Difference between revisions of "The Death Machine"

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"The [[Ungir]] could simply hire the [[Grendel]] as mercenaries, putting us at war with three nations at once, while also being thrust into the midst of a civil war.  They would destroy us completely."
 
"The [[Ungir]] could simply hire the [[Grendel]] as mercenaries, putting us at war with three nations at once, while also being thrust into the midst of a civil war.  They would destroy us completely."
  
"And who would give us succor, Magister?"  Hedgewind asked as he drew more breath.  "The [[Ælf]]es would not lift a finger to save us from the tiny [[Ungir]].  The [[Ontustiktar]]s would not save us unless we all converted to their religion, but no other way.  The [[Sigis|Sigis Empire]] is only interested in trade and everyone else is too far away.  So those, Magister, are the reasons why did not answer [[Aydahar]]."
+
"And who would give us succor, Magister?"  Hedgewind asked as he drew more breath.  "The [[Ælf]]es would not lift a finger to save us from the tiny [[Ungir]].  The [[Ontustikter]]s would not save us unless we all converted to their religion, but no other way.  The [[Sigis|Sigis Empire]] is only interested in trade and everyone else is too far away.  So those, Magister, are the reasons why did not answer [[Aydahar]]."
  
 
"Get...out... of my classroom this instant!" Screeched the Magister, enraged by Hedgewind's detailed answer.
 
"Get...out... of my classroom this instant!" Screeched the Magister, enraged by Hedgewind's detailed answer.

Revision as of 21:15, 25 October 2021

Hedgewind Jalinbeti was dead. When I say that he was dead, I mean that his heart had stopped pumping blood. The tissues in his body, deprived of oxygen were dying at a cellular level. His brain, once full of thought and energy was also inert; mere jelly encased in a skull that was slowly cooling to room temperature. Hedgewind Jalinbeti was as dead as anyone had ever been.

The worst thing about Hedgewind's death was how disappointing it was for Hedgewind. He knew that dying would be a horrific process. All of his apprehensions were confirmed as he died. He doubted the usefulness of his life. He doubted whether he had ever truly loved. He doubted whether he had ever truly been loved. A choir of cascading doubts and disappointments swirled in his head as his heart stopped. His mind losing consciousness used the last of its faculties to process his greatest doubt; why had he ever lived at all? And then, he was dead.

In death, Hedgewind understood that there were a number of possibilities. The most likely of these, he assumed, that his mind would simply be cast into void, a nothingness from which nothing escapes. There would be no thought and no future. Of course, he considered the possibility that the clergy might have the correct insights. Had he not witnessed evidence of the power of the gods? Surely the powers possessed by the holiest of men were not all illusions. If the clergy were to be believed, he wondered, "Which clergy?"

If the Wodenists and Aspanists were to be believed, then his mind would not go to the void, but rather to some afterlife prepared by the gods. The gods would, or at the very least should, reward him for having lived a good life. His due was a pleasant afterlife, an afterlife so incredibly pleasant as to keep its charm for an eternity.

On the other side of this fateful coin, the gods were, depending on who you asked, inclined to punish those who had lived a bad life. Hedgewind confessed to himself that he had made some bad decisions in his life. Some gods were said to choose destruction for the doomed soul, a second and even more cruel death than the first? Still others touted the claim that there would be endless punishment, and yet others believed in the worst punishment possible, an eternity of boredom.

As Hedgewind considered these various possibilities and dozens more, he found that he had run out of gods, rewards and punishments to contemplate. He had exhausted his clerical knowledge of the afterlife and prepared to brace what ever was ahead. It was then that he thought to think, "Why am I thinking?"

He quickly decided that the afterlife, at least not his, was not one of immediate and painful destruction. He took some relief that he was not being destroyed; his instincts telling him that he would feel something if he were being destroyed. There would be no reason for the gods to impose a second death to an unrepentant soul if that second death wasn't several score more terrible than their departure from life. "Why do the gods make the first death so terrible?" He wondered to himself.

"Maybe they don't even know it is terrible. No, surely someone would have complained." He continued to think.

His hand gently brushed his thigh. He could feel. A reel of all the benevolent afterlife possibilities filled his head as he wondered if had the temerity to open his eyes. Would there be a paradise before him or a terrifying hellscape? For the hundredth time he allowed his pantheon of doubts to flash through his mind.

Hedgewind readied to open his eyes when sadness overtook him. He could feel his body convulse as the sadness spread through and around him in waves of pain and regret. We are all familiar with the sadness of death, but only in the afterlife do we experience the true sadness of death. Hedgewind was not prepared. There was no way to prepare. His mind bent backward.

Hedgewind, now a seven-year-old in his mind, was presented to his teachers at the Imperial Academy in Kala Astanals. "He's a very bright child, if not a handful." His father explained.

