Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Destiny;s Queen 13

 

Chapter 13

 

Phaedros left Harkon and his fellow Alethosi to their rapid disassembly of the Thanusi hierarchy and the replacement of the consecration to Alethos.

“Kaz was spitting nails to be left,” said Rynn. “But someone has to watch various children and look out for Mesolimnos; and she needs to be on top form to handle the trickster and then help with Selen.”

“We have her prayers, and the offer to draw on her for power,” said Phaedros. “You could stay with the others, you know, and be safer.”

“You need someone to watch your back,” said Rynn. “They will write me off as your slave.  How are you going to find her?”

“I am following a thread of power,” said Phaedros. “When I am close, doubtless we shall be challenged; but in the open by those worshippers short of glyph-rank, who are still human, and aspire to the dubious status as blood suckers. They are as nothing, but will take me to her, for a good looking man who seeks her will intrigue her. And I think I am not ill looking.”

“You’re beautiful,” said Rynn.

“You are lovely to me, you know,” said Phaedros. “And though I may compliment Aima, in order to get close to her, it is you that I admire.”

“Can you really feel so?” asked Rynn.

“Dost question it when it is thee I ever turn to as mine companion?” asked Phaedros.

“Would... would a kiss for luck be out of place?” asked Rynn.

“Not in the least,” said Phaedros, and kissed her.

Rynn clung to him.

“I will help you rend her,” she growled.

 

oOoOo

 

Ralthur put a hand on Sjurgi’s arm; not a restraining hand, but one to get her attention.

“You’re bubbling with anger,” he said. “It’s not wise, going into a fight of any kind. Do you want to talk about it?”

“Thanus failed me,” said Sjurgi. “But it’s all of a piece. You will have heard that I took lovers to rise, and to learn, and gain me position, and it’s true enough; and I hated every minute of it. I have hated men, who accord me no respect, but expect me to respect them for nothing more than having their privates dangling in the wind, and not subject to the monthly curse.”

“You’ve discovered that Latrika has remedies to ease that, I hope?” said Ralthur.

“Yes, and I appreciate it. And I also find that Alethosi men treat me with more respect,” said Sjurgi. “I... I find I can have friends, besides my brother.”

“I like you,” said Ralthur. “I have always admired you, as a warrior, and as a woman. I would like the opportunity to court you.”

“I... I do not know,” said Sjurgi. “What is expected in the bedroom is painful and humiliating.”

“It is not supposed to be painful or humiliating,” said Ralthur. “Will you give me the opportunity to show you that I can give you pleasure, not pain?”

“I... I know you speak truth as you believe it,” said Sjurgi. “I will give you the opportunity to show me; but I want to make it clear that if you respect me, you will stop when I say stop.”

“That is fair enough,” said Ralthur. “And if you do not like it, I pledge that I will not pester you, nor will it stop me seeing you as a friend and a comrade.”

“That... nobody can say fairer,” said Sjurgi.

 

oOoOo

 

Lelyn wrung, scrubbed, ironed,  and folded the temple spirit, whilst the rest winnowed through the pitifully few priests and initiates in the temple of Thanus; there were scarcely thirty of any rank, which was no challenge to Harkon, Ralthur, Protasion, and Sjurgi, especially with Crondion, Dróg, and Tallys along. The lay servants hovered.

“Stay out of the way, and your jobs will be secure,” said Harkon. “If you object to the temple being changed to that of Alethos, I suggest you leave, and seek employment elsewhere.”

They disappeared into their quarters below.

And then Thanus manifested in the temple as Harkon was about to reconsecrate it.

“What are you doing?” demanded the Selenite god of death, shrilly.

“Desecrating your temple and stealing it for Alethos, old boy; what’s it look like?” said Harkon, offensively. He could sense the approximate level of power of the god, and gasped. “Really?” he said. “How have you managed to remain so feeble? You’re scarcely any more powerful than a tough hero, have you seriously been wasting your time mooning after Selen – no pun intended – when you should have been working on your worship base and growing your portfolio? You poor sap, you have, haven’t you?”

Thanus gaped.

“Run and flee from me, for I am the god of death!” he cried.

“A god of death, and a fairly feeble one,” said Harkon. “Why not give it up? Come back to Alethos, come and be our brother, and forget this foolishness. We would welcome you and aid you if you just abjure that manipulative wench.”

“I love Selen, and I will not turn my back on her! I will obliterate you!”

Harkon sighed, shrugged, and turned to Sjurgi.

“He’s all yours,” he said. “He’s an idiot, and he knows he’s an idiot, but if he cannot renounce it, then he needs to be a dead idiot.”

“Thanus! Do you know who I am?” demanded Sjurgi.

“Why should I know you, wench?” said Thanus.

