Authors: Ian Irvine
The air went so cold that it crackled, then with a little
pop
a man appeared, sitting cross-legged on the rocks before her. He was an odd-shaped, awkward-looking fellow not much taller than she was, with thin, short legs and a heavy, muscular body. His skin was dark, his head bald, his nose hooked, and the point of his beard jutted towards her like a javelin.
âYou called me, Daughter?' His voice was so deep it might have been formed inside the hill; it reverberated like the throb of an organ pipe.
âYou called me
daughter
,' she whispered. âAre â are you really my father?'
Though she yearned for a father, a demon was the last father she could want. Besides, a mighty demon like Behemoth might have a
thousand daughters; she might mean nothing to him. He was her god's enemy and had undermined everything she believed in. Astatine was too overcome to speak.
âYou expected some great, hulking brute?' Fire flickered in his raised eyebrow. âI prefer this form; both enemies and friends underestimate me. What do you want, Daughter?'
âThâthe Graven Casket was empty. What happened to the Covenant?'
âI gave Fistus the power he craved so desperately; in return, he allowed me to destroy it.'
He sounded convincing, but he was the Prince of Deceivers. âWhy, Father?'
âTo make mischief.'
Astatine's entire life had been submission and obedience, but neither would serve her now. Dare she challenge the Lord of Perdition? Sweat dripped from her palms at the thought, not to mention that she owed her father respect. Could she put that obligation aside? She must. âI â I don't believe you. I know you made a copy of the Covenant. Why, Father?'
Behemoth swelled enormously; his black eyes flashed and his left hand shot out, encircling her wrist like an icy manacle. âHow dare you question
me
? You are over-bold, Daughter.'
Astatine had never been bold; the other novices had mocked her as âthe mouse'. She wanted to scream and run, but reminded herself of her oath, and it stiffened her. She would keep her word to the Abbess, whatever it cost. The mouse had to bite.
She caught Behemoth's dark wrist with her pale hands, squeezed hard and, amazingly, he winced.
âYou
are
my daughter,' he said, glowering at her. After shrinking to his former size, he resumed his seat.
âWell?' she said, pretending an imperiousness she could not feel.
âLife in Elyssian becomes tedious, when one faces an eternity of it. That's why I left and set up Perdition, though I was no more contented there.'
âBut Elyssian is the epitome of perfection,' said Astatine, wide-eyed.
Behemoth rolled his eyes. âEven reaping the souls of the wicked
begins to pall, when one is the wickedest of all. There's no villainy I haven't done, Daughter, and tempting mere mortals into sin lost its joy long ago. In short, I was bored witless. And so, I discovered, was my enemy, your precious god, K'nacka.
âWe took to meeting in Hightspall for a game of dice, each striving to best the other, and I won more often than I lost. But without something precious to lose, even gaming's charm fades, and the stakes grew ever higher until, finally, K'nacka had nothing left to put on the table. Nothing save a pound of his own flesh.'
âFather?' said Astatine, not understanding, though a chilly wave of horror surged through her. This was terribly wrong; she did not want to hear it.
âHaving nothing else, he wagered one of his balls â and lost.'
âBalls?' Her cheeks grew hot.
âHe should have known that
my
dice were loaded.' Behemoth's thick lip curled. âK'nacka begged for another chance, double or nothing, and I was happy to dice again â as long as he signed a binding Covenant promising to pay tribute to Perdition if he lost the other ball.'
âA tribute of what?'
âA tithe of souls, the most perfect and saintly of all those who enter Elyssian. You can imagine how delightful I found that irony, Daughter. The harder that mortals strove to live good lives, the more likely they'd attract the attention of K'nacka and become part of his tribute to me. Good or bad, I'd reap their souls.' Behemoth grinned savagely. âAnd I won. Suddenly, my life had meaning again.'
And this monster was her father? No wonder she felt that she had been carrying a sickness around inside her, infecting the world.
âHildy said she could hear the shrieks of the saintly,' Astatine whispered. âOh, Father, how could you?'
âIt's what I'm for. Hightspall needs me, and so do the gods. Without evil, where is the good?'
