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She and Zhuan spent three more days together in the mountains. On the third evening, Mirian felt sothing change as she was speaking to a scimitar lion. It was like when she’d been practicing Eskanar. For a ti, she’d been able to muddle through conversations. Then sothing had clicked, and she was thinking in Eskanar. As her thoughts touched the scimitar lion’s aura, she felt a better understanding of what it wanted, how it saw her. It was nothing fundantally new—she’d been speaking to myrvites for years now—but it felt different. She couldn’t explain it.

When she slept, she moved around the dreamscape.

She found the Ominian, slowly striding across a vast forest. From the mountains, she knew that it was Akana Praediar, long before humans had ever touched the land.

These are Their mories, she knew. Traced and retraced. A way to rember this place. A way to hold on to what was lost. What will be lost. She flew across the dream. The Mausoleum was rooted in reality, but the other places weren’t. She wasn’t sure how that worked, but she didn’t need to understand the theory, just the rules. They were bound together in a spirit, and each soul within the construction was in contact with the Ominian.

She had a request, and she put it together without words or emotions, only what she knew of the arcane sigils. Communication required establishing common context; the scimitar lion understood raising young, understood hunting, understood hiding from predators. The Elder Gods understood none of that; she showed the Ominian concrete physical events: moonfall. The asurents of the temporal anchors. The kind of stone found in the Endelice. Once she had that, she showed the Ominian the movent of ti she needed in glyphs, showed Them the spirit construct in runic approximations.

At first, there was no movent. Then, the giant God stirred. Their body appeared humanoid, but sotis as it moved, she could see the pieces of it hidden by a trick of the dinsions, vast pieces of twisted stone and unblinking eye-like whorls, twisted wings of dark crystal, and limbs that twisted at odd angles.

The Ominian raised a hand, and for a mont, Mirian could see parts of Them in a layer she couldn’t normally perceive. It was maddening, that glimpse. It was like she was almost touching a new understanding of how the world was assembled, only for the pictures to dissolve into fog as she reached out. It was like realizing the ground she stood on wasn’t solid, but contained more of the void than anything real.

In an instant, the world around them transford. Now she looked at Akana Praediar as it was now. The western mountain peaks worn down, the forests replaced by endless farmland. There were no people, was no movent—it was a mory, not a reflection of reality—but it was a fixed mont in ti.

Mirian gaped at the Elder God.

It had worked. She’d made herself understood—without the translation of Eyeball or Conductor.

She tried to push her thanks through runes, but the God was motionless.

Mirian stepped through the dream into the Mausoleum.

Two shadows, the souls looking like the folds of cloth, the faces blank, were already waiting for her at the foot of the colossal figure of the Ominian.

“What happened?” thought one of the souls. Xecatl, she knew.

“I think… I think I got the Ominian to make the dream linear,” Mirian thought back to both her and the second soul, Jherica.

Another shadow appeared in the room, then another, then another. Liuan, Ibrahim, and then Gabriel. Last, Zhuan appeared.

“The dreamscape shifted. And you’re all here,” Ibrahim thought, surprised. “What happened?”

“Ti in linear in the Mausoleum, now,” Mirian thought. “We can now et any night we please.” That would give them a powerful tool for coordination. Instant communication each night.

“Amazing!” Jherica thought. “Does this an… is there a way to communicate with the previous Prophets? Can you tell Them to move us back to the First? But then what if we changed what the First Prophet did? Could we even do it? If we could, what would that do to our branch of ti…?”

“I don’t know,” Mirian replied. Could she? Would the Ominian listen? How did that play into the Pact? And what would happen to their portion of the fields of ti if sothing a thousand years ago changed? Would they be erased, or would they be like a branch cut from a tree, unmoored from history?

“It can help us do sothing else, in the anti,” Xecatl thought. “Scebur doesn’t have a violet focus, but they must be sowhere in the dream when we sleep. We can hunt them down and take a asure of their soul.”

If she’d had a body, Mirian would have straightened in shock. “Spread out in the dream. Check in here every so often. If I can get a look at their soul, I can create a divination spell that targets a unique current or feature.” That would involve a tri-bound sequence that mixed runes and glyphs.

The souls of the Prophets began to vanish as they spread out.

Mirian flitted through the dream. The mories of places had all changed to represent the present; the Ominian hadn’t quite understood that she just needed the Mausoleum in linear ti. Or perhaps they couldn’t have one without the other. It seed the Ominian walked all of known Enteria, though, which ant there was a lot of ground to cover. Even flying through the dream faster than what supre levitation could manage in reality, there were so many places to check. But they wouldn’t get a better opportunity for an ambush.

