Delemental
First Post
“Are you trying to tell me MY RULES?”
Kaliel’s voice roared down the hallway, penetrating the thick door of the cell where he had been interrogating merchants all morning. The fierce glow of his anima radiated through the cracks and seams in the door, throwing sharp daggers of golden light into the corridor beyond. The other merchants, sitting on benches against the wall at the far end of the corridor, looked at each other nervously. The soldiers guarding them glared impassively as there was a sudden loud crashing noise, accented by the sound of shattering wood and snapping bone.
Zun Raito, the merchant who was currently in the cell with Lord Kaliel, was well known as a conniver who liked to twist the wording of laws and contracts to his benefit. He was respected, if not well liked, but as the crashing noises ended and were replaced by ominous silence, the other merchants suspected he may have tried to push his machinations a little too far.
The door opened, and Kaliel stepped out, mopping blood off his white jade gauntlets. Spatters of blood dotted his armor everywhere. “Send in the next one, Corporal Tapas,” he commanded.
At that moment, Luc ran into the hallway and came up to Kaliel. He peeked into the room behind the Dawn, and went pale.
“Um, Lord Kaliel, sir? Zanka would like to speak to you. She says it’s important.”
Kaliel looked down at Luc for a moment. “Very well. Corporal, bring the next merchant into the interrogation cell and have them wait inside until I return.”
“Yes, sir. Should I have someone sent up to attend to Zun Raito?”
“Did you hear me say anything about Zun Raito, Tapas?”
“No, sir.”
Kaliel walked with Luc back to the town hall. On the way, he caught sight of the Zenith, High Bright Sun, who was having a quiet but impassioned conversation with one of the community’s leading figures. Kaliel had been receiving reports on the strange monk’s activities; rather than proselytizing to the public about the Unconquered Sun, as might have been expected, he had instead been having conversations with the priests and community leaders of Chrysanthemum, chiding them for their failure to attend to the spiritual needs of the people and allowing them to falter in their faith. It would remain to be seen if this approach bore fruit.
They arrived at the town hall, and descended into the basement where the records were stored. Zanka had been set up with a desk near the window, with stacks of documents to either side of her. As they approached, Kaliel noticed that it was much warmer than he expected, and noted that a wood stove in the corner had been stoked, and looked as though it had been burning that way for hours. He was about to question why Zanka would do this when he knew her preference for cooler temperatures, but then he noticed that the young Eclipse had shed several layers of clothing while working, and after noting the direction of Luc’s gaze, he came to suspect that Zanka was not the one who had built up the fire.
“Kaliel, good,” Zanka said. “Have you learned anything from the merchants?”
“Only that several of them have been making clandestine deals with the Guild while I was away,” Kaliel growled. “I have had to remind them firmly that the Guild is not permitted to do business in Chrysanthemum.”
Zanka noticed the spots of dried blood on Kaliel’s armor. “I can see that. Well, I have something else to show you.” She handed him a few sheets of paper. Kaliel scanned them, but could make no sense of it; the letters seemed jumbled together randomly.
“It is a cipher,” Zanka said. “I have spent the past several hours deciphering it. Luc found these in the offices of one of the merchants you detained last night.”
“What does it say?” Kaliel asked.
“It is a message to the members of a group called ‘The Eternal Circle’,” Zanka said. “It calls for the members of the Circle to meet at a certain time and place, and says that ‘the entrance to the temple will be revealed at that time’. Each of these letters say almost the same thing; only the location of the meeting point varies.”
“When and where?”
“Tonight, in the northwestern part of the city. It appears that they meet every two weeks or so.”
Just then, Rutendo walked down the stairs.
“I thought you were going out to find Brusk,” Kaliel said.
“I was. But I came to tell you that there is a gift waiting for you in your offices, Kaliel. I think you will like it – it is sergeant-shaped.”
Kaliel thought for a moment, then chuckled. “He rode perimeter around the city.”
Soon they were all together in Kaliel’s offices, and Brusk was being apprised of the situation and the information they had about the Eternal Circle. Rutendo had managed to bring Brusk back into the city without drawing attention, so few knew he had returned.
