501 BCE:
"Narala!" called out Priest Asadra. "How good to see you!" The elderly priest hobbled over close to the nobleman. Asadra wore a red robe. Most of his hair was gone, and what was left was white.
"Greetings, Priest," replied Narala respectfully. He was younger than Asadra, but still in his late forties. Grey was creeping into his black hair, and his brown skin was starting to wrinkle. He wore the elaborate robe of the Council, white with green trimmings and the golden amulet of the Family Ramanon. By this he was marked as the head of one of the 74 Families of Tyros, one of the leaders of the city.
"I was just talking to your son the other day!" exclaimed the old Priest. A smile leaped upon his face, causing numerous tiny wrinkles to appear around his small eyes. "He is quite the budding theologian."
"Indeed," said Narala. "I am glad he appears to have calmed himself, after his long period of questioning a several years ago."
"He has many interesting ideas," stated the Priest. "Many people have spoken of the purity of Vanata, but few have placed such an emphasis on it in their words. He is truly inspired."
"Truly inspired indeed," replied Narala. The pair sat down on a bench, for the sake of the elderly priest.
"Perhaps he will write some great hymns to the purity of Vanata," speculated the priest. "He could leave a great mark upon the religion of Tyros, even if he is not a priest."
"I hope he shall leave many marks upon Tyros," state Narala. "Did you know, he has put great effort into learning the language of the Alkemin?"
"Really?" inquired the priest. "I admit, I know few languages. The Old Ardhari from the South, and the language of the Omsari islands as spoken in Tyros."
"The Ardharin!" exclaimed Narala. "How I have come to resent that foreigners still think of us as parts of their empire. They haven't even managed to collect any taxes in seven years, and their record was horribly spotty before that. The Republic of Tyros is part of that decrepit empire in name only."
"Ardharim lost the favor of the gods, and now decline," replied the priest. "I fear they angered Hadare, and She sent that drought upon them."
"They were declining before the drought," responded Narala. "They were declining before even you were born. I was speaking to my son the other day, and we both agreed it was time for Tyros to negotiate with foreign nations as an independent Republic."
"And to think," replied the Priest, "That if you said that a mere fifty years ago, when I was you son's age, you would be sentenced to death."
Narala smiled as the sun shone upon Tyros. He exclaimed, "A new age is upon us!"