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Hidden 6 mos ago Post by Necrodancer
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Necrodancer "A Dance With Fate."

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Adria

Adria roamed the forest glancing towards her own creation with a careful gaze. Yet her mind lingered on what her perfect domain truly meant. An endless sea of crimson red while half sunk corpses drifted in the sea. This was her domain of war, the burden of her divinity. The blade against life, the murderous crow among prey, the author of ruination. Was this a prophecy destined to be a burden of fate? That no matter what form she took, she will always be the monster cursed by the lips of the innocent but be a beautiful muse by the tongues of warmongers? Did she have to reward their love for her with gifts that would drown the world in bloody wine?

She stopped. Sharply taking breaths while she possessively tightened her grip on her trident. Her talon hand ran through her hair, trying to keep her sanity from breaking even if her body felt numb to the feeling. Her body and nature was bred for the embodiment of war, so why wasn't her mind used to it? Is it because this was the “perfect” version of a domain she hasn't even witnessed yet? Or was it because her mind was focused on what it meant to be the goddess of sacrifice. Did the perfect vision bothered her mind because it was senseless? Void of emotion and thought? To shed blood for no reason other than war.

Her eyes snapped wide as if she found the cure to this sickness that corrupted in her mind. “I am the goddess of sacrifice.” Her voice trembled at first, yet it quickly hardened as her resolve grew. A sacrifice must be remembered, respected, and honored. It cannot be rewarded by nothing. This was her domain and sacrifices must be remembered. Yet a small part of her still doubted this, that her resolve was naive and pointless. That war will be meaningless and emotionless, it shall only be a force of nature to cull the weak, old, and young of creation so the strong could thrive. She glanced towards the recently made heavens for an answer. “Please… give me an answer.” Softly in her solitude she begged for the answer, while she searched the skies for it.

Then a voice called out, the sibling of the shifting stone called towards her mind. She was surprised that the lord of the depth shared the news. Yet, she remained in silence as she faced a more stunning vision. The sparkling lights of crystal depths, the shifting sands of the earth, their movements as energies. She smiled tenderly towards the image as she kept the image up in her mind as long as she could. Yet the image wasn't hers to completely take over. A little laugh escaped her lips as the tension of her doubt slowly faded away.

“Thank you, Khthon. It's truly a sight to behold.” Adria replied as the image completely faded from her view. Perhaps this was her sign that even in the depths of darkness there is something beautiful within. Though she couldn't help but softly laugh at his possessive tone. “Very well, I shall honor your claim. If you need protectors for your stone, I can offer my services to my stone sibling.” She remarked playfully letting the silence hit her mind before she steadied herself. War and Sacrifice must be one, and not against each other. Glancing back to her first creation. Plants that are born to defend, plants that already fought against the “perfect” vision of war.

She connected back to Khthon, offering her view of the temple knowing she must honor the agreement. “This is what we discovered above. It seemed that those who lingered before us knew of our birth." She confessed, allowing everything to be seen. From the half ruined temple, the 12 alcoves that represented the gods, and even the crumbling throne that poised the question of “Who made us?” Once he was satisfied she continued to press forward towards the outskirts of the forest, weaving together what she should make.

Once her gaze was interrupted by starlight she left the forest letting her creation find its place. She held her chin for a moment longer. Pondering what her siblings had weaved together for creation. The stars were crafted along with the sky due to indulgence, the grog trees for entertainment, the dark sea due to reason still unknown, and many others. All of them were so certain with their actions, like they didn't know the price. She understood that moment of joy, when she made such a small yet deadly weed. That insignificant moment of creation filled her with insurmountable joy. Even now she wanted that joy again, but she couldn't act recklessly again. She knew everything had a price to pay, a sacrifice to contribute. Thus she needed to be careful more than ever.

As she left the forest something struck her heart as a speckle of knowledge landing between her fingers. Blood was split, not the crimson of mortals but outworldly ichor that did not drip. A death had been weaved and she felt that moment. An unwilling sacrifice made itself known in her mind and this time she sought answers, with the beat of her wings she entered the air searching for the source of the knowledge. Yet her eyes widened even further, mundane life had been weaved together. Sent into the world innocently but she knew that wouldn't last long. Her heart knew what this will bring. She needed to know who was responsible.

Her wings beat the air faster and faster searching for the other newborn gods with desperation. This had to be a mistake. Life shouldn't be ready at a time like this, were everything is still being developed and searched for. She wasn't ready. Her wings beat faster as she stumbled upon two gods already in conflict. One with rage written in his form while the other with controlled responsibility. She hovered to their level as she gripped her weapon tightly staring at the two of them. Feeling the presence of her domain lingering in the area.

“What in the heavens happened here!” She cried out, her once tender voice echoed with dread and uncertainty. “Why is knowledge spread out all around the unfinished world? Why are there living crawling beings around?” She asked her question her voice becoming louder and filled with unknowing fury.

“Please, someone just tell me. Why was there a sacrifice?” She asked staring down both of them with her hand gritting her trident as if it was a metal stress ball
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Hidden 6 mos ago Post by Lord Zee
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Lord Zee I lost the game

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His tail flicked in a slow back and forth. The Lord of All Cats sniffed the air, taking in unfamiliar scents. His gleaming eyes then surveyed the area before him. In the din of the hollow tree, the Lord could see a great deal. Much prey was abundant, hopping, slithering, crawling and walking in all shapes and forms. Yet there were also greater foes. Such things lumbered, stalked and flew. Many times he crouched, out of anticipation, out of reflex but none dared approach him on his perch. And what a perch it was. His own patch of the night, glowing and shimmering. The Lord had been so enthralled, so captivated, he could not help but grab a closer look. The climb was long and had many struggles but the Lord could not resist. Thus, he now sat upon the very tip that jutted out from the mass, like a giant snout of the greater foes he saw.

The Lord was content to rest there for a time. As the day had been taxing, full of much excitement and stress. There had been many smells and many sounds, not all were pleasant. Eventually he wandered into the forest and came upon this patch of night amidst the hollow tree. He had been there ever since.

A sudden sound piqued his interest. The Lord scanned the entrance and saw the strangest foe yet. Pale of fur and standing upon two legs. He could not make sense of it. Another joined it and they stared into that hollow tree. The Lord looked away from them as a bolt of movement caught his attention. A fat flying prey with molted coloring landed just inside the tree. It pecked at the ground before ruffling its feathers. Before the Lord could ponder this strange thing, one of the pale giants, because they were giants to the Lord, grabbed the prey with its strong paws. The prey squawked and kicked but could not escape the grasp of the pale giant. The two then exchanged looks before they set off at a rush.

To the Lord, this did not bode well. The scent of the pale giants was the least pleasant he had encountered so far. And they had grabbed the flying prey with such ease. Could they do the same to him? The Lord did not wish to find out and he was growing hungry.

So it was decided, reluctant as he was to leave such a fine perch, the Lord made his way to the soft earthen floor and with great caution, he made his way through a small gap of bark next to the entrance of the hollow tree. He poked his head out to make sure the way was clear and, satisfied, bolted into some leaf litter and began his grand trek into the unknown.


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Hidden 6 mos ago 6 mos ago Post by Timemaster
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Timemaster Ashevelendar

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🎲 𝒜𝓁𝑒𝒸𝒽𝒾𝑜𝓇 🎺


Alechior gave the mortals one last glance, already curious how their little experiment would play out, then lifted off the ground. They rose above the treetops, leaving the group to muddle, wander, learn or set something on fire, whatever fate rolled for them. With a twist of their wrist, they drifted back across the waves toward the first island where mortals had appeared.

Alechior touched down on the forest floor and the moment their feet hit the earth they spotted movement in the underbrush. A small creature emerged, stepping with the kind of confidence only something that tiny and that convinced of its own importance could pull off. Light tan fur, black speckles, round ears and green eyes, the little cat prowled with the self-appointed dignity of a monarch surveying his kingdom. Alechior’s grin tugged wider. “Well now,” they murmured, “look at you. A pocket-sized conqueror!"

They drifted closer, hovering just above the ground as the feline continued his regal wander through the forest. There was curiosity in every step, a whole world reflected in those green eyes. The kind of creature who would walk into the unknown simply because no one told him he couldn’t. A clearly impressive specimen. Quite lucky that no creature tried to eat it yet.

“You’ve got something,” they said, loud enough and visible now, for the cat to hear/see. “A spark, a stride, a future.” With a flick of their fingers, they let a tiny blessing slip from their hand, gentle enough not to startle the Lord of All Cats. "“There you go, little one. You’ve dodged becoming someone’s lunch by sheer charm so far. Let that luck keep carrying you, but remember this, fear sharpens the thrill. A little danger makes every victory taste sweeter.” they said with a grin as a tiny speck of divine power flowed from them to the Lord of All Cats. A small yellow dot appearing on his back. A sign of being blessed by the Alechior.

@Lord Zee



Alechior gave the tiny lord a last look, watching the cat’s tail flick with regal confidence as it padded back into the underbrush. “Go on then, Your Furriness,” they said with a chuckle, “rule your little world, chase shadows, nap like it is a sacred art. I expect greatness, or at least a very funny story!”

With a salute and a grin, Alechior rose up in the air. Higher and higher, drifting past the tree line and climbing into the open sky. The world spread out beneath them. Alechior spun once, twice, pointing a finger blindly in one direction, then snapped their arm forward. “That way,” they declared with the satisfaction. Without hesitation, they shot through the air, a streak of shifting color against the blue, ready to see what kind of trouble or entertainment the gamble would bring next.

Alechior slowed their flight as a jagged mountain peak caught their eye. “Why not,” they said, already descending before the thought even finished. Their feet touched down on the cold rock, the wind snapping around them in sharp gusts. They took a deep breath, surveying the ridges and valleys carved into the mountain’s spine. Nothing obvious called to them, no glowing relic or omen, just raw stone. Which, in its own way, was promising.

They let instinct tug them along, eyes flicking over crevices, caves, patches of scraggly vegetation, anything that might suggest something unexpected waiting to be found. They weren’t searching for a particular thing, just the thrill of the unknown, the sense that somewhere on this mountain, a secret sat waiting for the right reckless god to stumble into it.
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Hidden 6 mos ago Post by Cyclone
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Cyclone

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Mighty Sarhush eventually awakened from his long rest. There was still a terrible pain coursing through the arm that Saries had chewed, and this left him in a foul mood. The smell of sea spray irked him too; almost instinctively, he wanted to put distance between himself and the vile sea, for the memory of nearly drowning in it was still fresh.

It pleased his sensibilities to look around and observe some of the ur-humans shepherding the animals of this land; but the trees and wilderness all around were a blight to the eyes that he would suffer no longer. With purpose, he rose to his feet from the beach where he’d lain down, and made his way towards the nearest of the offending trees.

The humans, inquisitive and natural followers that they were, saw him stomping towards the forest with purpose, and they followed to watch what their great patron would do next. Sarhush squatted, wrapped his arms around a mighty oak, dug his fingers into its bark, and heaved with all the might within his legs to rise. He uprooted the whole tree, wrenching it from the earth, and then threw it down on its side. Then he did the same to a poplar, and then a juniper… he spared no tree from his wrath.

