Part 1 can be found here.
SPOILER WARNING: THIS ENTRY CONTAINS SPOILERS FOR THE FIRST THREE NOVELS OF THE ASPECT-EMPEROR SERIES.
Drusas Achamian, former sorcerer of the Mandate and now the only Wizard of the Three Seas.
At one time Drusas Achamian was an agent of the Mandate, a
sorcerer haunted by dreams of Seswatha, hero of the First Apocalypse, and by
fears that the Second was coming. During the chaotic swirl of the Holy War he
found a man whom he believed could save humanity and lead it to victory over
the ancient foe, the Unholy Consult. Anasûrimbor Kellhus led the Holy War to
victory, but in doing so he stole away Achamian’s love, Esmenet, and subverted
the religious fervour, faith and love of millions to build himself an empire.
Faced with the choice of kneeling to the Aspect-Emperor or
repudiating him, Achamian chose the latter. Unimpeded, at the Aspect-Emperor’s express
command, Achamian fled into the wilds of Galeoth, erecting a tower to live in
solitude and meditate on one question: “Who
is the Aspect-Emperor?”
Achamian knew only a few facts and hints, gained from the
all-too-brief revelations of Cnaiür urs Skiötha in the dying hours of the war.
He knew that Kellhus was Dûnyain, the member of an almost unknown sect that had
survived the Apocalypse and the two thousand years since in utter solitude. He had
teased out the name Ishuäl from Seswatha’s dreams, the secret redoubt of the
House Anasûrimbor ere the fall of Kûniüri, but did not know where it could be
found. In desperation, he plunged further into the dreams, ploughing into them
night after night, writing down every nuance and every detail for signs of
clues to the Dûnyain’s origins, which he now believed lay in the catastrophes
of those times. Over time he teased some new revelations from the dreams, such
as the fact that Seswatha had seduced his friend Anasûrimbor Celmomas II’s
wife, and that the famed hero Nau-Cayûti may have been born from Seswatha’s
line rather than the house of Anasûrimbor. But, although historically
scandalous, Achamian could not tease meaning from such revelations.
In the early spring of 4132 Year-of-the-Tusk, nigh on twenty
years since the Fall of Shimeh, Drusas Achamian received a surprising visitor:
Anasûrimbor Mimara, the oldest child and first daughter of Esmenet of Sumna.
Born long before the Holy War, when famine stalked the city and her mother was
forced to give her away to save her life, Mimara’s life had been hard and
cruel. Not long after Esmenet was installed in Momemn as Empress, she sent
agents to scour the Three Seas to find Mimara and eventually they succeeded.
But in the cold hallways of the Andiamine Heights, Mimara did not found the
home she sought. Her half-brothers and half-sisters, the children of Kellhus,
were not quite human and she found
forging a bond with the mother who had abandoned her difficult. Mimara
eventually learned that she was of the Few, but sorcery was denied to her, even membership of the newly-crafted School of Witches, the Swayal Compact. Frustrated, she
abandoned Momemn and sought out Achamian, the sorcerer-without-a-school, a wizard.
Mimara tried to convince Achamian to teach her the Gnosis, but
Achamian resisted, even after she seduced him. Instead they swapped stories,
Achamian revealing his quest to find Kellhus’s birthplace and Mimara revealing
her own harsh upbringing. In the midst of the conversation, Mimara revealed
something Achamian was not expecting:
The Great Ordeal
marches, old man.
The Great Ordeal arrives at Sakarpus, the City of the Plains and home to the famed Chorae Hoard.
From across the Three Seas assembled an armed host dwarfing
any in history. A third of a million men, clad in the finest armour and
carrying the stoutest blades. A thousand or more sorcerers, assembled from all
of the Schools. Tens of thousands of horses, millions of arrows. An army ten
years in the planning. It gathered near the Kathol Pass, assembling under the
watchful eyes of the Believer-Kings and the great heroes of the Holy War, chief
amongst them Coithus Saubon and Nersei Proyas, the Exalt-Generals.
The army marched north and west, through the mountains and
into the edges of civilisation. They closed around Sakarpus, the mighty
city-of-the-plains which had survived even the No-God itself during the First
Apocalypse and whose mighty Chorae Hoard struck fear into the hearts of
sorcerers. But not the Aspect-Emperor. Kellhus moved to take the city and King
Horweel chose resistance, but also knew that his resistance was doomed. He
commanded that his son, Sorweel, be kept safe, even as his own death drew near.
