All Rights Reserved © 2022, Rick Haydn Horst
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are either the products of the author's imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
CHAPTER NINE
Chronos, the primordial god of Time, had grown accustomed to knowing all events on the timeline, and for as much as his knowing could burden him, it conveyed a sense of order and logic that he appreciated. It often pained him how language could not comment upon it without grotesque inaccuracies like the crude simplicity of cause "A" leading to effect "B". It stripped away all nuance leaving little else but false impressions, like a five-year old's black and white drawing of a universe that had decillions of colors. But he also knew that if language could depict a genuine description of the relationships between causes and effects, it would ultimately lose its audience in its profundity. However, as it stood, the complexities of Time, and all it entailed, defied description. He alone could comprehend, in its fullness, the beautiful tapestry of the universe's seemingly infinite number of causal chains, and as such, he thought of it as a work of art in his own private gallery.
No one noticed the furry muscle god and his concerned expression atop the staircase at the entrance to the bridge. He watched as Ronan invited Emma, William, Hephaestus, and Colt with him to Olympus. Wanting to show his support for them, as they turned to leave, they saw him dressed in a Centaurian uniform like Ronan's. His shirt held a depiction of an hourglass made from a lemniscate—an infinity symbol—with the name CHRONOS stitched into the fabric.
"Angus," said Ronan, surprised to see him. "Is something wrong?"
"We should talk," he said.
Ronan turned to his companions. "Pardon me, I must stop Time for a moment." And he did so.
Angus entered the bridge and stared at the others.
"What's the matter?" asked Ronan. "Have I done something?"
"Yes," he said, "but I carry the fault, and it's complicated so bear with me. As I said, I have never had anyone but myself capable of stopping Time, and I have never unlocked anyone with Time stopped, so this is unusual. The experience of Time is linear, and events—with a minimum of randomness—are largely a matter of cause and effect, but those causes and effects have always occurred on the timeline. However, you're having to stop Time just to get things done—and given your perspective, understandably so—but many large events are happening off the timeline, and it has fractured the timeline's continuity, a problem exacerbated by the inclusion of many unlocked people during these extra—timeline events. They create ripple effects that appear to have no causes. If that's not clear, please let me know."
"I unlocked over two-hundred gods on Olympus."
"Yes, and it's making the timeline messy, which is a real problem, not because it damages the timeline per se (it's pretty forgiving), but because it hinders my ability to help you. I must apologize for this necessity, but since I only know events that happen on the timeline, I have had to secretly follow you to help mitigate the problem, so the faster we get back to the timeline the better. From what I can see, things smooth out soon, but I think that happens from this conversation, and I think I help you here, so we can get back to normal. You could create a great many extra-timeline events trying to coax Zeus into telling you what he has done with Liam, but I can tell you from what I know of him, he would reveal nothing. I wish to spare you that. I hope you know by now that I can't do this for you by giving you the final solution—that would be T.M.I. (Too Much Information). However, I have a tiny tidbit that I believe I should give you because I don't know how you get it; you do not receive it on the timeline. I worry that it's my doing, and if I hold to my usual code of silence, by choosing not to tell you, I might alter events. Perhaps, from that alone, you can see how messy this is getting. So here it is, ask Emma about Métis."
"Ask Emma about Métis. Got it. I apologize for making a mess of the timeline."
"You're just doing what you must," said Chronos. "So that you know, if you must stop Time, keep the number of people unlocked with you to a bare minimum; it helps to reduce the problem. Here's why this is so important. Even with all your power, this is a limitation for us both. Events are accessible along the main timeline because of its perpetual existence."
"Right."
"The moment we stop Time, as now, we begin a secondary timeline and any event that occurs on that secondary timeline is only accessible to us while that timeline is active. If something should happen on a secondary timeline that has damaged the main timeline, you can't go back to that secondary timeline to search for its cause to change it because it no longer exists."
"Oh... Well, no wonder you've followed me around. So, none of the secondaries are connected."
Chronos shook his head. "If you should stop Time again later, you are beginning a new secondary timeline, independent of all the others. Once they end when you restart Time, they vanish."
"We really do need to get back to the timeline then. Thank you. I'm glad you're telling me this."
"I'm pleased you understand," said Chronos. "I will leave you to it." He descended the staircase.
"Thank you, Angus."
Ronan turned to Emma and unlocked her. "Hey."
She smiled a little and looked around. "Where's Chronos? Is something wrong?"
"Apparently, I'm making a mess of the timeline by all these off-timeline events, like the one we're having right now, and the more people unlocked with Time stopped the worse the mess gets. He says that we need to get back to the timeline as quickly as possible, so he gave me a hint. He told me that I should ask you about Métis. The name is familiar to me, but what can you tell me about her?"
"Métis...," she said, sounding almost nostalgic, "I haven't heard or thought of that name in centuries, but I think I know why he told you to ask. Métis was the goddess of wisdom and good counsel, Zeus's first wife, and Athena's mother. Someone prophesied that she would bear two of Zeus's children, and both would have great power, but the second, was a son who would dethrone him. So, Zeus followed his father's example, tricked Métis into turning herself into a fly, and swallowed her. Unfortunately for Zeus, she had already gotten pregnant. Somehow, she made her way to his head, and she gave birth to Athena who grew there, causing him terrible headaches. When it became unbearable, he asked Hephaestus to crack open his head with an ax, and Athena leaped from Zeus's head fully formed and wearing armor."
Ronan laughed. "Uh-huh," he said, with a look of extreme skepticism. "How can that possibly be true?"
"Because, like yourself, the gods are more than we appear. You continue to view yourself as a physical being, but you're not. I find it charming that you prefer to live in the illusion that you're more biological than you are, and I understand why you prefer it, but we are energy beings. We have these bodies as a conduit for experiencing this universe, so we may have the ability to touch and sense and fully feel our emotions. We intuitively understand that
this
"—she patted her chest—"is living, but as pure energy, we would have only existence. That is how Zeus can survive an ax cutting open his head to release his fully formed daughter."
"I see. So, what happened to Métis?"
"Zeus sealed himself up again, keeping her trapped inside his head. Zeus said that she became pure thought and has the same role she had before he swallowed her...as his wise counsel."
Ronan tipped his head in disbelief. "Ha! Right. I'm more inclined to believe the ax in the head story."
"Well," she said, "I saw Hephaestus wielding the ax, so I can attest that it's true, however, we have only Zeus's word about Métis, and it would be an easy lie."
"Angus had me ask you for a reason, and the only one that makes sense is if she's still there, and she knows where Zeus took Liam."
"I agree. Why do you call him Angus?"