The noise he made was supposed to be a laugh. Alas, the partially consumed beverage on the edge of his throat turned it part sneeze, part snort, and part spit. His shoulders convulsed with amusement as he moved to cover his hand with his mouth. Like a child scolding another, he interjected, “Rhysol’s not a She. She, in the song, is The Voice. She makes all the decisions. Like a queen, but better. She’s His lover,” he cooed, as if it were some rumor to ridicule, “He gives her powers.”
If Bob had sat beside any other man, even one more drunk than the Lark boy then, he might have been told to shut his mouth and keep his ignorances secret. But Victor, the stupid but lucky fool with a name that granted him some semblance of amnesty from the city’s more trivial offenses, would give no such warning even if he were of sound mind. He did not entirely believe that mere blindness to the God of Evil would cause a person any harm, but if it did, he wanted to find out.
He decided he deserved another taste of ale before he had to answer the rest. A sigh carved a playful frown on his lips. “Petching foreigners,” he muttered as he moved the drink in idle circles against the glass that contained it. “Don’t know anything about anything.”
A drawn-out pause kept Bob waiting, filled with the cheerful humming of ”...ol’ Rhysol’s Ravok!” as the boy struggled to put more words together in his head. When he did, he was amiable; his greater knowledge granted him a happy sense of superiority. He finally removed both hands from his glass to gesture conspicuously. “Yeah, they respect Him. He’s only the God of Everything! Or at least everything that matters. Darkness, and magic, and minds, and power.” Victor did not quite know what Evil was; at least, not enough to pick the word out of his bewildered brain. “And Ravok, of course. He’s the one that makes Ravok the wealthiest, luckiest, happiest city in all of Mizahar. And he gives the Chaon powers. That’s what makes them Chaon. Some people are Chaon, and some are not. Just like some people are priests, and some people are ‘Stryfe, and some people aren’t.”
He stopped a moment to wrap his hands around his mug again, but this time thought to speak first. “But everyone knows Rhysol. He’s the biggest god there is.”