After the city’s surrender, Kellhus came before Sorweel and told him that he
was now King of Sakarpus and that his father would forgive him for surviving
where his father had not. Sorweel was inducted into the ranks of the Great
Ordeal, riding in the Scions, a horse company made up of princely hostages from
across Eärwa. Sorweel’s new friends and allies included Zsoronga ut
Nganka’kull, the Successor Prince of Zeüm, and Eskeles, a Mandate sorcerer who
taught the young king Sheyic, the common tongue of the Three Seas. Sorweel also
learned of the Aspect-Emperor’s rise to power and why so many regarded him as a
prophet, but in his own heart was only hate and a desire for vengeance.
Also assigned to Sorweel was a slave, Porsparian. However,
Porsparian was also an initiate of the Cult of Yatwer, the fertility goddess.
He moulded the face of Yatwer out of the dirt and took mud from her lips to
paste over Sorweel’s face. Afterwards, Sorweel found himself able to lie to the
face of the Aspect-Emperor and not be
discovered. Yatwer’s blessing rendered Sorweel immune to the
Aspect-Emperor’s supposedly holy sight, which could discern almost instantly
the presence of Consult skin-spies and read the untruths from the lips of
practiced liars. Instead, Kellhus believed that Sorweel had become a true
follower and named him a Believer-King, one of the most exalted rulers in all
Eärwa…and a dagger positioned close to the Aspect-Emperor’s heart.
The Great Ordeal (4132 Year-of-the-Tusk) was the largest undertaking in history. Almost four and a half times the size of the First Ordeal of the Apocalypse, comprising over three hundred thousand soldiers and well over a thousand sorcerers-of-rank, it was ten years in the planning and preparation. Its goal was nothing less than the utter destruction of foul Golgotterath, the casting down of the Golden Horns and the annihilation of the Unholy Consult.
Mimara’s news panicked Drusas Achamian, who believed that
momentous events were passing, maybe even the events that would trigger the Second Apocalypse rather
than forestall it. Indeed, from his dreams he recalled the great First Ordeal
of Celmomas, an army fashioned at the urging of Seswatha to destroy Golgotterath
ere the rise of the No-God but which had ultimately failed. Leaving Mimara
behind, Achamian travelled to Marrow and there commissioned the services of the
Skin Eaters, a party of “scalpers”, mercenaries who travelled the far side of
the Osthwai Mountains in search of Sranc bounty.
Achamian told them of fabled Sauglish, the greatest seat of
learning in Eärwa. It had fallen to the No-God during the Apocalypse, but its
Great Library had not been completely destroyed. There, Achamian hoped to find
the secret location of Ishuäl. However, he also claimed the fabled Coffers, the
Library’s great treasury, likely still endured and would reward the mercenaries
with great riches. The mercenaries were dubious, since the mission would
involve crossing many hundreds of miles of dangerous territory, but their greed
and the urging of their mysterious Nonman ally, Incariol or “Cleric”, convinced
them to take the commission. Soon after setting out they were joined by Mimara,
who had tracked Achamian from his home. Fearing for her safety amongst such
dangerous men, Achamian claimed her as his daughter. Mimara disclosed to
Achamian a secret that she had been hiding her whole life: she bore a “secret
eye”, one which can see the absolute good and evil in all people. Achamian
recognised this as the Judging Eye,
an exceedingly rare and potent ability. Troubled, he would not reveal more.
The Skin Eaters make their way through the ancient Nonman ruins of Cil-Aujas.
Soon after setting out, the party discovered that the passes
through the mountains had been closed by spring blizzards. They instead chanced
the ancient Nonman Mansion of Cil-Aujas. The Mansion had survived the ancient
Cûno-Inchoroi Wars, the wars against the invading hordes of men and even the
No-God, but had been betrayed and sacked by the armies of men allied to it, an
act of treachery renowned in history. The scalpers passed through the mountain
only to find it infested with Sranc. A dangerous running battle through the
mountain eventually ended in an even greater horror: the shade of Gin’yursis,
the Nonman King of Cil-Aujas, possessed Cleric and attacked the rest of the
party. The rest of the group was outmatched, but Mimara used her Judging Eye on
one of their Chorae, transforming it into a shining white Tear of God. This
caused Gin’yursis’s shade to dissipate, and a troubled Cleric to return to
normal. Shaken, the party emerged on the far side of the Osthwai Mountains and
began the gruelling march – the slog-of-slogs – through the forested
wilderness.
