“My world is crumbling. My world is changing. Everything I once had has fallen away and I find I am happy to see it all go.”
“I should find a recorder for this. Surely the thoughts of one of the Vast and Mighty Neoteric Lords of the New Creation should be captured?”
“Oh how she would have laughed at that.”
“Not so vast in our creations as that which we destroyed. Not so mighty as to hold the world still in our hands, locked in the perfect moment we’d each imagined we alone could craft.”
“Foolish old lot we were.”
“Or perhaps only some of us. It seems not only unkind but terribly inaccurate to say she was as foolish as the rest of us.”
“Foolish in her own manner, certainly. Faced with the end of all things, and she choose to save us from armageddon by embracing an apocalypse of her own design? One that she knew would lead to her own destruction.”
“Most unkind.”
“But even endings must end it seems, and so on the horizon I see the light of a new day, of the world changings. And on the wind which hasn’t blown in lifetimes, the scent of life renewing itself dances.”
“Our working are not yet undone, and perhaps never will be completely, but I can still feel sparks of joy crackling to life in my long dead heart.”
“I think I would like to see this new world, but I feel as though it lies beyond me.”
“I have lingered, beyond the end of the world and the end of myself, beyond all the schemes I have laid down and beyond so many of the ones which were meant to ensnare me. I have seen the valiant rise and the valiant fall. I have seen monsters prowl the wastelands and monsters hold sway over the last flickering flames of life.”
“Now though comes something new. An age undreamt in all our plotting, a world beyond my calculations. Her world. Her time. But before it can come to pass, one final obstacle remains.”
“Our greatest sin.”
And so we come to my last cruel request, if I can call upon you one more time my dearest Helgon.
– Helgon observing Jyla’s victory before being joined by an old friend.
There was so much left to do. You might think that destroying Mazana The Holy Tree and rendering Sasarai the Neoteric Lord into a mindless worm (god) would have been more than enough work for, say, a lifetime.
In a sense I suppose it had been too. I mean, my life as I’d known it had kind of ended. Between being burned up in divine grace, and my essential nature becoming something not-entirely mortal anymore, I wasn’t exactly sure if I qualified as being ‘Jyla’ anymore.
I certainly didn’t feel like her. I mean, apart from the scales, and strength, and ability to more-or-less choose what I looked like, the fear that had lived within me for so long finally had a sparing partner. I’d beaten Sasarai. Not without cost. And absolutely not alone. But I’d beaten him. I’d rejected him, and I’d told him exactly what I wanted to, and I’d survived.
In fact turning from the life I’d hated had left me so much better then only thing I knew I would regret was that I hadn’t had the strength to do it so much sooner.
But sooner wouldn’t have worked.
I’d needed Theia to give me to boot she had.
I’d needed Xalaria, and Fulgrox, and Kilkat and the army they’d assembled
I’d needed Little to show me the way forward.
And I’d needed Kam.
My idiot brother.
My longest supporter.
Who was, to be perfectly clear, still an idiot.
But he was my idiot and I loved him.
So he was the first one I’d gone to see.
Only, he wasn’t alone when I got there.
“There is so much to see here though,” Kam said as I landed with silent wings outside the castle room he’d been given near the conference chamber Xalaria and the others had been coordinating things from.
“But we must go back. The Garden is our home,” my mother said.
“Yes. This is a city of wonders, but it is not our city,” my father said.
“It could be,” I said, folding my wings around my shoulders like a cape.
My parents looked at me without any recognition, which I couldn’t blame them for. Their daughter did not tower over them by more than a head height, nor had she possessed scales as luminescent as mine.
“Jyla! Awesome!” Kam said, displaying more perception than I would have granted him credit for in a thousand years. “Tell them we should stay here. My Gloria is…it’s glorious!”
Yeah. My brother and words, not a match made in the heavens.
“Jyl…?” my mother started to say and trailed off.
“Who? How?” My dad didn’t even bother trying to guess.
And what was my response supposed to be to that? ‘Hi folks, I know I look a little different, saving the world took a lot out of me?’
“Hi,” I said, clearly being a master of words myself.
“There’s so much going on here,” Kam said. “Important stuff! We got the fragments from most of the Neoterics! There’s like, I think three that we couldn’t find anyone to get into the vaults? So, yeah, we still need to do that. We can’t go home yet. I mean the First Tender is definitely still angry right?”
“Sasarai isn’t angry at all anymore.”
“We are forgiven?” my mother asked.
“Forgiven for what?” I asked. “What do you think you ever did wrong?”
It wasn’t the right tact to take. I knew it the moment the words left my mouth. They had spent their lives defining themselves as servants of a higher power. I wasn’t going to argue them out of those beliefs.
Which wasn’t fair.
I’d spent my whole like believing the same things they had, right?
Except I hadn’t.