The humans tried to do as they saw, but they were far too weak to simply cast down whole trees. Then pushed and kicked and hanged from the branches, but it was all their could do to break off the low-hanging limbs and leave the trunks. That would not do.

Really, the exertion that it took to rip up the trees was quite taxing even for mighty Sarhush. There had to be a better way.

Where before the ground underfoot had been little more than loose grains of blackened sand, there were now stones aplenty, larger and sturdy rocks. Sarhush took note of that, and lifted one to inspect it. He bashed the blunt stone against the trunk of a nearby tree, just as he’d bashed the Egg of Potential upon the head of Saries, but this did little save splinter and dent the wood. So he cast that stone over one shoulder – there was a watching ur-human that barely managed to leap out of the flying rock’s way – and looked for a better rock. He soon found one with a jagged edge; with it, he could cut into the bark. Slowly, he hacked and sawed through a tree’s trunk. This was better, but it still did not feel quite right.

Sarhush sat down to rest, for by now he was covered in sweat. He lifted another stone, and began knocking them against one another. It demanded some thought and attention, but with careful enough strikes, he was able to chip off bits of the first jagged rock using the second one; in this way he knapped an even more wicked edge onto his stone. And then with the thing in hand, cutting through the tree bark became easier still, but he was still simply palming a rock and bashing it against something.

There had to be a better way. He sat beside a small thicket to ruminate on how to best destroy the forest. Some fibrous plants tickled at Sarhush’s skin as they waved in the breeze. Annoyed, he wrapped a brawny hand around the plants and ripped them out of the ground; this was much easier than wrenching up a whole tree. But as he held the small plant stems and felt how flexible they were, it occurred to him that these might be capable of lashing his cutting-stone onto the end of a stick. With that idea in his mind, fashioning the first stone axe was a quick and simple thing.

He put that axe to the test, and found it viciously effective. The god’s booming laughter rang out across the land as this clever creation allowed him to fell the trees ten times as fast. The Mes of Flint Knapping, Tool Making, and Woodcutting manifested like treasures heaped before his feet; he kicked them to every mortal that approached him.
There were many such mortals that had come to him, for curiosity prompted them to investigate the terrible, thunderous, nearly incessant sound of trees crashing to the earth. Sarhush called out to them all as they gathered and laid hands upon his sacred Mes, ”Do as you have seen! Spare not a single tree; that is my commandment. There is great power in numbers, and through our mutual efforts shall we cleanse this land.”

Soon, night began to fall. As the sky darkened and the air grew crisp, Sarhush stopped. There was a great hunger that overcame him, so he made his way to one of the cattle that he’d tamed and decapitated the animal with a single blow of his mighty stone axe. He bit into its flesh; the metallic taste of blood filled his mouth, and after many great bites he left perhaps half the bull on the ground for his hungry worshipers to finish.

Sarhush shivered in the night’s breeze, but he was a clever god, so it did not take long for him to discover that he could rub the fallen trees against one another with great vigor to heat them and set them aflame. Soon, the Me of Fire manifested in his palm. He and the humans crawled across the darkening landscape to gather up wet and green timber, for fallen trees now littered the earth everywhere, and pile them up into great bonfires.

The thought occurred to Sarhush that there were so many trees around that they could not easily be counted; and these were just the ones that he could see! How many other woodlands might have already sprung up across the world? Destroying the forests would be much easier if he were to skip this intermediate step of felling the trees and simply set the live trees aflame. He beckoned the ur-humans closer. The Me of Fire rested in his palm; it burned, for the thing took the form of a red-hot ember, but he pressed it upon the hand of each human in turn for a moment or two. A few saw the others wincing in pain and tried to flee, but the furious shouts and stomps of Sarhush frightened most of them into submission and obeisance. Soon he had bestowed knowledge of fire upon hundreds of the humans, and he set them loose into the flammable wilds like so many embers upon the wind.

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Hidden 6 mos ago Post by Lord Zee
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Lord Zee I lost the game

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The Lord had been beset upon. At first there had only been his quiet wanderings. His eyes fixed on all curious things while his nose sniffed the air and his ears folded and spun at every sound. Nothing bothered him of course, for he was the Lord of All Cats and couldn’t be intimidated. But then, then there came a new sound, a new smell. The Lord jumped, reorienting himself to brave this new foe but what he found only left him confused. A strange creature floated before him, its features odd. Like a pale giant but not quite. Most terrifying were the eyes, for the Lord knew it was looking at him but the golden orbs were uncanny. He could hear the resonance of its voice and this too, was alarming. But the Lord could not run in the face of such a thing, despite it all, he was curious.

The world seemed to tilt towards this stranger, as the foliage danced on unseen winds. The Lord’s eyes narrowed as the plants of the undergrowth stretched to be closer to the stranger and the trees above leaned in. There was a thrill in the air he could not explain but his muscles felt loose, almost relaxed. Without a doubt, the Lord knew instinctually, this was something akin to the very land itself in its assuredness underfoot. Then the not-pale giant flicked its fingers and something came forth like a falling leaf. It curled in the air and so mesmerized was the Lord, that he did not move as it fell upon him. A strange feeling overcame the Lord then. He could not quite describe it but once again, he knew something had changed and this time it had been him.

He blinked and then crept back into the underbrush. He did not run nor even jog away, as he felt the stranger would not harm him when his back was turned to it but the Lord was quite done with all that. Indeed, after a short time, the odd presence was gone and the plants returned to their rigid stances. The thrill in the air was gone and now he knew, a certain vibrancy with it. The Lord stretched and felt his hunger gnaw. It was time to hunt, to expel this energy while he had it. He heard a faint trickle from a nearby tree and investigated the sound. What he found was a liquid trickling into a basin. It did not smell like water so he avoided it and kept on his way. But it was curious all the same.

As the Lord walked under root and leaf, he began to search for prey. He knew not what he would find but one could not be stopped by uncertainty. His instincts were primed and it did not take long to find what he sought. A mouse nibbled upon a fallen nut, stopping to scan its surroundings every few seconds as it stuffed its face. The Lord’s eyes focused, his body flexed as the stalk began. Carefully he moved like the silent wind, stepping in the most advantageous spots where his paws would not make noise. He shrank in on himself, getting low, almost on his belly as he advanced. He stopped when the mouse stopped eating, he moved only when it wasn’t searching for predators.

When he was nearly there, so tantalizingly close, a distant crash echoed throughout the forest and the Lord of All Cats, chiefest among his kind, startled. He jumped out of reflex and the mouse bolted into a small nook. But the Lord had only eyes for escape. More booming echoes followed and he ran. So panicked had he become it took a great will of effort to cease his flight, to gather his racing mind. What on earth had that been? It had ruined his hunt! More appalling, he had run. He who had claimed the night, he who had seen the pale giants and had survived the floating stranger. Aghast, the Lord let out a low roar (It was really just an angry meow) and went on his way. More loud echoes followed and he decided to pick up his pace. Sometimes one didn’t need to be curious.

Eventually the Lord settled down as night began to fall. He found a nice crook inside a low tree, spacious and out of the wind. Though his belly was hungry and he felt more at home in the dark, he could not help but feel tired after the day's events. So he shut his eyes and fell asleep.

He was awoken in the pitch of night by a terrible smell. It clogged his nose and clung to his fur as it drifted through the forest. He found it hard to breathe and the once quiet forest alive with sound. Prey and foes alike were running but from what? He had his answer a moment later when a terrible roar, louder than anything he had heard, ripped through the night. The Lord, for once in his life, was terrified. It was time to go. He scampered down his tree and once on the forest floor, he was able to breathe again to his relief. But that relief was shattered when the lumbering giants of the forest, those with crowns, those with large paws and those whose girth obscured the trees, thundered past. He was almost crushed underfoot but by some chance he managed to evade them as he joined in the flight. Another roar sounded behind them with such brief intensity it made all quicken their pace. If it was a foe, it was something he had no desire to witness.

The smaller prey were also running, in some cases as thick as the forest floor. Many were crushed in the stampede but a few times did mice and lizards come right before him or beside him, and the Lord was tempted but he knew it could be his demise if he stopped. A red glow was beginning to illuminate his surroundings. Larger creatures ran past him still but now a few were coated with orange and red wisps that blackened their fur and sent them into pain. Where those creatures ran the red wisps spread upon the ground and the wood. It was horrifying. He had to escape!

A crowned beast, its hooven legs bounded by as it screeched from the hot wisps upon its fur. So frantic was the beast, that The Lord had to pause as it cut him off. Only then did he see that the creature had run itself into a low hanging branch and in its struggle to free itself from the tree’s grip, fell to his side, right into the wet tree. Why was it- The tree caught fire and a great woosh bellowed forth before a roar so loud it shook the earth followed, erupting the tree into an effigy of the hot wisps. But the Lord did not see this. Instead, the blast had catapulted him into the most unlikely of places; a hole in the ground. And there in the darkness, the Lord lost consciousness.


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Hidden 6 mos ago Post by Timemaster
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Timemaster Ashevelendar

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❚█══Tribxor══█❚


Tribxor watched the deity vanish into the sky, the last traces of Alechior’s presence fading fog. The group of mortals around him blinked up at the empty air, already forgetting the shape they had just witnessed but not the strange feeling it left behind. Tribxor felt it more sharply than the rest, a pressure in his chest that wasn’t fear or hunger, something like knowing he had been given a task.

He looked at the others as they poked at the grass and wandered aimlessly and something inside him got triggered, an understanding that their safety was his burden now.

Tribxor glanced at the ooga-booga mortals who now stared at him with half-curious, half-confused eyes, and began to move among them. He guided them with simple gestures, gentle nudges, a presence that kept the wandering ones from straying too far. The Happy Flowers hummed around them, keeping every spark of anger harmless.

Tribxor didn’t know what leading meant, not yet, but he knew he was supposed to keep them together. And as he watched them shuffle and grunt and follow his path, a thought began forming in his mind, small but persistent. There had to be a way to do this better.

Tribxor stood still for a long moment. Thinking and thinking. There had to be a way to do this better.

Keeping everyone bunched up was good, sure, but it wasn’t enough. They wandered, they drifted, they forgot where the others were unless he physically herded them back. He didn’t know the word for pattern, not yet, but the concept started clicking into place. The others needed something to follow, something to copy, something they could understand without him pushing them every five seconds. He scanned the grass around them, then the scattered stones, then the trees. Shapes. Things that stayed put, that didn't move too far.

He moved to a clearing and began arranging stones in a circle, obvious enough for barely thinking minds to notice. A place to gather. When a couple of the mortals wandered too far, he guided them back to the circle, tapped the stones, repeated the motion until they blinked and understood just enough to linger. Then he took the fallen branches nearby and broke them, setting them in lines pointing toward the nearest green patch of edible plants. He didn’t have words for “road” or “direction,” but he had hands and enough intelligence.

