PoL-Dreams

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Arc Two

Arc 2-2: The Glory of Maharesh

Wind of Swiftness

You gaze out on your latest project from the balcony, overseeing the work. While you could use your Exalted power to make this move along faster, it is good for the people of a place to take part in the glorification of their own homes. It gives them some sense of ownership over the final results – let this be a project that the people of Maharesh have done, with your help, rather than a project that one of the mighty Twilight Caste gifted them with.

Though it will one day run with foul water, the canals themselves are beautiful in the light. This is the central drop-point for the vast sewage system you have developed. No more shall these people dwell in their own filth, content to simply cast it aside out of their sight. Too often sickness and plague have struck this city, growing too fast because of your influence here.

So, you have turned aside from your own projects for a while and set your incredible learning to solving the problems facing Maharesh. This sewage system, specially designed to funnel wastewater through a series of arcanely crafted filters, until nothing remains except the clean, wholesome water, to deposit it into the river once more.

For months, your major domo and other servants have overseen the digging of the waste-canals beneath the city, aided by the elementals of the local water court, who were in danger of dying out because of the dramatic increase of sewage in the river. Now, their court is healthy once more, and they have sung your accolades.

Now, your vision shifts to the streets in the Harlotry. Streets whose ditches often run filthy with wastewater and on hot days, teem with insects. Strangely, the bouts of illness ebb and rise with these heated days, and the low-lying cough and fever that most people take to simply be a part of regular city life, you now recognize for what it is: the result of living too close to filth.

Arc 2-3: Funereal Grief

Faultless Radiance

You stand there, blood drenching your hands. It gathers in your lowered palms and runs in thick gory rivulets from between your fingers, gathering on the priceless carpets under your feet. You look at her remains, the slaughter you have committed and clench your fists.

A slight noise draws your attention, and you turn to see two of your circle-mates, their faces wary, concerned, determined to do what they need to do in order to appease your wrath, but willing to defend themselves if it comes to it. You shake your head slightly and look back at the corpse on your bedroom floor.

“There was treachery being planned,” you say. Your circle-mates frown down at her corpse, and then at you, not entirely believing you. With good reason – it is a lie.

No one would believe that your devoted wife, Thiria, Exalted to the Dragon of Air, would plan to betray you, but it is easier to accept the lie from you.

You are, after all, a very paragon of virtue and righteousness. Your under-priests know this to be so, and your congregation considers this to be one of the fundamental truths of the world, like the rising of the sun and the falling of rain.

You wish you could remember what sparked your terrible rage, but you cannot. She is dead, this woman you vowed to love.

The funeral is immense, and all the city is draped in mourning white for it. You are resplendent in your gold and white vestments, an elaborate orichalcum mask of mourning – a duplicate of the mask of jade that Thiria’s body now wears – covers your face, and you wish you had the tears that it is meant to cover up.

She is dressed in the robes of state that she wore during your wedding, and clad in her jade armor. At her side is the mighty jade daiklaive Kathman-Renn, forged for her as a wedding gift by your Twilight circle-mate.

Your Eclipse circle-mate speaks a beautiful eulogy, upholding your marriage as the true joining of Heaven and Creation. You know that there are those in your Circle who disapproved of your love for what they considered to be a mere foot-soldier in the mighty Imperial Armies, but your circle hides it well. And who knows? Perhaps in the three hundred years since your wedding, they came to share some kind of affection after all. Perhaps they even stopped judging you for never taking a Lunar spouse.

Perhaps you should take one now.

After your circle-mate’s stirring words, no eyes were dry in the city, save yours. You bent to render the sacraments, the touch of precious oil crafted from the prayers of the faithful, the touch of the olive branch taken from the very palace gardens of the Unconquered Sun in Heaven, and then your kiss.

With the kiss, you immolate her corpse into pure, white ash, as you know is your Exalted duty. Her robes, armor and weapon will be laid to rest on the statue of her that your Twilight circle-mate is making, in the tomb in the Garden of Cold Blossoms, the garden cemetery where your circle have interred their loved ones over the centuries.

But still, rage prowls in your breast, and pride feeds it. You know that those two are the conspirators that slew your wife, and you try desperately to fight them back with a faith you think you lost a long time before.

You pray, and hope that you are still heard.

Arc 2-4: The Council of Deceit

Obsidian Lance

You are seated at the head of the table. The table itself is a tiny replica of the Riverlands Province, where the Deliberative has determined most of your work should focus. You look down at the discs of stone that represent cities, and at the tiny orichalcum pyramids that represent Manses held by the Deliberative here. You look around the table at your senior operatives in the organization you have cultivated here: the Midnight Pavilion.

"Talk to me," you say, cradling Lionheart, your Essence-driven orichalcum flame tongue repeater, absent-mindedly cleaning it as your wife begins her report.

"Nothing worth mentioning in Dedansor, my love," she says, gesturing at the map with the long moonsilver nails that you know can grow into terrible rending talons in a moment's notice. "I suspect that the Twilight caste Everwatchful Righteous Star may be up to something strange, but…"

You interrupt her.

"But our directive isn't the watching of other Solars. We are here to guard Creation from incursions from beyond the Elemental Poles. I will pass that information on to the Deliberative, though – it may be worth checking out. Tarria?" You turn to the Dragon-blooded man clad in a buff jacket of black leather, reinforced by black jade.

"A curiosity, my lord. My spies in the city of Hollow suggest that there may be something curious at hand there. Sightings of demons have increased, and our agents among the apothecaries and rare goods dealers indicate that there has been an upswing in the materials used to summon demons. However, according to the Golden Registry, none of the Exalts in Hollow are demonologists."