She shifted back and forth between the Mausoleum and the dreams. Xecatl returned as she did. “Nothing in that place of creeping dread, and I did a quick pass over the archipelago. I’ll try to cover Tlaxhuaco,” she said. “Perhaps they’ve been using the dream to scout it out.”

Mirian left to look across Baracuel. Using that logic, Scebur also might be scouting out Torrviol. Except, it wasn’t quite Torrviol that she returned to, but a place where the Labyrinth had blistered up and myrvites stalked through old mismatched ruins. Not quite the present, then. She returned twice more, checking in with Ibrahim first, then Jherica, who was looking along the Akanan coast.

Mirian rushed through the more symbolic places of the dream next; the sea where it rained anchors, wove around through the grove where mushrooms grew into storms and volcanoes into trees, out into the void where the wall of fire veiled the stars, always growing but never arriving. She returned to the Mausoleum, finding Ibrahim again, then Xecatl twice more, then Zhuan.

“Has Gabriel or Liuan checked in?” Zhuan asked.

“No. I was about to ask the sa. Maybe Jherica has seen one of them. I can wait for them.”

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Zhuan gave her affirmation. She had the most practice with the violet focuses, and found it easy enough to rapidly move around the dream.

As Mirian waited, she quickly grew impatient. She hated standing around feeling useless. It felt like hours passed, though it was probably only a few dozen minutes.

Finally, Gabriel appeared. “Liuan says she found Scebur. She woke herself up to go after her.”

“What!?”

A soul couldn’t exactly shrug, but Gabriel sent his best impression of one.

“Where are they?”

“The dream isn’t exactly going to tell us that. She said sothing about a soul-pattern she recognized.”

“She shouldn’t go after them alone.”

“She’s not. The archmages and Sorcerer Elite are on her side this cycle, rember?”

“I can fly there. In two days—no, I think I could do it in one if I pushed myself.”

“Right, drain all your mana and then burst into a delicate political situation, helping locate soone you don’t know and wouldn’t recognize. Brilliant.”

Mirian sent the feeling of a scowl at him.

“We all have the things we’re good at, rember? Liuan can handle herself. Maybe she can even get them to talk.”

If Scebur wasn’t a fool, they could remove themself from the loop in an instant. A wand of fireball could also do the trick, as Celen had proven. Then, they’d have ti to recover and plan. They’d set about causing more chaos that made them difficult to detect. Mirian didn’t care if they talked. Their actions—refusal to talk, attacking Tlaxhuaco, encouraging the war to escalate—they had already spoken loud enough. What she wanted was to remove them from the loop entirely.

And yet, that would reveal a capability she was still keeping hidden.

Liuan had access to the RID. Scebur could be cursed into incapacitation. And if that didn’t take, that was valuable information to know.

“If she lets Scebur escape, I’m going to overturn every rock in Akana until I find them. This has gone on long enough.”

“Probably the smart move,” Gabriel replied. He looked around the Mausoleum. “Right, this place has always creeped out. Don’t think there’s much more point in staying. Nice work, by the way.” Then he vanished.

Mirian stayed for a bit longer, relaying what had happened to the others. Then she forced herself awake. There was work to be done.

***

Mirian was already pacing back and forth by the ti Zhuan woke up.

“Gabriel thinks I should stay in Baracuel,” she said instead of ‘good morning.’

Zhuan rubbed the sleep from her eyes, blinked a few tis, then grunted sothing unintelligible in Gulwenen.

“If Liuan fails, though… it’s far easier to disrupt a tiline than to get it to serve a purpose. Liuan likes her independence too much. And yes, I know that’s probably rich, coming from , but it’s true.”

Zhuan began rummaging in her pack. “Gabriel thinks highly of the control of information. Liuan thinks highly of the control of faith. Both have the imperial mindset. Such a way of thinking is rigid. It demands a reinforcent of hierarchies that—who is that?”

Mirian felt the presence behind her even as Zhuan spoke and whirled. She caught sight of the jawless man for just a mont. The morning light didn’t reflect properly off the tal woven into his flesh. Then he vanished. She didn’t bother casting her divination spells this ti. They wouldn’t catch him.

“I don’t know. He’s been appearing briefly. I’ve seen him in the Labyrinth, in the Mausoleum in the dreamscape, and it’s the sa presence I felt in other monts. I think the first ti he appeared, it was because Jherica said the true na of the Ominian, but there’s sothing else that gets his attention. Certain types of magic, perhaps.”

