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Posts archive for: September, 2006
  • Confused.....

    Hey..am confused. The thing is, once when I lost my password I'd made this other blog. But eventually, I rememberd the password to this blog and then, never used the other one. My pc remembers the password of this blog now but when I try to login to the other blog, it doesnt go through.

    When I ask for the password, it gives me the password of this blog!! Am really perplexed. What do I do? What am I doing wrong here? Is my brain all fuddled up because of all this moving or is it genuine problem? Can someone tell me please?

  • Its Navratri time!!! Light wins over darkness.

    Hi Guys, I have been busy, what with moving to a new apartment and handling my brother and meetings with the lawyer due to problems that my ex husband has created for me; by not paying his due loan amounts to the banks and breaching the contract that he made with me, the bank collection people calling upon me, threatning me, despite I having paid my dues.....the list of troubles seems endless at this point. I got my divorce three years ago and that is a part of my life I dont disclose often. Not that the intention is to misguide anyone but I try not to think of the life that I led where I suffered beyond endurance and still carried on with the stupid hope that things might change. How stupid I was!! Somethings dont change. Somehow everytime I think, I am done and over with it, it rears up its ugly head, ruining my present and has evil designs on my future. Everytime I think about it, it puts me so much into rage that I clean up the whole house. Not a very pleasant time of my life, that one. Instead, I prefer to think of how far I have come in these last three years, what I have made of myself. Indeed, I wouldnt have been able to succeed and fulfill my desire of travelling to places I like had it not been for some inner strength that I seem to get from somewhere. Maybe that is God's way of showing me HE is there with me, in me and loves me despite my faults. :) Despite all these troubles, I have something to cheer me up. I look around me and I see people dressed in their best traditional clothes in the evening, all ready and pepped up to dance. It is the festival of dance; Navratri time. :)It is the time for hope, to regain strength to fight against evil; like Goddess Durga did. It is the time which tries to tell us, enjoy life and fight to live. Dont let the bad things in life depress you. Fight the unfairness and the core of all this- BELIEVE IN YOURSELF, YOU CAN CHANGE THE WORLD. DONT GIVE UP! Navratri is celebrated mostly in my State; Gujarat but is equally loved all over India. In the north and the east, this is the time to pray to Goddess Durga. In the west, it is the time to dance and call upon Durga to come to our houses and bestow her blesssings upon us. Uh oh..shall continue later. Gotta go. Its the estate agent's call. 21:32 pm Here I am, back again. Went to the garbas and had a blast. Garba is the traditional folk dance of Gujarat.It can be played in different styles and modes. Displayed are some pictures to show how colourful it is and how it is played. Hope you like it. garba imagegarba attiregarba
  • Chapter 2

    Grotesque. (cntd)
    Chapter 2

    City of Avignon, France - 1342

    Situated on the banks of the Rhone River, Avignon was the Babylon of the West and the very heart of the Christian Empire in the fourteenth century, a city teeming with tradesmen and soothsayers, drunkards and craftsmen, soldiers and ambassadors, Jezebels and thieves. High ramparts encircled the town to protect it from outside invasion, but with so many people pressed together within its walls, adequate sewage disposal proved a daunting task, and a foul odor hung over the enclosed congestion like an invisible but quite tangible pall.

    The Popes’ Palace rose out of that sea of stench, towering over the land. Built upon a rock for which the Roman Empire had found no use, the looming configuration served as the cornerstone and pontifical throne of the Holy See. The enormous Gothic castle stood as the largest in existence, its fortified walls twelve feet thick and replete with battlements, towers, and arrow loops. The whole of the formation sprawled as a double palace boasting twin quadrangles. Its wings held massive halls, the larger and more significant of them being the consistory, conclave, banquet, and treasury halls. In the bowels of the edifice was a great cellar that housed seemingly countless gallons of wine extracted from rolling acres of papal vineyards and aged in ranks of immense wooden casks. In the heart of the castle were hellish hearths where tens of thousands of bread loaves a day were baked to feed Avignon’s Babylonian hoard. The Popes’ Palace was nothing short of a medieval monster scaled to magnificent proportions, a beast colossal.

    Within the palace there were squirming entrails of corruption, wealth, seated iniquity, power, and great authority, ceaselessly rolling and contracting. Invariably, the castle corridors teamed with cardinals and Curia officials, papal guards and squires, councilmen and lawmen, concubines with lowly gazes, knights and their lords, visiting dignitaries and their escorts, including distinguished relatives and private entertainers of the Pontiff.

    During the reign of Pope Benedict XII, twenty-four cardinals served in the College of Cardinals — Cardinal Blasi was its fiery wolf and disliked by most of the mainstay. One of the youngest cardinals, Jean-Francois Blasi, was a man of good health, standing tall and sporting a head of blonde hair. His most notable feature, disturbing enough, lay in his eyes, one a clear brown eye and the other a blind milky eye worthy of a devil’s return gaze. Only a few of the cardinals tolerated his company outside formal engagements, but a few were all that Blasi required — those cardinals with enough inner-circle influence to serve his needs. Mostly, they were Senior Cardinals who also served within the Pope’s Palace as overseers.

    ‘Twas standard practice in Avignon for cardinals of higher stature to be assigned to oversee various wings, halls, chapels, and grounds of the palace. For years, Blasi was the overseer of the Great Cellar. The expansive hold, dug in 1337 and spanning the entire length of the wing housing the Conclave Hall above it, was a subterranean hallway. This enormous underground vault held hundreds upon hundreds of seasoned kegs aging some of the finest wines in Europe. Blasi was responsible for nearly every aspect of their production, grape to keg, including the subsequent storage and safekeeping of the wines. Generally considered as an appointment of grand importance, the winery was responsible for a good portion of the annual revenue of the Papacy.

    Thus, most of those about the palace considered Blasi to be the ‘Cardinal of the Wines.’ Moreover, every connoisseur knew that befriending Blasi was to befriend the Great Cellar. Cardinal Raulin Toussain, the wiry unto being gristly overseer of the Palace Pantry and Boteillerie (the Bottle Storehouse), and the very obese yet delicate Cardinal Lilo Julin, master of the Kitchens and Banquet Hall, considered themselves epicures, and thus each had made certain to cultivate the friendship of the Cardinal of the Wines. Blasi knew well enough why these two courted him, but nevertheless there was at the least an obvious brand of camaraderie amongst them.

    Unlike the much larger College of Cardinals, the Council of the Apocrypha contained only three cardinals: Cardinals Hadour Xavier, Senior councilman, Avit Basiliste, the eldest and most frail, and Edmard Lean, the youngest and most recently appointed of the body. Cardinal Xavier’s service ended with the discovery of his nude and decapitated corpse. A peasant boy discovered his remains in a thicket alongside a road west of Avignon. Scattered in the brush about him lay the remains of his guards, their bodies equally defiled. His murder remained an enigma, and before the rumors of the murders grew stale, Pope Benedict died as well. Though several cardinals insisted that Benedict had been poisoned, and that the string of murders were somehow part of a larger political conspiracy, such speculations were never substantiated. Blasi was closest to the papal wines — and a tyrant to boot — and many suspected him of the poisoning. None were bold enough ever to confront him for fear of his fiery temper, however.

    Less than two weeks after Benedict’s state funeral, the French-dominated Conclave hastily elected another Frenchman, Pierre Roger de Beaufort, who was fifth in succession to the Avignon Papacy. De Beaufort was christened Clement VI. Most of the usual dignitaries were present for the election: the College and Council cardinals, the Secretary General, the Vicar General and Vice-Regent, chief papal officers of the Kingdom of Naples, the more distinguished Bishops, and all the bevy of hangers-on such an assemblage required. An envoy from Philip VI de Valois, King of France, was notably absent, having arrived too late to attend the ceremony.

    The power of this election rested overtly with the College of Cardinals, but as only a few living men knew, the true power of pontifical persuasion lay in the hands of a mere few — namely the Council of the Apocrypha. Over the centuries, the College of Cardinals had evolved its role into an electing body of the Church, now serving the Holy See in much the same manner as any parliamentary organ serves its overall organization. In contrast, the Council of the Apocrypha was a small, veiled and purposefully unrecorded papal body wielding an authority that easily rivaled that of the College. The cardinals of the Apocrypha suffered no dominion, save that of God, and were accountable only to His chosen representative on earth — the Holy Father and Pope.

    The Apocrypha was composed of two distinct levels — the Upper and Lower Councils. The Upper Council consisted of the Pope and the cardinals he appointed, who in turn supervised the abbots and monks of the Lower Council. Since the time of its inception, membership of this Council had varied between sixty and sixty-six members, each appointed by the Upper Council. Appointments to the Council were for life, and new members were given charge only upon the death of an existing appointee. The two of the original three cardinals of the Upper Council — Basiliste and Lean — resided in Avignon in the villa Chateau Rouge. However, the members of the Lower Council were divided evenly between two equal and remote monasteries in the hinterlands of France and Italy. These were the Abbaye des Gardiens, located in the hills of Auvergne Province in France, and the Monastero del Cancello, situated in the mountains of Italy’s Molise Province.

    The Gardiens Abbey of the Lower Council fell under the direction of its resident Abbot, Vonig, whilst the Cancello Monastery in Italy fell under the direction of its resident Abbot, Domingus. Both Lower Council Abbots reported only to the Upper Council cardinals, who reported solely to the Pope — and in secret. These isolated monasteries considered themselves Benedictine, yet were not governed in accordance with Benedictine Monastic Rule. They had become an order unto themselves, which was neither Benedictine, nor Franciscan, nor Cistercian. For centuries, these monasteries had remained disjoined from the monastic rule and fell under the exclusive control of the Council of the Apocrypha. The Council and its two monasteries, with its esteemed circle of servants, were outwardly a kind of ‘holy ghost’ guarding the most ghastly skeleton of the Papal Closet. However, few secrets escaped Lucifael — those of the Council, in particular.

    Thus, whilst Lucifael decimated Asia with her breath-of-death, she was equally occupied with Europe, deceiving two of its nations. Through marriage, France and England crossed royal bloodlines. In short, a king died and England had rightful claim to France — but the devil lay in the details. Nevertheless, the entangled kingdoms found themselves at an impasse and the bell tolled, ringing in of the Hundred Year Wars. The very first of these battles, which would prove to be the most horrific in history, played itself out on French soil and would forever be called the bloody Battle of Crecy. Many would bear witness to the horrors that came to happen on the muggy August afternoon of the battle.