You ponder, looking at the spot where Hollow rests at the crux of three rivers, and then nod your head. You turn to your wife.

"Imasha, I'd like you to return to Hollow with Tarria. If they are doing anything there, it is likely to be among the deep sewers," you say, applying golden pen to parchment. You spend a moment writing out an order in perfect form, and apply the seal of your ring to it, which affixes a brilliant golden ring in the shape of your castemark, with the sigil of your name in its center. You hand the form to Imasha.

"Take this. It is a levy order to Frightful Clamour, the god of rats there. He will make all of his resources available to you, and keep quiet about it. Tell him that you are on good terms with Old Nibbler in Jakarish if he gives you any cheek, and threaten to have him replaced if he doesn't immediately obey."

Imasha smiles that smile at you; the one that says that she knows you enjoy this a little too much. You wink at her in return. You then turn to Biharri, a junior Night caste put under your tutelage by the Deliberative for the course of her journeyman years.

You look at her, and she lowers her eyes, uncharacteristically.

"Well?" you say.

"I have… nothing to report, master," she says, meekly.

You snort and look at her.

"Pathetic. How long did you think you could get away with it?" you ask. She looks at you with some confusion.

"Get…away with it, master?" she asks meekly, obvious uncomfortable under your gaze.

In a blur, Lionheart roars, and the air is filled with bolts of burning solar agony. Biharri leaps to her feet and tries to dodge, but your aim is far too solid, and her abilities far less than yours.

You walk over to the corpse, as you watch the skin bubble and peel off, a layer of demonic flesh peeling away to reveal some poor fool possessed by one of the Mimic Demons, copying poor Bihari's form.

"Bastards," you mutter. Your entourage looks shocked, save for Imasha, whose enhanced senses must have picked it up as an imposter the minute she entered the room. They look to you, questioningly.

"Your orders still stand. Business needs looking to in Hollow. On the way out, please fetch a page and tell him to summon my Circle. Mimic Demons are in the service of the Targresh Beast, a Second Circle demon that is not to be trifled with alone. I will need their aid – we have a demonic infestation in Dolarith. That is all."

You and Imasha kiss, and then the room is empty. You allow yourself a moment of grief for poor Biharri. Then it is time to go.

Arc Three

Arc 3-1: Dealing with a Rebel

Five Color Shrike

On the cold snow plain in the North, eyes move out over the great army the Dawn Caste has gathered here. Troops look up at their powerful leader, a general and warrior of great power, as he looks upon them from the high hill, the Glorious Righteous Aegis on his arm. His helmet and breastplate are sun-golden and the fringe of feathers along the helmet are the white of eagles' wings.

The city below the army is sinful and ruled by tyrants; tyrants that must be overthrown. An army has been raised and trained exhaustively for months for just this purpose, and now righteousness will raise its terrible golden fist to smite the wicked below.

Suddenly, the snow begins to flurry around the gathered soldiers, as though winds were coming from all directions at once. The Dawn Caste looks around and then the terrible whine of Essence engines assails everyone's ears. All eyes turn upwards to see the Five Metal Shrike erupt from the snow-heavy clouds overhead.

You step out of the opened hatch, unfurling the glorious wings of pure golden essence that grant you flight. You descend like an angel of wrath, with the small blades known as the Celestial Pinions in your hands. They are the size of short daiklaives, and curved, shaped like the feathers of some terrible hunting raptor.

The arrows arc up towards you, and you cut them down in their flight, the Celestial Pinions flashing. In the heartbeat between the time that an archer can release his first arrow and release his second, you have thrown the Celestial Pinions, which split into a thousand-thousand slicing arcs of Essence, and his archers lie dead.

You land near him, catching the Celestial Pinions as they return to you, their golden surfaces pristine and bloodless. He draws his daiklaive and you eye the razored edge of his sharpened artifact shield.

"You shouldn't be here, Prince of the Morning," you tell him, using the only name the Deliberative knows him by.

"Begone from this place, and take the Five Metal Shrike with you," he says, lowering his gaze and assuming a battle stance. "My war here is righteous, and you and yours refuse to assist. Begone, I say."

"Prince of the Morning. In the name of the Solar Deliberative, I charge you with unlawful rebellion and raising an army against a peaceful city. Surrender now." Essence begins to trail along the points of your blade, outlining the perfect lines of defense for you in this battle.

"That won't happen," he says, his own blade sketching the same outlines around himself.

"Then, in the name of the Deliberative, I sentence your Exalting Shard to reassignment that it may better serve the Deliberative, Creation and the Unconquered Sun."

Arc 3-2: Ultimate Expression of Love

Unyielding Grace

You have traveled far, and in myriad forms. In traveling, you invoked your most potent Charm – a Charm you know to now be lost to Luna's Chosen. Though you cannot recall what it is called, you know that when invoked, it shapechanges you into the most effective form for your purpose. You need not even retain that Heart's Blood within your totem-self – it is Luna's understanding that shapes your body to become what you most need it to be.

And so your travel across this land has been swift, wearing the forms of animals that time has forgotten or not yet known, wearing forms of creatures that the Primordials crafted and then destroyed. Short of the most powerful sorceries, few things in creation are capable of traveling as quickly as you are while this power in invoked, and you have used it well.

You are welcomed like a goddess into the August Court of the Five Stones, a mighty court of earth elementals in the Riverlands. You smile and permit them to treat you as such – little elementals do not understand the nuances of the Celestial Hierarchy, though they do their best to mimic its bureaucracies among themselves, like barbarian kings aping great emperors.

