Öln declines these offers of refuge, stating that his place is with the freedom fighters of the realm.
Linking up with slaves, morally guided soldiers, and the junkers' underlings, Öln leads the group to a hillside within the desert where the loyalists cannot easily find them. Rebelling peasants, used to the burn of the Iron Desert, are tasked with locating a water supply. Messangers are sent to east Sunyong and Sonodine, urging that they assist in the fight. He hopes that their familiarity of himself is enough to convince them to fight for a free realm.
Erik Borch starts to educate Öln's followers of the True Faith, speaking softly and amiably. He sends delegates to rebel slave strongholds, hoping to peacefully spread the Great word.
Erik begins writing a bible, not with another on-hand, but by what he claims to be divine guidance. Notably, it tells of God's greatest assistants. Odin, the most pietous of the angels, governs the heavens and maintains God's will. Thor, the calmest of the angels, is God's diplomat to the overworld, protecting and guiding Humanity with lesser angels known as nature spirits. This roll is filled by the souls of animals lost from the physical realm. Mary was watched over by a nature spirit in the form of a great wolf as she birthed Christ, lending this new Christianity's symbol of a cross atop a plaque in the shape of a wolf head.
There is no direct hell, but rather a dark purgatory where the angel Hel determines if you are to ascend to the heavens or become enslaved in her army. Hel represents God's wrath, having used her army of sin and peril to smite decadence seen in those such as the now smitten Satan, who took on the bestial form of Nidhogg to ravage the world and make the continent into the desert we know all too well. Several other great angels exist in the many pages of this book, but are minor in comparison to what has been said so far. Erik considers Protestants to be friends, despite him not quite believing in their teachings.