“I’ve been doing some calculations.”
“And in other news, the sky is up. Do these calculations have anything to do with our current topic of discussion Helgon?”
“Of course they do Vaingloth. You know our Helgon is as committed to this scheme as any of us, he is simply using own unique tools to ensure it’s success.”
“Thank you Dyrena, and yes, this is relevant to the grace storage mechanisms we have been speaking about.”
“That was two hours ago Helgon.”
“Was it? Oh, well, it’s a new calculation and I don’t have my proper tools here. Did I miss anything important?”
“Why don’t you share the results your calculations have produced Helgon. I can bring you up to speed on the population exclusion process the others have developed.”
“Oh, of course. Well, a few hours ago apparently now, we were discussing our schemes for collecting and storing the grace which will be cast off when the gods fall, as well as the subsequently generated grace produced by our protectorates.”
“Yes. We all recall the discussion Helgon. Do you have something to relevant to add or did it take you this long to catch up with us?”
“I’m not sure Vaingloth. Did we talk about how any one of us will vaporize the planet if our containment devices fail?”
“I’m sorry, what did you say?”
“Oh, Sasarai I hadn’t seen you there. Um, yes, with the amount of grace we’re speaking of, if one of our proposed containment structures fails, there’ll be a tipping point reaction triggered. Unbound grace at that concentration with flood the bindings which hold together other grace bound systems.”
“Everything is bound by grace.”
“Yes, you see the problem the Vaingloth! Living creatures, solid objects, the air itself. There’s grace everywhere. Once the threshold is crossed, each extra spark added will increase the reaction. And it won’t be slow. Perhaps ten milliseconds for complete planetary conversion.”
“Are you sure Helgon? I thought…can I see you’re calculations.”
“Oh course Dyrena. Please check them over. It’s possible I made a mistake somewhere.”
“No it’s not, but I’ll check them over anyways.”
“What does this mean?”
“What it means Sasarai, is that we need to make sure one of our storage systems ever fails someone is there to absorb the overflow before it destroys us all.”
“But that’s impossible.”
“We’re about to do many things which aren’t possible. What’s one more?”
– The High Accessors creating a system which unintentionally provided the mutually assured destruction which should have kept them in check.
I survived. Sorta.
I’d told Sasarai I wanted “my home”, and “my Holy Tree”, and the Garden back. And I did. The longing in my voice for my old life had been dredged up from a real place.
I hated him, and I hated the life I’d been forced to live, the mask of lies I’d struggled to cram myself into out of the absolutely correct knowledge that to do otherwise would have meant being killed.
But the Garden was what I’d known. It held so many promises, and I’d invested so much of myself in it.
And I knew there were good people there. Misguided? Tremendously so. Unlikely to appreciate me exposing their beliefs as standing on lies? Unquestionably. But there had been kindness, and there had been laughter too, and I missed bits and pieces of it.
So my lie had been spoken with truths.
I did want those things.
And I had been willing to offer Sasarai the divine fragments in my hoard.
All of them, which, as it happens to be, was one. A fragment of Diyas, God of Healing.
Had Sasarai expected that I still held his hoard? Yes. Who would be mad enough to give up 1/8th of known divine fragments on the planet?
Better still, had Sasarai expected that I also held the other 7/8ths of the known divine fragments? I’d never claimed that, but I’d certainly led him to believe it, and the other Neoterics explosion of rage on discovering that they’d lost their individual troves had certainly helped foster that misperception.
I hadn’t claimed the divine fragments for myself though. They were mine to protect and mine to deliver. I held them because they needed to be brought to people who could bear their Blessing and, as it turned out, my new friend Little had a whole city full of people with different strength, ideas, and priorities, which was exactly where the divine fragments I’d carried needed to be.
As for the other cities?
For that I had to thank my other new friends. Xalaria was divinely gifted when it came to tactics and planning, at least as far as I knew. Fulgrox’s position as Blessed of the Harvest meant he had contacts everywhere people ate food, which kind of obviously covered all the places I needed help reaching, and Kalkit as the Blessed of Secrets apparently set up little secret societies wherever they went, as an amusement or something I think?
Anyways, between the three of them, all we had to do was give people in each of the other Neoteric’s domains the key to getting into the vaults, a timetable, and a workable plan for coordinating their actions.
Seven cities. Seven heists.
Had they all gone off smoothly? Probably not, but, crucially, enough of them worked out somehow that Sasarai had believed me and had seen a fleeting chance to escape being torn apart by his fellow Lords, and the price I’d demanded? It would have galled him, but it was exactly what I should have wanted and so very, very small compared to what he stood to gain.
And so he gave me my home.
And he gave me the Holy Tree.
And they were MINE.
Could have wrenched them back? I don’t know, maybe. If he’d acted the moment I claimed them, it would have been an interesting struggle.
He hesitated for an instant though since nullifying our agreement meant the other Neoterics were going to do to him what he’d done to his own gods.
And so I burned.
