50 Fall, 511 AV Seodai had a lot going on. Hell, didn't everyone in Denval? Times were crazy. Everything was crazy, what with the murder of a child and all that had followed. It was unthinkable, really, that something so cruel would happen from within. Denval was a fierce and strong place, but as each young boy grew and learned to wield arms and was indoctrinated into the thought processes that kept Denval strong, he learned that the threat was outside. Denval was something like an enormous family within the walls, a place that was good and safe to grow and learn. The murder had shaken that, somehow. And though Seodai was pulled in a million directions, he had days where he couldn't get away from it. The chink in the armor, the glitch in the system. Bala was his fortress, his patron god and his beloved. He spent his days in constant prayer and praise and, when his attentions were divided, his attentions usually shifted to Syna. He knew all of the lore that went along with Viratas and Aquirus - what Denvali didin't? He felt proper respect, but no special connection with either. Sometimes, though, he felt comforted by the thought of Denval's long past. Sometimes he liked to go to the chapel and sit in the quiet pews. He liked to gaze at each stone, lovingly and intentionally placed, and imagine that the gods really were involved. That they did care. That they were somehow watching over them. Today was one of those days. A heifer had given birth out of season, and the pitiful thing she had borne had bleated only once before it passed. A bad omen, Seodai was certain. It reminded him of the child Denval had lost and, altogether, did much to subdue his mood. He had slipped away from the farm just as the sun rose and walked the dusty trail that led him to the chapel. The grounds were lovely, and sometimes he invested the gift Bala had given him into pruning and encouraging the vegetation that lived there. Today was not such a day. Today was for his own, private sort of mourning. Today was for his own awkward prayers. It was quiet as he approached, and he was met with the same amiable silence when he entered. The promise of peace lured him in, though Seodai knew that this sort of peace almost never lasted. |