“We can’t go in there, the ghosts will eat us!”
“Better the ghosts than the things that have been tracking us through the wastes.”
“But those things can follow us in here too!”
“Nah. They won’t come in here. The ghosts would eat them if they did.”
– A band of outcasts on finding the ruins of the Factorum
With no ability to change direction in mid-air, we plummeted downward, right into the spikes atop one of the buildings at the outskirts of the Factorum’s research district.
That should have been a problem
Spikes have this thing they do where they can punch large holes in places that really want to remain unperforated.
No one had informed MB of that however.
Gentle as a breeze, it landed on the tip of the spikes and bounced onward no differently than when it had leapt from solid ground.
How many angels can dance on the head of a pin? I have no idea, but I can definitively say that one MB is perfectly capable of doing so.
I released my death grip on MB’s fur as it came rest outside the one building with light spilling from its windows.
Did the dead need candles to see too?
No. It turns out that this particular dead guy was simply being hospitable.
“Ah. Guests,” a tall, translucent man said from the imposing doorway to the research lab. Yeah, somehow despite the obvious fact that he was a ghost, it was the door which struck me as imposing. I don’t have a thing for architecture or anything, it was just a really impressive door. “I must now chase you off. Boo. Blrgh! Begone mortals before your souls are consumed and your eyes are pickled in brine! Hmm, oh, well, that didn’t work.”
The complete lack of effort he put into being properly menacing spoke to something but I had no idea what it could be.
He turned with a shrug and walked inside, leaving the impressive door open for us to follow.
The thing was at least an arm’s length thick. It had amazing carvings that seemed to have been organically grown by the stone.
It was also a god.
No.
I blinked and tried to work out what I was seeing.
I’d acquired amazing powers of perception. Understanding anything they were showing me however? That was a work in progress.
Zeph and MB moved to follow the ghost, but I paused for a step to work out what, exactly, I was seeing.
The door wasn’t a god. It was however strong enough to hold off a serious amount of divine smiting.
I peered deeper, expecting find a fragment of a god lodged into it somewhere, but it was free of anything like that. At least as far as I could see.
What I was able to make out was the raw divine power the door was imbued with. The decorations were more than aesthetic too. They were prayers. Prayers that were trapping stolen power and turning it into a shield.
The last place in the world I should go was inside a research lab that was shielded by divine power, but given that I was planning to talk to a Neoteric Lord in the state I was in, I couldn’t really be accused of making anything like “good” decisions.
“Sorry, I got distracted,” Zeph said, appearing at my side and offering me her arm for support.
I took it.
I’m not proud.
Or at least not proud enough to reject help when my were legs feeling like they were going to buckle any second.
“The door’s not…”
“I know. It’s supposed to be consecrated to the god of war, but it’s more than that.” From how Zeph spoke, I had the strong sense that she hadn’t been consciously aware of that until her most recent time seeing the door.
That MB didn’t care could have been reassuring, but I had no idea what its perspective on divine energy was like since that I don’t think I’d had much to contribute there. Maybe it though of the research lab like it was made of tasty food? Probably not but the thought amused me enough that I walked in without paying the sacred structure much more mind.
“Oh no. Intruders. Invaders. Whatever shall I do?” the ghost said, putting his hand to his forehead like he was going to faint. “Offer you some tea perhaps?”
He gestured to a table that was otherwise cluttered with books but had a small area pushed clear for a tray with tea cups and a pitcher on it.
Was taking food from the dead a good idea? No. Was taking food from a Neoteric Lord an even worse idea? Yes. Was taking food from a dead Neoteric Lord who had, for reasons unknown, set out seven servings of frankly wonderful smelling tea the worst possible idea one could have? I neither knew, nor cared. Not when the tea came with the chance to collapse into a big, puffy chair which had probably been holding the pile of books that was scattered around it.
MB wuffed and sat down beside me, knocking over a teetering stack of books in the process. A stray thought wandered through my mind that if he damaged them, maybe we’d have to take them away. Following that came the question of just how many of the books I could steal before it would be noticed. I figured a safe estimate was somewhere in the triple digits given how many there were and how little attention had been given to their layout, but the last time I’d stolen something from a Neoteric Lord had led to some noticeable consequences, so I reigned in my larcenous tendencies as best I could.
“You wanted to talk to us?” I asked after taking the offered cup of tea with a nod.
“Not especially,” the ghost said.
“Helgon,” Zeph said, a note of warning in her voice.
“I’m a ghost my dear, I have no wants or needs.”
“You’re awfully solid for a ghost,” I said, indicating the carafe of tea he was holding.
“It’s an improvement,” Helgon said. “Previously I was merely awful.”
