sitting in her room, sirius stared at an hourglass.
there were few grains of sand left in the top. another mortal would die. very soon.
sweeping it aside with her tail, sirius disappeared in an instant.
"mom. cloudberry. you're going to die. take your herbs, please..." a brown molly sobbed.
"oh, youngster. don't you worry, plover. i'll be fine! death ain't gonna come for me so soon-"
the last grain of sand fell to the bottom of the hourglass. sirius touched cloudberry's chest gently.
the old she-cat fell silent, eyes beginning to glaze over. "no. no. no." plover choked, placing a paw on her mother's chest to feel for her pulse, for a single breath, for any tiny sliver of life.
she was definitely dead.
"come on, interrupting me while i was saying some last words to my daughter?" cloudberry groaned, staring at her dead body and then glancing at sirius.
the chimera sighed, waiting for an upset response, but cloudberry's eyes only twinkled in laughter.
"ah, i'm gonna miss her. look after my daughter for me, alright?" cloudberry's pale fur shone with starlight.

the two walked alongside each other in silence until at last, sirius found a suitable spot. it was a small, shaded part of the forest.
smiling at the death goddess one last time, cloudberry padded away and disappeared...somewhere. wherever spirits went after they died.
sirius hadn't seen that place at all, strangely. she simply guided the spirits.
a yowl of anger cut through her thoughts.
"there you are! you took my mother away from me!"
plover was sitting a fox-length from sirius, glaring at her with pure fury and grief.
an eye twitch. more yelling from plover.
sirius was sick of this.
interrupting the fawn molly, sirius abruptly stood up.
"do you think this is a job i wanted? do you think i laugh whenever some cat dies because i caused misery to your family? do you think i mindlessly go around and kill cats? the answer is no! i don't! i'm sick of how you mortals react to me. with fear, with anger, with hostility. you all belive i'm a monster, i'm cruel and emotionless. gods have feelings too, you know."
seeing that plover looked stunned, sirius didn't continue. she simply mumbled to herself, "oh, why am i ranting to mortals? they don't understand me. besides, gods aren't supposed to interact with mortals anyway."
she was surpised when she heard the patter of pawsteps beside her.
"woah. i'm... i'm sorry. i didn't realise your job was that hard. i guess i was just...i just didn't want my mom to die so soon, that's all." plover mewed, sighing.
sirius glanced at plover in shock. "it's alright." she mewed, smiling at the fawn she-cat.
"i guess i'll go...bury cloudberry. do...do you want to come? or are you busy doing...you know, your job."
sirius glanced down at the necklace she was wearing. "no...i can stay. i mean, if you want me to."
"that'd be fine by me." plover meowed.
———
sirius looked on in silence as plover buried her mother. the molly seemed to flinch away whenever she got too close to sirius.
understandable...wait.
"wait. how did you even know i was here in the first place?" sirius hissed, hackles raising defensively.
plover turned around and noticed the suspicious god. "oh..i...i....can sort of see...you guys, you know." she mewed sheepishly, pelt prickling in embarassment.
"you can see spirits?"
"no....just...you all...i don't know what to call you, deities, i guess. i don't know why. that's how i followed you."
"oh." the chimera calmed down, letting her fur settle down.
"i'm going to miss her." plover sighed, raw emotion in her voice.
awkward silence.
"oh. also...your mom...she said she hoped i would look after you." sirius meowed uncertainly, hoping it would break the awkwardness and tension forming around the two once again.
plover's eyes lit up. "wait, really? does that mean you're my guardian angel?!"
guardian angel.
she wasn't an angel of any kind. she was cursed.
"oh, no, no, no...i..i just came to take your mother away- i'm not an angel of any sorts. i don't think she knew what she was talking about."
"well, you may not be an angel, but you might be a guardian!"
the duo chatted for a short while after the burial.
a sudden twinge.
few grains of sand left.
