Oct 26 2020, 02:46 AM
Content Warning
This post contains potentially sensitive material:
This post contains potentially sensitive material:
gore
From within the rockface, I have toppled out into green. Crackles of energy burn out of the fissure behind me, nipping at my heels as reminders of my borrowed time, but I’m not bothered. I pick myself up, brush the dirt off my knees, and bask in the cave glow. This is one of my favorite places!
The jungle sings sounds of creatures familiar but uncanny, insect chirrups rendered by an old radio, a bird call with longing in its undertones like a shine of stainless steel. I can never place names to them, because the names and thems are always changing; ever so alive this place, still alive even though it stays contained. A terrarium of such peculiar design! I like to look inside and tap the glass. As long as nobody catches me, I’m fine. I listen to the bird’s melody and distort it back, pulling it apart as I walk.
No things know it when I’m here. They don’t see me like I see them. I can see them from the front and the back, I see them in infinite shades and visual artifacts, in millions of frames of them living. I can pick through them at will. But I leave it untouched, for now, to marvel at what the natural order of Origin Cave is. When I want them to see me, they will. Until then, I step high through the grass and turn my body into the long vertical shadows of trees. I see what I can see: A group of adventurers. Siblings climbing upon rocks and looking into ponds. A father and son in emotional duress. I hover nearby and watch for untold moments. I jot things down, unseen.
And then, curious, I venture back to an old place, to a thing that I had long ago left unknown but disturbed. Forgotten and furious. I only just remembered her! When you see as many things as I do, and leave so many parts of yourself in them, you forget their names and thems where you left them. I wonder if this thing I forgot will let me pick her back up.
I stand at the edge of the water, looking down. My rift is nearby as a contingency plan; I know how dangerous she can be! I had a hand in putting her here, after all. (Jupiter, Nemean, and Tamulus trapped her so she’d cook alive forever, because Nemean thought it would be funny. There, see?) If I am the slightest too careless, I might get ensnared in her. This is where it becomes tricky: I’d like to look at her, but, ah, this one... There’s a lot to unpack. She’s very angry. If I stay too long, she might mess me up.
My toes grip the edge of the water. My toes are bones and mushrooms. I reach to touch the surface, searching for an old body beyond it. Are you there? I call out. I saw you last tucked into a tight and horrible space. Would you like to come out?
A stream of bubbles rises from the subaqueous shade.
It wasn’t my plan actually to take take her out. But you know what? I like this better. I defy natural order too, not like vicious chaos or unyielding sequence, but just because I choose to. This is one of my favorite places, and I like to see what they do with this illusion of being alive.
Bubbles pop in the water. I realize I am bent too close—and straighten up again. Hah! I’ll just take you out and watch you from afar. Okay?
But I don’t think that’s good enough. She wants more than that. She wants another part of me, another sacrifice—was Beatris not enough? I’m being facetious. I think she wants to kill me. I mock her relentlessly because it’s fun. Then, dwelling on her makes me prone, and mental claws grip my skull.
The pressure is crushing. She pulls me underwater.
It goes all black, and I struggle. As traveled as I am, I still fear. She knows this. She holds me underwater not for as long as she can, but as deep as she can, exercising her rage that has only been able to boil the water in her prison. My heart slams in my ears, but I hear nothing! Nothing but the muffled hiss of bubbles and water, black water—green water—purple water throbbing against my temples. An ultraviolet light. Eclipsed by a—a malevolent claw—it comes for me! The pain is like no other, piercing the integument of my being, my material! She begins to rip me apart!
I am inundated with scissor-grip claws that shred gaps to be inhabited by the microscopic organisms festering in this hole for thousands of years. She nauseates me and fills my cavities with bacteria that makes me hallucinate. I detach from my body, my muscles fine strings, my organs bubbling to the surface. I am shorn to ribbons. I’m sure I deserve it, and so do the Masters who did it. All that remains of me is chunks of flesh bleeding and seeping red into the dark water. Pieces I can see floating past glassy, gaping—yet my brain does not cease function.
Huh!
I wake up from a split second delusion. They’re already in my brain! Proliferation sets in, and I can feel her influence immediately. She is an omnipresence lying in the cold, dark abyss that hungers. She ravages, that’s what sets her apart from the ice cold Mother. I can feel her craving to dismantle. That seems to be the theme of tonight, Mother and her ants! Farina and her bacteria! I made the mistake of spoiling myself on Chaos. What would have happened had I stepped into Ursa instead?
