21st of Lupar, Year 551 A.F.
By: Tilieus Posted on: October 31, 2010
An excerpt from a battered old journal, its pages spattered with a unknown purple dye:
The other day, while garroting a certain visually-impaired and strangely bipedal
cat (my habit always of the afternoon), I began to question the moral
consequences of causing harm to the weak, the helpless. For example, the cat - I
didn't always find the cross-eyed creature so easily outmaneuvered, so pitiably
feeble. There was a time when the cat could merely dance over to me and stomp on
my foot, and I would consider myself lucky if that alone wasn't enough to send
me to Thoth's impartial and apathetic attention. Yet, I learned, and grew, and
am stronger now - and the cat cannot do - or, at least, has never done - the
same. If my strabismatic and feline victim cannot grow, can he truly be said to
be weak? Doesn't the term weakness imply some fault on the part of the weak? Had
we not been blessed with the craftsmanship of certain artifacts, a grook could
not fault a mhun for drowning, nor an atavian sneer at a horkval for falling,
for it is completely out of the mhun's or the horkval's capacity to do
otherwise. Can strength still be considered a virtue to one whose very nature
forbids him utterly from achieving it? My mind wandered on and around these
thoughts as the cross-eyed cat clawed desperately at the floor in a vain attempt
to escape the grasp of my whip. Exiting my stony retreat I began to climb
through the Magic Mountains southerly towards the Mushroom Forest, setting a
course toward the Bastille Tree, its towering, looming majesty so beautiful in
its constancy. I stand at its feet a dwarf, stumpy and pugnacious, while the
tree stands proud and God-like, expecting rather than demanding my respect -
which it wins, easily. But does it deserve my praise? Certainly the tree has
done nothing to earn his glory; all this is merely a function of his nature.
Like the cat, he has no say in his own strength or weakness - so can he truly be
admired? A hundred Tilieuses would hardly outweigh one of his lesser branches,
and yet I am no less worthy to share his company for all that. Unlike he, I have
paid my due in blood and pain for every bit of experience and every last shred
of growth I have ever had. I pulled my dirk from the eye of the mushroom guru in
time to see a beam of humming blue fire arc in a blaze across the skies past the
tree, the light dappling through the leaves, briefly outshining the sun. The
wrath of the Gods given form, its trail slowly fading as it glided just beyond
the veil between the planes. It was a beautiful sight, my aesthetic appreciation
of it perhaps aided by the sweet smell drifting off the corpse of my edible
companion. I picked him up by the foot and dragged him along behind me as I
resumed my tour through the woods. With my mind still ablaze with that bright
blue fire, my thoughts naturally turned to the nature of worship. Countless
houses, cities, clans and whole classes of Sapients, all dedicating themselves
to the worship of Gods and their ideals. But what is there to worship? Gods are
unchanging, empowered by birthright and not through self-sacrifice or
self-realization. I remember now, words I was told years ago, not long after I
was cast out of house and city - a time when I was still young enough to listen,
occasionally, to the words of others. "The Gods," he said, looking at me
steadily with those mismatched eyes of his, "Cannot be other than they are -
they are not Sapients, but statues - not men, but marble. They are larger-than
life, indestructible, even beautiful - but forever frozen in a single pose." Too
true. Regardless of the ideals the Gods purport to hold (and for that matter
those who would worship them), the Divine can never truly be a paragon of its
own ideals - only a paradigm. A template. Pandemonium cannot even attempt to be
anything other than an impassioned advocate of strife, Pandora can never choose
to be anything other than a laughing exponent of mischief. Their very nature
forbids them from being other than they are. And if they cannot be otherwise,
why respect them? Impassioned by my thoughts, I stomped my foot down hard and
observed a gooey, feathery mess oozing out from underneath one black wyvernskin
boot. I scraped my foot against the ground to clean it of the mess and picked up
the limp sailor-suited chickadee, its dreams of joining the Royal Navy
hopelessly dashed, wings still twitching as if unaware the better half of their
owner had departed this realm. I began to walk along the road to pay a visit to
my always-starving and rather hirsute friend who lived north of the Crossroads.
As I walked I recited, out loud, one of the seven truths I learned long ago, in
the miserable days before I was a rogue, and free: "The spirit may be made
stronger by enduring hardships, both self-imposed and externally-imposed." I
have always found this to be a philosophical truth, with or without relation to
Mhaldor - my erstwhile home - its Gods, and their so-called 'evil.' I have
earned the right to walk in Sapience, amongst those of sapience. I bear nothing
but admiration for all those who have fought harder and longer for the same
purpose. I can neither pity, nor worship, nor degrade those who do not have it
in their nature to change, to develop. In a day I have become stronger, I have
grown, because I have struggled and suffered and caused suffering. I can be
proud of what I have become because I have no crutch. It is in my...
...It is in my nature to change.
Halfway through prying a small bag of gold from the stiff claws of the bloody
lion, I stopped suddenly in total despair. If, as weakness is inherent in the
denizens of this world and strength inherent in its Gods, so too it is inherent
in me, in my nature, to change and to grow - then I cannot be commended for
anything I have ever done. I have earned nothing. I sat down amongst the bloody
corpses of all that I had slaughtered in Bopalopia that day and let out a cry of
desperation as I clawed at the floor of Connie's dwelling. The world is cruel,
unappreciative, and unforgiving. I cut a small slice of mushroom from the head
of the RammaLamma and ate it. There is really no sense in fighting it, the
hopelessness. As the drug took its effect, my sobs gradually turned into
laughter. The absurdity of it all! The pointlessness! Why bother, then? I gave
Connie a sharp kick to the chest, blood gushing out from under her crimson,
matted mane and onto the sole of my boot. I suppose I enjoy the grind.