《The Wedding of Eithne》Chapter One, Scene One
Advertisement
As if through the fog of a dream, the white marble stone walls rose to a cathedral’s height over Eithne’s head. The grotto was twice as long as it was wide, bordered by a double row of columns on each side, columns of true wood that put out leaves like natural living trees.
Eithne tried to blink, to shake her head, to rid herself of the fog over her mind.
At one end of the grotto rose a circular white marble platform, a single step high. Upon it, a yard-wide cauldron yawned. It gleamed with the white glint of a metal that was somehow both silver and gold at once, while forever being neither.
Beneath it, a fire had been kindled, and steam arose from it.
Eithne couldn’t move. Couldn’t so much as lift a hand. Curse that old witch. Her teeth ground together at the back of her jaw.
At the other end of the vast hall was a semicircular pool filled with pure, clear spring water. The pool was fully ten yards across and another yard deep. Four more of the tree-like columns with their living leaves lined the pool.
Despite her frustration, Eithne felt placid and dreamy, as if she dozed in the morning sunshine of a holy day, with no daily tasks ahead of her. She’s ensorcelled me. Even the thought of it had no force, no rancor, only the bland truth of fact. She knew she should be angry. She wanted to be angry. With the wave of a hand, the high-priestess of the Drymyn Order’s sisterhood had sapped all her free will from her, and she couldn’t even protest.
From her place inside the wide, arched entrance to the grotto, Eithne overheard an argument in the shadows at the far end. Corchen, the high-priestess, scolded a blue-robed novitiate.
“Do what I told you. Go prepare for the Rite of the Oracle.”
The young woman protested. “But Grandmother, I haven’t been prepared.”
“Go and do it now, Sister Kerridwen. Even you should be able to do this. The rest of us will be along presently.”
The girl’s hissed reply—“Fine, Grandmother”—told Eithne that the High-Priestess was certainly the girl’s grandmother, and that the matter was certainly not fine.
The young priestess left with a thunderous look, followed by two other girls.
Eithne wished she had even enough self-possession to sport such a look for herself. A strand of her copper-red hair fell across an eye and tickled her nose, and she couldn’t move it away, couldn’t even sneeze.
Corchen emerged from the shadows of those strange tree-like columns, her grey-hair crowned by a spring laurel, her wrinkled hands folded on the plump belly under her stark white-robe. She took note of Eithne and raised a finger to someone behind her line of sight.
Advertisement
Two grim-looking Huntsmen with sheathed swords and boar-head hoods, warrior-guardians of the shrine, flanked Eithne.
At the center of the spring-water basin, against the wall on a pedestal, stood a white stone statue. Soft, slender, curved and graceful—the form of a beautiful woman carved in white marble. Ringed around her neck was cunningly twisted torc of silvery metal. The statue seemed fixed in place, as if it had been carved from the living rock. A soft pearly light radiated from it, illuminating the hall.
From the wall on either side of the statue, spring water bubbled and cascaded down into the pool.
In the pool of spring water, nine priestesses in pale robes knelt. There was something floating there between them in the water.
It was a body. A man’s body. Bearded, broad-shouldered, bear-chested, narrow-hipped and naked. Blood and gore floated around him in the water.
She wanted to gasp with shock, Eowain. But she could make no sound.
She wanted to run to him, to draw his head from the waters and hold him. But she could make no move.
Her intended husband and king, if the drymyn priests and priestesses had their way.
“I’m sorry for this, but it’s necessary. Keep silent please.”
Two of the Huntsmen took hold of her arms.
Corchen made a gesture, and Eithne was free again. She shook the wyrd fog from her head, pulled against the grip on her arms. “What is the meaning of—?”
Corchen raised a finger. “Silence, please.”
Eithne felt no more sorcery or glamour then, yet the stern tone of the High-Priestess, the still strangeness of the chamber—the haunting sense of a greater presence—compelled her to silence.
She watched, restrained by the two Huntsmen, as the priestesses wrapped Eowain’s ursine form in long white funereal linens.
What madness is this? Eithne strained at the Huntsmen’s grip, but they pulled her back roughly. But Corchen said he lived, that he survived the betrayal of his cousin and the bandits that plagued our journey here?
Anxiety clutched at Eithne’s throat, knotted her guts. She yanked again at the grip of the Huntsmen, but they were unyielding. Is he dead after all?
