"Answer to a Prayer" Log Date: 6/14/01 Log Cast: Kedar, Faanshi, Khalid Log Intro: It is a Faanshi shattered in heart and soul who has returned at last to Atesh-Gah following her long sojourn among the Ettowealona. She has been safely escorted into the court of Thalia Tritonides Khalida by Geridan Kentari Rashid, who brought her back from the Sylvan lands -- and Geridan has reported with her on the circumstances surrounding the death of the Varati man Mehul, who had been revealed as the murderer of several Sylvan graisha. The Varati man Mehul, who Faanshi had loved, and who she saw killed before her very eyes. Sunk into a fog of emotional detachment, Faanshi knows deep inside her that something is wrong with her. And so she does not protest when the Maharani immediately perceives that she is not herself, and declares that she needs to realize she is in need of help. But still she cannot banish the images of blood and violence from behind her eyes -- or the weight within her heart of all the other losses she has suffered, brought once again into sharp relief by this latest, most acutely painful death. Desperate for guidance, desperate for wisdom, and desperate to understand how she can continue to bear it if she must suffer loss after loss, pain after pain, death after death, the shudra healer has come to spend the rest of the day within the Temple of Khalid Atar. There she has immersed herself in prayer, unaware that for once, an answer will come to her prayers, not only from a young Lion of Fire who owes her his health, but also from the one she has been taught to revere ever since she was born... The God-King Himself. *===========================< In Character Time >==========================* Time of day: Night Date on Aether: Monday, June 15, 3908. Year on Earth: 1508 A.D. Phase of the Moon: New Season: Summer Weather: Clear Skies Temperature: Hot *==========================================================================* Inner Sanctum - Temple of Khalid Atar - Atesh-Gah - Haven Sweeping, majestic arches dance courtly waltzes amongst the high ceiling, grand domes spacially created with simplistic, artistic values. Towering to their full heights and supporting such enormously extravegant architecture are golden columns, their girths tickled with feathered etchings. Central to the entirety of the temple is a shrine of offering, risen upon a marbled dias and laden with treasures and incense. Sleek, hand-crafted tiles spread their glimmering rainbows of fantastic imagery as a uniform compilation to create each wall within this lavish temple. A veritable history unfolds from one brilliant grouping to the next, figurines created with an assortment of florid hues to ultimately depict Khalid Atar, from babe to God-King full grown, and the tales of His triumphs thereafter. In a deep enclave just to the right of the entrance, nested beneath an miniature archway boasting of vibrant flame etchings, are two typical items for daily worship. Lined in perfection and upon a hip-high table of mahogany is an array of prayer bells, their shiny, silver surfaces untarnished and well-defined with tiny lettered blessings. Filling the remaining space are mounds of woven, patterned pillows devised so as to aide in healthier joints. A veritable heaven is not complete without the lush cultivation of thriving plants, those which clamber and sprout forth, wrapping with caressing leaf for a resoundingly peaceful conclusion. (OOC: +view is enabled here.) Contents: Kedar Offerings Obvious exits: Antechamber Ornate Staircase Courtyard Kedar Kedar is not tall, for a Varati, just short of six feet. However, the lack of height is more than made up by the well-proportioned muscles, which make his frame not so much bulky, but give it both strength and agility. The speed, precision and vigilance of the man's movements banish any thought of weakness and harmlessness. Unlike the rest of his bronzed, scarred and hardened skin, the man's face is smooth and flat, with slim features. His black hair is cropped short in a very pragmatic way, leaving little way for fashion or beauty. Contrasting to the dangerous appearance of the warrior are the big brown, slanted eyes. They reflect his young age and still show innocence and lack of experience with the ways of this world, yet also reveal self-confidence and firmness. Betraying that light of innocense is the inverted star of burned white flesh, etched deeply into the smooth dusky skin of his forehead -- the mark of a criminal convicted by the Delphi. The control Kedar shows over his motions cannot hide the youth that remains in his expression. Surely, this lad has not seen his twentieth summer. His clothing is entirely black, lacking any sort of adornment: A loose cotton shirt with a big 'V' going down his hairless, sculpted-like chest and a pair of tighter leather breeches are completed by matching leather boots, reaching up to his knees. The only part that breaks the darkness of this outfit is the sheathed falcare at his hip whose pommel is crafted