Summer 42, 513 AV
Mark by overlaying mark.
Wren pulled the charcoal over the paper, twisting it into a circle. In his apartment room in Ravok, there were few that would deign to disturb him. He connected the lines, frowned, and turned the paper over, starting again on the other side. Once again he worked on the basics of the glyphs he knew. He'd chosen today for the relative quiet of the outside. Not that it was any auspicious day that he knew, only that the usual dull roar of the throng had fallen away. Pausing over the paper, he brought down the charcoal and drew another circle, the basic shape of the glyph and its function to hold.
In a way, he had also been drawn, reshaped, erased and connected. The gods sought purpose for him, and in that purpose he was nothing more than a glyph sometimes. Pausing, hand hovering over the circle, he laid the charcoal aside and pushed away from the desk. Outside, the people passed by his window on their way to daily obligations. Each one was an unwitting tool for Rhysol, and even if they knew...what then? The people loved it here. The weather was perfect, the economy never struggled. Here, Rhysol provided everything his pawns would ever need.
The mark on his neck throbbed an appreciative thump, and Wren reached up to gently touch it. He felt nothing when he did, but knew the power within. It was hard, sometimes, to work out the way his various faiths intersected. Vayt promoted the strong over the weak, Rhysol promoted betrayal, chaos, and Sagallius called for manipulation and power. Putting both hands on the sill, he curled them just to feel the pressure of his skin against the masonry. For a long time he had devoted his life to the principles of whatever god marked him, whatever power found him worthy in their eyes.
There was something to that, wasn't there?
Deep down, he wanted to be loved and appreciated...the boy that shouted loud in the crowded square, only to be ignored. Sometimes it seemed he was less acting of his own accord and more acting in accordance with hidden lords. Would it not be more valuable of him to simply serve in the ways he best understood?
Following orders...was that really him? He'd called his alternate identity 'Hound' in Zeltiva...but what did that mean, really? It hadn't been anything at the time, but perhaps in some subconscious way, he had marked himself.
So who was he, really? What did he believe?
Turning back from the sill he returned the desk, drawing another circle around the other and a line that extended away from it in a wave...like a fuse, he drew it to represent the time it would take to trigger the glyph.
Had his life always been a struggle? In many ways, yes. He had endured shipwrecks, gods, and monsters to get here...and there was still so much farther to go.
Placing a hand against the glyph, he swept his Djed into the designs. First he filled the fuse with the djed that would slowly cycle, eventually triggering the reaction within the main part of the glyph.
He did believe in Vayt's philosophy. If Mizahar was ever to rise again, it would have to be on the backs of those that could carry it. Ravok wasn't actually all that powerful, no...instead it was sheltered, much like a predator might deign to let some of his prey live rather than indulging himself. The people followed because they knew nothing else...and in that way, Rhysol perpetuated Chaos as Order...a cunning illusion to be sure, certainly Ionu might have been impressed.
But those who deserved to live would be tested, and if they were found wanting...die so that another could take their place. Mizahar was a broken place, a world that had long stagnated. The only way to rebuild was to promote Order, but only in such a way as to demolish that Order that was already so strong in the land in the form of the individual city states.
He encoded the Void into the paper, a small one...nothing he needed to overtly worry about, and stepped back from it.
In a chime, the glyph would erupt...had he planned it correctly, and whirl into a small piece of the Void.
It would be a pleasant escape from such introspective thoughts...there was always something comforting about the nothingness beyond the portal.
Mark by overlaying mark.
Wren pulled the charcoal over the paper, twisting it into a circle. In his apartment room in Ravok, there were few that would deign to disturb him. He connected the lines, frowned, and turned the paper over, starting again on the other side. Once again he worked on the basics of the glyphs he knew. He'd chosen today for the relative quiet of the outside. Not that it was any auspicious day that he knew, only that the usual dull roar of the throng had fallen away. Pausing over the paper, he brought down the charcoal and drew another circle, the basic shape of the glyph and its function to hold.
In a way, he had also been drawn, reshaped, erased and connected. The gods sought purpose for him, and in that purpose he was nothing more than a glyph sometimes. Pausing, hand hovering over the circle, he laid the charcoal aside and pushed away from the desk. Outside, the people passed by his window on their way to daily obligations. Each one was an unwitting tool for Rhysol, and even if they knew...what then? The people loved it here. The weather was perfect, the economy never struggled. Here, Rhysol provided everything his pawns would ever need.
The mark on his neck throbbed an appreciative thump, and Wren reached up to gently touch it. He felt nothing when he did, but knew the power within. It was hard, sometimes, to work out the way his various faiths intersected. Vayt promoted the strong over the weak, Rhysol promoted betrayal, chaos, and Sagallius called for manipulation and power. Putting both hands on the sill, he curled them just to feel the pressure of his skin against the masonry. For a long time he had devoted his life to the principles of whatever god marked him, whatever power found him worthy in their eyes.
There was something to that, wasn't there?
Deep down, he wanted to be loved and appreciated...the boy that shouted loud in the crowded square, only to be ignored. Sometimes it seemed he was less acting of his own accord and more acting in accordance with hidden lords. Would it not be more valuable of him to simply serve in the ways he best understood?
Following orders...was that really him? He'd called his alternate identity 'Hound' in Zeltiva...but what did that mean, really? It hadn't been anything at the time, but perhaps in some subconscious way, he had marked himself.
So who was he, really? What did he believe?
Turning back from the sill he returned the desk, drawing another circle around the other and a line that extended away from it in a wave...like a fuse, he drew it to represent the time it would take to trigger the glyph.
Had his life always been a struggle? In many ways, yes. He had endured shipwrecks, gods, and monsters to get here...and there was still so much farther to go.
Placing a hand against the glyph, he swept his Djed into the designs. First he filled the fuse with the djed that would slowly cycle, eventually triggering the reaction within the main part of the glyph.
He did believe in Vayt's philosophy. If Mizahar was ever to rise again, it would have to be on the backs of those that could carry it. Ravok wasn't actually all that powerful, no...instead it was sheltered, much like a predator might deign to let some of his prey live rather than indulging himself. The people followed because they knew nothing else...and in that way, Rhysol perpetuated Chaos as Order...a cunning illusion to be sure, certainly Ionu might have been impressed.
But those who deserved to live would be tested, and if they were found wanting...die so that another could take their place. Mizahar was a broken place, a world that had long stagnated. The only way to rebuild was to promote Order, but only in such a way as to demolish that Order that was already so strong in the land in the form of the individual city states.
He encoded the Void into the paper, a small one...nothing he needed to overtly worry about, and stepped back from it.
In a chime, the glyph would erupt...had he planned it correctly, and whirl into a small piece of the Void.
It would be a pleasant escape from such introspective thoughts...there was always something comforting about the nothingness beyond the portal.