“We must, at all times, cleave to the teachings of the Holy Tree. Doubt is impurity, doubt is weakness, doubt is the crack in our heart which lets corruption in.”
“Yes Teacher!”
“In the teachings of the Holy Tree is recorded the wisdom which saved us and raised us up from the fallen world to our life under the protection of Divine Mazana’s blessed illumination.”
“Yes Teacher!”
“Should you feel doubt creeping in, should questions and uncertainties assail you, you know what you must do, do you not children?”
“Pray to the Holy Tree.”
“Confess our sins.”
“Do penance.”
“And through the suffering of penance will you find the light of the Holy Tree shining upon you once more.”
– Notes from the First Tender’s classes to the first generation of children born within the Garden.
I expected my intruder to be offended. She was from beyond the Thicket Wall and I knew everything beyond the wall was broken and monstrous. Or I thought I’d known that. Being called broken and monstrous seemed like the sort of thing someone would take offense at. That would have made things really simple. If she’d fought me, I would have…I would have…
I don’t know.
I should have fought her.
I should have raised an alarm and battled against her like all the life in the Garden depended on my victory, but I was so far past that doing that I felt like I’d stepped into someone else’s life.
No backsliding now. Please.
I almost chuckled at that. I couldn’t backslide far enough to return to my life if I was greased head to toe in Glowflower oil.
My intruder didn’t fight me though.
She was the one who chuckled.
And then laughed in my face.
“You’re not kidding are you?” she said said before her laughter got out of control. “You think…you think the wall is the end of the world?”
“Well, no,” I said, lying to avoid admitting how stupid I obviously was.
“What about all the food you eat? Where do you think that comes from?”
“From the Holy Tree?” I mean, the food we ate had to come from the Holy Tree. Where else could it grow?
“Even the meat? Does the tree grow meat bulbs?”
“No. Of course not. The meat comes from the Root Farms.”
“Root Farms? And come on, you don’t have any farm land in here. There’s nowhere your tree could grow anything inside the wall if it wanted to, much less have animals grazing for food.”
“No. The storehouses. The tree creates the food in the…”
I stopped as a question I’d swallowed at four years old belched itself back into the forefront of my mind.
It’s surprising more people don’t ask how the food gets in the storehouses, but then I suppose you’ve been trained to accept miracles as your just due.
“Are you really just figuring this out? I mean…really?” She looked like accepting that I was stupid as I clearly was was inconceivable.
“I…no. What did you come here for? What’s out there? Who are you?”
Was I falling apart? Nah. I’d already fallen apart. Was I losing coherency and spiraling into madness? Nope. I couldn’t be going somewhere I already was.
I mean, nothing about the day had made sense so far, so losing my mind was clearly just going with the flow.
Maybe this was Divine Mazana’s will?
Sure, that was it! It was a test. All I had to do to get back in the Holy Tree’s good graces was…was…
The thought of the penance I would be required to perform hit me and I felt sick. Not from fear though, not like I was supposed to. No, doing penance would be a violation. I knew a much better approach than penance.
Burn it to the ground.
Burn everything.
Did nothing made sense? Well ashes would make a whole lot of sense.
What about what’s yours? You’d give all that up too?
There was a gravity to that question that pulled me back together. My demon wasn’t idly chatting. What she had asked was somehow, in that moment, the most important question in the world and I could feel my whole life turning on its fulcrum.
Ashes on one hand.
And on the other?
The unknown.
No.
The future. My future.
I could feel the fire rising in me. I could fracture and let it loose. I could make everything make sense again by burning it all down into a very sensible layer of silt that a new world might spring from.
But I wouldn’t be there to see it.
I would be at peace.
I would be gone, past the madness, past the anxiety I’d carried for so long, past everything.
And what would I have?
Nothing.
No, we weren’t going to throw away everything.
The future was mine.
Mine.
No matter how long I’d been lied to.
No matter what they’d tried to make me into.
No matter what they did, I wasn’t going to let them take what was mine.
Strangely, the anger I felt worked to keep the fire in check.
Because they were both mine. My fire and my anger.
They were both me!
My intruder had been answering me with something like words, but the rush of flame within me had drowned it out.
I wanted to hear her words, but too much else was roaring through me so I held up my hand for her to stop for moment as years upon years of the insanity I’d been living with came crashing down around me.
Had I known this would happen if I confronted her? Had I wanted it to happen?
Those weren’t the questions I needed answers to.
Why she’d come into the Garden? What she planned to do? I didn’t need those answers either, at least not as much as I needed the answer to the one question I’d been avoiding for far, far too long.
Are you mine? I asked without words.
Am I? came my demon’s answer.
My demon.
Mine.
Yes. The word didn’t explode out from me. It exploded inwards, etching each letter onto my soul so indelibly that I would never be able to deny them again.
Never be able to deny her.
I wasn’t a good Sylvan.
And I wasn’t possessed.
I was the possessor.
And what did I possess?
