Mod NoteWe need to move on. I'm sorry about the delay. I was waiting for Treavery to be completed, but we'll just keep going and I'll move into another direction.When the nuit's hands touched the Goddess' palm, there was a flare of light - brilliant and pure. Malia could feel herself wrenched from the present and dunked into the waters of time. Life disappeared around her. The temple vanished. Its walls bled into a wash of color that in turn dissolved into a water so pure, so filled with power, that even something that wasn't quite alive like herself could sense it. It swept her away from her sense of 'now' and she was pulled backwards through the current, as if crossing time itself. She could feel the palm beneath her hands, warm and solid, but there was no other sensation of Tanroa being with her. The experience lasted only what would equate to a breath or two for someone living, but to the Nuit it seemed as if it took most of her life - and beyond.
When it was over, they were standing in a room. It was elegant with high sweeping columns that were gilded in gold and decorated with chunks of lapis lazuli that made the whole place look deep dark sapphire and gold. Elegantly woven drapes swept down from the walls, framing oversized antique furniture. There were three men in the room. The first two looked identical, twins for certain, though they acted differently. It was odd, almost as if she recognized one, which would be insane because from the style of the room and the atmosphere, a building such as this would not have simply existed post Valterrian unless it was built up recently and through large acquisitions of wealth. The second of the two identical men, unlike the first one she almost recognized, was fully recognizable to her, though the face and the amount of life the man had in him left her no doubt he was alive and not nuit. It was her Master. A twin. There was a third gentleman there, someone that Malia recognized right away as being something inhuman itself. She could see the vileness about it, even if he was looking as normal as a man. Being inhuman itself had taught her the signs to recognize similar 'offness' in other creatures. It felt like a god though not so powerful, as if it was fragmented away from something older more heinous. The three men clasped hands, and the third smiled a cold smile which might have made Malia cringe.
The first man spoke, the one that looked so much like her master but wasn't - and yet was familiar in his own right - as if she knew and loved him anyhow.
"You were right. Everything you said to do worked wonders. Look at this place? We've built up an empire of textiles, dyes, and have cornered the market on trade. The whole Medinis family has thrived. Both of us have taken wives, and Jovian has a new daughter, Malia. We couldn't have asked for anything more..." The second man smiled, her master, Jovian. She now had a name and a hint of what he was to her.
The third man spoke up.
"Yes, I know. I've been watching you. And now is the time, I think, for me to come collect my debt. The one you both agreed to years ago when you first sought my advice." Jovian spoke up.
"Yes, Bravin is right. Thank you very much for your advice. You've brought us a long way, Kahnikivas. And since you've waited so long, we now have coin aplenty to pay our debt to you." The man, Kahnikivas chuckled.
"I am not interested in coin." He said sternly.
"You think I wanted coin? Coin is meaningless... coin has absolutely no value in my world." The creature said, laughing.
"It will just make you a slave to the world, and that lot in life is one that will not suit you." He said gently.
They were interrupted as a maid brought in a service filled with tea. Malia recognized her as memory flexed. The woman used to sing to her sometimes when she tucked her into bed as a child. In fact, the whole place was starting to look familiar. As she looked around, the men kept talking, though Malia didn't pay much attention to what they said because she couldn't. Suddenly, as if a dam burst in her head, memories flooded back. She grew up in Karjin. It was a wealthy place of merchants and mages. It was so unlike Syliras where she was now. Karjin was a city where industry boomed again, directly after the Valterrian emergence. Life was re-established, especially commerce, and her family was a prominent one in the city. They were fabric makers. They owned a huge factory where weaving was a way of life. And their dyes were sought after world wide. They had shades of color no one else had, and they guarded the secrets jealously. Medinis fabric was renowned. She remembered, even as a child, playing around the vats that soaked silk and linen, dying it bright red or blue or a shade of black so perfect it rippled with the undertones of night. She remembered, all in a jarring instant, the silkworm house where the caterpillars spun their lovely wares.
Her childhood had been magical, filled with the wealth of being someone who belonged to a place that they mastered. The only shadow had been her father's death. She grew to adulthood loving fabrics, their weave, their texture, their coloring. She knew industry secrets, recipes, formulas. She was standing in the middle of her legacy, an empire her father and his twin had built from nothing, based on the advice of a stranger, a nuit. Only, she hadn't grown up with a father. Jovian had died when she was still an infant, an carriage accident on the outskirts of town. Her uncle, Bravin, had raised her, stepping in to do for her mother ... Rose... when her father was no longer around. She hadn't known, however, that Jovian and Bravin were twins.