“Considering you trained me, on Selen’s command, I cannot think that you have trained so many female warriors,” said Sjurgi.

His eyes widened slightly.

“Thea Drex? Though of course a female warrior is a contradiction in terms. You learned enough for Selen to show off, like a dancing dog,” said Thanus, dismissively.

“It was the name they saddled me with,” said Sjurgi. “I go by my birth name, Sjurgi Gordsdottir now, and stand by my brother, Harkon. I see now that your poor training of me was deliberate because you did not want or expect me to succeed.”

“I taught you everything you could learn, you wretched wench,” said Thanus. “And now I will punish you, and have you weeping and begging my pardon.”

“In your archaic dreams,” said Sjurgi. “Fight me, you bastard. I have worked hard to make myself a heroine, and I have sworn to oppose you.”

“You have asked for this; but your friends had better not interfere.”

“We’re Alethosi; we don’t interfere in an honour duel,” said Harkon, scornfully. “Sjurgi is in theory an equal match to you, since you chose not to grow.”

Thanus took up a stance, which Harkon absently named to himself as ‘hawk hovers above;’ classically this was the forerunner to ‘stooping falcon descends upon its prey,’ or ‘waterfall brings icy retribution.’ Of the two, the former was the more subtle, but either could only theoretically be countered by a defensive move like ‘swinging gate bars the way.’ Sjurgi did not attempt to parry the vicious downstroke, but stepped to one side away from it for a push stroke on Thanus’s forearm where it descended unprotected, her sword swinging in a moulinet to meet his blade at the end of its stroke and put pressure on his wrist.

“What? That is not the proper counter, I did not teach you that!” said Thanus.

“No, because all you taught me was to posture. Alethos and his followers taught me how to fight,” said Sjurgi, in scorn. “You are open to me, because you have spent that stroke, and become off balance.”

“But there is only one counter to it,” said Thanus.

“No,  there is only one counter that you can see, you old fool,” said Sjurgi. “Because there are new styles.”

“That is cheating!”

“Do you think the ultimate god of truth would permit cheating?” said Sjurgi, sword on low guard waiting for him. “No, it is that Alethos can learn, and change, and adapt, and you cannot. Now, fight, old man, and try to at least make it a match.”

Thanus yelled in anger, and raised his sword to chest height, attempting to cross cut; and Sjurgi’s blade met his, parried small, and followed up to cut his thigh. Again and again, Thanus came in to attack, and every time Sjurgi stopped his best efforts, often making a follow-up move to wound him.

Thanus started blowing, his breath sobbing in frustration and pain.

“Don’t play with him, sister,” said Harkon.

“He loved to play with me, and hurt me,” said Sjurgi. “He resented being told to train me.”

“You are better than that,” said Harkon.

Thanus thought to take advantage of her preoccupation in speaking to Harkon, and made a lunge; Sjurgi knocked the blade further down, turned on the moulinet, and brought her blade up into the god’s belly, cleaving him almost in half. And Thanus realised in horror that within his own temple he was more vulnerable to wounding than anywhere else, even as he would be in his own portion of the underworld. He could not heal damage to what was his actual body, not a pseudobody made to manifest, and he had no power to draw on in the bound temple spirit, which was being attacked, and indeed, destroyed, as he fought. He had taken himself into a trap, and he suddenly, in awful clarity, realised it.

“But it cannot be!” Thanus managed as blood bubbled out of his lips.

“Let Alethos take you, brother!” called Harkon to his departing spirit.

“He won’t,” said Sjurgi. Her spirit engaged that of Thanus, seeking for, and tearing out the glyphs of immortality, for her own use. She left the rest of his spirit to flee; now he was truly dead, and could not re-form a body, even in his own domains.

“I had to try,” said Harkon. “Well! Let us consecrate this place.”

 

Alethos joined them as Harkon chanted the proper prayers.

“Did he...?” asked Sjurgi.

Alethos shook his head; tears stood in his eyes.

“He is constant to his love, even though he knows deep down she is not constant to him. And now, she will expend him in her attempts to save herself, and he will be destroyed. I loved him like a son.”

“Go to Kaz, and cry your fill, dear Alethos,” said Harkon, embracing his god.

“I shall,” said Alethos. “Well done, Sjurgi.”

“I was disappointed at how easy it was,” said Sjurgi. “I... I thought I hated him, but I feel numb.”

“It’s because, in the end, he is less important in your mind than you realised, dear one,” said Alethos. “And as such, you pity the poor limited thing that he was more than you exult over having prevailed.”

“That makes sense,” said Sjurgi.

Ralthur put an arm around her; and she leaned into him.

“You can move on,” said Ralthur. “He was... ossified, as all of us who trained under the old forms were, until shown new ways. I am here;  and you can now grow.”

