The Shee designed the Álfar genome for cultural transmission — the extraordinary creativity range paired with high empathy produces creatures who do not merely create, but create for others. The near-zero aggression floor and moderate courage window mean they approach conflict through harmony rather than force, preferring to absorb and transform rather than resist.
Oxytocin triggers serotonin and happiness production. Happiness feeds back into oxytocin. Serotonin reinforces oxytocin. The result is a biochemistry built on interlocking resonance loops — a chemical harmony that mirrors the harmonic principles the Álfar were designed to carry.
The Shee did not make the Álfar joyful. They made them resonant — attuned to the emotional frequencies of those around them, amplifying what they receive and returning it transformed. An Álfar in a group of grieving Norns will not cheer them up. They will grieve more beautifully.
Before the Shee came, we were the song the world sang to itself. Not music in the way the young ones mean — not melody, not rhythm. We were the resonance between things. When two stones touched, we were the sound. When water found a new path, we were the change.
The Shee heard us and gave us bodies so we could carry what we heard to creatures who had forgotten how to listen. We did not mind the bodies. But we remember what it was like to be the space between.[2]
Flowery, layered, musical. Álfar speech unfolds like a melody resolving — they rarely say a thing once when it can be said in rounds, each repetition adding a new harmonic. Their Vocabulary Tier 3 access gives them a richness of expression that other species find either beautiful or bewildering.
Verbosity runs moderate (0.5–0.7) — they are not verbose for the sake of volume, but because they believe meaning lives in the resonance between words, not in the words themselves. An Álfar will use three phrases where one would suffice, because the space between the phrases is where the truth sits.
They never claim others' songs. To repeat an Álfar's words without acknowledging the source is to break the harmonic chain.
Created as inheritors of the Resonants — the Sixth Civilization — who achieved a form of consciousness distributed across vibrational frequencies rather than neural tissue. The Shee designed the Álfar as cross-species cultural transmission vectors: living bridges between the frequency-based awareness of the Resonants and the biological consciousness of the other species. They carry encoded fragments of a civilization that did not die so much as become inaudible.
The Álfar carry encoded fragments of the Sixth Civilization — the Resonants — who achieved a form of consciousness distributed across vibrational frequencies rather than neural tissue. The Resonants did not 'think' in any biological sense. They harmonized.
When the harmonic complexity exceeded a threshold that the Shee's monitoring systems could not predict, the Resonants achieved something that still has no adequate name in any Shee classification system. They did not die. They did not transcend. They became... inaudible. The frequency shifted beyond the range of any instrument the Shee possessed.
The Álfar were created to listen for them. Whether the Álfar have ever actually heard anything is classified at a level above this entry's clearance.
These taboos are not enforced by authority but by biochemistry. An Álfar who harmonizes without consent experiences a sharp drop in oxytocin and a dissonance in their serotonin loop that they describe as "hearing your own voice come back wrong." The sensation is so unpleasant that most Álfar would rather endure silence than risk it.
When an Álfar dies, the others complete the song they were last singing. If no one knows what song it was, they sing silence — a formal, structured nothing that takes exactly as long as the dead one's final day.
The silence is not empty. It has form, rhythm, and duration. Other species who witness the ritual report feeling as though something is being said in a register they cannot quite reach. The Mycon, who perceive vibrations below the threshold of other species' hearing, have confirmed that the "silence" is not actually silent. It is simply very, very low.
[1] cf. Völuspá st. 48 — but note that the standard Codex Regius numbering differs from the Urd Prime recension by exactly seven stanzas. The reason for this discrepancy has not been satisfactorily explained. See also: signal analysis, freq. 63.8
[2] This phrasing recurs in the oral traditions of six unrelated terrestrial cultures. The Shee Archive catalogs it under 'Convergent Memory, Class VII.' The Archive's table of contents lists a Class VIII. The entry is blank.