“A toast my friends, to the gods we shall become!”
“Indeed Vaingloth! Together we shall be a pantheon the likes of which the world has never dreamed of seeing.”
“And yet one which it has sorely needed Sasarai!”
“You speak truth Insikir, though we must grant our predecessors some grace. They were called forth into a world already spun to chaos and had to work with what their ancient disciples could offer them. Our world will rise above theirs because ours will be perfect from the start.”
“Perfectable I should think, Vaingloth. We shall each be sheltering survivors of the old world, and as we do not know now what we are certain to know then, I feel we must account for the possibility that challenges and issues will await us after our ascensions are complete.”
“But Helgon, don’t you see, Perfection must include adaptability and the capacity for growth.”
“And to what would we grow Sasarai if we and our world are already perfect? Is there a perfection beyond perfection? And if so does that not mean that the first perfection is necessarily flawed in that it lacks to the refinement of the latter state?”
“You quibble too much about the philosophy of the point Helgon. Our perfection shall be one undreamt, an age beyond the foresight or prediction of any god or power save our own, and that, regardless of what we make of it, is what will make it perfect.”
“I may be speaking too much of philosophy, which is passing strange for me, but you, Vaingloth, seem to be speaking too much from the wine we’ve imbibed.”
“Nonsense! Sasarai, tell him how harmless your wines are! Made to be especially gentle to the senses I imagine.”
“That would be the Castel Red, you appear to have a glass of Umbral White Vaingloth.”
“Red or White, the potency matters not. For we shall be gods!”
– Vaingloth leading the festivities at a private, pre-Sunfall party amongst the soon to be Neoteric Lords of the Earth.
“What…what have we done. What have we unleashed!”
“It cannot see us. It must never see us.”
“We can never become gods. Not a one of us.”
– Words from the Neoterics first council after the Sunfall.
Daydreams are not supposed to be dangerous. Daydreams are not supposed to rend the gossamer veil of the world away and lay bare the majesty underlying all of creation. Most importantly however, daydreams are not supposed to cast you out into a domain where you stand exposed to the All Consuming Eyes of The End of All Things.
Apart from my own incredibly imminent demise however, standing on the divine plane didn’t feel quite as strange as I’d imagine it would.
Oh, to be certain, things were a trifle different from my normal experience. Space, for example, was essentially non-existent. I was more or less everywhere at the same time. Wherever death had or could happen, there I was.
Not incarnated of course. Incarnation was the gift the mortals held and my mortality was…
Hmmm…
I was the God of Death and many other domains, but was that all I was?
Had I lost my mortality because I let myself dream of eternity with the women I loved?
The divine spark that had been building within me certainly wanted that to be true, but divinity is stupid.
Hey!
Sorry Diyas! You are of course the exception to that rule.
Yes, well, what happened to you?
I have no idea, and I’m a bit more concerned about what’s going to happen to me.
I didn’t have a body to gesture with, but I was still able to indicate the terrifying maw of the End of All Things that was descending on us.
We need to leave here, Diyas said, not bothering to hide the urgency in her tone at all.
I don’t know if I can. I don’t know if I’m…me anymore? How am I supposed to go back to pretending to be a mortal woman when I am clearly something so much more?
This? This was never more. That’s something the Neoterics tricked us into forgetting. Divinity is a substrate of the world. We were never more important than you – no more than bones are more important than the body they support.
That’s philosophically fascinating but I have no idea how to apply that to what’s happening now! I wasn’t frustrated with her. I wasn’t even scared really, which was a sign that I definitely wasn’t fully myself. I just really couldn’t see how to pull the power I’d held for so long and stuff it back into an Insight-shaped package in the material world.
How fortunate that I do.
It wasn’t Diyas who spoke.
I shouldn’t have known the voice at all, since Insight’s ears had never heard Dyrena speak, but even as nebulous as I’d become I still held onto the shards of Malgenia’s memories and Malgenia knew Dyrena all too well.
Of the eleven other Neoteric Lords, Malgenia had been unconcerned with ten of them. In Vitor’s case, she knew him too well to imagine he’d be able to move against her without being staggeringly obvious. In Vaingloth’s case, she knew he would save her for last because she was too useful a weapon to turn on the others and far too capable of ending him if he gave her reason to. Most of the others were the same, apart from Helgon who she was saw had little interest in even being a Neoteric Lord and would happily had spent eternity in his lab if they’d simply left him alone.
Dyrena was the one outlier.
Dyena was understood her.
And Malgenia was not fond of that.
It had taken her a while to develop the animosity she eventually felt for the first Neoteric to fall though. Early on, Dyrena had been a relief as one of the few who didn’t ask idiotic question, or have any trouble accepting Malgenia at her word.
They hadn’t been friends. Malgenia didn’t see the need for that, but Dyrena had been pleasant to be around.
Pleasant and reasonable and perhaps the only person who’d ever been able to manipulate Malgenia. Worse, Dyrena had managed her manipulations without challenging Malgenia in a manner Malgenia could understand how to fight against.
