There is a strange inconsistency in the tales of the Sisterhood Queens, or at the very least an objection. Aireb and Banac were the first two Cassiak Queens, and others who are believed to also be a part of that lineage include Caird, Ellaf, Fisag, Gilah, Harli, Jalak, and Venew. This chapter will address the truly perplexing naming convention these Queens seem to adhere to. It shouldn't take long for one familiar with the languages of our friends from Earth to see a pattern appearing, especially to those trained in English. Aireb, from A to B, then Banac, B to C, and so on. But the legends of these Queens date back sometimes to tens of thousands of years before the Human race on Earth.

As it turns out, there is a simple explanation. Namely, this pattern only appears in the English alphabet. No language on our world shares this, and the Queens' many names are rendered very differently from language to language, culture to culture. Aireb alone is known by over a hundred different variations of her name, several of which match this pattern when rendered to English, but many more do not. Other variations of her name, or believed to be of her name, would be rendered as Ire, Habib, Chorab, Ruby, Arba, and Errep, among many others.

Going down the list, we see Banac often rendered as Panic, Caird as Kayrt, Ellaf as Alef, Fisag as Fizzik or Visage, and so on. The only one who doesn't have a wide variety of name variations is Venew, who is only sometimes rendered as Venuu or Fenyu. Time, and the limited reach of her legend, seem to have prevented the corruption of her original name.

However, in spite of all this, when all ancient legends and myths are transcribed into English, the Humans seem to have a keen sense for rendering mythological entities in ways that allow them to offer possibilities for filling in the empty gaps in the Sisterhood Queen lineage, at least for the Cassiak Queens. Using this process, they have suggested a few additions. Their assistance in this has generally been ignored or rejected, but that has not prevented a pileup of theses.

While it is an interesting thought experiment to delve into, there are a few issues that certainly even the most interested of our own historians must be skeptical about. For example, following this pattern, there would be one Queen of the Sisterhood whose name went from M to N. Separate interested Human students of the mythology have presented for this point in the Cassiak lineage the mythical entities of both Mevan and Marin. Setting aside the ridiculousness of the suggestion that the Red Storm is one of the Queens, at best only one of those two could be a Cassiak Queen. Be it the scientifically proven Red Storm, an inanimate cosmic phenomena, or a demonic entity only named once in the fevered imaginations of a Krydolec poet from five thousand years ago, if either of them are a Queen, only one can be.