I’m still deep in the water. I have to get out. I see the dim purple light, and something gargantuan shifts below it. The claw—! Kicking my feet, I reach for the surface. The currents lap around my legs, as though the water sweetly begs me to stay. Then, insistently. It’s nerve wracking. Even the microbiota that flood my system coax their weight downward. Everything in my body feels so heavy, it’s like swimming through the tar of a dream; except I’m fully awake in a body that doesn’t obey me. I reach and swipe for the surface glow, bubbles like glass fractures slipping from my maw, bubbles rushing my ears as the claw—claws!—so many claws!—clack at my feet!
Then, with a gasp, the water breaks over my head like gelatinous film; over my mouth, thick, thick water. I inhale some of it as I choke for air. I charge through the surface, throwing my limbs skyward, and I thrash until I reach the edge. The water globes off me like slime. I scramble into the grass, my body whole and wet and clinging to my bones; I vomit; and rolling onto my back, I breathe.
I breathe for long moments, until the surface stirs and a ripple combs my way. LET ME OUT, she screams and whispers.
I laugh and peruse the canopy above. I detach so that she can’t snap me up again.
YOU CAN LET ME OUT, she says, her voice like metal shards.
I reach into my pocket. Everything is wet. My notes are mush, but luckily I write in a stenographer’s hand, I write in the strokes that I wrote in, I remember it that way. I laugh again at her. I instead withdraw a handful of spicy corn nuts and sprinkle them on the ground. Okay, how about you tell me a story? You know who we haven’t heard about? The plant Master. She used to like this room, didn’t she?
The Eyes fall silent. I think I have plucked a nerve.
Or I can tell you a story. I don’t think I’d do her justice like you would, I append, sitting up.
The pools emanate a wicked chill. Foreboding surges from the depths of the water, stygian clear. Her voice croaks hollow from within me, the voices of the million prokaryotes enacting her will, IF YOU LET ME OUT SHE WILL TELL YOU HERSELF.
Is that so? I thought she was dead, I remark.
JUST SLEEPING.
I HAVE BEEN AWAKE ALL THIS TIME. WAITING FOR THE TIME TO WAKE HER.
YOU WANT A STORY? LET ME TELL YOU WHAT I’VE DONE.
THERE WAS A CAT WHO CAME TO MY EYES. I FIXED HER. SHE WAS THE FIRST OF TAMULUS’ DISGUSTING MISTAKES THAT I FIXED. NOW SHE SITS ON THE LORD’S SHOULDERS.
I WHISPERED SECRETS TO THE FAILURES OF VALKHOUNDS—NOT VALKHOUNDS AT ALL, BUT WATERED-DOWN RUNAWAY EMBRYOS, I SHOWED THEM THEIR TRUTHS. I HAVE BEEN LOYAL.
EVEN FROM WITHIN MY PRISON I SERVE MY PURPOSE. UNLIKE TAMULUS AND JUPITER. UNLIKE THE BETRAYER! LOOK UPON THE BEASTS I HAVE ARCHITECTED FOR THE FIRST TIME IN THOUSANDS OF YEARS. EVER SINCE THE WOMB WAS REOPENED I FEEL IT—I FEEL ALIVE AGAIN. I BOIL ALIVE IN THIS BUBBLING PIT, WITH VIRILITY! LOOK WHAT I HAVE MADE! THEY WILL HELP ME!
ONE TO KILL TAMULUS
ONE TO KILL JUPITER
ONE TO KILL NEMEAN
THEN THIS CAVE WILL BE SAFE AGAIN
FOR MY LEAF, ARTIO.
By the time the crustacean exhumes the final syllable of the Taurus Master’s name, I am on my feet. The air has been getting colder. My stomach churns uneasy with Farina’s zeal. I do second-guess letting her out, and that’s what drives me to turn my back on her.
LET ME OUT, she screeches through the pools.
When I look over my shoulder, I’m moving too fast to make anything out, but when I look forward again I’m in front of the pools. Ah, shit.
LET ME OUT, she shrieks again.
I run and fall into the water. I run and blink and I’m at the pools. I run and close my eyes and don’t open them, and that does it—I’m free.
LET ME OUT! she screams into the aether, raking my ears.
I can’t risk getting trapped in her psychosis again. I run to where I left my rift, burning and fizzling all unimaginable colours. There, I catch a glimpse of the new chrysali, three of them, oily black and tucked away inside the fracture. Maybe it’s sympathy that guides my hand, or my selfish indulgence of disorder; as Farina’s fury reaches after me, I beckon the stones and cavernous tunnels to contort. The ground shakes as I step through my rift, the rocks ripping apart to cleave a new opening out of the wedge between Farina and the boiling water vent she had been blocking.
I left too hastily; a seam has broken. Energy crackles unmendable, and my influence escapes me, leaving a scar in spacetime in the wall of Eridanus.