âBut Hightspall is falling apart, and it's your fault. You've got to put things right.'
âI don't do
right
,' he snapped.
âThen why did you burn the Covenant?'
âSo K'nacka could not.'
âWhere did you hide the copy?'
His smile faded; he seemed to be reassessing her. âIn a place where you can never see it.' Behemoth faded away.
Did he mean that the Covenant was hidden in Perdition? Could she only destroy it, and keep her oath, by dying?
Â
âFistus looks ready to work his “miracle”,' said Roget as they watched the preparations in front of the Cloven Shrine. A hundred red-robed monks stood guard to either side.
Greave ached for a drink. Stone sober, he lacked the courage to do what must be done. âCan you tell what spell it is?'
Roget focused his spyglass. âNo, but it's no ordinary magic.'
Think of this as another seduction, Greave told himself, the riskiest and most glorious of your life. It got him to his feet, but he felt no thrill â this task was all risk and no reward. âWe'd better move.'
âTaking him on is suicide.'
âI'm dead either way.' Greave headed across the rock-littered hillside. Roget and Astatine followed.
The Carnal Cardinal turned to meet them, his mouth as red as a feeding vampire's. âYou think to challenge
me
?' Fistus pounded his chest. âI've done a deal with Behemoth himself.'
âAnd betrayed the gods you swore to serve,' said Greave, only now realising his own hypocrisy.
âThey've forsaken us and must be cast down.'
A white object in Fistus's hand reflected the light; something small, pointed and familiar. Ants scurried across Greave's scalp.
âThe god-bone,' he said hoarsely. âThat's what you were after all along.'
âI used sorcery to whisper into your mind,' sneered Fistus. âIt was surprisingly easy to heighten your despair and encourage excesses your dull wits could never have imagined.'
âYou
wanted
me to seduce K'nacka's month-bride?' whispered Greave.
âI knew he held the god-bone in Elyssian, though there it was beyond my reach. The only one way to get it was by giving K'nacka the means to destroy the Covenant â via a man at the end of his
rope.'
âBut you'd already allowed Behemoth to burn it.'
Fistus smirked. âPoor, deluded K'nacka didn't know that.'
âHow dare you set yourself up as a rival to the gods you swore to serve!' cried Astatine.
The hooded eyes fixed on her, but dismissed her as insignificant. âMy spells are greater than theirs,' said Fistus, âyet are they recognised? The gods treat me like a churl.'
âThey recognise your true nature,' Greave said recklessly.
Fistus's gory lips thinned. âGet rid of them,' he said over his shoulder, then turned to a crude bench his priests had constructed from slabs of shrine stone. A large stone chalice stood on top, empty save for a small amount of grey powder. The trench they had excavated was half full of it.
The monks drove Roget, Greave and Astatine back, but did not attempt to harm them. Fistus wanted them to see his might, and despair.
âAt least you know that his magic was behind some of the terrible things you've done,' said Roget.
âIs that supposed to make me feel better?' Greave said in a dead voice. âTo discover that I've been manipulated like a mindless fool? Besides, he didn't corrupt me â he only fed the sickness that was already there.'
âWithout him, you might have come to your senses.'
âI don't think so,' Greave rasped. âThe hook had already bitten too deep, and there's only one way off it now.'
Â
Fistus dropped the god-bone into the chalice, raised his hands and began the spell.
âIs the grey stuff the dead god's ashes?' said Astatine, peeping through her fingers.
âGods, have mercy!' cried Roget. âIt's a
Resurrection
spell. But surely not even Fistus would dare â'
A whistling sound arose from all parts of the horizon and raced towards the hill, rising to a series of ear-rending screeches that collided, collapsed, then an utter silence, more unnerving yet, enveloped all.
The chalice quivered and burst, its contents billowing upwards in a grey plume which slowly pulled together to the form of a man, a giant almost the height of the Cloven Shrine, though the skin hung on him and his granite face was fissured with despair. A wound between his ribs ebbed red; the bloody blade dangled from his right hand.
Astatine gasped and fell to her knees. âThe Great God,' she whispered.