You are brought, in short order, before the Five Stone Lords themselves, great gemlords. They are the embodiments of the precious gemstones found throughout the Riverlands: opal, beryl, topaz, sapphire and onyx. They bow and scrape when you enter, bearing your mark of Exaltation upon your brow. They come down from their thrones and greet you personally, dismissing their courtiers – ostensibly to make your visit uncomplicated and your message secret, but also to keep their courtiers from seeing them toady to you.

You explain the reason why you have come, the plans that are now in motion and what role you wish for them to play in the upcoming struggle.

Though they are creatures of stone, they blanch. There is silence among them, as they commune in the unspoken words of stone to rock, and then they turn to face you.

"We are fearful, Chosen of Luna," the Topaz Lord says. "It is well known that you are married to one of the mighty Chosen of the Unconquered Sun. And yet, you ask us to rise up with you against him, and against his brethren, while the rest of the world rises up against the remainder of the Sun's Chosen. Do you not love your husband?"

You resist the urge to utterly destroy this impudent elemental, and to crumble their fine stone palace around their very ears, to slaughter every spirit within and leave this court as a crumbling hole in the ground unfit for even the pettiest of elementals to dwell in.

Instead, you close your eyes and do not weep.

"I love him more than anything in all of Creation and Heaven. I know the good man he once was, and I know the good he has wrought. I would die for him. But I also know the decadent creature he has become. I do not hate him, lords of elementals – I ask you to do this because I love him. And I cannot bear to see this jaded creature wear the face of my husband. He is the kind of monster my husband once fought, body and soul to destroy. But the years have turned him into what he once hated. Will you help me, or no?"

They confer once more, but you know their answer before they speak it.

"Yes. We will aid you, and we are sorry for the necessity of it. Tell us what we may do."

You outline the plan as a single tear trickles down your cheek, unnoticed by you, but not the elementals.

Arc 3-3: The Project

Gilded Coin

The hybroc lands smoothly on the roof of your tower, tucked far away from civilization. The monsters that haunt the lands around the tower are powerful, bred by your specialized programs, capable of – in small groups – taking out individual Exalts. They are capable of much more than that when the gods who are assigned to acting as the masters of these creatures possess them. Once the servants in the tower have secured the hybroc, you climb down from the howdah.

The doors that lead deeper into the tower swing open and the tall, beautifully robed form of Makara, your demon major domo, strides out into the sunlight. The neomah bows graciously and smiles to see you.

"My master. It brings me terrible joy to see you again – I pray that these three specimens meet your approval." You turn your attention to the creatures that accompany her. The first is a tall, elfin woman, with the beautiful pointed ears like some Fair Folk have, but the sway in her hips and the movements of her body are pure Creation: this is a creature built for the most perverse pleasures, and trained well for them. Makara sees your attention and smiles.

"This is the foremost example of the Gathmara, my master. They are built using Wyld principles, allowing them to slightly shift their appearance to match that which pleases their masters best. Once they have tasted of their master's flesh, their appearance evolves over the next few days or so – they can even wholly transform in gender to match their master's preference. Additionally, they are built to be incapable of feeling any pleasure that is not given to them by their bound master – and since they are grown to be sensation addicts, they will obsessively seek the approval and favor of their bound master."

You nod, admiring the neomah's cleverness in creation. Your eyes play over the next two, who seem to be connected somehow. Both of them have chalk-white flesh. The smaller of them is completely hairless, and its body is marked with small black circle-markings, and it is naked, bowed submissively at the feet of the second. The taller one, far more muscled is also chalk-white, with a full head of thick, mane-like hair, shaven at interesting angles to create a sinister shape for its face. Its flesh is likewise marked – this time in black stripes, like that of a tiger. It radiates malice in the way the smaller one radiates fear, and it is dressed in simple black leather, with a wicked, taloned gauntled on one hand. You follow the chain from the gauntlet and find that it ends around the neck of the smaller one.

"These are something of a symbiotic creation, my master. The Jikari are an aggressive race of creatures, with pointed teeth and a taste for blood and pain. They are created as per your requirements: they are exquisitely trained in all manner of sexual torture and the infliction of pleasure through agony. Unfortunately, their aggressions must be almost constantly channeled through activity, which made them poor servants for a harem. "However, it was then that I created your Djala, the smaller, weaker creature. These creatures are utterly submissive and willing to allow the most wicked of degradations that might cause other creatures to rebel, even out of simple survival instinct. These creatures have none. Additionally, the only sensation they can experience at all is pain. They don't necessarily find it pleasurable, but as with many living creatures, they come to crave even agony if the alternative is utter absence of sensation.

"You see, I designed them to manifest this trait at adolescence, so that they are always haunted by the old memory of pleasure, and seek it forever. The Jikari, of course, are more than willing to provide this sensation, which proves to be an outlet for both creatures. A single Jikari is well-fitted to between three and five Djala. They will make excellent gifts for those of your brethren who wish to emulate your great harems, my master."

She bows her head, then, and the three creatures follow suit, knowing that your approval is literally permission for them to continue to existing – indeed, for their entire race to continue existing.

You smile at Makara, and raise her chin in your hand, kissing her. She leans into you, breathless, as you pull away from her. You glance over your shoulder at the three creatures designed specifically to elicit sexual pleasure for men and women like you. You are great, epic creatures with lusts more than most mortals can encompass. It is fitting that entire races of beings be made for your pleasures.

