“What are you doing?!” Kamelya asked, approaching the throne of the Qara-Khağan
and throwing down a letter addressed to her at his feet. “What is this nonsense?!” She concluded.
In the dark tent, a wind howled from the outside, flickering the torches sitting on either side of the black khan’s throne. Behind the shadow of Nasreddîn stood the merchant-diplomat Akin. He watched as the crumpled letter smacked onto the rug below—his black eyes unreadable beneath the emotionless gaze of his white mask. Equally unreadable was the gaze of the Nasreddîn, whose scowling helm sat perfectly still upon his broad shoulders—his own eyes staring off in the distance—two balls of black shadow looking beyond the angry witch at his feet.
“The Qara- Khağan,” Akin explained, bowing, “feels the time to act as mercenaries in the world has expired.” He began to step forward from the throne—down the steps to the rug where the letter lay. The elaborate dress of blue silk and cloth blew behind him as he walked—one arm upward and an erect posture as he spoke. “And that the Qara-Suu should now take their place amongst the kings and queens of the earth.”
“You are undoing EVERYTHING I have worked for!” Kamelya said, ignoring Akin and looking straight at the Qara-Khağan. Her white eyes glared furiously from the beneath the shadows of her robes. “Have you forgotten everything I have taught you!”
Akin stood forward. “My lady... I am the voice of the Qara-Kâhin. You will address me when you speak to him.”
“You are a pawn!” Kamelya said, finally turning her attention to the man. “You have always been a pawn. A mere piece in a design more grand than you can imagine!” Kamelya turned back to Nasreddîn. “And now your ‘Kâhin’ threatens to ruin it all.” She glared, stepping forward past Akin and brushing him aside.
“My lady,” Akin began again.
“Sit down,” Kamelya said, brushing her hand. And with her words, Akin hit the floor. She moved past the stunned man and stood before the throne of Nasreddîn. The black khan turned his stare down onto the woman and the two merely stood there for several moments—quiet—still—unwavering. Finally, Kamelya took one more step forward and lowered her chin. “You will undo everything, child. Everything we have worked for. Everything we have accomplished. Nations fall. Kings fall. And with them… their ideas fall. Can’t you see?” her voice softened, before gradually picking up into a hoarse yell. “Can’t you see this is so much more than about increasing your OWN POWER?!”
The black khan stood up and unseathed one of the many swords lying next to his throne. Kamelya took a step back and Nasreddîn took one forward, down the steps of his throne and onto the dirty rug on the ground.
Kamelya scowled and clinched her fists into tight balls, her body shaking. “And now you call yourself Kâhin—a prophet of God.” The last word sat on her tongue for several moments, like the last echo of a noise reverberating down an empty hall. She knelt forward and threw her hand past her face. “GOD!”
Nasreddîn took another step towards her—the heavy, serrated scimitar in his armored grip clanging as he walked.
Kamelya growled—like a beast being backed into a corner. “You would ruin everything… to only increase your own power for a single lifetime.”
The black khan continued to walk—each step louder and more forceful than the next—each step sending Kamelya one step backward, towards the exit of the tent. She looked behind her to the exit, a gray and windy night awaiting her outside. Then she turned her attention back to Nasreddîn. “Cursed are the Qara-Suu because of you,” she said, pointing her gnarled finger to the giant. “The Ghūl will die and so will everything we have worked for! You fool!” She snarled. “YOU FOOL!”
Nasreddîn took several steps forwards and started into a full sprint. Kamelya began to step away, but the black khan was too fast. He thrust his serrated sword back and plunged it into the abdomen of the witch.
Kamelya stood there leaning over the blade in her stomach. Her eyes widened to tiny white pearls and she coughed some blood out of her throat. She looked down and saw the blade, sticking out from beneath her robes and drawing out a slither of blood down its edge. Then she slowly began to step backward—the sword making a metallic squeal as it left her body. And soon Kamelya stepped all the way out of the tent.
The ghūl around her looked up in surprise as the witch stumbled out. She continued to walk backward, gripping the wound gushing in her belly and her blind eyes staring off shocked into the distance.
She turned around and started into the night, the smiling faces of the ghūl around her watching curiously as she moved. They began to follow her, arching their back and moving steadily behind each and every one of her steps.
Kamelya stumbled, but kept moving. She stumbled again, but kept moving. Finally, she could walk no further and fell to the dirt—a cloud of gray sands rushing up as she hit the floor. The ghūl around her stopped and waited.
The witch raised her face to the bright moon, listening to the rolling winds coming through the northern mountains. She closed her eyes and took a heavy breath, releasing her hands from the hole in her stomach and letting them fall absently to her sides. “God,” she said, her voice strained and tired—her eyes shut and her words slow. “God hath deceived me.”
And with that, the ghūl around her pounced. They rushed upon her in a frenzy—their swords, maces, and smiles blending together in a violent storm of red and silver. They tore into her, the sounds of their massacre carrying viciously across the night sky.
And from the tent, the Nasreddîn watched emotionlessly—unmoved and uncaring at the scene playing out before him. He took a step backward—into the shadows of his rustling tent—and closed the curtain before him.
Up in the sky, some clouds began to eclipse the moon—its silver light illuminating less the world beneath it. And over them all the winds moved on by like they always had—carrying the sounds of Kamelya's death from one end of the earth to the next.
Somewhere far away, a crow howled for the very last time, flying off and never returning—leaving behind some feathers as it flew into the dark and into the sounds of the howling winds...
Bookmarks