“That was the thirteenth Non-Agression Proposal we have shot down. At what point do we determine that there are no valid and divinely enforceable options to guarantee peace between our cities?”
“We have not ruled out all of the possibilities yet Vaingloth! Or do you want us to wage war on each other like the savages we’re going to be leaving behind?”
“Of course not Sasarai, but I feel that you are missing a crucial point. Our need for a divine mandate for peace is so vanishingly small as to likely be irrelevant. With a dozen of us, each of even vaguely equal strength, and in control of all this world’s available grace, there will be almost nothing for any of us to gain through aggression.”
“We have eternity to think about though. Will ‘almost nothing’ be enough of a guarantee to see us through ten thousand million years?”
“It may have to be I’m afraid. I know you and Vaingloth have been the genesis of the plans we’ve reviewed so far, but the more I see, the more convinced I’m becoming that there is no artificial mandates which can be guaranteed to constrain us. We will be powers the likes of which this world has not seen since it’s inception. Unlike the gods we know, our power will not be spread widely but rather concentrated in beings who will be laws unto themselves.”
“And should those laws come into conflict Dyrena? What then?”
“Oh, I’m certain they will. As Vaingloth says though, what would be worth risking against eternity? For minor conflicts, I assume we can come up with some form of game to play. Perhaps I gain a Blessed among my people who would benefit Vaingloth. Would he attack me for some perishable an asset? Of course not. He’s too wise for that, as are we all. No, I imagine we might meet and devise some form of amusement to determine the outcome. Or perhaps arrange for a swap of some kind. There are as many methods of resolving conflict as there are of initiating it.”
“Though it pains me to admit it, I believe Dyrena may be correct in this case. There are other avenues of research we could pursue, other geas we could investigate, but our time is not yet limitless and there is as much peril in binding ourselves as there is in relying on one another in perpetuity as we must rely on each other now.”
“I feel we are so close to an answer, but I have to confess, I have felt like that for each of the last seven drafts. Perhaps you and Dyrena are right Vaingoth. Perhaps our accord cannot be based on divine strictures but rather our innate trustworthiness.”
– Sasairai and Vaingloth addressing the gathered High Accessors with the final step of the scheme to leave open the possibility of destroying another Neoteric, just as Dyrena hoped they would.
The wastelands were not a very welcoming place to be it turned out. I mean, it wasn’t like I hadn’t known that. I’d been pretty much counting on it, and the fact that there were plenty of forgotten ruins where a clandestine meeting could happen which would be difficult to observe.
That, among a number of other things, Little had helped me out with. And Meluna. And Theia. And Kilkat. And a lot of others.
In case it wasn’t clear, my original plan was pretty terrible.
My current one wasn’t in the neighborhood of “good” but I had enough people helping me that it seemed like there was some hope it might work out. Even better, there was at least a small chance to I would survive it!
I don’t find your survival to be an optional part of this plan, Draconia said. She was annoyed with me, understandably so since I’d been cut off from her so completely while wrapped in Little’s darkness that, from her perspective, I’d been obliterated.
Also there was the small issue that I wasn’t telling her much of what Little and I had talked about.
I’m just trying to be realistic, I said. I’d really prefer surviving this too, but even if I don’t, we can still manage a win here.
Since all most people could manage, even with their utmost effort, when opposing a Neoteric was to be a momentary and minor annoyance, having the chance to make a real difference was something I had to believe was worth it.
I’m not sure any of this counts as realistic, Theia said, speaking silently.
Could the Neoterics listen in to divine conversations? Normally, it would be a safe bet to say they could but we had two blessings to prevent that where they only expected one.
I’d say you could back out, but I don’t think this plan works without you, I offered making the regret in my mental voice clear.
Few plans do, Theia said, adopting a lofty air, Backing out sounds no fun though. I’d of curiosity if I didn’t see how this was all going to turn out.
You may die of curiosity in either case, Umbrielle said. She was the least happy with the plan, in part I think because she had the least to do, and had to accept that she would fail.
I believe we’re here, Draconia said and I saw her mark, or what was left of it emblazoned on the floor of the room we’d arrived it.
Ruins come in all shapes and sizes. The fallen world had been developed in some many places that, even with all the destruction of the Sunfall, there were a lot of sites which still remained mostly intact.
I hadn’t thought we’d be able to find a temple to Draconia, but my brother had suggested meeting in one might lend some support to my idea, and Little had known of a spot that wasn’t too far outside Mt Gloria.
The journey there had been interesting, for lack of a more terrifying word. With Theia’s company though, we’d been able to move under enough of a cloak that without the physical presence of a Neoteric in the area, we wouldn’t be detectable.
How did we know that?
Having divine wisdom to draw on was incredibly handy, but even Umbrielle admitted that the Neoterics might have devised means to see through the basic cloaking spells Theia knew. Had we been left with only that to draw on, I still would have insisted we try, but we had another resource to work with.
