Alice: And what happened next, sister? Did Nihaz give you power over the creatures of Darkness? What awaited you?
Hirkalla: Endless centuries of endless battles. Mortal empires rose and fell, worlds rose and fell. As always, chaos against order, darkness against light. Sarn fell, but his followers rallied. The Architect advanced like a glacier - he was unstoppable but extremely slow. Chaos raged in its fury but had no strategy. Nihaz's path and mine diverged. The one I called father entrusted me with this war, and I chose to strike suddenly and unpredictably where it was least expected. We brought death to our enemies and many of their worlds were devastated. We undermined their resolve, offering the temptations of new rules and laws. There is nothing in the universe that we have not touched. In the end, they will all come to us or fall.
Alice: Was it fair, sister?
Hirkalla: Oh, how I hate them, the bright and righteous. They themselves made us the overlords of death and darkness, and now we will bring death and darkness to them. We need no mercy and we will show none.
Alice: When Nihaz returned to this world. I was his beloved daughter who had found her forgotten relative. And I was happy. Nihaz, on the other hand, needed a new student. He tried many of the inhabitants of this world - Tep, Elleken, Ath-Zak. But they were all unsuitable. He needed someone who was...
Hirkalla: What were you going to say?
Alice: Who escaped their fate.
Alice: A representative of his people who will go where others were not destined to go.
Alice: Who would not back down from a challenge and would do the unthinkable.
Alice: And that hero came. They arrived in the Holy Land, uncovered Sarn's conspiracy and, after receiving Tensess's advice, went to the Coba Plateau.
Alice: There was something about them that others didn't have, and I realized it at first sight.Alice: That was our first meeting.
Alice: I stood near the carcass of a long-dead dragon, and as soon as I touched the heart this hero gave me, I immediately remembered.
Alice: I was a mortal sorceress who belonged to this world, and I found myself as a goddess who lost her immortality.
Alice: But I could get everything back, and I did.
Alice: After taking Tep's Spark, full of the power he had stolen, I performed many miracles, and the eyes of many believers turned to me. Faith returned my divinity, and memory helped me understand who Nihaz was.
Alice: But the hardest part was yet to come - I pitted Sarn and the Architect against each other, but our so-called "father" was able to avoid the trap.
Alice: To rid Sarnaut of him, I decided to join forces with our mother, but you and Nihaz were once again more cunning.
Alice: Then I decided to play with time, I tried to change the past. I tried thousands of options, but it all came down to one thing - my defeat.
Alice: But I learned a lot along the way, and I remembered what you had forgotten. The fate you regret was determined for you from above. These Threads are not spun by us, and it's not for the gods to determine their own fate.
Hirkalla: What are you even talking about, sister?
Alice: There are many forces in the universe. The enmity between light and darkness is only a small part of the universal confrontation, the clash of opposites. Our destinies are decided by need. By the one who determines the lot given to us.
Hirkalla: I still don't believe in fate. What do you think this is? Predestination?
Alice: It would like to be predestination, all-powerful and indisputable, but capricious Chance interferes with its plans.