"oh. i've got to go. um...another cat needs...to well...die." sirius meowed nervously.
plover smiled warmly. it seemed she had been cheered up slightly, but sirius could still sense the grief in her heart. "well, i hope to see you again sometime!" the fawn she-cat purred.
"i..don't think we're going to see each other again." sirius stated as nicely as she could.
"that's alright, but i have a feeling you'll be back. it's been nice metting you, um...what's your name?"
"sirius."
"it's been great meeting you again, sirius. maybe we'll cross paths again one day. just remember me, plover, if we don't see each other again, alright?"
as the chimera left to take another life, she felt.....warm inside.
———
sirius never thought she would make a friend. especially a mortal friend.
unfortunately this means that you would outlive your friend if you were a god, which sirius was.
and you would also have to take your friend's life if you just happened to be the goddess of death.
the ache in her heart worsened.
———
plover and sirius had bumped into each other several times "by coincidence", and the two had eventually formed a bond.
sirius felt like plover brought out the silliness in her. the duo joked sometimes, and sometimes had heart to heart chats.
point was, plover listened and understood her. (or, well, tried her best to understand.)
but as plover said, "mortal lives are short but sweet."
both of them knew that sirius would outlive plover.
yet somehow sirius didn't want to believe that.
so of course, when plover's hourglass finally ran out of sand, sirius broke down.
she tried everything. turning the hourglass over. she almost went to moira to beg, but stopped herself.
after all, the rule was death is inevitable, and it cannot be prevented.
and so she lay next to the dying molly, she touched her head, and it was all over for plover.
saying her final goodbyes to plover as she guided the spirit to the entrance of the spirit realm, sirius felt all alone once again.
back to getting into arguments with her sister, getting annoyed with the gods' antics, grudgingly doing her job.
plover lived for 12 years.
a very short span of time for sirius, yet a whole lifetime for a normal cat.
and the chimera still has five centuries left.
five long, lonely centuries.
but even then, she wouldn't die, would she?
she'd be a voidlurker for eternity.
thoughts like those make sirius's heart hurt even more.

there were few grains of sand left in the top. another mortal would die. very soon.
sweeping it aside with her tail, sirius disappeared in an instant.
"mom. cloudberry. you're going to die. take your herbs, please..." a brown molly sobbed.
"oh, youngster. don't you worry, plover. i'll be fine! death ain't gonna come for me so soon-"
the last grain of sand fell to the bottom of the hourglass. sirius touched cloudberry's chest gently.
the old she-cat fell silent, eyes beginning to glaze over. "no. no. no." plover choked, placing a paw on her mother's chest to feel for her pulse, for a single breath, for any tiny sliver of life.
she was definitely dead.
"come on, interrupting me while i was saying some last words to my daughter?" cloudberry groaned, staring at her dead body and then glancing at sirius.
the chimera sighed, waiting for an upset response, but cloudberry's eyes only twinkled in laughter.
"ah, i'm gonna miss her. look after my daughter for me, alright?" cloudberry's pale fur shone with starlight.

the two walked alongside each other in silence until at last, sirius found a suitable spot. it was a small, shaded part of the forest.
smiling at the death goddess one last time, cloudberry padded away and disappeared...somewhere. wherever spirits went after they died.
sirius hadn't seen that place at all, strangely. she simply guided the spirits.
a yowl of anger cut through her thoughts.
"there you are! you took my mother away from me!"
plover was sitting a fox-length from sirius, glaring at her with pure fury and grief.
an eye twitch. more yelling from plover.
sirius was sick of this.
interrupting the fawn molly, sirius abruptly stood up.
"do you think this is a job i wanted? do you think i laugh whenever some cat dies because i caused misery to your family? do you think i mindlessly go around and kill cats? the answer is no! i don't! i'm sick of how you mortals react to me. with fear, with anger, with hostility. you all belive i'm a monster, i'm cruel and emotionless. gods have feelings too, you know."
seeing that plover looked stunned, sirius didn't continue. she simply mumbled to herself, "oh, why am i ranting to mortals? they don't understand me. besides, gods aren't supposed to interact with mortals anyway."
she was surpised when she heard the patter of pawsteps beside her.
