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Enlightened Empire 47 Into the Darkness
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Enlightened Empire 47 Into the Darkness

Once the small court had restored Corco's status as prince, he could bring his personal guards through the walls at last. Even better, he was able to make proper plans for the day. First, Fadelio would go out into the inner city to visit his father, the dead emperor's great general Atoc, to get the testimony of someone they could believe for a change. He would also inform their allies in the traditionalist camp outside the city on what had happened the previous night.

Meanwhile, the crown prince made himself ready to worship his dead father. He cleansed his body in the baths, meditated for an hour, put on the blue funeral tunic and robes he had bought back in Porcero and wore as many silver trinkets as his fashion sense could stomach. With this, he was ready to face his maker. He made his guards carry his effects, including the small bamboo tube of water from the celestial mountain, and met up with the prime minister. When he exited his temporary quarters, the old politician stood at the entrance, ready and waiting. After a short, cold greeting they went on their way towards the Moonlight Ziggurat.

Though the ziggurat was the political center of Medala, the structure was much older than the empire itself. As far as Corco knew, it had sat in its place for as long as anyone could remember. In all that time, it had always been the center of the northern island of Sinchay, no matter who had claimed power over it. Corco marched up the square stone stairs and looked over to the rounded edges to his side. Apart from the stairs in the center, the ancient stone slabs had been rounded on the outside and then neatly fit together to crate the enormous building which resembled a beehive in shape.

"Prince Corco-" The prime minister was eager to start a conversation, but Corco interrupted theincoming excuse. He wasn't interested in a conversation with the snake.

"The paths should have carried last night's water well. What do you think, old man?"

A look down besides his feet revealed the grooves which were carved into the top of each individual slab, the only change the Pluritac dynasty had made to the Ziggurat after they had taken control of it some six hundred years earlier. As part of the stars-and-water-worship of the Pacha faith, the grooves were meant to catch and guide rain, like they had done during last night's storm.

Once the procession had traveled half way up the stairs, they stepped onto the slabs and continued along the ziggurat's side. Any further up and they would reach the great court, the Ancestral Hall and eventually the peak's Pacha shrine, so they had to make a detour to reach the imperial tomb in the back of the structure. Around half way along their path, prime minister Chaupic made a second attempt at conversation.

"Prince, if you could-"

"Prime Minister, if you would be so kind? I will soon visit the father I have not seen in seven years and would like to focus rather than do chit chat."


As they followed the path of the rain, silence once again descended over the two men, even though they had much to say to one another. After his experience from the previous night and the farce in the small court the next morning, Corco had decided that he would rather not speak anywhere within the palace complex, not as long as there was a chance that someone might listen in. Thus, all the sounds they were left with came from their footsteps on the wet stones and from drops of water somewhere in the distance. At last, the group had rounded half the ziggurat and the imperial tomb had come into view. Or rather, the top of the tomb had, since the entire structure was built underground.

What was visible to them was an artificial pond of considerable size, which was fed into by the grooves they had followed here. Had it not rained the night before, they could have seen the tomb's enormous, bowl-shaped roof. In comparison to the impressive water feature, the entrance itself was only a square hole in the ground, barred off with heavy iron chains. Usually, the only reason anyone would notice the entrance at all were the always present guards in its front. However, at the moment they were accompanied by their guide through the tomb: The Pachayawna, the old head priest of the Pacha faith.

Unlike the usual bluish-gray robes of the priests, the Pachayawna wore cobalt robes covered in stars above his waist and covered in waves below it. However, like most of his fellow priests, he was also very thin, had a shorn head and carried a large, empty clay pot on his back.

"Pachayawna. This mortal seeks entry to the land of the dead to meet his ancestor." After he had arrived in front of the old priest, Corco gave a deferential gesture. The old man replied in kind.

"Good, this priest will guide Prince on his journey."

After he had spoken, the priest unlocked the chains over the tomb's entrance and led them down the revealed steps.

Since they would have to wait outside, Corco took the blessed water back from his Arcavian guards. Although he had almost died the night prior, Corco still wouldn't be allowed to take his warriors into the tomb. After all, even though he was his father's old servant, it was already considered unusual to let prime minister Chaupic follow along.

