Read The Invisible Chains - Part 2: Bonds of Fear Online
Authors: Andrew Ashling
Tags: #Romance MM, #erotic MM, #Fantasy
given real responsibility and power. More and more they began to
demand a part in the decision making process. It took centuries, but
eventually they supplanted and subjugated women. There followed
a long period of literally millennia of war and suffering, culminating
in the Darkening when mankind almost ceased to exist. The records,
even those of the Order, are scant, and I’m not too sure what can
be believed or not, but they speak of terrible weapons. It must
have seemed as if the Gods themselves waged war upon mankind.
Extinction was narrowly avoided. We don’t know how long it took.
During the Darkening no records were kept, or if they were, they
were lost. Until one thousand four hundred and fifty-three years ago,
mankind emerged from the Darkening. Or so it was declared. As far
as the Order is concerned, we are still in the Darkening—”
“Can we get to today, please, Trysulda. I feel a splitting headache
coming.”
“Ever since,” the First Daughter continued, unperturbed, “the
Order has sought for ways to restore the rule of women. Griswinda
thought she had found a shortcut. The day she heard that little prince
Anaxantis had fallen gravely ill and that the Ximerionian doctors
were seemingly powerless, the Stratagem of the Weak King was
born. In short and without going into the finer details it amounted
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to putting someone on the throne of a powerful country and ruling
through him until we would be strong enough to come forth into
the daylight. We knew Emelasuntha would do everything in her
power to put the Devil’s Crown on the head of her boy. It was also no
secret that Kurtigaill, her brother, doesn’t want to be king. First he
offered the crown to her, which she refused, and then he proposed
to abdicate in favor of Anaxantis on his tenth birthday. He reckoned
that Emelasuntha could be regent until her son’s majority. He had no
problem declaring that she would be a lot better at it than he was.
Most people agreed with him. It was too early, she said. What she
meant was that she would be going after the Devil’s Crown first. The
throne of Zyntrea already was a sure thing.”
Martillia whistled.
“A woman after my heart,” she said. “She sees something she
wants and she goes straight for it.”
Her look wandered to a weeping willow in the distance where
Dirina was minding the three horses. Trysulda saw her look and
smiled.
“No doubt,” she said. Anyway, you can imagine how she panicked
when her precious boy fell ill. You can’t order a sickness to be
strangled. Griswinda, on the other hand, saw a golden opportunity.
We had a very good doctor who was — how shall I put this? — in our
employ. Griswinda went herself to present him to Emelasuntha, and
the boy recovered. Sort of. At least he didn’t die. What Emelasuntha
didn’t know was that Griswinda had given Birnac Maelar instructions
to cure the boy, but at the same time to keep him weak. Weak in
bodily strength and willpower. The Order would help Emelasuntha
in gaining the Devil’s Crown for her son. The Order would also train
and advise him... and of course make sure that there would always be
enough of the medicine he so obviously needed to survive, but which
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in fact kept him weak.”
“I see,” Martillia said. “In one fell swoop the Order would become
a political force as well as a spiritual one.”
“Exactly. Anaxantis would govern Ximerion and Zyntrea. The
Order would govern Anaxantis. Or that was how it was supposed to
go. You know what happened. By a string of unforeseeable incidents,
Anaxantis was deprived for a long period of the medicines that were
to keep him docile. He must have been gravely ill and even must
have thought he was dying at some point. Of course that was how
the drugs were designed to begin with. If ever Emelasuntha would
have tried to wean her son off the medicines, she would have soon
changed her mind when she saw how he was suffering.”
“It seems to me Griswinda’s plan was sound.”
“By all calculations it should have worked. Only, it didn’t, did it?
The plan also had one great weakness. Or rather the Order had and
still has. When something unforeseen, and probably unforeseeable,
happened we couldn’t react adequately.”
“I did everything humanly possible—”
“Oh, dear, nobody is blaming you. We know you did more
than could be expected of you. We were simply outnumbered and
outflanked. One crisis and our chapters couldn’t bear the strain. The
simple fact is that we haven’t got the financial means nor the women
power.”
“What now, Trysulda?”
The First Daughter sighed.
“Come, let’s visit the temple. It would be a shame to have come
all this way and not enter it.”
She started climbing the marble stairs.
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“Are you giving up?” Martillia asked, while following her.
Trysulda waited until she had reached the platform of the temple.
“No, not at all,” she said when she had regained her breath. “But
I plan to be more circumspect about our true aims and more open
at the same time. For ages the Order has hidden behind the skirts of
the Goddess Astonema. My aim is to gradually identify her with the
Great Mother. After all, Astonema is only an emanation, an aspect of
her. And so are all the other Goddesses.”
She smiled at her daughter.
“I call it the New Order. And a New Order needs a New Doctrine.
In a few decades I want to unite all the followers of all the Goddesses.
They can continue worshiping whoever they are worshiping now, as
long as they understand that all those Goddesses are just the Great
Mother in another disguise. After a few decades the Great Mother
will let it be known that she wishes to be revered only in her true
state. That of the one and only Goddess.”
