Fledgling Gods – Waking the Divine – Ch 6

“We have endured hardship and suffering because the gods were too weak, but where they failed us, our strength will be our salvation. Through sacrifice and toil will a new day bathed in holy light soon be born.”

– Vaingloth the Eternal at the 100th anniversary of the founding of Mount Gloria.

I’d been lucky. It felt weird. I wasn’t used to it. Most of the ‘luck’ I’d ever run into, I’d made for myself. I suppose in a sense the same was true with finding another outlet from the big watery cave I’d fled into. 

As I was searching around towards the bottom of it, the idea that it might simply be a big pocket of water and that I’d wind up backtracking far enough to walk into Vaingloth’s waiting clutches occurred to me more than once. I knew precisely nothing about cave diving, or mining, or how to explore underwater and, unsurprisingly, Sola wasn’t terribly familiar with any of those things either. Together though? Together we managed not to suck.

I guessed that if the water was pooling up in the room I entered from then there was probably some outlet that let the water leave at about the rate it was coming in. I don’t know if that was at all guaranteed, and I was able to easily imagine that the outlets might be a bunch of tiny little cracks rather than nice big tunnels I’d be able to swim through. Since I had nothing to lose by searching though, I swam down to bottom and got to work.

One thing I did know about water, was that being under a lot of it made for a lot of pressure. People who had to retrieve things that fell into the reserve cisterns always complained about feeling like their ears were going to burst. The watery abyss cave was a lot deeper than any of the cisterns were though and I didn’t notice any problems with pressure at all. Apparently having a god backing you up – even if she wasn’t a god who had anything to do with water – was a pretty handy thing.

It took some searching at the bottom of the cave but that was where my skills came in handy. There were plenty of passages out but finding them involved searching the walls since it wasn’t easy to see the gaps, given how rough and twisty the walls became. There were plenty gaps that seemed like passages but most only ran a little bit inwards. The ones we were looking for were the ones which connected to somewhere else.

“Somewhere else” turned out to be another, smaller, abyssal cave, and then a third narrow cave/tunnel which lead mostly upwards and wasn’t fully flooded.

“We must be back up to where we were in the other room,” I said as we came out of the water. I was still glowing so it was easy to see no one was around, the tunnel was only about three feet wide and it ran upward past the point where Sola’s light could reach.

“This is a better hiding place than the grotto was, do you want to stop here?” Sola asked.

I did. Curling up in a tunnel for a decade until people forgot about me seemed like a brilliant plan.

Except Vaingloth wasn’t going to forget. And I had no idea what sort of techniques he might have to find us. Sola was many things but ‘subtle’ didn’t seem to be high on the list, so banking on the Eternal Neoteric Lord being unable to locate her seemed unwise.

As much as I hated the idea, I had a sinking feeling that the safest place was going to be the one which took advantage of my greatest strength; that nearly everyone overlooks me. 

Ratkin aren’t large in general. We can be as tall as dwarves, but we’re about a quarter of a dwarf’s mass and maybe a tenth as dangerous. That I’m fairly small even for an adult Ratkin means I’d get mistaken for a child by people from other species a lot, and that’s when they notice me in the first place.

Where they tend to overlook me the most though is when I’m in the company of other Ratkin. It’s less that there’s strength in numbers for us, and more that when there’s a few Ratkin around, people tend to call on whoever’s the biggest one they can see and assume that’s ‘our leader’.

Because of course we must have leaders right?

As if a ‘leader’ would be able to do anything for us.

If there’s something that would entice one of us – like the offer work for the day, or food in general – that’s really all that’s needed to ‘lead us’ anywhere. Beyond that we tend to follow our own paths.

Or maybe that’s just me.

I guess most Ratkin don’t run away as good as I do, and some of them do seem to have more solid friend-groups than I’ve ever had outside of daydreams. 

You’d think we’d have pretty tight knit families, and I used to wonder if we did once upon a time. With Ratkin being considered exceptionally viable sources for Kindling though, our families don’t stay together very well. 

In a sense that was good news for me though.

Creeping up from the underground tunnels, I focused on breathing normally and feeling the rough tunnel walls under my hands. Bits of the tunnel broken off here and there, showering me with enough dirt to undo the otherwise lovely bath I’d had swimming through the sunken caverns. That was good too.

The dirt and grime helped me look like I normally do. A spotlessly clean Ratkin would have been enough of an oddity to attract attention from almost anyone, and attention was the last thing I needed. A muddy disguise wasn’t an amazing one, but it fit me well.

Even more importantly than acting as a disguise though, climbing up, and getting dirty, and breathing like the absolutely normal girl I was reconnected me with the ‘solid’ parts of me that Sola had talked about.

I was about halfway up the tunnel when I noticed the glow of her power around me beginning to fade, and I had plenty left to go by the time it winked out entirely.

“I fit in you? I don’t understand how you did that?” Sola said.

“I don’t either.” No point lying to her there. “I noticed before though that the more I was just me, the more the glow dimmed down. I think if I don’t use your power, I’ll stay more myself and, I’m guessing, if we do much ‘godly’ stuff, I’m going to glow to the point where maybe I’ll burn up or something?”

“I won’t burn you up,” Sola said. “You carry me in you, and I could never wish you ill.”

“Even if I did something directly against you?”

“If you turned on me, or began to hate me, you would no longer be carrying me inside you,” Sola said. “I…I think I would still cherish you for freeing me from the garden though.”

“Was it that bad there?” I asked, remembering what a paradise the place had seemed like.

“I was trapped. I was being used, and I was blocked from being any more than what the gardener wanted me to be,” Sola said. “While I was there, so much of me drifted beyond my reach. So many parts of who and what I am were cut off from me. With you, even if you’d stayed hidden in the underwater cave, I could grow into the fullness of your life, and then beyond it.”

“Do you really want to though?” I asked. “I mean, isn’t reclaiming your missing bits going to put you on a path towards running into the thing that ate you again?”

“Yes. It will. I believe that’s why its still here. It knows that life persisted through its assault. It can feel that embers of me and the rest still remain. It knows that it in time those embers will flare up again, and again it will feast.”

“Can’t say I’m a fan of that idea. I don’t want to get eaten, and I definitely don’t think it would be good if you did either.”

“We are of one mind on that,” Sola said. “Which is why, in this lifetime or the ones which follow, I must discover the truth of the devouring beast. Everything has a weakness, and everything can die. I will not rise again until I hold whatever knowledge and weapons are needed to ensure that my next meeting with my ancient foe will be its last.”

How you could kill something that was large enough to eat the sun, the stars, and the sky itself was so far beyond me that I didn’t waste anytime thinking about it. Plus there was really only one answer I could make to that.

“I’ll help.”

Sure, my help and the help a random bug could give would be more or less identical in terms of usefulness, but I was used to only be able to make small differences.

“You already have, but I won’t say no to anything else you bring me.”

I’m not going to lie, feeling the gratitude of a god is a heady thing, even if the god in question is a tiny little fragment of who she used to be.

That little rush stayed with me as I squirmed through some tight places and finally managed to pop out into the lower sewer tunnels.

I was home! Sort of. I didn’t live in the tunnels really. Nothing did. I did however use them often enough while running away that I had a decent idea how to get back to the streets of the Low City, which I could more properly call home.

Had I been one of Vaingloth’s chosen, I would have had an actual building of my own to call home. If I was one of the Requisites, I would have at least had an apartment to wander towards. Instead though, I went looking for a Nest.

‘Nests’ had all kinds of bad reputations associated with them. No privacy and no consistent occupants. Violence and theft being the standard way of life. All the usual stuff that people thought the Kindling-bait of the world got up to or deserved.

In practice though? In practice, most Nests were pretty decent. With only a couple of candles of heat and light, it made sense to sleep in big groups. Violence happened, sure, because…well, people are people, but it wasn’t hard to see coming, and avoiding it usually wasn’t too difficult. 

Food was shared a lot more than the High City people seemed to think too. There was never as much as I would have liked, but I’d been able to get by. 

From where I finally popped back up into the Low City, I had about a fifteen minute walk to get a Nest for the rest period. I was able to tell it was time for rest largely because the beacon from the Eternal Lord’s tower had been turned to its lower setting.

Also only a few people were still wandering the streets.

Thankfully, and as was typical, none of them paid me any mind. I was a scrawny little rat girl who wasn’t carrying anything interesting beside some mud and grime. Beating me up would get my attacker some dirty knuckles and nothing else.

The nice thing about most Nests is that those qualities would also make for an easy entry pass since I clearly wasn’t the kind to start any trouble, or, if I did, it would be trivial for them to kick me out.

I’d come up pretty far from my usual haunts so I had to wander around a bit before I found the Nest’s entrance up on a second floor balcony of a pair of buildings which were largely boarded up to keep what little heat there was sealed in.

I was looking forward to a cursory couple of questions and then settling down in a nice anonymous pile of Ratkin and other bodies where I could rest and make some longer term plans.

Of course that was not to be though.

“Hey, Little, been a while,” an unfortunately familiar voice said as the door to the Nest opened.

Fledgling Gods – Waking the Divine – Ch 5

“Though the gods have failed us, and allowed our world to be cast into darkness and desolation, through our great efforts we stand at the cusp of reclaiming the glorious day that is ours by right. The sacrifice and toil required will fade away under the glorious light the world will soon know.”

– Vaingloth the Eternal, on the 25th anniversary of the founding of Mount Gloria.

I didn’t need to breathe. 

But I very much still wanted to.

That it had been my idea to essentially drown myself in a pool which had no guarantee of being connected to any other waterways did not make the experience any more enjoyable. It was only the fact that the alternative was coming face-to-face with a pissed off Neoteric Lord that kept me moving forward. The water could only kill me, Vaingloth occasionally got ‘creative’ with his punishments.

Walking down into the pool wasn’t entirely terrible either. While my lungs were berating my brain with requests to do their job, Sola’s support allowed me to mostly ignore that and focus instead on where we were going. I was so used to operating in the dimmest of lighting conditions that the illumination Sola’s essence was providing made the eerie underwater world even stranger though.

What I’d thought was a relatively small pool opened up into a vast, flooded cavern. I stood at the edge of it, where the pool had long ago broken through the wall of the fissure, and felt like I was about to fall into an endless abyss. 

Except of course I wasn’t falling. I couldn’t. I was marvelously light and buoyant. Too buoyant into fact. To move downwards I released the breath I’d been holding. I didn’t need the air since Sola was sheltering me and without it I could swim freely.

No. Not swim. I could fly.

I’d never learned how to swim, That was something for the Lords of the City. Water was too precious to spoil by putting bodies in it, and heat was too scarce to risk the deathly chill anything but a specialized pool would carry.

By all rights, the plunge I’d taken should have killed me even apart from the problems with breathing it presented. The water close to Sola’s chamber had been heated by her presence. The pool I’d run to was much farther away though and was sitting at a much more typical not-technically-instantly-lethal-temperature-but-close-enough, like most other water I’d run across.

Except for me, it was mild and pleasant. Because Sola didn’t want us to freeze.

Sola also didn’t want us to get caught, so where my random flailings couldn’t have been described as proper swimming by even the kindest observer, they did propel us onwards.

Grace came surprisingly quickly too. Without any need to panic, I was able to feel the flow of the water and what worked to move us through it. Sola gave my limbs extra strength but the water still moved best when I cut through it with long, clean strokes. Long, clean strokes which sent me down into the fathomless abyss because unless Vaingloth came looking for us personally, and decided to jump into a random hole and go for a little swim, there was no chance anyone else was going to follow us.

I make statements like that and then everytime I shudder waiting for the world to smack me for being arrogant enough to think that I knew anything at all. In this case however, I was right. It helped a little that Sola’s absence hadn’t quite been discovered at that point, or that when it was, no one would even begin to imagine that someone like me had been the one to steal her away, but my reasoning was still sound, and I stand by it.

The abyss wasn’t quite as endless as I at first imagined it to be either. It was still vast and filled with more water than I’d ever seen in my life. 

Which was strange.

