Aria stared at the potions as they rested on her dressing table. From her prone position, each one looked tinier than a fingertip. She could take them. She would fall in love with Achi, presumably. They could marry, live in this palace, run the world. Perhaps they would have children. She laughed at herself. More likely, it would fail because the potion did not work on ghosts.
She rolled out of bed and onto her feet. The potions were a backup plan. There was no need to consider them yet.
She shook her head and climbed out of bed. Outside, she completed her daily survey of her surroundings. There were still no visible cracks in the surface, something that filled her with hope. Perhaps Achi had made this realm more resilient. But it filled her with fear as well. To be trapped alone, forever, in a large world while everyone else died? He would not have given her such a gift.
Technically he only gave you about eighty years of energy.
Instinctively, she felt for the rings she was wearing. She had barely depleted them and they stored significantly more than eighty years of energy. Either someone found a way to save the world or she could be left with no choices but suicide or slow madness.
After her survey, she stopped at a gazebo and retrieved her books. Alogun was working on a plan and he was more intelligent than she was and just as motivated. He would find something. She let herself focus on her own duty: learning.
She picked up the first book in her new collection: How to make a God. It proved to be poorly named. Dull Recitation of the Histories of Various Deities would have been a better title. She learned facts from it, but slowly and painfully.
âAria?â
Aria jumped. The voice had seemed to come from right beside her, but there was no one around.
She rose to her feet and allowed the book to fall onto her chair.
âAria?â The voice came again. âMy name is Lorik. I bring a message from Alogun, The Deep Mountain, God of Knowledge and Unending Sight.â
It was a tragedy, Aria thought, that she was too startled to appreciate the humor in that title.
âWhere are you?â She asked.
âI am currently with The Deep Mountain. I can speak to you without being in your vicinity.â
And, apparently, he could hear her as well.
âWhat does Alogun want?â She asked. A pit was forming in her stomach. He had called for Aria, and she had answered.
âI want to congratulate you,â Alogunâs voice said. âYou fooled me for four full days. That is a feat greater than anyone has ever achieved.â
Aria took a breath to steady herself. She was safe; she was hidden.
âI suppose thereâs no point in denying it,â she said. âWhat gave me away?â
âYour mannerisms,â Alogun said. âAnd once I was no longer distracted, it seemed obvious that your only ability is teleportation. That is atypical for deities, but standard in ghosts.â
Aria bit her lip in frustration and worry.
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âI can find you, wherever you are hidden,â he said.
âI wish you luck, then. I am very well hidden.â
âBut I donât want to waste time,â he said. A grunt followed, then Alogunâs voice again. âSpeak to your daughter.â
Aria froze. Another grunt sounded, then another, and then another.
âFather?â She asked, even though she knew.
âAria,â her fatherâs voice came through clearly, as if he was right beside her, âdonât do anything they want.â
There was the sound of a blow, and another grunt.
âGaro is doing the honors,â Alogun said, âand very enthusiastically. I suspect he is still smarting from your humiliation.â
Aria applauded. Her terror was receding, her heartbeat was growing steadier. The situation was familiar, manageable, something she had trained for her whole life. A hostage situation, a negotiation, the threat of violence. It was so comforting, she had to fight a smile.
âHow did you find them?â She asked.
âMy title is not made of empty words,â Alogun said.
âThen why have you not found me?â
Silence followed that, punctuated only by blows and grunts.
Aria frowned. âDid you not find my mother? Or did she already kill herself?â
âSheâs here,â Alogun said. He sounded confused now and that amused Aria.
âYouâre wondering why I am not more concerned?â She returned to her seat, making sure to remove the book from it first and gripped the parts of the chair beside her.
âPapa -â She said. âI forgot. How many times did you cane me because I saved a friend rather than complete a mission?â
âMore than enough, I hope,â his breathing was heavy.
âAfter all that effort, it would be a shame if I disregard your training, would it not?â
âI would never forgive you,â he said. âIâd threaten to cut your throat, but that works less often now that youâre an adult.â
This time, Aria failed to suppress a smile. âSo brave. But donât worry, theyâll release you.â
âAnd why do you say that?â Alogun asked.
âBecause Iâm going to count to sixty in my mind,â Aria said. âAnd while Iâm doing that, youâre going to choose. You can return my parents to their hiding place and negotiate in a more intelligent manner or I can kill myself. Then, you can torture them for as long as it takes the world to fall apart.â
The response was a loud blow and an even louder grunt from her father.
âThis is ironic,â Aria said. âDo you know how much they love you, Garo? You have your two most loyal followers right there, and youâre embarassing yourself. I wonât break.â
âWe wonât fall for this,â Alogun said.
âThat is fine,â Aria said. âIâve reached sixteen.â
She continued counting silently, resolve growing with every count. Fear tried to rear its head, but she mastered it. Like the moment she touched her spear before a battle, she was committed.
âStop this.â Chalik said. âTruly, you are all insane.â
There was a pause in the grunts.
âAria,â Chalik said, âallow me to be frank with you. We need you. With your assistance, we can revive Achi, restore the world, and avoid Tiveloâs wrath but without you, our only choice is death. Between death and happy survival, weâve chosen survival. Those two idiots cannot fathom obtaining your help without threats, but I am willing to make a fair deal with you. I typically employ Proiva for these things. You might not know her, but every deity you can ask will vouch for her. We use her to make binding agreements that no one can break.â
Aria considered that carefully. âAnd what will I be required to agree to?â
âWe will help you revive Achi, and you will talk him into making his father pardon us,â Chalik said. âEveryone wins.â
Aria frowned. âIf that is so sensible, you could have presented it before kidnapping my parents.â
âTrue,â Chalik said. âBut, as you can imagine, the others wanted a backup plan.â
Aria fell silent as she made exhaustive mental calculations. She could not trust them; she knew that. But she did not believe they would free her parents without an agreement and she did not wish to sacrifice them unnecessarily.
âThis is what we will do,â she said. âAny negotiations will require you to first release my parents. I will take thirty minutes to consider your proposal. After that, if they are secure, I might be willing to work with you.â
âNo -â Garo said.
âThat is fine,â Chalik said. âWe will speak to you in thirty minutes. You may break the connection, Lorik.â