Scene starts off at Tokyo’s Babel Tower as Michael is standing
around. Narration keeps referring to the tower as That Thing for some
reason, but that aside Michael is looking up at some big (unpictured)
rainbow spanning the sky as he remembers The Promise.
Narration
says that in Eden, there are tales of a flood that destroyed the world.
When the waters drained away, there was a giant rainbow in the sky, and
it is said that there was a voice that spoke from somewhere. The one
that Eden’s people call the ‘master’ or ‘light maker/creator’ was made
to make a promise with their world. “This rainbow stands as proof of the
contract I’ve made with you all. May the flood that destroyed all the
lives never come again.”
Ever since that
pact was made, the flood that is brought about is not one that kills,
but one that washes away memories. Michael understood that compassion
and thought all should strive to meet it. All should entrust themselves
to order by their own will and share the same desires. Should the
world’s structure/System bring sadness, Michael thought it would be
erased.
This lofty idea never came to pass,
and the suffering of history continued to repeat. Similar sins piled on
endlessly, with the flood coming just as often to wash them away. To
Michael, it all looked as though the world had never advanced a step
since that first flood. That pure boy could only see this as a hard to
accept breach of trust towards that promise.
Michael
wasn’t the only one to think so. Many angels thought the same, and in
their anger they destroyed many worlds. Canaan was one such world. It
was a world where its System was incomprehensible, one that destroyed
its most beloved, and as such was one of the most unforgivable.
Outside
of this narrative exposition, Michael calls out brother before
narration goes back to talk about there being someone (Michael) who
knows what a world system is and refuses to let the same end as Canaan’s
befall theirs. He continues to fight endlessly while pitying and hating
the vessel that inherited those memories.
Scene
shifts to Canaan as Teacher Dagon decides to talk about Babel Tower. As
it stands not much is understood about it, but he says guesses can be
made. As a specialist in other world constructions, he’d like to test
out some hypothetical architecture.
Dagon
starts off by talking about how there’s one tower from history made to
see the corners of the world. It would have to be taller than anything,
so you’d think it’d have to be gigantic right? Dagon says that would be
too big then. If the goal is to oversee the world, there’s no need to
get that big anyways.
Suppose that it isn’t
a tower then. In that case, what is it? Camera zooms in a bit on the
tower as Dagon asks if you can see the giant torrents of light visible
through the window-like things. What if that light is the true nature of
the building? What if the part that looks like a tower is meant to
safeguard that light?
Dagon says it might
help to think of it as a giant pillar of light mentioned in scraps from
many worlds and legends. This pillar of light is something anyone has
seen, the Rainbow. It’s a story many have heard, the story of the
rainbow bridge that connects one world to another.
Dagon
then asks, what if the tower we see that looks straight is in actuality
just one end of a ginormous arch? That would make the light within a
road that connects to somewhere else. Maybe it can connect to Tokyo too.
Title card pops up, and this is simply titled Epilogue.
Camera
tunes back in at Canaan. The flood is gone, the sky is clear, and a
rainbow hangs in the sky. The people are smiling, and Resheph, Moloch,
Yam, and Kothar-wa-Khasis are with them in their new bodies. Of course,
so are Baal and Astarte.
Over at Dagon’s
palace, Dagon talks about how Babylon’s Tower has connected Canaan to a
new future. Tokyo has a 24th pillar of light, and Dagon mentions the
Tokyo Babel Tower being there. He also brings up that Bael has called it
the tower that connects and unifies all worlds. As such, it probably
connects to destroyed worlds like Canaan that are outside the 23. Now
though, Canaan has been revived.
Dagon
prompts you to look at Canaan’s citizens. They’ve gained new bodies and
new lives, and Canaan is alive as well. Be proud, for you have all
created a future for a dead end world. Dagon tells you to come closer so
he can reward you, so you can either cheer, be nervous about how close
he’s getting, or hug him like you want his attention.
In
C he asks if you’re sure about this since he won’t let go. He then
notices something and asks if you have something you want to ask him.
You ask him which Dagon he is at the moment. He laughs and asks what you
think.
Some time later, everyone has
gotten together and Dagon says that the day you all leave will be coming
soon. Once you do leave, he thinks it’ll be unlikely anyone will come
back again. Astarte is shocked by this, and Dagon says that while Bael
may have set up a gate to get back to Tokyo, you guys can’t ask him
about it now and things have gone off script from his plans anyways.