In Momemn, capital of the New Empire, the Empress Esmenet
struggled to hold the Empire together in her husband’s absence. Her most
capable children and stepson – Kayûtas, Serwa and Moënghus – had joined the
Great Ordeal. Her daughter Theliopa remained as an advisor, but she was
scarcely human, possessing uncanny insights and wisdom that had cracked her
sanity. Inrilatas was locked away atop the Andiamine Heights for his own safety
and the safety of those around him. Only the twins Kelmomas and Samarmas give
her any joy, but she was unaware that Kelmomas was a cunning, conniving little
creature, possessing both the analytical power of the Dûnyain and a callous
disregard for the consequences of his actions. Kelmomas engineered the death of
his idiot twin, determined to make his mother love him all the more.
But a new threat grew from within the Empire. Psatma
Nannaferi, the outlawed Mother-Supreme of the Cult of Yatwer, declared her
goddess’s war against the House of Anasûrimbor. A holy assassin, the White-Luck
Warrior (so-called because how he could bend circumstance and fortune to his
will), revealed himself and revealed his mission to lay waste to the House
Imperial. Yatwer, as the god most fervently and widely-worshipped by the slaves
and caste-menials of the Three Seas, commanded enormous respect and power and
soon unrest began to spread throughout the entire Empire.
Distracted by Samarmas’s death, Esmenet employed the aid of
her brother-in-law Maithanet, Shriah of the Thousand Temples, to overcome this
new threat. Maithanet reminded her that the gods could not see, perceive or
even comprehend the Consult, the Inchoroi or the No-God and were utterly blind
to the coming threat of the Second Apocalypse (as they were to the First,
seeing it instead as inexplicable carnage wrought by man against himself).
Maithanet advised turning the Yatwerians against themselves by convincing their
official Matriarch, Sharacinth, to condemn Nannaferi. This plan was
successful, albeit only when Kellhus translocated from the Ordeal to the palace
to cower the woman, but sabotaged when Kelmomas, seeking to further isolate his
mother from her other concerns, murdered Sharacinth and her retinue. This
further turned the poor of the Empire against the imperial family.
The Skin Eaters fled from Cil-Aujas into the Mop, the vast,
untamed forests covered the lands north and east from the Osthwai Mountains to
the Sea of Cerish. Their course would take them through the ruins of the
Apocalypse, skirting the edges of the fallen Meörn Empire. The road was long
and beset by challenges: Sranc in ever-increasing numbers, and rival scalpers
eager to kill them and loot their bodies. There was also a threat from within.
Using her Judging Eye, Mimara discovered that one of their number, Soma, was a
skin-spy. Achamian attempted to parley with the creature, but it chose to flee.
It shadowed the party, intervening during a Sranc raid to kill one of the
creatures before it could harm Mimara, to her bemusement. It informed her that
she was pregnant with Achamian’s child. Soma was working on the orders of the
Inchoroi, communicating with them by Synthese. Their order was that Mimara must
be protected all the way to Golgotterath if necessary. All of the prophecies
must be respected, "the false as much as the true".
The Great Ordeal entered the heart of the vast Istyuli
Plains, a colossal tableland extending across thousands of miles. Concerned
with supply, the Aspect-Emperor ordered that the Ordeal should split into four
armies and march separately to improve their chances of foraging. Believer-King
Sorweel earned respect for his scouting (using both his native knowledge of the
plains and also information gained from his divine connection to Yatwer), which
uncovered evidence of Sranc having been in the region recently but having now fallen back before the Ordeal. Such signs grew until they become
indisputable: a vast Sranc Horde was gathering ahead of the Ordeal, falling
back before it and accumulating all the tribes of the plains. The numbers
lying beyond the northern horizon defied all rationality, and the Scions raced
back to the Ordeal to give them warning.
The Culling. Hundreds of sorcerers scour the edges of the Sranc Horde, forcing them back whilst outriders of the Great Ordeal slaughter the stragglers. This would continue for day after day for months as the Ordeal crossed the Istyuli Plains, and yet the Sranc could still summon numbers that would blanket the horizon.
They halted at last, swamped by the enemy and protected from
death only by Eskeles’ sorcerous wards. At Sorweel’s urging, Eskeles found a
way of alerting the Ordeal by illuminating the sky above him with a Bar of
Heaven. They were rescued by witches led by Anasûrimbor Serwa and returned to
the Ordeal. Sorweel was praised for his actions, which had saved the Ordeal from
a costly ambush. In the aftermath of the action, the Ordeal deployed its
sorcerers to begin the Culling, with hundreds of sorcerers using vast amounts
of power to burn Sranc in their thousands and tens of thousands from above. The
slaughter was immense, but the losses were made good – and more – by
freshly-arriving Sranc clans from the High Istyuli.
