Dagon starts narrating about how in any world, the truth is decided
by the will of the majority. This leads to the fact that the will of
the minority is unrecognized by the world. Since you are the most
isolated life in the world, how would the world reflect your will?
Dagon
then talks about being an ancestor in one world and says that’s the
position he has to ask you a question from. That is, did Astarte
represent a purgatory of pain and lies from which there is no salvation
to you? She would have been a companion who would have eased your
loneliness, but she was a dear childhood friend who changed when she
gained the power to represent the world.
Thinking
on it, Dagon says that Canaan was already doomed to destruction when it
was created. In this world, love takes precedence over everything.
Canaan is the world where love makes the System run.
But
what is love? Dagon supposes that most people would answer that love is
making another person happy. Yet in Canaan, the person who is most
loved is none other that the one whose will is always trampled upon.
Everyone was supposed to love you, yet the world refused to let you
exert your will.
You sank into despair and
gave up on living. The world cycled so so *so* many times, yet the
result remained the same. Dagon then refers to his other self, the one
who came from the abyssal world of Old Ones, and says they must have
known. This is the World where love was placed the highest, which is why
this world was destroyed. The faith that held up love as the greatest
thing destroyed the one who was loved the most, which means that the
world was wrong. When the majority believed that, that was the end of
Canaan.
Dagon talks about how the System of
majority rule is nothing more than setting the will of the majority as
the truth without any regards for thoughts and feelings. If they believe
the world should go, then even the world will do so.
Dagon
then starts talking in reference to Teacher Dagon and brings up how he
said that Old Ones was a world meant only to amuse Azathoth, its
Representative. If such is the case, he feels that Old Ones and Azathoth
have surely met the same end that Canaan and its Beloved did. It’s not a
hard conclusion to come to. A world that cycles and repeats its love
and entertaining for one will eventually break.
Dagon
says it’s not an unusual story, one you could find in any world. Even
now, somewhere there’s probably someone chased out of the world and
giving up on living. He talks about himself and how he was destroyed
alongside his world, yet he couldn’t bring himself to accept it.
Eventually he had to borrow another’s power to end himself.
Dagon
brings up that Teacher Dagon had asked him why he borrowed his body to
show him a dream of Canaan. His answer to that is because he promised,
and promises have to be fulfilled.
Things
pick back up where they left off with Dagon commenting on you finally
getting this far. Getting here means you’ve remembered your battle with
him back in Gogo as well as the fact that you came from Tokyo. You
confirm it, then ask how it is he’s here since he was supposedly
destroyed back then.
Dagon confirms that
his body (which was connected to his Pillar) was destroyed back then. He
explains that he borrowed a new vessel and kept showing you all a dream
of his ruined world. You ask about this being a dream with some
disbelief, but he repeats that this is the destroyed world he once ruled
over.
It is however a dream yet not a
dream. It is not a mental illusion in any way. In the middle of this
dream, real living bodies were brought here, filled with real memories,
and made to play a part. Dagon says all those memories reside inside
him, and as you already know he is capable of transplanting them.
Dagon
says that transplanting those memories requires a body capable of
acting them out. You ask if he means the islanders, Nomad, Asterius, and
everyone else. He confirms that, saying that if the memories weren’t
placed in vessels then they’d have no ability to affect reality. You
take that to mean Canaan is already gone, which also means you’re in an
overworld shift somewhere in Tokyo.
Kijimuna
speaks up saying he wants to ask Dagon about something else. Dagon had
once said about having wanted to destroy something, so what gives? Dagon
says that before he answers that, he needs to test your strength along
with Kijimuna’s and Tangaroa’s. He starts gigantifying to your shock,
and he says you need to show him that you can surpass him. Otherwise
he’ll wipe your memories with his power and repeat the dream over and
over.
Tangaroa slowly picks himself up and
tells Dagon to wait. Dagon expresses mild surprise that he even can get
up to fight. Tangaroa asks him about what he said about borrowing a body
and if that means the original owner of the body also came from Tokyo.
