The divine being squinted down at his scroll again, then suddenly jolted as if someone had slapped the back of his cosmic head. "Oh, stars above," he muttered, reaching to the side and yanking an impossibly long clipboard from thin air. "Wait, wait, wait. This isn't right. Where's the… where's the intake form? Did I leave the entry spark? No, no, no, where's the manual…"
He spun in place—still cross-legged somehow—rummaging through folds of his robe like a college intern looking for his lost syllabus. Celestial scrolls fluttered, a glowing hourglass fell sideways in zero gravity, and something that looked suspiciously like a divine stapler clunked to the void floor and rolled off into nothingness.
Kaelan, still half-curled from psychic damage, blinked. "Are you… okay?"
The being didn't hear him. He straightened with unnatural grace, cleared his throat, and suddenly grew taller, standing upright at what looked like twelve feet high, clipboard clutched against his glowing chest. A booming voice now filled the space, smooth and reverent. "Welcome, Saint Marcellus."
Kaelan blinked. "…What."
"And of course, thank you for saving the world," the being added proudly.
Kaelan opened his mouth. Nothing came out.
The being beamed, radiating golden warmth. "No need to be speechless, Saint. Your dedication shows. The world below is bursting with cheer and laughter because of you."
"Wait, I don't think—"
"Truly, an inspiration. The higher-ups are absolutely glowing with praise," the being continued, words rushing like a nervous intern who practiced this speech in a mirror. "Your courage! Your sacrifice! Your incredible sense of humor—especially during the Siege of Arathun! When you handed the Grand Duke his own staff and said, 'You dropped this, motherfucker.' Incredible."
Kaelan squinted. "What."
"I mean, wow!" The being laughed, eyes brimming with light. "You punched a tyrant and healed a dragon in the same week. Iconic. There are tapestries, Saint. Tapestries."
Kaelan finally found his voice. "What!!"
The being paused, confused by the tone. "Well yes, you're a little early, to be honest," he said, glancing at his clipboard again. "I thought the higher-ups wanted to give you more time for a grand retirement arc, but hey—cosmic time is tricky, right?"
Kaelan's voice cracked as he shouted, "What the fuck are you talking about?!"
The being recoiled slightly. "Why so hostile, Saint Marcellus?"
"I'm not Saint Marcellus!"
The clipboard dropped an inch. "…You're not?"
Kaelan folded his arms. "No!"
The divine being blinked, then lowered his clipboard to eye level and tapped its glowing surface. A bright screen appeared midair—like a magical tablet—and displayed a video. A radiant man stood atop a parade float, wearing gilded robes, arms open to a crowd that chanted his name. "Marcellus! Marcellus!" Flower petals rained from the sky. A unicorn cried with joy. A baby laughed.
The being turned the clipboard slightly toward Kaelan. "You're… really not him."
"Geez," Kaelan deadpanned.
The being frowned and flipped a page on the clipboard. "Let's see… Kaelan Wynn… from Terra… uh-huh… died… wait." He tapped again. "Died at age… five?"
Kaelan's jaw dropped. "WHAT?! No, I died at twenty-three!"
"Well that's not what it says here." The being spun the clipboard around again. It now showed Kaelan's name, followed by a fuzzy black-and-white baby photo and a note. "Fate: to perish at age 5. Cause: accident involving garden shears and balloon."
"I didn't die with a balloon!" Kaelan shouted. "I died when a plane slammed into my apartment! You people owe me an apology!"
The divine being's glow dimmed. "But… that means…" He lowered one massive hand and gently pressed a glowing fingertip to Kaelan's forehead. A soft chime echoed through the void. "Oh… my," the being whispered, eyes widening. "Your life. It's… it's saturated with misfortune."
Kaelan sighed. "Yeah. Story of my life. Keep on keeping on, I guess."
The being pulled the finger back slowly, as if scorched. "No. That's… an understatement. After the day you were supposed to die… your life warped. The strings of fate around you tangled into a singularity. You absorbed every piece of bad luck that should have gone elsewhere."
