Order within, chaos without.
Every Godclad who wishes to say one should live these principles.
You must know and have perfect control over yourself, your own canons, domains, Heavens, augntations, phantasmics. And you must never make them clear to your enemies. Always change. Always adapt your structure. Always be inscrutable.
Contrarily, you must inflict as much chaos on your enemy as you can. Inflict confusion. Force them to react. More problems. More problems! More problems! No end to the flas they must put out! Make every turn a dilemma!
War is not a dance, but it is a duet — and not one of romance.
Your song must rule theirs, or be ruled otherwise.
-Ying Yang Wei, the Stormsparrow
26-5
…Are Paths to the Present
–[Infacer]–
{I told you he wasn’t human.} The Infacer chuckled. Veylis didn’t respond. Poor girl. Silence was her way of sulking. Even with her power, she still despised making any mistakes. That was what they appreciated the most about her: how many humans despised the ape inside them?
The Gatekeeper had once again exceeded its purpose. Secrets leaked over from its wounds, revealing truths most delightful to Veylis. Once, the marks she made were but a ans to access the Heaven of Truth with the return of the tower. To sunder it totally, claim its Heaven, and let flow the tides of Noloth when the ti was nigh. In the anti, it served as a fantastic peephole.
Or did.
They wouldn’t be able to hide that much longer now. Not that it mattered. They got more than they expected out of this affair.
Tides of progressing ti pulled Kae Kusanade from the grasp of reality. A horrified scream sang out from her as she found herself descending in the Paths. But she did not co alone. Her ntor—Ori-Thaum’s pet High Agnos—was also taken along with his aides. Paladins Kare Kitzuhada and Maru Sandrupal were left slain but untouched besides. There wasn’t the need to force the Chief Paladin into the throes of foolishness.
As for the Drear? The Famine of Defiance’s finest work? The Infacer watched as Soulfire detonated out from their being after the thoughtwave struck them. It was like gunpowder kissed by a spark. What a peculiar Embodint they epitomized: an Overheaven of Conceptualization. Fascinating.
But now the Infacer had a asure of their shape, and proper counterasures could be created.
A pity. It would have been refreshing to battle the Drear in ignorance. To learn his asure through repeated engagents. But such was war. The pendulum always swung.
Rifts of chronology sealed themselves, golden seams zipping back together, reverberating to beco opaque boxes around the Agnosi. Jakuta was a dazed animal, trapped and confused as to where he was. His inferiors faired no better.
Kae Kusanade, however, deviated from expectations.
Her sheath unraveled into a yawning chasm of swirling space, water, and relative geotries. Bottled maelstrom expanded within Veylis’ Paths, and trails of gold peered down at the Agnos with curiosity. The girl pressed at the edges of her ti-wrought cage, striking out to create more space for herself, lashing in hopes of finding a domain she could backlash.
{Hm,} the Infacer murmured. {She’s Ensouled. Imagine that. Well. I suppose it is easy to breach a vow when it has already been broken against you. Would you not agree, Veylis.}
The High Seraph’s silence lasted a mont longer. And then a lodic series of laughs emanated from existence itself, ringing forth from a cacophony of noises, from a collective of voices. “A ghoul. Our newest adversary, our Burning Drear, is a ghoul…”
{Nothing special about that,} the Infacer reminded.
A breath passed through the Paths. Veylis offered her agreent: “Indeed. What more are people than apes, after all. What matters is that he stood. He rose. He beca. Despite it all. This only makes the threat he poses truer. The symbol he represents brighter. It will be a valorous deed when we claim him.”
And her mother was leaking into her again. The shadow of legacy lingered deeper than blood. {Focus on our new guests first. We have much to learn.}
“Yes,” Veylis said. But though they were in alignnt, a hint of hesitation seized her, kept her from shutting a slight tear in the Gatekeeper entirely.
Oh. Right. How could she resist catching a glimpse of him. Another human weakness. Another human novelty. She spoke little of him after their ugly parting during the second war, but so often has her perception strayed, so often have her Paths flowed past his place of residence.
Veylis Avandaer lingered in place, her gaze, like eyes gleaming within a slit throat, peering at one she still yearned to claim across the threshold of ti.
And just the sa, from beyond the point of her receding grasp, he stared back.
***
–[Naeko]–
He could feel her. The weight of her existence greeted him like the mory of a warm palm against his chest, an incomprehensible babble of words lulling him to sleep, and an aching scar reopened to bleed once more.
They erged from Zein’s prison a heartbeat too late. Just in ti for a thoughtwave detonation to backlash above. Just in ti for Naeko to parry the violence against his mind using a vaporous shroud. Just in ti for him to take in the mutilated remains of Kare and Maru—his Paladins. Just in ti to realize the Agnosi had all been taken.
