“Do you ever wonder, Vitor, how our world will end?”
“I believe we’ve lain rather meticulous plans so that we can be sure of exactly how the world will end. Wait, have we missed something? What are the dead saying Malgenia?”
“Nothing, nothing. The restful spirits remain as restful as ever and the restless ones natter on about whatever little issues which keep them clinging to this world.”
“Thank…well, not the gods I suppose. Thank you, yes, that seems appropriate in this regards. You had me worried that somehow one of those beyond the veil had caught wind of what we’re doing and was poised to spoiler the entire endeavor, not to mention our immediate futures.”
“Really there is no veil, you know this. I’ve told you multiple times now I’m sure.”
“And I accept that is true for you, dear sister. The rest of us, you might have noticed, cannot negotiate the division between the living and the dead with quite the ease you possess.”
“As if any of you have ever bothered to try.”
“But you shall always be there for us to turn to and even your modesty must admit that no one will ever be your equal in that regards.”
“Always? Oh I don’t think it will be always.”
“Of course it will be, that’s the point of all this. Once we claim dominion over this world, we will be the ones with the power to reign over it eternally which the gods have kept hoarded for themselves.”
“They have.”
“So you see there is nothing to worry about. Once they fall and this world is put out of its misery, we shall rise and forge one to chart a course to eternity from.”
“Because we’ll have the power of the gods.”
“Yes, exactly. Their power and, for you, the power of all the departed. Where we shall collect the grace which today goes to waste to do with as we please.”
“The power which grants the gods eternal life.”
“Indeed!”
“And you see no potential issues with this?”
“We have foreseen all of the potential issues. We have plans for every failure case. Whatever unforeseen events may rear their ugly heads, the gods will fall and we shall rise in triumph.”
– Malgenia confirming that her brother was only capable of looking towards the immediate future, and might be missing the larger issues she could foresee.
There’s a thing about asking someone to do the impossible. Most people, to be fair the sensible ones, will inform you by some means that your request is beyond them. Others, let’s call them the more energetic sorts, will agree immediately despite have no idea whatsoever what is being requested of them.
Responsibility chose neither approach.
Instead she leaned in and engaged with the idea just as I had hoped she would.
“And how exactly am I to give you back your mortality?” she asked, her eyes locked onto me. That she was at last unconcerned about the god sitting on the bench with her was probably a good sign too since she would have to work with Diyas a lot in the coming weeks.
“You’re going to fight me,” I said, supremely confident that she would find the prospect as delightful as I did.
“No.”
That was not the answer she was supposed to give.
“No? No what?” I asked.
“No, I won’t fight you,” she said.
Which..
What…?
We always fought!
She’d stabbed me! We had to fight!
“Why? You hate me! You have to fight me!” Did I sound a spoiled five year old? Shut up. That’s your answer.
Oddly, Responsibility looked surprised at my outburst.
“Hate you? I’ve never hated you. I love you,” she said, which, sure, whatever.
“Yes, yes, and I love you too. All the Deaths love each other. I don’t need love though. I need someone who can break what I’ve become.”
“And what is that?” Responsibility asked, somehow the far less flustered of the two of us.
How was that possibility. She’d been falling apart in shock like a minute earlier. How could she move to ‘calm and reasonable’ so quickly?
Oh she’s still falling apart, Beauty said privately to me and the other spirits in our little group.
Yeah, she’s dealing with all the things we’ve dropped on her by not dealing with them, and I can’t blame her, Inhibition said.
It’s not the definition of healthy but then I don’t think any of us can claim to be in the same kingdom as healthy when it comes to things like this, Reason said.
“I’m not sure Insight is capable of fully answering that question,” Diyas said in response to Responsibility. “I believe what you are seeing is Malgenia’s power which is now very much Insight’s in all senses save for its origin. Insight, who is perhaps failing to explain herself fully enough, since you are correct and an attempt to overcome Malgenia’s power with the gifts you now possess would be an exercise is not only futility but annihilation.”
“Oh give me some credit! I would not annihilate her! I don’t even want to win!” Other, smarter Blesseds, since technically I was also the Blessed of Life, probably would have spent at least a half second or so processing their god’s words.
Not me though!
Nope.
Open mouth, spew thoughts out.
On the positive side though, it did give my god a chuckle, and amusing the goddess of life had to count for something, right?
It does. It always does, she said.
“Why don’t you explain a little better then,” Responsibility said.
I wanted to punch her.
Why we she always so much better than me!
I love how stupid she is, Beauty said and I scowled at her.
She was right, but that didn’t mean I had to like it.
She’s not right, Inhibition said, meaning Beauty though it took me a second to get that. You’re not stupid and Responsibility isn’t better than you. You both are just under what people in Malgenia’s time might have called a mountain of stress.
Thanks, I said, to Inhibition specifically, and tried to suppress the mental grumbling that went with it.
“Okay. Let me start over there,” I said and gathered my thoughts.
I’d spent so long thinking about this though that I had no idea where to start for a moment.
