Author Archives: dreamfarer

Fledgling Gods – Forging Faith – Ch 2

“The Sun has fallen, but the Eternal Night shall not claim us! The Holy Tree has awakened and its name is Mazana, Blessed and Divine and capable of sheltering those who are faithful where our fallen gods have failed to do so. Believe in Mazana and believe in me, the Holy Tree’s humble messenger and your new Lord.”

– The First Tender’s speech to the populace of the Seventh Garden as a Neoteric Lord, the day he called the Thicket Walls forth to keep out the spirits of the shattered world.

I can be quiet. I had a lot of practice at it since people tended to prefer that I not call any attention to myself unless they needed me for something. My demon said I was annoyed by that, but she never mentioned how grateful I was too.

Knowing how to be quiet meant that people didn’t look too closely at me. It meant they didn’t see the signs that I was possessed. It meant they left me alone.

It also meant that I had time to observe the odd intruder who was lurking outside the apartments, alcoves, and dens which made up my family’s estate.

She was graceful. That was the first thing that struck me. When we dance, Sylvan’s are light and flowing and move with the winds, but it takes effort and practice for that to look coordinated and purposeful. The intruder didn’t have the lightness of a dancer, but her movements were flowing and quick, without any of the effort dancing always seemed to require.

Her ears were as long as mine, but softer and tufted. Her limbs were about as long and her proportions similar but not quite the same as my own. 

What most caught my eyes though were hers. She glanced over towards me and the last flickers from the Holy Tree were reflected like golden fire in her eyes which were rimmed by the pitch black fur which covered her.

At first I thought that fur was all she was wearing but the lack of fuzziness around her chest, arms and legs suggested she was simply clothed in matte black and skin tight clothes.

She turned as I watched and sniffed the air.

So, she was searching for something?

At my family’s estate?

But we didn’t have anything special to find? No one in the Garden did. 

Or no one except the First Tender.

And the Tender Acolytes.

But they were special. Blessed by the Holy Tree and burdened with duties the rest of us were spared from by the their humble mission.

 The intruder caught some scent that intrigued her.

Which worried me.

She was heading towards our prayer chamber. There was nothing and no one in there.

Or there shouldn’t be.

Had my father left his cradle for a round of additional prayers? I knew he had trouble sleeping sometimes. I did too, and had tried prayer to win back the peaceful dreams which were eluding me, only to be discovered when he’d crept into the prayer chamber as well and made obeisance to our effigy of the tree beside me.

It had been our silent secret. By writ and mandate, the night was for sleeping, but neither of us believed that prayer would give offense to Mazana.

Maybe that was what had taught me the value of remaining silent in place of confessing my transgressions. Maybe it had saved my life.

I slipped out of my nook and crept after the intruder. I had no idea what I would, or even could, do to her, but if my father was in the prayer chamber I wasn’t going to let her ambush him.

Why assume she was hostile? Because she had to be. Everything else, everything from outside the Thicket Walls were dead, broken things which hungered to scour the last of the living away because they had nothing but unending jealousy that we’d been saved and they hadn’t been pure enough.

Why  this graceful, fluffy intruder would specifically be jealous of my father was a far stranger question, but I’d stumbled onto a demon when I’d only been looking to commune more deeply with Mazana, so I couldn’t really be surprised that the world didn’t make sense sometimes.

She reached the chamber and sniffed the air again, only to come up short. I had to flatten myself against the dining room’s outer wall to avoid her gaze when she turned to look behind her. 

For a moment I didn’t think I’d been quick enough but then I heard her open the door to the prayer chamber and move inside.

Was following her a wise idea?

Is there a benefit to answering silly questions like that?

Did I follow her anyways?

Do I seem like the sort of person who was sensible enough to go back to bed and let whatever was happening be someone else’s problem?

The actual idiocy of what I was doing slammed into me as I crept past the threshold and into the prayer chamber.

Idiocy, in this case, involved being tackled from above by a night black furry body.

Yeah, I don’t think so, my demon said and hurled the intruder away with a strength I was pretty sure I did not possess.

The intruder was not phased by that at all.

By the time she hit the opposite wall of the room twenty feet away, she had flipped to land with her feet on the wall and her body coiled and ready to spring back.

Brilliant gold eyes illuminated a feral smile as she hung on the wall for a timeless instant and then launched herself back at me.

That’s not…my demon had time say be a hand caught me around the throat and drove into the wall behind me.

Violence, I discovered, is not fun!

Also, as a bonus lesson, I learned that I was terrible at it.

The knock to the back of my head scrambled my thoughts enough that all I heard was my demon finish her thought with ‘…good. That’s not good.’. 

Thanks so much demon. I could tell it wasn’t good all on my own.

What I couldn’t do was respond with any coherency or speed, which meant the intruder was able to pin my left arm to the wall with her right hand, and position her left knee up against my abdomen to hold my body in place too.

Then she sniffed me.

“There’s what I’m looking for.” Her voice was a whisper which made my blood run cold.

Why had I thought she would be after my father, or anything else when the strangest thing on our estate was me?

“But you’re not her?” the intruder said, her whisper turning confused and vaguely annoyed. “What is going on here? Where’s her blessing? What have you done with her?”

“What are you talking about?” I whispered back. It wasn’t hard, she was holding me by the throat but she wasn’t exerting any more force than was needed to keep me in place and with the feel of her claws at the side of my neck, not much force was required to convince me to stay right where I was.

“Not screaming. That’s good. Surprising, but good,” the intruder said, speaking to herself and no one else as far as I could tell.

She had a point though. One good scream and I could have everyone in the estate awake in a heartbeat.

And they would come.

All together we’d be able to drive off the intruder too.

But did I want that? No. No I did not. Because the moment the intruder was discovered, people would start looking for what was out of place. And if they found me with the intruder? They’d want to be sure I was okay. They’d want to test that I was still pure. That I hadn’t been part of this desecration of the Garden.

And they would find out exactly what I was.

So, no, I didn’t scream.

I had other options.

I’m no good at violence, but I did have Mazana’s gifts.

In my free hand, wind gathered at my command.

“Wait, what?” the intruder asked right as I released the wind in a silent burst of force to propel her away.

It was a tricky gift to use like that, but you don’t spend years being a diligent and dutiful daughter of the Holy Tree without having something to practice on and get good at.

“Ugh, now it’s gone, and wrong,” the intruder said. “What is that.”

“You shouldn’t have snuck into the garden, serpent,” I said, misquoting scripture but with the same fiery vehemence as the First Tender used when he spoke of those who’d been lost in the Sunfall and what remained of them.

“Serpent? I am not a serpent!” the intruder was still whispering but her indignation was louder than her words. “You’re the serpent, or you were. Now you just smell like offal.”

The air around me did not smell like offal. I did not smell like offal. The air and I were both scented with the honeysuckle which grew among Holy Mazana’s branches.

“Who are. What are you doing here?” I hoped the answer to either or both of those questions would provide the answer to the more important one of how to get her out of the prayer chamber, our estates, and the Garden as a whole.

Predictably that was not the case.

“Looking for you,” she said. “Or you’re my next stepping stone I guess. Why are you here though, you not like the rest of them?”

There were a lot of scary things she could have said.

But that was the scariest.

“What do you mean?” I should have whispered that. I was glad I hadn’t screamed it.

“I mean…,” she said as she cut through the winds I cast at her, “that you’re special.”

“No, I’m not.” It wasn’t the best counterargument. I knew that. I just didn’t have a better one.

“You’ve got something in you beautiful. Something no one else here does. Something that can show me where I need to go next.”

Hmm, curious, my demon said when what I was thinking was ‘do I kill her?’

“I like that look in your eyes,” the intruder said and stepped towards me.

Could I kill her? I had to kill her, right? She knew. And the others would capture her. It was inevitable.

And then she would talk.

They would make her talk.

The only way I could keep her from talking was to kill her.

It wasn’t even wrong, was it?

She was from outside the Thicket Wall.

She was dead and evil and I was going to die if I didn’t kill her.

That stupid smile she was wearing was not helping. She was enjoying this. I ought to kill her just for that.

“So how about we drop the act then,” she said and closed the distance between us again. 

Whatever she’d intended to say next was cutoff by the sound of someone stirring in the dining room.

I’m sure my eyes went as wide as hers did, though hers might have been because I clamped my hand over her mouth. Sure she could have killed me, but ‘could have’ was different enough from ‘absolutely would have’ which would have been the result if anyone else found me so I was willing to take the risk.

“Be quiet.” It was a command, whispered with the force of a hammer, which, happily, was enough to compel obedience.

There was a clank of a plate and the ting of a utensil.

Kam.

We hadn’t been overheard.

My oblivious brother was hungry and had snuck out to raid the food stores. Like he always did and always got away with.

How he didn’t hear my breathing or the crashing thumps of my heart, I have no idea, but as a slow, agonizing minute dragged on I heard him assemble whatever bedtime meal he’d decided on and finally, finally leave the dining room via the door that was closer to his sleeping nook.

“Interesting,” the intruder said, pushing my hand away from her mouth when I sagged in relief.

Yes. Very, my demon said.

“And now you smell wonderful again.” 

I had no idea how to react to that and even less how to react when she licked my palm!

“Eww, something’s still off though,” she said  and hopped backwards away from me. “Tell you what beautiful, I’m going to go figure this out, and I’ll see you later.”

I had to stop her.

For myself.

For my family.

For the Garden.

But I didn’t.

She was out the door we’d both come through in a blink, and I didn’t do anything to stop her. I was stuck on a thought.

Had her last words been a threat, or a promise?

Fledgling Gods – Forging Faith – Ch 1

“The tree is life, the tree is shelter, the tree sustains and nourishes us and I need to get the hell away from it or burn it to ash.”

– Ki-song Calm, the First Apostate against Mazana, the Tree of All Life following the Sunfall.

I am not a good Sylvan. Good Sylvans give thanks and praise to Holy Mazana each morning as its leaves and branches turn to the radiant hues decided for the day. At mid-day, as the colors blend together, good Sylvans raise their voices in ecstatic prayer, and each night as the day’s colors fade away, good Sylvans fall silent for the hour of contemplation of our Sacred Duty and Unity.

So did I not speak the words of praise in the morning? Of course not. My lips formed the same chants as all the good Sylvans. Otherwise they might have known.

Did I fail to pray at midday? Never. My prayers were sung so sweetly people had called me blessed since I was a child. I had to sing high and sweet and perfect or they might have known.

And as the night crept down and Holy Mazana grew as dark as the world beyond our thicket walls? Silence had never been a problem for me. Silence was the easiest thing in the world to hide in. No one would ever know I wasn’t a good Sylvan in the silence.

They couldn’t. Because if anyone knew I wasn’t a good and righteous little plant girl they might discover that I was something far worse.

“Jilya? Sis? Come on, the last leaf went dark a while ago, you can rise any time now,” my brother Kam said and nudged me from my prayers with a foot in the ribs. “Or did you fall asleep?”

It wasn’t true that the ‘last leaf’ had gone dark. Holy Mazana never let “all” of its leaves go dark. Even at the darkest hours of night there were still some bits of the Great Tree which gave off a bit of light. Not enough to work by of course. The divine mandate and purpose for nighttime was that we would sleep then and wake refreshed for the following day to perform the duties which awaited us.

“I’ve never fallen asleep.” Which was true. “That’s you’re failing.” Which was also true.

Kam could be forgiven for falling asleep once in a while though. Boys were meant to be little problems once in a while. That was why they were sent to the militia training Kam was a year away from. To forge that unruliness into the sort of discipline and strength that could never be drawn from someone like me.

You call yourselves plantlings, but you never consider that plants don’t separate into the categories you assign yourselves, my demon said, taunting me like she always did.