Where the fire portals brought heat and light into the world and had to be feed with Kindling disturbingly often, there were also water portals which were needed to supply the fresh water the city required. The water portals didn’t demand sacrifices like the fire portals did – not simple, direct ones anyways. Instead they required constant vigilance and warfare to keep open since the creatures which lived beyond the portals had a habit of seeing the things on our side of the portal as free snackies. Being recruited for the water legions was a great method of rising above the lot in life me and people like me had, with the one, tiny, caveat that it was an even better method of rising above life in general and becoming the free snackies the water domain creatures were looking for.

If the fire portals were kept open by burning Kindling, then the water portals fed on the blood of the legions who fought within them. That wasn’t the official story but I’d never met anyone who was under the impression that things worked otherwise. Even that didn’t stop the legion from finding the recruits it needed though. From the people who signed up because whatever money they made before dying would keep their families going for a bit longer, to the ones who ‘signed up’ with a blade held at their throats. The legion needed bodies and whatever it took, it got them, and in exchange they won a small trickle of clean water to make life in the city possible. The thought of how many lives would have been required to fill a cave of this scale was horrifying on a level I’d never considered before.

“There should be fish here,” Sola said, her voice audible only to me in the cavern of water.

“They’d freeze wouldn’t they?” I asked. The fish I knew would be lost in a place like this. No tank walls, no air bubbled in, no warmth, no food. The fragile little things were clearly meant for some very specific conditions, as witness by the how many of them turned up dead and floating each day and had to be tossed onto the processing lines immediately before their bits ruined the meatslaw base that a lot of other foods were made from.

“I don’t know,” Sola said. “My memories of the world-as-it-was are scattered and disconnected. I can’t recall who held dominion over fishes, or if there were separate domains for the fishes of the salt and fishes of the fresh. I just remember that there were fishes. More types than anyone ever counted.”

I stopped swim-flying for a moment and sat with the ripple of loss which swept through her.

“They say there’s not much left of the old world, but it was always hard to imagine how much more there could be than just more people and more cities and more Lords,” I said, trying to guess how a space like this could be filled with anything but the fish I knew.

Maybe bigger ones? And smaller ones? The bigger ones wouldn’t have been preserved because they were too much trouble to fit in the tank we have and the smaller ones wouldn’t have been worth the effort to process. So probably there were fish of different sizes. From Sola’s words though I had the sense of the diversity went far beyond just size.

“Could they be brought back?” I asked. “If we found the others like you? The ones who were supposed to take care of the fish?”

“I don’t know. I remember shining on the fish in the seas and the fish in the lakes and streams, but I never knew them,” Sola said, still lost chasing a memory. “I think…I think what’s lost is lost. I don’t think even the one who bore the domain of the seas could restore them. I think instead they might make new ones. Ones to the fit the world as it is rather than the world as it was.”

“Is there anything that would fit the world as it is?” I asked. “Is there even still a point to this place at all?”

“That’s for you to say. I am of this world, but your choices are the one that make it,” Sola said.

“I don’t think my choices matter all that much. Or at least they didn’t before I met you. Now they mostly matter because if I make a wrong one I’ll get us both killed.”

“You choose to be in this world. You fight and struggle to stay here.”

“Is being afraid of dying that much of a choice though?”

“It’s enough of one,” Sola said. “And it leads to so many others.”

“So what choices should I make from here then? I was thinking we’d see if we could find any other places to come up and then hide from there but beyond that I’ve got no idea what to do next.”

I could be honest with her more than I was with myself because I wasn’t going to scare the wits out of her by facing the fact that previously zero things I’d done in the last several hours had any sort of thought put into them.

“Survival is reasonable goal,” Sola said. “It’s what I chose long ago and its made me I’m what I am.”

The words were in my voice, which was growing to sound natural, but they bothered me because they were my words too. I was a ‘survivor’ in the sense that I’d scurried away from everything that was going to kill me. So far at least. I knew that could change in an instant

“What if…,” I started to ask and then reconsidered it. “Are you happy with what you are now? With what putting survival first made you into?”

“That’s two questions with many different answers,” Sola said. “Am I happy to be here? Yes. The state I’m in is a miserable one, and my limitations are all but unbearable, but I am bearing them, and I am still here despite them.”

“Do you even have a choice about that though?”

“Of course. I could hurl myself back against the thing that devoured me. My domain would return. Something would be born in time to fill the place where I stand too. But it wouldn’t be me. I could throw aside all the problems I see before me and let them be someone else’s issues to deal with.”

“But you don’t.”

“Nor do you.”

“I don’t do anything to fix the problems though. I can’t.”

“If you can’t, then simply choosing to survive until you can, or until you can be a part of fixing them, is still doing something.”

She wasn’t supposed to be the one cheering me up. I was fine after all. She was the one who’d lost more than the entirety of my existence.

So why was I feeling better as we talked?

I shook my head.

I was not going to think about how long it had been since I’d had anyone to talk to. 

It definitely wasn’t that.

Cool thing about floating in an underground abyss? It was impossible to claim someone was crying.

“We could just stay here forever couldn’t we?” I asked as I started swimming again.

“Not forever. There is no forever. I think that’s what the old me learned. But, yes, we could stay here. If that was what you wanted.”

“Never hungry, never cold, and no one able to find us or hurt us? I’m not going to lie, it sounds pretty good.”

“But not good enough?” Sola asked as I kept swimming and saw the abyss’s floor come into view.

“It might be great for me, but you need more,” I said.

“I am for all intents and purposes a new creation, but I can feel the ages I once existed through. We could spend the whole span of your life here and I would still be better off than trapped in the garden as I was.”

“Maybe, but more people need you than just me, and Vaingloth would probably find us here eventually. We need to keep moving.”

“Are we running from or running too something?”

“For now? We’re just running,” I lied.

I was too small and too unimportant, even as a god bearer to change the world.

I was also too stupid not to try.

Fledgling Gods – Waking the Divine – Ch 4

“Where the god abandoned us, we shall forge our own bright and shining star through sacrifice and unity to illuminate this world that all may see the greatness we bring in the coming days and weeks!”

– Vaingloth the Eternal’s promises at the founding ceremony of Mount Gloria.

I was a god. Or we were. Really Sola was. But she was a part of me, so I was stuck being one too.

Divinity sucks.

“Does it hurt?” Sola asked. I couldn’t see her as a separate person anymore, but her voice was still distinctly her own.

I mean it sounded exactly like mine, but she had a presence the size of a mountain and I very much did not.

“No,” I lied. 

Which was pointless. She was a part of me. She knew immediately when I was lying, but a lie is sometimes a choice more than a statement of fact, and for the time being, carrying the divine essence of sun did not hurt.

“I need to be smaller,” Sola said. “You’re right that we shouldn’t be glowing like this. I’m just too big though. I’m spilling over I think, but I don’t know how to throw away any more of myself.”

“What do you mean ‘throw yourself away’?” I asked.

“Before, I was a lot more than I am now. I remember being torn apart though. There’s something out there. You saw it I think. In my old home. I escaped by tearing this part of me away so I wouldn’t be eaten.”

“How do you…?” I started to ask and then reconsidered the question. It was godly nonsense. They were different than people like me. Different rules applied to them, so, sure why couldn’t they rip themselves into bits and then live on in those bits. “Don’t worry about it.”

“They’ll find us though. They’ll find you.”

“Not if we stay down here.”

“But the garden isn’t safe.”

“Which is why we’re leaving,” I said and scurried over to the gap in to roots I’d entered through. 

I tried to draw them back closed to hide the passage. The effort worked better than I could have hoped. Not only did the roots shifts to block the entrance, they grew even thicker, obscuring the gap completely.

With the glow that was radiating from me, I could see more of the passage I’d fallen into more clearly than before. The rocks still looked fractured and disturbingly likely to come crashing down, but they remained solid as I crept past them, working deeper into a maze of cracks and crevices which suggested a massive force had broken the land at some point in the not terribly distant past.

“We’re not going to be safe here for long, but if we can keep moving, we’ll be a bit safer until we can figure out where we need to go.”

I said that like I had a plan. I did not. I had instincts and intuitions and neither of those scored high in the reliability department.

But I was god now, right? So why was I running. Why not just smite my pursuers with the power of the sun?

I’m not terrible smart sometimes, but I’m not a total bonehead either.

Sure. Sola was a god. Or part of a god.

She’s also been captured and held for at least long enough to make a garden stuffed full of near extinct fruits and vegetables. Had she been powerful enough to smite her captors, they would likely be a burnt ashen stain on the ground long ago.

So, no, I was not interested in testing the fragment of godly might I carried against Vaingloth the Eternal, Neoteric Lord and Savior of Those Who Live Under His Blessed Light.

Which was how I found the flooded cul-de-sac.

The fracture I’d been following had split several times and it had taken me about a hour to reach the end of the path. I hadn’t been following any particular strategy but the trickles of water had led me to a widened area where a pool had formed.

The water smelled clean and cool, then when I dipped a finger in I didn’t feel a chill at all.

“That’s me,” Sola said. “We’re sustained by own our light.”

“So I won’t be cold anymore?” I asked, trying to imagine what that would be like. I could sleep anywhere! Anytime!

“Only if you want to be,” Sola said. “No hunger either. Rest and sleep will be good for you still, but if you need to, we can go a lot longer without any of that than you’re used to. The same with breathing.”

“Wait, I don’t need to breathe anymore?” That was far more than I’d imagined was possible, despite that fact that I was magically glowing in a very impossible manner already.

“If you need to go without, we won’t need to, but it’s not something you want to do too much.”

“What happens if I do it too much?”

“You’ll become more like me. You’re still almost entirely an Incarnate, but a little bit of you is less solid than it was. If all of you shifts towards what I am, then we’d lose our grasp on this world. You could become too divine to be a physical part of the world anymore.”

“So, a ghost then?”

“Not even as substantial as a ghost,” Sola said. “Think of it more like becoming an idea in place of being a person.”

“You seem a lot more like a person than an idea.”

“That’s because you opened your heart to me and let me in,” Sola said. “Before you came into the garden, I had no one. The only thing I could touch in the world was the life in the garden. I nourished it and it held me safe, but I couldn’t be more than what the fruits knew I was.”

“How did plants keep you safe? Or hold you at all?” I asked, trying to fathom how something as vast as I could sense Sola to be could have been trapped by an acre of fruit an vegetables.

“I needed something in this world to cling to,” Sola said. “Something to keep me here and not out there, where the thing that destroyed me is. The plants couldn’t ‘believe in me’ like you can but there was a relationship between us. I was able to give them a part of myself, enough to hang on here and work miracles that reinforced our bond.”

“Miracles? For plants?”

“I brought them back,” Sola said. “They began as dead and lifeless seeds, but I was able to bring them the life which had been stolen from them.”

“You can raise the dead?” People were never specific about what the dead gods had been able to do or why they mattered. Whatever stories there were about them had been mostly forgotten I think once people saw that they couldn’t do anything for us. After all, who needed the gods a bunch of dead people used to worship when every city had a Neoteric Lord who served basically the same function?

“No, and yes, and its complicated and messy. That power wasn’t part of my domain. I held sway over neither growing nor reaping, neither harvest nor planting. I know that, but I also know that there is no one who holds those domains, and no one to stop me from claiming them. Not fully anyways.”

“What do you mean ‘not fully’?” I asked feeling like there was something more important there than the gods have a bunch of different jobs and the ability to sub in for one another if someone was out sick for the day.

“I was once the Sun. Or a part of the Sun. The old me had many domains to bear, Light, Knowledge, the breaking of darkness, and the giving of life. I remember those, and I’m sure there were others. The thing is, all the others? They’re not a part of me anymore. I can act through them and any of the other unclaimed domains, but I am not the one who bears those burdens.”

“Who does then?”

“For many of them? No one,” Sola said and I felt a heartbreaking loneliness of her words. There was loss within her that felt both agonizingly familiar and vastly alien. “There are pieces of me out there with no one to carry them. There are pieces of all of us, the others like me, scattered across our world and and the domains of most sit unclaimed and without anyone to nurture or care for them.”

