Chapter 9
Being a god was, thought Harkon, ridiculously busy. Powering the excess required for a mortal to cast a glyph-spell was relatively easy, and did not take much concentration, but listening to the whining, and the bad poetry as his new worshippers confronted enemies was tedious and irritating.
Harkon waited for Windsday, for the formalised worship on the solar plane.
“Henceforth, no poetry is required,” he said. “The war is too intense. Convert, ignore, or kill, depending on the threat level you meet. Offer removal of chaos taints; I’ll follow through. I don’t really care about you confronting some poor peasant who has been turned into a lycoid; report it to me for him to be cured. Only kill him if he doesn’t want to be cured. It’s time to actually fight the real enemy not worry about the sort of chaos which is not an outright supporter of Selen and her filthy brood. The Moon Wolf has been replaced, and a shifter is now stealing the lycoids to become disease-free shifters. Do what you can to help.”
“Why don’t we just kill them?”
It was Erippion Windblown.
Of course it was Erippion Windblown.
“Because, you idiot, if you kill an enemy that’s one enemy down. If you make him into a friend, that’s not just one enemy down but one friend up,” said Harkon.
Erippion took being called an idiot by his god remarkably well; but then, Ombros was rather direct.
Harkon waited for the other sandal to drop, and for Erippion to recognise him, having known Harkon for many years; but apparently Erippion saw what he expected to see.
Harkon complained to Alethos.
“I’m sure I’d notice if you weren’t you,” he said.
“Beloved brother, of course you would,” said Alethos. “You’d notice because we are close, and also your glyph of truth would tell you something was wrong.” He smiled. “Don’t worry about it,” he went on. “The majority of my worshippers wouldn’t notice what I am, because most give little more than lip service, to gain the training, at least, those of initiate level and some glyph-lords. Feel sorry for Thanus; there is a movement amongst the patrician warriors who give him nominal worship, glyph-lords or no, that believe that their sacrificial magic is taken by the priests, and it is the priests who provide fancier magic using it, as they don’t believe in gods at all.”
Harkon gasped in horror.
“Surely such sacrifices will be sloppy and not connect properly with Thanus?” he asked.
Alethos chuckled, wickedly.
“I could not possibly suggest to your sister that she might go through every temple of Thanus to absorb loose power which has not been properly assimilated,” he said. “But every little will help when she goes to confront Thanus, as she must do at the proper time.”
Harkon sniggered.
He felt much better.
Ombros’s worshippers might not be the sharpest sticks in the bundle, but they were at least devout. Some went beyond devout into downright zealotry; but that could be addressed. And the crazier ones would probably die fighting Selenites.
oOoOo
“Daze! Did you see what they did?” screamed Selen. “One minute I was laughing over how our son killed Ombros, and he fell to the ground, with Lycos going to rip out his abilities and become the Stormwolf; and the next minute, that flat-chested idiot, Thyella was there with a load of the rag, tag and bobtail Alethos keeps about him, and they killed Lycos! And his most loyal priests! What happened? The prophecy said he would be the Stormwolf! Do something! Undo it! Make it right!” she sobbed in real fear.
“The prophecy said that when the thunderer called for a reckoning, if the blood-moon aided the moon-wolf, the moon-wolf would become the Stormwolf, and none should stand before him,” said Daze. “You stupid woman! You let Lycos deal with Ombros by himself, didn’t you?”
“But... but I thought he did not need me!” cried Selen. “You know how he is if people interfere in his prey... how he was, I mean.”
“You should have softened Ombros up before calling in Lycos,” scolded Daze. “And then you should have gone to Lycos’s aid on the ground.”
“I... I did not know they could kill him so fast! I was answering other prayers!” said Selen. “It wasn’t my fault!”
“It was your fault,” said Daze. “Now you only have Aima to guard you, and she spends most of her time shagging her bloodsuckers.”
There were very few female bloodsuckers; Aima liked her priesthood available to entertain her.
Selen cried in earnest.
She was suddenly afraid.
oOoOo
Slipping up to the lunarsphere whilst Selen was preoccupied was easier for Kaz, especially as she was visiting another lunar deity.