“Yes. Yes, I can,” said Sjurgi.

 

oOoOo

 

Selen was drawn to the underworld, to the place of souls, where she scowled at Alethos.

“Which of my worshippers have your people massacred now?” she demanded.

“Depends if you count his people in with yours,” said Alethos, laconically. “Thanus chooses to go to you, not to come to me.”

Selen stared.

“Selen! I am loyal to you!” cried Thanus.

“You fool! How did you get yourself killed?” demanded Selen.

“I... it was Thea Drex,” said Thanus. “She was fighting in a different style to the one I taught her, and she did not use the forms and postures at all! I could not counter it!”

“Is this why so many of my people who worship you are killed? Because you can’t teach them the new ways things are done? What a waste of time it was to attract you to me, you have done nothing but hang around me, without keeping up with what’s going on!”

“You can talk!” cried Thanus. “You snatched my people and sent them to their deaths without arranging food for them, or other supplies!”

“Well, there was plenty of dirt around, humans grub in dirt for food, why didn’t they eat it?”

“Because they don’t eat dirt, they plant seeds which grow into plants!” growled Thanus. “Are you stupid, or something?”

“Oh, I can’t allow you to speak like that to me, my dead hero,” said Selen. “I shall have to think of a special punishment for your soul... maybe I will consume it almost to fully drained, and then make you gain it back without worship, as I will take all your people from you.”

“Thanus...” said Alethos.

The soul turned to him, insubstantial tears on his insubstantial cheeks.

“I... chose. And that may have been wrong but....”He turned to follow Selen.

  

 

After Alethos had been to see his followers in what was now his temple, he went in search of Kaz; and enjoyed playing with Iphianira and Chionea, who were learning the complex skill of throwing a ball, and making it go forward rather than lifting it above their heads to lose it behind them, or dropping it straight down. And once they were bathed and put to bed, he might take Kaz to bed as well, and then tell her all about it, and weep for the bright young hopeful hero Thanus had once been.

“It was my fault I lost him,” he sighed.

“I doubt it; but why do you think so?” asked Kaz.

“It was in the time of the Maelstrom Madness,” said Alethos. “My sisters and I went to heal the gods of storm and wind, and draw them out of the Maelstrom. And whilst my eyes were turned away, Selen saw my poor naive, impressionable Thanus, and made herself beautiful to him, and consumed him with lust for her, and what he thought was love. And when I returned, it was too late, and he ambushed and robbed me, whilst I was weakened, for she made it seem in his mind that there was no dishonour in taking what he saw was his birthright, as if he were my son, deprived of inheritance.”

“She has a way of making the gullible betray even themselves,” said Kaz. “Weep for him; I will try to save any remnants of his spirit she leaves, to return to you, when I stand head to head with her beside Rogaz.”

“I will not expect it of you, but if you are able, I will be grateful to have something of my wayward and foolish protégé,” said Alethos.

 

Monday, July 13, 2026

Destiny's Queen 12

 

Chapter 12

 

“I don’t believe it!” cried Selen. “I sent more men to ensure the downfall of Mesolimnos, and all that happened was that they fought amongst themselves, and now they have run away! Any that come before me on Moonday shall be beset with boils  and virulent pustules in punishment!”

“Didn’t your priestess die of disease? What did she say?” asked Daze.

“Oh, she made some stupid comment about me sending men to starve because they could not live on thin air, and that there were not enough provisions,” said Selen.  “I am punishing her because she should have ensured that there were enough provisions as soon as they arrived; and all she does is ask how she was supposed to do that. I don’t have to take control of every detail! That’s what glyph-lords and glyph-priests are for! She and the other priestesses should have found a way!”

“How would you expect them to get provisions?” asked Daze, interested.

“How should I know? We are not mortals and we do not need to eat, that mundane nonsense is up to the mortals,” said Selen, haughtily.

“Yes, indeed, I wouldn’t even know what sort of things they do eat,” said Daze. “The peasants spend a long time grubbing in the dirt; perhaps they eat dirt. There was plenty of that, so I don’t see why they were making problems.”

 

oOoOo

 

“I think the problem with Selen is that she does not understand the needs of humans,” said Alethos to Kaz as they lay cuddled up together.

Kaz sniggered.

“Now, I could say I don’t want my husband bringing Selen into our marriage bed; but I confess myself too interested in why you say that to protest,” she said.

“Gods have no need to eat nor use latrines,” said Alethos. “We elder gods have grown in power alongside the needs of our worshippers, heard their small woes and needs from time immemorial, and have come to accept the limitations of a mortal body. Selen and Daze appeared in the world in near historic time, at such time that mortal populations had learned how to handle infrastructures, like drainage, like planting and harvesting protocols, like disease management. They see mortals as a source of power for their own needs and forget the many things mortals need because they do not see such things in their worship.”