Kaelan stared blankly. "…So you're telling me I've been cursed because the universe forgot to kill me on schedule?"
"Yes," the being said solemnly. "You… broke fate."
A low hum spread across the whiteness. The being clapped his colossal hands once. Clap. And then… silence. But not the kind of silence Kaelan had come to know. This was deeper. Heavier. The void around them thickened, like someone had laid a wool blanket over the very concept of motion.
Even Kaelan could feel it—stillness so absolute it made the earlier void feel noisy. He instinctively took a step back. "What… did you just do?"
The being lowered his glowing arms and exhaled with theatrical calm. "I've stopped the momentum of my domain."
"...The what?"
"The current. The passage of celestial attention, motion, observation, time." The being glanced around. "No one can see this moment. Not even the higher-ups. Well… except Father. But he doesn't care… I think."
Kaelan rubbed his temples. "Okay, hold on—what is this? What's happening?"
"You're right," The being said, raising a glowing hand. "You deserve an explanation."
He shifted posture. The light around him dimmed, then flared. The divine being's body began to rise, elongate—his once vaguely humanoid shape becoming more radiant, more symmetrical, more mythical. His eyes shimmered like twin galaxies. The clipboard disappeared, replaced by a scepter of coiling light. His voice deepened, layered now with echoes of multiple selves.
"I am Cecil, Lower-Class God of Processing, Domain 6-A, Fifth Tier of Celestial Function."
Kaelan blinked. "...That's the least impressive way to sound impressive."
Cecil chuckled. "Fair. Let me simplify." He began pacing mid-air, gesturing with his scepter. "There are classes of gods. Upper gods—what we call 'the higher-ups'—make the grand decisions. Cosmic direction. Creation. Canon timelines. Things like that."
He waved his hand, creating tiny visual echoes of what looked like shimmering star-beings sipping divine tea and watching massive floating screens. "We—lower-class gods—do the work. Assign souls. Track fates. Maintain domains. Fix the metaphysical plumbing when it leaks starlight."
Kaelan squinted. "So… you're like the divine janitors?"
"With a dash of secretary and intern," Cecil said, smiling. "Though, when we're on the job, our domain grants us power. Strength, presence, even time-control… as long as we don't mess things up."
"And you've… messed up."
"Oh no, not me. You did." Cecil pointed the scepter at Kaelan with a teasing grin. "By existing."
Kaelan rolled his eyes. "Great."
Cecil continued. "See, this moment—this domain right here—is meant to prepare Saint Marcellus for reincarnation. He's being celebrated for a lifetime of great deeds. The higher-ups love his story. They see it as… entertainment."
Kaelan's jaw tightened. "Wait. You mean his life was a show?"
"Yes," Cecil said gently. "A beloved one. Think prestige drama meets mythic fantasy. Marcellus defeated empires. Sacrificed greatly. Gave stirring speeches while bleeding. Very high ratings."
"And I'm guessing I was not part of that script."
"Exactly," Cecil nodded. "You… shouldn't be here. At all."
Kaelan folded his arms. "Then why are you telling me all this?"
Cecil tilted his head, a smile tugging at the edge of his radiant face. "Because… I finally get to talk about it." He sat back down in midair, cross-legged once more, arms resting on his divine knees. "This job never ends. One demand after another. Higher-ups want a legend? We sculpt a legend. They want tragedy? We cue heartbreak. They want redemption? Cue childhood flashbacks and healing arcs."
He looked at Kaelan, and for the first time, there was no glow in his eyes—only fatigue. "But no one ever asks what we think. Or what we feel. I wasn't supposed to have time to stop and talk. But with you here… I had an excuse to pause."
Kaelan let out a long, quiet sigh. "So what am I supposed to do now?" he asked. "I can't just… stay here forever, right?"
Cecil tapped his fingers against his chin. The light around them pulsed, slower now. "No," he said softly. "You can't."
Kaelan stared at Cecil, the divine glow of him soft and strangely sympathetic now. "What," Kaelan asked, "were you thinking?"
