Read The Godspeaker Trilogy Online

Authors: Karen Miller

Tags: #Fiction / Fantasy / Epic, #Fantasy, #Science Fiction

The Godspeaker Trilogy (29 page)

BOOK: The Godspeaker Trilogy
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He obeyed her warning, he did not weep.

Raklion embraced Hanochek first, he held him hard and close. “The god see you, warleader. Keep my warhost in the palm of your hand until I return, the warlord of Mijak.”

“Warlord, I will,” said Hanochek thickly. “I will keep your son, also. His heart beats within me. His life is safe in my hands.”

Next Raklion dropped to his knees and rested his hands on Zandakar’s shoulders. “You will heed the warleader. He speaks with my voice. You will be my proud son, we will rejoice upon my return.”

Zandakar nodded. “Yes, warlord.”

As Raklion stood, Hekat smiled at her son who would be warlord of Mijak. “You know what you must do while I am gone, Zandakar. Tell me.”

He straightened his spine. “Yuma, I must study my reading and writing three fingers every day. I must dance with my snakeblade four fingers every day. I must obey Hanochek warleader when he gives me other training tasks. I must kneel before the altar in Et-Raklion’s godhouse every newsun, so Peklia godspeaker might sacrifice for the god and the warlord in the Heart of Mijak.”

Nagarak said, “Your duty to the god should have been spoken of first.”

“He is to be warlord, not a godspeaker,” Hekat replied, as Zandakar blinked, trying so hard not to show his fright. She had no fear of Nagarak, he was only a man, he did not dance in the god’s eye.

Nagarak’s lips pinched tight, aieee, how much he hated her, he had no power over her. It made her smile, that he had no power. Raklion said, “My son knows his duty to the god, I am sure. It is time to leave Et-Raklion, high godspeaker.”

Nagarak nodded curtly and turned away. Raklion bent low and embraced Zandakar. Hekat looked at Hanochek. “Keep him safe, warleader.” Her voice was a threat, she made sure he heard it.

Raklion heard it, he released Zandakar. “He will be safe in my knife-brother’s eye. Come, Hekat. The god’s purpose awaits.”

They mounted their horses, they rode with the chosen warriors from the warhost field. The gathered warhost cheered them loudly, Zandakar cheered but there were tears in his eyes. Hekat frowned.

Silly boy. What have you to weep for? When Raklion is Mijak’s warlord, how much closer are you to your glory?

She rode away from her solemn-faced son, she looked to their future, she did not look back.

Mijak’s Heart was neutral ground, owned not by one single warlord but by all. It was a place where the seven warlords might thrash out their differences without bloodshed. It was rarely visited, warlords liked their skirmishing ways. What use were warriors who never drew blood? They were like trained sandcats, easily distracted into mischief and strife if not regularly sated with a hunt, a kill.

Hekat rode a red mare, gifted by Raklion, who rode a blue-striped stallion by her side. At his left hand Nagarak rode a black stallion, grimly determined on the god’s business. Behind them rode the ten chosen warriors, proud men and women with death in their hands. They rode swiftly through the lands of Et-Raklion, highsun after highsun, living off their fat green bounty, easily finding abundant water and well-fed game. Before this day’s lowsun they would cross the border into Et-Tebek, and twelve highsuns after that into Et-Banotaj. Then their living would grow much harsher, the other lands of Mijak struggled mightily in the god’s displeasure.

After fingers of silence, Raklion glanced at Nagarak and said, “You sent word to the warlords and their high godspeakers. Are you certain they all will come?”

Nagarak wore tanned leather leggings and his scorpion pectoral. His chiming godbraids, choked with amulets, dangled down his back and covered his shoulders. At Raklion’s question his face closed tight. “No summoned warlord can refuse the call to Mijak’s Heart without earning the god’s unstinting wrath. I have read the omens, warlord, they will come. If you doubt me we stand in shadow.”

“I do not doubt you, Nagarak. I doubt my sinning warlord brothers.”

Nagarak’s deep eyes blinked, like a snake before its striking. “No. You doubt the god.”

“He does not,” said Hekat, before Raklion could answer. “You should not say so.”

Nagarak said nothing, since leaving Et-Raklion he had not spoken to her once. She shed no tears for his stubborn silence.

I am Hekat, godtouched and precious. What do I care if he speaks to me or not?

His expression uneasy, Raklion said, “Hekat—”

Ignoring Raklion, she stared at Nagarak. “Raklion knows the warlords are flesh and blood, he questions their obedience. High godspeakers are not perfect, they stray, they dissemble. They guide their warlords into waterless deserts. Why else has the god decided Raklion must rule them? They have offended the god, not him. Raklion warlord is seen in its eye.”

