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Lotte wasn't sure what a good proof was. Clearly, there was nothing she could say that would be new knowledge, at least not of the field lore she knew. Nor did she know any new stories, only old ones told again and again, worn out the way any practical person used cloth until it was good for nothing but the jakes, and then used it in the jakes.

But if she revealed the names of the Forgotten God, people would ask where she'd gotten them. Now, there was another thing she could do that would be a little more explainable. If she carved the Nachtmater as she remembered the Goddess, that would be something! But when asked how she knew how it looked, she could tell the story of meeting the Goddess. It was an extraordinary story, but it was the kind of story that did honor to her rather than the inverse. If they asked why or how a Lamia had the right to see her, Lotte would just…

Say nothing?

Lotte found a large log and began working on it at night, though she was sure some had guessed her purpose. It felt like it was best, despite the difficulties of lighting, to do such a holy act at night.

*******

Karle was a strange one. He talked like something out of a story about a scholar who had to be saved by adventurers, but there was a solidity to him. He didn't complain about the conditions, and he knew what made good firewood, and could dress an animal decently enough. It was nothing that would have allowed him to survive out as a wild-man, but it was impressive. He was the mirror-image of all of those effete nobles in stories who turned out to be hardier than they looked. He was as sturdy as a mighty tree, and about as unbending. Lotte was a little intimidated, and so she only got up the courage to really talk to him once in the four days it took to travel to the monastery.

"Have you met Lamia before?" Lotte asked, while they were taking a break by the stream and refilling their skins.

"A few, now and again. There are some in most cities, in the beastly quarters." Karle frowned, thoughtfully. "You've never been to a city, have you? The conditions in the quarters are bad, but then the lives of the poor in such unhealthful places are rarely pleasant. Not good for the humours, I'm told."

Lotte had heard just about the same thing before. She leaned down to continue to fill her water. The babble of the stream was a relaxing counterpoint to this heavy talk. "So, they just… lived?"

"Oh, yes. I suppose there are some professions Lamia cannot manage. I've never heard of a lamia burglar leaping from rooftop to rooftop."

"But aren't lamia known as…"

"Thieves? Liars? I suppose there would be some, though are there that many more than in any population? I cannot know." Karle nodded to himself. "If you cannot find a way to unravel the curse, I am sure that you can still have a life as an adventurer. You surely have the spirit for it."

Lotte flushed at the words of praise, and looked away. "Thank you."

"You shouldn't thank me for telling the truth. I am a scholar: lies get us nowhere except helplessly lost." Karle turned away, and Lotte could tell that he was done with the conversation. His expression even grew distant, and so she decided not to press her luck.

******

"What did you mean by all the questions?" Lotte asked Aisling, when the two of them scouted around the campsite on the second day. They wanted to be sure that there was nothing untoward, so that their sleep wouldn't be disturbed. There were the usual critters out there, but the air smelled clean and the road had not been too dusty. Now that there were five people traveling, including a scholar, multiple guards, and someone just as clearly a noble, Lotte didn't stand out.

(This wasn't true. It was more that Lotte was no longer an easy target. But it felt more true, and so Lotte was able to endure.)

"I mean that there are things about you that make me curious." Aisling looked around, her eyes narrowed. "I've always felt that Central Lands understandings of identity are so simplistic. Especially for a people whose Gods are not always either male or female."

Lotte frowned, thinking of examples. Everyone used it or they to refer to the Waldherz, and the Forgotten God was a 'they' as well. But wasn't that just what being a God could mean? Humans certainly couldn't do half of the things Gods were, so of course neither could they be half of the things Gods were.

Or, did she think that Lotte was somehow different? But if she thought that, then it'd be because she knew Lotte was some sort of demigod. But how could she? "Yes, but that's the Gods."

"Moreover, the Fae themselves can shift, from male to female and back again. They are ever-changing, though some are more definite, more sure of who and what they are. Unlike your Gods, we often… talk to them far more often, and even disagree with them." Aisling looked nervous, and no doubt because what she was saying was a sort of heresy. The Gods didn't demand unthinking obedience, though it was perhaps true that most didn't meet them. But then, Lotte bet that most Elves didn't meet the most powerful of the Fae. (She knew enough stories to know they ranged from pixies and brownies to beings of immense power.)

"It is not like that," Lotte said.

"Perhaps not. But either way, I want to tell you a story."

"You mean, like a fairy tale?" Lotte asked, suddenly enthusiastic. She really had heard too few stories from other lands. Wouldn't that be just a little like adventuring to the isles themselves?

"...I suppose so."

Lotte nodded, now knowing that she would have to listen carefully for the important moral to the story, and look beneath the words. It wasn't that some of it hadn't happened, but she'd been told that fairy tales were supposed to teach moral lessons. So she had to focus on that.

"I once knew a girl who was very different." Aisling said.

"Oh?" Lotte nervously said, leaning forward to listen.

"Many people thought she was a man, because she had been born with a… well, your parents are farmers, so I'm sure you've seen it. A prick. Yet she was a woman, and also one of the best bakers I'd ever seen. She was an impressive person, you know. Others doubted who she was, but she believed in herself." Aisling laughed. "Considering how dark and hopeless the world can be a lot of the time, it was honestly kind of impressive. I do like earnest, honest sorts of people." Aisling's ears twitched, and she snorted. "Look at me."

"Honest sorts of people?" Lotte asked, still trying to find out what the moral of the story was. Was it about being yourself? Or perhaps honesty?

"Well, there's Naja. No matter what sort of person she can be, she's very honest with being it. Not that we're doing anything other than fucking, of course." Aisling's face was a little flushed. "Still, even when she's being manipulative, she can't help but bring her faux-dashing adventure routine into it. It is really annoying, but… Lotte, what are you doing?"

Lotte was staring hard at her, and the faint blush on her face with a wide-eyed, happy look. Because it seemed so romantic! A guard and her charge, disagreeing and talking back to each other but clearly feeling far more than either one of them would admit! "Are you in love with her?"

"Of course I'm not. It's silly that you think that," Aisling said, with a roll of her eyes. "I'm fond of her, and she's attractive of course. You've noticed that yourself."

"Well, she is." Lotte couldn't even really deny it.

"But fondness and attraction do not add up to love, unless you're really desperate," Aisling said. "And--wait, you're distracting me! What I was saying was, she had to struggle to realize who she was. Because you can think you're one way but be another way and not even realize it."

Lotte winced at that, thinking about how different her soul and past was from what she thought it was. Were her parents secretly worshippers of the Forgotten One?

"And it's important to be true to yourself, I suppose…"

It was obvious now. Aisling suspected that Lotte was actually a lamia, rather than cursed to be one. She was trying to tell Lotte that it was okay, but there was no way she'd admit to it. She needed to hide it, right?

"W-what would any of that have to do with me? True to myself?"

Aisling sighed, like an air-bladder deflating. "Well, you see, her own journey of discovery began with--"

"Hey, guys. Are you done yet?" Naja called out, walking up. "I really need a buffer between Karle and myself. He's looking at me as if I am an idiot, rather than the bold adventurer that went into the prison of a God."

Aisling snorted. "It could no more hold a God than you can hold your liquor."

"You know, I am paying you."

"If you'd like to stop, you can." Aisling waved her hand, and strode back towards the camp. "But I don't think you'd dare."

Ah, love! It was a lot nicer to think about that than the obvious message of the story thus far: Aisling knew about Lotte's secret identity as a demi-god.

How was she supposed to convince Aisling not to believe something so true?

*******

Lotte almost spaced out, that night, as she carved. It was as if she was drifting away, and yet her fingers moved all the same, carving out the shape of the moth-God, the mother of Night. But it felt like she was adding what wasn't there, trying to capture something that couldn't be seen. Her fingers didn't feel up to the task, but then a lot of her didn't.

She was still getting used to her new body, but at least her fingers seemed to whittle as well as ever. At least she could rely on that. She went to sleep still clutching the log, now well on its way to becoming an idol.

She dreamed of bright wings.

******

"I wasn't done with the story," Aisling said, at the next possible moment, while they were eating dinner the next day. "I want to tell you more. I never got to my point."

"O-oh?" Lotte asked. "W-well, you know, I don't…"

"This girl I knew, the one I was telling you about, that thought they were a man for a while, before they realized otherwise…"

"Yes?" Lotte asked, with a resigned sigh.

"I'm trying to help you." Aisling rolled her eyes. "She didn't feel comfortable in the body she had. She was never happy masturbating, she told me, because she didn't like her cock. And she hated the facial hair she was growing, and the fact that she looked at her chest and couldn't' see breasts. She hated how deep her voice was, and she hated how she was expected by her parents to not care about cooking, cleaning, and especially baking. How she was supposed to like fighting and hunting when they bored her." Aisling spoke slowly, but with obvious fondness. "She was a woman, before she even realized this."

"I'm touched, but confused," Lotte admitted, frowning at Aisling and trying to divine what exactly she was telling Lotte this for. Were they bonding?

"Only you can say this for sure, but I think you might be a man."

Lotte's heart stopped beating for what felt like an eternity. When people talked about hearts skipping beats, they made it sound romantic rather than terrifying. "W-what would make you think that?" Lotte asked, already backing away.

"Your hatred of your breasts, how you carry yourself, the fact that you were able to enter a wing that neither of us were, the clothes you prefer aren't really much of a hint, but when we consider it all together, it does seem a little telling." Aisling frowned thoughtfully.

"The w-wing?"

"We couldn't enter the wing you could, you couldn't the one we could. What else could it have to do with?"

Lamia souls? But then, what about the man who was in there. The man--

No, impossible. "D-don't s-s-say stuff like that about me," Lotte hissed, a stammar finding its way into her voice when she'd never had one before. She was so terrified she almost couldn't think. "I'm already a lamia, a freak, and--"

"Are you calling her a freak?" Aisling asked, sharply.

"N-no. I'm calling myself…"

Aisling sighed, and Lotte could see the way that she wanted to continue the conversation. "You can be a guy if you want to be. The question is: do you want to be? Do you really? If the answer is yes, then as far as I can tell that means you've always been a guy. It's that simple?"

"What about any of that is simple?" Lotte demanded, her voice cracking a little.

"All of it. What it isn't is easy." Aisling shrugged. "You're an adventurer, you didn't sign up for easy."

"I don't have to--"

"Just think about it. It's annoying, but I do care about your happiness, and I think you'd be happier if you actually considered it and came to a real answer, not just the default."

Lotte shook her head. "I suppose I can… think about it."

Lotte was lying again. She wanted to ask again, what the things she'd done wrong were, so that she could stop doing them wrong and giving off the impression she was a boy. Surely she hadn't been doing being a girl wrong? Was there even a wrong way? There had to be, and somehow she was managing it.

But she was not smart, but she wasn't stupid enough to believe that she'd fix it by just pretending to like whatever Aisling considered womanly. Skirts, and baking, and whatever else. It didn't work like that.

Even she knew that.

She'd just… try to ignore it.

******

Somehow this turned into neither Aisling or Lotte talking at all, even while the day slithered on, and they finally approached the monastery.

"There's a particular outbuilding on the grounds that houses the route in. Of course, there's also a path within the main building, but we won't be granted entrance through that way," Karle said.

"Wait, so is it actually kept secret from the nuns and monks?" Lotte asked.

"Not really, no." Naja shrugged, answering before Karle, who glared at her for butting in. "How could they?"

"Oh."

*****

The building on top of the hill was truly impressive. It seemed as much a manor as anything else, two floors high, with a gate around the area stretching almost that high. The top of the building was flat, no doubt to allow stargazing, and there were plentiful fields and even villages all around the base and in all directions from the monastery. If it really did come down to finding a building, squat and plain, near the base of the hill. It seemed to hold little more than extra equipment, spare plows for disasters, that sort of thing. It smelled a little terrible, but also a little familiar, and there was barely room for all of them. Karle had to walk around, banging his feet on the ground in some sort of pattern, until at last there was a click, and a part of the floor opened up into what seemed like a long, if rather steep, stairwell.

"I will go first," Karle said. "There's no danger."

"Ah! Karle!" the call came from down below as he walked just out of view. "It has been too long, and I've been too bored standing guard at this back entrance like this. Are you here alone?"

"Not at all. There's an entire party, including a lamia. But you will not believe the story that comes with them. Scholastic knowledge about… all sorts of things is about to be rewritten!"

"Ah, yes, send down this lamia of yours."

"Not mine at all, and considering she can hear us… please do come down, Lotte. And everyone else, after her."

It had to be a while after, since Lotte was long enough that you couldn't exactly press yourself up against her back while walking, not unless they knew her rather better than any of them here did. It felt a little odd, slithering down stairs. But it wasn't difficult, whereas Lotte had no idea what she would do if it came to ladders. In fact, now she was wondering whether Lamia houses had second stories, or whether they dug down instead. The Temple had been built tall, but that was a Temple. Temples tended to do the impossible to demonstrate the depth of feeling behind them. Or so the stories said.

The man Lotte was meant to see was short, and had a thick beard. It didn't look that well cared for, by the standards of beards, but a part of her--

"Only you can say this for sure, but I think you might be a man."

Lotte tried to push down any emotions the beard of anything else, barely looking at the dark-haired man, and then looked away.

"Huh. Interesting. I think Freddy will like this, if there's an interesting story behind it. And she's strong, too, carrying all of those packs." Lotte was festooned with them, since she'd agreed to carry a lot of the supplies in. There was also the carving she had to show.

"She's an adventurer. A new one, but already made a name for herself," Karle asked. "I can explain later, but she stumbled across something momentous in a ruin that Lady von Siebert found."

"You mean, your sister found--"

"She is not my sister," Karle said, voice thunderous. "But it is the woman you are thinking of."

The man's sigh was the gusty winds to that thunder. "I swear, Karle, one of these days you are going to attack someone who mentions her."

"I would never." Karle sniffed. "Everyone, you can come on down instead of listening in!"

Eventually all of them were piled into the almost-too-small underground pathway, which only went deeper down. They were required to wait for a while, part of the way through while the man--Louis von Vener--went on ahead to tell the others. Then they were guided into a circular room. In the center of which was a platform, upon which stood a man in his thirties, clean-shaven, with a strong jawline. His nut-brown hair looked like it was starting to recede, but it also looked as if it might be as soft as the best grass.

Lotte kind of hated that she noticed, considering she had so many other things to be concerned with at the moment than how well he filled out a green tunic, or how well his hose looked on his leg. She hadn't even heard him speak, so she knew it was nothing more than silly, animal attraction. People were distressingly like the pigs, cows, and horses, who certainly didn't mate for personality or mutual respect of interests. Though, she sometimes wondered, watching them, just how animals worked.

Certainly, affection among animals couldn't be denied. Cows could have friends, deer could frolic, birds chittered and chattered and sang out their conflicts and their passions. Humans--and in fact all the races of the world--were supposed to be different, though.

So it was with a blush that Lotte entered and tried to look away, glancing instead at the door they'd no doubt go through once they provided the payment.

"Frederick. It is good to see you." Karle nodded in his direction.

"And you as well, Karle." Frederick waited until they'd all filed in and took their places. Then he declared, "Karle, you've already paid, but nobody else has." His voice was deep, though his tone was casual. "So first, your guard--"

"Well, how about gossip. Does that count?" the guard, Sofia, said. "An Orimish tribe managed to beat back the Kurzach Kingdom in a skirmish. But there are fears that the Kurzachs will be back, and in greater numbers. If they are, they the Orime of that tribe will need allies. Can't know if they'll find them, but that's useful information, right?"

"I believe I will accept it. War and news of war is of little interest to many in our society, but not all. And news on the Orime is always appreciated."

Karle snorted at that, but for what reason Lotte couldn't say.

"Alright, I will go next. May I approach the podium? I talked to Karle about the character of the Keeper of this Library, that is yourself, and so decided that this bit of information would be something you'd like." Aisling smirked as she stepped forward.

"H-hey, you don't have to characterize me to random guards, Karle!" Frederick protested. But he bent down and listened to whatever Aisling whispered in his ear. His face went red, and he said, "O-oh, really? Very well, then. That works. Next, Naja von Siebert, then?"

"Well, this is just the start of it. But Lotte here was in fact cursed into the form of a lamia mere weeks ago. Karle and I can both testify to seeing her with legs, a perfectly extraordinary human hunter."

"You mean perfectly ordinary?" Frederick asked, with a frown.

"I said what I meant," Naja said. "She was exceptional before the curse, and she'll be exceptional once it is broken. Is that an interesting enough bit of information? It's why we're here, after all."

"Hmm. Yes, yes, that will work. And what about you… Lotte, was it?" Frederick asked.

"M-me? Well, there's this…"

Lotte opened one of the bags and carefully took out the carving, which was tall enough to go from the top of her chest to her brow, and wide enough with the wings to be very cumbersome. No doubt everyone else must have guessed what it was.

Frederick, on the other hand, stared at it. "You've seen Her, haven't you? It looks exactly like her."

Lotte, who knew her whittling and carving skills weren't that good, said, "I have, but it's not a very good likeness."

"Are you sure you aren't magical? Because I can see the rough parts. It is just a carved figure, but something about it invokes the… invokes the Goddess herself. Divinity, too. I saw Her just once, a decade ago, but one doesn't forget these things." Frederick's eyes seemed to gleam as he leapt down from the podium. Up close, Lotte could see that they were hazel, and very intense. "Could I please show this to the monastery? I don't have to tell them who made it, though know you're welcome to stay as long as you wish. Such payment is well worth the year you would get for providing an entrance fee."

"You would kick me out after three weeks," Karle said. "But then, this is quite expected of you, all things considered."

"You can show them, as long as they don't…" Lotte began.

"Ah, right. Never worry, Lotte," he said, with a gallant bow.

