“We should be considered the quality of the departed populations in the areas we will affirm our control over.”
“The quality? Tallgrim we have already discussed population size, species mixture, and the residual degree of devotion which can be extracted by each of us given our alignment with the regions we control. What other quality would you have us consider?”
“I believe Tallgrim is speaking of the piety the dead souls which will infuse our domains. He’s, would it be fair to say ‘concerned’, or perhaps expectant?”
“Expectant of what? The dead will be dead.”
“Yes but they will…”
“They won’t Tallgrim.”
“I assure you Malgenia with that many souls liberated at once and with no afterlife for them to proceed to? They will, they absolutely will, exert a sizable aetheric influence on our lands.”
“How sizable?”
“Sizable that they might be enough to call a second Plunderer into our existence, Vaingloth.”
“No. They will not.”
“And you say this why Malegenia?”
“Because Tallgrim’s vision of our future is incomplete.”
“Is it now? Then pray tell us all what I have not accounted for.”
“Why, me of course.”
“As puissant as you are, I believe a world’s death may prove to be more than you can enspell on your own. Is it not likely Tallgrim is correct and you will require the aid from one or all of us to balance the influx out?”
“I shall not.”
“But your people, your city, they would…”
“What people? What city? You all have been busy dividing up the world between us, but have I asked for any principality of my own? Have I shared any plans for the population I will preserve? Do you imagine preservation is something I seek at all?”
“Oh, uh, no. No, I suppose not.”
“Without a city, where will…”
“I shall reside with my brother.”
“You will? But we haven’t…”
“Would any of you feel safe enough not to attack me if I was left on unsupervised on my own?”
“…”
“There is still the matter that holding the dead of the world is beyond anyone, no matter how talented they might be.”
“Yes. That is true Tallgrim. Which is why I shall not be holding any of them. You say there will be no more afterlife, and that is partly true. While you all scavenge the pieces of our dearly departed deities, I will collect the pieces of the underworld. I shall not have a city because I shall not need one. The living I leave to you, and the dead you shall leave to me.”
– High Accessors Tallgrim, Vaingloth, Malgenia, and Vitor at the Neoteric cabal’s meeting where the minor details of the end of the world were debated.
I liked meeting with my Deaths. It wasn’t always easy, but we’d been friends since I was able to form words and pass the first tests our teachers had put before me, so avoiding the Deaths would have been unthinkable.
Well, most of them.
Death of Clarity was lovely and I would use all of Malgenia power to smite anyone who spoke poorly of her, but Death of Responsibility and I had a bit of a rockier history. I mean, I loved her too, in theory, but that hadn’t stopped either of us from seriously trying to kill the other on a number of occasions. Certainly we always made up afterwards, but she presented a unique challenge in terms of maintaining the facade that I was our beloved Neoteric Lord and not the girl who’d once submerged Responsibility’s head in a bathtub until Responsibility had passed out. In my defense, I’d thought I’d successfully drowned her and had only discovered my error when she’d woken and hit me with a pipe wrench hard enough to fracture my skull.
How is that a defense?
I’m not sure Insight means for us to take her seriously Beauty.
I ask again, how in the Fallen Heavens was SHE the one Diyas found a bound with?
What? No quips about how broken my brain is? I really shouldn’t have to provide my own punchlines, but thus went the life of an ersatz Neoteric Lord.
If you respond, you know it will just encourage her. Death of Reason wasn’t wrong there, but Beauty clearly knew that I was going to continue as I was, encouragement or no.
“My Lady! You have returned to us!!” Death of Contemplation drew me out of my overcrowded head with her gleeful announcement. She also drew the attention of all of the other Deaths who were presently studying in the Arboretum.
“Lady Malgenia!” they shouted in a chorus I almost joined by reflex.
As a Neoteric Lord, Malgenia had many tasks and responsibilities which demanded her attention and so could only spare fleeting moments for her most precious of daughters.
Or so we’d been told.
In truth, from what I could find in Malgenia’s memories, and what I’d seen demanded of my time on a day-to-day basis, Malgenia could have spent years basking in the undivided attention and adoration of her principal food-sources and had simply chosen not to, despite the bliss it induced in those who’d been selected to serve serve as eventual sacrifices to sustain her existence.
It wasn’t that she felt any guilt or remorse at our eventual fates either. From what I could tell she legitimately was fascinated with each and every one of us. Which wasn’t too surprising. If Malgenia had found any of her Deaths wanting, or even simply uninteresting, Vitor made sure they were ‘decommissioned’ and replaced with a more suitable candidate.
Given the fact that Malgenia’s immortality was rather different from the other Neoteric Lords, I had to concede that Vitor’s actions were at least self-consistent given the complete absence of moral or ethical boundaries required to become a Neoteric Lord.
“Is it to be a test today My Lady?”
“Will we be performing for you My Lady?”
“Shall we feed you My Lady”
“Do you wish us to leave you in peace My Lady?”
“May we tell the others of your arrival My Lady?”
Yeah. That’s how we all spoke. It’s how I would still be speaking if not for the whole thing where Malgenia had killed me.
