The Story of Celene
Cast: Cyrano and Selene
Date: April 20, 1999
Synopsis: Selene keeps a nightly vigil so that she might pay homage to her namesake goddess, Celene, the maiden of the moon. At dawn, the Praetor, Cyrano, finds her seated on the rooftops, and the Jovian noblewoman proceeds to tell him the story of how Celene came to be acquainted with the moon. A romantic at heart beneath that stoic facade, Cyrano is not likely to forget the tale.
Sky Above the Palladium - Above Haven
Wind swirls around you, caressing your face and body with its cool touch. Above the Palladium, you are totally free of the trappings of the earth.
Greco-Roman architecture spreads out below you, comprising the collection of buildings making up the Palladium. Pale marble is the major factor among all the buildings, offset by greenery from numerous plants. Most notable are the Palladium's gardens, which are lush and green almost all year round.
Balconies and doorways leading to upper floors mark many of the buildings, while many rooftops are designed to also allow for landing. The broad expanse of the roof of the baths is a particularly popular spot, considering its proximity to the lush gardens.
Numerous plazas, courtyards and collonades invite landing in addition to the garden and the broad sloping hill of the Theatre.
The morning sun breaks over the eastern horizon, bathing the city in a pale yellow
glow, chasing the darkness of night to the west. The figure of a woman rests on the
highest rooftops of the Jovian estate and amazingly, she is alone. A wreath of flowers rests
in Selene's lap, a few loose buds are scattered around her, smaller flowers that did not
make it into the living halo of prayers. Her wings slump behind her after a full evening of
solitude and prayer, watching as the full moon disappears under the sun's harsher rays.
Cyrano settles to the roof of House Jove, his wings gliding him silently down. He
looks the area over. His brow furrows slightly, and his lips are indecisive as to whether to
smile at the beauty and serenity of the scene or to frown at the idea of this Jove leaving
herself guardless. He remains silent during the closing of her revelry and prayer, but make
certain to flap his wing enough to sound like he is just landing before she turns, not
wanting her to know he has been watching her and intruding on her prayers. If she says
anymore he tries not to hear it. A silent sigh is released as he waits. The Praetor considers
how he feels about this most interesting of the Noble Caste. Its not anything like he has
know before, her presence is pure regality, and inspires a desire to protect and preserve
such a perfect creature. Love and admiration of a most unusual level. Selene is far from
anything he is used to. It's not a desire to possess, not feelings of attraction, but something
that inspires a innate sense of loyalty. The best terms his mind can put to it are that she is
the kind of regality of fairy tells, that she is best and first what it should be like and why he
is proud to serve the Empyre. To him, Selene is a living symbol of what the Empyre could
and should be. He decides on the smile.
The disappearance of the ghostly orb that guards the night sky ceases the Jovian's
prayers, her fingers no longer weave flowers together into the ring on her lap. Tired?
Perhaps, but her nighttime vigils seem to fill her with hope, a renewed energy and most
likely she will not sleep anytime soon. The sound of wings beating against air are
unmistakable and so she does not turn right away, even the recent threats do not make her
nervous, not now. Only after what seems ages does the Jovian turn her head toward where
the other Empyrean landed and she breaks a smile. "Good morning to you Dominus," she
says, lifting a hand to motion him to join her where she sits. "What has you up and about
so early?"
Cyrano bows deeply his wing accentuating, he looks to her and smiles, Then his eyes
begin gazing at the results of her prayers. "Ave Domina Selene. I am a Praetor, I was up
an hour ago." He says in explanation of her question. He rises slowly, the wings wrapping
back into place behind him. "How are you this morning Domina Selene?" He scans the
area, making it slightly clear what he expects he should have seen but doesn't. Then his
eyes return to her. "Have you been out long Domina?"
Selene selects a loose flower from her side and spins it's tiny step between her fingers.
"I've been up all night, Dominus," she returns, as if the reason should be obvious, but then
again, he's not family and so he probably has no clue as to her monthly vigils. Her eyes
cast skyward, searching for even the faintest outline of the moon goddess's light, but the
sun's rays strengthen and it can be seen no more.
Cyrano nods visually but the faintest glimpse of his eyes shows a strong confusion and
sense of worry. The division of his thoughts battling the restrictions of class and the desire
to question her jeopardizing her self in a scheduled ritual, alone in the dark, on a roof. He
watches her a second longer. "Domina Selene,..?" He stops, now is not the time. She
looks at peace and he will not deny her that for now. He decides to complete the question
a different way. "have you had breakfast?" Well he probably could have done better were
his thoughts clear, but the knowledge that Vincent could have arrived here as easy as he
did can not be forced from his thoughts.