Your hand slides beneath Makara's robes, and you touch her in those places that make her weak-kneed.

"I like their look, but before I give permission for them to continue existing, let us see how they perform in the bedchamber, shall we?"

She nods, biting her lower lip, as you pull your hand away. She ushers them through the door and you follow.

You've been anticipating this month for quite a while.

Arc 3-4: The Youngest Bull

Faultless Radiance

You are terrified beyond the telling of it. Oh, you certainly grew up knowing what happened to those that the Sun Chose: The Solar Deliberative was notified of the occurrence, and shortly thereafter gods arrived to whisk the young Champion of the Sun away to his new life. One day to sit on the Solar Deliberative itself, but first, training.

The problem is, no one really seemed to know what happened after they took you away. Oh, you've known someone else who Exalted – Thira, from your village, had Exalted to Luna when she was diving for pearls off the cliffs near your home. You remember seeing the brilliant silver light that one evening. You saw the gods come shortly after that, and the young Lunar that everyone knew in your islands, who called himself Leviathan.

But this was different. Herald gods and celestial lions came first to look over the boy, and then the celestial chariot arrived, shining like the sun. It seemed made of orichalcum and it was decorated with the symbols of the Unconquered Sun. The woman who got out of the chariot looked positively normal among the gods and other spirits, but they bowed to her as she stepped out, and then her Caste Mark gleamed.

She took you away and taught you for one year at her Manse. Rose and Gold Seneschal was of the Twilight Caste, but she said that you were of the Zenith. She didn't teach you anything about being a Zenith – she taught you about the Zeniths, and the rest of the Deliberative. She also taught you about Heaven, and the First Days when the Primordials were thrown down. She taught you about the threats to Creation: the Fair Folk and the demons. Then, she took you to Heaven and you saw the streets of orichalcum filled with the glorious bustle of the gods going about their celestial duty. Each one of them was amazing to look upon, great and terrible and numinous and divine.

For three years, she taught you to read. She taught you history, lore, strategy, mathematics, occult sciences and all manner of things. She also taught you to wield Essence, to use your Charms and helped you to develop your understanding of your talents. Finally, in the final year of your tutelage, she taught you the history of your Exalting soul. You know the exploits and talents of every Exalt that has borne your Exaltation in the past, and you know that you shall share in their grand history. You pray that you are worthy of those heroes.

For some reason, you thought you would be with the Rose and Gold Seneschal (which was a title given to her by the Deliberative – it wasn't until recently that you learned her name was Mahare) until it was time for you to attend to duties given to you by the Deliberative. But it seems that you were wrong, for now she has taken you to the middle of Riverlands. Her chariot lands outside of the gigantic stepped pyramids of the Taurean Sanctuary – you are greeted by the winged bull statues that you know house gods meant to defend the Sanctuary.

She has told you that you have ended your apprenticeship with her. With her, you learned to be an adult, a scholar, an Exalt. Now, she says, you will learn to be a Zenith Caste, one of the priests of the Unconquered Sun.

"Remember," she says to you. "Forget what you assume about priests. You are now part of the most powerful order of priests in all Creation – the only god to whom you abase yourself is the Unconquered Sun, and the only gods to whom you bow are Luna and the Maidens. You are a priest of the god of heroes – you will not live out your life in a boring old temple, droning prayers and burning incense. You shall mete out righteousness with your blades, and when your voice is raised, gods and mortals both shall take notice. You are not simply a priest, little one – you are a priest-king of the Unconquered Sun, and all of Creation owes you fealty, but only if you remain righteous, and a hero of the people. Fail in this, and you become a tyrant. And if you become a Solar tyrant, the Five Metal Shrike shall come for you," she finishes with a smile, tweaking your nose slightly.

You turn, and the priests who greet you are dressed in white robes, trimmed in gold. Each of them bears a circlet of orichalcum and the oldest among them bears a crown to match his pectoral of orichalcum, both of which are set with Hearthstones. He smiles, and you feel the warmth of his attention wash over you, like basking in the noonday son.

"Come, Dulani," he says, extending a hand. "The initiation chambers await, and when we are done there, you shall be taken to Heaven to speak with our true mentor, the Righteous Bull-King, who is the god of Zeniths. There is much to do."

Arc 3-5: The Dark Pact

Obsidian Lance

You are terrified of this place. You've hated it ever since you first came here. You stand within the center of the Cromlech Cinerary, a place of standing stones, each with nooks carved into them where sit urns. Each such urn contains the ashes of fallen heroes, the most glorious of the Solar Exalted, their bodies rendered down to holy white ash by the touch of the Zenith Caste.

You hate this place as much as you've hated any cemetery, especially since you know it is a shadowlands, one of those rare places where the Underworld and Creation collide. Oh, you know that the master of this place deliberately created, so that the ghosts of the Solars interred here may more easily pass into the afterlife, yet the fact that he create it doesn't allieviate your dislike of it. In fact, it only increases it.

This should demonstrate your willingness to do whatever it takes to accomplish your ends. The powers that the ancient Solar who resides here, the one everyone calls the Black Psychopomp for his duties and the color of his robes, are potent indeed, and you plan to see them put to use for your own Midnight Pavilion.

You remember laying in bed with your wife, her moonsilver talons running along your shoulder, as you described your daring plan to her.

"Think of it, my love," you told her. "Think of a spy network made up of ghosts, which can be nearly anywhere without being seen. Spies made up of those who can not only get nearly anywhere, but who can simply be called up to find out what they know. Why do I need to investigate someone when I can simply call up the ghosts of his parents, his enemies, his fallen allies, and they will tell me everything I need to know."