The Imperial Academy served as the foremost school of the land, taking in the children of nobles, even the Zhurek family, the dynasty of the Tsars attended the Imperial Academy where they honed their student's skills in all matters within their grasp of learning. Politics and history for all. Strategy and tactics for some. Magic and the dark arts for others.

Hedgewind had a particular gift for the latter. As a young child he developed a fascination with fire. He would stare into the flames of the family fireplace for hours, entranced by the beauty of the dance and the color of the embers. He was no more than four when he was able to cause flames to shoot from his fingers.

He did this without training or even the slightest understanding of magic. It was his passion. By the time he was presented to the Imperial Academy he had mastered a few methods for producing magical flame. His experiments at home would lead him to trouble with his parents quite often. When his attempts at fire magic would go awry, they would leave him with burned hands, hair and clothes. Other times they would burn things in the home that his parents did not want to see burned. He was indeed, as his father had pointed out, a handful.

As a student, Hedgewind was less than ideal. He did not care for his politics and history classes and would drift off into imaginary battles with dragons, wondering if one day his own flames would exceed those of the dragonkind. He took little interest in the strategies of the battlefield and it was not long before his teachers stopped calling upon him for answers.

Everything was different in his magic classes. While he was less than studious, he paid close attention to the studies of what he deemed the lesser magics; those which did not involve flame. When the topic rolled around the the magic of flames, he exceeded his class. He exceeded his teachers. He did not understand how they used so many more words, so many more sleights of the hand to produce so little flame.

His teachers, powerful wizards all, found themselves being mocked when the subject of flames arose. To all who observed Hedgewind's progress, they would have predicted that the academy would have served him no purpose other than to bolster his arsenal of utilitarian magic. They would have also predicted that Hedgewind would leave with the Academy with a sharply honed ability to mock the powerful. Of course, these two predictions would have been prescient as they did eventually come to fruition.

Something happened, however, that changed Hedgewind for the rest of his life. On a cold Kantar morning, Prince Batil Zhurek the the prince regent and heir to the throne of Ortalyk arrived at the Imperial Academy. Along with his entourage of servants and armed guards he had brought a young girl with him, his daughter, Princess Svetlana Zhurek. He came to consign his daughter to the very same Academy in which he was trained and the matters of politics and warfare. Here he believed, she would receive the education she would need to ascend to a great title, perhaps exceeding her already lofty title of princess.

The seven-year-old Hedgewind, of course, thought nothing of this new arrival. She would probably have no interest in magic, he decided. If she did study magic, she would have no interest in flame, he further decided. Hedgewind took little interest in his classmates at the best of times. He had not yet developed an interest in girls, and he certainly had no special reverence set aside for the royal family. This meant nothing to him.

"Hedgewind!" His teacher shouted.

Hedgewind was in class. His history teacher, a slight grey-haired woman pointed at him with her pointing stick. The rest of the class all looked at him apprehensively. Hedgewind had been a universe away. The new student, the princess, Svetlana had been placed in his history class. It was no fault of her own that she had red hair. It was no fault of Hedgewind's that during his normal course of not paying attention in class, he had looked into her hair.

It was in Svetlana's hair that he could see flame, dancing and cascading waves of flame shimmering and beckoning him to pay close attention or perhaps miss some important... "Hedgewind!" His teacher shouted again.

"Yes Magister?" He coughed, looking for clues as to why he had been pointed out.

"Please remind the class why the migration of the Ungir from the Aydahar Confederation across the Ortalyk countryside deeply agitated our people."

Hedgewind had never seen an Ungir or an Aydahar for that matter. He drew a blank. No one could possibly care about this topic, he decided to himself. "I don't know, Magister." he finally muttered.

The class laughed. Svetlana laughed. The princess of fire shared in the mockery; his mockery. The class went on and Hedgewind's shame grew. To stare into this fire, he would need Svetlana's approval, not her mockery. The shame stung like a fresh wound. In this moment, he vowed to take his studies more seriously.

A ten-year old Hedgewind sat in the back row of his politics class. He would arrive early so that he would never have to sit in the same seat from one class to the next. He naturally preferred the back, where he could see everyone in the class. Of course this also allowed him to stare into Svetlana's hair and watch the fire, though he only permitted himself moments to do this when the Magisters were speaking. Often he would sit at the front of the class and engage in direct dialogue with the Magisters. He found this one-on-one dialogue to give him an advantage over his classmates and few Magisters would ever rebuff his direct questions.

It came to pass that the entire country of Ortalyk was starting to feel the tide of war rising. The Grendel in the north and the Aydahar to the south were grumbling about how much of the continent's wealth had moved itself to Ortalyk. They complained that the advantages of Otani life always seemed to shift toward Humankind.