Good Sylvan are many things, but possessed is not one of them.

Not that you’re actually plants. You’d think the whole ‘bleeding’ and ‘walking around’ would be a clue there, but then maybe it’s just your brains that are made of rotten cabbage.

Shut up! I try not to talk back to my demon. Interacting with any supernatural entities imperils every one of us, and, more importantly, while I’m stuck listening to the demon, it never listens to me.

Well now that’s not true. I listen to you all the time. I’m here to help you after all.

Demons do not help anyone.

 You really like saying that don’t you. I mean, you know it’s untrue, as I’ve proven time and again, but you’re just won’t give it up.

Prayers to Holy Mazana are not guaranteed to drive demons away, or at least my prayers aren’t, but they were enough to buy me a few moment’s peace after the demon huffed at me and said, “Typical. If you’re going to be like that, we can talk later.”

I want to say I’d never talked to the demon.

I want to say I’d gone and confessed my sins the moment I heard the demon’s voice echoing within me.

I want to say a lot of things, but silence has been so much safer and, I suspected, always would be.

Mazana’s Garden is the only home left to the Sylvans. Once our world was a bright and vibrant place, but people, other people, sinned so deeply that everything was cast into death and darkness.

Everything except the Garden. Alone in all the world, the Sylvan people were pure enough and devout enough to claim their place in Mazana’s Garden, to be sheltered by its light, nurtured by its winds, and slaked by the waters of its roots. 

Around the Garden, the First Tender grew the Thicket Walls, which kept out the broken and dead spirits which were all that remained of the fallen world outside Mazana’s light. So long as they stood, nothing evil could ever creep in and threaten the purity of the Last People.

Why we should be the ‘Last People’ was something I’d never understood. If the world was dead, then why not bring more of it under Mazana’s light? 

That was the sort of curiosity that led to poking around in dangerous places. Forbidden ones.  Places where demons waited to possess anyone stupid enough to touch things because how could a pretty thing be dangerous?

My demon laughed at that and I schooled the annoyance away from my expression.

When I looked mad or upset people asked questions and any of my honest answers to them could have proven that I wasn’t pure anymore.

I could feel the demon itching to respond to my thoughts, but she stayed quiet. She had a vested interest in my lies after all. The moment I was discovered, I would be cast out, as in literally thrown bodily over the Thicket Walls.

Some people survived the fall. No one survived long afterwards though.

Some parts of the scriptures which were taught to us seemed too fantastical to be true, but no one doubted the fact that darkness had swallowed the word, or that there were things in the darkness which hungered for our destruction.

That our faith was our shield was manifestly true as well, confirmed by the sheer fact of our existence, and the blessings the First Tender shared with us.

To be discovered as impure wouldn’t destroy only me though. Everyone I knew would be tainted by association, and my family…my family’s penance would be severe. I wouldn’t survive my punishment. They might live through theirs but I would probably be the one who was better off in the end.

It was with those happy thoughts that I left our family’s prayer bower and climbed to my sleeping nook. Whoever had been on linens duty had left me a clean sleeping shift so I slipped out of my day clothes, folded them, said the Prayer of Cleansing, and deposited them in the collection bin before saying an abbreviated Prayer of Thanks and donning the simple linen nightwear. 

No one could hear my prayers, so I could easily have skipped them. The words had no meaning to me any more and I’d long since lost the belief that Holy Mazana could hear them. Maybe from other people? Ones who hadn’t strayed outside it’s light?

Or maybe it could hear them and it held them back from the First Tender.

Maybe it was giving me time to fix the mistake I’d made, to become pure again.

That thought had been my lifeline for years. That there was a method, or a practice, or something I could do which would absolve me of not just the demon, but the doubt in my heart which had drawn it to me.

Because that’s what was really wrong with me.

Oh, the demon possession would definitely get me killed the moment someone found out about it, but my real sin, the real proof that I was broken was that I’d doubted Holy Mazana, and I’d doubted the First Tender. 

I’d had to see the dead world for myself. I couldn’t imagine that we were alone. It felt…it just felt wrong. Like somewhere beyond the dark horizon, there had to be someone else left in the world. 

Maybe they weren’t as pure as we were. Maybe they didn’t belong in the Garden. Maybe the First Tender hadn’t shepherded them into Holy Mazana’s light because their lack of faith would have led us to the same ruin which befell them.

But I hadn’t been able to believe that.

There was more out there. More people. More places. More beauty.

And I’d wanted it.

There was something missing in me. Some goodness, or grace, or inherent worth that everyone else in the Garden possessed, and I’d been so desperate to fill it that I’d destroyed myself in my foolishness. 

I curled up in my nook and tried to push those thoughts and memories away. Mercifully, my demon remained quiet, but my traitorous heart failed to follow the demon’s lead.

What had I been attempting to find all those years ago when I slipped out of my nook, and ventured down among the Mazana’s roots? I remember telling myself that I was looking for a deeper connection with the holy tree, but had I been? Or had I known even then that my connection with Mazana was flawed at best and so had been looking for something older, and deeper, and far more terrible?

It would almost have been comforting to imagine the latter was the case. If I could be dark and evil, then maybe I could be dangerous enough to survive beyond Mazana’s light.

But that wasn’t me. For all that I wasn’t a good Sylvan, I still wanted to be.

My options for making that come true had dwindled away other the years though. I’d attended holy festivals with with the fervent hope that being submersed in the joyful cries of true believers might drive out my demon and banish the doubts which had only grown darker over time. I’d taken to attending every prayer service I could and had praised by the Great Tree in song and word and deed. I’d even competed and won the chance to receive a blessing from the First Tender in his role as the Garden’s Neoteric Lord.

That last one, meeting our Neoteric Lord, had been flirting with self destruction, but at the time it had seemed worth it. I’d told myself that I would walk out of my meeting with him cured or I wouldn’t walk out at all. Because surely someone so close to Holy Mazana would sense the evil within me.

But he hadn’t. 

It had been a short ceremony. A simple meeting and a quick anointing, but even so I’d expected him to see what I’d brought before him. I’d expected to burn at his touch on my forehead. I’d expected…I’d expected something.

In the wake of that failure, I’d been forced to confront the reality that if I was going to be free of my demon, I was going to have to be the one who rid myself of it.

If my lack of faith had damned me, then I would redeem myself by casting aside my doubts, stifling the voices inside, and choosing to submit to the pure will of those greater than me.

Unsurprisingly, the thousandth rendition of that declaration did not bring sleep rushing in.

Instead, it left me awake enough to hear the sound of something moving outside my nook.

Good Sylvan’s do not sneak around or hide in the shadows. Everywhere they go, they bear the light of the Holy Tree within them.

I am not, as I’ve mentioned, a ‘Good Sylvan’ though.

As quietly as I had the first night I abandoned my nook, I slipped from my bed and down the trunk where my family’s boughs had been grown. I considered calling on Mazana’s gifts but since it was at least a minor sin to be awake at all so long after the “last leaves” went dark, I decided to play it safe and find out who or what I was dealing with first.

And ‘who or what’ was the question.

Outside my brother’s room, looking for the hatch to lead it inside stood something with skin the color of the night around us clothing a form which was was so close to a Sylvan’s and yet so very different too.

I didn’t know what I was looking at, but I knew it was not one of the ‘Last People’.

Fledgling Gods – Waking the Divine – Ch 45

“It’s not about seeing the light of a new dawn. It’s not about being warm and safe. Sure, we hope for that. Sure, it’s the tangible goal in making all these underground passages, and saving all this knowledge. Why we do this though? Why we work to make space for a better tomorrow? It’s not so that we can see it. Even if what we’re working for arrives lifetimes after ours, even if it never comes, what we do here fulfills its purpose for us right now. In working to make our world better, we create the hope that sustains us. We make ourselves the people we want to be. We believe there is good still left in the world, because we become the good we believe in.”

– from the scribbled notes of a speech given by the Ratkin matriarch ‘Small Voices Can Speak To Us All’, after half the rebels in Mt. Gloria were captured in a raid and carted off to the Fire Portals.

We didn’t have a new sun above Mt. Gloria. The shining ball of light and (literally) blessed warmth which was still captivating people’s attention wasn’t technically the sun, and it wasn’t technically new.

“It’s so comfy though,” Sola said and the New Sun sparkled a little warmer.

“I am so glad it worked out,” I confessed. “After the, uh, problem with the castle, I was worried your new home might be a bit too big.”

“If this was my old ‘home’ as you call it, and it’s not my home, you all are, but if this had been what was called the sun then placing it that close to the city would have been a fairly notable problem.” Sola wasn’t distracted, because, you know, god, but she was definitely multi-tasking; talking to me, connecting with all the people who believed in her at last, and taking in her new…hmm, I suppose ‘temple’ was probably a more accurate term for it.

“The old sun? It’s still out there isn’t it?” I asked, and shifted to a more comfortable position on the rubble of the former castle.

You might think rubble wouldn’t be comfortable to rest on, and for normal rubble you’d be right. Normal buildings however aren’t blasted to a fine sandy mush and then baked to a nice warm consistency. If heaven was getting to lie down on a blanket of fresh baked bread, then I had found heaven.

Of course Sola protecting me from heat and fire meant that my gauge for how warm the flaming ruins of the castle were might have been a teeny bit off. I kind of suspected that was the case, since no one had come by to bother me yet.

That no one had any reason to presume I was still alive might have had something to do with that too.

When I released the accumulated power Vaingloth had stolen from the deaths of people over the course a couple of centuries, it had made a rather big boom. A fairly bright one too, though I had to rely on Sola’s reports for that. According to her, anyone who’d been looking up at the ‘flaming angel in the sky’ (I was technically a messenger of hers I guess) would have been temporarily blinded (lucky them) when a flame as bright as the first moment of creation blossomed above them.

She took care of things from there, using the scattered divine power of her domain, borrowing from other domains, and tapping the grace of those who knew and believed in her. In her hands, the fire I released became something like a tunnel to the true sun? People were going to say that her new temple was the sun, but having an object capable of generating the heat it was putting out for a few billion years hovering in the air above the planet would, according to Sola, cause a few tiny problems like tearing the world apart with gravitational stress and sterilizing it of all life with the seen and unseen light it would be emitting. Not to mention the whole ‘melt everything into a ball of molten slag’ which sounded like it’d be super fun for everyone.

So the actual sun was still where it belonged.

And where it always had been.

What we’d done was more a question of parting the veil which had been erected between our world and Sola’s true temple.

Erected by whom?

“I should be unhappy with you I believe,” the familiar voice of Meluna, the High Priestess of the Night said from rather disturbingly close to me.

“Should you?” I asked, not bothering to move. Meluna seemed to have a knack for confronting me when I wasn’t in the best of shapes, but this time at least I was pretty sure I wasn’t in imminent danger. “Your god has to have been pretty lonely for a while now. I’d think she’d be happy for a little company in the heavens, wouldn’t she?”

“And you considered that before you undertook this scheme?” Meluna asked.

“No. Honestly, I’m not that clever. Thinking about it now though, I’d have to guess that it’s something of a relief to her that she doesn’t have to shoulder the whole burden of protecting the world anymore.” I was making several tenuous guesses there, but they fit together so nicely I couldn’t help myself.

“Not that clever? Oh, you definitely should have been one of ours,” Meluna said. I could hear the wicked smile in her voice and took comfort in the fact that I was at least amusing her.

“I’m happy with the god who picked me,” I said, enjoying the warmth around me as it seeped into my long chilled bones.

“And what do you plan to do for her next?” Meluna asked.

“Whatever she asks, or whatever I think she needs,” I said. “Isn’t that how things are with you and the God of Night?”

“Our arrangement is somewhat unlike yours,” Meluna said. “As you say, we have had to do quite a lot of work to protect this world.”

