Timestamp: 14th Day of Winter Tanroa's river was carrying Mizahar closer and closer to the darkest day of the year, a steady and measured pace that could not be turned or avoided by any sort of mortal artifice or magic. It was the time of year Alses least looked forward to, the month or so where even the most marathon of sleeping schedules failed to compensate for the yawning hours of darkness, leaving her little recourse but to suffer the indignity of her mortal chain for however long it took for the light to return. There was, however, still a little time before those dark days, for which Alses was grateful, staying out to savour every last second of her celestial form. She knew in her head that the days when she could spend seventeen, eighteen hours a day delighting in her true body would roll around once more, but each winter as the nights grew longer and colder, her heart still ached with every shortened interval between the sacred and the profane. Her thoughts turned more and more towards divinity as winter's icy cloak drew close about the celestial city, perhaps because of the introspection that her Konti form brought, focusing her wandering and disparate thoughts, the tangled labyrinth of many lives, onto a single silver thread of consciousness. Dwelling on her state, and the state of the world in general as the nights drew in, was probably counterproductive at best, and outright damaging at worst, but it seemed inescapable in the unaccustomed silence of her mind. Needless to say, winter was the time when she got most of her theorising done, relatively free from the distractions of memory and experience of past lives across the centuries, and also the time when she was least pleasant to be around, snappish and irritable at the bells she was forced to spend as a washed-out ghost, drifting through the silent world and almost blending with the snowy surrounds, her natural Konti paleness only enhanced by the lack of sunlight that form, that chain, felt. As ever at this sort of time of year, shortly after the first snowfall turned Lhavit into a sparkling city of icy light and fantasy, Alses roused herself from her customary chair right beside (indeed, almost in) the Respite's main fireplace, tearing herself away from the delicious warmth and smell of woodsmoke from the fragrantly-crackling logs to venture out into the clear, crisp winter days, the air cold and sharp as knives in her throat. Indeed, venturing out into the mountain chill was not to be taken lightly – and certainly not for someone who adored the heat as much as Alses did; very much a product of her creator. Whatever else one said about winter – and there were many things Alses could think of, most of them uncomplimentary, it did afford a certain stark beauty to the Unforgiving mountain range all around the city. On the vertiginous slopes, both distant and near, the clinging ranks of pines and other hardy conifers were solemnly garbed in their wintry senator's robes, whilst lesser deciduous trees in the precipitous valleys had succumbed to the plummeting temperatures, leaving them with only bare branches to shake in defiance of the winter storms. Every mountain currently wore a jaunty cap of snow, as indeed did many of the roofs of Lhavit itself, the sturdy skyglass and cedar beams shouldering the extra weight with nary a groan of protest, the city's many buildings now becomingly framed with fringes of icicles that sparkled and shimmered in the abundant light. The immense bowl of the sky overhead, powder-blue, clear of any wisp of cloud and achingly cold, coupled with the crisp clarity of the air made it seem that, if one could get enough height – like the lone bird that was circling lazily over Lhavit, probably basking in the city's heat – it would be possible to see all the way to Zeltiva. Alses suddenly felt an irrational, irrepressible urge to take wing and somehow fly up into the heavens, to just flit away from Lhavit and her responsibilities, to pursue the summer back to the places where it gloriously never-ended, to the deserts of Eyktol and the glittering cities there. Leaning on the railings of one of the bridges, a soaring expanse of carved skyglass that would deposit her safe and sound right beside the Sun Temple, glowing lemon-yellow up ahead in the gathering morning light, that was a very persuasive thought. Alses smiled fondly, thinking about bathing in deliciously hot water, thick and lazy with scented oils and with flowers floating on the surface, a daydream of the pinnacle of absolute indulgent luxury. The comely masseuses and their many arms were a bonus, too. Alses shook her head somewhat regretfully, bringing herself back to the here-and-now. Lhavit had no pretty masseuses with shiny jewellery and naughty smiles – well, none that she'd seen, anyway. A pity, that. There were compensations, though – she felt so much closer to Syna in Lhavit than anywhere else on Mizahar that she'd travelled to (and on the course of her journey from Zeltiva to the celestial city, she'd had the opportunity to see quite a few places), the city was a safe and reliable haven where her kind were welcomed and respected, and Lhavitians could mix a mean cocktail to boot. Her footsteps, operating completely on automatic as she daydreamed her way through the journey, had not steered her wrong, taking her completely across the grand expanse of the Helios bridge and setting her comfortably at the threshold of the Temple of the Sun. Syna's light always seemed richer, fuller, more immediate here, every square centimetre of her skin delighting in the continual rain of radiance. The lake was a painfully-bright oval, a rippling mass of molten gold in the abundant sunlight, and the skyglass was almost as brilliant, reflecting all the warm colours of Syna, a bright and reassuring beacon even in the very hammer of winter. Alses drew strength every day in the autumn and winter seasons from the steady, blazing presence of the Temple on its promontory. She knew little enough of the other Ethaefal in the city, even the other Synaborn, to not be entirely sure of whether this was true for others, if they drew some measure of comfort from the sign that the good times of Spring and Summer were just around the corner or not, but she was fairly sure she'd seen the Day Lady, Talora, paying her respects more than once, in the very early dawn before most were even awake. They'd not spoken, of course – communion with a god whom one had known and then lost was an intensely private affair, and in any case Alses was slightly nervous about idly conversing with one of arguably the most powerful people in the city she'd come to call her adoptive home. For all its gilt and skyglass, its elaborately-capitalled columns, its friezes, frescoes, paintings and bas-reliefs on the outside, the focal point of worship was simple; distractions from communion were discouraged, for obvious reasons.. Gold was in evidence, of course, but the designs were straightforward, timeless, really, serving to focus sight on the great flame blazing eternally in its bowl and the circles of swaying, chanting, skirling Taiyang priestesses, immaculate in their robes and always dancing a paean of praise to Syna, high above. Their focus was absolute – they were the sisters of the sacred flame, their duty to pay homage to Syna and to keep the eternal pyre burning, a continual focus of worship. When performing their duties in the Temple, they were fanatically single-minded, their auras solid and straightforward, unwavering in thought or purpose. Outside of that, of course, on feast-days and at celebrations, they were just as vibrant and lively as any other living thing, but absolute conviction and purpose drove them whilst inside Syna's holy place. As it should be. |