Sorweel confessed his relationship with Yatwer to his friend
Zsoaronga, who realised that Sorweel had been positioned as a Narindari, a divine assassin sent to
murder Kellhus. This seemed confirmed when Kellhus sent the order to execute
all slaves and unnecessary non-combatants to help preserve food supplies,
Porsparian amongst them. Before his death, Porsparian summoned a visage of
Yatwer. Yatwer gave Sorweel a mighty gift: a single Chorae. The image
disappeared and Porsparian killed himself. Sorweel was now close enough to kill
the Aspect-Emperor, but feared that Yatwer’s protection would not be enough. He
sought out Serwa to thank her for saving him, and discovered that she could not
divine either his hidden Chorae nor his deception.
Soonafter, surprising news came: Ishterebinth, last of the
Nonmen Mansions, had rallied to Kellhus’s cause. A Nonmen emissary of King
Nil’giccas offered to support the Ordeal if, in return, three hostages were
sent to the Mansion and the Ordeal could prove its worth by retaking Dagliash,
the ancient fortress of men built atop the fallen Mansion of Viri. For his
hostages Kellhus chose his stepson Moënghus, his daughter Serwa…and Sorweel.
Using metagnostic cants of translocation, Serwa took her brother and Sorweel to
Ishterebinth at great speed. On this journey Sorweel learned that Serwa and her
stepbrother were involved in an ill-advised, passionate relationship.
The Great Ordeal approached the shores of Neleöst, the Misty
Sea, but also fell into a trap. The Army of the South fortified the ruined
stronghold of Irsûlor on the western flank of the Ordeal, unaware that the
Sranc Horde had swung to the west in an attempt to catch them by surprise. The
Mandate and the Vokalati schools joined forces to burn the Sranc, but the
creatures suddenly surged through the curtain of magic to swamp the fortress.
The Consult had also hidden a legion of Bashrag within the ruins. At a key
moment, they emerged to shatter the human lines. In the slaughter that followed
the Army of the South was utterly destroyed, many sorcerers dying with them.
In the wake of the catastrophe, with near a quarter of the
Ordeal lost, the three remaining armies of the Ordeal reunited and heard the
command of the Aspect-Emperor on the holy heights of the great hill Swaranûl,
overlooking the sea. The Ordeal had exhausted its supplies and would now have
to eat the bodies of the fallen Sranc.
The Skin Eaters pressed on across the Istyuli Plains,
crossing the line of march of the Ordeal. With rations low, Cleric had taken to
dispensing Qirri, a form of Nonman
sustenance, to the company. It fortified them, allowing them to march longer
and harder than would otherwise be possible. Mimara eventually learned the
truth: Qirri was the powdered remains of ancient Nonmen heroes, and the pouch
Cleric carried contained none of than the remains of Cû'jara-Cinmoi himself.
Horrified, Achamian attempted to refuse the Qirri. He was bound
and gagged by the other scalpers. Captain Kosoter then revealed that he was an
agent of Anasûrimbor Kellhus, begging Mimara to help save him from damnation.
Mimara used the Judging Eye on Kosoter and discovered that his soul was
blackened from the atrocities he had carried out at the Aspect-Emperor’s
command, and he was utterly beyond redemption.
The party reached the ruins of Sauglish, but Mimara had
discovered another truth: Cleric was none other than Nil’giccas himself, the
High King of Ishterebinth and the great hero of the Cûno-Inchoroi Wars. She
disclosed this to Achamian, who was released. Kosoter ordered Cleric and
Achamian into the ruins to find the Library and the Coffers, whilst he kept
Mimara as surety. However, Kosoter’s men, traumatised by the horrors of their journey, turned and murdered him. Mimara would
have been killed had not the skin-spy Soma returned and saved her for reasons
still unclear.
Cleric, a Nonman Erratic working with the Skin Eaters.
In the ruins of Sauglish Achamian attempted to reason with
Cleric by awakening his memories of Nil’giccas, but this backfired, awakening
instead the Nonman’s desire for pain and suffering, for only those things made
impressions in his multi-millennial memory. Their burgeoning discord was
interrupted by the discovery within Sauglish of Wutteät, the Father-of-Dragons,
a dread Wracu of the Ark who had once borne the obscene King Sil on his back.
