Joan let out a groan, her eyes slowly opening. She then let out a shriek when she looked into the strange, glowing face of Gilâs armor.
âYouâre awake,â Gil said.
âThat is not a nice thing to wake up,â Joan said sheepishly. âWhat happened? Are we outside?â Her quick look around revealed she was back in the chamber theyâd first come to, the door glowing a few feet away. âHave you been staring at me the whole time? How long was I unconscious?â
âOnly a few minutes,â Gil said. âAt least, to you.â
âTo me?â Joan asked.
âWhen you pass out in the Realm of the Gods, you are forced out from it,â Gil said. âOutside the realm, time has stopped. While it took me a while to get to you, it would be only seconds from then. How do you feel?â
âTired,â Joan said. âMy head hurts.â
âWhat did you do?â Gil asked.
âI didnât do anything,â Joan said quickly. âIt wasnât me! There was this weird cloaked person and they gave me this weird thread and--â
âWait, what?â Gil asked, sitting up a little taller. âWhat kind of thread? What did it look like?â
âUhhhhhâ¦â Joan said softly, trying to remember. âSilver? I guess? It wasnât very long. It faded away.â
âWhere?â Gil asked.
âHere,â Joan said before holding her hands up.
Gil grabbed her left hand tightly. âWhatâs this?â
âWhatâs what?â Joan asked.
âThis,â Gil said forcing her to look at the hand.
âI donât know,â Joan said. âA hand? Itâs too dark to--â A small orb of light appeared behind her and she could now clearly see what Gil meant. Little black lines had formed across it. âUhhhhh⦠I donât know.â
Gil gave a soft sigh. âWonderful. What are they planning?â
âWhat are who planning?â Joan asked. âWhat happened? Whatâs going on? Whatâs going to happen to me?â
âThe fates,â Gil said before letting her hand go. âIâm not sure yet. Here, punch me.â
âPunch you?â Joan said.
âYes,â Gil said. âIf Iâm correct, youâll be fine.â
âIf youâre not?â Joan asked.
âYouâll maybe get a bruise,â Gil said.
Joan nodded nervously, though she didnât want to try and hit the woman who saved her life. If she was asked to wasnât it the right thing to do? Maybe? Very slowly she reached out and gave a soft, gentle punch to the woman. âThere.â
âHarder,â Gil said, her voice dripping with annoyance. âAs hard as you can.â
âButââ
âJust do it!â Gil ordered.
Joan whimpered but then did as she was told, punching as hard as she could. Pain shot through her hand and she shrieked, pulling it back and clutching the hand. âOw ow ow ow owâ¦â
âOkay, so not that,â Gil said.
âNot what? Why did you make me do that?â Joan asked.
âI had to be sure that they hadnât made you the Champion,â Gil said. âIâm doubtful they would, but the test is easy enough.â
âWhat?â Joan asked. âThe what?â
Gil stared down at her before shaking her head. âWe should go.â
âCan you please tell me whatâs going on?â Joan asked. âPlease! I just want to know what this is!â
Gil didnât move, but after a moment she gave a loud sigh. âItâs a long story. Most of which you likely already know, even if you donât remember it.â
âPlease,â Joan said. âThereâs no rush, is there? I just want to know why any of this is important. Why any of this matters. Why Iâm able to go through those doors and why it is such a big deal. Please.â
Gil slowly got to her feet and slowly began to pace back and forth. Joan watched her, a small feeling of dread rising in her. Then, finally, the woman sighed. âVery well. Itâs not easy to fully explain, though. Even for me. But I should be able to give you enough. Youâre not the Champion.â
âI donât even know what that is,â Joan said softly.
âYou will,â Gil said. âI suppose I should start long before even I was aware. The beginning. This world, our home. There were a people here. Many, many people. Millions. Billions. I donât know what they were like. In some ways, I suppose your⦠our ancestors. In a way. Their souls, at least. The first. A world only the fates had seen. I have heard there were many of them, but I donât know. They were the first and every last one of them perished. Wiped clean, this world turned to a bleak, barren wasteland with only a few remnants of souls remaining.â
âThen came the gods. Our gods. The fourteen. They came to this world and reshaped it. They took the souls that remained and gave them a new chance. They took what was barren and empty and made it anew. For a while, it was good, I am told. But with new life, the Hungry One came.â
âHungry One?â Joan asked.
