“Well that was rather a lot of grace Kurst had stored up. Fortunate that we were all here to portion it out. I’d hate to think what it might have done if his contracts had killed him when no one was around to deal with the fallout.”
“Oh, that would have been simple Vitor. If we hadn’t been able to collect the grace he had stored the planet would have been erased.”
“Erased Helgon? What do you mean erased?”
“Well, as you know, the aetheric potentiation point of matter has a non-defined but probabilistic upper boundary so therefor…”
“Therefor the destruction would have been immense. Thank you Helgon but we do not need a full technical treatise on the subject. Suffice it to say that we cannot allow anyone who has amassed the levels of grace Kurst did to lose control of it. At least not without several of us around to collect the freed energy before it runs wild.”
“But that would be all of you, would it not Vaingloth?”
“And you as well Helgon? Certainly you have collected as much grace from the fallen and your population as we have?”
“Certainly, certainly, Vitor, though I have my experiments to think of as well. As I was saying about the aetheric potentiation point, it’s very important to ensure that one does not concentrate grace too much. Hoarding makes yields imbalances which are very hard to account for. Much simpler to keep things at a lower burn as it were.”
“It seems rather fortunate that we got wind of the Grand Contract Kurst was trying to implement then! Either it was going to go well for him, in which case we all would have been bound to serve him, or he was going to blow up the world. I suppose we all owe you a debt of gratitude there Vaingloth.”
“I suppose we do, though to be accurate, there was no world in which a Grand Contract the likes of which Vaingloth described was going to work out well for Kurst. The structure he was theoretically putting together could not have held the grace from everyone and so the only result would have been the nullification of the planet.”
“And this from our Master of Divine Contracts. Poor fool got quite ahead of himself, really should have known better.”
“Yes. You’d expect he would have.”
– Vitor, Helgon, and Vaingloth discussing the aftermath of Neoteric Lord Kurst’s overthrow while Helgon also planted the seeds for his own ‘demise’.
Vaingloth wasn’t dead. Malgenia knew death. If he’d been dead I would have felt it. He was simply gone and the echo of that was reverberating around the world.
“Well, that’s not exactly what I expected,” Meluna said.
“What’s not? And why is Insight flickering?” Responsibility.
“Oh, sorry,” I said, pulling myself back fully into the material world. “A Neoteric Lord is gone.”
“Vitor!?” Clarity asked, hopeful relief poised behind her teeth.
“Vaingloth.” His absence was like a missing tooth. A missing rotten tooth which suddenly no longer hurt, but the absence was still a little maddening in its own right.
“He’s dead? Who killed him?” Responsibility asked.
“Little,” Meluna said. “I believe I owe her congratulations. I truly wasn’t sure if her plan to kill Vaingloth was feasible or not. Of course that assumes she survived the confrontation. I do hope so. Zeph and Sola will be despondent otherwise.”
“No,” I said, still a bit addled. Was there more than just Vaingloth missing?
A Neoteric Lord being destroyed like Vaingloth had was unthinkable, but something else was wrong. Something had changed. Something as wrong as the Sunfall? No, it wasn’t like that. It was profound though and the more I probed at the absence the more unreasonably irritated I grew.
“No? Little didn’t survive?” Meluna asked.
“Little? Oh, Sola’s Blessed? I don’t know,” I said, almost completely distracted as I reached out with Malgenia’s power searching for what appeared to be nothing at all.
“Hey, Insight, are you okay?” Responsibility asked.
In the past when she took that tone with me, my choices were either answer or get clobbered into answering. I wasn’t sure that a good whack to the side of my head wouldn’t knock loose the obsession that had grabbed me, but that wasn’t what Responsibility was offering anymore.
At some point I think we’d both realized that just because the injuries we’d inflicted on each other could be healed didn’t mean that we were at all healthy afterwards. I certainly didn’t want to hurt her anymore, and the fact that she didn’t want to hurt me meant more than I could ever articulate.
“Yeah, yeah I am,” I said, laying my hand over the hand Responsibility had placed on my shoulder. “Okay. Wow. That’s…”
“Yes. I suspect the other Neoterics are experiencing a similar amount of consternation as well. We shall have to see how they react to this,” Meluna said as she began to grow indistinct in the shadows which hadn’t been there a moment earlier.
“Or we can shape how they react to it,” I said, which drew Meluna back into sharp focus.
“What do you have in mind?” she asked through narrowed eyes.
“You said Little planned to kill Vaingloth, but that’s not what she did,” I said. “He isn’t dead. He’s gone. Erased. He and all the power he was personally holding. He went from existing to not existing in the blink of an eye, and I think we both know what had to be responsible for that.”
“She drew him to one of the Beast’s fragments? But, no, she survived that herself, she wouldn’t have…” Meluna said, looking confused for what might have been the first time in centuries.
“However she survived it, she must have known that Vaingloth wouldn’t be able to replicate her feat,” I said.
“Assuming she did, how would you shape the Neoterics reaction to it?” Clarity asked.
“In theory, we’re out here for two reasons,” I said. “I’m supposed to be training you both for the Assumption Ritual but that’s mostly you studying and practicing. The primary reason we’re here, or the primary reason Vitor thinks we’re here, is because I’m investigating how to kill one of the Beast fragments.”
“But that’s not possible,” Meluna said.
“That’s not possible for the rest of you,” I said. “It’s not entirely predictable what Malgenia can and cannot do. I think Vitor assumed that if it truly was impossible that I would simply be wasting some time in the Wastelands, which is far from the strangest thing Malgenia has done.”
