DargonZine | Volume 17, Number 1 |
"
riestess, I am frightened."
Lisette Derrickson's voice was small and quiet in the sparsely
furnished room. Despite her statement, she continued preparing for the
ritual, removing her clothes and bathing herself in pungent oils derived
from the blue, fleshy berries of juniper. She looked younger than her
age of seventeen years, seated among the billowy, pale folds of cloth
that she would wear. Yet Lisette was a girl by virtue only, since her
breasts were full and her hips suitable for child-bearing.
Hossil Braemar, dressed in a priestess' robes of blue and white,
turned where she stood, a lit splint in one hand and a candle in the
other. She stared searchingly at the girl sitting on the edge of the bed
and did not answer right away.
"There is nothing to fear, Lisette," the acolyte finally replied,
lighting the candle in her hand and setting it in a small alcove. "Ol
will accept you or he will not." She blew out the splint.
"But what will become of me if I am rejected?" Lisette asked. The
girl thought it easy for her teacher to be so calm. Hossil, after all,
had a place in Ol's temple; Lisette did not.
"Lisette, how long have you been in Dargon, at this temple?" Hossil
asked.
"Since Deber."
"Have you seen anyone here who is not content?"
"No, but --"
"And are they all priests?"
"No, but --"
"But what, my young apprentice?"
Lisette hesitated. She wanted her answer to be rational, to sum up
the logical reasons for her doubt and to make the priestess understand
them. In the end, however, she could only answer, shamefaced: "I do not
wish to fail."
Hossil frowned. Stepping forward, she took a seat next to her
protege. "Lisette, you cannot fail," Hossil whispered, putting an arm
around the girl's bare shoulders. "Ol accepts you for who you are. He
will ask you into his service if that is your destiny, but not every
servant serves him in the priesthood. Do you understand this?"
Lisette swallowed her burgeoning tears and nodded, but in the back
of her mind she could not dispel the fear of failure, and it fluttered
like dark wings at the edge of her vision. She had already begun to
imagine the wonders of her life as a priestess of Ol. It was not the
life of the farm girl she had been.
Two bells later a man and woman carried Lisette into a dimly lit
chamber, bearing her body on their shoulders like a precious relic that
would shatter if dropped. She was wrapped in the fine linen from
Hossil's chambers, two stalks of the golden-flowered meilore plant
grasped in each hand and crossed atop her rising and falling breasts.
Even though she saw only the ceiling, Lisette knew it as the ritual
room: a grim, square enclosure large enough to hold a gathering of fifty
men. The walls were black, veiled in shadow, and the only light came
filtered down from a well set high in the vaulted ceiling. An altar
stood in the center of the room, plain and unadorned.
Lisette tried easing her breath as the pair set her down on the
altar's uneven surface. She struggled to keep inhaling, feeling as if a
great weight was pressing down upon her chest. She did not move her eyes
to glance at the acolytes. She knew them to be two of the dozen she had
already met, but as part of the ritual she must not acknowledge or
communicate with them.
The door closed and the sound of a bolt sliding into place echoed
in the room. Lisette exhaled forcefully, feeling her muscles loosen for
the first time since the morning. She did not move her gaze from the
skylight, its brightness stinging her almond-shaped, green eyes. She had
not been allowed outside for a sennight, performing the necessary
ablutions for the ritual only by candlelight or in complete darkness.
The sun was a welcome, if temporarily unpleasant, visitor. The scent of
the oils and the meilore lay heavily in her nostrils, causing waves of
lightheadedness to pass over her. After her six months as a resident of
the temple, her moment had finally come.
She lay on the stone slab for a bell, by her reckoning, but there
was no way to tell for sure. She had been told when she prepared for the
ceremony that this room was constructed to dampen external sounds, such
as the tones of Dargon's city bells. She waited patiently for the Touch;
she prayed silently for the Touch. But all she received was the slight
shifting of the light above her, dimming as the sun crept across the
sky. When the altar became uncomfortable against her skin and her arms
ached from holding the meilore stalks, she sat up, removed the linen,
and eased herself to the floor in order to stretch.
She next paced the confines of the room, running her fingers across
the rough surface of the walls. They were cool and moist beneath her
hand. The oils on her body left her chilled, although the overall
temperature of the room was not uncomfortable. She circled the altar a
dozen times more, eventually settling in one of the room's dark corners,
leaning against the union of the two walls behind her. Her wrap lay in
disarray on the stone slab, the flowers dropping their petals limply.
Lisette crouched, lowering her head into her hands. Her doubt began
uncurling its dark claws. How long did the priests wait before they came
back for an initiate, she wondered? Bryan, son of Rissomer, had not been
gone a bell before emerging anointed. Sheirel Beiren had barely been
locked into the room before they had returned for her. She didn't know
of anyone who had failed during her stay at the temple. How long before
she had to face Hossil and announce her failure? Lisette had not asked
to be a priestess. She had not asked to come to Ol's temple and leave
her family. But everyone said she had shown signs. She exhibited an
empathy with the land in a way much deeper than the ordinary farmers of
her village. She had always found it strange that a simple farmer's
daughter like herself would be accepted into the order, but once she had
been admitted ... she did not like to think about how much she liked
life at the temple. Would her teachers announce her failure at midday
service?
