“We need a means by which we can ensure an equitable distribution of power once our plans reach fruition, do you not agree Vaingloth?”
“Will we? I should think not my dear Helgon. We are no great number, and are all of comparable skill and insight. In the shuffle and chaos that will unfold, there is likely to be some small differences which arise in terms of which powers we each can capture and how well we can hold onto them, but those will be minor perturbations at best. On a global scale, it’s unlikely we will even notice or, in fact, truly be able to measure the differences between ourselves with how much greater our powers shall be.”
“But inequalities, Vaingloth, if any there are, well, they may serve to come between us. Those who make out poorly may resent the more fortunate, those who win by fortune what they couldn’t have managed by skill alone may become paranoid at losing their unearned gains.”
“Perhaps, but there will be so many of us, Helgon. Any tiny perturbations in our standing will be insufficient to matter in the face of eleven others who are of similar caliber. No one of us will be able to impose a tyranny on the rest, without being massively overwhelmed.”
“As I understand it, our rule will be built on tyranny though, will it not.”
“Only the tyranny of gratitude. Our peoples will follow us because we will give to them what they most desire; their continued existence. Those who are opposed to that form of equity will be free to seek out any lives they can.”
“Lives in a dead world.”
“For a time. As our power grows and we master our divinity, life will return. On our terms.”
– High Accessor Helgon and Vaingloth carefully asking each other about their mutual likelihood for betrayal and mayhem.
Vanishing sounds like a quick thing. Like when we travelled from the chapel to the Silent Archive, the journey was over in a blink.
And in one sense it was.
I don’t know how much time it took Theia to shunt us from the chapel to the archive, but from observing it later, I think her shadow stepping was effectively instantaneous.
That wasn’t how it felt though.From the moment I closed my eyes to when the flickering lights of the Silent Archive blazed before me it felt like weeks had passed. I had the clearest of possibly memories of clinging to Theia for dear life as something horrid beyond words loomed so large above the horizon that it blotted out everything else in the world.
We’d spent so long bound together by the iron grip of our arms that it felt like a piece of myself was peeling away when she released me and I had to drag my hands back as they reached out for her in the wake of our journey.
“Ugh, okay, yeah, woah, let’s not do that again if we don’t have to,” Theia said, stumbling backwards to rest against one of the walls.
I assure you, we very much had to, Draconia said with a deeper note of anxiety than I could recall hearing in her voice before.
“Are you okay?” I asked, stepping forward to kneel beside Theia as she slid down to a seating position. I made sure to keep my hands to myself, despite the strange ache in them to hold her again.
She will be. That was simply more taxing than she’s used to, Umbrielle said, her lack of concern feeling genuine.
“Nah, it was easy,” Theia said. “This place just has some protections on it though. Took a little bit extra to get in here without breaking them.”
Where are we? I sense…, Umbrielle started to ask before falling silent in wonder.
“Exactly what we were looking for,” Theia said, her voice quiet in wonder as her gaze passed around the small cavern we’d arrived in.
The Silent Archive was a place I’d told myself I was probably never going to return to, ever. After I’d picked up Draconia, I’d imagined coming back hundreds of times. I’d thought that the place where one found a demon had to be the proper place to return it too. Gazing at all the twinkling lights that surrounded us though, I had to shake my head.
How could I have thought I’d leave this place behind?
How had I forgotten what had drawn me here that first, awful, amazing time?
The Silent Archive is a natural cavern far below Holy Mazana’s roots. It’s walls are adorned with what has to be thousands of magical glyphs drawn in the most intricate and beautiful of patterns, each one interlocking with at least three others.
The soft ambient lighting which radiates from the glyphs is breathtaking but what truly captivated me when I first stumbled into the room was the rainbow constellation of stars affixed to the walls. With older eyes, I expected to see them as the simple gemstones I’d spent years convincing myself they had to be.
But they weren’t.
They were alive. Not gems but living beacons.
Living and bound.
The beauty of the glyphwork was almost enough to disguise the horror of the story the glyphs told.
“Why can I read these?” I ask my eyes following the trace of symbols which screamed “subjugated, defiled, unworthy”.
Because I can, Draconia said. Through my Blessing, I can share with you much of what remains to me.
“How did you know to take us here?” Theia asked. There was a wariness in how she held herself. I’d seen the same thing when my brother received a present for First Blooming Day, one that he’d wanted so desperately and yet had never imagined my mother and father could provide.
“No one is allowed here,” I said. “It was the only place I could think of where there wouldn’t be any Tenders since even they’re not allowed to come in here.”
How did you know of it’s existence? Umbrielle asked. We only surmised that such a shrine might exist. Finding even one of our fragmented host would have been an unimaginable victory.
“And now we’ve found too many.” Theia’s hands were frozen in front of her, reaching towards the nearest wall and the treasure trove of lights it held.
“Too many?” I asked, feeling like I was still far behind everyone else in understanding what was going on.
“We can’t take this many fragments back,” she said. “I could hide one, or maybe two.”
