“Health to all the land,” she whispered, “and the healing fire of love….”
Torches painted the rubble of Dyareela’s temple with their lurid glare, dyeing with an even deeper crimson the blood-splattered robes of the priests and the severed head of the sacrifice. The sweet stink of blood hung heavy in the air, and the line of soldiers watched with wary eyes the chanting, murmuring masses of humanity who had crowded into the ruins to see it. The priests were praying now, straining grotesquely toward a darkness of cloud or smoke that blotted out the stars.
“Whatever they’re expecting, they’d better get on with it,” said a man of the
Third Commando. “That kind of babbling won’t hold this lot long. They’ve seen blood, and they’ll want more of it soon!”
The man on his right nodded. “Stupid of Kittycat to allow it-anyone could see what would hap-” His words faded to a mumble as Sync’s stony eye passed along the line, but his companion heard him add, with a faith that in the circumstances was touching, “This wouldn’t of happened if Tempus was here.”
“Dyareela, Dyareela, hear, oh, hear!” chanted the crowd. Hear, hear, or maybe it was fear, fear, echoed from shattered pillars and walls. “Have mercy-” came the drawn out cry. A shiver of eagerness ran through the crowd and the soldiers stiffened, knowing what was coming now.
Torches flickered wildly in a great gust of wind, a damp wind that came from the sea. The wind gusted again, and the scene grew perceptibly less lurid as several of the torches were blown out. A priest grabbed helplessly as his headdress went sailing away, and the crowd was abruptly distracted from its bloodlust by the struggle for gold thread and jewels. Then somewhere out to sea, thunder rumbled, and the remaining torches were doused by the first splatterings of rain.