6th Spring 513 AV The Temple of All Gods Early morning He had not very much slept through the night. Some hours past reading that phrase of the journal, Lindel's mind surged. He didn't feel a need to revisit it, and so he had merely laid flat on the bed, arms crossed across his chest, hands hanging onto elbows with a futile intensity that seemed to slop still – he hadn't the strength to keep a firm grip long. He had figured his father, well step-father, didn't intend to speak of it at all. Lindel figured he had found it – how remains unknown still to the child – and read, and when he read what had been done to them made the decision to leave. The old dock worker said west, he had ventured west on the sea to peace maybe. The seas seemed to be serene, even in storms. It wasn't the sea that was ever harsh, merely its disagreement with the land. The tallest waves all curled and flowed gently. How incredible it was though that he'd just up and leave. Lindel was shocked he bothered to take his cane. Poor Lindel, he had always been taught and believed that true peace was here in Syliras, where the knights provide for every protection and those who dwell here care for one another. How that vision seemed to fade at times…heartbreaking. The spiraling of events had left him in a sort of stasis: the world kept turning, but why was it his own stopped? One day, that old man would have left him anyway, and all the same Lindel wouldn't have been able to do anything for it. It had been too soon. Or had it? His plans for today, his day, his birthday, which was planned to be merry and fulfilled had not gone as he'd foreseen. He threw away his old plans, evaded the bath, put on whatever cloths he could, and took with him a few coins, the brightest gold piece he could find among them. He had made a solemn pilgrimage to the Temple of All Gods, his steps resembling a half-hearted march as he forced his legs to get up from the bed, and to keep them moving from that moment on. True, he had been a man and was providing, but he had never been so alone. He needed guidance, some solidarity, maybe even a sign that all would be all right. He didn't need things to be wonderful; he'd settle for all right. For one, who knew, he was no man to demand of the Gods, he who had his own gifts and perhaps squandered them. Furthermore, he knew he could make do, but he needed something to branch off from, anything, just…just something. His soul was full of sorrow, and it weighed him into near misery and despair. He clung to stay afloat and was searching desperately for a life raft. His steps up to and into the temple were plagued by self-criticism and doubt. Maybe he had been punished for something? But again, who was he, a young man- no, but a boy – a boy to question the doings of Gods? It had been Lhex, the old man of fate who had set him on this course. Maybe he ought to pray to him, and beg his soul for forgiveness for whatever his trespasses and ask for a new fate. Could Gnora bring him to balance maybe, and help him understand what was happening? Things do happen for a reason, Lindel insisted upon it, and she would know. Rather, would he pray to Eyris and her wisdom? Might Akajia reveal to him the secrets of life, and why his was to be so? Perhaps her son, Nysel, would cure him of such wounds with a deep, forgetful sleep, though it might be so much quicker, so much easier, to call to Dira for an end. He felt no illness Rak'keli might relieve him from, and only knew memories better left forgotten; pray to you, Qalaya, he is not ungrateful, merely at an edge. Was there even then no God who could provide the proper care for this young man, easily still but a child in the eyes of many, whose soul had bet loose to the storm? Of course, it had been so clear to him, the face branded on silver at every turn, every corner. It was his foundation, and truly the foundation of many things. He had only feared he'd go unheard, or unanswered, for his God was dead and his son had left them. Perhaps that was a reason why so many bad things had happened, the storm still churning. Lindel paused at the doorway and bowed his body fully, on his knees, elbows, and forehead. From that fetal position he could feel the weight of the heavens upon him, their eyes staring through the walls, and all others. He began to think he might look strange submitting himself so helplessly to the divine, but he had a right to, didn't he. Didn't he? He stood up, shaky yet, and avoided the already evasive priest. He hadn't the nerve to look much of anyone in the eyes. Lindel went forward to the center aisle and stared up to the front altar. He walked with such undeserved shame. Abandoned as a child, detestably without much of a mother, and now his last tether to family had been broken. Was that the sign, to take wing? He wasn't ready though, and they knew that – they must have. Was it all so futile? No, stop, just stop. He had to keep himself together, he could do this. How strange that he felt so silly and worthless for a show of faith and selfishness as if no such things had ever been done before. By all the Gods, there were gods for murder, trickery, illusions, and he was so concerned to ask for some inner peace? His pace quickened to the front and he bowed again in a brief prayer. He whispered with just enough air from his lungs to make a noise from his mouth and not strum his chords a bit, "Please accept my offering in prayer," bowed, and placed the glimmering miza, golden and bright, on whatever offering bowl there was for this sacrifice. He retreated back then, not turning from the front until he was lowered and then took to a pew row three behind the front, not wanting to look too involved or desperate. No one had minded his business so much as he thought they did, it would seem, but still he looked over his shoulder before he folded his hands and bowed his head to the wood. He struggled with a start at first, and then began to wonder what kinds of prayers they heard. Could the gods read his mind? He didn't want to speak too loudly, out of respect and privacy, but - there was no but, only more excuses. His cowardice would go unjustified. He needed to reflect on the moment, understand his suffering, and then he would pray. Gods had no time for unintelligent babbling. Or did they, and once more Lindel assumed of them again. Who was to say fate had not made him a babbling fool this very moment, in the eyes of Gods? |