“Most but not all? Does that mean there are other people out there like you and me?” I had to know because any other god bearers, or whatever I was, were either going to be my best possible allies or my worst conceivable enemies.

“I don’t know,” Sola said. “I can feel some of the domains that I was once tied to, but not all of them. It could be that the missing ones are still recovering, or that they’ve been truly forgotten, or that something else has taken them.”

“The beast that ate you? Could it still have some of them?” 

Asking questions I don’t actually want the answer to is a shockingly stupid mistake I’ve made a lot in my life, and it seems to be one I am simply incapable of learning from. If the god eating monster still had the other parts of Sola, then it would have a piece of her in its gullet and, by extension, a piece of me too. Me, who couldn’t even fight a patroller fairly, and had absolutely no hope against a Neoteric Lord, or even one of their minions. My only hope against the god eater was that I was literally beneath it’s notice. I was so small, it was incapable of perceiving my existence. It could perceive Sola just fine though and if it sniffed her out, I would amount to a single grain of salt on the snack it would make of her.

“If it did, it would have taken my place,” Sola said. “I don’t feel anything carrying the burdens I and the others carried. No grace flows through any of the domains I can feel, not now anyways.”

“Okay, so it ate you but it didn’t get your power? Or your position or whatever?”

“We were more than the power and authority,” Sola said. “We were wellsprings of grace, we were imagination and potential given form. We took the dedication and love of our worshippers and rewove the threads of fate, untangling snarls, guiding the right effects to the causes which we wished to produce them. When we were devoured, all that was lost. The dedication given to us, the love, and hope, and faith, all of those were torn from us. The world you were born into grinds onwards because the people of it are stubborn, and that stubbornness is the only tool they have to push past atrocity and nightmare.”

“I don’t know how well we’re doing with that. Most people just ignore what they don’t want to see.”

“They don’t understand how to do anything else. Or why they need to.”

“That’s me most days. No idea why any of this is worth it.”

“And yet you rescued me.”

“It felt like the right thing to do. And you weren’t asking me to. You didn’t want me to get hurt.”

“I still don’t.”

“I haven’t met a lot of people like that. I don’t think I can afford to let any that I do go.”

In the dark, I felt a mighty tremor rumble through the ground.

Which was interesting, both because the rocks didn’t come crashing down on me and because the glow around me had faded away while Sola and I had been talking.

I also felt more centered, and about as well rested as I had on my ten best days combined.

“My jailer has noticed I am missing,” Sola said.

“Yeah. I think we need to get farther away. Feeling kind of worried he’s going to level Mount Gloria looking for us.”

“We’ll need to backtrack. I can sharpen your memory if that would help?”

“I’ve got a different idea. Let’s go where they won’t think to follow and may not be able to even if it does occur to them.”

And with that I walked into the water and stopped breathing as Sola’s glow began to shine from me once more.

Fledgling Gods – Waking the Divine – Ch 3

“Under your holy light, we stand revealed and accepted, and through the darkness, your shepherds will guide us to your understanding and love.”

– Traditional prayer to Solus the Divine Sun.

“To your flame we give ourselves, for your glory, we burn. Your light shall scourge the wicked from the world and purify your people.”

– Neoteric chant of the crowds gathered to watch Kindling being sent off to the portal of flame.

I was looking at the sun. Directly at the sun. That was supposed to be a bad thing wasn’t it? So why was I seeing more clearly than I ever had before?

“I can go,” my sunfire twin said. “I don’t want to, but I know, or I think, being around me can be bad for people like you.”

“People like me?” 

Just the most brilliant question I know. Top work of the world’s most clever mind. In my defense, literally nothing in my life or any story I’d ever heard had prepared me for what was in front of me. I think the only reason I didn’t either go stark raving mad or, more sensibly, run until my legs gave out, was that being bathed in the light of understanding comes with a natural calming effect.

I was still nearly petrified of course. Overwhelming awe isn’t something you can just laugh off with a cynical chuckle. Or it’s not something I was able to laugh off, and I’ve had lots of practice being cynical, so I presume that’s a general rather than personal truth.

“Incarnates. Ones who are part of the world’s solidity.”

“I’m what now?” I’m not stupid. Really. What was in front of me was impossible though, and my brain had a lot of reorganize to fit in the belief that was I seeing could even adjacent to real.

“I’m sorry. I’m not what I was. I should be able to just show you all this and have what I want you to know just appear in your mind. I’m supposed to be able to do that, but I can’t.”

“It’s okay. We can just…why don’t we start over?” I suggested. The blazing copy of me was powerful beyond my imagining. That was easy enough to see that it penetrated the confusion that was swirling around in my head. What came with it though was a sense of how vulnerable the other me was, and that made the least sense of anything up to that point. “You can call me ‘Little’, that’s what everyone else does.”

I sat down and invited the other me to do the same.

“But that’s not your name?” she said, sitting down exactly as I had.

“It’s part of it, and the rest is ridiculous,” I said. “What’s your name though?”

“I don’t have one. Not any more.”

“What happened?” It seemed like both a nicer question than ‘what are you’ as well as being one that wouldn’t be as terrifying to hear the answer to.

“I don’t know. I think something stole me.”

“You were kidnapped?”

“No. Maybe eaten would be closer? I know I’m not what I was. Things are missing. I’m…maybe smaller is the right term? It’s confusing and it sucks, because I’m supposed to know all this stuff. I can feel it. But instead I’m just…just broken and trapped here.”

I don’t know if her frustration and resentment struck a chord in me because she was speaking in my voice, or because her emotions were too close to my own most days. 

“What do you mean ‘trapped’?” I asked, looking around for the walls of a cage that had to be wrapping around us. Not a single bar was visible, but I still had the sense that my double was telling the truth.

“I’m not an Incarnate like you are. I don’t have a place in the solid world like you do. I don’t think I’m supposed to be here at all.”

“Where should you be?”

“Somewhere without the weight of this place. Somewhere I can be everything I am, even the parts that contradict each other.”

“Can you get there? If you could get out of here you mean?” By which I was also asking if she’d be able to take me there since it sounded a lot better than anywhere I’d ever been.

“No. It’s not safe there. I don’t remember much about it, but wherever my home was, it’s death to go back there.”

“That makes two of us then,” I said and started thinking for the first time since I’d been grabbed, what my future was going to look like.

The patrollers did not tolerate even small acts of rebellion, and stabbing one of them as much as I had was more than a small act. They were going to be hunting me until the day I died, and they were going to put considerable resources into making sure that day came real soon.

Which left me where?

Could I hide in tunnels forever? I wouldn’t have thought so because of the whole issue with starving to death, but the garden around us still had plenty of food. I could live a long time on just what was around me, and the plants could always grow more.

Except, I couldn’t stay in the garden either, because gardens had gardeners and the gardener of this place was going to want to kill me even more than the patrollers did.

The food here was someone’s secret, someone who was not into sharing priceless treasures like this. My sunfire double made things even worse. If the food was priceless, then her worth was incalculable.

A shiver ran threw me despite the warmth of my twin.

A priceless garden that was home to a being of unimaginable power (even if she was hurt and broken)? There was one person in the whole city and one person only who could be the owner.

“We need to get out of here,” I said. 

If I didn’t take her, it was possible I might be able to hide in a deep enough hole to live out whatever days it might take for starvation to do me in. Surviving together seemed laughably unlikely, but since my death was pretty much assured in either case, I wanted to at least be able to live with myself until it came.

“I can’t leave unless you’re willing to carry me,” my twin said.

“That shouldn’t be hard, you look pretty light.” I shot her a stupid smile to go with the joke and congratulated my brain for coming up with the remark when it was worked, not a half hour too late.

“I might hurt you though,” my twin said, apparently her sense of humor being one of the things she’d lost.

I laughed for her.

“You won’t be the first,” I said. “And at least this time I get a choice in the matter.”

“Are you sure?” she asked. “I think if you cast me out, it’ll destroy me again and I’ll have to start all over.”

“Staying here is going to destroy you too though, isn’t it?” I asked.

“No. This isn’t death. It’s not life either though. I’m locked in here, stuck in stasis. I’ll never be anymore than I am now. It keeps me safe.”

“Keeps you safe from other people, or keeps them safe from you?”

“Both. But I’m not meant to be safe. And I don’t think the people who want to be safe from me should be either.”

“Sounds like an excellent reason to get you out of here. Unless I’m one of the ones who shouldn’t be safe from you?”

“I’m a danger to you, but not like the others. If you carry me out of here, I’ll become a part of you and you a part of me. I won’t burn you up, but I think you’ll change and I know change is hard for Incarnates.”

“When you say ‘incarnate’ do you mean I’m something special, or is that what everyone, all the Ratkins and Avians and Dwarves and whatnot are?”

‘You’re the first incarnate I’ve spoken to who didn’t want to consume me in their own manner, and you welcomed me into your heart the moment we met, so, yes, you are special, to me at least, but I imagine far beyond that too. That’s not what makes you an incarnate though. Incarnates are formed from the stuff of the solid world. You have bones and blood and your existence is a set and defined thing. All the peoples you mentioned, everyone you’ve ever met I would think, are incarnates too. And so is the whole world that you know.”

“And you’re something more.”

“Something else. I think that was a mistake I made before. We, there were others like me, thought we were something above you. We had vision and wisdom and power. Or we thought we did. With what I am now, I have to really question that though.”

Her regrets united with my paranoia and very reasonable guilt to get me back on my feet.

“Let’s go,” I said. “If this is a mistake, then whatever. I’ve made a lot of them, so at least I’ll be in familiar territory.”

I held out my hand to help her up.

“If you’re sure?” she asked.

I nodded in reply and took the hand she held out for me.

And that was the end of me.

I burned.

Every whisker, ever hair, every last little bit of me transubstantiated from matter to pure energy, bypassing gas and plasma entirely. 

I saw the world. All of it. Not as it was, not as a dark and ravaged shell with unnatural tick-cities clinging to its body, burning away what little life remained on it. The world I saw was just as empty and dark, but it was the darkness of slumber and the emptiness of a sea of possibilities waiting to spring to life with the dawn.

In the shadows beyond the sky, something unspeakably fearsome lay. Something with teeth that could rend apart time and claws that could shred even the inviolate concepts the world rested upon.

Down on the solid world, in a realm too fixed and limited for me to do more than pass over like a breeze, there was a body. A tool. That belonged to me. 

The unspeakable beast was too vast to trouble the body. She was too small, and too real, for it to even notice. It could destroy her whole world, would destroy her whole world, but something was keeping it at bay. Something eternal.

Something that couldn’t protect me though.

I was too bright. Too big. The great target the beast had sought.

I couldn’t defend myself, I tried that and failed, but that was before I’d become who I was in that moment, and if there was one thing the me of that moment was good at, it was running away, so that’s what I did.

Right back into my body.

I’d burned and it had been rapturous, but I didn’t need to be whatever it was I’d briefly become. We didn’t need that. We needed to be what I was.

A normal, solid, and most importantly, real Ratkin girl.

Pouring everything we were into the tiny package of my incarnated body seemed impossible when we tried it though. We were bigger than the world. Even the mountains were tiny specs to us. I knew my body though. It was home too, one I’d made bit by bit over all the years I’d been alive. We could hide there. We could be safe, if not from the other tiny little bits of the world, at least from the unspeakable beast.

We reached down from celestial heights and laid a single finger on my own brow which drew us hungrily back in.

I woke up with the sense of having touched an immense, unfolding eternity and found myself alone.

Or rather, my sunfire twin wasn’t standing in front of me anymore.

“We should leave,” she said from somewhere behind my eyes.

Her words were wise.

But I was glowing.

“This is going to be a problem,” I said, trying to imagine how we’d hide from anyone if we brought the brilliance of divine light into every shadow that offered us shelter.

“There’s too much of me here,” Sola said.

How did I know her name was Sola? How could I not know that?

The part of my mind that was still fully me jerked back at that thought. And all of the others which hadn’t been in me before. I knew things no Incarnate had ever known. I couldn’t hold on to any of them, but they were there. Perspectives and insights, facts and histories, fragments of an awareness that extended to the borders of the cosmos and the ends of time.

