With Honeyed Words
Thirtieth Day of the Fourth Month 294 AC
The voices grow more muted, the clink of glasses stilling as you grow close to the table that hosts the small delegation from Last Lament. Still, the smiles do not dim and, unless you are gravely mistaken, they are sincere besides. Perhaps they had not been expecting a meeting tonight? Theirs was among the smallest delegations, their gifts more symbolic than grand. Part of you wonders with some amusement if they had heard of the legendary greed of Dragons.
Would they recognize it when you laid out offers of infrastructure and lore, crop rituals and wonders crafted of steel and flesh?
"A fortunate star shines upon our meeting, and a fortunate tide bears our fates together. I had heard much of the wonders of The Island of Sorcerers, but even sailors' tales pale before truth," Yanda Zaq flatters with easy cheer beside his youthful charm. "High are the halls, but higher still the flights of Dragons and the paths of the sky ships. Ah, to fly upon those wings of steel and sorcery..."
"Even the tallest tree has its roots in the earth of the world," Jola Daa interjects, motioning with her fork above a salad of fruit and nuts, half of which are not native to this world. She is no more afraid to experiment than her husband, but she is quieter about it. "Of course, that is generally a saying and not a marvel under the sun stretching out its branches over all the land." She motions towards the Great Tree, a shadow against the starlit sky, save for the faint glimmer of phoenix lights among its uppermost branches, from those rare flame spirits welcomed to come and go as they please by the Zomok.
You had suggested the possibility of something more festive for the day, but the guardian of the tree had been less than interested in playing to the crowd.
The wise should not play the fool in ragged cloak, he had sniffed. The Zomok seemed rather more attached to the Old Gods in the past months you had noticed.
"Do you not find it difficult to rule over a land of so many waking gods, each with their own purpose, so many tongue and manners?" Jola Daa continues. "Last Lament has but a fraction of a fraction, and yet we struggle to accommodate all. Some think they are masters and some wish themselves slaves, to escape making any decisions of worth. Some drown in wine to forget, and others close their eyes to deeper truths lest they prove too dark in the knowing..."
"No more talk of darkness when there is so much light about us," her husband interjects loudly before you can answer. "This is a day to celebrate life, not wonder at the portents of death."
The priestess would not be deterred, though. "And yet without the darkness how would we even see the lights?" She points to the stars. "When the sun is high, we are denied that beauty. When hunters have no worry of the beasts of the jungle, they do not think to gather around the campfire. Indeed, why would they even build walls if not to hold out the perils of the world?" Turning back to you, she adds, "You have built great walls, Dragon Lord, all the more so for the fact that here in the heart of your power they are unseen."
As compliments go, that is by far the most insightful, though you wonder what she expects you to say in answer to her earlier question. Does she expect you to judge how you rule, or how you see yourself ruling?
What do you reply?
[] I have found that people of all sorts are more alike than they are different in what they expect of their rulers, security, prosperity and keeping out of those parts of their lives they deem private
[] All the gods of the realm wish for their people a bright fate in their own way and so they are welcomed where darker powers are not
[] Write in
OOC: I got a headache halfway though writing this and had to break here rather than roll through. The alternative would have likely been no third update. Sorry if this feels dragged out.