|
You've left something in the far reaches of the grey sky, and you keep on searching as you wander. And I can't see tomorrow, I can't believe anything, I close my ears. When I met you, I found my true place in life. An innocent kindness is right here. And so we awaken...
Long, long ago in a land filled with prosperity and equality, a hierarchy of Deities was created. Three Gods and three Goddesses roamed the earth, tranquil in their ties with one another. But masks are only masks. Timor, the Goddess of Death, soon found shelter among jealousy. The thirst for power engulfed her, clouding her mind with a veil of black. She craved more power than the other deities. Convinced that she would win, Timor bribed Hecate, the Goddess of Pain, and Xerxes, the God of War, to help her, and they agreed without hesitation. After all, a seat of power was going to be nice. Timor was weak and fed from the fear due to her nightmares, so she created a race of wolves that were bred to be timid or light hearted. Inducing nightmares on them, Timor thrived on the ‘connection’ between the wolf and its nightmare.
However, Mithras, the God of Earth, could not stand to see Timor claim power. He created a race of wolves that were bred to be tough and merciless. An army of brutal beasts began to appear, and soon Mithras had just as many pawns as Timor, and Touran, the Goddess of Peace, as well as Ceylene, the Goddess of Water, siding with him. In a clash to save his homeland, Mithras led his army to attack Timor’s, hoping to stop her fits of nightmares. Timor fought back, and a war has waged on ever since.
Timor and Mithras both have spawned offspring. Circe, princess of Peace and daughter of Mithras, seeks companionship, while Cathal, prince of Death and son of Timor, seeks someone to sooth his itching nerves. Together these two shall weave a web of love, or be drowned by suffering separation between two genres. Will you join Timor, or Mithras? Will you help Circe and Cathal fall in love to sooth the tension between the two Gods? Only time will tell.
|