The others imitated him clumsily, dragging sticks and piling rocks in ways that were wrong but close enough. Tribxor felt something loosen in his chest. They could copy. They could learn. They just needed shapes to follow.

But then something happened. Something that'd prove quite problematic. The sky darkened.

Tribxor didn’t know what the sky was doing, only that something was wrong. The air changed, it got cold, and the ooga-boogas began to whine and fidget. A drop hit his cheek and he flinched, swiping at it like it was an insect. More drops followed, then more, until the whole sky felt like it was spitting on them. The others panicked immediately. Half of them tried to swat at the falling water. One fell over while looking straight up. Another started trying to fight the sky with his fists. Tribxor had no idea what this strange falling stuff meant, but every instinct screamed that being out in the open was a bad idea.

So he looked to the ones who did understand. A bird darted into a bush, vanishing into the leaves. A fat creature waddled under a bent tree root and huddled. Tribxor didn’t know why they hid, but hiding felt smart. He imitated them.

He guided the mortals toward the thickest tree trunks, nudging them beneath the roots where the ground formed natural hollows. He pointed to a creature sheltering under a rock, then pushed a confused mortal beneath a similar one. He grabbed broad leaves and placed them gently over their heads, showing them to crouch low so the strange falling water hit the leaf instead of their faces.

And slowly, the frightened group followed his lead, tucking themselves into the natural shelter the land offered, trembling but safe from the sky’s sudden temper.

It looked like being a tribe leader, even if he didn't know that he was one yet, wouldn't be easy for Tribxor.
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Hidden 6 mos ago Post by Stanifly
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Stanifly buzz

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ᦓ꠸᥅ꪀꪖ


It was fleeting. There and gone in a single moment. Sirna stood by the water’s edge, their shadows shifting with uncertainty.

What is this feeling?

They knew that, seconds ago, they had witnessed something tremendous. Perfection, in ways that their new mind had yet to consider. Perfection, shaped in a mould that spoke only to Sirna. Perfection, dangled tantalisingly close and cruelly ripped away. Sirna stared at the wavering shadows reflected in the water.

Loss. It wriggled around in the depths of Sirna’s being like an unwanted parasite. Unwanted and out of place, for what had been lost, truly, in this barely forged world? If anything, Sirna should be disappointed. Here they had been summoned and presented with the paltry leftovers of a barren world. Was Sirna expected to simply pick up the pieces of an unfinished game someone else had decided to give up on?

Insult, decided Sirna. That was the feeling pervading their being. Still, as maddening as the realisation should be, stronger was the spite that chased the heels of their short temper. Let these mysterious beings dangle truths and hide around corners like infantile creatures. Sirna would take this world and make it their own. They would be inevitable. Inescapable.

Their shadows flashed a decided mauve pink. Caught on the water’s surface, his form seemed far too scattered for any meaningful interaction with Ashuru or its wandering inhabitants. Part of the shadows congealed into a small, spiralling twister, evening out into a pale, grey orb – one that strangely resembled a full moon – backlit by the same mauve pink that had coloured their shadows moments prior. The rest of their form remained a hazy mass of shadows, converging into the moon that now served as their head. Midnight blue bled across its surface, washing out the mauve.

This will do, for now.

Their musings were interrupted by a passing squabble between two of their god-siblings – seemingly borne out of little reason – and the admittedly entertaining commentary provided by the one watching from the sky. And then – creation. Critters. Animals. Little two-legged creatures that seemed to resemble the one who’d been holding an egg of some sort before he’d fallen into the water.

None of this fascinated Sirna as much as the resounding spike of chatter that bloomed from the freshly spawned realm they had created not so long ago. Their moon head began to spin, sucking in the shadows that drifted around its form until their head was enshrouded in shadow. With a pop, Sirna vanished from the physical realm.

They emerged in a place of nothingness. Not mere darkness, it was more a lack of existence than a lack of light. Yes, that familiar noise – which Sirna had come to realise, in the wake of their forgotten epiphany, was simply potential – was simmering away, but nothing was being done with it. At least, that had been the case before. Now there were spots of colour dotting the empty space. Little pockets of fields, forests, islands, deserts – most of which were unfamiliar to Sirna. Their moon-head glowed a mild orange, shadows lashing agitatedly. This felt incomplete, like Ashuru in the snatch of time when the newborn gods had it all to themselves. With a sweep of a shadowy arm, Sirna summoned a landscape of soft blues and purples to carpet the void between the spots of already-present colour. It was a mirror of Ashuru in a way, in that it presented a malleable world that defied the rules that governed reality – all easily shaped wishes and undefined details.

This was a serviceable welcome mat, Sirna decided. The mortals and gods who wandered here would not be greeted by the unseemly sight of a blank void, at the very least. Perish the thought! They set their self down in a downy, purple meadow and squeezed two shadowy palms together.

Out between their unshaped fingers popped several critters. They came in a myriad of colours – some static, some swirling across their translucent forms. If compared to one of the new creatures of Ashuru, one may think them to be a species of winged hares. Their wide pupil-less eyes glowed softly up to Sirna.

Go on now.’ Sirna’s voice was a wisp of a sound, echoed in a tone so gentle that it almost seemed as if they hadn’t spoken at all. ‘You have your task.

They scattered. Some flew. Some scampered. All of them ran towards those spots of colour, where someone, somewhere, dreamed.

It was through one of those dreams that, upon closer inspection, Sirna realised that something interesting was happening in the realm of the real. And so they re-emerged in reality, where they found a fellow god-sibling bestowing gifts upon gifts onto the mortals that resembled his form. It was the same one that had fought their four-legged god-sibling, the one who had had clutched that mysterious egg so tightly in the ocean.

Greetings,’ they said, politely. ‘Do I have you to thank for this influx of mortals on Ashuru’s surface?


~


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With a satisfied grin, Sarhush looked to the distance. There were great plumes of white, gray, and black that rose like mighty towers to touch the sky, narrow at the bottom and wider on top. The sweet smell of smoke pleased him; already his followers were destroying those trees that still marred the horizon.

His revelry was interrupted by the arrival of another god. Sirna's appearance was as graceful as it was sudden; they had not been long upon this world but already he'd grown so accustomed to the crude stumbling and bumbling of these ur-humans, of Saries, and of the beasts that he'd domesticated. Those were things that he could hear from a mile away and which never took him by surprise.

But this shouldn't have been unexpected--it was bound to be only a matter of time before the other gods realized that they lacked his vision and came to him to seek counsel and direction.

'Greetings,' the newcomer said.

"You are seen," Sarhush answered back.

'Do I have you to thank for this influx of mortals on Ashuru’s surface?'

Those words did not elicit such a quick response. Sarhush ruminated over them for a moment or two.

"In one moment I was in the sea, thrashing with the great beast that I have named Saries, subduing and domesticating it as is the proper way of things," he began, "Then in the next, I emerged triumphantly from the accursed waters, and I beheld thesee creatures all around!"

He gesticulated at a group of the ur-humans who stood watching the strange conversation attentively. There was an intelligence behind their eyes; they seemed to understand at least tone and meaning if not whole words, but they did not ever speak back.

So they could only stare dumbly back when Sarhush's gaze shifted from the other god and fell squarely upon them, and the god asked, "What are you called? Where did you come from?"

It had never occurred to Sarhush until that moment to ask any question of the mortals--what use had he, the wise and all-knowing, have for asking questions?--but now he realized the great flaw in these mortal beings before him. They could listen, and obey, which already made them useful. But they could never speak or command, for they were bereft of such higher intellect. This left them mindless in a sense, and useless as vessels for civilization. Without speech, they near entirely were devoid of the powers of organization and initiative. If they would never accomplish anything on their own without his direct supervision and command, then they were limited and crude tools, like that sharpened stone before he'd crafted it into the first axe.

From the power of this revelation, a great brazen tongue manifested in Sarhush's hand: the Me of Speech. Its metallic surface was covered in symbols too numerous and varied to count; there must have been one symbol for every sound that a real tongue could ever shape.

"Behold! The Me of Speech. With this I shall bestow upon these creatures the power to tell us of the place whence they came from."

Sarhush gestured them forward. They approached with some trepidation; this turned out to be wise, as he proceeded to quickly strike them, one after another, with the great cudgel of a Me. But where before they had been silent or condemned only to grunts, they now cursed and cried out in pain with full words.

"Where did you come from?" Sarhush demanded of them, his booming voice overpowering their moans and whines. He threw the bronze tongue to the ground; they could claim it carry on the work of bashing the rest with it later, for Sarhush had far more important things to do with his time.

"From the sea," one of them replied, "in one moment there was nothingness, and in the next, there was water. It blurred my eyes, but by instinct, I held my breath and thrashed until I could come ashore. There I saw the others, and we gathered to dry in the light of that first day. And then you emerged from the water, triumphant over the Great Beast, and we followed you."

"Hmph." It was hardly an answer; then again, if one asked Sarhush from whence he'd come, could he have answered any better? Any more eloquently? "They must have manifested from the Egg of Potential, where it was torn asunder in my battle. These ones look like me, so perhaps they were shaped from my thoughts and likeness. And perhaps the lesser and wilder beasts came from the chaotic, unrefined thoughts of Saries."

Yes, Sarhush was confident in that theory. But now that he was thinking about it, he still did not know what to call these creatures that looked so much like him. "Another question now: what are you?"

This one, none could answer. Even with the gift of words, they could only shrug.

It fell to Sarhush, naturally, to name them then. He had to name almost everything it seemed: the world, Saries, these folk. "I name you folk humanity," he began. But that word lacked power. "Mankind." Again, the word rang hollow. He tried a third and final time: "People."

There! That was a word that had power to it. There was so much power within it that a second Me manifested; this one looked like a tablet of hardened clay, imprinted only with the shape of a human hand and foot. The prints were perfect in their shape, too perfect to ever be real, almost like the divine Forms. But this was such a powerful Me that it transcended mere humans; it contained the knowledge of understand of all peoples, creatures capable of organization, of forging civilization. Perhaps it was as powerful as the Me of Ashuru. But Sarhush was not overly attached to these Mes, so he dropped it down and watched as the ur-humans gathered around it, trying to fit their own hands and feet within the shaped molded onto the tablet.

Sarhush finally turned back to Sirna. "In short: yes. You may thank me, Sarhush, for these mortals. But you have not offered your name. Do you lack one too? From my customary abundance of generosity, I would bestow one upon you."




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Hidden 6 mos ago Post by Frettzo
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Saries


Some animals were too brave, Saries thought, as a small cat jumped down from its perch atop Its left side and disappeared into the underbrush.

It wasn’t the only animal to have done that in the last few days since the conclusion of Saries’ fight with Sarhush, but it would certainly be the last. Most of the pain and soreness was gone now, so it was time to go.

Saries opened Its eyes just in time to see a large bear dropping off its catch next to Its mouth - an offering of sorts, It guessed. This particular bear had already been blessed, so Saries didn’t understand why it had come back, much less bearing gifts. Maybe it saw It as some sort of parental figure? Or perhaps the bear felt pity for Saries, having observed the state It was left in after the fight? The thought ticked It off a little.

