Celestial Worm
Part Twenty-Seven: Mortal World, Celestial War
[A/N: This chapter commissioned by Fizzfaldt and beta-read by the author of Ties That Bind and The Long Way Home, Karen Buckeridge.]
[A/N 2: for other (non-Worm) Celestial Wars sidestories, see here and here.]
[A/N 3: After due consideration of the numerous critiques of this chapter and Chapter 28, I have done some rewriting.]
Taylor
"Your family?" asked Taylor, caught partway between being thrilled to meet more celestials and worry at the tone of Janesha's voice. "Where are they?"
Janesha began to move her hands as though she were reeling in an invisible cord. "At your father's place of work," she snapped. "They are interrogating him regarding My actions."
A shock went through Taylor's body, fear for her father overwhelming all other impulses. "Dad? How did they even find him? How did they know who he is? Can you save him?"
"Of course I can save him, petal." Janesha seemed to test the tension on the invisible line she held. "You forget, I'm directly connected to him, as I am to you." She took in a breath and let it out between her teeth in an irritated hiss. "Just when I was getting this world in order, too."
"Why is it such a problem?" asked Taylor apprehensively. She'd gotten used to the idea of meeting celestials, but all the celestials she'd met had been friendly. For some reason, these two were apparently not. "They're your family, right?"
The rumble of an almost-growl in Janesha's throat pointed out to her that she didn't quite understand what was going on. "Yes, and they will presume that I am too young to be established, and wish to take this all away from Me, and remove Me from your world."
"What?" Taylor frowned. "That's ridiculous. You're doing a great job. People are happy, pollution is down, the world governments are falling into line, the Endbringers are gone, those other hostile celestials are dead or gone. How can they be unhappy with that?"
"Because they're old-fashioned and reactionary, and living by the standards of a billion eons ago, not today." Janesha set herself and
yanked, and suddenly Danny popped into view. A split second later, before he could fall, Janesha surrounded him with a cocoon of light.
"Dad, are you okay?" Taylor swooped down and entered the cocoon, wrapping her father in a fervent hug. He'd been so much happier ever since Janesha had brought Annette back, and she didn't want to see anything happen to him now that everything was good for once. It would especially devastate her mother.
Taylor had spent hours chatting with Annette, opening up more and more as she filled her mother in on what had been going on since she'd died. Annette had seemed just as bemused by the extra attention as by the time skip, given that she hadn't had to endure a year of knowing her family was dead. But the truly special time had been taken up with Danny and Annette reconnecting on all levels. There was no way she wanted to lose that.
She looked her father over. He seemed a little stunned, but answered all the same. "I … yes, I think I'm fine. They didn't hurt me. Though from the way they were talking, I think they mind-bent me."
Taylor glanced sideways at Janesha. While the teenage goddess was perfectly capable of mind-bending Danny to find out the information they needed to know, she'd given her word much earlier that she would not use her abilities on him without his consent, so somebody had to ask the question. "Who was it, Dad?"
"Uncle Chance and Grandmother Armina," Janesha said, pre-empting him. She caught Taylor's questioning look and raised an eyebrow. "Omniscience, petal. It has its uses."
"From the descriptions you've given us, it was definitely them," Danny confirmed. "She asked me how I knew about you, then ordered me to stay where I was."
"But how did they get here so fast?" asked Taylor. "Janesha, you said they wouldn't be here for a long time. And they zeroed in on
Dad? What's going on?"
Danny drew a long breath and spoke the four words that changed everything. "I called them here."
"You ... what?" Taylor couldn't have heard right. She
knew she couldn't have heard right.
Why would Dad have done such a thing?
Janesha, on the other hand, was under no such misapprehension. Lightning crackled in her eyes, in counterpoint to the thunder that boomed overhead from clouds that hadn't been there ten seconds previously. "Danny …
what have you done?"
He stood as straight as he could while being supported in a cocoon of pure energy. "What I had to. What needed to be done." Jaw firm, he stared the teenage goddess in the eye without flinching. "You and Taylor are out of control. There is nobody on Earth Bet who can tell you that you're going too far, too fast. Not and make it stick, anyway. So, I called in somebody who at least has a better chance of doing that … all pun intended."
"But, Dad, you've got it all wrong," Taylor protested. "Janesha will listen to advice. She's done it before. All you had to do was
talk to her. You didn't have to bring other celests into it."
"Really." Danny met her gaze. "I tried to talk to
you, and you wouldn't listen.You're the sole arbiter of Janesha's powerbase and thrall. How am I supposed to get through to her if I can't make an impression on you?" His eyes flicked to Janesha. "Can you convince me without mind-bending me that you would have given my counsel the same weight you've been giving Taylor's?" His voice was neither challenging nor mocking; merely matter of fact.
Janesha stared back at him, her lips pulled so thin that they were nearly bloodless. Thunder boomed overhead, then lightning struck all around them in a cage, making the air sharp with ozone. Despite the noise and havoc all around them, her voice was as clear as a bell when she spoke.
