Chapter 387: All For Clay
Added 2023-05-30 06:52:12 +0000 UTC“Now that I know what comes, all of this looks so small,” Onychinusa marveled, one of the emissaries of her Lord at her side as she witnessed the march of the elven gods. They stood above the canopies of the redwoods, removed from the conflict yet central to it all.
“Everything can look small from the right perspective,” the emissary answered back.
What occurred down below certainly did not fulfill the definition of ‘small.’ Kirel Qircassia’s breach stood strong. It was a gash in reality itself and existed as a portal to another realm. Rather than a portal made naturally, this was a tear. It connected the two realms in such a way that one could see nothing if they looked at it from behind, but from the front, an entirely separate realm expanded infinitely onwards. Though Kirel already bent this place to his whims, in time the Bloodwoods would be entirely supplanted by his realm.
If Kirel had his way, the two realms would blend, homogenizing until the mortal world and the divine world were one in the same. And when—no, if—Gerechtigkeit was defeated, both would separate once again, like two diverging paths subject to different forces. The divine realm would heed the divinity, while the mortal realm would once again heed the mortal forces of nature permeating this land. And thus, existence spun millennium after millennium.
Seeing it in this fashion, the great force of elven gods and mortals rushing to plug up this breach seemed small. Thousands of Kirel’s servants battled against a foe they were not equipped to handle in a desperate but loyal attempt to salvage their invasion. Even Onychinusa could see no way to end any of those elven gods with all of the power at her disposal.
The gap between worshipped and worshipper was far too large to bridge. And there were yet more gaps beyond those, of a magnitude Onychinusa could barely even begin to conceive…
Yet still her eyes wandered to the human mage known as King of Vasquer, struggling with his allies with all the same ferocity as the rest. Looking at him, he had reason to be proud of his strength. His spells claimed countless lives in this war, and so he had reason to think his actions mattered. He had certainly toiled to embrace as much power as he could. But with all she knew, he seemed the smallest of them all.
Still, her eyes wandered to the emissary. “You are beyond the Lord’s shrines, now. Why must we mind things so small? He rejected the Lord once before. Let him die,” she suggested after her question.
The emissary did not respond immediately, but she knew it would. They had been indulgent to her requests these days, in harsh contrast to the coldness they displayed not a week earlier. Even though the back of her mind sometimes whispered this was manipulation, she still wished to be indulged to a point she did not mind if it was precisely that.
“We understand that having other variables around discomforts you,” the emissary responded sagely. “But ask yourself this: is true mastery of the game eliminating all uncontrolled variables, or mastering them so completely they bend to your will?” The emissary held out its hands, almost as though to seize those fighting on the ground. “The Lord believes it is the latter. Brutality has its place, as you will soon learn. But why should He care if Argrave has freedom? It does not matter. The Lord is not playing Argrave’s game. Argrave is playing His game.”
Onychinusa felt a chill run down her spine. “And if this king chooses not to play?”
The emissary retracted his hand. “The only way to determine the quality of clay is to get it wet, and attempt to mold it. If it keeps its shape when worked, then it is good clay. And if it breaks, crumbles…” the emissary looked over. “Then we move on, leaving it broken.”
As the gaze lingered, Onychinusa’s breath quickened, realizing the emissary might not be speaking of the king alone. She swallowed and said desperately, “I’ll do my part in the battle. I’ll make the Lord proud, I swear it.”
The emissary looked over. “From the looks of things, that part will commence soon. They grow ever closer to the breach… and Argrave will call upon the centaurs’ Sarikiz, if he sticks to his plan.”
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Argrave’s mind was frayed with exhaustion as he fought with fierce desperation, straining his mind to his limit to control the numerous whips surging out from his hands. He burned through much of the power he’d accrued in the elven realms, but it didn’t feel like such a loss if victory could truly come of this. And looking ahead… that seemed to be the case.
Argrave fell back to survey the scene, mentally exhausted. Though even the Magisters had run out of strength on this death march, Anneliese and Orion picked up the slack he left behind. His queen cast grand spells one after another as though it was as easy as walking, using ice and lightning to fell any that would dare come near. Orion warded away all the creatures that avoided her power, and what few he missed were in turn dealt with by the honor guard of Veidimen. Argrave felt proud of them, and even had confidence enough to look away where the true battle happened.
Ghan and Merata, father and son, walked side-by-side in their advance toward the breach in the world. To the right and left of this great cut in the fabric of reality, one could only see the mortal world. Looking straight at it, an entirely new realm opened up before the viewer—Kirel Qircassia’s realm. It was impossible geometry manifest where that within had greater area than the breach that contained it. And all of what Argrave saw of Kirel’s realm was simple land and sky. They existed as two parallels, almost like yin and yang.
Argrave had expected to see more. Kirel Qircassia had made this breach, and so it would stand to reason to see his personal touch in it—a hand wrenching things open, a force that tore the fabric apart. Instead it stood open on its own, allowing all those within to pour out in an endless march of desperate loyalty.
They were not uncontested—the undying Earthenware Titan rose from the ground once again, reforming, but Ghan and Merata were on a ceaseless mission to end this battle and he fell far quicker than the last time. The swarms of insects and harpies became greater, but they were washed away in Dairi’s torrents of water or Gunlik’s tides of flame.
