Chapter 9 – Past and Future Loss
"Somewhere along the line people came up with this notion that clergy of a given faith are holy and pure, thriving on piety and divine purpose where others suffer and fail. Self-aggrandizement became common knowledge and generally accepted truth, and yet like so many things about the nature of the gods and what they give us, the mechanics of things get lost under the lie of perfection.
No, clergy are not all knowing. They have help from their divine patrons, but even their understanding falls short of true divine beings like Sphinxes and the fabled 'Angels' that the old texts speak of, if you want to know the truth and you're not afraid to ask the question, I would proffer what you seek and what everyone has the right to know: the clerics of our world carry a heavy burden.
It is heavier than anything borne by man or beast. They carry it so that the gods have a medium to communicate with us, so we may witness their power and understand that we are individually cared for our divine overseers. In exchange the cleric must carry on beyond his natural years until he is called away at last to rest, when his time is finally over.
The gods never wanted us to be alone, even when they desired a reprieve from their hard work, the cleric is our common link and so shall it be in perpetuity. Where Sphinxes and Angels held the divine in their hand and shared its secrets only to a select few, we've the cleric to thank for making those secrets accessible and open. After all, it is the cleric that trained the first paladin to access divinity and in time, I suspect we will find many more accessing it in some fashion or another.
When and only when they have earned it.
There is no reason for the gods to communicate with us when we have their physical servants in our midsts, and while it may seem heinously unfair that thousands upon thousands are killed in temples the world over to find these messengers of faith, the gods know best who to hand over their power to.
Ultimately clergy are as failure prone as any mortal and a certain level of arrogance is owed to the lot they bear in life, but make no mistake, no cleric is made by accident. They are exactly as they are intended to be."
-Tamsin Labre
"Letters From the Gods, Volume 321"
~Sarah~
Well steeped tea was said to be the first line defense against the world for the sagacious mind, like some holy ward meant to stave off the monsters of the evening before and protect the drinker from the day ahead of them.
If common knowledge was wrong, Sarah couldn't tell the difference. She certainly didn't want it to be wrong. No, pleasant illusions were pleasant enough to have a tangible effect on one's mood, gods forbid they be taken away.
These morning reflections came easily as she sipped her own divine brew, bundling up in Chance's shirt and leaning against the counter. Her thoughts had been drifting for some time and everyone in the house was still asleep, leaving her to the tender mercies of familiar friends; tea and spirits. Though if anyone could have been convinced the vinegar stored in the pantry was still wine, she'd have loved to meet that person with a business proposal regarding lake front property in Mawik.
So she was left woefully sober, vaguely comfortable and bristling with goosebumps in a drafty farmhouse waiting for the sun to creep over the horizon. Oh, but she did have tea.
Yes. Wonderful,
warming,
tea. . . It gave her clarity and helped her focus on the future, and by the gods did she need that focus.
There were a million different ways things could go– a million different
places
they could go. And who would come with her? Gods, was she going to be alone yet again? What about Keiter, or even Tessarie? She looked into her empty cup for the answers already formulating in the back of her mind. She wasn't looking for solace so much as validation.
But that begot a new question, one she hadn't really considered and only struck her as she went to eat her own fill of someone else's food; did she owe Tessarie some level of responsibility? Perish the thought! Surely her giving the girl freedom had been
more
than enough of her part in their relationship, wasn't it?
"Woe, doth she walk the line between apathy and aloofness but to find them the same in the end." Sarah murmured to herself as she prepared some more tea. Eventually they
would
part ways, like any other time she'd spent in the company of her ancestral race– sooner or later she'd be put on the spot or otherwise inconvenienced as to why she didn't join her 'family' back in the Veil. Of course that was complete nonsense, but their ilk never seemed to fathom that not everything with pointed ears and a pulse was all that interested in their particular brand of insanity.
Though, Sarah had to give it to them, they had one hell of a marketing department. If she were the type to categorize the quality of people and bedmates by race, she'd probably have a shelf devoted to the 'fairest of the fair.' In fact, she probably had such a shelf that she'd forgotten about in some dingy little hovel.
The thought made her chuckle. It felt good to laugh.
But it also turned a particular gear in the back of her mind she didn't expect to feel turn over. She'd left a rather lengthy trail of bedmates across the planet, even some homes in her egress from the bowels of the Confederated Free States to safer pastures. She'd been running for so long.
She never
would
be free, though. Not so long as she had to rely on mundane means of transit and deal with the people who worked in the shadows– there was money in knowing where people went. There was money in
defining
where people went. It was a disaster waiting to happen.
Sarah mulled it over as she finished off her breakfast of left-overs and tea. There were so few places she could go; to the south was the unending turmoil of the gods blasted land, to the north, the tundra and any further east and she'd run into the same problem she had going west; sooner or later his agents would find her.
It was suicide waiting, it was suicide moving, but the idea– the galling notion of being paralyzed into inaction made her physically ill. No, this wasn't acceptable at
all
. She'd come too gods damned far, endured too gods damned much and on top of that she was smarter than that.
She was the most intelligent person she knew. She'd find a way out of it.
She might've had the tools she needed, even.
Yes. Sarah was an Engineer, all she needed were plans and the
tools
to implement them. The curvaceous half-elf set her cup down, dampened her lips and for the first time in what could've been forever, set off to find her clothing for purposes other than basic decency.
#
Sarah's boots crunched the dirt as she strode from the back door to the barn, lugging a pitcher of tea and cursing herself for not bringing her coat too. On the way she checked the carriage to see if it'd been tampered with in the evening.
She hadn't expected to see Caldion strung across the benches in a fitful sleep. He'd wrapped himself up in his own leathers for warmth and while he didn't
seem
immediately uncomfortable, Sarah knew well the pleasures of sleeping curled up as he was.
Why hadn't the damned fool come inside? Not only did he miss dinner, but the basic warmth and safety that came with a home too? Bloody paladins. It wasn't like they hadn't left a note– she rolled her eyes and eased back so as not to wake the boy.
Further proof positive the very
concept
of a paladin was categorically ridiculous and prone to failures of the spirit and flesh. Not that she was one to talk, but at least she didn't pretend she was somehow better than the average person.
Well, not usually; it wasn't her fault she generally
was.
Sarah halted at the door to the barn, clutching her pitcher warily. She knew what lay beyond it, and what it represented, what it
was
. But that was all it was, wasn't it? A representation.
No different, really, than any cargo ship in any port. It happened to be her design that inspired it, that was all. It wasn't
the
ship. She drew in a deep breath and licked her lips. She could do this.
What a perfect time for her glasses to feel slightly off on her nose, and gods damned, her boot's strap was loose. She muttered as she fixed the offending articles, taking much longer than necessary to do so. When she rose Haras was staring at her with arms crossed.
Sarah groaned inwardly.
The humanoid creature uncrossed her arms, the swish of her odd three piece suit being the only sound she made before reaching to the door. Sarah was pretty sure she was transmitting part invitation and part demand through her milky pupil-less eyes, but she didn't speak as she opened the door. Mercifully, she stepped aside and waited for her charge, her cleric, to gather up the courage to peek in.
And by the gods did it take time.
Sarah went through every buckle and tie on her clothing until she could've made a new outfit out of the material she'd rubbed off the old. Eventually her excuses ran thin, however, and she had to look to her handler once again. This wasn't even a certainty, she told herself, this was her testing the waters to see if she could get somewhere.