The wall of greenery that was Barck sidled a bit closer as he presented a cheek. My boots shook; Iâd seriously been contemplating punching that in the face!?
âAYE, OFFERâS OPEN!â
Did he just read my mind too!?
âYEP.â
I donât think so! I imagined the dirtiest, most twisted stuff that I could from the internet. Real unigoatse and four dwarves one mug kind of shit. Take that!
âIâVE SEEN IT ALL PETE, YER NOT GOINâ TA SHOCK ME WITH YERâ VANILLA CRAP. ARE YA READY TO CHAT? WE DONâT HAVE FOREVER. I MEAN, I DO, BUT I DONâT LIKE WAITINâ.â
I deflated a bit. This was not at all how I'd foreseen this meeting going. I briefly considered taking him up on his offer but⦠eldritch unfathomable being. I decided against taking a swing.
"So youâre Barck.â I began.
âTHATâS RIGHT. GOOD JOB.â
More like eldritch unfathomable wiseguy. Must be where Prophet Barnes got it from. Well, two could play at that game!
âAnd youâre all Barck, no bite, right?â I gave a sick smile. Hah! Take my dad-fu!
He paused. âTHATâS A NEW ONE.â
âI hope you liked it. Please donât smite me.â I shivered slightly in terror, gathered every last bit of bravado I had, and continued. âBefore we start, I need to know. Why did you force me to become an [Alchemist] Barck? I thought choice was important to the Gods. Seriously, W-T-F?â
âAH, YEAH, I DID THAT.â
"Yes! Yes you did!" As a Canadian, I was incredibly offended by the lack of an âIâm Sorryâ.
Barck continued while I chuffed. âARCHIS AND I FIGURED YOUâD DIE TO THA STONEANTS OR GUNPOWDER WITHOUT IT. IF IT MAKES YA FEEL BETTER, I GOT PUNISHED BY THA OTHER GODS FER DOINâ THAT.â
âYouâre right. I would have died without it.â I sighed. âSo I guess you're partially forgiven. Hearing you got punished for it does actually make me feel better. What happened?â
âIâM NOT ALLOWED TA HELP YOU AS MUCH ANYMORE. AND SOME OTHER STUFF.â
âWait, thatâs more like me getting punished! How is that fair?!â
âTOUGH.â
â
Have you ever wondered what it would be like to chill with Jesus?
The guy sounds like an awesome hang. Never need to make a beer run: he can make water into wine. If you run out of munchies, BOOM infinite fish and chips. If you break your spine doing a stunt while he holds your beer, no worries, Jesus has got yer back!
Barck was a pretty awesome hang, and I quickly lost my [Terrified] condition. There were two big problems though.
âSO THEN I SMOTE HIM.â
âHah! In front of everybody!?â
âTHEY WERE TALKING ABOUT IT FER CENTURIES.â
âI thought the Gods didnât care about our piddly human insults?â
âNAH, I HATED THAT GUY; HE GOT WHAT WAS COMING TO âIM. I GOT HIM OUT OF THE KARMIC POOL AS FAST AS I COULD.â
Barck lifted a Whistlemug the size of an aircraft-carrier from the cliff beside me and took a drag. The scent of lemons washed over me. I still couldnât believe Barck drank my radler! I took a sip from my own Whistlemug and frowned at it, both at the mug and its contents.
The other big problem was that I was in Heaven, or the Pinnacle, or whatever, and still drinking shit beer.
âBarckâ¦?â
âASK MORTAL, PERHAPS I SHALL ANSWER.â
âWhy are we drinking this awful beer?â
âWHAT!?â I winced as a boulder crashed along the slope and then flew past overhead. âYOU DARE CALL THE SACRED BREW AWFUL! THIS MOST âOLY OF BEVERAGES WAS BLESSED BY MESELF!! PROSTRATE BEFORE ME AND I MAY FORGIVE YOU.â
Barck drew himself up. The trees of his beard shifted and cracked as a suction of wind nearly ripped me from the cliff. The galaxies that made up his eyes flashed crimson, and somewhere far off in the distance his monumental fingers cracked as he flexed them.
