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    CALDE OF THE LONG SUN botls-3

    Page 4
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      presence of divinity.

      "You did wonderfully, sib. Just wonderfully!" Maytera Marble had

      followed Maytera Mint out of the manteion; now she laid a hand

      upon her shoulder. "Taking everything outside for a viaggiatory!

      However did you think of it?"

      "I don't know. It was just that they were still in the street, most of

      them, and we were in there. And we couldnn't let them in as we

      usually do. Besides," Maytera Mint smiled impishly, "think of all the

      blood, sib. It would've taken us days to clean up the manteion

      afterward."

      There were far too many victims to pen in Maytera Marble's little

      garden. Their presenters had been told very firmly that they would

      have to hold them until it was time to lead them in, with the result

      that Sun Street looked rather like the beast-sellers quarter in the

      market. How many would be here, Maytera Mint wondered, if it

      hadn't been for the rain? She shuddered. As it was, the victims and

      their presenters looked soaked but cheerful, steaming in the sunshine

      of Sun Street.

      "You're going to need something to stand on," Maytera Marble

      warned her, "or they'll never hear you."

      "Why not here on the steps?" Maytera Mint inquired.

      "Friends..." To her own ears, her voice sounded weaker than

      ever here in the open air; she tried to imagine herself a trumpeter1

      then a trumpet. "Friends! I won't repeat what I said inside. This is

      Maytera Rose's last sacrifice. I know that she knows what you've

      done for her, and is glad.

      "Now my sib and her helpers are going to build a sacred fire on the

      altar. We will need a big one today--"

      They cheered, surprising her.

      "We'll need a big one, and some of the wood will be wet. But the

      whole sky is going to be our god gate this afternoon, letting in Lord

      Pas's fire from the sun."

      Like so many brightly-colored ants, a straggling line of little girls

      had already begun to carry pieces of split cedar to the altar, where

      Maytera Marble broke the smallest pieces.

      "It is Patera Silk's custom to consult the Writings before sacrificing.

      Let us do so too." Maytera Mint held up the book and opened it at random.

      <blockquote>

      Whatever it is we are, it is a little flesh, breath, and the ruiing

      part. As if you were dying, despise the flesh; it is blood, bones, and

      network, a tissue of nerves and veins. See the breath also, what

      kind of thing it is: air, and never the same, but at every moment sent

      Out and drawn in. The third is the ruling part. No longer let this part

      be enslaved, no longer let it be pulled by its strings like a

      marionette. No longer complain of your lot, nor shrink from the future.

      </blockquote>

      <spacer Type='horizontal' Size=32>

      "Patera Silk has told us often that each passage in the Writings

      holds two meanings at least." The words slipped out before she

      realized that she could see only one in this one. Her mind groped

      frantically for a second interpretation.

      "The first seems so clear that I feel foolish explaining it, though it

      is my duty to explain it. All of you have seen it already, I'm sure. A

      part, two parts as the Chrasmologic writer would have it, of our dear

      Maytera Rose has perished. We must not forget that it was the baser

      part, the part that neither she nor we had reason to value. The

      better part, the part beloved by the gods and by us who knew her,

      will never perish. This, then, is the message for those who mourn

      her. For my dear sib and me, particularly."

      Help me! Hierax, Kypris, Sphigx, please help!

      She had touched the sword of the officer who had come to arrest

      Silk; her hand itched for it, and something deep within her, denied

      until this moment, scanned the crowd.

      "I see a man with a sword." She did not, but there were scores of

      such men. "A fine one. Will you come forward, sir? Will you lend

      me your sword? It will be for only a moment."

      A swaggering bully who presumably believed that she had been

      addressing him shouldered a path through the crowd. It was a

      hunting sword, almost certainly stolen, with a shell guard, a stag

      grip, and a sweeping double-edged blade.

      "Thank you." She held it up, the polished steel dazzling in the hot

      sunshine. "Today is Hieraxday. It is a fitting day for final rites. I

      think it's a measure of the regard in which the gods held Maytera

      Rose that her eyes were darkened on a Tarsday, and that her last

      sacrifice takes place on Hieraxday. But what of us? Don't the

      Writings speak to us, too? Isn't it Hieraxday for us, as well as for

      Maytera? We know they do. We know it is.

      "You see this sword?" The denied self spoke through her, so that

      she--the little Maytera Mint who had, for so many years, thought

      herself the only Maytera Mint--listened with as much amazement as

      the crowd, as ignorant as they of what her next word might be. "You

      carry these, many of you. And knives and needlers, and those little

      lead clubs that nobody sees that strike so hard. And only Hierax

      himself knows what else. But are you ready to pay the price?"

      She brandished the hunting sword above her head. There was a

      white stallion among the victims; a flash of the blade or some note in

      her voice made him rear and paw the air, catching his presenter by

      surprise and lifting him off his feet.

      "For the price is death. Not death thirty or forty years from now,

      but death now! Death today! These things say, _I will not cower to

      you! Jam no slave, no ox to be led to the butcher! Wrong me, wrong

      the gods, and you die! For I fear not death or you!_"

      The roar of the crowd seemed to shake the street.