"I was making your world a better place, Danny Hebert. You had no right to do this."
"
I had every right." His words were implacable. "You did not create this world. I was born here. You were not. You came in afterward and started messing with things you do not understand."
"Messing with things I don't understand?" Her voice rose high with disbelief. "Were you any other mortal, you would already be dead for your apostasy, Danny Hebert! I am a
goddess, born of gods and taught in the ways of doing this very thing! I know more about it than you ever will!" Energy began building up around her hands and body, crackling between her and the clouds. Random arcs of lightning started to strike high points on the terrain below.
"Forgive me," he said softly. "I misspoke." He bowed his head, humbling himself before her.
Taylor saw the energy begin to dissipate again as Janesha took in his words, the anger receding from her. "And well you should know it, Danny Hebert," she said, her tone mollified. "I will not be—"
"Forgive me once more, Lady Janesha," Danny said, bringing his head up again. "I said I misspoke, not that I was wrong. Of
course you've been trained in how to be a goddess to a world that is hungry for leadership, one which has developed with the full knowledge that a pantheon watches over them.
That is not this world. We of Earth Bet have an independent bent. While we're likely to accept the benefits of a generous goddess, we're also likely to push back at the strictures that come with such a reign, because that's who we are."
"I bring peace and prosperity to Earth Bet," Janesha snapped. "That is My gift to the mortals of this realm. In return, they are to accept My eternal reign as their goddess, as Taylor has, and worship Me forevermore. That is the bargain, as it ever has been. Those ingrates who wish one without the other will accept My rule or accept the consequences, for I will not change Myself for them."
"And those who don't want either one?" asked Danny, his voice becoming louder and louder. "What about those who just want you gone? Will you force your so-called bargain upon them as well? Will you mind-bend them to get your way if they keep opposing you?" The last words were a shout.
"If I have to, yes!" Janesha's eyes flared as she replied in kind.
His voice was soft, all trace of anger gone, as he answered. "Then you have no idea what you're doing. You're letting your thrall control you, making it up as you're going along. I've been doing this dance longer than you've been alive, and it isn't 'bargaining' if you're not giving the mortals a chance to say no. The word for
that sort of negotiation is 'extortion' and it always ends badly." He tilted his head and raised his eyebrows.
"I will tell you again, Danny Hebert, have a care." Janesha was angry now, but she was keeping her temper in check. "You hold a life debt on Me and thus I would never kill or even harm you, but even so you overstep the bounds of propriety. Should My relatives hear you speak to Me in such a manner, they are under no such compulsion to spare your life."
"I understand all that, Lady Janesha of Mystal," Danny said, his voice almost irritatingly calm. "However with all the respect due to you and your station, please,
prove me wrong. Be strong enough to walk away."
Taylor watched Janesha's hands curl into fists, and understood where she was coming from. Few things were more annoying than an adult who kept an argument reasonable. It was even worse with the knowledge that her father had a temper problem and he was
still keeping it together while Janesha was filling the air for a mile around with yard-wide crackling streamers of divinely generated electricity. It was a good thing they were far away from civilisation right then, or people would've been dying by the hundreds.
<><>
Chance
"Where did he go?" demanded Armina. "I ordered him to stay where he was. No mortal can withstand my commands, and there are no celestials in this realm who are more powerful at mind-bending than either of us!"
"He didn't go anywhere voluntarily," Chance said thoughtfully. He'd had his eyes on the mortal's face just as he vanished and a subjective five minutes of internalisation confirmed a very brief expression of surprise just before he winked out of existence. "He was moved away."
Armina wasn't slow on the uptake. "You're saying Janesha has some sort of establishment power that lets her move mortals around like chess pieces."
"I'm saying it was almost certainly her," Chance said. "How she actually did it, I'm still figuring out."
"Well, no matter," Armina said briskly. "We've got everything we need. Let's go grab Janesha and head back to Mystal before this shit-show gets even more complicated."
Chance nodded, and they exited the building to where Gambler and Gladiator awaited them. It said something for the wisdom of the local mortals that nobody was coming near the mystallions, although some appeared to be capturing images with small devices. Of course, even celestials steered clear of Armina's coal-black armoured mount; especially given the strategically placed spikes, the glowing red eyes, and the equally red hooves.
Moving in unison, they swung astride their respective mystallions and urged them skyward, then concentrated on the familial link to the only other Mystallian in the realm.
She was in the same continent, but airborne. Immense amounts of energy crackled around her, scorching the ground below and arcing in all directions. As they neared the delinquent celestial, Chance gestured for Armina to slow down. "I wouldn't go into that lightning," he said. "Remember, her father's Weather, and her mystallion's called Cloudstrike. I wouldn't be surprised if her lightning was supercharged past what even you or I could easily handle. Besides, with that armour, you and Gladiator would be one big lightning rod."
Armina slitted her eyes as she stared at where Janesha seemed to be arguing with the mortal they'd interrogated, with a teenaged mortal girl hovering nearby. Chance was almost impressed; the man was actually giving her some damn good reasons for folding up the tent and coming home, which was far different from the usual fare of cowering acquiescence.
