The city of Ahnatep flared with light. The Golden Watchtower's storms illuminated monuments and temples, spires and walls, broken ruins and gilded obelisks alike. Atop the Pressora's palace, Bashti and her advisors marveled and fretted at the strange and portentous occurrence; priests at their chapels prayed to the gods, seeking answers; and common folk huddled in front of their doors, aghast and wondering if the world was to end. Even the criminals, whores, and addicts at the Pillars of Dust squeezed together behind piles of rubble, under fallen columns, or inside scant hovels, knowing there would be no one to save them should the gods finally demand a reckoning.
A divine war. A second Valterrian. A premonition of doom. However Ahnatep's inhabitants viewed the storm, the fact was that a city divided by blood and rank and ancient prides now sat united in one thing: fear.
Faroul could only laugh, even as haphazard fingers of lightning arced into the bowels of the city. The absurdity of it all, the irony, gripped him as hard as the terror. That he should be freed, that he should know the sky again, just as the heavens cracked apart! That the gods should bring vengeance on Ahnatep, just as he had contemplated doing so himself!
Madness. Surely, if the gods had a plan for him, it must only be to witness suffering. No other explanation could account for what he had endured, for the things he had seen.
If death will come, I will face it, he resolved.
Just like every other time. Gripping his khopesh and his cane, the pillars of his life, he sank to the floor. He ran his fingertips over the names carved into the cane's wood, the annals of his Chronicle. Perhaps today he would join the dead in Dira's grip.
But even as the lightning pierced through the open window to strike him, he knew it wasn't time.
***
Perhaps ages later, Faroul woke. Reaching out, he felt a carved and broken floor, the space where his body lay. He could hear murmurs, movement, a low hum. The lightning's touch still tingled inside his muscles and gut. The comforting weight of his blade and his cane rested against his side. But there was no light – only darkness.
Absolute darkness.
He tensed, trying not to shake. Surely this could not be death. Not yet. If it was, why did his heart still beat? Where were Dira and Her fabled jackals, to bear him to the God of Fate? Maybe there were no gods, after all. Or maybe, by some mad happenstance, he had returned to the pit.
The thought paralyzed him. He clutched his khopesh to his chest until his knuckles ached. But even as he lay there, suffocated by blackness and fear, he could feel the old jackal rouse in his breast. As it stirred, his instincts returned, sharpening his senses. This could not be the pit. There was no subterranean coolness, no smell of ancient stone, no looming presence of a cavernous ceiling. No howls in the distant dark. Wherever he was, it was a place he did not know.
Once Faroul had steadied his limbs, he sat up. Blinking, his vision slowly returned. As shadow receded, he could make out a glimmering sea of stars overhead, the giant disc on which he rested, and the silhouettes of many gathered people. Nearby, the lip of the disc fell away, revealing a glowing blue orb draped with drifting clouds. Perfect and untouchable, it floated amidst shining heavens, as serene as passing eternity.
It was the strangest and most beautiful thing he had ever seen.
Having no god to supplicate, the Benshira sat there in his dusty turban and ragged robes, staring at the slow spin of this vision far beyond his ken.