Thus, both Corco and Chaupic were led down into the darkness. As the prince left the light of day behind, so did he his protection. However, he was not worried about any more tricks. The tomb was usually closed off and no one should be inside. The only priest allowed into the royal tomb was the Pachayawna himself; and he would never give up his privileges. As for the possibility that the head priest might collude with Spuria or his brothers to let in an assassin? As a place of the dead, the royal tomb was already considered a part of the underworld. No mortal would come to enter the tomb for fear that any evil spirits like the immortal sea snake Hatun Supra would trick them and eat their souls. The only way to enter a Pacha tomb and be safe would be in the company of a Pacha priest.

"How often have people been visiting my father?" Corco asked the Pachayawna.

"Since the funerary rites, Emperor Titu has not received any visitors beyond his father. Elder Caelestis has so far visited once every few days to speak with his son."

"What about the rest? His concubine? His sons?" Corco asked in disbelief. How could these people be so shameless and not even keep up appearances?

"Unfortunately, it seems the living have no use for the wisdom of the dead."

As the priest kept lighting lamps on their way and led them deeper and deeper into the damp catacombs, Corco's mood sank with their position underground. While his breathing grew heavy from the musty air, he observed the figures which the priests had carved into the stone walls over the centuries. The common motif was the deep sea. Whales, algae, sea snakes, turtles. And waves, of course. Waves everywhere.

According to the Pacha faithful, after death the spirit would have to leave the body and move downward through the deep sea, to reach the afterlife among the stars, so the choice of imagery was not surprising. It was also the reason emperors were buried at such a depth: To give them a shorter journey. In all possible ways, the emperor's way through the depths of the sea were made as easy as possible. Their bodies would be covered in a sweet rice paste, as the journey would last so long as there was still meat on the bones of the deceased. Finally, twelve turtles, considered to be mystical guides to the afterlife, would be sacrificed as companions during the funeral. This rituals also made turtle figurines a popular present during lesser noble funerals, the idols meant to support the dead on their path ahead.

After they had lost sight of the world of the living and Corco was sure that no one would overhear them from the outside, he turned his head to the prime minister. However, the old man had already been eager before and so he was the first to speak up, his voice enhanced by the eery echo from the green stones all around them.

"This servant would like to thank Prince Corco for his support in front of the court this morning."

"The court? Who would that be?" Corco threw back a sarcastic reply. After all, Chaupic himself had been a key member of the small and grand courts for decades. He had already served under Corco's great grandfather and still did so today, after his father had died.

"Empress Mother Spuria of course."

Chaupic's eternally frozen smile seemed a bit weary this time, though Corco couldn't know if the man was just acting out a different role from his usual one.

"Is that so?" the prince thus shot back in a flat voice.

"Yes. Two months after the emperor's unfortunate death, Lady Ichilia managed to convince the ancestors to declare her Empress Mother."

"Well, she's not 'my' mother." Corco stopped and turned to face the man, baffled. How could any of this possibly happen? The head priest, meanwhile, waited several steps ahead to give the two opponents some space.

"At the time, Prince Corco's warrior, a man named Quirinu, had returned to the capital and brought tale of Prince's demise. Since the crown prince was considered dead and both remaining princes were Lady Ichilia's children-"

"I get it, it doesn't matter since she'd be the emperor's mother soon. But why give her the title early? What was her excuse? Stabilize the royal family?"

"Prince Corco is wise," flattered the politician.

"Doesn't take a genius to understand a simple power grab." Corco would never believe that Spuria, a woman he only knew as selfish, vicious and choleric, would act out of anything other then self-interest.

In response to the prince's bile, the politician bobbed his head up and down in an exaggerated manner.

"By now, the empress mother has installed her men all throughout Pluritac Castle and is in complete control of the small court."

Only a raised eyebrow and a dry look answered Chaupic's complaint. Corco doubted that the old politician wouldn't also have some pieces left in play, not after decades of preparation.

"Thus, this old servant hopes Prince can understand that it was not his will to leave prince's guards outside the castle walls. The accommodations as well had already been prepared and instructions sent from inside the empress mother's Golden Yard."

"So you're implying that Spuria is the one who wanted me dead?" Corco asked back in a flat tone.

In reaction, the politician looked shocked, though Corco was certain that Chaupic's current inner state couldn't be further from surprise.

"Oh, no. This old servant would not dare. Just that, since the emperor's death, the empress mother has done much to guarantee Prince Pachacutec's ascension to the silver throne. Surely it would pain her to see all her hard work wasted."

For now, Corco decided that he had humored the politician for long enough. No longer would he follow the man's breadcrumbs through their conversation. Instead, now that he had privacy, someone in the know and a reliable witness within earshot all at once, the prince decided that it would be best if he got answers to some of his more pressing questions.