“This could be our chance to end this threat,” Kaliel said. “I will allow the merchants to return home. They will almost certainly go to this meeting of the Eternal Circle, and once there we can move in and capture them all.”
“We could use someone on the inside,” Brusk said. “The last time I checked, there were no secret temples in that part of the city. Getting in and out could be a problem.”
“I’ll do it,” Luc said. “I can take the ring off that guy you crushed. Nobody in this town really knows me.”
“I suggest you return to the home of that merchant you burgled,” Brusk said. “Check his closets carefully. Cultists and secret societies rarely wear their everyday clothing to these kind of meetings.”
“Luc,” Rutendo asked, “can you acquire another ring?”
“Sure,” Luc said. “I saw a few people wearing one around town, shouldn’t be too hard for someone to ‘lose’ one.”
“Then I can go with you,” the Fire Aspect said. “In case there are problems.”
Luc left in order to locate the items they would need. Kaliel, in the meanwhile, had returned to the interrogation room and told his soldiers to escort the merchants home, though he left a guard on each one for the remainder of the day. He also removed the black iron ring from Zun Raito’s hand before his body was hauled away. Kaliel noted that the inside of the band was engraved with interlocking skulls.
“Brusk,” he said, once he had returned and was showing the ring to his sergeant, “what happened?”
“I knew something was wrong from the first set of your ‘orders’ we received,” Brusk said. “You hate paperwork. I cannot imagine you wanting to make more of it. But though I had my suspicions, the signature and seal were close enough to perfect that I had doubts, and I could not risk simply disobeying. By the time my suspicions became strong enough to speak out, I had been assigned to scout for the Bull of the North.”
“Did you run into Blizzard Topples the Oak while you were out there?” Kaliel asked. “I have been curious if any of this has affected him.”
“We have not heard from him in weeks,” Brusk said. “But he rarely speaks to anyone but you, so this is nothing unusual.”
“I will go and speak to him after we expose this cult tonight,” Kaliel said. “For now, we have plans to make.”
Darkness fell, and from all throughout the city of Chrysanthemum, men and women in black-cowled robes began to gather in the night.
Silently they waited, gathered in groups in four different locations around a small storage building. As the moon rose in the sky and crossed into the constellation of the Mask, sections of cobblestones suddenly dropped down into the earth, forming crude stairs leading down into the darkness. The robed figures began to descend the stairs, not noticing in their haste that their numbers had grow by two.
Nearby, from their places of hiding, Kaliel and his soldiers waited patiently as they watched the people descend into the temple. “Wait for the signal,” he ordered.
The stairs led down to an underground chamber that had been isolated from the main sewers and expanded. Thick stone pillars held up the roof of the long chamber. The walls and floor were paved in bones, some of them charred and cracked, giving the place the feel of as ossuary. At the far end of the room, an altar carved with profane symbols sat next to a large throne that appeared to me made of an enormous skeletal hand that had burst out of the floor and now sat, cradling its occupant in its palm.
The man who sat in the throne was huge, as large as Kaliel. He wore deep purple robes and a skull mask. As the room filled, the man stood up, spreading his arms wide, and began to speak.
His sermon was in part a political diatribe against Kaliel and all Solars, but the Eternal Circle appeared to be mostly an ancestor worship cult, promising power to those who revered the spirits of the departed. Parts of the service, however, were incomprehensible to Rutendo and Luc, as they were conducting in a language neither of them had ever heard.
The man’s words were persuasive, his argument penetrating deep into the soul. A foul, dark miasma spread throughout the chamber, filling the minds of those present with hatred and loathing for the city’s rightful ruler. Rutendo found that even he was beginning to question his loyalties, an insidious effect he was only able to shake off with effort. As his mind cleared, Rutendo noticed that a symbol had appeared on the brow of the skull-faced orator; a solid circle, like the Zenith caste-mark his mother bore, but this symbol was not made of light, but was an angry, bleeding wound.
“Tonight!” the man’s voice boomed. “Tonight you are all ready! Tonight you will journey with me to the other world, where you will serve the master and be given power to end the tyranny of the Solars before it can take root in Creation!”
