“Successor? No I’ve never considered who my successor will be. You are aware that we will be immortal do you not Dyrena?”
“Need I point out that the gods are immortal as well, Vaingloth? Or that our entire scheme hinges on the assumption that said status is not an irrevocable one?”
“Pah. All the more reason to have no successors available.”
“You would have your vision fall to ruin when you do? But what of your special people? The ones you will shepherd into our new age?”
“I detect more than a hint of sarcasm in your question, Dyrena.”
“Why Vaingloth? When have I ever been sarcastic? Surely not about this enterprise. Why it shall place us into a new and eternal golden age will it not.”
“The eternal gold age shall be our eternal golden age. We will be its masters and, unlike the foolish deities we must contend with, we shall not allow for conditions which might unseat us, having learned from the openings we will use.”
“Perhaps. That is the structure of the scheme I suppose. But I must also question what should happen if we were to grow tired out of our positions? At some point, however far in the future that might be, certainly we will have done all that we care to do. Best I think to have an idea for how a transition of power might be arranged, lest we be caught cobbling something together when our interest in this world has waned to its utmost nadir.”
“Best not to, I assure you. Constructing an avenue by which our powers may be inherited will do nothing but provide an incentive for those who stand to gain that inheritance to hasten it’s coming.”
“But certainly if we attempt to hold our power close forever, there will be those who nibble away at it, or find the fragments we leave laying around to use against us?”
“I, for one, will be leaving none of my fragments in reach of anyone save myself.”
“We shall need to certain Draconia is among the first defeated then if you intend to assemble a hoard of your own.”
“I have Sasarai working on that as we speak.”
“Intriguing. Shall I offer to review his Sacred Geometeries?”
“No, I’m sure…okay, I can’t say that. Yes, please do. We’ve all seen his work before.”
– Dyrena convincing Vaingloth and, indirectly, the other Neoterics of the value of creating secret hoards for the divine fragments they meant to harvest.
Mt. Gloria looked weird. A sprawling city laid out around a mountain wasn’t so different from the Garden but the almost complete lack of anything growing was just unnatural. How were people supposed to live without space to grown food?
The former Lord had specialized farm areas built beneath ground and then piped in light and heat to them, Umbrielle said.
“That seems like a lot of work when he just could have…” I started to say and then ran into a limit to my thoughts of having grown up in the Garden.
What could he had done without his own Mazana to provide light and heat?
“It’s worse than you’re thinking,” Theia said. “Whatever you have to say to Little, I’d suggest not mentioning ‘Kindling’ to her.”
“Why?”
“That’s what Vaingloth used the people of Mt. Gloria for,” Theia said.
“Wait, he burned up people to heat the city for people? How? That could never work?”
He wasn’t burning them to heat the city. He had a portal to the plane of Fire for that. He claimed he was burning people to keep the portal open when he was just using that as a means to harvest their grace, Umbrielle said.
Hmm, similar to what Sasarai does in the Roots, though a bit more direct, Draconia said.
Somehow the death of nearly everyone in the would-that-was had less impact for me. They were too remote, and too numerous, their deaths too unspecific for any of that to evoke more than an intellectual level of revulsion. The idea of lighting people on fire was one my imagination was disturbingly capable of providing imagery for however, and the connection to the deaths in the roots of the Holy Tree made them too real for me to brush aside.
“I’m glad he’s dead,” I said, my stomach fully turned at the thought of how awful the Neoterics could be.
We are as well. An unmistakable voice said as I flew in close enough to be fully illuminated over the city.
The Sun was speaking to me and her splendor and majesty was nearly overwhelming.
Sola! Draconia was as delighted as I was overwhelmed. How did so much of you survive!
Oh, I very much didn’t, Sola said. What you see now is the result of a lot of work reassembling the bits of me we could find. My Blessed is rather exceptional in that, and so much of this is thanks to her.
“Can we meet her?” I asked. “I think I may have set some things in motion that are going to impact, uh, well everyone.”
Things? Such as? Sola asked.
“I claimed all of the divine fragments the First Tender, err, Sasarai held as my own,” I said. “He’s going to be coming for the ones that are here, and so are the others.”
You…you took little Sasarai’s stolen fragments from him? Without him knowing? Oh! OH! And you’re the Blessed of Draconia, so he can’t….
I wasn’t aware that the Sun was capable of breaking down into gales of crippling laughter. She tried to speak a few more times but wasn’t able to get any words past the fit of giggles that gripped her.
“We should probably head to the castle,” Theia said.
I nodded, which she could at least feel if not see directly. It made sense that we’d find the Sun Queen in the highest room of the palace after all.
And there again I was mislead by my time in the Garden.
We landed on the highest open terrace I could find only to discover that the Sun Queen was not in residence. I had to shift back to my Sylvan form in order to fit on the balcony that had seemed the most promising spot, which left Theia clinging to me until she was sure of her footing. The temptation to switch back to dragon form was oddly strong but I pushed it aside. As…comfortable as that might have been, we had work to do, and danger to warn about.
