Star Mother (Star Mother #1)(69)
“I have claim on him,” I repeated, softer.
He studied me longer than was comfortable, and His fiery brow lifted. “Of course . . . it makes sense.”
I hugged myself, feeling vulnerable. “What does?”
His mouth turned down. “You will deliver him to Me, Ceris.”
“Or what?” I stepped closer again, but Saiyon was hardly cowed by me. “If celestial and mortal law is so separate, can You even order me to do that? Can You punish me? Will You hurt me, Saiyon, kill me? Or will You imprison me the way You did him?”
He flared, heat so powerful I had to step back. He reined it back in.
“It is my charge,” He ground out. “I must secure balance in the universe, regardless of who tries to destroy it. Regardless of My feelings for you. He must repay the time he took. He must restore the chords. I will burn down every mortal city you hide him in if I must.”
I gaped at Him. “You would never be so cruel.”
His light flared again, so bright that I could not bear to look . . .
until I realized it was not Saiyon who glowed so brilliantly, but the sky. Or one small point of the sky. I knew its light instantly, its warmth, the voice I could feel but not hear.
Surril. My star.
Saiyon turned His head skyward. “You dare oppose Me in this?”
But she did. I could not see whatever trouble she was causing, but it was something Saiyon could not ignore.
He blazed red and turned back to me. “You blame Me for the damage done here, but you are misled. Ask him, Ceris. Ask him why this war started. Ask him how it is his doing.” His voice was low, tinged with rage . . . but something sad weighed down His words, and at that moment, I could not determine what.
Saiyon flashed away, Surril retreated, and I stood alone among the trees stippling the wide spreads of pastureland, more confused than ever.
I walked back slowly, my energy drained, my mind heavy. I didn’t understand where mortal laws ended and celestial laws began. I trusted Saiyon, and yet I wanted to trust Ristriel with everything I was. It gave me peace to know Surril watched over me, even when I could not see her, and yet her intrusion only raised more questions.
Did she trust Ristriel? Could she watch him from the heavens as she did me? Or did she oppose her father only to support me?
Why did Saiyon want me to ask Ristriel about the war?
I rubbed gooseflesh from my arms when I neared the city. A baker had a cart of hot buns near the wall. Grateful to have my things with me, I eagerly paid him for two and ate every last crumb as I climbed the rising streets of Nediah, licking candy gloss from my hands. It was about noon, if the sky was to be believed. I thought of the times I’d gotten bored enough in Endwever to pull one of my pranks, and laughed at my younger self. How simple life had been then, to have such a small world to bask in, a husband already chosen for me, and a future mapped out by someone else!
There was still a crowd when I reached the cathedral, though the spire had ceased burning and showed no damage from the heat.
It reminded me of myself, burning alive in Saiyon’s bed and walking away without any physical scars. I stopped and closed my eyes, pushing the memories away. But something struck me: Saiyon could see my soul’s scars just as well as Ristriel and the godlings did. Past looks He’d given me, things He’d said to me, made sense—He felt guilty for giving them to me. Then, like now, He had followed the laws of the universe. And He still wanted me, despite the disfiguration of my spirit.
I was not so na?ve to think He loved me more than the law, however. I didn’t think He was able to.
Guards had gathered around the cathedral, trying to calm the crowds as people shouted questions about the gods and star mothers and blessings and curses. My attention pushed past them, to the towering monstrosity of worship looming over me. I thought of the priest in Tarnos, and his book of the gods’ language. Could this cathedral, being so large, so old, and so prestigious, have something like that? A book of celestial law, perhaps? Something that could help me sort out this problem and save Ristriel from his fate? I had not noticed one before, but then again, I had not been looking.
The least I could do was try.
I slipped through the crowd, finding gaps in it where others had grown tired and gone home. I was nearly to the steps when a guard put his hand out in front of me. “None may enter.”
Without stopping, I unleashed my starlight, burning like a new wick before him. He quickly cowed away, eyes round. “Let me pass,”
I demanded, and he did. My light died before I reached the front door, but it had started a commotion behind me. Good; let the onlookers keep the guards busy. I had work to do.
The breathtaking stained glass and oil paintings, sculptures and busts, mosaics and columns, were practically invisible to me at that moment. I sought something pragmatic, not ornate. I did stop once at Agradaise’s bust, studying her face in copper, remembering it bathed in brilliant light. Wondering when I would get the chance to ask Saiyon her story, if He even remembered it.
But she was dead and could not help me now, so I bowed my head in a plea for forgiveness and continued my search, checking alcoves, shelves, and tablets along the walls. I walked through the ambulatory and looked in each chevet, then came around the cathedral again, checking drawers and slinking behind roped-off sections. I found books, but most of them were familiar hymnals or scriptures—the same pages I could have read back home.