“You’re the trógling they say will heal me and take away the curse; you don’t look like much,” humphed the huddled figure of the moon, still beautiful in her ravaged state, a soft glow to her blue-black skin and shining silver hair, though her six breasts wept pus.
“We need to co-ordinate our efforts, Rogaz,” said Kaz. “We are moving into the endgame now. My brother-in-arms, Volk, has defeated Lycos and taken his powers, in order to cure the lycoids. I need you to weaken Daze for me.”
“How can I do that?”
“Since the creation of tróglings, those not specifically welcomed into your worship or that of other toróg gods, have been his to feed on, and to take to his corner of twisted godsphere, to enhance his power. I purpose to free all those souls, but in the meantime, if you tell your priestesses that they should inform their tróglings that they are free to worship the Daykaz, the mother of trógling, I will get their worship and power to help me against Daze,” said Kaz. “In due course, I will lead those who want to leave to new lands, once your own fertility is regained. You and I will have to take down Selen together, and destroy her ritually, to assimilate her power into yourself. And it must be while her power is full, with the full moon, or you will also be tied to waxing and waning as she is.”
“I would have accepted that as an improvement, but I prefer a full healing,” said Rogaz, hungrily. “What will happen to my children?”
“I have spoken with Fate,” said Kaz. “If all is done correctly, things will not be entirely as they were before, as the web of fate moves on; but births of trógling and greater toróg will cease, and darklings will give rise to some high toróg, and more who have four or even six breasts amongst the darkling numbers. High toróg will always breed true; and over time it may be that Darklings die out, but their numbers are needed to restore a population of high toróg.”
Rogaz nodded.
“That seems reasonable,” she said. “I will heal, and so will my children. I can live with it taking a while; my darklings have been loyal.”
“It may be that fate has a purpose for them, also, as your envoys to humans, and traders,” said Kaz. “Your daughter, Hraazaz, finds trading harder now she has transitioned to be a high toróg, though it’s a price she willingly pays, obviously. We have struck a friendship, and her adoptive daughter is close to my own daughter. I think that Hraazaz will take on the healing aspect of your pantheon when she has gone beyond herodom.”
“I owe you for aiding her achieve her potential,” said Rogaz, grudgingly.
“We had parted neutrally; and we had a common foe,” said Kaz. “It was needed for us to work together, and that we have become friends is a pleasant outcome. I know you have not welcomed my arrival, but perhaps you and I might become cordial allies?”
“I did not understand who you were when I told your grandmother that you would have to die,” admitted Rogaz. “I was afraid you would disrupt the coming of the promised Daykaz. It never occurred to me that a trógling could be the promised one.”
“Isn’t it delicious?” said Kaz. “Selen and Daze still have not realised it, and think it might be my daughter, but they still do not know that Death’s beloved is a trógling.”
“Fate chose you wisely; I see that, now,” said Rogaz. “I will work with you.”
oOoOo
Firri all but flew back into the house and cast herself on Sjurgi, in Harkon’s form.
“What is it? Who has hurt you?” asked Sjurgi, brusquely, holding the child.
“The empress’s oldest daughter is getting married,” said Firri, her teeth chattering. “I was stopped in the street because of being likely to be a virgin at my age....”
“It is a good thing Harkon isn’t here,” said Ralthur. “I rather think he’d react violently....”
“It’s time someone reacted violently,” said Sjurgi. “Harkon, my brother! We need your stormforce here.”
Harkon arrived with a moderately quiet rumble of thunder, brushing away hailstones and lightning bolts in irritation.
“Is it important?” he asked.
“Yes,” said Sjurgi, going back to her usual appearance. “Firri ran home in terror, having been stopped, because Princess Tallys is getting married.”
Harkon frowned.
“I don’t understand the cause and effect there,” he said.
“When a patrician girl is married, as many virgins as she has years of life have their maidenheads sacrificed, so their sufferings in blood grant her fertility. The temple Thorns are contracted to... to pierce rosebuds, and to be as rough as possible to make as much blood as possible; some of them are initiates of Aima, and sometimes younger virgins die from the damage,” said Sjurgi. “And they are not particular about them being of nubile age.”