Cecil tilted his head, fingers steepled like a divine barista considering a strange new order. "How about… I reincarnate you?"
Kaelan's face went blank. "How about you take me to heaven instead?"
Cecil winced. Just slightly. It was subtle, but his entire glow dimmed like someone had turned down the divinity dial. "Ah. Yeah. I wouldn't… do that," he said. "Even if I wanted to, I can't."
"What do you mean can't?" Kaelan's tone sharpened. "You're a god."
Cecil rubbed the back of his shimmering neck. "Yes, but… there is no heaven. Or hell. Those are cultural constructs."
Kaelan opened his mouth, closed it, then sat down without realizing he had no legs. His form hovered, slightly curled. "There's no heaven," he whispered. "There's no hell."
"Not in the way you're imagining," Cecil said gently. "We don't do eternal reward or punishment. We do… processes."
Kaelan tried to breathe. Failed. Tried again. Still failed. "But—then why am I like this?" he asked finally. "Why a floating soul? Why awareness? Why anything? If there's no afterlife?"
Cecil nodded solemnly and crossed his arms behind his back, drifting slightly as he paced in slow arcs. "Well… usually, when someone dies, their soul drifts to the Great After. It's a metaphysical space that forms itself around your greatest desire. Whatever emotion, longing, or dream defined you most. There, you're meant to experience it fully."
"Until… what?" Kaelan asked, suspicious.
"Until you're ready for release," Cecil said.
Kaelan blinked. "What does release mean?"
Cecil stopped, turned to face him. "It means… you disappear. You become nothing. You go back to your root state. Unbeing. The spark goes out, cleanly."
Kaelan didn't speak. He just sat there, the idea sinking in like wet concrete. His thoughts slowed. He wasn't sure if it was shock or grief, or just exhaustion on a level beyond life. "I was supposed to fade away?" he said quietly.
"You were," Cecil said. "But that's not what happened." Kaelan looked up. "You never went to the Great After, Kaelan," Cecil said, his voice heavier now. "Your soul didn't land anywhere. It went… straight into the void. That shouldn't be possible."
Kaelan's breath hitched. "Why?"
Cecil gestured broadly to the whiteness around them. "This place—it isn't a holding area. It's the absence of all systems. When I touched your memories, I felt it. Your life was so soaked in misfortune, the system couldn't process your death. Your timeline got cut—but your spirit was too tangled to go anywhere." Kaelan didn't respond.
"You wandered," Cecil said, "for who knows how long. With no way to fulfill your desire. No place to rest. You've been outside of the path for so long… that even we forgot you."
Silence. Even the white around them seemed to pull tighter, quieter. "And now?" Kaelan finally asked, voice thin.
"You have two choices," Cecil said softly. "You can continue wandering in this void. Alone. Slowly breaking apart."
"…Or?"
"Or," Cecil smiled gently, "take my offer. Reincarnation. A new start."
Kaelan was quiet. Then he chuckled. Then he laughed. Hard. It echoed weirdly in the void. He clutched his forehead, shaking with quiet hysterics. "Even in the afterlife, my luck hasn't changed. A five-year-old accident that didn't kill me screws up my entire fate and puts me in the waiting room of nowhere." Cecil smiled with him. "Well, screw it," Kaelan said through the laughter. "Let's do it, Cecil."
Cecil beamed. Not just smiled—beamed. His whole body shone bright for a second like he'd been plugged into cosmic joy. "Alright! This is the first time I've made a decision like this. No clipboard approval, no upper-god review. I feel… pumped!" Cecil twirled midair like a glowing ribbon dancer.
He grabbed his clipboard, clicked his stylus into place, and began pacing with divine enthusiasm. "Let me get the structure ready… hold on…"
He raised his hand and drew a glowing circle in the white space, symbols spiraling around it. Celestial equations flared into being, beautiful and incomprehensible, pulsing in rhythm.
