Part I
Chapter XVI
I follow the long road around the mountains, bending south below the capital, off through the colonies and toward India.
When the horse tires, I lead it off the road and feed it whatever dry grasses I can find. When it seems sated, I lie down in the soft sands.
The pilgrims arrive hours after.
Some are deserters who walked away from the army when word spread I had taken to the road. Most are civilians, lured by an accidental piper. Deep into the moonless night I hear them shuffle in on blistered feet. Babies clutched to mothers' breast whine and gripe with shallow, weepy breaths. Old men scratch vermin from their beards as they collapse into concentric circles around me.
They ask nothing. I say nothing.
I wake at dawn and see that there are at least a thousand of them asleep and half dead in the dust.
"You," I say, shaking one from his slumber.
"Yes, unholy one?"
"Who are you?"
"I am Acatlotzin," he answers.
"Not your name. What are you? Why are you here?"
"I was a worker. I helped build the floating gardens outside the capital, but two mornings ago, I heard word that the god king was passing the southern road on a holy journey and--"
"And you deserted your work for this foolish errand?"
"I wished to serve your will!" he pleaded.
"And what made you think this would be my will?"
He tried to summon up some words, but could not.
Why serve my will? Would you be a slave? I imagine his work, hacking out long beams from the cane plants and lashing them together. Building rafts of sludge for some future bounty.
These savages thought of that.
It's never one thing, civilization. I've led them astray, tugged on the most ruthless thread of their nature and told myself it was the central cord of their being.
I've done you wrong, little farmer. Go back to making your rafts; go and watch the chilies and squash sprout up on your tiny, artificial islands. Worship nothing. Live as you would live, not as the god king would will you to.
I mount the horse and ride off, losing the sounds of the man's pleas for forgiveness in the clopping of the hooves. I drive the beast hard through the sweltering heat, hoping to lose them.
By nightfall outside the next city, though, I can sense their bare feet shaking the ground behind me, so I ride on, ignoring the animal's distress.
I almost kill it by pressing on after the river crossing toward Delhi. When I finally make camp and let the animal succumb to exhaustion on the earth beside me, I think I have finally escaped my entourage. I slip off into a dreamless sleep that I wish could last for ages.
But by morning's light, the whole throng of them is there again. Filthy and bleeding from their pores, they have hurried through the night to be near me.
I waste no more energy trying to escape them.
I let the weary horse clop on at foot pace and the whole pilgrimage plods along just over my shoulder.
In Delhi, somehow word has travelled ahead of us and the governor stands in the streets with the entire city guard in full regalia. He bows and has horns blow as I pass through the gate. He begins to speak, but I ride by him.
The Indians watch our sad invasion of depleted souls march by with blank eyes.
The road ends.
The mass of humanity trailing me has grown. Loyals and Indians alike from Delhi have added themselves to the impromptu migration. Even the defeated must know awe. Their gods have never walked by, so they might as well follow.
Past the cattle pastures, I finally see the sea on the horizon. When the horse finally steps past the last of the tall grasses and onto the open expanse of the beach, I dismount.
I slap its flank hard and send it running along the length of the sea. It shows no attachment to me or my purpose, less foolish than the human dregs behind me.
I have not eaten in seven days. Even with all my advantages, I cannot last much longer. The steps through the dense sand slow me and I feel as if the lip of the sea is beyond reach.
When my toes finally touch the water, crisp and cold against my pale, worn flesh, one of the pilgrims speaks up.
"My lord, what does this mean? Why have you brought us here?"
A more biting question than he can ever know.
Why?
"I'm done with this world," I answer.
"But how, how can you be finished? The world is not yet ours."
"And if it was? What would you want from me then?"
"I do not understand."
And you think I do?
The water pulls at my ankle. The tide is perfect.
"It's time for me to go."
I wade out. Behind me, wails of lamentation go up from the women. There are moans of agony as men cut their own throats. I don't turn around. I don't want to see it anymore. I wash my hands of it all.
End of Part I