Saries grunted and stirred. The bear and the birds perched on every branch of the Hollow Tree were spooked into flight. Saries stretched its muscles whilst whining in relief, and then in one smooth movement devoured the gifted salmon and set off into the forest.

At times it was difficult to move through the dense woods, given Its large body, but nothing was really impassable for Saries. One way or another, It found ways to get to where It wanted to go. Sometimes Its destination was the nest of some beast that had caught Its attention, other times it was a particularly spectacular spot that oversaw entire regions, and some other times It simply had no destination.

During its first journey, Saries saw beasts of all kinds. Some were covered in fur, others had antlers on their head, others were large — even larger than Saries itself — and had magnificent, stone-coloured trunks. And those weren’t all. Besides all the furred and scaled and hairless animals It had seen, It also saw strange little things growing out of dead things and in damp spots. Fungi, eaten by some animals for both nutrition and entertainment, and even smaller things that multiplied and lived entire lives well beyond the sight of lesser beings.

Had all of this truly come from It? It briefly remembered the vision it experienced before the fight with Sarhush — The moving painting of an Ashuru filled to the brim with life, where one could not take a single step without seeing something new and beautiful.

Saries hadn’t even tried to bring these beings into the World, and yet they were here now. Was this Its instinct? To bring things to life and banish the coldness of non-life?

It had been some time since Its departure from the first Pen by now, and Saries felt the fur along Its back stand on end. Its Progeny was suffering — It could feel every strike and every wound as if they were being inflicted on It.

It was time to go back.

II


How did this happen? The thought echoed over and over in Saries’ mind.

What had originally been a small clearing containing a single pen was now a vast field containing nothing but grass, huts, paths, and the sickening scent of burning flesh and plants.

Saries huffed — Yet another log was placed on the platform tied to Its back.

These trees had not been dead nor sick before they’d been cut. They’d been of the priceless First, and Sarhush decides to murder them anyway? What even was the point, when allowing them to live out their lives would have taken a mere few thousand years?

It was one thing for Sarhush to be depraved and evil, but to go so far as to spread that corruption into the hearts and minds of Saries’ Offspring? There was no greater offense. And yet, a battle right here and now would be counter productive — Saries was meant to protect the living, and fighting Sarhush here would lead to many needless deaths.

Another log was dropped onto Saries’ back. Its paws sank a little into the soft dirt underneath.

Someone approached Saries from the side and It snapped at them, growling and barking. The growl abated only when Saries saw that the creature now sitting on its behind, shaking and having slightly wet himself, was a lanky and weak-looking ur-human. Not a threat, It thought, so it ignored the weak human and lifted its paws out of the dirt.

Saries had enough. It shook its body, easily breaking apart the platform on its back and causing the logs loaded on it to drop onto the ground. The ground hadn’t even had a chance to rumble before Saries had jumped away from the clearing and landed at the shore nearby.

There were countless fires raging in the distance, and every breath that Saries took filled its lungs with ash and smoke. It would not have been a cause for alarm, if it did not also feel the sensations of every one of its creations nearby. The burning, the choking, the fading of life — It was nearly maddening. With each life that was unjustly snuffed out, Saries felt its patience wearing thin. The damage had to be controlled!

So Saries howled. It was a long, haunting howl that resonated throughout the land, bringing ur-humans to their knees and calling beasts to It. Yet beasts were not the only ones to respond to the howl. In the distance, four beings echoed.. Not Gods, no, something different. Lesser obviously, but they somehow shone brightly still. It was time to hunt.

The birds in their many different sizes and colours were the first ones to arrive and perch themselves on Saries’ back. They would do as the first to be blessed, as the first Non-God to have echoed Saries’ howl back at It lived far above in the skies. To a lesser eye, it would have looked like a lone cloud far above the other, but Saries knew. The birds all braced as Saries flexed Its legs, and then It jumped.

The land below quickly disappeared below layers of clouds and smoke, they went so far above that all but one cloud had disappeared. The closer the group got to the cloud, the more its shape changed. It was always a vague shape, but by the time that the birds could see it, it had formed two magnificent wings and an avian body not unlike theirs. It was flapping its wings trying to get away, but it was of no use, Saries was too fast!

That’s when the birds saw them. There were things inside of the cloud. Countless, innumerable things that shone and twinkled like the night lights in the sky! The crows were the first to act, taking flight and shooting straight for the shiniest of them all. Then the hawks, and the eagles, and the parakeets and the owls.

They all knew that they had to reach one of the lights and take it.

And so dozens of birds, along with Saries, shot through the cloud, grasping in their beaks one of the lights and swallowing. Some went back for seconds, others for thirds, but most were only able to get away with just one, for the altitude there were flying in was far too high and their lungs and bodies were not designed to survive it for long. It was not long before the birds had fallen unconscious from the strain of the flight, but luckily for them, Saries was there. It fell alongside them and kept the flames of their lives alight, even when their bodies would have given up long ago.

They had become connected to something greater than themselves. As they fell lower and lower, they woke back up, completely changed. The very air seemed to nourish them, and the clouds responded to them. Their feathers and wings had changed and in their minds, there was only one thing now: the fires.

As they approached the surface once more, the birds split up. Some of them went straight for the fires, using their new control over wind and air to make the clouds overhead burst into a torrential rain. Others spread far and wide to herd more and more clouds to the burning lands, so that the torrential rain would continue for as long as it needed to.

When Saries landed on the ground, It saw that other animals had gathered. This was good, Saries thought, for the threat that the ur-humans and Sarhush posed had become clear. There were three more Not-Gods to hunt, and each of them would be forced to give a blessing to Saries’ Progeny.


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Hidden 6 mos ago 6 mos ago Post by Vec
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Days had passed since the fractured sky, since the gods witnessed perfection and found themselves wanting. The world had not been idle. Life, once contained in a single perfect sphere, now spreads across Ashuru like wildfire. Forests burn. Oceans pulse with hidden knowledge. And in the spaces between creation and chaos, the consequences of divine action begin to manifest.

On one of the two islands scattered across the known reaches of the foggy sea near the black shore, some of the first Changed Ones would be born. The ur-humans who had emerged from the shattered Egg would gather in nervous clusters, clutching their newborns with a mixture of wonder and fear. For the children would be... different. Not wrong, precisely, but changed in ways their parents could not explain.

One infant's eyes would reflect light like polished gems, her skin taking on a faint crystalline sheen. Another child would stretch impossibly tall even in his mother's arms, limbs already showing the elongated grace of something meant to reach great heights. A third would bear skin dark as the ocean's depths, shadow seeming to pool in the creases of her tiny fists.

The changes would be small, at first. A matter of color, of proportion, of texture. But they would be unmistakable. And they would be multiplying.

Where Alechior's golden light had descended, the mortals would be touched by something the gods would come to call the Gambler's Mark. Not visible on the parents, but expressed in their offspring: random, chaotic, beautiful, ugly. Some children would bear a small yellow dot between their shoulder blades, a sign of the blessing's presence. Others would show no such mark but carry the change nonetheless.

The ur-humans would not yet have words for what was happening. They would point. They would compare. They would hold their different children close and wonder, in their primitive way, if this was punishment or gift.

Any gods that might lay eyes upon them, however, would understand: the bloodlines were diverging. What had been one People would soon be many. Tall Folk and Short Folk. Shadow-Kin and Gem-Blooded. Beast-Touched who would bear animal features: a tail here, pointed ears there, amber eyes that saw in darkness. Each generation would splinter further, rolling the dice of chance with every birth.

Sarhush's vision of a unified civilization would fracture before it could properly form. The mortals (at the very least, these mortals and any outsiders who joined them) would not breed true. They would never breed true again.

At first, the mortals would notice only pleasant plants: flowers with broad petals that swayed in windless air, vines that climbed nothing yet somehow stood upright, shrubs that emitted a faint, golden glow at dusk. Beautiful, but unremarkable in a world already strange.

Then the plants would begin to sing.

Not with voices, not with sound as mortals understood it, but with a low, harmonic hum that resonated in the chest and settled in the mind like warm honey. The mortals who walked near these groves would feel their anxieties drain away, replaced by contentment so complete it bordered on euphoria.

What the mortals would come to call the Happy Plants would be spreading. They would grow in clusters, each cluster connected by invisible root networks that thrummed with shared purpose. Where enough gathered, they would form Joy Groves: spaces of perfect calm where even the most frightened child could sleep peacefully, where the most hardened warrior could lay down his stone axe and simply... rest.

The groves would glow softly at night, a warm phosphorescence that drew mortals like moths to flame. Within their boundaries, predators would grow docile. The sharp scent of burning forest would fade to distant memory. Even Sarhush's most fervent followers, those who had been touched by the Me of Fire and set the world ablaze, would find their hands stilling when they entered a Joy Grove.

The mortals would build their first permanent shelters within sight of these groves. They would plant seeds nearby, hoping the plants' strange blessing would spread. Some would begin leaving offerings (simple things, carved stones or woven grass) at the bases of the largest specimens.

The first prayers to vegetation would be whispered beneath Happy Plant canopies. The first botanical religion would take root in soil touched by Alechior's merriment.

The rain came suddenly.

Sarhush's burning forests, which had raged unchecked for days, filling the air with choking smoke and ash, were doused by torrential downpours that seemed to appear from nowhere. Clouds that had not existed moments before materialized overhead, pregnant with water, and emptied themselves onto the flames below.

The ur-humans looked up in confusion. Then they saw the birds.

They were larger than any birds should be, their wingspans rivaling the height of full-grown humans. Storm clouds clung to their bodies like living cloaks, dark and roiling, shot through with veins of lightning. Their eyes glowed with an inner light: not the soft warmth of Arstus's stars, but the cold, electric blue of a sky before thunder.

These were not the simple birds that had perched on Saries' back. They had been transformed. The lights they had swallowed from the Patron of Air's cloud-body had changed them fundamentally, irrevocably. They were no longer mere animals. They were something between mortal and Ideal: elemental beings wearing feathered forms.

The Storm Birds, as mortals would come to call them, commanded wind and rain and lightning. Where they flew, weather obeyed. They herded clouds like Sarhush's mortals herded cattle, driving massive banks of precipitation toward the burning lands. They struck the ground with talons that left scorch marks, not from heat but from raw electric potential.

And they were territorial.

When one mortal, emboldened by desperation, raised a stone axe toward a Storm Bird diving low over the flames, the bird did not flee. It turned mid-flight, impossibly fast, and struck. The lightning that erupted from its beak left the mortal unconscious and his axe melted to slag.

The other mortals learned quickly: these were not creatures to hunt. These were predators. These were demigods in miniature.

Orranoth, watching from his domain in the skies, would have felt the wrongness of it like a discordant note in a perfect symphony. This was not the magic he had glimpsed at during his vision. This was not the result of careful study and mastery, no. This was theft: power ripped from an Ideal and implanted into mortal flesh.

And yet... it worked.

