Old King Severmist of Kerastis, Aram, and Akamantis stood on a rock outcropping on the sea side of the pass through the Golden Mountains down into the rich plains of Tharsis and shook his fists in frustration and despair. For the third time in as many days the frontal assault on the High Castle of King Kleemus, his cousin and erstwhile ally, had failed.
"How much longer will you hold against my might?" the old king roared out in his obsession. "Two long years. See this beard? It nigh reaches the ground and is as gray as the skies over your winter land."
"Perhaps it is time to suggest just going around the castle and down into the valley, sire," one of the king's advisers said timidly, cowering at the king's side. Unfortunately, he had come too close, though, and, with one swipe of his mail-encased hand, the king slapped him across the path, from whence he did not rise.
The king knew they could not continue this siege for two more years. His own health would not permit it. He would not live to enter Tharsis then, and all would be lost without him at the helm. Then his mission would be frustrated—to seal his legitimacy even after his death and put to rest for all time the ebbing rumor of the Oracle at Noto's declaration of High Kingship over all of the lands in the region for the progeny of old King Cresum.
"The High Castle remains the key," he growled. "It is the strongest point in Tharsis. If we take the castle, all of the rest in the valley will open its doors to us. If not, it is a fight on every doorstep and a lance at our backs, between us and the sea. We must have the castle. Must I do the thinking for us all? Is there no one here with the wit to follow on from me?"
"Sire," a low, but assured voice spoke up from the shadows, "Might I—?"
"Why be you here?" the king cried out, almost in anguish. "You are nothing but the king's dancer and the sheath for my sword. You belong in the train with the women and the other women in men's clothes. How dare you attend and speak out. Better yet, get you to the High Castle. From what is reported to me, those within are sodomites all."
"We have Raum in the castle." Cleus gritted his teeth at the arrogance and convenient memory of Severmist. Where was he, Cleus thought, when I led the storming of Enna. He was sipping in his cups on his flagship off the beach at Cefalu, Cleus added in his mind, supplying his own answer. He was determined to continue in the forefront of this siege, though, and to show his metal to all those who would survive Severmist. He was posturing for the ages now, seeing the nearness of the end of his life in this world. With determination, Cleus continued with his counsel, "Perhaps we—"
"Be damned and be gone with you, pup. It is because of you that Raum is there. I'll have no more words from you, boy."
And then all was silent as the shadows of night descended on the pass from the sea through the Golden Mountains and down into Tharsis, and the lights in the High Castle yet burned, telling of comfort and safety.
And yet the king's catamite was so bold to have not returned to the train as ordered. He knew the old king. The man he'd known as the Prince of Madness was mercurial and would call for him in the night, not remembering he had been dismissed, and roaring with anger if he were not there.
And sure enough, the many moldering war wounds and advance of age in King Severmist's body were denying him sleep, and he called for his calamite. And the young man was there in an instant, naked and bearing the soothing oil with which he rubbed his king's body before taking the old man's phallus in his mouth and bringing him to life and then straddling him and riding his staff like a camel in the Aram desert until the old man dribbled his seed and drifted off to sleep with no more than a murmured, "Thank you, Cleus." Seemingly nothing in the way of homage, but far more than Severmist accorded any other human being.
If the king were introspective enough and capable of telling a truth, he would acknowledge that he loved this catamite of his as he loved no other. And both the Watchman and Cleus had worked tirelessly to make this so—to make what happened with Severmist in the end that much more satisfying and fitting.
From the shadows, the Watchman kept vigil. He could end it now for the traitor to his own king with the sigh of a dirk. But this fulfillment of the prophecy of the oracle needed to be public, the ultimate disloyalty needed to be equal to that which Severmist had shown two kings of Aram. And, for the sake of the ancestors, the one who delivered Severmist into the hands of the gods of the netherworld should, the Watchman believed, be a progeny of Cresum. And that was not all. The prophecy was fading. It needed to be brought to life in a way that all could see and there would be no doubt, no hesitation for all to bow their knee.
As he had planned many years ago, the Watchman assumed that Toma would be the vehicle for this part of what needed to be.
At that moment, though, the Watchman felt the searing pain as of a lightning bolt coursing through his body from the top of his head through to the vitals of his torso, and he sensed more than heard the voices of the gods ripping into and through his body, telling him that the hand of neither Toma nor Cleus could dispatch Severmist, the last tyrant standing in the way of the unity and time of peace spoken of by the Oracle at Noto, if each was to fulfill his own destiny. To one it would provide something that was not his to have. And for the other, it was not a fitting start to the reign of a High King who was to bring unity and peace to the people. Thus, the gods seared into the Watchman's consciousness, it was he himself who would have to take on one last task before he could rest. But all in the proper time.
Turning his eyes to the skies, the Watchman lifted his hands and cried out, "Let what is to be be." And then he fell down in an exhausted stupor from which he did not awaken until those in attendance to him feared he was dead.
* * * *
The Grand Marshal of Tharsis, the man closest to King Kleemus and his principal military adviser, the man who had devised and carried out the successful defense of Tharsis against the invading barbarians from the sea in close consort with his king for the past two years, was galloping through the forest at the valley base of the High Castle with his small band of hunters, bringing home venison. The Grand Marshal disdained the forces of the Akamantises and went out on these forays on purpose to show those under siege in the High Castle how safe they were in his hands. Few of the besieger's raiding parties ventured beyond the castle and down into the valley, and the Grand Marshal's spies knew when they were afoot.
But on the road to the castle, the Grand Marshal pulled his horse up and his lip curled up. Here was something he had not been apprised of. Heads would roll for overlooking this. This was a king's highway. What was such a vehicle doing here?
Off on the side of the trail he spied a gypsy wagon, turned on its side, its contents strewn out around it and obviously the subject of pillage.
The Grand Marshal trotted over to the wagon, its scarlet and yellow wheels still spinning, and reached down and jerked an arrow out of the undercarriage and lifted it up for all to see.
"Double-edged point," said one minion.