© M. Keaton, 2000-2003
Opus
One
To
discuss a war, you first have to discuss the situations which led to it. Wars begin well before armies take to the
field; most begin shortly after the last battle of the previous war. In a grander setting, war is an anti-climax
to the greater pressures of geography and culture. A simple discourse of military cause and effect can become a
scholar's forum for social reform and a complete waste of time. A historian, especially a military
historian, has to set a point from which to begin, clarify any prior historical
information he feels is salient to his point, and begin. My evaluation of the Sinari war is no
different. I have tried to focus
primarily on the physical aspects of the war beginning with the siege and invasion
of Myr Kun but some historical preface must be provided.
The
Sinari entry into the conflict is easy to explain. The Sinari religion believed their god, Sin-Alb, to be imprisoned
physically in the floating city of Annaeyana.
When the city moved, they took it as a call to move themselves. These desert nomads had been following the
city for years in the northern deserts and so, when it veered from its normal
path to hover over the port city of Myr Kun, they took it as a sign from
Sin-Alb to conquer the city. As the war
progressed, they continued to follow.
Why Annaeyana followed the path that it did, and whether the Sinari god
Sin-Alb really did reside within and direct them, is beyond the purview of this
work.
The
reasons for the Mirrish resistance to this jyhad are less clear. Officially, a large number of altruistic
reasons have been presented.
Militarily, it is most likely that the island nation feared that, should
the Sinari gain control of the northern coast of the inland sea, Mir itself
would be in danger or face economic hardship.
It may also be that Mir felt, and desired to atone for, a kind of
cultural guilt from its imperialistic past.
Considering the prominence of Annaeyana in the Sinari war, this is not
unreasonable.
While
still a young empire, Mir put to war with the more powerful empire of Rian
a'Avaerand. Mir eventually triumphed in
this conflict, partially due to their aggressive use of dragons. It was during one of the pivotal battles,
that Mir was party to the accidental creation of Annaeyana. The land mass upon which the city sat was
destroyed and, due to sorcerous circumstances still not fully understood, the
city (but not its residents) survived, floating independently some distance above
its previous location. Imperial Mir
seized the city and used it as a mobile command center for their expansion of
the empire.
Within
the ruins of Annaeyana, Mir also found the race we now refer to as the
Eerith. Spirit beings of astounding
sorcerous power, the Eerith proved to be a surprisingly complicit people. They were easily enslaved and put to work
fueling the Mirrish engines of expansion.
If not for the events at Bega, it is likely that, with the enslaved
Eerith, Mir would have united the entire continent of Qaiyore under its rule.
Bega
was the second battle involving the city of Annaeyana which yielded unexpected
and unwelcome side-effects. Factually
we know that, at the battle of Bega, the military might of the Mirrish empire
was broken, control of Annaeyana was lost, and the vast majority of Eerithian
population imprisoned within the city via some form of dweomer.
This
was, predictably, the end of Imperial
Mir and the beginning of the slide back to the island nation of Mir which
exists today. Without their Eerith
slaves and the highly mobile Annaeyana, Mir could not effectively govern their
interests on the outer continent, much less defend them from invasion and
prevent revolt. The few Eerith which
did escape imprisonment also avoided recapture and turned their attention toward
remaining free and, in turn, freeing their brethren trapped within the floating
city. Annaeyana itself drifted north,
eventually to become a religious site for the Sinari. This brings us full circle.
When Annaeyana drifted over Myr Kun, a one-time colony of Imperial Mir,
it is not surprising that the descendants of that empire felt themselves either
threatened or even somehow responsible.
For
whatever reason, Mir thrust itself forward to stop the Sinari invasion,
although not in time to be of assistance to Myr Kun. They also actively sought peace with the free Eerith. This is not surprising. Within the preceding decade, Mir had seen
the priesthood of the Cedonian Oracle brutally slain and been betrayed
internally by the mage Tarfn. Tarfn
fled after slaying the Archmage Netra but there were strong indications that he
was acting in coordination with the Sinari and the Eerith. In this case, Mir desperately needed one
fewer enemy.
Scholars
may debate the various motives involved but these are the basic facts. We may now turn our attention to the
military situation at the time.
Ill-prepared, Myr Kun found itself besieged by a horde of Sinari
sweeping in from the east while none of its neighbors to the south and west
were prepared to offer aid. Above it
all waited Annaeyana, which may or may not have held several hundred imprisoned
Eerith and the Sinari god, Sin-Alb.
