I'm not sure if I should be pleased with this
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@ -63,5 +63,153 @@ though. Its unlikely that she'd appear here.
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\textbf{Manafed:} No, she's just incredibly tricksy and a bit of a pain in the
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ass.
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Deities. Figured they'd be problematic with their own set of rules.
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Deities. Figured they'd be problematic with their own set of rules and shit.
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I focussed on my mind for a moment before disappearing into a completely void
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'scape. I saw my thoughts as they bubbled into existence before disappearing
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again just an instant later. The implant must enable some weird types of
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self-introspection.
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"Yes, it does," someone said from behind me. The entire environment blinked
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pink then red as I snapped around ready to attack. I saw a young looking
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blonde floating upside down.
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"Anna, I presume," I offered as I forced myself to relax. "You could warn a
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girl before just barging into her head-space."
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"But where would the fun in that be?" she asked, sticking her tongue out in a
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playful manner.
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"What's with the corporate love?" I asked, frankly.
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"No love," she giggled, "just trying to throw a wrench in the other deities'
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plans so I can go back to my set of universes."
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"Your set of universes?" I asked, confused. There were other universes? But
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why? I mean, science said it might be possible, but we were nowhere near
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exploring what that might mean.
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"Yes," she said, her playful tone vanishing instantly, "I miss my home and I
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miss my power. Omnipotence doesn't work in this universe due to some weird
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limitations." Her face turned sour. "It means I can't just alter timelines to
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get what I want and instead I have to keep powerful players in power. Why do
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you think the free states exist at all? If it weren't for me, corporations
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would rule every inch of this hellscape."
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"Alter timelines?" I asked, alarm radiating through every ounce of my voice.
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"Yes," she replied, "but alas, I can't just say 'no more technomage dragon god'
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in this universe. By the way, I haven't taken care of that issue, but at least
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she doesn't control every aspect of technomancy here. In fact, killing her in
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this universe could cause a massive schism that would end all life. Fucked
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that one up one too many times in my own timeline."
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"There's a dragon somewhere that can control all 'technomancy'?" I asked,
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bewildered, "what the hell even \emph{is} technomancy?"
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"Oh my young fledgling," she cooed, "you'll hopefully never meet one. They
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exist far beyond the stars at this moment. Due to the expansion of your
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universe, its hopeful your entire species will never have to meet them."
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"There's life beyond the stars?" I asked, I didn't think I could be any more
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alarmed, but it seemed my patron deity was just dropping bombshell after
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bombshell on my fragile psyche.
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"Gods yes," she laughed, "you thought you were all alone here in this big ol'
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universe? Pah. The Kirtischians would wipe this sorry excuse for humanity
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into oblivion. If they could ever figure out how to tear a hole through
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space-time, that is. Luckily, every other deity also appears to take the
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stance on them that I do: don't let them touch anything they already haven't."
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"So humanity is better where you're from?" I asked, suddenly relieved that
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humanity was at least doing better in some other universe.
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"Yes and no," she began to explain, "gods above, I haven't talked about my own
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origins in this much detail since the first mage I made." She materialized a
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chair next to me and lounged in it.
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"In my universe, the one I was able to cultivate from its very inception,
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humanity wouldn't 'just happen'. I tried so many things, but from the
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beginning to the end, humanity never showed up. So I caused a few malfunctions
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on Kirtiscian spacecraft and crash-landed them on Earth to finally jumpstart
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humanity. After that, I was able to gently nudge the right people into power
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and Earth, by the time it all ended, was finally populated by humans that had
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setup a true utopia.
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"How many timelines did you shave off into oblivion to get that to work?" I
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asked. My lack of trust in people clearly showing through.
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"More than you could count, but less than infinity," she laughed, "of course,
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that's a lot less than I thought, too."
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"Why the special care for humanity?" I asked, curiosity finally boiling over.
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"Why not? I am, after all, human," she admitted, "or at least I was,
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originally." She pointed to a weird little tattoo she had on her shoulder. A
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grid of spaces, some filled with dots, others not. "My hacker emblem. Someone
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who found a bug in the universe was awarded with one. Mine? Ascension. I was
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able to um, without making it sound too much like an RPG, level up my
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abilities. Until I was omniscient."
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"You played a lot of strategy games, then?" I asked, a smile cracking across my
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face.
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"Not as many as you'd think," she dismissed, "I was more of a hacker. A lot
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like you, actually. Just, a lot more into maths. That was so many years ago,
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though. Many universes worth of time ago, actually."
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That was a lot. A lot to take in. A lot to process. That was a lot. I mean,
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the fact that I was sitting there talking to an actual goddess was also a lot,
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so I suppose my idea of 'a lot' was suddenly very broken.
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My mind wandered back around to why I wanted to talk to her in the first place,
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not wanting to unpack all of the information that was just dumped on me. "So
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why don't we split from the corp now that we are clearly big enough?"
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"Oh," she laughed, "quite the topic change. Um, currently we're actually in
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the process, but really it comes down to ensuring that the Free State here
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still exists. Eastern Hills is under constant pressure from Tamaki, under my
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direction mind you, to keep other corps in the area in check. We leave and the
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entire area will be 'up for grabs' in the eyes of the corps."
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"So a bit of a catch-22, then?" I asked, pondering the politics that corps play
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with eachother.
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"Yeah," she replied, "I'd opt for an all out revolution from the people living
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here, but that would cost more blood and life than its worth."
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"So living in a Free State, despite the massive corps exerting their power
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anyway, is preferable to letting the citizens decide?"
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"No," she laughed, "but they wouldn't get a say in any case. The corps have
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more power, money, and resources. They would simply wipe any opposition out.
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Or, as is tried and true, and much much cheaper, run psyops until other
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citizens removed the opposition for them. Takes a little longer, but they
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already control the media, so ultimately it cuts the cost by a lot."
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So she was saying its better to live in a facade of equality than to live in an
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open tyrany. I wasn't sure I agreed, but I'd think on it more later. I sighed
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and slumped down as I realized I had an absolute tonne of information to unpack
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and process later.
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"Looks like I gave you too much at once," Anna said laxidasically. "Maybe you
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should head back to the party and be with others. You have definitely been
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winning friends."
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"No winning about friendship," I stated, "friendships are bonds that are
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forged. They aren't won. Competition in this context simply doesn't make
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sense."
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"Fair, but my point still stands," she giggled playfully. Again, treating me
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like I was a pawn in a game. I didn't like it.
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"We're people," I said, "we all have feelings, and we shouldn't be played
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with."
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She gave me a puzzled look before realizing that my mindspace was becoming more
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violent in its shifting thoughts. She nodded and was gone in an instant.
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Some goddess. Using people for playthings to enact her will in the world. At
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least she was a lot more limited here than wherever the hell she came from.
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And to be using us to get home was simply shameful.
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