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Orphan at the Edge of the World 1 OEW .5
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Orphan at the Edge of the World 1 OEW .5

Nestled deep within the violent maelstrom that demarcated the border between structured and unstructured existence, lied a pocket of impossible geometries. The equally undefinable creator who roamed it's labyrinthine depths, in thought if not in form, did have some traits even the simplest of sentient creatures could understand. For example, the child-like curiosity and attraction to new stimulus it exhibited would make it seem familiar to any who had lovingly suffered at the hands of a mischievous toddler. And despite it's eons of age, for its kind, that's exactly what it was.

Resisting the not yet insistent call for it to return to its elder kin in the infinite potentiality, it sunk a honed portion of its vast awareness and being into the toys it had buried within the sand box of existence. Using these toys, it could interact with the small and simple creatures that came into contact with them. Such toys facilitated a more intricate kind of play than the random flailing about it no longer derived much pleasure or satisfaction from.

Each one of the kin who became drawn to more refined playtime before answering the call of it's elders, tended to find greater enjoyment from a specific type of play that distinguished it from other kin. Clues to these differences could be found in the shape and function of the toys it used. Some liked tools of war or symbols of authority but this entity liked to shape its toys of interaction into books. Regardless of the shape and individual function designed to lure its controlling entity's preferred prey, nearly all had a common principle, power.

A small amount of shed essence, a little superficial insight the entity possessed, and scarce few of the creatures that encountered these toys could resist or escape them. And of those hapless creatures that became entangled with the playing entities, fewer still walked away having gained more than they had lost. Aside from a nearly unavoidable varying degree of madness, however, the book using entity in question considered itself relatively fair in treatment to the creatures it interacted with in comparison to its fellow enthusiasts.

It reveled in observance as it sent inspiration for wonders and horrors in equal measure. If one of its inspired creatures would unleash a threat capable of destroying all life, often its next manipulation of another would be to create solutions. In the midst of the violently tipping scales there was much to behold and learn for not only the entity but also among the scholarly of the world so affected, at least those fortunate enough to survive.

It looked fondly upon itself for it's breadth of generosity in copiously sharing the revelations of structured reality it had gleaned, frequently anguishing about the pitiful limit a single one of its pets could contain. Incessantly it pushed against this limitation for the sake of driving the pets beyond the mortal creature's contemporaries to reveal richer intellectual rewards. It eschewed, plotted against and ignored fellow kin and mortal alike that spoke against it's acts of generosity in anything other than a positive light.


As a being that treasured knowledge and understanding, it was aware in a way some of its young kin was not, why they were not allowed to push very far past the inner edges of the maelstrom and beyond the calmer void around structured reality. Doing so would damage existence and limit the other's ability to interact, a fact that most would not care about even if they knew but there were more reasons than that. To enter structure was to be shackled by it, the instinctual resistance against which was the source of the damage but more importantly, while under it confines an entity's expression of self and ability was significantly diminished. In such a state, the entity could be harmed.

Because of this chance of harm, the elder ones would not stand idly by. Once noticed, an elder would be quick to react. The placid call to migrate back to the endless potential would become an unavoidable and irresistible demand. Because of such a consequence, those who couldn't resist the temptation would exercise cunning and guile to sneak their tendrils further in than permissible for more intimate understanding and experience. Among those who did and escaped notice was a tacit understanding. Don't snitch.

If one was nicked or scraped and cried out alerting the elders, the others would break or hide all the toys close to their own. Without toys, the crybaby could only leave the sandbox or flail around until the elders called it away. In fact, if any entity started crying and flailing about once it had learned to play with toys it would find itself quickly ostracized or bullied by the others until it was forced to leave.

In older sandboxes, like the one the book using entity belonged to, one might find a forgotten or abandoned toy. If that happened, it was finders keepers. In the sandbox, no entity wanted to follow any rules but the constant threat of being called away kept most conflicts to a certain level and nothing would end playtime faster than toy snatching turning one of them into a snitching crybaby. Sometimes the older toys weren't safe and the resulting hurt could end playtime too. Still, few entities could resist playing with an other's toys so sometimes even cautious entities like this one would make the mistake of playing with a potentially dangerous abandoned toy, risking its own and its playtime in the process.

Careful not to alert other entities playing in the world it had found the abandoned conduit, conveniently in it's favored form of a book, the entity plotted to move it from owner to owner with barely perceived whispers and urging until it landed in the hands of an unstable and soon to die man. In another world dimension, the entity had urged its two strongest conduits together in the hands of that world's chosen champion. Sadly the champion, in his grief over lost loved ones and desire to find closure and other emotional concerns, had never used the two books. All the careful crafting of scenario almost seemed lost effort until a mad mage began a dysfunctional ritual close to the entity's conduits.