The Storm Birds' offspring would carry this gift forward, and a precedent had been set. If animals could steal power from Patrons, what else might be possible? What other Patrons might be hunted, consumed, exploited? The gods would have to decide: stop Saries, or watch as the world's animals became an army of elemental monsters.

Yzechr found it in the heart of the uncertain mountains.

The journey had been treacherous even for a god. The mountains collapsed and reformed constantly, their peaks flickering in and out of existence like candle flames in wind. But Yzechr was patient, and Yzechr was clever, and when the mountains stabilized for the briefest moment, he slipped through.

The bell hung in a cavern of crystalline stone. Not the warm, organic crystals of Khthon's underground roots, but cold, geometric structures that looked less grown than manufactured. They formed walls, ceiling, floor, all meeting at impossible angles that hurt to observe directly.

The bell itself was massive, easily three times Yzechr's divine height. It was made of metal that shifted color depending on viewing angle: bronze, then silver, then something that had no name. Intricate patterns covered its surface. Not decoration but script, symbols that writhed and reconfigured themselves as Yzechr watched.

At the bell's base, a crystalline mechanism pulsed with faint light. It was a display of some kind, covered in characters that made Yzechr's divine consciousness ache when he tried to read them. Most were incomprehensible: geometric shapes that folded through dimensions his mind could not properly contain, alphabets from languages that had never existed.

But some things... some things were readable.

Numbers. Percentages.

67%

The numbers flickered, dropped to 66%, held steady.

And beneath them, carved into the crystalline base with absolute precision, was a symbol. Not a word, not an image, but a concept made visual: a representation so stark and final that Yzechr understood it instantly, instinctively, with the kind of bone-deep certainty that bypasses thought entirely. TERMINATION.

The bell was counting down. And when it reached zero...

The jumbled characters on the display shifted again, and for just an instant (barely a heartbeat) one configuration resolved into something almost readable:

"STABILITY... DEGRA... USE... WISE... EXIST..."

Then it scrambled again into incomprehensibility.

The god of Deception and Corruption stood in the crystalline cavern and felt, for perhaps the first time since awakening, something close to fear. This was not a mystery to be solved. This was a warning. This was a countdown.

And he had to decide: tell the others, or keep this secret for himself?

Alechior's instincts led true.

The mountain he had landed on was ordinary enough: jagged peaks, loose scree, thin air that barely qualified as atmosphere. But as he explored, following nothing but whim and curiosity, he found a path that should not exist. It zigzagged down the mountainside at angles that defied gravity, leading to a valley hidden between peaks that reformed specifically to conceal it.

When Alechior stepped into the valley, reality... hiccupped.

Rain fell upward, droplets streaming into the sky like reversed waterfalls. A boulder floated past his head, spinning lazily, before suddenly plummeting to the ground with impossible force. Time itself seemed uncertain. Alechior watched a bird fly by in normal speed, then rewind its flight backwards, then leap forward several seconds in an instant.

This was a place where probability had gone mad.

The valley was circular, ringed by mountains that shifted their positions when not directly observed. At its center stood a pillar of stone (or perhaps it was ice, or metal, or all three at once) that flickered between states faster than even divine eyes could track.

The ground nearby changed texture erratically: sand, then grass, then polished marble, then nothing at all. Alechior would walk on air for three steps before the valley remembered gravity existed and the god would feel the power exert itself on his form once more. Fire became ice became lightning became flower petals became screaming became silence became...

At the valley's center, the flickering pillar pulsed once, and for just a moment, Alechior could see it for what it truly was: an anchor point. A place where reality could be stabilized, if one dared to try. Where the chaos could be claimed, controlled, made into something useful.

Or left wild. The choice, as always, was his.

In the days since Saries had departed, the Hollow Tree had become a place of pilgrimage.

Animals came. Not the blessed ones who had received Saries' vitality gift, though they came too, but all manner of creatures: birds, mammals, reptiles, even insects drawn by instinct they could not name. They approached the tree reverently, circling its trunk, leaving offerings: shiny stones, fresh-killed prey, flowers plucked from Joy Groves, among other things.

The tree accepted all gifts.

And something else happened, so subtle that only the most observant gods might notice. When the blessed animals visited (those who carried Saries' vitality in their blood), they lingered near the trunk longer than others. They pressed their bodies against the bark, as if seeking comfort or warmth.

And when they left, they walked slightly slower. Their pelts looked slightly duller. The glow of health that marked Saries' blessing seemed fractionally dimmed.

The tree, in turn, looked less dead. Its bark, which had been grey and brittle, now showed hints of brown beneath the surface. The hollow in its trunk seemed fractionally smaller. And in the deepest part of night, when even Arstus's stars dimmed, a faint luminescence pulsed from within the wood: barely visible, easily missed, but undeniably present.

The tree was not growing. Not yet. But something within it stirred. Something woke. Something began, in the smallest possible way, to live again.

The blessed animals did not notice. They returned home feeling slightly more tired than they should, but nothing alarming. Just the normal exhaustion of a long journey.

The Hollow Tree waited, patient as only plants can be, and drew sustenance from the essence that clung to its visitors like morning dew.

The Thornsteel Vines spread through Adria's forests, their metallic tendrils wrapping around tree trunks and diving into soil. Where a mortal had died protecting her child from a predator (the first noble sacrifice), a single vine sprouted from the blood-soaked ground, its thorns gleaming like rubies in Arstus's starlight. The vine stood sentinel over the grave, its presence warning predators and welcoming kin. The mortals did not yet understand, but they felt the significance. They marked the spot with stones and whispered promises to remember.

The gold veins Khthon had created sank deeper into the earth, as if the metal itself had inherited its creator's love of secrets. What had been visible glints at the surface became buried veins, tantalizing glimpses of wealth that would require effort and danger to claim. Mortals who would, eventually, dig for it would find their hands coming away with only flecks, barely enough to admire in lamplight. The true treasures lay below, waiting in darkness.

The animal pilgrimage to Saries' former resting place grew into a well-worn trail. Deer, wolves, bears, even the Storm Birds descended to visit the Hollow Tree, bringing their strange gifts and strange reverence. Some mortals, watching from a distance, began to imitate the animals. They too left offerings, though they did not understand why.

The crystalline roots beneath Khthon's earth pulsed brighter now, their phosphorescent glow strengthening with each passing day. In some caverns, the light was strong enough to see by. The roots spread deeper, faster, as if racing toward something far below. What they sought remained unknown, but their urgency was unmistakable.

Knowledge fragments glowed in the ocean's depths, their pale light visible through even the corrupted waters during Yzechr's brief windows of clarity. Some fragments had begun to move with purpose, clustering together, merging. The gods who watched the sea closely reported shapes forming in the deep: ambulatory things made of living information, Knowledge Golems that wandered the ocean floor like lost children searching for meaning.

Sarhush's forest fires had been quenched by Storm Bird rains, but the damage was done. Vast swathes of pristine First Growth trees lay as charred stumps and ash fields. As the mortals touched by the Me of Fire looked at the devastation they, for the first time, felt something that could be called guilt. Others felt pride. A division was slowly forming: those who built and those who burned.

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Hidden 6 mos ago Post by Rekkuza
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Khthon


Yes, yes, yes!

His creation was even more beautiful than he could have imagined! That wonderful yellow shine, the subtle weave of it throughout the stone... Such beauty! Hidden deep and unseen by all, except him! A treasure for his eyes only!

This new substance, the first natural metal, would need a name, for it would not remain the only of its kind for now. Its color was inspiring, somewhat reminiscent of Khthon's loudest and most boisterous God-Brother, Alechior. It would need a striking name, something worthy of its beauty.

"Gold".

Yes, "gold" felt right. Khthon might not have Sarhush's arrogant love of naming things, but even he could acknowledge a good name.

He would not stop at just gold. It was beautiful, yes, but it was alone, and lacking in variety. It's beauty would only shine brighter when joined by other treasures.

From the same base that birthed precious gold, Khthon made many more metals to paint his subterranean domain. An orange metal that would grow green-grey when exposed to air, and white gleaming one that felt as shined as bright as gold. Some painted in veins, others in small lumps, most in small flakes. Some metals he used extremely sparsely, only present as accents in his increasingly complex work of art, while he spread others liberally, mixing them with stone as he saw fit.

Names came quickly afterwards. Copper, silver, lead, aluminium, platinum, zinc, tin... Many of them seemed similar at first glance, but Khthon knew that their beauty laid as much in their properties than in their appearance.

As he prepared his next metal, a hardy, grey thing that grew red when exposed to air, Khthon had a new idea. From the bases of "stones", he had made "metal". What if from "metal", he made "stone" again?

He put his idea in practice, taking his metal, "iron" he had called it, and willing it into stone as he had willed the primordial sand into stone. From it emerged a new thing, both rock and metal, dark, solid, and gleaming. He tried the same with a few of the rarer pure metals, and was ecstatic to see similar results, in many different colors and textures. These new things, both stone and metal, would be called "ores".

Khthon spread these ores far and wide, encasing them in the walls of his caverns and in between pure metal veins. Large chunks of buried stone would be replaced with a mix of these ores, waiting for someone to find them. When at last Khthon was done filling the earth with metallic treasures, when he thought he was finally done building his hoard, he was struck by the feeling of something... missing.

His crystal roots felt close to this missing piece, but not quite the right answer either, not that he could make more if he wished to; their power and movement spelled something... ancient, and much too alive for him to replicate. He thought back to the small, white crystal he had accidentally created, his very first treasure, which he still cradled with his body. Khthon had momentarily forgotten it, overtaken by awe at the discovery of said crystalline roots, but it held potential, as well as a certain sentimentality.

The roots were beautiful, but they were... the same. Large and twisting, uniform in color and luster. He could make something similar, his own crystals and gems. He could make them any color he wanted, any shape he wanted, any opacity he wanted. They would be the last piece of the puzzle.

Soon, millions of gems appeared underground, peppering the rock where they would be the most beautiful. Some were as clear as air, and shone in every color when illuminated. Others were a deep, deep red, as red as freshly spilled blood. Rubies, sapphires, garnets, emeralds, quartzes, diamonds, opals... Every kind of jewel that could have ever been imagined filled the bowels of the earth.

Finally, Khthon was satisfied. He had created a vision of true beauty, one hidden from would-be plunderers by the deep crevaces of the earth and his unyielding stone. Such frantic and abundant creation had left him tired, however, and he felt the desire to rest.

He awoke slowly from his trance and was left surprised at what he saw; the surface had changed dramatically while his divine mind wandered underground. It was so much louder than it had ever been before, even without his louder God-Siblings nearby. Life filled every crevice, and even covered some of Khthon's own body: a soft, green thing had grown over a good bit of his exposed torso. Even the soil had changed somewhat. The top layer, once a sandy and sterile thing, had been transformed into rich, life-giving humus.

