Chapter 9
Harkon stood, waiting to be struck down.
Lightning flickered in a clear sky; and Thyella vanished. The other two clenched their fists and contemplated Harkon.
And then the heavy weight of a premier god lay upon the little valley, and a man who resembled Phaedrus appeared, his skin shining,
“Get back to father’s court,” he said.
“But Pollonis! This mortal has insulted us!” said Zeandine.
“No, actually, he hasn’t,” said Pollonis. “He has told you some brutal truths and he is under my protection. A pretty thing it would be, would it not, to cause a war of the gods, for Alethos would have to demand your lives in exchange for that of one of his favourites.”
“Is that why he doesn’t like the women I showed him? He’s shagging Alethos?” asked Zeandine.
Pollonis slapped her.
“If he was, it would not be any of your business, but some men are more fastidious than the ones you make drool over you!” he shouted. “Now get back to court and take your foolish egg with you!”
“No,” said Harkon and Kaz in one voice.
“What?” Pollonis turned.
“That egg is wrong,” said Kaz. “It carries evil.”
Pollonis frowned and regarded the egg.
“Chaos!” he snarled. He raised his hand, and a spear was in it.
“Let your son do it,” said Harkon. “He needs feel what such things are like for himself. Phaedros, take your sword, and cut it open.”
“No! it is beautiful…” cried Secalia.
“It has caused my sisters and my niece to quarrel,” said Pollonis. “You two! Begone!”
The two goddesses fled. Phaedros lifted his sword, and hit the egg.
It bounced off.
“Add a flameblade spell,” said Harkon. “Magic is needed to break through it.”
Phaedros did so, and this time, the egg broke at his blow. Kaz, watching narrowly, was fairly certain that it was because of Phaedros’s own divine nature that it was possible for the chaos egg to be broken open. The shards flew in all directions, and Phaedros dropped his sword, cradling his right arm as if it had been hurt by the blow.
From the remains of the egg, crawled a hideous travesty of eagle and man, which looked around.
“But you promised to protect me!” it croaked, pointing at Protasion. “You were paid well enough!”
“What?” said Protasion. Some of his fellows turned towards him, reproachfully.
Kaz narrowed her eyes, as Lelyn seized Protasion’s hand and clung to it, whilst Evgon, Svargia, Kuros, and Polia looked at him as if he was a stranger and an enemy.
“Alethos fill your hearts with truth!” she cried, swinging her sword at the head of the hideous being. It dodged.
“Foolish trogling, to think your companions do anything but laugh up their sleeves at you pretending to be a warrior,” said the thing.
“Trógling,” said Kaz, automatically. She knew she was a good warrior, the jibes would not touch her, she would not let them, though the insidious voice hammered on her self-respect.
“You humans should keep the slave in its place, and not let it attack young gods,” said the thing.
“Just kill it, Kaz; don’t play with your food,” said Vulk.
The creature expelled a stream of spittle, and Kaz swayed effortlessly out of the way, gasping with pain as a drop touched her hand, and burned.
“I’m not eating that, I don’t know where it’s been,” said Kaz, tracking the movement of the creature with her sword, learning how it moved. It tried to launch itself into the air for flight, but had given itself away by glancing upwards; and Kaz let the momentum of her blade carry it up to reverse for a downstroke which caught the creature as it flew upwards, neatly cleaving its head from its body. Her sword hissed, and the iron blade dissolved.
“What was that thing?” cried Lelyn, clinging to Protasion. “Its words were more poisonous than its blood!”
“It influenced us to turn on Protasion,” gasped Evgon. “I also ask, what could it be?”
Kaz did not answer, for she was fighting the spirit of the being she had killed. Kaz gritted her teeth as the creature tried to bite her magical heart, taunting her that she was nothing but a deformed travesty, who would never amount to anything. The words hammered home like wounds in her heart, there was some compulsion the creature carried to believe its lies.
Kaz drew on the love of Alethos, and used the rock carving cantrips to strengthen her nails to dig into the spirit; being magical, they could do real damage. As could the wring cantrip from laundry spells. Ripping and twisting, she dove into the mind of the spirit, shuddering at its evil, its sheer contentiousness. It had a horribly inverted form of the Truth glyph as a part of its make-up, where the concentric circles were displaced, a glyph of Confusion; as well as one of Chaos, and another travesty of the Death glyph, which Kaz read as Strife. It was almost as if this godling had been designed to counter Alethos and his followers.
And perhaps it had.
