She peeked down to one of the smaller creature and shook her head.
"I have never been there... myself... I don't know what... it looks like..." New faces joined them and she turned to see and greet—one of them she almost missed, it was so tiny! A bug!? And then a larger bug... much larger... she smiled to them nonetheless and swapped her attention back to the chambers.
As they navigated the bone labyrinth, Lorekeeper could not help but stretch and turn to view all the little nooks and crannies. She did not leave her own lair much, so getting out to see what had changed was very rewarding. It seemed as if a multitude of creatures inhabited the heart, scurrying into their tiny homes to hide from those trespassing. Occasionally, she'd test the scents on the air where the bones would
bifurcate the path, and suggest a new direction if the Gembounds were unsure.
She was oblivious to how much time had passed but they did reach—what she presumed to be—Jupiter's den.
At first, it seemed quite organized and almost barren: a small place for sleeping, nestled with furs and soft things to lay on; a workbench of sorts with tools for crafting, including sharpened diamond and oily stones for cutting other gemstones; a myriad of feathers collected in a clay cup, with cut bits and pieces littering the table and floor beneath it; and finally, a large vase-like thing full of sticks and bones, out of which Jupiter might have carved arrows.
But in the corner lay a hidden chamber, a dim light reaching from its dark walls to which she scooted and crooned across the backs of the others to see...
Discarded chunks of oily stone, broken or shattered, bones of stronger creatures with denser magic than the Gembounds, and finally... shimmering white feathers, crackling with electricity. There were only four left, one of each size: small, medium, large, and extra large—likely one of his outermost feathers. At first, Lorekeeper was speechless, her jaw opening to speak but nothing coming out. As she continued to look into the hidden area, there was something else there, a scribbling against the back wall:
(click for full!)
It was a painting against the bone: a background of smudged charcoal or soot to darken the color of the backdrop on top of which was depicted a winged man. His white wings shimmered with gold, his entire body crackling with lightning—and above him, an obsidian sword with wings not unlike his own, crackling with the same energy; at its base, where a hilt might have been, was a crest with a scorpion. Piercing blue eyes stared eternal, heavy with a sadness and a vengeance.
The Lorekeeper seemed lost for a long moment, her many eyes fixated on the painting—and slowly, tears welled from them.
To see him again... she was breathless.
"This is... Tamulus..." she managed, sniffling up a long, leaky string of snot.
"He is... what you kids would call... my father, I guess." Essentially. The word did not have much meaning to her. Tamulus and Enki had been her creators, her architects, but she did not come out as planned; Enki would trust the disposal to Tamulus, who hid her instead. She would come to learn that they were successful in their creation of Rhatan, and that her better half would be collected for the chaotic plunge into the end. But... her? Nameless? Purposeless?
"I was... a failure," Lorekeeper started, her voice solemn and raspy.
"I was taken here... to be disposed of... but Tamulus could not..." she spoke, deep breaths rattling her chest as she struggled against the swell of sleep calling her.
"He hid me... instead." Her eyes worriedly flicked to Vargas.
"I was good... at hiding!" A toothy grin.
"Jupiter came... to visit me... too... then both of them... Tamulus had a sword made... from his chrysalis... it was a powerful weapon... imbued with his own magic... and feathers..." She traced it with her eyes, gesturing toward it above him in the painting.
"It had... no hilt... he simply commanded it... and it flew..."
"And then... they discussed with me... hiding... for good..." her voice trailed off, her throat tightening; yes, it had been fearful during the war. It was all they could do to escape, she had heard. Her chest squeezed. She had been left behind, perhaps strategically, she had thought. But then, so had Batcat.
"And then... I went to sleep." It wasn't untrue, but it wasn't on purpose either. She had fallen into hibernation like the others.
"And... then... you came," she continued, looking to the gembounds.
"The Great... Awakening..." A small, genuine smile.
"Jupiter returned too... and began to tell me... what was happening..." Her ears folded back.
"It is bad... up there..." Her voice sunk as she said this.
"But it wasn't... always... Jupiter said, when they... reached the surface... it was nothing..." She made a
poof sound, parting her paws as if for reference.
"And so they made it... something..."
Her eyes went wide.
"They made the grass... the trees... the rivers... the animals..." She could only imagine what this looked like.
"And she said... there is no ceiling... just a yawning... expanse... of sky..." She looked up to the bone roof that enclosed them in the Chambers.
"Jupiter said... they thought... they might never... see it again..." But Lorekeeper didn't know what that meant, really. She hadn't asked.
"But Tamulus..." she continued, her eyes tracing back to the painting.
"He was... happy... Jupiter promised me... that..." She could only choose to believe her friend.
"With someone... named Let... his wife."
Surely, Jupiter would not lie to her?
Lorekeeper frowned.
"It is... sad... to know she... is gone..." And by the hand of Lord Dhracia—the Hand, Lord Dhracia.
"Might one of you.. be clever enough... to dislodge this area... and bring it back to... my den?" she wondered aloud, looking between those present.
"I would... very much like... to have this... please." Her voice wavered and her head bobbed against the pull of sleep pulsating through her, adding a weight to her body she could not fight.
"Please..." she said again before her head fell against the hyena's side and she drifted off into another of her deep slumbers.
Exit Lorekeeper