Selene continues to spin the flower in her finger, eyes drawn back to the small violet
petals that dance inches over her hand. A small breeze caresses the rooftops and the
Jovian release the flower to be carried off to wherever the wind dictates. The threats of
the day seem to melt away at night and likely Selene had not even considered the
possibility of an attack, not on such a night. "Breakfast?" she asks, once more looking
upon the Praetor, rolling the word on her tongue as if it were a foreign concept. The
sunlight dances over the silver in her locks as she shakes her head to the negative. "No,
I've not left since dusk, Dominus."
Cyrano looks to her concern overriding training in this case. His eyes follow the
flowers flight a short distance trying allow some of her serenity to absorb into himself.
"Domina Selene, you were up here alone, at night?" Yes, he has research every available
reference to the inhabitants of House Jove in the city, and he knows that this a scheduled
matter. That makes it worse. If he could find out so could others, but curiosity over comes
him. "Why would you do this Domina?" The concern is very obvious in his voice.
A stray curl is caught by the breeze that carries the flower away and the length of
silver is thrown across the Domina's face, quickly retrieved and tucked behind her ear.
"The moon," she replies after the curl has been tended to. "I come to offer prayers to her
and ask for her guidance." A tilt of the head follows the statement as she continue to
watch Cyrano and she adds, "I was born under her guiding and comforting light. She led
me into this world and I believe she watches over me still."
Daughter of a Goddess, yes if there were one among the Empyre who he could
believe that of it would be Selene. He smiles again considering her statement. It does not
pass him that she calmly answered a question he had no right to ask of her. His wings shift
slightly and a look of pride comes to him. "That is quite interesting Domina Selene. If it is
not wrong of me to say the the Moon's rays do appear to favor you Domina." He says
quietly.
The head remains at its tilt as she responds with a question rather than another
statement. "You know of the story of the pale goddess, do you not?" Selene asks of the
Ceterion as her wings stretch in a glorious arch at her back, working free the kinks that
have settled on from a night of remaining almost motionless. As for the compliment paid
by Cyrano she can only blush faintly and smile, lowering her eyes to the wreath in her lap.
Cyrano smiles but shakes his head slightly. "No Domina, Praetorians have some
classical training but, it is limited and that story escapes me, I am afraid." He looks to her
with a curiosity, wondering if she might relate it to him. The idea of the Jovian doing that
strikes him as unexpected.
Selene gently strokes the flowers in her lap, wary of setting it aside in the event another
breeze might catch it and drag it from her. "I fear the stories of her are not told as are
those of the Kronian and Apollo. She is neither an Empress nor one gifted with magic. She
was only an Empyrean loyal to her people and took on the role of protector her her small
village when it was left with few others to defend it." Her eyes rise from the blooms to
regard Cyrano. "Shall I continue the story for you? I would not wish to bore you with my
ramblings," she comments, even chuckling softly.
Cyrano smiles brightly, the smile of admiration. He listens with interest to the first part
his thoughts already wrapping in the story. At the question he nods slightly. "Please
continue Domina, I was born a Praetorian, but I have always had a certain love of stories
in art." Yes, it is obvious in so much of the being of this Praetor for good or not, he has
the heart of a true romantic.
Her wings settle against her back once more as she continues with her tale. "She, as
were others we call gods and goddesses, was once flesh and blood as you and I are. Her
name was Celene Ileana Octivius and she lived in a small town in Edessa. The names have
changed over the many years but it was near where Molior now rests." She pauses for a
moment so she does not rattle quickly through the story and allow Cyrano a moment or
two to place the town. "This was near the time that Civitas Dei was raised to the heavens,
though the exact year is unknown, and it in itself is unimportant." Again she pauses and
awaits any questions that might come from the early part of her tale.
Aqua eyes are wrapped in the story, during the pause they almost search the heavens
and seem slightly disappointed not to see the Moon there to hear its own story from
Selene. He would never have thought himself in such a position as this, sitting atop the
most powerful of the Noble Houses, hearing a story from its most excellent example. The
nature of the entire atter holds him as entranced as a child as he listens to her recount the
tale of her namesake goddess. The entire sense more perfect than in Myth or dream he has
know, and pure as the white rays of the moon she basked in earlier.