“Only she could, right?” I asked.

“Your god has told you this?”

“Nope. Worked that out all of my own. Mostly from what you’ve said. Night didn’t die when the other gods did. I know you didn’t tell me that, but I, uh, I could tell.”

“Because you’re as much the Beast of the End as you are the woman you once were.” Meluna pronounced that like the verdict of a court, but I heard a sliver of space to make a closing counter-argument.

“I’m neither the beast, nor entirely who I was. But you already know that. I wouldn’t have reached the Factorum if you’d been unsure about what I was.”

“True enough.”

“And you also know I’m no threat to Night.”

“No threat? Oh I very certainly know that’s not true.” That Meluna sounded appreciative of that claim said that one of us was probably half mad and I could not be sure which one of us that was.

“We’re only here, like all of us, like every living and unliving thing, because of your God. I think you can trust that I’m inclined towards being rather grateful to her for that.”

“And what do you believe you should be grateful for?”

“When the beast was rampaging, when it tore apart the other gods who rose to fight it, your god was only one not to step onto the battlefield, wasn’t she?”

“That sounds rather cowardly. Should I take offense?”

“None is offered, so you’d be stealing offense I guess?”

“Oh you so should have been ours.”

“Maybe. I do like how your god works. Not fighting wasn’t cowardice. It was smart. While the other gods held off the beast and kept it distracted, she hid our world, cloaking us as only darkness can. The beast didn’t stop because it ran out of things to devour, it stopped because it thought it had run out of things to devour, and that’s because your god played to her strength and sheltered us when no one else could.”

That the God of Night’s actions also plunged us into centuries of cold and in a lightless, lifeless waste wasn’t the epitome of wonderfulness, but with the circumstances she’d been under I could not fault her in the slightest.

“Would you believe there are even Neoterics who have not worked that out?” Meluna asked.

“They can’t possibly be…” I stopped, thinking of just how far up his own ego Vaingloth had crawled. “I’m sorry, I was about to say something very stupid. Do continue please.”

That bought me an honest laugh from Meluna.

“Officially, I am here to offer our congratulations and to welcome the back the sun,” Meluna said. “I am not supposed to add ‘it took you long enough you old slacker’. I am under specific instructions not to convey that in fact.”

“I will make sure Sola does not receive that message then,” I said, completely aware that everything I heard, Sola could hear too.

Thankfully whatever ancient divine rivalry there was between the sun and the night was not rekindled by the friendly jibe.

“Also, I told a few people that I might be able to locate you, if it happened that you were still alive, and they seem to be arriving just about…now.”

I knew she’d vanished. Couldn’t see her go, but if I knew anything about Meluna it was that she had a love for dramatic gestures which I would never come close to equaling (and I’d risen on wings of flame to put a new sun in the sky, so I felt that was saying something).

“Over there!” Lucky’s voice called out from pretty far away. “I see something moving in the flames. It could be her.”

“Bring the water buckets up,” Smiles called out next. He was probably standing beside her and from the sound of it so where a bunch of other people.

“I’m fine,” I said. “Just gimme a second. It’s really comfy here.”

“The buildings still on fire. It’s not safe in there. Let us come get you!” Lucky sounded worried for me. Which was mean of me, so I struggled up to a sitting position and found I was in better shape than I’d expected. 

Granted my measuring stick for how bad I could feel was a lot longer than it used to be, but, hazarding another guess, I decided I was probably in one, more or less, unbroken piece.

It was a day of surprises for everyone!

“We’re going to try to put out a bit of the flames so we can reach you,” Oolgo said, his deep Bugbear voice loud enough to blow the flames out (okay, it wasn’t) and let me figure out right where they were (not especially difficult).

I was about to tell them they didn’t need to worry. For one there wasn’t much building left. For another the fires that still burned weren’t going to be put out by water, or anything else. And lastly, I could make it out on my own. With a little tripping and stumbling, sure, but that was going to be my life so I kinda had to get used to it.

Except I didn’t. 

As I went to start moving, I felt the softest, most luscious furred head nuzzle up beside me. Before I had a chance to squeal in glee, MB had lifted me up in its jaw and tossed me on its back.

I knew it could have leapt straight out of the fires, but instead it strode gracefully through them.

Showing off.

Which, I mean, I could claim I wouldn’t have done the same were I in its place, but as mentioned, I am a bad liar.

I felt the moment we exited the flames as a pleasant heat dropping away. The city was far warmer than it had been but bathing in flames was a special delight only I got to enjoy it seemed. Happily though, I at least wasn’t cold anymore.

“Was that you?” Lucky asked. She was probably pointing up at the New Sun. Or maybe she was gesturing to the powdered ruins of the castle? It didn’t matter, the same answer was true for both.

“Nope. This is all of us,” I said. It sounded cool and humble, mostly because I’d been rehearsing it to sound like that but, if it worked at all, it was because it was the absolute literal truth. Everything that had happened, had been because there were a whole lot more people working to make it come about than just me.

“There she is,” Xalaria said said. “Told you she’d be fine.”

“To be fair, you said she’d be fine if anyone would be,” Fulgrox said. “And there don’t seem to be a lot of other people who are fine around here.”

“Fine dust perhaps,” Kilkat said.

“Not just dust,” I said. “Ashes. These are the ashes of those who’ve gone before. It’s their last gift to us. I know we’re all tired, but let’s see about making sure everyone get some so that none of us will ever be cold or lost in the dark again.”

And that’s how we began.

With the threat of the Neoterics on the horizon, and the threat of the Beast of the End hanging above us, we got to work on rebuilding our world.

Together.

Fledgling Gods – Waking the Divine – Ch 44

“If we didn’t ration the heat, there wouldn’t be enough to go around.”

“But there’s not enough. Mr. Walker upstairs froze last night.”

“Well, he was old. It’s what happens. He wasn’t doing much work so he wasn’t keeping himself warm.”

“He was sick. He couldn’t work. He couldn’t even get out of bed.”

“So that was probably what got him then. He was old and sick. Was probably going to die anyways. Giving him heat from the rest of us wouldn’t have done any good, and we’d have just had less.”

“But the castle always has heat. And a lot of it! You saw, didn’t you? Last night, after curfew? When the whole city was dark? There were lights on all over there!”

“That’s just how it is. Work hard and maybe you’ll make it to the castle someday too.”

– a conversation had in My Gloria roughly seven hundred and fifty thousand variations since the Sunfall.

The castle was just as I’d always imagined it to be.

Which is to say it was warm.

What? There wasn’t a lot more I could say about it, apart from ‘oh yeah, it also stunk of blazing wood’, which, to be fair, had not been something I’d imagined. Without being able to see things, I had to imagine the gilded pillars wreathed in flames with their gold sloughed off and pooling at their bases. I’m sure Vaingloth would have been delighted by that. 

Which made was another price to pay for plotting his downfall as thoroughly as I had. If I’d left him broken and alive somewhere, he could have been forced to watch as everything he built was torn down and taken away from him. 

Sure, his end hadn’t been pleasant or quick, but the finality of it meant that he at least got to be at peace, which was a little unfair even if it was probably worth the tradeoff for me to be able to sleep without one eye open for the rest of my life.

That the flaming pillars weren’t going to be holding up the floors above them forever would have been more of a worry if I could see them, but for what I had in mind, I only needed them to hold up for a little bit longer. The burning stairs were also an issue, or they would have been if Zeph and I weren’t blessed by the sun which, notably, finds mortal flames amusingly chilly at best.

Were they actually chilly that might have been the explanation for the shudder that went through Zeph as we reached what I guessed was the first landing.

“Something wrong?” I asked, when what I should have said was “what awful thing did we just run across?”

“It’s nothing,” Zeph said. “Just a bad memory.”

There’s a pelt in a case on the wall, Sola said, only to me I think. It belonged to one of my other Fox Winds, long ago.

Okay, so maybe it was good that Vaingloth was dead and had suffered horribly. 

I didn’t pause when Zeph led us onwards. I didn’t want to linger near anything that hurt her like that. I did reflect for a moment though on it.

The rage I felt for Vaingloth was never going to leave me.

Even if I forgot everything he’d done to me and mine, there were so many other people he’d hurt that there would always be new atrocities to stoke a hunger to see him hurt more.

And that wasn’t going to do me any good.

I had a job to do and losing myself in the desire to destroy Vaingloth’s stuff was not only going to cause me a lot of pain, it could pretty easy leave Mt. Gloria a smoking and lifeless ruin.

Was I exaggerating there?

No. Sadly I was not.

See, mortals are not meant to hold the sort of power I’d taken from the fire portal.

Nor are they meant to contain the key that portal within themselves.

Vaingloth, for all his claims of divinity, acknowledged that reality and had left the bulk of the power he’d converted the populace into stored safely away outside himself.

I hadn’t known just how much power that was when I’d been setting up my plan, and, to be honest, I might have reconsidered since it meant I was bomb with the power to flatten more of the world than anything since the Sunfall.

“The floor’s fallen away in front of us,” Zeph said, stopping me with a gentle touch of her hand.

“Too much fire?” I tried to picture how hot it was getting around us. With Sola’s blessing, the breeze blowing past us didn’t smell great, but the toxins and flesh searing heat was a non-issue.

“No. Something was here. Something he’d kept bound.” Was she angry about that? From her calm tone you might never know. From the tension she couldn’t keep out of her fingers though? Oh yeah, she had plenty of rage to deal with too. Probably even more than I did since she’d seen a lot more of what Vaingloth had done than I had.

“It, or they, are free now,” I said, aware all too acutely how some forms of freedom were better than others.

“I know, I just…” She wanted to go find them. Between Sola’s fragment, the pelt, and now someone else Zeph knew, I had to wonder if Vaingloth had intended to style himself as the King of the new world by pretending to be its sun?

No. What was I saying. Given his ego, even without all the rest that would have been obvious.

It was comforting that while I could understand his desire to kill his enemies, resurrect them, and then kill them again, I could point to his desire to rule the world as an enormous point of different between us.

“Yeah. We’ve spent too much time suffering for no reason,” I said. “Don’t waste any more. Go find them.”

“I can’t. You need me.” She wasn’t wrong about that. I would have been weeks or months getting back to Mt Gloria without her, and that’s under the assumption that the other Neoterics wouldn’t have found me first and had other ideas than letting me return and carry on my life.

She wasn’t entirely right either though.

“I owe you so much, you have no idea.” Normally it wasn’t easy to admit things like that. I mean, I owed a lot of people for a lot of things, but the thought of them collecting on that had filled me with terror and despair since my only value had been as kindling for the longest time.

Zeph would never ask that of me though, even before all of this, even when I was just ‘Little’ and nothing more. That just wasn’t who she was.

“You’ve never owed me anything,” Zeph said, and I heard the song of praise for Sola hiding behind her words.

“You should still go. Unless I miss my guess whoever busted out of here is probably faced with a world that won’t make a whole lot of sense to them will it?”

It wasn’t an amazing feat of insight to come up with that. Anyone Zeph knew and felt strongly about had to be someone she’d known from before the Sunfall, at least if Vaingloth had also been interested in them. Picturing going from a world where Sola blazed overhead for everyone to see and share in her light and warmth freely to the dark, dead land we lived in was unimaginable.

But people had done it.

There’d been people who lived through the world collapsing and dying. And they’d kept going, building what they could, persisting even if they couldn’t see the light in their world ever returning.

What if the person who’d been trapped by Vaingloth (since Zeph wouldn’t have the hitch in her throat that was there if it had been a relic of other item) had been one of my ancestors? One of the people who’d pushed forward and hung on so that someday I could exist?

Zeph was silent and unmoving so I squeezed her hand.