    Crecy-en-Ponthieu, Northern France - August 1346

    Only remnants of the storm remained. Thunder rolled off to the west, and lightning lanced into the distant hills. A luminous black raven settled amongst the wind-warped branches of a splay oak, disturbing a few battered leaves. Its black pupils swelled and contracted, cold and mechanical, as if some machine governed the pitch-dark eye. The raven rocked its head and cawed at the retreating thunderhead twice, and then again. Below the oak perch, a column of French soldiers sloshed along a muddy rutted road.

    The Frenchmen — most of them peasants whose hands were more accustomed to wielding axes and pitchforks than swords — were marching to war through the sodden hills of northern France. Their newly crowned king, Philip VI, had told the English dog, Edward III, that France would never share the throne with England, or anyone else, for that matter. France, Philip decreed, was sovereign, and its throne was his alone. Responding to Philip’s cavalier claim with a fit of rage, and thenceforth determined to unseat him, Edward carved a path through France, burning entire villages in his wake. He was intent on inflicting enough injury to force Philip’s downfall, for those within his own ranks to unseat him. When news reached Philip of Edward’s brazen attack, he gathered many of the French lords to march against the invading intruder.

    Philip’s call to arms was so great that Edward, now confronted by the massive French force on the plains above Crecy-en-Ponthieu, refused to engage him and fled north toward Calais. The French were confident and very much anticipated a hasty victory. Philip’s force was enormous, composed of the armies of many lords, and even if made up of mostly peasants, they were more than thirty-five thousand strong and outnumbered the English three to one. The French lords and their knights, however, were easily distinguished from the host of farmers and tradesmen. They were well-mounted, carrying banners and sheathed in heavy armor, and they had the proud bearing of noblemen and the grim determination characteristic of veteran soldiers.

    Long swords, maces and shields clanked against armored mounts, and ranks of pikes bobbed amongst the orderly columns of foot soldiers marching behind crossbow wagons that lumbered over rutted terrain. A thousand saddles creaked; a thousand horses blew and stamped. Shouted commands were relayed from rank to rank as pockets of men sung of the fields and the harvests they had left behind. In the wet August air, the sounds of war made a requiem for men who marched stonily toward their fates. Although the soldiers were brash, presuming a hasty and decisive victory and the taking of many English prisoners, deep within them ran a great unease akin to that of skittish hogs on the eve before slaughter.

    The shared state of mind betrayed a distinct level of nervousness, spawned more of incorporeal premonition than of any concrete estimation, a dim yet thoroughly distracting awareness running deep through these men’s bones — a sense of impending doom. Even the battle horses discerned the very marrow of it; however, the same luminous black raven, perched well above the battlefield in the gnarled oak, apprehended it best of all. ‘Twas the unseen presence of the Devil herself, and in her company but unseen was another ready angel — Death.

    In the midst of the column of soldiers, two heavily armored knights with armored horses moved shoulder to shoulder. Over their breastplates hung sleeveless jerkins embroidered with identical emblems. The same insignia decorated their saddle blankets and shields. The knights rode under the banner of Lord Amelet of Laon. They were brothers separated by six years who bore the coat-of-arms and distinguished sir name of Blasi. Jean-Jacques and Jean-Rene were the youngest of the three Blasi brothers, and the eldest was Jean-Francios, revered Cardinal of the Wines.

    Unlike Jean-Jacques, an unbridled man, Jean-Rene lived with his wife, Alsae Blasi, and his only son, Michael Blasi, in a chateau on the respected Blasi estate located on the northern outskirts of the town of Reims. Jean-Francois resided in a large papal-owned chateau, the Chateau Rouge, in Avignon. He shared the two-story chateau with several other papal dignitaries, their lavish apartments combined under a single roof.

    Jacques bit the last meat from an apple and tossed it at his brother’s helmet. The core struck Rene’s raised visor and slammed it shut. Rene snapped it up again, exposing a bitter brow yet holding a forward stare. Jacques laughed and leaned forward on his horse for better inspection of his brother’s stubborn expression.
    "Come now, Rene," the young man said with a smile. "Laughter raises the spirit before battle. I’m not King Edward, Le Petit!" Jacques slipped a fresh apple from a pouch draped at his side.

    Rene responded coldly. "The men are not prepared for the charge. They are weary from the march."
    "I shall run the English into the sea!" Jacques proclaimed, raising his apple on high. "I shall shove an apple in Edward’s mouth and hurl him back across the sea. And since I am your kind brother, Rene, I shall capture an English squire for you," he added with a chuckle before biting a chunk out of the apple.
    "They shall position themselves defensively and be prepared for the charge," Rene stated.
    "They shall be tired as little girls," his brother countered. "They have seen days of battle. They shall throw down their arms in surrender at the sight of our numbers."
    "They shan’t surrender. Both Edward and his Black Prince are with them. Their army shall defend them to the death. You speak foolishly, brother."
    "They are tired," the younger man insisted. "They shall surrender. You are the fool, Rene. I shall remind the fool of whom he is after the battle, if there be one."
    "You have orders, Jacques. You shall follow them, as will I. His Majesty’s marshal has ordered every banner rest until the men are fresh from a day’s march."
    "Look about you, Rene. Look in their eyes — at their spirits! They shan’t rest. Their blood is hot. They shall attack, against orders, even," Jacques replied.
    "Many of these men have never tasted battle as we have," Rene reminded him. "And we are bound by orders from Lord Amelet, whose banner flies for His Majesty." Rene spat. "We have orders to rest. We must not move against Edward until we are given the order to move."

    The two men looked over the slow-moving army as a short silence fell between them. The column seemed to extend itself through the uneven terrain forever before and behind them. Jacques turned to Rene, his face twisted by disgust, and said to his brother, "If these simple men place their lives before the Englishmen, most without shield or armor, then so shall I ride and defend them. True to France, so shall any knight. We serve France, and these men are France — I shall defend them!"
    "You swore an oath, not to be broken." Jacques stared forward as though he did not hear Rene. "Damn you then, Jacques." Rene growled, snapping his face guard down.
    Shortly, Jacques asked, "Shall you ride with France, as well?"
    Rene raised his visor and replied, "You have lost your balances, Jacques."

    Jacques grimaced and repeated the question. "Shall you?"
    "You’re no knight — an armored fool only."
    "Shall you, then?" his brother repeated.

    "I shan’t confess to Jean-Francois that I was not beside his foolish brother in battle."

    "Yes," said Jacques. "‘Tis as he said: The cross rides with both of us, or with neither."

    "Indeed it does," Rene sighed.
    He turned to Jacques and scolded him. "You leave me little choice. You enjoy that, yes?"
    Tossing the apple aside and slipping off his helmet, Rene pulled a fine golden chain from beneath his breastplate. It supported the considerable weight of a gem-studded crucifix that had belonged to his elder brother, Jean-Francois Blasi, and was since blessed by the late Pope Benedict XII himself. Francois had insisted that Rene and Jacques carry it with them in every battle. As the moment dictated, it was Rene’s turn to wear the Blasi cross. This was a part of the reason Rene felt compelled to join his brother if Jacques charged. He would not leave his brother to face death alone, and without the cross. Nor would he leave the French army to fight the battle on its own, no matter how foolishly united. He was equally dedicated to his countrymen and to his brother, if in different ways. Both he would defend. Both he would honor. Rene leaned over the side of his horse and handed the cross to Jacques. Jacques kissed the cold metal, bowing his head slightly in reverence. A crash of thunder resonated over the countryside. Jacques laughed and welcomed it as a good omen. Above them, in the boughs of a squat oak, the luminous raven stirred with fluttering feathers. It bolted from its perch toward the northwesterly horizon, toward the armies of the English.

    "In the name of the most high Lord and Saint Denis," Jacques murmured with stony severity. Rene squared back on his horse and repeated the same reverence. He returned the crucifix to its place upon his breast and pulled his helmet on.
    Horsemen raced down the column of armies, shouting, "Make ready! Ready your weapons!" The column lunged forward.

    Philip’s army had caught up with Edward, who now had little choice save to turn and fight. The English king had aligned his mounted knights and pikemen on a wide hill near the village of Crecy, archers ranked behind and in front of them and yeomen waiting beside more horses at the rear. Edward held his command from within an occupied windmill atop the hill.

    In a short space, whilst continuing in the direction of northeast, the agitated raven covered an expanse of roughly tilled earth and dived into a secluded thicket, hidden by a scant ridge. The bird’s luminous appearance lit heavily amongst the thistle and yew, its harsh call startling a young English archer who stood relieving himself in the lee. "An untoward sign on an untoward day," the archer whispered, staring at the raven. It seemed to the man that the bird saw him, indeed saw into and through him, and its unnatural gaze pierced his soul. He buckled to his knees, clutching his head as if attempting to keep it from exploding. He huffed and moaned, crumpling to the ground before dying. The bird shrieked and fluttered wildly before it too fell to its death, dropping into the undergrowth in a feathery convulsion.

    As the bird’s dead form hit the earth, the dead archer’s eyes snapped open. He lifted himself from the ground and scanned the hollow. The whites of his eyes were washed away, now shiny and black as a raven’s feathers. He retrieved a longbow that stood propped against a tree trunk, and with a full quiver of arrows slung across his back, he left the grove more filled than he had entered it. Even with his bladder emptied, his heart was brimming — brimming with the black evil that boiled in his unbeating breast. He broke through the thicket to a rigid formation of nearly a thousand archers flanking five hundred men-at-arms. The formation stood positioned atop a point overlooking a shallow valley to the east. Behind them and to the west, thousands more soldiers waited in two perfect squares. The archer took his place amongst the ranks.

    Just as Jacques Blasi had predicted, the French army charged recklessly into the fray before their commanders could restrain them. In the valley, a disorganized mass of shouting men-at-arms, spearmen, Genoese crossbowmen, and mounted French knights rushed toward the ridge occupied by the English. There was no order to the melee, and the men were knocking one another to the ground in their bloodlust, some even impaling themselves by their own inept hands.

