Day 34 of Summer, 496 AV.
The summer sun was fully out again, and the vipers in the Dhani nest of the endless desert of Eyktol rejoiced. This time of year was a typical Dhani's favourite. Being a race sharing close psychological and physical ties with snakes, their national pastime, apart from torture, was basking in the sun. Even though the Dhani were not entirely cold-blooded reptiles, being partly human like their goddess Siku, they always enjoyed this activity. The sun's warm rays stroked their slippery scales like a mother cradling her children, and the usual Dhani reveled in that kind of natural gift of astral affection. Bethsyliss, however, did not.
Seventy-four years ago, Bethsyliss was basking in the sun's spotlight during the beginning of the hot season when a small constrictor raid was mounted on her nest. To that fateful encounter, Syliss lost her father, who had been brutally captured and enslaved by her Dhani cousins from the jungles of Falyndar. Every summer since, Bethsyliss went out some ways from the other vipers' presence to isolate herself and think about her father. She did not enjoy the basking, but a mysterious force inside of her compelled her, every year, to go out in the sun in snake form and remember her youth, and recall that terrible day when her father whom she loved very dearly had been snatched away from her before her very eyes. So there she was, laying at the foot of a sand dune in the Burning Lands with her nest behind her, while the sun reheated her memory and ignited her inextinguishable thirst for retribution. She imagined a thousand ways to avenge her family. Her mind seethed with anger and spite, and the golden scale she bore above her left eye glowed as she pictured countless scenarios where she tortured constrictors and liberated her father.
Buried in her bloody thoughts, she schemed. When I am old enough, I will leave the nessst, and I will rally a sssizeable force of vipers and rattlers and lead them into the ssstinking city of cursssed Zinrah. There I will slaughter a hundred constrictors until they sssurrender, and I will, in turn, make the remaining survivorsss my slaves, and I will free my father from the ssshackles of those damned creaturesss so that he gaze proudly upon the daughter that brought honor on his family and his kind. Father, you will be avenged, and mother too, for I will bring those foul sssnakes to their knees and they will sssuffer as we have sssuffered. Sssiku be my witness, and the sun also, though ssshe shall not shine any longer upon the monsters that have wrought sssuch pain and injustice on the surface of Mizahar. Lost in those dreadful fantasies of hers, Syliss dreamed of the day where justice would be served, impervious to the rolling dunes of sand all around her while the sun fueled her mindless fury. |