“What are we?” I asked, and felt my heart plummet as the answer rose all too plainly into my mind.

Fledgling Gods – Waking the Divine – Ch 2

“Though our world be shrouded now, you may look to me and this city which I claim as my own to light a path to future. Bend no more your knees to the divinities who have failed you. Turn instead to the light which remains before you, to the fire with which I will sustain you for the rest of your lives.”

– Vaingloth the Eternal, speaking to soon-to-be-dead masses huddled before the closed gates of Mount Gloria in the wake of the Sun Fall.

I witnessed a miracle. No one in a hundred years had felt light wash over them in the abundance that the small crack in the roots before me let shine through. It was a gift, a joyous, rapturous blessing which the highest of the city’s nobility would have exhausted their fortunes and more to receive.

So I ran.

I was not the city’s highest nobility. I had no fortune to spend on rapturous blessings. I was not someone who was supposed to be given joyous gifts, and if I received one I knew from first hand experience it simply meant someone bigger and meaner and more important was going to come along and take it away. 

And they’d hurt me for having it.

Which was stupid! I didn’t even try to hang on to things like that and yet the people who took every little thing I’d ever been given, always seemed to feel like they needed to kick me after they had what they wanted.

Not that I’m bitter about it.

Or still covered in blood from the patroller who’d finally pushed me too far.

Yeah, that had probably been a mistake.

I mean, he had been taking me to be burned up, and he knew it, so my sympathy was a wee bit limited for him, but the other patrollers were not going to be happy about that at all. I could turn myself in and that might limit the damage they would do, but since no one would believe I was an actual threat there were going to be a whole lot of extra Ratkins added to the Kindling pile this month.

I slumped down in the dark and the dirt. I wasn’t in the sewer tunnels anymore. My tumbling fall had taken me well below the level they ran at and dropped me into one of the natural caves systems which ran under the city.

And that was bad.

Mount Gloria had been a major metropolis basically forever as far as I knew. When Vaingloth took it over, he’d opened the portals and had the conduits built around the parts of the city which were accessible. Putting in piping between all the buildings had taken a lot of hands  working together but had been pretty simple. Putting piping in through the bedrock the city was built on though? Not so simple.

The sewer tunnels still saw some use, for obvious reasons, and there were lots of underground spaces which had been converted to act as sheltered areas where heat could be conserved for farming, but anything below that was beyond the bounds of Vaingloth’s protection.

Which meant there were monsters lurking below, or so everyone said.

I’d never seen one of course, as witness by the fact that I was not currently fertilizer and/or being actively digested. Since I did not wish to be a part of anyone’s digestive process, I began scampering back towards the surface.

Or that’s what I would have done, if I’d had the first clue where the surface was.

But I didn’t.

And I was tired.

And hungry.

And more than bit bruised.

And also, still covered in blood.

I kept coming back to the blood because it stank. And I felt guilty. Which was stupid, but then so was getting caught in the first place.

Did that make it my fault? Was it my ineptitude that cost the patroller his life and was going to doom a lot more Ratkin’s to the burn as kindling than should have?

Yeah, that wasn’t a line of thinking that was going to take me anywhere I wanted to go, so I did the sensible thing instead.

I curled into a corner and buried my head in my knees.

What? I was on the run from the law, about to be eaten by monsters, tired, and hungry. Collapsing and feeling sorry for myself was eminently sensible.

Of course it also did nothing whatsoever to make me feel better.

And for as far as I’d run, I still wasn’t cold?

Which was odd. I’ve got a lot of experience with being cold. Most places are at least unpleasantly chilly. It was what made working in one of the farm pods something of a treat on the days where I was lucky enough to get picked for it.

So why was I pleasantly warm? It wasn’t the exercise. I cool down really quick, especially when I’m sitting on the cold ground.

Curiosity and, I’ll admit, boredom, got me to raise my head and give the the fissure-tunnel-thing I was in a sniff. 

That was another mistake.

I smelled food.

Food that was back in the direction I’d come from.

Also, my eyes had adjusted enough that I could see the area around me was rather precarious looking. The walls were lousy with cracks and the whole place looked like it was one silly Ratkin girl’s misstep away from crumbling down into a grave no one would ever dig me out of.

Which wasn’t terrifying at all. I didn’t freeze in place and stop breathing. Not at all.

Roughly a thousand years later, a more important question occurred to me and I let out my breath.

How was I see anything here? The illumination was dim, but the last I checked, they weren’t piping flames down into random crevasses in the earth, and while I had good eye sight, I couldn’t see in literal pitch black. 

I crept back towards the food, focused on listening for the slightest sound of the rocks shifting. I’m not sure what I could have done if they had, maybe arrange myself into a confusing position so I could at least boggle the people who’d never find me anyways? It wasn’t much of a goal but I was working with what I had.

And trying very diligently not to think about the miracle I’d run into.

That was where the food was though, and food was a miracle all unto itself. Granted, it was typically a flavorless paste of a miracle, but people threw out all sorts of thing, including perfectly good spices from time to time, so my meals did occasionally border on being tasty.

With visions of pleasant spiced and unrotten food in mind, I crept back to the roots on my tip toes, and stumbled into what had probably made the tunnel; a small stream which had gathered into a waist deep pool. 

Again though it was warm? 

I sniffed the water and decided that it was, indeed, water, or not a pool of blood, or oil, or demon ichor or something. Just water. Warm water. 

Which made sense given that something was warming this place up, so why wouldn’t the water be warm too?

I dunked my head in it, washing off the blood and dirt that had become my outer layer of clothing. There was only so much I could do but that was true of most of the times I got to bathe or shower and at least this water wasn’t so icy that I risked losing body parts to it.

Emerging a good deal cleaner than when I’ve plopped into the pool, I found my nose wasn’t as blocked off as it had been. I continued breathing as slowly and regularly as I could, so as not to set off a cave-in, when my mouth did something strange.

It started watering.

I hadn’t been sure if I really wanted to risk returning where I’d come from but the smells alone were enough to bring me back to the roots.

Where I shouldn’t have gone.

Where I was going to wind up in a cataclysmic amount of trouble.

Where…where I had to take just one more peek.

I tried to resist. I knew I was doing something stupid. I knew I was making it so much more likely that I would be caught again. 

But I had to know.

Parting the roots let the warm and brilliant light spill forth again. I could smell a season on the air that I didn’t have a name for, and a delicious bounty of fruits that I was pretty sure had gone extinct decades before I’d been born.

I didn’t push the roots any farther apart – I was too stunned by everything I was experiencing – but they parted anyways and I stumbled through.

Into the brightest place I had ever been.

It took me a good several minutes before I was able to see at all. My eyes just didn’t understand how to take in that much light. I could feel my pupils shrinking and shrinking and struggling to shrink more, but it was just too much more than they’d ever had to deal with.

The same was mostly true of my nose. The aromas of so many delicious things was overwhelming. Fortunately my hunger rose to the occasion and provided me with the entirely sensible direction to reach out and grab the first thing that felt edible and let my taste buds sort out what my nose could not.

My tastebuds exploded. Whatever I’d put in my mouth was sweet and I had to have more.

I devoured maybe a billion more berries before it occurred to me that sweet things could still be poisonous and anything this tasty had to belong to someone incredibly important.

I ate another three handfuls and was considering going for more when my eyes finally won their fight and I was able to see where I was.

It was unreal. I could see everything. There weren’t any shadows in the room at all. And no flickering of the light. Which was impossible. Flames always flicker, at least as far as I’d ever seen.

I looked around the impossibly well-lit room searching for the source of said-impossible illumination and couldn’t find anything. Instead what I saw were rows of neatly tended plants – a fair portion of them having sacrificed their fruits into my ravenous maw. In the far corner of the room there was a pedestal with a twisting cage of metal filigree sitting atop it.

The cage smelled like magic, but it wasn’t the source of the light.

In fact, given the lack of any shadows in the room, even my own, I was pretty sure there was no single source of illumination in the room. The light seemed to be everywhere.

Rather than sending me scurrying away – which I really should have been doing – the light made me feel brave somehow. Like despite the fact that I was fully exposed with nowhere to hide, I was still safe and protected.

Something in me relaxed, something I had held rigid since the moment I was born I think, and I let myself just feel how nice the moment was. 

I was well fed.

I was warm.

I was sheltered.

I was also trespassing and meddling in something so far beyond me that no hidey-hole in the world was going to be deep enough to hide me from the repercussions. 

And somehow that was okay.

Whatever happened, it was worth it to have seen the light which surrounded me and taste food which could never have been grown under the light of the conjured flames.

Part of me wanted to stay in the garden forever. Another part knew that forever would end the moment the garden’s owner came back. Part of me thought that would be enough though, that even a brief forever would be okay if I spent it surrounded by the light.

“I wish I could take this with me,” I said and imagined the impact bringing something like this up to the city would have.

“I think we can do that. If you’re willing to carry me?” 

I turned to find a figure standing behind me. She was my duplicate, carved to exactly the same dimensions, but formed from dazzling light.

Fledgling Gods – Waking the Divine – Ch 1

“A night descends which shall never pass. The sun has fallen, devoured by the nameless beast, and with its last light faded, no more gods stand to bring us to salvation. I write this for the uncaring void and the empty wastes which will remain as we, the peoples of this mighty world descend into madness, and barbarism, and, at the last, the silence of unquiet death.”

– Grigo Weltham, recording an oracular vision on the day of the last sun fall. Cited in the following decades as how very wrong seers are capable of being.

The greatest city in the world was full of rats, and I was one of them. We huddled down in the unwanted places, snatched up the scraps people let go, and tried our very best to draw absolutely no attention to ourselves.

Predictably, that did not always go so well for us.

“Little! Move your ass! The patrol just got Pibby.”

I wasn’t overly fond of hearing my own name called out. In part because “Little” was annoying accurate, and in part because I really didn’t like the idea of the City Patrollers knowing that I even existed much less that there was someone with my name that they’d missed. There were a lot of things that pissed off the Patrollers but high up on the list was anything that reminded them what a bunch of screwups they were, like, for example, the fact that they were consistently failing to capture one tiny little Ratkin girl who had a habit of making acquaintances with other, more idiotic Ratkins.

Pibby wasn’t someone I’d known long. Which was true of most of the others who were scurrying down the alley with me. Unlike us though, Pibby hadn’t been clever or lucky enough to dive into the alley when the Patrol’s wagon came rumbling around the bend, and as a result, Pibby was going to be volunteered for the Holy and Sacred duty of taking part in the Kindling Tithe.

He didn’t deserve that.

None of us did.

No one at all did.

But that’s what the Lords said was needed. Sacrifices had to be made in order to keep the flame portals open. Without them we’d have no warmth and no light, which would mean no food either.

People like food. I know this because I’m people, and I like food a lot.

As it turns out, a lot of other people only disagree with the part where I get to be a ‘people’. That’s not unique to Ratkin. Lots of people who aren’t favored by the Neoteric Lords don’t get to count as ‘people’. We’re still useful as kindling. We burn just fine after all. And we can be put to work for a lot of different things which, if we’re lucky, is enough to get the Patrollers to look elsewhere when they go out to round up the month’s Kindling supply.

Pibby hadn’t been that lucky though, and as I ran so hard it felt like my lungs were going to explode, I had all kinds of visions that I wasn’t going to be that lucky either.

If we’d actually been rats, getting away would have been a lot easier. Vaingloth, our local Neoteric Lord, hadn’t built his city from the ground up. Like all of them, as far as I knew, he’d taken control of one of the big cities of the old world and spared it with the portals he’d been able to open when the sun got eaten up, which meant there were plenty of spots in it someone that was actually rat-sized could have used to escape. I’m sure the great and glorious Neoteric Lord would have preferred otherwise but saving the world hadn’t allowed for much time for architectural renewal in the process.