She focused back to the conversation. Jovian was yelling now.
"No, you can't have Malia. This was not part of the deal." Her father said, vehemently. It was apparent by every tense muscle in his body that he was protective of his daughter. The man just laughed.
"You signed the contract and willingly took my advice. It is your duty to provide for me what I want." The creature said.
"And that was a firstborn. I had hoped for a boy, and one of Bravin's body for he carries more raw talent than you do Jovian. Not that it matters at the moment. Malia is useless to me now... I had no idea she was still an infant. Time passes differently for us, you see. I will return when she's older, perhaps in eighteen years or so, and collect my due. She will be important, and used to do great good, I promise." His smile flashed bright, but there was such a sinister about it that even Malia could feel the threat.
Jovian spoke up again.
"We never signed over a child! We signed that we'd pay you if your advice proved helpful." He said, reaching for his own contract copy that was in the elaborate desk by a large bank of windows. He dug it out of the desk, opened it up, and began reading.
"See? It said nothing about..... wait... THIS WAS NOT HERE BEFORE...." He said, gaping at the man as Brevin pulled the contract from his hands and read it over.
"No, indeed it wasn't. It was to be coin. This has been changed." The creature said nothing for a long time then shook his head.
"Nothing has been changed. You read what you wanted to read back then when you were living on the streets at scrounging out a life after that fire. You should know better than to make deals with strangers offering you gifts. I must have her and I must have her willingly. I have obligations too, and a Master myself. I will return, in a few years, and collect her. I suggest you enjoy her while you can. For in eighteen years, she'll be mine. This is how its been done, how its always been done, and there's nothing you can do to change it." He said, a hint of sympathy in his otherwise hard eyes. And then he turned and walked from the room.
He left the two brothers alone with themselves, staring at each other in stunned silence. Jovian spoke first, finally.
"We need to find out more about him. What he is. What can stop him... what hes capable of. We have years, but it might take at least that long. He's not taking my daughter." The man said, his brother nodded.
"We'll get to the bottom of it. We'll find out why he wanted her so badly... coin should be enough. We have it in plenty. We'd have never signed something like that, never. All we've ever wanted was a family... security... wealth to make sure they have everything they need." He said, softly, not knowing this would be the result.
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
Tanroa turned to Malia then, still with her, whether the nuit had realized it or not.
"Your father and brother stumbled upon a trickster creature almost as old as time itself. For such creatures, it is not the payment that matters, but the devastation it brings upon the lives of those the creature touches. It builds up empires just to see them fall. Had I not known better, I would have thought the fall of Suva would have been brought about by one such monstrosity. He did not need you for payment. He did not think you were older. He came early to ruin your family's life for eighteen years. Every word pouring from his honeyed lips is a lie. To your family, to the world. He is one of Rhysols creations. And he targeted Brevin and Jovian because they are special among men. Their pain is sweeter to his kind than most because they project out their thoughts, their energy, their emotions. You are a lot like them, Malia, even if you know it not. Your father, from that very moment, began his search for answers and a way to combat the creature. He was a nuit within the year. And later, after the time had passed, he came back and made you one so that you would not fall prey to the monster. Brevin never had kids and his wife was taken by an epidemic that caused a bloody cough five years later." Tanroa said softly, her words no consultation at all.
"Their empire never crumbled though. His advice was that good. It still exists today in Karjin with the rest of your family, who were useless to the creature. He wanted the twins bloodline, and yours as well. And now, sadly, it is lost to the world forever. But your spirit is not. Nor will it ever be unless you are careless." She said gently.
"Kahnikivas destroyed your family. He enjoyed doing so. And now your father hunts him. He is gone from you because he did not want you harmed... but make no mistake... if your father fails in his quest but angers Kahnikivas, there will be no mercy for you." Tanroa said softly.
"It is not my war, but I can do my part. The creature has powers, abilities, insights that others do not. I would give you the same thing, child, via my own mark." And it was then that Malia's palm burned, the hand touching the goddesses.
"So that you may begin to fight him a little, perhaps help your father, and be forewarned of the future by having an idea of the past. Treavery will grant you control of time, at least in a small ways at first. Use this to help yourself and others... for Rhysol touches the world and you will cross paths with those that serve him much like Kahnikivas. You might even run into Kahnikivas or your father again, and if its the later he will need your help. She said, then paused, letting Malia take one last look around her childhood home even as the brothers began planning their next moves - one that would leave her father dead in less than a year.
Then after a moment, Tanroa took Malia back to the temple, back through the river of time and stood before her, watchful, waiting to see her reaction to everything she'd learned.