“Helgon,” Zeph repeated, the warning in her tone growing clearer.
“What? It is as you surmised. I was a monster and now I am but the shade of a monster.”
“Aren’t you supposed to be the dead shade of a monster?” I asked, sensing as I did the dense currents of energy that still ran through him.
In some senses he was more alive than anyone in the room. Heck, in some senses, he was more alive than everyone in Mt. Gloria put together, excepting only Vaingloth.
“I am. Quite dead. Have been for longer than you’ve been alive in fact,” Helgon said, putting the tea down and taking the seat opposite me. Apart from Zeph there was no one to fill the other five chairs, but it wouldn’t have surprised me if Helgon had set this room up a hundred years ago and never bothered altering the layout when he had ‘guests’ over.
“I’ve seen people die. You’re not dead. You’re something else.” I was tired. And I don’t banter all that well at the best of times.
“As are you,” Helgon said, taking a sip from his tea.
“Is that what you wanted to talk about?” I asked. “What I am? You already heard my explanation didn’t you?”
“Yes. Certainly an incorrect one, though any sort of correct explanation would fail to explain your presence here. Either of your presences.”
“What explanation do you have then? Incorrect or whatever?”
“None. You are a new thing under our sunless sky. Quite terrifying in fact.”
“You don’t seem particularly terrified.” Some people were a jovial mask to hide their fears. Some get real quiet. Helgon was neither of those people. And he wasn’t at all afraid from what I could tell.
“Again. Dead. Not much for me to worry about now, is there?”
“You can’t get, I don’t know, deader?”
“Why my dear! Are you threatening me, or making an offer?” His eyes lit up with the sort of delight that I would normally walk immediately away from. Walking was not exactly an enjoyable prospect at the moment however, so I settled for glaring at him.
“Is that what you want Helgon? I thought you were content with you ‘meager existence’?” Zeph asked.
“If Blessed Little can offer a more permanent state of demise to one such as I, I would find the option endless intriguing,” Helgon said.
“Let me guess, you’d commission nine murders from her?” It wasn’t hard to see who the targets would be given that there were nine remaining Neoteric Lords and they were afraid of Helgon enough to not mess with him despite the fact that they’d already killed him.
“Ten,” Helgon said. “If this world is ever to be renewed, all the monster should be swept from board I believe.”
“I’d need to take myself out too for that to be the case,” I said, feeling a wave of weariness wash over me.
“Don’t be silly,” Helgon said. “You say you killed a man? I and the other killed a world, and not for survival as you did, but for our own greed and ambition. You are no monster Blessed Little. You have simply been placed in monstrous situations and been offered monstrous choices as a result.”
“You say that, but you’re not exactly acting like a monster now. What do you want?”
“Almost nothing and practically everything,” Helgon said. “Not the answer you wished to hear, I’m sure, but truth at least, which I’ve been told is a rarity for my kind.”
“Why don’t you expound on the ‘almost nothing’ then,” I said. “Practically everything sounds like it would take too long to go through.”
“As you wish,” Helgon said and rose from his chair to begin pacing around the room. “What do you know of the Sunfall?”
“Not much. The beast showed up, the gods fought it, they lost, the Neoterics opened the portals to save the nine, or I guess it was twelve at first, cities.” I’d learned and worked out a bit more than that but I wanted to see where he would go with what I gave him.
“Very good. Everything wrong, just as it should be.” He picked up a book, discarded it, pickup another, placed it gently back where it was, and finally conjured a book from thin air that he seemed to be satisfied with.
“Here,” he said. “You don’t need to read it now. I’ll summarize. You may want to refer to it later for additional details however. I always find myself looking for the notes I forgot to write down, whereas the ones I have in written form never seem to leave my mind at all.”
I took the book which weighed about half what I did and let it fall on my lap. In a pinch it would make a decent shield against pretty much anyone I thought.
“To offer some corrections; first, the Plunderer did not simply show up, it was, as you surmised, summoned. The process was lengthy, and required a phenomenal outlay of effort, planning, and the slow and deliberate corruption of not only the processes we safeguarded and those were were intended to shepherd, but even the gods themselves. It was in many sense the grandest endeavor in all of history, the most sublime, and the most doomed even before it was a spark in any of our minds.”
“Why?” I couldn’t help myself even if it was a stupid question.
“We had too much,” Helgon said, his gaze growing distant. “We High Accessors. We were the intermediaries to the gods themselves. Through us the faith of the world flowed into the divine coffers. We were exalted above all other mortals.”
“And that wasn’t enough.”
“It never could be. We had so much, what else could we do but hunger for more?”