Armina was less so. "What's going on with her?" she demanded. "I'm trying to mind-bend the mortal to stop worshipping her, or Janesha to come with us, and they're not even looking in our direction."
"It's the kid." Chance indicated the teenage mortal, easily identifiable as 'Taylor' from Danny Hebert's memories. "For some unknown reason, she's decided to believe that Janesha's a stronger mind-bender than anyone else."
"
What?" Armina stared at him. "How the hell does that even work? I've never
heard of someone's establishment making them immune to bending!"
"That's because other mortals don't
know about bending, or shifting for that matter," Chance said. "If they don't know about it, they can't believe in it. And either Janesha's shielding her too, or she's wearing a seclusion ring."
"Well, that makes it simple enough." Armina's tone was dismissive. "The mortal's the weak link. We kill her or get her more than five meters away from Janesha. Whichever's easier." She gestured to Chance. "You're lucky enough to make it through that lightning. Grab her and get her away. Snap her neck if you have to. Once Janesha's depowered, we can go home."
Chance's instincts warned him that someone had just teleported to a spot behind them and they both turned fast, Armina bringing both swords out on the instant.
"That's not going to happen." A golden-skinned bearded man hovered before them. He wore a white bodysuit, a black domino mask and an elaborate red cape. Arms folded, he scowled at them.
"Okay, so who the hell are you?" Chance asked, not bothering to internalise. The figure before them was definitely celestial in nature. Nobody else had that level of chutzpah. And Chance had a definite respect for chutzpah.
"I'm Scion," the golden figure announced. "And yes, before you ask. I
am attuned. I can see you trying to mind-bend me as well. It won't work. Lady Janesha told my followers what to believe of me. Just in case any
other celestials tried to invade
my realm and murder us."
Armina sheathed one of her swords and stretched out her hand to Chance. In the next instant they were within Chance's mind. "Again with these hostile celestials," she growled. "I'm getting sick of hearing about them."
He folded his arms and rubbed his thumb against his lips, trying not to smile. "You're aware that right now he considers
us to be hostile celestials, yes?"
The humour in his statement went right over her head. "Yes, but how do so many celests manage to converge on this one insignificant realm? What's so special about it?"
Chance smirked. "It's just lucky, I guess."
She gave him a distinctly filthy look. "Fine. How do we deal with him?"
Something occurred to him. "You know … I don't think he knows who we are."
"Oh, I'm certain he's got a very good idea," she retorted. "If he knows Janesha, he knows we're Mystallians."
"Ah," he said. "True. But … he doesn't know
which Mystallians we are. For all he knows, there's different factions. He did say he's had to deal with hostile celestials in his realm before. Which doesn't really help us right now. We have to try to convince him that we're
not hostile to him or his realm." He eyed Armina and her accoutrements. "Which might be a little difficult. Just saying."
Armina folded her arms. "Too bad. What do you make of him?"
"Well, for starters, he's gotta know she's too young to be the supreme goddess of a world. If we can convince him we're here to help her …" He let the words trail off.
"We'll still have to deal with the consequences of
her establishment," she said, nodding in agreement with his suggestion. "It's possible to beat established gods, but it helps if they don't see you coming. With Scion, we're on the back foot all the way. If we can convince him to at least sit the fight out, we have one big advantage when it comes to Janesha."
"Single Worshipper Syndrome," he confirmed. "Remove the mortal from the equation, and Janesha's ours." He rubbed his chin. "I wonder if our boy Scion's got any ambition to be the top dog? It's got to be at least a little annoying to play second fiddle to a teenager."
"It would be good if you can find out," Armina said.
Chance tended to agree. It was an article of faith among Mystallians that every other pantheon in Creation could be manipulated into turning on each other. Putting a wedge between the local god of superheroes (which was possibly the most ridiculous concept Chance had ever encountered, short of the actual
existence of superheroes) and the so-called supreme goddess was potentially their best bet for achieving a bloodless win here.
Armina ended the internalisation, bringing them back to the real world. Wishing he had his powerbase to lean into, Chance went for broke anyway. "We're not your enemy, Lord Scion of Earth Bet," he said, projecting sincerity into every syllable. "And we're not here to kill anyone."
Scion didn't budge a centimeter. "That's a lie, Lord Chance." His eyes flared slightly, and Chance grunted as pain flared through his body. Armina barely twitched, but he knew she'd been equally afflicted. "You were just speaking about murdering Taylor. Even
think that again and I'll take both your heads off with one of her swords."
"I'd like to see you try." Armina's tone was low and deadly. For all that Chance was on her side, he was intimidated by her.
"This is my realm, Lady Armina.
Mine! Nobody comes to
my realm and threatens to murder
my friends," Scion snapped back. "We've already had enough of that."
"A mortal—" scoffed Armina.