Back when I was in kindergarten, I put a tack on my teacherâs chair. Yes, it was an awful and terrible thing to do, but if my favourite cartoon character could do it, why couldnât I? It turns out that having an adult scream bloody murder and come bearing down on you with death in their eyes is a lot less fun when itâs for real.
This was kind of like that, but a hundred times worse.
âI..I.. I apologize yer Godliness!â I supplicated as best as I could. This was how it was done, right? I put my hand into the same holy sign Iâd seen that asshole Barnes make. âPlease forgive this mortal for he has sinned.â
âNAH, IâM JUST SCREWINâ WITH YA PETE. ITâS GOATSHITE!â
What? My face betrayed my shock.
âYEAH. MEBBE ITâS ABOUT TIME WE GOT TO BUSINESS.â Barck put down his mug and his expression turned serious. âYOU PROBABLY HAVE A LOT OF QUESTIONS, AND I HAVE A FEW ANSWERS.â
âNot a lot?â
âTHEREâS RULES. I CAN ONLY TELL YOU SO MUCH, AND IâM BLOCKED FROM A LOT RIGHT NOW.â
âOk⦠can I make a small request first? Talking to you like this is giving me an awful crick in the neck.â
âOH, LET ME FIX THAT.â
I stepped aside to let him drop down next to me. Instead, the next instant, I was snatched up by a craggy fist and felt a massive pull as we accelerated upwards. The hand holding me felt vaguely mossy, and I swear something was moving in it. The ride was bumpy, but only lasted a few seconds, and then I experienced something I never expected to feel in this life or my last.
Weightless.
Barck opened his hand and I floated away, my arms and legs flapping uselessly. Down below me a blue and green orb floated in a vast ocean of stars. A pair of other, smaller orbs sat closer to us, spinning in a lazy circle around what had to be Erd. I could count three enormous continents down below. From up here, the clouds looked like rivers, flowing across an azure canvas.
âOh my Godâ¦â
âYES?â
I ignored that. My chest swelled with childish glee. I was in space. I freaking loved space. Heck, when Caroline and I had gotten married, Iâd walked down the aisle to Holsts Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity. The refrain crescendoed in my heart as one of the moons swept by behind us.
âHAH! I KNEW YOUâD LIKE IT!â
âItâs amazing!â I turned to look at Barck and did a double take. He floated off in the distance, where I could comfortably see all of him. He must have been nearly a kilometer away for that to be possible. He wore an armored suit in the classical style, and his hair was done up in traditional knotwork. If I didnât know he was the size of a mountain, I would have assumed he was a regular green-haired dwarf. He looked like an old man sitting in a leather recliner, and his gaze upon the world was positively paternal.
âITâS ONE Oâ ME FAVOURITE SIGHTS.â
âDo you come up here a lot?â
âSOME Oâ THA TIME. WE MOSTLY STAY IN THA PINNACLE. WEâRE IN THAâ FIRMAMENT RIGHT NOW, SO IF ANYONE IS LOOKINâ WITH A TELESCOPE, THEYâD SEE US.â
He waved towards the northern continent.
âALLO JACK. NOBODY WILL EVER BELIEVE YOU.â He snapped his fingers and some clouds moved to cover a portion of the northern continent. I was a bit bemused. Barck seemed to jump between serious, joking around, and angry at the drop of a hat.
We simply sat and enjoyed the view in silence for a while. âHonestly, I just thought you were going to shrink down to my size, this is so much better.â I admitted.
âWE DONâT DO THAT.â
âWhy not?â
âTHAT WAS SOMETHINâ YER GODS DID. MADE IT EASIER TO TALK TO âEM AND EASIER TO RELATE TO.â
âThat sounds right.â Hold on a tick, there was a rather major revelation in that sentence. âWait -â
âDIDNâT WORK OUT TOO WELL IN THA END.â
âWait - â n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âHARD TO BELIEVE IN SOMEONE THATâS JUST ANOTHER GUY IN A TOGA.â
âHOLD IT!â
Barck paused and *Harumphed*. A hurricane started somewhere over the southern coast from his breath alone.