“I’m not Malgenia.” It wasn’t the best beginning, but I felt it was important. “I’m not but I have all the power she ever collected. And some of her memories. And the powers she had well before the Sunfall. And I watched her for my whole life, the same as all of us did.”
“Not all of us,” Responsibility said. “There was a reason she choose you for the last Assumption. There are definitely Deaths who aren’t as tuned in to Malgenia as you were.”
“Fair. Though I think what drew her to me might have been Diyas’ presence or the Blessing she’d given me.”
“Can we go back to that later, because I don’t understand that either.”
“Sure.”
“So you’re not Malgenia, but you have all of the pieces of her that you’d need to become a near perfect copy of her if you wanted to.”
“Yes, which means I am absolutely capable of being the same monster she was. Maybe even worse because I know what its like to not be her.”
“And that scares you?” Responsibility’s comforting tone was not what I’d been expecting, but I didn’t mind it.
“I wish it did. At first, yes, but the longer I have these powers, the more I wonder about them. And the longer I have Malgenia’s memories, the more I want to poke around in them.”
“And that’s a bad thing because?”
“Once you see the things she’s done, you can’t unseen them. And the more that you see, the more numb you grow to it. I’m….”
I did not want to give voice to that thought because I knew it was far more true than I wanted to admit.
“She thinks she’s becoming like Malgenia, she thinks she’s going to flirt with unforgivable things and with no one to stop her and no consequences there’ll be nothing to stop her from descending into the same depths Malgenia plumbed,” Beauty said and bonked the side of her head against mine.
“Yes. I understand,” Responsibility said without flinching away from me at all. “So exactly what can I do to help with that?”
“When I said ‘fight me’ I meant it, but ‘me’, not ‘Malgenia’.”
“You and Malgenia’s power are inseparable though, are you not?” Responsibility leaned back and steepled her hands in front of her face. She always did that when she was thinking seriously about something, which sparked an erg of hope in me.
“At the moment, yes. Sort of,” I said. “Technically I could sever myself from her powers, and I think even her memories and basic abilities, but that would unless everything she has stored up and obliterate the word. So, obviously, we’re not doing that.”
“Obviously. If you want to destroy the world, my presence or absence would be immaterial.”
“There is a moment when I can be separated from Malgenia’s powers though,” I said. “I know because its when I destroyed her.”
“During an Assumption,” Responsibility said, guessing the answer because she is, as I’ve mentioned, smarter than me.
She’s not, and I will smack you if you need me to help remind you of that, Beauty offered.
Hey! I wasn’t saying I was stupid that time, I was just acknowledging that Responsibility is brilliant.
Then say that, Beauty said. No one gets to beat you up, not even you yourself.
“During an Assumption,” I confirmed. “How it’s supposed to work is that we, the Deaths who are partaking in the ritual present our world and supernatural gifts to Malgenia, laying them before her and opening ourselves to receive an infusion of her divinity in the process.”
“But instead she devours us?”
“In a manner of speaking. What the ritual really does is create a state of communion between Malgenia and the Death into which Malgenia pours not a drop of her divinity but an ocean of it. Far more than we can handle, enough so that when she reclaims it, because it is still her divinity, not ours, she’s able to claim our mortality along with it. Some of her divinity is lost in the process, it’s what kept Beauty, Inhibition, Reason and the rest around after they were consumed. That’s an intentional feature of the ritual though since having too much divine grace within her is what was constantly pushing Malgenia towards tipping over into full godhood, which would then get her consumed by the Beast of the End of All Things.”
“So, let me get this straight then,” Responsibility said. “You want me to be the next Assumption candidate, we perform the ritual and then, while the communion is open between us, we fight? What would that bring us? Would one of two of us wind up in the same state you’re in now?”
“That’s one possibility,” I said. “But I think we can do better than that. You and I specifically. Because you hate me. If we begin the Assumption ritual, establish a communion and then fight with all we’ve got, then within the Assumption the one who wins will be able to claim Malgenia’s power, but if they let the loser live too, that power will be shared between them. Neither of us will be as powerful as Malgenia was, and we’d have each other to keep us in check.”
“So you would go into the Assumption and chose to lose it, putting yourself in my hands when you think I hate you?” Responsibility asked.
“Not exactly. If I go into planning to lose, Malgenia power won’t come with me. I need to fight for real, and you need to as well.”
“What if we destroy each other in the process?”
“Malgenia’s power will fall to whoever is destroyed last or destroyed less and it will be more than enough to restore the victor to full.”
“So I could wind up in your state, or I could wind up dead and you’ll still be trapped like this?”
“Possibly? Yes. Practically though I don’t think so. If you’re willing to destroy me, you’ll definitely be able to win, and then it’ll be up to you what happens next.” Was I trust my arch-rival with my life? Yes. Did I have much to lose if she decided she didn’t want to share power? Nope. Either way I wasn’t going to become a monster.
“There’s only one small problem with that,” Responsibility said, rising from her seat.
I thought she was going to leave (I have no idea why, it just seemed like a thing she would do) but instead she knelt down in front of where I was sitting.
And placed her hands on either side of my head.
And gave me a surprisingly deep and passionate kiss.
“I meant it when I said that I love you.”