"If you are quite done flirting," Aisling muttered.

Frederick looked as red as a tomato, and Lotte was blushing as well when she looked away. "Anyways!" he finally said, with considerable bluster. "You may enter, and stay for at least a week, if not more. However long you need to take to do the research. This way, then, this way. There are cells for you to sleep in, and you'll of course have what privacy you need. There are only a handful of people here right now, and only one visiting researcher." He threw open the doors, and Lotte coughed at the smell. Books, books, and more books, and a considerable amount of dust as entered the space.

There were levels of floors piled on top of each other, with the bookshelves reaching to the very top of each floor, and a warren of passages, chairs, tables, rugs, and more making this place one bad candle from disaster, or so it seemed, but also strangely beautiful.

It was not the sort of place that interested Lotte, not being much of a reader, but it impressed her. "There have to be thousands of books here!"

"Tens of thousands," Frederick said. "The largest collection for a thousand miles. Larger even than that of the universities. And more than books, at that. Good luck, we have something of an organization, but there's a lot that remains tucked away."

Lotte wished Karle good luck, since of course she was not going to be any help at all in this.

While Lotte's waiting, what do they do? (Choose 2)

[] Since all of the searching is going to be about lamias only indirectly, and a lot more about curses, Lotte could *try* to find information and books about Lamia. How likely she'd be to succeed and then get much useful out of it is… unknown, but perhaps it's worth trying?
[] There was apparently one researcher already here. That meant a new person to meet and greet, and while this could end really, really badly considering that Lotte was now a lamia, perhaps they'd be a friend. And if not, one could still learn things.
[] Exploring the area in general could be done even if you didn't expect to find works. Look at everywhere there is, figure out what this place is even about.
[] Ask more about the monastery above. What would the people up above do if they learned there was a lamia beneath there. Did the Nachtmater ever visit? What could be done to divert them if they did?
[] Frederick was handsome, if a little strange. Would it be perhaps a little foolish to hang around and get to know someone better, just because you feel an entirely superficial and likely fleeting attraction to them? Yes. Is Lotte in fact eighteen years old? Also yes.
[] It wasn't Lotte's business, not directly. She could indeed spend some time in the cell, relaxing and napping, and otherwise keeping out of the way in favor of relaxation.

******

A/N: A lot going on in this one. Hopefully you enjoyed.
 
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Lotte sometimes regretted her own ignorance and stupidity in the way of books and learning. Certainly, she regretted it whenever she ran face first into problems that only those who had actual learning could solve. But it was more than that. Lotte knew some people who disdained not only book learning, but even the ability to read and shakingly write their name. It was unnecessary frills on a life that had plenty to do, so those people said. Lotte, on the other hand, . respected those who were intelligent and thoughtful, such as Naja, Karle, and Frederick. But it didn't make it any less frustrating to be left behind.

It also didn't make the dust any less unsettling. Lotte coughed a lot in the first few hours of looking at shelf after shelf, with books packed tight and names only sometimes written on the spine. At other times there were instead labels. P24, Ch 38, and so on. It was baffling, and so Lotte just tried to remember things. She could tell that P24 was near P25, though not quite next to it. It was as if someone had put the books back in slightly different orders, but considering that Lotte's math and counting slowed down considerably above the tens places, she couldn't be entirely sure how they were supposed to be aligned. There was a P 312 at the end of one particularly huge shelf that seemed jammed into a wall. But it was next to a R 112, so how was she supposed to know?

She searched a little while longer, and felt no closer to understanding where everything was than at the start, two hours ago. She learned where a few things were. There were several sets of stairs, scattered around as if each had been an afterthought, and two privies, one near the top of the library and the other near the bottom. Both privies were well out of the way of the stacks of books, thought here were desks not that far away. It was the sort of place you had to learn by seeing, and even then she hadn't gone down into every dark corner to see whether she was missing anything. She had stopped to examine the desks, since they were a little strange by her vague understanding of what desks were. There wasn't enough room to really crowd the books that were supposed to be scattering it. A writing desk, perhaps? But didn't writing include writing or copying books? Lotte gave a mental shrug: what did she know?

So she walked around a little more until she found Frederick. He was smiling to himself as he sat at a chair, going over a book. Off to the side was a small table that had what looked like notes, and as she watched, he stood up, carefully walked over to the sheaf of paper, and began to take notes.

Lotte slithered closer, and he startled, then turned to see her. "Oh, Lotte! You're quieter than I thought."

"I am?" Lotte asked. She hadn't particularly been trying not to make any noise.

"I guess you're just light on your… erm." He coughed and admitted, "I'm sorry that I'm so awkward, I'm just surprised."

"It's okay, I'm awkward too," Lotte insisted.

"Well, so what brings you to me?" Frederick asked, with a toothy smile. "At the moment. Your friends are hard at work finding the cure to your curse."

"That's sort of what I was looking for," Lotte admitted. "Or, no." She bit her lip, and Frederick's grin turned into a concerned frown. "What if the curse cannot be undone? If so, I need to know more about what I've become. So I was thinking of finding books about lamia, well, true books about lamia, and learning more about their culture, and their physio…" Lotte frowned, as the word she'd vaguely remembered being used escaped her grasp. "Physical bodies."

"Ah, I could help with that. I admit that it can be confusing, sometimes. The system is simple once you understand it, but a lot of people don't." Frederick glanced at the book and said. "Actually, I could use this to show you." He set the book down and picked up the paper, turning it to show Lotte the writing on it. It was a little rough, loopier than she was used to. Fancy. But she could read lines for a title, for an author…

"See, how it works is, with each new book I write a new index entry. Title, author, what year the book was written and what year this particular copy was made, details about the author's background…"

"Why?" Lotte asked, frowning at that.

"Well, it matters whether she's a Duke's daughter, or he's a poor boy on scholarship at a university thanks to a Godly fellowship. So we list it, just short details about their parents or life situation, usually. Then, we list the category it goes in. Philosophy and Theology for instance, or History, or Medicine and Bodies, or Language and Philology. Then we list its number. For instance, the thousandth book on Language or Philology would be L1000."

"What's philology?" Lotte asked.

"The study of words and language," Frederick said, with a soft smile. "It is something of a passion of scholars to leave no word unturned. Finally, a brief description, perhaps only five or six sentences, of the content of the book. Then it is all put into an index so that anyone can look, index by index, and have an idea of what's here."

"That seems like it'd be easy to find things, then?" Lotte asked.

"Well, yes and now. How do you decide what goes where? Then there's the fact that since we have them all in order of entry, it means that actually finding them by looking on the shelves is a nightmare." Frederick shrugged. "Still, it's a good job, I think, and I should be able to help you."

"You know a lot about lamias?"

"Well… I know some, and I've always been interested in non-humans. Or those who temporarily appear nonhuman." He added the last hastily, as if terrified that Lotte would take offense.

"For practical purposes, I'm a lamia right now," Lotte said, biting her lip. "So."

"Well then, follow me! We can see what we can find."

******

Frederick was so smart, and very careful about gathering together books. He carefully pruned the list of those he felt were inappropriate or obviously inaccurate, talking the whole time about all the difficulties of a library. It was rather more work than Lotte ever would have been able to guess. It didn't really interest her all that much in general, but he had a deep, pleasing voice, and it was nice to have his help. He'd flip through a book before handing it to Lotte.

Even with his discernment, the pile of books grew, though he pointed out, "Much of the book won't be needed. Just read the parts that are important. I can make a space for you if you want." His face was remarkably red, and Lotte wondered if it was wishful thinking that she hoped it was about her and not about any awkwardness between them.

"Thank you," Lotte said. "Make space how? I wouldn't want to inconvenience you."

"Y-you wouldn't. I would just push a chair aside, and then pile up some blankets and pillows for you to lie on while reading. You can stand, or stay completely upright and read, but you don't have to, as long as you don't eat or drink anything too near to the volumes and make sure not to tear the pages. But I'm sure you'll be careful." He chuckled to himself, and then added, "I know you will be."

"You don't really know much about me," Lotte admitted.

"You don't either, and yet you trust me to give you accurate knowledge to read through. For all you know, I could be holding back the best books in some bizarre scheme."

Lotte looked him over, leaning in a little towards him as he flushed and shook her head. "No, I don't think you are."

"Can you tell when someone's lying?" Frederick asked, breathless, leaning towards her just a little. His eyes were wide enough that Lotte knew it wasn't a joke at all.

"No, but I feel like I can trust you, and I trust my instincts. I do want to know you a little better, since you've been very kind in letting us in here. I've heard enough talk to know that beastfolk aren't welcome most places." Lotte frowned, thinking of Lisbeth, her heart thudding at the thought of her, and the kiss they'd shared. It hadn't seemed the kind of kiss that made a promise, that vowed eternal loyalty. Yet she didn't think her feelings for Lisbeth were diminished.

Despite that, she still wanted him to know at least a little more about her, and appreciate her.

"Alright. My name is Frederick of Amsburg, a town where my father was a pious butcher. His piety and my evident skill at learning led to me being sponsored for University when I was seventeen, and I did well there, and joined this society."

Lotte nodded, frowning. "So you get along with nobles?"

"I could ask the same of you. It's all about being seen as a person. And seeing them as people." Frederick shrugged. "You seem to have managed the trick, if even half the stories of your adventures are true."

"I haven't done all that much," Lotte said. It wasn't even modesty, just the truth. She'd had an encounter with a Rat Piper, an adventure involving the ghost of a martyr, then finally an ill-fated expedition into a ruin that had turned out to be a prison for a forgotten God.

"More than many people do in a decade," Frederick said. "Though if we're being honest, it isn't that much by the standards of the kinds of adventurers people tell stories about. But adventurers aren't everyone. They aren't most people. I went far and wide without being an adventurer at all."

"What did you do, abroad?" Lotte asked. "Though I think, if you're seeing the world like that, you're a sort of adventurer anyways. Where did you go?"

"I went as far as the isles, and I even visited Orime villages. I wanted to see all the types of Sepult, the elves, the Orime… all the kinds of people in the world who weren't just humans. Not that humans can't be varied, can't be different, but there's something about seeing someone who is so different to make you understand yourself better." Frederick spoke slowly, as if he were composing a letter, his head tilted up a little, to stare at a wall. He wasn't looking at her, not directly, and yet she felt his attention. His focus. "I even spent a few months in a beastfolk village, though I only met a lamia or two in that time. That was in my twenties, though. I've settled down a little more, I suppose."

"How old are you?"

"I was born thirty-four summers ago," Frederick said, with a frown, as if he'd rather not have to say that.

"Oh," Lotte said, face a little flushed. "I'd love to hear more stories about everything you had to have seen. You've met lamia, after all."

"We didn't talk much, though. I'm also curious: it's clear you can read, and that itself is impressive."

"It's just that I was given an opportunity," Lotte pointed out. "There are countless who don't get a chance who'd read better than I could. I stumble through pages like a child through a dark forest." She smiled and shook her head. "My mother had priestly magic, but I don't, particularly?" She could imitate some of the forms, and sometimes it could do 'things' but never quite what she wanted, and nothing like what a priest could do. Certainly she had no innate magic. "However, it also meant she was respected and useful in my village."

"Was your family rich?"

"By the standards of the village they were well off, but I've always heard the saying 'The tallest Sepult'... wait, is that rude?" Lotte frowned, not having ever thought to ask. "Mentioning their shortness?"

"It can be." Frederick rubbed at his chin, which looked like it had the start of a beard. "It all depends. Either way, you should not be so negative. Though I've also never heard you read. But being able to read at all is still impressive. It's not as if there aren't a thousand poor scholars like me who didn't get a chance. You see an opportunity, and you grab it. Or you try, at least. Sorry, I'm rambling."

"No, it's fine." Lotte slithered over a little closer to him. "I know what you're talking about. You just have to hope that Gods and whatever fate there is know what it's all for. Even if you don't."

What did the Forgotten God really want? Would it be terrible to do its bidding? But then, what would Lotte get from doing that? There were so many questions they overflowed, and so her mouth went with it as well, "I wish I could talk to the Nachtmater again."

"Talk to the… again?" Frederick said. "She said things to you?"

Lotte's heart was beating fast, in something between trust and distrust, between terror and hope. "She just apologized, though I'm still not entirely sure why."

"She apologized? Are you sure? Gods don't apologize, or so I'm told," Frederick said.

They were close enough to kiss now, and she had to keep her heart from pounding so hard it tore through her breast. She had to force herself not to lean in that little bit more, looking at the bright enthusiasm in his eyes. "She did, and I don't know why."

"Ah." Frederick bit his lip, and spent a very long moment staring at nothing. "Well, then, perhaps you want to go to a ritual devoted to her? The monastery is going to have a major ritual in two days, and perhaps She'll choose to show up, if you implore her presence. She does sometimes, for those blessed in her Sight, and if any place counts, it'd be here, right?"

Lotte nodded. "Could you possibly ask if I'm allowed to participate?"

"Of course I can. And I will," Frederick said. "You've gone through a lot, I can tell, and helping you is the least I can do."

"Thank you," Lotte said with a flush. "So, the… books."

"Well, first, what are you most interested in?" Frederick asked, with an eager look on his face.


What sorts of things does Lotte wind up reading about over the next few days? (Choose 2)

[] Biology and the physical bodies of Lamia.
[] Their beliefs regarding the Forgotten God.
[] Their culture, society, and customs.
[] Their magic, magical traditions, and rituals.
[] Beastfolk and general, and whether lamia and other beastfolk intermingle, and if so how.
[] The locations, if available, or where lamia might live… or might not, since any information would be old news.
[] Write-in.

*******

A/N: So, here's more scholar!
 
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"The forgotten God," Lotte read, from one of the few books that seemed to actually talk about them, "Is like an idol to them, a promise, a hope that they feel will never be fulfilled. It is a mir… mir… age?, a chimera." Lotte frowned down and then looked up at Frederick. "What's a mir-age?"

"It's something you see only out in the deserts, where the heat means you see visions of things that aren't there. So you might chase an oasis, and find only sand," Frederick explained, very patiently considering she'd had to ask three different questions in the last two pages.

Still, there was a rhythm to reading, and the more she did it, the more she enjoyed at least the process of figuring things out. "So, lamia treat their God as a mirage?"

"The author claims they do," Frederick corrected, his voice gentle as he smiled at her.

"Ah. The author could be lying?"

"He could, though he's a credible enough scholar." Frederick frowned. "Then again, think of it. If you think that the Forgotten God is promising some great destiny, then what do you say to the way lamia live? There are some books on the matter, and I've met lamia before. If they are his--"

"Their," Lotte said. "It didn't feel like it was any one identity, when I saw it."

"Ah, yes. You did have an experience with the God. How did it seem? Was it terrifying? Horrible? Majestic?"

"It was canny and dangerous," Lotte said with a shudder. She realized that this was more than she'd said about the Forgotten God. "It talked to me, but it all seemed like it was nonsense."

"The Gods' wisdom often seems that way at first," Frederick said, leaning back a little and smiling wide. "But there has to be something in it, or where would we all be? But then when they disagree, we're left sifting the ashes of their conflicts."

Lotte nodded at that, understanding exactly what he meant. "But it never says what the Forgotten God even promises?"

"Well, who can know? I know that much." Frederick nodded to himself. "Lamia priests keep their most secret rites sacred from all outsiders. Only another lamia could learn everything about that, but I do remember… oh, I know a book that does mention their prayers, now that I'm thinking about it. Can you wait here for a little longer? It might take a few hours to find it."

"Why?" Lotte asked.

"The previous library Keeper decided it was secretive lore, and hid it away where we keep the books we don't want everyone to see. We can't destroy knowledge, that would be against our credo. But we can keep it away from others, as long as it can be accessed."

Lotte nodded, and when Frederick left, she continued to read.

******

What she learned, from the books she and Frederick had read, was that lamias were as secretive as their God in some ways. The Forgotten God was the chief God of all Beastfolk, but it was not the only 'forgotten' God, and other Beastfolk worshipped their own, and only occasionally referenced the Forgotten God, whose name was forbidden.

But there were still prayers, though they didn't include the actual name. They were almost like something you'd imagine for a play, words you were supposed to say:

"[Name] guard me, protect me in the shadows, allow me to slither through the darkness and doubt of the world, to reach the sun."

"By [Name's] thousand eyes."

Lotte couldn't exactly tell him that she knew several different names, and suspected there were more. Actually, that might have been a way to hide, wouldn't it? If there were so many different names, then how would you know if someone invoked them? Or if they were instead saying something to fill in where a name might be. The Gods Lotte knew didn't have many secret names, at least as far as Lotte knew. Everyone knew that priests of some Gods learned one or two secret names. But that didn't mean the name everyone heard wasn't real too. Yes, a name could be power, or it was in old stories, but trying to use the name of a God to move them was like trying to move a mountain with your pinkie.

Sure, you could touch it, but you'd have to be pretty stupid to think you had a chance of doing anything to it. Punch it as you will, it's only your own fist that will get broken. It, of course, was a lot more complicated than that, but that's what Lotte had gathered from the priest the one time he'd talked on it.

So it made sense, what else she heard, in a way. Priests of the Forgotten One apparently only dressed according to their station for rituals, sometimes even having another member of the village pretend to be them in order to fool outsiders. When they did rituals, they dressed in a cloak that was grey on outside, and all the colors of a rainbow on the inside to represent--apparently--the hidden splendour of their God.

The average person prayed to the Forgotten God in small ways, and there were no family shrines, though there was a lot of talk about the use of scales and other objects as talismans. Frederick, though, had gently cautioned her on trusting that, pointing out that the same was often said of witches, and in his experience was only halfway true, and then sometimes.