…
Cecil stood with both arms raised, clipboard floating beside him, scepter planted like a flag. "Alright—it's done!" The glowing summoning circle beneath them began to spin, then swirl. Radiant glyphs pulsed outward, forming a wide orbit in the whiteness like a gear turning inside a clock made of light.
From its center, a shape emerged—slowly spinning, hazy at first. A planet. It hovered, suspended in the void: a sphere wrapped in blue oceans and sprawling green continents, dotted with clouds and threaded with faint lines of magic that pulsed like veins. Cecil gestured proudly. "Behold: Aetherion."
Kaelan stepped closer—if walking in non-space could be called that. "Okay, that's... cool. So, what am I looking at?"
Cecil began to pace in the air like a tour guide ready to earn commission. "Aetherion is a livable planet like Terra—the world you came from. Except where Terra relies on science and technology, this world uses both magic and magitech. Think early 1900s by your standards—industrial era, but with sorcery-fueled machines, airships, arcane radios, enchanted infrastructure."
Kaelan raised a brow. "So it's steampunk, but make it sparkle."
Cecil grinned. "Exactly." He twirled a finger, zooming in on the planet. Cities became visible—towers coiled with crystal tech, glowing leylines, bridges that floated on runes.
"And the people?" Kaelan asked.
"Aetherion hosts a variety of intelligent species," Cecil continued. "Demons, beastkin, dragonborn, elves, dwarves, humans, and hybrids of all kinds. The politics are layered. The prejudices are ancient. The world's magical foundation is still intact, but spiritually? It's a bit… hollow."
Kaelan gave him a side-eye smirk. "You're like a cosmic real estate agent right now."
Cecil chuckled. "I've been working on my pitch." He waved again, and a timeline spun through the air—depicting a heroic figure battling armies, leading revolutions, and finally, kneeling bloodied in a burning battlefield as light consumed him.
"This world was once the setting for a great epic. A beautiful story. The main character—a human, Saint Elaris—died long ago, a noble end in the final war against the demons. His death was so... poetic, the higher-ups considered it a perfect narrative conclusion."
"And then they just... dropped it?" Kaelan asked.
Cecil shrugged. "The ratings dropped. Interest waned. Like a beloved show getting canceled. Aetherion became a quiet background world. No divine updates. No story arcs."
"Wait." Kaelan squinted. "So why send Saint Marcellus in now?"
"A soft reboot," Cecil said, spinning his clipboard. "They want to 'restart' the world. Reignite the drama. A new Saint enters, tension stirs, the world reacts. The demons—who've been treated like dirt since the war—are part of that plan. Conflict's good for narrative. Adds stakes."
Kaelan folded his arms. "Is it okay to throw me into that same world? Isn't it going to mess with your 'saint relaunch?'"
Cecil clicked his stylus midair, then flipped the page. "Nope. Totally fine. Saint Marcellus has already been scheduled to be reborn."
Kaelan frowned. "Reborn as who?"
Cecil froze. Glitched. "...Can't say."
"Why?"
"Higher-up NDA."
Kaelan raised both brows. "You've got divine NDAs?"
Cecil gave a long, exasperated sigh. "Don't start. You'd be shocked how much paperwork is involved in miracles."
Kaelan grinned. Then it faded. "Alright, serious question. Can I skip the… whole being-a-kid-again thing? Please? I've already been through childhood once. It sucked."
Cecil lit up. "Oh! Yes. Of course. I was going to ask. I can start you at eighteen—adult enough for autonomy, young enough to still have a 'newcomer' arc. We'll say you arrived from a rural region and moved to the city for a 'fresh start.' I'll even tweak the local records."
Kaelan's shoulders relaxed. "Perfect."
"Anything else?" Cecil asked, now flipping open a fresh form midair. "You've got body customization coming up. But if there's any traits—now's the time to start to think about it."
Kaelan blinked, eyes narrowing. "Wait. I get to choose my form too?"
Cecil grinned. "Call it a perk."
The glow around Cecil dimmed slightly—not from energy loss, but because something in him shifted. His arms lowered. His voice dropped from divine grandeur to something quieter. Human, almost. "Kaelan… listen."
