Sighing, I mount my white gelding Snowmeow. His white flanks are a canvas for the world to paint on. The color of the moment is shade gray.
Some months ago a madness took me, and I fled the world of Norrath. Long I wrestled with anguish and despair. But when I stopped fighting, a kind of peace came. And I returned to the little house in East Karana.
No one is there now. Sometimes Mirthan will come to mend a board or two. A woman I don't know, a ghost perhaps sometimes breezes by. But for the most part it is a house of shades.
I missed a war with Verin Vharc. Gilliadson and Sineliniel died, a few escaped never to return. The house burned, ironically in it's fiery demise finally a House of Light in truth.
Mirthan never speaks of my daughters. In my heart I do not want him to tell me. They are gone to ashes with those who perished in the flames...
I let Snowmeow wander, scarcely seeing the plains I once loved so well as we travel.
Night falls, there is no moon. We cross into South Karana...
Distant flashes of light stir me from my stupor.
It's lightning flashing on a distant hill.
Then I remember...in the Time of Fables, Holy Karana walks the earth...!
My heart is wild with emotions, excitement, terror, shame, how can I face my God having failed and fallen so far?
But Snomeow whinnies exultantly, and charges across the plains.
Twenty feet tall, stern and terrible, like an old man, but standing straight and tall, eyes flashing with electrical sparks, God looks down on me.
'...my God...!' I whimper.
'Whom do you speak to priestess? What god? God is whom you serve. Family? Guild? Friends? Pray to these Gods you replaced me with. Do they answer?'
'...no my Lord...' Tears come like a cloudburst storm, and I fall to the ground sobbing.
'Then they are not God, though you put them before me. Call me!'
'...Karana! Holy God!'
Then he laughs, and it's like thunder, and the brightness in his eyes like the lightning, and the shadows waver and quail.
'Priestess! When all is lost, only God remains! Lose it all, even the despair! Even the weakness! You made mortals your gods, but now I will show you a more excellent way!'
And somehow my sobbing turns to weak laughter and sweet relief. I sit at His feet, my Holy Karana, and the night holds no terror, and I am healed by faith and devotion. Tomorrow a new day will come. Perhaps I will be there to greet it, or maybe not. It doesn't matter. God is in heaven, sometimes on earth, and now once again at home, in my heart!
