The Black God's War (59 page)

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Authors: Moses Siregar III

BOOK: The Black God's War
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“Yes.” Lucia picked up her hands again and placed them on Rao’s chest. She looked up at the cloudless sky and tears poured from her eyes like a gentle rain.

I am sorry, Caio. What you really wanted, before your heart was twisted and broken, was peace. I only sacrifice you so that so many more will live.

 

Chapter 82: Return to the Underworld

 

 

A MYSTERIOUS, SUBDUED LIGHT SOURCE lit the underworld sky. Most of the firmament alternated from impenetrable grey to flickers of soft light, mostly eclipsed by the thick atmosphere. Above a crumbling building in the distance, turbulent clouds roiled like a boiling cauldron, spinning around the structure as if it were their axis.

Rao stood in this great basin surrounded by tall, craggy mountains. His bare feet chafed against the cracked floor and hot, biting winds—full of steam—assaulted his subtle body.

Lord Danato loomed over him, all black skin and leather.

“You’ve come for me,” Rao said.

“This remains to be seen.”

“Is this your underworld?”

“No. This plane exists between the surface and the netherworld. Your life remains in Lucia’s hands.”

“She is considering saving me?”

The black god nodded once.

Just ahead, the harsh ground became a polished natural floor. Close to the distant mountains ahead, Danato’s fabled lighthouse literally glided around the smooth surface with dark clouds following it.

“Come,” Danato said, leading Rao toward the structure. The black god’s strides lengthened and Rao’s raw feet ran to keep up. He stumbled and fell once, twice, three times before he reached the swinging, dilapidated black wooden door.

The black god stood near the entrance, facing Rao. “You have only one chance at life. To exercise it, you must enter.”

Without another thought, Rao leapt over the few crumbling steps, through the door, and squeezed into a dark vestibule. Dim rays of light from outside revealed a much heavier door in front of him, one reinforced by tall bands of steel and decorated with round obsidian gems. It blocked the only way forward. Carved into it were the following words in a calligraphic Pawelon script:

May the spectre of death be your ever-present liberation.

Rao pressed the lever atop the rusty handle and pushed. The metallic hinges produced an echoing screech …

The light of the sun blinded Rao’s eyes, but a transcendent calm precluded him from feeling any pain.

Clang. The sound of metal against metal. Clang.

The washed out, white sky slowly differentiated into a field of blue and a burning sun.

Clang. A man screamed, dimly.

“Rao … Rao …” The voice echoed like drops of water dripping into a tub.

Two hands lifted him from under his shoulders. Narayani’s face blocked out the blue heaven.

“Your father needs you! Get up.” She lowered her face to his and kissed his lips.

The world spun around him in a great panoramic vision. There: Lucia holding Ysa’s relics, Narayani lifting him, Caio dead, Aayu prone, and his father fighting the king of Rezzia.

With Narayani pushing him from behind, he rose to a sitting position.

Rao’s father looked at him for a moment before the king charged the rajah and brought down his curved falchion. Devak had just enough time to block Vieri’s swing; holding his spear in two hands, he received the king’s sword against the shaft of his weapon, and then pushed the king back.

Why?
Rao wondered.

The king and rajah danced around each other. Devak bled from one forearm.

Rao worked his way to his feet and put aside his shock over the presence of Aayu and his father. He looked down at Caio’s body and saw his horribly bruised flesh. He looked down at his own skin and saw he was unharmed.

“Stop,” he said.

“Don’t interfere, Rao,” Lucia answered. She pointed her sword, almost directly at him, as she spoke from five paces away.

“We came here to work this out,” he said.

“And that’s what they are doing,” she said.

Devak thrust his spear forward and Vieri dodged sideways. The rajah stabbed forward again and the king blocked with his golden shield, then hammered his weapon down on the rajah’s spear. Devak maintained his grip and pulled back again.

“Why?” Rao yelled.

“Until this man is dead,” his father said, “your life will never be safe.”

Rao checked Lucia. She stood away from the combat, seeming content to let it play out.

“This won’t solve anything,” Rao said.

Vieri roared as he came toward Devak, hacking down and then pulling back quickly and swinging from over his other shoulder. The rajah held his spear with two hands and blocked the rain of blows, screaming.

Devak swung the butt of his spear forward and jabbed, catching Vieri in the face and opening a wound on his cheek. The king rushed forward and sliced his blade low at the rajah’s leg and opened a gash.

Devak stumbled sideways and held his spear in front of his body at an angle to defend himself. The king of Rezzia hacked as he came forward, once, twice, three, four, and five times, finally knocking the giant rajah of Pawelon down onto his backside.

Vieri fell forward, leading with his blade straight down into Devak’s gut. Devak expelled a dying bawl and swung his spear once more weakly, cutting across Vieri’s shoulder. The rajah’s eyes seized up with crippling pain.

Devak dropped his spear and slumped flat against the earth. Blood poured from his midsection, onto the dry desert.

Rao closed his eyes, unable to watch.

He couldn’t erase the scene from his mind: the slaying of his invincible father … his father’s gagging, guttural scream.

“Rao!” Lucia yelled.