âUm, I mean, excuse me please yer Barckliness. You said, your Gods, as in my Gods, as in: there were actually Gods on Earth?â
âAYE. WHO DO YOU THINK SOLD ME YOUR SOUL.â
I rocked back on my heels; an incredible feat in zero-g. âSold you my soul!?â
âYOU DIDNâT KNOW?âHe quirked an eyebrow the size of a bus.
âNO!!!â
âHALF-BAKED, AMATEUR, HAS-BEENS.âBarck grumbled. âTHEY MADE A GREAT WORLD BUT THEYâRE SHITE GODS.â
âSOLD YOU MY SOUL!?â
âYOU WERE EXPENSIVE. I HAD TO PAY YOUR GOD A RATHER PAINFUL SUM.â
âI was an agnostic! I didnât believe in any God! Did some God just get my soul by fiat!?â
âSURE YA DID. DIONYSIS? AEGIR? DU KANG? THA GOD Oâ WINES, BEERS, AND ALCOHOL? YOU WERE ONE OF âIS MOST FERVEROUS FOLLOWERS. YOU SPREAD HIS WORD YER ENTIRE LIFE AND DEDICATED YER BODY TO HIM IN DEATH. HE WAS LOATHE TO GIVE YOU UP, BUT I MANAGED TO CONVINCE âIM.â
Huh, I guess they did bury me in wine grapes. Wait, donât get distracted! âSOLD YOU MY SOUL!?â
âDONâT GET LUNARAâS LACE ALL IN A TWIST.â
Barck waved his hand, and I blacked out.
â
A dozen beings sat in a space that had no real borders. Each of them was more of a concept than a physical thing, their forms not tied down by anything so mundane as geometry.
âSo what have you brought us, *screecrackle*â The last bit sounded like a mix between a modem and high-pitched static.
âItâs a new invention created by one of my souls.â One figure said, holding out a strange box. âItâs pure technology, no magic at all.â
The item was passed around to all those assembled, and they pronounced it a fine thing indeed.
âAnother one oâ my favourite souls lost everythinââ.â One figure grumbled. âSame problem, theyâre amazinâ at inventinâ but no head ferâ gold.â
âMy humans had a similar problem.â Another voice put in. âThey solved it with something called âcopyrightâ.â
âHow does it work?â A figure that appeared to be an idea of the concept of pasta and meatballs asked.
âI created a magical gift that prevents anyone else from making or selling the same thing for an inventorâs lifetime.â
âSeems a bit short. Mortal lives are a candle in the wind.â Another being with far too many metaphysical tentacles purred.
âAye, perhaps five or six generations would make it better.â Another voice said.
The assembled agreed it was a very fine invention, and a very fine idea.
â
Another time, another space, another assembly.
âLook at what one oâ me favourite souls made! They called it beer! I LOVE this stuff!â
A metaphysical mug popped into existence in front of all those assembled. They each took drinks in their own turn and kind.
âItâs okay.â A snake the size of a universe proclaimed.
âIâm not a fan.â Said a mass of energy.
âTastes like something my people make too. Iâve been letting it stew until it improves. Would you like to try?â Said a four-armed being with sixteen hands.
âAye! Absolutely!â
Another set of mugs went around, and drinks were had by all.
âAch, this is even better than mine! I canât wait till they make it!â
âHow soon?â
âAch, I dunno. I gave emâ one oâ those âCopyrightâ Blessinâs so itâll be a while. Hopefully they wonât rest on their laurels!â
â
âNext, try the wine! Itâs new!â The assembled beings cheered.
âHey there *screech crackle pop*â
âAh, what has you down my short statured friend?â
âAll the alcohol here is so damn good, but itâs gone stagnant on my world.â
âIf youâre feeling down, try some of this mead, itâs to die for!â
âThat doesnât really make me feel better. I want my spirits to enjoy some real spirits!â The being slammed his mug down on the floor.
âWhatâs gone wrong?â
âWell you see, do you remember that âCopyrightâ idea from way back? I made it corrupt any unlicensed alcohol, but⦠I think I made it last too long.â
â
âWhat is it my short-statured friend, you have had more to drink than usual.â The being in a toga raised an eyebrow and took another gulp of wine.
