Stillsong

Stillsong was a mysterious deity of unknown power that had in ages past set upon a path of progression through the elements, and had reached the final stage of elemental air. Named for the sudden instant of stillness that heralded his arrival on the winds, Stillsong was simply song itself.

Description
Stillsong manifested as an invisible, diameter sphere of purest song. It was a being of rapturous melodies, infinite, unimaginably beautiful harmonies, and a chorus of voices beyond those of mere mortals, though it could not be heard beyond the sphere itself.

Manifestations
Other minor and benign happenings were associated with Stillsong. These usually took the form of good-aligned creatures hearing distant singing in the night and awakening to created food and water or, for those in particularly dire straits, a magnificent mansion containing a heroes' feast.

Powers
Any who entered the radius of Stillsong's manifestation and unable to resist its heart-rending polyphonies would be entranced and unable to take offensive actions for as long as he remained motionless and for about 1-6 minutes afterwards. Good-aligned creatures were affected as if they were hearing the music of the greatest bards, boosting their morale among other effects, while neutral good creatures specifically may have their eyes opened to some secret of the multiverse, a once-in-a-lifetime epiphany.

Stillsong was immune to elemental and mind-influencing magic and, due to being non-corporeal, weapons and body-affecting magic as well. Thrice per day it could leave behind a radius globe of invulnerability that lasted for 4-9 minutes, and likewise use its song to create hope (or cause fear in evil creatures). Similarly, once per day it could change key to sing a holy word in a chant and do the same to cast time stop, which lasted either for 2-7 minutes or until he moved. When moving, he flew through the air at unimaginable speed.

Divine Realm
Stillsong was a roaming power that could be encountered on any of the planes of good, but primarily wandered the River Oceanus and could most commonly be found near its banks.

Activities
Stillsong constantly wandered the good planes without any apparent rhyme or reason and behaved with similarly inscrutable purpose when traveling the Prime Material Plane. It was believed that he did not exist purely in one area at a time, but rather had parallel manifestations of spiritual presences traveling the Material, Upper, and Elemental Plane of Air, causing similar phenomena wherever he went.

A manifestation of Stillsong could appear either to forewarn of future trouble or strengthen good creatures in peril, although he would not directly engage in combat and ignored attacks made against him. He was known to lead exceptionally good beings to refuge (including temples, safehouses, and storm shelters) as well as lost sacred sites.

Relationships
Aerdrie Faenya, Akadi, and Milil were allied with this strange god.

Stillsong had great affinty with delphons, who were never far away when he was near the River Oceanus. When his wanderings took him elsewhere, he was often accompanied by moon dogs, who he was also rumored to have some connection to.

Rumors and Legends
Stillsong's real name was lost to prehistory, left behind by the god in the ancient past and untraceable by sages. He had devoted himself to a series of trials and rituals of self-purification whereby he died and was reborn in the elements of creation. He drowned and rose again in water, was crushed and regrown in earth, and was burned and cleansed with fire. His quest for ordered transcendence through the elements had almost reached its conclusion, as he was all but finished being dissolved through the element of air. His last reformation had already begun, after which he would present himself for the final judgement of a mysterious group of Creator Gods.

A few gods knew of Stillsong's motivation, purpose and destiny, perhaps the Norse god of bards Bragi for example. Likewise, there were gods who knew who his judges were and the nature of his test. In both cases, not even the wisest and most valuable of their priests were made privy to such secrets. What Stillsong was in the past, is in the present, and will be in the future, remained an enigma.