Nightside the Long Sun

Nightside the Long Sun by Gene Wolfe Page A

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Authors: Gene Wolfe
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the gracious gods to those who petition them—that a god will indeed come to this Sacred Window when I have made my sacrifice. It may be a long time, as I told Kit, so we must not be impatient. We must have faith, and remember always that the gods have other ways of speaking to us, and that if our Windows have fallen silent, these others have not. In omens and dreams and visions, the gods speak to us as they did when our parents and grandparents were young. Whenever we are willing to provide a victim, they speak to us plainly through augury, and the Writings are always here for us, to be consulted in a moment whenever we have need of them. We should be ashamed to say, as some people sometimes do, that in this age we are like boats without rudders.”
    Thunder rumbled through the windows, louder even than the bawlings of the beggars and vendors on Sun Street; the children stirred uneasily at the sound. After leading them in a brief prayer, Silk dismissed them.
    Already the first hot, heavy drops of the storm were turning the yellow dust to mud beyond the manteion’s doors. Children scurried off up or down Sun Street, none lingering this afternoon, as they sometimes did, to gossip or play.
    The three sibyls had remained inside to assist at his sacrifice. Silk jogged from the manteion back to the manse, pulled on leather sacrificial gauntlets, and took the night chough from its cage. It struck at his eyes like an adder, its long, crimson beak missing by a finger’s width.
    He caught its head in one gauntleted hand, reminding himself grimly that many an augur had been killed by the victim he had intended to sacrifice, that scarcely a year passed without some unlucky augur, somewhere in the city, being gored by a bull or a stag.
    â€œDon’t try that again, you bad bird.” He spoke half to himself. “Don’t you know you’ll be accursed forever if you harm me? You’ll be stoned to death, and your spirit handed over to devils.”
    The night chough’s bill clacked; its wings beat vainly until he trapped its struggling body beneath his left arm.
    *   *   *
    Back in the dim and airless heat of the manteion, the sibyls had kindled the sacrificial fire on the altar. When Silk entered, a solemn procession of one down the central aisle, they began their slow dance, their wide black skirts flapping, their tuneless voices lifted in an eerie, ritual wail that was as old as the whorl itself.
    The fire was a small one, and its fragrant split cedar was already burning fast; Silk told himself that he would have to act quickly if his sacrifice were not to take place when the flames were dying, always a bad omen.
    Passing the bird quickly over the fire, he pronounced the shortest invocation and gave his instructions in a rush of uncadenced words: “Bird, you must speak to every god and goddess you encounter, telling them of our faith and of our great love and loyalty. Say too how grateful I am for the immense and undeserved condescension accorded me, and tell them how earnestly we desire their divine presence at this, our Sacred Window.
    â€œBird, you must speak thus to Great Pas, the Father of the Gods.
    â€œBird, you must speak thus also to Sinuous Echidna, Great Pas’s consort. You must speak so to Scalding Scylla, to Marvelous Molpe, to Black Tartaros, to Mute Hierax, to Enchanting Thelxiepeia, to Ever-feasting Phaea, to Desert Sphigx, and to any other god that you may encounter in Mainframe—but particularly to the Outsider, who has greatly favored me, saying that for the remainder of my days I will do his will. That I abase myself before him.”
    â€œNo, no,” the night chough muttered, as it had in the market. And then, “Please, no.”
    Silk pronounced the final words: “Have no speech with devils, bird. Neither are you to linger in any place where devils are.”
    Grasping the frantic night chough firmly by the neck, he extended his

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