The scent of ancient cedar
The scent of ancient cedar smoke curled through the air, mingling with the faint tang of damp stone. A scream—sharp and bloodcurdling—tore through the sacred temple grounds, sending flocks of startled egrets scattering into the jungle canopy. Arinash spun on her heel, her long black silk tunic billowing like a stormcloud in the wind, revealing deep burgundy embroidery along the hem. The time for subtlety was gone.
The great city of Kal-Teritlan lay sprawled beneath the looming shadow of the Obsidian Pyramid. Once, it had been a place of harmony, a marvel of the Mayan Empire. Now, whispers of betrayal crept like poison through the streets, and the pyramid’s summit crackled with unnatural light—light that should never have been disturbed. Arinash tightened her grip on the ceremonial staff in her hand, its polished mahogany wood stained with blood at one end. Her stark golden hair was plaited into a crown atop her head, glinting in the eerie moonlight, a mark of her position as the Last Keeper of Ix Chal. Her brow furrowed beneath the golden circlet she wore—simple but regal, adorned with tiny obsidian beads.
She couldn’t shake the image of her father’s face, shadowed with fear, when he pushed her toward the jungle’s edge earlier that evening. “You cannot fall into their hands, child,” he had said as the High Guards pounded on their doors. “If you do, the Age of Stars will end, and the world will drown in darkness.” He’d thrust the staff into her palms and kissed her forehead before disappearing into the chaos.
Now, the once vibrant streets of Kal-Teritlan lay quiet, haunted. A jaguar prowled nearby, its yellow eyes gleaming, before melting back into the foliage. Somewhere to her left, streams of gold and green paint still slicked the great murals of the gods, though the barest rust-colored streaks—blood, old and new—marred their once holy surfaces.
Footsteps thundered behind her. Arinash pivoted as a shadow cloaked in a soldier’s bronze-plated armor lunged forward, their spear raised. She sidestepped, her tunic’s black fabric catching the torchlight in rivulets that mirrored the stars above. With a graceful twist, she delivered a jarring blow to the assailant’s ribs using the staff. The soldier crumpled, their weapon clattering across the ground.
“Please,” the soldier rasped through gasped breaths, clutching their side. “Don’t—stop the ritual. You don’t understand…”
The words caught her off guard. The ritual? So they knew more than she’d feared. “Who sent you?” her voice was sharp, low, as she pressed the glowing ruby tip of the staff against the ground near his face. A thread of smoke curled where the stone beneath it burned. “Answer me.” But all the soldier could do was sigh before the light left his eyes.
The ritual and the medallion
Arinash exhaled, backing away from the body, her breath catching. The ritual. Her father’s cryptic warnings echoed now louder than ever. The priest-kings at the Obsidian Pyramid had not been content to leave the ancient medallion undisturbed after all. Greedy for power, they had begun invoking forces older than the gods, forces that lay dormant beneath the city… until now. Even the jungle trembled, its creatures silenced in expectation of the reckoning.
Her leather sandals crunched against the gravel as she approached the reflecting pool near the temple’s entrance. The water was dark like onyx, save for a faint shimmer of green across its surface. Her reflection stared back at her—tired, defiant. The long tunic clung to her skin where sweat and rain had soaked through, its burgundy embroidery resembling streaks of blood under the pale moon. The heavy golden earrings she wore, gifted by priests during her initiation, swung lightly as she turned, her tote-like shoulder bag bouncing faintly against her hip. It held only two things: the old medallion, which pulsed with a heat of its own now, and her mother’s woven shawl with its caramel-hued patterns of protection.
She looked up toward the summit of the pyramid, where the light began to flash in stuttering waves, accompanied by bone-rattling hums of power. Arinash felt the enormity of the moment. If she failed, Kal-Teritlan would not merely fall. Reality itself would fracture. And yet, there was no one else—no heroes, no armies, only her. That was why the gods had chosen her lineage: not for strength but for resolve.
Confronting the awakened god
Suddenly, a deafening roar shattered the quiet. A glowing serpent-head emerged from the uppermost level of the pyramid, its body coiling downward with scales that shimmered like molten gold. The god Kukulkan, awakened from a slumber that predated humankind. Arinash knelt instinctively as the beast’s thunderous eyes locked onto hers.
“Seer of Ix Chal,” the serpent rumbled, its voice a deep vibration. “You think you can defy what has already begun?”
Arinash forced herself to her feet, her grip tightening on the staff, sweat dripping down her temples. “I am not here to defy,” she said, her voice clear though her heart raced. “I am here to correct what has been desecrated.”
The serpent let out a low growl that resembled laughter. “Mortal arrogance,” it mused. “Go ahead, Seer. Enter the pyramid. But know this: should you fail, your body will join the stones, and your soul the void.”
“I’ll take that chance,” she said, her head held high. And with the serpent watching, its great jaws gnashing the humid air, Arinash began the ascent toward the pulsing heart of the pyramid.
As she climbed past murals of dancing gods and weeping mortals, her outfit and resolve seemed to become one. The obsidian sheen of her tunic blended into the stones of the ancient staircase, the subtle warmth of the burgundy embroidery like blood against the blackness of night. Her golden hair, tied into braids like the rays of the rising sun, gleamed as though lit from within. She was the Last Keeper, the hope of her people—and the only one who dared to wield the medallion against what awaited.
At the top of the pyramid, the ritual chamber pulsated with energy, the medallion in her side bag heated like fire, and Arinash could see shadows coalescing. Only one thought remained in her mind: End this, or die trying.
The Source…check out the great article that inspired this amazing short story: Black Coat and Burgundy Sweater Ensemble for Urban Chic Winter Style with Minimalist Accessories
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