The jungle sings sounds of creatures familiar but uncanny, insect chirrups rendered by an old radio, a bird call with longing in its undertones like a shine of stainless steel. I can never place names to them, because the names and thems are always changing; ever so alive this place, still alive even though it stays contained. A terrarium of such peculiar design! I like to look inside and tap the glass. As long as nobody catches me, I’m fine. I listen to the bird’s melody and distort it back, pulling it apart as I walk.
No things know it when I’m here. They don’t see me like I see them. I can see them from the front and the back, I see them in infinite shades and visual artifacts, in millions of frames of them living. I can pick through them at will. But I leave it untouched, for now, to marvel at what the natural order of Origin Cave is. When I want them to see me, they will. Until then, I step high through the grass and turn my body into the long vertical shadows of trees. I see what I can see: A group of adventurers. Siblings climbing upon rocks and looking into ponds. A father and son in emotional duress. I hover nearby and watch for untold moments. I jot things down, unseen.
And then, curious, I venture back to an old place, to a thing that I had long ago left unknown but disturbed. Forgotten and furious. I only just remembered her! When you see as many things as I do, and leave so many parts of yourself in them, you forget their names and thems where you left them. I wonder if this thing I forgot will let me pick her back up.
I stand at the edge of the water, looking down. My rift is nearby as a contingency plan; I know how dangerous she can be! I had a hand in putting her here, after all. (Jupiter, Nemean, and Tamulus trapped her so she’d cook alive forever, because Nemean thought it would be funny. There, see?) If I am the slightest too careless, I might get ensnared in her. This is where it becomes tricky: I’d like to look at her, but, ah, this one... There’s a lot to unpack. She’s very angry. If I stay too long, she might mess me up.
My toes grip the edge of the water. My toes are bones and mushrooms. I reach to touch the surface, searching for an old body beyond it. Are you there? I call out. I saw you last tucked into a tight and horrible space. Would you like to come out?
A stream of bubbles rises from the subaqueous shade.
It wasn’t my plan actually to take take her out. But you know what? I like this better. I defy natural order too, not like vicious chaos or unyielding sequence, but just because I choose to. This is one of my favorite places, and I like to see what they do with this illusion of being alive.
Bubbles pop in the water. I realize I am bent too close—and straighten up again. Hah! I’ll just take you out and watch you from afar. Okay?
But I don’t think that’s good enough. She wants more than that. She wants another part of me, another sacrifice—was Beatris not enough? I’m being facetious. I think she wants to kill me. I mock her relentlessly because it’s fun. Then, dwelling on her makes me prone, and mental claws grip my skull.
The pressure is crushing. She pulls me underwater.
It goes all black, and I struggle. As traveled as I am, I still fear. She knows this. She holds me underwater not for as long as she can, but as deep as she can, exercising her rage that has only been able to boil the water in her prison. My heart slams in my ears, but I hear nothing! Nothing but the muffled hiss of bubbles and water, black water—green water—purple water throbbing against my temples. An ultraviolet light. Eclipsed by a—a malevolent claw—it comes for me! The pain is like no other, piercing the integument of my being, my material! She begins to rip me apart!
I am inundated with scissor-grip claws that shred gaps to be inhabited by the microscopic organisms festering in this hole for thousands of years. She nauseates me and fills my cavities with bacteria that makes me hallucinate. I detach from my body, my muscles fine strings, my organs bubbling to the surface. I am shorn to ribbons. I’m sure I deserve it, and so do the Masters who did it. All that remains of me is chunks of flesh bleeding and seeping red into the dark water. Pieces I can see floating past glassy, gaping—yet my brain does not cease function.
Huh!
I wake up from a split second delusion. They’re already in my brain! Proliferation sets in, and I can feel her influence immediately. She is an omnipresence lying in the cold, dark abyss that hungers. She ravages, that’s what sets her apart from the ice cold Mother. I can feel her craving to dismantle. That seems to be the theme of tonight, Mother and her ants! Farina and her bacteria! I made the mistake of spoiling myself on Chaos. What would have happened had I stepped into Ursa instead?
I’m still deep in the water. I have to get out. I see the dim purple light, and something gargantuan shifts below it. The claw—! Kicking my feet, I reach for the surface. The currents lap around my legs, as though the water sweetly begs me to stay. Then, insistently. It’s nerve wracking. Even the microbiota that flood my system coax their weight downward. Everything in my body feels so heavy, it’s like swimming through the tar of a dream; except I’m fully awake in a body that doesn’t obey me. I reach and swipe for the surface glow, bubbles like glass fractures slipping from my maw, bubbles rushing my ears as the claw—claws!—so many claws!—clack at my feet!
Then, with a gasp, the water breaks over my head like gelatinous film; over my mouth, thick, thick water. I inhale some of it as I choke for air. I charge through the surface, throwing my limbs skyward, and I thrash until I reach the edge. The water globes off me like slime. I scramble into the grass, my body whole and wet and clinging to my bones; I vomit; and rolling onto my back, I breathe.