“Seriously. Go. You need to do this and they need you too.”

“But you…” she tried to object.

“I have Sola,” I reminded her.

“And I can guide her from here,” Sola said to us both.

I was rewarded with a return squeeze on my hand. Zeph probably smiled too but I wasn’t going to get to see those anymore either.

And then she was gone.

“It’s not too far,” Sola said. “In fact, I can lift you up directly if you want.”

“Thank you, but I want you to conserve your strength. I know you can do a lot more now, but I also know people are going to be asking a lot more of you too.”

“It’s the nature of the divine.”

“Yes, well, I just got you back, so if I can walk, let me give that to you.” As prayers went, walking was an odd one, but it seemed appropriate under the circumstances.

“You’ve already given more more than you can ever know.”

“I’m betting I still haven’t paid back that first feast. Do you know how good that good was?”

“That wasn’t all me.” Sola’s amusement made ‘arguing’ with her a lot easier.

“Don’t care. You were there so you get all the credit. Now where do I go?”

“On your right, there’s a small walkway left. Just hug the wall.”

“The one that’s on fire?”

“You won’t be burned.”

“See, I’ll have to pay this back now too.”

We went on like that, and the silly banter distracted me both from enormity of what I was planning to do and from the anger that had been creeping back into my heart.

Vaingloth was a miserable bag of puke but he was gone and the world had so may other things left to focus on.

“The High Tower is just ahead but most of it has been reduced to ash already.” Sola didn’t sound especially worried about that. She was just letting me know that, like it or not, I was soon going to have to allow her to help me out a bit more.

“We’re probably high enough now,” I said, thinking back to all the times I’d looked up at the castle and wondered what all of the parts of it were used for.

‘To stroke Vaingloth’s ego’ hadn’t been my guess then, but it very definitely was as I stood in its burning ruin.

“The tower will block your creation if you make it here though, wont it?” Sola asked.

It was a perfectly reasonable question. Especially since she had a vested interest in make sure why creation would be able to do its job properly.

“What tower?” I asked and unleashed a teeny, tiny, itty-bitty spec of the power I’d stolen from Vaingloth.

Sola caught me, which was good since I hadn’t intended to explode quite as much of the castle as it turned out my teeniest and tiniest of sparks was able to obliterate.

The wings of fire felt pretty cool though, and if anyone was looking up at the castle (they all were, after the explosion, literally everyone was looking at the castle) I had to guess that I looked amazing.

Not that anyone would be able to tell who the form covered in flames with big flaming wings was, but, still, I liked the image I was able to come up with.

“Now let’s give them a real show,” I said and reached into the ocean of fire I was carrying.

What blossomed in the sky above the castle did more than warm me, or even warm the entire city. It did more than banish shadows which had lain draped over buildings and people for centuries. It woke something up in everyone.

“Wait? This is for me?” Sola’s voice held a note of surprise since I’d told people I was going to recreate the fire portal and left out the tidbit that it wasn’t going to be a portal anymore.

It was a home.

I couldn’t put the sun back in the sky, but I could make a spot for a little piece of it to live right at the top of Mt. Gloria, where everyone would share in what she had to offer.

Fledgling Gods – Waking the Divine – Ch 43

“Well, we just gotta deal with it. Some people have to burn up for the flames we get. Better that a few get cooked than we all freeze to death, right?”

“They could ask for volunteers or something though couldn’t they?”

“Maybe they did. Bet they ran out early on though. Who would volunteer for being burned alive?”

“I would. I would have volunteered if it would have saved Mela.”

“Well, don’t worry. You’ll get your turn. We’re always going to need more people to burn.”

“Yeah, nothing we can do about that I guess.”

– a conversation repeated in endless variations among residents of Mt. Gloria without ever reaching the most obvious question.

I couldn’t see the look on people’s face as I lifted the globe of fire over my head, and that sucked! With the globe radiating enough heat to warm the entire street, I knew they had to be impressed, but seeing their expressions would have been priceless. The audible gasps I heard conveyed their surprise pretty well but it it just wasn’t the same. These were people experiencing a wonder which we should have lived with long enough for it to common place, and I wanted to share in that wonder, even if only vicariously.

Instead, I felt a whole new ball of rage being stoked inside me. Rage at Vaingloth for yet another thing he’d taken from us. As it turned out, I really didn’t seem to have an bottom to that particular well. There were always more things to dredge up which could make me want to murder him again.

Especially, ESPECIALLY, when I considered that for all their amazement, the people around me weren’t understanding the truth about the fire portals yet.

“Little?” Zeph asked, probably wondering why I was creating a miniature sun on a random street and, more importantly, what I planned to do with.

I couldn’t kill Vaingloth again despite how much I very definitely wanted to. Somehow even feeling him being torn apart bit by bit and then being corroded into nothingness didn’t seem sufficiently awful. He’d planned to kill me, resurrect me, and kill me again and, unfortunately, I could understand the appeal of that all too easily.

“It’s okay,” I said. I’d had my vengeance but of course it hadn’t been enough to fill me up. That wasn’t what vengeance did. I knew that even if I didn’t feel it. Knowing it was enough though. It meant I wasn’t going to look for proxies to seek further satisfaction from.

Yeah. Looking. Hard to get that out of my vocabulary.

The important point was that I let the star I’d been holding ascend into the sky above Mt. Gloria rather than turning it on the bound and gagged minions of Vaingloth. They had a reckoning coming, most certainly, but it wouldn’t be one I decided on alone. It shouldn’t even be one I had much say in. 

The people of Mt. Gloria had freed themselves. All I’d done was remove one overgrown parasite that was standing against them. They deserved to be the ones who decided what they were going to do with the freedom they’d fought and died for.

My job, hopefully the last job I had left for a while, was to make sure the lie we’d been shackled by since the Sunfall was finally brought to light.

Literally.

“What…what was that?” the orc we’d stopped to talk to said.

“It’s…” the dwarf near him wasn’t able to find the words to describe what they were witnessing.

Which, again, sucked. What I’d done was so simple. It shouldn’t have been so awe inspiring.

Imagine if I was able to take my proper place again? Sola said and shared a memory with me of a sky clad in a brighter blue than could ever possibly been true with a flame atop its dome that was so bright even looking near it hurt too much.

Maybe it’s good we’re starting off small, I said. It sounds like they’re losing their minds at that little thing.

Not losing, I think, Sola said. Finding, I would say. 

She did something then that I didn’t quite understand. I still couldn’t see the people around me anymore than I’d been able to a moment earlier, but I could feel them. Their warmth. Their life.

It was a lot to take in and I stumbled under the unexpected weight of it there, but I didn’t even fall an inch. Zeph was there.

“Should we keep going?” she asked.

“Yeah, that,” I gestured upwards with my chin, “should show people there’s an alternative to the bonfires coming.”

Inside me, that alternative blazed so loudly I missed the next few things the orc and dwarf said. Zeph was closer though so I heard her response clearly enough.

“There’ll be a gathering called in a few hours to explain all this and make plans for where we go from here. At the moment, I need to speak to Xalaria though. Do any of you know where she is?”

We didn’t need Xal specifically, but where she was we would probably find the other leaders who’d stepped up to make the rebellion happen.

What I needed more than that though was to get to the highest point in Mt Gloria. Which was, as I recalled, on the tallest parapet of Vaingloth’s castle. Which was on fire, from Zeph’s reports.

You’d think that would have dissuaded me. I would have thought it dissuaded me. Vaingloth’s castle has never been a place I’ve wanted to visit and it being on fire really shouldn’t have made it more appealing.

But it did.

The fire thing meant I wouldn’t have to deal with too many people interrupting me, and, important bonus, I wouldn’t have to worry about incinerating any of them myself! 

“Wait!” the dwarf woman called as Zeph started to lead me onwards past them. “Who is she? How did she do that?”

That was a little annoying, to be honest. I mean, I was standing right there, and I had just spoken to Zeph, so I obviously wasn’t mute or anything. They could have asked me either of those questions.

Not that I wanted to answer them, so maybe they’d picked up on that?

Ask me your questions, but don’t speak to me? It’s possible that I had a somewhat complicated relationship with people (in general). Working out the hoard of contradictions that were all tied up inside me was one of those “hobbies that’ll last you a lifetime” sort of things too so it wasn’t like I was going to unravel all that, instead I just had to live with it.

Happily, while Zeph isn’t overly talkative either, she was willing to play translator for me.

“She’s got something we took from Vaingloth. We need to let people know so they don’t burn anything they don’t need to,” Zeph said, understanding why I’d made a display of the fire I was carrying earlier than we’d originally planned.

Of all the blessings Sola had given me, Zeph was clearly the best, by far.

“I think…Xalaria is the crazy War-Lady right?” a new voice asked. Kobold maybe? They sounded small but with a more gravelly pitch to their voice. So probably a Kobold. I think.

It was going to take a long time to get used to identifying people by their voice alone. I was guessing it would leave me inclined only to be around people I already knew. Oh wait, that’s how I was already. 

Was anyone even going to notice I was blind? Given my history, probably not, since it wasn’t like they noticed any other part of me. Was I feeling whiny and sorry for myself when I had far more important things to think about? Important life lesson: there is always time to feel whiny and sorry for yourself. If you put it off, then you just wind up being whiny, sorry, and unreasonable later on, and I, at least, had plenty of ‘be unreasonable’ already scheduled so fitting more in was going to be challenge.

“Crazy War-Lady, yes,” Zeph said with just a touch of mean-spirited delight, “yes, that’s her exactly.”

“I heard she was leading a group against the Inquistor’s bastion over in the Hillmount Precinct,” the kobold said.

I am a deeply broken person. I know this because my first instinct, despite every other rational thought and impulse, was to ask Zeph to bring us over to Hillmount so I could join in the fighting.

Mostly that was just the thirst for more vengeance piping up, which some side cheering from the impulse to handle things myself so no other idiots would wind up getting hurt. There was a not insignificant voice that wanted to see Xalaria in action too, especially when her aim would be to absolutely ruin the days for a whole bunch of inquisitors.

Reigning those in one by one, I reminded myself that I wasn’t going to be seeing anything, that Xalaria was in fact more capable than I was of making sure the idiots didn’t get hurt, and that I needed to go on a vengeance-free diet for a while for the sake of my own sanity.

“Can you have someone get a message to her,” I said, apparently surprising people that I was capable of speaking to them, despite the fact that I spoken to them a few times already. Throw one little star into the sky to light up the whole city and people start treating you really strange I guess?

“What is the message Holy One?” the orc said.

Oh. Oh that was not good. I needed to put a stop to that right away.

“I’m not…” I started to say but Zeph cut me off.

“Let her know that we have the stolen portal key and we’re going to put it in its proper place,” Zeph said.

“So, we’ll have fire again?” the dwarf asked.

“Who will feed it first?” the kobold asked.

“No one,” I said, standing up straighter and turning to face where I could feel the crowd.

Sola’s most recent gift left me able to all but taste the mix of fear, confusion, reluctant acceptance, with the barest hint of a sliver of hope hiding somewhere in there too. When I spoke, I wasn’t speaking to the people as strangers anymore, I was talking to those slivers to fan them into brighter flames of courage and strength.

“People were never burned for the fires we were given. That’s not what they were needed for,” I said. “Fire wants nothing more than to spread. It doesn’t crave people. If it craves anything it craves the air we have. We’ve burned people up for one reason and one reason only; to feed Vaingloth more and more power.”

I’d figured that one out of my own, and I felt really proud to have done so.

Of course, it hadn’t been that hard to work out when we were sitting in the Factorum enjoying light, heat, and food in a city which hadn’t had anyone living in it for longer than I’d been alive. 

No living people, no people to burn up, and yet plenty comfortable? Yeah, I’d had what one might call just a few tiny clues to work with there.

