The drums had
begun at sunset, softly, a dark whispering promise of a shadow of
all night falling. Now they roared boldly. True night had come.
There was not even a sliver of moon. The flickering light of a
hundred fires set shadows dancing. It appeared that the trees had
pulled up their roots to participate. A hundred frenzied disciples
of the Mother of Night capered with them, their passion
building.
A hundred bound prisoners shivered and wept and fouled
themselves, fear unmanning some who had believed themselves heroic.
Their pleas fell upon unhearing ears.
A looming darkness emerged from the night, dragged by prisoners
straining at cables in the hopeless hope that by pleasing their
captors they might yet survive. Twenty feet tall, the shape proved
to be a statue of a woman as black and glistening as polished
ebony. It had four arms. It had rubies for eyes and crystal fangs
for teeth. It wore a necklace of skulls. It wore another necklace
of severed penises. Each taloned hand clutched a symbol of her
power over humanity. The prisoners saw only the noose.
The beat of the drums grew more swift. Their volume rose. The
Children of Kina began to sing a dark hymn. Those prisoners who
were devout began to pray to their own favored gods.
A skinny old man watched from the steps of the temple at the
heart of the Grove of Doom. He was seated. He no longer stood
unless he had to. His right leg had been broken and the bone
improperly set. Walking was difficult and painful. Even standing
was a chore.
A tangle of scaffolding rose behind him. The temple was
undergoing restoration. Again.
Standing over him, unable to remain still, was a beautiful young
woman. The old man feared her excitement was sensual, almost
sexual. That should not be. She was the Daughter of Night. She did
not exist to serve her own senses.
“I feel it, Narayan!” she enthused. “The
imminence is there. This is going to reconnect me with my
mother.”
“Perhaps.” The old man was not convinced. There had
been no connection with the Goddess for four years. He was
troubled. His faith was being tested. Again. And this child had
grown up far too headstrong and independent. “Or it may just
bring the wrath of the Protector down on our heads.” He went
no farther. The argument had been running from the moment that she
had used some of her raw, completely untrained magical talent to
blind their keepers for the moments they had needed to escape the
Protector’s custody three years ago.
The girl’s face hardened. For a moment it took on the
dread implacability apparent on the face of the idol. As she always
did when the matter of the Protector came up, she said,
“She’ll regret mistreating us, Narayan. Her punishment
won’t be forgotten for a thousand years.”
Narayan had grown old being persecuted. It was the natural order
of his existence. He sought always to make sure that his cult
survived the wrath of its enemies. The Daughter of Night was young
and powerful and possessed all of youth’s impetuosity and
disbelief in its own mortality. She was the child of a Goddess!
That Goddess’s ruling age was about to break upon the world,
changing everything. In the new order the Daughter of Night would
herself become a Goddess. What reason had she to fear? That
madwoman in Taglios was nothing!
Invincibility and caution, they were forever at loggerheads, yet
were forever inseparable.
The Daughter of Night did believe with all her heart and soul
that she was the spiritual child of a Goddess. She had to. But she
had been born of man and woman. A flake of humanity remained as a
stain upon her heart. She had to have somebody.
Her movements became more pronounced and more sensual, less
controlled. Narayan grimaced. She must not forge an interior
connection between pleasure and death. The Goddess was a destroyer
in one avatar but lives taken in her name were not taken for
reasons so slight. Kina would not countenance her Daughter yielding
to hedonism. If she did there would be punishments, no doubt
falling heaviest upon Narayan Singh.
The priests were ready. They dragged weeping prisoners forward
to fulfill the crowning purpose of their lives, their parts in the
rites that would reconsecrate Kina’s temple. The second rite
would strive to contact the Goddess, who lay bound in enchanted
sleep, so that once again the Daughter of Night would be blessed
with the Dark Mother’s wisdom and far-seeing vision.
All things that needed doing. But Narayan Singh, the living saint
of the Deceivers, the great hero of the Strangler cult, was not a
happy man. Control had drifted too far away. The girl had begun
altering the cult to reflect her own inner landscape. He feared the
chance that one of their arguments would not heal afterward. That
had happened with his real children. He had sworn an oath to Kina
that he would bring the girl up right, that they both would see her
bring on the Year of the Skulls. But if she continued growing ever
more headstrong and self-serving . . .
She could restrain herself no longer. She hurried down the
steps. She plucked a strangling scarf from the hands of one of the
priests.
What Narayan saw in the girl’s face then he had seen only
one place before, in his wife’s face, in her passion, so long
ago that it seemed to have happened during an earlier turn around
the Wheel of Life.
Saddened, he realized that when the next rite started she would
throw herself into the torture of the victims. In her state she
might become too involved and spill their blood, which would be an
offense the Goddess would never excuse.
He was becoming extremely troubled, was Narayan Singh.
And then he became more troubled still as his wandering eye
caught sight of a crow in the crotch of a tree almost directly
behind the deadly rite. Worse, that crow noticed him noticing it.
It flung itself into the air with a mocking cry. A hundred crow
voices immediately answered from all over the grove.
The Protector knew!
Narayan yelled at the girl. Attention much too focused, she did
not hear him.
Agony ripped through his leg as he climbed to his feet. How soon
would the soldiers arrive? How would he ever run again? How would
he keep the Goddess’s hope alive when his flesh had grown so
frail and his faith had worn so threadbare?