I breathe for long moments, until the surface stirs and a ripple combs my way. LET ME OUT, she screams and whispers.
I laugh and peruse the canopy above. I detach so that she can’t snap me up again.
YOU CAN LET ME OUT, she says, her voice like metal shards.
I reach into my pocket. Everything is wet. My notes are mush, but luckily I write in a stenographer’s hand, I write in the strokes that I wrote in, I remember it that way. I laugh again at her. I instead withdraw a handful of spicy corn nuts and sprinkle them on the ground. Okay, how about you tell me a story? You know who we haven’t heard about? The plant Master. She used to like this room, didn’t she?
The Eyes fall silent. I think I have plucked a nerve.
Or I can tell you a story. I don’t think I’d do her justice like you would, I append, sitting up.
The pools emanate a wicked chill. Foreboding surges from the depths of the water, stygian clear. Her voice croaks hollow from within me, the voices of the million prokaryotes enacting her will, IF YOU LET ME OUT SHE WILL TELL YOU HERSELF.
Is that so? I thought she was dead, I remark.
JUST SLEEPING.
I HAVE BEEN AWAKE ALL THIS TIME. WAITING FOR THE TIME TO WAKE HER.
YOU WANT A STORY? LET ME TELL YOU WHAT I’VE DONE.
THERE WAS A CAT WHO CAME TO MY EYES. I FIXED HER. SHE WAS THE FIRST OF TAMULUS’ DISGUSTING MISTAKES THAT I FIXED. NOW SHE SITS ON THE LORD’S SHOULDERS.
I WHISPERED SECRETS TO THE FAILURES OF VALKHOUNDS—NOT VALKHOUNDS AT ALL, BUT WATERED-DOWN RUNAWAY EMBRYOS, I SHOWED THEM THEIR TRUTHS. I HAVE BEEN LOYAL.
EVEN FROM WITHIN MY PRISON I SERVE MY PURPOSE. UNLIKE TAMULUS AND JUPITER. UNLIKE THE BETRAYER! LOOK UPON THE BEASTS I HAVE ARCHITECTED FOR THE FIRST TIME IN THOUSANDS OF YEARS. EVER SINCE THE WOMB WAS REOPENED I FEEL IT—I FEEL ALIVE AGAIN. I BOIL ALIVE IN THIS BUBBLING PIT, WITH VIRILITY! LOOK WHAT I HAVE MADE! THEY WILL HELP ME!
ONE TO KILL TAMULUS
ONE TO KILL JUPITER
ONE TO KILL NEMEAN
THEN THIS CAVE WILL BE SAFE AGAIN
FOR MY LEAF, ARTIO.
By the time the crustacean exhumes the final syllable of the Taurus Master’s name, I am on my feet. The air has been getting colder. My stomach churns uneasy with Farina’s zeal. I do second-guess letting her out, and that’s what drives me to turn my back on her.
LET ME OUT, she screeches through the pools.
When I look over my shoulder, I’m moving too fast to make anything out, but when I look forward again I’m in front of the pools. Ah, shit.
LET ME OUT, she shrieks again.
I run and fall into the water. I run and blink and I’m at the pools. I run and close my eyes and don’t open them, and that does it—I’m free.
LET ME OUT! she screams into the aether, raking my ears.
I can’t risk getting trapped in her psychosis again. I run to where I left my rift, burning and fizzling all unimaginable colours. There, I catch a glimpse of the new chrysali, three of them, oily black and tucked away inside the fracture. Maybe it’s sympathy that guides my hand, or my selfish indulgence of disorder; as Farina’s fury reaches after me, I beckon the stones and cavernous tunnels to contort. The ground shakes as I step through my rift, the rocks ripping apart to cleave a new opening out of the wedge between Farina and the boiling water vent she had been blocking.
I left too hastily; a seam has broken. Energy crackles unmendable, and my influence escapes me, leaving a scar in spacetime in the wall of Eridanus.
As the ground falls still, the water in the Eyes grows warm. There is a distinct absence of presence in the pools now.
The riftstorm can be entered briefly by the feet of one's mind, where within, a Gembound might catch glimpses of untold dimensions before they are ejected back into Eridanus.
The three creatures are ready to emerge from their chrysalis, and will feel a compulsion to travel to Fornax to receive their purpose.
Eight spicy corn nuts are available to be claimed.
The riftstorm can be entered briefly by the feet of one's mind, where within, a Gembound might catch glimpses of untold dimensions before they are ejected back into Eridanus.
The three creatures are ready to emerge from their chrysalis, and will feel a compulsion to travel to Fornax to receive their purpose.
Eight spicy corn nuts are available to be claimed.
@Tsetse @Emrys @Hjalmar