into a lion's head, the sign of an Agni-Haidar. Faanshi At first glance, some things about this individual are easy to discern. The garments worn are those oft seen on Varati females, yet, this figure stands at only 5'9", small for a woman of that race. But woman she clearly is, if the glimpses of slender hands and feet and of the shape beneath her flowing garb are to be believed. What portions of her skin are visible are a warm shade of gold. Shy or perhaps simply trained to submissive silence she must be, for she rarely raises her eyes to anyone unless specifically bidden, and she speaks so seldom and so softly that it is nigh impossible to determine the quality of her voice. Only the most astute of observers might notice that every so often -- perhaps when she thinks no one is watching -- this silent one peeks with furtive curiosity out from behind her veil at the world at large, with eyes set at a slight un-Varatish slant in her face, eyes the color of summer leaves. At the moment she is clad in red and gray garments of Varati make, a voluminous sari wrapped about her slender frame and almost concealing the simple choli and skirt beneath. She is veiled, though perhaps those who know this maiden might glean that the translucent silver-gray gauze before her face is not quite the usual sort of veil she wears; it admits glimpses of her mouth and the shape of her chin beneath it. So too it is with her hair, which is unbound for once and which falls about her shoulders and back in a loose coal-black river of curls. Although she comports herself with perfect propriety, her tone and demeanor those of a respectful servant, there is nevertheless a certain strange detachment about the girl -- a remoteness to her tone, and a look to her eyes that suggests some fundamental portion of her being is not in residence behind them. Under the watchful eyes of its guardians, Kedar takes a closer look at the collection of offerings. Khalid enters the warmth of the temple from the courtyard beyond. Khalid has arrived. Not that Atesh-Gah in general is not vigilantly guarded at all hours of the day and night -- it is, after all, the residence of the most important Varati in Haven, not to mention that of the Amir-al Himself when he chooses to visit this candala city -- but the temple in particular is _always_ under watch. It is holy ground, and therefore must be guarded at all times. Faanshi knows this -- but for once, the prospect of the Atarvani seeing her enter the place has caused no fear to enter her heart. Dismissed from Thalia's court, she has come to this place in search of a quiet corner in which to kneel. Hours have passed in which she has remained, gazing with empty eyes up at the sacred altar where many offerings have been placed in honor of the Hawk of Heaven. But only when afternoon slides into night does the shudra stir. With the coming of night, the temple is comparatively deserted, only the presences of the occasional Atarvani here and there hinting at signs of life. No one disturbs the shudra in her borrowed clothes of Clan Rashid as she approaches the place of offerings and kneels there, reaching into a small bag she has brought with her, and pulling forth small white candles. One after the other, until she has a dozen before her. Being a guard himself, there's hardly a place Kedar fears to enter within Atesh-Gah -- or perhaps even outside. Yet he always felt inappropriate at the temple. A place ruled by others, a place where Agni-Haidar are accepted to watch, but still do not belong. It's not the first time he enters, but the first time he chooses to come by his own will. Hard, metal-capped boots upon polished marble announce the entrance of the off-duty Janizar. His kin at the door hardly spare him a glance, and he avoids to give either of them a closer look. His eyes flicker only briefly, nervously through the near-empty hall, before focusing on the ground in front of him. Unconsciously, his steps take him towards the space for the offerings, right where Faanshi is sitting. A dozen candles, plus one. Faanshi lifts each consideringly, and as she does turns her attention to the many offerings that have been placed before the altar already. Space is a precious thing, and she is not about to disturb any gifts or rida scrolls that have been left for the Atarvani to take and relay to the God-King, or otherwise use in his service. But there is a small open space at the foot of the altar, and into this Faanshi lays a final item from her bag: a tray of fired clay, upon which she begins to arrange the candles. It would not do, after all, to have melted wax spill upon the sacred floor. Behind her, then... footsteps? Her heart seems empty and cold to her, and after the Maharani's advice it does seem to her that she should not feel this way... but there is nothing wrong with her senses. Summer-green eyes peek over her shoulder, and as she espies the young Lion approaching, she turns where she is already kneeling to incline her head to him. Eyes still on the richly