    On the English side of the hill, the soul emptied soldier passed between long rows of archers who held longbows high and drawn.
    "Steady! Hold," roared a voice of authority.
    The living archers, seeing the blackness of his eyes, poured back, their ranks rippling in twain as a parting Red Sea. Stricken, the men whispered to one another, "Move ‘way! He’s the Devil in him!" None moved to stop him as he turned among ranks and marched down the ridge, leaving the English and their position behind him.
    "Archer! Return to your post!" The bellowing order came from behind the ranks. The voice was that of Lord Clifford, certain in its power of command, and yet the archer maintained his slow, sure course down the hill. Behind the English formation, gray skies broke and the afternoon sun pierced the clouds. With the sun behind the English, the approaching French forces stood blinded.

    From his station amongst his own bowmen, the Earl of both Warwick and Oxford called, "Lord Clifford, return your archer! Lords, hold your men on the mark!"
    The devil-archer slipped an arrow from his quiver, and without breaking stride, drew it deep into his longbow. His black eyes lay fixed on two bright specs near the far end of the valley.
    "Archer! Return or be felled from behind," Lord Clifford demanded. The archer continued down the ridge, his dark figure thrown into eerie relief against the chaos of the advancing Frenchmen. Clifford moved his horse forward, followed by his bannerman. He stopped beside one of the archers, growling orders to drop the lone warrior where he stood.
    "From behind, my lord?" The bowman asked uneasily.
    "I order you: step forth and drop that man! Do it now, archer," Clifford hissed, gesturing furiously toward the retreating figure.
    "Indeed, my lord." The archer bowed and moved to a clear position. He drew back an arrow, tested the wind, and launched the bodkin arrow down the ridge. The shaft flew straight and swift, piercing the soulless man’s back and sprouting from the center of his chest. The impaled archer paused a moment, then turned around to face the ridge. The English soldiers saw only a blur as the dead man turned around to face them, almost as if to hail them. No one saw the arrow fly from his bow and up the ridge; no one saw that arrow pierce the eye of Lord Clifford’s young bowman. Only when the bowman crumpled to the ground did they see the black-feathered arrow pushing out from his head. The devil-archer turned and continued down the field, into the roaring gape of the French charge.

    "Leave him go!" Clifford spat, staring at the walking dead man. "Archers, find your targets! Be ready on my mark!" But all eyes were on the thing that still walked unaffected toward the advancing French enemy, mindless of the lodged arrow that had pierced through its torso.

    The blast of a primitive English cannon echoed across the field as the first hail of arrows rained down amongst the charging Frenchmen. Men and horses fell beneath the onslaught of the arrows, dismaying the French. The arrow shafts had a brand of bodkin arrowheads, new to battle. Bodkin points were long heavy iron tips capable of slicing through armor, and the English longbows were carved from dense Yew wood and fitted with resilient hemp bowstring that required a draw of a hundred pounds or more and hurled this devastating new arrow with incredible force. The metal suit of the French knights did little to protect them.

    Seeing his men in disarray and falling quickly, Philip ordered them to turn back and regroup. They ignored the order, charging past him and running through the valley like madmen. The Genoese crossbowmen found themselves in a hail of longbow shafts. Too far from the English to hit them, they threw down their bows and fled. Upon seeing this, Philip’s brother, Count D’Alencon, ordered them slain. Thus it happened that, on that day, more Genoese fell in battle at the hands of their French comrades than by the invading English army.

    The soulless archer walked alone on the churning battlefield. Men and horses obeyed the instinctive terror those black eyes inspired, and none would approach the bowman who moved about with apparent unconcern for the arrow that pierced him. He drew another arrow from the quiver on his back, strung and released it in one sure motion. Nearly three hundred yards downfield, the shaft thudded into the earth between the forelimbs of Jean-Jacques Blasi’s horse. Two Genoese crossbow bolts now found their mark in the ribs of the dead archer, and a third impaled his thigh. His black gaze never left its target, and the arrows did not stop him or even slow his hand.

    Another arrow left his bow before the first was still. This one did not miss. It blazed downward into the collar of Jacques’ armor and pierced his left lung. As he tumbled from his horse, another shaft flashed from the sky, and beside him, Rene heard a disheartening pop as his own mount crumpled beneath him. A black-fletched arrow protruded from between the animal’s eyes. But the dead archer was not immortal.

    Even as he released another arrow, a crossbow bolt punctured his throat and he finally fell to the ground. Rene jumped to his feet and ran to his brother. Soldiers screamed past them, their mad charge unabated. Rene lifted Jacques’ faceguard, raised his head from the ground, and cradled it in the bend of his arm. His eyes welled with tears — he knew Jacques would not leave this valley alive.

    "Do not, Rene," Jacques said, his face struggling between forced smiles and an expression of pure agony his brother had only seen on the faces of the dying. "I have fallen with honor." He coughed on the bubbling blood in his breath. "I wish to…to kiss the cross….once more."
    Rene ripped away his helmet, raised his chin, and jerked on the neck chain until the crucifix tumbled from his breastplate. He fumbled with it, bringing the cross to his dying brother’s lips. Jacques kissed it and he smiled.
    "Rene, when you slay Edward, ask the great Jean-Francois de France to pray for me," he whispered. "Swear it."
    "I swear, Jacques. And I shall also pray for you, until no breath is left in me," Rene responded with a laugh and a shower of tears. Such was a long-standing jest amongst the brothers — the foolish title with which they had teased their ‘overly serious’ older sibling: Francois de France. As Rene pushed the cross back beneath his breastplate, his brother sighed and died in his arms.

    Across the valley, the devil-archer stirred. His work was not yet finished. The thick crossbow shaft lodged in his thigh broke off with a grisly crack as he rolled and stood to his knees. A hail of arrows peppered his light armor, but his blood did not flow. He strung an arrow and released it. Rene raised his face to heaven, wailing in both grief and defiance, even as his own death flew toward him on black wings. Hell’s arrow streaked toward the earth like a soul damned. It scored Rene through the roof of his screaming mouth, impaling his brain and cleaving his skull. He screamed no more. His body fell across his dead brother’s with an expression of horror on his contorted and bloodied face. His gaping eyes did not see the Genoese arrow that took the damned archer through his skull. The archer fell once again and moved no more.

    The English force had consisted of approximately twelve thousand men, over half of them archers. Men-at-arms stood, centering two spreading flanks of bowmen, forming a precise V of roughly eighteen hundred yards in length.

    The French force numbered thirty-six thousand. Wave after wave of charging knights — fifteen waves in all — raced into the English funnel of arrows, only to heap themselves upon their dead and the ones dying before them. Between the fleeing Genoese crossbowmen, the sun blinding their eyes and the untrained peasants’ mad screams about the battlefield, the French forces began to fall into complete disarray. The battlefield lay riddled with English arrows that stood out amongst the slain men and animals like stiff barley stalks. In the short space of ten hours, nearly half a million English arrows had rained down from the high ridge and over six thousand French and Genoese fell dead. Surely ‘twas a devil’s dance — and a wicked waltz it was.

    The witching hour was upon him when the wounded Philip retreated. He had little choice but to abandon his injured where they lay. Two kings, as allies to Philip, had fallen in the horrid slaughter, one of them the blind King John of Bohemia. But Philip had no recourse but withdrawal, and Edward took no prisoners. At midnight, his son, the Black Prince of Wales, moved under cloak of darkness, and with long knives, his men slashed the throats of the injured. In all, sixty-six hundred Frenchman and only a few hundred Englishmen died in the battle. ‘Twas a battle in which Lucifael was all too involved from the onset. The credit for the large number of dead was hers completely. Both kings, Edward and Philip, were merely pawns in her much grander game. She was the reigning queen, and unwittingly, two foolish kings jousted as jesters before her.

    Following the battle, Philip buckled. With the aid of two Avignon cardinals as conciliators, a truce between France and England was soon in place. Edward retained occupation of Calais and Philip became frantic. The English had removed chivalry from the rules of battle. Hand-to-hand combat, face-to-face confrontation in a battle pitting one man’s skill and power and courage against another’s had been replaced by what amounted to spearing an enemy from behind. The English longbow was a slap in the face to the Knights’ class. Although French knights scorned it — labeling it as outright cowardice — combat at a distance proved highly effective for smaller armies like Edward’s. And with Lucifael’s intervention, the art of war had changed and dusk had fallen on the glory days of knighthood.

    In desperation, Philip considered seeking out the help of the Holy See and its vast numbers of educated priests, but he required more than prayer of them. He needed finances and a solid counter to the new weapon — the rapid-firing longbow and its armor-piercing bodkin arrow. He needed new strategies to counter the unchivalrous tactics employed by the English as well. He thought that a decisive counter-weapon and definitive counterstrategy in combination might drive Edward out of Calais and back across the Channel. Nonetheless, Lucifael moved against all thrones, bitterly eager, as a wronged yet outwardly ever mastering Queen-of-queens. The throne of the Holy See and the Papal Palace of Avignon were not immune. The Pope, the College of Cardinals, and Apocrypha Cardinals were all equal prey in her game, and she wove her web among and within them all.

    Chateau Rouge - City of Avignon - April 1347

    Avignon’s Chateau Rouge served as guarded residence for several College cardinals. A guard stationed at the rear entrance of the chateau shifted his feet — the prickling pain was in his left heel. He searched his boot, yet found no raised tack, no splinter or thorn inside, but he felt a prick like a tiny dagger stabbing at his heel again when he put the boot back on his foot. It would allow him no peace. He studied the dead grounds. Not a soul gave sound in the late hour. With a furtive glance toward the arched entrance of his post, the guard stole into the shrubbery that flanked the thick stony walls of the chateau. He patted his pockets hopefully and grinned at finding a folded leaf of paper in a vest pocket. Leaning against the wall, he unlaced his boot and slipped the paper inside it. He was just retying the laces when the long shadow of a hooded figure fell across him. In a panic, he straightened hastily and nearly fell.
    "Guard. You are not at your post," the priest said softly. "Why?"
    The guard moved toward the archway, looking chagrined, the shadowed figure also moving to block him. "I heard a noise, Friar," he stammered. "But ‘twas only cocks roosting in the bush."
    "Ah, roosting cocks. I see." In better light, the soldier saw the priest as tall and rather burly, with full black hair. He seemed to be eyeing the paving stones, but when his dark eyes flashed over the face of the guard, they were piercing as daggers. "You chase clucking cocks with an unlaced boot?"
    "I did not notice it, Friar.
    "Ah, I see. You did not notice the loose laces." The soft voice was an eerie contradiction to the flashing eyes, and the combination set the guard’s teeth on edge. "Show me your orders, guard. This instant."
    Surprised by the friar’s request — he had been wondering when this unnerving priest would leave him to his duty — the soldier reluctantly bent and removed his boot. He withdrew his makeshift bandage and offered it to the priest.
    "In your unlaced boot? Ah." The priest unfolded the paper and stood beneath a wall torch to read it. "Why are your orders in your boot, guard?"