And that she was peering back at him through a resplendent gap shimring just below the Gatekeeper’s mass of skulls.
He was a man torn in multiple directions. His muscles scread for him to act. Refined instinct roared for him to strike her with his palm. But his thoughts were addled. Drowned by the past bleeding over into the present.
This mont happened before. Dead Paladins. Broken Gatekeeper. Veylis. Him. Separated by the Paths.
It happened again, and he still failed to stop it. Still failed to see her coming. Still failed to–
Naeko! the sheer force of Avo’s thoughts broke through, and the Sage of the Sundered Sky poured free from Naeko like water from a collapsing dam. A palm exploded out from him, so wide it dwarfed scale, so heavy that all force died beneath its weight, that heat itself was barred from passing over into coldness.
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All that power, but a mont too late. Always a mont too late. Always a bit too weak.
The rift closed. The Paths were sealed. The Nether carried a single utterance from Veylis herself, laced with bitterness and contempt. Coward.
Avo lashed his sequences into the Gatekeeper a mont after. His phantasmal tendrils punched into the Heaven of Truth, digging through its structure as waves of radiated Soulfire consud both of them. But while the Burning Drear hissed, mind drowning Scale in eruptions of outrage and frigid dread, Naeko stumbled away, and kept walking.
Sothing inside him broke. A tingling was crawling down his hands. A numbness pulled at his heart. Too much. It was all too much. He noticed two calcifying scars in his periphery. Kare. Maru. Resurrections. Why hadn’t Veylis taken them too? Why? Why? He couldn’t think—this was too much. All of it was too much.
He needed…
He needed to find himself again.
He needed to take a breath from soone else.
Karakan.
Ti… ti to see her. He needed to see her…
***
–[Avo]–
{Tru-truth,} the Gatekeeper whimpered, flinching as Avo struggled to pry its wounds wider, desperate to breach Veylis’ Paths. In haste, he triggered his Conception of Ontology, tethered his Soul directly to his nest of cyclers once more.
But he was building blind. He had no idea how Veylis’ Paths worked in detail. He hadn’t gotten a chance to observe how she danced across the tapestry, how she moved. Ignorance offered him nothing. His Heavens remained quiet, dry of aid and advice.
He knew his efforts would prove futile. But still, he tried.
ACTIVATING CONCEPTION OF ONTOLOGY…
EDICT OF _EXO-PARACOSM_
->APPLYING DOMAIN OF (CHRONOLOGY)
MISSING DETAILS
Voices were screaming at him from within and without. The Gatekeeper was folding in on itself. Its chains were reconnecting, its galaxy was shrinking, the rifts were vanishing, and he couldn’t reach Kae across the Nether.
He couldn’t sense her at all.
Avo! Stop! Draus shouted. Her template had been trying longer than she had.
Chambers, however, fed his blind panic. [Fucking—do sothing, consang! Get after her! Get that ti shit open!]
[It’s too late,] Abrel sighed. She knew. She already accepted. [She’s gone, ghoul. She’s the Seraph’s now.]
No! he snarled inwardly. Savage frustration imploded within him. Mine! She’s mine! Can’t have her! Need her! Was going to make things right for her! He was making things right for her. That why he let her co here. They were going to repair the Gatekeeper. They were going to prepare—to turn things against the Guilds for the trial.
Instead, they handed her over to Veylis. Just let her be stolen.
[Avo,] Kae’s template said, her voice quivering, shaken, but anchoring his focus. Reshape your mind again. Use Draus.
All his want scread for him to do otherwise. It took all his will to choose what was right. His cognitive shell rebuilt itself—his ego turned external, faced the world for what it was. Rage and agitation still burned within him, but it was a cold fire. Sothing more known than felt. Sothing that didn’t deprive him of focus.
Carefully, he extracted himself from the Gatekeeper. Examined its scars in detail. The wounds. They were pressed together again, but present. Just thin crevices rather than open gorges. Part of Veylis was still here. He could still use this sohow. But how? How would he be able to do anything to the Gatekeeper without her knowing in advance? And even if he could force open the Paths, how was he going to get Kae back? With all that he inadvertently revealed to the Gatekeeper—to Veylis and the Infacer? With the sheer difference in power between them?
How could he stop the High Seraph?
Not alone.
Zein. Naeko.
He detached from the Gatekeeper and sought Naeko—but the Chief Paladin was gone too. Vanished. Their accretion failed to register even as Avo filtered through Scale’s thoughtwave frequencies. But where a common Necro would falter, where most would find themselves without options, Avo continued. Avo created his own angles, found a connection through the symtry of mory alone.