“You want to abolish all the other Goddesses?” Martillia said in
awe.
“Not only the Goddesses, my child. The Gods as well. They are an
abomination anyhow. Whoever heard of a male God? The concept is
too ridiculous for words.”
“I agree, of course, but it seems your plan is even more ambitious
than Griswinda’s was.”
“It is. But remember, children learn their prayers from their
mothers, not from their fathers. The Order has existed for ages, so
what are a few decades... Unlike Griswinda I have no hope to see my
plans come to full fruition. The best I can do is set us firmly on a new
course.”
The First Daughter fell silent. Martillia put a hand on her shoulder.
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“Ah, well,” she sighed, “you can readily see that we need to
reinforce our armed branch, the Sisterhood. That’s why I asked you
here. Most of the priestesses of the other Goddesses are not going to
be very happy. Some convincing is likely to be necessary, don’t you
think?”
“Just leave it to me.” Martillia grinned. “You know me. I can be
very persuasive.”
They entered the temple. It was not very imposing, but rather
cozy, comforting. It also wasn’t kept up very well. Votive offerings lay
on the floor as well as on the altar.
“And Anaxantis?” Martillia asked after a while.
“We’ll see. Anyway, we are not going after him. Griswinda’s plan
died with her. We’ll wait till he comes here, to Zyntrea. If he ever
does. He has to survive the Mukthars and his family first. I don’t
know which is the greater danger. In the meantime we’ll concentrate
all our efforts here, where we are strong. Where we have many
chapters. Where we already have a weak king. And then, when and if
he comes, hopefully he’ll find us in a far stronger position.”
She smiled thinly.
“I also want to do something about our finances. We are rich of
course, but I want us to become immensely, unimaginably rich.”
She took a small golden ring from the altar.
“Look here,” she said. “Someone left this very recently, or the
locals would already have stolen it. It’s not worth very much. The
gold is not very pure and the workmanship is shoddy. Yet, I’m sure
this was very valuable for someone. An heirloom of some kind and
probably the only jewelery of any substance the poor soul possessed.
I want to reorganize all that. Offerings should be brought only to the
Great Mother. We will teach people that not even the one and only
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Goddess works for free. We will revive the concept of Murochdill, the
terrible place where wicked people go when they die. We will teach
them that they are all wicked and that only the Great Mother can
save them.”
“And that offerings are the best way to make her smile upon you,”
Martillia scoffed. “I thought the Order didn’t believe in Murochdill?”
“We don’t. But what is known in the inner sanctum of the Order
and what is said to simple people are two different things, my dear.”
She laid the small ring carefully back on the altar.
“Let’s go back outside. We will discuss how we will make the
Sisterhood even more into a finely honed weapon than it is today. I
have a few modest suggestions.”
She went outside. When she had turned her back, Martillia took
the small ring from the altar, grinned at the Goddess and her dove,
and followed the First Daughter.
A few hours later the women were done talking. Martillia
gestured to Dirina to bring the horses.
“Remember what I said about her,” the First Daughter said.
“I will,” Martillia answered.
“But will you do something about it?”
Martillia laughed out loud.
“You’re very pushy, you know, mother?”
Trysulda looked at her with astonishment.
“I think that is the first time since you were five that you have
called me mother,” she said, clearly moved.
“As you tell me so often yourself, you are my mother, aren’t you?”
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They looked at each other and laughed.
“Yes, my daughter, that I am.”
When the First Daughter was gone, Martillia and Dirina mounted
their horses in their turn. Martillia set a leisurely pace.
“So,” she said to the still brooding girl, “I was thinking of not going
immediately immediately to the chapter house.”
“Oh?” was all she got by way of response.
“No, I fancy a good meal and some pitchers of strong wine. You
could go to the chapter house on your own, I suppose, but there is
this quiet tavern I know.”
“And you want me to go with you?”
Martillia nodded.
“My treat. And don’t worry about the wine. They have a stable
and clean rooms.”
“Do they now?” Dirina said with budding enthusiasm.
Martillia smiled at her.
“I can’t afford two rooms, though, so you will have to share the
bed with me. I’m sorry.”
“I’ll manage somehow,” Dirina said, barely capable of restraining
herself from jumping on Martillia’s horse and smothering her with
kisses.
“It works. It works. I prayed to the great Goddess Murandana and
already she is fulfilling my wish. She truly is the Goddess of lost causes,
for if ever there was a hopeless case it was Martillia. A shame it cost me
mother’s ring though.”
“Before I forget,” Martillia said casually, groping around in her
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pouch and retrieving a small object, “here is your ring back. I found
it on the floor of the temple. You must have lost it.”
Dirina took the ring with open mouth and thanked the Goddess
even more. She obviously didn’t want to get paid for her kindness.
“You should be more careful, my dear. It would be a shame to lose
such a beautiful ring. Not that you need it, but it looks so pretty on
your hand. What you do need, however, is someone to take care of
you.”
Dirina smiled sheepishly. She would have happily died then and
there.
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“Thank you,” Emelasuntha said, and she smiled radiantly. She