      "So say the Writings to us, friends, at this manteion. That is the

      second meaning." Maytera Mint returned the sword to its owner.

      "Thank you, sir. It's a beautiful weapon."

      He bowed. "It's yours anytime you need it, Maytera, and a hard

      hand to hold it."

      At the altar, Maytera Marble had poised the shallow bowl of

      polished brass that caught falling light from the sun. A curl of smoke

      arose from the splintered cedar, and as Maytera Mint watched, the

      first pale, almost invisible flame.

      Holding up her long skirt, she trotted down the steps to face the

      Sacred Window with outstretched arms. "Accept, all you gods, the

      sacrifice of this holy sibyl. Though our hearts are torn, we, her

      siblings and her friends, consent. But speak to us, we beg, of times

      to come, hers as well as ours. What are we to do? Your lightest word

      will be treasured."

      Maytera Mint's mind went blank--a dramatic pause until she

      recalled the sense, though not the sanctioned wording, of the rest of

      the invocation. "If it is not your will to speak. we consent to that,

      too." Her arms fell to her sides.

      From her place beside the altar, Maytera Marble signaled the first

      presenter.

      "This fine white he-goat is presented to..." Once again, Maytera

      Mint's memory failed her.

      "Kypris," Maytera Marble supplied.

      To Kypris, of course. The first three
    sacrifices were all for Kypris.

      who had electrified the city by her theophany on Scylsday. But what

      was the name of the presenter?

      Maytera Mint looked toward Maytera Marble, but Maytera

      Marble was, strangely, waving to someone in the crowd.

      "To Captivating Kypris, goddess of love, by her devout

      supplicant--?"

      "Bream," the presenter said.

      "By her devout supplicant Bream." It had come at last, the

      moment she had dreaded most of all. "Please, Maytera, if you'd do

      it, please...?" But the sacrificial knife was in her hand, and

      Maytera Marble raising the ancient wail, metal limbs slapping the

      heavy bombazine of her habit as she danced.

      He-goats were supposed to be contumacious, and this one had

      long, curved horns that looked dangerous; yet it stood as quietly as

      any sheep, regarding her through sleepy eyes. It had been a pet, no

      doubt, or had been raised like one.

      Maytera Marble knelt beside it, the earthenware chalice that had

      been the best the manteion could afford beneath its neck.

      I'll shut my eyes, Maytera Mint promised herself, and did not.

      The blade slipped into the white goat's neck as easily as it might

      have penetrated a bale of white straw. For one horrid moment the

      goat stared at her, betrayed by the humans it had trusted all its life;

      it bucked, spraying both sibyls with its lifeblood, stumbled, and

      rolled onto its side.

      "Beautiful," Maytera Marble whispered. "Why, Patera Pike

      couldn't have done it better himself."

      Maytera Mint whispered back, "I think I'm going to be sick," and

      Maytera Marble rose to splash the contents of her chalice onto the

      fire roaring on the altar, as Maytera Mint herself had so often.

      The head first, with its impotent horns. Find the joint between the

      skull and the spine, she reminded herself. Good though it was, the

      knife could not cut bone.

      Next the hooves, gay with gold paint. Faster! Faster! They would

      be all afternoon at this rate; she wished that she had done more of

      the cooking, though they had seldom had much meat to cut up. She

      hissed, "You must take the next one, sib. Really, you must!"

      "We can't change off now!"

      She threw the last hoof into the fire, leaving the poor goat's legs

      ragged, bloody stumps. Still grasping the knife, she faced the

      Window as before. "Accept, O Kind Kypris, the sacrifice of this fine

      goat. And speak to us, we beg, of the days that are to come. What

      are we to do? Your lightest word will be treasured." She offered a

      silent prayer to Kypris, a goddess who seemed to her since Scylsday

      almost a larger self. "Should you, however, choose otherwise..."

      She let her arms fall. "We consent. Speak to us, we beg, through

      this sacrifice."

      On Scylsday, the sacrifices at Orpine's funeral had been

      ill-omened to say the least. Maytera Mint hoped fervently for better

      indicants today as she slit the belly of the he-goat.

      "Kypris blesses..." Louder. They were straining to hear her.

      "Kypris blesses the spirit of our departed sib." She straightened up

      and threw back her shoulders. "She assures us that such evil as

      Maytera did has been forgiven her."

      The goat's head bunt in the fire, scattering coals: a presage of

      violence. Maytera Mint bent over the carcass once more, struggling

      frantically to recall what litfie she knew of augury--remarks

      dropped at odd moments by Patera Pike and Patera Silk, half-hearted

      lessons at table from Maytera Rose, who had spoken as

      much to disgust as to teach her.

      The right side of the beast concerned the presenter and the augur

      who presided, the giver and the performer of the sacrifice; the left

      the congregation and the whole city. This red liver foretold deeds of

      blood, and here among its tangled veins was a knife, indicating the

      augur--though she was no augur--and pointing to a square, the

      square stem of mint almost certainly, and the hilt of a sword. Was

      she to die by the sword? No, the blade was away from her. She was

      to hold the sword, but she had already done that, hadn't she?