Lotte liked hearing Frederick speak, but she made sure to pay attention. He'd seen so much more of the world than she had, and she still didn't understand why he was being so patient with someone so clearly unlike him.

Still, she read, out loud in order to puzzle through the words, and by the end of the day she'd started to get a grips not only on religion, but on what role it played in villages. It seemed as if there was a sort of hope that didn't come from the afterlife, or even from believing in the work of your own two hands, but in thinking that perhaps the God would solve things.

Lotte didn't know what to think of that hope, and what to think of the fact that there was a single scant reference to the idea that lamia believed that a holy figure would come, the son of their God, and would… what? Lotte wasn't sure. The author of the work had carefully transcribed a word in a language that even Frederick didn't understand. Beneath it was a line of poetry, and this translated roughly. 'They will light the hearth-fires that were have been long but ashes' the first line read.

"You'd think they'd at least look at what they're translating," Frederick had groused as Lotte puzzled over what it meant. "What next?"

"They will sing the songs that have not been long sung/ Shackles will be shucked in the manner of loose scales.' Like loose scales?" Lotte guessed.

"Makes as much sense as anything else," Frederick agreed. "Interesting. I've never seen a religion like that."

"Like what?" Lotte asked, but she knew what he meant. She just didn't want to think about it, because if she was supposed to be a savior of some sort, what did that mean? She'd heard the implication of others, but were there none at the same time? Was she entirely alone, entirely unique?

A part of her had always dreamed of that, of being one of a kind. Those dreams had involved her doing something, rather than her being something. The difference felt like the difference between reading a book about a forest and walking in it, breathing the air, feeling at peace with the world.

But she couldn't explain anything of that to him. What if Frederick hated her, once he learned that she was a liar, like everyone said lamia were, once he learned that she was a demigod. None of the books spoke of the Forgotten God as anything except a monster, and yet if they were the ones who provided hope to the lamia…

Did Lotte have an obligation to them? She was a lamia now, wasn't she? But then, she hadn't chosen to be one. But who chose their births? Who chose their lot in life? She could rough-hew fate from any angle, but like a tree it would still be the same when it crashed down onto the ground. If there was a destiny she was standing on the path of, then could she fight it? There were stories that said she could; there were stories that said it was impossible.

Most of all, Lotte didn't know what all of this meant. But she was glad Frederick was at least here to help. "It's oddly personal, isn't it? Just one savior? But I don't have any room to complain. Central Lands traditions were odd to carry to other places, too. You know, you're not bad at reading at all. You shouldn't doubt yourself just because you don't know a few words you never had a reason to learn." She smiled at him, and got a delightful toothy smile in return.

*******

Karle visited her in her cell, for reasons that clearly were beyond him. He in fact began by saying, "Lotte, I really do not think it is any of my business telling you this." There were dark circles around his eyes, and he was shifting a little in place, as if he didn't dare stand still.

"Wait, is it something to do with the research?" Lotte asked, frowning. She had coiled her way around yet another book, this one common enough that Frederick hadn't had a problem with letting her read it in the cell. It was a small space, really, nothing more than a place to sleep, but she liked it in a way. It was cozy.

"No. We're continuing apace on our research, and should have more to say within a few days," Karle said. "But Naja, cursed be her name, wished for me to talk to you about Frederick."

"What about him? He's been very helpful, so far."

"He is a nice person, most of the time, but there's probably a reason he's taking to you as fast as he is," Karle said, face twisting up as if he'd drank bad beer.

"Why?"

"Frederick has always had… a thing for non-humans. He was in a relationship with a Sepult woman for a year or two, though that ended last year, and I know he's spent time in a beastfolk village, and there's the Orime he was in a relationship with for a few years, and the elvish man…" Karle shrugged. "He's not exactly been the sort to romance humans. Ever. As far as I know he's a perfect gentlemen with the men and women he loves, but the fact that he is attracted to them because they aren't human is, I suppose, worthy of concern."

Lotte's stomach fluttered when she heard that. There was a moment where it was almost flattering, that someone could be attracted to her now. But wasn't it wrong, for him to be attracted in such a shallow way?

Yet, if attracted, he could have done a lot worse than being nice and polite and encouraging to her. She knew people who had had crushes on her who'd been far less pleasant. She didn't know how to feel, and Karle seemed to sense that. "But I do not know if I agree. You can be attracted to someone for a dozen different reasons. If a person is attracted to me because they like intellectuals, does that make their attraction wrong?"

Lotte bit her lip, hissing between her teeth. "But is it the same as me being a lamia? Or looking like one? I didn't choose that, and I know people don't choose how they look either."

"They can, in little ways." Karle looked troubled, brow furrowed, eyes almost shut as if he were thinking. "I don't know. I can't tell you what to do. I would have said, a year ago, that it was better me giving advice than Naja, but she and Aisling do seem comfortable with each other. Naja has not yet managed to be annoying and controlling and grating enough to drive her away." Karle paused, and then opened his eyes and said, "I admit a part of me wonders whether she might not have changed."

"I'm… not sure."

"Everyone changes, and it's not always for the worse. But I am not required to like it." Karle crossed his arms, and looked so petty and annoyed that Lotte couldn't help but laugh.

But it was true. She'd changed, and she didn't know what to do with it. What if Aisling was right? Or what if she was wrong? Either possibility felt a little like stepping into a bear trap. "Neither am I," Lotte said, with a frown. "Thank you for telling me."

"You don't mean that. You're not thankful at all," Karle said, his voice a growl. "I do not appreciate being lied to."

"I'm not thankful now, but I needed to know," Lotte insisted.

"Then I shall leave."

And so he did. Lotte spent a long time staring at the door of the cell after he'd gone. Thinking.

******

The whole next day, Lotte wondered whether Frederick's smile when Lotte talked was for her words, or for her forked tongue, whether he imagined stroking her scales and feeling what they were like. It was very distracting, imagining their tongues mingling in a kiss, or his gentle hands stroking her tail. Not any part of her tail close to anything inappropriate, of course, just touches. It warmed her, though she couldn't imagine what would come next. No, that was wrong. She didn't want to imagine it, and not just out of any innocence, but that to imagine the kinds of things that would come next was difficult. She'd seen animals rutting, and she couldn't imagine herself there, couldn't--

Compared to that, learning about their culture was, if not easy, then at least less difficult. Half of everything consisted of lies, and half of the rest of misunderstandings, but plenty of scholars had been curious about how lamia and other beastfolk lived. Plenty of those scholars had been trying to create a sensation, or support one cleansing or law or another. But it was very clear, even in the most disparaging works, dry and dusty with age, that lamia stuck together.

This was presented as a bad thing, but in the cities their families and clans all lived nearby each other, though there were also reports of families dispersing throughout the Beastfolk quarters. But even then, you didn't find individual families holed up in some village alone. The only people you found alone were individual drifters, looking for whatever work they could get.

Families were apparently small, because of their poverty and because of the work that occupied so much of their lives. But they were tight-knit, and this perhaps hindered it as well. Nobody established their own household until they were married, and apparently few lamia were adventurers for the same reason that none were nobles.

But Frederick didn't seem daunted by that fact. "How would anyone know that there were lamia adventurers. They would see drifters, not heroes, and people pay too little mind to Beastfolk other than to harm them," Frederick insisted. "Though I do hope that if there is a cure to the curse, you find it."

The problem was, Lotte thought he meant it, even though she also suspected he'd no longer be attracted if so. But then, did that mean…

"I… fear that I won't escape this form," Lotte said. The truth was she knew she wouldn't. If it was what her soul was, then how could she change it. "Have you ever heard anything about such a change at all? Let alone it being reversed?"

"Well, it's not the same at all, but there are stories of Duke Magnus' university, some ways south, and what they did two decades ago."

"Which is?" Lotte asked.

"...alchemy and magic combined. They were attempting to alter the makeup of the soul itself. They thought if they could turn the nature of a dog into the nature of a cat, then the body would follow more easily, and that such learning would lead to the legendary stone that all philosopher-alchemists seek, which can turn lead to gold, lies to truth, and a whole host of impossible feats." Frederick coughed. "But there are rumors of dark experiments and clearly the Duke thought so too, because he stopped any such experiments. There were pyres, there were deaths." Frederick shuddered. "So much knowledge was destroyed that, even if it was terrible, should have been preserved."

Lotte wasn't sure she agreed, but gave a nod as if she did. Frederick seemed to calm down, and they read for several more hours, learning about how apparently lamia and beastfolk had their own songs and their own instruments, and it seemed as if they often gathered together in… well, the books often called it ungodly… gatherings to party all through the night, getting outrageously drunk and breaking all sorts of taboos.

(This, however, sounded not all that different from the festival that her village held after the end of the planting in the fall.)

Finally, Frederick stood up, as Lotte blinked back sleep and read over yet another account of the many sins and evils of the lamia family. "It's time to go."

"Go? Already? Wasn't that at midnight?"

"It is almost midnight already," Frederick pointed out. "You got lost in a… well, from your frown, a bad book."

Lotte had decided not to read it aloud, for all that this made it harder for her to read it at all. "So, I'm allowed to go?"

"Yes, I did say I would do what I could. If you wish to observe a rite of the Nachtmater, now is your chance."

******

They'd come up through a dark set of stairs, and she slithered up yet another set of stairs, past a remarkable number of casks for beer and bottles of what she assumed were wine. It was cold down there, cold and dark and typical enough. She was used to the sensation of stone against her tail, but she still felt exposed as she went up. It wasn't hard to go up stairs, at least, despite her lack of legs, but she was glad Frederick went ahead of her, rather than watching her back.

The halls of the monastery were wide, but remarkably empty, the walls bare, the floor bare, but everything smelled faintly of something rich and woody. She expected at any moment to see anyone, but instead they made their way to a set of doors, and opened it out into a… grove.

At the center of the monastery, then, there was a garden, a grove of sorts, with trees here and there, and a small pond. There were a dozen hooded figures standing around one of the trees, and each of the trees glowed with the light of carefully hung lanterns. Overhead, the light of the half-full moon cast its halfhearted shine upon everything.

"Greetings, Frederick The Keeper. And is this the lamia you said sought to observe our rites?" A woman asked, stepping forward and pulling off her hood to reveal a grey-haired, withered woman with only one eye. The other was scarred over, and that made her gaze seem even more penetrating.

"My name is Lotte," Lotte added, looking around as if each gaze upon here was a brand, an arrow aimed at her heart.

"You wish to observe our rituals?" what had to be the abbess replied.

"...Yes," Lotte muttered, not sure if her wish to talk to the Nachtmater would be believed.

"Then we shall begin. Sister Fenja, begin." They all knelt around the tree, and Lotte did the same, shifting her body so that she was as low as she could manage without laying on her belly. Frederick, after a moment, did the same.

"Oh Goddess, bright of countenance in the darkness of this place. Oh goddess, we beseech you, bless our nights and light our way, let those that would sneak through the dark looking to destroy us stumble upon rocks, trip upon their feel. But let them find their way if they are our friends."

Lotte listened, eyes wide, as the words began to wash over the clearing. There was a splash from the pond, but Lotte just focused on the tree. She felt something, coming closer.

"We ask, as well, that those who are your loyal servants, ask and speak to you, and that you may hear. We have guests today, Frederick and Lotte, a lamia. I do not doubt," the Abess said, taking over from the Sister with a grim intonation, "That they seek only to know more, but if they wish to address you--"

"I do," Lotte said, rising up to her full height. "I wish to ask something of the Nachtmater."

"Ask something of her? Do you hope to dream?" the Abess asked.

"Yes, if that is how She wishes to visit," Lotte said, her heart thudding in her chest.

"How she wishes to visit?" a man asked, speaking out of turn. "How else could she visit a lamia?"

"In person," a very familiar voice said. No, it wasn't familiar, because Lotte had never heard it. No, she'd had it projected into her mind. But somehow she knew who it was. Everyone else threw themselves prostrate, gaping at them. Lotte moved to join them, and heard, "No."

"You're speaking to me," Lotte said, turning to see her, hovering above the water, a giant moth, each wing-beat making all the stars in the sky glow brighter. "It's not…"

"As overwhelming? No. It can be, but I choose not to now. Lotte," she said, her voice remarkably soft. "Is that what you are still called? Is that what you wish to be called?"

Lotte couldn't answer, she just stared. "I… I have questions to ask, if you would answer, Nachtmater. I know I have no power to force you to answer them, nor would I use such a power if I could, for you are a God and I'm mortal."

"You may ask two questions," the Nachtmater said. "You asked one before, so boldly."

She flapped closer, and Lotte realized that everyone was watching and listening. She'd have to be careful what she asked and how, if she didn't want anyone to read too much into what they were saying.

What does she ask? (Choose 2)

[] "Last time we talked, you said you were sorry. But what would a God have to be sorry about? Why would you tell me sorry?"
[] "Did my parents… know?"
[] "What do they really want?"
[] "What should I do?"
[] "What will… other Lamia think?"
[] "What does it mean? What happened?"
[] Write-in.

******

A/N: So there we go!
 
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At the heart of it, there were people she was supposed to trust with her life. Her parents were among them. They'd raised her, had taken her in as nothing more than a babe. They had choices, while abandoning the baby to die would certainly be looked at poorly, everyone whispered about how, in times of famine, mothers were sometimes forced to make difficult decisions. Besides, they could have brought the child to a priest and the priest would have been obligated to find some parent or another.

Instead they had kept her, and named her, and she had become of their flesh in a way more important than birth. (Lotte knew that whatever It claimed, He was not her parent, She was not the one who had acted as a parent. At least, she knew that most of the time, when she didn't worry, when her thoughts didn't go down the wrong path as blind as a novice in a dark forest.)

But what if her parents were simply employees, simply secret cultists? "Did my parents… know?"

The Nachtmater didn't have a human face, and yet somehow the proboscis and body managed to look a little bit pained for just a brief moment. If Lotte wasn't staring at her so intently, she might have missed it. Even then it was odd, Lotte just felt a sort of tug at her guts, as if she knew there that the Nachtmater was about to lie.

"Of course, being what it was, such choices would have been decided well in advance. Why wouldn't your parents have known?"

Lotte took a long, deep breath and said, "Please, do not lie to me."

There was a gasp, going around and around. You didn't accuse the Gods of being liars, at least not most of them.

"They… were perhaps less aware than it might be expected considering the situation."

Lotte stared at her for a long moment, trying to think about this. Expected by who? The Forgotten God? Did that mean that previous 'sons' were raised by cultists but she hadn't been? If so, then was it Nachtmater who did so? But Lotte had no idea why she'd do that.

Lotte took a deep breath, feeling a moment of self-assurance. They weren't lying, they weren't faking. They didn't know what Lotte was… though of course that meant that Lotte would have to tell them, one day. It was a mixed blessing, but only a little mixed.

It was a weight off his chest. In fact, thinking about that saying made her realize there was a literal weight off her chest, and she was too tired and too excited by the news to deny it. She liked that she didn't have any breasts at all, as if she could somehow breathe easier, as if her breasts had been giant weights that were now gone.

Which brought Lotte to another question. 'What am I?' No, that was too blunt, and what if the Nachtmater actually answered honestly? Lotte could already feel the scrutiny multiply after that first question. But she could also feel the tension, the way that the Nachtmater seemed unwilling or unable to simply go away. Lotte knew it didn't have to do with her importance, it was probably just the curiosity of a Goddess.

"What does it mean? What happened?" Lotte asked, as the Goddess drew closer. She smelled faintly of pollen, and shimmered in the half-light of the moon.

"A door was opened. It cannot be opened if there is no door. And it means what you will it to mean. There is no one Fate that you must obey." The wind whistled through the trees as she finished speaking. "It does not mean you were turned into a monster. It means that you are as you are. Do you think I, of all the Gods upon these lands, judge others for being, or becoming, beastfolk, especially Lamia? I do not." She turned to the abbess and said, "The night ends soon, and another night begins. The light which has long been half-shadowed might come out from its cloud. Or perhaps it will rain. Either way, one must prepare for it. I shall come in dreams and portents to speak more on this matter, but the word must be spread through the midnight networks."

Lotte gaped, more stunned than she had been in a long time. She couldn't even imagine what this meant, for it sounded like the sorts of words that preceded wars between Gods, great upheavals, things that felt a long way from her slithering through the garden of some monastery.

She was as she was? If there was no Fate, then why was she supposedly acting upon Lotte and the world? What were her plans? But Lotte knew that she wouldn't understand them even if she was told them outright, and she was aware that she was asking a lot of a Goddess who had not ever asked anything of her.

"You are afraid," the Nachtmater said, suddenly turning to her, moving even closer. "You should not be." Now it loomed over her. "You have a strong and stable heart. You think yourself a fool, but… what is foolishness?"

"I… do you want an answer?" Lotte asked, uncertain. Often times people asked questions just to ask them, to make a point. She'd never gotten that. It had something to do with being rhethorical? Roth… ore… something. Something like that. She was blanking on the word at the moment. Which was yet more proof of her stupidity.

"Yes. I cannot see into your thoughts, but it is very clear there is much you do not yet understand. But that is not folly."

Lotte nodded, even though she didn't agree. Despite all the opportunities she was given, she still had to drag her way through books, she still misunderstood the words of others. At times it seemed as if understanding swam always just out of grasp. "I… will think on your words."

"Do so, please," Nachtmater asked. "I will be watching you, but judgement is not always so clear in the night."

With that mysterious saying She… vanished. One moment she was there, and the next, without any flashes of light or any signs at all, she was gone.

"I… I should be going," Lotte said. "Thank you for allowing me to view your rites." She bowed low to the abbess, who gaped at her.

"Wait… we should discuss what was said," the abess argued.

"My friend is tired, and is not a priest," Frederick said, stepping forward, his face blank. "She does not need to be interrogated or questioned now, if she does not wish to be."