decorated ground, Kedar is unaware of who exactly he is approaching. And not really noticing the gesture of respect given to him. "Atarvani," he addresses the half-breed neutrally, his voice calm and controlled. "I came to seek spiritual guid..." Only now, he raises his gaze, and notices just who he is talking to. The admissing is abrubtly interrupted. "You are not an Atarvani. You are the shudra healer." The assertation is made in the same calm, flat tone as before, lacking any sort of either reverence or superiority. "I did not want to disturb your prayers." Even though that's exactly what he did. If it's an excuse for his prompt action, it doesn't sound like one. "Yes, Imphadi," the maiden replies, her voice as soft and earnest as always, just as deferential. Yet tonight, there is something different. For starters, she keeps talking, after that habitual 'yes, Imphadi'. "I am she. You have disturbed nothing... it is all right." And secondly... though her tone is not flat, per se, there is nevertheless a calmness about it that rivals Kedar's own. A remoteness, a detachment. But there is also a solemn, childlike innocence to it, as she pauses in her arrangement of the candles, never looking up, her slender form seemingly patiently at ease. "I have paused my prayers to make my offering, but I will cede my place to you if you need guidance as well. It is right that the Atarvani should attend to one of the Amir-al's own Lions; I can wait." Kedar raises one hand, indicating to Faanshi that she may stay where she is. "You are faithful. That is good." The emotional distance in the Janizar's tone is replaced by one of serene satisfaction, derived from the knowledge that the world is alright again if the shudra keep their faith to the Eternal Flame. Eyes showing hardly more maturity than those of the kneeling girl wander over the candles, studying their arrangement silently. Finally, the Lion explains, "Continue your prayer and offering. Agni-Haidar are warriors. We offer Khalid reverence in our fashion. Our altar is the battlefield. Each dead enemy an offering." He takes a long breath, then adds, "We do not require guidance by the Atarvani." Usually. Something is clearly disturbing the young soldier that he came here to seek what he just denied. Something out of the ordinary. And the fact that he admitted this weakness to a mere servant doesn't make things better. One of the great temple doors opens on gathering dusk, then swings slowly closed once more; for that moment, a lone, cloaked figure is framed there. It is plunged in darkness thereafter, but the soft echo of bootsteps mark the figure's progress until he materializes at the edge of a warm pool of torchlight. Diminutive for a Varati, this one; he is all but lost beneath a fall of rough, brown cloth, but the strong outlines just visible within his looming hood suggest a male of the species. A line of seven... a line of five. And one set aside on its own, closest to the altar. Faanshi stares down at them with her absent gaze, then moves her dainty hand to the seven, separating off a pair on the left and a pair on the right, leaving three in the center. "Thank you, Imphadi," she murmurs. "I have tried all my life to be faithful, even when it is hard." Is she conscious of the oddity of how the young warrior is addressing her? If she is, it does not show in her lightly veiled face, and neither does she display any sign that the fact that she is actually speaking to him in return can be considered odd as well. She moves now to take flint and tinder from her bag, patiently and unhurriedly working to make the first small spark with which she may light the candles she has brought. "The Lions are truly blessed. From what I have been honored to witness, there must be great comfort in knowing that His flame is strongest for you, His hands your hands, His strength your strength." Watching the religious ritual with the silent curiosity of a child who is just witness of something he could never understand, Kedar remains attentive, one step behind the shudra. He does not interrupt her as she lights the candles, but replies once they're all lit. "Only hardships can strengthen true faith. And lead to strength." The youth doesn't seem pertubed by explaining his own beliefs to this girl he just randomly stumbled across. And doesn't seem to mind the conversation as well, even if his answers still sound like they've been read out from an Agni-Haidar cookbook. "We are his tool. His sword, his fist and his shield. Nothing more, nothing less. As such, we do our duty." The newcomer is briefly noticed, but Kedar's attention doesn't linger on him. The simple, brown garb hiding the figure marks him as some random, unimportant civilian looking seeking prayer -- in the warrior's view, at least. Not quite as observant as the Janizar, for the stranger has not come close enough to Faanshi to suggest to her that he, or perhaps she, is someone from whom she must accept an order or someone to whom she must yield her place, the shudra keeps her