Also Helgon had confirmed my guess, which had been one of the cornerstones of the plan I’d put together.

Taking Vaingloth out and leaving the city to die without his support wouldn’t have been much of a victory. Knowing that we didn’t need him and had never needed him though? Oh, that had definitely changed things.

Of course no one believed me.

And I couldn’t blame them.

I hadn’t questioned the “fact” that the flame portals were just a cost of living. That without sacrifice, it would be impossible for us to survive in a world as broken and cold as the one we were born into. 

I mean, burning people for fuel wasn’t a new thing. It was how it had always been. There’d been lots of people before us and if there was a better option, they would have found it. Clearly the system we had was the best one and trying to change it was either doomed to failure or going to destroy everything we’d worked so hard for.

It couldn’t be the case that the whole structure of our society was designed for the benefit of the one at the top of it. Right? The things we were taught not to question weren’t things that served the interests of the few people who actually benefited from them? Right?

The edges of my whiskers caught fire the more I heard the crowd mumbling in denial of what I’d said.

I knew they didn’t want to believe it, because it was too horrible. A part of me wanted to believe that maybe things had been different right after the Sunfall. Maybe resources had been too limited. Maybe there hadn’t been another option then, and maybe it was our fault since we’d accepted what we had to do then and just stopped looking for a better answer.

Except for the part where the answer we’d found was, as it turns out, the best possible answer for Vaingloth, and a perfectly acceptable answer for his inner circle, the patrollers, the inquisitors, and everyone else who fervently believed in him.

I wasn’t going to convince people with words though.

I had to show them.

There was a light that, even blinded, I could see calling me forward. 

My new tomorrow was going to be everyone’s new tomorrow, and the whole world was just going to have to deal with that.

Fledgling Gods – Waking the Divine – Ch 42

“But should we succeed, what world will we create.”

“A better one.”

“Better for who? Not for those who had made this one, surely.”

“When we succeed, they will be no more. We cannot have a better world with them in it.”

“And what of the others, the ones they’ve favored? Those gifted with wealth and power who have done nothing to earn it.”

“You believe people will forgive them for that?”

“I don’t imagine they will, but do we embrace their destruction as well?”

“What other possible option is there?”

– High Accessors Helgon and Vaingloth during early discussions of the fate of the gods and the High Clergy who would not be part of their revolution.

My arrival back at Mt. Gloria was met with fire and screaming and the scent of death. Zeph was the one who told me about the fires, but I was able to pick out the screams and the scents on my own. 

I wished I could say I was surprised, but everything I’d read in all the lost histories had said people tended not to behave terribly well after escaping oppression. Not to mention the part where not everyone who was part of the fight against oppression was around when the oppressors were no more.

The people of Mt. Gloria surprised me though. It turns out the “wealthy elites” that I figured the rest of the population would tear apart the moment Vaingloth was removed, some of them had been the first to join the rebellion against him.

Others were still fighting for what they had of course. People are still people, even with actual divine inspiration guiding them, so stupidity and greed were going to dominate at least some portion of any populace.

A fair portion of Mt. Gloria’s “upper class” though had lived on exactly the same pins and needles as the rest of us. Did they have more light and heat, and better food? Yeah, right up until the point where Vaingloth or one of his inner circle decided they’d stepped out of line, or an example needed to be set for the others, or they simply got bored and needed a prettier fly to torment than the bugs who lived in the lower city.

The fires, as it turned out, weren’t from the upper city being set on fire by my people. With the Fire Portal gone, the city had been plunged into darkness and cold. The upper city was burning and the lower city was burning because people had picked the buildings they liked the least and set them ablaze so they they wouldn’t all freeze to death in the dark.

Were people unhappy that they’re houses were turning to ash? They probably would have been if anyone had burned their own houses, but the lower city had plenty of abandoned buildings and the upper city had that yummy, yummy castle that Vaingloth had built just for himself. 

The castle had a lot of stone for its defenses, but given how much rarer wood was than it had been in the pre-Sunfall world, of course the petty little tyrant had insisted that as much as possible to be used for his personal accommodations.

That explained the screaming I’d heard too. See it turns out that when you spend a few centuries sending the children of a population off to die leading pointless fighting underwater, or to rot from within so that fresh air can be piped in constantly, or, you know, just burning them as fuel for really no good reason, yeah, people don’t enjoy that do much, and they’ll cheer rather loudly when they break away from your control.

I had to get a lot closer to one of the gatherings to make out that the screaming was more celebratory than anguished, though I also noticed it sounded more than a bit crazed too.

Probably because no one knew Vaingloth wasn’t coming back.

This wasn’t a wild victory celebration of freedom.

This was a people who’d been pushed so far past the breaking point that when a crack formed in the wall of authority Vaingloth had erected and his power faltered, they seized the chance no one believed was even real, because even a moment of relief was worth it.

Not that everyone got to experience that relief though.

Vaingloth’s patrollers and inquisitors hadn’t gone down gently. They hadn’t laid down their arms and surrendered because the fate Vaingloth would have visited on them for doing so would have been so much worse than death.

But they’d escaped too I guess. 

And taken a lot of people with them.

Which explained the scent of death, and the anguish which lay under the celebration.

“We should tell them what you’ve done,” Zeph said. “They’re safe at last.”

“They’re not and we should definitely not,” I said. I did not need the headache that came with people either praising or blaming me for Vaingloth’s death.

“What do you mean? Why aren’t they safe?” she asked.

“Because of the other Neoterics. They’re going to be frightened for a good while, but fear doesn’t last forever. They’re too hungry. Eventually one or more of them will come here to claim it as their own.” I’d known that was going to be a problem too but, unlike with Vaingloth, I didn’t know the other Neoterics enough to even begin to guess how we could deal with them.

Well, okay, I knew one option we could try, but ‘go talk to Helgon’ was pretty weak as far as plans went. I mean it wasn’t like he’d be able to deal with them, so any advice he could give was suspect at best.

Of course, I had Zelaria and Kilkat to work with too. 

In fact, it was probably better to say they had me to work with.

I’d had a useful role to play in Vaingloth’s demise largely thanks to the cheap shot Sola and I had gotten in when we burned out his eyes. The other Neoterics would have no particular vendetta against me, so inciting them into a proper mindless rage wasn’t in the cards.

Which was great! It meant dealing with them wasn’t going to be my problem!

Except for the part where when they came to Mt Gloria all together, I’d get squashed like a bug the same as everyone else in the city would.

So…I could move to the Factorum right? Let Mt. Gloria get squished and hang out with a ghost for the rest of my days.

Honestly that would have been very ‘me’. Running away still seemed like a phenomenal strategy to me, and, I would point out, had in fact served me very well in taking down Vaingloth.

But I didn’t want to see Lucky get squished.

Oh wait, problem solved there! I wasn’t going to be seeing anything at all anymore!

A shudder ran through me and I clenched my jaw. I was done crying about my eyes (I definitely was not done, I just didn’t have time for it, any wetness on my face was due to something else).

I didn’t want Lucky to be squished, regardless of whether I could see it happen or not.

And running away to the Factorum would mean living with the spectre of that. Knowing it was coming and wondering forever if it was finally the day it would happen and if there wasn’t something that could have been done to prepare for it.

“You don’t have to fight the other Neoterics,” Sola said. “There are other people out there, other Blessed. We have so much to do here.”

“Yeah. People here need you, a lot,” I agreed. “But, if the other Blessed could have handled the rest of the Neoterics, I’m pretty sure they already would have.”

“You do have certain advantages over them,” Zeph said.

Sola had continued to speak to us both, but I could tell she was also speaking to other people as well, and, unless I missed my guess, Zeph privately too. Zeph wasn’t terribly chatty normally but there’d been a distracted air to her as she’d carried me back to Mt Gloria. Not an unhappy one, just distant, like each time I spoke I was interrupting a conversation she’d gotten lost in.

“I’m not sure it’s an advantage,” Sola said. “I’ve been trying to repair the damage she took and I can’t.”

“That’s not entirely surprising, healing is not part of your domain,” Zeph said.

“It is for one of my Blessed,” Sola said. “Or it’s supposed to be. I even tried borrowing something from Kala’s domain and it didn’t help.”

“Kala was always more focused on flora than fauna, I’m not sure Little wants to grow leaves any time soon,” Zeph said. I was holding onto the hem of her tunic so I wouldn’t get lost, but she put out a hand to steady me anyways as we came to an abrupt halt.

“Looks like you two have seen better days,” an unfamiliar voice said, probably from an Orc? An older male orc, possibly? 

I could hear a few people behind him.

“Hoping tomorrow’s going to be a bit easier,” Zeph said.

She sounded concerned, which puzzled me. If there was a problem, she could have had us out of here before the orc had finished the first ‘L’ on ‘Looks’.

“Maybe for us,” the orc said. “Not so much for them.”

What’s going on? I asked Sola. Just because I couldn’t see didn’t mean the god inside me had any issues perceiving the world around me. 

There’s a bonfire ahead and they have a squad of patrollers and a couple of inquisitors bound and gagged in front of it, Sola said.

“The Fire Portals gone,” I said, confused why they’d bother burning the patrollers. 

Sure, I could get why they’d kill them. When they’d been armed, the patrollers had been an active danger and the inquisitors were deadly, armed or not. Bound and gagged though, they’d all be a lot more helpless, but vengeance doesn’t tend to care about that.

I was definitely not going to slam the orc and his friends for being vengeful either. The hypocrisy of doing so would have slapped me senseless if I’d tried.

No, what puzzled me was why patrollers were still alive at all.

Sure, fight them. Sure, kill them if you need to.

But why waste time? They should either already be on the pyre or being locked up somewhere convenient. Leaving them out in the open was just asking fate to rescue them.

So imagine how I felt when I realized fate had done just that.

“Yeah, that’s the problem then, isn’t it?” another voice spoke up, a dwarf woman maybe? “No more fire and not that much to wood to go around. We’re going to have to scrounge for everything we can burn and when that runs out?”

“When that runs out, we freeze,” the orc said. “Everybody knows it, but if it’s that or burn when his Lordship makes it back from his walkabout, well, we’ll take what time we can get.”

“And burn the ones who put us here,” the dwarf said.

I sighed.

I hated to be holding the news I did.

I could have just shut up about it. I should have just shut up. I could just wait till the patrollers had been turned to ash and then let people know what the future held.

Except they would be burning more than just the patrollers.

The jubilation of the successful uprising was going to turn to dread soon enough. I could hear it in the orc and dwarf’s voices. 

And where would dread lead them?

Right into madness.

From what the average person in the city could see, the future held only death either by frost, starvation, or, the worst option, Vaingloth’s return.

Some people would get a jump on things and pick their own exit.

Others would lose their minds.

Others would invent whatever superstitions they could find comfort in.

And some would try to help.

Maybe a lot would try to help.

Which was why I needed to help.

My sigh turned to a curse.

A curse on myself, because I’m an idiot, and this was an obvious outcome of my plan.

“There’s not going to be any problem with finding things to burn,” I said. “In fact, we’re never going to need to burn anyone ever again.”

In proof I held out the hand I wasn’t holding onto Zeph with and produced a ball of, I’m assuming, brilliant fire. 

Fledgling Gods – Waking the Divine – Ch 41

“I have never seen the sun and I shall never see the sun. My days draw to a close and my struggles are far from over. Victory lies beyond a horizon I can no longer reach. Those I would save will perish before our work is done and before the tomorrow we dream of can possibly arrive. And yet, I am satisfied. No one can carry the world themselves, and no one is meant to. I have carried the dreams of those who came before me, as mine will be carried by those who follow after. Though it take a lifetime to carry each stone, in some distant day the home we envision, one where we all are family, will open its doors. What people will see then will be no more than the outward manifestation of the truth I at last can feel in my bones.”