“The true na…?”

“DIVITRIUS,” Mirian said. The word had power to it; she could feel it in the air as she spoke. She looked around for the jawless figure to appear again, but he didn’t.

“This is… concerning. You didn’t ntion this to the Council.”

“The Council already thinks I’m cracked in the head.”

“Yes, that’s true, but insanity can only be defined relative to normality. Circumstance causes behavior. The normal feedback loops of social regulation are not present. Insanity is an inevitable consequence of the loop.”

Mirian chuckled. “Not one for coddling, are you?”

Zhuan nodded. She got so tea out of her pack, then started casting spells to pull water from the air, heat it, then pass it through the tea and into a mug she had waiting. “My father was treated as an infant by his Akanan boss in the workshop. The Akanan man wanted an obedient child. Outbursts of anger at poor pay and worse working conditions were t with paternalistic disdain. But we are human, worthy of autonomy and dignity. When treated a certain way, we either conform to that vision of who we are, or rebel. This is why you need to investigate the people of your cities, Mirian. Look for the currents of discontent flowing beneath the surface. Feel the resentnt as it saturates the air, waiting to beco a storm. Then you will be ready to call down true lightning.”

She sipped her tea.

Mirian went back to pacing.

“Will five minutes determine if Scebur gets captured or not?”

Mirian snorted. “Probably not.”

“Then I will enjoy my tea. And you may do whatever you please in the anti.”

Mirian looked at Zhuan. Wisdom is not a revelation, but a practice, she rembered. She moved next to Zhuan and crossed her legs, floating in the air. She observed how the shadows of the Casnevar Mountains stretched across the western farmlands, and how the morning light brightened. She took note of the way the light glimred off the snow of the peaks.

Zhuan finished her tea, then smiled. “I would like to observe Akana Praediar. Much can be inferred by walking down the street, reading a few newspapers, and seeing what a local factory is producing. You’ve taught what you know, and I’d like to repay the favor. Besides, I need to practice with illusions and work on my accent when speaking Eskanar.”

Mirian smiled. “I hear you like flying fast,” she said, and offered out her hand.

Zhuan took it, and soon enough, they were streaming just below the low clouds, leaving behind spirals and whirls in the falling snow.

***

That night, they took two rooms in an inconspicuous inn near Vadraich University, using illusions to disguise themselves as Akanans. Liuan hadn’t stopped the assassination of the pri minister. Nor, as far as Mirian could tell, had she quashed the rumors of the magical eruptions being a sinister Baracueli plot.

As soon as she fell asleep though, she and Zhuan were greeted by two souls waiting for her in the Mausoleum. One she recognized, the other she didn’t. The soul was tattered and darkened, the currents disheveled, and the surface withered.

“Mirian, Zhuan” Jherica’s soul said. “I’d like you to et soone I consider a friend. This is Celen.”

Mirian took a step back in surprise. She hadn’t even considered—but of course. Even though the temporal anchors went sowhere when a Prophet died, the soul was still linked in the spirit-construct. Celen had spent most of his ti between deaths wandering the dream.

And what does that do to a man? she wondered, but didn’t project the thought out.

“His soul needs healing,” she said.

Jherica projected a thought of agreent. “I told him Sulvorath—Troytin is gone. That we’re working together now. He can’t speak here, of course, not until he’s had practice, but I think he’s agreed. I still feel his despair and pain, but it’s lessened.”

“All these years…” she thought.

“Only a few days for him, I think. At least, in the waking world. He’s been living in the dream. I’ve been trying to catch him up—gently. He has a good heart. Well, I didn’t know him long before… you know.”

Mirian had mixed feelings about Celen. She’d stopped thinking about him, mostly. But when she did think about him, she thought he was a coward. He’d abdicated his responsibility. Hidden from his duty as Prophet.

She hid those feelings, letting them swirl inside her rather than project out. Communicating her contempt for him would do little. And perhaps, like Jherica, he could beco useful. After all, every soul that could rember ti between apocalypses was valuable.

She hesitated, not sure what to say. What did one say to a person they despised, but needed?

Then Liuan’s soul appeared.

“Scebur is eliminated. Cursed into incapacitation. I’ll begin searching the country for the comatose body as soon as the next cycle starts.”

Mirian turned and looked at Zhuan, then back to Liuan.

That had not been how she’d expected events to play out.

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