He opened his eyes. Narayani raced toward the King of Rezzia.

With the king’s back turned to her, Narayani picked up Devak’s spear and thrust it fully into his back.

The king spun and fell backward, removing his falchion from Devak’s body and slicing it across the front of Narayani’s neck.

Aayu screamed, “No!”

The king fell to his knees and looked at Lucia before he closed his eyes and slumped forward.

Narayani clutched her neck and crumbled to the ground, convulsing, beside the king.

Their blood spilled onto the ground and ran together.

Rao ran to Narayani. Lucia ran to her father.

Narayani tried to speak. At first, only gurgling came from her throat. Then she said, “Now you’ll be safe.”

“My love,” Rao said as he held her head with both hands.

Narayani clumsily grabbed at Rao’s face and mouthed, “I love you.”

He kissed her for the last time.

 

Chapter 83: The Temple of the Gods

 

 

THE SUN’S RAYS shone a deep golden color through the aspens. The Temple of the Gods appeared as Caio remembered from his visions, except for one great difference. The holy structure had been utterly pale and white before. Now each column of the gods’ temple shined with vibrant images of The Ten.

He turned his head slowly, taking in the tiny leaves fluttering in the mountain breeze. The air smelled fresh and moist despite the arid climate. Songbirds flew between the trees, filling the air with a ballad of eternal morning.

Caio walked to the high stairs of the temple and studied the colorful marble steps, vibrant shades of yellow. He heard a pleasant hum within the temple and climbed toward its towering, open entrance.

In his visions, the great hall had always been empty, save for the presence of Lord Oderigo. This time it was full of men, women, and children standing in rows, thousands smiling, warm and receptive. Those seated near the aisle held out their hands to him.

He walked the central aisle and gently held one hand after another. Each face brought back vivid memories of lives he had touched with one kindness or another. Some he had healed, some he had comforted as a counselor, some he had prayed with, and others he had made laugh.

He came upon a Pawelon man and held his hands. Caio recognized him as the young man he resurrected. Behind the Pawelon sat a short woman and seven Pawelon children.

The entire congregation began to cheer.

“What is this?” Caio leaned in to hear the man speak over the sound of the applause.

“I am still alive on Gallea. You are experiencing my spirit, the spirit of my eventual wife, and the spirits of my future children. We want to thank you.”

Caio looked to the third child and somehow recognized him as the boy he saw in his visions, the one who would be a great soul among his people. “You’re most welcome.”

Ilario
, he remembered.

“Your friend who died because I lived,” the young Pawelon said, pointing further down the aisle.

Caio turned, greeted by dazzling faces as he walked toward the front row. His old friend’s eyes drew all of Caio’s attention. They were spinning portals of light.

Caio hurried forward and knelt. He put his hands on Ilario’s knees. “Will you ever forgive me for not being able to save you?”

His broad-chested friend didn’t move, but looked down with warmth that filled Caio’s soul. “From where I am now, forgiveness is not a question. And very soon it will not be an issue for you either.”

“How did I get here? Are Lucia and my father all right?”

“Lucia is leading her army back to Rezzia. Your father has taken his final rest.”

“Where is he? Can I see him?”

“Not for some time. He must journey through Danato’s underworld first.”

“What about Narayani, the Pawelon girl?”

Ilario looked over Caio’s shoulder.

Caio turned and saw Narayani standing close behind him, more beautiful than any flower, more divine than any mountain range, more magnificent than any sunset.

“What happened?” he asked. “Are you still alive?”

“I died soon after you, Caio.”

“How?”

“That doesn’t matter.” She reached for his hand and lifted Caio to his feet. “We’re going to be together now, together forever.”

Caio’s field of vision became restricted to Ilario’s eyes. Their glow deepened, becoming a cone and then a corridor of soft light. He felt himself traveling the dazzling tunnel, holding Narayani’s hand. He flew in further, faster, then felt a rush like the cooling sprays of a thousand bright blue oceans.

All that remained was acceptance and love.

 

Chapter 84: Mother of the Night

 

 

Kannauj, Pawelon.

 

RAO KNOCKED on the rickety, thin wooden door. It seemed to be ‘locked’ in place by a ratty piece of rope on the inside of the brothel. He looked Aayu in the face. Neither said a word.

“Who goes?” a hoarse woman’s voice asked.

“I have money.”

“How much?”

“Enough for all of you.” Rao smiled at Aayu.

The lady of the house swung the door open, letting out a musty smell tinged with stale liquor. Three dilapidated pink couches covered in white shawls comprised the furniture of the waiting area. A dusty wooden stairwell led up to the second floor, where a hand-carved red railing ran in front of a handful of rooms.

“But I have a request for one in particular,” Rao said. “Halima is her name.”

“Boy, we’ve got younger, prettier women. Do you want to see them?”

“No thank you, she is the one we want.”

The woman nodded, mainly to herself, and called up the stairs. “Halima! You have two customers.” She narrowed her eyes upon Rao. “You don’t get a deal for two. It’s full price for each of you.”

“That’s no problem.”

The lady held out her hand and took Rao’s heavy copper coins. She flashed him a questioning eye before waving them up the stairs.

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