Chapter 18: A weapon wielded, secrets revealed.
Demon Child story about an alien girl, a child conceived in violence, a child of a demon cast adrift among a warrior society. In this chapter Aylanna is called to serve the Aga Khan and uses her magic to loosen the grip of the evil wizard has upon the dying man's mind.
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Aylanna's hands felt slippery with clammy sweat as she gripped the window sill of her room. The world whirled and spun around her and her stomach churned ominously. She closed her eyes to block out the pool of vomit that she had so recently spewed out the open window. For once the endless rain was a blessing. Its cool touch rinsed the tears from her face, clearing her head and washing away the evidence of her recent sickness.
It was the price she had to pay for indulging in the intoxicating sense of freedom that accompanied leaving her body. She knew the dizziness and nausea were not the greatest risk. The primary danger was straying too far and never returning. Without her spirit to feed its flame, the spark of life within her body would flicker, fade and eventually die.
But the alternative was worse. To remain trapped in this maze of narrow corridors and square rooms would inevitably extinguish the light of her spirit. So each night she slipped free from the chains of her mortal form and wandered. She craved the wind and the freedom of the sky but the rainclouds were an endless haze of grey and the risk of losing her way was too great, so she explored the labyrinth of the Aga Khan's court.
She had learned much from her journeys. While the stone walls remained thick and unassailable, she could move with the speed of thought and pass through the cracks of the window shutters or wooden doors as easily as a puff of air. She watched the four women, the wives of the Aga Khan as they went about endless routine of their confinement. While she could see them all clearly, she could not discern the words that passed between them. When they spoke, she could see their lips move but there was no sound. In fact the only sound she could hear in the spirit form was the endless whisper of other spirits. More than once she found herself whirling about as a whispered word or the strange sensation of movement, just beyond her ability to perceive, sent a pang of warning through her.
She was very aware she existed between worlds. Neither alive nor dead, she traveled between the world of the living and the mystery that lay beyond.
Following in the footsteps of the patrolling guards she learned her way through the complex. Most of it stood empty. Entire wings saw only the infrequent passage of guards and the accumulation of dust and cobwebs.
Tonight she had pushed further, stayed away longer; but returning was becoming increasingly difficult. Each day that passed did nothing to ease Aylanna's loathing of the confined and rigid routines of the courtesan's quarters. To be confined endlessly indoors after a lifetime under the open sky was misery. She could feel the very walls and strangely angled corners of the rooms pressing in upon her.
She found the interminable repetition of history, protocol and etiquette lessons dull and meaningless. She was in despair over music, her voice refused to find the notes, wavering and breaking, her fellow singers wincing and making pained faces. Her fingers fumbled at the strings and holes of the instruments, her ears not able to discern one note from another.
Finally Mallinika officially declared her hopeless and relegated her to sitting with a small drum, tapping out the simple rhythms of the songs.
She avoided talking or playing games with the other courtesans, they were too competitive, and would frequently lie or cheat. It made her feel somehow soiled to feign ignorance of their deceitfulness.
The only art that she showed any ability in was dance, but even there she found the postures and movements were strictly choreographed with small chance for any freedom of expression.
If it had not been for Mallinika's eventual consent to teach her to read, Aylanna felt like she would have gone mad.
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Aylanna had been sitting in the common room as far as possible from the small bevy of other courtesans as they gossiped and gambled. She had once again pulled out the scroll of the story about Pan'Shash'Sha'Am and Jha'Mak'Tah and was laboriously tracing the rows of strange marks with a finger tip, her lips moving as she recited the memorized words of the creation myth.
Mallinika had caught her there and had stood with her hands on her hips, staring down in irritation. It was not the first time she had found Aylanna looking at the scrolls she used in her lessons.
"Why do you persist in this foolishness? A courtesan has as much need for the skill of reading as does a horse or a songbird."