Slowly, Rutendo began to slip backward through the crowd. He looked around for Luc, fearful of the effects the man’s words might be having on the mortal boy, but could not find him.
He moved up the stairs and went to find Kaliel. “You must hurry,” he said. “Their leader is very powerful, on par with you or Mother, I believe. I believe he means to kill everyone in the cult.”
Kaliel scowled. “That is my job.” With a wave of his hand, Kaliel moved forward, followed by Zanka, Rutendo, and ten Knights of the Golden Flower.
In the underground temple, the cultists were swaying and chanting, entranced by the words of the priest. A translucent, ghostly form was beginning to manifest on the altar. As they prepared for the journey to the other world, the chamber was suddenly filled with sunlight.
Kaliel stood at the bottom of the stairs, his anima flaring, ethereal wings unfurled behind him as chrysanthemum petals swirled around him. “All of you!” he shouted. “Return to your homes and your rightful places!” He pointed with Principle of Severity at the man in purple robes. “And you, get out of my city!”
“The vile bright one has come!” the priest shouted. “Defend yourselves! For the glory of the Master!”
The cultists all pulled out knives from their robes. A dark aura began to emanate from the dark priest, matching the glow of Kaliel’s anima. The two auras seemed to struggle against one another for a few moments, but gradually, Kaliel’s light pushed the darkness back, until it surrounded all of the cultists. Kaliel’s wings extended forward and elongated, seeming to wrap themselves protectively around the crowd. The cultists cried out and cowered before the power of the Unconquered Sun. Half of them dropped their knives, and ran out of the room, leaving through the passageways not blocked by Kaliel. The soldiers stationed outside quickly took them into custody.
Kaliel’s concentration was broken as the ghost that had manifested at the altar suddenly shot forward, howling as it raised a broad axe and swung at the Dawn’s head. He was able to raise his daiklaive in time to ward off the blow. The priest, meanwhile, spoke a few strange words in a guttural tongue and began making ritualistic gestures with both hands.
Zanka stepped forward, avoiding the ensuing melee between Kaliel and the ghost, and addressed the cultists. “I cannot believe you have fallen for this man’s lies! The darkness here has blocked your vision from the glory of the sun, that has made Chrysanthemum a safe and prosperous city in the midst of the Northern wastes! Safe from the ravages of the Bull of the North, safe from terrors of the Realm, safe from the depredations of the Guild! Tell me, why must this priest of your hide himself from the eyes of the Sun?”
“She’s right!” cried out a young voice from the crowd, one that was familiar to the Solars. “We’ve been deceived!”
Luc’s cries were punctuated by the hissing sound of a fiery arrow streaking across the room, burying itself in the dark priest’s shoulder. The priest grimaced, but his concentration held, and he continued his chanting. Rutendo quickly drew another arrow, but him aim was thrown off by the sudden chaotic movements of confused and panicked cultists, no longer wanting to fight Kaliel but too afraid to know what else to do.
Kaliel, seeing that the dark priest was gathering dark power for his foul sorcery, gave a derisive glance to the ghost that had been trying ineffectually to combat him, and made a sudden dash across the room. His golden wings seemed to reach forward across the room and curl around the pillars, pulling him forward like a ballista bolt. The golden chrysanthemum petals began to swirl in a tight spiral, from the tip of Kaliel’s extended blade and flowing straight at the dark priest’s chest.
The priest moved his arms to block the blow, while the skeletal fingers of his throne curled around, trying to draw off necromantic Essence. The golden blade of Principle of Severity buried itself deep under the priest’s sternum, and he cried out as the energies of his sorcery dissipated into the ether. With a look of hatred burning in his eyes, the dark priest slowly slid off Kaliel’s blade, and continued to move back, passing through the skeletal throne as he turned immaterial and moved away.
Behind Kaliel, the ghost tried to move up to attack the Bronze Tiger in the back, but was intercepted by Zanka, who lashed out with her sash in a graceful, dance-like attack, curling the sash around the ghost’s arm and pulling it back toward her. Rutendo moved to cover her back as she did battle with the spirit, firing an arrow at it and disrupting its semi-solid form. The ghost’s axe struck Rutendo, but the force of the blow was deflected by the jade breastplate that Kaliel had given him when they arrived in the city.