Achamian attempted to reason with the creature in exchange for the map to
Ishuäl, learning that he had travelled on the Ark with the Inchoroi from other
worlds. The goal of the Inchoroi was to reduce the number of souls on any given
world to just 144,000, in pursuit of their cause of sealing the world against
the Outside and avoiding damnation.
Battle erupted and the Mandate schoolman and Qûya sorcerer
combined their power to drive the creature from the skies, as in the days of old. But Nil’giccas
turned on Achamian and would have killed him, had Achamian not noticed that
Nil’giccas had raised no sorcerous wards of his own, inviting his own
destruction. Achamian, sorrowfully, complied. Afterwards he burned the great Nonman's remains, taking the ashes as Qirri. In the ruins of the library,
using Seswatha’s memories, he found the map showing where House Anasûrimbor had
secretly built Ishuäl, high in the Demua Mountains.
Returning to the camp, Achamian found Mimara safe but the
skin-spy, Kosoter and most of his men dead and the rest fled. They now set out
north and west for the mountains.
Second Negotiant Malowebi, a Mbimayu Schoolman of Zeüm, was
sent to the camp of Fanayal to assess his strength and see if the Fanim and Zeüm
could strike up an alliance to oppose the Aspect-Emperor. Malowebi was unimpressed with Fanayal, whose twenty years of exile in the desert had taken a
toll, but was more heartened by the continued survival of Meppa, the Last
Cishaurim. The Fanim marched on the Sempis River Valley, Malowebi accompanying them as an observer on behalf of the Great Satakhan.
In Momemn, the Empress learned of the advancing Fanim
armies. Disturbed, and aware how militarily weak the New Empire was in Kellhus’s
absence, she showed Kelmomas a secret network of tunnels riddling the Andiamine
Heights. Suspicious of Maithanet’s role in events, the Empress asked her children
for help. Theliopa suggested that she use Inrilatas to sound out Maithanet’s
goals. Although mad, Inrilatas had also inherited more of his father’s gifts
than any of his siblings. Esmenet complied, convincing Maithanet to visit
Inrilatas. The only other person present was Kelmomas. Maithanet admitted he
had doubts about Kellhus’s plans, but only because Kellhus has allowed his love for his children and wife to cloud
the Thousandfold Thought (to the surprise of Kelmomas, who believed his father
incapable of such an emotion). Inrilatas exposed Kelmomas’s crimes, shocking
even Maithanet, before attempting to murder him. He failed and Maithanet killed
Inrilatas in self-defence. Kelmomas denounced his uncle as an assassin and
murderer, throwing the city into an uproar. Esmenet contracted an assassin to
kill her brother-in-law, unaware that the man she found for the job was the
White-Luck Warrior himself.
The Fanim armies took Iothiah, the capital of Old Shigek,
impressing even the sceptical Malowebi. After the conquest Fanayal was confronted
by Psatma Nannaferi who, speaking for the Cult of Yatwer (and Yatwer herself),
cultivated an alliance with the Fanim to bring down the demon-emperor Kellhus.
Malowebi reported on these events to his Satakhan, but cautioned that Kellhus
emptying the Three Seas of armies suggested that he genuinely believed in the
threat of the Consult and the No-God. The Satakhan nevertheless sensed an
opportunity. He told Malowebi to offer Fanayal an alliance: High Holy Zeüm
would support the Fanim if they could take Momemn itself.
Esmenet met with her assassin in secret in the city, only to
find that Maithanet’s troops had captured the palace in her absence. Taken into
hiding by her captain of the guards, Esmenet fretted over the fate of her
children, especially Kelmomas. However, Kelmomas made use of the secret
passages she had shown him to hide from guards, occasionally emerging to steal
food (and, horrifically, to kill guards and use them for sustenance).
Esmenet was eventually found and taken back to the palace.
Maithanet demanded to know why she had tried to kill him, but she said this had
not been her intent. Using his Dûnyain conditioning, Maithanet realised she
spoke true. Maithanet released her and told her his suspicion: that Kellhus had
created the New Empire purely as a machine to create the forces he needed to
march on Golgotterath. That achieved, he no longer required the Empire and had
abandoned it to its ruin. Esmenet was horrified. Maithanet announced the
reconciliation of the Imperial Throne and the Thousand Temples, but was
suddenly struck down by the White-Luck Warrior, acting on Esmenet’s orders.
Esmenet declared Maithanet a traitor and heretic, the murderer of the
Aspect-Emperor’s son. The city rallied to her cause, just the trumpets of the
Fanim sounded out and Fanayal’s army arrived to besiege the city.