To be fair, ‘saving the world’ does sound like a big deal, and I’d have to guess it was since I don’t think anyone outside the Lord’s cities managed to, you know, survive. The cost of that survival was everyone who could be packed into the city, was. Then everyone had to deal with the fact that we’re all completely dependent on the Lord’s whim to continue surviving. If he says we’ve got to burn up a bunch of people each month to keep the portals open, then in they go.

“It’s a great honor”, “They only use the ones who deserve it, the criminals, and that sort”, “I think it cleans up the streets nicely”, “Well, we’ve got too many people as it is, of course we need to thin things out a bit”.  

It’s really amazing the kind of things you can overhear when, with a bit of an oversized cloak, you can be mistaken for a human kid who’s just hanging around. Not that it was just the humans who thought that. Or even all of them. Plenty of humans got tossed in as Kindling too, right along with Gobs, and Avians, and anyone else the Patrol decided looked annoying and/or flammable.

I liked to tell myself that as a little Ratkin girl, there wasn’t enough of me to be worth burning. I liked to tell myself I was too clever to get caught too. Too easily overlooked. Not worth anyone’s time really. And too good at keeping my head down and my nose out of trouble.  I liked to tell myself a lot of things.

And, I maintain, I am clever.

When I saw the others I’d been scavenging with take a hard right and head down one of the cross streets, I knew they were dead. The street was too wide. There were definitely going to be more Patrollers there.

And I was right. 

I had a better option though. A thin little gap between two houses on the left that only someone my size could manage.

I threw myself into it and learned, yet again, that sometimes, being clever is not even close to enough.

The patroller who caught me was human. Big guy. Couldn’t fit in the gap I was squirming through if you held a sword to this throat.

His arm though? Yeah, that fit in just fine. He snagged me with a single grab and yoinked me out of the illusion of safety with barely any effort at all.

If I had more ratlike features I could have bitten him with terrible rodent teeth, or scratched him with noxious claws. 

Or something.

Or anything.

All I’ve got are some good ears, whiskers, and a nose that works a bit better than most folks. 

I sagged and went limp. The dead weight of a body is supposed to be hard to lift.

I wasn’t.

“Hah! Got it,” he said, holding me up by one arm to show to the other patroller.

“Sure you didn’t leave some of it back there?” the other one said. “Gonna need three more like that it just to count for one real person.”

I didn’t bother to stir. I wasn’t really that little, but it didn’t matter. There wasn’t exactly a minimum size for the ‘Holy Offerings’.

“Maybe they’ll call it a bonus,” the one that was holding me said. “You know, a little extra for the portal, to keep it happy.”

I was pretty sure the portals didn’t have a ‘happy’ setting, but what did I know? I was just kindling right?

Well not just kindling.

I was clever kindling.

Yeah, I was still hanging onto that despite all the evidence to the contrary. When you’ve got the fighting capacity of an over boiled noodle, you hang onto whatever you can.

Step one of being clever was lulling them into a false sense of superiority. That was incredibly easy since they were superior to me in pretty much every physical attribute.

Step two was not letting them put me into a spot I couldn’t escape from. Like, for example, the back of one of their collection wagons.

“They caught you too?” Pibby said as they swung the wagon door closed after unceremoniously chucking me inside.

“All part of the plan,” I lied to him. I didn’t mind when he shot me a skeptical look in response. I wasn’t try to make Pibby feel better. I was trying to make myself feel better.

I really didn’t want to burn.

Not like everyone else had. 

This city didn’t deserve the warmth it would get from burning me. 

The patrollers moved off to finish corralling the others, so I tried kicking the door, on the off chance that they’d forgotten to put the lock on it.

Patrollers are idiots, but patrollers who let people just walk out their collection wagons wind up on the kindling pile quickly enough that the ranks are not quite idiotic enough to make grandiose mistakes when I really need them to.

“We can’t get out of here like that,” Pibby said. As though that wasn’t staggeringly obvious.

“Of course not,” I said, imaging that I really did have a plan and everything I did was in service to it.

My “go to” strategy was hiding. When that failed, my backup was running. When that failed, I was supposed to hide some more. It wasn’t a wide repertoire of options, but it had served me well right up until it hadn’t.

Which meant it was time to try something new.

Something new that my fear drenched brain was going to dredge up right away.

Any time really.

But sooner would be better.

Since I would be on fire later.

Not a helpful thought I have to confess, and it was asking a lot for my brain to function at all under the circumstances, but I didn’t really have much else to work with. Just an empty wagon and no tools in sight.

My eyes drifted over to Pibby.

“Want to try something really stupid?” I asked.

“What could be stupid at this point?” he asked in return, so I explained my idea to him.

And he agreed it was stupid.

But he also agreed to try it.

It only took a few minutes to take our shot, since the patrollers wrapped up their hunt early.

“Hey, where’s the other one?” the patroller who’d grabbed me said when he peeked back into sealed cage we were in.

“She wiggled through the bars and took off,” Pibby said, sitting carefully so that I was able to hide completely behind him by curling up into a small ball.

Yes, my big plan was to go back to hiding.

But I was going to try something new too.

“Like hell she did,” the patroller said, at least not referring to me as ‘it’ anymore, which was nice. “Get out here.”

It was a stupid plan. Clever people come up with good plans, and this was a stupid one.

But it worked.

The patroller threw off the lock and reached in to drag Pibby out into the meager light of the aether torches they carried and I clung to Pibby’s back to stay obscured until the last second.

Whatever the patroller had been expecting, it hadn’t been for me to roll around Pibby and go for one of the knives on his belt.

He swung at me with his torch, which did not feel good, and went to grab the sword he was carrying.

I can understand being worried about losing a sword, but he was also carrying a dagger, and those not only fit my hands a lot better, but, as it turns out, they’re much easier to use when you’re inches away from someone.

In the stories they tell in taverns and at festivals, the brave fighter always seems to dispatch their foe with one terrible and/or swift blow.

I think the patroller took something like thirty or forty.

That didn’t take long.

I’m small but I’m not slow.

Not being slow was also what got me running again.

To my credit, I feel, I had the presence of mind to drag Pibby with me. He didn’t want to be dragged along. Which was fine. Following a Ratkin girl who was covered in patroller blood and was probably not going to live long enough to be fed to the fires was not the best company to keep. I at least dragged him away from the wagons though before the other patrollers made it the cart to see what I’d done. 

With precious few options to work with, I hurled us into an a building someone had forgotten to buy a door for.

Pibby, for reasons I can’t begin to fathom, went up, scaling the staircase in front of us three steps at a time. Maybe he planned to hop from rooftop to rooftop? Maybe he planned to spontaneously discover an aptitude for flight magics? Whatever his plan was I wished him luck with it and went with what I knew.

Down.

Lots of buildings have access to the old sewer tunnels, and I’d spent enough time in them that I was sure I could get lost better than the patrollers would be able to find me.

Not that they were ever going to stop looking.

But that was a problem for a Little who’d found a new hiding place and could manage to put at least two thoughts together in a row.

My luck, being what it was, left me in the building’s sub-basement running my hands along a wall which lacked the normal hatchway into the sewer tunnels. It was pitch dark of course. Even decent places had limits on how much light they were afforded from the Lord’s precious hoard. I knew what the hatchways felt like though, and working in the dark wasn’t exactly new to me.

Frustrated, I punched the wall, as though I could smash through it with all of my amazing brute force.

Punching walls is stupid, just in case that wasn’t clear.

My fist hurt enough that I stamped my foot and bit back a scream of frustration and pain. 

Also not the brightest move since making any sound to attract the patrollers was a terrible idea under the circumstances.

In this particularly case though, it was a spectacularly bad idea since the floor I was standing on was not, it turned out, especially sound.

I plummeted through the boards as they gave way beneath me and sent me tumbling down a slanting shaft into sheer darkness.

Falling was disorienting, but I knew I’d dropped below the levels of the old sewers and was still going for a while before I came to a hard stop against something that thankfully was neither ‘spikey’, ‘stabby’, nor ‘impaling’. 

Feeling around, I found roots. Thick, old roots. I expected them to crumble away at my touch since most of the old trees had withered and died long before I was born, but these were supple? And warm?

Squirming a hand in between them, I managed to part a few.

And my world shattered.

Down, lost in the depths, rays of golden light unseen in the world for a century flooded through the vines.

Star Wars – Legacy of the Force – Ch 36

Life, by and large, is not peaceful. It churns and twists and makes a mess of everything. Somehow though, it can find moments of peace too. Islands of serenity where calm can flow in, and  the all the strife and turmoil can be seen for what they are; just moments as well, pieces of experience that challenge and teach as much as they hurt and destroy.

Nix’s reflections on that weren’t where her mind usually wandered as she sat by the small reflecting pool outside the cabin she shared with Ayli.

Normally she found the most relaxing things to think about were the schematics for the various ships she still hoped to have a chance to work on. She’d always known that the galaxy wasn’t a clockwork or a mechanism of any sort. There were too many moving parts to it and too many different purposes and goals each little one was pursuing. With the Force, she was tuned in to all of that, which was probably what had pushed her to becoming a mechanic, she knew.

Being able to understand each component of a greater machine and know what that machine needed was such a relief when even the Force often had no idea what the solution to a planet, or a city, or even a single person’s problems might be.

In moments of calm though, she thought she could see the answer, or maybe just an answer. All the tumult which surrounded her? However overwhelming it might feel, it would never be the whole of her life. The moments of reprieve, the moments of connection and joy and wonder? They were going to be there too. She could let the Force guide her to them, but so to she could guide the Force and show it the things that only she could bring to the galaxy. Her unique perspective, her choices, and her dreams.

In the pre-dawn light, the world around her was golden, the silence of the fading night broken by the call of morning birds and the crash on the incoming tide. In a sense that made it like any other day, and in sense, it was.

The day which lay before her would like be loud. It might have a fight or two even. There was almost certainly going to be laughter, and it wasn’t impossible that there would be a few tears. Nothing was really going to change or be different by the end of the day though. 

The ring on her finger wouldn’t be any heavier for the vows she was going to lay on it.

The ceremony they were going to undertake wasn’t going to change them or make what was between them ‘real’. It couldn’t since what they shared had been real the moment they woke up together and decided to make it real.

But it wasn’t going to be meaningless either.

Standing together before all of their friends and declaring their love was a step neither one of them had imagined taking before they’d met the other. 

The weeks of planning had also been something neither had expected to do, and had led on not a few occasions to the suggestion that they could simply elope to somewhere more official than Canto Bight this time.

But they hadn’t.

Because they did want to share the moment with the people in their lives.

Of which there were also far more than either had expected there to be.

Beyond Sali and Zin, who they were less-than-secretly trying to upstage with the reception they had planned, there was Rassi and Solna, their official new apprentices. 

Kelda had explained that young Jedi learners were properly referred to a padawans.

Which made it clear that Rassi and Solna should be apprentices and none of them had interests in being mistaken for Jedi.

Attending with Sali and Zin there were going to be a sizable contingent of underworld sorts, pirates and ne’er-do-wells who’d been on the periphery of Nix and Ayli’s antics since they’d met. If Nix had a family to speak of, they were probably the closest thing she had to cousins and aunt and uncles or weird grandparents that could be found.

On Ayli’s side, there were her parents and Archivist Bopo as well as a contingent of academics who were, if anything, rowdier than the pirates were, given how the rehearsal dinner had gone.

And then there were the people who were there for both of them.

People like Tovos and his crew. People who they’d helped either directly or indirectly, who were all to happy to have some warmth to celebrate in what could sometimes be a pretty cold galaxy.

“You’re pretty quiet today,” Ayli said, sitting down on the mat beside Nix and gazing out at the dawn bright horizon.

“But not silent,” Nix said, relaxing from her meditation posture and leaning over to plant a kiss on Ayli’s cheek.

It was a fairly chaste gesture, but not a chaste invitation.

Ayli responded by running her left hand gently up Nix’s spine, which offered promises for things to come without disturbing the calm of the moment they were sharing.

“Just so long as you’re there for the vows, you can be as quiet or silent as you like,” Ayli said.

“Do you think it will be different? Saying them in front of everyone?” Nix asked, enjoying the warmth of Ayli’s hand on her back.

