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Who: Dominique DiPierro and YOU
What: The new god of Law and Justice gets to work
Where: The Temple of Law and Justice and around Vernos Bay
When: Anytime in the first week after Dom claims the throne of Law and Justice
For the first day, it doesn't seem like much is different in Vernos Bay. But soon men and women start reporting for duty at police stations. Lawyers open their offices. Judges—the priest of Law—discover formal regalia that they'd forgotten they owned. Clerks set up shop in the Temple—the highest court in the land, as it turns out, sort of like Vernos Bay's equivalent of the Supreme Court or the Old Bailey (both of which buildings it vaguely resembles, Dom thinks).
Dom surprises herself a little. She turns out to be a fussy, hands-on sort, talking to everyone she can, learning about the way things used to run around here before the old gods disappeared. There's a lot of gaps. Rules and regulations that have fallen by the wayside, records and texts that need to be recovered from the dusty shelves and file drawers of the Temple. So she spends her week everywhere—in the Temple, at this or that police station, visiting a courthouse. You might see her there—or you might just see her about in the street, trying to get a decent cup of coffee or a sandwich.
As always, her clothes and hair and makeup are on point. Still, she looks a little tired and a lot driven—and also, weirdly perhaps, kind of happy.
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"What's Hylia?" she asks, thinking as she does so that she could have phrased that a little more felicitously.
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"Hylia is the name of the goddess who, it's said, gave up her immortality to save the land and founded the kingdom of Hyrule." So Hylian refers to citizens of Hyrule, not citizens of Hylia.
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Or ... something like that. As she's saying it, Dom wonders if she's getting it wrong.
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"Yes, it's rather like that. Legend says that girls born into the royal family are the reincarnation of the goddess, but it's more tradition now than true belief. It's why I was named Zelda. We still pray to the goddess Hylia, just in case."
As she explains she pulls another book to her and riffles through it, just to check on the numeral theory. So far it tracks. Satisfied, she closes the book and finishes a label for it.