monzun (
monzun) wrote in
boxfullofzeroes2025-03-17 06:58 am
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then it becomes, it becomes, it becomes a problem, then--
Monzun watches over their people. They teach their Creature. That was all they knew and all they really wanted initially, when they were freshly-created, and perhaps it ever would have been if another god's cruelty hadn't cut in.
Their goal had never been to be the only god. It was that, and then it had been surviving to oppose Nemesis, and now he was gone, and it seemed they were the only regardless.
("Eh, screw 'em! What've other gods been but trouble for us, huh?")
("Well...It is a bit lonely. And Khazar's actions are the only reason we're around today, isn't that right?")
The power of the Creeds trickle back alongside the power of the people. And then torrents, and a flood. The Miracles they use grow stronger beyond even Wonders' assistance.
Generations of their people live and proliferate and die, and Monzun's strength doesn't waver, but increases even as the populations settle lower than the war efforts and post-war burst their levels to being.
("Yeah! We're badass! Even if it could use a lil more fireballin' to make all this peace more exciting, Boss.")
Their Creature and people are safe. They revel in being only gentle without consequence but worshippers' occasional disrespect, and they find they care little about that--unless they harm others in their village, and then Creature gentle scolding or abrupt relocation across the land tends to work nearly as well as lightning would have.
Their intervention is needed less even as they notice more. Little beacons where their people were, somewhere well beyond the seas, still worshipping where it once couldn't reach.
And something else. A shard of something.
Another...another god? Near their people? The numbers waver, some converting to the other, fewer converting to Monzun, as reasonable without them there to demonstrate their power.
They need to look.
("Could be a fresh threat we need to squash.")
("Or they may be a new god in need of a Guide?")
A fragment of them even hopes...
...
...Nemesis' brutality means their consciences say nothing while their Teleports are slowly practiced until they look something closer to a Vortex the old gods used.
It's not quite as large. Redder. But far more than a simple Teleport.
The day comes where they reach across the Lands and place it where they sense their lingering people and that god.
("Let's go!")
("It's so exciting! But we don't need to rush quite yet--")
Monzun takes some time to look over their nearest people and discuss. Khazar brought them Disciples; they could bring some possibly willing to convert to another, although they seem confused by the conversation. Do any of theirs know Miracles? Oh? Yes? One of Sable's decedents picked up the Wood Miracle, they hadn't realized that was possible--
A part of them is distant, distant, distant.
Monzun reaches for their Creature and finds they stare down into the Vortex.
Ah.
It seems their impatience was noticed and acted upon.
In another part of Eden, a Vortex opened on the side of a mountain that Monzun's old Temple still stands on. The air splits with a shocked bellow as a massive Leopard Creature steps onto nothing and tumbles down into the water.
Ouch.
Only a little ouch. It wasn't that far, but Sweetheart wasn't expecting it. She stands and shakes the water off a little--oooh, fish. Scoops up a handful of fresh fish to eat, and then turns around to claw up the mountain to peek over the edge.
There are a few people! Worshipping wrong, or maybe just frightened. That's okay. She's pretty different now. She doesn't mind when they take off running when they un-freeze.
...Most of the trees she grew are missing. She doesn't like that, she worked hard on those.
She climbs up all the way--oh, the Temple's smaller, or she's so big as to match?--and immediately gets to Miracle Watering the withered ones in the worship sites left.
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And then back down, alongside their voice. "That--that--all-burning, all-sacrificing--bare-Sited pile of Creature shit is gone with the power of the Creeds I wrested from him," they rumble.
Shining Sweetheart arrives with flicking ears, glancing between other-god and other-Creature. Monzun is angry? Monzun is using strings of words she's never heard before, in fact.
Only a little angry, as they drift back again to float above their somewhat-puzzled creature. "...He lead me to believe you--weren't, anymore."
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But they have confirmed this at least: Nemesis is no more, and they wiped him off the face of Eden.
He has plenty of cause to believe them. A spike of - something runs through him, too close to the fear of a new unknown to truly be relief, but similar enough that the cogs begin turning regardless.
Nemesis is gone. Eden is forever changed. Monzun is poised to take his place as power-that-is. And so it goes.
"You and I remain," he declares out loud, affirming this to Monzun - and to himself.
His tone is pensive, slow, and deliberately unclear. He must choose his words with care. Below, Laetes holds his ground, still sustaining a low, rasping growl with pauses only to snatch a breath, eyes fixed up at the towering Leopard as though tasked with an unblinking watch over only one thing in the universe.
"What will you do now that you hold this power?"
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"I'll continue tending to my people," they say eventually, glow listing to the side, over the nearby Village the Wonder towers over. "There are fewer mine than I knew on this land, but still many scattered around--here, and the others I've travelled."
The word comes with some irony, being such a mild word for being forced to flee from and chase gods so much.