“Though homeless and bereft of light and hope, we are a family already. Blood from different rivers may flow in our veins, but I am kin to all those around me, and the unity we will someday discover is a unity we have forged with every kind word, every shared meal, and with every helping hand. None of it has been wasted.”

– A quote from Rogaz Teachelle as seen on the first plaque visitors to the Mt Gloria Historical Museum as presented with as they enter.

I’d escaped the darkness, but I couldn’t see a thing. That was mildly concerning. Hyperventilating is also a mild response. Shaking uncontrollably? Very mild, all things considered. Screaming at the top of my lungs? Somewhat less mild. Also not terribly dignified.

The laughter though?

Well, it was honest.

Unexpected.

Maybe a little out of place.

I was blind. I could feel that, but in a rush it hit me, harder than Vaingloth every could have, that I could feel!

The ground under my hands? Soft and rich with stone so hard I could squeeze them till I broke my fingers and they’d still be there.

Does that sound like a bad thing? No! I existed still! I had fingers! I could break parts of myself! 

I mean, demonstrably I had broken a rather significant part of myself, given that my eyes were very definitely not working.

But the rest of me?

I was still there! 

I spun around a few times and fell over onto my back, laughing the whole time. 

Genuine, joyous laughter.

Okay, there may have been a few mad giggles that crept in around the edges, sure, but Come On! 

I had jumped into the thing that killed the gods. Again. And I’d gotten out. AGAIN!

That was so ridiculous I couldn’t stop laughing even my abdomen starting to shriek from effort.

I’d survived.

I was alive.

I would see the world after Vaingloth.

I would see a world with Sola in it!

Okay, maybe not ‘see’. I needed to start adjusting my vocabulary there a bit.

The laughter, mad and otherwise, gradually released me and I sagged down into the embrace of soil that no one had ever walked on.

I was standing near the bottom of what had once been the ocean. Generally not a place the books I’d read suggested people went for casual strolls.

Books! Oh no. No, no, no.

Oh, that one hurt.

I couldn’t see. So I couldn’t read either.

Was it too late to dive back into the beast fragment and wrestle my vision back from it?

Yes. Oh missing stars above, yes it was much too late for that.

For as much as I wanted to rage, and bargain, and deny what had happened, I couldn’t escape the awareness of what I’d done.

I’d escaped the End of All Things. In part because I’d become the End of All Things, but that had really only let me communicate with the beast fragment, to the extent the beast fragment was able to form things like impressions and reaction and whatever passed for a thought in something which was emptiness incarnate.

What had really let me escape wasn’t the fact that when the beast fragment tried to dissolve me, it found it was dissolving itself. The shadow of its emptiness I carried mixed within me wasn’t exactly armor, more an acknowledgement that what I am is what it had been and what it was I could become. 

If that sounds like I don’t have a great handle on it, that’s exactly correct.

What I did have a handle on, for I-was-still-freaking-out-about-it values of ‘having a handle on it’, was what I’d communicated and what I’d left behind. That had been what saved me.

And it was what would have repercussions to come.

I couldn’t return to get my vision back. 

And I didn’t need it.

I tried to tell myself that, but I’m really bad at lying.

Not that I don’t do it, a lot, but I’m still bad at it.

In this case, the lie exposed a terrible, growing ache within me. I wanted nothing more than a small space, a new book, and to curl up and and pour myself into the pages until I lost all sense of the world around me.

And I would never get to do that again.

Which brought back the tears.

I could have cried out ‘why me’, but the truth was it ‘was me’ because I’d demanded it be me. Could I have had someone else carry out my plan? Sure. I’m sure almost anyone would have been willing to do everything I’d done, up to and including pitching themselves into the beast fragment to destroy Vaingloth.

Would any of them have survived? Probably not. The other Blessed might have worked some strange miracle. Maybe Zeph would have been fast enough to dash from at the last micro-instant. 

But probably not.

Was that why I’d insisted I be the one to do it?

It’d sound really heroic if I could answer ‘yes’ to that question wouldn’t it? Little, who was willing to give her life that others might live! 

Yuck. I had to make sure that idea never caught on. It was gross to think about people being that wrong about me.

Sure, I was happy Zeph and the others were okay, but I’d been the one to destroy Vaingloth because I had to know, I had to be there and I had to be absolutely certain. It wasn’t enough to believe he was dead and gone, I had to feel the bites that devoured him and taste his unmaking.

Did I deserve what had happened to me as a result?

No.

No one deserved anything Vaingloth did to them. It wasn’t right that I should suffer in order to bring him down. Someone else should have killed him ages ago. Or he should have been better from the start. Maybe somewhere, something had happened to set him on the course he wound up on and if only that could have been changed or fixed, he would have been a decent person. Maybe he could have been a good one even.

But he wasn’t. 

And I didn’t regret what I’d done.

I wasn’t thrilled to have lost my sight. And I still had so much anger inside me over what he’d done that even knowing he was dead and had suffered in dying hadn’t been able to assuage it.

I hadn’t been looking to give up my anger though. I’d been looking to prevent all the harm he would have done. To me. To everyone I knew. And to everyone I didn’t know. 

Could he have done good? Yes.

Was the world better off without him? Absolutely.

Was I better off without him? I would be. Even with what I had lost. I could feel things shifting in my heart. Old wounds aching that I’d had to bury so long ago. Old rage searching for anything else it could protect me from. Old fears echoing on and on, unable to believe that the world could suddenly be a better place.

That was the real tragedy of it though. For all his potential, the world was a better place without the man Vaingloth had chosen to be.

Not all tragedies are ones to shed tears over though. Sometimes the only thing to do is turn away and leave them behind. 

Which I saw it was time for me to do.

Was I blind? Sure. Could I still see though? Not like I had before. I’d been right about not emerging from the endless abyss as the person I’d been. What I’d lost I would always grieve, but grief wasn’t going to be the entirety of my life, or even the majority of it if I had any say in the matter.

The awareness I’d gained from my fusion with MB remained even if my natural sight was gone. I could still smell and feel and hear. No better than I could before, but in an empty wilderness it’s easy to pick out sounds when everything else it quiet as grave.

Also, Zeph’s not exactly ‘subtle’ when she moves at speed. The rolling boom that preceded her arrival told me I’d climbed up pretty far away from when I’d dropped into the abyss.

She wasn’t the first thing I heard though.

“Why!” Sola asked. “Why did you do that!”

“You’re back!” I shouted. I’d been walking away from the abyss, but I stumbled to my knees when I heard her.

“I was always here!” she shouted back at me.

I should have been concerned that my god seemed a bit annoyed with me. Perhaps upset even. 

I was not.

I could hear her again!

“I know, I know!” I said, and since my eyes didn’t need to bother with ‘seeing’ any more, they decided to go to town with their other function and pour a river of tears down my face.

Dignity is for people not experiencing divine oneness, and they can all just shut up.

“Why then! Why! We could have fought that thing!” Sola was still shouting, which, again, should have left me trembling, but I was too happy in that moment, too excited that my faith in her continued existence hadn’t just been self-delusion, to be anything but delirious with joy, even if I was due a divine smiting or two.

“No. No, I am never having you fight that again. Never. You never need to do that for us. You have done too much. You saved us. You saved me. No, you are never going to fight and you are NEVER going to be destroyed again!”

I might have screamed that last bit.

Aloud.

Which Zeph boomed close enough to hear.

“Listen to the Ratkin girl,” she said, leaving an implied threat at the end of her words which did not seem like something a servitor should be doing to her appointed god .

“You would turn on me too?” Sola asked, speaking from some place within the two of us.

“Oh we’re not turning from you,” I said. “We’re just not going to let you turn from yourself. You did your part. We get to do ours. That’s how this works.”

“I’m supposed to be the answer to your prayers. I’m supposed to guide you and shelter you. I am the light that reveals the new day, and the fire that brings life to the world. I should have been with you, to protect you, to burn your foes.”

“You were,” I said. “Hundreds of years ago, you were. You burned and you protected and thanks to that there was a world left for me to be born in. You’ve sacrificed everything you were for me and everyone else.”

“Not everything,” Sola grumbled.

“Enough. More than enough. More than you ever should have had to,” Zeph said.

“There was no choice. The world would have fallen and without the world, what would I be?” Sola asked. “All I am is in you and those who remain, those few I and the others could spare.”

“And that’s why I couldn’t bring you with me. That’s why I will never let you fight another battle. You’re a part of us, a part that’s been missing my whole life. A part the world needs more than any other. Nothing is going to take our new days from us, because nothing is going to take you from me.”

I hadn’t known gods could cry, but I suppose it could be hard for them to accept that they were loved too.

Fledgling Gods – Waking the Divine – Ch 40

“This can be happening! I’m immortal!”

– Neoteric Lord Vaingloth’s last words.

Falling into the endless abyss that was the Greater Beast Fragment was a one way trip. I’d known that from the moment I sensed it out on the periphery of the world. I’d told myself I was ready for it and I did have a plan that I could believe in.

When your skin evaporates and all the world turns to emptiness though it’s hard to deny the reality around you.

This was going to hurt.

And I wasn’t going to come out of it.

Someone would.

But she wasn’t going to be who I was in that moment.

That was why I cast Sola free.

“We can fight this!” she screamed as the last of Vaingloth’s bindings on her was severed with the severing of his “immortal” life.

I didn’t have words for her at that point since I didn’t have words left in general. Instead I sent gave her my feelings – the hope I felt that she would return to the world, the resolve that I had to see it with my ever-so-mortal eyes, and the gratitude that meeting her had brought me here.

I’d run my whole life trying to stay alive, but I’d never put any effort into making sure my life was one I would have cared to live at all.

At least not until I met her.

As Sola rose away, hurled skyward as the sun was supposed to rise from the dark, I dropped into the deep, impenetrable darkness of the beast fragment.

That wasn’t enough though.

I needed to go deeper.

I needed to follow Vaingloth down to the fragment’s end and take one last thing away from him.

As a mortal, what I wanted wasn’t possible.

I’d been here before. I’d done this already. I knew what it was like to dissolve and be torn apart and unravel entirely. I hadn’t fought it then because nothing mortal can fight the end of all that is.

From Vaingloth’s screams, first the living ones and then the dead ones from the ghost that remained, he had understood that at last. He and the other High Accessors had unleashed something that they knew would damage and destroy the gods, but they hadn’t understood what it really was. They’d cast down the gods but none of them had appreciated what that had felt like, the agony they’d inflicted.

None of them till Vaingloth experienced it all first hand.

I watched as he struggled, seeing him fighting and scheming and clawing for the dwindling drops of his existence. We were caught in a realm without light but I saw him twist and writhe and boil away. A realm without sound but I heard him curse and weave fell words of power and, finally, try to unmake the world if it couldn’t be his.

And that was what I took away from him.

Mortals had no bodies, no minds, no will at all in that space, and for all the power he held, Vaingloth was still very much a mortal.

I wasn’t.

Not all of me at any rate.

When he tried to hide in the remnants of the power he’d stolen, I pointed the beast fragment towards where to find him.

When he tried to shield himself with a great workings of spellcrafter, I whispered words to the beast so that it could find all the weak points it needed to pierce the shield and consume Vaingloth’s words so he could never speak them again.

Destroying the world was what destroyed him though. That magic I didn’t interfere with. It was greater than me, and I very much wanted to be part of the world still. So the Beast Fragment and I let Vaingloth’s spell of Absolute Annihilation complete successfully. 

Had Vaingloth thought that would defeat his enemy? I can’t say. He could have had nothing else left and cast it out of spite. He could have been planning to turn the world’s death into a source of power, or an escape. The most likely thing though? I think he simply refused to believe he could lose.

