A Queen Among Snakes: Chapter Ten - Mei

We step into the suite, Chris closing the door behind us as Setia takes in the room.

“May I get you something to eat her drink?” I ask.

“No thank you, I’m fine,” she smiles walking over and taking a seat on the couch. Chris and I also take our seats on the couch, but Chris sits between Setia and I, angling his body as if to shield me. I smile at his protectiveness.

“I could always shift and stand by as your guard wolf,” Axel offers.

I try not to laugh, “Don’t be silly.”

“Who’s being silly? I’m serious. I don’t care who or what she is, I don’t want her making you uncomfortable.” I can tell he’s serious and even hear the anxiousness in his voice.

“I promise I’ll be fine, but thank you for looking after me, Axel,” I say sweetly.

“Anything for you, my Sweet One,” he coos.

“Amelia told us you have a lot of experience with nagatas,” Chris starts off.

“To be fair I have experience with all supernatural beings, but yes I have spent a great deal of time interacting with nagatas, but not for the last…” she looks up as if counting in her head. “Must be twenty or so years now, and I’ve certainly never seen one initiated into a pack, so that’s new,” she says with enthusiasm.

“Never?” I ask surprised.

“Not a single one. I have known nagatas in the past to be fated to a mutolupus every now and then, but they never stayed with the pack,” she explains. That’s odd since I know my mother was a nagata and was part of a pack, but then again I don’t think anyone knew what she was. “I am very sorry for the horrors you faced at the hands of the Albus Mons Pack, as I understand it you were only five when they abducted you,” she says in a careful and calming voice. Chris wraps his arm protectively around me and I focus on my breathing.

I nod, “Yes, that’s correct.”

“And you have no knowledge of your kind?” She asks sympathetically.

“Bits and pieces, but not much. Chris and Amelia have done their best to help me based on books they’ve read, but that’s only gotten them so far,” I tell her as I gently squeeze Chris’ knee to let him know I’m doing okay.

“Well, I plan to be here for some time so we can leave the history lesson for tomorrow if you wish. We shall do this at your pace, Mei. I want to ensure you are comfortable,” she says compassionately.

“I’d like to start now if that’s alright. I’ve spent all these years not understanding who I am and where I come from; I need answers,” I tell her and even I can hear the desperation in my voice.

It’s not that I don’t feel at home here, I do, but I had a different life once. I want to know what that life was supposed to be, I want to understand the heritage my mother never had the chance to share with me.

“Very well, let us begin,” she announces sitting back, getting comfortable. “You possess the gift of healing I was told.”

I hesitantly nod. I know they were informed of this because of how I healed Chris when he was hurt and then with how I healed pack members during the attack, but it still makes me uneasy having strangers know this.

“Is that a problem?” Chris asks and even though he’s not showing it, I can feel his nervousness through our bond.

“Not at all. Allow me to start from the beginning. Now all supernatural species have been around for thousands if not tens of thousands of years, myself included,” she says casually making my eyes nearly fall out of my head.

“You… you’re that old?” I ask in quiet disbelief.

She lets out an airy, delicate laugh, “I’m so old I can’t even give you a number, but yes, it would be in the tens of thousands,” she says with amusement.

I take a moment to process this information.

“You look incredible for your age,” I tell her. This makes her laugh some more.

“You’re very sweet, thank you, Mei. Now nagatas pre-date what is considered ancient China, but that is where your kind originated from, though it wasn’t called that back then. Your kind were created by the God Oshmin,” she explains.

Oshmin.

All the nights and days in that torment and I never had a name for the creator I prayed to and now I finally know. Oshmin. I like that name.

“I used to pray to my maker to save me,” I whisper. Chris tightens his hold and kisses my temple as Axel whimpers sadly in my mind. “Pray to any God who would hear me, really. I never knew my maker’s name, so I was never sure they even heard me.”

Setia’s eyes soften, “I can’t say if he heard you or not I’m afraid. Oshmin disappeared thousands of years ago, and no one has seen or heard from him since. Not even our mother as far as I know,” she says solemnly.

“How does a God just disappear?” Chris asks sceptically.

“They are not of this world, not of this earth or even this cosmos. They are celestial beings beyond our comprehension. Even their true celestial forms are so beyond us that to see them would cause us to implode,” she explains. “Oshmin may have gone about his life or gone to another cosmos, though I personally doubt that. He’s definitely not dead though.”

“Gods can die?” I ask in shock.

“Not by natural means, but yes, they can die. I know of two who are no longer in existence, their names were Apaki and Fretez, but Oshmin is definitely not dead,” she says confidently.

“How are you so sure?” Chris wonders aloud.

“Because Mei would not exist if he was.”

“I don’t follow,” he says confused.

“When a God dies, all their power dies with them, meaning everything they ever created; everything their magic touched, reverts to its original state. Basically, if Oshmin was dead all nagata would cease to exist.”

Chris gulps and Axel howls as a shudder rocks through me. The thought that my very existence is held in someone else’s hands is terrifying, mostly because it’s something I experienced for most of my life, and I don’t like feeling that way.

“Okay, so Oshmin created the nagata,” Chris says, trying to get us back on track.

“Oshmin was very fond of humans. As the God of life and death, he appreciated their mortality, so he spent a great deal of time amongst them to the point he befriended an emperor of a small kingdom. Emperor Sheng was a benevolent ruler of a small and humble kingdom known as Longsang. He was content with the power he had and the size of his kingdom but his ministers were not so content and so they formed a coup. They assembled an army – including Emperor Sheng’s own army – to kill him and take over the kingdom,” she says, almost speaking as if she was there.

“That’s horrible. All for power?” I ask sadly.

“Some people are full of so much greed nothing can satisfy them, it’s sad but true,” Chris says with an apologetic look on his face.

“The Gods love to meddle in human affairs but for the sake of balance they agreed to never revive the dead, but they find loopholes that allow them to save people. Oshmin couldn’t bear to see his good friend die – he was already old as it was – so he blessed Sheng’s children. They were turned into the first nagatas; magnificent snake-like beings with the power to protect their father and their kingdom,” she says proudly.

“Why a snake?” I ask.

“A snake was their family seal back then.”

“Oh. That makes sense I suppose,” I say nodding.

“The Emperor’s son – and next in line – Wei, was an onyx snake and was given the gift of death, his venom was lethal to any and all it came into contact with. On the flip side his sister Jing was a gold snake and given the gift of healing,” she says smiling at me knowingly.

Healing? Did she say healing? Both Chris and I perk up leaning forward.

“So the siblings were gifted Oshmin’s gift for life and death,” Chris summarises.

“Half-siblings, they were each born to one of Sheng’s concubines,” she corrects.

“What’s a concubine?” I ask in confusion.

I can feel Chris getting a little embarrassed through our bond. “Um, well, a concubine is a type of mistress. In the old days, many leaders in different cultures had many mistresses,” Chris delicately explains. I wrinkle my nose not liking that one bit. That sounds cruel and selfish. “I know, I don’t like the sound of it either, my love,” he says as he plants a chaste kiss on my lips, the sensation instantly perking me up.

“Now of course Wei and Jing had children and their children had children and so over time nagatas grew in numbers. But to maintain balance, Oshmin’s magic ensured that the onyx and gold snakes would always exist. To every generation, the first born male of Wei’s line would be born with the Onyx Snake of Death and every first born female of Jing’s line would be born with the Gold Snake of Healing,” she says with a large grin on her face.

“But… I have the gift of healing…” I say as if she presented me with a difficult math equation.

“Precisely. I felt it immediately in your energy, Mei. You are a descendent of Jing. You are a nagata Empress,” she says with excitement.

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