âThat hungry god,â Gil said softly. âI donât know its name. I donât even know if it has a name. Some call it the Void, the Empty God, it doesnât matter. What matters is what it did. It assaulted this world, devouring it. Trapping what souls it could in its web. The new life was torn asunder. Some tried to fight, but they were hopeless against it. So the gods gave a chance to those few who remained. The seven, who came to be known as the Chosen. Given but a fragment of the gods powers, they were able to fight back against that Hungry One.â
âThey won?â Joan asked.
Unauthorized duplication: this narrative has been taken without consent. Report sightings.
âNo, they lost,â Gil said. âThey perished, again and again. But they continued to fight. They finally, after many lives lost, many souls were devoured, they fought back and they wounded the Hungry One. From this wound, the souls of those devoured were freed. Not all of them, but enough. Victory was at hand, or so they believed. But it wasnât so. So it was that in the next world, the next chance, the Chosen were defeated. Rather than facing them directly, it assaulted them in a new way. Shattering not just them, but their spirits. Their will to fight.â
Joan shuddered, feeling a sudden rush of sadness wash over her.
âThe Chosen could no longer fight, their souls so badly damaged by this war. Their defeat, snatched from the jaws of victory. They no longer had the will to fight on,â Gil said. âThough they could try, there was nothing that could be done at this point except make them born anew. To refresh their souls, to cleanse them of this pain. But without the knowledge of what they faced, it was unknown how they could defeat the Hungry One again.â
âI was told that the world was almost abandoned, then,â Gil said. âLeft behind, the Hungry One feasting on the souls of those who were still trapped. The Chosen were given the chance to escape, to leave. All save one almost took it, but in the end? They did not. So the souls of the Chosen were to be reborn. Cleansed of their past lives, their past suffering. Two new souls were created as well. A guide and a champion. The former to direct them, to tell them where they must fight, how they must fight. To carry the knowledge of what they were fighting for, the costs. To bear the burden of what was at stake, without paying the cost of fighting. The latter to fight by them, to aid them. To lead them.â
âThey succeeded,â Gil said. âAgain and again they wounded the Hungry One, freeing soul after soul. While the world perished, those trapped were once more freed. New worlds were made, new battles fought. But victory was at hand. Until finally, they did it. The Hungry One was defeated. Once and for all. Dealt a fatal wound that even a god could not survive.â
Joan perked up, her eyes going wide. Theyâd won? Theyâd actually done it? Yet, Gil didnât sound happy about this at all. If anything, sheâd gotten quieter. âWhat happened?â
âKilling a god is never easy,â Gil said. âThere are after effects. Costs. The Hungry One knew its time was coming to an end. It scattered thousands of its spawn across this world. Like seeds from a foul, evil plant. The Devourer of the Deep, the Cloud of Death, the Nameless One, the Toxic Wave, the Tainted Webweaver, the Devourer of Dynasties. Some were destroyed, some waited to rise should others fail, a handful were even turned from their ancestor. But the most insidious of its seeds was what it did to the Champion.â
Joan lightly hugged her knees to her chest, staring with wide eyes. âWhat did it do?â she asked in a soft, frightened tone.
âCorrupted him,â Gil said. âIt buried itself in the very core of his soul. It took⦠many⦠lives for the Guide to realize what happened.â Her hands tightened into fists. âFor the Champion was so much more than just the Champion of the Gods. Arta was⦠Arta was⦠The Champion was unique. Special. Strong. Determined. So with each life, the Champion, the Chosen and the Guide would rise up, against the seeds of the Hungry One. Stopping them at each step. Yet, with each life, the Champion would succumb to the darkness by the end. Eventually they all had to accept it. Accept the⦠loss of their Champion. With each life lost, the corruption would start sooner and sooner. So the Guide made a promise, a vow to him.â
âThe Guide would no longer focus on her role as a Guide,â Gil said. âThe Guide would find a way to free him, permanently, from his role. To stop the rebirth of the Champion. So the Guide pulled away. But it was impossible, or so she believed. The Guide tried everything. She created the humans, the dwarves, the elves. She even learned to tap into the power of the Hungry One to create the demons. Yet no matter what tools she used, no matter what power she wielded, no matter how she changed herself, she could not defeat the Champion. She could not save him, could not end his terrible cycle no matter how hard she tried. It wasnât long before her role as the Guide was forgotten entirely, the Champion becoming known as the Hero.â
âBut in their fights, their confrontations, often the most she could do was wound him,â Gil said, her fists shaking now. âRarely she could slay him. She even tried to⦠wipe his memory from this world. She even believed if she could just make it so none knew he had ever existed. If none knew of him, he could be saved. That seed of evil could be purged and he could be reborn.â
Gil stopped clenching her fists, then. Her fingers laying limp at her side. âThere were times she believed she had succeeded. Believed he had been saved. That was what he was, after all. So good with words. So clever. So kind. The Champion was the Guideâs friend. A soul so unique. So many times she believed his lies. Trusted him. Then suffered for it. Yet each time she failed. He fell and the remnants of the Hungry One rose in his place, a vile, corrupted soul. Twisting all that was good and pure into something else.â
âThen, finally, the Guide succeeded,â Gil said softly, now speaking so softly that Joan had to lean in to hear. âThe Guide was given direction when she reached out to the fates. She was led to where the Champion was. Before his power had awoken. Before he had gathered his precious Star of the Hero. While he was at his most vulnerable. And she destroyed him. She wiped not just the memory of him, but of his family, his home, from existence.â
Joan blinked a few times. âThen⦠what happened?â
âFor a while the Guide felt sheâd finally done it. Sheâd succeeded. They were free. But no, such things can never be so easy. For a time, she relaxed. She found peace. A family. A home,â Gil said. âShe believed things would be better. But there were still stirrings. She heard stories of a new Hero. Of more Chosen. Of new monsters.â
Joan gulped, hugging her knees a little tighter. âYouâre⦠the Guide, right?â
âYes,â Gil said.
