She couldn't answer him at first, only with a weak smile and nod at the mention of getting into trouble yet again. It was close enough to the truth. It was hard for Moliira, seeing Krys again and not knowing what had changed for him. Gods knew she had missed him, but Moliira's wary nature made her wait to act. She didn't answer right away, staring into the fire, trying to find the first words she would speak to him after so long away. “It was a very difficult fight, five years long for us. It wasn't in this world, or even another world, but a place in between. A place where all worlds meet together,” Moliira finally said. She wasn't quite sure how he would take the time displacement, but glancing at him, Moliira knew she had to continue before she lost her nerve.
“You would not believe the things I saw, Krys,” she said, finally smiling more genuinely when she spoke his name. It was almost as if she was believing for the first time that he was actually there before her, and not a memory or nightmare. She knew he would listen, and Moliira had quite a tale to tell. “There were wild gods from other worlds, some like me, and some totally alien. I met a wild goddess from the world my mother's people originally came from. Not Daeluin, but beyond there. Others who were little more than ghosts guarding primal lands, but they came too. And we were hunting…” Moliira paused, hesitation in her tone. It was hard to find the right words to explain the thing they had hunted. She knew that there were so many side to the tale to make the whole thing understandable.
Taking a stick, she drew a number of spheres with lines connecting to one large sphere in the middle. “Think of the smaller spheres as all our worlds with wild places and primal lands, with nature spirits and gods protecting them. That center sphere, that connects all the worlds together. A sort of portal realm. There was a monolith of stone built in the center of the realm, with a stairway winding up through it. If that monolith had fallen, all the wild places would have started to die,” Moliira said, a finality in her tone. She stared off into the stars for a few moments, waiting for Krys to reply. But he was still silent.
"The thing we hunted, it sought to consume the monolith. We fought through its minions, some fell then, but not many. It took a long time to find its trail, it kept slipping through other worlds, taking what it needed from there, and returning to the monolith. For almost five years, we hunted it, seeking it through many worlds. Some we saved, some we could not,” she explained, a lump in her throat, silently mourning those worlds that had been lost their wilds. “Imagine a world without any wild places. No forests, no grasslands, nothing but bare dirt where they had been. That is what we were fighting to keep from happening,” Moliira said, her palm again the trunk of the tree behind her. After what she had seen, the sight of green was balm to her soul. She fell quiet, sensing that Krys had questions.