“Helgon has been making noises again.”
“About what Vaingloth?”
“About Dyrena, Vitor.”
“Seems rather late for that doesn’t it? Or has he finally come around to understanding that her betrayal could only be answered as we did?”
“There were other options but none of you would let me take them.”
“Those options can never be taken Malgenia. You know none of us can risk falling over into divinity. Not even you.”
“Yes. It is a sadness. We were supposed to be gods, and now we can’t even be worms.”
“We are still the lords of this world though sister. And our powers are not so constrained as all that, are they? Didn’t you put up a new exhibit in your garden last week? I don’t think you would have been able to make such a…sculpture?…without the power we now have access to.”
“I would ask but I am sure your sister will share her work with the rest of us when she’s ready.”
“I always share my works. No one ever appreciates them though. It is a sadness.”
“It will be a sadness if Helgon turns out to be hiding Dyrena’s secret tomes.”
“But Vaingloth, we searched for those tomes, and there was never any evidence that they existed at all.”
“With the power she held, is that meant to be surprising?”
“Perhaps not, but we cannot jump at every shadow and quaver in fear that Dyrena may have hidden something in it. She was still only a mortal woman. We proved that rather soundly.”
“Her prowess is the evidence of their existence though Vitor. She knew too much and predicted too accurately everything that occurred. The fact that we are left in the state that we are can only be attributable to some cache of hidden prophecy or wisdom one of the ancient scholars like Krytsak failed to secure due to his incompetence.”
“As I said though, we have searched everywhere. There were no books from Krytsak or any other ancient scholars in her possession.”
“And what if they weren’t in her possession? What if they were being held for her? By the one among our number who she shared her true vision with?”
“You think Helgon has her missing tomes? I don’t know…”
“It is possible. He’s much smarter than he lets us know. And if he has them, we must have them too I suppose. It is a sadness though what that will mean for him.”
– Vaingloth stirring his fellow Neoterics to murder over a set of tomes he knew never existed at all.
I have to send away the women I love. Oh, woe is me. I am forced by the cruelties of fate to cast out those most dear and precious to my heart, stranding myself to labor in cold and empty nights, beset on all sides by fell beasts who could be my undoing.
You are doing that specifically to torment me, aren’t you? Beauty asked.
I don’t know? Is it working?
So, I had a plan.
But no one liked my plan.
What are you talking about? We all like your plan. Most of it. We just don’t like the ‘leaving you alone’ part, Inhibition said.
“You four are arguing about the plan, aren’t you?” Clarity asked.
The other Deaths were projected around the living room in my conjured mansion in the Wastelands, but speaking privately was still easier and quicker. I suppose our distracted air and how we were looking at each other was something of a giveaway though.
“She’s tormenting me,” Beauty said.
“Why are you tormenting our elders?” Responsibility asked, having decided that teasing Beauty, Inhibition, and Reason with their being at least theoretically older than the rest of us was fair game.
“She’s trying to convince Beauty to go off and leave with you,” Inhibition said.
“By whining about how terribly, terribly, alone she will be,” Beauty said.
“I thought we were going to leave Reason here with you?” Clarity asked.
“She’s going to assign Reason to do some research project or the other the moment we’re gone. Then she’s going to do something unreasonable,” Beauty said.
“I am capable of refusing requests like that you know, don’t you?” Reason asked.
“Capable? Yes. Historically likely to pass up an opportunity to understand the problem before acting on it?” Beauty gave a shrug of disbelief as the answer to her own question.
Reason started to form a retort but sank back into her sofa with a frown.
“Could we ask Meluna to stop by?” Inhibition suggested, which, while possibly a wise idea, was absolutely not what I wanted to see happen.
No offense meant to Meluna there. She had a strangely comforting presence while also being somewhat less than subtly menacing.
Or maybe it was because she was less-than-subtly menacing that I found her presence reassuring. I grew up worshipping Malgenia. There are parts of me that are broken that I know I’m still not aware of.
“She doesn’t seem the sort to make house calls,” Clarity said. “Or act as a house sitter.”
I half expected her to appear with a snappy rejoinder to that, but the shadows in the house remained that simple spots of dimmed illumination that they were supposed to be.
“I did come back you once already,” I said. “You don’t need to worry that I won’t be here when you all get back.”
Beauty eyed me suspiciously.
Because she caught what I hadn’t said.
All of the rest caught it too, but it was Responsibility who refused to let it slide.
“You can’t use any more of Malgenia’s power. You said that and you still believe it, don’t you?”
“I do. And I won’t. Trust me, I barely remember any of it, but what I do remember is more than enough to convince me that Malgenia was right and godhood is to avoided at all costs.”
You remember that, and you remember why, Diyas said. She wasn’t asking me so much as checking in with me to see if I was creeping any closer to dooming us all.
I would lose all of you, I said, answering the question without directly answering her hidden concern about what I’d seen of the Beast.
Which was exactly the right answer for me to have chosen.
There were five word I was never going to say or even think again, and the farther I stayed away from them, the better.