"Armina! Stop!" shouted Chance. Shocked, she stared at him, but did as he said. He knew he'd pay for cutting her off later, but at least there would
be a 'later'. "Lord Scion, I am Lord Chance of Mystal. I'm Lady Janesha's uncle and Armina here is her grandmother, We're here to bring her home to Mystal."
Scion tilted his head slightly. "In case you missed the memo, she's currently the Supreme Goddess here on Earth Bet. She's more powerful than me, and I've been here a lot longer than her. Good luck 'making' her do anything she doesn't want to do."
"She's also sixteen," Chance said bluntly. "I don't know how old you are but in Mystal, we don't allow the youngsters to become established until they're attuned, and they've been educated in every single way it's possible to screw up an establishment. She's far too young for what she's doing right now, and her lack of attunement merely makes it even more certain that when the rug gets pulled out from under her, she'll go down hard."
"Oh, I don't know." Scion chuckled. "She's kicking ass and taking names so far."
Chance did his best not to heave an audible sigh of aggravation. "Okay, you don't want to hear my words?" He gestured toward where Danny Hebert was speaking. "Listen to your friend's father. See what
he has to say on the matter."
He shut up then, letting Scion turn his attention to the elder mortal. Armina gave him a disbelieving look that he easily translated as
what the hell are you doing?
In return, he gave her a wink and a nod.
Trust me, I got this.
And he hoped like hell he was correct.
<><>
Taylor
"The proof is simple, Danny Hebert of Earth Bet." Janesha's tone had moderated very slightly, but there was an edge to it that suggested she considered herself the winner of the argument before it was even over. "Your experience is with mortals, dealing with mortal matters. I have been tutored by the gods of Mystal themselves, as well as those of other realms. My life has been but a blink of an eye so far, this is true; but the amassed experience of those teaching Me how to do this very thing is so close to being infinite that no mere countable number would suffice. How many years did
your teachers have between them?" She raised her chin, looking sharply satisfied with herself.
Taylor felt a little sorry for her father; with the increased intelligence she had bestowed upon Janesha, he surely wouldn't have an answer to that.
"Oh, I wouldn't dream of suggesting that your teachers were insufficiently experienced, Lady Janesha. I'm sure they know everything there is to know about being an effective god." Danny smiled. "But do you follow every single teaching of theirs without fail? Or do you ignore whichever ones you don't want to follow?"
Taylor could tell that Janesha's pride, already celestial-sized, was pricked by Danny's insinuation, and the teenage goddess answered without hesitation. "I was an exemplary student, and I followed every …" She trailed off, realising what the trap was just after stepping into it. Her eyes flared anew with lightning as she glared at Danny.
"Every single one?" Danny completed, his voice soft. "Even the one that said not to become established for at least a few centuries?"
"It is done now, Danny Hebert! Whatever I told you at the time of My arrival has no bearing on what is happening now." Janesha pointed at the ground far below, now somewhat charred from lightning strikes. "When I arrived, your world was crying out for a goddess to cure their ills and show them a better way of life! I have done good, far more good in just a few short days than you have managed in all your time on the mortal plane! Your own daughter is My high priestess, and I have more followers all the time, from around the world!"
Danny shook his head slowly. "And yet, you absolutely fail to see the trap you've locked yourself into, and you'll keep failing to see it, even after it's far too late. It will always be someone else's fault, even when you keep making the same mistake over and over again."
"There is nothing I cannot perceive," Janesha growled. "As supreme Goddess of this realm, I see all that I choose to see. You seek to sow doubt and division in My mind. The only trap lies in listening to your misleading words over Taylor's counsel."
"If you say so," Danny countered. "If you paid attention to mortal rulers, you would find that the wisest of them deliberately take on advisors with views differing to theirs, so they can be sure they are getting an honest opinion, not just what they want to hear."
There was a long silence. The energy surrounding them crackled and popped as Janesha chewed over Danny's words. "Very well, Danny Hebert," she said, clearly attempting to sound majestic and magnanimous. "What are your words of wisdom?"
"There's a phrase," he said at once. "'Honeymoon period'. It happens to everyone. Right now, everyone who's asked you for anything loves you. You're
the new big thing on the scene. You are gonna skate it in. Your popularity's going to grow in leaps and bounds. But then, it'll level off. You'll have fixed all the problems, saved all the people. Nobody will be hungry or thirsty or homeless. Everyone will have everything you're willing to grant them. And that's when the complaining will start."
Janesha snorted. "Nonsense! They will love Me for being their Goddess, for having lifted their world out of the common dross!"
"Uh huh." Danny nodded. "Even if everyone on Earth Bet chooses to ignore how heavy-handed you're being right now, which is wishful thinking at best, this is just the beginning. A significant fraction of the population is small-minded as hell. As soon as it becomes clear that you're not smiting the people they don't like for being insufficiently faithful, or not giving them
more than you're giving everyone else, they'll start asking what you've done for them
recently. People are selfish like that."
"You're wrong." Janesha's tone was absolutely assured. "You and Taylor aren't like that. Annette isn't like that."