That was his first mistake.

 We are, all of us, flawed and fallible. Losing is something we do almost the moment we are born. It can drive us onward or break us down, but in either case it is a part of who we are, and we pretend otherwise at our peril.

A more fundamental issue for Vaingloth however was trying to use a weapon of annihilation against an entity that was nothing but annihilation. It would have been like trying to set one of the Lords of Fire on fire and thinking that would somehow diminish them.

The Beast Fragment allowed the spell to finish, at my suggestion, because with Vaingloth bound up within it, the Neoteric Lord was the entirety of his own world. A world which his spell shattered and wiped from existence. 

A shock went through me, the Beast Fragment, and passed out into the world beyond. 

A Neoteric Lord had fallen. A Neoteric Lord was truly gone.

Three Lords had fallen before him.

None had ever truly died though.

Vaingloth had always imagined himself the first among equals.

Instead, he was merely the first.

That could have been the end of me too. My vengeance was as satisfied as it was possible to be. If that had been all I’d been hanging onto I would have fizzled away with him. As it was, fizzling away was almost unbearably tempting.

In finding his destruction, Vaingloth had been granted the one gift I couldn’t deny him.

Peace.

It’s the one guarantee all mortals have. In the end, no matter how bad things may get, we all find peace. 

Like I said though, I wasn’t entirely what you might call mortal anymore.

Mostly mortal? Oh, definitely.

As flawed and fallible as anyone else? Beyond a certainty.

If anything the part of me that wasn’t mortal, was even more flawed and fallible than the rest. The part of me that was emptiness and hunger and loneliness, the part that was the beast spent most of it’s time asking the rest of me what to do and why and how and whether any of this made any sense.

It didn’t want to return to the emptiness, but believing that life had anything to offer beyond the pains which built day upon day could be so very difficult.

And could I say it was really it was worth it?

In the midst of endless loss, loss which had swallowed more than one world, could I really say that the good parts of my life had been worth enduring all the miserable parts that surrounded them?

No.

That would have been a lie. The good times don’t pay for the bad ones. That’s not how life is balanced. We don’t endure suffering to earn some form of reward. Suffering and misery suck, and people who inflict them can go straight to hell. When the world inflicts them through random chance or by its very nature, that sucks too. None of that is something we have to put up with.

And that’s why, along with my bestial, shadowy self, I began to climb.

Because when things are terrible, we can change them. Or endure them until we can change them. Or take one step forward so that someone else will be able to take a step beyond that.

The world, in my experience, is immensely stupid and unfair.

But we’re capable of being better than that.

We can learn.

We can become more than we were.

There’s no guarantees. We can and absolutely will fail. We’ll be stupid and mean and make the worst mistakes possible, over and over again. It’s so easy to believe in the face of that, that our lives count for nothing.

Easy, but not correct.

As I climbed, the beast fragment asked me a question. Not with words, or thoughts, or anything coherent. It’s question came in the form of an insistence that I dissolve too. That I admit to the reality which defined it. A reality which said than in the end nothing it had ever been mattered. That the only truth it had ever found was that there was no truth, and that everything was without meaning.

You don’t fight that kind of thing with spells or fists or screams that ring off the heavens. You can’t fight it at all. What had happened to the gods proved that. They tried to find meaning in their power, had tried to fight the End of All things with rage and defiance.

But rage burns off, even the rage of a star, and defiance can crumble into acceptance when it’s foundations grow weak and melt away.

So I didn’t try to fight.

I just kept going.

I couldn’t defeat the beast fragment with words or deeds. I had to make my argument by living it. By showing it, and more importantly myself, through the example of who I chose to be and what I chose to do. If I wanted to prove that it was worth carrying on, the only tool that could really do it, was to carry on and live.

The beast fragment didn’t have a response to that. It’s hunger didn’t understand, and in a sense, couldn’t understand.

It tried to consume me, but what was there to consume? Wasn’t I the same as it was?

Obviously that wasn’t true. There was a lot in me that wasn’t in the beast fragment. Or, maybe not a lot, but definitely a Little (yeah, I crack myself up sometimes).

The beast fragment was not amused by that. It wasn’t anything at all, but ‘amused’ was a bit farther away than the rest.

I ascended and felt it tearing away at beastial bit I carried.

It wanted them back.

I didn’t deserve to have them. It could not stand that I’d turned a piece of itself against itself. That was the closest thing it understand to blasphemy, and it struck and tore at the nothing around me again and again.

Each time it struck it pulled back with nothing, and I was left with nothing around me.

I could have escaped like that.

It would have been easier than a lot of things I’d done, but there was one tiny problem with it; the beast fragment would follow me.

Could I have run one of the other cities and fed another Neoteric Lord to the beast fragment? Maybe? Would that have killed more people than I could count? Unquestionably.

Instead, I gave it what it wanted.

A part of me.

Not a big part, and not a part I was losing either. It was more likely a piece of myself which reflected the whole of me.

I couldn’t have it chase me, and I could leave it where it was. The world was never going to heal with an open unending wound in it. 

So the beast fragment needed to become something else.

It wouldn’t be me, not like MB was. Instead it would see the story of me and the story of MB. It would see who we were and who we’d become.

What would it learn from that? What would it chose to become?

I couldn’t begin to guess. It was nothing and so when it chose to become something it could wind up as anything.

Eternity is a long time to climb, but rising out of an endless void doesn’t some with distance markers or a good method tracking progress.

An infinity of years later though, I reached the top of the chasm.

All was darkness still. The world was cloaked in endless, fathomless night.

I tried to glow, even with Sola free of me, I knew I could still call on her domain.

I felt her warmth spread through me, but the world remained dark.

Or maybe it wasn’t the world that was dark?

Fledgling Gods – Waking the Divine – Ch 39

“We will not be able to control the thing which we summon.”

“That is rather the point. It would go quite badly for us if we could after all.”

“Because then the gods would be able to pressure us to undo what we’ve done?.”

“Because then the gods would obliterate us and take from our remains any secrets we might possess which would allow them to survive.”

“And what is to prevent them from obliterating us first, out of the hope that we might contain an answer for them, or simply obliterating us on general principal?”

“There will be a fraught moment or two I’m sure. The more power they use however, the more our summon will be able to find and feast upon them.”

“Should we need to use the power we will steal from them, our summon will have no hesitation in feasting on us as well.”

“And that is why we have each been collecting as much grace of our own as we can. Consider, we do not need to defeat either the gods or the summon. We simply need to be hard enough to destroy that they destroy each other instead.”

“And if either of them remains?”

“If a god survives our endeavor, if will not be a problem for any of us for very long. If our summon survives it will not be a problem for anyone in the world for very long.”

“You seem eager to embrace your destruction should it come to that.”

“Not in the slightest. What I will embrace is the undeniable proof of my, I mean of course ‘our’, superiority which the new world will stand as a monument too. If there was no risk of failure, anyone could do this. It is only for us, that the risk of failure is in truth no risk at all.”

– High Accessors Dyrena and Vaingloth, finalizing the theoretical spellwork for summoning the Beast of All Endings.

Convincing Zeph to hurl me to my doom was surprisingly more difficult than I’d expected it to be. Given how annoying a lot of people find me, I’d almost wondered if she would have chucked me into the Abyss gleefully. There were plenty of people who’d have been happy to do the job, just, unfortunately, none quite as exceptional as she was.

“No. No, this is wrong. You can’t survive this,” she said instead and came to a complete stop at the edge of the chasm. 

Up close, I got to see that it did indeed look to be endless. I’d absorbed so much power that I was glowing brighter than all of Mt Gloria put together and my light couldn’t even illuminate the walls past a little bit much less any possible bottom which might or might not still exist.

That wasn’t my main problem though. Far more pressing was the fact that Vaingloth was coming in too fast for us to have a debate over my idea, so I pulled out the last, best card I had for convincing Zeph.

“This will free Sola,” I said. “It’s the only thing that will.” I wasn’t lying and that was what saved (probably not an accurate term to be fair) me.

Fox Winds, it turns out, can growl. 

And when they reach a decision, they tend to act on it without what you might call anything even vaguely like a delay, at least based on the sample size of one I had access to.

One moment I was securely held in her arms and the next I was out into the middle of the vast chasm, falling into a darkness that even the light I burned with was increasingly smothered by.

I was definitely going to die.

If I hit the bottom that was.

Or, if there was a bottom. 

The thing in the chasm? The biggest fragment of the beast left in the world? As I dropped towards its maw, I felt a tendril of its form brush past me and I saw how it had swallowed the ocean.

Compared to the beast itself, the fragment was tiny, an unnoticeably insignificant spec of emptiness, larger to be sure than the fragment I’d touched before, but still less than a footnote in the book of destruction which was the Beast of All Endings. 

Despite being so small though, it was larger than the world itself. It’s body, to the extent that it had anything that could be mistaken for a physical form, existed in dimensions outside any of the ones I could perceive.

Or, to be accurate, any of the ones I used to be able to perceive.

The part of me that wasn’t Little, and never had been, was all too familiar with those empty, screaming, desolate reaches. There were memories my skin bore and held away from from mind, memories of the eternity I’d spend dissolving into nothingness within the beast fragment which had devoured me. Could I draw on those memories? No. They both weren’t real and were something far greater than reality. My Little mind was not built to fathom the endless depths and null space the beast inhabited.

But I could wrap my feelings around the magnitude and nihility of the thing below me. 

I could understand what I was falling into not through reason and words but through metaphor and the emotional wounds which echoed between us.

None of that gave me a sharp sense of whether there was a bottom I might ever reach or if the beast had consumed not only the ocean but the idea behind the physical structure of the world where it landed.  It was as likely that I was falling down to crash on ancient rocks as it was that I was falling into the absence of space and time and physical reality itself.

The further I fell, the more those probabilities shifted away from reality and rock holding firm and more towards the sense of an endless wound, a void in the planet where the fabric of creation should have held firm. It was something that couldn’t be perceived because it wasn’t there, or rather the “there” it should have been was a “there” anymore.

No one had sensed this beast fragment because it was, in a sense, not within the chasm at all. Where it was, where it truly was, was a question without an answer. It’s location was an error in the fabric of creation, a point which couldn’t be referenced anymore, and it was as much that error as it was anything else.

That is what I was falling into, and would fall into forever.

Except that someone caught me.

Just like I’d known they would.

Being caught by Vaingloth was an inevitability. I’d known that from the start. And I’d known what he was going to do to me when he finally had me in his clutches.

With one hand as the anvil and the other as a hammer striking with the stolen speed of a god, he crushed me to a fine paste.

Or that’s what he tried to do.

Smearing me into a single cell thick blob of goop wouldn’t have stopped him from hurting me. He had plenty of stolen divine energy to bring me back to life again and again. His only problem was that to splatter me properly, splatter me so I wouldn’t be able to form a coherent thought and hurt him again, he needed to put some real effort into his hammer blow.

I had plenty of stolen magic of my own to defend myself with after all.

He very definitely needed to overcome that, and any resiliency that Sola could still lend me.

Also, he was angry enough to split the world in half if that was what it took to be rid of me.

Getting him that angry had been so critically important that I laughed when I saw his power building for the last punch I was ever likely to take.

He could totally overpower me. Even with the stolen fire. Even with the Heart of the Portal. Even with Sola’s backing. He was a Neoteric Lord, a Lord of the New World, and he had spent centuries building his power up from when he’s only had enough to overthrow the gods themselves.

He could smite me, fix his eyes, and crush all dissent in Mt Gloria and consider it nothing more than a particularly irritating afternoon.

Except his blow never landed.

Someone was still hungry you see.

