By the way, Brother. Since this might be the last time we keep each other company, I would like to make a request. Add the holy Mistress I serve to the original Pantheon book. She is real as far as I can say, I have seen - and been instrument in - her miracles, and I believe these two faiths don't need to clash; after a consideration, she actually fits.
I know her as Mistress Medicine, though she could have just well been described as Goddess of Life and Lady of Suffering. Of her teachings which I learnt the hard way, feeling is integral to living, and so goes suffering pain. "Medicine is a cruel Mistress," one could say, "by which I mean a psychotic yandere bitch who insists on being the last one to harm you." Yet she is sweet and merciful in her own way; I serve her for she is a sworn enemy of death, and actually can grant life - help one miraculously keep it. I suspect she might be called by promises or acts of suffering pain, for all too often that is the due she takes for saving the life. She is Medicine not in the particular ways of treating, though she has that knowledge and can occasionally grant it, but rather as the process of living is a fight against death - that is she. For example... the first time in my life I felt her presence was when, long before my trial and HMRC service, I was a military pilot, and our plane crashed in the middle of some desert. A week later, delirious and near-dead, I finally came to inhabited areas, carrying my wounded co-pilot. It was but strength to live and endurance to survive that she granted me then, not precision or speed or medical skill as it happened several times during my service here. All so I could live (and suffer), and my patients could live - and feel, and suffer.
Algis is father to Emar-i, Progenitor of the Medic pantheon; she must be his mother, and just like Algis she is opposed to that unknown god of death, described by the redacted page. As I was sentenced to the HMRC service, and experienced most of her visitations here, it all stands to a reason she is part of the HMRC Pantheon. She belongs to the book.