Today I'm showcasing the Tower of Stairs, a sacred site in my Lore Universe. I wrote this many years ago, but only recently did I come across a real world place that actually mirrors what imagination conjured up. Here I'm including the excerpt from the Kallanon Scales (and AI image), as well as images of Ambuluwawa Tower in Kandy, Sri Lanka. Amazing, isn't it?!
Northern Valaris
The Tower of Stairs
TORRULLIN TRANSPORTED north the afternoon
before the others were expected. Thundor accompanied him. The Thinnings
entertained the notion of entering the Zone and made good argument.
After surveying the massive arena that was
the Tower of Stairs, Torrullin was satisfied. It was the best place for what
would come next. He cleared the vast floor of light snow and hopped up onto the
first tier to check the caverns hewn into the rock. The caverns were
comfortable suites for the Valleur when they spent time here. He reinstated the
tradition of gathering at the amphitheatre for winter and summer solstices.
Twice a year the mountains thus reverberated with celebration. The next
solstice was a month and a half away.
Torrullin raised his gaze to the four peaks,
Mon, Shin, Rue and Bres, permanently snow-capped, but free of cloud. Saska
loved those peaks, different to anything on her homeworld, watery Canimer.
Snow lay thick around the edges of the
arena, but conditions were acceptable under the auspices of the site’s magic.
There were five tiers and the Vallorin’s suite was on the central level at the
northern compass point, and that was where Torrullin headed. He did not go in,
swivelling instead before the entrance to view the fantastical tower in the
centre of the arena, rising to a height to rival that of the four peaks. Around
this spike a stairway wound, no handholds, no railing, ever tighter as the
diameter decreased with height, until it ended in a platform no more than two
hand spans in width.
At every solstice gathering, they elected a
solstice king and queen and theirs was the challenge to mount the stairs and
climb as high as they dared, and thereafter others attempted to better them. Thus
far, only Vannis attained the pinnacle, in another era.
During Margus’ unsavoury reign, Vannis and
Taranis challenged each other. A year later, in autumn, they made good on it.
Those remaining after the final battle with Margus came to witness; himself,
Saska, Raken, Lycea with the infant twins, Belun, Lanto, Kisha and Kylan,
Quilla, Phet and Shep Lore.
They came to witness, but also to reunite.
Fun they had, laughing hard when Taranis ventured a third of the way to descend
with dark mutterings about it being impossible. He was immortal, but not
stupid. Vannis proved him wrong, ascending an additional third, but came down
without attempting the pinnacle. He wryly stated he no longer possessed the
same fearlessness, and Torrullin wondered if he lied to spare Taranis. Vannis
and Taranis could be competitive, were often at odds.
He stared now at the Tower. He had denied
every challenge at the solstice meetings. His gaze travelled the length of the
spike, pausing midway on a tiny speck. Thundor.
Now it was him. And the Thinnings. A
witness.
Torrullin ambled across the arena floor,
gathering missing willpower, and wits. He needed to challenge and sharpen his
human abilities. He placed a booted foot on the first step and looked up to
find Thundor five steps removed.
The Thinnings raised an eyebrow. “With no
Valleur in the vicinity? Does that not defeat the purpose of the exercise?”
“If you have been watching as closely as you
suggest, you must know those questions are immaterial.”
Thundor bowed. “The Enchanter prefers
privacy.”
For a moment that put Torrullin off. “You
believe it a fault?”
“For this, no. I think the reason many fail
in the climb is the pressure of personalities watching.”
“Out of my way.”
Thundor scuttled aside as Torrullin passed
him and began to climb. One carefully placed foot after the other, maintaining
eye contact with the next precarious step. He climbed slowly, halting every
tenth to draw a deep breath.
It was simple at first, taking little
energy, but gradually the gaps between the stairs lessened and the width
narrowed. He looked neither up nor down, clamping down every natural instinct
that would have him check his progress, but his heart began to hammer, and he
wondered belatedly if he should have removed his boots at the base; there was
barely enough room to place his foot.
Too soon, he placed his feet on alternate
steps, causing him to over-balance. For the first time he put a steadying hand
to the Tower itself, and retracted instantly when it felt as if it would toss
him down. He understood what others said about the Tower’s influence upon the
climb.
The stairs became slippery, the air colder,
and he knew he passed the two-thirds level. He dared not check. There were his
feet, the next cautious placement, and his hammering heart. Nothing to be
afraid of, for he could arrest his fall if he tumbled over, but he desired to
go as far as he was able to, and return to ground without a humiliating tumble.
