In this story from the Loom of Hours, a grieving husband constructs a peculiar door and encounters the gods and the dead.
Today’s story is “The Eavesdropper” by Ritter, who is a musical husky with a passion for literature. You can find more of his stories, including the full Loom of Hours cycle, on AO3.
Read by Dralen the Dapper Dragonfox
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https://thevoice.dog/episode/the-eavesdropper-by-ritter
You’re listening
Speaker:to The Voice of Dog.
Speaker:This is Rob MacWolf, your fellow traveler,
Speaker:and Today’s story
Speaker:is “The Eavesdropper”
Speaker:by Ritter, who is a musical husky with a passion for literature.
Speaker:You can find more of his stories,
Speaker:including the full Loom of Hours cycle,
Speaker:on AO3. Read by Dralen, the Dapper Dragonfox. Please enjoy
Speaker:“THE EAVESDROPPER”
Speaker:by Ritter In what we call the kingdom of Alwa
Speaker:is a place called
Speaker:To’u, which lieth on no map
Speaker:and seemeth alike to its surroundings,
Speaker:save that it marketh the point
Speaker:where the deserts meet the marsh
Speaker:and the rivers crash from the cliffs,
Speaker:and appeareth to no
Speaker:-one except in the dawn fog
Speaker:when the heavens descend to earth.
Speaker:For it is the seam
Speaker:which bindeth together the worlds of gods and spirits and men,
Speaker:and must lie hidden from mortal eyes,
Speaker:lest through misfortune
Speaker:or malice, the worlds come undone.
Speaker:Now there was a bricklayer called Nusperen, son of Nebamen,
Speaker:who was favored by the kings of old;
Speaker:and he was given command of all the laborers and construction gangs in the land.
Speaker:He caused many statues to be raised
Speaker:and many temples to be built in honor of the gods and the king,
Speaker:and also created many wonders for the people of Alwa,
Speaker:which they loved and admired him for.
Speaker:But one year, a pestilence swept through the kingdom, and the air hung heavy
Speaker:with the ghosts of
Speaker:the dead;
Speaker:and although Nusperen was spared,
Speaker:his wife and daughter were not.
Speaker:Greatly did he mourn,
Speaker:though the king lavished him with all comforts and decreed that his family be buried in the royal tombs;
Speaker:greatly did he wail and weep.
Speaker:For so plenteous was Nusperen’s love for them,
Speaker:that no earthly pastime could offer him respite.
Speaker:Thus did the king seek counsel from his wise men,
Speaker:and in their wisdom,
Speaker:they advised that Nusperen pass the grieving period
Speaker:in the places of his treasured memories.
Speaker:So Nusperen made way to his village,
Speaker:bringing only a donkey and donning a widower’s garb.
Speaker:He would camp in the evenings, when night shrouded the land,
Speaker:and alight at dawn,
Speaker:before the sun was strongest.
Speaker:In this manner he soon arrived in the place called To’u,
Speaker:which never cometh to two people in the same places,
Speaker:and here he found a riverside hamlet
Speaker:engulfed by the sands.
Speaker:Wearied and not knowing its true name or nature,
Speaker:Nusperen made camp
Speaker:and rested for the night.
Speaker:But a spirit of the crossroads who dwelt nigh
Speaker:espied his garb of bereavement, and,
Speaker:taking pity, came to him in his sleep,
saying:“Go to, and I will shew thee a sight -
saying:for this is the place called To’u,
saying:where one may pass into the world between worlds,
saying:and thence observe what ensueth in the dealings of gods and spirits and men,
saying:without that they become aware of one’s presence.”
saying:And Nusperen responded:
saying:“Of gods and men I would gladly learn,
saying:but my heart would most fain know what hath become of my wife and daughter,
saying:whom illness hath taken unto death
saying:before their time;
saying:for they were dear to me,
saying:and my life is naught without them.”
saying:The spirit replied:
saying:“Verily, in this manner shalt thou behold them and hearken them as if they were by thy side.