She and Raklion rode so close together he could reach out and touch her knee. He touched her now, half-frowning, half-smiling, he was pleased that she had come. The first night of the journey, as they lay under the star-filled sky, he had told her. Then he had fucked her, he still hoped for a second son.

He said now, making peace, “I do not doubt the god, Nagarak, I do not doubt you. I am a foolish warlord, chattering like a child.”

Nagarak snorted. “Then bite off your tongue. The god does not care for chattering and neither do I.”

Hekat hid her own smile. Raklion is pleased I ride with him, but Nagarak is sour grapes on the vine. Tcha. His feelings are hurt, I do not care .

Silence returned. They rode until the light began to dwindle, then made camp by one of Et-Tebek’s mean, trickling streams. They had brought no godhouse doves or lambs for sacrifice, Nagarak shed his own blood for the god without flinching, and afterwards healed the deep cut with his godstone.

After sacrifice, six warriors departed to hunt what meat could be found for their dinner. Nagarak lost himself in prayer. Hekat took her other, dirtied tunic to the stream to clean. No slave rode with them, it was a task she must perform herself. She did not mind, it was something to do.

Raklion joined her at the stream’s muddy edge and watched her work. Behind them the other four warriors played chance with their godbones, laughing at each poor toss and guess. Feeling Raklion’s eyes on her, Hekat looked up. The sinking sunlight gilded his dark face, his eyes were shadowed, he did not smile. “You are so beautiful.” He sounded sad. “I wish you would let me dress you in riches, you deserve every bright color and all Mijak’s gold.”

She pulled a face. “Tcha. I am a warrior, I need nothing but my training tunic and leggings when we ride. Raklion, you are troubled. Was Nagarak right? Do you doubt the god?”

He looked away. “No.”

“Then what is it?” she demanded, straightening. “You cannot lie, you know I see you.”

He tried to smile, as though afraid of frightening her. “Yes. You see me. And I see you, I see more than that. I am uneasy, Hekat. There is a worm within my gut, it feasts on fears, it is growing fat.”

Her tunic was clean. She spread it to dry on the tangled brown grass, then dried her fingers on her leggings. “Speak plainly, warlord. You are fearful of meeting with the others? Why?”

He did not wear a training tunic, his tall, broad frame was covered in light wool and leather, the snake of Et-Raklion coiled on his chest. His snakeblade sat quietly in its jeweled sheath. He was splendid, if she was not a woman consumed by the god, a woman who had no time for men, she might lose her breath at the sight of him.

He said, lightly frowning, “Since leaving Et-Raklion I have had dreams.”

“All men dream, warlord,” she told him. “If those dreams came true we would live in a strange world.”

He reached for her, and pulled her close. “I dream of crows’ wings blotting out the sun. I sink into shadows, I see, I hear, I cannot move.”

His heart beat strongly beneath her cheek. “Have you told Nagarak of these dreams?”

He shook his head. “In Nagarak’s mind this journey is the outward expression of an inner truth. The god has told him I am Mijak’s warlord, and so I am. Sometimes I think he does not understand. We ride to turn the warlords’ world upside down, to throw them in the dust, to press their necks beneath my heel. These are proud men, will they kneel meekly like lambs, will they accept the slaughter of their ambitions without protest? The god has said it must be, so Nagarak thinks they will. I think he might be wrong.”

“He is not wrong,” she said. “They will submit to the god or they will die. This is the god’s desiring. Nagarak is right. They must accept you as their warlord or be cast into hell and devoured by demons.”

Raklion tipped her face to look into his. “You are as bad as Nagarak. Can you not see how this might end in bloodshed?”

“Tcha! What I see is a warlord uncertain of his worthiness,” said Hekat, impatient. “You fear for no reason, Raklion, you have been tested and tested, you spent three highsuns on the scorpion wheel, you did not break, you bared your body for smiting and your godspark to the god. It ate your cries, it drank your tears. Whatever imperfections led you to that humbling, they are burned away now. You insult the god if you insist you are not worthy.”

He kissed her. “No. I question my good fortune.”

“Then question it no further!” she snapped, and yanked hard on his silvered godbraids. “The warlords will submit.”

He would have said something else then, found more words for the feeding of his doubts, but the hunting party returned and it was time to eat, and sleep.