Nine squat, ruddy-visaged brutes in hairs and furs entered the grotto from the two arched passages. They were silent as they passed between the columns, and arranged themselves in a line at the edge of the pool. The priestesses finished their work and lifted the swaddled head of Eowain up out of the pool. One of the brutes took the head and stepped back, drawing more of his body from the water. Two more brutes stepped in and took the shoulders, then two more, and two more again, until the final pair of squat little men took up the feet and together, the nine of them raised Eowain’s body over their head.
Advertisement
Her eyes fixed on his wrapped hands. Hands that had once gathered away a spider that had startled her. Hands that had killed men that had threatened her. She wished she could hold them to herself. Her own hands clutched the air helplessly.
Corchen began to chant.
Bread of the Cult of the Dead in its Place I eat
In the Court prepared
Water of the Cult of the Dead in its Place I drink
A Queen am I, Who has become estranged to the Cities
She that comes from the Lowlands in a sunken boat
Am I.
I AM THE VIRGIN GODDESS
HOSTILE TO MY CITY
A STRANGER IN MY STREETS.
Corchen raised a silver sickle to the white marble statue of the woman overlooking the pool. “Oh, Spirit, who understands Thee? Who comprehends Thee?”
The dark brutes hefted his body up, carried it with grave ceremony to the silvery cauldron that boiled at the far end of the grotto. The priestesses, their white robes drenched with spring water and clinging to them, rose from the pool and followed after them.
The plates of the cauldron had been hammered from within to push out the wyrd metal surface. From the facets of the boiling pot, mystic coelbreni runes and curvilinear pictographs stood out in the glow from the statue at the other end of the chamber.
The ancient image of Kârn, god of the forest, was on that cauldron. He wore roebuck antlers and sat with goat-legs crossed beneath him. In his right hand, he held a torc, and with his left gripped a horned serpent behind the head. To the left was a stag with antlers similar to those of the god. Dogs, cats, and cattle surrounded the scene. Some faced the god, others faced away. Between the antlers of the god was the motif of a tree. The antlers of the god reminded Eithne of the massive rack that hung over Eowain’s hearth in Dúnsciath. That seems so long ago and far away now. How strong and fierce and handsome he looked. And now… Tears welled into Eithne’s eyes, no matter the guards, the people. Helplessness and defeat overwhelmed her.
The brutes raised Eowain’s linen-wrapped body high in the air. The cauldron bubbled with herbs and mystic roots. On another of its plates was the bust of a torc-wearing woman, flanked by two six-spoked wheels and what seemed to be two elephants and two fierce, winged gryffins. Beneath the the woman’s bust was the image of a terrible lion. The ancient chants of Corchen and the priestesses rose in a feverish spiral through the grotto.
Eithne shrieked a little as his linen-wrapped body sizzled into the scalding water. She had not thought it possible, for those short men to reduce his whole, bearish, war-like body, his whole life, into that cauldron. It seemed not nearly so vast as to contain the man she’d come to love.
And yet they raised him over their heads and folded him down into the waters until he was submerged. His body, wrapped in sodden linens, gleamed with a spring-green pallor in the shadows, as the waters of the cauldron boiled, bubbled, toiled, and troubled.
Then the linen-wrapped form stood up from the cauldron.
Revulsion clutched at her throat. How—? But—? Even if he had not been dead before, surely the boiling cauldron had killed him. Eithne yanked again at the grip of the Huntsmen. She had to go to him, to pull aside the linens and see his face, to prove to herself it was truly he that arose from those scalding waters.
Corchen spoke urgently. “Now. Get him out of there. Get him upstairs.” The priestesses helped him from the waters, the short brutes carried the bandaged body away.
Eithne struggled against the stern hold of the Huntsmen, but could do nothing save watch him go. The fight faded from her and dread overwhelmed her. She whispered, “He is alive again?”
Corchen shook her head. “He was never dead. But it was a close thing.” She raised her hands in open supplication to the shrine. “The Goddess is restless tonight.” She furrowed her brow, as if she listened to some sound lost in the grotto’s stones and waters. “The goddess is restless indeed!” Her eyes went wide. “Put Lady Eithne in the novitiate’s quarters. Tell the Hunt-Lord to double the guard. Turn all the men out.”