Dagon
decides to humor the question. He starts talking about how this
enclosed space is filled with the memories of Canaan’s old citizens,
which in turn means it’s filled with their faith to Canaan. Dagon says
that by using his name, he can use Canaan’s role and power. He talks
about how Dagon is a name believed to mean ‘one who brings food,’ which
then means it comes with the role and power to fulfill, raise, and bring
abundance.
Following that logic, Dagon
says he can gigantify himself however much he wants. He also is the
ruler of Canaan who receives faith, so he uses that authority to summon
Resheph, Moloch, Kothar-wa-Khasis to possess Nomad and the others, each
manipulated by a tentacle. He also summons one other person but doesn’t
have a corresponding body for them. This turns out to be Astarte, which
shocks Astaroth.
Dagon commands his
servants to battle you guys, and they move to obey. You try to ask Dagon
why he’s doing this, so he tells you to show him that you can surpass
him. Nomad, Asterius, and Kurogane all start attacking Tangaroa, and you
try to protect him but are having trouble keeping up with it all.
Kijimuna
tells you to get behind him as he tries to defend with his NP, but
Dagon interrupts the casting. He’s far stronger than you guys are at the
moment, and you try to suggest backing up but struggle with it. Dagon
says you should give up if it hurts so much, and his side surrounds you
three.
With no escape in sight, Dagon says
you should give in and let him wipe your memories. Suffering is probably
the only meaning to life there is for you, and having to fight will
only cause pain. Dagon says that if you stay in Canaan, you can slumber
within love and be submerged in happiness. You however reject this
offer.
You say you can’t spend your time
here in happiness because you know how Astarte felt. Dagon says nothing,
and narration talks about how you switched places with her and learned
of her hidden feelings. You learned her happiness and bitterness at
being the only one loved in the world. You learned of her misery of
being the only one powerless in the world.
Dagon
comments that you living in a harsh world is too kind for you.
Meanwhile Astarte is beating on Astaroth as she screams about dying.
She’s straddling then while wringing their neck with both her hands. She
tries to choke them as hard as she can, even as her arms are about
ready to break and her nails about to come off.
Given
that Astarte is essentially a disembodied ghost, she doesn’t actually
damage Astaroth, never mind that Astaroth is supposed to be a strong
demon. But as she continues, her emotions seep out in dark tears that
fall into Astaroth. She screams that she should be the one to die.
Astaroth
is surprised by this, and Astarte talks about how it was all wrong. The
body she was born with was wrong. Her very birth was wrong. No matter
how she struggled, it didn’t matter. Nothing did. She screams that she’s
given up, so she should just up and die.
Astaroth
speaks up and asks her to stop saying that, begs her really. They reach
up to brush away her tears as they admit they might not be able to
understand her sadness since they still feel envy for her even now. On
that note, Astarte probably doesn’t still doesn’t understand their
feelings either. But still Astaroth was glad to have met her.
Astaroth
concedes that maybe they were both wrong. Maybe they were both born at
the wrong time. Astaroth can insist it wasn’t a mistake, but admits
their real feelings are different. Both of them were born wrong, and
maybe there isn’t anyone in the world who would agree with that. But
they met and understood each other’s feelings, so they’re happy they
met.
Astarte seems to shrink away at this,
and Astaroth repeats again that they’re glad they met and understood
each other’s feelings that they’re alone in the world. They then talk
about having given up on a lot of things, but they’ll never give up on
this one thing. They want to be friends with her, and Astaroth swears to
to make sure there was some meaning to their meeting. You agree with
Astaroth and ready your sword, and Tangaroa approves of you two.
Tangaroa
starts talking about how he learned the world is a big place and how it
has countless bonds and connections from you guys that day. In
encountering another world, he’s gotten this far. And here in Canaan,
he’s encountered one more. Tangaroa says that even if you were born
powerless or the world holds no meaning for you, you can go somewhere
else and find and make something with a new meaning.
Tangaroa
addresses Dagon and says it’s wrong for you guys to stop here, and that
you guys will go find something important after getting out of here.
Dagon says it’s a nice speech, but words are cheap. He challenges you
guys to show him that you can resist him. He admits he lost back at the
secret island, but now things are different. He grows again to your
shock.