The drums had
begun at sunset, softly, a dark whispering promise of a shadow of
all night falling. Now they roared boldly. True night had come.
There was not even a sliver of moon. The flickering light of a
hundred fires set shadows dancing. It appeared that the trees had
pulled up their roots to participate. A hundred frenzied disciples
of the Mother of Night capered with them, their passion
building.
A hundred bound prisoners shivered and wept and fouled
themselves, fear unmanning some who had believed themselves heroic.
Their pleas fell upon unhearing ears.
A looming darkness emerged from the night, dragged by prisoners
straining at cables in the hopeless hope that by pleasing their
captors they might yet survive. Twenty feet tall, the shape proved
to be a statue of a woman as black and glistening as polished
ebony. It had four arms. It had rubies for eyes and crystal fangs
for teeth. It wore a necklace of skulls. It wore another necklace
of severed penises. Each taloned hand clutched a symbol of her
power over humanity. The prisoners saw only the noose.
The beat of the drums grew more swift. Their volume rose. The
Children of Kina began to sing a dark hymn. Those prisoners who
were devout began to pray to their own favored gods.
A skinny old man watched from the steps of the temple at the
heart of the Grove of Doom. He was seated. He no longer stood
unless he had to. His right leg had been broken and the bone
improperly set. Walking was difficult and painful. Even standing
was a chore.
A tangle of scaffolding rose behind him. The temple was
undergoing restoration. Again.
Standing over him, unable to remain still, was a beautiful young
woman. The old man feared her excitement was sensual, almost
sexual. That should not be. She was the Daughter of Night. She did
not exist to serve her own senses.
“I feel it, Narayan!” she enthused. “The
imminence is there. This is going to reconnect me with my
mother.”
“Perhaps.” The old man was not convinced. There had
been no connection with the Goddess for four years. He was
troubled. His faith was being tested. Again. And this child had
grown up far too headstrong and independent. “Or it may just
bring the wrath of the Protector down on our heads.” He went
no farther. The argument had been running from the moment that she
had used some of her raw, completely untrained magical talent to
blind their keepers for the moments they had needed to escape the
Protector’s custody three years ago.
The girl’s face hardened. For a moment it took on the
dread implacability apparent on the face of the idol. As she always
did when the matter of the Protector came up, she said,
“She’ll regret mistreating us, Narayan. Her punishment
won’t be forgotten for a thousand years.”
Narayan had grown old being persecuted. It was the natural order
of his existence. He sought always to make sure that his cult
survived the wrath of its enemies. The Daughter of Night was young
and powerful and possessed all of youth’s impetuosity and
disbelief in its own mortality. She was the child of a Goddess!
That Goddess’s ruling age was about to break upon the world,
changing everything. In the new order the Daughter of Night would
herself become a Goddess. What reason had she to fear? That
madwoman in Taglios was nothing!
Invincibility and caution, they were forever at loggerheads, yet
were forever inseparable.
The Daughter of Night did believe with all her heart and soul
that she was the spiritual child of a Goddess. She had to. But she
had been born of man and woman. A flake of humanity remained as a
stain upon her heart. She had to have somebody.
Her movements became more pronounced and more sensual, less
controlled. Narayan grimaced. She must not forge an interior
connection between pleasure and death. The Goddess was a destroyer
in one avatar but lives taken in her name were not taken for
reasons so slight. Kina would not countenance her Daughter yielding
to hedonism. If she did there would be punishments, no doubt
falling heaviest upon Narayan Singh.
The priests were ready. They dragged weeping prisoners forward
to fulfill the crowning purpose of their lives, their parts in the
rites that would reconsecrate Kina’s temple. The second rite
would strive to contact the Goddess, who lay bound in enchanted
sleep, so that once again the Daughter of Night would be blessed
with the Dark Mother’s wisdom and far-seeing vision.
All things that needed doing. But Narayan Singh, the living saint
of the Deceivers, the great hero of the Strangler cult, was not a
happy man. Control had drifted too far away. The girl had begun
altering the cult to reflect her own inner landscape. He feared the
chance that one of their arguments would not heal afterward. That
had happened with his real children. He had sworn an oath to Kina
that he would bring the girl up right, that they both would see her
bring on the Year of the Skulls. But if she continued growing ever
more headstrong and self-serving . . .
She could restrain herself no longer. She hurried down the
steps. She plucked a strangling scarf from the hands of one of the
priests.
What Narayan saw in the girl’s face then he had seen only
one place before, in his wife’s face, in her passion, so long
ago that it seemed to have happened during an earlier turn around
the Wheel of Life.
Saddened, he realized that when the next rite started she would
throw herself into the torture of the victims. In her state she
might become too involved and spill their blood, which would be an
offense the Goddess would never excuse.
He was becoming extremely troubled, was Narayan Singh.
And then he became more troubled still as his wandering eye
caught sight of a crow in the crotch of a tree almost directly
behind the deadly rite. Worse, that crow noticed him noticing it.
It flung itself into the air with a mocking cry. A hundred crow
voices immediately answered from all over the grove.
The Protector knew!
Narayan yelled at the girl. Attention much too focused, she did
not hear him.
Agony ripped through his leg as he climbed to his feet. How soon
would the soldiers arrive? How would he ever run again? How would
he keep the Goddess’s hope alive when his flesh had grown so
frail and his faith had worn so threadbare?