“That’s an interesting insight,” said Kaz. “It’s a bit like imposing a new ruler on an established population, one who has no idea of their customs and mores, and so tramples on them without even realising it.”

“I discovered that with the coming of the blood moon, I was losing some female worshippers, because being at war was harder when dealing with the monthly flux.  Seren deals with it by making it hard for women to be warriors – except slave gladiators who have no rights – and the idea that women should stay at home; I dealt with it by relaxing my geasa and adapting them around a woman’s flux, and asking my sister to invent medicines to make the time shorter and easier.”

“And very helpful such medicines are,” said Kaz. “I think the older gods are more like mortals in their understanding; there is something horribly alien about Selen, Daze, and their pantheon.”   She wriggled. “And as you don’t need sleep, and I need less, I think the time for conversation is over as I have other mortal and immortal needs.”

Alethos laughed, kissed her, and demonstrated how well he knew her needs. He wanted his wife happy and secure; she had a dangerous and dark path ahead of her. She had planted ideas in the past to make Daze both create tróglings and to curse her to give her immortality to be his beloved, but she must face the crazed god of trickery once again, in order to obliterate him, and take from him the chaos, and make it into random chance, so that change was tempered with order. This was the greatest task of any of the young heroes Alethos had care of, and the most taxing, and he could not stand beside her to do it. It wrung his heart, but Alethos knew that if he did not leave Kaz to do it alone, she would fail. But he could give her love, and support; and hold her whilst she slept, dribbling into his armpit, and making gentle sleeping noises.

 

oOoOo

 

Kaz was getting used to more worship from trógling; Rogaz had been good to her word, and instructed her priestesses to tell trógling to worship the deity who was their new racial mother, who would lead them to freedom, when toróg were also freed of the curse. Not all understood; many trógling, whose gestation was short, had the mental capacity to understand all that was said, and more to the point, what was not said. But they whispered prayers in hope that times of trial should come to an end. Rogaz went further than Kaz had asked, and banned the eating of trógling, though not all worshippers of Tor took much notice of that.

 

oOoOo

 

Alethos sorted the souls who belonged to Thanus; it was telling that there were an increasing number of Selenite soldiery who did not care enough to specifically choose Thanus. Alethos nodded to Harkon, there in a rather stunned capacity for Ombros to collect one of those who chose to pray to him, when he had sent them a deer, who had been too badly injured to survive.

“I’m happy to take you, ah, Starnus, but I won’t keep you from any family you might have elsewhere,” said Harkon.

“Mighty Stormlord, you’re the only god who I’ve felt accept my worship; I ain’t about to give up on that,” said the soldier. “And you even know my name!”

This was down to Alethos, but Harkon did not disappoint the man by revealing this.

“Perhaps you’d like to be one of my personal spirits,” said Harkon, realising that the poor fellow would not be treated well by the average dead Ombrosi, who were an uncouth bunch on the whole, and not likely to welcome a one-time Selenite.

“I’d be honoured!” said Starnus.

Harkon left Alethos with an embrace.

Alethos turned to Thanus, who watched with a wistful look.

“I’d take you back, you know, if you apologised for stealing from me in your eagerness to achieve apotheosis,” he said.

Thanus sneered.

“I broke from you because you disparaged my beloved Selen. And if you associate with those louts of the clear starlight, I can see why. You, stern, and with nothing but duty to warm what you call your heart, you know nothing of love.”

“On the contrary; it is you who know nothing of love,” said Alethos. “Giving death without love is nothing but murder. And I love my worshippers; even when some of them disappoint me. What you have is lust for a clever and manipulative goddess, whom I wager finds excuses not to be in your bed; whereas I am happily married. You could ask Phrodine, you know; she understands love in all its forms, sexual and otherwise.”

“I pity your wife; you are cold and passionless,” hissed Thanus. “You only married to bring forth a putative godling who might, or might not manage to combine the red and the blue moons in order to heal the blue.”

“Oh, you will believe what you want,” said Alethos. “I can see that you have made up your mind. But I had to make the offer.”

The chime was a sad one.

“What was that in aid of?” asked Thanus.

“I assume some prophecy I don’t know,” said Alethos. “I’ve stopped questioning Fate over her chimes.”

Moraia appeared.

When Death offers his hand to the apostate, either much carnage will be avoided, or the thief will choose to go onwards to his own destruction without redemption,” she said. “The one-time pupil will come for vengeance over the former master.”

“And I will not protect you when she does,” said Alethos, to Thanus.

