Devika and the Serpent’s Crown

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Devika is the last daughter of a silenced lineage, her ancestral power buried beneath centuries of fear and forgotten truth. But when a vivid dream and an urgent call from the goddess Kali awaken a dormant fire within her, Devika must choose between a life of quiet safety and a destiny of immense, terrifying power.

Her path leads to the fabled Temple of Nine Veils, a spiritual gauntlet where the true journey is not through ancient corridors but through the veils of her own ego. As she confronts the inner demons of shame, fear, and attachment, each a serpentine coil around her soul, she will discover that the greatest trial is not fighting the darkness, but learning to embrace it.

Devika and the Serpent’s Crown is a mythic tale of self-discovery and spiritual rebirth, a story for anyone who has felt the pull of a greater purpose.

Keywords

Mythic fantasy, Spiritual fiction, Goddess Kali, Female protagonist fantasy, Rebirth and transformation, Serpent symbolism, Priestess lineage

Author’s Note

Devika and the Serpent’s Crown was born from a single, powerful dream—a vivid image that left a lasting and profound impression. The dream was not a story but a tableau: the goddess Kali, fierce and serene, her skin the colour of the cosmic void, a crown of serpents upon her head, and a skull in her hand. This story is an attempt to give that image a voice. It is a narrative built to explore the meaning behind those powerful symbols—the serpent crown representing fears overcome, the skull signifying the death of the old self, and the goddess herself as a calling to a deeper, more profound truth. This story is a journey into the mystery of that dream, an exploration of what it means to shed one’s old skin and be reborn into a new self.

Fool’s Journey

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Many view the fool as he is about to fall into the abyss, off the cliff. In my eyes, the fool always seemed like he is about to leap higher, ready to take the greatest leap of fate of them all. He is looking ahead and up with a little smile and a glint in his eyes, his dog is just as excited as he is and the rays of Aten shining upon him. If we look carefully at the picture, we don’t really see the abyss, we only assume it is there, which tells us never to assume anything before you carefully check the details you are presented with. 

The card is in vibrant yellow, the colour of our conscious mind, the practical mind – the doer not the dreamer. Yellow is a stimulating colour, which stimulates our nerves, glands and brain, making us more alert and full of energy. It boosts our memory and intellect, arouses original thought, and curiosity and encourages communication. 

Yellow is the colour That promotes activity and interaction and helps us find new ways and new ideas. Even the fools’ boots are yellow which symbolising suggests that the fool is fully aware and prepared for the things to come. 

Kameswari is the first Kala of the moon cycle and she corresponds with the letter Aleph.

“Aleph corresponds with or is the alphabet’s New Moon” (from Egyptian Magick by Mogg Morgan). Kameswari’s foot represents the first step of the Lunar month cycle, that she/we are taking on the first phase of the moon cycle. Like the fool, Kameswari opens the new cycle with a little step in the dark, but her foot is a fiery one and brings forth the first ray of lunar light into the darkness. 

Looking at the image of the Thoth Tarot 

We can see here that our humble fool looks very prepared and awakened (the tiger biting his leg and the Aten shining in full power in his Yesod) for the cycle ahead of it. Crowley’s fool looks fiercely ahead and smiles knowing that his first step will be taken with the blessing of Horus in his crocodile avatar – kenty-kht. 

The fool represents the primaeval spark from a solar explosion that initiated everything around its universe to move forward. We are moving in spiral cycles, every new cycle we spiralling deeper and further.

The dream I had the night of April’s fool was a very solar one, a blessed one. 

I was riding on a wild horse, which can suggest material wealth, happiness and contentment. According to Jung, dreams, are connected to our “natural force” of life and the horse, is representative of our own inner power.

A horse in a dream might symbolize freedom, energy, strength, endurance, stamina, power, but also hard work. It might signify male sexual energy and masculinity. Running horses symbolize freedom and the release of repressed energy.

The freedom to take the first step and move forward with no hesitations or regrets.