Dagon
says he can’t imagine what could happen while Canaan and Tokyo are
linked. It might be nice if Canaan can connect to other worlds too, he
thinks. Tangaroa agrees but asks what Canaan Dagon plans on doing after
this. Everyone who was brought in from Tokyo removed the Canaanites and
went back through Babel Tower. The people’s memories have been put into
new bodies and sent off.
Resheph, Moloch,
and Kothar have all split off into new bodies this way. Yam has as well,
based on the idea that if he split the seas again he could make a new
ocean. Dagon however could not have a body of his own made, which
Tangaroa says is due to an issue with his rank as a world creator. Dagon
existed before the world did, so Yam is unable to create a body for him
even with all his power.
Dagon says that
if the people’s faith for him were to be left in his original body, then
it might have been possible for him to regenerate it. Unfortunately all
of it was destroyed in Gogo, so he says he can’t be remade. Tangaroa
asks if that means his existence will be suspended again once Old Ones
Dagon leaves Canaan, but that Dagon says it won’t happen because of a
promise they made.
Canaan Dagon confirms
and elaborates, saying that he’ll leave his memories with Old Ones Dagon
and go with him outside Canaan. Astarte is shocked by this, as are you.
Teacher Dagon says if someone else were the vessel, it’d probably be
difficult. He however has a Pillar for an artifact, which he describes
as the pillar that upholds the sunken Old Ones city of R'lyeh. That
should be fine for holding his other self’s memories.
Canaan
Dagon says that the world has already surpassed the limits of his
memories and is moving on. Canaan doesn’t need him anymore as a result,
and Dagon feels its inheritors can bring it to a new future. Baal asks
if he’s leaving, and Dagon addresses him and Astarte as he talks about
them knowing about Canaan’s end. They now are heading to an unknown
future, which he believes that can do.
You
ask if the other Dagon is okay with this, think about the idea of
coexisting with someone else’s memories, or say he’ll always be seen. In
A, Dagon is amused you’d ask that. He tells you you’re ‘acting the same
way’ as the Excellency who gave him his body, so if he were to refuse
you he’d lose his self-respect. You try to ask what he’s talking about
or say nothing, but either way he says it’s been a while since he felt
such enjoyment.
A few days later, the night
is filled with banquets, congratulations for new meetings and partings,
and reluctance. The parties feel like they go on forever, but slowly
the attendees drift to sleep, and calm settles over the town. Astarte
comes up to you to talk to you, inviting you to take a walk with her.
The two of you talk and reminisce as Astarte laughs about what happened.
You
two eventually come across a rock that fell into the streets, the one
Astarte broke a while back. Astarte tells you to watch her as she tries
to punch the thing. She plays it off as a joke, but she turns out to
have actually hit the thing and hurt herself. You either ask if she’s
okay, tell her not to go crazy, or sigh and ask what she’s doing.
Astarte
asks if you remember the time where she could shatter the thing no
sweat. You either say yes or say nothing. Astarte says her strength then
might have been borrowed, but she learned something while having it so
she’s glad. Until that day, she always thought strong was good and weak
was bad. Now however, Astarte learned that being strong isn’t all good,
since she lost sight of what she wanted to be. She picked the other
option, and she feels it’s okay now that she did choose.
As
the cool wind blows, you decide to ask Astarte something. She prompts
you to say it, so you either ask why she gave you back your power or ask
if she regrets it. In A, she says she promised that it would only be
for a short while. Astarte mentions that she hated it when other people
pushed things onto her, so she’ll never do that to you. She also calls
herself stubborn and says you know already.
You
try to talk to Astarte about something else or stare at her. Upon more
prompting, you either say you think she’s strong, say you don’t
understand what strength and weakness is, or wonder what weakness means.
In A she’s surprised you’d say that to her before declaring she gets to
decide what she is. Then she laughs.
Astarte
talks about thinking some more on what she really wants to be. Did she
want strength as a rebellion against everyone’s thoughts of her as weak,
did she want it for its own sake, or does she want something else
entirely? As long as she keeps thinking she’ll come up with an answer
one day. And if it turns out she can’t get it here, she’ll do what you
did and go to another world to find it. Dagon is doing that, so there’s
no reason she can’t.
