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" I believe she is Selene, goddess of the moon." " She looks so content." " You sound surprised." " Well," Callie said tentatively, " Selene is not the happiest of stories. After all, she is doomed to love a mortal in eternal sleep." St. John turned at her words, obviously impressed. " Her own fault. She should have known better than to ask favors of Zeus. That particular course of action never ends well." " A truth of which Selene was likely acutely aware upon receiving her favor. I assume that this statue depicts a happy Selene before Zeus meddled." " You forget," St. John said, a teasing gleam in his eye, " she and Endymion did have twenty children despite his somnolence, so she couldn't have been so very unhappy with her situation." " With due respect, my lord," Callie said, " bearing and raising twenty children alone does not sound like the happiest of circumstances. I hardly think she would appear so very rested were this a statue depicting her maternal bliss. "