Kaliel tried pursuing the fleeing priest, pulling out his flamepiece and firing at the transparent figure who was fading into the back of the chamber. There was a flash of smoke and fire; the priest seemed unaffected. “Cowardly bastard!” Kaliel shouted, as the priest faded from view, the last thing to vanish the bloody circle on his forehead. Spinning around, Kaliel brought Principle of Severity up over his head, and smashed it down into the altar, splitting it in half. He then spun around, and saw the confused mob of cultists, still uncertain of what they were doing. Some had even picked up the knives they had dropped, and were looking at the swirling melee between Zanka, Rutendo, and the ghost.
Kaliel’s brow darkened, and his anima flared brighter. “I told you to return to your homes. NOW!”
The chamber was devoid of cultists within seconds.
Zanka, who had pulled out her war fans, now moved in as the ghost pressed its attack on Rutendo. She began spinning around in a whirling dance, slashing with her fans too fast for the eye to follow. Great rents appeared on the spirit’s body, and necromantic essence spilled out. The Eclipse finished her dance with a flourish, slashing across its neck and severing the head from the body. It faded away as it collapsed in a heap.
Taking a moment to smash the skeletal throne, Kaliel then marched up the stairs into the night air. “Bring me High Bright Sun!” he shouted, his voice echoing off the stone buildings surrounding them. Several soldiers immediately set out to find the monk. Within an hour, however, they had all returned.
“There’s no sign of the monk, sir,” Corporal Broxa reported. “No one can recall seeing him leave the city.”
Kaliel thought back to the exchange he had witnessed between High Bright Sun and the community leader. Listening to him exhort the man to attend to his faith. Realizing that the monk had never once mentioned the name of the Unconquered Sun. And seeing the man he had been talking to, a short distance away, still wearing the black robes of a cultist. “An impostor,” Kaliel said. “Of course.”
In the end, the faith of the people of Chrysanthemum was tested, but emerged stronger. Kaliel’s connection to his faithful was restored, stronger than before, and even Zanka, who was instrumental in reversing the damage done by High Bright Sun’s cult, began to receive direct worship from the townsfolk.
There was some damage that could not be healed, however. A few of the more prominent members of the cult had to be banished, or simply disappeared one night. Several merchant’s businesses were disrupted for weeks as sons and daughters were obliged to take over the family business unexpectedly, and a number of audits were done to purge the insidious tendrils of the Guild. Discipline among the Knights was extremely strict for a while, to purge them of the malaise that had befallen them. Knowing, however, that idleness had contributed to the collapse in discipline, Kaliel began to make an effort to secure a mercenary contract for the Knights.
The most telling disturbance, however, was discovered when Kaliel tried to make contact with the spirit Blizzard That Topples the Oak. When the spirit did not respond to Kaliel’s summons for several days, and no trace of him could be found, the Solars were forced to assume the worst; that Blizzard, like Brusk, had been seen as an obstacle to High Bright Sun’s plans, and had been removed from the situation. Unlike Brusk, however, the spirit’s removal had been more permanent.
The town gathered one night, many weeks after the breaking of the Eternal Circle cult, and surrounded the square in front of the town hall, where a great bonfire had been built. Most of the kindling in the fire was made from hundreds of sheets of parchment, the coded serial numbers visible on the edges of some. On a signal, Rutendo fired a flaming arrow into the center of the pyre, and everyone was suddenly bathed in the light of the inferno.
Kaliel stood with Zanka and Rutendo on the steps of the town hall; Luc was off in the crowd, enjoying the festivities among the common people.
“I have received reports from the scouts I sent to investigate the Bull of the North’s sudden withdrawal,” Kaliel said to them. “I have been told that the withdrawal was because of an unexpected disturbance to the North of their forces.”
“North?” Zanka asked. The Bull’s armies were already encamped as far North as she thought possible. “Is there anything left in Creation that is north of the Bull?”
“It may not be a disturbance from Creation,” Rutendo observed. “The Fair Folk may be playing their games again.”
“Regardless of what it is, we had best keep our eye on it,” Kaliel said. “I have had enough of unpleasant surprises.”