Danny raised his eyebrows. "We aren't representative of the general population. You went to Winslow, briefly. What do
you think?" He took a deep breath. "There will be people who will hate you and deny your divinity because of your skin colour, or because you're helping people they hate. Stories will start to spread about how you're not really all that great, because if there's anything we mortals love, it's something to get properly indignant about. By the time you become attuned, there will be so many versions of you out there in the minds of the population, you'll be changing costume and probably gender every time you cross the state line. And that's in the regions where you're actually acknowledged as a goddess. Get too close to a fanatical unbeliever, and he might switch your entire establishment field clean off."
"You still fail to understand what it is to be a Goddess, Danny Hebert." Janesha's tone was as rock-solid as it had been in the beginning. "In the warmth of My love, My mortals will grow and thrive and worship Me, as it was always fated. When I come to be attuned, all will be united in My praise."
He nodded, a sardonic smile on his face. "Ah, yes. United in your praise once you mind-bend them to be that way. Did nobody ever tell you that it's cheating to stack the deck?"
Janesha drew herself up, affronted. "Mind-bending will not be required. They will be educated in My divinity by Taylor and her subordinate priests and priestesses."
"Right up until they choose not to listen. How many unbelievers will you tolerate, how many dissenting voices, before you start
forcing people to believe?"
She stared at him, the aura of her power visibly flexing. Taylor could tell she wanted to answer, but there was no good reply to his question. She felt anger at her father growing in her chest.
Why's he asking such unfair questions?
<><>
Chance
"Damn it …" muttered Scion. "Okay, yeah, you can lose the smirk, Lord Chance. I'm new at the whole god thing, but even I can see he's right. She's ignoring everything he's telling her, and she's not taking mind-bending off the table. Why?"
Chance was tempted to ask exactly where Scion was from that he didn't know anything about being a god, but he suppressed the urge. For one thing, it would be rude as hell. "Thrall," he said bluntly. "It locks you into believing that you are perfect as you are, and makes you hella resistant to giving up your powerbase for even the best reasons in Creation. When you get this sort of situation, with a celestial who's not attuned and has one follower, there's very few ways it can go right and a thousand ways it can go wrong."
"So this is actually bad for Taylor." Thank the Twin Notes, Scion was finally coming around to their point of view!
Discarding all artifice, Chance nodded earnestly. "Absolutely. She's the pivot point between a world of mortals and the supreme goddess. For people who know how it works, or figure it out, she's a target. Remove her, and Janesha loses all power. You can understand how we'd rather that not happen when we're not here."
"
You were going to kill Taylor." Scion glared at Armina.
Chance gave his sister a warning look, and cleared his throat. "It's one way to break the stalemate. The other is to get the worshipper more than five meters away from the celestial. That breaks the link."
"She's family." Armina, like any good soldier, was able to put aside her anger and focus on what was necessary at the time. "We only want what's best for her. And what's best for her right now is to be removed from that situation and taken back to Mystal until she gets over it."
"Family …" Scion bit his knuckle.
Chance took a stab in the dark. It seemed the right thing to say. "Imagine Janesha was your sister, and you saw her in a toxic co-dependent relationship that you
knew she was too young for. Wouldn't you want to get her out of that, even if she said she was happy?"
"
Fuck." Scion hit his forehead a couple of times with the heel of his hand. "Okay. Fine. I'm not just going to hand her to you. She's done me a couple of solid favours. But I am going to step aside and let her see and hear you. Give you a chance to talk her into coming back."
"Talking isn't going to work." Armina, bless her, was using her inside voice for once. "A god of rats and garbage will fight tooth and nail to preserve his wretched little establishment field. She'll do the same. There
will be battle."
"Fine." Scion pointed at Armina, then at Chance. "If fighting happens, it happens. But you do not harm either Taylor or Danny. Not one hair on their heads. Is that absolutely understood?"
A glowing golden field surrounded all three of them. Chance instinctively understood it to be a truth aura. "Absolutely," he said sincerely. "I won't hurt either mortal."
Armina grimaced. "Fine," she grated. "I won't do anything to hurt either one."
"And you won't order your mystallions to do anything to them, either," pressed Scion. "Also, if you try to bring in anyone else to dogpile her, or if Taylor or Danny are threatened in
any way, I step in and end the fight. And everyone who's not Janesha gets punted out of the realm. No Mystallian will ever be welcome back."
From the flicker in Armina's eye, she'd been thinking about a plan to do one or more of those things, but of course she couldn't admit it. Curtly, she nodded. "Gladiator won't attack them," she affirmed reluctantly.
"Neither will Gambler," Chance said readily enough. It wasn't like they were going to get anywhere until they agreed to the terms set by the local god. Not being able to simply remove the mortal girl from consideration was going to kneecap their efforts considerably, but they were going to have to work with what they had.
Scion nodded. "Then we have an agreement."
He dropped the veil.
<><>
Taylor
A slow, ironic clapping became audible, and all three looked around. The zone of continuous lightning had tightened to a sphere fifty yards across; just outside this radius, riding astride two more mystallions, were a pair of celestials, with Scion floating a little way back from them.