—Introduction: "A
Frank Discussion of the Underlying Strategies of the Sinari War" by
Agrigax—
***
For
two days they walked without pause, toward the city burning in the shadow of
Annaeyana's eclipse; the ruins of the once great city hung above Myr Kun like
the skeleton of a hanged man.
The
two travelers wore the false skins of man like cloth draped across an
ill-conceived frame, blurred at the edges and imprecise in the relationship of
form to function. In two days, they
crossed a distance that would take a healthy man less than a day but they had
much to learn. They listened to the
undercurrent of harmonies buzzing from the world around them, learning and
remembering, hearing a lifetime of memories in hours and hearing the memories
of a world in scattered fragments, accepted and stored to be assembled
later. In the interim, neither spoke. By journey's end, they wore the bodies with
stoic grace and so it was that the two men-not-men entered the city of Myr Kun
as if they had walked the dunes a full two score years and those who saw them
pass noted naught amiss.
"It
is as if, disdaining the gifts of the Creator, they descended from caves of
stone to build their own of mud for no reason other than spite," mused the
tributary, speaking softly in a voice modulated to a low tenor. The other did not reply, merely studied the
city with a flat, disinterested gaze.
"You are less than scintillating company," teased the
tributary.
"I
. . . I don't like this mode of communication.
It's too limited, too mundane."
"There
are other options," came the reply soundlessly, the voice speaking just
within his ears.
"No. It's not time yet. I would rather not be overheard," was the spoken reply; a deep voice, rough and forced, almost
grating. "You babble like a
brook."
"That
was humor?" asked the tributary sincerely.
"Irony. Most mundanes do not understand either. Tell me this, if you are so desperate for
talk: why are you here?"
"I'm
a tributary; it is in my nature to serve and support. When you awoke, I was drawn to your flame. It was like flowing downhill."
"And
what of the river that you normally flow into?
If you are the overtone of a tributary stream, why are you free to
wander?"
"I'm
not sure. Something happened, something
unnatural. I still flow but the river
is gone."
"So
where does your existence begin and end?
Where for all of us? Eerith,
Valerian, Elemental, we are all variations of the same race. Where do we each begin and end?"
The
tributary smiled at that. "Your
people do not know. If they did, you
could pull it from the undercurrent of their thoughts. For Elementals it is easier. We are the Worldsea."
"Explain."
"I
flow into a river. Even though I exist,
so does the river and I am part of the river.
Even if I were gone, the river would be, but if enough of us were gone,
the river could not exist at all; so the river is all of us but we are separate
from it, and it is separate from us.
The river is a harmony of tributaries.
The river feeds the land and runs across it. The land floats upon the sea and rivers flow to it until
everything is one thing. We call it the
Worldsea. It is all of us, but we are
separate and it is separate. It is an
overtone of overtones."
"An
archetype and a sliding scale. Tell me
then, is your Worldsea a concept or an entity?"
"It
is. It lives as you or I. The Worldsea is no ideal construct of
theory, it is a being. It is a . .
." the tributary's voice trailed
off as he searched the world's undercurrent for the concept he sought.
"It
is a Valerian," pronounced his companion with finality. "The archetype of archetypes. That's what they are. The Valerian are the abstract truths which
wear the masks of archetype to be seen and understood."
"So
where do the Eerith fit?"
"I
must think on this further. The Eerith
are corrupted from the pure. I do know,
just as you have the Worldsea, we have a law.
It is a concept, not an entity, but I see similarity."
When
his companion fell silent, the tributary let his mind touch the world's
undercurrent. "I see it. One shall speak for all and all shall speak
for one. That is your law."
"Our
only law." The two fell silent,
staring upward.
Floating
suspended above them, almost half of a mile distant, hung the ragged base of
Annaeyana, broken stubs of rock and exposed tree roots still hanging loose from
when the city had been uprooted centuries earlier. And there, far above, dissolving into mist long before it reached
the ground, a stream of water ran from the edge of the city, falling over the
jagged lip like a magical waterfall.
"I
think I know what happened to your river."
***
Alfos
Ben-Senra was neither mage not Eerith.