Kaliel’s voice roared down the hallway, penetrating the thick door of the cell where he had been interrogating merchants all morning. The fierce glow of his anima radiated through the cracks and seams in the door, throwing sharp daggers of golden light into the corridor beyond. The other merchants, sitting on benches against the wall at the far end of the corridor, looked at each other nervously. The soldiers guarding them glared impassively as there was a sudden loud crashing noise, accented by the sound of shattering wood and snapping bone.
Zun Raito, the merchant who was currently in the cell with Lord Kaliel, was well known as a conniver who liked to twist the wording of laws and contracts to his benefit. He was respected, if not well liked, but as the crashing noises ended and were replaced by ominous silence, the other merchants suspected he may have tried to push his machinations a little too far.
The door opened, and Kaliel stepped out, mopping blood off his white jade gauntlets. Spatters of blood dotted his armor everywhere. “Send in the next one, Corporal Tapas,” he commanded.
At that moment, Luc ran into the hallway and came up to Kaliel. He peeked into the room behind the Dawn, and went pale.
“Um, Lord Kaliel, sir? Zanka would like to speak to you. She says it’s important.”
Kaliel looked down at Luc for a moment. “Very well. Corporal, bring the next merchant into the interrogation cell and have them wait inside until I return.”
“Yes, sir. Should I have someone sent up to attend to Zun Raito?”
“Did you hear me say anything about Zun Raito, Tapas?”
“No, sir.”
Kaliel walked with Luc back to the town hall. On the way, he caught sight of the Zenith, High Bright Sun, who was having a quiet but impassioned conversation with one of the community’s leading figures. Kaliel had been receiving reports on the strange monk’s activities; rather than proselytizing to the public about the Unconquered Sun, as might have been expected, he had instead been having conversations with the priests and community leaders of Chrysanthemum, chiding them for their failure to attend to the spiritual needs of the people and allowing them to falter in their faith. It would remain to be seen if this approach bore fruit.
They arrived at the town hall, and descended into the basement where the records were stored. Zanka had been set up with a desk near the window, with stacks of documents to either side of her. As they approached, Kaliel noticed that it was much warmer than he expected, and noted that a wood stove in the corner had been stoked, and looked as though it had been burning that way for hours. He was about to question why Zanka would do this when he knew her preference for cooler temperatures, but then he noticed that the young Eclipse had shed several layers of clothing while working, and after noting the direction of Luc’s gaze, he came to suspect that Zanka was not the one who had built up the fire.
“Kaliel, good,” Zanka said. “Have you learned anything from the merchants?”
“Only that several of them have been making clandestine deals with the Guild while I was away,” Kaliel growled. “I have had to remind them firmly that the Guild is not permitted to do business in Chrysanthemum.”
Zanka noticed the spots of dried blood on Kaliel’s armor. “I can see that. Well, I have something else to show you.” She handed him a few sheets of paper. Kaliel scanned them, but could make no sense of it; the letters seemed jumbled together randomly.
“It is a cipher,” Zanka said. “I have spent the past several hours deciphering it. Luc found these in the offices of one of the merchants you detained last night.”
“What does it say?” Kaliel asked.
“It is a message to the members of a group called ‘The Eternal Circle’,” Zanka said. “It calls for the members of the Circle to meet at a certain time and place, and says that ‘the entrance to the temple will be revealed at that time’. Each of these letters say almost the same thing; only the location of the meeting point varies.”
“When and where?”
“Tonight, in the northwestern part of the city. It appears that they meet every two weeks or so.”
Just then, Rutendo walked down the stairs.
“I thought you were going out to find Brusk,” Kaliel said.
“I was. But I came to tell you that there is a gift waiting for you in your offices, Kaliel. I think you will like it – it is sergeant-shaped.”
Kaliel thought for a moment, then chuckled. “He rode perimeter around the city.”
Soon they were all together in Kaliel’s offices, and Brusk was being apprised of the situation and the information they had about the Eternal Circle. Rutendo had managed to bring Brusk back into the city without drawing attention, so few knew he had returned.