After the newsun sacrifice their journey continued through brown Et-Tebek. Game grew scarce, they ate more dried corn from their saddle-bags than fresh-caught meat. They rode beneath the hot sun along the border between Et-Tebek and Et-Banotaj, crossing over it not far from the place where it met with the border of Et-Mamiklia. In those highsuns of riding they saw no enemy warriors, they did not meet with the other warlords.

Forty-six highsuns after leaving Et-Raklion they reached the sacred Heart of Mijak, where the godforsaken warlords of Mijak were waiting.

CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

M
ijak’s Heart was an enormous crater in the middle of a barren red plain where the borders of Et-Mamiklia, Et-Takona and Et-Banotaj converged. The crater’s rim was bound by seven black stone godposts evenly spaced, each carved in the shape of a scorpion and topped with a warlord’s traditional sigil; though a warlord’s territory changed name to echo his own, the land’s symbol remained unchanging. A steep pathway descended from the base of each godpost to the floor of the crater. Waves of heat rose from the bare red rock, shiny like glass from its creation: it was a cauldron, an anvil, where potential futures were mixed and measured and beaten into history. Raklion led his ten warriors to the godpost marked with a striking snake and halted.

“How did you ensure we would be last to arrive?” Hekat murmured.

“The god told Nagarak how we should travel at last lowsun’s divining,” Raklion replied, just as softly. “He told me at newsun which path we should ride.”

She had not been told this, she felt her teeth clench. Nagarak was attempting to exclude her, that was something she could not allow.

One by one she stared at the other godposts, at the warlords and warriors gathered in their proper places. They could not go down into Mijak’s Heart until the summoning warlord had bared his godspark to the god in their witnessing presence. If the god did not smite him for a wicked summoning, then could their meeting proceed.

The silence in this place was oppressive, immense. There was the sky, there was the sun, there was the crater where the god’s hammered fist had punched into the earth. The warlords and their warriors sat their horses and did not speak, even their godbells were muted, muffled.

Raklion swung down from his stallion. Nagarak followed and untied the robe strapped to his horse. Hekat slid from her saddle. Her joints jarred sharply as she struck the bare ground, the heat striking fiercely through her sandaled feet.

When they looked at her, surprised, she lifted her chin. “I come with you into Mijak’s Heart. I am Zandakar’s mother, the warlords must know me.”

“No. You stay behind with the other warriors,” said Nagarak, pulling on his high godspeaker robe. “When the god’s will is made known they will be told who you are. Know your place, woman. You are not the warlord.”

She had never shown him her scorpion amulet. She showed him now, and smiled to see the arrogance drain from his face. He could feel its power without even touching it, he saw her for the first time, chosen by the god.

“I am Hekat, who swam with scorpions. I am the mother of Mijak’s future. I am here by the god’s desiring, born to its purpose as is my son. You are high godspeaker, Nagarak, you have your place here. Do not think to unseat me from mine.”

Nagarak’s robe was plain, and dirty. Dust stained it, and horse-sweat, and traces of blood, he looked like some poor village godspeaker forgotten by the god. He stared at her with eyes full of angry questions and pointed at her scorpion amulet.

“That is carved from sacred stone, it is not for a common warrior to possess!”

“Try and take it from me,” she invited. “Touch it and see your hand shrivel to dust. The god gave me this amulet, Nagarak. You may not have it.”

Nagarak glared at Raklion. “You knew she had this?”

Raklion nodded. “I did.”

“Tcha!” spat Nagarak. “You sinful man! Why did you not tell me this was in her possession? She is not bound to the god, she is untested, she cannot—”

“She survived your scorpions and bore me a son, that is test enough,” said Raklion, removing his sheathed snakeblade from his belt and tucking it for safekeeping beneath his saddle’s sheepskin cover. “Why do we bicker about an amulet when the warlords have gathered to hear the god’s desire? Let us go down into the Heart of Mijak, the god has waited long enough.”

Hekat saw in Nagarak’s eyes how he wanted to argue, his arrogance was returned as strong as ever. He was a man grown complacent in the god’s eye. Tcha . She had no time for him.

With a glance at Raklion she started down the stone path leading to the floor of the crater. Raklion followed her, and then came Nagarak. He was not happy, she could feel his rage. On the crater’s rim above them Et-Raklion’s warriors drummed their knife-hilts on their pommels, to show their loyalty and their love. Raklion smiled up at them, he punched his fist in the air, pressed it hard against his heart. A warlord’s salute.

Safely at last on the crater’s bare floor, its scorching air searing, sucking them dry, Nagarak drew Hekat sharply aside. Raklion walked to the crater’s center, raised his arms to shoulder height, dropped to his knees and tipped his face to the sun.