âYeh, Iâve had an epiphany.â Beer dripped down a beard that was knotted in a traditional non-euclidean manner.
âDo tell.â The being in a toga eschewed refilling its glass and drank straight from the bottle.
âIf my souls wonât make better alcohol, Iâll be stuck drinking tha same few drinks forever.â
âThat is a terrible problem, you have my condolences.â
âSo I had a great idea, you give me one of yours, and they can make proper drinks!â
It turned out even Gods could spit-take.
â
"Ten thousand souls, not a single one less."
"Grrr, you drive a hard bargain." The bearded being growled. "Fine!"
"You must ensure he gets the chance to win his soul back."
"Of course. I've been doin' this longer than you, I know tha rules."
"You aren't exactly known for following the rules my short-statutered friend."
"Bah! All that matters is that 'is soul won't be held down by that damnable Blessin'"
"Take good care of him."
"Don't worry, I 'ave a good spot fer him. I've placed my most treasured souls there."
â
My eyes popped open, and I dry heaved into space. If I lost my lunch here, some poor explorer far in the future was going to find the oddest space-junk ever.
âSO, THATâS IT.âBarck said, morosely. âTHATâS WHY YER HERE.â
âIâm here because⦠of âcopyrightâ?â I croaked. I couldn't tell if that was interesting or incredibly dumb.
âAYE. THA DWARVES WERE SO USED TAâ BEERS NOT WORKINâ CAUSE OF IT THAT IT BECAME A TRADITION NOT TA TRY. THA LAGERS WERE A HAPPY ACCIDENT A WHILE AFTER THE COPYRIGHT ENDED.â He shrugged. âTURNS OUT LIFE PLUS FIVE GENERATIONS WORKS GREAT FER HUMANS BUT AWFUL FER DWARVES.â
âThe elvesâ¦â I whispered, horrified.
âWORSE.â Barck nodded. âTHANKFULLY THA DRAGONS ARE TOO LAZY TA INVENT ANYTHINâ. I DONâT GIVE OUT THA [COPYRIGHT] BLESSIN' NOW, BUT THA DAMAGE WAS DONE. AND AS AN OUTSIDE SOUL YOU AREN'T AFFECTED BY ANY COPYRIGHTS STILL LAYINâ AROUND.â
âSo my quest, to influence the dwarves. The reason Iâm on Erd and have a second chance at life. Itâs all because you want new alcohols? Why not just ask someone like Annie? Not that Iâm complaining, mind you!â Yeesh, talk about your deific revelations: alcohol was literally my reason for existence.
âYOU SEE, AFTER CREATION WE GODS CAN ONLY MAKE MILESTONES AND BLESSINSâ, OR THINGS THAT OUR MORTALS HAVE INVENTED. IF WE JUST TOLD YOU WHAT TO DO THEN YER NOTHINâ MORE THAN AN EXTENSION OF OURSELVES. INSTEAD, WE PROVIDE THE FIRMAMENT AND THE GIFTS, AND MORTALS PROVIDE THE INNOVATION. NO INNOVATION MEANSâ¦âBarck created a Whistlemug with a *pop* and filled it with beer. He took a sip and frowned. âNO NEW ALCOHOLS.â
âBut why me?â
âWELL, THATâS A WHOLE OTHER STORY. TA BE BLUNT, ITâS CAUSE YER GOD SAID YOU WERE AMONG THA BEST.â
âI sincerely disagree.â
âYER NOT DEAD, YER IN A BREWERY, AND YER JUMP STARTIN STUFF WITHOUT EVEN BEINâ INVOLVED.â Barck counted down on his fingers.
Okay, maybe I could agree a little. âWhy all the rigamarole then? Why not just throw me in the brewery and send a [Prophet] at me with a message.â
âITâS A BIT MORE COMPLICATED THAN THAT. YOU SEE, AS MY CHOSEN - â
âLIKE HELL!"
âYOUâLL NEED TA BE MORE SPECIFIC, PETE. WHICH ONE?â