    The guard confessed all. The priest smirked, and returning the folded orders, said, "Then it appears your orders are best when trampled upon. Shall we keep the confession between us?"
    "If you would, Friar. And how can I be of assistance, Friar…uhm…" The guard struggled for the priest’s name.
    "Sevalle, Archbishop Lou Sevalle. I am here by personal appointment to see Cardinal Jean-Francois Blasi."
    "I shall summon the Master-at-Arms. He can arrange an escort." The guard began to turn away, but the priest seized his shoulder in a painful grip.
    "I see by your orders that you are new to this post," the big priest whispered. "I gather you wish no stain against you? I need not wait for an escort. I have been here many times and shall find my own way."
    The soldier, who was indeed a raw recruit and none too quick in the bargain, felt a haze fall over his mind. ‘Twas imperative that he obeyed his orders, and yet, he felt compelled to allow a strange man into the chateau unescorted — an unthinkable dereliction of duty. However, it seemed imperative that he obey the soft voice too, and the command in the flashing eyes. "Visitors are escorted. I must…"
    "Is it possible," the priest interrupted, "that I did not notice you away from your post? Is it also possible that you did not notice me enter? Do hear me, guard — I am but a quiet roosting cock and ‘tis late. I am weary. Do you gather my meaning?"
    Looking away, the guard responded, "I gather it. As you say, then. I do not know you. Nor have I seen you."
    "A lie in good intent is no ill deed. Well done. I shall see the favor settled thrice as much," the priest said, patting the guard’s shoulder with a sneer the soldier did not see. He disappeared beneath the arched entrance and drifted through the quiet corridors of the chateau. The priest came to a corner, and as he rounded it, his features and dress were abruptly changed, metamorphosed into an altogether different form. Instead of a robe, he wore the battle dress of a French knight. On his chest gleamed the gold and gem-studded Blasi cross. He turned another corner and walked placidly through a stone wall, the armor-clad visage melding into the massive stones without a sound.

    In the bedroom of Cardinal Jean-Francois Blasi, a hanging wall tapestry fluttered briefly as the form of the knight passed through the solid stones of the wall. The cardinal tossed and moaned in his gilded bed, his eyeballs rolling under their lids as they tracked the features of a nightmare landscape. Jean-Francois rolled across the huge bed, trapped in a dream in which he was swiftly falling. Abruptly, he gasped and bolted erect, wide-eyed. Sweat glistened on his brow. The nightmare, when discovered, fled the room. The cardinal’s shoulders slumped in relief, and he lay back on the bed, his eyes slowly closing — but then snapping open again. The nightmare was not over after all. He sat up, his heart fluttering oddly in his chest. There, in the corner of the room, stood the dark silhouette of an armored knight.

    "Who goes there?" Francois hissed at it, terror in his throat. The shadow stepped into the moonlight falling through the open window.
    "Jacques," Francois choked. "Is it you, Jacques?" His hands flew to his face in astonishment.
    "‘Tis I, Jean-Francois. Have you faired well?" It seemed the knight wore an impish grin.
    "I…indeed, I have! I have prayed for you. How are you? And Rene?"
    "Rene preaches, as he always has. He deemed it best that I not visit you — he thought it may distress you."
    "Oh, no," Francois lied. "Not at all! You must tell him to come. Tell him, Jacques."
    "I have come to warn you of a horrible thing, Francois," the knight whispered hurriedly. "France shall fall to Edward of England in the space of but twenty years. Edward shall gain the support of many French lords. He shall come from the west and the north and win the heart of the Burgundy. He shall divide France."
    Quite confused, the cardinal replied, "Even with most of the lords of France behind Edward, how might he be victorious? He has no capable army!"
    "He shall," the knight said sharply. "He has since sealed a pact with the Devil. ‘Tis the Devil himself who speaks to Edward of the secrets of war! Edward shall take our homeland, Jean-Francois, lest you stop him before his campaign — lest you stop him now."

    Francois’ mind spun. "That is madness! I can not stop such things. If I speak to His Holiness of this, he shall deem me mad," he said. "Can you not stop these events, you and Rene?"
    "Only you can stop these events, Francois."
    "I can not prevent the will of a king, Jacques. Nor can I command of the Devil. I am merely a servant of…"
    "Hear me, Francois." The dark figure was indignant as it stepped closer. "The Council of the Apocrypha, you know of it?"
    The cardinal stiffened slightly. Reluctantly, he confessed, "I do, but only bits of the truth. What of it?"
    "They hide secrets, a weapon that can destroy the English king. You must take charge of this weapon, Francois. You must release it against him. First, however, you must learn of its proper use. Such knowledge rests in the archives of the Apocrypha, in what some call: the Naramsin Translations. In these pages, you shall learn of the design and workings of this weapon."

    "And how am I to lay hands upon these things?" Francois asked, unconvinced. "The archive is well guarded. And they use words of passage to gain access. I do not know these words, Jacques! The archives are for the Council only."
    "The Devil shall whisper this secret in Edward’s ear, and Edward shall come for the Naramsin writings. With them his power shall become greater than even the Holy See. He shall take all of France if you do not heed my words. Francois, you must proceed with this act, if not for France and Church, then for your brothers — that we fell with cause and honor. Even angels fell that the Will of God be done. If others must fall that more may live, ‘tis His Will."
    Francois recalled his nightmare. "Others? Who must fall?"
    "Even Christ fell that others may live. I must leave, Francois." The knight turned away.
    "A moment more!" Francois cried.
    The knight turned back, grinning. "You are Francois de France. For the sake of God, save France. Save us all." He turned and disappeared through the wall.
    "Wait! No! Jacques! Jacques!" Francois bolted from his bed, chasing the fleeting form.
    He ran through his apartment chambers and threw open the door, stumbling into the hallway. "Jacques!" The long corridors lay empty, echoing his brother’s name.

    His brother’s visage had already crossed the corridor, stepped through the far wall and into a priest’s visiting room. He fell to his knees. "Jacques! Come back!" The priest sobbed, and doors creaked open, heavy-eyed guests sleepily poking their heads out of doors.

    A sleeping priest stirred at the cry outside his chambers, but his eyes did not open. His bedside oil lamp illuminated the book of scriptures lying face down on his chest, his hands laced across it. The knight stood at the foot of the bed, staring down at the dreaming man. Slowly the plates of the knight’s armor began to meld and change, blending into the gleaming skin of a lushly made woman, her flesh pale as death.

    Her eyes and nails were black, her waste-length hair and wide aureoles red as blood. She was the embodiment of pure and shameless Eve, the reason that all men and women were fallen. She was Lucifael. She stood over the priest, smiling. The voices of many women uttered from her pale mouth. "‘Tis a waste of a man to be alone, especially if he is not beneath me, one of my charges doing my bidding. But soon enough."

    The priest grimaced, moaning in his dreams, and rolled onto his side. The open scriptures tumbled to the floor, where her bare heel trampled it as she stepped through the outer wall of the Chateau, leaving only a ghost of profane laughter to trouble the holy man in his dream.

    And quite deserving was Lucifael’s laughter — less than a month transpired before the wicked seed took root.

    Rene’s frown fell away, and finally a small smile crept into its place. "I shall ride with the Fool of France."

    Jacques laughed and leaned toward his brother. "Look about you. I know men’s hearts, Rene, as do you. These men shan’t rest until they throw Le Petit into the sea. The victory is already ours. Soon enough, we shall have Edward’s head — and his throne. Show our cardinal brother’s cross, that we may charge to victory!"

    Tossing the apple aside and slipping off his helmet, Rene pulled a fine golden chain from beneath his breastplate. It supported the considerable weight of a gem-studded crucifix that had belonged to his elder brother, Jean-Francois Blasi, and was since blessed by the late Pope Benedict XII himself. Francois had insisted that Rene and Jacques carry it with them in every battle. As the moment dictated, it was Rene’s turn to wear the Blasi cross. This was a part of the reason Rene felt compelled to join his brother if Jacques charged. He would not leave his brother to face death alone, and without the cross. Nor would he leave the French army to fight the battle on its own, no matter how foolishly united. He was equally dedicated to his countrymen and to his brother, if in different ways. Both he would defend. Both he would honor. Rene leaned over the side of his horse and handed the cross to Jacques. Jacques kissed the cold metal, bowing his head slightly in reverence. A crash of thunder resonated over the countryside. Jacques laughed and welcomed it as a good omen. Above them, in the boughs of a squat oak, the luminous raven stirred with fluttering feathers. It bolted from its perch toward the northwesterly horizon, toward the armies of the English.

    "In the name of the most high Lord and Saint Denis," Jacques murmured with stony severity. Rene squared back on his horse and repeated the same reverence. He returned the crucifix to its place upon his breast and pulled his helmet on.
    Horsemen raced down the column of armies, shouting, "Make ready! Ready your weapons!" The column lunged forward.

    Philip’s army had caught up with Edward, who now had little choice save to turn and fight. The English king had aligned his mounted knights and pikemen on a wide hill near the village of Crecy, archers ranked behind and in front of them and yeomen waiting beside more horses at the rear. Edward held his command from within an occupied windmill atop the hill.

    In a short space, whilst continuing in the direction of northeast, the agitated raven covered an expanse of roughly tilled earth and dived into a secluded thicket, hidden by a scant ridge. The bird’s luminous appearance lit heavily amongst the thistle and yew, its harsh call startling a young English archer who stood relieving himself in the lee. "An untoward sign on an untoward day," the archer whispered, staring at the raven. It seemed to the man that the bird saw him, indeed saw into and through him, and its unnatural gaze pierced his soul. He buckled to his knees, clutching his head as if attempting to keep it from exploding. He huffed and moaned, crumpling to the ground before dying. The bird shrieked and fluttered wildly before it too fell to its death, dropping into the undergrowth in a feathery convulsion.

