Eiru Sent’ank fell to his knees on the rough stone floor of the temple. A bright moonbeam from the skylight cast his face at first in pale ecstasy, then horror, then bleakness. Such emotions filled him as he channeled the will of the gods, alone in that dark room. His body convulsed unwillingly, tossing him limply across the floor as his naked body was torn and bruised. For a moment he stilled, and forced himself to take a jagged breath, but in the next instant his trance was renewed with greater force. His back arched violently with the surge of fire in his veins, then, abruptly, he rolled to the side. A thunder-crack echoed on the walls, and Eiru felt the bone in his forearm splinter as it met the ground, but that was what it meant to be a messenger of the divine.
Indeterminate time passed, and Eiru was left panting, limbs contorted beneath him. He pushed himself to his feet with some difficulty and gazed around, filled with inexpressible zeal. The center of the temple was a tall room with four corners and straight walls, cast in deep shadow. But no shadow could hide the shrine from the eyes of a true Speaker.
Before Eiru stood a wall with great carvings. He had committed each to memory, every line, every crack, every faded patch in the stonework. The gods took many forms, but on Mount Amathet, they took the forms of the land. Kaio, the elk, protecting Oyuhcal, the oak. Nearby was Ousuo, who took the body of a dewdrop, but held the power of every crushing waterfall. Even the greedy, deceitful and cunning Shinan had a place on this wall, a snake in the corner, watching the others with envy from afar.
Eiru reluctantly turned away and limped through a small doorway nearby. It led to the chambers of the temple’s Speaker, his own room. Rather, the room that he was borrowing from this divine place whilst he served. Until my death, he thought, a fractured smile appearing on his lips, only the faintest curling of the corners. Only that can keep me from serving here. His room was barren by his choice. The last Speaker, the one he deposed personally, had been living quite luxuriously. Everything, from the carpets to the feather bed, had been burned, returned to the mountain. Eiru slept on the cold earth, only books, a wash basin, and crates of food and water decorating that space. Speakers were forbidden clothing, so he had no need for chests or wardrobes.
The Speaker moved to the basin and used his right hand to splash frigid water over himself, washing his face of sweat and dust. Locks of unkempt brown hair fell around his face as he let the water drip from his crooked nose. He then made his way around the room until he found a length of threadbare cloth and wrapped it around his left arm, bent sharply near the wrist. He grunted as the bones cracked and set, then limped back out into the antechamber, fixing his eyes once more on the shrine.
Eiru dared a thought, a pebble skimming across his mind, gone almost as soon as it came. He saw Xaro, the great mountain cat, and envisioned that strength within him. Eiru Sent’ank, devout and unwavering servant to the gods, was going to become a great power on Mount Amathet. For the gods were angry. The gods had been forgotten. And now, the gods were going to have their voice heard.
Indeterminate time passed, and Eiru was left panting, limbs contorted beneath him. He pushed himself to his feet with some difficulty and gazed around, filled with inexpressible zeal. The center of the temple was a tall room with four corners and straight walls, cast in deep shadow. But no shadow could hide the shrine from the eyes of a true Speaker.
Before Eiru stood a wall with great carvings. He had committed each to memory, every line, every crack, every faded patch in the stonework. The gods took many forms, but on Mount Amathet, they took the forms of the land. Kaio, the elk, protecting Oyuhcal, the oak. Nearby was Ousuo, who took the body of a dewdrop, but held the power of every crushing waterfall. Even the greedy, deceitful and cunning Shinan had a place on this wall, a snake in the corner, watching the others with envy from afar.
Eiru reluctantly turned away and limped through a small doorway nearby. It led to the chambers of the temple’s Speaker, his own room. Rather, the room that he was borrowing from this divine place whilst he served. Until my death, he thought, a fractured smile appearing on his lips, only the faintest curling of the corners. Only that can keep me from serving here. His room was barren by his choice. The last Speaker, the one he deposed personally, had been living quite luxuriously. Everything, from the carpets to the feather bed, had been burned, returned to the mountain. Eiru slept on the cold earth, only books, a wash basin, and crates of food and water decorating that space. Speakers were forbidden clothing, so he had no need for chests or wardrobes.
The Speaker moved to the basin and used his right hand to splash frigid water over himself, washing his face of sweat and dust. Locks of unkempt brown hair fell around his face as he let the water drip from his crooked nose. He then made his way around the room until he found a length of threadbare cloth and wrapped it around his left arm, bent sharply near the wrist. He grunted as the bones cracked and set, then limped back out into the antechamber, fixing his eyes once more on the shrine.
Eiru dared a thought, a pebble skimming across his mind, gone almost as soon as it came. He saw Xaro, the great mountain cat, and envisioned that strength within him. Eiru Sent’ank, devout and unwavering servant to the gods, was going to become a great power on Mount Amathet. For the gods were angry. The gods had been forgotten. And now, the gods were going to have their voice heard.