A soot-rimmed glass lamp burns low on a bedside table with a sleepy glow, softly illuminating the contour of a woman curled around a worn book filled from cover to cover. Folded pages stick out of the side, a collection of loose sheets added later, half-thoughts gathered up to make an inviting anthology. She props her arms up on a short stack of tomes, lolled head gazing down at the pages from beneath heavy lids and dark circles, eyes dragging from left to right as though each line is a mile to run over and over and over. The hour is surely late, but the infernal light that creeps unbidden along the edges of the heavy curtains would never reveal it. She can’t help but dive deep into the messages left for her from the past, the manuscripts of sermons before they came alive at the altar. These were her words, her thoughts. It was guidance she desperately needed at a time when the world had never felt emptier or more void of hope.
Amidst the cluttered margins, her memories are set alight by the fiery passion recorded on the lines in tight cursive. What details she can’t recall precisely from the treachery of transformation, she can recognize from the dull pang of familiarity that blooms a terrible ache in her chest, as heavy as her own grave slab weighing down. On rare occasion, the words come as a warm embrace from an old friend, replete with unconditional love and understanding. The miasma exhausts, but does not grant her slumber until she finds the last complete page before the journal meanders off into incomplete notes jotted, ideas for future lectures, market lists, and mundane reminders.
Why would anyone choose to take on the burden of the Khotgor? An endless war, raging against the Void with no end in sight. Watching generations rise and fall to beat back the encroaching darkness. Is it courage? Is it faith? You could attribute any number of noble qualities and be correct, but what rises high above all, as bright as sunlight, is extraordinary love. The sort that is not often called upon, but is remarkable and profoundly changing when it’s made manifest. The kind that is held in a deep reserve for a day when you must trust you’ll know it’s right to use.
The words seemed not only to be read, but to read her right back. Her eyes fluttered shut as her hands tightened on the covers like an anchor to a tossing ship. A chasm threatened to tear her in two, her own voice commanding the words back to her as clearly as if she were kneeling before herself in the shrine that now laid in ashes from the rage of those she’d made victims; in the dim shelter of her inn room, she was priestess and congregant alike. Her own eyes bore down on herself, her own judgment striking wicked bolts with each syllable.
Though these men and women have sacrificed, we cannot and should not aspire to become martyrs, nor should we be asked to pay such a steep price in our own blood by beings who look after us. Their price was volunteered, offered from within, and not commanded from on high. This is what makes their work so precious. Indeed what we should be chasing instead is a love that inspires us to defy odds. Not just romantic love, but love that extends impossibly in all directions, in ways we can barely imagine. Love that works in ways we can’t fathom. Extraordinary love for the world and its inhabitants is the purest kind of heart. Care for your fellow man that reaches beyond earthly grievance is the cornerstone of goodness. There is no higher virtue between heaven and earth that better exemplifies or honors the innumerable spirits that dwell among us.
How far off had she veered in the end? She was made a martyr by a force that should have never asked it. She was beckoned down a path of righteous ego one heroic act at a time until it became impossible to imagine that anything she touched could turn to aught but gold with enough belief tipping the scales behind it. Shame swelled so rapidly in her gut that she had to pause simply to catch her breath. This was right, this dolorous state; what could be more appropriate than to let the weight of her sins bear so fully and so unabated, free from the too-helpful hands of those that would try to soothe. She needed this. She read on.
It may feel impossible to reach such a transformational state. It may seem too radical, too out of reach, too much transformation that it’s impossible to know where to start—but there is something for everyone, steps that can be made on the long road ahead. Honor the dead foremost. Ensure their selfless and transformational love is not forgotten or done in vain. Continue to strive to espouse the virtues that made them great and to carry on the work they began so they might transcend death in such a way. Tell their stories not to hearts who already agree, but challenge those that don’t. Open closed eyes with awe, let them see example of your stories in your deeds, as well. Be the living embodiment as often as you can and aspire to better when you cannot.
A dozen died by her hand, an immutable fact that haunted her at all hours. She had unleashed an aetherial rot that stole life from the land by way of immaculate light and collected the souls of the desperately infirm under the guise of divine intervention. How could she hope to embody anything but humility after such a thorough humbling? What sort of priestess could hold her weight in a challenge of ideas when her own sins cast such a long shadow over her legacy? There were no kami. No spirits would save her. No gods would touch her.
Do not wait until you are dead or collapsed to seek out those who radiate it here and now. There are always others who are further along the path than you, and they are to be learned from. They are among you, in places you least expect, as well as places that seem too obvious to work. Serve while you are able. Give them not only gratitude, but help them to shoulder the burden. Bolster their path as they lift you in yours.
Her fingers paused on the page and for a moment, the brackish waves breaking in her head quieted. She was given just enough relent to look up, to shake loose the tight breath locked up in her chest for far longer than she had realized, and to let her body release a mountain of tension just this once. Slumbering silence had made way for the first stirrings of life outside to herald another everlasting day in the dying world while she was absorbed in her reading. If she had once been so close to virtue, perhaps it wasn’t so far to climb to find it again. These words were her words. These beliefs had once been her beliefs and perhaps they still could be.
Extraordinary love is not by accident, it’s cultivated, and you must be its vigilant gardener. Beauty beyond measure starts with earnestly scattered seeds. The seasons turn; winter never lasts no matter its bitter depth.
Whoever she became in the wide, yawning, swallowing, screaming margin between worlds could perhaps close the distance enough to remember what came before and to carry it forward. To honor it. Perhaps even to love it. If she could not be a paragon, then she could make to lift those who would. If she could not wash the blood from her hands, then she would need to use them to build a life whereupon another pair could remain a little cleaner. She reached out and snuffed the lamp, leaving a lazy drift of smoke to curl from the blackened wick.
Perhaps there would still be an end to this brutal season.