"N-no," Lotte said, firmly.

They left with eyes on their back, Lotte slithering ahead of Frederick, who seemed to almost be trying to shield her with his body, as impossible as that was.

"You can ask," Lotte whispered when they'd reached the stairwell down into the 'hidden' library.

No doubt he thought she was a freak, that there was something wrong with her, or perhaps worse, something wondrous about her when she was not that special. Even if she was a demigod, that wasn't something she chose, that wasn't something about her, it was something that had happened to her. She didn't want to be an idol to be worshipped, or a strange… exotic marvel, let alone a bizarre horror.

"But you don't want to answer. Why would I demand answers? They are yours to give or not. I do not deserve to know everything about you."

"What?"

"I've been to many places. Do you think I did so by demanding explanations to anything I didn't understand." Frederick sighed. "No, you have to listen to people, respect them, and let them teach you if they want to… and if they don't, or don't want to reveal things, you accept it. Pressing them, treating them like a fascinating work of art… what would that have aided me? I hope you don't think I'm like that." His voice was so downcast that Lotte almost confessed about what Naja had told her, which of course was part of the reason she'd worried and doubted.

"Thank you," Lotte said again, her voice a little more stable and a little louder. "Thank you, Frederick."

Frederick sounded like he was smiling when he said, after a silent minute of Lotte going down the stairs first, "You're welcome."

*******

It was almost noon the next day when Naja finally found Lotte, curled up over a stack of pillows and a large desk, reading through yet another volume that seemed to emphasize only the sins and strange habits of the Lamia.

"There you are! We finally made a breakthrough. Dunno what you've been up to, but I've been brilliant!" Naja grinned, and Lotte looked at the dark circles around her eyes and her general dishelvement.

"What happened?" Lotte asked.

"Well, I was staying up late reading, and I fell asleep, and I just… figured it out. I'd been on the right track the whole time. One of the books I wanted to look over again in a few days once I'd chased down other leads was the right one!"

"A… dream?" Lotte asked.

"Yeah. I don't think it was anything special. I'm amazing, but dream visitations seem rather unlikely," Naja von Siebert said, leaning in closer to Lotte as if to see what she was reading.

"I… last night, the Nachtmater…"

"What?"

Lotte cleared her throat. "I went to a rite of the Nachtmater and she showed up, and we talked for a little while."

"You what?!"

"It's… I don't want to talk about it," Lotte said. "I think I presumed too much."

"Well, alright I guess. Now tell me all about it. You don't get to say 'I don't want to talk about it' to me. This could be important to our research!" Naja demanded.

Lotte thought of Frederick's words and shrugged. "I asked about what happened to me, and she didn't answer directly. I asked whether my parents knew…"

"Hmm. Alright then. I do want to hear more, but I'm sure you're excited to learn that apparently your soul had to have been transformed! Aisling agreed, and Karle came around to it. Only the transformation of a soul could make something like this stick for more than perhaps an hour, and probably less. Which means we need to talk to a soul expert, or at least read the notes of one. And we've thought of two places that might work."

"Three," Lotte said, thinking about what Frederick had said about a university and soul research. "There's a university down south that researched souls."

"Oh. Right. I remember hearing about that. That could be an option, too. Either way, we've agreed to go with you to the next stop. It might be good research, and I just want to see this through."

Lotte thought about the kinds of things they could say, or even reveal, and yet nodded anyways. She was already lying to them. Once they learned she was, she didn't want to think about what would happen.

She'd have to just… keep on going forward.

******

Some time after dinner--which was boiled meat and vegetables--there was a knock on Lotte's door. "Come in," Lotte said. She'd just been laying around, checking her bowstrings and making sure her pack was in order.

Frederick stepped in, dressed down a little, in clothing that seemed like it would be more comfortable to sleep in than his usual. "I've heard you're leaving."

"I am, yes," Lotte said. "We're supposed to be going at dawn, but I'm pretty sure for them that means within a few hours of sunrise."

Frederick laughed. "We scholars don't have many reasons to be as strict about hours as you are, when we can elucubrate."

"Elu-what?" Lotte asked.

"It's when you stay up all night studying or writing by candlelight," Frederick said. "It's a hazard of the trade."

"Huh," Lotte said. You apparently learned new things every day, though she had a feeling she'd never use that word in her life.

"I suspect we won't meet again, at least not anytime soon, after you leave," Frederick said, a slight frown on his face.

"You've been very good, though Naja warned me about you."

"Naja did?" Frederick asked.

"Well, Karle told her something…"

"About what?"

"Your history." Lotte shook her head and hesitantly added, "How you only get… involved with non… non-humans."

Frederick's eyes lit up. "So now you're worried about how I was being polite to you?"

"You were more than polite. You were nice, very nice," Lotte said. "I will miss you." Not every day, not constantly, but he'd been good to her, and she was attracted to him.

"You're still worried."

"Wouldn't you be? I think I might be a lamia forever, but…"

"Did you see me flirt with Aisling?"

"No? You flirted with Aisling?" Lotte felt jealousy stir in her belly like a thousand angry hornets.

"No, I didn't!" Frederick said, stepping forward. "I didn't because I wasn't attracted to her. If it was just about not being human, then shouldn't I be trying to seduce both of you? No, I like you. I think you're smarter than you think you are, and certainly bolder and kinder too. I've heard a little about what you've done, and I've seen the way you pay attention, focus even when you're not of a scholarly bent. You're amazing, Lotte." Frederick said it all so simply, as if it didn't need to be embroidered with the kind of fancy phrases he sometimes used.

As if it was an undeniable truth.

Lotte's body moved almost on its own as she shifted towards him, slithering, heart beating faster and faster. Lotte stopped and said, "May I…?" as she reached down slightly and touched Frederick's chin.

Frederick's eyes were wide, but he nodded, as Lotte kissed him. It was just a peck on the cheek, but that close she could smell him. He smelled clean, of course, but more than that there was a faint floral scent to him, perhaps some sort of perfume or something in his bath. It was almost intoxicating as she kissed him again, and this time his tongue slipped into her open mouth, touching hers. It was strange, having a forked tongue, and she shuddered at the strange feeling.

It wasn't a bad shudder.

She knew she had far less to recommend her, especially scent wise. If she was lucky she didn't smell of sweat at all. She hadn't been exercising, so perhaps not. Frederick wrapped his arms around her shoulder, as careful as someone walking over a trap. He was probably ready to pull them back if she said no. Instead she kept on kissing him, until he had to pull away.

It was strange and messy, and there was drool on her lips as her head swam. She could have kept on kissing, but apparently he ran out of breath easier.

"Huh," Frederick said. "You know you're beauti…" Frederick trailed off as Lotte winced without meaning to. "Handsome?"

Somehow that word felt better. It was still a lie, though. "No I'm not."

"Well, I'm attracted to you, and I say you look handsome to me," Frederick said, gently, easily, as if she were an easily spooked animal. Perhaps she was. She shifted forward to hug him again, placing a softer, gentler kiss on his lips. She was still far from an expert, she'd just done what felt natural, but it was still a little bit charged. She hoped the flush on his face meant he liked it. "I… it's up to you to decide what comes next, if anything does."

Lotte hesitated, as he shifted slightly closer to the door, not sure what she really wanted. She wasn't sure of a lot of things. She did know that thinking of him on top of her, rutting like animals, made her feel sick. The arousal turned bitter and began to fall away just thinking about it. Even if it didn't disgust her--and she was starting to wonder why it did, thanks to Aisling--she wasn't sure she was ready for that. But what else was there? She knew that there were people in her village would know, and there were songs that would have been sung long after she'd gone to sleep. She vaguely remembered hearing that one could put one's mouth upon other… body parts.

But she had no idea whether she'd want that or not, when she wasn't sure whether she was… what if she wasn't a woman. It would certainly explain not wanting to… have things… there.

Flushing, she thought about what she wanted. "You could stay the night, just to sleep. If… you wanted."

"Do you want me to?"

Lotte thought for a long time, and gave her answer.

*****

The next day they left, far closer to noon than dawn, as Lotte had suspected.



*************

Votes!

Does Lotte sleep with Frederick?

(This is no sly insinuation. I mean sleeping, and perhaps cuddling, and nothing else intended or done--because Frederick wouldn't do that. Though whether others in the party will know that and refrain from teasing Lotte, who knows?)

[] Yes.
[] No.

Where to next?

[] The university to the south, in a powerful duchy, used to deal in soul research. There might be researchers left, and it's said that the entire wing is haunted, or at least troubled, by what happened. It is not an entirely safe place, and there may be dangers and hidden secrets, but certainly it is also a learned place.
[] In the Blackbriar woods, it is said there is a witch. Many of the locals think she is maleficent, cruel and dangerous, while other visitors from outside speak of her beneficence, and her willingness for reasonable prices to aid others. All of them agree, however, that she is a Mistress of changes to both souls, bodies, and--some whisper with fear, others with excitement--minds.
[] There are rumors of a large beastfolk village in one of the largest forests in the region. The hints are very subtle, and as it was written five years ago, it might not still be there. But if it is, it is almost certain there are lamia, including priests who would no doubt know quite a lot about Lotte's soul… though of course she'd have to be very, very careful with who learns what, and a Beastfolk village might be as uncomfortable for the humans as… literally everywhere Lotte has ever been since the change has been for her.


XP Gains: 1 (Completing the adventure)+1 (Making a Friend)+.5 (Learning things)+.5 (Nachtmater Confrontation)=3 XP, so at 2/18, and Level Up to 3.



Choose 1 Racial or General Trait, 1 Class Trait, 2 Divine Traits (special one-time offer), 1 Level 0 or 1 Trait pickup from non-Divine categories

General Traits

Light Sleeper (General, Level 1): Perhaps you always were a light sleeper, or perhaps it is new development in the face of dangers and adventures, but you can wake up very easily at threatening sounds, and when roused you don't spend an hour groaning, insensible, and useless.

Hum It A Little (General, Level 1): You have a newfound appreciation for music, and you listen more closely to songs, and can even hold a tune… or at least hum a tune. It has no magical significance, but music is a universal language, and it relaxes you.

If You Turn It Sideways (General, Level 1): Lotte isn't a genius by any measure, but they did spend some time recently working their way through books, and while they didn't get everything, they have become a little better at drawing out at least some of the meaning that books hold.

The Price Of Everything (General, Level 2, Pre-Req: Penny Wise): You know what your services are worth, and even if you're not necessarily a great negotiator of your adventurer's reward, you have the knowledge to deal sharply in your own interests.

Loading and Unloading Only (General, Level 2): You've spent several weeks guarding merchant's caravans, and this experience means you've sometimes been asked to help out. It's helped develop your strength, and also your knowledge of how to fit things onto carts and how to get them off. Hey, if the whole adventurer thing doesn't work out…

Killer Instinct (General, Level 2): You don't like killing people, but having thought through it, and having considered everything, you're able to do it again without quite as much pain. Perhaps you've lost something, but at the same time, the life of an adventurer is violence, isn't it? And apparently you're good at it, or at least capable of it.

Adventurer's Eye (General, Level 3): It isn't much of a skill in one sense, but Lotte can sometimes tell when someone is an adventurer. It's not as simple as some sort of mark, and of course plenty of people can explore, but there are people who wear wanderlust as a perfume, and knowing who they are can be important.

Steel Nerves (General, Level 3): You've seen enough strange places and done enough fantastic things that you are less likely to panic in terrible situations, and more likely to think things through, however difficult. This doesn't mean you can't panic at all, but you have a grip on those nerves.




Racial Traits--Human/Lamia, Central Lands

Physical

Well-Built (Level 1, Human/Lamia, Physical): You were already pretty fit, but your experiences have given you plenty of practice. You are built to take hits and give them, built to work all the live-long day and still be standing at the end of it. You're not an Orime, but who is? Besides Orime.are not like you, either.

Slithering Speed (Level 2, Physical, Lamia): Learning how to move as a lamia is difficult, but once you figure it out you can move a lot faster than expected, even if your endurance isn't any greater than before.

Snake Eyes (Level 1, Physical, Lamia): You can see in the dark pretty well. It isn't perfect, but the night is not nearly so dark and full of dangers as you expected it would be, for whatever reason.

Taste Of The Air (Level 2, Physical, Lamia): You have quite an ability, though one still being drawn upon, to 'taste' the air in order to smell things that are more difficult to smell. Being a hunter, you have figured out immediately just how useful this could be to track animals or foes.

Iron Stomach (Level 1, Physical, Lamia): You are not quite immune to poison, but you can survive it… and in fact rotten food, a lot better than you could before you became a lamia.

Climbing Tail Stance (Level 3, Physical, Lamia, pre-req Steady Tail Stance): Ladders are still far beyond you, but it's possible to rise up as high as you can, wrap yourself around, say, a tree, and then use her hands to pull yourself up, before getting up. There are of course things it can't help one climb: buildings, ladders, but it's honestly a pretty cool thing to be able to do, even if the first time Lotte did it they were stranded on top of a tree with no idea how to get down.

Tail Whip (Level 3, Physical, Lamia): You have a long tail, and you're physically fit. Of course Lotte found it out in an accident that involved apologies, but if they move their tail fast enough, they can knock people over, and even batter them around.

Stone Stomach (Level 3, Physical, Lamia, Pre-req Iron Stomach): You're basically immune to poison, and it'd take really bad food to really feel it. There are a few well-known poisons that are exceptions, but even those you can build up a resistance to. In fact, poison tastes oddly… good to you, as if it's doing something important and good to be ingesting some of it, as long as it doesn't hurt you.




Cultural

That Old Time Religion (Level 1, Human--Central Lands, Cultural): After your experiences, you aren't necessarily content to just remember what you do about the religion, and you've been speaking earnestly with a number of priests, and having read--or even reading--more passages, on the various Gods and their nature.

Have A Drink? (Level 1, Human--Central Lands, Cultural): You have of course drank a little beer before, but those on the road have introduced you to the fine art and craft of getting rather drunk. You don't overindulge, but it can be nice, and you can hold your beer decently enough to join in on drunken songs and games, and otherwise fit in in a hard-drinking culture.

That Old Forgotten Religion (Level 1, Lamia -- Cultural): You know a few prayers now, and while anyone else would struggle with the secrecy of the cult, you also know some names. If you're willing to be brave, you could put those two together, and see what you can do. Maybe it would help if you met Lamia later, maybe it would just help you reach out to your… parent?

Rough and Rowdy (Level 3, Human-Central Lands, Cultural): Your people (well, they are of course now the sort ot view you as not them, but…) have a tendency to be blunt about things, even a little crude. While Lotte is perfectly polite, traveling up and down the Central Lands is certainly one way to get his ears and tongue used to coarser talk, and more aware of the possibilities therein.


Class Traits

A Balm To Ease (Level 0, Healing Priest): Lotte was reminded of what their mother had been teaching them about priestly magic. Lotte remembers very little, but with a bit of work they were able to touch someone and ease their pain somewhat. It was not an extraordinary ability, and an ill-practiced one, like a Mage casting sparkling light in terms of true skill, but it was more than nothing.

Way With Animals (Level 1): A skilled hunter knows the beasts, the birds, the creatures of the forests that they love. They know how not to make an enemy of a bear, and how to avoid hungry wolves. They know what it means when birds aren't singing, and they know how to, if not tame, then at least feed and gentle such animals.

Faithful Companion (Level 1): Lotte has come across a stray dog, and decided to rescue her and train her up a little. A dog's a person's best friend, and when trained up they can be a loyal hunting dog, willing to defend them from all sorts of dangers, and serve as a lookout.

Trapmaking Basics (Level 1): Traps are quite useful for a different sort of hunting. One can put together or take apart the kinds of bear traps, pit traps, and tripwires that were quite common in the forests of the central region, when one has cause to use them.

One On The Wing (Level 2): You've practiced shooting down birds. This doesn't necessarily pay off in some ways, but you are now a lot better at hitting fast-moving targets above your head, which might well be practice that can be used for other areas.

Tracker's Ways (Level 2): Your recent experiences have taught you how much you have to learn about tracking people or animals in the woods, and so you've redoubled your efforts, learning quite a bit about how you might track more difficult targets in the future.

Leave Few Traces (Level 2): The experience of being on one side of the hunt makes you wonder how you'd hide your tracks if you were being hunted, or tracked by hostile enemies, as sometimes does happen in adventures. You've begun to practice how not to be followed in the woods, and perhaps elsewhere.

Skinning (Level 3, Hunter): Lotte has figured out how to skin animals to preserve their hide, and has learned, through asking some questions of Karle, who has read a little of everything, how to do more with their kills than they were able to do well. This both provides an extra resource, and the hides themselves could be used for clothing or even winter armor.

One Nocked (Level 3, Hunter): You've gotten used to the idea that your hunting skills will also be used in battle, or else you'd not be so skilled. You can loose arrows with reasonable accuracy faster than before, sometimes even faster than your enemy can respond, if a fight suddenly breaks out, and if you're willing to panic and move as fast as you can, you can get some impressive speed, even if it harms the accuracy.

Woods Sense (Level 3, Hunter, pre-req: Leave Few Traces or Tracker's Way): You know the woods… not even your woods, but woods in general. You can get a sense for what's going on, where things are going, one that works at least for any woods even remotely similar to the ones you're used to. While you still might hesitate to go into the darker hearts of the woods, your abilities are remarkable in this regard.



Divine Traits

Lucid Dreams (Level 2, Divine): You can control your dreams, and more than that, on occasion you glimpse something beyond them, as if your mind is a bubble at the edge of reality, and beyond lie terrors, yes, but also wonders.