    As the bird’s dead form hit the earth, the dead archer’s eyes snapped open. He lifted himself from the ground and scanned the hollow. The whites of his eyes were washed away, now shiny and black as a raven’s feathers. He retrieved a longbow that stood propped against a tree trunk, and with a full quiver of arrows slung across his back, he left the grove more filled than he had entered it. Even with his bladder emptied, his heart was brimming — brimming with the black evil that boiled in his unbeating breast. He broke through the thicket to a rigid formation of nearly a thousand archers flanking five hundred men-at-arms. The formation stood positioned atop a point overlooking a shallow valley to the east. Behind them and to the west, thousands more soldiers waited in two perfect squares. The archer took his place amongst the ranks.

    Just as Jacques Blasi had predicted, the French army charged recklessly into the fray before their commanders could restrain them. In the valley, a disorganized mass of shouting men-at-arms, spearmen, Genoese crossbowmen, and mounted French knights rushed toward the ridge occupied by the English. There was no order to the melee, and the men were knocking one another to the ground in their bloodlust, some even impaling themselves by their own inept hands.

    On the English side of the hill, the soul emptied soldier passed between long rows of archers who held longbows high and drawn.
    "Steady! Hold," roared a voice of authority.
    The living archers, seeing the blackness of his eyes, poured back, their ranks rippling in twain as a parting Red Sea. Stricken, the men whispered to one another, "Move ‘way! He’s the Devil in him!" None moved to stop him as he turned among ranks and marched down the ridge, leaving the English and their position behind him.
    "Archer! Return to your post!" The bellowing order came from behind the ranks. The voice was that of Lord Clifford, certain in its power of command, and yet the archer maintained his slow, sure course down the hill. Behind the English formation, gray skies broke and the afternoon sun pierced the clouds. With the sun behind the English, the approaching French forces stood blinded.

    From his station amongst his own bowmen, the Earl of both Warwick and Oxford called, "Lord Clifford, return your archer! Lords, hold your men on the mark!"
    The devil-archer slipped an arrow from his quiver, and without breaking stride, drew it deep into his longbow. His black eyes lay fixed on two bright specs near the far end of the valley.
    "Archer! Return or be felled from behind," Lord Clifford demanded. The archer continued down the ridge, his dark figure thrown into eerie relief against the chaos of the advancing Frenchmen. Clifford moved his horse forward, followed by his bannerman. He stopped beside one of the archers, growling orders to drop the lone warrior where he stood.
    "From behind, my lord?" The bowman asked uneasily.
    "I order you: step forth and drop that man! Do it now, archer," Clifford hissed, gesturing furiously toward the retreating figure.
    "Indeed, my lord." The archer bowed and moved to a clear position. He drew back an arrow, tested the wind, and launched the bodkin arrow down the ridge. The shaft flew straight and swift, piercing the soulless man’s back and sprouting from the center of his chest. The impaled archer paused a moment, then turned around to face the ridge. The English soldiers saw only a blur as the dead man turned around to face them, almost as if to hail them. No one saw the arrow fly from his bow and up the ridge; no one saw that arrow pierce the eye of Lord Clifford’s young bowman. Only when the bowman crumpled to the ground did they see the black-feathered arrow pushing out from his head. The devil-archer turned and continued down the field, into the roaring gape of the French charge.
    "Leave him go!" Clifford spat, staring at the walking dead man. "Archers, find your targets! Be ready on my mark!" But all eyes were on the thing that still walked unaffected toward the advancing French enemy, mindless of the lodged arrow that had pierced through its torso.

    The blast of a primitive English cannon echoed across the field as the first hail of arrows rained down amongst the charging Frenchmen. Men and horses fell beneath the onslaught of the arrows, dismaying the French. The arrow shafts had a brand of bodkin arrowheads, new to battle. Bodkin points were long heavy iron tips capable of slicing through armor, and the English longbows were carved from dense Yew wood and fitted with resilient hemp bowstring that required a draw of a hundred pounds or more and hurled this devastating new arrow with incredible force. The metal suit of the French knights did little to protect them.

    Seeing his men in disarray and falling quickly, Philip ordered them to turn back and regroup. They ignored the order, charging past him and running through the valley like madmen. The Genoese crossbowmen found themselves in a hail of longbow shafts. Too far from the English to hit them, they threw down their bows and fled. Upon seeing this, Philip’s brother, Count D’Alencon, ordered them slain. Thus it happened that, on that day, more Genoese fell in battle at the hands of their French comrades than by the invading English army.

    The soulless archer walked alone on the churning battlefield. Men and horses obeyed the instinctive terror those black eyes inspired, and none would approach the bowman who moved about with apparent unconcern for the arrow that pierced him. He drew another arrow from the quiver on his back, strung and released it in one sure motion. Nearly three hundred yards downfield, the shaft thudded into the earth between the forelimbs of Jean-Jacques Blasi’s horse. Two Genoese crossbow bolts now found their mark in the ribs of the dead archer, and a third impaled his thigh. His black gaze never left its target, and the arrows did not stop him or even slow his hand. Another arrow left his bow before the first was still. This one did not miss. It blazed downward into the collar of Jacques’ armor and pierced his left lung. As he tumbled from his horse, another shaft flashed from the sky, and beside him, Rene heard a disheartening pop as his own mount crumpled beneath him. A black-fletched arrow protruded from between the animal’s eyes. But the dead archer was not immortal. Even as he released another arrow, a crossbow bolt punctured his throat and he finally fell to the ground. Rene jumped to his feet and ran to his brother. Soldiers screamed past them, their mad charge unabated. Rene lifted Jacques’ faceguard, raised his head from the ground, and cradled it in the bend of his arm. His eyes welled with tears — he knew Jacques would not leave this valley alive.

    "Do not, Rene," Jacques said, his face struggling between forced smiles and an expression of pure agony his brother had only seen on the faces of the dying. "I have fallen with honor." He coughed on the bubbling blood in his breath. "I wish to…to kiss the cross….once more."
    Rene ripped away his helmet, raised his chin, and jerked on the neck chain until the crucifix tumbled from his breastplate. He fumbled with it, bringing the cross to his dying brother’s lips. Jacques kissed it and he smiled.
    "Rene, when you slay Edward, ask the great Jean-Francois de France to pray for me," he whispered. "Swear it."
    "I swear, Jacques. And I shall also pray for you, until no breath is left in me," Rene responded with a laugh and a shower of tears. Such was a long-standing jest amongst the brothers — the foolish title with which they had teased their ‘overly serious’ older sibling: Francois de France. As Rene pushed the cross back beneath his breastplate, his brother sighed and died in his arms.

    Across the valley, the devil-archer stirred. His work was not yet finished. The thick crossbow shaft lodged in his thigh broke off with a grisly crack as he rolled and stood to his knees. A hail of arrows peppered his light armor, but his blood did not flow. He strung an arrow and released it. Rene raised his face to heaven, wailing in both grief and defiance, even as his own death flew toward him on black wings. Hell’s arrow streaked toward the earth like a soul damned. It scored Rene through the roof of his screaming mouth, impaling his brain and cleaving his skull. He screamed no more. His body fell across his dead brother’s with an expression of horror on his contorted and bloodied face. His gaping eyes did not see the Genoese arrow that took the damned archer through his skull. The archer fell once again and moved no more.

    The English force had consisted of approximately twelve thousand men, over half of them archers. Men-at-arms stood, centering two spreading flanks of bowmen, forming a precise V of roughly eighteen hundred yards in length. The French force numbered thirty-six thousand. Wave after wave of charging knights — fifteen waves in all — raced into the English funnel of arrows, only to heap themselves upon their dead and the ones dying before them. Between the fleeing Genoese crossbowmen, the sun blinding their eyes and the untrained peasants’ mad screams about the battlefield, the French forces began to fall into complete disarray. The battlefield lay riddled with English arrows that stood out amongst the slain men and animals like stiff barley stalks. In the short space of ten hours, nearly half a million English arrows had rained down from the high ridge and over six thousand French and Genoese fell dead. Surely ‘twas a devil’s dance — and a wicked waltz it was.

    The witching hour was upon him when the wounded Philip retreated. He had little choice but to abandon his injured where they lay. Two kings, as allies to Philip, had fallen in the horrid slaughter, one of them the blind King John of Bohemia. But Philip had no recourse but withdrawal, and Edward took no prisoners. At midnight, his son, the Black Prince of Wales, moved under cloak of darkness, and with long knives, his men slashed the throats of the injured. In all, sixty-six hundred Frenchman and only a few hundred Englishmen died in the battle. ‘Twas a battle in which Lucifael was all too involved from the onset. The credit for the large number of dead was hers completely. Both kings, Edward and Philip, were merely pawns in her much grander game. She was the reigning queen, and unwittingly, two foolish kings jousted as jesters before her.

    Following the battle, Philip buckled. With the aid of two Avignon cardinals as conciliators, a truce between France and England was soon in place. Edward retained occupation of Calais and Philip became frantic. The English had removed chivalry from the rules of battle. Hand-to-hand combat, face-to-face confrontation in a battle pitting one man’s skill and power and courage against another’s had been replaced by what amounted to spearing an enemy from behind. The English longbow was a slap in the face to the Knights’ class. Although French knights scorned it — labeling it as outright cowardice — combat at a distance proved highly effective for smaller armies like Edward’s. And with Lucifael’s intervention, the art of war had changed and dusk had fallen on the glory days of knighthood.

    In desperation, Philip considered seeking out the help of the Holy See and its vast numbers of educated priests, but he required more than prayer of them. He needed finances and a solid counter to the new weapon — the rapid-firing longbow and its armor-piercing bodkin arrow. He needed new strategies to counter the unchivalrous tactics employed by the English as well. He thought that a decisive counter-weapon and definitive counterstrategy in combination might drive Edward out of Calais and back across the Channel. Nonetheless, Lucifael moved against all thrones, bitterly eager, as a wronged yet outwardly ever mastering Queen-of-queens. The throne of the Holy See and the Papal Palace of Avignon were not immune. The Pope, the College of Cardinals, and Apocrypha Cardinals were all equal prey in her game, and she wove her web among and within them all.