Humidity lingered in the air, along with the smell of ash and smoke. Critters scurried everywhere, plants rustled in the breeze, and strange creatures, similar in shape to some of his God-Siblings, walked through the wilds, foraging. They, by far, were the noisiest of the bunch. Some of them wielded what seemed to be tools made from his stone. This was... clever, the God thought. He had created stone to serve as a solid base for the world to rest upon, and as a place for him to find solitude when desired. He had never imagine that it could be used in such ways.

Khthon rose from the ground, unearthing his massive lower body, and shook off the excess soil. He began lumbering away, unheeding of the shocked cries of the bipedal creatures at his sudden awakening. How long had they been here? Did they think him a vulgar boulder? Were they afraid of him?

He had wanted to find one of his deeper caverns and rest in silence within, and perhaps follow the crystal roots to their destination. But it seemed he would first have to find whichever God-Sibling was responsible for such drastic changes, and ask a single question, borne from simple curiosity; why create all of this?

Perhaps the arrogant one, Sarhush, would have an answer.

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ᦓ꠸᥅ꪀꪖ


Certainly, Sarhush was a god with initiative. Within the span of his long-winded response, Sarhush had gifted these ur-humans with yet another two blessings. A part of it felt wrong – and yet it was that wrongness that filled Sirna with intrigue.

Pink tinted their moon-head when Sarhush offered to give them a name.

I accept your kind generosity,’ they say, in a perfectly level tone. ‘What name would you bestow upon me, whom you have met only moments ago?

Whatever Sarhush’s response may be – if it was offered at all – Sirna had no time to reply to, for shortly after, the sky darkened and emptied out a great rain. It soaked the soil and the ur-humans, who scurried to their homes in search of cover. It drenched the critters, huddling in their pens or stranded in the burnt lands that had once offered homes in the trees that were no longer there. It stirred the shadows of Sirna’s form and wet the surface of their moon-head, stray droplets catching in faintly visible craters.

Pink faded to a dim blue, streaked with gold. Sirna formed a shadowy hand, let the rain drops pool within their palm.

If I may offer my thoughts,’ they said. ‘You have a vision for this world. A clear one. A great one, perhaps. But you seem in a rush to shape it to your will.

They knelt to the ground and tipped their hand. The pooled rainwater, now shimmering, twinkling, different, drizzled into the soil.

At first, nothing. Then several somethings popped out of the soil. Not plants, no. They sported dimly glowing golden caps, with stems as black as midnight. They wobbled in the pounding rain, some of them tilting sideways to flash rich, shimmering, dark blue gills. Only a small amount of them grew where Sirna and Sarhush stood – the rest would sprout elsewhere throughout Ashuru. In the dung heaps of animal pens; in the moist corners of crude ur-human homes; in the undersides of fallen logs and the nooks of thick tree roots; where fungi would grow, these mushrooms would follow. Mortals who ate them would find a greater inclination to recall their dreams. Perhaps they might find themselves navigating the realm of dreams to greater depths, used wisely.

(A certain group of ur-humans with questionable diets may recognise the taste of these mushrooms to resemble ur-human flesh. They kept this knowledge to themselves, for obvious reasons.)

These mushrooms would come to earn the name of Lullaby Shrooms. For if left unchecked, nearby mortals were prone to falling into a deep, restful slumber that was difficult to wake from. As opposed to what their name suggested, these mushrooms did not produce any song of their own, only a rhythmic gentle shushing – the sound of spores being released into the air, reproductive and soporific alike.

In the rain, they did not make a sound.

The mortals may do well with some breathing room,’ continued Sirna. ‘Are you not interested in seeing what they will bring to fruition on their own, given time?


~



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Hidden 6 mos ago 6 mos ago Post by Timemaster
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🎲 𝒜𝓁𝑒𝒸𝒽𝒾𝑜𝓇 🎺


Alechior took one confident step forward and the ground simply decided it had better things to do. Their foot landed on empty air and for three long seconds they stood there, suspended, as if the valley was trying to figure out whether gravity still applied to gods. Then the place remembered itself and yanked downwards all at once. Alechior dropped like a stone, only for the air beneath them to harden into marble mid-fall, turning the plummet into a far too dignified landing.

“Cute,” they muttered, brushing imaginary dust from their shoulder while a river to their left flowed sideways into the sky. Every part of this place was gambling with the laws of existence and losing with style. A bird rewound past their ear in reverse chirps. A patch of grass combusted into ice. A mountain peak vanished and reappeared behind them. The valley wasn’t broken, it was improvising, which Alechior could absolutely respect.

The flickering pillar at the center pulsed again, harder this time, like a heartbeat belonging to a creature that did not care for consistency. It flipped between stone, ice, shining metal and something that might not even exist yet. Alechior felt the pull of it, not a beckoning but a dare, a challenge, an open seat at a table no one sane would sit at.

They grinned. “Now this… this is a proper game.”

They strode forward as the valley reshuffled beneath their feet, every step a new spin of a cosmic wheel. The air crackled with instability but, for once, Alechior didn’t bother to nudge the odds. They wanted to see what the valley would try next.

Alechior paused where the ground had dissolved beneath them, hovering midair with a twirl of their fingers. The valley around them flinched, sand turning to water then to glass, rain flicking upward in spouts, boulders floating in spirals before crashing down. With a grin, Alechior decided it was time to see what they could coax from the chaos. They reached toward the central pillar, fingertips touching the flickering surface and let their influence spread. The valley hiccuped at first, reality shivering like a cat but gradually the chaos bent to a pattern. Not complete control, just nudges and boundaries. The rain still ascended, but in predictable arcs. Floating stones followed loops that could be anticipated, time hiccuped in short skips rather than endless randomness.

As they flew through the valley, eyes shinning as they tested the limits of their touch. They lifted a shard of ice-turned-metal from the ground, watching it spin, then let it go, noting how it followed a looping curve instead of plummeting at a hundred different angles. Sparks of lightning fizzled into flower petals before vanishing, yet the pattern repeated with every sweep of the hand. Alechior's laughter echoed faintly through the valley. Nothing here would ever behave normally, but the valley could be played with, like a board set with rules invented by Alechior.

Alechior laughed and laughed for what felt like hours, the sound rolling across the unstable valley. Every time the ground shifted beneath them, every flicker of rain or twist of time, it felt like a dice roll, unpredictable yet thrilling. “Ah,” they murmured to themselves, “this is a gambler’s paradise. Every step is a wager. Every breath a chance. Every blink, a roll of the dice.” Fingers traced arcs through the air as they floated, watching a boulder twist into a spiral and descend exactly where it shouldn’t, the patterns teasing the edges of sense.

The deity’s thoughts spiraled along with the valley, excitement clear on their form. “Almost no rules, except those I allow. Nothing guaranteed…yet everything possible. Here, even the air itself cheats, bends, tests, taunts. Fortune favors no one…except maybe me, if I roll right.” Alechior’s grin widened, eyes scanning the chaotic horizon. Every step, every gust of wind, every errant spark of lightning promised a gamble, and that promise was intoxicating.

With a very, loud shout, Alechior said "I just LOVE THIS PLACE!"



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Hidden 6 mos ago 6 mos ago Post by ActRaiserTheReturned
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Orranoth

The God Of Skies looked over the world. His mighty gathering of the Ideal Patrons had tired him. For now, some of his strength came back. As a result, he wandered the world in his "mortal" form, a disguise of a simple old man in a pointed hat, walking on a staff.
Orranoth walked mortal lands looking for a worthy "apprentice" among the peoples. In this guise of an old man he would offer help where he could, sometimes making life better for entire villages and tribes, and not just a particular person. He had some specifications for apprentices. They had to be at least ethically inclined, and most of the time they had to have at least above average intelligence. Most apprentices would be young, for their species.


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This time, Sarhush responded a bit more softly, "You are heard. You have asked for a name, and I shall grant it."

He stood there for a minute, ruminating over the task and taking in all that was before him. Then the rain began, and droplets of accursed wetness fell upon the god's brow. His teeth gnashed and ground at one another, unseen behind his scowl.

"I style you Sirna," he soon proclaimed. Perhaps Sarhush's divine perception was sharper than any--even he himself--could ever know, and with a mere glance he could sense the true name of a being. Or perhaps Sirna's earlier revelation of their name, closer to the time of their arrival on this world, was a mere premonition of the divine proclamation that Lord Sarhush would utter thereafter. OR perhaps it was mere coincidence, for Sarhush did seem to fancy names that began with an 'S'.

Whatever the case, the rain was deeply bothersome on many levels. It pattered upon the shoulders of Sarhush, who seemed unmoved by its weight even as he seethed inside like a silent, hissing coal buried beneath wet snow. He listened to Sirna while that other god answered the gift of a name with some words punctuated by an almost insulting suggestion:

"If I may offer my thoughts...You have a vision for this world. A clear one. A great one, perhaps. But you seem in a rush to shape it to your will. The mortals may do well with some breathing room,’ continued Sirna. ‘Are you not interested in seeing what they will bring to fruition on their own, given time?"

Ha! Breathing room. Time and room enough in the emptiness of our sleep,' was what Sarhush thought, but his parting words spoken aloud were sharper still.

"For these mortals...breathing room?" He snorted, not cruelly but with the dismissive certainty of someone humoring a child. "The world you walk through,” he gestured broadly, to the distant forest fires that still barely smoldered in the rain, to the fields of ash and charcoals, to the pens that held sheep and cattle, the stone tools, the trails already beginning to be cut into the earth by the sheer movement of so many feet, "...exists only because I have shaped it so. You think that I move too quickly, that I might perhaps fell the trees and set their timber to dry before burning them all. I think that I move perhaps too slowly, for there is so much work to be done, and so many misguided beasts and gods making the task harder!

"You recognize my great vision, so you must realize too why this work must be done. Is time so worthless that you would set it aside to spoil? Whether nature is conquered and civilization rises by my hand, or through the hands of those that I have directed, the outcome will be the same. All mortal works are the same as my own works. Their accomplishments testaments and additions to my own glory and teaching."


His eyes shone like embers.

"They may grow, yes, and in time complete works of their own. But this will be facilitated by my guidance, and under my command. Without the Mes, they would still be as beasts. Without a leader, they would lie in the mud, dreaming forever."

Then Sarhush looked to the newsprung fungi, and his lip curled. "As you perhaps intend. But it is no matter. You cultivate dreams while I cultivate deeds. Let us see which takes firmer root!"

Sirna was gone. Sarhush did not particularly care what that one thought or how much it had heard. The work remained.

He now allowed his displeasure at the rain to be seen, and he stepped back beneath the protective shelter of a rocky overhand to escape that shiver-inducing wetness that reminded him of the sea.

This rain was a terrible and egregious thing. It halted his fires, and worse, in Sarhush's great foresight he could see that this rain would doom the world. Even as small rivulets formed in the earth by his feet, he could see the water carrying away specks of dirt, eroding them and bearing them to the sea. As the rain continued, the waters would only ever rise, and eventually the sea would drink the whole of the land underfoot and all his work would be undone. He would not allow it!

As he shivered beneath the overhang, he looked down and beheld his own nakedness. It reminded him of a beast. All around him, the ur-humans too were shivering with their bare skin exposed to the wind and cold rain. No more!

