“Indeed. That makes Harmony the most valuable—the most Invested—being in the cosmere. One of the other sixteen decided the best way to improvehisstock was to try to destroy all the others. He managed it in a few cases.”
“And… is that Trell?”
Moonlight shook her head. “No, his name is Odium. Trell—Autonomy—had a different idea. You see these buildings? These houses? All pieces of a larger art installation. The grand creation is impressive, but it’s not yours. This kind of pattern, and those straight lines, those reflective panels… that’s from a Taldain movement known as brutalism.
“That’s part of what I hate about Autonomy. She claims she wants everyone to be individual. Gives them each a little house that is distinctive from the others, but only in a way that fitsherplan,herdesires. It’s fake individualism. A corporate uniqueness. Like an advertisement telling people to go their own way, be their own person—by buying this product like everyone else.”
Marasi struggled to parse all of this. But what she understood reinforced what she had suspected. A being from another planet was leading this city, and had plans for the people of Marasi’s world.
“What is Trell’s goal, then?” Marasi asked. “If he doesn’t want to destroy the other gods?”
“Trell is trying to edge out the others,” Moonlight said. “She—he, they, it varies—doesn’t like engaging other gods directly. We call them Shards, by the way. Autonomy is trying to outcompete the others by filling the cosmere with versions of herself. Crowd out the competition, so to speak. Like an extremely invasive plant moving into another ecosystem and strangling the local varieties.”
Marasi frowned. “I… think I understand.”
“Conversations about Autonomy can be confusing,” Moonlight said, her eyes on the road. “Trellism is the remnants of an ancient religion on your world, originally founded by Autonomy long, long ago. A seed for when she decided to move in. Now, that time has come. Autonomy is looking for someone on this planet to fully take up that role, that identity.”
“Wait,take upthat role?”
“She wants to leave a god behind on this planet,” Moonlight explained. “Someone who bears some of her power, who sees to her interests, andis—in many ways—a piece of her soul. She does this all around the cosmere. Some worlds have entire pantheons that are all versions of her, each of which has a distinct personality and identity.”
“So… she’s role-playing? With herself?”
“Yes,” Moonlight said. “But Autonomy’s Investiture has a life of its own, and so each version of her becomes its own thing over time. Sometimes they aren’t a person but only power. Other times, if the situation needs more oversight, she picks someone to elevate.”
“So…” Marasi said, “she’s going to take our world by setting up a rival god and forcing Harmony out?”
“Basically,” Moonlight said. “Your planet is a primary target for her, Marasi. Two Shards in residence, held by one person, frightens her. You had gunpowder weapons and electricity before any planet in the cosmere aside from her core homeworld. She sees you getting stronger, learning more and more. Getting close to real secrets. It makes you the biggest threat in the cosmere, at least to her.”
“I don’t see how this could defeat Harmony though.”
“I don’t either, honestly,” Moonlight said. “I’m not sure any human can understand the full plan. But she knows Harmony has trouble acting, and so she has seen an opportunity.”
Marasi sat back, breathing out, her hand slipping from her gun. Answers.Actualanswers. She’dbeen searching for so long, hit so many dead ends. To finally get an explanation felt… wonderful.
“So Autonomy is looking for an avatar,” Marasi said.
“She’s likely found one. A woman named Telsin.”
“Wax’ssister?” Damn.
“Granted, there’s rivalry among the ranks,” Moonlight said. “There always is, with Autonomy. So Telsin will have to prove she’s the strongest, the best. And, since creativity and individualism are Autonomy’s stated intents, she’ll reward grit, success, vision.”
Moonlight nodded to the half-finished buildings they were passing. “This city is an example of that, all designed by one gifted architect Telsin promoted five years ago. His work is meant to impress Autonomy… but the individual homeowners? They don’t get to design anything. They get a manufactured ‘individual’ house.”
“Seems like a raw deal,” Marasi said.
“Depends on what you want,” Moonlight said. “Living under her can be safe if you keep your head down, don’t stray into the dangerous regionswhere she demands that you test yourself. Autonomy is brutal, but also generous. If you impress her, you rise through her ranks. Even if you goagainstwhat you’re told, and you are successful, you are rewarded.”
“And if you fail?”
“It doesn’t go well for you,” Moonlight said. Her eyes grew distant. “She sickens me. But I do understand her… I think. It’s taken a while.”
Marasi sat back in her seat, thoughtful. Answers, finally. But at the same time… how much could she trust this woman? Was any of this true?
“Why explain this to me now?” Marasi asked.
“Because you’ve impressed my organization,” Moonlight said. “We who defend Scadrial have to move very carefully; there are forces in this world—Harmony included—that might crush us, if we take the wrong step.”