Chapter 378
CHAPTER 378
LAW OF ENTROPY
Inside a gla.s.s-roofed gazebo overlooking a cascading garden of roses and rapid streams of water bundling into small waterfalls as they all fell into an out-streaming, ma.s.sive one, five figures currently sat in ephemeral silence around a wooden table stacked with exotic fruits .
The place beneath was surrounded by clouds as it floated far up, well away from the sight of the world . The gazebo was held up by six, hand-carved beams, decorated by various, beautiful patterns, which ever so often sported a s.h.i.+mmering gem .
Of the five figures, two were men and three were women; Freya sat at the central spot, her expression downcast and troubled . Seated next to her was a woman with a veiled face, her whole body edgeless, b.l.o.o.d.y-red hair faintly visible as it draped over her back .
Opposite of them, to the far right, was Erebus, who had a deep frown of contemplation on his face . Seated right next to him was the other man, seemingly in his late sixties with a head full of white hair and a face full of white beard . His eyes were closed, his features otherwise entirely ordinary . To the end was the last woman, draped in cascading shadows of nothingness, her figure both there and not at the same time . She didn"t have any distinguis.h.i.+ng features, as though she was everyone and no one at the same time .
" . . . why now?" Erebus suddenly asked, breaking the silence and drawing attention to himself . "Why would the Empyrean take Alison now?"
" . . . I imagine it is because he has seen through my Avatar," Freya replied with a faint sigh . "Which forced him to speed up his plans . "
"What plans?" the other man asked, his eyes still closed .
" . . . it"s difficult to say," Freya replied, sighing once more . "I got the feeling he is not playing just our own game, but one much larger than it all . "
" . . . what could possibly be larger?" the veiled woman scoffed, her voice cracking and breaking . "In the end, he still became merely another of Ataxia"s puppets . We"ve put too much faith into him . "
"A"yor," Freya turned to the last woman . "What do you think?"
" . . . I think," the woman"s voice was paradoxically loud and low, distant and near, everywhere and nowhere, at the same time . "Nothing . I am ashamed . . . to say it, Mother . But, when I look at him . . . I . . . see nothing . Far more . . . than looking myself in the mirror . "
" . . . I"ve said it before," the old man said suddenly . "It was a mistake, Mother, to antagonize him . "
" . . . chips merely fell where even Sister was unable to predict them," Freya said, chuckling bitterly . "If it was in the cards, I"d have befriended him instead . "
"Regardless," the veiled woman said . "We can"t allow this to continue anymore . Our reign is already being questioned . If we do nothing after having lost another Bearer, it will become even more difficult . "
" . . . I agree," Erebus said . "We need to draw him out and throw everything we have at him . Even if we are unable to kill him, we need to buy more time . How many years before we can breach the barrier, Mother?"
" . . . with the help of Four and Three, I estimate another thirty years at the least, forty at the most . "
"Then forty we need to buy . " Erebus said . "He"s not invincible . . . nor is he as composed as he lets out . However despicable, we need to aim where it hurts the most . "
" . . . dear Mother, Great Sister," the elderly man suddenly said, opening his eyes as his lips curled up in a bitter smile . "I"m afraid I cannot partic.i.p.ate in this . "
" . . . why, Istok?" Freya asked .
"I . . . simply cannot . " the man replied, bowing lowly . "I shall await my due punishment . "
" . . . Istok . . . " Erebus mumbled, but the man had already vanished from his spot, as though he were never there .
"I shall arrange everything," the veiled woman said . "You only need to gather people and be where I tell you to be at and when I tell you . "
"Yes, Great Sister . " Erebus and the other woman nodded solemnly and too vanished, leaving behind only Freya and the veiled woman .
" . . . I"m afraid, sis . " Freya said, biting her lower lip . "This . . . might truly be our undoing . "
"What are you afraid of, Gaia?" the veiled woman asked with a faint scoff . "He is just a lowly human, at his core . Ataxia may enamor him, but he doesn"t make him an immortal . Not in the least . "
"You haven"t met him," Freya said . "Not like I did . He"s . . . different . Different from Eve . Different from Ayla . Different from Rove . Different from Stark . Different from Eldon . "
" . . . in what way?" the veiled woman asked .