“ I am here, god, Raklion of Et-Raklion! I call warlord council at Mijak’s Heart! Before my brother warlords I kneel before you, my godspark bared to your seeing eye! Smite me to ashes if my cause is not just!”

His words thrummed and bounced and shivered round the crater, doubled and redoubled into thundering echoes.

The god did not smite him, Hekat knew it would not. Nagarak cried out to the watching warlords. “ Aieee! You are witness! Raklion of Et-Raklion is in the god’s seeing eye, it does not smite him, his cause is just !”

As Raklion stood, the other warlords and their high godspeakers began their own descents to the crater’s hot floor. Hekat stood with Raklion and Nagarak, watching them come. She had never seen Mijak’s other warlords face to face, their sigils told her who they were.

Mamiklia, heavyset but still in his prime, his skin was lighter than the others’, his eyes pale blue and narrow with suspicion. For the moment treatied with Takona and Zyden, they would be fools to turn their backs on him.

Takona, a younger man and virile, he walked lightly on the ground. As he descended he glared at his brother warlords, his fingers curled as though he held a knife.

Zyden, even older than Raklion. He had a son to follow him but showed no sign of dying. Nor, so Raklion said, did his son seem eager to put him on a pyre. That was a rare thing among the warlords.

Jokriel, the warlord who might have ruled her village in the savage north if his long-dead forebear had not abandoned it. He was near to Raklion’s age, worn thin and dry by his profitless lands.

Tebek, sullen in his recent defeats by Raklion, stung and eager to prove himself. A stupid boy, he should have followed his father’s wisdom and kept the treaty with Et-Raklion.

Banotaj, most dangerous of all. Poisoned by his father Bajadek into belligerence and blood. Greedy, vicious, treacherous as a demon.

Hekat smiled at the warlords walking down to the crater’s red floor. They could die soon, I would not weep . She glanced disinterested at the high godspeakers walking with them. They were the god’s business, it would deal with them. If they truly lived in its eye they would hear Nagarak’s words and know he spoke for the god. If they were false the god would smite them.

Around her neck, the stone scorpion shivered.

At last the warlords and their high godspeakers reached the crater’s red floor. Stiff with dignity and with pride they spread out beyond arm’s reach of each other; even unarmed and some of them treatied, still they were wary.

“The god see you, my brothers,” Raklion greeted them calmly. “May it see you in its judging eye.”

Banotaj ignored the greeting. “What is that ugly bitch doing here? You insult us before we begin!”

“She is no bitch, she is Hekat,” said Raklion. His face and voice were cold with temper. “Mother of Zandakar, my son, born the hope of Mijak. She is my finest knife-dancer, you should beware.”

Banotaj laughed, a harsh crude bark. “You coupled with a common barracks slut? That is the bloodline of your precious son?”

“Common?” said Hekat, before Raklion could answer. “I slew your sinning father, Banotaj. I am Hekat, I am not common. Your tongue is common, if you are not careful the god will pluck it out.”

“ Tcha .” Banotaj stabbed his brother warlords with a look. “He was never fit to be a warlord, here is more proof. A barracks bitch. Ha!”

The other warlords said nothing. Hekat watched them carefully, saw the ones with daughters frown, considering. Could they find a way into Raklion’s good temper, tempt him with female flesh for his son?

No. You could not. Zandakar is destined for greater things than rutting with the offspring of weak, godblinded fools.

Banotaj threw back his shoulders. “What do you want, Raklion? Why are we brought here? Speak quickly, we are not slaves to be sent for at a whim.”

“Of course you are slaves,” said Nagarak. “Slaves to the god. You are here to learn how you will serve it in its new age.”

Takona’s high godspeaker spat on the red glassy ground. “Be careful you do not choke on your arrogance, Nagarak. The god does not love a conceited man.”

“Nor does it love a man deaf to its desires,” Nagarak retorted. “Open your heart, Vijik, or see it eaten by the god.”

Vijik high godspeaker’s fleshy face grew ugly. “The god be blind to you, Nagarak, I am not some novice in your godhouse to be spoken to like a clod of earth! I have a godhouse, I—”

“ Peace !” said Raklion, and raised his hands. “We are not here to bicker, we gather at the god’s will so you might learn its desire.”

“That is godspeaker talk,” said Zyden, his eyes suspicious. “And you are no godspeaker. I will tell you my desire! I desire to know why my lands are dying when Et-Raklion is green and fat!”

“That is my desire also,” said Takona, broad hands fisted at his sides.