“Go on, Kaz, rip it!” yelled Protasion, encouragingly. “We all love you! Ignore anything it says!” He, like the others, could see glimpses of the aura of the spirit as it attacked their friend and as she struck back at the near-invisible entity, biting with hard, trógling teeth into the spiritual wing, to hold the spirit and prevent it from freeing itself and escaping. Harkon stood on watch, his own sword flaming, thrusting it at the spirit to keep it from escape, his brother, Toval, and Kaz’s spirit friend, Zon, helping to peel back the layers of consciousness, to tear the spirit of something so potentially dangerous to absolute destruction. Somewhere within there was the knowledge of a giant eagle mother, wounded and stinking with some chaos disease, her nest and egg corrupted and the essence of a god entered into the egg as it was taken over.
Kaz breathed deeply. She had stored power to back her, and she threw it at the foul glyphs, wrapped around the laundry cantrip of inside-out for getting washing all the right way out. Somewhere she was aware that Alethos was laughing himself silly. Kaz just seized all she could from the entity as it was ripped to shreds and ceased to be.
“So simple, so practical! Most people twist themselves half into loops to get glyphs to change, but you just launder them into submission,” he sniggered. “Oh, my darling, you have made the requirements to be my priest as well as my lord, and you have made the first step to herodom. You have your own glyphs.”
Kaz sat down. She was spent, but she could feel her magical heart expanding from the fight, and from what she had ripped from the chaotic godling; and Zon, too, was stronger for his part in the fight.
“My egg! Someone has destroyed my egg!” raged Daze.
“Who? Punish them,” said Selen.
“I cannot feel who; the presence of both Pollonis and Arethos drown out who did it. It is probably Harkon; but at least I have stirred up hatred for him with the sun-daughters.”
Pollonis cast a ritual of cleansing on the shards of the egg,
“My lady,” said Pollonis. “I have asked permission of Alethos to replace your blade. Might I have the hilt of the burned one?”
“Was that acid or caustic?” asked Kaz. “I need to neutralise the wound… it is spreading.”
Alethos was there in a trice.
“It is caustic, so will not respond to being peed on to neutralise,” he said. “Vinegar, and I fancy only my healing will close it.”
Lelyn ran with vinegar, and poured it liberally on Kaz’s burned hand; the drop of spittle had taken the flesh on the back of her hand down to bone in one place and was spreading up her arm.
Kaz vomited with the pain, and Alethos concentrated.
“Paste made with the white star flower,” he commanded. Lelyn gave it to him.
“Eagle mother… wounded… I think by Toróg poisoned spear initially… further hurt by chaos disease,” said Kaz. The paste to counter the wasting poison the Toróg used on their weapons helped ease the pain, and Pollonis joined with Alethos in a chant over the wound, which closed up and Kaz sighed in relief.
“My thanks, my lords,” she said.
“I fear it will be a white scar, always,” said Alethos.
“Better by far than lose my sword hand,” said Kaz. “I was wondering if I should have to ask Harkon to cut it off for me.”
“I am glad none of us have to meet that thing grown to adulthood,” said Alethos.
“Indeed,” said Pollonis. “And now, your blade…” Rynn passed him the hilt; she had soaked the rest of the blade in vinegar. Pollonis nodded, banishing the rest of the blade, and inscribed glyphs magically on the hilt. “When you will it, you will have a sword made of pure light; and whatever length you will.”
“Whatever length?” asked Kaz, interested.
“Once past the length of a hand-and-a-half sword it will be less effective, as the light will tend to spread out,” said Pollonis. “Such is the nature of light. Your will keeps it concentrated in the shape of a blade.”
“I am deeply grateful,” said Kaz.
“No, Daykaz; I and my father are deeply grateful to you all, to Harkon, for refusing to be drawn into something which would cause war and strife in my father’s court, and to you for battling that… thing… and recognising that it must be destroyed spiritually as well to stop it regaining a body.”
“I think we all took a big step into our destiny in a larger world,” said Kaz.
Alethos kissed her gently, and he and Pollonis left the party to hunker down by the spring and recover from a very nasty incident.
“Any idea what it was?” asked Rynn.
“A god or demi-god, new-made,” said Phaedros. Rynn had healed his broken arm. “That, at least, I may sense. A new power to spread strife and contention, I think. I am impressed by its swift despatch.”
“If it had had the quarrel of a choice made of one of the three, it could have split the court of Solos,” said Harkon, soberly. “And caused trouble between Solos and Alethos.”
