Reign of Peace
Long ago, when the gods fought their first war to
determine who was eldest, they used the div in their struggles.
Alone among the gods it was Morwyn, Gentle Morwyn, who
cared for the fiery race. She did not exploit them, but rather
taught them many secrets. It is said that she would go into their
cities and whisper a different secret in every ear—secrets of
why flowers bloom, and why the sun sometimes looks red. She
showed them that the world is lovely, and that it is lovelier still
when your heart is at peace.
The path she set them down was noble, and these div built
great societies, with thriving cultures of art and beauty. But
Morwyn the Compassionate was not yet Morwyn the Wise,
for she had not yet had to temper her love with the bitterness of
tears. Her brothers were not yet murdered, and she had not yet
experienced the horrors of war. She taught these div to not build
walls or defenses, and said that the good in the hearts of their kin
would come forth. Though war raged around them, she told the
div that peace was stronger than war, and that when their hostile cousins saw their beautiful homes, savage hearts would ease,
and all would walk once more on the path of peace.
Sadly, the White Lady was wrong. When the war of Tinel
and Terak reached the peaceful people Morwyn had instructed,
these gentle empires paid war’s bounty in tears and blood.
Their homes were burned and their temples were destroyed.
The adults were slain, and their children were enslaved.
Soon, there was no sign there had ever been peaceful empires.
Morwyn, Gentle Morwyn, wept.
She found her brothers then, and falling upon them wailed
and gnashed her teeth. She tore the hem of her robe, crying
out, “Why? Why would you tell your servants to do this to my
people?” And for a short time, Tinel and Terak put aside their
war and went silent, for Morwyn was beautiful and terrible to
behold in her sorrow, and their hearts were moved by her tears.
Five gods were born of Eliwyn. They remain the mightiest Lords of Heaven. Four emerged from the fruit
of the tree, and the fifth was born from murder by divine hands. In this chapter, we explore the faiths of these five gods:
Morwyn, the merciful;
Terak, the mighty;
Zheenkeef, the mad;
Tinel, the magnificent;
and Mormekar, the shadow.
Goddess of Healing and Wisdom
Morwyn The Gentle, the Compassionate, the Wise,
the Merciful, White Lady, Queen of Heaven
“Sister, I promise you, I never ordered such a thing. I have
fought for my rightful place and have no time to tend to them.
They are told to destroy Terak’s usurpers.” Tinel stood tall and
proud. He knew the truth: His hands were clean of the matter,
and so he mourned not.
But Terak’s heart was more than moved; he was wounded to
think he had caused his beautiful and peaceful sister such sorrow,
for this was never his intent. He knelt before Morwyn and kissed
the torn hem of her robe. “Beloved Sister, I swear to you it was
not I that did this thing, for you are the treasure of the Tree, who
I fight to preserve. I make this war so that you will be safe.” And
truly, Morwyn saw the love her brother bore for her, and knew
then that she loved him also. She saw clearly that they would be
married in time, but how much that is sorrowful would come to
pass before there would be joy. And touching his hair, she walked
away from her brothers, and let them fight their war.
If her brothers had not ordered her people, the gentlest of the
div, to be so abused, she determined it must have been Zheenkeef.
And she found her sister playing a game in which she lit two
bulls on fire and tried to put them out with her urine. Morwyn
watched her sister running around, squatting over the flaming
bulls to douse the flames; but always the bulls, crazed by the
pain, would run from beneath her and kick and buck. At one
point in this painful ordeal, the sisters’ eyes met. In that moment
Morwyn the Wise saw the truth—her sister had never ordered
such a thing, for she would never care enough about the races of
the earth to give such a petty command.
So now she knew the div who perpetrated these crimes were
ordered to do so by Kador the Wicked. It was the only explanation, and she sought these div out to punish them for aligning
themselves with the dark power. But when she found those who
had savaged her people, they had been enslaved by an even more
powerful kingdom of the div, and they wailed to her to release
them from their torment. And when she asked what commands
they had taken from Kador, they did not know of what she spoke,
for they had taken no order from any god. “We have waged war,
lady, and for this we are sorry. We killed your people not because
anyone told us to, but because we could. Please, release us!” And
she did, breaking their chains and setting them free, for she
could not abide seeing anyone suffer. And she found those that
remained of her people, and she took them to secret places of the
world and made them safe, but they were few and nevermore
built wonders.
It was then that the White Lady learned that which she
knows to this day: The races of the earth do not need the will of
the gods to justify horrible acts against one another, for they are
no purer than the gods. They have a secret fire burning in their
breasts that tells them to hate, and if ignored, that fire spreads.
But she also knew they had other secrets in their hearts.
Morwyn the Compassionate saw that all people desire peace.
Deep in their hearts, perhaps less fiercely than the savage fire of
hate, there glows another, warmer light. There will come a time,
she knew then, when all mortal people will at last heed their
calmer voice. There will be a day, though it may take a thousand,
thousand years, when all people will be washed clean of the
dark fires, and live in peace.
They will no longer kill and burn
simply because they can. Until that time, it must be the work of
Morwyn, Gentle Morwyn, and those who would walk at her
side, to make the damage done by hatred and war the least it
might be. They must tend to the flock of the good and gentle, keep
them safe, and defend them against those who hate. Never again
would Morwyn preach the casting aside of blades, for some, she
saw then, must bear blades to protect those who cannot. And the
Queen of Heaven looks for signs of the Reign of Peace, as she calls
it, and where she sees them protects them, blowing on the embers
of compassion, as one kindles a fire in the rain.
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