She says that like it makes her special.
To be fair Beauty, it does. It just doesn’t make anything remotely close to unique.
I continue to question whether we can really call this death. It was an argument Reason had raised several times, and I had to admit it was a convincing one on a theoretical and practical level, but then I remember exactly how awful what Malgenia had done to me was, and what I’d done to her in response and, well, ‘killed’ and ‘dead’ were much simpler and more pleasant terms to describe what had happened, so I was sticking with them.
“You may follow your passions my flowers,” I said, hoping my repetition of Malgenia’s frequent saying was convincing enough.
How could it not be?
Okay, points for Beauty there. The Deaths where highly trained in many arts, but ‘questioning Malgenia in any manner whatsoever’ was decidedly not one of them.
The Deaths in the arboretum nodded, each beaming with earnestly felt glee and scampered back their current projects consumed by excitement at a chance to show off whatever they’d learned since I’d last visited them.
Or at least it had been how it was for me. I was praying to any god fragments who would listen that one or more of the Deaths would be more sensible than I was.
They’re hiding it well if so, Diyas said, which shouldn’t have been comforting but given that she hadn’t ruled out the possibility it meant that some hope remained.
So, who am I going to kill out of this lot? I asked my mental chorus and Diyas.
None of them, we all know that, Beauty answered, because Beauty has made it her job to not let me get away with any dramatics at all.
For which, I was more grateful than I ever let her know.
Pretending to be Malgenia is easy after all the time I spent worshipping her. Easy enough that slipping into her thought patterns seems dangerously likely. What the world specifically did not need was another Malgenia to rise in the place of the one we’d cast down.
Avoiding her thought patterns is dangerous too though, since it anyone more observant than my Deaths were to notice a significant slip up, they’d start asking uncomfortable questions like ‘who are you really’ and ‘what have you done with my sister’ and ‘would you like to end what little is left of the world or shall I just destroy you utterly like the martyr you were supposed to be’?
You know.
Fun sibling stuff like that.
She really doesn’t want to do this does she? Inhibition asked, which drew a hum of agreement from the other Deaths in my head and silent interest from Diyas.
Okay. No. I don’t. I admitted.
I’d sunk into ‘Malgenia mode’ because it was what the still-living Deaths expected and because she wouldn’t have taken this seriously.
When she’d picked me out as the next candidate for Assumption, Malgenia hadn’t put me through any special exam, or shown all that much interest in the selection. She’d wandered into our dormitory one day, glanced around and said something like “that one seems especially luminous”. I hadn’t been glowing, or particularly well put together, having been woken up by Death of Literacy dashing into the room two minutes before that, but it hadn’t mattered. From that moment forward my fate had been sealed.
A month of preparation with the others, a month of solitude with Malgenia, and an hour all alone before the ceremony. That had been how my old life had ended and it was the window we would have save the next victim of Malgenia’s hunger for endless life.
Or I could just die myself.
Except you can’t, Reason reminded me unnecessarily.
Because refusing to take another life would expose my deception and would lead to, among other thing, all of the Deaths being ‘decommissioned’.
Oh, and killing me would unleash the necromantic aether Malgenia had stored up. Which would do more than kill the few people who still remained on our destroyed world. Malgenia had gathered up all the souls who’d died in the Sunfall and all the energy their deaths had released (or rather all the energy which hadn’t been consumed by the Beast). She’d then spent several lifetimes gathering up any deaths the other Neoterics overlooked, which, it turned out, was rather a lot of them. Enough that, without a commensurate amount of life aether to balance it, the physical structure of the world would die if it was all released at once.
So, in theory, I could kill one girl every couple of years, or I could kill the world.
Great choices right? Definitely a splendid idea to replace the Neoteric Lord who’d been doing the job originally. I wasn’t hating my life choices at all.
“Might I draw you My Lady?” Death of Clarity asked and my attention was firmly removed from spiraling around inside my own head.
“That would be delightful,” I choked out, struggling to make the words sound as unencumbered as I could. It was hard to be around Clarity. I couldn’t touch her. I couldn’t speak to her. Not like I had before. It hurt so much. She’d been a friend when I didn’t deserve one. She was so gentle and she loved us all despite our myriad flaws and foibles.
Malgenia’s Assumption ritual would proceed flawlessly with her, Diyas said and I very nearly burned out our bond in a flash of hatred.
Except I knew what she was really saying. Gods are funny like that. If they mean something, they can make that meaning staggeringly clear if they want to.
Because I love her, I said. Because the prospect of joining together into one life is something both of us would accept.
You wouldn’t even need to consume her soul like Malgenia would have. She could join your chorus, no matter how self aware she was.
Despite how her words sounded, Diyas wasn’t encouraging me to pick Clarity.
She was reminding me what I needed to fight against.
The ritual couldn’t proceed as it had. Not again.
We needed a new answer.
The ritual would work too well if it was someone I loved, which meant I knew exactly which of the Deaths I had to pick.
Across the room and behind a lovely pair of stonefruit trees, Death of Responsibility sat, watching me with eyes that were going to hold just a hint of horror before the day was out.