As things are, though, they can travel when they please.
Sweetheart slowly crouches until she reaches nearly Laetes' eye-level. He, too, seems angry. She dips forward to tap her snout to his in askance. He doesn't need to be angry, she'd rather have that stop.
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- and a Leash whips into existence, snapping taut and yanking him back so his jaws clatter shut on thin air, causing him to stumble off-balance. He whines, then, and turns seeking eyes up to Lethys.
My people, Monzun said. Lethys knows their symbol is still seared into the hearts and minds of this Village, as with the one by their temple. As it was, as it still sometimes lingers, in the Villages he's reclaimed, inch by anxious inch. Fewer mine than I knew...
He knew nowhere else to run, but was a mistake to stay. He doesn't know their plans for certain, but - in case they wield their power carelessly, they should know what they'd be doing:
"I have no other Temple," he states, matter-of-factly.
Normally this would be a foolish admittance. But their power eclipses his so completely, the time for strategy has long passed. The truth is the only option left. Perhaps knowing they would be wiping him off the face of Eden might give them pause. It did last time...
"Your battle here is already won. My lands are forfeit. Give me time," he asks, in a way that feels familiar. "I will find another Land far from here, but I need time."
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She rumbles and jabs a claw forward, arm still long enough to nearly reach the wolf if she leans. Don't they notice how he's acting? She just wants to do something about it!
Monzun swiftly pulls further away, nearly across the Village itself. "Those aren't my people any more." (They are, but Lethys seemed to take care well enough when they weren't raining flame over them. They can stay his.) "I did not plan on taking from you," they say tightly, finally realizing what this may be looking like.
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Some small part suggests anxiously that perhaps what Monzun means is—
—they don't need to take from him, points out the long, tired part of him that bent to Nemesis. They already have more power than this Land could afford them. He has been thinking too small. The quaint game of taking Villages, back and forth across the board, cannot mean anything to them now; the power of the Creeds puts them above that. No, they don't care. The rules are thrown away and do not matter. (Such rules were all that amused Nemesis.)
If ichor could run cold.
Laetes, sensing something from his god, begins to slowly back away, the Leash falling slack. His eyes dart from Lethys to Sweetheart to Monzun.
"What will you do?"
His voice carries the usual echo of godhood, but it sounds hollow.
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Sweetheart, as she tends to, begins a Gesture--a Gesture she considers of Water, but then changes to a greater one, of Healing. There was already Healing done, but she knows this one is best, and perhaps Laetes could use it. She doesn't need to be all that close to do it.
Monzun darts back a little in the direction of their Temple, cutting a sharp line of red shine in the air. "You asked and I answered this moments ago." But they're missing something, and they despise it.
("Perhaps he thinks you're lying, Leader? We know Nemesis liked to twist words, after all...")
"And I am not lying about it!" they add roughly.
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His tone is genuine, and his symbol flickers back to full brightness.
His voice is urgent and to be heard! and there is a ripple of pausing and muttering across the Village as, unintentionally, mortals catch the echoes.
Yes, Nemesis lied. But he had no need to lie to Lethys. His most faithful; his right hand. His god of least concern. Nemesis could crush Lethys like a bug. Why waste the energy lying?
Lethys expects the truth — he does not expect it to be kind.
Laetes flinches back, dragging his feet to shuffle away, covering his face for a blow that does not come. When the Miracle hits, it hits a cringing thing, and Laetes' eyes flick wide.
Laetes dares a questioning stare over the pointed fur of his arms, peering at Sweetheart in shock.
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They answered this--!
...unless they did not?
Monzun stops.
With the tentativeness of a new stream breaking off from a river as spring cracks through ice:
"What?"
It dawns that no, they did not. They've spoken of Lethys' territory and his people. They have not spoken of Lethys himself.
There is a strange sensation, somewhere. An echo of how it feels when they'd been too desperate for too long, and their most loyal had collapsed to their deaths at the Temple they should have been safest serving at. (There are not enough doing so here for that, though, even when they stretch their senses to quickly check again.)
"I will do nothing," they say finally. "Without Nemesis, I have no reason to war with you. Or...anything else?" Monzun adds uncertainly. They still don't understand what he's expecting, if he doesn't believe they'll simply blow his Temple away.
Almost entirely oblivious, even to Lethys shouting, Sweetheart is bouncing on her feet a little. See, see, Laetes? Is that any better?
--But at the name 'Nemesis,' her eyes flick back up and her own teeth flash. What? What about him? Monzun sinks from the sky to tap a pat over her back--it is nothing, nothing at all.
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So he shrinks. With a warmth in his limbs and sore paw-pads cooled, the comfort floods in. He rejects it easily. Laetes pads back and takes his place behind the imaginary war-line drawn before his god. He lowers to all fours, one clawed paw against his knee, one flat to the ground. And he watches Sweetheart: no more snapping. Baleful eyes meet hers.