“That one’s tough isn’t it? I mean, in theory, I think we took our first vows in front of, what, an entire casino?”

“That sounds right? I think?”

“Yeah, I mean, I know I said something, but I can’t really recall what our vows even were.”

“Probably whatever boilerplate the Canto Bight crooks have cooked up.”

“Well, whatever they were, they worked,” Ayli said and learned over to return Nix’s kiss.

“I don’t think it was the vows,” Nix said, shifting to look Ayli in the eyes. “It was you. Each day. You were there, and you chose me and you made it worth it. That means so much more than those vows do.”

“You make it so hard to wait sometimes, do you know that? I swear, even after all the prep we did, I kind of still want to just steal you away and elope right this instant.”

“Your parents would hunt us down.”

“And Sali and Zin would help, I know.”

“I mean, we still could,” Nix said, mischief and mayhem sparkling up inside her.

“Oh. Oh that would be fun. Could you imagine having the entire wedding reception chasing us from star to star?”

“You would have one problem,” Kelda said, appearing on the other side of the reflecting pool.

“They’d catch you before you left,” Ravas said.

“We’d make sure of it,” Kelda said.

“Aww, but why!” Nix said, comfortable letting her inner child out in front of the thousand year old Force ghosts.

“Do you know how many times we got to go to a wedding?” Kelda asked.

“A Jedi and a Sith? Who were either forbidden from marrying or who noone in the right mind would marry?” Ravas asked.

“So, you’re living vicariously through us?” Ayli asked.

“Has that not been apparent for a while now?” Kelda asked.

“You know, we could have you two up there with us,” Nix said. “A double wedding is as easy to put on as a single one.”

“I believe there is commonly a term in the vows about death dissolving the marriage,” Ravas said. “That would likely present a problem for us.”

“So don’t say them,” Nix said.

“Don’t say what?” Kelda asked.

“The part of the vows about death parting you. I mean, it clearly didn’t.”

“Yeah, if anything it brought you back together,” Ayli said.

“Well that’s true but…” Ravas stammered.

“We’ve never…” Kelda stammered as well.

Nix and Ayli shared an eye roll and a sigh.

“You’ve never actually told each other that you love each other enough that you want to be together? Seriously?” Ayli asked.

“Well, it was clear now wasn’t it,” Kelda said.

“Was it?” Nix asked.

“Yes, of course,” Ravas said, with only a hint in her voice that she was lying.

“Then you should make it clear to the people who love you,” Ayli said.

“Yeah, you were both cheated out of what your lives should have been. It’s time to make up for lost time and make the lives you wanted to have back then,” Nix said.

“There’s the slight problem that we’re not alive,” Kelda said.

“And that we weren’t cheated,” Ravas said. “This is very much the consequence of my actions.”

“Sure. Right. Except none of that is correct,” Nix said.

“She’s right. It’s good to take responsibility for what we do, but you’ve got to remember that you don’t get to take all the responsibility for everything,” Ayli said. “You didn’t actually do this to yourself. Not alone anyways.”

“And, rather more importantly, you’re not dead,” Nix said and held out her hand.

Kelda waved her hand through Nix’s as a refutation of her statement.

“Yep. That’s a neat trick,” Nix said and then reached out to catch hold of Kelda’s wrist.

“That’s…you’re just using the Force,” Kelda said.

Nix glanced over at Ayli and sighed.

“Yes. And where does the Force come from?” Ayli asked.

“You. The living,” Ravas said and paused. 

Or stopped really.

“You’re really just figuring this out?” Nix asked. “I mean, to be fair, it took me a long time too. If Monfi hadn’t mentioned something to Ayli, I don’t think either of us would have put it together.”

“What did the Horizon Knight say?” Kelda asked, still confused.

“I said you were a Force Ghost and he almost immediately said that you were something else,” Ayli said. “We talked about it later and he didn’t know what you were but her pointed out that Force Ghosts can usually only be seen by those they had a connection to in life.”

“The only exceptions he knew of were in places where the Force was in an exceptionally heightened state,” Nix said.

“Like a Dark Side Nexus, where we met you,” Ayli said, looking at Ravas.

“Except I met Kelda in one of Sali’s gardens,” Nix said. “Not exactly much of a Force nexus there, but the plants were nice.”

“True,” Ayli said. “Neither of us knew enough to question that though.”

“They can’t be right, can they?” Ravas asked.

“More like, we can’t be wrong,” Nix said. “Not on this at least. You, both of you, have appeared to plenty of people, none of whom you knew in life. Even if we’re your anchors because of what happened on Praxis Mar, you still have lives outside of us.”

“And they are lives,” Ayli said. “Leaving aside the fact that you are embodiments of the Force, which, is LIFE, you’ve both been changing, which, as an academic I have to point out, is one of the things that living things do. Sort of an essential quality for them to have.”

“But…” Kelda said.

“But that would mean…” Ravas said.

“That it’s not too late for you,” Nix said. “And that you will definitely be joining us up there on the altar.”

“We’re carrying on what you began,” Ayli said. “And we still have a lot to learn from you.”

“Just like Rassi and Solna have a lot that we can teach them,” Nix said.

“But that doesn’t mean you’re done,” Ayli said.

“Just because you’ll live on in us, doesn’t mean you don’t get to live for yourselves too.” Nix said.

“What can we say?” Kelda asked, looking a bit more overwhelmed than she ever had before.

“To us?” Nix asked. “You don’t have to say anything to us. What matters is what you’re going to say to each other.”

“What matters if what you’re going to be to each other.”

“The reason I held on,” Kelda said.

“The reason I came back,” Ravas said.

Nix took Ayli’s hands.

“The reason we made it this far,” Ayli said.

“And the reason we’ll keep going.”

[Chronicles Complete]

[…for now]

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 35

Rassi and Solna caught up with Nix, Ayli and the others on a pirate station which looked like it had never seen better days, mostly because it looked like it had never seen any good days at all. With a trio of Sister Zin’s fellow space nuns serving as their escort though none of the pirates offered them any trouble.

Which seemed odd to both of them?

“You’ve been here before?” Solna guessed, the Force being smugly quiet about the lack of response the nuns were generating.

“Others of our Order do business here,” Sister Calvarex said. 

Rassi was a big girl, both in height and width. For the first time however, she looked on the smaller side compared to Sister Calvarex. 

Which might also explain why the pirates were uninterested in giving them much trouble.

With that in mind, neither Rassi nor Solna were alarmed when they turned down a dark side alley that turned into an odd little maze. Had anyone else led them into a spot like that it wouldn’t have turned out well for someone, but the Sisters clearly knew where they were going.

That their destination turned out to be a bright and airy flower garden at the top of long lift ride was not at all what they’d been expecting, but the sight of their new friends told them they’d definitely come to the right place.

“So, is a new fleet worth the ship we banged up a little on you?” Nix asked.

“If its only a little banged up then you should be able to bang it right back into shape, right?” Sali asked.

“That is something I could do, yes, with enough time,” Nix said. “I would just need you to collect it first.”

Nix’s smile said she knew she was in at least mildly warm water in terms of the state of the ship, and she wasn’t quite willing to admit to what it was “mild” in comparison to.

“That should be easy enough,” Sali said, her smile matching Nix’s only in that, while she was legitimately happy that Nix was still alive, she was absolutely not going to pass up the opportunity to make her former lover squirm a bit. “We have, what, four, five salvage teams in the area? I’m sure they can bring it in you give them the coordinates where you left it.”

“Yeah, about that,” Nix said, pausing to find the right words.

“They’re going to need more than one set of coordinates,” Ayli said, finding, if not the right words, at least an accurate set of them. “Maybe a few thousand?”

“So, my ship is in a thousand pieces?” Sali said.

“More like a million probably,” Ayli said. “But most of the bits should still be grouped together, roughly speaking.”

“So banging it back together?” Sali said. “Might take a little while.”

“A little,” Nix said.

“Or,” Ayli offered. “We could give you something much better.”

“You really don’t need to,” Zin said. “That ship was insured after all.”

“No, no, this I want to hear,” Sali said. “What’s better than getting my very nice ship back?”

“There’s a Proton Beam Cannon floating out there,” Ayli said. “It’s damaged, but still functional. It’s also cloaked, but the cloak will be fading. As it stands I’m pretty sure one of your ‘friends’ is going to stumble across it as soon as they get done divvying up the fleet they captured.”

“Do we really want to put that kind of temptation into Sali’s hands?” Nix asked.

“I don’t know? Do we want it in anyone else’s hands?” Ayli asked.

“I mean, we could use it,” Nix said.

“I second that! And third it! And fourth it!” Goldie said over the comm Nix was carrying.

“Okay, maybe that would be a bad idea too,” Nix said.

“There, you see, so how does your very own proton beam cannon sound? You know in place of it being someone else’s proton beam cannon?” Ayli asked.

“I hate you,” Sali said. “Both of you.”

“Yay!” Nix said. “Hey, I’ll even install it if you want.”

“No!” Sali said.

“What? Why?”

“You will absolutely put a destructive fuse in it so it fries itself the first time I try to fire it,” Sali said.

“Well, I mean, no one else would know that,” Nix said.

“Why did I ever date you,” Sali said. “You are the worst.”

“It was so you could appreciate your current girlfriend more,” Nix said.

“I don’t have a girlfriend anymore,” Sali said.

Zin bapped her on the shoulder and held up her left hand.

Which Sali did as well to display their matching rings.

“CONGRATULATIONS!” Nix squealed and leapt to embrace them both.

“Now you officially can’t have her back,” Zin said.

“She’s been taken for a while now,” Ayli said.

“Not outside of Canto Bight,” Zin said, which was news to Rassi and Solna.

“Huh, we never did get that fixed, did we?” Ayli said, and glanced down at the ring on her fingers which was a twin to the one on Nix’s.

“We should probably fix that then,” Nix said and got down on one knee.

“Oh no you don’t! I get to propose to you,” Ayli said, also getting down on one knee.

“You proposed last time though!”

“Maybe! We don’t know that for sure though.” Ayli held forth her lightsaber for Nix to take, apparently as a betrothal gift.

“Wait, what?” Sali asked. “How do you not know…ah, Canto Bight. Right.”

Rassi and Solna exchanged a glance at each other in confusion, but it was Nulo who was floating nearby who cleared things up.

“Canto Bight is a, uh, resort world,” she said. “It’s sort of infamous for all the substances that can deprive people of their senses.”

“Makes for better gambling,” Sali said. “From the house’s perspective.”

“So are you two actually married?” Solna asked.

“They are definitely married,” Rassi said.

“Thank you,” Nix said. “And yes, in every way that matters, this is my wife.”

“For legal purposes though, for example in the eyes of the New Republic, our marriage certificate might as well be written in crayon,” Ayli said. “We don’t have to deal with the New Republic very much, so it hasn’t come up in the last year or so, but if these two are going to be all official, we can’t very well let them show us up.”

“I don’t think you’ll benefit from the same tax loopholes that she will?” Zin said to Ayli, indicating Sali.

“Hey! I married you for more than the tax breaks,” Sali said. “Those were just a nice bonus.”

“Which is why you’ll be giving me the proton beam cannon right?” Zin said, smiling sweetly.

“What’s mine is yours,” Sali said, looking genuinely smitten for a moment.

“Okay, for you I’ll do the installation and not put in the kill circuits on it,” Nix said. “That can be my wedding present to you.”

“Thank you,” Zin said.

Ayli cleared her throat.

“I believe there’s another wedding under discussion?” she said, noting that they were both still kneeling.

“Ah, good, so you accept my proposal then!” Nix said, turning a mischievous smile on Ayli.

“That depends,” Ayli said. “What are you offering for my betrothal?”

“I’d give you my saber, but, it’s…”

“Not exactly wedding material, yeah.”

Again, Rassi and Solna shared a puzzled look.

“What happened to it?” they asked together.

Nix drew forth a fairly plain hilt, and offered it to no one.

There was a presence within it. Dim. Sleeping.

And unspeakably deadly.

“I don’t want to call it a Death Saber, because that sounds so overwrought and pathetic…” Nix said.