It wasn't hard to figure out who the celestials were; Janesha had named them earlier, after all. The man with the golden eyes and ready grin, still clapping, had to be Lord Chance. At his side, the woman in the midnight-black armour with two sword hilts protruding over her shoulders and a severe expression could only be Lady Armina.
The Mystallian God of Luck and Goddess of War, come to Earth Bet. Even on a social visit, they would've been intimidating as hell. This wasn't a social visit.
Taylor tensed. Even with her absolute faith in Janesha's power, she knew they were in for a fight. And though she and Janesha had the home court advantage, they were still going against a pair of celestials who were older than her
universe. No matter how it came out, it wasn't going to be pretty.
"Lord Chance. Lady Armina." Janesha's voice could have frozen entire icebergs of pure oxygen out of the air. "To what do I owe the pleasure?" The surrounding lightning died away to nothing.
"Janesha." Chance spoke first, his voice the very epitome of reason. "You know why we're here. To bring you home. Your parents are worried. Everyone's worried. You've been refusing blood-links. This isn't like you."
Janesha gestured to herself, then outward to indicate the entire realm. "I
am home, Lord Chance. You may tell My parents to cease their worry. I am healthy and happy. I will be blood-linking to speak with them soon. But I have My own realm now, and I will not leave My people." She looked past them to Scion. "What do you have to do with this?"
"I saw them arrive, and trailed them here," Scion replied. "They would've attacked Taylor to remove her, but I put a stop to that. I figured that you could fight your own battles, so here we are."
Janesha nodded. "I thank you, Lord Scion. I'll take it from here." She switched her attention to Armina and Chance. "You were saying, My Lord and Lady?"
At some unseen signal, Gladiator moved up alongside Gambler, then a few yards closer (Taylor had been filled in on the mystallions' names quite some time ago). Armina's voice was harsh and angry. "Don't be a fool, child. You're barely a newborn, and you expect to be able to handle the stresses of establishment? How are you going to keep your public image stable without attunement?. Mind-bending will only get you so far."
Janesha raised her chin defiantly. "I am succeeding so far. In fact, I'm thriving. The ranks of My followers are growing, day by day."
"That comes with a cost as well," challenged Armina. "How will you handle it when your first religious war breaks out? Which side will you take, or will you risk alienating both sides?" She spread her hands. "This, child, is why it's the height of hubris to become established in a realm before you are attuned. What happens if your high priestess dies before this happens? You must take on another high priest. And without attunement, you cannot guarantee that they will see you in the same way. What if you fell among those who saw you only as a means to grant them miracles or wishes?"
"But I did not," Janesha argued. "Taylor is My high priestess, and she is powerful enough in her own right to avoid that worry. Nobody will replace her, at My side or in My heart."
"There are always unexpected events," Armina said. "You cannot foresee them because they are unforeseeable."
"You would be surprised what I can foresee—" Janesha began, then cut off as Chance came lancing in, Gambler's wings driving the mystallion and his rider faster than Taylor had seen Cloudstrike go. He'd clearly picked his time for when Janesha was distracted by Armina's words, and he came by Taylor before she even registered his presence. Only afterward, looking back over her visual images, would she be able to realise what had happened.
"Hello, sweetling," he murmured as his arm went around her waist and he kept on riding. Or rather, he said the beginning of the phrase as he got to her, and finished it by realm-stepping halfway across the galaxy. "I'm told you can survive this. No hard feelings—whoa!"
The exclamation came about as he tossed her away from him. An instant later, she dissolved into a human-shaped mass of celestial murder-hornets, each one with a stinger an inch long, loaded with venom that would make even a god curl up into a whimpering ball. Taylor didn't know how she knew this, but figured Janesha had just given her the power on the fly.
In the next instant, she was at Janesha's side once more, reforming into human shape.
"Are you well, petal?" asked the teenaged goddess.
"I'm fine," Taylor replied, glaring at Chance as he reappeared. "But Mr Handsy over there needs to learn about boundaries."
"Anything?" asked Chance of Armina, ignoring Taylor's snark.
"Nothing," Armina snarled. "Are you sure you took her out of range?"
"Does halfway across the local galaxy work for you?" Chance looked at them, then squinted. "Oh. Oh,
now I see. Clever, clever girl. Well done." He began clapping again.
"What's she done?" Armina gave him a dirty look. "Don't
applaud them!"
"Look more closely." Chance gestured at Janesha. "She's used shifting to create tethers through the celestial realm that lets her stay in direct physical contact with father and daughter both, and pull them back to her when necessary. I'm guessing it was to protect them from the hostile celestials."
"Yes." Janesha directed her words toward him. "
All the hostile celestials." Her meaning was clear:
you as well. Then she looked at Danny. "But after your betrayal, Danny Hebert, you are no longer under My direct protection. Go home; be safe with Annette. That much you have earned." She gestured and Danny vanished, the energy cocoon that had been holding him dissipating.