Captivating Eyes (Level 2, Divine): You can sometimes 'catch' people with your eyes. If you're concentrating, they'll find it slightly more difficult to look away, though any sense of threat or danger breaks it immediately, and they'll hear your words clearly, actually listening… or at least hearing them. There's no requirement to listen to them, nor does it seem as if anyone's mind is being altered in any way, but it's an interesting, if bizarre, power, and certainly is a new take on 'lost in their eyes.'

Nibbly Teeth (Level 2, Divine): You have fangs as well as teeth. Yes, they lack any of the poison of a snake, and while they no doubt hurt to be bit with, it seems more cosmetic… at least as far as Lotte can tell at the moment.

A Taste For Lies (Level 3, Divine): You sometimes have a feeling whenever Gods are lying. It's hard to describe, since it's far from simple and certainly not straightforward, but there's a flavor in the air when a God lies, though of course subtle or clever lies can escape that, and humans can lie to Lotte all the livelong day without being noticed. And of course, the Forgotten God is an accomplished liar, so it might not work on them either…

Slithering Shadows (Level 3, Divine): You can blend into the shadows better than you should be able to. At night, and in darker areas, you can seem to shift away from sight. It doesn't work well in a wide-open space, but that little bit of extra secrecy can be very useful as a hunter, and as someone who might need to sneak through various areas.

A Two Way Mirror (Level 3, Divine, pre-req: Captivating Eyes): When one looks into eyes, the mirror of the soul, you can look back. When they are caught by your eyes, you can see flashes of thoughts related to what's being talked about, or memories or emotions dredged up. These are just flashes, and you cannot dig deeper, willingly or unwillingly, into the mind of another, but even the ability to glimpse memories and know what they're feeling can be used to help them, understand them, or could even be used against them… though Lotte isn't sure how comfortable she is with the latter.
 
2:1
2:1

They left in the bright light of day, and it wasn't long before Naja began making comments. "So, Lotte, I saw that Frederick left your room this morning."

"No she did not," Karle said, with a smirk that was almost playful instead of cutting. "You wake up far too late for that, I believe. Instead, she heard it from gossip from the other members of our order. However, you should know, Lotte, that while gossip may follow you, your choices are quite clearly your own. I shall not judge you."

Lotte honestly doubted that, but she understood that Karle meant well. "We didn't… nothing happened." But that was a lie, and they must have been able to see it as she slithered along beside them. So she added something more true, thinking of what had happened and the strange dreams, almost like memories, that had come with sleep. So she added, hastily, "We didn't have sex."

"Then what happened?" Aisling asked, raising an eyebrow.

"We… cuddled, and then I went to sleep. He left in the morning," Lotte said.

"You know, I actually believe that." Aisling nodded to herself and then went back to scanning the far horizon.

"I don't know if I do. You should have seen him, whenever he showed up." Naja waved a hand grandly. "He had something for you."

"We kissed, but he might have left then," Lotte said, aware that she wasn't helping her case. She had somehow managed to keep the fact that it wasn't a curse secret, but that wasn't the same as something like this.

"Oh, who cares. If she fucked him, more power to him, and if she didn't it's fine. He didn't ask any deep secrets of you while you were snuggled up, right?" Pippa asked it as she threw her hands up in the air.

"No, not at all." He hadn't even asked. He'd known not to ask the kinds of questions that could have destroyed her.

"Then I don't get what the problem is."

"There's no problem," Naja insisted. "Just curiosity. You seem different."

"I'm not sure… I had strange dreams, and I feel a little different now. I could… I could see far better in the dark than I could the night before."

Naja and Karle exchanged glances. "Lotte," Karle said, clearly deciding to take the lead. "This seems as if it might be your soul settling some into place. With any change, the soul is first discomfited, and then it begins to settle until it is stable. Or at least, stable until any such curse or transformation is undone."

Naja nodded, and Lotte stared ahead, thinking about what that might mean. They continued onward, but Lotte was quiet for most of the day.

******

"Yes."

His face seemed to almost glow as he stepped closer. "Thank you, Lotte."

"Could you… could you not say my name," Lotte said, the sudden impulse gripping her tight and shaking her about. She was starting to suspect certain things that she'd been told repeatedly might not be entirely wrong. She wasn't sure, and she wanted as little uncertainty as she could get. She didn't want to worry or wonder tonight.

"I can do that," Frederick said. "I would do far more than that for you… handsome." He said it like someone taking a bowshot they were almost sure wouldn't hit, but they needed the meat before winter. (Lotte had taken many of those shots, and hit more than she should be able to on average. But she'd missed plenty, of course.)

Lotte flushed, aware that her every pleased emotion was shown on her face.

"So, uh. Here are all of these pillows and blankets. I can't really sleep in a bed, unless it's a big one." Bigger than she'd ever had before.

"That'll be just fine. What am I… what do you want me to do?"

"Hold me. You can… you can touch my lower half, but not, not close to anything. But I know you're curious, right? You have to be curious. It's weird and strange and new--"

"It's lovely, you're handsome, and I will make sure to do nothing more than what you request." He nodded, as if that solved everything, and said, "I assume you want to get to bed early?"

Lotte thought about what they'd be doing in between first and second sleep, and said, "Yes. We can… figure things out when we wake up again then."

Frederick smiled, and Lotte began to arrange the blankets. He stripped off his shirt, and Lotte didn't keep from staring. He wasn't muscular, and he was thin, but there was still something about his bare chest that sent Lotte's blush crawling for her hair. "I could go and get a night shirt, but I usually sleep naked." Despite saying that, he didn't remove his pants.

Lotte herself usually slept in clothes during the winter, and at most a thin cloth dress during the summer… and that only for modesty. She'd been sleeping in her clothes since she went on the road, but that was because there was always a chance to be attacked.

She took a breath, and said, "If you don't normally wear anything, you don't have to wear anything…"

She felt positively… something for saying that. But a part of her did want to see his…

Even if they were doing nothing at all. Which they weren't. She didn't want to imagine it doing things, but she still wanted to imagine it. Lotte barely understood herself on better days, let alone now.

"If you are fine with it…"

Lotte nodded, taking off her own shirt, and what little else there was. Frederick's eyes found her bare chest, and his smile was alight with carefully controlled desire. Lotte couldn't pretend she wasn't looking too as he slipped off his tunic, his undershirt, and then began to work down his hose. He had smooth legs, not entirely hairless but certainly looking as if they were cared for, in the manner of the rich. Lotte's, when she'd had legs, had been hairy, legs that she'd never once shaved. Which seemed better for cold days, anyways, out in the woods.

Then, his member was exposed. It was odd, because Lotte had seen cocks before, human ones even, since few enough men in the fields have any modesty to cover up when they're peeing. Frederick's cock should have seemed perfectly normal. It wasn't--objectively--an bigger or smaller than Lotte's vague understanding of the average, erect as it was. Nor was it particularly pretty, or covered in warts and foul looking hair, the way Lotte had heard one girl say about a boy whose marriage proposal didn't suit her. But it looked large enough, that close, and it was… it seemed large. And it was pointing at her.

She didn't know how to describe, or quantify, her feelings. It wasn't hot, mindless passion, but something slower and more simmering, and so she was able to tamp it down and lay down on the bed of blankets and pillows, and he snuggled up to her, not trying to do anything more, but apparently unwilling to turn away just because his desire was clear.

He reached down to stroke at her scales, and it was strange. She'd been able to slither over rock and grass and gravel as if she'd been wearing a boot, and yet his touch felt powerful. It was like those sorts of people with feet like boot leather, who nonetheless fell victim to tickling.

It was pleasant, and he said, almost absently, "Smooth."

Lotte nodded, and they huddled together in the warmth of the blankets, and she enjoyed his heat and presence. Even the lust felt muted, pleasantly warm rather than burning. She drifted off.

Her dreams were strange, a little like watching a tree for signs of movement, or walking on an endless road. She didn't quite remember them, but she remembered staring up at the sky, and seeing that it was night and there was still a sun, and she remembered staring at the moon that was in the sky as well, and--

She blinked awake, and saw that Frederick was headed for the door. But it was first waking, not the morning. "What?" she asked, baffled, as she rose up with a yawn, thinking about whether she wanted to pray or not.

"I needed to use the privy," Frederick said, and Lotte stared at him from behind. He'd grabbed a blanket to cover himself, but he was still exposed, his slim, delicate back, and well-shaped legs, and everything else…

She saw it far better than she should have been able to in the darkness, and knew at once that it had to be some sort of strange power, or characteristic of her new nature. "Oh, when we get back, do you… what Gods do you know?"

A true believer always wanted to hear about more Gods, and if Frederick truly knew many Knowledge Gods, she should learn them.

"Oh, I can tell you much about that. I've met so many Gods, and many of them to you. We could be here for a long time. Just let me hurry away, and I'll be back soon."

Lotte watched him go, and then lay there, feeling oddly contented. When he returned, he lay down next to her and stared up at her. His eyes caught hers and something passed across his features, something like awe.

"What is it?"

"Your eyes are beautiful. I almost can't look away," he said, and there was something about his voice that felt as if it was slightly distant, as if this wasn't simply poetical exaggeration. He did pull his eyes away, nodded to himself, and looked back again. This time Lotte could feel it. She wanted him to look into her eyes, wanted him to see her, only her, and not whatever else there was.

"Then don't. And tell me about… about Gods."

He didn't look away. When she blinked, he'd wait until her eyes opened and meet her gaze again, and so she didn't try not to blink, wasn't sure what to do with this trick.

"The strangest cult I've ever met must be the one that believes that the ocean, the one to the south, was made by a… worm, or a clam, or a sea urchin, or a giant fish… a God of some sort, that meant for it to be like a nest, with great leviathans deep in it waiting to hatch and wreak havoc. But as long as they are fed, the leviathans won't wake and the God will bless those who sail on its seas. Despite all that it will one day seek to do, they spoke of it as impossibly kind, but quickly wearying of how many it aided, who swore that were in its debt, and yet thought that its weakness was to be exploited. Or so their holy stories say." He spoke slowly, and yet with growing confidence. "They had a prayer I can't quite remember, it went… wait, I can remember it. Your eyes are something, really. It's like, with a part of me calm, the rest of me can grasp it better. But their prayer was, 'Oh Many Armed, Many Formed One--'"

Something in Lotte jumped, leapt out at her. This was a God's True Name, something powerful and real. "Oh."

"May your children always rest, may the debts be always paid, may the sea be merciful and your wives and daughters, sons and children, always happy. Take this offering, which I give into the sea, knowing that all things flow into you."

"Huh."

"It really is something. There's another God I think would interest you. Incu Malu, who despite his name is not one of the Sepult Gods of smithing."

Lotte assumed his name meant 'smith' or something like that. "What is he?"

"He's the God of grief. He's like the Nachtmater. She doesn't give great boons, but keeps darkness away from you, or so they say. He is the anvil which grief, anger, despair… loss beats against. A Sepult rages in his grief, calls Him a thousand cursed names, and still he forbears. Still he is the chest, they say, upon which anyone can cry. He will not hug, he will not wipe tears, but through Him you can reach the part where sorrow gutters for lack of fuel. He doesn't bring people back to life, but he can help their desire for death dwindle. A father rages in grief at a child whose life was cut short with just three short decades… but bit by bit he prays, and bit by bit he realizes there's still a world outside of his aching fists, beating against the Gods' anvil."

He said it slowly, and then added, "I've had times when Incu Malu helped me keep going."

"He sounds like a good God, though is he only for the Sepult?"

"Primarily, but it is said He sometimes listens to others. Do you want to hear another?"

Lotte sighed, already feeling sleepy. She had time for perhaps one more, and then they'd drift off. So they walked through it, staring at each other, until sleep came again.

******

Her eyes didn't go back to being better than they should be. She couldn't see in the dark as if it were day, but she could see well enough that hunting on even a moonless night in the forest might be possible. She wouldn't want to take the risks, since you want every advantage when taking a shot, but that should have been outside the realm of possibility entirely, without a lot of luck.

As they made their way north, Lotte began to pay more attention to how she hunted, the way she had when she'd been honing her skills before. She didn't yet have cause to try to track anyone, but what if she was chased? She figured out a few facts. First, you could always move slower. Second, there was a move of her tail that could actually clear out tracks in dust. It might still reveal that someone had been through, if someone knew to look at the thickness of dust on the ground… but someone who knew that probably could see a thousand unseen signs.

Moving unseen also involved taking risks and not taking risks. Lotte learned, during her hunts, the way that you had to avoid riling up the animals in the area. But this didn't just mean avoiding their notice. Sometimes it meant just going through the forest as if you belonged there. But there was something else. Sometimes her skin itched when she really didn't want to be seen, and she wasn't. It didn't make all that much sense, and she'd think she was imagining it, except… there were too many odd coincidences to imagine.

It was almost two days north before Naja finally said what Lotte had been distantly aware of. "We're going to be passing near your home village. I think, right?"

"Yes."

"So, do you want to… leave a message? Or even go yourself? Maybe we can figure out how to fix this, but if we don't…"

Lotte didn't know what to think, could tell that if she didn't say anything about it, if she kept on slithering down the road in front of them, nobody besides Naja would bring it up. The others were footsore, and they wouldn't complain about not going out of the way a little. But she also guessed that they wouldn't complain if we stopped for a while to let her talk to them. Or send one of them, probably Naja because of her noble bearing, to send a message of… what?

Mostly lies, no doubt.


What does Lotte do?

[] Move on. Her parents aren't likely to worry that they haven't heard anything from her, at least not yet. Perhaps they will later, but Lotte would rather put off any confrontation as long as possible, even if she now knows that they weren't aware that Lotte was actually a lamia, and a demigod. Or perhaps especially because of that.
[] Send Naja with a gold coin that Lotte earned, and stories of her deeds. It shouldn't be too hard to convince them that if Lotte could come, she would, but that she was desperately busy with an adventure and had tasked a friend and former employer to send along some of what she earned. They'd have to guess that she'd earned quite a lot, to have that much to send back home, and hopefully they'd be happy and have words for her in return.
[] Send Naja to fetch them out into the forest, to talk to Lotte. She… she doesn't have a reason to confront them any longer, but she needs to tell them… all sorts of things. But if this ends badly, it could destroy her hopes of having somewhere to go back to, and people who love her. There'd be no way to ease them into it, to send money on occasion or anything else to hope that when it comes out there would be more understanding.

*******

A/N: So, we begin a new adventure somewhat slowly. It will build up, as always.
 
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Lotte knew these woods far too well. They had changed, but in ways that she had predicted. So she slithered through them, aware now that she'd have to be more careful how and where she moved. She had a longer 'train' than before, and that meant that she had to be more careful with how she moved. But she felt as if in some ways that only made her better at it. She'd learned and grown a lot, even in this small time. She hummed a little, imagining it in the deeper pitch that Aisling had taught her. They were beyond this forest, in the next town over. They wouldn't be there if this… went too wrong, but she knew her parents.

They loved her. They wouldn't run back to the village to gather a mob, even if they never wanted to see her again. If all their love was in a moment extinguished, like a weak flame, then that last flicker would still warm her, however briefly. This felt like… like cold comfort, of course. But they weren't like some parents in the village. They had chosen to have her, had chosen all that had come up to here.

So she slithered around, in a circle, unable to leave the area and yet unwilling to stay entirely in one place.

She just had to hope Naja could get them to go out of their way like that.

******
This was it. The village that Lotte had been born in, and at the outskirts, the home that held the people who had raised her. She'd knocked on the door, not sure whether anyone would be there, and the wife had gone for the husband, leaving her there. When they finally arrived, Naja considered them, and Naja… couldn't really see it.

They seemed like pleasant enough people, but the longing in Lotte's voice, and the stories she'd forced on them on the way here about her village had talked it up as being far more than a little nothing in the middle of nowhere. Her parents seemed like nice, reasonably prosperous farmers, and that was all.

This wasn't nothing. The house was well-kept, and they seemed to have plenty of land, but Naja still felt as if she'd prepared too much. Of course, they hadn't known she was coming, wherein she had bathed, and dressed in her best boots, tunic, everything needed to look like an adventurer.

'You look too boyish. What sort of woman would be attracted to that?' her father had snorted. 'Or boy for that matter.' He had been a great wanderer in his own youth, a man who'd been inside dozens of Sepult ruins, but old age had narrowed his mind, even as it had in its way sharpened it. He'd loved her, but hadn't much cared for her mother, and had loved Karle's father more than everyone else in the world combined.

"This must be about Lotte. You aren't any noble we've seen around here," Henrik said, with a very careful bow. The man did look a little like Lotte, in the sense only that he was larger than a man should be. Lotte sometimes didn't seem to realize just how imposing her height had been, and even for that height she seemed huge. Naja's envious, desire-riddled looks had come genuinely. "Though, Naja, that sounds familiar." He stroked his beard, which was one habit that Lotte couldn't pick up.

The man was Henrik, the woman Anelie, her plumpness proof of her husbands' success. Both of them showed what old age and success could bring, for all that Henrik looked like he could still shake the rafters. Naja could never imagine Lotte, even at her forties, softening like that. (It'd also look pretty silly with a snake lower body, honestly. But then, there were things about Lotte's new form that made Naja nervous in a way Karle--oh so cosmopolitan Karle--at least was able to hide.)

"Naja von Siebert. Perhaps you've heard of my father? Either way, I'm here because of your… child, Lotte." Naja had heard what Aisling had guessed about who Lotte was, but Naja still thought it more likely that it was just Aisling's bizarre ideas of masculinity and femininity. Would Aisling accuse her of being a man, next, just because she liked wearing big stomping boots and a dashing nobleman-style tunic? She wore it, and thus it was women's clothing.

But perhaps she was wrong with regards to Lotte and Aisling was right. It wouldn't be the first time that Aisling was right and she was wrong, nor the last.