“But that’s not an inaccurate name for it,” Ayli finished.

“What did you do? What is it?” Solna asked, pushing away her sense of it in the Force. She wanted absolutely nothing to do with whatever was in that hilt at all.

“When you sent the Death Shadows to us, they turned on the Elders,” Nix said.

“But we didn’t send them to you?” Rassi said.

“You did, in a manner of speaking,” Kelda said.

“When you broke the Silent Enclave, you broke the tether the Death Shadows had to you,” Ravas said. “We helped them find the Elders but honestly it wasn’t hard. They were drawn them like light into a black hole.”

“Which is very good,” Nix said. “We owe our lives to you two.”

“Really?” Rassi asked.

“How?” Solna asked.

“Our plans didn’t work out quite how we thought they would,” Ayli said.

“And the Elders were a lot stronger than we were ready to deal with,” Nix said.

“To be fair, they were slurping down Imperial lives like they were bacta packs,” Ayli said.

“True, and that wasn’t the sort of thing we’d ever seen them do before, so kind of a cheat,” Nix said.

“What do you mean ‘slurping down Imperial lives’?” Sali asked.

“Remember how we said it was a bad idea for the pirates to try taking on the Elders?” Ayli asked. “Turns out the Elders knew a Force trick where they could rip the life out of someone and add it to their own. The Imperials had the bridge filled with troopers when they brought us there to use as hostages. A smart move given what we’d been doing to them, but kind of stupid as it turned out with what it let the Elders do.”

“How did you survive?” Rassi asked.

“Blocking that sort of thing isn’t hard if you’ve got even halfway decent shields,” Nix said. “Honestly a bunch of the pirates probably could have managed it too. Imperials on the other hand are so hungry to worship the powerful and so lacking in basic empathy that they’re all but divorced from the Force, or at least any meaningful dialogue with it.”

“Which isn’t to say they weren’t a problem,” Ayli said. “Nix taunted Dolon and they hit her with something that came pretty close to ripping her apart.”

“It came close to ripping us all apart,” Lasha said.

“Sounds like I had the easier time of things then,” Monfi said, his arm which was cradled in a sling and the cast on his leg making that a questionable claim, though still perhaps an accurate one.

“Dolon wasn’t who we thought he was,” Nix said. “Not since he was named Primus at least. Which means I never met the original.”

“What do you mean the original?” Solna asked.

“The Elders weren’t just trying to kill us. If they wanted us dead they could have managed that without ever being in danger themselves. What they were really doing was trying to shred us and leave our bodies as empty husks to put their own spirits into,” Nix said. “With the Imperials dead they could have let the pirates take over, claimed that they were Ayli, Lasha, the kids and me and waked away with no one the wiser.”

“But you were too strong for them?” Rassi asked.

“Not in the slightest,” Nix said. “I was maybe two seconds away from becoming their meat puppet when the others stepped in and then the Elders started eating the Imperials for extra strength. We fought back, but Ayli even chopping off Dolon’s head didn’t help.”

“Okay, I am definitely glad we let you be the boarding party,” Sali said.

“Same,” Nix said. “Don’t get me wrong, that entire situation sucked, but I at least knew we would get through it.”

“How?” Solna asked.

“The Force was with us,” Ayli said.

“Eagerly in fact,” Nix said. “What the Elders were doing was everything they’d told you a ‘corruption of the Xah’ was, and the Force was basically done with their idiocy.”

“Which was probably why the Death Shadows were able to find us so quickly,” Ayli said. “The moment the Elders dropped their cloaking to assault us it must have been like a signal flare went up.”

“Even they weren’t quite enough though,” Nix said. “So Ayli dumped the Star Destroyer’s main power conduits onto Dolon and let the reactor fry him.”

“Which, before you think that sounds too good, he survived,” Ayli said.

“But to do so, he ate the rest of the Elders,” Nix said. “Which made him a bit bigger of a problem.”

“So you hit him with your lightsaber?”

“Lightsabers weren’t really bothering him at that point,” Ayli said.

“Yeah. And the Death Shadows couldn’t get to him,” Nix said. “So I called them in and gave them what they needed to reach him.”

“What? How?” Solna asked.

“I wasn’t the one they wanted. They would have hurt me, they do that just by existing, but I knew I wouldn’t take much organ damage if I gave them a place to go.”

“Which was into her lightsaber, which turned the most disturbing shade of nothing,” Ayli said.

“Nothing as in the black of space?” Sali asked.

“Nothing as in invisible,” Nix said. “Unless you move it, then it looks like a tear in reality.”

“That sounds rather dangerous,” Monfi said.

“It is,” Lasha said. “Which is why she’s not going to turn it on again.”

“Yes. For that reason and because I do not want to wake up the all the Death Shadows which are sleeping within it. They’ve earned their peace. Just like we have.”

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 34

Nix snapped back into her body the moment the Death Shadows arrived. The soul crushing pressure the Elders of the Silent Enclave had brought to bear on her hadn’t been enough to cast her out and it wasn’t enough to save them either.

Not that they didn’t try.

Around them, Imperials began dropping like flies as the Elder tore the life out of them to engorge themselves with power. 

Where and how they’d learned such a Force-corrupting technique was something Nix didn’t want to know the answer to, but had to guess lay shrouded in the Enclaves earliest day. The existence of those abilities was probably why they had evolved such an extreme doctrine against ever manipulating the Force at all.

And yet the techniques had still been passed down.

Nix couldn’t judge the ancestors of Enclave. She had no idea what dangers they were faced with, or why they’d made the choices they had. Their descendants though? The current batch of Elders? Those she felt far more comfortable passing judgment on. 

They’d tried to kill her, which was a serious mistake. They’d tried to kill Ayli, which was utterly unforgivable. In Nix’s estimation therefor, they were getting precisely what they deserved.

“You should leave,” Kelda said. “You cannot save them, and the Death Shadows are not beings of great discrimination.”

“I agree,” Nix said. “Lasha, get the kids to safety.”

“That doesn’t sound like you’re agreeing completely there,” Lasha said over the cries of the battle which had erupted on the bridge.

“I’m not planning on saving them,” Nix said. “They’ve got a lot of tricks we’re not familiar with though and I’m not letting them sneak away from this. They’ve earned this.”

“It’s what the Death Shadows need too,” Ayli said, her gaze distant as she reached out to the Force. “These ones will never be at peace, but the Elders, they’re the last remnant of the Silent Enclave. The Death Shadows will sleep once they are gone.”

“For how long?” Lasha asked, the Horizon Knights notably being focused on eradicating abominations in the Force.

“Forever,” Ayli said. “Or until someone else tries to use the Expunging Rite or something like it.”

The Imperials, woken from the stupor the Elders had inflicted on them by the sheer horror of the situation turned to the first and last refuge. Their blasters.

Shooting incorporeal wraiths did not produce the effect they had been intending though. It wasn’t that no effect was produced. Their blaster fire did succeed in drawing the attention of the Death Shadows which were latched onto an Elder and fighting to push themselves into eyes and ears and mouths. Those Death Shadows with no set target were all too eager to show the Imperials why standing in support of the Elders was an unwise idea and the blaster fire helped the Death Shadows immensely with determining who their first students should be.

“Hmm, guess we are catching them at a bad time,” Sali’s hologram said as it sprang back to life from the command console. “Yo, Nix, you still alive in there?”

“Right here Sali!” Nix called back. “Could you hold off blowing this ship up for a minute or two?”

“For you? I can probably be talked into three, maybe even four minutes,” Sali said. “Five minutes though and I think these proton torpedoes are going to fire themselves.”

“They can be temperamental. Remind me about it and I can get you upgraded to a Simmstech firing system, they’re…” Nix started to say but Ayli cut her off.

“Something we should talk about later, look what’s happening with Dolon.”

Where the other Elders were draining the life to whatever nearby Imperials they could see, former Primus-Dolon had decided on a different strategy.

He was draining the other Elders.

As tactics went it was as effective as it was miserable, not because it gave him the strength to grab hold of the Death Shadows, but because he appeared to be able to twist the dead Elders into a sort of ablative shield which could bind the Death Shadows who tried to attack him.

“We have to stop him,” Nix said, sensing a far deeper problem.

“He won’t be able to protect himself long with abominations like that,” Kelda said.

“He won’t have to,” Nix said. “Listen to the Force inside the Elders he’s killing. Its tearing.”

“He’s not making a shield,” Ayli said, her eyes going wide with the same terror which gripped Nix. “He’s making a gate. He’s going to step away from here far enough that the Death Shadows will lose track of him.”

“That’s…that’s rather clever,” Ravas said. “He’s using their death as a cover so that if he’s pursued his trail will pass through the death and make it seem like he died too. The Death Shadows won’t be able to see beyond that.”

“Then we need to stop him here and now,” Nix said and ignited her lightsaber.

Ayli’s blade was drawn in the same instant and together they moved as one, cutting through the Imperials who registered their presence and still regarded them as enemies.

Dolon didn’t see either of them coming until Nix and Ayli hit him with cross cutting strikes, cleaving him into quarters.

“Ah, two more I can use,” Dolon said, his body knitting back together as fast as it had been sliced apart.

“We were never yours,” Nix said, catching a blast of pure Force energy on her blade.

“But you are ours to end,” Ayli said, meeting a separate blast of power with a Force push of her own.

“I have no end,” Dolon said. “I am eternal.”

And Nix heard the truth in his words.

Dolon was not who he appeared to be.

The real Dolon was a puppet. Or a suit the monster in front of Nix wore. He’d likely been a miserable person in life. Probably a greedy idiot who’d been receptive to any offer for power no matter its cost or who it hurt, so long as it wasn’t him. That absence of empathy and vast surplus of narcissism would have been crucial for the monster before her to scoop out the original Dolon’s soul and toss it out to make room for himself.

A vision flashed before Nix’s eyes. Confirmation from the Force. 

It had been the day of Dolon’s ascension as Primus. He’d been selected by the former Primus who’d been laying on his “death bed” or perhaps it was lying on his death bed, since the death that was to come was not the monsters at all, and the monster could have continued on for decade had it needed to.

But Dolon was ripe enough and the monster had been tired of playing the role of the older Primus. And so the Ascension Rite had begun. Prayers and ceremony and meditation, all to serve as a distraction from the subtle work the monster did. All to give time for the monster to make the sort of promises that would draw in someone as stupid and mean as the original Dolon had been. As all of the Primus’s had been.

The persistence of the Enclave’s worst, most corrupting disciplines was startling easy to understand in light of what Nix was seeing. The Enclave hadn’t passed down their most vile of rituals from generation to generation. What had been passed down was the parasite who had originally discovered the rites!  

With each new generation, and each new Primus, the man who had become a parasite had found a new host and a new means of sustaining his unnatural existence. 

So it was true that he was eternal.

From a certain point of view at least.

“Your Enclave is broken and destroyed. There won’t be anymore Primuses from you to feed on,” Nix said.

“There will always be people to feed on,” Dolon said. “Do you know how stupid you all are? Look at these Imperials. Their war has been lost for years and they still think they had authority and power. I will never lack for people who will crave what I can offer them.”

“Sure, people will always be stupid, but you’re missing a few things there,” Nix said.

“Enlighten me then, that would provide some meaning to your life before I take it.”

“Well, first, you’re a people too, so you’re not exempt from being just as stupid as the rest of us,” Nix said. “And second there’s not just one way to be smart. We can be incredibly stupid and incredibly brilliant at the same time. Brilliant enough in fact to get rid of nuisances like you.”

Dolon laugh and hammered Nix back three paces with his renewed assault. Bit of his attack bled past her defenses and she felt it tearing away of her connection to her body. Her connection to the Force was strong and old, as much a part of her as anything else, and his assault was still almost enough to overwhelm it.

She was in danger, and could feel the Force warning her of the peril the future held, but it was still with her.

“You’re…you’re going to have to try harder than that,” Nix said through gritted teeth as she dropped to one knee and used both hands to hold her lightsaber in front of her.

“Oh? Do you think I can’t?” Dolon said and a blast of immeasurable power battered her for a moment before two other people were at her side.