“This could be our chance to end this threat,” Kaliel said. “I will allow the merchants to return home. They will almost certainly go to this meeting of the Eternal Circle, and once there we can move in and capture them all.”
“We could use someone on the inside,” Brusk said. “The last time I checked, there were no secret temples in that part of the city. Getting in and out could be a problem.”
“I’ll do it,” Luc said. “I can take the ring off that guy you crushed. Nobody in this town really knows me.”
“I suggest you return to the home of that merchant you burgled,” Brusk said. “Check his closets carefully. Cultists and secret societies rarely wear their everyday clothing to these kind of meetings.”
“Luc,” Rutendo asked, “can you acquire another ring?”
“Sure,” Luc said. “I saw a few people wearing one around town, shouldn’t be too hard for someone to ‘lose’ one.”
“Then I can go with you,” the Fire Aspect said. “In case there are problems.”
Luc left in order to locate the items they would need. Kaliel, in the meanwhile, had returned to the interrogation room and told his soldiers to escort the merchants home, though he left a guard on each one for the remainder of the day. He also removed the black iron ring from Zun Raito’s hand before his body was hauled away. Kaliel noted that the inside of the band was engraved with interlocking skulls.
“Brusk,” he said, once he had returned and was showing the ring to his sergeant, “what happened?”
“I knew something was wrong from the first set of your ‘orders’ we received,” Brusk said. “You hate paperwork. I cannot imagine you wanting to make more of it. But though I had my suspicions, the signature and seal were close enough to perfect that I had doubts, and I could not risk simply disobeying. By the time my suspicions became strong enough to speak out, I had been assigned to scout for the Bull of the North.”
“Did you run into Blizzard Topples the Oak while you were out there?” Kaliel asked. “I have been curious if any of this has affected him.”
“We have not heard from him in weeks,” Brusk said. “But he rarely speaks to anyone but you, so this is nothing unusual.”
“I will go and speak to him after we expose this cult tonight,” Kaliel said. “For now, we have plans to make.”
۞
Darkness fell, and from all throughout the city of Chrysanthemum, men and women in black-cowled robes began to gather in the night.
Silently they waited, gathered in groups in four different locations around a small storage building. As the moon rose in the sky and crossed into the constellation of the Mask, sections of cobblestones suddenly dropped down into the earth, forming crude stairs leading down into the darkness. The robed figures began to descend the stairs, not noticing in their haste that their numbers had grow by two.
Nearby, from their places of hiding, Kaliel and his soldiers waited patiently as they watched the people descend into the temple. “Wait for the signal,” he ordered.
The stairs led down to an underground chamber that had been isolated from the main sewers and expanded. Thick stone pillars held up the roof of the long chamber. The walls and floor were paved in bones, some of them charred and cracked, giving the place the feel of as ossuary. At the far end of the room, an altar carved with profane symbols sat next to a large throne that appeared to me made of an enormous skeletal hand that had burst out of the floor and now sat, cradling its occupant in its palm.
The man who sat in the throne was huge, as large as Kaliel. He wore deep purple robes and a skull mask. As the room filled, the man stood up, spreading his arms wide, and began to speak.
His sermon was in part a political diatribe against Kaliel and all Solars, but the Eternal Circle appeared to be mostly an ancestor worship cult, promising power to those who revered the spirits of the departed. Parts of the service, however, were incomprehensible to Rutendo and Luc, as they were conducting in a language neither of them had ever heard.
The man’s words were persuasive, his argument penetrating deep into the soul. A foul, dark miasma spread throughout the chamber, filling the minds of those present with hatred and loathing for the city’s rightful ruler. Rutendo found that even he was beginning to question his loyalties, an insidious effect he was only able to shake off with effort. As his mind cleared, Rutendo noticed that a symbol had appeared on the brow of the skull-faced orator; a solid circle, like the Zenith caste-mark his mother bore, but this symbol was not made of light, but was an angry, bleeding wound.
“Tonight!” the man’s voice boomed. “Tonight you are all ready! Tonight you will journey with me to the other world, where you will serve the master and be given power to end the tyranny of the Solars before it can take root in Creation!”
Slowly, Rutendo began to slip backward through the crowd. He looked around for Luc, fearful of the effects the man’s words might be having on the mortal boy, but could not find him.