Dagon says Canaan is filled with
faith offered to himself. So long as it fills his vessel, he can be as
strong as he wants. You ask what can be done, and Tangaroa tells you
there’s a way to win. Since Canaan is filled with faith that turns to
power, Tangaroa says Yam should be capable of the same thing. He turns
to the shadows flying around and spreads his arms, declaring himself to
be both Tangaroa and Yam. Then he commands his servants to gather by
him.
Tangaroa turns himself to be about as
big as Dagon, which surprises you. He tells you he’ll hold Dagon back,
so in the meantime you should cut the tentacles off from the other guys.
You tell him you understand, then tell Kijimuna and Astaroth you guys
should fight. Both agree, and Astaroth says they’ll show the power of a
demon/dragon they’ve always detested. Dagon prompts you guys to show
your strength as the episode battle starts. Story continues afterwards.
After
the battle, the story kicks off with a flashback by Dagon as he says
he’s supposed to have been destroyed. He finds himself in the old
library and asks where he is, as well as who that guy that’s there is.
Why did he awaken again?
Bael turns out to
be there and says he’ll answer his questions one at a time. First off,
Bael says that they’re at the place where disembodied memories are
stored and compares it to a library. For the second question, Bael
describes himself as someone who once held a strong bond of fate that
tied together with him, declining to give his name. For the third
question, Bael says Dagon is awake because he brought a suitable vessel
to hold his memories. This turns out to be Teacher Dagon.
Dagon
is surprised by what’s happening, and Bael asks if it feels right. He
also assures him that Teacher Dagon has agreed to this. Teacher Dagon
has something he wants to ask him, but Bael asks that they talk it over
themselves later.
Dagon asks about the
reason Bael brought him out since he figures he doesn’t have one, though
Bael beats him to the end of that sentence. He shows him your
silhouette somehow, which Dagon does recognize, then says that you are
currently wanted to become the world’s System core and being hunted for
it. All according to the ‘world’s cruelest System’ that Dagon knows very
well, Bael says.
Dagon says nothing, so
Bael continues by saying that you have nowhere to run. If there would be
such a place, Bael suggests it would be the place Dagon once ruled.
Dagon agrees to help no matter which way it goes, and Bael thanks him
mentioning he thought it would take longer for him to decide. Dagon adds
that he’ll only help up to the point where your mind heals and you can
stand up and regain your strength.
Bael
agrees to the stipulation, framing it as the point where you can break
yourself out of Dagon’s protection. He also calls himself a specialist
in laws. Anyways Bael asks if it’s fine for him to supply the bodies
needed for Dagon’s memories, offering to do so. Once the vessels,
memories, and am enclosed space are put together, Canaan will be reborn.
He seems excited about that.
Back to the
present, you activate your NP to free the guys from their possession.
Asterius tries to understand what’s happening, Kurogane mentions being
tired and feeling someone was abusing him, and the three of them
collapse. Tangaroa meanwhile is pushing Dagon back before signaling to
you. You run over to swing at him, and Dagon says you’ve gotten strong
and that things will end this way or something.
Kijimuna
tells you to stop, and you do so as you say you know. The Analyst
starts playing as Dagon asks you why you did so, so you can either say
because he was letting himself he cut or because you haven’t heard why
he’s doing all this. Dagon says if you cut and ended him, it would have
been fine. He knows you can go back out there with a smile, and he says
you’ve done well for someone who looked dead and helpless back at the
island.
Dagon raises his hand, and
Astarte’s shadow stops moving. You try to ask him what’s going on, so he
agrees to tell you. He starts telling you you were placed in his
repeating dream of Canaan because of his promise with that man, but he
stops partway to tell you to look out. Tangaroa reacts faster and covers
for you before being blown away, still a giant.
You
call to Tangaroa before turning to see Baal. He laughs about the
destructive power of his artifact created by Kothar-wa-Khasis, saying
his biggest problem is now out of the way with Yam down. He also says
it’s so appropriate that Astarte’s will is dead. Now he has his sights
on Dagon.
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