
A stone road stretches from the city, crossing river and plain, until it reaches an ancient commune, quiet but for celebrations at a pagoda named for its towers: Prasat Nean Khmau (Khmer: ប្រសាទនាងខ្មៅ). Each tower stands square, tall, and mute. Here, history does not shout—it waits, patient, among the bricks.
Once, power belonged to a king who built temples, carved out ponds, and named himself steward of the mountain. His daughter, Neang Khmau (Khmer: នាងខ្មៅ, the Black Lady), was the sort whose beauty required neither witness nor proclamation—her presence, simply, was enough.
She sought permission for a simple pleasure: to glide along the kingdom’s waters. Her father consented, sending guards whose vigilance dulled before the world’s splendor. Along her path, a scholar appeared, no longer a monk, but a man with unquiet gifts and a yearning heart. Tradition, he knew, stood between their stations, and his mind, caught between audacity and despair, settled on the lure of magical music. It called to her from the trees and she followed, as if the world itself demanded they meet.
There are promises made in afternoons whose consequences last much longer. The princess’s heart grew lean, her joy diminished. Eventually, the secret was revealed; rage blossomed in the king, who chose not death, but distance—a pair of towers, each a measure of justice and sorrow, rose in the lands west of the mountain.
Banished, Neang Khmau bore mourning for love and lineage alike. Solitude yielded to curiosity when news reached her of a monk, wise and austere, newly honored by the villagers. She visited him, seeking hints of her fate. What she found was not prophecy but the quiet gravity of a man apart, to whom her devotion shifted; the former scholar’s place vanished as new affections took root.
Desire is not a thing easily denied. The monk fought the tide but found himself drawn into her orbit—first with words, later, renouncing his vows, with presence. Two towers remained, silent witnesses to choices that neither king nor goddess could undo.
Where history cedes to legend, there are few victors. Only stone stands untroubled, measuring the passage of memory against a sky that asks no questions.
