attention centered upon the tiny flames she kindles on the tray before her. As each springs up it casts a miniscule sphere of light into being and sparks off golden reflections in the shudra's deep green eyes; she stares down into the flames now, perhaps entranced, perhaps seeing something visible only to her within them. "The Imphadi Warlord of Messala told me that I would be strong because part of my blood is Varati," she says then, musingly. "How do you know when you are strong?" Kedar's assessment of the newcomer seems to be borne out by events. The cloaked man makes his silent way to the altar's side, not far down from warrior and supplicant; after a few murmured words, deep-voiced but indistinct-- a prayer of some sort, perhaps-- he sinks to his knees, the rough weave of his garb gathering in folds upon the temple's pristine floor. With his head lowered, the man's face is largely hidden from view. Even though Kedar is looking at the same flames, his flat expression shows that he cannot find anything deep or interesting about them. Any significance is lost on the young warrior. Must be a chick thing. "If I am not strong, I fail. And die. I am alive. Therefore, I am strong." It almost sounds like Descartes had some influence upon this Agni-Haidar's logic. Despite the absurdity of the explanation, the angry mark of burned flesh upon his forehead bears silent witness to his belief. With distant attention, he tries to make out the words of the prayer, but spares the believer otherwise no heed. Faanshi slips a glance sideways at the young warrior, her brow furrowing evr so slightly, just a hint of distress somewhere beneath her mask of tranquility momentarily getting through. Kedar's logic sounds intoxicatingly simple... but things have never been quite so simple for her. Is there something she's missing, some piece of wisdom that those of pure blood possess, that she does not? Or is his assurance borne of his exalted position? Somewhere within her she feels the tiniest flicker of bemusement that she is speaking so freely with him... and yet, her mistress _did_ tell her to seek guidance. Is it coming to her in the form of this young Lion? "Imphadi," she asks then, shyly, "may I ask a question of you?" Kedar's eyes narrow for a moment -- nobody has ever asked him before whether they could ask a question. Fellow Agni-Haidar just demanded that they were answered or things get done, and others simply did when he got them that something needed to be done. A flicker of confusion shows in his gaze, but then he nods silently to the devout servant, gesturing with his hand to proceed. Despite the fact that he cringes inside to answer a question a servant could ask. He was not made to talk or to guide. He was made to kill. "I know that we are supposed to rejoice, when someone passes on to their next life..." Even now, as she bobs her head gratefully in acknowledgement of the permission granted, Faanshi does not look up to meet his eyes. Instead she looks to the altar, her face still starkly impassive beneath the dapplings of candlelight that glimmer along her veil. "But when the Agni-Haidar see their brothers fall in battle... do they miss them?" "No. There is no reason to mourn or miss." The answer is firm and clear. "A brother who has fought to last to do his duty has died in glory and will be reborn in glory. A brother who has failed in battle does not deserve to be missed. We have to act to continue our duty. Above all else." Kedar's eyes drift off momentarily, focusing on a single flame. The memory of a friend he killed during training deep in the rocks Masada comes back to him. Memories of their closeness. Does he miss what happened between them? Does he miss the trainee Akbar? He was too weak to survive the training. Kedar was strong enough not be overcome by feelings of grief. And survive. No regrets. Without batting an eye, without diverting her attention a fraction of an inch from the thirteen flames before her, Faanshi says softly, "I have seen death, and death, and I try to tell myself that the Lost Ones are all gone to their next lives and there is nothing but my duty. But the Queen-Maharani says something is wrong with me now, and my heart is as ashes within my breast. I cannot tell if she is right, or if I am getting stronger." One heartbeat, two, and the maiden's gaze settles upon the candle closest to the altar. "I suppose that I will have to pray harder." Kedar's gaze lowers to the kneeling figure in front of him. "She is right," he asserts in a tone leaving little room for discussion. He doesn't even bother to reason for his assertation. It's clear, isn't it? She is Queen-Maharani, and Faanshi is her shudra, so she has to be right. "Do what she tells you to do. And you will be what you should be." Wasn't he coming into the temple to seek spiritual guidance? It looks like the positions got reversed, somehow. "She has told me to pray," Faanshi agrees, "so I will pray tonight, and ask the Amir-al and His Holy Mother for wisdom and clarity." She has learned to stop asking for peace -- it hasn't come yet, and her exhausted soul no longer expects such a gift in this lifetime. Still... the blanket of remoteness about her is not all-enveloping, or else perhaps the girl is more observant than she looks, for she does also earnestly append, "I will include you in my prayers, Imphadi." And pray that he receives the guidance he claims he wasn't actually here to seek. Kedar gives Faanshi a long, bewildered look. It just begs the question _Why would I need a prayer from /you/, a shudra woman?