Kaelan tilted his head.
Cecil stepped forward, clipboard gone, hands empty. "I wagered a lot on this decision. Going off-script like this. So… please. Enjoy yourself."
Kaelan blinked. "Why do you care so much?" He looked down at his incorporeal hands. "Ever since I was a kid, I never had someone who gave a damn. No family. No fallback. And now, I've got the literal god of celestial forms and paperwork telling me to have fun."
Cecil smiled, a strange heaviness behind it. "When I touched your forehead," he said, voice soft, "I lived your whole life. In that second—I saw everything. Every little misfortune. Every moment of silence you swallowed. Every time you bit your tongue instead of screaming." His hands tightened just slightly. "I can't even imagine surviving what you did without snapping in half. But you didn't. You kept finding light in it. You joked through it. You endured."
Kaelan shrugged lightly, smiling without warmth. "Well, I could only control myself, right? Can't control dog poop or airplane trajectories. Might as well find the funny in it."
Cecil laughed. Not because it was funny—but because it was so Kaelan.
He reached out and clapped his hands together once, voice returning to god-mode. "Alright then. This is it. Are we ready for the new life?"
Kaelan raised an eyebrow. "We?"
"I mean you. I'm just excited," Cecil said, clearing his throat. "Right. First things first: let's talk power."
Kaelan lit up. "Wait—I get powers?"
Cecil nodded gravely. "It's a dangerous world, Kaelan. Even peaceful-looking places have sharp corners. I can't toss you into Aetherion with nothing."
With a casual flourish, he reached into the glowing void and pulled out a wheel—ornate, glowing, spinning gently in place with various glowing runes and race names written along its circumference. "Let's begin with your race," Cecil said. "Standard rule: everything gets spun. Even Saint Marcellus got the wheel treatment, y'know."
Kaelan eyed the wheel warily. "You sure we can't just pick?"
"Rules are rules," Cecil said. "Hit it."
Kaelan reached out and tapped the wheel. It spun—bright and fast, blurring names into a halo of light. Then slowed and stopped on:
[ARCHDEMON]
Cecil visibly winced. "Oof. That's... rough."
Kaelan looked up slowly. "Why? That sounds cool."
"It was," Cecil admitted. "Several hundred years ago, Archdemons were legendary. Powerhouses. But… after the Demon War and Saint Elaris's sacrifice? They're a reviled species. Most societies now either fear, hunt, or enslave them. They're considered cursed."
Kaelan groaned. "Oh come on. Even the divine gacha hates me."
"I don't make the rules!" Cecil threw up his hands. "And honestly, the spin should be random…"
"You're saying even Saint Marcellus would spun for his body?"
"Yup."
Kaelan grumbled. "Fine. What's next?"
Cecil summoned another wheel labeled [RACIAL TALENT] and spun it before Kaelan could object. It ticked, clattered, then stopped on glowing text:
[CLONE / AVATAR]
Kaelan squinted. "What's that mean?"
Cecil's eyes twinkled. "It means you have the innate ability to clone yourself. As long as you have magic, you can create a duplicate—an Avatar—that you control simultaneously. You'll see through both bodies, think through both, and act through both. Though…"
"Though?"
"You'll need training to master it. If you divide your mind too far, it'll fracture. That's why it's a talent, not a cheat code."
Kaelan's eyes gleamed. "That's… actually awesome."
Cecil nodded. "Very versatile. I thought you'd like that one."
"And now?" Kaelan asked, bouncing a little. "My power, right? The big one?"
Cecil grinned and raised the last, and largest wheel, shimmering with possibility. Abilities from all across the mythic spectrum blinked and flickered across it: Time Reversal. Elemental Fusion. Astral Body. Soul-Speech. Dimensional Fold.
"Now," Cecil said, "let's see if your luck will show mercy—just once."
Kaelan cracked his knuckles. "Here goes nothing."