One, Umbrielle said.
“Two on a good day,” Theia insisted. “But not this many. We’d never make it.”
“Make it where? And what are these? I…I never understood. I thought…” I didn’t want to admit what I’d thought. It was horrible. I’d been horrible. For years. I’d called her a demon. I’d refused to acknowledge her in any way. I…
You survived. You protected yourself and in doing so, you protected me, Draconia wasn’t speaking to all of us. Her words were for me alone, but they brought tears to my eyes that everyone saw.
“You seriously don’t know? But…how?” Theia asked. “You’re a Blessed. That…is she broken?”
She is not. She is merely young, Umbrielle said.
“No, not her, I meant the fragment.” Hearing Theia’s irritation with her god seemed…I don’t know. It should have been wrong. Blasphemous. Being angry at Holy Mazana was unthinkable.
Or it had been.
I…Rage didn’t describe what I felt for the Divine Tree. Part of me was still terrified of what I was doing, part of me was terrified I hadn’t done it soon, and part of me, a bone deep part of me, was certain that I hadn’t sinned against Holy Mazana. It had sinned against all of us.
Assuming there the tree even was something divine.
“She’s not broken either,” I said. “I’m just stupid.”
That…that was not the right thing to have said.
Holy Mazana is large.
The presence that rose within with me flared larger than the tree could ever have grown.
DO NOT BESMIRCH MY CHOSEN ONE.
Draconia had never given me a direct, divine order like that.
I hoped she never would again.
The words alone would have flattened me. Had I heard them in her voice at any other time I would have crashed to my knees and begged forgiveness.
But that wasn’t what she wanted.
And her emotions as much as her words resounded in me.
“I’ve been stupid,” I amended, each word slow and measured. “I didn’t know who or what she was. I still don’t. Because I was taught to believe she could only be a demon.”
“But…you’re Blessed?” That Theia was struggling to understand what felt like a rather simple concept told me how very little she, and probably other people outside the Thicket Wall, understood what it meant to be Sylvan. To be one of ‘Holy Mazana’s Chosen’.
“Why don’t we start there,” I said. “We should have a while before anyone thinks to check in here for us. Explain to me what being Blessed means to you. I’m hearing two voices in my head and talking to a woman who, as of last night, I wouldn’t have believed could exist, so assume everything I know is wrong, because that’s…that’s what I’m having to do, and it’s rotting terrifying!”
Had I said that to anyone else, I knew I would have been answered with either disdain at failing to cling to my faith tightly enough or condescension as they dutifully took a frail little child in for more instruction in proper doctrine.
Theia laughed.
At me.
Which was rude.
And mean. And I wanted hit her.
Until she spoke.
“Wow am I not the right person for this,” she said. “I can’t even…I mean, I’m just about the best Chosen that Umbrielle has, but not, you know, the smartest one.”
You’re the smartest Chosen I have here, Umbrielle said with a wry note in her voice that told me she was definitely going to be reminding Theia about this later.
“I hate you,” Theia said, clearly addressing Umbrielle before turning back to me. “Okay, I have no idea what nonsense you’ve been taught but the really simple part of this is that you’ve been chosen as the host for a god. Or a fragment of a god. No offense meant Draconia.”
None taken. My Chosen needs accurate information, and I will not claim to be more than I am.
“Should I just ask you all this then?”
No, Draconia said. You need to hear a mortal recounting, and one from lips you can trust.
“I can trust you. I do trust you. You saved me.” I could have been speaking about a lot of things, but I meant from the day we’d first been joined. Every word she’d spoken, they’d all been nudging me, making me question things. I’d fought each and every one, but I remembered them all, and if they hadn’t blossomed into understanding before now that was because her ideas had been hard at work developing a root system strong enough to find the real me and draw her forth.
I was a bad Sylvan, but I could feel who I wanted to be so clearly at last and that woman felt amazing.
She can speak to you of the realities you face far better than I can. She had lived as a mortal chosen by a god. That is an existence I have never known. One I can only glimpse through you.
“Why would that matter though? I mean, yeah, she’s amazing and all, but you’re my god. Don’t you have all the answer for me?”
Theia laughed again, and this time there was there was a knowing, and mischievous quality to her mirth. Before I could object, she held up a pacifying hand to ward off my anger.
“You are absolutely one of the Blessed,” she said. “Because that’s the first question so many of us have. Oh mighty god who has consecrated my life, will you not tell me the answers to all my questions and guide me with your infallible wisdom.” There was a sing-song quality to her voice that dripped of pure mockery, but not directed solely at me. If anything it felt like she was teasing her past self more than anything.
“Well, isn’t that what the gods are supposed to do?” I asked, trying to imagine what other relationship there could be between god and mortal.
“The gods don’t live our lives for us,” Theia said. “We have value to the gods because our lives, our choices, our mistakes, they’re ours, and that’s why sharing them with the god we chose matters. They’re not here to save the world for us. We’re here to save the world together.”