When Ghan and Merata grew close enough they could nearly touch the breach, two hands shot out of it—one gray, one white, and both large and fast enough to draw concern. Argrave’s eyes widened as he felt a familiar and intense presence. Erlebnis’ intervention had brought this feeling, this immutable existence that consumed the mind. He knew, then, that this was Kirel Qircassia’s will manifest.
Though Argrave was surprised, the two leading were not. Ghan’s lightning sparked out from his body like a living shield, while Merata called the vastness of life in the Bloodwoods. Both of them engaged one hand with their powers. Kirel’s hands fought against their resistance, and despite the power of the elven gods the hands triumphed with ease, soaring to grab the gods like dolls.
Ghan caught the gray hand, his right arm holding the thumb back while the other shielded from the pressure of the other four fingers. Merata, meanwhile, kept it at bay with his long crook, but the shepherd’s staff bent terribly against the pressure. As both of them strained, the other gods disengaged from all they fought, rushing to aid their family.
Argrave thought for a brief moment that Kirel, even though only a figment of his being, would be too strong for those here. He thought that his fears were right, and he was wholly insufficient for a challenge of this magnitude. With Ghan and Merata utterly overpowered, would the other gods even make a difference?
But soon enough, Chiteng raised an elegant blade of ivory up in the air. It took in Gunlik’s flames, Dairi’s water, Ghan’s lightning, and all the terrible aspects of nature embodied in the elven gods present. A metaphor became clear to Argrave, then. Flesh and blood were formless, molded to the environment around them like clay. That was Chiteng’s strength.
And when Chiteng’s blade descended, it cleaved through both arms to prove that true. As the gray and white hand burst into small, humanoid forms—spirits, fragments of the gods—that immutable presence became muted. Though the gods had been desperately struggling not moments ago, now they walked into the swarm of spirits as they danced away like a school of fish.
The spirits seemed like fleeing children, but the gods merely extended their hands and all were pulled from their flight to join with their body. Ghan, Gunlik, or Chiteng—all of them took in the fragments of Kirel’s hands with an easy and eager hunger. They stood stalwart in deep satisfaction, feasting like hyenas before hard-killed prey. It seemed like ambrosia to them—a forbidden nectar bringing pleasure Argrave couldn’t comprehend.
When the last of the spirits faded away, the gods reeled as though injected with drugs. Merata moved with uncharacteristic ferocity, slamming his crook on the ground before the breach. Roots buried beneath the earth surged to life, rising upwards and winding about each other as though to stretch to the sky in a grander display than ever shown before.
Behind, Merata’s father Ghan turned and raised his sparking fist up in the air. Intensely fierce lightning rocked the earth, so fast and loud Argrave felt their power drumming in his chest. As he looked around, shaken out of his observation, he saw a hellish scene that displayed a power far superior to what was demonstrated earlier. Lightning bolt after lightning bolt killed the vast hordes of enemies fighting against them moments before. Where Ghan had been protective before, now he was fierce and hungry, killing for the sake of killing.
But even still… Argrave reveled in it, laughing uneasily as his ears rang from the booming thunder. On one end, the source of reinforcements was blocked by a great wooden fortress that grew larger every second. On the other, all invading armies were struck down by the surging power of his allies.
No more enemies would come, not with the elven gods right here keeping the breach closed. But for things to end permanently, it was not enough. Tears in the boundary between this realm and the realm of the divine were not so easily mended.
His allies had done their part. It was time for Argrave to make good on his promise. He’d thought this situation desperate, almost unwinnable… but here he was. Now was the time to make his work with the centaurs pan out—now was the time to rouse Sarikiz and work out a compromise between all parties that left everyone walking away happy.
They’d passed the ball to him, and now it was his game to win.
Comments
The fall out shouldn't negatively affect Argrave, if only to keep him from cocking things up. Im more concerned with his reaction or lack of.
Al
2023-06-03 00:59:30 +0000 UTCI get the impression Erlebnis doesn't care if Agrave makes it or not here. Which would, to me (which means this is a guess), suggest he is going to engineer the defeat of the elven gods somehow here since chowing on other gods is how he can make himself stronger anyways. Too much is being kept "off camera" to really say for sure what his plans are. Could still be a set up somehow for a bigger play.
tibbish
2023-05-30 15:28:26 +0000 UTCShe's been brought up wrong on purpose for the fun and profit of a god...aint' no fixing that one
tibbish
2023-05-30 15:00:25 +0000 UTCmmmm Rectum wants to fix the Onychussy
AlthePal
2023-05-30 12:13:08 +0000 UTCThanks for the chapter!
Gopard
2023-05-30 12:05:56 +0000 UTCFor real. It's starting to feel like when they played Rains of Castermere at the Red Wedding
Hypnotical
2023-05-30 10:37:58 +0000 UTCI hope Argrave and Co. are able to counter Erlebnis appropriately or at least salvage whatever situation he will force on them. I'm getting a really bad feeling about just what is about to hit our protagonists.
Obsessivehobbyist
2023-05-30 09:58:26 +0000 UTCI want to hold Onychinusa tightly and praise her, to let her know she's loved. I want to be the one to fix Onychinusa so fucking badly.
Rectum
2023-05-30 07:36:00 +0000 UTC