Alleluia holds herself very rigid.
Isabella waits.
"Would you object very much," Alleluia says, "if my husband were also party to this discussion?"
"The magic - I don't want that going any farther than it has to."
"We can keep a secret," Alleluia says quietly.
"Then - that's fine."
"Will you tell us about the magic?" she asks.
"Only if you tell us how you knew," Isabella says.
Alleluia opens her mouth, and then turns her face into Caleb's shoulder and murmurs, "I can't."
"I can," says Caleb, looking like he's about to get a treat he'd been told was forever off-limits. "Jovah's not a god. He's a - a sort of boat in the sky. A space ship."
Isabella looks like she's been slapped.
Then he hugs his angel.
"How can that be?" she whispers.
"Amazing, ancient, relinquished technology," says Caleb. "The interfaces talk to the ship, the ship is so advanced it can talk back - but it only follows instructions. These instructions make the rain fall, those make the lightning bolts fall, but it doesn't make decisions - and it's not divine. It couldn't have turned a lucifer into an angel."
"That makes more sense than it doesn't," he murmurs.
"Quite," agrees Caleb. "The threats are real, though, the lightning bolts quite real, and we've kept our silence to avoid tearing Samaria apart badly enough that there would be no Gloria. It really would destroy the planet if no Gloria were sung."
"There's - in the oracle caverns, there's a place one can stand, and from there, teleport to -" Alleluia starts.
"Oh," says Isabella, "is that how it's done? It's quite safe to be on the space ship?"
"Yes," says Alleluia. "We've been there."
"Why fly all the way to Sinai," says Isabella harshly, "when I can teleport all on my own?"
And she takes all four of them to the ship, and it's silver and strange around them, and she falls to her knees and weeps again.
Micaiah follows her to the floor and wraps his arms around her shoulders.
Isabella laughs, a short, almost barking sound.
"The angel Isabella, and Micaiah sia a Manderra ye a Edori formerly registered as Azaziah son of Canaan and Judith," intones a deep, even masculine voice. "And Caleb and Alleluia. How did you arrive on the deck of the spaceship Jehovah?"
"Why am I the one who gets the whole big long name plus the part I don't want?"
"We teleported. Not your way," Isabella tells the ship, shortly.
...Micaiah is mildly surprised that there was an answer. Surprised enough that he doesn't fully start crying again, which is probably convenient for everyone else involved.
"You're talking perfectly intelligibly," says Isabella. "But you're a machine, Caleb says."
"It is as he says. Men and women with better educations than yours built me and installed the programs that allow me to communicate. However, I do not truly think, and am not truly aware."
...That seems vaguely contradictory to Micaiah. But he wouldn't even know where to start asking.
"Transport between planets, originally. Later programming was added in order to cause me to serve guidance functions for Samaria and ensure it did not deviate from the vision the settlers had for it."
"Guidance functions," repeats Isabella.
"Selecting adequate political leaders, suggesting genetically valuable pairings, producing limited advice in response to oracular questions."
Isabella blinks slowly.
"Genetically valuable pairings."
"Personality factors are also considered, but yes, the primary function of the Kiss response is to ensure that various gifts and talents are not lost to future generations, as well as to keep up the population of angels."
Isabella's eyes slide slowly to the Kiss in her arm.
And then to Micaiah's Kiss.
And then to his face.
"The matches are usually very good," Alleluia hastens to add. "Caleb never served as angelico because I was not Archangel long enough, but he would have been if Delilah hadn't recovered, every other Archangel's selected first spouse except for Levi, many famously devoted couples -"
"Except Levi?"
"Delilah didn't ask, when she was first named. She knew what the answer she wanted was, and it turns out that this isn't actually one of the rebellions that induces the ship to destroy the world," says Alleluia.
"But it's not all famously devoted couples, anyway," says Isabella slowly. "Uriel and Hagar fought all the time. Rachel and Gabriel nearly as bad, early on, and Ariel and Johnathan, and Aaron and Miriam -"
"It's not perfect, but you and Micaiah obviously do love each other," soothes Alleluia.
"I can't imagine having paid a moment's attention to a guest in Delilah's office who wasn't even there for a petition if it weren't for the way the Kisses flared," exclaims Isabella.
"I wouldn't have met Caleb if the music machines at the Eyrie hadn't broken, but that doesn't mean we were any less -" Alleluia trails off as Isabella begins to cry again. "Isabella, this is why I wouldn't take you as my own acolyte. I'm the only oracle who knows; at any time only one oracle knows, the previous Sinai oracle died without passing on the knowledge or the successor would have been able to fix the problem with the ship's listening devices that caused all those problems with it being unable to hear prayers. I talked to you, we had that long conversation - I saw how curious you were and how devout and I knew I'd never be able to have you in Sinai for longer than a day without you finding something, asking some question that caught me off guard, and I'd tell, or you'd talk Caleb into telling, and it would devastate you. But now I wish I'd taken you on then and you'd have already known and you wouldn't doubt yourself now, married and pregnant, this is worse, I'm so sorry."
Married and pregnant. The words echo in Isabella's head; her hands drop to her very slightly swelling abdomen. Married and pregnant.
She hugs him back. Whatever turmoil she's enduring about him, she does love him, she wasn't lying to herself, she does, and she's miserable and he's miserable and this means there need to be hugs.
"I married you," she says in his ear. "Jovah didn't make me. If he'd paired me off with someone I hated I might have tried to like him if I knew he'd have to be angelico were I Archangel, but I wouldn't have married him already, and I wouldn't be carrying his child. I love you."
"I love you too," he mumbles, hugging her tighter. "Love you, love you, love you."