saying:But they cannot do likewise,
saying:unless thou too beest in the world of the dead.
saying:dead.” Nusperen said:
saying:“Fairly hast thou spoken.
saying:Let us go then, spirit, and thou shewest me,
saying:how I may enter this realm.
saying:realm.” So Nusperen arose in his dream and followed the spirit to a certain point nigh to them,
saying:where the river poured from the cliffs above
saying:and the dunes encroached upon the reeds.
saying:Then the spirit bade Nusperen make a door-frame
saying:using the charred wood or building-stones from the ruins of the village,
saying:and when he awoke,
lo:there stood the door-frame
lo:wreathed in the dawn-fog,
lo:just as he had built it
lo:in his dream. Thus did Nusperen pass from the sight
lo:of men and gods. But the gods, dwelling on their mountain,
lo:were disturbed by a thing they knew not;
lo:and they said: “Some oddness is afoot in the land -
lo:let us investigate,
lo:lest a tragedy befall us without our knowing.
lo:knowing.”
lo:Then they went into all the kingdoms from Saba to Mazaka,
lo:and inspected every hair and every coin,
lo:but found naught amiss.
lo:Then they inquired in their temples
lo:and walked in their markets and loosened their scribes’ tongues with wine,
lo:yet still found naught amiss.
lo:At last they traveled all the lands from the oases of Sammach
lo:to the lush hills of Axum,
lo:counting every pebble and every blade of grass,
lo:and all appeared yet to be in order.
lo:Then the gods were stymied
lo:and returned to the place called To’u,
lo:where the earth floweth into the heavens.
lo:And as they were about to ascend to their godly abode,
lo:they espied the door-frame which Nusperen had built upon the slopes.
lo:And the gods said:
lo:“What trinket is this
lo:and what purpose doth it serve?”
lo:And the gods said:
lo:“Perhaps a hole for mice that whetten their teeth on our house.”
lo:And the gods said:
lo:“Let us amend it at once and go,
lo:for we have traveled far
lo:and wish now to dine and dream.
lo:dream.” But Nusperen did not hear this, for happy was he,
lo:espying finally upon his family
lo:who were in the land
lo:of the blessed dead.
lo:It is said that a mighty rage filled Nusperen when he could not return To’u,
lo:and that he attempted all manner of stratagems,
lo:but none found purchase in his realm.
lo:Then dread weariness gripped his soul,
lo:for there was no other that he could talk to in that place
lo:and no activity to pass the time,
lo:so he wandered the three lands wishing for death.
lo:But death could not find him either,
lo:for he had passed out of the sight and the reach of gods and men.
lo:So he went back to the home of the gods and watched their dealings and their comings and goings,
lo:that he might learn how he might leave the place between places.
lo:And although he found no such answer,
lo:he gained much knowledge which the gods had withheld from mankind;
lo:and he learned also how to impart these wisdoms
lo:to the land of men,
lo:without the need to be in the same realm.
lo:And so it is known that one who receiveth sudden clarity
lo:which cleaveth all intellective knots
lo:hath been visited by Nusperen,
lo:and one who is born with faculties of thought beyond mortal ken
lo:hath been blessed by him from birth.
lo:For this is how Nusperen
lo:bringeth the secrets of the gods to us,
lo:and it is because of this
lo:that we call him both
lo:the secret god and the god of secrets.
lo:And those newly bereaved
lo:who seek solace with Nusperen
lo:are given his in-sight into the land of the dead,
lo:for the pain he suffered as a mortal remaineth still,
lo:and he desireth
lo:that no person be burdened
lo:by the same torment.
lo:This was “The Eavesdropper”
lo:by Ritter, read for you
lo:by Dralen, the Dapper Dragonfox.
lo:You can find more stories on the web at thevoice.dog,
lo:or find the show wherever you get your podcasts.
lo:Thank you for listening
lo:to The Voice of Dog.