Lethys holds. Carefully he processes what this could mean, all thousand-and-one interpretations. A flattened part of him dares: Monzun sounds as though they concede.
Flickering uncertainly, like a candle flame on too short a wick, Lethys hangs-fire. Considers.
"Nothing," he repeats.
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The Creature delicately steps away (as much as a mountain-sized thing can) and paces back around the Villages. From where the gods speak to the Guru's Temple to her own home Temple and back, she needs to check it.
Nemesis is dead. There are no curses here, but the itch in her bones is always back when she hears about him and this is the best way to make sure.
"Nothing." A third time, bouncing between them as an attack between shields.
Although...
"Unless you steal my Creature again. You would come to regret that. From both of us," they think to clarify.
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But that is not the point.
Lethys watches the Leopard pace. As Laetes did. Anticipatory. Anxious, checking, seeking something her god cannot provide.
His mind is elsewhere.
"You wish me to remain." ...To clarify.
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Sweetheart returns. Holding another tree, Monzun notes absently when she plants it somewhere near the beach.
"Yes. Unless you would prefer elsewhere," they say abruptly, swinging back thoughtfully in a half-circle. "Is this not your home? Or was it another place? The land of more snow?" They still remember Khazar's announcing him as though "of the snowy realm" was his title; this lead to their own taking "of the seaside storms", though they've dropped the "seaside" since.
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Fearful, but with the mention of snow throwing him neatly for a loop:
"Do they live?"
It is almost quiet.
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Monzun dips back, red pulsing reaching, reaching as they've only just recently (in godly terms) learned how, for all those little flickers of faith and hopes and prayers and hates drumming dripping humming dancing rippling all the way across the world back to them.
"...The land is full of life. The ones that worship me still, at least...although few from the snow do much anymore," they say.
Sweetheart Gestures once more. Look at this, Laetes, this impressive thing she can do: making more trees, and this particular tree much larger. See? See?
...And if she scoots the water over to dampen his tail, Monzun is a little too distracted right now to tell her off! Ha!
"There's a Village," they're preoccupied noticing. "I believe. Not mine. Where your Temple was? Is it yours?"
It occurs to them he might not be able to sense without Creeds. (Pieces of Creed? They still don't know the right name.) "I could look for you," they add, with much lower energy. The new freedom of travel is pleasing. Their enthusiasm for speeding ahead is not since killing several of their own people trying.
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He is surprised however to hear that anything might remain. He felt the Temple's destruction like a scar in his light, and that part of the world went dark to him. But if anything remains...
He used to be stronger, more capable of this, but if he focuses hard ...
...glimpses of somewhere distant. Quiet and few enough that he hears nothing unless he listens, and even then only small flashes. The soft crunch of fur footwraps through snow; the glisten of morning on the settled flakes; mutterings and a slow wave of a hand in prayer where the snow is deep and untrodden, and a dance would cost energy more valuably spent elsewhere. Overnight snow dusted from a tiny altar of salvaged temple wood, preserved in the cold.
Lethys snaps back to himself at the sound of Laetes' sharp, affronted bark.
"Laetes! Enough from you! Leave!"
The Wolf makes a haggard grumbling sound, still clutching the soaked fur of his tail, and skulks away - backwards, at first, to keep Sweetheart well in his sights, before turning and beginning a reluctant lope back towards Lethys' lands, duly scolded for his distraction.
Lethys is a little dizzied. Whether from overreaching, or the realisation itself that embers of faith yet burn for him in the snow, he isn't sure.
...But there is reality to account for. As deeply as it cuts, his remaining faith encroaches on theirs. Lethys steels himself, and coldly instructs:
"You will have to kill them. I have no power to turn away such determined followers." A pause, and for his own ragged pride: "Nor do I desire to."
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"None of that, now," Monzun says crossly, and yanks away the tree she was about to fling across the land at Laetes' back. She jumps with a rumble-yowl of offense and gets a small swat on the wrist for it. Come on, she picked a small one, he can catch it!
But Monzun is not dealing with an aggressive Creature who might goad their Sweetheart into both crushing the nearby buildings so easily. Act friendly, not act as if attacking. They redirect her attention to the nearby water, to eat or gather fish for whoever she pleases instead.
The tree is dropped into the green-roofed Workshop, and their attention swings back to the land's first Village. Speaking of redecorating...
They begin plucking a few more just-grown trees and feeding them through, as well. Those fields genuinely require a redo.
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...But their attention has drifted again, away from the other god shining over their territory and towards building. As if he were not here at all.
Through the shock, Lethys is a little insulted. He knows they could crush him like a mortal under their thumb, if they so chose. But that they don't even show concern that he's here is purely insulting.
