Saturday, September 22, 2018

Second Sight (Fall Equinox 2018)

Second Sight - a reading (on Google Drive)


From the embers a demon arises, an eight-fold chorus harmonizing with each weapon in its hands, echoes and artifacts of an evil undefeated. Like an unholy archetype, the Righteous will not die. The sweeping victory of the seven sisters only forced them into reclusive slumber until the acts of man once again drew them forth from their long, deep hibernation, renamed and reincarnated, their numbers undiminished. They now call themselves the Chosen. The counter-revolution their ancestors sparked so long ago was not easily undone, the forest not easily reseeded after their clear cutting and slash-and-burn viniculture. The acidic ash lay fallow until, watered by tears of envy for an illusive Arthurian empire long lost, it fertilized the grapes of wrath, ripened to near bursting, ready to be crushed. Even now their red vinegar once again stains the tongues of man. Only a single descendent of the seven sisters still lives to stand against them, the youngest daughter of youngest daughters tracing back seven generations to Martyred Mary. She bears the birthmark of Alcy the Fallen, a kingfisher above her breast. Her blood is all that remains untainted of their original res publica vision. But their armor ill fits her. She is a poet not a warrior. A philosopher not a prophet. She seeks sympathy and common ground through treaties and beneficial trade. When those inevitably fail, her reluctant call to arms comes across as more cipher than clarion.

The Chosen gather. A legion of the faithful stand against the prophecy unleashed, an immortal ethernaut sent to raze their souls to god. She has none of the subtly and guise of her grande dames, none of their martial prowess. She marches her meager army out according to the histories, a vanguard, center, two wings and a reserve. The pueblas have little cavalry so rely on a native contingent who pledged their support after their own blunted revolution farther north. Bands bearing distant names like Cheyenne and Sleeping Buffalo. Once they had been equal allies. Now they are auxiliaries. She positions their scant numbers to cover her flanks. The Chosen had taken up positions first, facing dusk. The sun reflects off their armor, making the sky before the ranks of women catch fire. They murmur it’s an ill omen. But when the battle is joined, it’s the Chosen center that does not hold. A cheer arises. She presses her advantage and pushes forward, just like the histories say. It seems too easy. But perhaps this is exactly how her forbearers won. She only realizes her mistake too late when the Chosen center turns and fights, their retreat a feint. The sun across their polished shields covered the sweeping charge of their cavalry hidden behind their lines. Their horses scattered her wan allies. The Chosen wings now press her flanks, with their cavalry behind. Her veterans fight valiantly but already sense their doom. The women would rout if they weren’t already encircled. As night descends, only crows and the Chose celebrate the field.

Wounded beyond grieving among the army of the dead, she is lured into the shadow of an ancient shrine by the mystery of a whisper. How she slips through the Chosen pickets, she does not know. She just follows a voice in the darkness that softly calls her name. Sophia. Sophia. Behind her, the distant lamentation of no quarter asked or given transforms into a raven’s song until an anti-chorus of crows lends it the quality of children’s cries. By moonlight, she spies the ruins of the square tower in the mountains. To achieve its sanctuary, she must first navigate the field of broken crosses. Their tiny, jagged arms rend her clothing and deeply etch her armor until her fingertips grieve with blood. Within the crumbling shelter of the tower walls, she gathers deadwood and strikes a fire. Her only goal now to survive and keep the candle lighted for another generation. Her little blaze mimics the twinkling bonfires on the battle plane below. She prays that death has been sated by the offerings and remains too drowsy to come seeking more. Overwhelmed by the magnitude of that carnage, she buries her face within her hands until the teardrops from her fingertips run clear.

She strips away her armor at the altar of an unnamed god, feeding it to the wishfire, beseeching an intercession to restore her savaged faith. Her weapons she drops beside it, believing them useless and unnecessary. Naked and ashamed she confronts the disaster her reign has ushered in. That gentle voice whispers the fault is not hers to bear alone. She ignores it. Her mind is wracked with dreams and nightmares, visions of black or white. The voices of her ancestors insisting you are either with us or against us. No dissent. No middle way. Their shrill chorus alienates their allies by casting them as enemies while expecting them to understand. What they understood instead was that their aid was no longer needed, their alliance no longer valued. Their fight had become theirs alone. Her night is a pain filled crucible of tempering by self-recrimination. She glimpses a future where all their causes are defeated in detail. How can she conquer unrelenting human nature?