"What about her?" Henrik asked. "Is she okay?" He leaned in, and Naja didn't know how to answer that.

"I… would say so. But it is a long story, and already Lotte has done great deeds, ones that have found their way into song and story. 'Lotte the lanky, kind and humble/ skilled hunter of the forest' is her moniker in a song about her deeds involving a martyr and theft at a Temple. She has met the Nachtmater twice, conversing with her as a hero might a God. I knew only rumors of the first time and the song when I set out to try to gain an advantage."

Henrik was gaping, and gestured to their table. "Please, sit down, and explain."

Naja sat at a chair, and said, "So you see, I have someone who is like a brother to me. An annoying brother I despise, but like a brother nonetheless, deny it though he will." Though Karle had been a lot more tolerable, this last week. He was still annoying, and clearly still hated her, but…

She didn't understand how he didn't grasp that if he accepted the connection, he wouldn't be 'like' a brother to her, but quite possibly better than one. If he merely pretended he was of a kind with his father, then her father would have all but handed everything to him, would have helped him into some careful noble match, would have… no, not cast her aside, but helped her into a marriage worthy of her station if that was what would be best for him. Instead, Naja was going to inherit the estates.

"His father was a very prosperous farmer, and loved by my father more than he loved any other man or woman. After his father's death, we grew up together, and both of us competed in everything, including the study of ancient ruins. When we heard of a group of heroes who had exposed a family whose line had won glory killing a holy martyr, and who were servants of a Forgotten God, we both decided that what better person to help us explore a Sepult ruin?"

"Our Lotte did that?" Anelie asked, sounding as if she was going to faint.

"It's a little complicated, but yes. So Karle and I went to her, and I hired her on a promise of a gold coin afterwards. What happened then is hard to explain, but she's still alive, and she's not crippled. In fact, we're on our way to… another adventure, and Karle is along as well." Naja coughed, not sure how she was supposed to say it. "She wanted you to have this." Naja took out a Holy Vanning, as they were called. Naja had decided that they deserved a larger gold coin than she had been planning on giving to Lotte.

(Best of all, if Lotte asked, Naja would be able to tell the absolute truth, that she'd given them a gold coin.)

"I… I've never seen one quite that large," Anelie said.

"I've never seen one at all. Anelie, where did you--"

"When I was adventuring, of course."

Naja looked at the woman. She was an ex-adventurer?

"We all split a gold coin in four, once, after a particularly dangerous mission. But it was a small coin, not like this. Do you know how much this is?"

"What you'd make in a few months, but all at once?" Naja guessed. She frowned. She didn't really know what things cost, at least beyond the fact that everyone knew innkeepers cheated adventurers of room costs all across the world.

Anelie was now looking at her as if she were stupid, as if she didn't know what she was saying.

"There's a reason people adventure to seek their fortune," Henrik said. "If Lotte has already made that much, I'm almost surprised she hasn't come back. The life you could make with just one of those coins…"

Naja frowned, and shrugged her shoulders. "Lotte wants to adventure. It's not about making a fortune, I don't think. But she has done well so far, for a new adventurer. She's certainly shown more good sense and bravery than I have."

"So, is that all you came here for?" Henrik asked, looking as if he was going to be deep in his cups tonight.

"No, Lotte wants to talk, but doesn't feel as if she can enter the village, things being as they are now. She asked me to lead you to her." Naja pointed to herself, trying her most cocksure grin. "So, I know you have a long day of… important work ahead of you." Naja tried to sound confident of that, but whatever they were doing couldn't be all that important compared to the revelations, and they were rich and could no doubt pay someone else to do their farm work and merely supervise, if they wished.

She was sure that would hurt their pride, and certainly their daughter, Lotte, was proud in a strange way that almost looked like humility. (Or was she humble in a way that almost looked like pride, as if the world and all its splendours, however beautiful, could not corrupt her straightforward honesty. Perhaps Naja was reading too much into Lotte, seeing too much, but at times she seemed almost to glow.)

They looked as if they'd heard her tone and didn't like it, but she continued. "But Lotte is waiting in the woods to talk to you. As I said. I'm going to lead you to her, if I can remember her directions. She acts like the woods is a road anyone knows."

"That does sound like her," Anelie muttered. "But you're wrong to think it isn't. Don't they still sing it? 'Everyone knows the road in their heart/ Everyone knows where the journey will start/ First one step/ Then the other.'"

Naja goggled at her, not having expected to hear an old drinking song for adventurers come out of the mouth of a mild-mannered wife, especially since she knew that the song went on to espouse the joys of the road, including not just adventure and new sights, but the favor of willing men and maidens. Perhaps she hadn't known those particular lyrics?

(Or perhaps Naja just didn't want to imagine the fact that one day she'd be old enough that young men and women would struggle to imagine how she had aroused such passions, or participate in them. She didn't like thinking of these things. She wanted to imagine herself young and adventuresome forever.)

"I-it is true that they sometimes sing that. So, are you going to come along with me? I'll… talk a little about what happened, on the way."

Henrik frowned, glanced at Anelie, and saw whatever he expected there because he nodded. "Of course."

Henrik brought a heavy stick with him, for safety from animals. They wandered the path, Naja stopping every so often to try to remember which way she'd gone. Okay, maybe she didn't have much of a sense of direction. But it was a fine day to walk, and she definitely wasn't hoping they didn't ask any questions about--

"What happened to her?" Anelie asked, not struggling at all to keep up, even when Naja increased the pace.

"We took her to a Sepult ruin, which turned out to be containing a… temple of some sort to Forgotten God, the God whose servants she had thwarted, if I'm following the implications of what's happened. She was captured, and something was done."

"Well? I can tell you're dragging the tale out." Henrik snorted, and she turned to look into his blue eyes.

"She was changed, transformed from a human into… not human. Her mind is still intact, and she seems no different from before except in body, but we've been looking for a cure."

"Not human?" Anelie asked, sharply. Oh, she realized that Naja was very careful not to say what. She had to guess that if the story was 'Lotte now had elf-ears and would live for centuries' then there wouldn't be quite as much awkwardness. It'd be odd, of course, but elves weren't killed, at least in the Central Lands, for being elves.

She was glad of that when she thought of Aisling, who somehow had become someone she didn't want to be without.

"Just this way, she should be… around here. Though, I suppose she would sli… ide off." From the look on Henrik and Anelie's faces when she turned to check, they'd noticed her awkward, last minute change of words.

Then they saw Lotte, in the distance.

Henrik and Anelie stared for a long moment, and then Henrik said, as Lotte turned and saw them, "Lotte?!"

"Oh, well, uh. I'm going to go, and I'll be back in an hour to make sure that nobody's heart's been broken and, er, all of that…"

Naja babbled these excuses as she fled. Perhaps she should have stayed to act as moral support, but she thought maybe this was something they should do themselves.

******

"Ma, Pa?" Lotte asked, dropping the singing voice she'd been practicing, and talking as if nothing had changed. "I'm… I'm glad Naja brought you."

"Do you think she wouldn't?" Henrik asked, his voice guarded, his body stiff. He looked like an animal trying to decide whether to pounce, or whether he should flee.

"I… I don't know. I know this is a lot to take in."

"It really is you," Anelie said, frowning as she got closer. "You look different, besides… that."

"Little things," Lotte said. "There's things she probably didn't tell you. The Forgotten God is some sort of snake God, but I've been lying to her." Lotte's heart ached, and she looked away as she slithered closer. "And the Nachtmater confirmed it."

"Confirmed what?" Henrik asked. "What do you mean? You talked to her?"

"Twice," Lotte said, quietly. "Once just a few days ago. I asked her whether you knew that this was going to happen."

"How would we know you were going to be transformed into a… into a… lamia." Henrik looked horrified.

Her mother, on the other hand, was still frowning, a little stunned but thinking.

"I'm… the Forgotten God said, and the Nachtmater confirmed, that I'm some form of… that it was the one who gave birth to me. Then the Nachtmater must have taken me and dropped me off at your doorstep."

"In the night," Anelie whispered. "I'd prayed so many times for a babe, for our sex at night to--really, Lotte?"

Lotte was blushing, and if she could see herself, she'd see someone whose face was as if she'd bitten into something rotten. "S-sorry."

"I'd prayed a lot, and then you arrived. And you claim you're a demigod? Lotte, this is interesting."

"Interesting? Anelie, what are you saying?"

"I've met Beastfolk before, even a lamia. They… not everything that's said about them is wrong. They're outsiders, and their Gods are evil, including this Forgotten God. But not all of them were terrible, and most just lived their lives, wrong as their faith is. Their Gods are the problem, not them." She spoke with such assurance, but Lotte wasn't sure.

"I don't know what the Forgotten God wants. They are aggrieved at what has been done to their people, but I don't know anything else. She didn't seem like she was going to force me to do anything, not yet. He was… strange and dangerous and I'm pretty sure I can't trust him. But I knew that, knew to expect it," Lotte babbled. "I was… I was so scared when the change first happened, but I don't think it can be undone."

"So you're lying to your friends?" Henrik asked, sounding like a desperate man scrambling in the dust for anything that made sense.

"I'm afraid. Of what they'd say, of what you'd say. I don't know anything about being a Demigod."

"I do," Anelie said. "I am not one, but I met one, for a while. Then we parted ways.. He was the son of a demigod. But it isn't math. You don't halve divine blood each generation, it decays more slowly, like noble families of Naja von Siebert's sort. His name was Zelig Noll, and from what I've heard he has a son, a famous adventurer. One thing I learned then was one of the hidden divine abilities."

"Really? You never told me of this," Henrik said.

"Because you would be jealous, dear. I don't ask you about Natasha, the wandering bard from the east. I had to get that story out of the neighbors, years ago."

She was saying that her and Noll had… or…

Ew.

Lotte didn't like thinking of it, and it was strange to imagine her parents pining after anyone but each other.

Henrik laughed, unexpectedly, and admitted, "You're right. I was, and I still am, just a little."

"He could always sense when there was a God nearby, or when another demigod was close, though the more powerful they were, he said, the more easily he could track them. So… if you've been wandering around, it's possible you could be followed, and it's possible you could follow others. I don't know that much else. You have powers, I assume. But if the Nachtmater is talking to you, then… I think there has to be a divine plan."

"Oh, yes there is. The plan of some bizarre God who is her parent." Henrik spoke slowly, as if trying to give Anelie a chance to change her mind.

"Never that," Lotte said, desperately. "You're my parents. They just gave birth to me. I don't know how that part of it works. I… are you still?"

"Your parents?" Henrik asked, sounding appalled. "Of course. You should… you should get away from this God, and stay here."

"Where, Henrik? Do we bring her into the village. Hope nobody notices she does not have legs anymore? She can't stay here."

"She could stay in the woods," Henrik said.

"Yes, because that's far less lonely than having people like Naja around her?" Anelie said.

"I'm not coming back, even if you agreed on that." Lotte wanted to make that very clear. "I said I wanted to be an adventurer, and that hasn't changed, despite everything else."

"Everything?" Henrik asked. "When it comes down to it, I'm worried about you, but you're still our daughter and I love you. So that's another thing that hasn't changed."

Well… Lotte hissed nervously, not sure what to say. She wasn't sure whether she was actually their daughter, either, but she had to admit that both of them standing there, reluctantly and uncertainly accepting all that had happened was better than she'd hoped.

Does Lotte talk about her… gender thoughts/feelings?

[] Yes. She trusts and loves her parents, even if this is clearly not the sort of thing they'd have experience in. And she might as well tell everything now. Perhaps saying it aloud to someone would help make it real, and help it all to make sense.
[] No. They're dealing with enough to try to understand about how she's changed. Plus, what if they think it's a mental change, or… something like that. Besides, Lotte really isn't sure of her own feelings, so perhaps talking now, when she doesn't know whether it's anything or not would be a mistake.

******

A/N: Confused, hesitant acceptance… with love. Far from the worst possible outcome thus far.
 
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"I suppose I will, Ma," Lotte answered, smiling a little weakly. "I've made friends, and if I ever go on a wrong path, they'll help set me back in the right direction before too long."

"That's important, out there," Anelie admitted, quietly, as she stepped closer. "It's a dangerous world without allies. Keep them however you have to, even if you have to lie to do it." She said it casually, even as Lotte's father looked faintly outraged at the idea of encouraging such deception. Henrik was an honest man, at least about things that mattered. He wouldn't reveal his every thought to anyone who asked, but neither would he cheat someone the way Lotte was, offer them an animal that had been drugged to be lively, or which had been stuffed full of rotten food to increase its weight just long enough to sell.

Lotte, in this metaphor of hers, was just such a beast, and yet the seller also. But she couldn't admit it, for the same reason that half of those cheats were simply desperate men and women. What other choice did she have? None, at least not yet, and she cared for them as more than just people who could be replaced if they left. Aisling was kind in her way, Naja was interesting, Karle intelligent and odd, and even the one woman that Lotte knew nothing about she'd miss… especially since it meant that Karle would have left as well, mercenaries being as they were.

"...I'll try not to lie to them any more than I have to," Lotte assured Henrik, just as Anelie got close enough to hug Lotte tight.

Lotte hugged her back, and closed her eyes, imagining that the world had not changed nearly as much as she thought it had. Her mother's fingers carded through her hair, carefully and yet soothingly. "You'll always be my miracle child. All those years I waited, and did not know it was for a child like you. You've made us proud, and you've done so much already. I can tell that you've gotten stronger, and not just in your body." She patted his arm. "In your heart as well. Which does bring me around to something I've been meaning to ask."

Lotte swallowed but took the bait, "Yes?"

"Have you been getting up to anything on the road? It's common enough, whatever my husband may say of it, so I was curious."

"I… not long out of the village I ran across a Rat Piper and his apprentice, who he was cruel to. The Piper was tormenting an old, childless couple because the husband wouldn't pay his price. I captured him before he did worse, with the help of that apprentice. Her name was Lisbeth, and she was a Ratfolk, influenced by his pipes, raised by him, and yet aware that he'd taken a dark turn once he started to think of murder for vengenace."

"And… you?" Anelie asked.

"We shared a kiss, and then parted," Lotte said.

"That is sweet, Lotte. I assume that is where you first met Beastfolk… other Beastfolk?"

Henrik, though he looked uncertain, was listening intently, no doubt just as curious as Anelie.

"Yes, it is. And a few days ago, I kissed an archivist, Frederick, in a hidden library where we were researching what happened to me. Many times," Lotte said, her cheeks heating up. "But nothing more than that. Then we slept together, actually slept and nothing more, and he left in the morning."

"Interesting," Anelie said. "Husband, you will be happy to know that thus far she takes after her mother. Far more flirtation than action, and only then with people that she seems to care for."

Lotte didn't mind if that was evident in her voice. They were not subtle people: Henrik's odd sort of relief was evident in his shoulders.

"I admit… that does reassure me."

"That's good, because I need to talk to Lotte for a while, and I need you to get a bag with all of my supplies, husband dear. I skimped on some things owning to your fears. If they are… dealt with, than I can be more honest." Anelie said it in the tone of voice Lotte was familiar with, the one that worked against both Henrik and Lotte alike, both of them jumping to do what they could. At least usually.

This time Henrik nodded, and said, "Though that Naja girl will be back before too long."

"Well, then we'll have to talk fast. There's plenty to teach, if you can afford the time for your old woman," Anelie said, her voice soft and quiet, in that almost teasing tone.

"Of course I can, ma!"

"You might want to leave, Henrik, before you hear too much." Henrik hurried away, as Lotte tried to consider what exactly was going to be learning.

Soon they were alone in the clearing, birds chirping in the distance.

"Was Frederick naked when you slept together?"

"Y-yes," Lotte confessed.

"I thought so. Did you want to have sex with him, though I can tell you're not lying when you said you didn't, dear." Anelie said it so casually, though Lotte had to resist nervously slithering backwards.

"Did I… I…" Lotte began, not sure how to answer it. She had felt desire, and now she felt it again, coiling in her belly. But the thought of…

"You don't want to get pregnant? Is that it? Or you don't think it's done?" Anelie asked, frowning. "In my experience, simply telling yourself never to give into temptation does not work."

Lotte winced. It wasn't quite that, though the idea of getting pregnant was enough to make Lotte want to run away. But it was more that the very idea of being penetrated made her physically ill. This seemed like another obvious sign that perhaps she wasn't… that she… she wasn't sure, though. She bit her lip.

"But were you still attracted to him?" Anelie asked.

Lotte hid her face in her hands.

"I'm sorry, dear, I just… do need to state it obviously."

"...Yes, but I didn't want to…"

"Which is one thing I'm going to tell you about. There are potions that can weaken the menses along with your chance of having children. But even beyond it, there are things I can tell you about, ways that a woman might pleasure a man, or a man or woman a woman, that have no chance of having a child, nor of failing to… satisfy one." Anelie had to pause, to look away. "This is going to be awkward, but I believe it might help you, and who else is going to tell you?"

Naja walked in as Anelie was explaining things that could be done with fingers and tongues… and then turned right around and walked away, face as red as if she had not probably had plenty of experience with all of those things and more with Aisling.

(It should have been at least a little gross to think of. Surely they'd be sweaty, and why would one put one's mouth…

Except, when she summoned up the image of Frederick's cock and imagined those sorts of things, it had felt like anything but disgusting.)

By the time Henrik had returned, Lotte was longing for release from the torment. It was all interesting, but hearing it from one's mother was an absolutely nightmare.

"I have the supplies, dear," Henrik said, thrusting them at her--Anelie had sat down at some point, and Lotte had settled low to the ground--and then retreating.