Achamian’s dreams had been changing for years, but now they
had taken on a new level of detail, images from not just Seswatha but also his great
friend Celmomas and his son Nau-Cayûti. On the Fields of Eleneöt,
Achamian saw Celmomas’s death from the
perspective of Celmomas himself. At the moment of his death he uttered his
famous prophecy, that at the end of the world an Anasûrimbor would return. But
when he uttered this prophecy it was because a vision of Gilgaöl, God of War,
had come before him, holding an image of a man. And that man was Anasûrimbor
Kellhus. This revelation shocked Achamian but he did not know what to make of
it.
In Ishterebinth, the envoys Sorweel, Serwa and Moënghus were
seized by the Nonmen and put to the question. Sorweel quickly discovered that
Nil’giccas was missing, having fled in years past, and that the remaining Nonmen
had formed an alliance with the Consult. The interrogation of Sorweel
discovered his connection to Yatwer and his destiny was to kill the
Aspect-Emperor. Upon the revelation of this news, he was released into the
custody of Oinaral Lastborn, who could provide him aid in his quest. He was
given the Amiolas, one of the greatest sorcerous artifacts in Nonman history, which
bonded his soul to that of a slain malcontent, Immiriccas. This resulted in
Sorweel learning the Nonman language but also learning the truth of the Unholy
Consult: through Immiriccas’s memories he relieved some of the Cûno-Inchoroi
Wars. Thus, the Consult’s gambit backfired: Sorweel became convinced of the
righteousness of the Aspect-Emperor’s cause.
Anasûrimbor Serwa, daughter of the Aspect-Emperor, Grandmistress of the Swayal Compact, heroine of the Great Ordeal. Wielder of the Metagnosis, the most powerful sorcerer since Titirga himself, save only her father.
Oinaral had also become doubtful of the wisdom of allying
with the great enemy, so took Sorweel into the deepest part of the mountain.
They sought Oirûnas, Oinaral’s father, a great hero of the wars against the
Inchoroi. Find him they did, but the hero had been driven utterly insane by the
passage of the millennia. In a rage he slew his son, but Sorweel was able to
guide him to the inhabited part of the mountain. There Oirûnas, Lord of the
Watch, slew Nin’ciljiras, the Consult pretender to the throne of Ishterebinth
and the last survivor of the line of Nin’janjin, the Traitor-King. During the resulting chaos Sorweel
freed Moënghus, who had been near broken by his captivity, and Serwa, who had
not. Serwa sang her metagnostic cants of destruction, laying waste to the
Exalted Mansion and thus accomplishing what even the No-God had failed to do:
the ruin of Ishterebinth.
The Great Ordeal marched north from the charnel fields of Irsûlor,
crossing into the ancient, long-fallen kingdom of Aörsi. With their food gone,
the Ordeal followed the command to consume Sranc. The Culling took on a new
form, with Sranc corpses now collected for consumption. As the Ordeal marched,
its character changed, becoming something more animal. The Exalt-General,
Nersei Proyas, became concerned at this turn of events, believing it threatened
both the spiritual and moral superiority of the cause. He turned to his
Aspect-Emperor, hoping for reassurance, but instead Kellhus admitted the
unthinkable: that he was just a man searching for answers and doing the best he
could. He was no god, no prophet, just a man, with a man’s needs. He "seduced" an
uncomprehending Proyas.
This act broke Proyas’s faith in the Aspect-Emperor. He
sought advice and aid from his brother in rank and war, Coithus Saubon, but
Saubon remained constant in his belief in the Aspect-Emperor’s plans.
Now the Great Ordeal drew close to the River Sursa and the small
mountain range known as the Urokkas, which lay above the fallen
Nonman mansion of Viri. During the time of the First Ordeal and the Apocalypse,
a great fortress called Dagliash had been built atop Antareg, the northern-most
of the mountains. Kellhus now planned to use the geography of the region to go
on the offensive.
The great Sranc Horde was forced to divide around the
mountains and skirt the river, allowing the Ordeal to concentrate the bulk of
its forces against a smaller fraction of the Horde and destroy it in detail.
The sorcerers brought their full power to bear against the Horde and bloody slaughter
was wrecked in a fashion never before seen. The Sranc were suddenly being
annihilated at a speed they could not replace, and their destruction seemed
imminent.
