The gods were losing.
A mighty demon named Taraka had grown so strong through long, fierce penance
that no weapon could harm him and no warrior could stand against him. He had
driven the gods from heaven, and they wandered the borders of their own
kingdom, defeated and afraid. Even Indra, king of the gods, could not turn
the tide.
There was an old promise hidden in the demon's strength: only a son born of
Shiva could defeat him. And so, in time, from Shiva's blazing power, a child
was born — a child so full of fire that six mothers, the star-maidens of the
Krittika, nursed him at once. He grew six faces to drink their love, and they
called him Kartikeya, and also Skanda, the one who leapt swiftly into being.
He grew not in years but in moments, the way a flame leaps up a dry branch.
And when the gods came to him, weary and hopeless, the boy-warrior rose
shining, a spear of golden light in his hand and a peacock at his side.
"Make me your general," he said, "and I will lead you home."
The gods gathered behind him. Brihaspati, the great priest of the gods, the
wisest of all who chant and bless, spoke the sacred words over the army and
blessed their banners. Then Skanda raised his spear, and the host of heaven
surged forward like the sea rising in a storm.
The battle was terrible and brief. Skanda met Taraka without fear. Where the
demon had broken every warrior before him, he could not break this one. The
spear of light flew true, and the demon who had ruled the worlds fell. The
gods poured back into their lost heaven like a river finding the ocean at
last.
Afterwards, the gods said that no general had ever led so bravely, and none
ever would. He was the foremost of all who command. And Krishna, telling
Arjuna of his glories on the chariot at Kurukshetra, named him: "Among
generals, I am Skanda."
For wherever someone leads with courage instead of fear — wherever a leader
walks first into the hard place so others may follow — there is a spark of
the six-faced general, and of the One behind him.