Her frown tells you what she thinks of the idea.

"Toying with the dead is wrong," she says simply.

Standing where you do now, it is hard to fault her that thought, in all honesty. You look around you and the Cromlech Cinerary stretches out forever, it seems, though the tall cathedral that is the Black Psychopomp's Manse towers over it all. And then he is there, the Twilight Caste who has delved this deeply into the powers of the dead, that he has learned to harness its Essence in the same fashion that a sorcerer can harness the Essence of Creation and Heaven. He looks down at you and smiles.

"Are you prepared?" he asks, gesturing towards the circle that is inset in the marble pavilion floor. It is similar to those summoning circles you have seen before, save where those are inlaid with jade and orichalcum, this is crafted of some strange black metal that he says is common among the heroes of the Underworld.

"I am," you say and walk to the center of the circle. The incantations will take several hours, but they are incantations that the last few months have seared into your mind. You know it, and when you speak them properly, with Essence, a ghost will hear you and obey.

Arc 3-6: Sorceress-Queen

Wind of Swiftness

You hate this feeling – this nervousness. It is unbecoming a queen such as yourself, and yet it is well warranted. It isn't every day that your city must act as host to the Censor of Imperialism, the Solar Deliberative's representative who ensures that no Solar who chooses to rule over an area of Creation endangers the effectiveness of the Deliberative's mission by becoming too engrossed in their own efforts to raise a nation that they cannot effectively defend Creation.

You know that your nation is considered controversial by some. You also know that it is considered highly advanced and worthy of emulation by others. Though nearly every small province of the Empire of Creation requires that its citizenry attend schooling, no one else makes a thorough occult education part of that agenda.

Most citizens here can identify the most common elementals and demons. The fields of your citizens aren't fenced, but warded – animals are kept out of orchards and fields through the use of wards, and herd animals are kept in by the same manner. Every house is connected to the great Essence grid that powers your city, providing it running water, heat and cold in turn, strengthening its walls and causing vibrant life to grow there. Every home is warded against diseases and unwanted spirits not by sorcerers paid absurd amounts of money, but by the members of that household. Every citizen here knows the correct forms of address for divinities and Exalts, and they know what gods and the Chosen are, rather than holding them in some kind of superstitious awe.

Which is, of course, part of the problem, you know. Oh, you have developed Charms that can turn the meanest peasant into a literate man in under a month, and techniques for awakening the Essence of mortals who have the talent before they see twenty years of age, but the most dangerous thing you have done here is give them the Truth. It is so damning.

But you know what is right. These people have everything, and you gave it to them, and you'll be damned if the Deliberative will take that away from you, just because your subjects don't fawn and fall down in worship of the Exalted and divinities when they appear. And why should they? You have seen plenty of less-than-enlightened behavior among the gods of Yu-Shan and the Exalted of Creation: they are not numinous beings worthy of awe. They are flawed. Impure. Imperfect. You don't expect worship because you know that it isn't right, and you'll be damned if you see your citizens extend worship to those that don't deserve it. Better they be armed with the Truth, over superstition.

And you intend to tell this Censor that, too. Damn them all. You have turned the temples of your city into places of art, places where your people can better understand the gods, not fall to their knees and worship like peasants groveling in the mud. And if the gods don't like it, then that is too damned bad. When they are creatures worthy of worship, they shall get it.

You find your ire growing within you, like a creature growing out of control. You have strived, for so long, you have sacrificed so much, to come as close to perfection as you may. And you know that you are a long, long way away from it — and your fellow Exalts and the gods of Heaven are no closer than you.

Let them bring you up on Celestial charges, then, if that makes them happy. You do your duties – better than most. You and your Circle have been called upon to defend Creation time and again; you have educated young Exalts in what it means to be a Solar, educating them in every nuance of knowledge and understanding before sending them to one of the Five Academies.

You have given much for Creation, and should the Deliberative try and penalize you for telling the Truth, for not encouraging superstition?

Then let them try.

Arc 3-7: The Bereaved

Five Color Shrike

You stand over the body of the Prince of Morning and look out over the hilltop, down into the valley where sits the barely-saved city of Silverfall, which he would have laid siege to. You look around you as you wipe the blood from the Celestial Pinions, and sheathe them on your back. His army has broken and fled, and the army of Silverfall have emerged from the gates to harry them.

Before you are aware of it, you are moving. The Celestial Pinions are in your hands and you have blocked the claw-slash of the terrible war-form of a powerful wolf-totemed Lunar. You leap back, your wings of solar light unfurling from your back and you hover in mid-air, appraising your foe.

The Lunar circles beneath you, watching you carefully. It stops, then, and looks down at the corpse of Prince of Morning. You land a distance away, respectfully. The Lunar shifts and falls to his knees, his once sure movements made jerky by sobs of grief, as he pulls the body of his beloved to his chest. He sits there, rocking back and forth, for several minutes, his only sound the choking sobs he cannot quite contain or quiet.

Then, he lifts his head skyward, to the cold sky overhead and screams into the night, and his scream turns into a howl that is answered by packs of wolves in the deeper wildernesses nearby. The Lunar's silver eyes come to rest on you as he gently places the body of his mate back on the ground and then rises.

"He was a criminal," you say, sheathing the Celestial Pinions once more. "He knew that he acted in defiance of the wisdom of the Solar Deliberative. He was warned, multiple times, and yet he still marched."

The Lunar only glowers and slowly circles you, his muscles quivering with rage and grief. He stops, however, when the city of Silverfall comes into view. You look upon it as well and look back to see the Lunar watching you.