"You could almost stay, because I'm just going to be making sure Lotte remembers a little about the art of bandaging wounds, applying herbal remedies… that sort of thing. Because you're going to have to rely on yourself. So please, be diligent in learning this, Lotte."

******

Lotte's head was swimming with the names of herbs and where to find them by the time she finally managed to get away… but she also had a good deal of potion meant especially for the problem of menses. (And sex, but Lotte just thought of how much better it'd feel never to be haunted by control of the moon, again. She wasn't going to have to test the ability of the potions to prevent a pregnancy. Not now, not ever.)

But Naja finally arrived, and she asked, "So was it a good talk?"

"It was," Lotte said, her face red.

"You really didn't know about--" Naja began.

"No. Animals don't exactly get up to any of that," Lotte muttered. All of her sexual knowledge came from the fact that she lived on a farm. Besides that, she wasn't one of those youths who had sought out inappropriate songs, and she certainly hadn't been the kind of person who had fooled around with half the village by the time she was sixteen. Instead, she'd all but told the Minnesängers to skip any details even having a little to do with sex.

"And that's… well, I'd believe it. We should go. Was it a good experience with your parents?"

"Yes, it was," Lotte said, setting aside her thoughts about what she'd been told. "I hadn't expected they'd be so… understanding."

"Did you tell them about the thing Aisling thinks?"

"It's just an idea." Lotte shook her head. "Maybe it's true, and maybe it's not, but I'm not going to worry them for nothing."

"Worry them? Aren't you their child?"

"I… yes," Lotte said. "But there's already a lot for them to go through. D-do you tell your father about your feelings for Aisling?"

"What feelings?! We're just having sex," Naja said, so loud that a few birds flew away in fear and protest.

Lotte realized that if the world was cruel, Aisling would somehow have been in hearing range of that. Thankfully for Naja it wasn't. "I believe you," Lotte said, trying and failing to sound like she meant it. She grimaced at her own words.

"Either way… what matters now is getting back. Perhaps all those supplies will help."

"Maybe."

******

"It will be four days of travel to reach our destination," Karle said. "It would be fewer, but some of us can't ride, and more importantly, others of us aren't used to walking a long way. Or slithering." He coughed, looking over at Lotte. "Naja told me your parents were approving? This is a good thing. Just to be clear, if you were moving on your own, you'd no doubt improve on that time by a considerable amount. However, Naja is weak."

"I am not," Naja said, with a childish pout. "But it is true that my feet get sore if I walk everywhere."

"Well, most people's asses get sore if they ride everywhere," Pippa pointed out, bluntly. "It will be good exercise."

It was, though it wasn't the only exercise Lotte engaged in. She tried to sneak up on animals, she went wandering in the safer parts of the forest at night, she tried everything except for the strange ability of her eyes to catch that of another.

She whistled in the day, and tried and failed to ignore the glares in one village when she went along to gather supplies. A woman had come up to her, and mumbled words of holy verse as if they would drive her off. The woman was old, and half-toothless, but she cursed up a storm when she realized that Lotte was trying to ignore her. Her words stung, "Forked tongue worthless whoreson, how dare you come into our village to spread your poison--"

"Excuse me, but go away, ma'am," Aisling said, stepping up, weapons undrawn but ears tense and high on her head. "Out of respect for your age and obviously failing mind, I will excuse the insult to a loyal and brave adventurer. But I am an elf, and you know we do not respect the infirmities of human age." She shook her head. "Leave, if you would."

"You can't talk to my mother like that," a dark-haired man who was the leader of this village. "I'll have you thrown out."

"Will you?" Aisling asked, with a cruelly raised eyebrow. "A noble's money is no good, anymore?"

"A snake's isn't!" the old woman cursed, spittle flecking onto Lotte's clothing.

"Take the supplies and leave!" the village headman yelled, and Lotte retreated, shamefaced and unwilling to hear anyone's reassurances. It wasn't as if they'd not face something like that in plenty of villages. It was better if Lotte simply stayed away. She wandered the forests and roads, and tried to enjoy the labor she did. She had plenty to lift and haul, whether it was animals or supplies, and she tried to lose herself in her usual patterns. She wasn't someone like Naja or Karle, who thought all the time about everything. Sometimes she just liked sinking into her duties. There were entire weeks, during some of her most miserable months as a teenager, where she didn't have a single original thought.

She'd gotten up, she'd moved through the instincts and learned behaviors of farm life and hunting alike, coming alive only enough to do her task well. It was not something she could ever imagine Naja doing.

She slipped a little into that mindset, until they finally stopped for the day at noon, in a clearing in a rather new looking woods, an area that must have been cut, and recently. "Very well. Tonight we will walk the route. There is a specific order of torches we will follow, into the woods, and then beyond the woods, into a space warped and twisted by a Sepult who owed the village a debt of gratitude. Tonight, guided by these torches, we will reach our destination. There is supposed to be a small camp outside the village, where travelers can stay until they are deemed safe."

*****

That night, they made their way through what should have been a dark, difficult forest to navigate, the moon only half-revealed. But Lotte could see perfectly well in the dark, and could even see the occasional sign in a language she didn't understand, nailed to the trees as they moved from a red torch, to a green, to a red, to a blue, to a yellow… it was a long path, and they moved in silence, nobody quite trusting decades old instructions.

And then they saw it.

It wasn't a village. No, a village didn't have walls. They were not high walls, not the walls of a city, but there were walls nonetheless, the marking of a town, and buildings beyond it, just visible in the dim light. And before the gates, there were a small clump of tents, and an old man with ears like a cat and a greying tail, who stood up and said, "Ah, visitors. Please, make yourself welcome. Like any town, it is closed after dark, and we can assure no safety in the night if you went inside. There are thieves everywhere."

"Wait, town? I thought this was a village," Naja said.

"Oh. It's a town now. These things grow," the old man rasped. "So I suppose I will be the first to introduce you to the Town of Allswell!"

In the morning, what does Lotte do? (Choose 2)

[] The market day is tomorrow. Go visit the market and see what there is to see.
[] Go straight to the lamia quarters, and try to find the Temple, or someone who knows what's going on.
[] Find somewhere to get a drink… oh no, not in the morning, though as a Central Lander, that wouldn't be entirely uncharacteristic… but for future reference. That'll also tell you more about commerce outside the market in all its forms.
[] Wander around the nicer parts of town, seeing what there is, and trying to get a grasp on the kinds of beastfolk here.
[] Stick close with the others, especially Naja, who is likely to be wandering in strange places out of curiosity.
[] Write-in.

******

A/N: If the ending seems slightly rushed, it is. I might at some point go back to add to that section, but that's still the gist of things.

I don't even have a good excuse, and I'm going to have to skip next week's update because I'm really behind on my Master's Thesis.
 
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"It was supposed to be a village," Naja muttered in the morning, squinting against the light of the sun in her eyes at the town before her. It wasn't even a small town, though neither was it big. Lotte had no experience with judging how many people might be in a town, and so she wasn't even going to guess. But it was certainly far more than were in her home village, and that'd been complex enough. In the light of the sun, some of the roofs gleamed, though there was plenty of thatching, and a few buildings here and there that stood above all the others. Some looked like large homes… but not castles. Others were clearly places of worship.

They circled around the town, twice, as if they were dogs trying to catch a scent.

"Well, it is not," Karle said. "It seems as if you must adapt to the differences of the world."

"You're the University boy," Naja retorted, frowning.

At the outskirts of the town to the north, of course, were the blacksmiths, leatherworkers, and more. All of the professions that fouled the air tended to get pushed together, towards the edge of town. Along the south, the wall gave way to farmland, stretching out of sight, no doubt a result of the Sepult's manipulation of space itself.

The stories told of how, in the days of their greatest glory, they'd had entire huge crops in a crack in time and space underground, so that it was impossible to besiege Sepult cities and castles in a mountain, even if you could somehow ring every possible exit with troops and keep them there, against mortal and rightful fear of what they'd do.

This was nothing like that, but it did make Lotte think. It also made Lotte think to see the men and women going out to a small stream to the west, which seemed to be a place for laundry. Ratfolk, bearfolk--women with great big bodies, and claws carefully filed down, and brown skin--a satyr or something like it, a man with cloven hooves who went distractingly shirtless…

There was only a single human, and he was in rougher looking clothing than any of the others. If Lotte had to guess, some sort of servant. But she knew she could be wrong. She'd never want to be so arrogant as to assume. Besides, she'd heard it said that werewolves looked just like humans most of the time, and they were reckoned beastfolk.

There were men with rough looking backs and slightly greenish looking skin, women with feathers in their hair that didn't seem to be placed in it, and one young lamia boy who glanced up at Lotte as she passed, and stared for a moment, as if struck by something.

Lotte didn't know whether to feel more or less comfortable for it. On the one hand, there was nobody who would spit and curse at her for being a lamia… she hoped. On the other, even a month ago she would be as out of place as Naja looked, worrying at her lip with her teeth. It took almost two hours for Naja to get up the nerve to go to the front gate, where she'd find two guards and a wide open gate. One of the guards was a tall, dark-haired man, with a cat's tail dark pointed ears, and a beautiful shortbow that he was in the process of restringing as Lotte came up.

The other was a short blonde woman, stout looking and with a large nose, who wore her mail armor with ease and grace, and stepped towards them with her axe when they approached. "Ah, so these are the visitors," she snorted, her blue eyes narrowed. She had a fine smile, and callused hands as she reached out towards Lotte. "I suppose you thought that because you knew some relative here, you were free to bring along any humans you wanted, hm?"

"I have no relatives here," Lotte said, as she looked closer at him.

"Well, sir… or madam? I find that hard to believe. A strapping young thing like you, with an unstrung bow and good looks? You'd be anyone's choice for a relative."

Lotte knew that this was the way of things, especially among nobles who had more to lose. Couples who couldn't have children adopted distant cousins, nephews, nieces, and more all the time. It was a subject of quite a few silly stories about one adventurer or another being adopted. Though her mother had said that it had happened at least once, just as at least once adventurers had found chests full of gold relatively unguarded.

"I'm not interested," Lotte said, honestly. She had a mother and a father already.

"Yeah, now may we all pass?" Naja asked, peering uncertainly at the woman. Lotte guessed she must be a boarfolk or pigfolk or whatever it was called, based on her ears, among other things.

"Of course, of course. Just obey the rules, keep your hands to yourself, and you'll be fine. But I will be watching you."

"There is no need to be so dramatic," the catfolk man said, with a wave of her hand. "It's just a few guests, Olga."

"You can keep your opinion to yourself, Kätzchen," Olga purred, with a gesture meant to approximate a cat batting around yarn.

"Please don't call me that," the man said, with a sigh. "I am Kulbert Smithson."

"It is a pleasure to meet you, Kulbert," Karle said, his voice formal and carefully controlled. "Would you happen to know where, if anywhere, most lamia live?"

"Right in the center, but to the west," Olga said with a shrug. "You won't be able to miss it. You really won't. They're pretty high and mighty for clans half the town hates. Well, some of them, at least."

Lotte frowned at that, but what could she say? She knew nothing about what actual lamia did, ones who had been born lamia. (She knew technically she had been born a lamia, but what did that really matter? She hadn't lived as one, and didn't even know how she would. A part of her thought that perhaps it'd be better not to try.)

So they were nodded in, and then there was the town before them.

It was a lot to take in, and Lotte just inhaled the scent of bodies and sweat and dung and everything else that always came with people squished together in close quarters, her eyes darting and finding a half-dozen new species of beastfolk in a matter of seconds. A horned man's ears, combined with his horns, marked him as some sort of bullfolk? Cowfolk? Lotte wasn't sure. A strange woman seemed to have eyes like some insect, and a person whose gender she couldn't determine had a sheep's tail, and hair on their head that looked as light, soft and tangled as the finest wool.

The buildings themselves could have been in any of the towns she passed by, other than having somewhat wider entrances. There was the same riot of color enthusiastically thrown onto the walls where they had a chance to, the same slightly ramshackle look to some of the houses, and the sturdy, solid look of others. The road was solid, good cobbles, and there were carts going here and there, as the people dodged around it.

Lotte didn't get any curious looks at all, but she noticed a lot of looks thrown towards the humans.

There were indeed other humans on the streets, but just a few individuals, among the dozens and dozens Lotte could see at any moment, all streaming by fast enough that even she knew that the population of this whole town might reach over a thousand.

How much over? How would she know.

"What a village," Naja muttered. "How did they get this big in just two generations?"

"It doesn't matter," Aisling said, wincing as a ratfolk pushed past the whole group, carrying supplies on his back. His tail had whipped against her leg, entirely by accident Lotte guessed. (What if it wasn't?)

Slowly they made their way towards the west, through narrow streets and wide streets, beastfolk visible everywhere, until at last Lotte saw her first lamia. They were a child, with a child's uncertainty--boy or girl Lotte could not guess--slithering along after a ball. Their tail was green-brown, their shift a little big on them. Perhaps a hand-me-down from older siblings?

Lotte couldn't help but gape as they passed the child, who barely spared them a glance. Then they were out on the streets, and the number of lamia for Lotte to gape at increased. Lotte couldn't help it, they were in all sizes and body types, though they seemed to trend towards thinner than she was, though there were plenty of reasons that could be, including that she wasn't seeing any lamia laborers. Either way, they all seemed to wear clothing stopping at most a foot down their tail, in styles not all that different than those of humans, though with hoods that were somewhat larger, as if they were trying to block out the sun. Which made no sense, considering how nice the sun felt on Lotte's body now.

"Once we find the temple, we should probably leave you to it," Naja said. "You can tell us what they say later, if they even see you yet."

Lotte nodded, aware that the most popular temples often had supplicants waiting for days to talk to the head priests if it was for less pressing matter. If it was just a wish for a blessing, or to talk about the wisdom of a God. "I understand that," Lotte said.

She slithered along, the rest of the team in her wake, and tried to keep an eye out for a Temple. In this part of the town, there were a lot more buildings that were only one story high, and there were a lot more signs of basements dug into the earth, no doubt because of their bodies.

Finally, Lotte saw it. The building was three floors high, curved at the top and bigger than anything around it, with wide open wooden doors and symbols and patterns painted on the stone walls of the temple.

"Well, that is certainly something. We're going to be walking around the whole perimeter of this place."

"No we won't," Karle said, with a sniff. "We should find their scholars quarter, and--"

"We'll do all of that and more. If you get done early, you can look for us, or you can meet us outside of town. That's where we'll be," Aisling said, looking over at Pippa with eyes that asked her to help in making sure they didn't get distracted.

Lotte smiled, trying not to seem nervous, and slithered into the darkened temple.

*****

Ayda hadn't meant to fall asleep. She blinked awake as she heard someone slithering up to her, and she started, looking around for a second, her tail throbbing with pain. She'd had a nightmare last night so bad that somehow her tail had wound up wrapped around one of the pillars in the inner sanctum, squeezing for dear life. It left her sore and exhausted, and so she had drifted off.

Her long, dark hair, which she had spent ten years growing out after deciding that she would try being a woman for a while, was often thought of as her best quality. It was silky smooth and beautiful, running all down her back… except, falling asleep on it, and having nightmares with it, made it a terrible tangle. She flushed and wished she'd had time to comb it in the morning, when faced with the man in front of her.

He was tall, his tail with fascinating patterns compared to the browns, reds, and greens that most men and women in her life had. He was blond, with a strong jaw and gorgeous blue eyes, and a full, mobile sort of mouth, currently bound up in a frown. She noted the bow at his back. An archer? Or perhaps even an adventurer. That would make sense. She straightened up and said, "Who is it that disturbs the Temple?" She glanced around. She was, despite her years of experience, relegated to acting as a buffer between the outside world and the rest of the Temple, in a somewhat small room filled with incense, dark but with high ceilings. He felt familiar, but she'd have known this man if he lived in town.

"My name is Lotte, and I need to talk to the head priest, about matters involving souls…"

"Lotte? That's not a name I thought I would hear. May I know what you seek, so that I may pass on your request?"

Ayda said it all by rote, even as she stared, vague surmises refusing to become specific. She was very good at saying things while her mind panicked, and she knew it was part of the blessing of the Forgotten God. People thought lamia were natural liars, and that wasn't true. But Priests of the Forgotten God had to learn how to dance around the truth, how to play with it, how to be safe.

(To be safe was to be hidden, at least for now. It had been for generations. Though she knew it wasn't enough. This town was one of a kind, and her great, great grandmother had lost her life in a purge, as had a number of people who might have been her great aunts and uncles, had they not died when the houses burned and cold-eyed adventurers had made sure not to leave survivors to contradict their lies about dread cults sacrificing human children.)

"I need to know more about my soul. I've heard, honored Priestess, that this Temple is especially known for it."

"That's true, but I don't know what about your soul could worry you," she said, with a shake of her head, fingers brushing through her hair distractedly. Did he wonder whether he was still a good person? The Head Priest was one of the greatest experts on souls alive, and he always said that souls had very little to do with morality. The kindest person in the world might have a cracked soul, damaged in ways that were difficult to repair. The basest murderer could have a perfectly functioning soul. Souls broke as hearts did, as minds did, but they were not hearts or minds.

"I want to know more about what it is," Lotte said, his voice soft, a little feminine, she supposed. Slightly high. But there was a heft and strength to his voice that made Ayda look him over again.

She saw plenty that impressed her, and plenty that would have interested her if she was less tired, but nothing extraordinary.

"Do you mind if I take a quick look at your soul?" Ayda asked, quietly.

"Yes." Lotte hesitated, "N-no, I mean. And… how long until I can meet with the head priest?"

"A few days, under a week. Now, come closer, child." Ayda gestured, and he came close enough that she could lay a hand on his broad shoulder, inhaling the scent of sweat and wood and hard work. Then she probed, a little carelessly, not bringing up the barriers she probably should have.

