The Game Where I Was Rank One Became Reality-Chapter 142: Vassal’s Complaint

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Chapter 142: Vassal’s Complaint

Seylith spoke.

The vassal goddess of Life and Tide — Seylith, the Pale Coast’s patron, the Bloomist divine — communicated through the architecture for the first time in eight years. Not through her priesthood, not through her First Tide, not through the diplomatic intermediaries that normally handled inter-divine relations within the Covenant. She communicated directly. God to god. A message transmitted through the Eternal Anvil’s internal structure with the particular resonance of divine will that couldn’t be ignored, delegated, or delayed.

[SEYLITH → SOVEREIGN]

[PRIORITY: FORMAL COMPLAINT — COVENANT CLAUSE 7 — RELIGIOUS AUTONOMY]

I am addressing you because my priesthood’s communications to the Crucible have been acknowledged but not answered for eleven months. I am addressing you directly because the institutional channels designed to resolve inter-faith disputes within the Covenant have failed.

My complaint concerns the Crucible’s compliance review of Bloomist temples — initiated eight months ago, ongoing, producing a pattern of interference that constitutes a violation of Covenant Clause 7: the guarantee of religious autonomy for sub-religions within the Anvil.

Specific violations

1. Pennant standardization: Crucible requirement that all Bloomist temples display the Burning Hammer pennant at specified dimensions. The current specification requires pennants fifteen percent larger than the previous standard — a change implemented without consultation and applied retroactively to existing temples.

2. Liturgical supervision: Crucible personnel attending Bloomist services to verify inclusion of the Standard Sovereign Invocation. Three temples have received formal warnings for omitting the Invocation from Fisher-tradition services conducted in Tidespeak — a language in which the Invocation’s concepts do not translate.

3. Personnel interference: The Crucible’s human resources division has requested transfer documentation for seven Bloomist priests — documentation that Bloomist internal tradition does not produce because priest appointment in Bloomism is communal, not institutional.

These are not isolated incidents. They represent a pattern of institutional pressure designed to standardize Bloomist practice into Ordinist norms. I accepted integration into the Covenant with the explicit guarantee that Bloomist autonomy would be preserved. That guarantee is being violated.

I request your intervention. If intervention is not forthcoming, I will exercise my Covenant right to invoke Clause 12: formal review of membership terms, which includes the option of withdrawal.

End communication.

***

The communication arrived at the Sovereign’s awareness during peak operational hours — the period when Zephyr’s divine attention was distributed across the kingdom’s blessing infrastructure, the military’s protection network, and the thousands of small divine processes that kept a civilization of 1.4 million people functional.

He read Seylith’s complaint. He compared it against his records: the Crucible compliance review had been initiated by Cardinal Tessyn of the Pale Coast, authorized by Pope Elwyn under a general standardization mandate, and executed by Crucible field administrators whose understanding of Bloomist tradition ranged from limited to nonexistent.

The complaint was justified.

This was not a judgment about fault — Zephyr didn’t think in terms of fault. He thought in terms of system performance. The system was malfunctioning. A vassal goddess with ninety-seven thousand believers was threatening Covenant withdrawal because the Crucible’s standardization process had been applied to a sub-religion that didn’t standardize. The malfunction was institutional: the Crucible treated all religions as variants of Ordinism. Bloomism was not a variant of Ordinism. Bloomism was a separate tradition with separate practices, separate liturgical language, and separate organizational structure, and the Covenant had guaranteed its separateness as a condition of integration.

If Seylith withdrew, the consequences were immediate: 97,000 believers removed from the Covenant’s total. FP income reduced by approximately 43,000 per day — the FP generated by Seylith’s believers through the Bloomist blessing infrastructure. The Pale Coast’s healing capacity would collapse, since Bloomist priests provided the majority of the province’s medical services. And the precedent — a vassal god successfully withdrawing from the Covenant — would destabilize every other vassal arrangement in the system.

Vaelthyr was watching. Fenrath was watching. Every vassal god who harbored any resentment about the Sovereign’s terms — and Vaelthyr’s contained resentment had been clear in the last assessment — would observe whether Seylith’s complaint was resolved or whether Seylith’s withdrawal was punished. Resolution demonstrated flexibility. Punishment demonstrated brittleness. And Zephyr, who had spent two hundred and fifty-one years building a system that was efficient but not brittle, understood that this moment required flexibility.

***

The communication to the Crucible was unprecedented.

Not because the Sovereign communicated with the Crucible — he did, routinely, through established channels. But this communication bypassed the Pope, bypassed the Cardinals, bypassed every institutional intermediary that the Crucible’s organizational structure provided. It went directly to the compliance review team — the field administrators who had been implementing the standardization mandate in the Pale Coast.

[SOVEREIGN → CRUCIBLE COMPLIANCE DIVISION — PALE COAST]

[PRIORITY: DIRECTIVE — IMMEDIATE COMPLIANCE]

Cease all standardization activity in Bloomist temples. Effective immediately.

The compliance review initiated under the general standardization mandate does not apply to Covenant-protected sub-religions. Bloomism operates under Clause 7 autonomy guarantees. The following adjustments are hereby mandated:

1. Pennant specifications for Bloomist temples revert to the pre-review standard. The fifteen percent increase is rescinded.

2. Liturgical supervision of Bloomist services is discontinued. The Standard Sovereign Invocation is encouraged but not required in services conducted in non-Common languages.

3. Personnel documentation requirements for Bloomist priests are waived. Bloomist communal appointment processes fulfill the Covenant’s ordination requirement.

The Crucible’s standardization mandate applies to Ordinist and Ordinist-adjacent institutions only. Sub-religions with Covenant-protected autonomy are exempt.

This directive supersedes any contrary instruction from any Crucible authority.

End directive.

The directive was received. The compliance team stopped. The Cardinal Tessyn received a copy and the particular discomfort of learning that her initiative had been reversed by a power that outranked the Pope.

Elwyn received a copy. He read it with the weary acceptance of a man who understood that the Sovereign’s intervention — direct, bypassing, unilateral — was both necessary and humiliating. Necessary because the complaint was justified. Humiliating because the Pope’s institution had failed to resolve an internal dispute and the God had been forced to step in.

"He corrected us," Elwyn said to Theron, in private. "Publicly. Irrevocably. The compliance team now knows that the Sovereign has directorial authority over Crucible operations. The precedent is set."

"The precedent was always there," Theron said. "He’s the God. We’re the Church. The Church serves the God. The hierarchy is structural."

"The hierarchy was implicit. Now it’s explicit. And explicit hierarchy produces resentment in the institution being corrected." Elwyn coughed — the deep, wet cough that had been worsening for months. "He was right to intervene. We failed. But being right and being wise are not the same thing."

Seylith withdrew her Clause 12 invocation. The crisis ended. The Covenant held.

But the residue remained — the institutional memory of a God who had bypassed his own Church to correct a policy error. A reminder that the Crucible, for all its authority and institutional weight, operated at the pleasure of a Sovereign who could, at any moment, reach through the hierarchy and rewrite the rules.

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