He was a man, a traveler, and, sometimes, he was a thief. Today, as for the past two weeks, he was a
messenger. He did not know why he had
been hired for this task and it had not occurred to him to ask. The gold which paid his fee was real; to
Alfos, little else mattered. He had
traveled on foot and mostly at night across the Shadowlands, and had reached
Myr Kun just before dawn. Had he been
more dedicated to his current career, he might have been concerned about
finding the recipient; but he was Alfos.
His plans included a bed, a bath, and copious amounts of fermented goat
milk. Unfortunately for Alfos, Myr Kun
was not the same city as the one he had left years before.
He
stood outside the city and wiped gritty sweat from his forehead with a stained
cloth, debating a career change. After
a moment, he pulled a piece of dark root from his pocket and began to chew it,
spitting brown froth to the sand beside him as he contemplated. The man who had hired him had strongly
implied that, should Alfos shirk his newfound duties, he would suffer dire
arcane tortures. Still, he was fairly
certain that even his employer had not foreseen the chaos that lay before
him. Alfos had thought the dull
reddening of the sky as he traveled though the night was due to the rising
sun. A wiser man might have noted that
this would mean the sun was rising in the west, but a wiser man would have
realized that the smell of smoke from his cookfire should have faded, not
become stronger. As he crested the
dunes, Alfos found himself looking up at a second, black moon, a large blot of
darkness against the night sky.
Annaeyana hovered over the city like a lurking predator; below, Myr Kun
was lit by the crimson flicker of its own flames. The city was burning, filling the sky with a grey smoke that
billowed up towards Annaeyana like an offering to a hostile god. Mobs, like priests of anarchy, surged
through the streets and spread the flames.
Alfos
was still surveying the chaos when he heard the sound of movement behind
him. The sound was the merest whisper
of wind upon sand, but a man with Alfos' love for the property of others had
taught him a certain savant caution. He
collapsed to the sand as if struck, his heart pounding in terror, his eyes
blinking out the sudden spray of sand from his fall, his mind racing,
calculating if he could have been seen, silhouetted against the sky, cursing
himself for a fool. Pressing his arms
and legs deeper into the sand, he twisted to look in the direction of the
sound, trying to force all of his motion downward, letting the dunes mask his
movement while his gaze scanned the horizon behind him. Several pregnant minutes passed and Alfos
began to relax. It moved again; this
time Alfos saw it clearly, ghosting across the dunes, a shadow among shadows.
Alfos
lay frozen until the catayarsh had long passed and the sun had risen high into
the heavens. His decision was
made: with the Sinari on the move, even
a burning city was safer than the dunes.
When the heat of the desert became too much for him to bear, Alfos leapt
to his feet and sprinted toward the city in a spray of sand.
***
"What
now, oh munificent and reborn leader?"
"I'm
not a leader," he said in a distracted tone, his eyes still seeking out
the city above them.
"When
do we meet the others?"
"Soon,"
he turned and began walking back through the city. "Something is still missing. I'll have to speak with the other Eerith soon. Custom forbids them from seeking us out, but
we are a dangerously curious people."
The
pair walked in silence, strangely unnoticed in the turmoil of the riots.
"We
did this. Commission or omission; this
is our creation. The Eerith have become
so self-consumed that we don't even notice our handiwork." His companion did not answer. They stepped into an alleyway and waited as
a crowd of people ran past them.
Whatever they were fleeing did not follow and the two men resumed their
walk.
"This
has to change." Despite his
curiosity, the tributary did not reply; his companion held obscurity as a
virtue.
***
"Let's
not be hasty now!" yelled Alfos at the crowd. "Let's not do something we'll regret later."
"It's
strangers like you brought this on us," a woman's voice shot back.
"A
spy for them nomads, I bet!" yelled another.
In
a rare display of uncommon wisdom, Alfos ran.
He had spent the past ninety seconds circling the crowd's edge to put an
alley at his back, and now he used it.
With a silent prayer to any god which might be listening, he shoved the
closest member of the crowd backward and sprang away. The mob was quick to follow, but Alfos knew from experience he
had the head start he needed. In his
life, he had run from many angry crowds, usually because he decided he would
appreciate some choice bauble more than its owner (at least until he pawned it). On some primitive level, he enjoyed the
chase.
Then
he tripped. He never tripped; his feet
were as sure as a goat's. He could not
trip. If he did . . .
To
his surprise, the mob rushed by him with barely a glance. A few kicks as they passed over him and they
were gone, as if they had suddenly forgotten he existed. Alfos rose to his knees and stared, stunned,
at the retreating forms.