" . . . he can both match Eve"s cruelty, as well as Ayla"s compa.s.sion," Freya replied, sighing . "He can meet Rove"s determination . . . as well as Stark"s will . And, by far, he is the only one that can match Eldon when it comes to true madness . I feel if we aggravate him too much . . . he will simply cease to care . "
"Let him cease, then," the veiled woman said . "If his following keeps growing, it will soon match ours, Gaia . He may have won them over for now with his wit and charm, but, he"ll chase them away all the same once they finally remember who he is . He"s just another one of Ataxia"s dogs, that"s all . Not one thing less nor one thing more . "
" . . . " Freya remained silent, merely looking out of the gazebo into the vast horizon . Times were about to change . . . yet, for the first time in a long, long while . . . she felt as though she didn"t belong on the right side of it all . The first and the last time she felt that way . . . she was right . Luck was on her side back then, but in her heart, she knew that wouldn"t be the case this time around . She silently prayed, to someone, something, even grander than her . . . prayed and prayed . That was all she could do now .
**
Floating above the ravaged rubble that was once a prison island, two figures had strange expressions on their faces . Four and Three had just witnessed Lino ride off with a Dragon into the horizon, as the two of them slowly materialized behind .
" . . . we need to report this to Two, at the very least . " Four said in a heavy tone .
" . . . it is indeed getting out of hand . " Three added, taking a deep breath as she glanced down at her trembling hand . Just now, when Lino threw the woman from the sky, majority of his Will was aimed neither at the woman nor at those beneath on the island -- it was instead aimed at the two of them, a clear-cut warning that should they intervene, things would get ugly . "We"ve allowed him too much freedom he"s begun to believe the world is truly his . "
" . . . you won"t report anything . " a familiar voice startled the two of them from behind as Six appeared, his expression complex . "I will handle it . "
" . . . like you handled it so far?"
"He"s becoming a loose cannon, Six," Four said . "How can he be trusted with handling anything important? He"s half a breath away from spiraling . "
" . . . is he?" he questioned with the two oddly . "Think back, think back to the moment his Will touched yours . What did you sense? Past the overwhelming desire to kneel, past the unbridled, surface madness, past all of the things you expected his Will to be . What did you sense . . . at the very core?"
" . . . nothing . " Three exclaimed lowly .
"Exactly . Nothing . " Six chuckled bitterly, shaking his head . "I can"t believe that lad is actually trying it . . . "
" . . . won"t Ataxia notice?" Four asked, unable to mask a surprised tone in his voice .
" . . . no," Three suddenly said, chuckling . "He only let us sense it . On purpose . "
"Aye," Six nodded . "Still, it worries me . He"s juggling too many things right now . And it seems Gaia has also decided to stop sitting idly by . "
" . . . we still can"t intervene . " Three said .
"We won"t," Six added . "There is no need . I believe he can figure it out himself . He always has . No reason to stop now . "
" . . . how did he even come up with the idea for it? He shouldn"t have been exposed to the Universal Laws just yet . "
"He took a short trip to Earth," Six said . "A small island in possession of G.o.ds . It must have been there that he learned of Law of Entropy . "
" . . . still, just from that?" Three sighed . "Even Eldon needed more . "
" . . . it"s simple," Six said . "Eldon grew up understanding the same Laws we did, boxed in . Lino . . . has always had the liberty of not knowing . It is much easier to create a new habit than it is to re-shape an old one . "
"Can you guess his ultimate intentions?" Four asked . "Does he truly intend to suffocate Qi Springs?"
" . . . I can"t even begin to fathom what he wants to do," Six chuckled . "But, I am looking forward to it . You two should return to the mainland and stay in Celeste . Don"t let him kill other Bearers just yet . "
"What if he goes against us?" Three asked .
"He won"t," Six replied . "He"ll probably curse you out to heaven, but as long as you endure that beating, he won"t make a move against you . "
" . . . I feel . . . I"d rather have him make a move, though . . . " Four mumbled, rubbing his gauze-covered temples . "That tongue of his . . . aii . . . it"s only gotten more venomous over the years . . . "
"Just take the las.h.i.+ng," Six said, slowly beginning to fade . "After all, we"re forcing him to work with two hands tied behind his back . It"s the least we can do for him . "
" . . . then you take the d.a.m.n las.h.i.+ng . . . " Three mumbled .
"You think I hadn"t?!" Six growled from beyond . "I"d taken so many I"m on the brink of vomiting blood every time I see his face . Humph, it was the high time someone else took that burden away from me -- I mean, that joy from me . Have fun!"
" . . . old crook . Go and die already . . . "