    Chateau Rouge - City of Avignon - April 1347

    Avignon’s Chateau Rouge served as guarded residence for several College cardinals. A guard stationed at the rear entrance of the chateau shifted his feet — the prickling pain was in his left heel. He searched his boot, yet found no raised tack, no splinter or thorn inside, but he felt a prick like a tiny dagger stabbing at his heel again when he put the boot back on his foot. It would allow him no peace. He studied the dead grounds. Not a soul gave sound in the late hour. With a furtive glance toward the arched entrance of his post, the guard stole into the shrubbery that flanked the thick stony walls of the chateau. He patted his pockets hopefully and grinned at finding a folded leaf of paper in a vest pocket. Leaning against the wall, he unlaced his boot and slipped the paper inside it. He was just retying the laces when the long shadow of a hooded figure fell across him. In a panic, he straightened hastily and nearly fell.
    "Guard. You are not at your post," the priest said softly. "Why?"
    The guard moved toward the archway, looking chagrined, the shadowed figure also moving to block him. "I heard a noise, Friar," he stammered. "But ‘twas only cocks roosting in the bush."
    "Ah, roosting cocks. I see." In better light, the soldier saw the priest as tall and rather burly, with full black hair. He seemed to be eyeing the paving stones, but when his dark eyes flashed over the face of the guard, they were piercing as daggers. "You chase clucking cocks with an unlaced boot?"
    "I did not notice it, Friar.
    "Ah, I see. You did not notice the loose laces." The soft voice was an eerie contradiction to the flashing eyes, and the combination set the guard’s teeth on edge. "Show me your orders, guard. This instant."
    Surprised by the friar’s request — he had been wondering when this unnerving priest would leave him to his duty — the soldier reluctantly bent and removed his boot. He withdrew his makeshift bandage and offered it to the priest.
    "In your unlaced boot? Ah." The priest unfolded the paper and stood beneath a wall torch to read it. "Why are your orders in your boot, guard?"

    The guard confessed all. The priest smirked, and returning the folded orders, said, "Then it appears your orders are best when trampled upon. Shall we keep the confession between us?"
    "If you would, Friar. And how can I be of assistance, Friar…uhm…" The guard struggled for the priest’s name.
    "Sevalle, Archbishop Lou Sevalle. I am here by personal appointment to see Cardinal Jean-Francois Blasi."
    "I shall summon the Master-at-Arms. He can arrange an escort." The guard began to turn away, but the priest seized his shoulder in a painful grip.
    "I see by your orders that you are new to this post," the big priest whispered. "I gather you wish no stain against you? I need not wait for an escort. I have been here many times and shall find my own way."
    The soldier, who was indeed a raw recruit and none too quick in the bargain, felt a haze fall over his mind. ‘Twas imperative that he obeyed his orders, and yet, he felt compelled to allow a strange man into the chateau unescorted — an unthinkable dereliction of duty. However, it seemed imperative that he obey the soft voice too, and the command in the flashing eyes. "Visitors are escorted. I must…"
    "Is it possible," the priest interrupted, "that I did not notice you away from your post? Is it also possible that you did not notice me enter? Do hear me, guard — I am but a quiet roosting cock and ‘tis late. I am weary. Do you gather my meaning?"
    Looking away, the guard responded, "I gather it. As you say, then. I do not know you. Nor have I seen you."
    "A lie in good intent is no ill deed. Well done. I shall see the favor settled thrice as much," the priest said, patting the guard’s shoulder with a sneer the soldier did not see. He disappeared beneath the arched entrance and drifted through the quiet corridors of the chateau. The priest came to a corner, and as he rounded it, his features and dress were abruptly changed, metamorphosed into an altogether different form. Instead of a robe, he wore the battle dress of a French knight. On his chest gleamed the gold and gem-studded Blasi cross. He turned another corner and walked placidly through a stone wall, the armor-clad visage melding into the massive stones without a sound.

    In the bedroom of Cardinal Jean-Francois Blasi, a hanging wall tapestry fluttered briefly as the form of the knight passed through the solid stones of the wall. The cardinal tossed and moaned in his gilded bed, his eyeballs rolling under their lids as they tracked the features of a nightmare landscape. Jean-Francois rolled across the huge bed, trapped in a dream in which he was swiftly falling. Abruptly, he gasped and bolted erect, wide-eyed. Sweat glistened on his brow. The nightmare, when discovered, fled the room. The cardinal’s shoulders slumped in relief, and he lay back on the bed, his eyes slowly closing — but then snapping open again. The nightmare was not over after all. He sat up, his heart fluttering oddly in his chest. There, in the corner of the room, stood the dark silhouette of an armored knight.

    "Who goes there?" Francois hissed at it, terror in his throat. The shadow stepped into the moonlight falling through the open window.
    "Jacques," Francois choked. "Is it you, Jacques?" His hands flew to his face in astonishment.
    "‘Tis I, Jean-Francois. Have you faired well?" It seemed the knight wore an impish grin.
    "I…indeed, I have! I have prayed for you. How are you? And Rene?"
    "Rene preaches, as he always has. He deemed it best that I not visit you — he thought it may distress you."
    "Oh, no," Francois lied. "Not at all! You must tell him to come. Tell him, Jacques."
    "I have come to warn you of a horrible thing, Francois," the knight whispered hurriedly. "France shall fall to Edward of England in the space of but twenty years. Edward shall gain the support of many French lords. He shall come from the west and the north and win the heart of the Burgundy. He shall divide France."
    Quite confused, the cardinal replied, "Even with most of the lords of France behind Edward, how might he be victorious? He has no capable army!"
    "He shall," the knight said sharply. "He has since sealed a pact with the Devil. ‘Tis the Devil himself who speaks to Edward of the secrets of war! Edward shall take our homeland, Jean-Francois, lest you stop him before his campaign — lest you stop him now."

    Francois’ mind spun. "That is madness! I can not stop such things. If I speak to His Holiness of this, he shall deem me mad," he said. "Can you not stop these events, you and Rene?"
    "Only you can stop these events, Francois."
    "I can not prevent the will of a king, Jacques. Nor can I command of the Devil. I am merely a servant of…"
    "Hear me, Francois." The dark figure was indignant as it stepped closer. "The Council of the Apocrypha, you know of it?"
    The cardinal stiffened slightly. Reluctantly, he confessed, "I do, but only bits of the truth. What of it?"
    "They hide secrets, a weapon that can destroy the English king. You must take charge of this weapon, Francois. You must release it against him. First, however, you must learn of its proper use. Such knowledge rests in the archives of the Apocrypha, in what some call: the Naramsin Translations. In these pages, you shall learn of the design and workings of this weapon."

    "And how am I to lay hands upon these things?" Francois asked, unconvinced. "The archive is well guarded. And they use words of passage to gain access. I do not know these words, Jacques! The archives are for the Council only."
    "The Devil shall whisper this secret in Edward’s ear, and Edward shall come for the Naramsin writings. With them his power shall become greater than even the Holy See. He shall take all of France if you do n

  • Chapter 1

    I was browsing through the net, looking for some more stories to read. After reading Mills and Boons for about a week; I guess, I have had my fill of romanticism. Time to go back to dreamworld of a differnt kind. :) So, I looked for stories. I had this dream on angels (yes again the same old topic) and thought of the War in Heaven. I felt like exploring stories on it et voila! Look what I found!

    I hope its an intersting read for you guys as well.

    Grotesque

    Chapter 1

    Awash in a still mist, the mountain forest seemed a perfect Eden. Clamorous birds fluttered in the canopy, and morning sun bled through the treetops, casting shards of slanted light through the haze. Ever so often, the mist parted for a wandering animal inspecting roots and grubs, only to swallow the creature up once again and become what it had been, an unbroken diaphanous wall. A single leaf spiraled lazily through shafts of sunlight, disappearing into the mist. Another leaf trailed the first, then another. The birds fell silent.

    And so it began.

    The mist began to churn with fleeing wildlife, and leaves, twigs and feathers rained from the trees as flocks of bright birds erupted skyward. The mountains rumbled and trees swayed as the earth tolled like a struck gong. At the peak of that ominous tolling, a stampede of hideous winged beings came surging over the mountain crest. Some, Cyclopes, towered tall as trees. Others, grotesque-like, stood no taller than might a human child.

    All wore battle dress, their membranous wings flailing in agitation, claws clutching swords and shields. By the thousands, the host of angels, giants, and grotesques poured down the mountainside together as one — a cascading avalanche of ruin. In the forefront of the roaring blaze, a band of angels with wholly black eyes led the descending multitude into the shadowed valley, carving a wide swath along the slope and pressing the forest flat. No living thing remained standing in the wake of that unholy legion. Then, as hastily as it arrived, the Pandemonium vanished.

    A new silence overwhelmed the ravished landscape, as complete as the devastation of only moments before. At length, the gong resounded as the earth began to groan with the passage of a second multitude. Across the mountain now came another legion of angels, clad much the same as the first horde, but unlike enough to warrant being classified as an entirely different species. These creatures resembled large men and women rather than demons; and though their eyes were equally black, they were more intent than incensed.

    The host of creatures paused on the summit of the mountain, surveying the devastation below. The lead angel, Michael, turned and spoke in a voice like a choir of thousands. "A deception is woven here — they remain!" Turning back to the seemingly abandoned slope below, he bellowed, "Semjaza, you shall have no peace! Undo your incantation! Cerberus! Araqiel!" There was no reply. "Show yourselves! By command of the Throne!" the angel roared.

    Two more legions of angels descended from the skies, their numbers nearly blotting out the sun before lighting amongst Michael’s formation. These were the hosts of Gabriel and Raphael. Michael addressed them, saying, "Semjaza and his legions are below. Cerberus has betrayed us as well, since aligning his ranks with those of…"
    Abruptly, a fallen tree became the angel Araqiel, revealing her true form even as she hurled toward Michael.
    "Michael!" Raphael warned.
    Michael spun and thrust his sword in the air in a single movement. Araqiel came down on it, swiping at him with her sword and screeching even as his blade impaled her. She crashed to the ground and exploded into an angry swarm of dissolving dust flecks. "Semjaza!" Michael shouted. "Your deception shan’t exclude you from judgment." He stepped into a clearing. "Another gate shall be here," Michael exclaimed, thrusting his sword into the ground. Again, the mountain shook as Michael withdrew the brilliant blade, blood now spewing from a wounded earth.

