Part I
Chapter V
I don't participate.
The slaughter unfolds at a distance. The priests and I watch the battle from the slopes of the barren mountainside, comfortable in the shade of a cotton awning. Messengers dash up on worn, bloody feet to bring us news of each advance, each contraction of the enemy force into tighter and tighter desperation.
Across the vast countryside behind us, the Jaguar warriors whet their appetites subduing the periphery of our territory, cowing tiny villages and putting down insurrection. The spearman, though, have pushed ever eastward, driving deeper into India, generation after generation, until now we look over the sweeping arc of our foe's home valley. The high sun makes the river a band of light pointing the way straight into the cradle of their civilization.
"But the Ottomans and Songhai have defied us as well," one of the youngest priests mumbles, staring at the twitching ant shapes writhing in battle beside the river.
"Quiet," his elder barks. The old man looks up at me on the throne they carry from battle to battle as if I might fire lightning from my eye sockets. All these years, and still the awe.
"It's alright," I tell them both, something like a grin on my face. "In time, they will all pay for their insolence. When India's will is broken, then the rest of the world will tremble before us."
They bow.
They actually bow.
One of the commanders kneels before me, an open gash leaving tendrils of gore down the lean stone of his arm. In the shadows cast by the fading campfire, the granite slope of his face dips unnaturally inward, as if the earth had thrust it upward in some jarring cataclysm. In the low light, I cannot help but think that he looks very much like his father.
And his grandfather before them.
Whole family lines born and bred on the march, leagues from the heart of Mexica territory, but enslaved to its pulse, its insatiable need.
"We have failed you, unholy one," he says hoarsely, shame like a muzzle. "The enemy's army has survived us. Though we fell upon them with all our fury, they have tightened their defenses and fortified themselves."
I remember that as a boy, he had hung his head low like this after a defeat in a brawl with another child. I'd stood by when his father had soothed him, urging him to eat several flanks of meat and strike at a nearby tree until his fists had hardened, then go find his opponent again and defeat him. The boy had run away, reinvigorated with a new purpose and his father and I had laughed at his energy and determination.
"Our scouts and spies say they are broken, captain," I tell him, thinking of his father's tone and trying to hear it in my own voice. "The battle is won and India's dominion of this region stands at a precipice from which it will never retire. Fear not."
"Still, my lord," he continued with even deeper strain in his voice. "We have taken only a handful of wounded as prisoners, none hearty enough to journey back to Tenochtitlan to die on the sacred altars. I offer myself, great one, to appease the displeasure of the gods. Let my heart's blood fill their bellies."
I can't help but chuckle. "No, old friend," I say to him. "You've done well today. Patience. You will see our final victory. You and I will see it together."
The boy shakes his head. I swear I see a streak of tears run through the greasepaint on his face. He is sure he must die. Does he weep for the plump little girl who waits for him at the main encampment? Or is his heart broken because he thinks he has failed me?
"Patience," I say again.
"My lord," the eldest priest hisses. "The gods must be appeased." He looks from me to the young priest, whose doubt percolates behind the glassy wall of his eyes, and then again to the prostrate young warrior. "A sacrifice must be made."
The old priest's eyes swing back to me, a fixed truth in each socket:
If the state cannot demand blood, then the state is only shadow. For it to be real at all, it must be more real than the life of any one soul within it. They are just lonely lives; they cannot be measured against the weight of history. And I am history. I am its will. I am the state.
"The honor will be yours," I tell him.
I will go with him, ride across the dry hills and through the soft ground of the flood plains. While we return to the city, the priests will grow fat on sugar and pasty fruits as they bark inane orders at the encamped men who will bear the imposition with gnashing teeth, waiting for me to return with reinforcements.
With the sun fixed high in the blue plate above the temple, I will watch without passion or attachment as they splay open the young man's rib cage and lift, like a mewing newborn, his still beating heart from his chest.
This I will do because I decided it must be this way. I decided he must die four hundred years earlier. I killed him in the woods. That one axe stroke in the jungle was the same blow that killed him, his father's son, four centuries later. It is all my doing.
So I will watch and I will not flinch when the last surge of blood splatters across the floor. I owe him that much.