Lisette shifted her feet, finding it impossible to get comfortable
against the unyielding stone wall. Once admitted to the temple, she had
given herself completely to the rituals and teachings of the order. She
had discovered the beauty in Ol's teachings, and the wonder in the power
of his creations. She had done everything she could do to be ready for
this day.
Looking around her at the emptiness of the room, at the wilting
plants ... she realized that it had not been enough.
Her shoulders sagged with relief. Lisette gasped, realizing the
source of her fear. It opened its dark bloom to show her its heart: a
part of her had been afraid of the god's Touch. She had been scared of
what Ol might ask of her. If the Touch was not going to come, she would
not be forced to face Ol's demands of her, demands that she might not be
able to meet.
"No!" she said, chastising herself. This weakness shamed her. She
had already sacrificed the comfort of her village, her family, and her
friends to come to Dargon to join Ol's order. She was not ready to stop
trying ... she would not stop trying. But what if Ol did not want her?
Lisette bit her lip. She would have to return home, humiliated, and
find a husband and have her own children. She had no other skills or
calling that would be useful at the temple. Wiping her eyes, she stood
up and raised a spark of defiance. This would be her path. The
humiliation would be brief; she would learn to live with the failure.
She remembered the day when she had left her village, when everyone in
the small hamlet had turned out to see her parting. As she had hugged
her family, she couldn't help but hear some of the gossips already
deciding how long it would be before she returned in defeat. It would be
as they had expected.
"I do not need the priesthood," she muttered. She would make her
own choices and bear the consequences. Her error had been in dreaming
too big and she would not make that mistake again. Lisette could live
with having a family and caring for them. She would hone new skills and
perhaps, one day, Ol would choose one of her children. Yet even if he
did not, she would never see her offspring as failures.
And in that moment of independence, at the point where her heart
was comforted and she saw new paths opening before her, that was when
she felt the Touch. It came as a shock to her: a cool, invisible finger
that traced a bead of moisture between her breasts, following a trail
down her torso to her navel. Then it disappeared. She inhaled sharply,
shivering at the ghostly caress.
She turned around in fright and stepped back, clasping her hands to
her shoulders, covering herself in the motion. "So now you come," she
murmured. "Now, when I renounce you?" In her retreat, she backed into
the side of the altar.
The Touch reappeared behind her, starting at the shoulder and
moving downward along her spine. Again it vanished. Lisette felt herself
shudder in unexpected pleasure. She stopped moving, her thoughts of
independence returning.
"I do not need your order, Ol," she announced. For the first time
since arriving at the temple, she truly felt that she didn't need the
god's blessing, the god's proof of her worth. She could find her own
way.
Yet, despite her strong words, she wished for the Touch to return.
Slowly, she lowered her arms. When the ghost returned, it was in
the form of lips that graced her neck, vaporous hands that grasped her
arms and supported her. She leaned back, her long hair sweeping behind
her. Soft lips, smooth and gentle, nibbled their way along her shoulder,
down to the tender space between her arm and her breast. She raised her
arms above and behind her, arching her back into a presence that stood
before her, pressing itself back into her.
"Ol ... " she whispered.
Lisette felt herself lifted from the ground then, the hands moving
to support her, raise her towards the skylight. The hand on her shoulder
became an arm, embracing her; the other moved lower to support her body.
That one rested on the back of her thigh, the ghostly fingers reaching
beneath her.
She spun in an otherworldly embrace, light blooming around her.
Lisette felt warmth flow around her and smelled the sharp, brisk scent
of spring. She opened her eyes to see flowers falling from the skylight.
Rose petals and daffodil sheaths, tulip leaves and peony blossoms,
drifting slowly in that wondrous light, filled her head with a perfumed
aroma that caused her soul to swell in her chest.
Her vision of the room blurred in the spinning, replaced by images
of a forest, sunlight dappling the ground in a clearing through leaves
both broad and full. Grass scents replaced the flowers; it was the
thick, heavy scent of summer. Along her lower back and legs she felt the
brush of a thousand stalks of grass, tickling her with their curious
heads. As she smiled, a shower passed over the clearing, its beads
settling on her body in a rainbow sheen. Lisette spun and the drops
became streams that coursed over her. They ran along her arms and off
her fingers, down her stomach and around her toes. She felt a number of
them gather in the natural depressions of her body, gingerly pressing
against her. They became a force that teased and touched, movements that
caused her to cry in ecstasy.
When she opened her mouth, more trickles of water pressed between
her opened lips, enveloping her face in their embrace. The ghost lips
found their way to her breast.
Lisette nursed the world and made love to it, both at the same
time. Swells of pleasure consumed her, building like an ocean breaking
on the shores of a firm and yet comforting shore. She lapsed into
unconsciousness with the greatest of the waves, falling into a slumber
where she dreamt of the soft caresses of water.