Astarte wonders if she
was gutsy that time. By that time she refers to the flooding, as she
says she was ready for it to be over for her and over for the world. But
here she is still up and about. If she was prepared for the end then,
she feels she can do anything now. A bit of difference in the world
means little now, and she laughs about breaking through any walls she
comes up to.
Astarte also declares this
won’t be goodbye and insists she won’t say those words to you, then
demands you respond to her. You either say her name, hold her hand, or
grab her in a hug. If you go C she calls you cheeky and sighs about
wanting to cheer you up like you did for her. But she hugs you back all
the same.
But anyways, Astarte says she has
a farewell gift for you. She tells you that you’re truly strong, and
she figures a lot of people are expecting things of you and believe in
you in your original world. She knows how you are when you’re weak, that
time you lost the power you were borrowing, so she promises to not
laugh at you for it.
Astarte also decides
to tell you that you should laugh off expectations that people just put
on you. She’ll be thinking of you as doing that somewhere beneath the
skysea, so she says it’s fine for you to think of her as doing alright.
After a moment, she asks if you thought she’d be sadder, so she snorts
about you making a mess of things and leaving. She tells you to do as
you like and insists she won’t say goodbye to you.
Time
skips to the morning of the day you’ll all be leaving. Astarte says it
feels weird to be looking right at Astaroth, comparing it to standing in
front of herself. It makes sense though since they’ve switched forms
since that one day. Astaroth says they thought everything would be okay
if they’ve exchanged strengths and appearances. They compare it to how
Bael felt, that having what you always wanted means everything else
doesn’t matter as much.
When Astaroth
became Astarte, they thought they were truly happy. However, they still
felt some sense of disconnection that they couldn’t understand. Astarte
says nothing, so Astaroth continues saying they finally understood from
looking at you, her, and Bael. Astarte asks if it’s because it was
something borrowed, which would still mean it doesn’t belong to them by
definition.
Astaroth feels that isn’t it,
so Astarte asks what they think it is. Astaroth talks about hating how
people pushed what they didn’t want onto them. After watching Astarte
however, Astaroth feels what they hated more was themselves for not
refusing to accept it. Despite how they changed on the outside, they
stayed the same inside. If it wasn’t going to change they weren’t even
going to try.
Astarte however was
different. She tried to defy what was placed on her, and she fought
despite knowing her wishes wouldn’t come true. She made the choices they
didn’t, and she pushed against the limits while they never did. Astarte
was pressured to the point she screamed about wanting to die, and
Astaroth notes that they could never have done so.
Astaroth
talks about how they believed they were the same as Astarte, but now
know that isn’t the case. When they realized this, they couldn’t stand
the bitterness of it. They couldn’t accept how shallow they were for
being happy with just having Astarte’s appearance. Astaroth then says
that they don’t want to fall behind her.
When
Astarte asks about that, Astaroth says they want to be like her in
choosing the path with no regrets and nothing to feel guilty about.
Astarte is a bit embarrassed by this, and Astaroth thanks her and
credits her for coming to like themselves a bit.
Astarte
decides she has something she wants to say. Since Astaroth just
referred to her as their past life, Astarte asks them to stop saying
that since she thinks it’s dumb. Astaroth is surprised since everyone
says that how their power works, but Astarte grabs them and says their
connection isn’t so cheap. She’s a soldier, so they’re war buddies. No
matter which worlds they’re in, they’ll be fighting the same battle.
Don’t they think so too? Astaroth just smiles in response after getting
through their surprise.
Anyways, time moves
on to the point where you go touch the door. Light envelopes you all to
take you to elsewhere. You tell Astaroth it’s time to go and hold your
hand out to them. Astaroth agrees, and Astarte calls out to you with one
more thing to say. You say goodbye to Canaan and tell Astarte you’ll
see her again elsewhere, and Astarte waves you all off.
Light
takes you guys through, and you are guided by fates and bonds to go
where you ought to go. As this happens, Astaroth thinks about what
happened that day. Flashback pops in to replay the time where they
begged you to help Astarte, and Astaroth thanks you for keeping the
promise you made with them. Now they say it’s their turn, which they
swear to you. It’s their turn to help you in Tokyo.
No comments:
Post a Comment