Spilling of the Heavens
The traitors attacked in the night, as Old Moon’s broken
face slid behind the outer tendrils of a thick, white cloud burst. Cassar had
been staring up at the wounded moon, remembering how smooth it had once been. On
clear winter nights, Old Moon had glowed flawless, filling up the entire sky.
What a sight! It had broken his papa’s heart to see the giant pale orb
tarnished. For three hundred years, his papa had chronicled Old Moon’s orbit
while other historians and stargazers worshipped the sharp, curved blue blade that
had appeared in the sky near Old Moon at the dawn of this age. New Moon
captivated the half-minded, his papa said. Old Moon, his father’s huge flat
face would brim with joy as he spoke, has and will see it all from our birth to
death. Little wonder that his papa fell to slumber only days after Old Moon’s
scarring.
His
papa’s slumber broke Cassar’s heart even more than the death of his wife and
son, for he had led the king to the top of the great peak of Kekur where the
king claimed his wicked prize, the sword ripped from Old Moon’s face. A shame,
but a necessary shame, Cassar’s gigantic head told his weeping heart as the
moon approached the cloud.
They
were camped upon Cane’s Landing, the stone deck where the old god, Cane, meditated
ages ago among the heavens and less than a morning’s hike below Kekur. Yes, Cassar
was leading the king to the peak again. This time a hundred dwarves, men and
gargolas accompanied them. Cassar was a gargola, a race crossed between the
giants of the ancient world and the men of the blue dawn. Behind them, the
traitors gave chase, waiting to ambush them either on the way up or way down.
If there was a journey back down, he thought. He had no idea why they had left
Metahischoo, the palace of Marek, under siege by a host of traitors. Once he had trusted his king, but Tarek
Grandar had changed. The battle with the dark king of Rion on the sands of the
Sorna had changed him. So had the two swords, Kekur – the sword of Marek and
one of the seven great blades – and Lunar – the wicked sword that had scarred
Old Moon.
Then Old Moon disappeared behind
the cloud, and the glow it gave off the snow-capped ground died. In the pure
dark, the feet crunching in the snow came from every direction. Cassar lifted
his head, grasping for his massive club. A gargola never fought with a sword,
for no smith had ever forged one big enough to fit his massive hands. Instead,
they used clubs that were trunks of young trees rounded at the end. Some cruel
gargolas fastened spikes to their clubs, but Cassar preferred his smooth. A
short figure with ax drawn came at Cassar, as he worked to lift his huge body
from the ground. He made it only to his knees, before swinging his club to send
the figure, a dwarf no doubt, flying off the side of Cane’s Landing and down
the side of the mountain. Cassar prayed that he had not known the dwarf before
all this had started, even though relations between gargolas and dwarves had
always been tenuous.
On
his feet, the sound of battle surrounded him. Dark figures danced with swords,
axes and clubs. Feet tapped off the stone deck, and wails sounded out. Cassar
fought to the front of the king’s tent, for the king had not yet joined the
battle. The man had an uncanny knack to sleep through everything. The loyal ones
left formed a circle around the tent, fending of wave after wave of traitors,
losing many in their own ranks each time. Old Moon escaped its temporary
prison, lighting the world enough to show the bodies stacking up and the blood
running off the deck. “Oh,” Cassar moaned. A place once known for serenity
would forever be stained by violence. A man came at him. Cassar fended off a
thrust from a sword and then caught the man’s head in his hand. Cassar
squeezed, feeling his fingernails dig in right before the man’s skull collapsed
on each side.
Behind
Cassar, the tent exploded in flame. He held his ground as others ducked for
cover. The gargola turned in time to see a man run through the ranks of defense
toward the flame at the middle of the tent. Inside the flame was the king, his
brown beard with flakes of gray and cold blue eyes were clear. Thank heavens,
thought Cassar, he drew Kekur instead of the other. He had seen the other drawn
once, and he hoped he would not live long enough to see that blade in battle
again.
“Traitor!” Tarek Grandar’s voice boomed
as he drove the blade into the man’s middle. The man’s body went limp before it
exploded, showering every one including the king with blood and sizzling pieces
of flesh.
“Pure
rage,” Cassar whispered. “Only rage remains. “
2 comments:
I had to read this twice to make sure I understood what was happening. I got lost the first time, partly due to distractions on my part. This piece presented good opening action and created lots of questions as to who were the traitors, what were they after and what is going on with Tarek Grandar. I believe I need to go read some of the other CD project because I seem to remember Tarek being revered as a hero.
I have to admit that I don't have a great grasp on Grandar. He sort of shifts in my mind. He's a hero in the sense that he drove away evil from the world once, but this is sort of post "happily ever after" Grandar where he's confronting his own immortality. I believe I hint at this near the end of the CD project (maybe in other parts). I can't remember for sure. I have posted about 12 or 13 chapters (re-worked) on webook that vary from original version. A few of them have received some decent reviews.
I haven't pursued this story too much, just because I am not sure I understand it fully or have delved deep enough into it.
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