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Her Scarred Serenity

286 bytes removed, 09:55, 5 May 2019
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| origin = Light
| titles = Our Lady of Scars
| names = Her Ryo, the Last ScholarAugur
| aspects = {{Aspect|Heart}} {{Aspect|Winter}} {{Aspect|Knock}}
| arrival = Long before the Collision.
The Hour called Our Lady of Scars is not as she was, before the Collision. She has been scarred and reduced by the sacrifice she made, to save the Hours and the twin Mansi. She fully expected to die, but she lived. She does not regret what she did, nor what she didn't.
Now, she is the patron of the wounded, the scarred, and the mutilated, invoked in moments of weakness and futility. She does not grant strength, not as her father does, though she wishes she could. She grants determination, resolve, the power to persist another day and another day and another day. She also grants the wisdom to know when strength and resolve are futile, when it is better to flee or to cease.
 
She does ask for small things in exchange, however, though she wishes she didn't need to. A breath here, taken directly from the lungs. A heartbeat there, taken directly from the heart. A twitch in the muscles, as she needs to move more than you need to move, in that moment. She is very sorry.
== History ==
=== Servants ===
Rao, The Last ScholarAugur
=== Servants ===
'''After Translation:''' ''A series of warnings, meditative exercises, and protective rites one needs to preform to safely read a "Word of Words", which Atzak claims is important to understand "The grandmother of languages".''
'''Before reading:''' ''"The Glory is dead. The goddess Vak is dead. Our Lady is deadclose to death. But yet, she will protect the Monastery from the Deluge, as she protects the body from the wound during surgery, as she protects the soul from evil during Mansus-dreams, and as she will protect the mind from the Word I will record. Here are the rites of protection..."''
'''After reading:''' ''"Many words can protect, but this one needs to be protected against. Few corpses contain words, but this word contains a corpse. All languages contain words, but this word contains a language. Herein, the grave of threefold Vak, the goddess, the word, and the language." ''

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