 

oOoOo

 

“Harkon, what are you doing?” asked Thyella.  Harkon was labouring over a map with a parchment beside him divided into squares some of which he had painted in various colours. The names of regions went across the top, and months ran down the side.

“You told me I needed to shed weather where and when it seemed appropriate, and I am working out where and when is appropriate,” said Harkon. “I suppose Ombros kept it all in his head, but I’m learning from first principles when a storm is appropriate.”

Thyella opened her mouth and shut it again.

“Ombros mostly went where he felt like, or when he was called in to relieve a long period of hot and dry, in  Summerscome, Hottest, and Harvestime mostly,” she said. “But of course he also helped reduce the cold in Winterscome and Coldest, and sometimes in Fairmonth and Leaffall.”

“Yes, I’ve been trying to recall when most storms occur,” said Harkon. “And add them to the chart.”

“Ombros was never that... organised,” said Thyella.

“What can I say? I’m an Alethosi,” said Harkon.

“I love you the way you are,” said Thyella. “But don’t let people get too complacent over avoiding storms in Springstart or Leaffall just because they are less common.”

“True,” said Harkon. “Because sometimes they happen.  Why is there lightning over a volcano that you had to go and deal with it?”

“It has to do with a build up of lightning-stuff in the atmosphere, caused by the heat,[1]” said Thyella. “I have to tap it and draw it off before it goes crazy and causes a disaster.”

“Oh, right,” said Harkon.

 

oOoOo

 

“How did anyone, even a god, destroy my temple?” screeched Selen, who was taking a while to catch up with what was going on. “Why was Ogeron Cass allowed to die? It was to be the wedding of the year! Where is that little bitch? I can’t feel her at all!”

Selen was unaware that Harkon had destroyed her temple from the inside bursting out, which made a difference. As Ogeron Cass, she had sealed his fate herself when she ripped from the empress’s bed to send to Mesolimnos.

“You have troubles, I have troubles,” grumbled Daze. “For some reason I’m getting fewer dying trógling; maybe the damned Toróg are treating them better so they don’t die. And I took a hit to my power when I fashioned the egg of discord, expecting to get plenty of power back through the strife it caused, and those damned Alethosians went and destroyed it!”

“And my worshippers are diminished by going and dying on me because they couldn’t be bothered to eat enough dirt!” mourned Selen. “And there’s trouble in Selenopolis! They are revolting!”

“Yes, but all mortals are pretty revolting,” said Daze, admiring himself in his magic mirror, which showed only his handsome aspect.

“Don’t be a fool,” snapped Selen. “In revolt!”

“Well, scare them back into good behaviour, m’dear,” said Daze.

Selen’s smile was predatory.

“I think Aima will bring them into line.”

“That should be funny,” said Daze. “All those fat little burghers thinking they have the right to complain – being prey to Aima’s people will give them something to whine about.”

 

oOoOo

 

“Lord of Storms! Please help us! Sardio won’t appeal to you, he scoffs about you being a god, he doesn’t believe in gods!” Tallys was close to panicking.

“Considering how little Selen and her pantheon do for any but priests, I can’t say I am surprised,” said Harkon. “What’s wrong?”

“Aima! She’s here herself, and a whole army of bloodsuckers and they are turning the dead into nekrosti!”

“I’ll put together a team and be with you presently.”

 

 

“See? And what did your praying do? Nothing,” sneered Sardio SubDoxus.

There was a rumble of thunder, and a crackle of lightning as Harkon turned up. He had his sister, his wife, Ralthur, Protasion, Lelyn, Phaedros and Rynn with him.

“Why, I do declare, what a most stimulating and jolly way to travel, my friend!” cried Phaedros. “It is a little noisy and smelly, but far more exciting and immediate than merely going to the sunsphere and then drifting down in a ray of sunlight. I declare, I am jealous of thy means of relocation!”

Rynn poked him.

“You’re being ponderous again,” she said.

“It is considered proper when addressing others in the presence of mortals, my sweet friend,” said Phaedros. “For surely these people who gape at us so uncouthly are mortals, startled out of their normal veneer of good manners?”

Rynn caught his eye, and saw the twinkle within it.

“In sooth, my puissant lord, I have neglected the proper protocols in striving for herodom,” she said. “I must apologise, in proper form, that those who have invoked our aid might regain equilibrium during our most formal discourse.”

“I’m surrounded by comedians,” grumbled Harkon.

“Verily, my brother, ’tis but the proper usage when dealing with those of mortal status, since ’tis their expectation. How canst thou expect respect for thy manifestation of apotheosis if thou wilt speak and act as one more glyph lord-priest?” said Protasion, grinning.

“I don’t really want to... oh, never mind,” said Harkon. “Tallys says you have trouble with Aima and her bloodsuckers, Sardio, but that you did not see fit to inform me that you had troubles out of your expectation of expediting?”