"Now that we're talking about the emperor's death, how did my father die exactly?"

"I am surprised that Prince would not know," Chaupic asked, another mask of shock on his face.

"I have asked around, but I've only heard 'natural causes'. But when has a Pluritac ever died naturally at the age of sixty?"

Now the politician looked embittered, as if he had bitten into a lemon. Corco still didn't buy it.

"Truth be told, this servant is not entirely sure himself. Some time after Prince Amautu's return to the capital, the emperor decided to close himself off within the Moonlight Ziggurat. At that time, the only ones with access to him were the elders of the ancestral hall, the empress mother, the princes and some close personal servants. Even his decrees to the courts would only come through his warriors. He seemed unwilling or unable to attend the court deliberations in person."

"So you're saying that no one can tell me what happened to my father?"

"Some do, but unfortunately, this old servant can only offer rumors. After he had spent some time in isolation, the emperor brought doctors into the ziggurat, so word has it that Emperor Titu was ill. When he heard the news, Prince Amautu sent word back to the Chutwa Empire to bring the best doctor he could find over the Verduic Sea. Alas, it was to no avail and the emperor went on his final journey soon thereafter."

"Is that so?" Corco asked with the enthusiasm of a sedated sloth. Just because of an owed debt and some privacy, he had been stupid enough to believe that the old politician would tell him the truth.

"Prince should not doubt all that he hears. Truth is everywhere, though we cannot always see it." Out of nowhere, the old priest chimed in. As they had descended further and further down towards the center of the old tomb, the Pachayawna was building a trail of light behind them. In his duties, the man had acted in such silence and suretythat both of his wards had forgotten about his existence. Now that he was reminded, rather than get fooled by Chaupic some more, Corco asked the priest something he had been curious about for a while.

"Pachayawna, on my road here I have been to Mount Urquna. The grand seer there told me about that celestial prophecy. I wonder what Pachayawna thinks about it."

"If a man looks down the mountains, he can not see his brother at the bottom, no matter how good his eyes. How far from us must the stars be, compared to the height of a mountain?" Accompanied by his strange sing-song voice, the priest stared by at the musky ceiling, or maybe past it, up to the stars.

"So you think that our suffering won't matter in the grand scheme of things? What if I said that I can make a man see down a mountain as clearly as if he stood at its foot?" Corco replied with a smile. Lenses sure were neat.

"It seems Prince has already found his path and will not need further guidance. Fortune might favor us yet."

The old priest's wrinkles stretched back around his face to reveal a mysterious smile. Corco, on the other hand, was sure that the priest had misunderstood his joke. Silence fell over the group as everyone's thoughts sank into their own pits.

After they had been left alone with the echo of their steps for a while, they had reached the lowest chamber of the pyramid, the gateway to the afterlife. In here, the dead would be barred up after their funerals, until only bones were left.