    At once a scream rent the air, and what had appeared to be a boulder became the stumbling figure of Semjaza, clutching a gaping wound in his chest. "Cerberus!" He cried. "Break the sword! Close the wound!" As Semjaza fell, his spell broke and the landscape transformed. Where fallen trees and boulders had lain in disarray, now the legion of demons stood revealed — thousands of them — crouching on the ravaged mountainside. Instantly, one of them blazed upward along the slope of the mountain: a horrid angel with three dog-like heads, gnashing teeth and the whipping tail of a serpent — Cerberus. Winds gathered with tempest force, and clouds roiled in a quickly darkening sky.
    "Ezequeel!" Semjaza cried. "The clouds! Break the sword!" Semjaza then rolled a brief distance, died, and burst into a cloud of dust. The host of Semjaza lunged forth in attack, following Cerberus up the mountainside toward Michael. Calmly, the three legions atop the mountain moved back, knelt and bowed their heads. A black vortex descended from whirling clouds, falling toward the earth. The ground heaved, and a rock rose from the bleeding wound Michael's sword had made. The vortex enveloped the rough stone and scoured it black, shaping and inscribing the stone in a fury of motion. From the chaos emerged a polished rectangle, etched upon its five surfaces with hundreds of rows of intricate circular and linear symbols.

    The emerging monolith turned Cerberus' advance to a rout. The attacking legion turned as one and tore back down the mountain, terror replacing the blood lust in their black eyes, but it was too late. The gate was complete. The fleeing angels slowed as though the air had turned viscous, slowed and then stopped even as they fought to escape. The whirlwind sucked at them, dragging them inexorably to its heart until each one had been swallowed by the monolith. When the last had disappeared, the heart of the monolith burned away, leaving a gaping hole through its center. The vortex ascended into the heavens and the clouds slowed their spin. In the silence, the angels could hear the hiss of steam rising from the new-made gate.

    The smooth black monolith was seven feet high by five feet wide by three feet deep, every visible inch of it covered with verses in the language of angels and of God Himself. The glassy black surface of the monolith was as perfectly smooth as the best mirror, and the center hole was flawless in its shape, two feet across and gutting the stone widthwise. The stone seal was perfection.

    The kneeling angels rose. Michael turned to Gabriel. "The remaining Nephalim are cloaked in the hills of Uhr." Gabriel stroked his sword and moved up the mountainside. "Gabriel," Michael called up to him. Gabriel looked back over his shoulder. "They must be slain by their own swords," Michael added, "by command of the Throne."
    Gabriel turned again toward his destination and bellowed to his legion, "To the valley of Uhr! We seek the Nephalim! No swords!" Gabriel then blazed away with his legion.

    "Michael, where has Azazel fled?" Raphael inquired with a voice of many.
    "He has flown into the desert mountains of Haradan," Michael answered. "He has sworn an alliance with Lucifael. Azazal has promised her the Throne in exchange for the protection of her greater numbers." Michael inspected the hissing monolith, and then the two of them circled the stone seal as Michael continued. "And Batarel's many legions soon fill her ranks." Michael stopped and turned to Raphael with concern etched in his brow. "If they unite, then Lucifael acquires the numbers she needs to accomplish all that she desires — and she desires the Throne above all else."
    Raphael roared to his angels, "We move against Lucifael!"
    "She will be ready, but the Throne is with us! Make haste," Michael commanded of all. The remaining angels tore into the heavens, abandoning the standing seal.

    And so the seal stood for nearly six hundred centuries, long since concealed by the elements and time as dust settled upon it, and then layers of dirt and rock. Encrusted within the Asian continent, it lay dormant as the decades chased one another like mating Chinese mayflies.

    With the fall of the Watchers, those angels who looked after earthly affairs, only Man remained to oversee the good earth. And He did for many generations. Then, whilst tending His gardens, Man happened to discover the buried gate. Knowing it to be of divine origin, He cleared away the centuries and enshrined it, constructing a temple around it. For half a millennia more, He kept the artifact secret, worshiped it and fashioned His life around it — until the day came when He became learned enough to open the seal and yet remained foolish enough to attempt it.

    Central China – June – 1331

    Hundreds of pigeons lined the massive roof of an ornate Chinese temple, clucking and pecking one another as they sought to lay claim to more of the sparse ledge space. Again and again, a single bird fluttered from the congested ridge, circled wide, and rejoined the throng, disappearing into the mass. Below the ledge, decades of pigeon excrement had streaked the stone surfaces gray and white. Statues of stone perched atop evenly spaced platforms protruded from the pigeon shelf. Each depicted a grotesque stone beast, four feet high and with membranous, bat-like wings.

    Some of these stone beasts were dragon-like, others part man and part beast, and still others were humanoid but primitive in appearance. Some crouched with wings splayed, some with wings tucked and folded, and then there existed various combinations of the two. Details of the statues and their random posture were so lifelike that they might have been living creatures frozen in stone. They thrust outward in all directions, lining the entire top of the temple.

    The temple itself was notably ancient, comprised of irregular stone slabs hewn a thousand years earlier. Eroded engravings depicting flying demons covered the outer walls of the structure, the most plentiful an icon of a dragon with splayed wings and wholly enclosed by three circles that shared a common center. Three arched entrances lined the temple face, the center arch standing higher than did those on either side of it. Three eight-foot stone carvings of winged lion-like beasts guarded the left edge of each of the arches, and engraved above each of the three arches was a distinct Chinese inscription. Altogether, read right to left, the completed passage could be rendered: ‘Flying Dragon Temple.’

    Manicured gardens surrounded the temple as humped teak bridges bowed back and forth across a slithering brook. Beyond the Bonsai trees and boulders of the inner garden, orchards of fruit and nut trees and small groves of hardwoods gave way to wilder mountain forests. On the fringe of those arranged gardens and untamed woods, a China thrush perched in an ancient, native ginkgo tree, filling the air with tranquil tones whilst midmorning sunlight dappled paths and pools.

    A row of black-robed monks snaked from the forest, moving solemnly down the stone walkway leading to the building. They drifted like mist down the path with lowered heads and hands clasped before them. They filed silent as death into the temple. Inside, countless candles burned on every horizontal surface, and the sweet smoke of incense spiraled from perforated canisters. Candles and incense combined to lend a thick air of spirituality to the atmosphere inside the temple walls. The silken monks moved through three consecutive chambers, each chamber larger than the one before it. The last of these was vast and its concave ceiling reached high above the priests. Etchings of flying beasts encircled the dome of the ceiling. Countless intersecting lines and inscriptions marked its curved surface, appearing much like a detailed astrological map of the heavens.

    A perfectly symmetrical round hole had been cut into the polished floor in the center of the room. The pit was large, nearly thirteen feet deep. Like the floor of the temple, the cylindrical wall of the hole was smooth and polished, and in the center of the hole, fifteen feet below the temple floor, stood the stone seal. Even with the passing of sixty thousand years, the gatestone stood flawless and unspoiled as the day it swallowed the Watchers and a great part of the heavens.

    Four emaciated priests sat near the edge of the pit hole, with their legs folded and their robes pulled away from their shoulders to reveal narrow chests and thin arms, their decrepit condition evidence of long periods of fasting. Sweat glistened on their necks and ribcages, and their eyes burned in the bottoms of sunken sockets as they sat like statues, deep in meditation. The procession of monks circled the four priests, then seated themselves shoulder-to-shoulder to form a solid wall around the priests and the pit. As more monks arrived, they formed a second circle, and then a third, until three concentric rings of meditating holy men filled the chamber. In the deep silence, the occasional guttering of burning candles echoed softly through the dome as the sounds of far away thunder.

    Soon three more priests entered the area. Two carried large candles and the third walked between them, this one garbed in robes as red as fresh blood. He carried an ancient, scrolled parchment in his hands. The three priests stopped behind the circle of monks, and the priest in red unrolled the scroll, revealing columns of Chinese writing. The parchment contained translations of the verses that were inscribed on the surfaces of the gatestone.

    Outside the temple, around its grounds, the only sound was the gurgling of the placid stream. The thrush took sudden flight, chasing a bee through the garden flowers. As the beak of the songbird snapped the bee from the air, there was an explosion, and instantly the dome of the temple shattered, sending stone shards hundreds of feet into the air. The concussion was so fierce that it stripped the nearest trees naked of their leaves and fragments of stone and human bones impaled their seared trunks. Enormous chunks of stone hailed down into the garden, snapping branches and pressing craters into the neatly raked earth. Billowing dust and ash raced over the grounds and rolled down the entire mountainside like a hyperactive pyroclastic cloud.

    What was left of the temple glowed with furious heat, cracking the stones left standing. And still, the temperature climbed, until the sides of the smooth pit at the epicenter of the temple liquefied like seeping sap. The seared trees surrounding the temple burst into flame. The unscathed gatestone stood out from the center of the crater. The hole at the heart of the stone turned thickly opaque with a bilious black fog, which began to roil and fume, spilling out of the gatestone like a viscous caustic cloud dense as sulfurous gases.

    The cloud rose from the crater and hugged the ground whilst it drifted beneath the lighter ash. It did not dissipate, but remained collected as a single boiling mass, blighting the garden greenery in its wake. Then, in an unscathed clearing, it stopped and churned in place for but a moment before rolling in upon itself and coalescing at its center. Arcs of light resembling a thunderstorm in deep cumulous flashed through as, deep within the mass, a form took shape. A shadow at first, it evolved to gather density and structure, and finally, flesh-tones. The cloud thinned to expose a nude woman with sprawling membranous wings. Her waist-length hair was red as crimson fire and fine as silk thread. Her eyes and nails were black as the gatestone face, which contrasted with her skin as pale as death. Her angelic beauty stood unmatched even by Eve herself. She was the Dragon, unholy Lucifael, and Mother of Hell. The materialized spirit of Lucifael spat in a voice of many women, "One! Two remain," she smugly declared, surveying the destruction.

    Around her, the dissipating brume revealed the landscape of a nightmare. The temple grounds were a smoking, corpse-ridden ruin. A field of blackness encircled the glowing remains of the temple, and the outer gardens lay flat and singed, dying of thirst. Steam lingered up from the stream, now black with soot and char itself. The Bonsai trees crackled, burning and occasionally one and another fell to ash and cinder where they had stood.

    Lucifael stepped forth and raked a dead pigeon from the ground. She caressed the bird as a caring soul. "Not yet, my dear," she whispered. "Come." The bird jolted to life, its head wobbling as if its neck were broken. She stroked it. "Indeed. Come back, little one." Its eyes eased open and locked with hers. It fluttered and she clutched its neck. She brought the bird to her face, inhaled deeply, and exhaled a thick sulfurous cloud over the struggling bird. Its feathers glowed yellow.