“It’s hard to even form the words ‘Malgenia was wrong’, and worse when we find things like this where she wasn’t,” Responsibility said.
“Malgenia was wrong. About the both of you,” Clarity said. “And likely about most of the other things she told us. It’s just her power that she understood, so not terribly surprising that she got something related to it right.”
“If we’re agreed, then can we also agree on when we’re going to set out?” Inhibition asked.
“I was going to suggest after another sleep cycle, but I don’t think we know how much longer Insight has,” Responsibility said. “We should probably leave the moment we have our supplies gathered.”
“You’re on her side, aren’t you? Admit it!” Beauty said.
“Freely,” Clarity said, answering for, I hoped, all the others too.
“Good,” Beauty said. “As long as she knows that then.”
And so they left me.
Well, it took a few hours to get stuff together since I couldn’t just wave my hand and conjure everything we needed.
When I’d told them I couldn’t afford to risk using any of Malgenia’s power I had not been kidding to even the slightest degree. The divinity Malgenia had captured was bursting at the seams within me. It had tasted the briefest of restorations to its natural state, remembering for a fleeting instant what it was like to have a world where it served and supported the natural processes which gave rise to it and that kind of thing? That sense of purpose and oneness and of being right where you were supposed to be, doing what made you complete? Yeah, I could not fault the divinity I was carrying from wanting that back.
It was its poor fortune that I wanted something else a lot more.
“They’re going to make it through the Wasteland okay, right?” Reason asked a few minutes after the rest of our little family departed.
“Malgenia was never particularly gifted in foresight,” I said.
“But they’re going to be okay,” Reason said, questioning I think herself as much as me.
“They’re going to be okay.” It was more a promise than a reassurance. We both knew exactly how long my self-prohibition against using Malgenia’s power would hold up if either group wound up in danger.
“We’re afraid for you too, you know,” Reason said.
“I do. Which is why I’m really not going to use Malgenia’s power,” I said.
“But you’re also not going to sit here, powerless, and take care of yourself, are you?” Shocking that Reason knew me, right? Yeah I didn’t think so either.
“Taking care of you all IS taking care of myself,” I said. “You know what put me over the top in the Assumption Ritual, right?”
“Yeah. Diyas,” Reason said.
“She gave me the opening. It was her power that kept me alive and whole when Malgenia’s safeguards tried to kill me. Without her I couldn’t have survived long enough to fight at all, but when it came down to Malgenia and me in the heart of her power? She was alone there, but I wasn’t. She had an eternity she’d grown bored of to fight for. She had experiments that she was mildly curious to see come to completion. She had her pride which had been poisoned into arrogance by a life without consequences. And I had you. All of you. I wanted to live, don’t get me wrong, but I could hear all of the Deaths who’d gone before me crying out in their slumber. And I knew who Malgenia would take next if I failed. You, Beauty, Inhibition, Clarity, and even Responsibility, you are why I still exist. Twice now I think.”
“Do you really not remember your brief Ascension at all?” Reasons asked. “It feels like there’s things hidden behind thick clouds in your memories.”
“I’m sure there are. And I’m sure those clouds are there for some damn good reasons, because I’m sure I was the one who put them there.” This was not a great conversation to have, what with it risking ending the world and all, but I knew Reason was the one I needed to have it with, thus why I’d asked for her to be the one to stay with me.
“So you do remember some of it then?” she asked. Because it’s really hard sitting in comfort with not understanding something. We’re similar in that we both just want to pick at whatever it is until we know what we’re really dealing with.
“Some. Like I said. But most of what I do remember just shows me that my mind, hell even Malgenia’s mind, doesn’t not have the space or capacity to hold even a small fraction of what it’s like to be fully divine.”
“So how are you going to keep them all safe then?” Reason wasn’t questioning whether I could, she just wanted in on the real plan now that the rest where safely too far away to interfere with it.
“I’m not,” I said. “You are.”
“One tiny problem with that,” Reason said. “I’m here and they’re there. Also, I have no powers that aren’t yours.”
“Yeah, about that,” I said. “Beauty and Inhibition are fully incarnated now right?”
“Yes, but they’re not independent of Malgenia’s power. We’re all still wrapped up in it. If their bodies are hurt or destroyed, they’ll just go back to our usual spirit realm. Unless a Beast Fragment catches them.”
“That’s correct. They’re not independent of Malgenia’s power, but they are independent of me. I said that I can’t use Malgenia’s power and that’s because I’m too close to the border of divinity. You, however, are not.”
“Because we’re not on course to become the new Malgenia.”
“Because you’re on course to become something else. If I’m almost a god now, then I think that means we can make you into something like a Blessed.” My family isn’t wrong that I have bad ideas they’ll probably object to, but sometimes my bad ideas are ones that I’m pretty certain are going to work.
“What? How?” Reason asked, flustered in a manner she rarely is.
“I believe I can help with that,” Diyas said, fully present as she can only be during a moment of divine revelation.