“You want him to think what happened to Vaingloth was your fault then?” Responsibility said, guessing the overall shape of the plan I was trying to pull into sharper focus.
“I want all of them to think that this was my fault,” I said.
“They will definitely move against you if so,” Clarity said.
“Better me than Mt. Gloria,” I said. “I know they’re already planning how to divide it up.”
“If I may suggest an alteration,” Meluna said. “The other Neoterics have, historically, been concerned about Malgenia being more powerful than any one of them. Rather than adding to that, you might instead use her reputation as a lever to buy Little’s people the time they need.”
“She’s right,” Clarity said. “If you claim to have been unable to either save Vaingloth or influence the Beast that destroyed him, but are certain that it was being controlled by someone…”
“That will give them even more reason to attack,” Responsibility said. “Or it would if they felt personally threatened.”
“I doubt Little will move against any of them. She grew up in Mt. Gloria so I imagine her rage was primarily directed at Vaingloth,” Meluna said.
“I like that idea, let me talk to Vitor and see how it goes,” I said.
“Now?” Responsibility asked.
“I think she’s right. If it appears to be Malgenia’s immediate reaction it will ring more true than if we let any time pass,” Clarity said.
And so I vanished.
I’d set up our home in the Wasteland far enough away that we wouldn’t encounter any caravans and isolated enough that the other Neoterics would neither feel threatened nor curious enough to stop by for a visit. Distance was largely irrelevant when a Neoteric really wanted to travel though.
“Sister?” Vitor said, looking away from the map he was standing in front of.
He hadn’t been in one of his isolated labs or his sanctum so I’d taken the liberty of transporting myself directly to, what turned out to be, his war room.
“Oh good, you still exist,” I said, holding a flower I’d conjured and sticking a petal back onto it.
“Exist? What do you mean? What happened?” he asked, flustered more than I’d ever seen him over anything.
“I didn’t study enough,” I said, and plucked a different petal off, twisting it between my fingers to inspect it. “So sad.”
“Study? Wait, is that what we all felt?” he asked. “Mal, tell me you had nothing to do with whatever happened to Vaingloth? We’re looking but we can’t find him anywhere. Did you kill him?”
“Why would I kill Vaingloth? Also he’s not dead, unfortunately,” I said.
“Not dead? I don’t know if that a relief or even more concerning. He shouldn’t be able to hide from the scrying spells we’re using.” Vitor said, gesturing to the map he’d been staring at.
Had his scrying spell been working, Vaingloth’s general position would have shone forth like a tiny bonfire. Instead the entire map was cold and empty.
“He’s not hiding. He’s just not there,” I said
“You said he wasn’t dead though?” Poor Vitor, he had all the power in the world (or a eighth of it I suppose) and yet any of the Deaths could run laps around him when it came to mental acuity (and Responsibility and Clarity could do so at a leisurely stroll, but I might have been biased).
“He’s not dead,” I said with a cheerful nod. “He doesn’t exist.”
Keep an eye out, Beauty said, I’m pretty sure he plays dumber than he really is.
I’m not sure he’s playing, Inhibition said. I think he’s easy to underestimate because he simply doesn’t care about a great many things. When he does care though he is dangerously observant.
Inhibition’s right, he wouldn’t have been pushing another Assumption on us for at least three more years. That he noticed the trouble Insight is having with Malgenia’s power is likely something he chalked up to the difficulty ‘Malgenia’ experienced with Insight’s assumption.
I’d say I’ll tread carefully, but I think embodying Malgenia’s carelessness is going to be a lot safer for all of us.
Then it’s up to us to watch for you, Diyas said, which was the kind of support I suspect few people throughout history had to rely on.
“When you say he doesn’t exist, what, EXACTLY, do you mean Mal?” Vitor was giving me his full and undivided attention. I should have been terrified of that. For all that I have Malgenia’s power, I’m not truly a Neoteric Lord and if he decided to lash out of me when I wasn’t ready I could wind up twisted, truly dead, or, worst of all, controlled before I knew what hit me.
“Doesn’t exist. Obliterated. Gone. Vanished permanently. Playing hide and seek with existence and losing. Exactly all that,” I said, still smiling as though I was playing the cleverest game ever with my silly brother.
“No. That’s not possible. How?” Vitor slumped down into a chair, no longer looking at me, no longer looking at anything in the world around us.
“Oh, come on. You know how,” I said.
“He wouldn’t though!”
“I know. It was very silly of him,” I said. “But then it wasn’t entirely his idea I guess.”
“Did…did you…?” Vitor’s gaze snapped back to me, naked fear of what I might have learned to do clear in his eyes.
“Oh what a delight that would be!” I said, radiating chipper joy at the idea. “But no, I tried. I did try. You know me. You know I would have tried right? I mean Vaingloth didn’t matter much, but I did try to save him. Or at least pull loose what I could have. There had to be some good bits in him somewhere. His heart maybe? I would have kept it in a nice jar I think.”
“You tried to save him? You saw what happened?”
“I saw what happened and I saw who made it happen. Quite vexing that she can do what I can’t. Yet.”
“There is someone out there who is stronger than you?”
“I’m not sure? Should we bother them and find out!”
The remaining Neoterics were all listening and the collective “NO” they screamed to us warmed my heart almost as bright as the newborn sun which blossomed into the sky far away.