When she awoke, she found herself on an unfamiliar beach with an
unfamiliar ocean at her back. The smell of the sea was strong. She stood
up slowly, discovering that she was on a narrow strip of rocky shore
with the chill sea air descending on her naked body. Off in the distance
a forest started, stretching to the left and right, hugging the
coastline. Leaves were bright in the fiery blaze of autumn and they fell
from branches of silver birch and tall oak. In imitation of the sea, the
leaves tumbled like a wave along the ground, racing to meet her at the
water's edge. Ol's Touch had disappeared, leaving a sense of yearning in
its place. Lisette was propelled by her wonder at the being that created
such a need. She took her first step, leaving a depression in the sand
behind her.
Lisette picked her way through the rocky headland, into long and
tawny grass. She parted the billowing stalks with her determined stride,
passing copses of birch that huddled like old spinsters gossiping at the
market. As she approached the woods, she turned her head away from a
wave of fluttering leaves and tried to cover herself against the wind.
It had gotten so cold so quickly. She then passed into the shadow of
that mysterious wood.
Her breath started showing in a pale cloud and she shivered. She
did not let the frigid land daunt her. She followed where her heart led,
needing to understand the path she walked. She stepped over fallen
trunks, through brush that was brown and dying. The deeper she ventured,
the closer the trees grew together. The graceful birch yielded to
thicker-trunked oaks and elms. She stroked their gnarled bark as she
passed, their giant forms towering above her.
The leaves on these trees were gone, revealing clawed fingers that
shook at a grey and clouded sky. The further she walked, the greater the
landscape changed beneath her feet. The ground, once a soft bed of
rotting leaves and undergrowth, became a mat of needles, ragged and
littered with stones that pushed up from beneath the soft mantle. After
some time, Lisette found herself climbing over boulders, as the
landscape of oaks and elm gave way to clusters of spruce and fir trees
amid rocky defiles. She pushed on as she sought to continue her search,
the stones cold and unyielding under her hands. There were ample
opportunities for Lisette to panic, she knew this, but fear did not
penetrate her heart. Although she did not know where she headed, a part
of her knew to travel inward and onward, yearning to explore Ol's Touch.
Small, white mounds of snow appeared on the ground, hiding in
shallow hollows and shade. They numbed her toes as she walked through
them, but still she climbed. At last, the clumps of trees gave way
altogether and she found herself on the bare slope of a mountain,
christened in gleaming snow. The mount was not tall, but was wide and
rounded, capped with a peak of rock that shrugged off snow in the wind
gusts.
Just beneath the crest of the mount she came to a cave. Teeth of
snow and ice rimmed its mouth, grinning. She entered it without
hesitation, her teeth chattering and all feeling in her extremities
gone. Lisette knew that a deeper understanding waited for her.
A labyrinth of various-sized stones and boulders greeted her, all
illuminated by the diffuse light streaming in from the cave mouth. The
wind was less here and Lisette felt relieved to be out of its piercing
chill.
On one of the rocks perched an eagle, its predatory head watching
her closely. The bird's body, while still powerful, was thin and gaunt,
speaking of a harsh survival. She wound around the boulders and came
forward to stand before the creature, watching it curiously. Its beak
was sharply curved, ending in a wicked point as long as her thumb. Its
keen grey eyes that held an intense intelligence -- and even deeper
hunger -- did not flinch from her probing gaze. The great bird clenched
one of its barbed talons, scraping the boulder. Finally, it stretched
its great wings, beating them weakly several times, and let out a feeble
cry.
Lisette started hunting around her for something to feed the
animal. She ventured to the back of the great cave and to its sides,
peering under rocks and in the crevices that pierced the walls. There
were no rats or other creatures that she could find. After a fruitless
search, she returned to the eagle.
Then a thought struck her and she knew what she had to offer it.
Cautiously, she leaned forward and extended her wrist, holding it
beneath the eagle's sharp beak. The bird nipped at her skin, drawing
blood. Lisette felt a burning pain, but also a deep pleasure at having
found a way to help. She lifted her arm and let a thin stream dribble
from the wound into the creature's opened mouth. It swallowed feverishly
for several moments, but still the blood seemed too thin and
insubstantial to provide it with sustenance. It was not enough.
Lowering her arm, Lisette peered intently into the eagle's eyes.
She read its hunger and its desire, but knew that the creature would not
take what was not offered. Understanding came as a warmth crawling over
her body, seeming to start at her feet and work its way upwards. She
realized she was not looking for more pleasure from Ol, but rather to
repay him for what he had given her. She had been right. She did not
need Ol now ... but now he needed her.
Without further thought, she lowered herself onto the ground before
the great bird, exposing her body to its hunger. The eagle swooped off
its perch and landed on her thighs, the hooked talons gripping at her
skin. One claw probed at the space between her legs. She was surprised
at its hard, warm touch, contrasted against her own cold skin. The
creature turned its head to look at her from one glossy eye. Then,
quickly, it swiped its dagger-like beak across her abdomen. Skin tore
and blood flowed, growing into streams that ran down her thighs. Lisette
felt the blood curl around her features and into the crevices of her
body, its warmth both shocking and pleasing.
There was no pain in the animal's devouring. Lisette simply closed
her eyes and said nothing -- did not cry out -- content to have ended
Ol's suffering.
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