The Seventh Letter
Below is all we know about the scandalous and forbidden play, The Seventh Letter.
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No story details here, folks. We just have a few phrases that are actual lines from the play, and we hope that's okay. The snippets in the non-fate-locked spoiler above go somewhere in between these. We also have some interesting information from the pen/keyboard of a certain disgraced tiger who shall not be named, given at the request of fellow player Drake Dynamo. The actress playing the Raven (possibly one of the Masters) is introduced. She sings her aria, the Hymn of Shames. "The glowing-hearted mountain/ the river in the sky / the near night and the deep night...' According to Alexis, the Ravens - there are multiple - are "the lesser Incarnates of the Liberation [of Night?!] in the days before there was war in Heaven." The Messenger - the Bazaar, played by multiple actors of multiple gender identities - is introduced. There is a mention of "the Owls" (the Masters, according to the aforementioned tiger) and the Hunter (perhaps the Vake though this is unconfirmed). The Phoenix, played by a beautiful Khaganian woman, gives her soliloquy: "I am so very tired of flames. I will drown myself in snow, and emerge in perfect serenity. Or emerge not at all." Rather than undress before her dramatic immolation as would be expected, she simply bursts into Correspondence flame. The aforementioned tiger explains that the Phoenix is "an untroubled star, busy at the melodramas of the High Wilderness." In the final act, the seven Dragons punish the Messenger, the Sun, their daughter, the Hunter, and Time itself. "The Seventh Dragon recites the crimes of the Sun and the Messenger – Betrayal of Messages, Undelivery of Words, Vile Breeding, Conspiracy in Darkness, and Unlicensed Love." When the Dragon recites this last crime, the others scream in what can only be Correspondence, injuring the audience's ears. The curtain falls as the Dragons feast on their prisoners. The dragons, by the way, are "the enforcement-emanations of Law." And "Time is (as Aulus Gellius knew) the father of Truth, but is also of course in turn the child of Law." |