Scion, behind the Mystallians, cleared his throat. "Just so we're clear? He's still under
my protection, as is his wife. Harm any member of Taylor's family and I eject you both from the realm, forever."
"Yes, thank you, we got that." Chance rubbed his chin, looking at Janesha and Taylor. "Any ideas, sis? We've got to get them apart long enough for you to sever the cord."
"Well, don't tell them our strategy where they can
hear us!" Armina snapped.
He rolled his eyes. "It's not like they couldn't figure it out. We've got to hit them with something that they can't beat even if they know about it. Because I'm willing to bet my niece is at least as sneaky as me, and is running internalisations where she's asking both of us what we're likely to do."
Taylor didn't bother lowering her voice as she spoke to Janesha. "Um, you're the supreme goddess here. I
know you're more powerful than both of them put together. Why don't you kick both of them out of the realm? Because I know you want to."
"I could, petal, but it would not do any good," Janesha replied. "As much as I hate to admit it, Grandmother Armina has a point. My lack of attunement makes it harder for Me to maintain certain effects. We must defeat them convincingly, together, here and now. Only then will they accept that I am worthy to rule My own realm."
"You know …" Chance said thoughtfully. "I could do that other thing ..."
"Absolutely not!" Armina said. "I forbid it! It's far too risky. I will best Janesha in single combat." Drawing a dagger from a sheath at her waist, she passed it to him. "If you see the opportunity, sever the cord."
"Do you have any idea what the 'other thing' is?" asked Taylor.
"It is a mystery to Me," Janesha admitted. "And I dislike mysteries. Still, we must focus on the task at hand." She spread her wings and lifted from the saddle. "Taylor, stay close. Cloudstrike, fall back. I don't want Gladiator harming you, even by accident."
Cloudstrike let out an unhappy snort, but did as she was told. Taylor figured it was probably the smart thing to do; while Armina's warmount wouldn't target Cloudstrike directly, the younger mystallion might easily get hurt from an encounter with one of the many spikes, spurs and other gouging implements attached to Gladiator's armour.
"The wings are different," Armina said, addressing Janesha directly. She reached back and drew a claymore, the metal scraping ominously from the scabbard. "But they will not help you. Neither will anything else. Surrender now, for you face the personification of War, and I never lose."
Janesha folded her hand, and a blade of light, brighter than the sun, sprang into view. Taylor heard the
snap-hiss and tried not to smirk. Across from her, Chance was openly chuckling; he must have seen the movie as well at some point.
"With all due respect, Grandmother Armina, you are the personification of War in
Mystal," Janesha observed coolly. "
I am the goddess of War, here."
"Of a planet of mortals? How long have they even
had war?" scoffed Armina. "An eon? Less?"
"Eight thousand years, more or less," Janesha admitted. "But hear this. In all of those eight thousand years, barely one has gone by where there has not been war somewhere on the planet. And I have the knowledge and understanding of conflict in all its myriad forms, in every way it has been fought and theorised, for those eight thousand years."
"A mere drop in the bucket," sneered Armina. "You are a child, playing with toy swords. Cease your pretensions. You are nothing to me."
"No, Grandmother Armina," breathed Janesha. "Here,
you are nothing to
Me."
In the next instant, by some mutual signal, they launched at each other. Taylor darted forward so that she would stay within fifteen feet of Janesha, even as the Mystallian steel and lightsaber clashed. A tremendous flurry of sparks sprayed across the sky, then Gladiator whirled in midair and attempted to plant one enormous armoured rear hoof against Taylor's solar plexus.
Almost instantly, she figured out Armina's plan; the kick, using the flat of the hoof rather than the wicked spur, would drive her backward without harming her, allowing Armina to slice the cord and depower Janesha. She reacted as fast as she could, dissolving into the cloud of hornets once more and swarming around the battling pair. "Nicely done but no cookie," she buzzed in Armina's face.
As tempted as she was to sting the Mystallian woman for her attempt, caution held her back; if Armina killed her in reaction, it would depower Janesha and allow Armina to take her back with them when Scion kicked them out. To the Mystallians, it would be a win-win situation.
I'm not going to just hand the battle to them.
"Oh, yeah, forgot to say she could do that!" called out Chance.
"It might've come in handy at some point!" Armina yelled back. She sent a series of lightning-fast cuts and slices at Janesha, more sparks flaring as the deadly blade glanced off the humming energy weapon. One blow got through, but glanced off the red-and-gold articulated armour that formed around Janesha's left arm and shoulder.
In return, Janesha straightened her arm at Armina with her palm out; there was a brief rising tone, then a titanic blast of power hammered Armina clear off Gladiator and sent her flailing into the middle distance. The armoured mystallion whinnied then sheered off and rocketed after his mistress, catching up to her in an instant.
"Every way war has been thought of, huh?" asked Chance derisively. "Never seen that one before."
"Fiction is still theory. And mortals believe in this fiction, otherwise it wouldn't have worked." Janesha's tone was serene. "This fight is as much Taylor's as mine."