“I... I did not realise that prayer would reach you,” said Sardio.

“It goes with the territory of having become a god,” said Harkon. “And I know fine well that Thanus is no more than a jumped-up hero with delusions of adequacy, and who does not provide glyph spells to handle the undead as Alethos does. And as I’m a hero of Alethos before I’m a temporary weather god, I’m rather good at handling undead. And Ralthur killed the bloodsucker priest here before we left, so he’s not inexperienced; Protasion and Lelyn are old hands, but Lelyn is here as medical backup, being associate priest and lord of Latrika, and being with child. It’s time for Aima to go; we killed her brother, Lycos, now it’s her turn. I take it things were going well enough before that, Sardio?”

“Oh! Yes. All the soldiery disappeared for no apparent reason, and we stormed the secret police, hanged Osedax and Julus Helio. We’ve spread the rebellion to other cities, and the soldiery has gone from them as well,” said Sardio.

“Selen picked them up en masse and dumped them outside Mesolimnos to join the siege; but neglected to provide them with any provisions,” sniggered Harkon. “Gods aren’t necessarily wise, however powerful they may be, and Selen and Daze lack something the older gods have – an understanding garnered over time immemorial of how their worshipers think and react.”

“Er... right,” said Sardio. “The gods have never done anything for me.”

“Well, we can go away and leave you to your bloodsuckers, if you like,” said Thyella, waspishly.

“Er, no, lady, if you please, if you can do anything....” Sardio trailed off, unsure what to say.

“Let us go and occupy the temple of Thanus, and overthrow its priesthood and guardian spirit in order to turn it into a proper temple of Alethos, and then we have a bit more godly backup for those who don’t automatically count as a temple in their own right,” said Lelyn.

“I’m in,” said Dróg.

“And me,” said Crondion.

“Then let the hunt begin,” said Harkon.

“And Aima is mine,” said Phaedros.

 



[1] As Thyella understands it, not understanding the build up of static caused by the friction between volcanic particles. The gods of this world work at an instinctive level.

Sunday, July 12, 2026

destiny's queen 11

 

Chapter 11

 

“Ombros is still alive!” panicked Selen to Daze. “And he has taken revenge by destroying my foremost temple in Selenopolis!”

“So, the so-called Knights of the Clear Skies have declared open war,” said Daze.

“Yes, but how is he alive? I saw him fall, his throat torn by my poor Lycos!” cried Selen. “I know some followers of his killed Lycos, but how did they save Ombros?”

Daze pondered.

“I don’t know,” he said, at length. “They must have had Latrika, lady of healing, with them.”

“She is Alethos’s sister; it’s him doing it. And his damned rebels in Mesolimnos! I am going to overwhelm them!”

 

 

Soldiers started appearing outside Mesolimnos, in their thousands, some in full armour, some not even dressed, and all confused. The huddled garrison started attacking them, thinking they were the enemy, and many died before Arialla Larth was able to scream to them that their goddess was sending more troops.

Sobus Aren looked on in horror.

He had ten thousand more men, many without armour, or even suitable clothing, no tents, an insufficiency of latrines, and worse than that, no supplies.

He used a battlefield spell to enhance his voice.

If your given name falls from A to H in the alphabet, find spades and start digging latrine pits! If your name is I to R, find axes, and start chopping trees to build shelters! Everyone else is foraging for any food you can find!” he bellowed.

 

On the battlements, Kaz watched.

“He’s moderately level headed and efficient,” she said. “Whatever is Selen thinking of, dumping thousands of unprepared troops on us?”

“That’s Harkon’s fault for causing an uprising in Selenopolis,” said Thyella, sniggering.

“This is going to get messy,” muttered Kaz. “Selen doesn’t have food making or multiplication in her folio, does she?”

“No,” said Thyella. “That was what Secalia offered Harkon over that wretched egg; that she could make sure that any army he led was always provided with plenty of grain.”

“Obviously she isn’t as stupid and ditsy a creature as I thought her,” said Kaz. “She at least comprehends that only well-fed armies fight.”

“Unlike Zeandine,” sniggered Thyella. “If Zeandine was any stupider, you’d have to plant her in a pot and water her.”

“Goddess of animal lust,” shrugged Kaz. “Even if she applies it to humans, we all know what happens when men start thinking with their small head, not their big one.”

“Good point,” said Thyella. “And women who start thinking with a need for lust over love for a good man will self-destruct.”

“Sadly, I fear you are right,” said Kaz.

 

 

Ogeron Cass was spitting nails.