However, Kellhus perceived movement in the fallen mansion
and realised that the Consult had seeded many Sranc and Bashrags in the ruins,
preparing to catch the Ordeal unawares. Saubon led an assault on the mountain
of Antareg and engaged the Bashrags instead, defeating the Consult’s plans.
Victory seemed near, so the Inchoroi Aurang took the field,
challenging the sorcerers. Saccarees, the head of the Mandate, met the
challenge but Aurang suddenly fled. Sensing this was a distraction, Kellhus
returned to the peak of Antareg and emptied
it, pulling the contents of the fallen fortress of Dagliash and the Nonman
mansion below up into the sky and hurling them down onto the Horde. Amongst the
artefacts pulled out of the ruins was a strange Tekne device, a cube with
unknown figures on it, changing, counting down…
The Aspect-Emperor translocated from the field, leaving
behind a command to the Great Ordeal to flee
Dagliash, to abandon the mountain. The army complied but for those closest to
the device there was no time. A tremendous light filled the sky, a roaring
blast that consumed the mountain top, most of the Sranc Horde and an
appreciable fraction of the Great Ordeal. Coithus Saubon and those closest to
the device were killed instantly, vaporised by a fireball that rose into the
sky and became a dark mushroom cloud filling the sky. This was a weapon that
the Inchoroi had deployed before but rarely, only in the most desperate days of
their wars with the Nonmen. A Scalding.
Drusas Achamian and Anasûrimbor Mimara arrived at Ishuäl,
the stronghold of the Dûnyain. They sought answers but instead found ashes: the
Thousand-Thousand Halls were a desolate ruin, the bones of men, Bashrags and Sranc
and Nonmen everywhere. They also learned what had already been suspected, that
the Dûnyain were not fully human. Through surgery and genetic manipulation,
they had reduced their women to little more than breathing wombs for their
sons, the so-called Whale-mothers. The Judging Eye confirmed what was now
obvious: despite their claims to rationality and cold logic, the Dûnyain were absolute
evil, beyond any question. The question now arose if Kellhus was also evil. Achamian told Mimara that their mission now had a new goal: to apprehend Kellhus with the Judging Eye.
They also found survivors, the son and grandson of Kellhus.
They learned that the Consult had finally found Ishuäl and assaulted it in a
fury. It had taken years of bitter fighting, but they finally destroyed the
fortress, leaving behind just two survivors scrabbling for sustenance in the
dark. The man and the boy were Dûnyain, quick to analyse and grasp Mimara and
Achamian’s desires and motivations, but they were also stymied by both Achamian’s
sorcery and by the Judging Eye, which rendered their attempts at deception
moot. The father – the Survivor – whose sanity was already precarious after the
fall of Ishuäl, was driven to madness by the revelations and by the Qirri he was
given to consume. He threw himself to his death.
The three travellers descended the mountains north and
eastwards. On the horizon they saw a storm, and using sorcery Achamian magnified
the image to show the horror cloud rising above the far northern shore of the
Misty Sea. Then they were captured, taken prisoner by the Scylvendi. To his surprise, Achamian found himself once again in the company of Cnaiür urs Skiötha.
He learned that Cnaiür survived the aftermath of Shimeh and, helped by the
Consult skin-spies, had seized control of the entire Scylvendi race. They now
marched to Golgotterath, to the relief of the Unholy Consult. Cnaiür planned to
kill Anasûrimbor Kellhus, his hatred undimmed by the passage of twenty years. Learning of Mimara’s ability and that they
might be enemies of Kellhus themselves, Cnaiür chose to release them. The boy from
Ishuäl fled in another direction, both the Scylvendi and Achamian content to
let him go.
In the wilds of Kûniüri, Achamian dreamed of the First
Apocalypse, and the revelations shook him. Anasûrimbor Nau-Cayûti was poisoned
by his wife Iëva, who was jealous of his love for Aulisi, the love that had
compelled him to risk even the dread Ark. At her insistence, Nau-Cayûti was
buried rather than burned, but he was not dead. The poison had merely given him
the appearance of death. His still-breathing body was dug up by Aurang and borne to the Incû-Holoinas. There, he was tormented and tortured by the Consult, who demanded to know the
location of the Heron Spear. He discovered that Shaeönanra still lived thanks
to a hideous contrivance, a device which bound several still-living people
together. Shaeönanra’s soul moved between the bodies as a way of constantly
avoiding death and thus prolonging his life for millennia. Nau-Cayûti was subjected
to every horror imaginable but did not break. He refused to disclose the
location of the Heron Spear, enduring two years or more of interrogation.
