“You’re wasting your time with prayers? Now!?”
“I am not.”
“You’re kneeling in front of an altar to the God of the Night with your eyes closed and sacred words on your lips. If that’s not prayer, then please explain what you imagine you’re doing, Meluna?”
“Not wasting my time. Nor is it strictly accurate to say I am praying.”
“The world is burning Meluna. There is a monster eating the sun and the people are watching a host of gods losing the fight against it.”
“I am quite aware of that.”
“Your prayers will not be enough to sustain them. We’ve received word from Twin River Junction, the town rallied behind Lacsandros and, when he fell, the town burned.”
“They didn’t burn. It was much worse than that.”
“Then why are you praying? Do you want to burn as well when Night falls too?”
“I have no interest either burning or suffering the fate which befell those in Twin Rivers.”
“Then stop praying.”
“I have. Quite a while ago.”
“Then get up, it’s time for us to leave.”
“And go where?”
“The other Common Accessors and I are going to lead our families to the new temple site in Helsguard. It hadn’t been sanctified yet, so there should be no godly influence there.”
“Are you of the belief that the gods exist only in their temples Kulon?”
“Of course not, but their temples are were the fires started.”
“They weren’t fires. And they won’t be constrained by any temple or town. Once the End of All Things finishes devouring sun, it will devour everything else as well. All of the town, all of the seas, all of the mountains. Nothing will be left. Not even the memory of us.”
“You would have us abandon all hope then?”
“No. There is still hope, it’s just a slim and unpleasant sort of hope.”
“Then you are praying to find a better path we may follow?”
“I am not praying. I am searching.”
“For what?”
“For the strength to follow that bitter hope to a day when the sun will shine again.”
– Blessed of the Night Meluna being interrupted while receiving her blessing during the Sunfall
Theia’s response to what might be the most important question I’d asked in my entire life was to turn and look at me quizzically.
“Sorry to break it to you, but this whole ‘Blessed’ thing doesn’t come with a salary, just benefits,” she said.
“What?” I asked, sounding just as confused as I felt.
“I don’t work for anybody. Not even Umbrielle. We’re more partners.” She was teasing me, and I was a moment away from strangling her into giving me the answer I needed.
That was not going to produce the results I needed though.
Also the odds that I could catch her were low even if I was being generous with comparing my skills to hers.
So I took a long, slow breath before resuming.
“When you chose to search the garden for divine fragments, was that your idea.” Always best to start with verifying assumptions.
“Sure.”
I could see she knew what I was asking and was choosing to torment me anyways.
“So you decided to hop into the Garden and loot the place one day, just because?”
“I mean it wasn’t exactly like that.”
“She was the one who chose to go, though there was a great deal of discussion before hand,” Zeph said, apparently tiring of Theia’s attempt at playing stupid.
“Thank you. And who was it who initiated those discussion, if I might ask?”
“We were throwing around a lot of ideas,” Theia said simultaneously with Zeph saying, “The Chosen of Night.”
I smiled and nodded my thanks to Zeph. She was a delight to deal with. Especially since she seemed willing to annoy Theia in my stead.
My delight faded as I thought through her words though.
“Wait…the Chosen of Night? Isn’t that you?” I asked, turning back to Theia.
“Nah, Zeph’s talking about my boss,” Theia said.
“I thought this wasn’t a job. How do you have a boss?” I asked, more confused than I’d been since I started asking questions.
“It’s not a job, but trust me, when you meet Meluna, you’ll understand.”
“Meluna is the Blessed of Night, Theia here is the Blessed of Night’s Shadows,” Zeph said.
Why there was a distinction between those two things or separate gods to cover those domains seemed bizarre to me.
Gods with especially large or fundamental portfolios would often have aspects which were more focused on specific elements of their domains, Draconia said just for me. I had several before the fall, though they’re lost to me now.
So were they like servants then?
Not at all. They were pieces of myself. Not so powerful, at the time, as I was, but more easily able to act on their pieces of the domains which I held sway over.
So Umbrielle is…?
She is Night, but the part of Night focused on the shadows night brings. Night had many other aspects, many of which I quite enjoyed the company of.
Many but not all?
Night’s Haven for Thieves aspect and I had a fairly intense professional rivalry, and Night’s Dark Hours of Despair I found difficult to interact with.
But they were all Night? I mean it sounds like you had different relationship with different parts of the same person?
I did, except for the part where we weren’t ‘people’ as you think of them. In our previous states were were far more vast and far less defined than we are presently. It would be closer to say that water and fire have different relationships when a kettle is put on to boil compared to when the water is used to douse the fire’s flames.
“Draconia filling you in on things?” Theia asked and I saw I’d been standing there chatting away inside my head for a few moments longer than I’d intended to.