He moved up the stairs and went to find Kaliel. “You must hurry,” he said. “Their leader is very powerful, on par with you or Mother, I believe. I believe he means to kill everyone in the cult.”
Kaliel scowled. “That is my job.” With a wave of his hand, Kaliel moved forward, followed by Zanka, Rutendo, and ten Knights of the Golden Flower.
In the underground temple, the cultists were swaying and chanting, entranced by the words of the priest. A translucent, ghostly form was beginning to manifest on the altar. As they prepared for the journey to the other world, the chamber was suddenly filled with sunlight.
Kaliel stood at the bottom of the stairs, his anima flaring, ethereal wings unfurled behind him as chrysanthemum petals swirled around him. “All of you!” he shouted. “Return to your homes and your rightful places!” He pointed with Principle of Severity at the man in purple robes. “And you, get out of my city!”
“The vile bright one has come!” the priest shouted. “Defend yourselves! For the glory of the Master!”
The cultists all pulled out knives from their robes. A dark aura began to emanate from the dark priest, matching the glow of Kaliel’s anima. The two auras seemed to struggle against one another for a few moments, but gradually, Kaliel’s light pushed the darkness back, until it surrounded all of the cultists. Kaliel’s wings extended forward and elongated, seeming to wrap themselves protectively around the crowd. The cultists cried out and cowered before the power of the Unconquered Sun. Half of them dropped their knives, and ran out of the room, leaving through the passageways not blocked by Kaliel. The soldiers stationed outside quickly took them into custody.
Kaliel’s concentration was broken as the ghost that had manifested at the altar suddenly shot forward, howling as it raised a broad axe and swung at the Dawn’s head. He was able to raise his daiklaive in time to ward off the blow. The priest, meanwhile, spoke a few strange words in a guttural tongue and began making ritualistic gestures with both hands.
Zanka stepped forward, avoiding the ensuing melee between Kaliel and the ghost, and addressed the cultists. “I cannot believe you have fallen for this man’s lies! The darkness here has blocked your vision from the glory of the sun, that has made Chrysanthemum a safe and prosperous city in the midst of the Northern wastes! Safe from the ravages of the Bull of the North, safe from terrors of the Realm, safe from the depredations of the Guild! Tell me, why must this priest of your hide himself from the eyes of the Sun?”
“She’s right!” cried out a young voice from the crowd, one that was familiar to the Solars. “We’ve been deceived!”
Luc’s cries were punctuated by the hissing sound of a fiery arrow streaking across the room, burying itself in the dark priest’s shoulder. The priest grimaced, but his concentration held, and he continued his chanting. Rutendo quickly drew another arrow, but him aim was thrown off by the sudden chaotic movements of confused and panicked cultists, no longer wanting to fight Kaliel but too afraid to know what else to do.
Kaliel, seeing that the dark priest was gathering dark power for his foul sorcery, gave a derisive glance to the ghost that had been trying ineffectually to combat him, and made a sudden dash across the room. His golden wings seemed to reach forward across the room and curl around the pillars, pulling him forward like a ballista bolt. The golden chrysanthemum petals began to swirl in a tight spiral, from the tip of Kaliel’s extended blade and flowing straight at the dark priest’s chest.
The priest moved his arms to block the blow, while the skeletal fingers of his throne curled around, trying to draw off necromantic Essence. The golden blade of Principle of Severity buried itself deep under the priest’s sternum, and he cried out as the energies of his sorcery dissipated into the ether. With a look of hatred burning in his eyes, the dark priest slowly slid off Kaliel’s blade, and continued to move back, passing through the skeletal throne as he turned immaterial and moved away.
Behind Kaliel, the ghost tried to move up to attack the Bronze Tiger in the back, but was intercepted by Zanka, who lashed out with her sash in a graceful, dance-like attack, curling the sash around the ghost’s arm and pulling it back toward her. Rutendo moved to cover her back as she did battle with the spirit, firing an arrow at it and disrupting its semi-solid form. The ghost’s axe struck Rutendo, but the force of the blow was deflected by the jade breastplate that Kaliel had given him when they arrived in the city.