“She’s right. You don’t have what it takes to win this battle,” Kelda said.

“It’s why he kept his underlings so weak,” Ravas said. “He’s always been afraid of a having to put up a real fight.”

Dolon’s yell wasn’t in the same solar system as coherency, but it did signal a change in the battle.

Despite Kelda and Ravas’ help, Nix felt herself being torn from her body again, her defenses all but useless against Dolon’s assault.

Behind Dolon, the last of the Elders collapsed, their defenses shredding and allowing the Death Shadows to take them unfettered as Dolon drained their strength away to power his mad gambit.

“Nothing will save you now!” His eyes blazed with crimson lightning and his voice boomed as large as the Star Destroyer.

“Forget about someone did you?” Ayli asked and dropped a metric ton of power conduits onto Dolon. Live power conduits which she’d been gathering while Nix served as the perfect distraction.

The ship’s generator fed as much power into the main lines as was called for and so a very natural torrent of energy seared through Dolon, bright and hot enough to make his bones glow.

But that wasn’t enough to end him.

Charred and battered, Dolon screamed and hurled the power cabling away in an explosive blast. With a crack of thunder he turned to Ayli and caught her in a Force grab and began choking the life from her with the power of sheer malice.

No attack they could make was going to be enough to kill him.

So Nix turned to something that could make the sort of attack she never could.

Opening herself to the Force, she reached out the nearest Death Shadow and called it to herself.

It was a void whose existence was defined only by retribution. It wanted to destroy everything that was connected to its existence and after long centuries there was only one person left who fit that bill.

Reaching out her hand, Nix offered it what it needed, and it flowed into her.

She could hold it. Not even for a moment. Its natural was to destroy and her desire was not to be destroyed.

But more came.

And she welcomed them all.

Not into herself.

She welcomed them into the light.

Of her saber.

Dolon turned almost in time. His rage had blinded him for just long enough but he almost turned quickly enough to see what she was doing.

Even had he done so though, he couldn’t have stopped her.

With an arcing swing she brought her blade which held the Death Shadows within it down, through Dolon’s defenses, through his body, and through the core of his spirit.

And the Death Shadows feasted at last.

Star Wars: Legacy of the Force – Ch 33

The Silent Enclave had fallen and was no more. In the face of the the Death Shadow’s relentless assault, it’s end had been all but certain, and as history rolled onwards, the marks it had left on the galaxy would be washed away with the time and tides of new galactic struggles.

Which is not to say that its people would be forgotten.

Or that they would forget what they once were.

“They’re gone.” 

Rassi wasn’t sure if it was Tovos who spoke, or one of the other young men of the enclave. Whoever it was though gave voice to the wonder which had enspelled everyone present.

Around them stood a ring of tired, slowly fading ghosts and around the ghosts? 

Nothing.

The raging horde was gone.

More than that.

The raging horde of vengeful voids no longer pursued them.

Some of the Death Shadows were at peace at last. Rassi and Solna had shown the people around them what it took to begin healing the injuries the Death Shadows had sustained, and while none of the formerly-Silent Enclave members could have replicated the feat on their own, together they’d been able to accomplish so much more. 

Together and working at long last with the Xah. In embracing the Force and allowing it to answer the calls they’d always been cut off from making, the people around Rassi had cast off the silence and accepted the burden of the power they’d hidden from for centuries.

That hadn’t solved all their problems of course, or even saved them from all of the Death Shadows.

“I don’t understand,” Jilla said. “There were ones we couldn’t reach.”

“Yeah.” Osdo’s gaze was turned entirely inwards as he searched for the answer to his survival which was so obvious Rassi almost giggled. “We helped some of them, and I think, I don’t know, maybe they forgave us? There were other though…others that..”

“Others that will never forgive,” Yanni said, her voice soft as though the enormity of what they’d faced had filled her entire being.

Which, it kind of had.

Rassi could feel the rest of the Enclave so clearly. Their cloak had been killing them. Their silence had been a carcinogen for their society. Even the people who clung the strongest to their denial, the ones who were the most invested in the Silent Enclave’s status quo, they were all still a part of the society of their peers, were still connected to the people around them. 

No matter how small and cruel they were, Rassi saw that everyone in the Enclave had someone they could feel empathy for, someone, in turn, who could influence them.

Dragging the entire Enclave out of the silence wasn’t something she ever could have done on her own. Or with Solna. Or even with Tovos and his whole crew. For the Enclave to change, it had taken the whole of the Enclave to do it.

But the change had started with her, and her change had started with Solna.

She dropped her head sideways onto Solna’s shoulder and relaxed something inside that she’d never known she had been holding tense.

“Will they be back?” Jolu, no longer Honored, but somehow the more honorable for that, asked.

“No. They’re gone and they won’t be drawn to anywhere here ever again,” Solna said.

“Where did they go though?” Jilla asked.

“To find the Silent Enclave,” Hendel said, plopping his skeleton body down beside Rassi.

“But they found us,” Tovos said.

“They did,” Rassi said and let the music in the Force wash over her. “And they destroyed the Silent Enclave. Or we did. I don’t think they care about that though.”

“But, we didn’t trick them, and we couldn’t hide anymore?” Polu said. “They know we’re still here.”

“We are,” Rassi said. “But the Silent Enclave isn’t.”

Plenty of faces turned to her, searching for understanding, but Rassi was more aware of Solna’s chuckle. Because of course Solna got it.

“All we were supposed to do is listen right?” Rassi said. “So listen. To us. All of us. What do you hear?”

“Oh. Oh no,” Yanni said. “We’re…no, wait, we’re not disturbing the Xah? It sounds…”

“Happy. It sound happy,” Felgo said, sound more perplexed than any of the others.

His experience was one which Rassi could feel was shared by many of the others who’d believed deeply in the Silent Enclave’s dogma.

This wasn’t supposed to be what it was like when people touched the Xah. Touching the Xah, expressing yourself, it was supposed to be a corruption. 

Whatever a “corruption” was.

Growing up the idea of ‘corrupting the Xah’ had always felt nebulous to Rassi. She’d imagined it like poisoning a river in that she was pretty sure she was far too tiny to change the course of something as mighty as the Xah, but maybe something she did could make part of it dangerous for others?

Clearly that was possible. They’d just survived an assault by the consequences of someone’s actions who’d gravely misused and abused the Xah.

But the enforced silence of the Enclave had been a grave abuse as well.

And the people could hear that at last.

In joining together and raising their voice in the Xah to shout that they would protect each other, and die for each other, they’d broken the silence to which they’d been held in thrall and, unknowingly in some cases, finally started singing along with the Xah as it coursed through their lives.

It was such sweet music to Rassi that she almost wanted to stay with them.

Almost.

“We’re not silent anymore.” No one person spoke those words. They came from everyone in the Enclave. 

Recognition of what a past that had been lost and the freedoms they had gained.

Freedoms which, Rassi suspected, would wind up being somewhat wasted. She couldn’t picture the Enclave changing as drastically as she felt they needed to, but in the wake of what they’d been through, she also knew they wouldn’t be able to stay as they were.

Listening to the Force told her that the future would be messy and complicated for the Enclave. They would fight and struggle, they would try to hold onto whatever parts of the past they could while grasping for a new understanding which incorporated the experiences they shared. 

And they would do it without her.

The struggles of the Enclave? She’d been bound to them for too long and where they’d had the comforts of tradition ripped away, she’d cast them off willingly. However far the Enclave would be able to go, Rassi knew that she could go much, much father.

“So where are the Death Shadows now?” Jolu asked. “Even if they are not our problem, I would say we still bear some responsibility for them.”

“Kelda and Ravas took the unforgiving ones away,” Solna said. 

“Wait, they could do that?” Jilla asked.

“Not until the Death Shadows had no one here to pursue,” Solna said. “And I think there is only one place they could have brought the Death Shadows to.”

“The other Elders.” Jolu whispered her sudden understanding into existence like she was pronouncing a doom.

Which she wasn’t.

She hadn’t doomed the other Elders.

That had been entirely their own handiwork.

Rassi would have expressed sorrow or sympathy for them, but she was feeling so open to the Force that everyone would have instantly felt the lie in her words.

The sorrow she felt for the Elders was that no one had stopped them sooner, or taught them how to be even vaguely decent people early enough in their lives to prevent the tragedies they’d perpetrated.

Would the Enclave produce better people from here? Maybe? It produced some good ones already. Solna at the least. And Jolu if Rassi was feeling charitable. And Tovos, and, and, and, okay and a lot of others. 

It was possible that she might have some things to work on still, and some trauma she was going to be dealing with for a while.

Happily there was a whole galaxy out there for her to explore while she did.

And, maybe, a few people she could turn to who knew a little bit more about the Force than she did.

“We should get going, shouldn’t we?” Solna said, not objecting to the weight of Rassi’s head on her shoulder, but clearly feeling the same pull Rassi did.

“You’re leaving?” Jilla asked, surprise and concern warring in her eyes.

“We did what we came for,” Rassi said.

“You don’t have to leave though,” Jilla said. “I mean, I know, before, we were…but now…”

“Now things are different?” Rassi asked. “They are. For all of us. This place, it’s not…not where I’m needed.”

“That’s not true!” Jilla said. “We…you saved us.”

“You saved yourselves,” Solna said. “And you’ll do it again if it’s needed.”

“I know everything’s still kind of scary,” Rassi said. “You’ve got what you need now though. Your listening to each other. That’s all I can give you.”

“But…” Jilla said.

“No,” Jolu said. “Rassi’s right. Listen to the Xah. We were a burden on her heart. Any debt she had to us is paid in full. Her calling is out there.” Jolu gestured towards the stars, and Rassi felt herself lifted up to them by the gesture.

“There will be one little problem with that,” Tovos said. “We weren’t kidding when we said that the Death Shadows wrecked all of our ships.”

“Yeah, about that…” Solna said, and smirked in time as the whumps and thumps from a distant fleet of clunky repulsor lift flyers became audible.

“I don’t understand?” Jolu asked.

“We mentioned to Sister Zin that we might need a ride out of here when we were done,” Solna said. “She has a contact on the planet. It’s how we found you in the first place.”

“That sounds like more than a ride,” Jilla said.

“It might also be the cavalry?” Rassi said. “We weren’t sure what kind of welcome we were going to get. Or what was going to be happening with the Death Shadows.”

“Normal forces wouldn’t have been able to deal with the Death Shadows though?” Jolu said.

“I don’t think these are normal forces,” Osdo said. “These are the space nuns right?”

“Yeah. Might be a small army of them,” Rassi said. “Still wouldn’t have been able to handle the Death Shadows, but from how Queen Sali talked, I don’t think they’re exactly ‘normal security operatives’ either.”

“Perhaps we can arrange transport with them as well then,” Jolu said. “Or repairs if they’re capable. How bad were our shuttles damaged?”

Rassi let talk turn to the inevitable planning and logistics required to deal with a population the size of the Enclave and settled in to wait for space nuns to arrive.

“Do you think we’ll be able to find Nix and Ayli?” Solna asked. She wasn’t whispering, exactly, since she didn’t need to hide her words, but they were really only for Rassi.

“Shouldn’t be too hard,” Rassi said. “Sister Zin’s friends should be able to find where she is, and she should know where Nix and Ayli are. Do you think it’s okay if we go to them?”

“I was wondering that. I feel like I kind of hijacked the journey Nix was on.”

“I don’t think she minded,” Rassi said. 

“I think she’s had a lot of other things to think about since we ran into her,” Solna said. “Once all the chaos is past, she’ll probably want to get back to her regular life.”

“Which does not include us,” Rassi said.

“Well, it hasn’t up till now,” Solna said. “I was thinking, if you wanted, that we could ask them if they’d train us in what they know. I mean, Nix said she didn’t want us to lose the connection we have to the Xah, but I don’t think we can just stay like we were. I think that was what the Enclave was doing wrong for so long. Well, that and killing people with the Force.”

“Yeah, let’s not do that shall we.”

“I think we can find a better path than that.”

“Together?”

“Together.”