He had been getting ready for a most advantageous marriage to Princess Tallys, who had a delectable young body, even if she did have ginger hair; he could always make her dye it.  And it meant he would also be close to her mother, his lover.  The empress had facilitated removing him from prison for failing to get the troops to Mesolimnos – which was not his fault – and then everything else fell apart. First, the brat disappeared. He was going to beat her black and blue when she turned up. It might even be fun to tame her; she was said to be a wild piece.

But the temple to Selen had been attacked twice, once to rescue some slaves nobody cared about and the temple Thorns whose actions would bless his wedding had been massacred.  Ogeron did not see why slaves should make a fuss about being deflowered; that was the purpose of women, after all.  And some of them might be lucky enough to conceive, and bear children to be raised by the temple as food for the bloodsucker priest, and be inducted into the worship of Aima. Why, it would be an honour for the children of slaves. And then, the second time was over some peasants who should be grateful to serve; and the temple was destroyed.  And then he had been plucked from his house and dumped into a rainy, muddy field with his erstwhile army.

“You!” he said, in dislike when he saw Erlax Sorn.

“And is this your fault, you overdressed ninny?” demanded Erlax Sorn.

As well as ten thousand men, Selen had plucked seventeen generals from the army to run things, and it was not long before different views on what should be done broke down into an unseemly brawl, which the troops, unhappy at their sudden arrival and having to build camp without adequate supplies, happily joined in, fighting for the general they mostly supported.

It took three days for  Sobus Aren and Arialla Larth to come remotely close to sorting out the mayhem; and only then because there were ten thousand hungry men, and there was theft going on from the supplies, which were not sufficient to cope with such an influx. 

The Mesolimnians sat back to watch the fun, under brilliant spring sunshine whilst the rain still fell on the foe, snacking on battered freshwater shrimps, nuts, and dried fruit.

“A pity they got something close to order,” said Kaz.

“That’s down to the efficiency of Erlax Sorn and his men, killing off other generals,” said Harkon. “I suspect he can manage to work with Sobus Aren, but they’ll have trouble garnering enough food.”

“They already started slaughtering those big beasts the heavy cavalry ride, and threatening to slaughter and eat the heavy cavalrymen if they protest,” said Pythas.  “It gives them a little longer to forage further,  and they can kill marsh creatures to eat, and fish in the rivers, and harvest cat tails. If they know how.”

Protasion sniggered.

“One of them caught a sauricthys, and not knowing any better, they gutted it, releasing the poison from the poison sac, and they ate the lot, unpalatable front half and all, and then the dozen men who had partaken in the meal had wild dreams, and stripped naked to dance before they fell down dead with their blood dried up,” he said.

“I am glad you showed us how to deal with the poison sac, so we could eat the fishy end,” said Kaz. “Several of them have been eaten by Marsh Creepers, too.”

“It couldn’t happen to nicer people,” said Protasion.

“There’s a steady stream of deserters, too,” said Pythas. “We’re letting them go. Of course Sobus Aren crucifies anyone who deserts, but as he’s crucifying anyone who fights, steals, dances, or complains, a lot of them think they might as well chance it. Once they’re gone, they’re gone, and we don’t have to fight them.”

“Did you hear what happened to the group who landed on our rear flank, next to the Red River?” asked Kaz.

“Only that they didn’t last long,” said Pythas. “What did happen?”

“Mycota was feeling grateful to us, so she grew them some mushrooms,” said Kaz. “Only they were the sort of mushrooms which bring the same sort of visions and dreams as the poison of sauricthys. Two of them buried each other up to the head, because they were convinced they were trees, and needed their roots to be deep in the soil; several solemnly opened their veins into the Red River, because it was demanding a sacrifice; and a huge bunch of them headed for the dry lands on a noisy hunt after a gigantic bat nobody else could see. As far as I know, of those who survived their fungal adventures, most of them set out for home.”

The others laughed. The deserters were probably the lucky ones; those who remained faced disease from inadequate latrine pits, starvation, and the misery of being rained on constantly.  They had managed to put up rude shelters, basically a sloping roof for half a dozen, with a fire, but it was not very adequate protection against constant rain, and Harkon’s occasional visitations of wind, hail, and thunder.

“I do need to shed the odd lightning bolt and the hail that gathers,” murmured Harkon. “It seems like a good place to get rid of it.”

“Did you want to lay a bet on how long it will take for someone to organise a credible mutiny?” asked Protasion. “I opened a book on it. Kaz is down for three weeks, Pythas is down for one week, and Alethos was specific in it being two days after you next chuck weather at them.”

“Oh, I’ll go one better than Alethos, and say within a day round of my next weather chucking,” said Harkon. “I don’t have a schedule on that, only when I feel uncomfortable from the excess weather on my skin. You have no idea how uncomfortable it is when hail lurks around the backs of your ears, and vibrates with the urge to fall.”

