Wielder of Names 4-65
Once, on the road, Prim met a mendicant sage. The sage was chewing umbral blossoms and sitting in a ditch, filthy and ragged. Curious, Prim crouched down and asked the man what he was doing, for the day was quite hot, and there were beasts and worse about.
“What makes a man the most powerful?” said the sage. “I’ve wondered about this question for a good three days now. I’ve scarcely drunk a drop, or eaten a morsel, or got a moment’s sleep!” Prim itched to leave and continue her journey, but instead gave the man water and sat beside him, as at one point in her life she had been an excellent daughter, and old habits die exceedingly hard.
“Is is the strength of a man’s arm?” said the sage, “Is it the timbre of his voice? Is it his luminous gaze? Is it the way the light strikes his face?”
Prim was sure it was none of these things, and told the man so. “I thought as much,” said the sage, “so I considered further. Is the root of power buried in the soil of violence? Must it be nourished with blood? But many violent men are overthrown with ease by those who use only words. So it must not be so. Does power lie in the throat, then? Does a truly powerful man keep it in his body like a deep and mighty lake, boiling and bubbling in his guts, only to spill forth when he parts his steaming lips?”
Prim was certain it was none of these things, and told the man so. The sage nodded and continued, chewing on his leaf. “I think so too,” he said. “In truth, my conclusion is that the most powerful of men are neither wholly violent, nor strong of voice. The most powerful of men are radiant. Their power suffuses the air around them, and enslaves the will of others around them, by their own unwilling consent. It is an illusory power, which makes it all the more dangerous, since it feeds off belief. Such a man can kill without thinking, if he so chooses. He is sovereign from the laws of other men.”
“What do you think?” asked the sage, looking equal parts exhausted and pleased. Prim didn’t have an answer. “Well, none of that! I’ve been on this for three days!” sputtered the sage. “Which do you think? The violent man, the vocal man, or the radiant man?”
Prim thought of the violent men who had passed through her father’s house, and the iron rod of her father, with which he had not been sparing. She thought of the silken-voiced men that whispered near her father’s hearth. And she thought of the royal men, who came in processions to consult with her father, carried on their palanquins.
“None of them,” said Prim, at last.
“What?” said the sage, aghast.
“The most powerful man has the capability to be violent, charismatic, or sovereign, all,” said Prim, “but he chooses to be none of them, because if he does, he has become cruel, and a cruel man has lost all claim to power.”
She stood up and dusted herself off. “If God were a mere fisherman, he would earn my respect,” said Prim. She gathered her things and returned to the road, leaving her canteen with the sage, who remained there a day longer. He then gave up on the question, and later abandoned his sage’s rags to become a successful farmer.
– The Song of Maybe
Either form Mottom takes she is a horrid being whether the youthful maiden or old decaying hag one is one the inside the other makes no attempt to hide it on the outside. But then it becomes question of beauty that always changes with a turn of an age with mortals personally her beauty lies in the subjugation of weaker beings that make such exquisiteness appeal to my eyes.
What a wonderful surprise at all levels. We might not suffer the poor fool’s screaming for a year. It might only last a tenday, and he shall never need to see his people suffering again.
Yeah, she’s not going to be merciful. It’ll be a quick death or something horrific.
I am surprised that she’s suddenly beautiful, when we saw a hideous creature under the veil before. Perhaps an illusion?
Or perhaps this aesthetically pleasing appearance is but a mask, of art or of flesh, worn to decieve gullible fools into thinking that their goddess’ skin does not match her innards in gnarliness?
Or perhaps this aesthetically pleasing appearance is just a mask, of Art or of flesh, worn to convince fools that their goddess’ skin doesn’t match her innards in gnarliness?
Mother Om looks so different from her last appearance. http://killsixbilliondemons.com/comic/concordance-of-the-demiurges/
Does she take her tribute of maidens, select their finest, and wear their bodies? (Back at the meeting, there was also a lady who had her head blown up and remade it. But that is less horrifying.)
She is a witch. She’s using a glamour/veil/illusion to hide her real exterior.
In front of her peers that’s unnessecary?
Abbadon, your work is moving me greately. Thanks
She is a witch. She’s using a glamour/veil/illusion to hide her real exterior.
In front of her peers that’s unnessecary?
Abbadon, your work is moving me greately. Thanks
Ever been so angry it was beautiful?
Do take care of your health, dear Abaddon, I will become very beautiful indeed if I do not get regular doses of your tales.
Oh no
She’s hot!
She doesn’t seem so bad.
She wears more of a mask here than she did when meeting the demiurges, but one does not need to be a devil to wear a mask, and some devils hide their masks well.
Allison InteRuth! Save him, Sovereign!
Ah, I had suspected as much. The Flame Immortal takes what shape it will when it is free, but contained within a vessel it is quite different. AL-YIS-UN took on the appearance of a wanderer in the Void, an unbound demon is a mercurial piece of the Hot Black Flame, and the angels differ greatly in form between armour and Flame.
YISUN is a consume liar, why should Their essence be any different?
Its curious that Mottom’s nimbus appears to be part of her hat, while those of all the other divinities we have one burning around their head (young Mottom even lacks one in http://killsixbilliondemons.com/comic/ksbd-3-45/). I’ve looked back at the appearances of the old Mottom, and can’t tell if she has an actual nimbus there.
If this Mottom has no nimbus, and if the older one does have, this one could be an imposter, but the seeing as she clearly has her key, that seems highly unlikely.
It seems a safer bet that she just doesn’t have a nimbus, and uses her witchcraft to appear young. As to why she wouldn’t have one, I don’t know. Looking at Prims story, the nimbus could represent the ‘claim to power’, (as Mottom has demonstrated being perfectly capable of violence, majesty and charisma).
Perhaps she ate it?
As long as it tasted good, I supose
It has been established previously (back in the Void, when Allison was trying to negotiate travel to Mottom’s palace) that favored emissaries of the Demiurges are given lesser keys. To effect their travel between worlds, and to demonstrate that they represent their masters. It’s very possible this is a body double so equipped.
“I myself have seen this woman draw the stars from the sky; she diverts the course of a fast-flowing river with her incantations; her voice makes the earth gape, it lures the spirits from the tombs, send the bones tumbling from the dying pyre. At her behest, the sad clouds scatter; at her behest, snow falls from a summer’s sky.”
Dam he is going get something a lot worse than death now. A loan!
Dude’s gonna wake up dead. Gear up to get rekt.
And the mercy was granted, and what greater mercy there is than sweet embrace of death.
I smell the silky stench of lies upon lies upon lies, a counterfeit face spouting twisted words describing actions that shall never have been.
Take guard; an unraveling web of deceit can become a garrote in the hands of the “merciful”.
A swift death, after all, is mercy, when compared to many things.
So two things are floating through my head.
1) Shenanigans to this truly being Mother Om, the Great Consumer of Worlds.
2) The Seven met in the void, and while their forms were indeed colorful and vibrant, were they just shades that represented their true selves?
“Mercy”. Methinks this does not bode well for the King or his late people…
Well, to be fair, the King’s late people don’t have to worry about much already. They are dead.
That is, unless Mottom’s witchcraft includes necromancy.
Okay now I’m really nervous
Amongst her peers we see her as she is, yet here, in the palace of her radiance, she takes the form most pleasing to her self.
Ugh. Square hats are so in right now.