"woah. i'm... i'm sorry. i didn't realise your job was that hard. i guess i was just...i just didn't want my mom to die so soon, that's all." plover mewed, sighing.
sirius glanced at plover in shock. "it's alright." she mewed, smiling at the fawn she-cat.
"i guess i'll go...bury cloudberry. do...do you want to come? or are you busy doing...you know, your job."
sirius glanced down at the necklace she was wearing. "no...i can stay. i mean, if you want me to."
"that'd be fine by me." plover meowed.
———
sirius looked on in silence as plover buried her mother. the molly seemed to flinch away whenever she got too close to sirius.
understandable...wait.
"wait. how did you even know i was here in the first place?" sirius hissed, hackles raising defensively.
plover turned around and noticed the suspicious god. "oh..i...i....can sort of see...you guys, you know." she mewed sheepishly, pelt prickling in embarassment.
"you can see spirits?"
"no....just...you all...i don't know what to call you, deities, i guess. i don't know why. that's how i followed you."
"oh." the chimera calmed down, letting her fur settle down.
"i'm going to miss her." plover sighed, raw emotion in her voice.
awkward silence.
"oh. also...your mom...she said she hoped i would look after you." sirius meowed uncertainly, hoping it would break the awkwardness and tension forming around the two once again.
plover's eyes lit up. "wait, really? does that mean you're my guardian angel?!"
guardian angel.
she wasn't an angel of any kind. she was cursed.
"oh, no, no, no...i..i just came to take your mother away- i'm not an angel of any sorts. i don't think she knew what she was talking about."
"well, you may not be an angel, but you might be a guardian!"
the duo chatted for a short while after the burial.
a sudden twinge.
few grains of sand left.
"oh. i've got to go. um...another cat needs...to well...die." sirius meowed nervously.
plover smiled warmly. it seemed she had been cheered up slightly, but sirius could still sense the grief in her heart. "well, i hope to see you again sometime!" the fawn she-cat purred.
"i..don't think we're going to see each other again." sirius stated as nicely as she could.
"that's alright, but i have a feeling you'll be back. it's been nice metting you, um...what's your name?"
"sirius."
"it's been great meeting you again, sirius. maybe we'll cross paths again one day. just remember me, plover, if we don't see each other again, alright?"
as the chimera left to take another life, she felt.....warm inside.
———
sirius never thought she would make a friend. especially a mortal friend.
unfortunately this means that you would outlive your friend if you were a god, which sirius was.
and you would also have to take your friend's life if you just happened to be the goddess of death.
the ache in her heart worsened.
———
plover and sirius had bumped into each other several times "by coincidence", and the two had eventually formed a bond.
sirius felt like plover brought out the silliness in her. the duo joked sometimes, and sometimes had heart to heart chats.
point was, plover listened and understood her. (or, well, tried her best to understand.)
but as plover said, "mortal lives are short but sweet."
both of them knew that sirius would outlive plover.
yet somehow sirius didn't want to believe that.
so of course, when plover's hourglass finally ran out of sand, sirius broke down.
she tried everything. turning the hourglass over. she almost went to moira to beg, but stopped herself.
after all, the rule was death is inevitable, and it cannot be prevented.
and so she lay next to the dying molly, she touched her head, and it was all over for plover.
saying her final goodbyes to plover as she guided the spirit to the entrance of the spirit realm, sirius felt all alone once again.
back to getting into arguments with her sister, getting annoyed with the gods' antics, grudgingly doing her job.
plover lived for 12 years.
a very short span of time for sirius, yet a whole lifetime for a normal cat.
and the chimera still has five centuries left.
five long, lonely centuries.
but even then, she wouldn't die, would she?
she'd be a voidlurker for eternity.
thoughts like those make sirius's heart hurt even more.