"To cover one's self is to rise above the like of beasts," he declared.

"What does that even mean?" one of the cavemen asked.

Another, overcome by modesty now for the first time, covered what bits of her nakedness she could with her hands.

Sarhush stomped out into the rain, towards the pen where he had trapped his cattle. He dragged one forth and slaughtered it with his stone axe; the hungry humans gathered around to feast, but he waved them off as he began meticulously parting hide from flesh. When he had skinned the animal, he wrapped the still-bloody pelt about himself, and considered the task done for the moment. To the humans, he tossed the remaining scraps of hide that he'd skinned from the bull.

There was one strip of hide that seemed different from all the rest. It was covered in strange geometric patterns that no mortal could have imagined or woven, and it was supple and yet untearing, thin and yet warm and waterproof, and it always seemed the perfect size to wrap around the body of its wearer. This was the Me of Clothing, and he gifted it to these followers.

There remained the bloody meat and carcass of the bull. Some of the hungrier ur-humans were circling around the thing like vultures, more concerned with eating than with crafting clothes even now that they had grown to understand that their nakedness diminished them in Sarhush's eyes. That weakness and lack of discipline was disgusting, but hunger was powerful. Sarhush himself felt it, so he claimed a bite of the bull's flesh.

Rain wept over the bleeding carcass, and the soggy meat was vile.

An orange glow emanated from a nearby cave where some of the other ur-humans had taken shelter. Here, a particularly industrious one had gathered some of the timber and sticks that had evaded the great blaze they'd started at their god's request, and he had somehow dried these woods scraps enough to start a crude fire with some implements. Sarhush shouldered the human who'd started that fire aside, though he did offer at least a grunt of praise.

The warmth revived Sarhush's muscles and drove off the damp, but it did something even better to the meat that he held above the fire to dry. The heat and smoke transformed the cut of flesh, cured it, improved it. This fit perfectly into his vision of Civilization. Thus was created the Me of Cooking, which took the form of a strange earthen vessel whose bowels ever emanated heat. He set the firepot down that the mortals could wonder at it and know what it meant to cook their food over fire rather than eat it raw and unrefined as beasts.

Still, Sarhush was crowned by worry and trouble. How would something like cooking even work underwater, once the rain had consumed the world? How was he to survive going down there again into the cold and briny dark, where he could not even breathe?

Lost in thought, he looked up, and suddenly noticed a small crack in the back of this little cave in the hillside. Something compelled him to investigate it; he seized a burning branch from the bonfire even as the ur-humans held their skewers of meat above the flames to roast; there was plenty of fire left for them to cook and stay warm, but this little torch would help Sarhush see in the back of that dark crevice. He approached it, found it narrow but traversable even for a being of his bulk, and began to crawl deep into the stony bowels of the earth.

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Hidden 6 mos ago Post by Cmmelody
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Yzechr


It is a sight worth shivering. A giant bell with incomprehensible letters, the count down, the words that spell doom. Something about this place reminds Yzechr of those fractures in the sky, unknown, dangerous. Still, the god of corruption doesn’t want to jump to the conclusion just yet, something dangerous doesn’t mean it is unbeneficial or out to get them after all.

The black mist slowly descended into the crystal cavern, stopping at the jumbled words under the bell. It is clearly not something the god can read in this state, maybe they have to wait for it to stabilize again? Yzechr lower their body, black materialized right arm reaches the odd shaping floor to run over the now unreadable characters. It might take a long time before anything of substance can be gained from study, too long to justify wasting away. Perhaps it would be more useful to give this information to others?

The first one that comes to mind is their colorful friend. But as soon as the picture appeared, Yzechr immediately shook their unsolidified faces. Too unserious, that one. The black god can’t imagine the dazzling friend sitting still to study something like this.

The god who made fractures in the sky is also a no go. There is no telling what his stance on those outsiders is. He seem a bit too friendly toward them, not something Yzechr want to deal with right now.

Those two gods who were wrestling at the sea? Too violent. Especially the one with only head, Yzechr can sense his arrogance from miles away.

The god who dug underground and the god who disappeared in dream, those two seem to be much more content in their own corner than interacting with people above ground. It would be better to leave them to their own device for now.

The trio who surveyed the inland? Yzechr briefly considered them, they would be interested in the mystery after all. But then the black god shakes their head again. Bad idea. They might be interested in the mystery, but they might not keep their mouth shut, and then all the problems above would come pouring in like the rain that started drifting down the mouth of this cavern.

That leaves the god who tried to capture the book. Hmmm.... might not be a bad choice. That guy shows enough willpower in wanting to know the mystery of the outside. He also doesn’t seem too friendly with them judging by his actions.

The candidate has been decided. Yzechr focuses their mind on the connection between them and others, the connection they briefly felt when conversing with that dazzling friend. Finding which connection belongs to who is a bit confusing at first, but with some effort, Yzechr is finally able to pinpoint the connection line that belongs to the book capturer god.

“Hello hello, test test. Are you the one who picks a fight with the book? I hope you are.” The black god opens with a cheerful teasing voice. “Anyway, I stumbled upon something interesting down here. If you want to come take a look, I will be waiting.” The picture of the cavern in the current state has been transmitted to the other side, including the bell, the scripts, and the unknown architecture. “Oh, right. The way is a bit hard to find with all those unfinished mountains, here’s the direction, hope that helps.” Thinking of the confusing navigation before, Yzechr decided to show the way as well.

After calling out the fellow god, Yzechr waits in silence.






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Hidden 6 mos ago Post by Necrodancer
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Necrodancer "A Dance With Fate."

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Bitter. From her celestial perch, Adria watched her god-siblings cavort with mortals, and every shared word, every hollow laugh, stoked the embers of her disgust into a roaring flame. How could they be so ignorant, so cruel, so reckless? The world was a half-finished canvas, a flawed draft upon which each deity had scrawled their own selfish design. And then, to force life into this crumbling mess… No. Not just life, but sentience. They had unleashed conscious suffering upon a world that still demanded reforging, that needed to be drawn closer to perfection before it could sustain such a fragile creation. It should have been a unanimous decision, a sacred pact. Instead, it was a whim, enacted without discussion, without warning. It was simply done.

It was pointless to watch them chase their base urges. How could they understand? They saw only the perfection of their own creations, enthralled by the visions that mirrored their desires. Adria, however, was horrified by her own perfection. She saw the truth: a never-ending cycle of slaughter and screams, soon to be immortalized in ink and stone. This burden—the embodiment of consent, blood, war, and death—had been forced upon her by some unseen watcher. Was it pointless to fight the fog? To be a goddess who roared like a beast lusting for crimson wine, who found ecstasy only in the clash of steel and the cries of the dying? Should she become like them: powerful, uncaring, and selfish?

Her thoughts became a deafening storm. Her eyes bled into a dark, blood-red, her heavenly form sprouting fangs as her hair darkened like spilled blood. Suddenly, a soft cry echoed from the bundle sheltered by her crimson wings. Her divine form receded, the monstrous features melting away. Slowly, her wings unfolded to reveal a mortal babe fussing in her arms. A soft, genuine smile graced her lips as she held him closer, rocking him with a motherly tenderness that defied her very nature. “Don’t worry… I am here, little one,” she whispered, her voice a gentle breeze as she sat upon the earthy ground. She cupped the child’s cheek. “See? I am not leaving you.” The babe cooed and snuggled closer against the cold steel of her breastplate.

No. She would not become the monster the fog demanded. She would deny this blood-soaked dream.

Her mind drifted back, the babe’s cry pulling her into memory. She saw a mother, soaked in blood and cut to the bone, yet standing over the corpse of a single, massive wolf. Driven by pure instinct or adrenaline, the woman was barely alive, her only focus on weeping for her son. Adria had appeared before her, immediately falling to her knees to cup the woman’s cheek. The first noble sacrifice. A mother’s love.

I am so sorry… This isn’t the world I wanted for you,” Adria had whispered, offering what little comfort she could. The woman, who had never seen a god before, flinched but did not flee. Adria, unlike her siblings, remained hidden, appearing only to those whose souls caught her eye.

Your sacrifice will not be forgotten—

Before she could finish, the mother slapped her hands away, using the last of her strength to shield her child. “Not… my… son…” she growled, a primal defiance in her eyes.

Adria stood in silent awe as her Thornsteel vines slowly rose around them, a vessel ready to be inspired. She met the woman’s gaze and nodded. “Your son will live. You have my word.” Her voice was still as gentle as her angelic form. The mother wept, giving her child one last, desperate kiss before her fading breath ghosted against Adria’s face. Then, she was gone. Adria was left alone with the weeping child. In the silence, her divine tears watered the ground, and from that sacred soil grew a quiet place of remembrance, enclosed by ruby thorns and veins of metal. Her talon-like claws, now gentle, reached out and took the babe.

Days later, she heard the mortals speak of the place—a sanctuary of protection and sacrifice, honoring a woman who gave everything.

Adria broke from her trance, caressing the baby’s face before rising to her feet. She glanced toward the distant mortals, her heart a soft, steady drum. With a careful hand, she wove the remaining fog into something for them. She sent a small inspiration to those who yearned to protect: a dream of heroes wielding shields and swords, standing against ravenous monsters. Perhaps, one day, they would learn to craft their own defenses, their own walls, to shield themselves from beasts and gods alike.

Her message delivered, she turned her back on the world and walked toward the forest, savoring this fleeting moment with the mortal child. As she moved deeper into the woods, she began to forge pathways for those who might one day seek her, laying the foundation for her fortress among the trees.

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Hidden 6 mos ago 6 mos ago Post by Timemaster
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🎲 𝒜𝓁𝑒𝒸𝒽𝒾𝑜𝓇 🎺


The valley would need residents soon, that much was obvious. A paradise of chance with no one living in it was just a fancy coin tossed into an empty well. Before wandering off to scoop up Tribxor and his tribe, it made sense to check in on the first batch of mortals. The ur-humans, as Sarhush insisted on calling them.

They stepped through the curtain of distorted space that marked the valley’s edge. Reality pinched, stretched, then flipped itself. A few heartbeats later, Alechior stood on the shoreline of the first island, the one where everything began.

And everything had changed.

Smoke curled from several controlled hearths even as the rain kept pouring, lightning striking from time to time from some birds that flew above. The scent of cooked meat lingered in the air, not the accidental kind either.

Clothing. Primitive, yes, but clothing nonetheless was present too!

Tools lay neatly stacked near the water. Stone flakes littered the ground around knapping spots where the ur-humans had been practicing. Freshly sharpened axes leaned against a fallen tree, their edges chipped but obviously used for woodcutting. Built shelter.

Alechior leaned back on their heels, eyebrows raised.

“Well,” they muttered, “someone’s been busy.”

The mortals themselves wandered the camp with some purpose, not the frightened stumbling Alechior remembered. They moved confidently between tasks, talking with a shared vocabulary that had grown past pointing and grunting. Sarhush had not just taught them skills, he had given them direction.