_. But he says nothing, having said all there is to say. Explanations of his own experiences can come another time, and perhaps from somebody else. Without a bid of farewell to the shudra he has just extensively talked to, he turns around and stalks off to the exit in the precise, acute manner befitting for a warrior. She is given no farewell, and neither does she expect one. Nor, even, does Faanshi quite believe that her humble prayers would bring guidance to one such as the Janizar... but still, she had sensed _something_, and a remaining ember of concern beneath the shroud about her thoughts counsels that an extra prayer for him couldn't _hurt_. She does not watch him go -- but she does dip her head in silent reverence, spending the time punctuated by his departing footfalls in winging a prayer forth to those ears she hopes can hear her, that that young Lion might find what he pursues. The cloaked man keeps his place as Kedar makes his exit, although his head does come up; firelight catches the most outward angles of a hard visage, and bright eyes look out of shadow at the tales told in elaborate arrangements of tile upon the temple walls. Only when the soldier has left the sacrifical altar does he murmur, mildly, "If I may, Imphada..." It does not seem to sink in immediately for Faanshi that the softly voiced 'imphada' is meant for her. Only after a moment or two does the shudra girl lift her own head ever so slightly, peeking in the direction of the cloaked figure, a passing wraith of something faintly resembling bemusement marring the unnatural calm of her expression. "If you address me, Imphadi," she says in that childlike gravity of voice, even appending as it occurs to her that this individual might have mistaken her for someone else, "I am but a shudra... do you require me to move?" The other gives a brief shake of the head. "No." His voice is rich, resonant; although he does not speak loudly, each word reaches the ear with ease. "But I... couldn't help, overhearing your discussion with the honored Janizar. Is it your contention that we ought *not* to grieve the loss of those who we know have lived well, because they will have their reward in the life to come?" It seems to be a question of academic interest for the stranger. Her sungolden brow crinkles up again, delicate dark brows knitting, as Faanshi realizes distantly that an opinion is being sought of her. This is not the first time -- but it has happened so infrequently that she cannot help but peek again to the stranger. Seeing nothing but a cloak, she lowers her gaze down to the thirteen candles once again, the blanket once again pressing down upon her thoughts. An opinion has been requested; she will give it. That's easy enough. "I do not know, Imphadi," she answers without hesitation. "That is part of what I have come to pray about tonight. No one has ever counseled me about it." Another small nod follows, visible as a shift in the set of the stranger's voluminous hood. "The honored Janizar counsels contentment in the face of a life lost nobly," he returns, without any clear disapproval. "But his is a warrior's faith, appropriate to one who deals in death. And you are not, I think, a warrior." For a moment, he is silent. "*I* believe that the grief of loss is incident to our mortal state. Surely the knowledge of the life that will be is some comfort, but we have lived with the men, the women, who *are* and *were*; and *those* lives are no more, whatever may wait beyond the final shadow. We live and feel in our own brief moment. Why should we lay waste to those feelings because we also know of Atar's higher truth?" The shudra girl shakes her head, by way of agreement of the cloaked one's assessment of her. "I am but a woman," she murmurs, "and I do not like fighting very much--" Memory spikes through her, three forms locked in a dance of death. Superimposed over them, a sword strike through a dark neck, the dull thump of a head striking the ground-- And her eyes go empty again, while she asks in her oddly guileless, oddly distant tone, "But what if they are candala, Imphadi?" A slow breath escapes the recesses of the stranger's hood, somewhere between weary and sad. "Those who have not lived well will not be reborn well," he opines, with no suggestion of anger or self-satisfaction. "And for them we must feel a double grief: woe that we have lost them from our lives, and woe that they have lost their way in their own." He turns his head just slightly, enough to