Using the impetus of the nine day ritual and the beacon of its two books, the entity subtly wove new ethereal geometries into the surrounding environment. As the man unknowingly sacrificed himself to the object of the entity's desire in one dimension, a child within the other was coaxed to draw upon the entity's conduits. With the appropriated ritual of the mad mage relaxing reality's laws around the child who was currently in a doubly strengthened bond with the entity, it felt safe enough to move a portion of itself into reality. With a cautious tug, it attempted to pull the abandoned conduit to its own two, using the sacrificed man's soul as the guider. Alas, time-space froze as the entity's tendril of condensed essence snagged on a sharp protrusion of causality that the abandoned conduit suddenly produced.

The entity had been duped. The conduit was still bound to another and that other entity had set up a malicious trap to cause intentional harm. In rage and pain it was unaccustomed to, it pulled itself free. Leaving behind a part of itself in the sacrificed man's reality and bleeding another portion around the now soulless body of the child in the other, it managed to retrieve its tattered and reduced tendril before letting out a bellow it could not contain. Before the entity could issue even the weakest of protests, its elder had called it in full force. Unable to defy, the entity sulkily withdrew from the maelstrom and into the infinite potentiality.

Inside the dead man's apartment, a dusty looking old man covered in rags consumed the entity's shed essence as his book consumed the two other conduits. Once finished, moved by whim or pity, the old man used a small amount of the causality power his book possessed to nudge the dead man's soul into a chance for new life. One last look around the apartment to ensure nothing of importance might be left behind, the old man realized that the game the dead man had been playing showed older dissipating signs of his book's power upon it. Signs, he thought, that were possibly stamped upon it right from its very source of development.

Before melting into the shadows and off to parts unknown, the old man took another look at the book he had penned in madness countless years ago and thought, "Causality, a power that can even threaten Them. Why would a madman like me be inspired to create and be entrusted with such a thing?" It was a question he had asked many times before and doubtless would ask many times again, for he never did and never would receive an answer.


Chapter end

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135 Crawling Chaos 33
134 Crawling Chaos 32
133 Crawling Chaos 31
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128 Crawling Chaos 26
127 Crawling Chaos 25
126 Crawling Chaos 24
125 Crawling Chaos 23
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122 Crawling Chaos 20
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120 Crawling Chaos 18
119 Crawling Chaos 17
118 Crawling Chaos 16
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116 Crawling Chaos 14
115 Crawling Chaos 13
114 Crawling Chaos 12
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112 Crawling Chaos 10
111 Crawling Chaos 9
110 Crawling Chaos 8
109 Crawling Chaos 7
108 Crawling Chaos 6
107 Crawling Chaos 5
106 Crawling Chaos 4
105 Crawling Chaos 3
104 Crawling Chaos 2
103 Crawling Chaos 1
102 Crystal Cage 40
101 Crystal Cage 39
100 Crystal Cage 38
99 Crystal Cage 37
98 Crystal Cage 36
97 Crystal Cage 35
96 Crystal Cage 34
95 Crystal Cage 33
94 Crystal Cage 32
93 Crystal Cage 31
92 Crystal Cage 30
91 Crystal Cage 29
90 Crystal Cage 28
89 Crystal Cage 27
88 Crystal Cage 26
87 Crystal Cage 25
86 Crystal Cage 24
85 Crystal Cage 23
84 Crystal Cage 22
83 Crystal Cage 21
82 Crystal Cage 20
81 Crystal Cage 19
80 Crystal Cage 18
79 Crystal Cage 17
78 Crystal Cage 16
77 Crystal Cage 15
76 Crystal Cage 14
75 Crystal Cage 13
74 Crystal Cage 12
73 Crystal Cage 11
72 Crystal Cage 10
71 Crystal Cage 9
70 Crystal Cage 8
69 Crystal Cage 7
68 Crystal Cage 6
67 Crystal Cage 5
66 Crystal Cage 4
65 Crystal Cage 3
64 Crystal Cage 2
63 Crystal Cage 1 OEW 63
62 OEW
61 OEW
60 OEW
59 OEW
58 OEW
57 OEW
56 OEW 55
55 OEW 54
54 OEW 53
53 OEW 52
52 OEW 51
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49 OEW 48
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44 OEW 43
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42 OEW 41
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40 OEW 39
39 OEW 38
38 OEW 37
37 OEW 36
36 OEW 35
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29 OEW 28
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11 OEW 10
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