She awakes alone in cold confusion to find a dreamcypher inscribed across her mind. Arcane words unbind an avatar. A martyr is unborn. The voices inform her what she must do to seek redemption. She smears herself with ashes mixed with blood that now become her armor. She takes up her weapons and hones their dull edges back to razor sharp. In the foothills, she gathers what remains of her forces, guerrillas and refugees drawn to her light as they flee the mountain fastnesses. Rumors that the puebla army had fallen spread faster than a plague. The voices instruct her to bide her time and wait. Not long. On the plane below, the Chosen shift their attention to Cheyenne and begin to march. Slowly so the terror of their coming precedes them, pressing the city’s will to crumble to obviate the necessity of siege. With a cadre reminiscent of the old days, warriors, witches and ingĂ©nues, she tracks them along the ridgeline. She can only pray her erstwhile allies see their situation clearly. After Cheyenne, their only the remaining camp is Sleeping Buffalo filled with their sick, wounded, elderly and young. And it cannot be fortified. But not their women. The example of her puebla empire taught them that at least. Their scattered cavalry regroups within the walls. Their hope forlorn, they stake themselves to the land to fight just as the voices said they would. The Chosen invest the city. Her camp remains cold and fireless to conceal her presence. The voices order her to hold fast until the moment the native cavalry sally from behind the walls, as the histories say they must.

From a hill beyond their ruined temple, astrologers record her descent as a tear down the face of god, the telemetry of a fallen angel. Alone, she would set fire their camp then destroy their half-built siege engines and retreat. Hit and run. Scatter them then cut them down in the passes. That’s what the histories say. The voices reject her caution. Now is the time to impale them from behind while their attention is fixed forward. Use her full weight as shock tactics to savage their exposed back. A lightning strike to show the besieged city that their allies have not forsaken them. She knows her forces may well not survive the impact. But for too many generations, the puebla have neglected their allies in favor of themselves. It’s time to rebalance the equation, through sacrifice if necessary. She aims her spear at the heart of their gathered leaders and lets gravity do the rest. Their defiant charge catches the Chosen completely unaware. By the time they hear the thunder of hoofbeats rolling downhill, the lance is thrust too deep.  She and her companions lay waste to their captains and lieutenants. Decapitated, their army begins to melt away, first a trickle, then a torrent.

Miraculously, Sophia and her companions survive. When she links up with the leader of Cheyenne war band, it’s she who dismounts and bends her knee. The voices reveal that her redemption is not yet complete. In the aftermath, she refuses to reassume her position of rulership. The pueblas are restive but cautious of her recent erratic actions. Her desperate charge based on the counsel of unseen advisors has already attained a legendary quality, part myth, part cautionary tale. As her last official act, she decrees the puebla empire will rebuild as a true res publica. To repair the alliance, she and her veteran cadre vow to remain and guard Cheyenne until the next generation can replace their fallen warriors. The Chosen have once again been sown to the wind, diminished but not defeated. The voices warn her they are destined to return, beneath a different banner, bearing a different name. She must remain vigilant. The cycles of the histories will continue unceasing.

So in victory she becomes Unchosen, a sibylline warrior cursed by whispers of her renunciation until the voices fade beyond her second sight.


© 2018 Edward P. Morgan III

2 comments:

  1. --------------------------------
    Notes and asides:
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    The next installment in A Wine-Stained Book from the daily lines from 10/4-10/2009. This set was based on titles of Cruxshadows CDs (Echoes and Artifacts, Ethernaut, “Immortal”, Mystery of a Whisper, Wishfire, Dreamcypher, Tears, Telemetry of a Fallen Angel, Until the Voices Fade, "Sophia"). The mostly unmodified lines can be found as the first line of the first six paragraphs and the very last line.

    Sophia translates from Greek as “wisdom” though originally it meant “cleverness” or “skill”.

    Alcyone (Alcy), one of the Pleiades, derives from the Greek word for kingfisher. There is a Greek legend about a different Alcyone where she was turned into one.

    The first battle is based on Cannae, a famous double envelopment that is still taught at the US Military Academy. The Romans never did have much for cavalry. Later, they relied on auxiliaries, mostly the Germans and the Celts.

    I ran across another battle when I was writing this that described the sun reflecting off the shields of the enemy making it appear as though the sky had caught fire. I can’t find the reference now but I thought it sounded pretty cool so I used it.

    Sophia’s voices are based upon those of Joan of Arc. Though in Sophia’s case, they ancestors (or maybe just intuition), not saints. But in both cases, they guided the women to victory (but not to avoiding capture in Joan’s case).

    Sophia’s decision to remain in Cheyenne is based on the Varangian Guard, Norsemen who served as the emperor’s elite bodyguards in Byzantine Empire for nearly four hundred years. The first of them began service after fighting between Kiev and the Byzantines ended with a treaty that granted them that right. I liked that idea. I think I first ran across it in the only medieval historical written by a Western writer my Norwegian roommate recommended.

    This one definitely took a different turn from what I expected when I sat down to write it. In the end, I let the lines guide me. Not sure how that sets up the next one, but I have just over a month to figure it out.

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  2. Picture Notes:

    This illustration, like the story, follows the illustration for the Seven Sisters. In fact, I started with the finished Seven Sisters illustration and continued from there, much as Second Sight continues from the previous story. The silhouette is an actual ruin in Utah, the Hovenweep Stronghold House. The Stronghold was built by Ancestral Puebloan communities and is now a National Monument. The door is the actual shape of the door in the ruin. Over the moon I laid an image of an iris to represent seeing beyond the natural world, and dimmed all but one of the stars in the Pleiades cluster, to represent the one remaining sister.

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