Chapter end

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<<Prev
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Catalogue
Chapter 257
256 Fire Safety
255 Opponents Far Apar
254 Infiltration
253 Setting Things in Motion
252 Family Vacation
251 Meeting the Boss
250 Secret Operations
249 No Place Like Home
248 Cold War
247 Catching Up
246 Still Searching
245 High Politics
244 Convincing the Holdovers
243 Fight For Power
242 Government Interference
241 New Business
240 Paper, Also Worthless
239 Looking Around
238 Worthless
237 New Chapters Coming Today and tomorrow, and...
236 Shadows
235 New Weaponry
234 Union
233 Back Again
232 Hidden Smile
231 Two Types of Battle
230 Beasts of War
229 Honorable Battle
228 Real Power
227 Servility
226 Change in Fortune
225 In Search of a Future
224 Strengthening the Alliance
223 Please Stay Behind After Class
222 Freedom and Burden
221 Overtime Work
220 Lessons Between Lessons
219 A Route to the Stars
218 Back to Basics
217 Modern Transportation
216 Trouble in Paradise
215 A New World
214 Projects and Goals
213 Office Politics
212 A New Era
211 Always More Banquets
210 Armistice
209 Trade Trouble Part 2
208 Trade Trouble
207 Trade Trouble End of Book 5
206 Reunion
Chapter 205
Chapter 204
Chapter 203
Chapter 202
Chapter 201
Chapter 200
Chapter 199
Chapter 198
Chapter 197
Chapter 196
Chapter 195
Chapter 194
Chapter 193
Chapter 192
191 Charge
190 Standoff
189 Skirmish
188 Sowing Disconten
187 Course Correction
186 Secret Deal
185 Breaking Ou
184 Strategic Maneuvers
183 Surprise Visitor
182 Demons and Mortals
181 Cold
180 Real Enemy
179 Maybe
178 Accompanimen
177 Chance at Glory
176 Starvation Tactics
175 New Toys
174 Opportunists, Cowards
173 Disruption
172 Landing Operation
171 Exiles
170 Cleanup
169 Back Home
168 The Fog Clears
167 Conspiracy
166 A Sacrifice for the Future
165 Plans and Ploys
164 Two Meetings
163 Plots and Plans
162 Plans to be Foiled
161 Gif
160 Antipyretics
159 Turning Winds
158 Reunions
157 Weather
156 Travelers
155 Vice
154 Loyal or Stubborn
153 Family Ties
152 Underwater
151 Stubborn
150 Spread Thin
149 Change in Direction
148 Pessimist and Optimis
147 Splitting Up
146 Superstition
145 Unfounded Worry
144 Supply and Demand
143 Purpose
142 Glory
141 Opening a Path
140 Weaklings
139 Burden
138 Pettiness
137 Inevitability
136 Loyalty
135 Preparations
134 Cheat Codes
133 First Invention
132 Secret Alliance
131 Recruitmen
130 Precision
129 Old and New
128 Bandits in the Fores
127 Old Friends End of Book 3
126 Opponents
125 Two Sides
124 Grand Finale
123 Light and Dark
122 Mortal Danger
121 Power Struggle
120 Surrounded
119 Chances Missed, and Taken
118 Two Sides
117 How to Salvage a Disaster
116 True Nature
115 Three Kinds of Trouble
114 Blemishes
113 Hidden in Plain Sigh
112 Uninvited Gues
111 Aperitif
110 Lord, Governor, King
109 Transi
108 Financial Troubles
107 Time Flies
106 Between a Rock and a Hard Place
105 Checkup
104 Triumvirate Meeting
103 Rumors
102 Hope Dies Las
101 Battle in the Mountains
100 Two out of Three
99 Businessman and Lady
98 Standardization
97 Free City
96 Ronnie and Bombasticus
95 Gifts
94 Beacons
93 Plans Between Friends
92 Adventurous Spiri
91 Smiles All Around
90 The Lord of Saniya
89 Close Family
88 Extended Family
87 The Captain's Homecoming
86 Saniya
85 River King
84 Middle of Nowhere
83 His Role End of Book 2
82 Cortege
81 A Duel Between Kings Part 2
80 A Duel Between Kings
79 Nobles' Assembly
78 Plans for the Future
77 Dark Omens
76 Truth and Decei
75 A Reward for Good Deeds
74 The Ancestor's Goals
73 Rif
72 Miracle
71 Uncovering Truths
70 One Down, One to Go
69 Ancestral Assembly
68 Washed Away by the Rain
67 Resist or Submi
66 The Final Vote
65 Collecting Pieces
64 Conspiracy
63 Going Home
62 How to Rule a Country
61 The Ape King's Banque
60 Witch Doctor's Curse
59 Looking Back
58 Fire Seeds
57 Stargazing Brawl
56 Beyond the Clouds
55 The Merchant Prince
54 A Moment of Peace
53 Streak of Ligh
52 A Great Hero
51 Claim to the Throne
50 Making Plans
49 A Long Day of Work
48 A Chat Between Father and Son
47 Into the Darkness
46 To Cancel Out the Double Negative
45 Accomplice
44 Life Insurance
43 A Chat in the Garden
42 Little Bro, Let's Drink!
41 That Magnificent Beard
40 Music
39 Electoral Campaign
38 Allies
37 Distribution of Wealth
36 Unequal Negotiations
35 Blue for the Funeral
34 A Triumphant Return
33 Talent, Success, Truth End of Book 1
32 Payoff
31 The Big Fish
30 On the Prowl
29 What Really Matters
28 The Best Laid Plans
27 Consequences
26 Fake Pirates
25 Greed and Motivation
24 Peace Offers
23 Fallibility
22 Manufactured Morale
21 Modern Siege Tactics
20 Faith and Greed
19 A Man of Few Words
18 New Era
17 Three Captains
16 Prey
15 Matters of Faith
14 Inventions
13 First Major Haul
12 Business Partners
11 Safety Ne
10 Fake Seer, Fake Physician
9 Cultivation
8 Second Produc
7 Marketing
6 Respective Plans
5 The Smell of Hope
4 First Experimen
3 Alchemist Bombasticus
Chapter 2
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