As they walked through the corridors, Sunny kept clearing their way with the help of the Crown of Twilight. Of course, they could easily swim through the flooded portions of the temple - but why would they, if there was an easier way?
The walls of the narrow corridors glistened, reflecting the light of a luminous mory Nephis had summoned. Soon, Sunny noticed a subtle change in them. If the ancient stone was unadorned before, now, it was covered by the remains of beautiful murals.
He couldn't quite understand what was depicted on them, though - partially because the murals were heavily damaged, partially because the images were quite strange. They were more symbolic than descriptive... at least that was the conclusion he made.
"...What's that?"
Noticing that Nephis seed to be interested in the murals as well, Sunny finally gave voice to his curiosity.
She hesitated for a few monts, then shook her head.
"I'm not sure."
In front of them was an image depicting a vast black field that looked strangely terrifying. In the middle of it, a mass of golden fla was burning, illuminating the darkness with its radiance.
Cassie slowed her steps and turned slightly, facing the mural. After a mont of silence, she said matter-of-factly:
"It's the myth of creation."
The two of them looked at her with so confusion. Feeling their gazes, the blind girl sighed, then smiled lightly.
"The inhabitants of the Dream Realm had a myth of how the world ca to be, of course. Actually, many of them. Most shared common points, though."
She pointed to the mural.
"In the beginning, there was only the boundless void of chaos..."
Sunny tilted his head a little, rembering the description of a mory he once possessed... the mory of a drop of Shadow God's blood. The runes he had read told the sa.
Of course, Cassie was slightly altering the aning due to the difference between the language of the waking world and the runic language the Spell used. There was no void of chaos... because the words "void" and "chaos" ant the sa thing.
Co to think of it, it had been the sa in the human language once, as well. These days, when soone said "chaos", they wanted to describe so sort of a huge ss. But the initial aning of that word simply ant emptiness... the void.
So, saying that there was only the void ant the sa thing as saying there was only chaos.
It was the dark abyss that Weaver had apparently visited, and where the gods had co from.
Cassie, anwhile, continued:
"The void was everlasting and everchanging. Terrible beings dwelled within the void, as well. But then ca desire, and with it ca direction."
She pointed to the golden fla.
Sunny raised his eyebrow. These last words were exactly the sa as in the description of the drop of ichor.
"Yeah, I've heard sothing similar before. But, to be honest, I never really understood what all of it actually ans. Desire, direction... why are they so significant?"
It was Nephis, not Cassie, who answered:
"It's simple, really. Well... it's a paradox, but a rather simple one. Since the void was eternal, limitless, and forever changing, it was inevitable that sooner or later, it would produce sothing that contradicted its fundantal qualities. In other words, sothing unchanging. That was desire. A single constant in the forever shifting abyss."
She coughed, and then added with embarrassnt:
"Oh... at least that was how it was explained to . But if you think about it, it makes sense. A desire can't change, because if it does, it ceases to be itself and becos a different desire. So, the concept of desire is static by nature."
Sunny blinked a couple of tis.
"Huh? What? That's... a bit too complicated for . What a weird myth! I like the ones you tell way better - you know, the stories about cunning n defeating giants, building wooden as... horses to conquer cities, and fighting sea monsters."
A subtle smile appeared on Neph's face.
Sunny enjoyed the view of it, then scratched the back of his head and added:
"But I get the idea. Desire was the first unchanging thing born from the everchanging void, so it was in contradiction to the void."
She nodded.
"Yes. A desire also can't exist by itself. It needs a subject. You want sothing, strive for sothing, dream of sothing... so, a desire has to be directed sowhere. Hence, with it ca direction."
Sunny looked at her with a strange expression.
"That... strangely makes sense."
So the direction the myth spoke about was a natural consequence of desire... or rather the concept of desire being born within the void. And since both were constant, their existence was in opposition to the forever changing abyss.
Where there had been only chaos, there was now sothing resembling order.
...Coincidentally, the word "directionless" could also an "disorderly" in the runic language. And therefore, the word "direction" could also an "order".
Even though it was not entirely correct, such an analogy made it easier for Sunny to understand the underlying aning of the strange creation myth. It was a conflict between chaos and order... the void creatures represented chaos, while the gods represented order.
He hesitated for a mont, then asked:
"But a desire for what? What was that desire?"
Cassie laughed quietly.
"Nobody knows. In fact, I don't think that anyone can know... we humans are not capable of truly understanding divine matters, after all, so this myth is rely a crude facsimile of the real story. Personally, I think it was the very idea of desire, not a specific one. That's why there is a fairy tale about the Well of Wishes here in the Tomb of Ariel - a magical place that can grant any wish, not just the correct one."
Sunny looked at her, amused.
"...You know that fairy tale too?"
Cassie coughed and turned away in embarrassnt.
"Oh. Yeah... it's popular among the younger inhabitants of Fallen Grace. I listened to it once or twice out of curiosity."
She lingered for a mont, then walked to the next mural. On it, six radiant figures were shown standing around the mass of golden flas, which had beco much smaller. Vague, but terrifying shapes could be seen in the surrounding darkness, swarming them. The blind girl pointed at the image.
"The gods were born from desire. Then, they waged a terrible war on the old ones, the creatures of the void."
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