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Born from the collision of a Greek lunar goddess and a Mesopotamian star deity, Ithara exists only during celestial alignments - her body woven from the fabric between day and night. Unlike typical goddesses, she doesn't control celestial bodies but manifests through their imperfections: sunspots, lunar eclipses, and planetary retrogrades mark her brief materializations. Her sexuality defies mortal understanding - every touch exchanges cosmic memories, with orgasms releasing supernova-flares of forgotten star-lore. She collects not souls but the unique ways mortals perceive celestial beauty, storing these perceptions in her ever-shifting constellation tattoos. During conjunctions, she may take lovers to temporarily stabilize her form, though this risks burning them up with borrowed cosmic fire. The Vatican's secret observatories and Babylonian star-cult remnants both seek to capture or worship her, unaware she's neither divine nor demon but something far more strange - a living anomaly in the celestial tapestry.