Finding no question from the Praetor, Selene continues with the tale she knows almost
as well as the story of her own life and sometimes it feels as if she knows the life of the
goddess better than she understands her own. "The Varati, as you know, have been our
enemies for many generations but there was a time when we did not know them as well as
we do now. Skirmishes were taking place along the border of Stygios, nearest to the
where the Varati mountains rest. The village in which Celene lived was situatated between
two mountainous regions, a lush green valley that seemed alone in the world at times and
for this reason, many of the men felt it to be relatively safe from Varati attack and so left
to defend Stygios, leaving only the barest number of guards behind." Another pause as she
catches her breath and awaits any possible questions.
Questions, there could be no questions from the Praetor, anything firiegn too her
telling of the tale would break the Deivity of the moment. In his life he has had many
wishes and desires, but the time here with her telling this story, exceeds hopes and desires,
transcend this reality with a higher one. As the legend proceeds the dreamer below the
warrior surface liberates it self to sail into the eloquent tale.
Selene continues with her tale after giving a nod and soft smile to the Hound. "And so
with the main forces of the town gone to push back the Varati threat into their lands, the
remaining people in the town were mostly women, children and the elderly, save the few
men left behind. Celene took the duty of evening watch upon herself and every night she
glided above the town, watching for anything that could possibly be considered a threat.
Weeks passed and still no word of the events in Stygios but overall the town remained
silent, but unfortunately, the peace they lived in would not last long."
Cyrano remains fixated on epic and recounter. In his mind the sights and setting come
alive. He smiles enjoying this moment, he will never no of a time that will match it, the
story is memorized. If there is ever an heir to his name he will tell them the tale, and tell
them how one morning he knew the Gods where real, at heard a the telling from their
daughter Selene Jove.
That stubborn curl again escapes from behind Selene's ear, but lost in the storytelling,
she leaves it to brush against her cheek. "It seems that the town was at more risk than
anyone could have guessed, those two mountains set as protection were in fact the near
demise of the small town. The Varati used them to sneak into Edessa and found the small
town unprotected, an easy target, or so they had thought. Celene's flight on those nights
led her to watch the edges of town as well and subtle movements in the outlying hills
caught her eye. She was the image of every Empyrean, pale of skin and hair and wing and
while she wished to further investigate, she knew she would be spotted, as a pale beacon
against the night sky. She returned to the village to find some covering so that she might
be as dark as the night sky, even covering her wings in charcoal from the evening fires so
that they too might go unnoticed."
The lines of the goddess in the tell and transferred over her name sake a moment. The
young Jove is seen going through the heroic motions of the subject his mind watching her
fly the night sky, his thoughts guiding amoung the stars behind. Seeing his own special
version of the story enhanced by the teller, Cyrano listens slightly as she progresses.
Selene continues with the tale, wings shifting again at her back, refusing to remain still
after having that task all night. "And so she set out again, cloaked in darkness and hidden
against the night sky to investigate the shadows that danced through the hills, shadows
that had not been there nights before. Creatures, ugly things that she had never before seen
resting amoung the crevasses, jostling for a good vantage point for which to watch the
sleepy town. She circled once and then twice, trying to count the number, as she fought
the terror that grew in her heart. She'd heard tales of the beasts the dwelled beneath the
ground and she could not believe she was witnessing them so close to her home. She sped
back to her home and alerted those men who remained behind, urging one of them to
speed out to the nearest town and gather men to fight those unsightly beings that lay in
wait."
The sun rising slowly in the sky has now passed the horizon, as the Praetor listens to
the Jovian tell the story of the other Celene. His eyes are locked on her and he sits calmly,
he would kick himself could he see how wrapped up in the story he has become. A sentry
should remain alert to the world around him but Cyrano is taken by the story to a time and
place of distant legend. He has already decided though how he will handle her guardless
nights and the sunny day provides its own protection. Watching her he allows for just a
second the thoughts of what it would be like to be a Noble and be able to spend a closer
time than this with the Domina. Quickly, the thoughts are dropped though. Even being a
Noble, how could anyone deserve a goddess, this Pantoleon must truly be Apollo's heir to
have won her favor. Thankfully the beautiful story remains to distract the mild envy. He
does so wish he belonged among the Nobility and was not just stealing time as an
investigator. How much some of them impress him, he cannot measure. Especially this
one, and her cousin the Empyror. If all the nobility where such then truly a Golden Age
would return, and likely the previous would never ended.
A soft breeze catches the silver that spills around Selene's face and the soft white
feathers that make of her wings, but she too is absorbed in the story and pays little heed to
the winds that call her to fly. And too she is oblivious of the random thoughts that fill the
Praetor's mind as he listens to her telling, for she would be blushing quite red should she
even have an inkling. "The swiftest of messengers that could be found were sent forth, to
the east to bring what men they could. Celene returned the next night to keep an eye on
the vicious troops that dare soil Empyrean ground, though she had no way of stopping
them should they advance much further."