consider the shudra with one luminous eye. "Should we not mourn the candala? They who of all the world are most forlorn?" "I want to," Faanshi murmurs in reply, "because mostly, only candala have been my friends, but then they keep dying, and I have begun to wonder if I have angered the Most High or His Holy Father or Mother, because I made friends with them. And some of the Children of Fire, too, but now they have also been struck down." Her words come out of her without a trace of a stammer, without a change in that absent tone, starkly innocent against the hollow gaze she rests upon her candles. "I want to mourn, but it seems as if I have done nothing but mourn since the day the Amir-al sent Imphada Kiera to free me and now there is nothing left in my heart. And I am very confused, and no one will tell me anything, even though I have been praying for hours now." "You have not been punished, Faanshi," the stranger returns, peculiarly confident. With the cloaked man's sympathy runs an inescapable undercurrent of bemusement. "Do you suppose yourself to have been at the nexus of all of these lives? That the gods have made these men and these women--" a brief gesture at the candles-- "live and die in accordance with the purity of *your* faith and conduct?" A brief shake of the head. "All men find their own fate. Mourn them, but do not succumb to the arrogance of blaming yourself for their loss." The halfbreed girl does not have much in the way of experience with the world -- but she can safely say that she has never before had anyone accuse her of even the danger of arrogance, much less the actual sentiment. She actually blinks, wondering for a moment if she has actually managed to draw the attention of one of the Atarvani at last -- and wondering, too, that this man appears to know her name. "I," she begins, and for a moment or two that is all she says, while her thoughts just halt entirely on the peculiarity of the notion that something _she_ has done might have been overly prideful. That would be a switch, for she who is accustomed to being told that she should have more pride than she does. But something flickers in her bleak expression, suggesting that the idea is taking hold. "I had not thought of that," she admits then, humbly. "Imphadi, are you Atarvani? Do you know me?" And then, lifting one hand to either side, Khalid takes down his earthen hood. The trim, golden crown of his office is lacking, but the God-King's strong features are unmistakable; eyes of the deepest blue, verging on the violet of the hottest flame, meet the shudra's hesitant gaze. And then he smiles. "I do know you, Faanshi," the god returns, the depth of his tone almost palpable now. "And you know me." Cloth flows up from the ground as Khalid rises. "You have had great pain in your short lifetime, my servant," he murmurs watching her. "Do not fear it. Do not permit it to kill your soul. Embrace it, and let it pass." As he rises -- as she sees the One who has stopped to speak with her -- Faanshi forgets to breathe. She also forgets, at least for a brief fleeting instant, that she is not supposed to meet the eyes of mortal men, much less the Hawk of Heaven; in that instant, eyes of summer's green are caught and held by fathomless azure. _Then_ she remembers, and she presses herself swiftly to the floor, brow to her hands-- But for once, she does not tremble. And within her she feels a stirring of surprise, some for the fact that the Son of the Dawn is here to speak with _her_, but even more for the fact that her voice has not died in her throat as she distantly hears herself answering, "Forgive me, Amir-al -- but I do not know _how_...! Your honored wife says that there is something wrong with me -- but if there is, I do not know how to heal it...!" Two heartbeats, and then she adds, her voice small against the resonant depths of the other's but a prayer from the very core of her soul nevertheless, "Help me...!" Khalid bends slowly over the kneeling creature; one dark hand emerges from the folds of his cloak to settle lightly against her shoulder. "You have always been strong enough to feel deeply," he explains, with every appearance of assured calm. "It is at the core of your healer's soul. What is your art but that of taking on another's pain, and then purging that pain away? What is its engine but your love of your fellow creatures?" The hand lingers a moment longer, then draws off. "Lose your passion, and you will lose your gift. Understand your gift, and you will understand the way back to your pain. Embrace it as you would a death-wound. Fill yourself with it. And then let it go." The strongest of shields could not stand, if lightning fell from the sky to destroy it -- and so too does the shroud around Faanshi's thoughts begin to fray, at the touch of the God-King's hand. She begins to tremble, her eyes squeezing shut. And yet, she still somehow manages to keep her voice, a breath of wonder pulling it ever so faintly away from the plaintive tones of a lost child... and further