Lotlain
It seems so like a mirage at first, you nearly pass it by. Three hundred days you've wandered this desert, so long you've forgotten your question.
This ancient tree drinks no water, but sits in a pool of black ink. Heavy pages serve as leaves and red-lipped mouths hang like fruit from its branches. Not in ten lifetimes could you read all it has to offer.
Five mouths speak at once, each asking the same question in the languages you've learned.
"What knowledge do you seek, my child, that brings you back today?"
Divine Domains
Knowledge, Language, Memory
Divine Symbols & Sigils
Lotlain's divine symbol is a book with a pair of lips on the cover. She is also sometimes symbolized by a large, gnarled tree.
Physical Description
Body Features
Lotlain takes the form of a massive, gnarled black tree sitting at the edge of a pool of ink. Her leaves are pages said to contain the sum of all knowledge, and large disembodied lips serve as fruit.
Special abilities
Lotlain the All-Knowing, Lotlain the All-Seeing, She Who Has No Eyes and Sees All. It is said that Lotlain knows all that has happened, all that is happening, and all that ever will happen - from before the emergence of Anai'it to after the death of the multiverse. She speaks every language that ever has been and ever will be. Many throughout history have sought her haven to ask burning questions, though ever-so-few have succeeded.
Mental characteristics
Gender Identity
While Lotlain takes the appearance of a tree, her fruits all speak in the same feminine-sounding voice, and she is generally regarded as female. Mortals typically use she/her pronouns to reference her, though occasionally you will hear they/them.
Divine Classification
The Forged
The Qualities
The Qualities
Religions
Honorary & Occupational Titles
Lotlain the All-Knowing, Lotlain the All-Seeing, She Who Has No Eyes and Sees All, the Mother of Memory, Speaker of All Tongues, the Giver of Knowledge, the First of the Gifts, the Tree of Knowledge, the Written Record, the Answer, the Divine Author, Keeper of the Books
Children
Pronouns
She/Her