05-24-2025, 05:48 PM
The new Atharim Headquarters was perfectly reconstructed. Nora worked at the one prior to the fire, and nobody had questioned how she survived it. In the time it took for the HQ to reopen, she’d been staying at an Atharim owned apartment in the mid-city, someplace that didn’t attract attention and served a rotating guest list of Atharim needing someplace to stay. It felt more like a dressed up hotel room rather than a home. For that reason, Nora preferred spending her waking hours in HQ, but it just felt wrong now that she knew what she was.
But she had no other choice. The only way she could do her proper research was directly on the Atharim’s servers, with database access to Vatican digital archives. She brought Claude here a few days after his arrival. Being Saint-Clair’s he had no issue with admittance, and after a short tour of the newly finished Baccarat building, they were buried in the database room, and she was quietly showing him her findings.
She stood in the middle of the room, arms crossed, brows drawn together like she was daring the data to contradict her.
“This isn’t some mood-swing death spiral, okay?” she said, her voice firm, practiced, and maybe a little defensive. “I’ve been digging through the Vatican scans, translation records, all the flagged anomalies from the last decade. Everything they don’t publish but still track.”
She clicked something on the laptop and the screen split, showing a dozen digital entries, each tagged with variations of the same phrase: uncontrolled divine surge, fatality suspected. She didn’t look at Claude, but she knew he was there. Close enough to hear, close enough to catch her if her voice cracked. It didn’t.
“They’ve been cataloguing godmarked individuals since before the term even existed. No one talks about it in the open, but the data’s there. Every time one of … ahem… someone appears. Every time a god touches their powers, something follows. Something irreversible.”
She stepped aside, letting him look if he wanted. She didn’t wait to see if he did.
“The powers always escalate. Slowly at first. But no one fades out. No one stays the same. They either go dormant and self-destruct,” she pointed to one case file, “or they snap. Violently.”
She exhaled through her nose and pulled up another tab. A scan of an old illuminated manuscript, faded Latin text with annotations in three languages.
“I did a reverse search on godmarkings, abrupt endings, and cataclysms.. that sort of thing to try and understand whether it’s reversible. Can you prevent a god from … well, becoming what’s inevitable. I found this, and I can’t for the life of me figure it out, but it definitely doesn’t look promising.”[/color]
She enlarged the image. A hand-drawn wheel, stylized like a sunburst, formed the centerpiece. Around it were smaller glyphs—constellations, or possibly seals. At the center: a broken sword embedded in an open eye.
“It showed up in four different texts across three centuries. All referring to the gods. All ending in some kind of cataclysm.” She ran her fingers through her hair, letting her hand linger at the back of her neck where she squeezed the tense muscles. Her voice dropped lower, not quite a whisper but something conspiratorial, wary. She was looking for answers about herself. Can she suppress her power? Can she change herself? Did this mean she should avoid having children? It’s not that she wanted them now, but someday, she figured she would.
“I asked another Atharim scholar for their opinion. He said it’s tied to something called the Unseen Pattern. Supposedly a prophecy, but it’s written in what is called 'preconceptional language’… a kind of thought-form language. There’s no Rosetta Stone for it. Even AI doesn’t have a good interpretation.”
She paused, then glanced at Claude for the first time since she’d started speaking. Her expression wasn’t confident anymore. It was measured. Cautious.
“I’ve read every commentary I can access. None of them agree on what it means. But I swear it feels familiar. Like I’ve seen it before. Maybe in a dream, or…”
She trailed off, then gave a small shrug, forcing the moment back under control. She was no prophet. She next showed him the list of commentaries, some going back two-thousand years of scholars giving their opinions. “Look, I know it’s a long shot, but you’ve always been better with puzzles than I am. This one’s chewing a hole through my brain.”
She crossed back to the laptop and tapped a few keys, bringing the image into sharper resolution.
“I hate these damn prophecies. Do you see anything in it I don’t?”
Link to research information on Nora's wiki: Scroll to Nora's Research section.
But she had no other choice. The only way she could do her proper research was directly on the Atharim’s servers, with database access to Vatican digital archives. She brought Claude here a few days after his arrival. Being Saint-Clair’s he had no issue with admittance, and after a short tour of the newly finished Baccarat building, they were buried in the database room, and she was quietly showing him her findings.
She stood in the middle of the room, arms crossed, brows drawn together like she was daring the data to contradict her.
“This isn’t some mood-swing death spiral, okay?” she said, her voice firm, practiced, and maybe a little defensive. “I’ve been digging through the Vatican scans, translation records, all the flagged anomalies from the last decade. Everything they don’t publish but still track.”
She clicked something on the laptop and the screen split, showing a dozen digital entries, each tagged with variations of the same phrase: uncontrolled divine surge, fatality suspected. She didn’t look at Claude, but she knew he was there. Close enough to hear, close enough to catch her if her voice cracked. It didn’t.
“They’ve been cataloguing godmarked individuals since before the term even existed. No one talks about it in the open, but the data’s there. Every time one of … ahem… someone appears. Every time a god touches their powers, something follows. Something irreversible.”
She stepped aside, letting him look if he wanted. She didn’t wait to see if he did.
“The powers always escalate. Slowly at first. But no one fades out. No one stays the same. They either go dormant and self-destruct,” she pointed to one case file, “or they snap. Violently.”
She exhaled through her nose and pulled up another tab. A scan of an old illuminated manuscript, faded Latin text with annotations in three languages.
“I did a reverse search on godmarkings, abrupt endings, and cataclysms.. that sort of thing to try and understand whether it’s reversible. Can you prevent a god from … well, becoming what’s inevitable. I found this, and I can’t for the life of me figure it out, but it definitely doesn’t look promising.”[/color]
She enlarged the image. A hand-drawn wheel, stylized like a sunburst, formed the centerpiece. Around it were smaller glyphs—constellations, or possibly seals. At the center: a broken sword embedded in an open eye.
“It showed up in four different texts across three centuries. All referring to the gods. All ending in some kind of cataclysm.” She ran her fingers through her hair, letting her hand linger at the back of her neck where she squeezed the tense muscles. Her voice dropped lower, not quite a whisper but something conspiratorial, wary. She was looking for answers about herself. Can she suppress her power? Can she change herself? Did this mean she should avoid having children? It’s not that she wanted them now, but someday, she figured she would.
“I asked another Atharim scholar for their opinion. He said it’s tied to something called the Unseen Pattern. Supposedly a prophecy, but it’s written in what is called 'preconceptional language’… a kind of thought-form language. There’s no Rosetta Stone for it. Even AI doesn’t have a good interpretation.”
She paused, then glanced at Claude for the first time since she’d started speaking. Her expression wasn’t confident anymore. It was measured. Cautious.
“I’ve read every commentary I can access. None of them agree on what it means. But I swear it feels familiar. Like I’ve seen it before. Maybe in a dream, or…”
She trailed off, then gave a small shrug, forcing the moment back under control. She was no prophet. She next showed him the list of commentaries, some going back two-thousand years of scholars giving their opinions. “Look, I know it’s a long shot, but you’ve always been better with puzzles than I am. This one’s chewing a hole through my brain.”
She crossed back to the laptop and tapped a few keys, bringing the image into sharper resolution.
“I hate these damn prophecies. Do you see anything in it I don’t?”
Link to research information on Nora's wiki: Scroll to Nora's Research section.