“You’re supposed to go and shed it where it seems appropriate,” said Thyella.

“It seems appropriate to make Selenites miserable,” said Harkon.

“Hush! Come, we shall go and make some storms in various places, and make sure our child understands his stormy future,” said Thyella.

“I can never resist you,” said Harkon.

 

They returned several hours later, and Harkon looked more comfortable.

“It isn’t easy being a weather god,” he said, a trifle plaintively.

His friends laughed at him.

 

oOoOo

 

“I don’t know why my priests are grumpy at me,” sulked Selen. “I give them lots of men to help them hold a siege, and they manage to kill half of them, and complain that there isn’t enough food. Why can’t they just go out and get food? Armies forage, don’t they?”

“Damned if I know,” said Daze. “Food grows, I think. They can go  pick some.” In which Daze showed himself to be as lacking in understanding as his sister.

 

oOoOo

 

Sobus Aren got his men drilling. He had never commanded so large an army before, but he was a believer in keeping the men too tired to be able to cause trouble. Hence, they were taking turns to drill as well as to forage for food, and in keeping their weapons and armour well shone. Those without armour were given weapons of a sort, and if that meant that formerly high ranking heavy cavalrymen whose presence had been wrested naked from a whorehouse, then they would have to live with what clothes they could beg from others, and to be bare foot spearmen with javelins made from saplings. Had Sobus Aren not had quite such an animus against those of higher rank, egged on, it might be said, by Erlax Sorn, he might have been more sympathetic to the plight of those whose idea of off duty involved soft beds, often enough with soft women, and soft living. Being suddenly the scum of the army, after having been elite, and having the training in leadership at least, if not the instincts, it was unsurprising that several former elite warriors should get together to plot the downfall of Sobus Aren and Erlax Sorn, who were, in the views of these privileged young men, upstarts and  impudent. Had they been riding their magnificent horses in formation, in their splendid armour, it is likely that no more than a passing moment of scorn for those who had risen on merit would have crossed their minds. But humiliated and robbed of all rank, vengeance was a concept which lurked heavily in their breasts.

It came to a head when one Fuscus Kron demanded better living from Sobus Aren, and was struck on the face.

“How dare you! I am a member of the heavy cavalry...”  cried Fuscus.

“Where is your horse, boy?” sneered Sobus.

There was a growl from the other cavalrymen, those who had come from their soft quarters and those whose horses had been eaten; and suddenly, Sobus was surrounded, and several spears were thrust into his belly.

“No more peasant leaders!” yelled Fuscus Kron. “Kill them!”

One of those fighting beside him was Ogeron Cass, who had managed to survive the purge of Erlax Sorn by the skin of his teeth. Now it was a matter of the elite of the  empire against those who fancied themselves of near equal status.

The Mesolimnians were betting on the outcome.

“My money’s on the common soldiers deciding that if half the officers can mutiny, so can they,” said Kaz.

“Never interrupt your enemy when he is doing your job for you,” said Pythas. “If they hadn’t got the former heavy cavalry involved, I’d be laying odds against the mutineers, but they’ve got some heavy armour on their side.”

It was a vicious fight, and some of the few heavy horses left were brought up to join in against the leaders; and before the sun had set, the army had some new generals.

It was unfortunate for the Selenite army that the new generals had little idea of how to run even a small army, never mind a large one.  The failing theme of ‘Order- counterorder-disorder’ was swiftly established with thirty or so would-be generals trying to establish, each of them, his own stamp on the army.

It was chaos.

Fuscus Kron called a meeting to establish some kind of pecking order, and the would-be generals mostly agreed to this. The ordinary troops saw it was a very good time to ignore lower officers and take themselves away from a most unpopular war with all the starvation, sickness, rain, and occasional infestations of hail, lightning, and wind.

“The gods themselves are against us,” opined one young soldier. “We have offended against nature itself when our goddess brought in the long winter, and we did not protest it. I am going home to atone by praying abjectly to the weather gods to forgive us for her sins and let us live our lives in peace.”

Harkon was hit by a number of prayers as others followed the young soldier’s suggestion, and as they departed as a group, drove a deer into their path to kill and eat, burning the glyphs of storm and motion onto its side so they knew it was a gift.

They were his devoted worshippers.

He did not mention this to his friends in case they teased him about going soft. But Alethos embraced him.

“Well done,” he said.

When the generals discovered that they had lost most of their army they were much concerned.

“I think we bow to the inevitable and go home,” said one. “The witch who called herself high priestess died at some point, so we don’t have anyone to pretend religious punishment for us.”

This seemed a good idea to those who gave only lip service; and those who believed went along with their fellows for fear of being mocked.