“You’re here to see Little?” the fox woman who spoke appeared in a rush of wind which could not have been coincidental.
“Hiya Zeph,” Theia said. “Meet our newest Blessed. Jilly, Blessed of Guardians and Treasures, meet Zeph Foxwind, Honor Guard to the Sun.”
I noticed an important distinction in the introduction there. Zeph wasn’t the Honor Guard to the Sun Queen. She was an Honor Guard of the Sun itself.
I had no idea what a Foxwind was, but Draconia’s gifts to my sense were telling me in no uncertain terms that the woman I was looking at was not of the same mortal stock as the rest of us.
“A pleasure to meet you Blessed Jilya. You seem to have amused my mistress greatly, but I imagine your haste stems from a more pressing source?” For all the speed with which she’d joined us, Zeph was remarkably calm and unhurried in her speech.
“It does,” I said. “Would I be able to speak to the Sun Queen? I think she needs to hear what we’ve done and discovered as soon as possible.”
“The who?” Zeph asked.
“Oh, I’m sorry Jilya,” Theia said. “Little doesn’t go by any titles like that.”
It was Zeph’s turn to be amused, though unlike Sola, she constrained her mirth to a wry little smile.
“No, no,” Zeph said. “I’ll be happy to take you to the Sun Queen. She is going to be delighted with that title.”
“Um, I’m sorry, I just thought…” I wasn’t sure what I thought. Except that of course anyone in charge of a city must have some suitable grandiose title to go along with it.
Damn you Sasarai.
Clearly the heaviest of his many crimes, Draconia said.
You too? I asked, affronted at the betrayal from my own god. Affronted and, of course, comforted. If Draconia was willing to joke about something then it couldn’t be that serious.
I can ask her to return to the palace? Sola said, having regained control of herself.
“I can get her,” Zeph said.
Or you could all remember that I can hear you as well, Little said, her voice distant but not impossibly so. I can head back in a few minutes, let me just wrap up the discussion I’m having with the builders here or they’ll be stuck for days.
“Why don’t we come to you?” I suggested.
That would be ideal if you could, Little said. There’s a prayer group that I wanted to check in on and I think they would be delighted to meet a new Blessed.
“I know where that is,” Zeph said. “We can meet you there.”
“We should walk,” Theia said. “This is the first city Jilya’s had a chance to really see.”
“I think we need to hurry,” I said, feeling the impending approach of the Neoterics like a new doom about to collide with the world.
“We will, but I think I know what you’re looking for now, and walking the city is going to be something we need to do to find it.”
I was about to argue when I stopped to consider who Theia was blessed by.
As the Blessed of Night, or even just a specific aspect of Night, also known as the god who saved the world by hiding it from a power beyond even divine might, Theia should have been able to sense where our quarry lay as a simple part of her domain.
Kalkit as well, as the Blessed of Secrets, should have known of its existence the moment they received their first gifts.
So how had I worked it out?
Well, my god is better than theirs.
I’m not supposed to approve of that sort of thinking, Draconia said in an approving tone.
To be fair, I couldn’t sense what we needed to find, but I knew we could find it somewhere in Mt Gloria.
And Theia’s words made sense. Even letting Little know what I’d discovered wasn’t going to change the need to explore until we proved out my hypothesis.
“Lead on!” I said, falling into step behind Zeph.
Theia took up a position beside me and bumped my shoulder with hers.
“Bet you didn’t think you’d wind up here when you started looking for me?”
“I didn’t know here existed, so, yes, that’s a safe bet,” I said.
“No. I meant working together,” she said and bumped me again.
I almost stopped at that, the whiplash of recalling what I’d been thinking and feeling almost snapping my brain.
“I wouldn’t be here without you.” I think I whispered the words.
“Looking for an apology?” Theia asked, her voice light with a hint of challenge in it.
“What? No. I mean I wouldn’t be alive if it wasn’t for you,” I said, a new idea running through my head.
Dyrena had left plans in place to guide the course the world would take when she “left”.
I know Helgon was convinced she was dead, and that might be true, at least for some definitions of ‘dead’. Given that he was dead and yet still quite chatty and involved in the world’s current affairs, I wasn’t convinced that death meant quite the same thing to them as it did to the rest of us.
The important thing though was that Dyrena’s plans for the world had to include responses to someone doing what I had done. That it had been possible for me meant it was inevitable that someone would have managed it eventually.
But I’d only been in a position to take Sasarai’s divine fragment collection because Theia had been with me.
And for as good at hiding as I was, I’d also been moving closer and closer into Sasarai’s orbit with my training and my insistence on being a pure and perfect member of Mazana’s clergy. I’d been wildly successful in hiding my Blessed state but the moment Sasarai had been given reason to really pay attention to me, I would have died then and there.
And Theia had saved me from that.
No. She’d done more than save me.
I was finally who I really was because of her.
But it hadn’t been her idea to be where she was.
She’d been sent there.
That did stop me.
“Theia,” I asked. “Who are you working for?”
