As the echoes of the little girl’s voice turned into silence, the nine of them fell into silence, as well. Her words had sounded like jesting... or at least they were supposed to. How could mortal men kill the gods?
And yet, a solemn atmosphere settled in the inner sanctum of the Oracle temple.
This peaceful realm of theirs was beautiful and thriving, but it did not enjoy the protection of a god. The gods had grown aloof and distant long ago... their temples stood proudly, and yet no matter how piously the priests and priestesses prayed, they were usually met with indifferent absence. Even War, the patron deity of humanity, had withdrawn from watching over the great, terrible empire of his.
The mortal realm where the nine of them had been born was not protected even by a neglectful deity, and so, it venerated no god. The ones they venerated instead were the Oracle — the women capable of glimpsing Fate.
The vast tapestry of fate was not something that mortals were meant to see, so the Oracle was blind, the terrible visage of what they had witnessed burned into their eyes, destroying them forever. That was their curse, but also their solace.
The Oracle was telling them that their realm was doomed, and that they would have to kill the gods.
Prince Eurys finally spoke, his voice shaking subtly:
"Mother... oh, Oracle. But... how can nine mortals kill the gods?"
The old hag seemed to study him with her blind eyes, then leaned back a little. Her creaky voice resounded in the inner sanctum:
"The War Empire is an insatiable beast that feeds on conquest. It is vast; it is prosperous. However, that prosperity is wicked, and worse than that, it is unsustainable. Their economy and their way of life can only be sustained by an influx of riches, or resources — and most importantly, of new slaves. Without the slaves, the Empire could not produce anything. But slaves... are not a renewable resource."
The woman spoke next, her words echoing somberly in the inner sanctum of the temple.
"You’ve read the imperial treaties, my son. You know the cruelty of their ways. The slaves they take do not last long, enduring endless labor. A few years, maybe... a decade, at most. And so, the Empire needs to conquer new lands, and procure new slaves. It won’t ever stop, because it can’t stop — if it does, it will starve."
The little girl spoke last, her voice turning small.
"Our kingdom is a peaceful one. It is a land of art, wine, wisdom, poetry, and culture. The Empire will come and take our art. It will take our wine. It will take our poets and philosophers and turn them into house slaves to educate the young masters. The rest — those who survive — will be sent to toil in the fields. In just a few generations, our culture will be no more. Our people will be us no more. Consumed and stolen by the conquering tyrants."
The woman wearing a deerskin around her shoulders finally spoke, her quiet voice sounding calm and even:
"That doesn’t answer the question. All of us can’t even stop an empire that one god watches over. How will the nine of us kill all six of them?"
The Oracle grew silent.
Eventually, the old hag spoke solemnly:
"You are a huntress, are you not? You should know how to kill a beast that is stronger than you."
The woman spoke next.
"The answer is simple. Not that it will be easy... far from it. It will be difficult. It will be unbearable. It will be impossible, even, for each of you."
The little girl finished what the woman started saying:
"But you must achieve the impossible, each of you. You must find the beast’s weakness. You must lure it into a trap. You must sink your blade into the weak spot that you found."
The three of them spoke in unison then...
"The nine of you were chosen because you are special, just like this realm of ours was. Some of you are wise, and some of you are strong. Some of you are holy. However, fate has no use for those who are strong or those who are wise, and neither does it care for sages and saints. The only ones it cares for..."
Their voices enveloped the sanctum, sounding like a prophecy.
"Are those who are fated. And that is what you are, the nine of you. You are blessed by fate... you are cursed by fate. The strings of fate wrap around you tightly, and so, everything you do will echo across fate, shaking its very foundation."
The old hag opened her mouth to continue, but at that moment, the prince who was kneeling on the floor interrupted her:
"You say that our land will be ravaged by the empire, that our people will be slaughtered and enslaved. That we cannot save anyone, but must instead avenge everyone. That we must kill the gods!"
His voice trembled with barely suppressed anger.
"But must we really abandon our people? And what will happen to the world when the gods die? Aloof as they are, the gods serve as the pillars of existence. All of it rests on their shoulders. Must we... destroy it all?"
Instead of the Oracle, it was one of the nine who answered — a tall warrior with broad shoulders, his face as pale as ash, his eyes brimming with sorrow and darkness:


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