Part of me loved that. Someone who’d been able to hold Malgenia back, or at least divert her from the worst of her impulses deserved a place in whatever celestial pantheon there could still be.
The rest of me though knew who and what I was talking to.
“You’re not dead,” I said, conjuring actual words from nothing.
The Beast was closing on us, but time, much like space, was the faintest of illusions. We had eternity in a moment and no time at all, and that was something the shreds of my mortal mind simply had to ignore.
“Is that an offer you would support Diyas?” Dyrena asked.
“Would you accept mortality from my hands, Betrayer?” Diyas asked.
Neither of them appeared before me, but I assigned visual images to them anyways. As deities we weren’t exactly standing around and talking, but the communion between us was so far removed from the mortal sphere that even acknowledging it was going to make things worse and probably permanent for me.
So I put us all in my house.
Or a reproduction of it.
Clarity and Responsibility weren’t there, and neither were Beauty, Inhibition, or Reason, and their absence was all that was giving me hope in that the moment.
Whatever it took, I was not going to let them suffer for my failings.
“Someday, if the offer was extended, I imagine I would take your hand Diyas, but we both know why that day cannot be this one,” Dyrena said.
“Is that how you would help her?” Diyas asked.
And yes, even with a divine level of understanding between us, they were, in fact, being that damn cryptic.
It’s for your own good, Dyrena said, whispering the message to me.
Was that possible?
Sure.
Was I willing to accept that?
I mean, it was what I’d been trained to do right?
Just listen to the big, wise, god-like people who all knew better than me.
Just turn off all my judgement, don’t ask questions, don’t try to understand, and don’t, whatever I did, ever think I could be capable of understanding something better than the people who were actually important.
That may have been a mistake.
I fear…
Divine wrath is not what consumed me.
My wrath isn’t divine at all, but empty skies above did it feel right.
I was the God of Death?
No. The Gods of Death had gotten themselves beaten like a cheap drum when they tried to fight the End of All Things.
Malgenia didn’t ‘remember’ that, not precisely, but she’d watched the gods fall and the various domains around death had held a pretty solid piece of her attention. One by one she’d felt them wink out, and one by one she’d claimed the domains they’d let slip through the hands of the fallen gods who’d failed and were gone.
I wasn’t the God of Death.
I was something new.
Something the Beast had never encountered before.
And something it wasn’t going to encounter yet.
I turned my eyes, because to hell with godly senses. I liked my eyes. Responsibility had gazed into them and they’d seen Clarity. So I was going to use my eyes to see the Beast.
And it was nothing.
And it was not to be seen.
To bad.
It disagreed.
Or did it?
It wasn’t anything. It was a nullification of existence. It hadn’t broken the gods. It had erased them.
So how could it be anything?
Unless…
Oh this is definitely dangerous, Dyrena said and began to move against me.
Insight, you need to…
But Diyas didn’t get to finish her sentence, because I already had.
I had eyes that could see and so I looked at the Beast.
At the End of All Things.
At the end of my world.
But not at the end of me.
How could I see all that? How could I see it at all.
“You’re not what you were.”
I didn’t even whisper it.
I couldn’t.
To speak those words would truly be the end of everything.
And so I fled.
To the only home I had, to the only safety there was.
Forcing a divine eternity down into a single mortal life was difficult? No. No it wasn’t. Not compared to the gravity of what lurked beyond the five words I could not speak held.
So I fled.
Down to my my bones.
Down to me.
Down to someone’s arms who wanted nothing more than keep me safe.
“She’s back! Clarity, grab her!” Responsibility had lunged for me the instant I reappeared.
And a moment later Clarity was holding me too.
“What in the ten thousand hells just happened?” Beauty demanded.
“Give her a second!” Inhibition, beloved Inhibition, demanded right back.
“She’s going to need more than that,” Reason said.
They were all incarnated, and all still bound up in Malgenia’s power with me. The only thing more relieving than that was Clarity covering my forehead with kisses.
“And she’s going to stay with us for as long as she needs, isn’t she?” Clarity asked me.
Except it wasn’t exactly a question.
Or a request.
“Not forever,” I said. “But for all of our lives and then some I think. I love you, and I always have.”
I had not fought back from the wrong side of the brink of divinity to be shy about what any of them meant to me.
“Thank you Diyas. Thank you so much,” Beauty said, offering an impromptu but clearly heartfelt prayer to the empty heavens above us.
“That wasn’t me,” Diyas said, fully incarnated in the room with us.
Which she couldn’t do casually.
Only when someone was having a divine revelation?
She was holding herself still. Not moving to encourage me, or stop me.
I could destroy everything, and she was leaving the fate of all that was in my hands.
I love you too, I whispered to her.
“I couldn’t leave you,” I told the others, “But I may have been over estimating how much control I have over Malgenia’s power.”
“What happened? If you can talk about it?” Clarity asked.
“I let myself imagine being with you forever, and apparently eternity comes at a cost,” I said, feeling the rising force of Malgenia’s power fighting ever stronger within me. It had tasted it’s proper home once and it could do nothing but hunger to return.
In that moment though, my hunger was greater than its was.