He is left hanging over the Village with no audience. Pride damaged, perhaps unreasonably so, but nothing else. It begins to sink in that he is alive, and looking to stay that way a little longer.
And Nemesis is dead.
Lethys flickers to one side, and back. He glides to the nearest mountaintop and hovers there, watching Monzun from afar. His thoughts won't sit still long enough for him to pin any of them down.
Eventually he flits back to his Temple and to the Village beside it. He conjures miraculous rations into their stores. And probes, gingerly, at the distant sound of prayers in the cold. And again, and again, and again, crosses the landscape almost to Monzun's Village borders and finds himself returning to his Temple without thinking about it.
He lives. And Nemesis is dead.
Laetes, who has been Leashed to the Pen and held there, peers up at his listless god and whines.
It is another mortal day and night before Monzun will find Lethys streaking over and flaring too-bright and too-close, demanding their full attention.
"What do you want? Tell me!"
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And, simply enough, Monzun enjoys forests.
They work side-by-side with their Creature to grow them, just as they did when they first learned of Miracles in times centuries past, when Monzun couldn't even cast under their own power.
"Greetings, Lethys," they say dryly, as if his appearance hadn't had their hand jerk from the forest they'd been watering to somewhere far to the left. (A single straw-covered house suddenly suffers a deluge on half of it. The people who come out expect Laetes and are confused not to see anything at all.) "I thought I'd answered that already, and am doing such right now."
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Surely they must have a long-term goal. Something beyond his knowledge. To ask is already overstepping but he can't stand not knowing. For his cruelty, at least Nemesis was clear.
Feeling frantic and out of sorts, and half-watching Monzun's rainwater soak the roof, Lethys absently traces for a Storm - not that he can cast, even if this was anything more than a fidget. So far away from his own Influence the blue tinge of power sprinkles away from him like dust in the wind.
"What is this for? What is your true aim?"
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("Let him wonder! He doesn't need to know jack about you, getting all uppity in your face like that! Not that you have a face...")
("He's certainly expecting more enmity than you're giving. Perhaps we should be careful not to stoke the flames, so to speak?")
"I did not win anything," they say tiredly. "I was forced to wage war I did not want, for people I did not desire, to kill a god that tried to destroy everything I knew first. I would have left it all alone if not for that."
They twist a Gesture, smaller and tighter, for more watering.
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His temper erupts.
"Eden is a battleground! Every realm is won or lost! If not Nemesis, sooner or later your realm would be challenged. You claim the power you won was against your will? If that were true, you would have fallen to him in an instant!"
Some drive led them to this point. There are no accidental victories. Lethys will not accept their victory over him was by chance.
"You chased me here because I took your Creature. Was that the only reason? What of taking ground from me in the end? You dare tell me my banishment was not your desire then?"
there is a lil wi-fi here lol. (love u)
"...That was for my Creature. I cannot say I wasn't angry about that then. Or for watching how you warred with my rescuer, Khazar, alongside him."
Sweetheart's head rises from the treeline, head tilted, listening intently.
"And I freely admit that I used that same rage, when he stole and defiled my homes, when he cursed her; and of how he killed Khazar, and how he killed you, to gather my strength to kill him, too. Without it, he would have crushed me."
Monzun lets the water run. They're not really hitting many saplings.
"You stole her on his orders. He is dead. I am not. My Creature is not. You are not. My rage does not linger. I don't want to do as he did. I do not want to make Eden my battleground."
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....But will they? And who would try? They hold the raw power of the Creeds. There may well be nothing anyone could do if Monzun doesn't want to fight.
Such a thought is absurd. Gods warring for dominance is how Eden has always been.
"I did what I had to. I will not pretend remorse."
And why bring him into the equation?
Feeling lost, Lethys warily pulls back a little.
"Eden will choose its victor, whether or not you seize it by force." More importantly: "You truly think yourself so righteous?" It comes out as a sneer, though it's not clear if Lethys has another tone.
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Although they pause, and then grouse, shifting to hover over Sweetheart's head as a halo: "excepting the torment of my Creature after her capture. You should apologize for that eventually."
Without Laetes to distract her, the Leopard's attention continues flickering back and forth between both gods.
They consider this. Righteous... "I do, yes." (The more destructive part of their mind grumbles. They ignore him.)
Below them, a handful of mortals stand around. It's been a while since any were particularly impressed by the forest growing exponentially, but a few are still taking time chattering to each other, observing.
"The deaths of my homes and my people were miserable, Lethys. The land that was Nemesis' still isn't recovered by what we did to it warring over it."
Again, Sweetheart hears that name. Something important is happening, so this time she stays, crouching down, choking on a snarl that goes lower and lower until it rattles the leaves.
"Villages were reduced to nothing, not one child, not one structure remaining. Again and again. Do you desire to do that to me and mine?" they ask, voice almost quiet.
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