Giggle listened to Reseda's request with a solemn stare, trying to simply accept it. The lizard was right--she had been young. Perhaps she had matured. After all, had Kerberos's first act not been to outright attack her? And the dog had become her beloved son, in time. With guidance.
As she turned back to her bone pit, she considered. Perhaps she should have offered guidance to the reptile--but she'd hardly been in a state to do so, at the time.
No point in it now. Take a bone, pick a bone, a lizard-bone...
Giggle found herself stumped, for a moment. She didn't know what to use to
represent the Komodo in her readings. Normally it was easy enough to snatch up a bone that reminded her, in some way, of her target--but now she saw nothing. For far too long she stood with furrowed brow, gaze wandering over her bone pit. At length, at last--and only after pawing around in the scattered bones--she chose one, a medium-small but strong, thick and tough thing, studded with little spines of some sort. This she lifted in her jaws, but a faint sense of misgiving still took her. After reaching the overhang looking over the top of her bone pile she looked down, looking over the bone one last time.
It will have to do. But-... for the first time, something is not quite right with it.
Never mind it now; there was little she could do about this, though it was a thought she'd bear in mind for later. Perhaps the bones were trying to tell her something, even now, even with this.
She tossed the bone with a fling of her jaws down into the pit below, and watched the way the rest scattered at its impact--the way the patterns of the world would change at Reseda's actions. There was, noticeably--Giggle's mind picked up on this at once--no real change. Most of the bones merely rocked at the spined-one's impact, twisting a little but barely changing position. Yet there were many that continued to move in place, to shift, and just before they stopped altogether, a few fell just enough to catch a bright gleam of warm light.
The hyena observed this all sombrely, and she began to make her predictions.
"No," she answered simply, at first.
"I see bones that do not fly at your touch. All remains the same--the same as it was, the same as it will be. The same as it is. Yet your bone--your future--it doesn't falter. You must be strong and continue on--perhaps even past an end of all you know. A near-death, perhaps. A death itself. A rebirth--that, I cannot see for sure; that, is a guess. What you must find is light: creation, lizard, and enlightenment. You have a dark shroud over your mind. It will be driven away with light. With understanding. Inspiration--perhaps companionship. I don't know that, either, not for sure. But what must change is you."
She looked up, at length, up at Reseda from her own perch high above the bone pit, and waited for a beat before speaking further.
"Is there something more you would ask the bones, or something you do not understand?"
Once upon a time, Giggle had deliberately tried for theatricality, for dramatic flair in her readings--the better to draw others back, the better to spread the wisdom of the bones. But now-... Her mind was still too fragmented for that. Perhaps in time. Yet now, her matter-of-fact delivery made it perhaps even more strange, particularly for the fawn: she truly believed in her own words.
She believed that the bones spoke the truth.
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ROLL THE BONES