Humanity is its own worst enemy. |
Crystalline waters flowed from within the chambers, and the slight trickle of water could be heard bouncing from one wall to the next, making the room seem much larger than it actually was. Moonlight from a window high upon the eastern wall danced upon the waters in a dark prism. A small fountain at one end of the waters created the sound. Other than the high window there were no other entrances. This is the place where time was recycled. I suppose one could say that as the same water was recycled endlessly through the fountain, time was also re-made within this enclosure. It did not literally go through the fountain as the water, the metaphor is not quite that literal, but if one were to somehow make their way into the room they would immediately sense the difference within the place. Were they to somehow make it out of the chamber they would also not recognize the world as it was when they entered. The recycling process within the chamber is much faster than without, and the world would therefore be at a much different stage in its endless cycle. There was an entity that had been around for almost as long as the recycling process. Millions upon millions of rotations, the exact number would probably be too long to successfully write on any type of parchment. The method in which it was able to maintain its existence had to this point in time never been discovered. It never aged. Large black eyes, like the pool itself, peered out from a powerful cat-like body. The movements, when it did move, made the simple feline of the world seem as though they were created to be the most clumsy of animals. Fluidity and power oozed through its body, eyes constantly on the surrounding area. The pool and the tower it resided in stood to the creatures back, at the end of a very tall ravine. The creature, with no known name, had never moved from the ravines edge except to move a foot or two and then resume its statue-like stance, looking out upon the plains beyond. Every few cycles would another creature come, standing on two legs and walking with an incredibly clumsy gait which made the creature cringe inwardly every time it experienced it. Without fail the two legged creature would approach the ravine, subsequently seeing the tower. Eyes opening with surprise they would retreat slightly, only to return shortly after with a few more of their strange species. It was normally at this point in time that they would point and shout something in a strange guttural language, and begin to approach the tower itself. The creature never dwelled on many details past this. After a few moments it would move smoother than water and red stains would dot the green blades beneath its feet, and the ravine would be still again for countless centuries. This is the way things continued for longer than the creature could remember. Just as time was recycled, so too were the events within the universe recycled. The creature did not really know how things changed, or what happened to create the change, but at some point in time strange rolling beasts began to dot the land, and large towers of flowing smoke started to stick out across the horizons. The beast did nothing, just continued to observe as the world changed around it, and more and more of the strange creatures populated the lands. Just because of their enormous numbers, many more of the two legs made their way to the mouth of canyon. The creature did its duty, as always, and redness began to cover the grounds as the years passed on. Soon, however, the air grew heavy and hot, the creature could not breath the freshness of the air as it once had, the purity which allowed it to survive. Its shining black eyes every so slowly began to cloud. The two legs came on relentlessly, their curiosity driven by what they could only imagine lay within the tower. Their numbers endless, and with every rising of the sun the air growing thicker and darker, the creature slowly began to tire. No longer did its movements make that of a normal cat look clumsy. No longer did its eyes see across the vast plain of the world. It began to need to rely on clever strategies to protect that which it was charged. And as the air grew thicker, and its eyes ever worse, those strategies too began to fail. Until one day, the two legged creatures succeeded making it into the ravine. What they had devised for weapons, long sticks with stinging metal balls coming from the ends, could not ultimately kill the creature, but their sheer numbers were simply too many for it to successfully keep them from the entrance. They charged in, their guttural tongues filled with elation and excitement at finally reaching their long sought goal. They brought with them large hunks of metal attached to wooden sticks, and proceeded to smash them into the sides of the tower, slowly cracking and chipping the rocks around the pool. They died at an alarming rate as the creature moved among them, drenching its body in redness as it went from one to the next. But they never stopped. Their drive to know the unknown, and reach out and take anything they could see never let them stop. For days and days the metal slammed into the stone, until it cracked and crumbled completely, allowing the first two leg into the chamber of the pool. Immediately it felt the difference in the air, although at first it was not able to perceive what it actually signified. It never really got the chance to figure it out either. The balance had been disrupted. Time was supposed to flow out the window, and the window allowed a very specific amount of old time to come in, and new time to come out. The process was very precise, and the slightest change was able to throw it completely off balance. Thus, with a hole large enough for a two leg to get through, old time assaulted the chamber. It stormed through the opening, ripping two legs to pieces as though they never existed. All the time in the universe was vacuumed into the tower until there was nothing left. Trees lost their leaves and turned to dust, rivers and lakes slowly dried into deserts, and the mountains were ground to nothing. Only the creature remained, ever watchful, until even it disappeared into nothing. |