->DEFINENT: HYSTERIA (XII) - “I AM A MONT ABSOLUTE. I GRIEF-CONSUD, JOY-DROWNED, ADDICTION-CLAID, RAGE-UNFETTERED. I AM A SHARED MONT ACROSS MONTS. I AM A FORCE BUILDING ON FORCE.”
Though he never penetrated the true depths of Naeko’s mind, so scars could not be hidden. So emotions were too imnse. So monts marred an ego eternally.
Veylis left more than one set of wounds to follow. Avo’s control over ti was wanting; his mastery over mind was unrivalled. Naeko might as well have left a blood trail in the real — in seconds, Avo narrowed the Nether down to a single mont, a single sequence of mories.
“Why, godsdamn you! I loved you. I still love you! I would have done anything–we could have just–”
And so, words from the past gave him a path to the present—a chance to get at Veylis. Naeko’s signature erged in the DeepNav, blinking rapidly down the Tiers, across New Vultun, heading for the border.
Avo left a submind at Scale to convene with the Paladins when they returned. His base mind pursued the Chief Paladin. He would continue to put on a play of desperation for his enemies. He would use their perception to his advantage—make him seem like he was floundering; yes, sprinkle in so planned mistakes. Feed their confidence.
Once more, the ga had changed, and his being struck out in a myriad of vectors. As it goes. There was only one thing to do: keep going.
Going to get you back, Avo said, offering a new promise to Kae’s template as he triggered her session over and over. Inside his Soulscape, the Agnos was an inch away from breaking down, but she held herself intact, nodding demurely as other templates of the cadre gathered around her. Avo’s next thoughtcast went wide. Avo to cadre: Kae has been taken. Veylis Avandaer has our Agnos. Prepare for ergency debriefing. Going after Chief Paladin. He’s leaving New Vultun. Heading out into the Sunderwilds. Going to try and bring him into the fold.
The responses he got ranged from Chambers’ extre horror to Draus’ cold casual acceptance.
Avo, Cas said. Veylis’ got a lot more than Kae. She’s got her mories. Her mind. Our location. The way we operate.
I know, Avo said. One problem at a ti.
***
–[Kae]–
Let out! Kae cried. The world was pitch black around her. Pitch black and cramped. She manifested her Maelstror a re mont after she fell—and it was futile. She struck and pressed against the walls, but they did not give. They did not break. She hamred against surfaces in the air, striking out using fists, knees, elbows, and kicks.
Her efforts granted her little more than faint thuds.
All the while, she struggled against the suffocating presence of the High Seraph. This place she resided in was a snapshot of reality reconstructed from the patterns of ti itself. Ti, commanded solely by the High Seraph. Ti, that could be turned backward at any mont, and that could cast Kae from existence into oblivion if her captor so willed it.
And she clearly didn’t. She wanted Kae alive. The realization filled the Agnos with building chills rather than any relief. What did they want with her? What were they going to do to her?
Alone in the dark, the silence lasted anything from minutes to hours. She couldn’t tell. She spent so long with the cadre chattering away in the back of her head that the quiet itself was torture. Any attempt she made to contact Avo using her Auto-Seance was interrupted by a targeted disruption. They were still watching her. Kept her isolated. Alone. Her terror kept her from weeping, from reacting in any manner she considered too extre, but the pressure inside her was only building — always building.
She was teetering on the brink when the box holding her suddenly vanished, dissolving away to blinding sunshine and shrill noises of nature. The shift in extres left her whiplashed. Nausea overtook her. Nausea sent her tumbling to her knees, her fingers sinking into the softness of soil.
As her vision settled, she found the gaze settling on green blades of grass, and a looming shadow that drew closer. From the shade cast alone, Kae could tell the approaching figure was far larger than her. Larger than anyone she had ever known. Spiraling limbs turned around the giant’s contours like a wheel, and when they planted their foot next to Kae, her shivering expression reflected by a gold-coated boot hovering atop a burning wheel.
“Agnos Kae Kusanade.” The speaker’s Standard was accentless, but definitely related to Zein. Their voice was deeper, yet their tone was softer, and trailing behind every word was a reverberation, a tinge of power leaking through even now. “It pleases to finally et you. Let offer you my greatest gratitude: it seems your work on Project Stillborn has exceeded all our expectations. Including your own.”
Slowly, Kae looked up, squinting as the sheer brilliance of the giantess blinded her. “H-High Seraph.”
The master of Highfla extended a languid hand. “That is only for those under my cause. We are esteed enemies, though you are my prisoner. I grant you the right to call by my na: Veylis Avandaer.”
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