âBut what about the seeds of the Hungry One? Whatever it left? If the, ummm, Champion is gone then--â
âThe Chosen will handle it,â Gil said. âThe Hungry One is dying. If the Champion is no longer, then there will be no more corruption. When it finally perishes, this cycle will be over. None will even remember it, or the Champion. Eventually, there wonât even be a need for the Chosen at all.â
âThen what about that thread?â Joan asked.
âI donât know,â Gil said. âThe silver thread is the thread of the Champion. You donât have his strength or power, so they didnât make you it. Worse, that thing in your left hand? I donât know how you have it. It was left with the Nameless One and they shouldnât have given it to anyone unless it was important. Something is going on here that I donât understand. But obviously youâre important.â
Joan nodded. âDo you think the Chosen were trying to kill me? Is that why you fought?â
âMaybe,â Gil said. âDo the Chosen scare you?â
âNo,â Joan said before she could stop herself. âI donât⦠think they do.â
âThen I doubt it,â Gil said before walking over to her and grabbing her arm. âCome on, letâs go.â
âWhere are we going?â Joan asked.
âIâm not sure, yet,â Gil said with a soft sigh. âSomewhere safe, though. I just need to determine where that is.â
âThat felt familiar, too,â Joan said.
âHuh?â Gil asked.
âYou saying you have to take me somewhere safe,â Joan said. âThat feels incredibly familiar.â
âAh, good,â Gil said. âSo you usually listen, then?â
Joan blinked a few times and then slowly glanced away. âI donât feel like I do, if that makes sense?â
âAh, delightful,â Gil said with a soft sigh. âSo you were a troublesome child. That narrows it down. If I take you to the demons and they see you, they might figure something out. But if you are amongst humans often, someone might have familiarity with you in some ways and that could invite more questions. Though, that might not be that likely. Your armor seems more akin to demonic styles than humans, so perhaps you spent most of your time with them. So humans might be the best. Perhaps elves? No, thatâd draw more attention. Humans would be easiest to blend in with. Weâll just need to ensure you stay far from the Chosen for now, keep you out of sight as best as possible.â
âFar from them?â Joan asked. âWhy?â
âBecause I donât know why we were fighting,â Gil said. âOr what the fates have intended for you. Until we know, itâs best to keep you safe.â She pulled Joan to her feet before dragging her towards the glimmering teleportation circle.
âWill my memory return?â Joan asked.
âNo,â Gil said. âBits and pieces may, but it is unlikely itâll ever truly return. The magic on that blade was beyond what most mortals could ever consider. It would take all of the Chosen to undo it, if they even remember it. Destroying it like she did, well, thereâs no telling what the after effects will be.â
âThen what about my hand? Whatâll happen to it? To me?â
That made Gil pause again, standing on the edge of the teleportation circle. Then, very slowly, she looked back at her. âIâm not sure. What is inside you isnât something created by mortal hands. Only the Chosen should have something like that. The fact you have it must mean something⦠important is going to happen.â
âReally? Itâs that powerful?â Joan asked softly.
âI canât remember you,â Gil said. âBut I still remember that artifact. That should tell you plenty.â
Joan gave a small nod and was dragged into the middle of the circle. A moment later it began to glow with a bright light before the two of them disappeared.