Yeah, turns out the Holy Tree had a lot more power bound up in it than any of us had known.
Let us carry this, Draconia said as my skin literally caught fire.
Yes, as the demon says, we are here for you, Umbrielle said and another blessing was layered onto the dragonscales that emerged from under my burning skin.
It was not enough.
The world was lost in pure ecstasy. I wasn’t simply touching divinity or gazing on it. Every cell in my body was filled to bursting with cosmic unity from the first drop of grace that spilled from the Holy Tree.
And there was an ocean left to drink.
Somewhere farther away than the edge of the universe, Sasarai was screaming on the other side of the room.
I could have wondered why, but I didn’t need to. The cosmos was my thoughts, the beat of my heart was gone and it’s place the ringing of the cosmic stings sang.
Greedy Sasarai had taken the one spec of divine sand I’d given him and sought to impose his will on it. Why? I could see into his mind as easily a glass a water.
If he had control over one divine fragment and the other Neoterics had none he would still reign supreme over them!
Did he not know of the danger we were all in?
What I had done was cataclysmically ill-advised, to put it mildly. When I failed, and there was no ‘if’ in that, the entire world would be reduced to less than dust.
But, no, he didn’t care. He simply had no capacity to care about anyone except himself. We were nothing more than toys to him.
It was sad. He should have been better than that.
I would fix it.
With a divine hand I would fix…
Nothing.
Because I didn’t have hands anymore it seemed.
Oh.
Right.
I was in the process of losing everything, even the concept of existing. I wasn’t going to be saving anyone.
Good luck thing we’re here to save you, Diyas said.
The Guardian never seems to consider that she needs protection sometimes too, Polsguls, the God of Small Problems, said.
Their help preserved me as me, at least conceptually, for a moment longer, which I appreciated, but we’d only managed to handle a few drops from the Holy Tree and there was so more, an unfathomable ocean that was flooding into me.
Thank you Draconia, my demon, mine, I said. It was important that she know I was happy she’d come into my life, even if I was going to lose it.
She didn’t answer.
I tried to feel her with me, but I was pretty far past the point of feeling anything.
Were the god fragments burning in the Holy Tree’s power? It was too much for me, and it was probably too much for them. I couldn’t tell, I was dissolving into the “all knowing divine” but losing too much of the ‘I’ in that for there to be a ‘me’ who could know anything.
Don’t lose hope, Umbrielle said. You haven’t been abandoned.
But I couldn’t feel anything.
And then I couldn’t hear anything.
It was too much.
Not more than I could bear, more than anything could bear.
The Holy Tree wasn’t heaven.
It was a hell of inescapable power, gathered far beyond any worldly need until it rotted and could only be turned to destruction and madness.
I’d thought the time had come to cast down the tyrant who ruled my little part of the world, but that time had been so long ago.
What Sasarai, what all of them, had created was a malignancy and it had done nothing but grow and grow worse the longer they reigned.
I feel under the weight of it.
It was too much.
I couldn’t.
How many had died when the sun fell.
I couldn’t restore them.
How many had died because they made the mistake of being who they were?
I couldn’t lift them back up.
How many had withered and become horrible when they should have been joyous and wonderful?
I couldn’t renew them.
I couldn’t.
I couldn’t.
But there were things I could do.
The Holy Tree was mine.
MINE.
It’s power was MY power.
I couldn’t shape it.
I couldn’t control it.
And I absolutely couldn’t contain it.
But I could share it.
So long as there was a ‘me’, burning, dissolving, lit in every cell by cosmic destruction, but still ‘me’, then the Holy Tree was MINE and, as MY TREE, I was the channel through which its power would pass into the world.
Not as a flood to destroy everything.
Not while the world was MINE to guard and treasure.
I think she’s still there! The voice was unfamiliar but unbearably welcome to here.
Of course she is! We’re still here aren’t we? Another unfamiliar voice.
Then let’s lighten that load a bit shall we? I’d never met the God of Strength, or their new Blessed.
I hadn’t met any of the thousand other Blessed who’d discovered their gods in the last five seconds either, but Oh Sweet Draconia was I glad to hear anything at all and their chorus most especially.
Together they…sang? Was there another word for what they were doing? For people coming together because they believed in helping not themselves, but the world who needed them?
Even with a thousand voices, I didn’t know if we could withstand the force of the Holy Tree’s power but they weren’t giving up, so neither was I.
And that let a thousand more join us.
Again and again, as the divine fragments found their Blessed hosts, those people chose to turn from their lives to save others, to save the ones without power, the ones who needed them most.
It wasn’t easy reaching across the world like that, Draconia, wonderful Draconia, said. But as you claimed. This is OUR world.
And I could see again.
Our world.
Garbed in a beautiful dress of darkness and stars with so many voices and so much life still.
Even the broken bits, the fallen and shattered spirits, even the fragments of the beast, lurking their lost corners, all of it, OURS.
Is this how you always saw the world?
No. Only through your eyes has the world ever looked like this.