"You're
welcome," came an amused voice at his elbow, and Alfos was amazed to find
a pair of men lifting him to his feet.
Both were wrapped in surprisingly dark and heavy robes. Only their eyes and the tattooed circles
around them were visible. The only
discernable difference to Alfos' eyes was the speaker was similar in height to
himself while his companion was nearly seven feet.
Alfos
directed his words to the shorter man.
"My thanks." He took a
pair of deep breaths to steady himself before he continued. "You are a mage?"
Alfos
tried to ignore the tightening of the larger man's grip on his elbow. The smaller man released him and moved away
slightly, giving Alfos a small nod.
"Close enough."
"Then
I owe you my life." Alfos tried to
pull his arm free and began to plan his next escape.
"You
are not going anywhere, sil," growled the large man, tightening his grip
to a painful level before releasing.
"Think
nothing of it," the smaller man continued, as if his companion had not
spoken at all. "I believe you have
a message for us."
Alfos
massaged his elbow as he answered.
"You are Eerith?"
"If
you choose."
Alfos
withdrew a folded parchment from within his robes. The document had once been nicely rolled and sealed, but several
weeks of desert heat and the sweat of Alfos' body had detracted significantly
from the aesthetic value of the message.
The
larger man took the crushed scroll from his hand. "It is a small rodent." The man looked at his companion and asked, "Throw him in the
prison?"
"No
need. They're getting smarter. The old man didn't even send an apprentice
this time; no help at all. Let him
go."
"What
do you mean 'a small rodent'?" Alfos asked indignantly. Instead of replying, the two men turned and
began to walk away. "What, no
reward?" he shouted after them and took an involuntary step back as the
larger of the two turned.
"What
do you want?" the man asked in an
ominous tone.
"Same
as everyone. I want to be rich,"
shot back Alfos petulantly.
"Very
well." The large man's voice was
almost a malevolent purr. "You are
rich." Before Alfos could react, the smaller man interrupted, as if responding
to some unheard conversation.
"Impossible! We must go.
The reborn speaker has . . . We must go!" With the last pronouncement, he faded from view like a mirage at
sundown. The larger man arched one
eyebrow in surprise and vanished in a burst of flame, leaving a shaken Alfos
alone in the street.
***
With
the hindsight of history, the Eerith were able to reconstruct every moment of
the event in the undercurrent and understand it fully. At the time, there was nothing but
confusion. Even the tributary, who
witnessed the occurrence with mundane eyes as well as spiritual perception,
barely knew the actions and had no inkling of the consequence.
The
two had been walking unnoticed when, across the lane, a brick wall began to
collapse. The tributary was only
nominally aware of the wall, much less the child which stood beside it, soon to
be below it.
The
reborn one had been in motion toward the child a splinter of a second before
the wall had visibly moved, discarding his physical body and moving with the
speed of spirit, the speed of thought.
Even then, even with inhuman reflexes and supernatural speed, the
tributary had known he moved too late.
The reborn one could not reach the child in time.
At
the time, the tributary did not realize what occurred; none of the Eerith
did. Driven by desperate reflex for
motives unknown even to himself, the reborn one moved outside of time to save
the child. At once, he was everywhere
and nowhere, beyond everything and all things, beyond the creation and the dreaming,
brushing the face of the Void; beyond.
Then his physical body was over the child and the wall fell.
The
wash of power flashed through the ether like the flare of a newborn sun, or the
nova of a dying one. The undercurrent
of the Eerith buckled like a puddle struck with a stone, and an entire race was
stunned. Even in their sleeping prison,
the Eerith cried out in pain and joy at once and the city of Annaeyana
physically shivered in the smoke-black sky.
Then they came to him, all pretense of convention forgotten, like moths
to the flame, and the street was filled with a thousand voices in
confusion. So great was the chaos that
only the tributary, who was closest, clearly witnessed the next few minutes of
linear time.
A
Videssian philosopher smiles and dies in her sleep.
In
a cloud of dust, the reborn one stands, rising from the remains of the wall,
the child cradled safe in his arms.
In
the libraries of Mir, the Archmage is struck down by sudden pain. The archivist catches him as he falls and
for a time they lean against each other—two men, old, tired. Without a word, both return to their work
and each avoids the other's gaze.
The
child looks up at her rescuer and asks a simple question. "Who are you?"