And he spun. The final wheel slowed with a dramatic chime, glowing letters clicking past the rim one by one. Chrono-Shift. Living Flame. Lightning-Kin. Soulforger. Dream-Hacker. Click. Click. Click:
[GACHA]
Kaelan's mouth fell open. "WHAT?!"
Cecil, hovering beside him, grinned wide enough to light the void. "Well well well. You actually pulled through!"
Kaelan threw his hands in the air. "How is luck-based RNG garbage supposed to be useful?! This is like—MapleStory PTSD all over again!"
Cecil only laughed. "No no, this is good, Kaelan. Really good. Especially with your clone talent."
Kaelan blinked. "...Explain. Slowly."
Cecil summoned a miniature model of Kaelan's new soul and a glowing "Gacha" beside it. "Your power allows you to summon character cards from your old world—fictional personas from anime, comics, games, movies, you name it. You can roll these cards, then use them to enhance your clone avatars."
"You mean—like, I get a card and become the character?"
"Sort of. You don't become them—your clone fuse with the traits and abilities they represent. And because you have Clone Avatar, you don't have to risk them going rogue or being summoned into existence like typical gacha summons. Instead, your clones absorb the card directly."
Kaelan's eyes gleamed with realization. Then dimmed. "Yeah, but if I can only make one clone, that's not much of a gamechanger."
Cecil held up a finger. "Ah. But who said you're limited to just one?"
Kaelan tilted his head. "...You did?"
"I said you start with one," Cecil corrected, smug. "You can create as many clones as your mana and mind can handle. Over time, with training and growth, you'll unlock more."
Kaelan leaned back slowly, thinking. Then grinned. "Alright. I think I just found my motivation for this new world."
Cecil leaned in, eyes curious. "Oh? Do tell."
Kaelan nodded, excitement blooming in his chest. "I'll keep my main body completely ordinary. Chill. Minding a nice little life. Meanwhile, I'll send my clones out into the world to do all the high-stakes stuff. Heroes, adventurers, bounty hunters, even kings—doesn't matter. I'll be anonymous. They'll be legends. I get to be chill and ambitious."
Cecil's grin nearly cracked the void. "I love that," he said. "Absolutely brilliant. As a token of support… allow me to offer a gift."
He raised his hand and drew a box of light in the air. Inside it formed a cozy, warmly-lit space: wood-paneled walls, bookshelves, and a bar counter with soft lighting. "I've modeled it after a fictional little café from your world… something called Leblanc from Persona 5."
Kaelan tilted his head. "I have no idea what that is… but I like the vibe."
Cecil bowed. "You're welcome."
"Alright," Kaelan said. "Let's wrap this up. Time to talk appearance."
"Go on," Cecil gestured, conjuring a digital character-creation silhouette.
Kaelan raised his finger. "Make me look calm. Strategic. I want long black hair, clean, tied back sometimes. Think Zhuge Liang. A calm tactician type."
"Noted."
"And handsome. Obviously."
"Of course," Cecil nodded, adjusting sliders and cheekbones midair with divine elegance.
Kaelan took a breath. "Done tweaking."
Cecil turned and asked the final question. "And your name?"
Kaelan paused. "I was gonna go with Zoro, but… let's go with Zero instead."
Cecil raised a brow. "Last name?"
"You pick it," Kaelan smile. "I trust you."
Cecil nodded, scribbled something quietly, and gave one last smile. "Then it's done. Zero, reborn of Kaelan Wynn, welcome to the path untaken."
Kaelan—now Zero—smiled for the first time without bitterness.
Cecil raised his hand. The void rippled. Reality began to fold. "May your luck prosper in this life, Zero."
As the light swallowed him whole, Zero called out one last question—half-joking, half-nervous. "Hey, uh—just how dangerous is Aetherion again?"
Cecil gave a shrug and said nonchalantly. "Think DC Comics. Extrapolate that. By a lot."
"Wait, what—?" But the light had already taken him.
Cecil remained, floating in the stillness. He smiled softly to himself and whispered into the now-empty void. "Good luck, Zero."
**A/N**
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**A/N**