I
The words meant nothing, yet the incessant
chants reverberating from the stone echoed within Erlaan's bones
and skittered along his nerves. He lost himself in the monotony.
There were no days and no nights, no mealtimes and no need to
sleep. Time did not pass, yet his heart beat, his lungs filled and
emptied, the invocation changed in pitch and tempo. This place was
timeless, yet it was eternal.
He watched over his father, from
a stool set beside Kalmud's bed. Like all else, Erlaan's father did
not move, his condition neither worsening nor improving. In the
Temple, he felt closer to his father than ever before, an almost
physical link between them. When he laid his hand upon Kalmud's
chest or brow, Erlaan's flesh tingled at the touch. He felt the
flickers of fevered dreams that raged in his father's
mind.
"It is the power of the
Blood."
Erlaan looked to the doorway and
saw the withered high priest Lakhyri, standing motionless in the
square arch as if he were a statue that had always been there. When
he spoke, only his lips moved, the barest twitch of muscle beneath
the taut skin of his face, every other part of him
frozen.
"The same energy that fuels the
Blood is the source of the Temple's power," Lakhyri continued.
"That is why you feel its presence, why you feel that you belong in
this place."
"The chanting, it draws in the
energy of the world," Erlaan said. "I sense the ebb and flow of its
tides. I feel something else, though, a tugging at my spirit, like
a hole that opens up beneath us."
"The power of the Temple is
weakening," Lakhyri said with a single, slow nod. "It took much of
the remaining energy to bring you and your father to this
place."
"Why did you? Why are we so
important that you would do that?"
"You are the true heirs to the
Blood. It is imperative that you survive. The Blood must rule the
empire. You will be restored to your rightful place and the course
of the empire shall be corrected, returning to the path that has
been laid down."
"What of Ullsaard? He is king
now. Why is he so wrong for Askhor?"
The tiniest flicker of agitation
passed across Lakhyri's face, so fleeting that Erlaan wondered if
he had imagined it.
"He is a usurper," said the high
priest. "He does not belong. He is not part of the plan. Your
father is the true heir to the empire, and you after
him."
"That's why you're keeping him
alive?"
Lakhyri's lips twisted
fractionally at the corners, distorting the runes carved into his
cheeks. Erlaan realised it was a smile, more grotesque and
frightening than anything he had seen. What could amuse such a
creature?
"It is not I who sustains your
father, nor the powers of the Temple. It is from you that he draws
sustenance. You give over to him your own life. Every moment that
you feed him with your spirit is a moment taken from your mortal
span."
Erlaan instinctively drew back
his hand from Kalmud's chest, and felt a sudden pang of guilt that
his natural reaction was so selfish. Even so, he did not put back
his hand.
"Why did you not tell me sooner?"
the prince asked.
"So that you would know what it
feels like to make such a decision."
"Decision? What
decision?"
"Whether your father lives or
dies."
As horrifying as the idea was,
Erlaan felt no shock at the thought of his father's life being in
his hands. This was a place that teetered on the line between life
and death, existence and oblivion. The idea of responsibility, of
becoming king, had terrified Erlaan, but in the Temple there was
nothing that felt more natural.
"The choice you face is harsher
than you think," said Lakhyri, breaking Erlaan's train of
thought.
"Harsher? What could be harsher
than life or death?"
"A quick or slow death. I see
from your eyes that you already are considering whether it is worth
the expenditure of your life to perpetuate this half-existence of
your father. There is another option. That flutter of life that
still beats in your father's breast, it is weak, but it exists. It
is in your power to take it for yourself."
"Steal his life force?" It was a
genuine inquiry, not an admonishment. Erlaan wondered why the
suggestion did not fill him with disgust. Why did he spend even a
moment contemplating such a thing?
"Your father's opportunity has
passed, Erlaan." It was the first time Lakhyri had addressed him by
name. The high priest stepped into the room. His words were
delivered in the same flat manner as before, without pity or
distaste, but his eyes betrayed just a shred of lingering humanity
as he continued. "Your chance is now. To let your father dwindle
away would be doubly disrespectful. End his suffering now, and use
the last of his strength for yourself, to reclaim that which
belongs to you."
Erlaan said nothing, but his mind
was awhirl with the implications. His father's life hung by a
narrow thread, all that remained between Erlaan and becoming the
heir to Askhos. Was it selfishness to cut that thread, or was it a
mercy? He turned back to Kalmud and placed the tips of his fingers
on his cold brow.
"The empire has already taken his
life," said Erlaan. "It would be a waste to let what remains slip
away without purpose. What do I do?"
"You already know."
Taking a breath, Erlaan stared at
his stricken father. He could feel the tremor of a pulse, not in
his fingers, but somewhere deeper, in his veins. It took no effort,
Blood calling to Blood, drawing to its own. Erlaan felt the
slightest shift within, a momentary change of current between him
and Kalmud.
His father's heart stopped and a
last breath whispered from Kalmud's lips.
"I have little to offer," said
Erlaan, closing his father's eyes before turning to
Lakhyri.
"What are you willing to give?"
said the priest.
"I have no experience as a leader
of men, and I am no great warrior. I would not call myself brave by
any measure."
"These things I can give you, if
you are willing. It will not be easy, and it will not be pleasant.
What will you do to reign as king?"
Erlaan looked at his father and
thought of his dead grandfather and uncle. He was the last of the
Blood, save for the bastard who now wore the Crown. It was Erlaan's
birthright to rule, and he recalled Ullsaard's words to him, an
assertion the general had made to assuage the prince's doubts,
which Erlaan had etched into his memory during the long days and
nights he had spent in Askh, fearfully waiting by his father's
side. 'You are what you are, and it is in you to embrace that
destiny. You owe it not only to yourself, but to the people you
will rule and your forefathers.'
The prince met the implacable
glare of Lakhyri.
"My family have given their lives
for the Crown. I would offer nothing less. My body and my spirit,
if needed."
Lakhyri accepted this declaration
with a slow blink.
"Your life will not be necessary.
Your spirit, your body… that is a different matter."