From the moment Draconia came into my life, I’d believed I was apart from the ‘good’ residents of the Grove. I’d believed I was bad, and that had left me with nothing but to look endlessly for the ‘good’ that I was missing. In hindsight it was so clear how much effort I’d spent on disbelieving all the bad things I’d seen.
But I had seen them.
Girls forced into lives of cheerful servitude, being selected and assigned to people they not only didn’t love but couldn’t stand.
Boys being twisted into thoughtless, compliant worshippers with no chance to pursue their own dreams, existing merely as an expendable resource to grow the Holy Tree’s roots ever deeper.
A whole society bound and in terror of the whims of madman with a religion that taught them that terror was joy and suffering was happiness.
“We don’t belong here. We should go home,” my mother said, stepping back as though my question was a prelude to violence.
“Please,” my father said and the fury I still felt at Sasarai deflated.
“I can do that for you,” I said. “You too Kam. You should probably see the Garden as it is now.”
“Wait, did you do something to it?” That wasn’t a large leap of intuition but I was still surprised. How much had been underestimating Kam all these years?
“You should see it for yourselves,” I said. “If you want to leave after that Kam, you can always call on me and I will carry you literally anywhere you want to go, anytime you want to go there.”
“Carry me? Oh oh! Do we get to fly!” He was exactly as excited about that idea as my parents were not.
“Anytime you want,” I said smiling because it was impossible not to echo his delight. “For now though, I thought we’d take a shorter route.”
Had I ever opened a door through my hoard before? No. Was that a standard power a Sentinel possessed? Also no. Was I at all concerned it wouldn’t work, or that I couldn’t manage it? Why would I be worried about that?
The room I led us into was vast, big enough to fit the whole world in it, because while the world wasn’t mine to claim, I was part of something so much larger than it.
Scattered around the hoard room where bits and pieces of the treasures I held. Memories of laughter and love. The good bits of the Garden I wasn’t willing to leave behind. Images of my new friends and a tiny little shrine to the growing crush I had on Theia (though I kept that one out of sight – I wasn’t ready to share that with ANYONE yet).
And over it all, an image of Draconia at her proper scale, larger than anything or anyone could do, and yet so close and personal.
It’s a delightful likeness. I wish I could show it to Umbrielle, she would be so jealous.
I wasn’t sure I wanted to make another god jealous but wasn’t sure I didn’t either. I filed that away for future mischief as we stepped out of my hoard and into my house (Sasarai had given me that back to the silly old dolt).
Or rather what was left of my house.
The Garden wasn’t what it was, what with the ashes of the Holy Tree covering everything and the trees having come to life.
“Where are we?” my mother asked but my father answered before I could.
“We’re home. I know this place,” he said and reached out to stroke the bark of a tree which had grown up where our kitchen had once been.
“You damn well should,” my uncle, his brother, who’d been dead for twenty years, said. “We had to clean this place up after you spill dinner often enough!”
“What? Pomol? How…” His surprise was pretty reasonable but not something I was going to be able to help either of them work through. The living trees of our lost family would either be able to sort them out or nothing would.
I grabbed Kam’s arm and led him outside, letting a hope linger behind that, maybe, maybe once my parents heard from those who’d gone before them, maybe they would accept how much of what they’d believed were lies and be able to start rebuilding their understanding of the world based on answers that weren’t meant to enslave them.
I’d be there for them if they could, but if not, I’d hold tight to the family I did have.
“Uh, I’m not seeing things am I?” Kam asked, staring around at the alien landscape before us.
“I don’t know, I’m seeing a lot of things, so I’d say, yeah, you probably are too.”
He bapped me in the arm.
Which was fair.
And a delightful sign.
I might be a seven foot tall dragon-plant lady, but, to him, I was still his mouthy little sister.
Which was exactly how things should be.
“You know what I mean,” he said. “There’s kinda something missing isn’t there. Like, you know, right about there.” He waved his hand to cover the large swath of sky which should have been dominated by the Holy Tree.
“Oh yeah. That,” I said. “Got rid of it.”
He turned to see if I was being serious, and to fair, I was trying hard not to be, but the evidence was right in front of us.
“You have got so much you need to tell me about,” he said.
And I did.
We had spent so much time together without really knowing each other. I’d had visions of helping to build a new world, one where the things that were vital and precious to us would be protected. I’d imagined that new world starting with rebuilding architecture or creating new homes, but those were just the trappings of the world. The material bits which could be treasured but weren’t ever the most valuable pieces of it.
“I think you deserve the whole story,” I said. “Want to hear it on the flight back to Mt Gloria? There’s some people there who I think could really use our help.”
With a breath I relaxed and resumed my proper form and as soon as Kam was sitting comfortably on my back we rose into the sky and headed toward the radiant glow of a new dawn.