Alechior grinned, sharp and pleased. “Looks like Sarhush has been spoiling you lot. Good. Saves me time.”

They strolled forward, curious eyes wandering, but still invisible to the human eye. If the valley was going to become the ultimate gamble, then finding mortals ready to handle risk instead of tripping over their own feet was a pretty solid starting hand. Sarhush’s efforts meant Alechior could focus on choosing who fit best rather than babysitting.

These ur humans, seemed promising. Skilled enough to survive, still naive enough to be fun. Perfect.

Alechior’s attention snagged on a strange little scene near the treeline. One of the more primitive ur humans, a fellow with the vacant stare of someone still figuring out which end of a stick to hold, was holding a bronze tongue. A literal metal tongue, crudely shaped yet clearly divine in origin.

Before Alechior could decide whether to laugh or sigh, the primitive one smacked another ur-human across the arm with it. The struck mortal flinched, blinked twice, then suddenly blurted out a perfectly structured sentence. Not a guess, not a mimicry, full language, as if someone installed grammar in his skull. Alechior pinched the bridge of their nose. “Sarhush, what in the golden odds are you feeding these people?”

The choice was simple. Alechior stepped forward, lifted a hand, and the primitive ur-humans slumped gently into sleep. The bronze tongue slid from his fingers, caught mid fall by Alechior’s own. Then, with a flick of their wrist, they touched each mortal on the forehead. A golden spot bloomed under their fingertip, warm and faintly shimmering.



Alechior drifted through the settlement with a sharper eye now, scanning the clusters of ur-humans until a handful stood out. These ones moved differently, with purpose. One knapped flint with clumsy but clear strikes, another tended a fire without panicking, and a third scraped bark into strands that vaguely resembled clothing.

They weren’t geniuses, but they got it, the way a gambler spots someone who understands the rules well enough not to fold immediately. Perfect candidates for relocation.

A chuckle escaped them as they raised a hand. One by one, the chosen ur-humans slumped gently into sleep, caught mid movement as though paused by a benevolent puppeteer. Alechior gathered them up with grace, mortals drifting weightless in the air around them like oddly shaped balloons.

“My peps are going to need a few who at least know which end of progress to hold,” they mused. With that, Alechior rose into the sky and crossed the sea, descending upon Tribxor’s island before setting the sleepers down in the grass. A neat little starter kit for civilization.

Alechior arrived carrying the sleeping ur-humans like a pile of luggage, lowering each one gently onto the grass at the edge of Tribxor’s "camp" which seemed to be a Singing Grove, a unintended but definitely good side-effect of the Happy Plants. Tribxor’s tribe gathered in a cautious semicircle, poking and sniffing at the newcomers as if expecting them to sprout horns. Alechior simply dusted off their hands, satisfied.

“Fresh imports,” they said, “slightly smarter than the local stock. Try not to eat them.” Then, with the new arrivals settled, they turned to find Tribxor.

The difference, upon spotting Tribxor and the main part of his group was immediate. When Alechior had left, they were little more than wandering stomachs with limbs, but now they moved in loose formation, reacting to Tribxor’s gestures and vocalizations with something close to coherence.

No fire, no tools, no tricks, but they at least weren’t walking in circles or trying to eat rocks anymore. Tribxor stood at the center, arms raised, issuing something that resembled commands. It was crude leadership, but leadership nonetheless.

Alechior watched for a moment with a proud smirk. Tribxor spotted them and let out a booming greeting, the whole group turning to follow his focus. They were still primitive as sin, sure, but they moved with direction now. The structure was there, in spirit if not in skill, and that was enough to make Alechior’s fingers itch for the next nudge.

They stepped forward, pulling the bronze tongue from their belt. “I name thee, Tribxor,” they announced with amused gravity, “you have done well. Time to level up.” Before the giant could ask or grunt or flex, Alechior tapped him lightly with the bronze tongue. Something snapped in Tribxor as he blinked and froze for a heartbeat.

He inhaled sharply as meaning flooded in, words forming where there had only been instincts. The mortals stared in confusion, waiting to see whether their leader would explode or ascend. Alechior just grinned. “Welcome to language, big guy.”

To be continued



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Hidden 6 mos ago 6 mos ago Post by Rekkuza
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Khthon


Khthon quickly realized a flaw in his plan to search for his arrogant God-Brother; he did not know where to search. The surface world was large and chaotic, and had changed dramatically since he'd last paid attention to it. Though he had gained an intimate knowledge of the underground and every last one of his caverns, the surface remained unknown to him.

Should he call out to Sarhush as he had done to the wandering trio? Would the other God even deign to answer him?

He felt a dull tap on his side, and turned his head to find one of those primitive bipedal creature, poking at his leg with a stick held in trembling hands. More of its kind were huddled a bit further behind him, looking on with wide eyes.

The creature held his stick in one hand, and brandished another one of those stone tools in the other. Khthon leaned down and gently took the tool, feeling along its edges, unheeding of the creature's cries of dismay. The tool was a flat stone blade, mounted on a study branch. One side had been crudely, but carefully knapped to make it sharper than the others. Khthon could recognize the stone type, a grey thing he'd called flint.

Truly a clever use of stone. The application was clumsy, yet doubtlessly effective. Perhaps he could make this tool a bit better, in thanks for showing him such an interesting artifact.

Khthon roughly drew his hand over the sharp edge of the axe blade, reshaping it in one swift movement. Where once was a rough and uneven axe head, now stood a perfectly smooth and sharp blade, devoid of any imperfection. A perfectly sharp axe, polished to a shine, far surpassing the ability of any current mortal craftsman. But the material remained brittle, too brittle for his taste. Khthon could infer that this brittleness was a necessity for the crafting of these tools, for harder stones would not break into sharp edges, but the god was not bound by such limitations. A trickle of his power bled into the stone, strengthening the bonds of its many minute parts together, until it became as hard and unyielding as stone could be.

No longer would the axe head falter, break or dull. Khthon was half-tempted to keep it to himself... but the tool was not his, and had been taken by force from another. It would be unfair to take without giving back. In any case, he had a feeling he would find a way to eventually acquire similar tokens in the future. No need to rush.

He handed the blessed tool back to the creature, and moved on without looking back on its amazed expression.

Now, where was he? Ah, yes, finding Sarhush. He aimlessly wandered some more, examining the surrounding flora and fauna with detached curiosity. Just as he considered simply calling to him to ask his location, he felt something. Something he hadn't felt before.

Many mortal creatures had found refuge in his caves, that much Khthon knew. But all had remained in the shallows, where they could still see and feel the surface world. None had dared venture any deeper into his domain.

For the first time, however, something just did. Not just anything, something powerful, something divine. None of his God-Siblings had been interested in the world beneath until now. Why would one do so now?

He would not tolerate thoughtless trespassers or plunderers. He needed to get there as quickly as he could.

His form reverted to that of a featureless boulder, and he sunk into the ground as if the soil itself swallowed him. He became as one with the rocks and the stone, and let the Earth move him towards his destination, moving faster than he ever could by walking on land. Soon he would emerge into the cavern, and confront the interloper.

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Hidden 6 mos ago 6 mos ago Post by Legion02
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Legion02

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Excelsis, the Lord-Eminence

Excelsis was still somewhat contemplating the encounter with two of his god-kin. They were… strange. So self-limiting. Even their forms, which seemed inspired by mortals, felt limiting. Then again, he knew next to nothing of these mortals. Passive, distant observations showed little capacity. They were more like writhing maggots in the ground. And yet life itself, the mechanical function sustaining it, was nothing short of genius design. They were able to convert various sources of food, combined with the gases of the world, into a sustained source of energy. They were thinking too!

Eventually, Excelsis felt compelled to take a closer look. The humans, as they were seemingly called, never knew what happened. One moment they were a family-tribe wandering the half-finished world, the next one of them was gone. A gale wind billowed over them.

The god-orb had taken one of the humans. He was screaming ceaselessly. A fear response, it would seem. Excelsis stopped in an instant. The sudden changes of momentum nearly knocked the human unconscious. That lessened the screaming.

“Be still now.” Excelsis said. However, the human had not much say in the matter. He screamed, but he was suspended in the air high above the world by Excelsis’ divine grip. A tendril sprouted from the eldritch orb and snaked towards the human’s forehead. He never stopped screaming. Then the tendril touched and the human fell into a fugue state.

The mind, what a wondrous construct. Whoever made it impressed the Lord-Eminence. But something was lacking. Their minds were capable of so much more! It would be a waste to have these bright minds waste away generation upon generation as they crawled out of the sludge of their birth. Excelsis redrew the tendril. From the forehead of the human a golden thread flowed. Then Excelsis got to work. A hundred more delicate tendrils formed, twisted, turning, bending, breaking, forming and shaping the human’s mind thread into a blessing. Slowly, over the course of a minute in which Excelsis was intensely miracle-crafting, he created a golden glowing engram. It was a masterpiece, not that shoddy useless thing like the Akashic Vessel. This would be the Spark and it would propel these mortals through discovery and excellence for centuries!

He released it. The engram, with its perfect geomantic shapes, floated up for a second, unfurled as if it was something between a beautiful flower blooming and a machine coming undone. The pieces separated themselves gently and then vanished from regular perception and seeped into the foundation of everything. Something was added to reality that didn’t half-exist before. Sapient life was forever altered, gifted and cursed by the Spark.

“Hello hello, test test. Are you the one who picks a fight with the book? I hope you are.”

Receiving the message was an odd experience. It was so pointed, yet it came from someone Excelsis had somehow completely missed. “Anyway, I stumbled upon something interesting down here. If you want to come take a look, I will be waiting.” The caverns were steeped in mysteries that were begging to be discovered. The vision lacked an exact position, and the world was still big. “Oh, right. The way is a bit hard to find with all those unfinished mountains. Here’s the direction, hope that helps.” The trial towards the cave now lay open and bare. One less mystery in the world.

The whole ordeal smelled like a challenge and this god was goading him into answering it. It could be dangerous or made to lure him into some sort of trap. Or perhaps there was no discovery to be made and he would waste his time? What if what he would find would utterly destroy his own essence?

All of these reasonable worries fell upon two dozen deaf ears. Excelsis flew away in a great hurry. With the trail before him he coursed through the air, along the half-made mountains until he eventually reached the cave. “I have come.” The Lord-Eminence declared as he floated into the cave. In a second, all other senses upon the orb vanished. A million eyes formed. Eyes that could see beyond ultraviolet and infrared. Fledgling eyes, barely more than just specs of sensitive tissue, were scanning even for magical influence. The god-sense still alluded deliberate manufacturing. It was there but it refused to be poured into a manageable form.

“How intriguing,” Excelsis said as the eyes scanned the whole room. “Transmutating bell. Incomprehensible lettering. A symbol ingrained upon reality.” The god quickly summed up the most notable parts of the cave. Even one of these discoveries could propel the newly born field of esoterism for decades. The fraction and the nature of the symbol, however, told Excelsis that time was not in their favor. “What is it terminating?” Excelsis asked himself, the world and the strange god in the cave as well.



@Cmmelody
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