Book Two
Desire trampled up Faith's tower, fury in her wake.
Verily, with every step, the stars themselves did quake.
She meteored straight through the doors that sealed off the sanctum
And swiftly smashed with grace and class the guards that filled the chamber.
But since good Faith was all wrapped up in solemn meditation,
Desire's knife was at his throat before he sensed the danger.
"What have you done with my brother, you twit?"
Desire's hot tongue was as sharp as her blade.
The latter pressed deeper down into Faith's neck,
As he, most unfettered, did calmly retort:
"So good now to see you, dear sister! My word!
How rude of me not to have offered you myrrh."
Desire, though thirsty, was far from impressed.
Did he mean to mock her by speaking his best?
"Don't slick that with me, you most worthless of slime!
No coward like you could be brother of mine.
I've said why I'm here. Now you say what you've done,
Or I swear by your laws you won't see the next sun."
But Faith only chuckled, his conviction secure:
Though she was far older, Desire could stir
Nothing up in his heart to let anger take hold,
And without that, she'd lose. So he kept his words cold:
"Without your brother here, my dear, I fear that that won't work.
His sickly scythe might slay me, 'haps, but never your dull dirk."
"I count on it!" Desire snapped. "The better yet to bleed you,
For pain enough to loose your words is all with which I need you."
"You know what I've done. Why bother to ask?
Death had to be stopped. I've finished my task.
You come here like some kind of snake in the grass?
My dear, have a seat. No need to be crass."
Desire was livid. Regardless, she smirked.
Young Faith was a thorn in her side since his birth.
Though Nature herself was a mother they shared,
Her father was Chaos, his Reason the fair.
Desire was everything Faith considered to be devoid of worth.
Faith stood for everything Desire spat at when she cursed.
So onward forever the two were ensnared
To fight for the claim to our hearts and souls paired
She brandished her knife and sliced off his earlobe.
The blood flowed down freely and sullied his robes.
She then kicked him brutally down to the floor
And spit on his tabard to settle the score.
Only then did she finally pull up a chair,
Sit down, sheathe her weapon, and flick back her hair.
"You'd better explain yourself quickly," she sneered,
"Or next time you'll lose more than th' lobe of your ear."
And if he had not been sustained by the sheer weight of his immense pride,
Unshakeable Faith, though bloodied and beaten,
May have failed to rise from the pile of blood on the floor.
But like a horse, after being forced to break into a gallop after already riding for several kilometers
Does continue its glorious charge for fear of its master's whip,
So did regal Faith, with a twisted grin full of smugness the likes of which children feel,
Their piñatas bursting—manage to maintain his dignity
Even while rising to his livid half-sister,
Blood from his ear wound still soaking his robes.
"If ever in your heart you felt that Death was to be cherished;
That somehow, in the scheme of things, we all were meant to perish;
That blood and gore would set the score to something less than garish;
And in its wake, give more than take by culling out my parish:
I'm here to say that to this day I've never seen the benefit
To pain and fear, to wounds and tears, to families all torn asunder.
And as your brother's banishment has brought about the end of it,
I hardly regret that I made the sun set on his eyes so devoid of life's wonder."
And as he spoke defiant, so his guards began to rise.
They moved to hold Desire back, but to their great surprise
Faith raised his hand. "I will not stand to see you any longer.
But I'll tell you what you came to hear from me as a matter of honor.
Your brother's soul could not be quelled completely—this you know.
To banish his power, like spores from a flower, his soul needed somewhere to go.
I put it in a human soul—which one was up to Fate.
But somewhere in a far-off plane, a spirit's filled with hate.
Your brother's soul is trapped within the body of another.
To find out which, you wretched witch, you'll have to ask Grandmother.
Now leave me be! I've told you what you came up here to ask,
And if you walk these halls again, those steps will be your last."
Desire grinned. And like a cat will let of a mouse
Just to keep the game afoot as it scurries through the house,
So did sly Desire thus depart from Faith's high quarters,
Her sights newly set on her grandmother's pedestal, west of Velandris's borders.