"Do you know what lies within that city?" the Lunar asks.

"Innocents," you say grimly, your eyes narrowing. "Innocent men and women that would have died because your mate chose to march upon their city, because he had a quarrel with the master of that city."

"A quarrel?" the Lunar looks at you, his face aghast, shocked.

"Yes. The rivalry between Prince of Morning and the lord of Silverfall is well-known in the halls of the Deliberative," you say gently, not wishing to provoke the Lunar into battle.

"Is that how he paints it?" the Lunar asks quietly, his voice suddenly become silkly and deadly. "Is that how it looks from the lofty tower where you dwell, O Arbiter of the Chosen."

The Lunar smiles when you furrow your brow.

"Arbiter of the Chosen. Such a presumptuous title you Solars have chosen for an executioner. Arbiter of the Chosen. Do you see yourself as the equal of the Unconquered Sun, Arbiter of the Chosen. Do you truly believe you have the right to un-Choose those whom your God has Chosen? Such arrogance."

You narrow your eyes. You don't rise to the challenge, though – he is obviously attempting to goad you to combat, hoping you will strike first. He knows the penalty for attacking the Arbiter of the Chosen in the course of his sworn duties: forfeiture of Exaltation and life.

"Know this. The silken tongue of the one who rules that town has poisoned your mind. My beloved knew this Eclipse caste, fool. Knew him too well. He knew the perversions he practiced, and knew whence came his breeding programs."

"The personal lives and endeavors of the lord of Silverfall are not in question here, Lunar. He is a defender of Creation, and a speaker for Heaven…"

"No!" the Lunar shrieks, nearly at the top of his lungs. "You fucking idiot! Don't you see? That's just it – he has wormed his way into your precious, bloated bureaucracy, the leech that clings to the drained corpse of Heaven, and all the while he laughs."

You look at him questioningly, unsure what he is meaning to say.

"Akuma," the Lunar says and you blink in surprise, your face going grim before you can school your reaction. "Yes. Favored of the Yozis, now, is that Eclipse, infused with the brazen Essence of Malfeas. Do you think his breeding programs serve Heaven, or Malfeas?"

"His…his personal endeavors," you stutter, falling back the words of law that you adhere to, that you uphold, that you are the very champion of. "His personal endeavors are not in question…"

"They are," the Lunar says, interrupting you again. "You just are too blinded by the bureaucracy he winds about you like a shroud to see it."

The Lunar points down at Silverfall, where the sounds of merriment and celebration can be heard.

"That city is the home of one of the akuma, Arbiter of the Chosen. But you don't have the jurisdiction to investigate that, do you? You can only obey the directive of the Deliberative in this. My beloved reported that fact to your precious Deliberative, and at a party that evening, the akuma made sure to tell everyone how my beloved and he once shared a bed. They all had a good laugh over my beloved mooning over his lost Eclipse lover. They were sure he was now bitter because that damned akuma had kicked him from his bed, when in fact, the reverse is true. Prince of Morning discovered too much, and he fled. Now you have killed him, and stopped the justice he would have brought there.

"Do you think that city exists because the Eclipse – who despises mortals for their weakness, and won't even deign to bed them – do you think he chooses to be near them for any real reason? Calibration approaches, you fool, and the akuma has built up a city full of sacrifices for the demon-lord he intends to summon to do his bidding.

"Idiots. All of you. My beloved was willing to die to save those people, but you killed him uselessly. Because your strings are held by a bureaucracy that ends in the hands of an akuma. But I am finished here. Done. Save Creation on your own, Arbiter of the Chosen, for you shall have nothing but my enmity forever more. And if all of Creation is eaten by the Yozis, then I don't give a damn, because a Creation where a puppet such as you can cut down a hero such as my beloved is not worth saving."

He then spits at your feet, shifts into the form of a wolf and lopes off into the darkness. Leaving you, alone, with the Five Metal Shrike above you and the city of Silverfall below you.

Arc 3-8: Alone in Glory

Gilded Coin

"It is absolutely essential that you understand the danger you are in, my love," Makara said, gesturing emphatically. A creature of unholy passions, the neomah demon who was your consort was passionate in everything she did – including argue with you. "Something has happened, and I do not like it. You should not go there."

"Makara," you say reasonably, holding up your hands in a gesture for quiet. "Please. I cannot very well ignore a summons from the Hierophant of the Deliberative."

"You fool!" she nearly howled, almost foaming at the mouth. "Why can you not see that they plot against you and…"

And, as quickly as that, she was sprawling across the room, her hand clapped to the side of her face, where your hand had just struck her. From the floor, she looked up at your face, expecting to find only anger and fury there.

Instead, she found a thin, cruel smile on your lips.

"Oh, no," she whispered. "No, master, please. I didn't mean to speak so to you. Not to you, my lord." You watch as she crawls the distance across the chamber and takes your hand to her lips, kissing you, begging you to not be angry with her.

"I am not angry, Makara," you say soothingly. "You know that. You don't fear my anger – in fact, you enjoy it, degraded creature that you are. I am simply finished with this topic, Makara. But I'm not going to tell you to be silent, because I want you to give me an excuse to send you to the Antechamber in my absence."

She blanched, and her lower lip quivered, a sign of terrible fear. She hated the Antechamber you'd had created, which filled her with the burning Essence of the Unconquered Sun, inflicting horrific tortures and forcing her to relive the defeat of the Primordials over and again – as one of the Solar heroes. And because treachery is impossible in demons against their progenitors, she was forced to endure the terrible spiritual torments that the Yozis built into their servants that prevented them from even considering treachery. Over and over again, until she was a broken thing, left sobbing and unwhole.