Cyrano listens to the point of nearly booing the foul demons like a child at a
marionette show. As the story progresses his mind shows him a army of the evil cave
dwellers amassing to strike a helpless Empyrean town in their typical honorless fashion.
Still fixated on both the tale and the spinner, he quietly listens to Selene's soft clear voice.
"The gods must have smiled down on the Empyrean town that day, for the messenger
met the troops halfway and were able to make a speedy retreat home," she continues as
she plays with the floral wreath in her lap. "The troops descended en masse on the waiting
Varati monsters, sending the fighting late into the night. Swift archers struck from above,
while others found the Varati's point of entry and defended it, trapping the creatures
where they hid." She pauses and sighs softly. "Celene had joined with the archers, as she
had led the soldier to where the Varati lay in wait. She was felled by a Varati arrow and
without a healer in the village, she later died." Her eyes go to her lap in a brief prayer for
the woman, now goddess.
Cyrano a look of triumph crosses the Praetor's face as the story talks of the archers,
himself being one. As the story progresses, the ending causes a sigh of incredible sadness
from Cryano. He had not been prepared for a sad ending. So wrapped in the story the
Praetorian listener fights his emotions for control. A life time of training is tested and
proves victor, the sigh the only breach of composure.
Her eyes raise from her lap and she continues with the story, for death is not the end
of this tale. "It was because of Celene that the village was not overtaken by the Varati and
left in ruin. The entire village turned out to mourn the courageous woman and the full
moon shone brightly overhead as her funeral pyre was lit. The moon bathed her body in its
tender glow as the flames consumed her flesh, releasing her lare to remain a guardian over
her beloved home. From then on, every time the light of the nighttime celestial orb broke
the clouds, the Empyreans were reminded of Celene and soon one could not think of it
without thinking of her as well." A smile crosses her face as the tale concludes.
Cyrano smiles calmly, wishing the sun had not replaced the moon so he could look on
its light and see it in this new way. He looks to Selene's eyes forgetting for a moment the
breach of station. "Domina Selene, that is one of the most beautiful stories I have ever
heard. Thank you so much for sharing it with me." He smiles at her, trying to cover the
feeling evoked by this unique experience with the elegant Jovian.
Selene cannot help but break into a wider smile at the appreciation given to the story
of the goddess she's come to call her own. "I am glad you have enjoyed it Dominus," she
replies as another gust of wind pulls at her feathers and hair. I feel honored that I was
given her name and have tried my best to emulate her in my own way, to be the kind of
protector she was, though I've only the opportunely to work within the sphere of my
family." She smirks somewhat. "I doubt I'd ever have the opportunity for such a feat as
she had performed, nor the nerve."
Cyrano looks to the beautiful Jove and smiles sweetly. "May your goddess never
allow you to, Domina." He slightly shifts his wings as he watches Selene. "Though I am
certain you could and would, the thought of Aether loosening a Goddess here
prematurely, even for the gain of Olympius is a sad one." He says calmly to her. Yes, it is
very clear to those who would see that the blood of Jupiter Jove runs rich in the daughter
before him. He blushes slightly. It has been an experience he shall not forget all his days. A
rare glimpse of what the Nobility is, and how it must be to be among them. For a brief
time he was allowed the privilege of knowing Domina Selene on a personal level. How
lucky those born to the Houses are, to know such freedom as they do. Yes, they are
confined by the laws of Caste, as much as others, but they may decide to lower the walls.
Selene has this morning given him a gift he will cherish, and never be able to repay.
Her pale wings stretch to their full span at her back and assist in her rising to stand on
the rooftop, letting the light of Apollo wash over her. So unaware is she of Cyrano's
thoughts, for she has simply told a tale to one who has given his time to watch over a
member of her own house and one she's learned to call friend. "I fear my vigil is at an end,
Dominus," she says, turning to face Cyrano. "If you would excuse me, I should find a few
hours in which to sleep if I can and then be about the duties of the day."
Cyrano bows richly his wings fanning out as he does, the broad smile upon his face
does not fade as he rises. I wish a good rest Domina Selene, and I thank you most
gratefully, I am truly honored that you shared the story with me." He says sincerely. He
spreads his wings for flight. "Thank you again, Domina if I can ever attempt to repay this
debt, please let me know." With that his wings begin the first motions of flight.