Chapter 482
CHAPTER 482
THE EXTRES
Lino stared at the void beyond the sky, currently ablaze with the molten rocks trailing across like the falling stars . Only One and he remained floating high up, others having withdrawn down to the ground .
It was a spectacular sight, as much as it was destructive . The rocks were like an army, ineffable in their make, fearless, cruising the cold, freezing void, yet unwilling to let it extinguish them . Altogether, he and One counted roughly two hundred of them that were on the direct course to crash into Noterra, taking into account the planet’s orbit . Though many may see it as a catastrophe, a world-ending one, Lino didn’t . It was easy to deal with inanimate objects for one simple reason -- they were straightforward .
The rock wouldn’t curve at the very last second, circumvent him and gain speed as it barreled toward the earth . It wouldn’t fake its intent in hopes it might cheat him . It would run its course, whatever may co at the end of it .
Lino glanced at One from the corner of his eye; the man seed as apathetic as ever, though now it made sense -- he was no man . Lino had begun suspecting sothing was athwart with the enigmatic ’One of the Great Descent’ long before he t Dangwe, but that eting confird his suspicions to a certain extent . Ashtar’s Archaic Record grounded it further .
If the Writs were not the first to descend, why were there only Seven of them? They were entirely unnecessary for everything the legends give them claims for; as far as Lino could realize, anything can beco a Writ . Perchance, sowhere on Noterra, conscious or not, there was a Writ of Wit . Writ of Fire . Of Emotion . This notion stirred even more fervently when he learned that Ataxia wasn’t always the Writ of Chaos .
Writs, as far as he understood them thus far, are simply penultimate realizations of a concept -- similar to the Spirits, yet different . Whereas Spirits were marked with self-realized existence and didn’t necessitate a very specific set of circumstances, Writs did . Even more, Writs were a complete bundle -- whereas Spirits were not . There were hundreds, thousands, perhaps even millions of Spirits of Fire . However, there can only ever be a single Writ of Fire .
Most of it was still a jumbled ss and a conjecture, but One’s admittance caused a surge of pride in Lino’s soul . He’d connected all the dots on his own, taken from the bits and chunks that hardly seed connected -- knowledge worth over five decades of living and learning . Another conjecture that he was trying to see through built upon what he already determined -- not just Writs, but everything else was not limited in number .
This applied to everything -- from sothing as simple as the diversity of plants in the forest to the potential amount of intelligent lifeforms across the cosmos . It was not so arbitrary number that limited them, but very specific circumstances . It is impossible, for instance, for so flowers to grow in the forest -- not because there were already enough flowers there, but perhaps because the seed was never planted, or the flower simply can’t grow without a continuous stream of sunlight to feed it .
However, that might not necessarily be true . So things, perhaps, were sealed by a number -- for instance, Writs . He wasn’t certain, but he suspected there can only be one Writ per elent or, rather, per concept . He could be completely wrong, of course, but so sense of logic in him dictated that there can only be one .
Ataxia, as was usually the case, remained mum on the issue, not denying or confirming any of Lino’s doubts . He also doubted he could pry much from One; he was a strange Writ, an anomaly of sorts when compared to the rest . One wasn’t a human per se, that is the person wasn’t a Bearer of a Writ -- he was an aggloration of initial mankind, their hearts’ fires to survive . In a way, One was a Bearer of himself . Rubbing his temples in frustration, Lino slowly realized that chipping away at the mysteries was far from being as fun as he’d expected .
He knew so much, perhaps more than any other Bearer of the entire Era, yet so little . The entire story was muddled with too many fogs and mists, too many interpretations, pretenses, too many diverging paths . Perhaps, in a vacuum, these all may make sense to a certain degree . However, as a part of a whole, they didn’t . Though he knew Ataxia didn’t create Pris, rely ’corrupted’ Archangels, that didn’t actually answer the question of how . Why was it that in so cases he’d heard it being referred to ’Angels having Fallen’? Also, why was it that Asmodei’s story, from when he first t the remnant of the Archangel, now seed a feeble fabrication? No, so elents of it echoed what Lino knew to be the truth -- yet most was false . Asmodei claid to be the first Archangel -- an Overseer . He also claid that the descent of the Writs marked the inception of the Universe . Yet, it clearly didn’t . He also claid Gaia created Noterra, yet she clearly didn’t .