Fangs, blood, glowing yellow eyes, pain, power, hate, kindness--all of it rushed in, battering against her sleepy, tired mind in a single moment as she slowly withdrew her hand, trying to keep from passing out or throwing up. Her face was an unconvincing mask as she said, "Interesting. Come back in f-four days." Ayda straightened up, hissing thoughtfully. "I believe we can help you."

"Four days, I understand," the man said, as if it was normal. She hadn't let anything show of the bad night of sleep she had. At least, he hadn't noticed anything. So either she was an impressive liar, or he just didn't notice these things.

*******

For a moment, the priestess had looked terrified. Lotte bit her lip, nervously sliding through the town as she could. If she could have stepped, her steps would have stabbed against the ground. As it was, she fidgeted, not sure how to let off her nervous energy. She needed to find Naja. She'd gotten her answer, and she'd gotten an answer from the moment the priestess had failed to hide how much her soul terrified her.

Lotte knew that wasn't a normal reaction at all. She hurried along, dodging the crowds as they gathered, looking for Naja. Instead she stopped in her tracks. It wasn't because of the crowd, most of whom seemed skilled at dodging around a lamia's long tail. No, it was about one particular person in the crowd.

She looked different. Her hair was in a tail, her body looked like she'd just begun to fill out after having been starved, and her dress was far nicer, her boots far more likely to keep out the damp. But Lotte could recognize Lisbeth. She couldn't help but remember her kiss, and Lotte's breath was taken away just from seeing her.

Then Lisbeth turned, and…

(Lotte didn't know how.)

Lisbeth recognized her.

What does Lotte do?

[] Run… er, slither away in a blind animal panic at how Lisbeth might react to meeting her again.
[] Head towards her as rapidly as possible, rather… perhaps a little too dramatically.
[] Wait to greet her, holding back, fearful and cowed and very, very uncertain.
[] Try to hide, terrified of her reaction, and yet panicking too much to actually run.
[] Write-in.

*****

A/N: I won't take an option that isn't at least a little awkward.

Also, there was a plan to have art for you with this, but it fell through and so will hopefully be next week.
 
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Lotte's heart was a wild beast, and it always had been. She could try to cage it, and when it wanted to, it'd beat against the bars, as it did in that moment. It felt like she never had any control at all over it. Stories spoke of the heart that way, but her mother had told her when she was younger and didn't understand it that a woman could be a master of her heart, and so could a man, without being either cold or self-interested. But her heart was nothing like that. It sniffed the air, it howled, it licked things just to see what they tasted like.

Now, now it was going crazy. Lotte froze, and if her heart was a wild beast, then her body was a tamed farm animal, too afraid to move in the presence of the beast. She shivered a little bit, but otherwise she remained transfixed.

Lisbeth saw her and began walking over. She moved slowly, a little wearily, eyes still wide with shock. She stopped in front of Lotte, who still couldn't bring herself to run or even react at all, and said, "Lotte?"

Lotte recoiled, slightly, wincing. "Uh," Lotte began.

Lisbeth's ears twitched, her nose scrunching up. "That is her voice, but…"

Lotte's stomach curdled as she said, faintly, "Lisbeth. It's… I'm glad you're doing well." She had to be doing well, if she had made her way there. She also didn't look sad, or heartbroken, or starving, and so Lotte decided to assume she was in fine fettle.

"You… er. Seem healthy," Lisbeth muttered, her face red. "I… can we talk? I feel as if we shouldn't be in the streets to talk about this."

"No, we shouldn't be," Lotte said. Though how was she supposed to explain it to her? There were secrets Lotte was keeping, and the thought of lying to Lisbeth felt a lot it was self-destructive, tearing open old wounds. Lisbeth, after all, had been lied to and manipulated by someone not that long ago, for years on end. "Where can we go?"

"I have a room at a local inn. It isn't that far of a walk… er." Lisbeth stammered the last bit, but Lotte shrugged.

"Don't worry, it's been a lot for me to take in too."

"Has it been long?" Lisbeth asked, as they began to move down the cobbled road. She took the lead, and Lotte looked at Lisbeth and tried not to realize how easily they could be parted forever if she said the wrong thing. It was clear that she couldn't tell the whole truth, but she didn't want to say the wrong thing.

Lisbeth was a Beastfolk, and so was Lotte for all that she couldn't admit it. If she admitted it, she'd be admitting to being a Demi-God, something she hoped she wouldn't have to do.

Lisbeth didn't talk, and neither did Lotte, and it was the most awkward silence of her life. Nobody seemed to spare them a second glance as they passed, busy as they were with their own lives.

At last they reached a two-floor building with large windows covered by wooden shutters. It smelled, even from a distance, a lot like beer and bread, and there were shouts and songs coming from behind the door, which was more than wide enough for Lotte. It seemed to be the normal afternoon carousing, less intense than it would be towards the evening, but engaging enough to remind Lotte of the places she'd been before.

Lisbeth opened the door and stepped in, Lotte close at her heels.

The floor--in fact everything--was different than expected. The floor had a layer of straw, which was normal enough, but the bottom felt different, and when Lotte glanced down carefully, she saw what looked like a stone floor. Stone floor with straw. Huh. There were also tables that looked as if they were anchored to the floor. There was a hairy, shirtless goatfolk man on the table, singing some sort of love ballad to a catfolk bar-mistress, who was rolling her eyes as she served. There were people gathered around the wooden bar, picking up beer as fast as it could be served.

They were singing too, almost drowning out the balladeer.

When they saw Lisbeth, one of them took up the call, a plump ratfolk woman.

"Oy, the piper! Oy, the piper!
The piper enters!
Oy, the piper! Oy, the piper!
The paper with a friend, the viper!"

The others repeated it, with rather rude sounding whistles on the last line.

"Oy the piper's friend,
Come here to rat's end!
Welcome fellow, welcome," a tall man who looked like a human and dressed like he belonged in the woods sang, his voice deep and booming. "The piper's friend!"

"Swish the tail, piper's friend, swish the tail," another took up, his voice high and clear as the others echoed it, one line behind.
"Dance 'round the spring pole, piper's friend."

"'As a bow, this piper's friend!"
"He hunt snipe this piper's viper friend?"

A short, drunken looking Sepult half-shouted the last two lines, taking the lyrics away from the man who'd said the first two, and banging his fist on the table. The others took it up, cheering his wit, as Lisbeth flushed. "Quiet down!" Lisbeth said, voice stronger than Lotte had feared.

"Quiet down, the piper says!" one of them sang in a sort of whisper-shout, the others taking it up quickly.
"Quiet as a mouse, the piper says!"
"Quiet, quiet, catlike quite!"
"Quiet, quiet, to listen upstairs!"

The leering wink that came with it convinced Lotte of exactly what it meant as she slithered forward, trying to get to the stairs in the corner. "What's going on?"

"It's a tradition. Tavern singing about whatever's happening," Lisbeth said. "It's, er, common in a lot of beastfolk taverns. But it's supposed to stop at a few lines." She said the last part louder, and again Lotte was struck by how much fiercer this Lisbeth was. Lotte tried not to stare at Lisbeth. She was filling out, both in boldness and in her body itself as she ate well and, apparently, learned to stand up for herself. "So that's enough, folks!"

"That's enough folks," one of them parroted back to her in a sing-song voice.

Lotte squared her shoulders, trying to tamp down her anger, and began to slither up towards the group.

"Ah, and here we go," one of them said, a broad looking woman with a fox's tail and perky orange ears. "What's it you want, viper?"

"My name is Lotte," Lotte said. "Yours is?"

"Why?" she asked.

"I'm curious. New in town. Wondering whether you do this to everyone."

"It's tradition!" someone shouted. "We're back from a long trade route, we deserve a lil' fun. What are you gonna do? Fight all of us?"

Lotte looked the foxfolk woman in the eyes as she turned away, about to laugh and quip to them about something. It was frustrating, especially because what was she supposed to say? 'I haven't heard of this tradition.'

"You've had your fun," Lotte said, and she could feel the way the foxfolk woman couldn't quite bring herself to look away. "So, why don't we quit it while we're all behind."

"I… suppose I could," the woman said, with a focused glare, unable to look away but only barely willing to listen. "But--"

"Or you could see what it's like to wake up with rats biting your toes," Lisbeth said, an edge in her voice. "J-just…"

"Oh, thank you're better'n me, you--"

"Drink," Lotte said, in a loud voice. "Could I have an ale?"

"It's coming, then," the bar-mistress said, returning with a mug, and sliding it over to Lotte. The others seemed frozen by this entirely normal request. Lotte picked up the mug, enjoying the chill against her fingers. It had to be some sort of chill spell. Lotte took a sip, and sighed in pleasure, glancing over at the woman.

"Is that honey?"

"Yes, sweet ale. My own invention. Have a deal with a beekeeper."

"Bee Beekeeper," The foxfolk woman pointed out, with a smirk. "I'm Amya, and you have an unfair advantage."

"What is that?" Lotte frowned.

"Well, unlike me, you can't get falling-down drunk. Cause you don't have legs."

"You're clearly there already," Lisbeth said. "Come on, Lotte."

Lotte downed the rest of the ale in a single long gulp, feeling the sweet warmth spreading through her body as she followed close behind Lisbeth. She wondered what a drunk lamia would be like. Would they somehow trip over their own tail? She slithered up the stairs, glad that those weren't as difficult as she might have thought.

It all felt very natural, but then she'd been 'walking' for days and weeks now, so of course she was used to it. She did have to watch carefully for narrow spaces, though she wondered whether she could just squeeze through them anyways. Upstairs, there was a hallway, with doors on each side. Lisbeth took the second to the right, which opened into a space only barely large enough for the both of them.

One thing she didn't like about being a lamia was just how much space she could take up. The room itself had a bed, and a stand for a lamp, and a chest under the bed, which Lotte had to assume held all of her worldly goods, clothes included. Lisbeth sat herself down on the bed, and then looked up at Lotte, who was taller than her even now. Perhaps especially now, if Lotte reared up, as she knew she could. It felt a bit awkward, but that was more about her sense of balance. "So, Lotte… what happened?"

"I was exploring a ruin and… something happened. I was transformed into a Lamia, or something was done, probably to my soul, to make me one." Lotte knew this was lying, but it was also close enough to the truth.

"You… what?" Lisbeth asked.

"A lot has happened since I last saw you," Lotte admitted, blushing a little. "I missed you."

"I've been fine. I know you were curious. I started going on the road on my own. I was almost robbed once, but managed to escape. I've learned a little about how to defend myself, and I made some good coin on easy tasks. But I wanted to do a little more. So I'm working as Rat Piper in this town for a few weeks."

"Has it been hard?"

"No. The interesting thing is that there are people who want more than for me to lead the rats away. I don't want to drown them, so I have to go a ways away, find somewhere for a lot of them to live. Even then, I know a lot of them will die." Lisbeth shook her head, less sad and more resigned. "But here, there are people who want rats as pets. There are some who eat them, and I'm not sure how I feel about that." Lisbeth's nose twitched, the whiskers a little stiff, which Lotte interpreted as tension. "But training rats to be pets or to do tricks is certainly something I never expected. I've figured out a lot about how my pipe works."

Lotte nodded, eager to hear more. "How does it work?"

"Trade secret," Lisbeth said, with a shake of her head. "But I've learned that there's a lot more you can do with a pipe than Aldrich told me. I'm sure he knew, but he went where there was coin."

"I did too, to be fair," Lotte admitted. "Or I wouldn't have been lured into the ruin exploration in the first place." Lotte smiled a little weakly. "I seem to have a few odd powers, or at least my body has changed beyond that."

"I, er, noticed," Lisbeth admitted, glancing over at Lotte's chest.

"So, I don't know… we're going to be seeing the priests to see if they know anything about the soul, but while I can't admit it to the others, I think I'll be stuck like this for the rest of my life."

"It's not so bad," Lisbeth said, though her voice quavered a bit, probably in fear. "Aren't there things about it that you don't hate?"

"Well, like the woman said downstairs, I can't fall down drunk."

"Oh, lamia can," Lisbeth said. "Well, I've seen one or two do so." She smiled a little, and Lotte felt so proud at being able to draw that smile from her, however she'd done it. She wanted to do it again, wanted to make Lisbeth smile rather than frowning and listening and judging.

"And it's easy to get used to, in a way," Lotte admitted. "It feels just as natural as walking. I suppose I like being able to see in the dark, too. It'd probably be pretty useful for hunting."

"It would have made our ambush even better," Lisbeth said, brightly. Then she started to tear up a little, eyes shimmering like clear waters against the moonlight. Lotte felt ridiculously poetic in that moment, her heart trying to force its way out again.

"Please, don't cry," Lotte said, desperately. It was almost an order, but her own voice quavered.She felt as if she'd lost track of game just weeks before snowfall.

"I missed you so, so much." Lisbeth half-blubbered it as she hugged Lotte tight all of a sudden, her small body pressed up against the lamia, her arms wrapping around Lotte's body as she cried softly against Lotte's shoulder. "I knew you were okay, because I heard about your song, but I didn't know if you were happy. I didn't know a lot of things. I didn't have a right to them, either. We'd met once, and briefly, at the start of your journey. It hasn't even been that long. I thought it could be months, or years, until we met again."

Lotte let out a strangled, wounded sound at that thought. But it was true. Adventurers could part for a long time. It was said that the bonds they forged were ones that could last forever. Two people might never meet again, but that didn't mean they weren't still friends. There were plenty of stories of adventurers decades parted stepping up to save each other, or found that the bonds of the past could tie them to disaster and adventure even then. "You're right," Lotte said, in a small voice. "But here we are."

"Here we are." Lisbeth said, quietly. "But something doesn't make sense?"

"W-what?" Lotte asked. "What doesn't?"

"How did you become a lamia? I know it isn't easy, or you'd see human Mages and Priests trying to reverse the process and turn beastfolk into humans, or preaching against the destruction of humanity by beastfolk turning humans into their own kind in dark rituals, or--"

With each word, her tone grew darker, and more exhausted, as if she were experiencing all the harsh words. Lotte didn't know how to say that that was one thing she'd seen only a little about, and didn't want to see much more. The truth was, whether she wanted it or not, it was going to happen. Lotte bit her lip.

"I'm sorry, Lotte. It can be tiring, sometimes. I was protected by my Master at least in one way. He never would have allowed such things to be said about me for long. He was cruel in many ways, but not in that way."

"I understand." Lotte wasn't sure if she did. "I know people can not always be one thing. I don't know what it wants with me, but I have to survive either way."

"It?"

"The Forgotten God." Lotte blinked as Lisbeth's ears twitched. "What is it?"

"I've heard of them. They're the most important God in this town. In theory, because apparently very few of the beastfolk I've met trust the lamia priests."

This certainly wasn't in the book. "Why?"

"I don't know. It seems to go back to two families, and something that happened over a decade ago. But the lamia priests were involved, and that's all I know."

"Who are the two families?" Lotte asked, drawn in despite herself. She had a lot more to explain, including her uncertainty about whether she was really a girl.

"Well, one is a family of werewolves, a powerful clan that's protected this village for a long time. The Mondzks. The other is a family of crowfolk that have been especially active in trade, and are thus very rich. The Schultes. I think they also disagree on how open the city should be, how they should handle talking to Central Lands humans… and other things." Lisbeth bit her cheek, tail swishing a little bit. "But I have the feeling that more than any disagreement about what is best, they hate each other and would hate each other just as much if they agreed on everything."

"Oh," Lotte said. "Do they run the town?"

"No, there is a council, and a sheriff who--"

There was a cry downstairs. "Hear ye! Hear ye!" a crier called, no doubt chosen for his powerful lungs. The words echoed even up there.

"We should see what that is, if it's town news." Lisbeth hurried down, Lotte on her tail quite literally, to find a red-faced young ratfolk in a doublet and rather worn looking hose, looking around wildly.

"By order of the Sheriff, the Town Meeting tomorrow will discuss the rash of violence between members and servants of the Schultes of this town, and the Mondzyks of this town. All who wish to attend will hear the bells ringing when it is time to arrive for the meeting." He took a breath, and someone chimed in with a question.

"What did they do this time?"

"There was an affray in the market," the crier said. "One servant insulted another with rude gestures and implications of their unworthiness…"

"And the other assaulted them with rude punches?" A woman asked.

"Yes, something to that effect. All are welcome to come, and that's what I came in here to announce. Now I have to go on, to announce it to others along this street." The crier, with that, turned tail and hurried on.

"What's that look on your face?" Lisbeth asked, ears twitching.

"What look?"

"You're going to get involved, aren't you?"

"Maybe."

"Lotte…"

"Yes."


How does Lotte begin her entirely unsolicited involvement in someone else's problem (also known as Freelance Adventuring)?

[] Visit the Mondzyks, who are apparently famous as foragers, wilderness survivalists, and hunters. Lotte could very easily pose as a curious hunter seeking to talk to them about technique and skills… in fact, Lotte basically would be that, but with another agenda.
[] As an adventurer and an outsider, Lotte would at least in theory be welcome to discuss news of the outside world with some members of the family known as the Schultes, especially with Lisbeth--who is working for one of their scions--to vouch for her.
[] Why are the lamia priests distrusted? Going back to ask them might well annoy them when they're making Lotte wait, but it could be important to the full story.

What does Lotte do with Lisbeth, in the time they have and tomorrow morning/afternoon? (Choose 1)

[] Introduce Lisbeth to everyone else and try to make it go well.
[] Lisbeth offers to help Lotte practice some of her skills.
[] Try to raise the… gender issue with Lisbeth.
[] Ask Lisbeth to show her around the town.
[] Write-in.

******

A/N: In fair Allswell where we lay our scene… but not quite.
 
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