The house shook with thunder, before Harkon got it under control.
“This stops now,” said Harkon.
“Yes, but we need to be clever about it; don’t get your head filled with the winds of Ombros,” said Ralthur.
Harkon shook his head as if to clear it.
“I want to make a whirlwind to flatten her temples,” he said.
“Of course you do, but that flattens the virgins, too,” said Sjurgi. “Be more subtle.”
“Fine. We go to the temple to worship, cloaked until we are within, kill everyone except the girls, and take them out via thunderbolt,” said Harkon.
“Half right,” said Ralthur. “We get a map of the storm drains and sewers, and Dróg’s team set us up a tunnel from the basement, and close it up after we’ve led the girls out.”
“Too much of Ombros in my head,” said Harkon. “I’ll get used to it.”
“Of course you will, brother,” said Sjurgi. “Now, do you have a map of the drains?”
“Of course; Dróg found us a former miner, and I diced for his ownership. Fate is fond of me, so I won,” said Harkon. “Velg is also educated and can draw maps. He’s been working on mapping all the drains in the city, and colour coded over the size you need to be to get through them.”
“You can trust him?”
“I used truthsense on him,” said Harkon. “And got his mate out too, so that he could not be pressured nor coerced.”
“Wise,” said Sjurgi.
“Oh, there’s a movement amongst ranking Selenites who worship for form’s sake, and of Thanus too, but do not really believe in gods. Apparently, there is spare power sitting around to absorb; Alethos suggested you might take it.”
“Why don’t we go to the temple of Thanus, and have Velg open a way into the sewers to go to the temple of Selen? That way we need not be the last people seen to enter,” said Sjurgi.
“I like it,” said Ralthur.
“Or, why don’t we just go via the drains in the first case?” said Harkon.
“Because if we are seen in the temple of Thanus on Deathday, we would not be elsewhere,” said Ralthur. “We have enough knowledge of glyphs to set up simulacra to be noticed whilst we slip out; and we return to join the congregation.”
“That should work,” said Harkon.
oOoOo
Tallys had tried logic; then she had tried a tantrum; then she tried crying. That usually got round her father; but of course, her father had no real power in the household at all. Empress Auralia was the power in the palace, and it was her decree that Tallys should marry Ogeron Cass, and restore his status. Tallys hated Cass; she knew he was her mother’s lover, and this disgusted her more than the thought that he was twelve years older than she was. That could have been worse; she could have been sold to some king of a client state to cement relations, some crusty old warrior. But she considered Ogeron Cass slimy. Consequently, she was crying on her bed, hating the idea and unable to think of any way of avoiding marriage.
Tallys rolled over in bed, her tears cried out. She got up and washed her face. She summoned Kissia, her favourite slave, who studied with her to make sure she learned, as Kissia was whipped if Tallys misbehaved, or failed to learn. Tallys did her best to make sure Kissia was not whipped.
“I want to run away,” said Tallys. “But I don’t know how to live outside the palace.”
Kissia was a girl of the plains, who was very down to earth.
“You won’t manage for one moment to pretend to be one of the commons,” she said. “You walk like you own the place.”
“Well, I need to do something quickly,” said Tallys.
Kissia threw up her hands.
“You’re as helpless as a kitten,” she said. “Oh, I know you’ve had sword lessons; maybe you could dress as a page boy, but that only gets you out, it doesn’t help you live. You might just as well pray to the Skyhorse to be rescued from an intolerable fate.”
“Well, then, I shall,” said Tallys. “I don’t see why he is called evil; storms happen because storms happen, and wind is wind. Without wind and rain, farming doesn’t happen.”
“You’re serious,” said Kissia.
“I hate my mother,” said Tallys. “I don’t much care about any gods; and I hate the idea that my fertility is to be ensured by an act of cruelty to sixteen other girls some of them younger than me. I shall ask the Skyhorse to rescue them, too. Show me how to pray to him,”
Kissia sighed, and hoped they would not get caught.
“Harkon! Listen very carefully to a prayer,” said Moraia, goddess of Fate.