Kalkit.
The Blessed of Secrets.
You know what’s really horrible for an octet of God-Kings with powers unlike those ever seen before? Someone who knows all the things they haven’t let anyone else discover.
With Helgon’s assistance, we had a good inventory of what the other Neoterics were known to be able to do. Kalkit then filled in the blanks of what the Neoterics kept hidden.
It still wasn’t perfect. Kalkit didn’t know all of their secrets, they only carried a fragment of Secrets after all, but it was enough to plan around.
And that plan had led us to Draconia’s temple, which proved to be more about as closed and secure as I’d imagined it would be.
Down a long flight of stairs, and behind a door which had fortunately been left open (or was that more of Dyrena’s planning?) lay a room with hundreds of thick metal doors mounted into the walls. At the far end of the temple, a statue of Draconia rearing above a donation box stood on a low altar.
I’m not backing out, but there’s still time for you to reconsider if you want to, Theia said, which was possibly the nicest offer anyone had ever made to me.
I want to see this through. Maybe we’re caught up in some grand plan, but it doesn’t feel like that. I think all that was left was opportunities and what happens is about what we choose to make happen. And I really want to make this happen.
Was I letting rage guide me?
No. Of course not.
Rage was walking beside me, on a leash I held.
The leash was a little longer than usual, and Rage was expecting to dine well, but it wasn’t guiding me. Rage wanted to hurt Sasarai, and hurt him again, and then hurt him some more. For all the shame, for all the fear, for all the needless, senseless evil he’d inflicted on us, and for what we’d become at his urging, my Rage wanted nothing more than to hit him and keep hitting him while I had an ounce of strength left in my body.
Rage is kind of stupid like that.
I wasn’t going to hit Sasarai.
I was going too destroy him.
All I had to do, was be the girl I’d been.
It’s time, I said, nodding to Theia before she stepped back into shadows which concealed her from me.
With the dome of shadow we’d been moving in still covering me, I called on the Seeing spell my instructors had tried to teach me what felt like a lifetime ago.
It was just a flicker of a spell, hold for less than a blink of an eye. Too short for anyone to notice.
Or at least anyone but a Neoteric, and even then they would have to be paying extremely good attention.
Sasarai arrived less than a breath later.
He wasn’t actually there of course. It was just a projection.
So I couldn’t have punch him anyway (as I said, rage is stupid).
“You called me at last,” he said, misplaced confidence oozing out of every syllable and I nearly exploded with glee. I had a script I wanted to run though but his reactions had been something I’d been worried about working around.
“Yes First Tender!” I said, sliding my old and ill-fitting mask over myself as easily as a lifetime of practice allowed. “Is this a secure enough location to give you the divine fragments?”
“You…?” That wasn’t what he’d been expecting me to say, especially not with the meek and subservient tones a proper Sylvan was expected to speak in. Semi-predictably though, the lure of his missing power bludgeoned all other thoughts aside. “Yes. Give them to me immediately!”
In a sense that was the perfect response. I was still annoyed though. I’d come up with a dozen different scenes to lead him into incriminating himself by saying something even obliquely related to that and Sasarai, the idiot, just blurts out exactly what I needed him to? Seriously? How did the other Neoterics work with him? Why did anyone follow him? And why, in the name of all the fallen gods, had I ever been fooled by him?
I’m an idiot. There’s no other explanation. Or at least a recovering idiot.
And an idiot who was good enough at hiding her feeling that he saw none of that.
“Certainly First Tender,” I said and bowed my head low. “I must apologize too, I know it was part of the plan, but I cannot forgive myself for what I had to say to you in Mount Gloria.”
“Yes. Whatever. The fragment!” Sasarai said, manifesting more fully in the temple.
He didn’t need to be with me physically to take ownership of the divine fragments, but physical possession was a highly useful in retaining ownership, as he’d already learned.
“Which vault should I transfer them from first O’ Holy One?” I asked. It was easy to keep my head down and my eyes averted and a heroic effort of monumental proportions keeping a smile splitting my face like a melon.
“Vault?” Sasarai asked, finally understanding that my warning about leading him into a trap had nothing to do with luring him to a temple where Draconia’s power would be at its peak.
We couldn’t overpower him. We all knew that.
So I was using Draconia’s power ‘in service’ to him.
Just like all of the other Neoterics would expect.
“Yes,” I said, allowing all of the nervousness I wasn’t feeling to put a quaver in my voice. “We are secure here aren’t we? I can give you all of the fragments we took from the other’s vaults. Isn’t that okay?”
“You took…?” It was a delight beyond what any rageful fit could have given me to watch as Sasarai put the pieces together.
“All of the Divine Fragments held by the lesser lords. The ones which should belong to you. You said they’d be focused on me and I tried to be what you asked. Did I do well enough? I know the others you sent out have been successful. All of the vaults are empty now. We have all of the fragments of the gods.”