What did all of it an? Why the lies? The smoking mirrors thrown around whenever the first few thousand years of the squabbles were ntioned? He didn’t know . Which caused him to sigh audibly .
"Don’t think too much about it . " he heard a voice chiming in from the side, glancing . One seed to be smiling, yet not at the sa ti . "You’ll know when it is ti . "
" . . . I have to think," Lino replied . "It seems oddly unnatural not to think . Also, I don’t believe in waiting for the perfect ti, Alladin . I believe in creating it . "
"--have you?"
"Hm?"
"Created the perfect timing, I an . Ever?"
" . . . " the man’s question prodded Lino for a mont before he replied . "On occasion . "
" . . . besides you, only Eldon ever figured out my identity," One said after a short silence . "It truly is remarkable . . . how similar, yet horrifyingly different you two are . "
" . . . I keep hearing the na," Lino said . "Yet, never a tale . Who was he?"
" . . . " One glanced at him for a mont, as though thinking whether to say anything or not . "The cleverest person -- nay, the cleverest anything I’d ever t in my life . You’ll hear him spoken of as strong, unbeatable, but he certainly was not . In a way, you’ve already surpassed him in strength; after all, he walked down the Path of Creation, rarely outright fighting . "
" . . . then what did he do?"
"Played the tune to which the whole of creation danced," One replied, chuckling . "You and him . . . you two are terrifying for two completely different reasons . Your Will is indomitable, like the weight of a galaxy pressing on one’s soul . If you lack the key for the door, you’ll break through it . If there are a hundred guards there, you’ll break through them . A thousand? Sa . A million? Sa . You are determined, and that determination cannot be taken away . "
" . . . "
"He was . . . different . Played the world against it each other, running all the currents as though we were simply characters in his story . You’ll see, one day . It’s . . . difficult to explain . Whereas you win the heart of others with who you are, with beating the hate out of their hearts, he won it by making all other alternatives worse . . . in a way . "
The silence once more descended between the two as Lino slumped deep into his thoughts . Eldon . . . he’d heard the na echoed repeatedly, for a long ti now . Stories -- no, not stories, just vague chunks, like prophecies of the past . He had absolutely no idea who they were referring to -- and he’d scoured most of the historical records he could find . For soone who, according to most who spoke of him, impacted the world so much, there was not a word of him, or anyone like him, in the histories .
One oddity that did stick out, however, is that he noticed that so people referred to Eldon as a ’he’, and so as a ’she’ . Though he did not yet know what to make of it, he noted the detail as the sole thing he was certain of . He’d been compared to them often, yet never collectively -- always in the parallel to the specific differences between the two . He found it odd, as most of who spoke about Eldon did so with a sense of reverence -- be they those who might have supported him or those who probably have not .
Plenty enigmatic figures existed within the Noterra still -- one he called his mother, for starters -- but sothing about Eldon was different . He, or she, seed more a myth than an actual person . Yet, he was certain they were an actual person .
There was no need to add another branch to his thoughts just yet, as they were already preoccupied beyond his capacity to hold them . He was never an agile thinker; perhaps, in the heat of the mont, he intuitively knew what to do, but when it ca to sitting down and sifting through his thoughts, he felt lethargically slow . Most of what he ’concluded’, after all, he did so with a great degree of Hannah’s help . She helped him arrange his thoughts better than he ever could, and see the order in the seeming chaos . In a way, he mused, it was rather poetic .
The molten rocks flying across the void would soon arrive, but he didn’t pay them much heed; what concerned him was the aftermath -- the war was imminent . Upon his return, ranks of soldiers would be sent into dozens of battlefields, and within weeks splinters will co . He was not yet strong enough to realize his convictions, yet he had no more tools to stall . Aah, I really wish I was more privy to philosophical books when I was young, he chortled inwardly . Perhaps, then, I’d be able to make sense of the shittery surrounding . . .
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