Ashya
Ashya is the goddess of the sky, of breath, wind, loft, and breadth, the chief deity of the
Yak Folk, and an important force of the
Manifold Way. She is associated with the mystical centre wind; the wind of breath, known as the
prana, through which she bestows and maintains life, love and power. It is the spiritual essence that flows through all things, and the inspiring force behind all creativity and magic.
The heart of Ashya's power on earth is the Yak Folk's kingdoms in the
high mountains of The West, and therefore she is also known as the Lady of the Mountains, the Snowmother and the Yak Queen, and associated with snow, storm, coldness and serenity. Though she presides over all of heaven, only the centre wind is her domain, and in the beginning, she sent the masters of the eight lesser winds, the
Kalpa Angels, down to earth, to guide the mortal peoples.
When their initial mission was done, the kalpas dissolved their angelic bodies and manifested in mortal beings in a long series of reincarnations, which has yet to end. Only when Ashya deem their purpose completely fullfilled will the kalpas finally leave the earth. Over time, new kalpas has manifested, and there's really no telling how many such beings Ashya still has at her disposal in heaven.
The Lady of the Mountains is worshipped primarily by the Yak Folk and their subject peoples, but her cult in the Manifold Way has quite a lot of followers among
men and
goblinkind. Most famous among the latter are the esoteric wizardly order of the Manifold Way, commonly known as the White Lotus Wizards, a powerful faction in
Naresh, the city of temples. While the Yak Folk sometimes seem to take every opportunity to pay her homage in gory rites of blood sacrifice, Ashya's worship is mostly performed by solemn prayer, meditation and offerings of money, incense, flowers and prayer beads. There's a more morbid aspect of her cult, though, the Yak Folk's blood rites notwithstanding, that involves grotesque imagery, protective amulets wrought from body parts and bisarre acts of self-mummification in order to attain kalpa status.
Ashya's domains are arcana, life and storm. While she is commonly thought to hold power of fate, that's not true - the Manifold Way firmly holds that fate is created by the fickle flow of the prana, which not even Ashya can fully control. Even among her human followers, she's most often depicted as one of the Yak Folk, or sometimes a yak- or bull-headed human female, serene and golden, sitting cross-legged on altars covered in flowers. Among the Yak Folk, she often has two heads, one calm and compassionate, the other cold and merciless, and incense burn ever at her feet. When the weather is good, the cold head is covered by a bloody veil, but when storms are raging or the snow is heavy, the calm head is covered and Ashya's fearful side revealed. A common symbol of her worship is a lotus flower floating in a bowl of still water; this represents the isolation of the living body's concentrated prana from the much weaker, but still vital, flow in the air around it. She is
Unaligned, and even though some foolishly identify her with
Pazuzu, the demon lord of the northeastern wind, others hold that she may be an aspect of
Taiia, another great goddess of the ancient west.