In
the streets of Myr Kun, a thief hears a sound at the base of his skull like the
buzzing of bees and begins to run. When
he stops, exhausted, he knows not why he ran.
A
tributary races towards its river, concern etched across its borrowed
face. "Are you…"
Within
a dark place, a non-descript form hears the tolling of bells. Unsure of its Master's reaction to this new
thing, it draws its cloak tighter and pretends not to notice.
The
reborn one smiles and answers. "I
am."
Somehow,
to the ears of the Eerith, it was a conversation.
"Do
you have your answers now?" asked the tributary, leaning close to his
companion and speaking over the clamor around them. The streets were awash with light as the Eerith flickered from
form to form in their agitation.
"No,
and that is as it should be," the reborn one replied cryptically, then
shouted, "Silence!"
"Enough
mundanity. Release the form and let us
converse as Eerith should," another voice called back.
The
reborn one shook his head.
"No. We must live among
them. We must learn to converse as
they."
A
different voice called again from the mass.
"Send the child away. These
matters are not for her ears."
Again
he shook his head. "She is Eerith
now."
"She
is mundane."
"Perhaps,"
the reborn one replied, "but she is also Eerith. Her family is dead or gone away.
Her home lies here: gone, rubble.
Like us, she has no home, no people.
What else can she be but Eerith?"
"This
does not make her Eerith!"
"Indeed." The reborn one's calm smile turned
menacing. "What is Eerith?"
The
street was, at last, silent. In the
stillness the tributary looked upon this people and wondered. The Eerith had no leaders, no structures or
obligations of society, and yet he would follow; they all would follow. The reborn one had their hearts and,
somehow, it was right.
The
reborn one drew a long breath before continuing. "What does it mean to be Eerith? Are we merely a race, a passing anomaly in the song of creation? Are we things?" He gestured toward the crowd, pointing to
certain of its members. "You five,
come to me. You few still feel the
call. You gall even at this small
delay. You, my remnant, already know
what I would say. Go now, with my
blessings."
Five
in the crowd erupted into shafts of light and were gone.
"They
go to the Onagir. While we have labored
to free our brethren, mired in our own past and self-obsessed, a race
dies! A knowledge gone forever,
lost. And where were we? Of all that are, the Eerith were best
equipped to aid them. We failed! We have let our past define us until there
is nothing left but what was! It ends
now. We shall free our sleeping
brethren, but not at the cost of our selves.
We have passed from one master to another until, when we seemed free, we
placed shackles upon ourselves. No
longer do we serve. We are Eerith! We serve none and all! That is our heritage. Eerith is our vision, our goal, our
legacy! It is not our race. The child is Eerith as are any who would
join us and any who have nowhere else to go.
Our masters have given us tools and taught us skills beyond even their
comprehension. From here, we go our own
way. From here, our fight begins in
truth. Child, would you stay with
us?"
The
tributary looked at the child and saw her, not as a thing but, for the first
time, as another entity. This gift—this
sight— the reborn one had given them, reminding them of what they once
were. Outside the child was small,
frightened and confused. Within, she
was a world all her own; hopes, dreams, ideas unique to her, things that others
might never see, that she might never choose to let them see. She was not simply the center of her
universe. She was, in truth, the center
of the universe. They all were. If only one being existed, it would be
enough.
"I
will stay."
"Have
you been given a name?"
"My
nanna called me Hope."
The
reborn one's face broke into a surprised grin.
"I am undone," he laughed.
"I suppose we shall all be forced to take names soon, but not this
day."
A
form walked forward from the crowd, pausing to smile at the child, and passed a
stained paper into the reborn one's hands.
"We have a message."
The
reborn one dropped the paper to the ground, unopened. The Eerith had known the contents of the message from the day it
was written.
"We
will attend."
***
The
tributary and two of the militant Eerith would attend the sorcerers' meeting, a
balance, it had been reasoned, between the old and the new.
The
reborn one, Hope in tow, met them before they left and pulled them close,
strangely tactile for an Eerith.
"Farewell,
my friends," he said, releasing them, and stood there long after they had
vanished, streaks of light into the distance.
"Wha's
wrong?" asked Hope at last, anxious to be away, impatient in her youth.
"I
shall not see them again, not as they are now.
I'm not yet sure why, but I know it is true."
"The
Mir'll hurt 'em?"
"If
they do, they will pray to the mountains to fall upon them before I am
through."