Kaliel tried pursuing the fleeing priest, pulling out his flamepiece and firing at the transparent figure who was fading into the back of the chamber. There was a flash of smoke and fire; the priest seemed unaffected. “Cowardly bastard!” Kaliel shouted, as the priest faded from view, the last thing to vanish the bloody circle on his forehead. Spinning around, Kaliel brought Principle of Severity up over his head, and smashed it down into the altar, splitting it in half. He then spun around, and saw the confused mob of cultists, still uncertain of what they were doing. Some had even picked up the knives they had dropped, and were looking at the swirling melee between Zanka, Rutendo, and the ghost.
Kaliel’s brow darkened, and his anima flared brighter. “I told you to return to your homes. NOW!”
The chamber was devoid of cultists within seconds.
Zanka, who had pulled out her war fans, now moved in as the ghost pressed its attack on Rutendo. She began spinning around in a whirling dance, slashing with her fans too fast for the eye to follow. Great rents appeared on the spirit’s body, and necromantic essence spilled out. The Eclipse finished her dance with a flourish, slashing across its neck and severing the head from the body. It faded away as it collapsed in a heap.
Taking a moment to smash the skeletal throne, Kaliel then marched up the stairs into the night air. “Bring me High Bright Sun!” he shouted, his voice echoing off the stone buildings surrounding them. Several soldiers immediately set out to find the monk. Within an hour, however, they had all returned.
“There’s no sign of the monk, sir,” Corporal Broxa reported. “No one can recall seeing him leave the city.”
Kaliel thought back to the exchange he had witnessed between High Bright Sun and the community leader. Listening to him exhort the man to attend to his faith. Realizing that the monk had never once mentioned the name of the Unconquered Sun. And seeing the man he had been talking to, a short distance away, still wearing the black robes of a cultist. “An impostor,” Kaliel said. “Of course.”
۞
In the end, the faith of the people of Chrysanthemum was tested, but emerged stronger. Kaliel’s connection to his faithful was restored, stronger than before, and even Zanka, who was instrumental in reversing the damage done by High Bright Sun’s cult, began to receive direct worship from the townsfolk.
There was some damage that could not be healed, however. A few of the more prominent members of the cult had to be banished, or simply disappeared one night. Several merchant’s businesses were disrupted for weeks as sons and daughters were obliged to take over the family business unexpectedly, and a number of audits were done to purge the insidious tendrils of the Guild. Discipline among the Knights was extremely strict for a while, to purge them of the malaise that had befallen them. Knowing, however, that idleness had contributed to the collapse in discipline, Kaliel began to make an effort to secure a mercenary contract for the Knights.
The most telling disturbance, however, was discovered when Kaliel tried to make contact with the spirit Blizzard That Topples the Oak. When the spirit did not respond to Kaliel’s summons for several days, and no trace of him could be found, the Solars were forced to assume the worst; that Blizzard, like Brusk, had been seen as an obstacle to High Bright Sun’s plans, and had been removed from the situation. Unlike Brusk, however, the spirit’s removal had been more permanent.
The town gathered one night, many weeks after the breaking of the Eternal Circle cult, and surrounded the square in front of the town hall, where a great bonfire had been built. Most of the kindling in the fire was made from hundreds of sheets of parchment, the coded serial numbers visible on the edges of some. On a signal, Rutendo fired a flaming arrow into the center of the pyre, and everyone was suddenly bathed in the light of the inferno.
Kaliel stood with Zanka and Rutendo on the steps of the town hall; Luc was off in the crowd, enjoying the festivities among the common people.
“I have received reports from the scouts I sent to investigate the Bull of the North’s sudden withdrawal,” Kaliel said to them. “I have been told that the withdrawal was because of an unexpected disturbance to the North of their forces.”
“North?” Zanka asked. The Bull’s armies were already encamped as far North as she thought possible. “Is there anything left in Creation that is north of the Bull?”
“It may not be a disturbance from Creation,” Rutendo observed. “The Fair Folk may be playing their games again.”
“Regardless of what it is, we had best keep our eye on it,” Kaliel said. “I have had enough of unpleasant surprises.”