That was an interesting revelation to Taylor. She wasn't sure if the real Thor would be as bothered by a repulsor blast as he had been in the Aleph movie, and she certainly didn't want to find out. But her belief had been enough to make it work, this time.
"She'll be back in a moment," Chance advised Janesha. "And she's gonna be
pissed. You sure you want to keep pushing her buttons?"
"If she keeps coming at Me, I'll keep fighting back. Because this is
My realm." Janesha raised her hand, the lightsaber winking out of existence. Her armour melted away to become her godly apparel once more. "But it
is time I stepped it up a notch. Three."
Taylor would have frowned if she had anything to frown with.
Three what?
Chance tilted his head, just as Janesha said, "Two."
He got it, a moment before Taylor did, but it was too late.
Janesha said, "One."
Armina, on Gladiator, vanished from sight.
A tremendous streamer of electricity connected ground and sky.
An instant later, Armina reappeared, in the middle of the streamer.
Lightning surged up from the ground and down from the clouds at the same time, meeting in the middle, which was where Armina still held her sword.
The concussion was apocalyptic. Armina
screamed as celestially generated lightning ignored the grounding effect of her armour and coursed through her muscles and bones. Taylor, tossed by the shockwave, did her best to cling to Janesha's armour and clothing and ride out the blast.
The Armina that emerged from the double lightning strike was a little scorched and smoking slightly, but apart from that she looked nothing but
extremely pissed. The tip of her claymore was glowing red, as were her eyes.
They came together again, in the middle of an extremely directed thunderstorm, where nothing happened to Taylor's composite bug body and everything happened to Armina. Even so, the older Mystallian's sword blows came raining down on Janesha like a high-speed triphammer. The intensity of her gaze told the story; she would not give up until Janesha submitted, no matter what happened to her.
Janesha, initially reluctant to strike back at her grandmother, grew visibly more comfortable with the idea as the fight continued. Drawing on the power Taylor granted her, she threw punches so hard they broke the sound barrier but barely dented the black metal armour. Taylor watched as she exhibited more and more esoteric abilities, healing the cuts and bruises Armina dealt to her and returning the attacks with interest.
For minute after minute they hammered on each other, neither one willing to give an inch. Janesha was easily the more powerful, but Armina was her superior in skill and guile. Any attack that threatened to disable the Mystallian Goddess of War altogether, she slipped aside from, as she'd been doing for billions of eons.
"You can't win, you know," she snarled as their blades locked together, their faces mere inches apart. "I will win. I always win."
"You always win in
Mystal," taunted Janesha. "This is My realm. You are far from home. I can outlast you. Even if I have to wait for Grandfather Mahpee to come and drag you back to Mystal because he misses you."
They pulled apart, then came together again with a bone-crunching impact. The very shockwaves of their battle were disarranging the terrain far below them, but they were beyond caring as they smashed blows at one another that would have killed an unprotected mortal from sheer proximity. Only Taylor was immune, weaving between swings to keep her insectoid mass within fifteen feet of Janesha.
Only Taylor noticed when Chance disappeared. And by then it was too late.
<><>
Danny
The Hebert Household
Annette clung to Danny. "But can we be certain she'll be okay?"
"As certain as we can be," he assured her. "Scion told them in no uncertain terms that targeting any of us means he'd stop the fight and kick them out. And he can make it stick. So Taylor's going to be fine. I just …" He shook his head. "Lady Armina scared the living crap out of me, and she barely even cared about my existence. She's actually angry at Janesha. I'm pretty sure I couldn't stand up to that, even if I wanted to."
"And that makes you wiser than most celestials, Danny Hebert." Chance stepped into the expanded living room from the spacious entrance hall.
"What the—" Danny turned, putting Annette behind him. "Why are you here? What do you want?"
Chance raised his eyebrows. "That depends, Danny Hebert. You prayed to me. What did you have in mind, calling me to Earth Bet? What do you believe of me?"
"Can't you just tell?" Danny gestured toward his head, his voice bitter. "You and Lady Armina didn't have much compunction in going into my head and giving me orders, did you? What's stopping you now?"
"It's less easy than you'd think," Chance admitted after a moment. "I can see the outline, but not the explicit details. But you called me here for a reason. I believe you think you can end this stalemate and allow us to take Janesha home. I'm willing to give you the opportunity to prove it."
Deliberately, he moved toward Danny, passing the fifteen-foot mark before coming to a halt. "Oh," he said. "Oh. I
see."
"Lord Chance of Mystal," Danny said deliberately. "Hear my prayer. I believe in you.
Save my daughter."
Power flooded into Chance, and he knew what he could now do, what Danny Hebert had just made possible. And for the first time in his very long life, he actually felt respect for a mortal.
He had just seconds, he knew, before Janesha figured out what he was about to do. So he did it. Reaching out with his brand-new establishment field, he touched the mind of every single one of her worshippers.
Every one. Upon them, he impressed one simple thought.
Huh. She's just a superhero, after all.
End of Part Twenty-Seven