    Within the rancid plume, seeds of annihilation lay ahead for virtually every living thing on earth, for it bore a deadly germ vile enough to rot the face of Asia, and eventually, the greater part of Europe. The germ was Yersinia Pestis — the very instrument of the Black Death. Lucifael grinned, instructing the bird, "Hear me, little one. Deliver unto Men my word — that I come soon to reclaim what is mine." She tossed the pigeon into the air. It circled and flew south even as Lucifael burst into a cloud of rolling ash, which then transformed into the likeness of a raven. The smoky visage tore across the grounds and dived through the hole of the gatestone.

    Clumsily and irregularly, the pigeon spiraled through the air along the mountainside and out onto the plain. Its shadow grazed the thatch roofs of a tiny settlement, fled across a field, and through a thicket of woods. Eventually, the bird found its way into the heart of a congested village. It fell into a seizure and plummeted towards earth, crushing itself against the slat wall of a building, whereupon it came to rest on the ground behind a fish stand in the bustling village market. As eve fell and the marketplace emptied, none noticed the dead bird, and in the gathering darkness, no one remained to see the sickly pale light that began to emanate from the carcass.

    The pigeon stiffened and grew cold, yet its feathers still shone with an unwholesome yellow glow. Just before first light, a pair of black rats happened upon the corpse. One rat sniffed at its gaping eye whilst the other smelled its anus, and both, finding the carcass fresh, tore into it. Yet, before they had finished with this gruesome feast, a man approached the fish stand, waved away green-backed flies, and slapped a heavy, milk-eyed fish onto the rough boards of the stall. The rats sped away, filled with the disease carried within the flesh of the bird.

    The rats were skillful scavengers, but more efficient still were the parasites that feasted unseen upon the rodents. The bacillus that had traveled to market with the temple pigeon amplified within the bodies of the rats, making them a living stew and witches brew of death for the fleas that infested them. Although not greatly affected by the bacteria, the fleas gorged themselves with infected rat blood, which they promptly regurgitated into the bodies of subsequent hosts as they prepared for the next meal. In the two weeks after the pigeon had fallen like manna into the rats’ marketplace warren, fleas spread the germ to every rat in the village.

    The rats began to die, forcing the fleas to look for healthier food. The disease, too, sought new breeding ground as it decimated the rodent population, and carried forth in the stomachs of billions of fleas, it found that new host — the disease moved to its next victim: humans.

    On this sweet and sunny morning, a young Chinese girl inspected tied bundles of black ginger heaped atop a produce stand a few feet from the landfall of the cursed pigeon. Pointing to a small bundle, the girl asked the old woman who ran the stall what she wanted for it. The woman waggled seven fingers in front of her toothless smile. The girl grinned, accepting: ‘twas a fair price. The woman retrieved the girl’s coins and held out the bundled roots, yet at that moment her young customer shrieked and leapt away from the stall. "A rat!" she exclaimed, her pleasant features twisting with distaste. "It ran over my foot."
    The woman laughed, waving a lazy hand in the air. "Only harmless pests," she said, grinning. "They have become bold with so much food lying about, like pets almost."

    The girl reached out to receive her purchase, wishing now to be away from the old crone and her ‘pets.’ Feeling a stinging sensation on her ankle, she recoiled again from the vendor and lifted the hem of her long skirt to reveal a bare foot. She bent over in closer examination, frowning. In doing so, the wide straw hat she wore tumbled to the ground, where a passing merchant trampled it. Laughter burst from the old woman, who seemed to find amusement in the commonest of misfortunes. The girl’s sharp glance only increased the woman’s mirth.

    "If everyone were so unfortunate as you, we’d all be dead by dawn," she cackled. The girl, failing to see the comedy in this bleak philosophy, retrieved her hat and popped it back onto her head. The old woman’s laughter followed her mockingly as she stomped off and disappeared into the crowd with a bundle of ginger, a dirty hat, and a flea’s bite. The bite, small as it was, would prove large enough to swallow nearly half of the known world.

    In only a few days, the ensuing outbreak of disease swept through the Chinese village like a tsunami. The children, closest to the earth and to the animals and insects that crawl across it, were the first to sicken and die. The mortality rate of the infection was bone chilling, soaring to nearly seventy-five percent. The mild winter offered ideal conditions for the spread of the disease, and the coming warmer weather would be yet more devastating to humans, more bountiful for the bacteria. Although happiness in Hell is quite rare, in that moment of tragic human infection, Lucifael capered. Man was ripe. The warm conditions were ideal to offer Death a bountiful harvest, Death who stood ever at the ready wielding a honed and gleaming scythe like a seasoned hired hand poised eagerly to reap of the plenty.

    Those infected with the plague died abruptly, as the germ was thorough in destroying their immune systems. It attacked lymph nodes unto rupture, rendering them useless. The victim’s body had little time to defend itself before it fell, completely overwhelmed. Hemorrhagic blood pooled beneath the victims’ skin in black splotches, and their infected body fluids — blood, sweat, and wastes — carried a horrifying stench.

    The Bubonic Plague was one of Hell’s more clever designs. The breath of Lucifael was devious, and her desire was complete annihilation of her adversaries. Thus the plague was a chemical shape-changer: what it did not accomplish in one form, it achieved in others. The disease changed, and a second wave of infection danced its dark way across the field of human life, and then a third wave. The pneumonic plague infected the lungs of its victims and multiplied there so rapidly that the chest cavity of the hapless victim swelled and filled with blood within days of infection. Though some survived the bubonic plague, pneumonic plague took no prisoners. Worse, the infection was easily transmitted through a cough or a sneeze — death filled the very air.

    The third form of infection proved deadliest of all. Septicemic plague attacked the blood, filling every particle of body tissue with the wildly multiplying bacillus. Victims died within hours, their inside organs literally liquefied in pools of highly infectious blood. Like the lung-borne form of the plague, the septicemic infection was nearly one hundred percent fatal.

    The pestilence spread rapidly from its source and engulfed the countryside. Three-quarters of all surrounding villages and towns now exposed to the plagues were decimated within days. In the following weeks, hundreds of thousands of infected dead lay strewn across open fields because few dared bury them for fear of infection. The fly population soared, the rotting corpses fine incubators for their larvae. In the more developed areas of the country, the stench of blackened, bloated corpses was so concentrated that a dead village could be smelt nearly ten miles downwind. A mass migration commenced as tens of thousands sought refuge in remote, unsettled areas.

    Even in their panicked flight, travelers avoided established roads, which were littered with the rotting remains of people, sometimes entire villages. Rural roads were often blocked by fly-filled carts hitched to dead horses. Death and decay was everywhere. The Plague reigned, and men were its slaves. The Great Pestilence took more than thirty-five million Chinese lives in sixteen hard years, and still it was not sated. The plague marched silently into Mesopotamia and Asia Minor, laying waste to them as it had China, sweeping across entire continents like some vengeful, marauding horde.

    The disease coursed through every vein of Asian civilization, following trade routes that radiated out from the heart of Mongolia. The Silk Road, an ancient caravan route that carried goods of the East to the Mediterranean Sea, now carried Death’s appointed handmaiden toward Europe. Indeed, Death breathed over the land like a foul breeze, tainting the air with the rancid odor of putrefaction. Its unholy stench was ripe enough to anesthetize even the heavens. Thus it happened, as horrible events in history invariably do, that Lucifael’s message rang out across the lands — she would soon reclaim her own.

  • Before I begin my journey into Neverland

    Time to sleep but before I do, just thought, I would put in a quick word.
    I have been in bed the whole day today. Not sleeping but sprained my ankle yesterday when I jumped down enthusiastically from the hammock. It wasnt particularly bad until today morning, in a fit of stubbornness, I decided that I shall take a walk in the garden and sat down altogher with a swearing oath when I put my sore foot in trouble by landing my body weight on it.
    So now, its rest for atleast three days. It wouldnt be so bad if I was alone and no one worriying and buzzing around all day about me. MOTHERS!! She would barge in and demand that I close my eyes and sleep-DAY AND NIGHT. I cant! But she wouldnt hear. She has decided that I dont get enough pampering and so voila! She has decided to shower it on me.
    Seriously speaking, she is my strength. I adore her and probably I'd be lost without her but sometimes..well...she smothers me with her overpowering love. Still, cant complain, can I? ;) Many of them in the world crave for this kind of love. I am lucky to have it. ( I tell myself that and bear this smothering.)

    All I did today was just read. Nope, not the study books. I was in no mood today to study. Was horribly grouchy. :( Ahem! Anyway, to come to the point, I had extricated some of the boxes with my collection of books from the attic some days back. I opened one and proceeded to read from it today. The books in this particular box, they are from my school time- when girls favour romance above all. LOL. This complete box is full of Mills and Boons. In all, about 100 of them in this box and more lying in the attic- in good condition even if I say so myself. :)
    My mother says its time for me to discard them but I dont think so. I have been buying books and collecting them since I was 10. It is the only treasure I keep. No one would part from their treasure, would they now? :D

    Time to sleep now. Maybe these books will take me to Neverland where I might meet my Prince Charming and things will be picture perfect, who knows? eh?! ;)
    Cheers!

  • The Path to 9-11.

    I have been trying since the last 2 days to upload pictures of my sister's wedding but somehow they dont get uploaded. Maybe its the damn connection..or maybe its the picture size. I am going to have to ask for my brother's help there.

    Btw, I was watching this movie on Zee Studio today. They showed it in the memory of those who died in the Sept WTC attacks in 2001.

    Cant believe its been five years since that incident happened.More than 3000 people died. I was always under the impression that the CIA had warnings before hand but didnt how before hand it was!! Seems there had been a similar attempt in 1993 but that failing,these terrorists had tried new techniques, destroying planes in several parts of the world, including a Phillipines Airbus in August 1993.
    Wow...and the movie also showed about how things were being worked out deligently by the FBI until Bush took over. Then CIA was handed over things and the FBI were told to concentrate on differnt matters other than Osama. I dont know how much of what was shown in the movie was true but they said this movie was made with references from the 9-11 Commission.

    I cant believe any nation can sit on the information like this..they know the terrorists who are going to attack the people of their country and still stay quiet?? WHY? This seems to be happening everywhere though. If its not the terrorists, its the politicians who create this mayhem just to keep people scared and out of their wits. Where is the end to this?