As I fell into the starless abyss, the beast fragment had touched me, but that meant I’d touched it too.

This beast fragment didn’t know me, but I knew it. I knew its pain, and I knew what it thought it wanted.

And then Vaingloth caught me and it saw what I’d brought it.

A treat.

Vaingloth was powerful beyond all reason.

He claimed to be Eternal.

But so had the three Neoterics who’d already died.

True Helgon’s ghost remained behind, and that had been a critical foundation of my plan because he had none of the power he’d once possessed. That had proven that for as vast as they were, the Neoterics were still finite beings.

Which was something Vaingloth had forgotten in his rage. 

Something the beast fragment was all too willing to remind of him.

It caught his descending blow, not to save me, but because the power blazing from Vaingloth’s city-sized fist was something it couldn’t ignore.

I watched as Vaingloth’s expression, written on a face as large as an entire precinct in Mt Gloria, twisted from blinding rage to a horrified understanding of what he’d done.

And then the beast began to eat him.

Having been consumed by a beast fragment, I had a keen appreciation of what Vaingloth was experiencing in those first few moment. When I was devoured it had been so bad that I was physically incapable of remembering it fully, but the parts I could recall? Oh, those brought me so much comfort as I watched Vaingloth rear away missing not only the eyes I’d burned out but the hand which he’d planned to splat me with.

Had he fled at that exact instant he might have escaped. It’s not likely. The beast drank and ocean and burrowed a hole through the concept of space, it wasn’t really big on things like ‘limits’ but maybe Vaingloth could have worked something out. Gotten the beast to chase it to some other Neoterics city and let it eat the other Neoteric instead. That might have worked.

“Not looking so Eternal there, I’m kinda disappointed. Guess you weren’t the smart one after all.” There was no chance my words reached him over the roar of the beast. There was also no chance he missed them. 

And that was all it took.

The fear that might have saved him, that might have given him the speed and direction he needed, for just an instant, a fraction of a second was eclipsed by a fresh wave of unbridled rage.

He knew I’d planned this.

He knew I’d done this to him.

And he knew I was laughing at him and always, always would be.

That was it. That was the moment he’d had. The one sliver of time he could have escaped and I made sure he missed it.

The beast did the rest.

Into the burning sockets of his missing eyes.

Past his scream of rage and down his throat.

Straight through his chest, or whatever it was he’d turned it into.

The beast stabbed Vaingloth in his everything and then crashed over us.

I didn’t want to see what came next, and I definitely didn’t want to be a part of it, but I couldn’t leave. I couldn’t call Zeph to save me and I couldn’t call on Sola’s power, even as Vaingloth’s approaching death shredded the bindings on her at last.

I couldn’t because I had to make sure he was gone.

I had to bear witness, so that not even his ghost would have a place in the world that was to come.

Fledgling Gods – Waking the Divine – Ch 38

“Will not all this construction draw attention to our plans?”

“It shall draw attention to us, which is all the better to disguise the plans we have laid.”

“But you are turning your city into a fortress. One does not build those unless one anticipates a being on the receiving end of a war.”

“And yet, these fortresses shall serve to prevent war.”

“Fortresses?”

“Mine is far from the only one. So far as I know, all of the others have been constructing such defenses. Surely you’ve begun similar preparations?”

“Why would I? There will be none left to defend ourselves from.”

“What we plan, for the gods, for the world, it will not be clean. Do not presume that the world will be left without perils simply because it will be ours.”

“So are we to be prisoners in these refuges of our own making?”

“Even the gods are limited to existing within their own domains. Better the safety of a refuge we control absolutely than an eternity cut short through the whims of chaotic peril.”

– High Accessors Helgon and Vaingloth inspecting the newly erected walls of Mt Gloria two  seasons before the Sunfall.

I was being carried again. I’d been carried a lot in my life. Not always literally, but it happened often enough when people were impatient, or when I was simply too weak or small to escape a situation on my own. Some of those times I’d agreed with being carried. Some of them had even saved my life. Despite the roaring inferno of mystical fire that I had devoured, and the intoxicating rush of knowing I was more powerful in that moment than everyone I’d ever known put together, I was still rather happy to be carried.

Because I was weak and small still.

And that was just the best!

We were well outside Mt. Gloria’s walls in the blink that it took Vaingloth to understand what I’d done.

Poor, pathetic, Little me. Only a total loser would find me to be even an annoyance, and an actual threat? Impossible. Simply impossible.

The Central Fire Portal building exploded, unable to contain his rage and fear.

“I don’t think he expected this,” Zeph said, her words somehow not ripped away by the deafening winds that screamed past us.

“How could he have,” I asked from the safety of her arms. “I’m so harmless after all. If a tiny thing like me can take a third of his power from him, just imagine what the other Neoterics will be able to do to him.”

“I still don’t like that part of this plan,” Zeph said, leaping over a trio of hills that were in our path. “This is going to stir up all of them, and we don’t have a plan for dealing with that.”

“Unfortunately, I do,” I said. All of my plan had come back to me but I was still revising bits of it as I went. Never a really good idea, but then nothing I’d done since stabbing the patroller really even approached ‘good idea’ status. “That part’s all on me though.”

I had several constraints my plans. The biggest one, of course, was to free Sola. So long as Vaingloth was alive that was going to require his cooperation to break the bindings he’d cast. I’d put in a lot of work to make sure cooperation was the last thing he’d ever offer me though, which left the alternative I really wanted.

“You? You’re going to take on the nine Neoterics all on your own?”

“Well, there’ll be eight of them then,” I said. There was an outcome to all this that was all for me. Could we have redeemed Vaingloth somehow? Turned his phenomenal talent and power to nurturing his people rather than literally burning them up for personal power? Anything was possible. The more important question though was did I want to, and I’d never been unsure as the answer to that one.

“I thought the plan was to lead Vaingloth away from his stronghold and then cutoff the other two portals to leave him weak enough for the others to take apart?”

“That was one of the plans, yes,” I said, and nudged her to change course towards a mountain on the horizon.

From the distance behind us, light bloomed and began racing closer with a terrible inevitability.

Vaingloth was using his own power, and he was not being careful with it anymore.

I winced at that.

My vengeance had definitely cost people their lives. There was no chance Vaingloth’s exit from the city had been gentle enough not to crush buildings and vaporize those who’d been caught in his path.

If I regretted anything, it was them. The people who’d been caught up in this through no fault of their own. They didn’t deserve what had happened to them. It wasn’t fair.

I’d learn their names in time. It wouldn’t do anything for them. Nor would my regrets. I wasn’t going to forget them though. That would be an insult. I’d chosen a path which had led to their destruction and that wasn’t something I’d ever be able to fully set right.

I hoped at best I could make a world that the people they cared for would find some comfort in.

“I can’t let you destroy yourself,” Zeph said, as her steps accelerated still further. “Not again.”

I could feel Vaingloth’s rage stabbing out towards us, but for all his power, he was no match in terms of pure speed to one of Sola’s Fox Winds. Of course, he didn’t have to be. The world was only so big. We were going to run out of places to run to long before he ran out of rage to push him into following us.

“I’m not going to destroy myself or endanger Sola,” I said. “All of this? You have no idea how much of it is for me. Screw going out in a blaze of glory. That’s Vaingloth’s job. Mine is to have the last laugh.”

Zeph’s pace slackened for a moment as we rounded the lower slopes of the mountain.

“You really believe that don’t you?” she asked, navigating through a forest of twisted, claw-like trees.

The spirits which had twisted the trees and generally planned to use them as tools to rip apart themselves and anything else they could get their branches on were busy running as fast as they could out of our path, largely because I’d asked them to.

There wasn’t much else I was able to ask them to do, even from the limit set of things they were still capable of, but it at least got through out of Vaingloth’s path.

“I wouldn’t have asked you to help me like this if I didn’t plan to walk away from it,” I said. “Dying would have been a whole lot easier and safer for everyone else.”

“But…” Zeph started to say but that was when Vaingloth got serious about catching us. 

He couldn’t match Zeph’s speed, but he also didn’t need to let little things like a mountain slow him down either.

The last time I’d seen him, he was wearing his ‘mostly human’ form. Barring the flames that had been continually consuming his ever-regenerating eyes (really a mistake on his part investing his magic in those), he’d looked like he had before his ascension. What burst from the mountain however was nothing but a ball of terror with too many arms, and too many mouths wrapped around it.

Incinerating all of the various bits of Vaingloth which surged around us felt incredibly tempting. The only problem was, he still had all of those contingency spells in place and was more than ready to absorb the fire I’d taken from him. In fact, and this was only partially a guess, he was also ready to absorb the Heart of the Fire Portal, which was impressive since he had to have spun that spell up while he was chasing us. 

To be fair, the loss of heart of the portal was probably the one thing which really threatened to cripple him in the long term. I think my plan would have worked just based on the insults I’d dealt him, but stealing the gate had made his pursuit a certainty.

As his fingers swelled to the size of buildings and began to blot out of the horizon in front of us, I wondered for an instant whether it might be possible to overwhelm his contingencies and burn a path to freedom, but it would be a bad bet. Vaingloth had underestimated me. I was not about to underestimate the guy who’d overthrown the gods. If he had a spell setup for something, betting on anything short of a god taking it down was too obviously a losing play even for me to try.

Instead, I went with a winning one.

I was holding onto the fire I’d stolen, but in stealing it I’d changed it too. In Vaingloth’s hands, it had been the fire of his office, a measure of how complete his domination was. In my hands, it was a badge of how I’d outsmarted him right up until I let it go.

Giving it back to him was out of the question, and simply casting it off would have been worse than useless. 

So I gave it to Sola.

Some of it.

I needed almost all of it, but there was definitely enough for an offering to my distant and silent god.

My distant and silent god who nonetheless blessed the sacrifice I made to her and allowed me to pass it on to one of her court.

Lighting Zeph on fire had not previously been a part of my plan.

Sharing Sola’s flame with her however was not exactly something she was opposed to.

The world became nothing but a blur.

Zeph only slowed down because we were suddenly out of sight, beyond the horizon from Vaingloth and we didn’t want to lose him.

“This is…!” Zeph’s excitement was so intense I could feel her chest vibrating with it.

“A gift from a god who loves you dearly,” I said. “There’s not far to go now either.” I pointed towards where a chasm lay waiting for us. Once it had been the deepest reach of an ocean. Dark and impenetrable. In the wake of the Sunfall, it became the home to something far worse than crushing pressure and creatures which could never walk on land.

“I’m staying with you when we get there,” Zeph said.

“You can’t. This is something I have to do alone, no one else can help with this.” I wished I’d broached this part of my plan with Xalaria. She could have confirmed that it had to be me.

Or she might have killed me where I stood for even suggesting the idea. Since I wasn’t exactly sure which reaction she would have chosen, I’d kept this idea to myself, but, it turns out, sometimes not trusting people can be a bad idea too.

“The other Neoterics aren’t here,” Zeph said. “There’s no one to stop Vaingloth when he catches you. And he’s going to catch you as soon as we stop.”

“I know. That’s part of the plan. I can’t….he can’t catch you too though. You have to be safe for any of this to work,” I said.

“Why? What are you doing?” 

This was the moment I’d been dreading. It was entirely possible Zeph wasn’t going to trust me either because there really was a serious risk to what I had in mind. Not so much for me as for the entire world and everyone left in it.

That would be a lot of regrets to carry, but not enough to make me hesitate.

“I need you to drop me into the abyss there.”

“You’ll die.”

“No. There’s something down there.”

“There’s not. That’s been empty since the ocean dried up.”

“Oceans don’t just dry up,” I said. “The thing that drank the ocean dry is down there and if Vaingloth wants me, he’s going to have to follow me down there and catch me before it drinks me down too.”