“Yeah. Where is Meluna now though?” I asked. “We need to talk to Little, but I think Meluna will be the one to have the answers we need.”
“Oh. Good luck with that,” Zeph said. “You get answers from Meluna under precisely one circumstances.”
“When I feel you need to received them,” said the lady who stepped out of a pale shadow inside the palace.
I turned to look at her and could feel…nothing?
Don’t worry, she’s here, Draconia said. That’s an old trick of Night’s.
“So does that mean I’ll be getting my answers, or are you here to make sure no one gets them?” I asked.
I hadn’t been afraid of the dark since I was a little kid, but something told me I had good cause to be wary of this woman.
“That very much depends,” Meluna said, drifting more than walking towards my right side as though she needed to appraise me from various angles.
“She has a part in this,” Zeph said. “A part you engineered for her.”
“Engineered? Engineers do work. I did nothing of the sort,” Meluna said.
“But you are why I’m here, aren’t you? Without you, I was destined to die in the Garden.”
“We have no destinies. Not anymore.”
“Maybe not, but none of this has been random. I’m here through my own choices, but those choices could never have happened without the support you sent to me.”
“I’m support now?” Theia sounded rightfully offended.
“What? You don’t think you helped me with stuff I could never have handled on my own? I didn’t say you were only support, just that without your help I could never have escaped the Garden. I would probably never even have questioned Sasarai’s teachings enough to try.”
“And now you are questioning everything it seems?” Meluna faded into another shadow before reappearing on my other side.
“Oddly, I have fewer questions now than I did before. One of them which has jumped to the top of the list though is, do you really want me sharing what I know?”
“And what proof would you have to share in support of your suppositions?”
“Does that matter? Once I ask them questions, the rest will begin searching for the answers no matter what proof I can or can’t offer.”
“Well it seems you have me quite boxed in then, don’t you? I suppose after the centuries of hiding I must now reveal all that I know, because someone at last asked politely? Obliquely? How would you characterize your request?”
She faded away as she asked and I knew she was behind me when she reappeared.
“I would say that if I am asking for something no one has asked for before, it is because I am still dancing to the tune you laid down for me.”
“You give me too much credit, I have never played any instruments. Not well at least.”
“What is it you wanted to ask her? Something about Dyrena?” Theia asked.
“I should hope not,” Meluna said. “That is a particularly dangerous name to conjure by. There are seven Lords on this world who would most unhappy to hear that aught of her remains.”
“Sasarai’s not precisely a threat anymore is he?” I asked, somewhat concerned that the count of Neoterics had dropped to seven without him.
Not that I wanted the count to be anything greater than zero, but from what I gathered there was some number below which the remaining Neoterics would simply make a mad dash for the remaining power and war like the world had never known would break out to finish up what the Beast had started long ago.
“The First Tender is the second most dangerous of threats at the moment. He has more reason for unreasonable actions than all of the rest put together.” Meluna was creeping up behind me and I couldn’t feel a thing. Draconia’s enhancements of my senses did nothing for me. I wasn’t even sensing a general air of danger, despite the fact that I knew I could be a single breath away from Meluna deciding to end me to ensure Dyrena’s plans weren’t disrupted.
“And what is the most dangerous threat we face?” I asked, wondering if she would claim the title for herself.
“We are not yet rid of the End of All Things,” Meluna said from a few inches behind me. “Until that is gone, nothing else will come close to being the most dangerous of threats.”
“I’m not sure Sasarai has the power to claim second place. You know what I did already, don’t you?” I said, listening to her creep backwards.
“I should like to hear the tale in your own words,” Meluna said.
I nodded and launched into a sketch of the events we’d been through, trying to note each point with gratitude where Theia either saved me or gave me something new to ponder.
Predictably at this point, Meluna caught a case of the irrepressible giggles when I got to the part about taking the divine fragments.
“My apologies,” she said. “There are the thing we hope for, and things we imagine might occur, but then there are the delights of things going catastrophically wrong for our enemies and it is challenging to remain unmoved on those occasions.”
“Wasn’t that the reason you sent Theia in to find me though?” I asked, my elaborate theory seeming more rickety with each chuckle that escaped Meluna’s lips.
“You were a contingency, a much hoped for contingency,” Meluna said. “Had I been aware of the actuality of your existence rather than simply the possibility of it, I would have insisted on including myself in the party which ventured into Sasarai’s abode.”
“Then, wait, how did you know to have all of the help that we needed waiting for us?” I asked, growing more concerned with each moment.
“As I said, contingencies. No single plan ever survives its initial implementation. The value of a plan is in the failure states it identifies and creates mitigations for.”
“Such a shame you weren’t able to account for all failure states you might encounter,” Sasarai said as the sky filled with Death Birds.