“And mine!”

“And mine!”

“And mine!”

“And mine!”

“Do not look to me for an answer, brothers!” cried Raklion to the hostile warlords. “Look to yourselves and to your high godspeakers! If the god smites you how am I to blame?”

“You are to blame if the god does not smite us!” said Tebek. “ Demons might smite us, with you their master!”

“You accuse me of consorting with demons?” Raklion’s face twisted with fury. “When one of you called on demons to blight my seed, murder every son born to me before Zandakar? I am not touched by demons! If I were it would have killed me when I knelt before it in this crater. You were all witness, I was judged pure. You proud warlords, you haughty high godspeakers, if you love the god you will listen to Nagarak. If you do not there will be a harsh reckoning.”

The warlords and their high godspeakers drew apart and huddled, they whispered and poked fingers, they threw hot glances over their shoulders. Smiling, Hekat touched her fingertips to her scorpion amulet.

They are blind, stupid men, their ruling lives are over and they cannot see it.

Raklion turned to Nagarak. “Is the god in even one of them?” he asked amazed.

Nagarak shrugged. “The god is in me, warlord. It speaks to me, I hear its voice. That is what matters. These other mere men are dust on the wind.”

The huddling warlords and their godspeakers broke apart. “Say it is true,” said Jokriel. His voice was reedy, thin as his godbraids. “Say Et-Raklion is not protected by demons. What do you know of the god’s desire that has not been revealed to any of us?”

Raklion said, “Brother, it is not for me to speak of the god. Nagarak will tell you of sacred things, but know this: I have been shown wonders and omens, the god has whispered in my heart. What Nagarak will tell you is its truth.”

“Speak then, Nagarak,” said Mamiklia, his raised fist a threat silencing Banotaj and Tebek. He had an odd voice for such a large, square man, high-pitched and fluting. “We will listen.”

“You please the god,” said Raklion, and glanced at his high godspeaker. “Tell them, Nagarak.”

Nagarak tipped back his head, rolling his eyes to crescent slivers. His arms stretched wide, his robe fell open, revealing his scorpion pectoral.

“ I am Nagarak, the god’s high godspeaker!”

His voice rolled round and round the glassy crater, full of echoes and strange harmonies.

“ I am the god’s vessel, I speak its words, I dress its words in my voice that they might fall like honey from my truthful tongue!”

As Raklion stared at his high godspeaker, Hekat watched the faces of his brother warlords and their high godspeakers. Anger, suspicion, fear, hatred: she saw all these things and felt herself tense.

“ Hear the god’s words, you warlords and you high godspeakers !” Nagarak commanded. “ You sinning men who are tasked to protect Mijak, you who have failed so your lands have turned brown, you warlords who have displeased the god! ”

The warlords muttered and looked at each other, they looked at their high godspeakers with their eyebrows raised.

“ The god desires that you are cast down, it throws you from your mighty heights, it bends your knees and lays you in the dirt before Mijak’s one warlord, its true warlord, the warlord desired by the god ,” cried Nagarak. “ You will kneel to Raklion, he will be your warlord, you will breathe beneath his godchosen fist! ”

“What demontalk is this?” demanded Zyden. “Mijak is ruled by seven warlords, you speak not for the god but for Raklion alone!”

“You dare dispute me?” Nagarak demanded. His eyes were still white crescents but he stared straight at Zyden. He tore off his robe and tossed it aside. Sunshine struck his scorpion pectoral, the scorpion-marks on his shining skin glowed fiery red in the searing light. “I warn you, warlord, the god will not be denied!”

“Your words do not come from the god,” said Tebek’s high godspeaker. “It has long been suspected you are a demon clothed in human flesh. You are not normal, Nagarak. Your power is too great.”

“My power is great because of the god!” shouted Nagarak. “Are you a high godspeaker, Trag? Is the god’s voice in your heart? Listen, fool, before it smites you!”

“No, Nagarak,” said Jokriel’s high godspeaker, a wizened old man with godbraids white as sadsa, one hand a clutching, withered claw. His spine was bent, his chin sat level with his breastbone. “What you are saying is against the god’s law. Would you destroy Mijak a second time? Curse it with one warlord, when one warlord brought us to ruin?”

“I destroy nothing, I inflict no curse, I say the words the god gives me to say,” said Nagarak. “It is the god’s desire that Raklion be your warlord, and after him his son Zandakar. Accept the god’s desire, Goruk and you others, or be destroyed in your sinning pride.”

BOOK: The Godspeaker Trilogy
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