The implacable grip of the Huntsmen pulled Eithne away from the arch through which Eowain had been taken. “Wait? Why can’t I go with him? What’s happening?”
Corchen’s face was grim. “The Dragon is coming. Go now. There is more villainy afoot this night.”
Advertisement
- In Serial31 Chapters
A Demon's Journey
Cole wasn’t expecting to be threatened with decapitation the morning before his high school graduation, but alas, The Tower was practically meant to train humans to slay demons like him. Even if his new reality was bleak, Cole didn’t intend to idly adhere to it. There were four tiers to clear The Tower, but could Cole trust his new companion to guide him through them? Could he really make it to the top with essentially everyone trying to kill him? Even if he could, would he be able to survive the world that awaited him beyond The Tower’s walls? Cover by Jack0fheart Certain tags won't fully manifest until later in the series, so that's something to keep in mind. This is my first novel, so go a little easy on me. All feedback is highly appreciated!
8 59 - In Serial6 Chapters
The Counterfeit Mage
On his first day at the Academy of Magical Arts, Evander discovers his innate magical power is practically nonexistent. As a silver lining, he also discovers he can do every type of magic, albeit extremely poorly. Determined to overcome this 'setback', and not wanting to bring shame on his family, he decides to fake it. Using alchemy, trickery, and his many magical arts, he convinces his peers he is, in fact, the greatest mage that ever was.
8 122 - In Serial11 Chapters
Ignore this
Just ignore it
8 192 - In Serial15 Chapters
Timeless Love
A tragic accident leads her to woke up into a new era she never knew before. Slowly learning about her new identity, she also learnt there was some connection between her former life and her current life. Woke up and found herself tied up and being kidnaped, no one believe her when she said she might be Jiang Xi Yu, the daughter of Duke Jiang from Luoyang. The two eunuchs, who saved her, brought her to served their sly, cunning wangye. after being forced to spend a night full of lust with the first Prince of the kingdom, she got the offer to become his sex slave. She, who believe she was a daughter from noble family, against him, who believe she belong to him from that night forward. Their fate started that way. From a night full of lust to forever be tangled in love.
8 174 - In Serial11 Chapters
ᴇꜱᴄᴀᴘᴇ [ʏᴀꜱᴜ x ꜰ ʀᴇᴀᴅᴇʀ]
⋆* 🎀 𝘌𝘴𝘤𝘢𝘱𝘦 [𝘠𝘢𝘴𝘶 𝘹 𝘍 𝘳𝘦𝘢𝘥𝘦𝘳] 🎀 *⋆Cover by : noob.daddae (instagram)A/n :(this boy get simped a lot yet gain not so many fanfic about him-)Many years ago there was an accident where our beloved Samurai Kusonoki Masashige went missing ofc everyone began to panic for their most strogest Samurai gone without any information,not so long after another Masashige ancestors went missing one by one,there was many people try to gethered more information about this accident but sadly most of these people found dead..after that tragedy no one dares to continue these 'research'. years went by it become peaceful days that until more people went missing.(Y/n) (L/n) the girl who sucessfully escape from that 'witch' Sama grasp but in the end she had to made a deal with Sama for her Mother live she accept her fate to be one of this monsters she used to fight against.She just hope someone will free her..maybe she will meet this 'knight in shining armor' and save her from all these nightmare?•> This book may contain :- blood- murder- gore (not that much)- not really good english- bullying- family issue- every character used on this book belong to MUCDICH the development of a game called 'the mimic' in roblox except Y/n who created by you (Reader) and OC that i create to helping the story go on.!keep on mind this book not contain any lemons!
8 113 - In Serial11 Chapters
Guardian Demon (Suicidal Iruma)
What if Iruma lost all hope in his life and was about to end it all when Sullivan found him? His whole life, Iruma didn't do anything else but obey his parents and everyone's wish. BUT enough is enough. He has had it. Tired of life and fighting for it, he decided to end it all with one jump. Little did he know what his parents did...Opera was the butler of Sullivan and a close aid to the demon. Now with Iruma in his home, he had to watch this little innocent and hurt angel as much as he could and try to get him back to his usual self while Sullivan was usually very busy and wasn't at home often.A/N:Feel free to correct my bad writing.Rights on the pictures go to the artist.I do not own Mairimashita! Iruma-kun! , rights to the owner.
8 207

