There are a lot of Amentan countries. Vanda Nossëo representatives are dispatched to all of them. These Elves (two with black hair, one with silver) take a shuttle down from the lightleaper to a country called Calado, and radio ahead to request permission to land at a elegant modern spaceport.
"16.8 million ver everywhere that allows unrestricted purchases, varies widely in places that restrict to citizens, but they're never cheap. Injustices get a lot of attention, people crowdfund. We're working on expanding capacity, of course, one force keeping prices down is that people expect in ten years they'll be downright affordable. - people who are born on your colony planet will be in range of an afterlife, they won't need one, that should help Amenta out a lot."
"We can move it if there are objections but it's broadly considered a plus. Anyone who dies finds themselves there, sterile but in otherwise good health. There are people trying to do things about the infertility and there are robust surrogacy arrangements, subsidized, but I know it's far from ideal."
"I know. I think it's a good deal, I favored this location for that reason. - suicidal people are typically one of the groups vocal about their disappointment with the afterlife setup - we keep them in a coma -"
"If they don't want to be alive with everything medicine and magic can throw at the problem there's a place wished up in Mîr for it. Sometimes people list a series of frankly unreasonable conditions under which they'd agree to be alive and sometimes they can't think of anything. Their choice."
"I haven't been, my species works differently. The afterlife arrangement is all right as described?"
"Yeah, inconveniently it works off the dimension in which you are conceived and pass some early-pregnancy milestones."
"We don't have that sort of thing in the advertising because it's not testable for a long time and it's not good for trust, making promises that sound unbelievable and aren't verifiable."
"It used to contain nothing except one object of great emotional significance to the deceased and what could be flung by high-speed trains through the portals that occasionally opened to the neighbors' dimension. Lots of people hated that, obviously. Now it has normal infrastructure and once some security concerns are ameliorated it will have shuttle service everywhere in the multiverse and I think those will resolve complaints that are not inherent to being indestructible and immortal."
So he explains daeva. Draws a little map in the air with Loki's illusion spell to explain adjacency, describes in broad terms how they're safely summoned to Revelation and how they can eventually be summoned to the colony planet - "though we're going to roll that out very slowly, it's disruptive and dangerous and I can't imagine you'd be comfortable with everybody trying it at home, which is what they do tend to do."
Emphatic nod. "We have a team that does summoning rollouts and once you're ready to think about that they can work with you - sometimes they do things like summoning centers where people can show up and do it by flipping a switch, takes the guesswork out and reduces the risk of mistakes. They can walk you through what everyone else has decided and you can make some choices from there - but not any time soon.
- oh, incidentally, Mereth mentioned people were worried - a demon can trivially verify that no one has visited your planet since it was built around a much smaller uninhabitable and similarly untouched core a few weeks ago. You'd need someone with expertise in using conjuration for forensics, to phrase the question properly, but 'people who set foot on this planet in this time range' is a conjurable quantity, as is 'those peoples' parents and grandparents' if there had been visitors and you were trying to check if they were potentially polluted visitors."