      In the entrails a fat little fish (a bream, presumably) and a jumble

      of circular objects, necklaces or rings, perhaps. Certainly that

      interpretation would be welcomed. They lay close to the bream, one

      actually on top of it, so the time was very near. She mounted the

      first two steps.

      "For the presenter. The goddess favors you. She is well pleased

      with your sacrifice." The goat had been a fine one, and presumably

      Kypris would not have indicated wealth had she not been gratified.

      "You will gain riches, jewels and gold particularly. within a short

      time."

      Grinning from ear to ear, Bream backed away.

      "For all of us and for our city, violence and death, from which

      good will come." She glanced down at the carcass, eager to be

      certain of the sign of addition she had glimpsed there; but it had

      gone, if it had ever existed. "That is all that I can see in this victim,

      though a skilled augur such as Patera Silk could see much more, I'm

      sure."

      Her eyes searched the crowd around the altar for Bream. "The

      presenter has first claim. If he wishes a share in this meal, let him

      come forward."

      Already the poor were struggling to get nearer the altar. Maytera

      Marble whispered, "Burn the entrails and lungs, sib!"

      It was wise and good and customary to cut small pieces when the

      congregation was large, and there were two thousand in this one at

      least; but there were scores of victims, too, and Maytera Mint had

      little confidence in her own skill. She distributed haunches and

      quarters, receiving delighted smiles in return.

      Next a pair of white doves. Did you share out doves or burn them

      whole? They were edible, but she remembered that Silk had burned

      a black cock whole at Orpine's last sacrifice. Birds could be read,

      although they seldom were. Wouldn't the giver be offended,

      however, if she didn't read these?

      "One shall be read and burned," she told him firmly. "The other

      we will share with the goddess. Remain here if you would like it for

      yourself."

      He shook his head.

      The doves fluttered desperately as their throats were cut.

      A deep breath. "Accept, O Kind Kypris, the sacrifice of these fine

      doves. And speak to us, we beg, of the times that are to come. What

      are we to do? Your lightest word will be treasured." Had she really

      killed those doves? She risked a peek at their lifeless bodies. "Should

      you, however, choose otherwise..."

      She let her arms fall, conscious that she was getting more blood

      on her habit. "We consent. Speak to us, we beg, through this

      sacrifice."

      Scraping feathers, skin, and flesh from the first dove's right

      shoulder blade, she scanned the fine lines that covered it. A bird

      with outspread wings; no doubt the giver's name was Swan or

      something of the sort, though she had forgotten it already. Here was

      a fork on a platter. Would the goddess tell a man he was going to eat

      dinner? Impossible!
    A minute drop of blood seemed to have seeped

      out of the bone. "Plate gained by violence," she announced to the

      presenter, "but if the goddess has a second message for me, I am too

      ignorant to read it."

      Maytera Marble whispered, "The next presenter will be my son,

      Bloody."

      Who was Bloody? Maytera Mint felt certain that she should

      recognize the name. "The plate will be gained in conjunction with

      the next presenter," she told the giver of the doves. "I hope the

      goddess isn't saying you'll take from him."

      Maytera Marble hissed, "He's bought this manteion, sib."

      She nodded without comprehension. She felt hot and sick,

      crushed by the scorching sunlight and the heat from the blaze on the

      altar, and poisoned by the fumes of so much blood, as she bent to

      consider the dove's left shoulder blade.

      Linked rings, frequently interrupted.

      "Many who are chained in our city shall be set free," she

      announced, and threw the dove into the sacred fire, startling a little

      girl bringing more cedar. An old woman was overjoyed to receive

      the second dove.

      The next presenter was a fleshy man nearing sixty; with him was a

      handsome younger one who hardly came to his shoulder; the

      younger man carried a cage containing two white rabbits. "For

      Maytera Rose," the older man said. "This Kypris is for love, right?"

      He wiped his sweating head with his handkerchief as he spoke,

      releasing a heavy fragrance.

      "She is the goddess of love, yes."

      The younger man smirked, pushing the cage at Maytera Mint.

      "Well, roses stand for love," the older man said, "I think these

      should be all right.

      Maytera Marble sniffed. "Victims in confinement cannot be

      accepted. Bloody, have him open that and hand one to me."

      The older man appeared startled.

      Maytera Marble held up the rabbit, pulling its head back to bare

      its throat. If there were a rule for rabbits, Maytera Mint had

      forgotten it; "We'll treat these as we did the doves," she said as

      firmly as she could.

      The older man nodded.

      Why, they do everything I tell them, she reflected. They accept

      anything I say! She struck off the first rabbit's head, cast it into the

      fire, and opened its belly.

      Its entrails seemed to melt in the hot sunshine, becoming a

      surging line of ragged men with slug guns, swords, and crude pikes.

      The buzz gun rattled once more, somewhere at the edge of

     


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