When light again touched my eyes, it took me a very long time to process it. It was pale and unassuming, with the slightest touch of pink. My mind had to remember what light was. Blinking dry eyes, I stared at it, gaped at it, comprehended it. I lay there for a long time, trying to remember who I was, what this body was, and how we were attached. My thoughts were sluggish and ground together as two great stones, but they moved, and slowly I pieced myself together again.
Ceris. Star Mother.
The blessed hereafter.
And yet . . . the hereafter looked very much like the misshapen palace where I had spent nearly a year of my life. I gradually found the strength to move my neck, glimpsing the night and stars overhead and finding a not-pillar nearby, beyond the reach of my not-bed.
I was spread supine upon the covers, my arms stretched out to either side of me, my legs in a narrow V. I was dressed in white that shimmered with a light of its own, not unlike a star. A fabric unseen on Earth, unmade by man. Four glass roses lay across my breast, and I felt a metal crown at my brow, warm from contact with my skin.
I was dressed for a funeral, a burial. Dressed as the honored dead. And yet my spirit was still firmly in my body, which was stiff and tired but absent of pain. Or perhaps I ached terribly, but the comparison to my star’s birth made it seem inconsequential.
Confused, I lifted my eyes to the sky above me, speckled with a million stars of so many colors. And somehow, somehow, my gaze was drawn to one in particular, a tiny white bead against the black, small and twinkling. A pinprick of life in a tiny pocket where life had previously gone out. Somehow I knew that was my star, though realistically I should not be able to tell it apart from any of the others. And I felt it watching me, looking back with . . . delight.
I let out a long breath and smiled.
Someone gasped near me.
“OH!” She dropped a pitcher, which vanished through the not-floor and reappeared in her hands. “Oh, by the Sun’s watch, she’s alive!”
Her cry rang against the not-walls. She backed away from me as though a dragon roosted in my hair, and ran from the room. I stared after her, my confused thoughts giving her a name. Elta. I tried to sit up, but my body was not quite itself yet. I could not so much as twitch my little finger.
Elta shortly returned with three others, one whom I recognized from earlier but could not name. They all stared at me with wide, incandescent eyes. The shortest, whose face reminded me of a bear’s, came close and peered into my eyes for a long time. He then collected the glass roses and pressed his large hand between my breasts.
He drew back suddenly, like I was hot to the touch. “She lives.” His words were airy, intangible as the wind. “She lives.”
Another said, “Alert Satto at once.”
Elta croaked, “Sh-She’ll need nourishment.”
And they all vanished, leaving me alone to gaze at my star, wishing desperately that I could reach for her.
I spent three days in my room, with my tapestry draped over the foot of my bed, recuperating from what should have killed me. I did not understand how I was still alive, and none of the godlings who waited on me understood it, either. One, the bear-faced being from before, thoroughly examined me, only to announce, “You are fully and undoubtedly mortal.”
And yet I seemed to be recovering just as any mortal woman who’d had a difficult birth with a mortal baby would. Better, even, for there had not been a single drop of blood from my womb, and I knew most mortal women bled for weeks after childbirth. I wondered if it was a side effect of giving birth to a star, or if the act itself had somehow cauterized me.
I regained my strength quickly with rest and food. I’d seen the way people who had suffered continued to suffer in their thoughts long after the physical suffering had ended, and yet my memories of giving birth to my star seemed faint and distant, like they’d happened in a dream. Like my mind did not want me to remember them, though later I would realize my body recalled what I did not.
My arms felt too light, like there should be a babe cradled in my elbows to weigh them down. Something was missing, and I carried around the constant, nagging feeling that I had forgotten something. I asked if I could see her, but none of the godlings had the power to take me to that faraway place where my star lived, and I hadn’t yet had an opportunity to ask Sun, for He was swept up in “critical matters,” as Fosii explained. Indeed, the walls of His palace were opaque more often than not.
I spent much of my time looking up into the eternal night sky, peering at my star and all her siblings. Peace came easier that way.