The Ortalyk perspective seemed to be a matter of simply riding out and putting foreign dissenters in their place by means of force. A war on two or more fronts, however, might prove a terrible burden on the country and everyone from the Tsar down to the lowest cowherd was speculating on how a war might unfold. A combined attack by the Grendel and Aydahar might prove to be more than the Ortalyk military could bear.

"What is the greatest threat to the Tsardom of Ortalyk?" The Magister demanded of the class.

The class put up their hands to seek the glory of giving the obvious answer. Hedgewind did not put up his hand. It was perhaps for this reason that the Magister called upon him to give his answer. "Hedgewind?" She asked. "What or who is the greatest threat to our nation right now?"

"The Ungir, Magister." He replied.

The class gasped. The Magister leveled her gaze at Hedgewind. "Do you not suppose, dear boy, that our greatest threat is the Aydahar? They have dragons! Yes, real dragons that accompany their military."

Hedgewind gulped. "The Aydahar are less of a threat because we treat them like they are people. We trade with them, they buy our goods and fineries. On our shared border, our people cross freely back and forth. They will not want this relationship to end."

"The Ungir," Hedgewind continued, "have been treated very badly by the Ortalyk people. Our people have always treated them as though they are unworthy of life. Should they find casus belli after years of our poor treatment of them, they could be a terrible threat! Their numbers are far greater than most people know, with perhaps nine Ungir living underground for every one that we can see on the surface. Their military could be greater than the Ortalyk and Aydahar combined."

"They also have no end of gold, silver and gems. Of course the Ungir leaders hoard their treasures, but if casus belli is declared, I believe they can get a token from their assessors. They can replace their hoards with a token and use the treasure to harm us. They have treasure enough to buy the loyalty of the Eastern Ortalyk provinces, while destroying the economies of the Western provinces. That action would certainly harm the Aydahar economy to great effect. They Aydahar would blame us and turn their dragons upon us to gather up some of this loose treasure."

"The Ungir could simply hire the Grendel as mercenaries, putting us at war with three nations at once, while also being thrust into the midst of a civil war. They would destroy us completely."

"And who would give us succor, Magister?" Hedgewind asked as he drew more breath. "The Ælfes would not lift a finger to save us from the tiny Ungir. The Ontustikters would not save us unless we all converted to their religion, but no other way. The Sigis Empire is only interested in trade and everyone else is too far away. So those, Magister, are the reasons why did not answer Aydahar."

"Get...out... of my classroom this instant!" Screeched the Magister, enraged by Hedgewind's detailed answer.

Hedgewind got up to leave. He picked up his books, looking back at his classmates. They all looked stunned in surprise. All but Svetlana who had what he could only guess, what he hoped most dearly, to be a look of admiration.

The next day Hedgewind was summoned to the office of the Registrar. When he arrived, his father was there with a bewildered look on his face. His mother sat there too, crying. He had been expelled. The disappointment in his parents' faces filled him with a deep sorrow that never left. He realized that he would never again see Svetlana and the fire in her hair. His sorrow multiplied.

He wished he was dead. Then, he remembered that he was dead. "Sorrow, does not die." He reasoned, then wondered if he would be able to cry in the afterlife.

He opened his eyes. "What the hell?" He wondered.

Part of him expected to see a classical depiction of Valhalla, a city of gold. Perhaps he would see the halls of Asgard with gods and heroes, side by side, drinking and telling tall tales. He did not see this.

He saw a long corridor. The hallway was illuminated with what appeared to be strips of magical light. The lighting was subdued. He could see that between himself and the hallway was... glass? He was inside a glass or crystal case. He realized that he was immersed in water. "How is this possible?" He wondered.

Looking to his left and right he realized that there were other glass cases. Hundreds of them, perhaps more. The cases he could see, seemed to also have people in them. They appeared to be either dead or unconscious. After some time, he saw people strolling down the corridor. They appeared to be human, strangely dressed, but with a god-like beauty.

The gods, if they were gods, appeared to be chatting casually to one another. They would periodically stop and look at one of the crystal cases, or perhaps coffins, waved some magical illuminations at them and move on. Wishing an explanation, he tried to move his hands to get their attention.

His hands were loosely restrained. He could not cast a spell or create fire, but he could rap lightly on the glass. Two of the gods looked his way. He tried to speak, but it proved impossible with the fluid in his mouth and lungs. He made a gesture with his head that he hoped to mean, "I want out."

The gods, looked at Hedgewind's coffin without a hint of surprise on their faces. They waved magical lights in his direction and then examined the sides of his coffin. A few high pitched bleeps permeated the coffin's waters and soon Hedgewind felt his consciousness being drained from him. The sorrow and despair that joined him on his voyage here also started to fade. Perhaps this was the end, the beginning of destruction and nothingness.

Hedgewind blinked.