You turned away from her as she schooled herself, then, continuing to kneel on the floor, her hands clasped in her lap, preventing herself from shaking, while she bit down on her lip, denying you that face that you love so much from her.

The face of terror. The face appropriate in those the Solars defeated and humiliated utterly. You smile thinly, taking pleasure in her terror and agony as you don your overcoat.

"Madhi," you call, and the small servant djala enters the room, bearing your pack for travel. You smile down at him and he lowers his eyes, grateful for your attention. You take the pack from him, look at him and then look back at Makara.

"I am leaving now, Makara," you say and she bows her head.

"Madhi, I want you to place Makara within the Antechamber."

You take a great deal of pleasure from both of their reactions. Makara looks up in shock, her jaw agape, as a sob escapes her lips as she begins to beg for your mercy. Madhi's terror almost completely matches hers, but his gaze is fixed on Makara – you know that there is no way the little djala could possibly force the demon into the Antechamber of his own power. Moreover, he knows it as well.

You look at both of them and are barely able to restrain laughing aloud.

"You both have a very simple mission. Makara must be in the Antechamber when I return. See to it." You turn on your heel and depart.

++++++++++++++++++++

Your laughter rings through the small bedroom suite. In the bed next to you sits the beautiful Autumn Jasmine, another of the Eclipse caste, partaking of the excellent opium-like substance she purchased from the Fair Folk.

"Oh, their faces were classic, Jasmine. Simply to remember forever." She chokes slightly on the smoke because she is trying not to laugh, and that sets both of you off on more gales of laughter.

"Hierophant," she says in a husky voice, imitating one of those put on trial today. "I know that my actions were not those befitting someone who holds my position in the Deliberative, and were motivated by hasty and poor judgment. I beg the mercy of the Deliberative as a whole."

The two of you laugh again – she is a little too good at mimicking the overly-formal speech of the Arbiter of the Chosen, Radiant Hawk.

"And she didn't blink, did she?" you say, leaning back and wiping away tears that have coursed down your face. "Snatched his position and the grand Five Metal Shrike out from under him without even changing the pitch of her voice. I hear she is handing that duty over to her favorite protégée."

Jasmine nods and leans in close to nibble your ear.

"At least he didn't lose everything," she says, her breath smelling of flowers and woodsmoke. "He was just adjudged to be enacting his duty incorrectly, without following procedure. Cloak of Silence was judged to have exceeded his duties entirely, and without reason. He was stripped of everything, the poor dear. The Midnight Pavilion, all of those resources, his apprentices and subordinates. I hear that she even ordered for his Brotherhood of Dragon-Blooded to be reassigned elsewhere."

You chuckle slightly, because her tone seems to indicate that she finds this terribly humorous, as well, but it is half-hearted. It is difficult to believe that you were as successful as you were today. Or as cruel.

Oh, certainly, these two planned to kill him, based entirely on the ramblings of some grief-stricken Lunar looking to salvage his dead mate's honor, but still. You arranged for all of those judgments – after all, as the aggrieved party, the Hierophant took your opinion into consideration.

Your opinion, and Autumn Jasmine's. You look at her, and she is chuckling again, taking a sip of wine.

You suddenly get up out of the bed and begin to get dressed.

"What?" she asks, curiously.

"I should go. I need to return home."

"Before you go," she says, sitting up in bed. "Have you given any more thought to the things we talked about last time? You know that we could accomplish our ends that way."

You look at her, and she smiles that smile of hers. That damned smile. You turn away and shrug on your boots.

"I have," you admit. "And I'm not entire sure, yet. I think there are other ways of accomplishing those ends. Less…destructive ways."

You hold up your hand as she begins to protest, explaining – for the hundredth time, it seems – why her plan is the only one that will work.

"I'm sorry. I don't have the time right now, Jasmine. I left someone that I care a great deal about in a very…unpleasant situation. I am needed at home."

As you turn to leave, she smiles and whispers: "So quick to run home to the demon you love. It is only a small step for you, silly boy. To love a demon is to serve it."

Arc 3-9: Bliss in Gold and Silver

Unyielding Grace

"Don't touch me," he says, scornfully. You pull your hand away, as though burned. "I'm not in the mood."

"I was unaware that my love for you depended on moods, husband," you say to Cloak of Silence as the two of you stand on the balcony overlooking the courtyard. You look up, and the Imperial Manse dominates the view – the very Imperial Manse the two of you spent the day in, dealing with the issues of this trial against Cloak of Silence and the Dawn-caste Radiant Hawk.

His face is a mask of stone – he has retreated from you again. He does this, betimes, and it often drives you to incredible fury. You feel that anger well in you, but you tamp it down. Now is not the time. It used to hurt you, until you recognized it for the selfishness that it was.

"I am sorry they ruled the way they did, beloved," you say, your voice caring. "I've already spoken with the elders of…"

"Stop it," he says, his voice telling you that he finds your prattle irksome and tiring. "It's over. There is nothing for me in Creation any longer."

"Nothing?" you say, your arched brow the only sign of your irritation. "Do I truly rank so lowly in your esteem, Cloak?"

He sighs then. Not recalcitrant – it is the sign of someone being plagued by an irritant that simply can't be dislodged. You feel that old, red anger welling up within you. You turn away from him then.

"Where are you going?" he says petulantly.

