “I’m on a mission with some sun-fondlers... er, Solosians... to fulfil a prophecy one of their sun-seers came up with so long ago I’d ignore it if it didn’t tie in with our more recent ones.” Harkon suddenly recalled the original prophecy had been found in their own temple. “Actually, one of our seers came up with something similar, so I can’t really discount it. And the signs say that the time is right.”
“I don’t hold any truck with prophesies, myself,” said Skerynos.
“I didn’t, until a friend of mine became the object of one,” said Harkon, soberly. “It makes a difference.”
He neglected to mention his own part in prophecy as ‘the judge’ and his subsequent relationship with Thyella. It was too personal.
“Yes, I imagine so,” said Skerynos. “I’ve had a personal epiphany about how I’ve been neglecting my duties; I have more of an idea what I should be doing, now. Though if they send an army, I’m not about to stop Erippion from charging forth without thinking. He isn’t my responsibility.”
“It comes with the god,” shrugged Harkon. “Ombros is a trifle abrupt and reckless and he expects his followers to be the same. Sometimes sitting back and assessing is better.”
“Death is patient; so is Truth. The wind is just a force of nature without let or hindrance,” sighed Skerynos.
“I hate to say it, but the Clear Skies crowd will make good shock troops to soften up the Selenites in the coming war, that more disciplined troops can mop up in detail later when they have spent themselves,” said Harkon.
Skerynos shrugged.
“They raise warriors; we raise soldiers and generals.”
Harkon and his companions stayed overnight; a male High Toróg excited some curiosity but no animosity. Toróg occasionally joined Alethos’s cult if martially inclined, and not keen on the wild, berserker frenzy of Tor. It was generally assumed that the quiet Toróg was a battle brother and friend of the Glyph lord-priest, Harkon. Zog said nothing to dispel this impression, and they went on their way to the last stop on the lake without raising much comment. They must disembark at Melokome, and rely on Zog to lead them to where he had often watched Mycota when she was permitted above ground.
“For it is my fault that Tor took her captive,” he sighed.
“How so?” asked Harkon.
“I was courting Mycota, and she was not indifferent to me, despite her father’s disapproval,” said Zog. “But Tor asked me if I would ask her as a favour to bless the fungi in his realm as well as mine, for her divine writ is in the underworld as well, for the darkness aspect of fungi. Mycota is the daughter not only of Solos but of Eukaryota, a spirit of darkness and mother of Sakaromysea, who invented alcohol. Eukaryota seduced Solos at the gates of dusk, when he was tired, with her daughter’s wine, and made him drunk enough to succumb to her embraces. Mycota is first born of their night together, but also Zygomia and Ascomia, mothers of moulds, and Lichena, mother of mosses and lichens. Solos cursed alcohol thereafter to degrade a male’s performance under its influence, even though he could not destroy its ability to inflame the senses.”
“It is not a story I knew,” confessed Harkon.
Zog gave a short, ironic laugh.
“It is not a story which Solos is proud of; but Mycota and Lichena chose to live in the light, and Solos accepted them as his daughters.”
“Then, when you and Mycota are united, you will, like the Daykaz, be of shadow?” asked Harkon. “Rocks and soil are in the light as well as underground.”
“I will not object to that, if such a change means we can be together,” said Zog.
“Then talk very fast to Solos about being shadow-beings,” said Harkon.
“Your tool is very smooth,” said Solos to Alethos.
“And shrewd,” said Alethos. “He can see which way the world is going, that when chaos is defeated, or contained into the necessary remains of it as disorder or random chance, then the gods must change or die; and your change is to accept that shadow is not an enemy but the inevitable result of light.”
“Don’t push it,” said Solos. “That first ever cup of wine was rough by today’s standards, but heady! I am not proud of my antics under its effects.”
“Your curse upon it was, however, timely, before it became known to mortals,” said Alethos, dryly.