“Neatly forestalling our moves against the interloper gods,” said Kaz. “I think we know who set this in motion; a trickster would be needed.”
There were murmurs of assent.
Pollonis grabbed his sisters by the ears as they tried to hide by his father’s throne. He looked around for Thyella.
He saw her, her face stricken with shame.
“You, at least, don’t need a lecture, my niece,” said Pollonis.
“I behaved abominably,” said Thyella.
“Then, you know what to do,” said Pollonis. “As for you two! Have you no shame?”
“It was only a beauty contest,” said Secalia. “We wanted a mortal to judge it. He reacted out of all proportion…”
“He did not!” bellowed Pollonis. “He treated you as shamed, as you are shamed! Using bribery on a mortal is a despicable thing to do! And to do so on a near-hero of a god of Truth is the most unutterably stupid thing anyone might do. I count Harkon now as an associate priest of mine, and I also favour him; do not try any games with him, you little ninnies! If I thought it would do you any good, I’d give both of you a good spanking, but I fear you would only regret that it wasn’t Harkon doing the spanking. You disgust me; you let yourselves be influenced by a game of the Trickster, with an egg containing a godling of discord and strife! Had that thing hatched and persuaded some dubious winner that it was wise beyond measure, one of you could have torn the universe apart with war! Get out of sight, and don’t let me see you for a very long time!”
His sisters scrambled to get out of the field of scrutiny of their furious brother.
Back at the spring, Harkon groaned as there was a burst of lightning out of clear skies, and Thyella returned.
“Oh, no, not again,” he said.
Thyella swallowed her pride, and knelt, touching her right hand to her head, her heart, and extending the empty palm in a universal gesture of supplication.
“I have come to apologise,” she said. “I… I realised the moment you disqualified us that we had all behaved shamefully. It was… I was so caught up in wanting to be thought beautiful the way my aunts are, not laughed at for being skinny, and muscled not rounded and beautiful… I thought a warrior might, with incentives be able to see some beauty in me… but now I know I was a foolish creature, enchanted by a chaos ploy. But even so, I should have known better than to try to bribe a judge.”
Tears ran down her cheeks, with tiny lightning bolts crackling in them.
“Please rise, goddess,” said Harkon. “Yes, you should have known better, but you have realised and you have come to make amends. As it happens, had it been no more than a lighthearted contest, I should have declared you the most beautiful; I do not find the looks of your aunts to be to my taste at all. You are the most beautiful woman I have ever seen, and I do not think that I will ever marry, for I will always measure any woman I see against your divine loveliness. And yet, that geas I carry joyfully for having the pleasure of knowing that your beauty is allied to integrity and the ability to look at yourself objectively means that I will readily accept that no other woman could stir my heart.”
“You are generous,” said Thyella. “I would that you will accept an associate priesthood with me; I do not often accept men into my cult, as I am a goddess of warrior women, but I will be pleased to enable you to learn those glyph-spells which are unique to me.”
“I am happy to accept your act of amends without requiring such gifts,” said Harkon.
“I want to gift you, to aid your quest to support the Daykaz,” said Thyella.
“Should you not offer them to her?” asked Harkon.
“If it pleases you that I should do so; but I cannot but wonder if skills of the skies would be uncomfortable to one reared with the Toróg,” said Thyella. “If I am wrong….”
“You are not wrong,” said Kaz. “I am the mother of shadows, and those cast by your lightning make stark shadows close to the divide of light and dark. And, as you surmise, I am happier on or under the earth than above it. I will not, however, turn down friendship and an alliance, even as we are friends with your cousin, here, Phaedros.
“That, I will give right willingly. I do not like it that the Trickster might be able to control me, through some enchanted egg. I… you have destroyed it?”
“And the god of discord within it,” said Kaz, grimly.
“Good,” said Thyella. “I… I will see you all again; and call on me at need.”
Kaz inclined her head, and the goddess vanished in a crack of lightning.
“Abrupt sort of person,” said Kaz.
“But a good ally,” said Harkon. He sighed, heavily.
“When you are a hero, you can court her,” said Kaz.
“But she’s the celestial virgin!” said Harkon.
“I presume that the few square denoms of skin which make that so are no different in a goddess to those in a mortal woman,” shrugged Kaz.
“But it might affect her powers, and diminish her,” said Harkon.
“Or it might affect her powers and enhance her,” said Kaz. “You’ve heard Alethos on the subject of being unchanging playing into the hands of chaos.”
“Leave it, Kaz,” said Harkon. “Just… leave it.”