towards a young woman whose struggle into adulthood has been a daily trial by fire. "I have... lived... for months and months with nothing but pain in me, Amir-al... how can I fill myself with it _more_?" "Because you cage it. Because you clutch it to your heart." A touch of sympathy colors the divine voice, now, running beneath eternal calm. "Where would your art be if you held the wounds of the years within you? If you carried them like a burden upon your back, heavier with each eldritch working, from cradle to grave?" Gentle remonstrance follows. "Heed all that I have said. Take it. Live it. But allow it to pass *through* you. Let it go." She does not want to tell the God-King Himself that His words seem to her to be more easily said than done -- and as soon as that thought enters her head, the maiden struggles to squelch it. As Kedar had uttered that the verdict of the Queen must surely overrule the verdict of her shudra, so too does Faanshi's heart strive to adhere to the unshakeable foundation of existence that if Khalid Atar says it, it must therefore be True. "It will be done, Most High," she whispers. There is doubt it in her voice; she cannot hide it. Right now, here in this place and before this being, she could not begin to hide it. But the doubt is not for her God-King -- merely for herself, and how she can possibly hope to carry out His bidding. No one has ever supposed that the commands of a god would be either comfortable or easy. Still, Khalid Atar offers the shudra Faanshi a faint, parting smile, a shallow nod. "Trust in your own strength," is all he answers, turning to make his way across the immaculate floor towards the exit. "The strength of your soul, and the strength of your faith. And you will prevail." And then-- with as little fanfare as he arrived-- the god is gone. *==========================================================================* Postlude: For the longest of times, the shudra maiden remains prone upon the floor, stunned to the fundamental core of her being by what has just befallen her. There is no fire in truth along her skin, but nevertheless to Faanshi it seems as if her shoulder burns where the Hawk of Heaven has touched it. And at last, a thought penetrates her daze. _Twice He has touched me..._ The memory of the sword that took Mehul's head from his shoulders is still etched in flame behind her eyes, but another recollection rises up to challenge it: the Amir-al, every inch of His mighty form radiating divine rage as He swept down from His throne. To come to her, to touch her with His hand and call her His faithful birr. Tonight, again, He has come to her. _The least of His servants... and yet He has come to me in darkness, to bring me back to light..._ Somewhere behind the shroud that has twined itself around her thoughts, a spark ignites. It grows inexorably, sweeping across her soul until she feels scoured in fire. Gratitude is the first thing she feels, she realizes dimly, even as she hears her own voice whispering fervent prayers of thanks to Holy Ushas for moving Her Son to the act of mercy He has committed this night. With it comes the pain she does not want to let herself feel, threatening to paralyze her, threatening to choke the very breath in her throat. But because Khalid Atar has commanded it of her, she makes herself rise, to gaze once again upon the candles she has lit for each of her Lost Ones. Her hands tremble, but as if in a dream they move, to find parchment and pen, to write out the names that echo through her consciousness. Milane. Thomas Murako. Ianthe. Samein. Sunset Tide. Craft. StormBearer. Hakan Adham-Numair al-Behzad. Delilah Kirseem alam'Zulyat Messala. Ulima Jaroun Sarazen. Lyre Talespinner. Mehul. _Let it fill you like a death wound--_ Her memories of them all swell through her thoughts until it seems that there is no space within her for anything else but grief. But bit by bit, letter by letter, she writes their names on the rida scrolls and burns each in a candle flame, whispering a farewell to each behind her veil. She does not cry, for there is no room within her for that either, not with the fire that has scoured her heart. Hours pass. And when the sun begins to rise anew, she has but one candle left. With hands that still move almost of their own accord, Faanshi draws the sari from atop her head, baring ebon locks to the light of the single tiny flame. She brings forth the dagger called Hornet to cut through the braid that confines her tresses, till her head is free of a weight that to her seems somehow to match the weight that has slipped away from her spirit. With reverent care, she curls the braid around the candle that remains. With reverent care, she writes out a final rida scroll, to consign her severed strands to be burned in honor of the Amir-al. _--and let it go._ And at last Faanshi leaves the Temple, stepping into the burgeoning light born of the glory of Ushas's ascent in the east -- and lifting summer-green eyes turned clear and clean to meet the morning. [End log.]