"Elsewhere. I am not going to stand here and be demeaned to my face because you had your worldly goods stripped from you. I had nothing to do with it, and I deserve better than that. But I also recognize that you need your time to sulk and pity yourself. So, when you are prepared to stop acting the part of a little boy, and come home and be a man to myself and our children, then feel free to do so. I shall be preparing us for the move."

"Ilisha," he calls to you, but the tone in his voice tells you that you are being overly emotional and illogical.

"Don't speak to me in this moment, Cloak. I have more important things to do." And then you leave.

+++++++++++++++ You walk the streets of Heaven. To your left is a canal seemingly filled with a liquid that is like quicksilver, and boats move quickly past upon it. Above you, small clouds rush important gods and Exalts to important gatherings, and the streets of luminescent glass around you are filled with a hundred shuffling small gods, each tending to their duties or personal interests.

You look at the woman who stands next to you. She is dressed in the robes of the Bureau of Destiny, with a fine pectoral crafted of starmetal, into which are set two hearthstones. She looks at you with sympathy, and you realize that you are fighting back tears.

"I just don't know what to do, Juaya. He is my husband, and I love him terribly, but he isn't the same. He is obsessed with the Midnight Pavilion still, and it has been years since the Deliberative ordered it closed. He has even written a full manual on how it was run and operated."

"I thought he'd found other things to occupy his time," Juaya, whom you have long considered advisor, friend and mentor, says. "Hasn’t he taken up study of sorcery with Ozandus Pal?"

"Not sorcery," you shake your head, sighing. "Necromancy. Sorcery of the Underworld." The look on Juaya's face tells you that she'd suspected such, but wanted confirmation. "He used to be constantly on the vigil for dangers to Creation, Juaya. But the Deliberative broke him."

"I know," she says consolingly. The two of you stop and purchase small porcelain cups of tea, brewed from the night-blossoms that grow only in Luna's Gardens in Heaven. "I wish that I could do something there, but alas we cannot. The Celestial Bureaucracy has no say in how the Deliberative works, any more than the Deliberative has any say in how Heaven is run."

"He has talked about building a shadowlands," you say quietly, so that no one can overhear. Juaya glances at you in something like surprise, and something like fear. You look into her eyes, which show you the stars and are limned in the bright cerulean that marks the Chosen of Serenity. "He wants to build a place where the Underworld and Creation overlap. He says that he wants a grounds to study the nuances of necromancy, and wishes to build one near our home."

Juaya's face shows nothing but sadness. You'd never accept this kind of pity from anyone, but you know that she truly cares. She has been your friend since you first came to walk the streets of Heaven, brought here by the elders within the Silver Council centuries ago. She sighs with a great deal of sadness, and you see tears in her eyes, tears that are held back by her will alone.

"So much has changed, Ilisha," she says. She stops and then gestures, invoking the powers of the constellation of the Mask, preventing the two of you from being overheard or spied upon. "I think living among mortals drives them mad, Ilisha. The children of Luna are not fully human, and you allow yourselves to become something else. We remain in Heaven, among beings with long world-views, and the benefits of godly understanding. But the Solars, they dwell among humans. They cannot be separated from humanity, Ilisha, and I think it does something to them. What must it do to watch mortals you care about die, over and over, through the years? We have Heaven, which is ever-changing, but static and unchanging, in its way. You have the borders of the Wyld and the wildernesses, which are the same, in that way. But Solars have only one another, and us. Everything else around them changes, constantly."

"Do you think they become mad?" you whisper, not wanting to really know the answer to that.

"I think that the Unconquered Sun is harsh, and unforgiving of failings in his Chosen," she says, reaching out to run a hand through the silver lock of hair at your temple. "I think that the Solars bear all the weight of Creation – and indeed, of Heaven as well – upon their shoulders. And I think that, when all is said and done, they are still only human because they must be, to govern humans properly. You may become partially animal, and we may embrace the divine shard that Exalts us, but Solars must retain their humanity. And how can a human mind survive what they must?"

You try to choke back tears, and fail. You bury your face in your hands and try not to sob aloud. Juaya maneuvers the two of you into an unoccupied pavilion, secreted away from the rest of the park in which it stands.

"How has no one else noticed this, Juaya?" you ask her, once your voice is your own. The look on her face is quite grim when you say this, and you know that she knows something. "Tell me," you say, refusing to let her remain silent, as she usually does.

"We have…we have cast divinations, Ilisha. Not a year ago, the Five-score Brotherhood, we who are Chosen of the Maidens, we gathered together and pooled our power to see what lies ahead for Creation."

"What?" you say, shocked. Something of that size doesn't go unnoticed. "Why haven't I heard of this yet?"

"We haven't spoken of it publicly, for what we found was…too terrible to imagine," you gesture for her to continue, and she does, after some hesitation. "We have seen three possible futures. In the first, the Solars are left as they are, to their own devices. In this outcome, the Deliberative and the Realm slowly degenerate until the world itself is corrupted, becoming a world of darkness, until all has decayed and been destroyed. In the second, we try and reform the Solar Exalted, telling them of our concerns and fears, leading to Solars striking out against one another, each fearing that the other is corrupt, until Creation is shattered in a civil war, leaving only a splintered ruin, which the Fair Folk wash over like a wave. And in the third…"

You allow the silence to stretch between the two of you, until you urge her to continue.

"And in the third, the Solars are thrown down. The world loses the glory that it once had, and can never regain it. There is misery, yes, and war, yes, but Creation endures."

Then she looks into your eyes, and you suddenly understand what she is asking of you. You weep then, because you know what your answer must be.