Flame and exaltation leapt from me. My hands twisted into claws and scales slid down my arms as wings flared from my back and strength I’d been crushing with denial since the night when I’d found her ripped through my whole body. My strength. Her strength.
My goddess’s strength.
YES!
Her relief was so palpable, it drove me to me knees.
I was afraid that was going to take much longer, but still, that was a long time.
You’re really mine? I asked, tears of flame tumbling down my cheeks.
As you are mine.
I fell to my hands and knees and vast wings wrapped around me, sheltering me as they’d always been ready to.
I was losing so much as the ramifications of what I’d chosen shot through me, but what I found in the wreckage of the life I’d known was so much more.
I could feel that even if I didn’t understand it, could sense the critical importance of not just finding the god I carried within me, but the small precious thing that was me. The real me. The me I chose to be.
When I rose again, no claws adorned my hands and no scales shielded my arms. The wings on my back were gone as well, or perhaps it would be better to say they were hidden.
And my intruder?
She was positively gleeful.
“I knew it! I knew it, I knew it!” She danced from one foot to the other, a smile as wide as the sky gleaming on her face.
And then she frowned and turned a bit to say, “Shut up. Okay, yeah, your idea was a good one. I wouldn’t have come if I didn’t think it was though. So there.”
“Umm, who are you….” I started to ask, hoping I hadn’t driven my intruder crazy with the tiny little life shattering revelation I’d been overwhelmed by.
That would be me, a new voice whispered in my ear.
Umbrielle? My god sounded surprised, which was an odd thing for a god to be but then my lessons on the nature and abilities of the gods were demonstrably flawed so who was I to say?
Draconia? I thought, I hoped, is it really you though?
Of course! Who else would I be you silly shadow!
That sounds like you, but the Draconia I know would never have allowed herself to become the trapped by an overgrown shrub.
Why don’t we try fighting like we used to and you’ll see just how much like my old self I still am.
Okay, now that does sound like you.
Brat.
Demon.
Flirt.
Can you blame me? I’ve been missing you for centuries you scaly beast.
“Should we let you two have the chapel to yourselves?” my intruder asked.
“You can hear them too?” I asked.
“Trust me, hearing them isn’t the problem.”
Now, now Theia, Jilya probably needs a moment, and our help.
Umbrielle is right. Can you cloak us? The shrub is stupid but its master is annoyingly adept. I wouldn’t have put off Jilya’s revelation for the world, but he can’t have failed to notice it.
Draconia. Please. You do remember whom you’re speaking to, do you not? I cloaked us the moment we entered the chapel. The only reason Jilya was able to see Theia at all was we’d caught a hint of your presence.
In the distance, I heard the sound of approaching footsteps.
A lot of approaching footsteps.
Umbrielle, my dearest, most hated, most beloved Umbrielle, exactly how certain are you that your shadows could have hidden a True Blessing. My only True Blessing, I must point out, in centuries and the only one which I am presently maintaining.
The step grew closer and I knew who they were.
The Tenders. Four of them.
And at least a squad of conscripts.
Muscle power and magic enough to solve any problem within the grove.
Well, maybe any problem.
Fire burns a whole lot of things after all.
You’re only Blessing?
I am…I was lost. I am not what I once was.
Oh Draconia, none of us are.
Almost none of us.
You know of her? You can sense her?
My bones are the bones of the world. My blood is the blood of life. I am the Treasure and the Guardian. I am…I lost. I lost and she stepped in to protect us all. You stepped in.
I’ve only ever been a part of my greater self, Umbrielle said and I felt an impression of her ‘greater self’ that stretched out wider than the sky.
Well, now I’m only a fragment of my true self as well, a tarnished treasure at best.
“No.” Anger snapped the word out of me. “You’re not tarnished. You’re mine and no one gets to abuse you. Ever.”
Ah, blossoming faith, Umbrielle said. Always so fierce.
“Oh yeah, I definitely sounded like that,” Theia, my intruder, said, meaning precisely none of the words she spoke.
You express your faith in your own manner. I find it charming, Umbrielle said.
“I’m going to need some explanations, a lot of explanations,” I said as the marching steps grew much too close for comfort. “But we need to leave. Now.”
“Aww, I was wondering if we were going to get to fight again,” Theia said.
“We will in about thirty seconds if we’re not out of here.”
“Ooo!” she said, gazing at me hungrily only to stop as her ears twitched up. “Oh, yeah, you’re right, we need to be elsewhere.”
We should be cloaked from them, Umbrielle said.
We should have been safe from them two centuries ago. Let’s not make the same mistake of underestimating them again, shall we?
“Do you know a better hiding spot?” Theia asked, stepping back close to me.
I wracked my brain for a moment trying to think of one, which was challenging since we were already at one of the safest places I’d been able to think of.
“Wait, yeah, I do know of a place no one will be at now. I don’t think we can get there though,” I said, trying to picture even the most unreasonable route that might get us to safety.
“That’s not a problem. Just hold it in your mind and hold onto me.”
And then she hugged me.
And then we vanished.