Finally, he was forced to join a line of prisoners, weighed down by chains.
They were slowly drawn through the Ark and taken, one by one, inside a strange
object: a sarcophagus with eleven Chorae embedded in it.
The Carapace of the No-God. Awakening, Achamian was
horrified at the revelation, but could not yet grasp its full implications.
A representation of Ajokli, the Four-Horned God of Deceit.
In Momemn Esmenet had restored order and commanded the
defence of the city, defying several attempts to attack the walls. Kelmomas was
more intrigued by the White-Luck Warrior, seeing him stalk the halls and bring
about the death of his sister Theliopa, who had been the greatest threat to
him. Kelmomas has been driven mad, hearing the voice of his twin Sarmamas in
his ear and believing that Ajokli, the evil Four-Horned God, was now his
protector. In an unguarded moment, Kelmomas was caught celebrating his sister’s
death by his horrified mother and fled.
A powerful earthquake struck Momemn, the gods again moving
against the House of Anasûrimbor in its moment of weakness. The Fanim prepared
to attack, only for Kellhus to translocate straight into their midst. He killed
Fanayal and Nannaferi without hesitation, brought down Meppa in a sorcerous
exchange and took Malowebi as a prisoner. Malowebi attempted to invoke the Blue
Lotus Treaty between Zeüm and the Empire to ensure his safety, but the Aspect-Emperor
was unimpressed. Using his sword, he decapitated Malowebi and replaced his head
with that of one of the Decapitants, the demon-heads affixed to his hip. The possessing
demon took on the form of Malowebi as he was ordered by Kellhus to return to
Domyot and kill the Grand Satakhan. Malowebi's head, still conscious and aware, was tied to his hip instead.
Kellhus then returned to the palace, telling Esmenet he had
returned to rescue her. The White-Luck Warrior struck, Kelmomas distracting his
father at a crucial moment…
A fresh earthquake struck the city, the Andiamine Heights
collapsing in on themselves and everyone inside.
Thousands of miles to the north, Nersei Proyas regrouped the
Ordeal, finding that only a third of the force that had left the Empire now
survived. With the Aspect-Emperor missing, he commanded them to muster, to take
as much sustenance as they could and to cross the Sursa. The Golden Horns of
Golgotterath were very close now.
Credits
The artwork in this article was created by Jason Deem, known as Spiral Horizon, and used with his permission. You can find more of his spectacular work here. The maps are from Scott's website, adjusted by myself.
The Prince of Nothing Wiki was helpful in providing spelling checks and putting the timeline of events in better order.
Scott Bakker wrote the Second Apocalypse novels, for which this history is merely the backdrop and the scene-setting that comes before. Those novels are:
The Prince of Nothing
The Darkness That Comes Before (2003)
The Warrior-Prophet (2004)
The Thousandfold Thought (2005)
The Aspect-Emperor
The Judging Eye (2008)
The White-Luck Warrior (2011)
The Great Ordeal (2016)
The Unholy Consult (2017)
Thank you for reading The Wertzone. To help me provide better content, please consider contributing to my Patreon page and other funding methods, which will also get you exclusive content weeks before it goes live on my blogs. The Cities of Fantasy series is debuting on my Patreon feed and you can read it there one month before being published on the Wertzone.
Thank you for clarifying what the hell was going on in the books. I am a big fan of the series but The Great Ordeal was sadly aptly named.
ReplyDeleteWas it confirmed Serwas song was sorcery? Is that from the Unholy Consult? Just curious.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this excellent series of texts! Particularly for The Great Ordeal as my experience mirrored that of MrSquiggles.
ReplyDelete[SPOILERS] Rereading this post, which has a metric tonne of detail, I am reminded of a bunch of frustrations with the second series. Kelhus' translocation back to Momemn (twice now) just in time to save Esmenet is rather deus ex machina, Kosoter's unceremonious disposal was inconsequential relative to the reputation he had built up (three guys jump him, basically), the whole disposal of Ishual is somewhat a let down but maybe suits a plot purpose (Dunyain too powerful en masse?), Oinural's unceremonious death (lets go all this [long, boring] way and then WHACK done with you), and the 'Tekne device', I mean, ok, its a nuke. Hell, even the Predator's self destruct had the decency to count down in an alien hieroglyphic.
ReplyDeleteThe first trilogy is gold class, A-grade, super interesting and thought provoking material which I have literally bought for multiple friends (first book at least). But as they say in the game 'the second half is not living up to the first...'.