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The Black Sire
Ensconced in his blackened stone fortress Xonereth delved deeply into the books humankind so revered. A hand illuminated holy bible sat open on his desk, spirited away from some ancient monastery in Europe. Copies of the Quran, scrolls from Egypt on crumbling papyrus, the works of and observations of SiddhΔrtha Gautama, Buddah himself. Judaism, the Dead Sea Scrolls, such priceless works seen my so few eyes, and understood by less. The Bhagavad Gita, Confucian texts, the Tibetan Book of the Dead, and the Corpus Hermeticum, to name only a few.
Xonereth had been lax the first time, he had failed to see. He would not do so again. The prophecy had spoken to him for a reason, and as the greatest being who still had the will to care it fell on his shoulders to understand.
The proud ruler had always viewed the works of humans as petty, somewhat whimsical and fragile. However the more he read, the more he felt, and his once slanted view altered. He began to realize despite their fragility and failings the human spirit held much for him to dwell on after all.
The first prophecy he had failed to comprehend until it was too late. Perhaps there was no such thing as thwarting the words penned by the gods, but he would this time at least strive to understand them. To know intimately his adversary before the engagement.
So with ceaseless ardor he read and reread the lines before him. Stopping to reference the various other tomes at his disposal for study. Questing to know more that he may have this time the power to effect the outcome.
The heavy paper housed the words embossed in blackest ink...
'As ebon tears cascade, bled by shadows below and above. He who will not grieve shall find it in himself.
Should the leafless stand, and the black Sire walks the earth.
The toothless dragon shall regain its claws, and the power be ignited.
Do we then pay homage to the five pointed star, or the kingdom of Judea?
For nestled in the breast of the soiled and weary mother, those autonomous shall become as one.'
Xonereth was trying hard to understand, the true meaning of the words that lie there. Plain words and yet they were not so plain.
He sighed softly, ivory forehead creased with trouble, as he rubbed at his brow with elegant, bejeweled fingers. The feelings that had recently been bestowed on him he had assumed were only for the fragile humankind. Something they bore or fretted over, hardly the chore for one such as he. Never had he felt such pressure or the feelings of helplessness as he had of recent nights, for daylight did not shine here.
His walk to the great tree had done no more than further darken his spirits. The waters were higher than ever before, black obsidian leaves sharp as sacrificial blades now littered the earth, making the sounds of crystalline screams as he crushed them underfoot.