âOh, this is monstrous,' said Roget. âThe Seven Gods must strike Fistus dead.'
As the Great God shambled forwards they saw chains linking his wrists and ankles, yet even shackled and weak from centuries of death he was a forbidding figure. Fistus cried out involuntarily and backed away, eyes darting.
âHe's overreached himself!' said Roget. âThe Great God will splatter him like a gnat.'
âEither way, we're done,' said Greave.
Fistus stopped and his lips moved as if exhorting himself to stand firm, then he raised his hands for another spell.
âIt's a two-part spell, resurrection and control,' said Roget. âNow comes the control part. If he's quick, he might just do it.'
âNo man can control a god,' said Astatine. Just speaking the words was blasphemous.
She took out her medal and began to rub it furiously but then, recognising the worn image on it as Behemoth, hurled it away. She began to twist her fingers together, then abruptly thrust them down by her sides, but she could not keep them still.
As the Great God attempted to turn aside the spell, he stumbled and it struck him on the right cheek. Howling in rage, he broke his wrist shackles and reached up into the low clouds. Thunder rumbled and the cloud boiled up into a thunderhead, incandescent with lightning. The sky went black. Astatine could not see. Lightning stabbed down at the Cloven Shrine, collapsing half of it; another bolt struck three of the priests dead. The remainder ran for their lives, though the red-gowned monks remained.
Fistus stood firm and cast the spell again.
âThis is the end of the world,' said Roget. âWhoever wins, priest or
god, there'll be nothing left.'
âIt's my punishment for seducing the month-bride,' said Greave, head bowed. âAnd for a lifetime of depravity.'
Suddenly Astatine saw him from the other, tormented side. âNot a lifetime, Lord,' she said gently. âJust a time, and it's over now.'
âToo late. No one can undo this.'
There had to be a way but could Astatine, the little mouse, find it? She must â her gods needed help and she could not deny them.
I can't be a timid novice any longer, she thought. Demon's blood runs in my veins; my father is Behemoth, the Prince of Devilry, who once beat the Great God himself, then turned his back on Elyssian. I've got to do this!
âYes, someone can.' Astatine backed away between the rocks. âFather?' she called, her voice ringing out between the thunderclaps. âHelp us. If Fistus's spells can control a god, neither Hightspall, Elyssian nor even Perdition is safe.'
Behemoth appeared in the air before her, cross-legged as before. âDaughter, I cannot interfere.'
âWhy not?'
âA sacred compact forbids us. We can cajole, persuade, seduce, even threaten, but neither gods nor demons may act directly in the world.'
Was she to fall at the first obstacle? No; she summoned her demon blood, stood tall and curled her lip. âI thought you were supposed to be
evil
!' she said, dripping scorn. âBreak the damn bloody compact.'
âI can,' he said, smiling at the mildness of her oaths, âbut would you call demons into Hightspall without the gods to balance us?'
Astatine paled. She had not thought of that. âDo it!'
As Behemoth faded, she ran back to Greave, who was hunched over as if in pain. âLord Greave, you have a link to K'nacka. Call him down.'
Greave turned, his eyes unfocussed. âK'nacka?'
âYes, quickly.'
Greave rubbed his face with his hands, then called her god, who appeared at once. Had he been waiting for the summons?
Astatine's heart began to pound so furiously she feared it would tear
free of its arteries. Her god, her god! But she had to be calm; there were only seconds left.
âGreat K'nacka,' she said, bowing low. âSee what your servant Fistus has done? The Seven Gods must enter Hightspall and stop him before it's too late.'
There is a compact, little nun
, said K'nacka.
âBreak it!'
The gods do not break compacts
. He glared at her as though she were a turd on his pillow.
âPerdition is going to.' She lowered her voice. âBesides, I know where the Covenant is.'
His head jerked up, wobbling his jowls like twin jellies.
I've been told it was burned in the casket, long ago.
âI have a perfect copy,' she lied, âand if you're
afraid
to break the compact, I'll reveal the Covenant. The gods will become a laughing stock â and you will be cast down.'