41st Zi'da 717
following this & this
following this & this
Yestertrial, she had started the process of getting the baby Aeon had saved adopted to a couple who would love him, keep him safe. She'd arranged for Aeon's body to brought here and now, this trial, she had to take care of him. Stan, the tunawa who was in charge of the Glass Temple looked at Faith and he managed to look at her with a stern gaze. As much as Faith was impressed with that, her gaze back was just as forceful. "I'm fine, Stan. I'm pregnant, not ill." It was her job as a servant of Famula and Vri. More than that, it was her job as his friend and it was her duty. Padraig had understood that, because it was simple and she explained it to Stan in the four words she had told her husband. "He was my brother." Stan sighed and nodded, then turned around and left her in the room he'd put aside for her.
The remains, such as they were, were in the coffin and Faith moved over. The nature of how he had died meant that there was very little that could be done for him, physically, and she knew that this was fine. Stan had put everything that could be found and identified into the coffin and the acolytes here at the Glass Temple had dealt with it as much as it could be. "Fred, I'm here. Aeon." She spoke to him, visualising him standing opposite her as she worked. "I brought you things. So that, when Vri takes you, he knows that you are remembered. It's a tradition here, and it's beautiful, isn't it?" She liked it, very much, as a tradition.
"I know that Vri is with you, that Famula's light shines on you," she said to him, her imagination forming her friend in front of her. "But this is the last thing I can do for you. Yestertrial, I thought I would have to kill him, you know. Noth. But you always tried to stop me from going against monsters, do you remember? I promised you and I never broke that promise in life. I won't in death." She sighed, slightly, her hand on the side of the coffin. It was open, she could see the wreckage of his remains in there, and yet, she spoke to the image she conjured up in her mind and started to see.
"So, I'm going to make you another promise. What I'm going to do. I'm going to live." Faith smiled at him, and she was not even aware of the tears which fell down her cheeks.
She wouldn't have cared if she had been. He deserved them. He'd earned them. There should be a thousand people here mourning him. To the young woman's mind, it made no sense. But she was here and that would have to be enough.
The remains, such as they were, were in the coffin and Faith moved over. The nature of how he had died meant that there was very little that could be done for him, physically, and she knew that this was fine. Stan had put everything that could be found and identified into the coffin and the acolytes here at the Glass Temple had dealt with it as much as it could be. "Fred, I'm here. Aeon." She spoke to him, visualising him standing opposite her as she worked. "I brought you things. So that, when Vri takes you, he knows that you are remembered. It's a tradition here, and it's beautiful, isn't it?" She liked it, very much, as a tradition.
"I know that Vri is with you, that Famula's light shines on you," she said to him, her imagination forming her friend in front of her. "But this is the last thing I can do for you. Yestertrial, I thought I would have to kill him, you know. Noth. But you always tried to stop me from going against monsters, do you remember? I promised you and I never broke that promise in life. I won't in death." She sighed, slightly, her hand on the side of the coffin. It was open, she could see the wreckage of his remains in there, and yet, she spoke to the image she conjured up in her mind and started to see.
"So, I'm going to make you another promise. What I'm going to do. I'm going to live." Faith smiled at him, and she was not even aware of the tears which fell down her cheeks.
She wouldn't have cared if she had been. He deserved them. He'd earned them. There should be a thousand people here mourning him. To the young woman's mind, it made no sense. But she was here and that would have to be enough.
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