Resting to draw deep breaths in the thin
air, he released in a cloud of vapour that nearly blinded him. He shallowed his
breathing, through his nose now, grit his teeth and took another step, every
third thereafter.
He lifted for the next before he realised
there were no more. With a silent oath he sought to regain balance, standing
swaying on his toes on the tiny platform.
Long moments passed and he had it, standing
unmoving at the top of the world. Without sorcery, it was all him. He wanted to
shout, revel in the achievement, and dared not. He needed to go down and,
according to reports, that was worse.
He gazed around, not long, for he felt the
pull of gravity, and looked upon Valaris without the Sight. What a wondrous
planet, such incredible beauty and diversity. How he loved this world of his
birth, through every change. He stared south in the direction of the Keep and
could see and sense the activity there. He felt Torrke, the sentient presence,
acknowledge his gaze. He drew breath, feeling lost. Torrke, a friend as no
other, but not human, not Valleur, no tangible, beating heart.
Where are you, Saska?
He turned before loneliness overcame
concentration, but had the presence of mind to do so in infinitesimal degrees
until he faced the downward spiral. For an instant, his gaze fixed on the
faraway arena floor, and he understood how the downward view influenced the
descent.
Regaining control, he pasted his gaze to the
stairs. He attempted to ignore his pounding heart, but that was not as easy
with blood pulsing in his ears. He descended.
He could not do this with the entire Valleur
nation hanging onto his every move; their expectations alone would debilitate.
Thundor was right. He was certain Vannis achieved this feat in private. He
would ask sometime.
Torrullin came to the point where the stairs
took on every aspect of normality, and realised he had succeeded, the up and
the murderous down, and ran to the bottom.
A tinny clapping of hands marked his
remarkable achievement, and he laughed aloud. Thundor danced a merry jig on the
arena floor.
“Very well done, Enchanter!”
Torrullin slapped the side of the Tower in
glee. “Got your measure now!”
Thundor appeared on the step at eye level.
“You have courage, Enchanter. The Thinnings revere that.”
Torrullin’s hands slid from the cold rock.
“My little friend, courage isn’t everything.”
“I was not talking about courage alone,”
Thundor demurred. “I meant we revere you.”
“I do not deserve it.”
“Humble also? It doesn’t suit you. It is as
it is. Of course, the Thinnings do understand that your tale is yet to begin,
but …”
“Begin?”
Thundor chewed at his lips. “Me and my big
mouth.”
“There are Dragons, Thundor?”
The Thinnings looked at him sideways. “Is
this a test?”
“I have no idea.”
“I hate tests,” Thundor muttered, looking
everywhere but at Torrullin. “Every examiner seeks a difference answer. What
are you looking for?”
“A simple yes or no will suffice.”
Thundor sighed deeply. “Yes, Enchanter,
there are Dragons.”
“As I suspected.”
The Thinnings knew something was confirmed
that had less to do with the actual existence of Dragons than an inner
something.
Torrullin shrugged and paced away, his mind
in renewed turmoil. It was time for Quilla to come clean. No more stalling.
After a while, he began counting paces, realising what use it would be to Matt,
and thus could set aside thoughts of Dragons. He set aside the achievement in
ascending the Tower; it was not important. He did not set aside Thundor’s
inadvertent comment about his journey having yet to begin.
An ancient map points the
way …
A new enemy enters
the Valla arena, but this one is as old as time and seeks a forbidden place.
The terrible source of Valla power is uncovered. As friends and family are
murdered, Torrullin reveals the truth about the Valla Dragon. He hurtles into
battle when his twin sons are kidnapped, and takes with him into danger a
pilot, a navigator and an innocent girl - they are the Dalrish seeking escape
from Xen III.
Another truth rears
up, the tale of the Nine who fled into the Forbidden Zone with a strange taliesman
in the shape of a dragon. Quilla knows who the fire creatures are; the Q’lin’la
fled them in ancient time. They are the Kallanon, the Glittering Darkness.
“There are dragons
in my future,” Torrullin once tells Quilla, and that future is now.
War erupts on a
world no more than a circle on an ancient map. There Torrullin discovers who
his sons really are, Taranis of the Guardians confronts his inner demons,
Bartholamu of the Siric faces his arch-nemesis, Q’lin’la and Kallanon are
thrown into the same melting pot, an ancient emperor speaks again, the new Lady
of Life is born, the Dalrish have a profound effect on Torrullin, and Vannis
seeks revenge.
The Kallanon Scales
is an epic journey into the realms of time and legend, and forever alters the
future.
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