Prologue Title on Screen: âUnderstanding Our Godsâ Second Title Appears: âOn the Subject of Worshipâ Disclaimer: First aired 2 months ago. Narrator (Voice-Over):
âIn this segment of our ten-part documentary on the new gods, we delve
into the enigmatic concept of worship. We join Professor Stanley; once
an ostracized professional within the Theological community, since the
ascension of the new gods, scientists and theologians now consider his,
once outlandish, theories and books as the greatest source of
understanding the gods and the universe. He is now a renowned and
respected expert on divine phenomena. We join him in his office for an
insightful discussion.â Scene: Professor Stanleyâs cluttered office, walls lined with books and artifacts related to the gods. Interviewer:
âProfessor Stanley, thank you for joining us. Today, weâre exploring a
crucial aspect of our new gods: their need for worship. Could you shed
some light on this?â Professor Stanley: âThank
you for having me. Worship, you say?â (He kicks up his feet on his desk
and leans back in his chair.) âAh, I love talking worship. Nothing has
changed the world so muchâchanged everyoneâs daily life so muchâthan the
concept of worship. I mean, sure, there are visible gods walking among
us and thatâs shaken everyone to the core. But everyday now, each one of
us prays to a god of our choosing. Who do you worship, by the way?â Interviewer: âOh, to remain impartial in this documentary, Iâd rather not say. Iâm sure you would like to remain impartial and not sayââ Professor Stanley: âGoddess Hailee, all the way. Yâknow, she was a student of mine?â Interviewer: âWe ⌠we know, Professor. Youâve stated that many times already.â Professor Stanley: âI have?â Interviewer: âSo, why is worship so important to these gods?â Professor Stanley:
âWell, imagine suddenly finding out youâre a god. Itâs not all about
throwing thunderbolts or walking on clouds. Itâs more like being the
greatest rockstar ever to exist at a concert, and having the crowds go
wild for who you are. Worship, in this context, is the applause, the
cheers, the standing ovation they crave.â Interviewer: âIt sounds quite emotional.â Professor Stanley:
âSure is. These gods they might be celestial beings now, but they still
have their human origins. Worship to them is like water to a parched
throat. Itâs affirming, reassuring. Without it, theyâd feel like that
great rockstar, but at an empty concert that no one attendedâstanding
tall, but terribly alone.â Interviewer: âIs it fair to say, then, that worship is a source of power for them?â Professor Stanley:
âEh ⌠no.â (He removes his feet from his desk and leans forward.)
âHailee and Iâve worked a lot together. Yâknow, trying to understand
more of her godhood. And Iâm ninety percent sure that worship does not
equal power. From what we gathered through experiments, worship is like
the bond between gods and mortals, the very thread that connects their
divinity with our humanity.â Interviewer: âBut why do they feel this need so deeply?â Professor Stanley:
âWell, think of it like thisâever had a birthday where no one
remembered? Itâs that feeling of being forgotten, multiplied by a cosmic
scale. Theyâve ascended to these great heights, yet what good is it if
thereâs no one to acknowledge it? No one to share it with?â Interviewer: âSo, worship is their way of staying connected with humans?â Professor Stanley:
âPart of it, yes. Itâs not just about being revered; itâs about feeling
seen, feeling linked to the world they once walked as mortals. Worship
is the proof that they matter, not just as gods, but as former humans
who walked among us.â Interviewer: âThatâs a unique way to put it, Professor. It seems worship is more than just a ritual; itâs a lifeline.â Professor Stanley:
âExactly! And without it, well, they might as well be shouting into the
void. Worship is what keeps them tethered, not just to their powers,
but to us, to life itself. You see, power can be cold, impersonal. But
worship? Thatâs warm, itâs personal.â Interviewer: âAnd if they donât get their worship?â Professor Stanley: âEvery god treats non-believers differently, as it affects them differently. Some, more so than others.â Narrator (Voice-Over):
âA compelling insight from Professor Stanley, reminding us that even
gods seek connection. Stay with us as we continue to explore the divine
intricacies in âUnderstanding the New Gods.ââ Title on Screen: âUnderstanding Our Gods - A Documentary Seriesâ Dinner Party âUgh. Letâs try this again.â Nine
tourists, each hailing from different walks of life, enjoying a New
York adventure, made their way to the Brooklyn Bridge where their camera
clicked away as they photographed the brick and steel structure during
sunset. Without warning, their reality shifted abruptly when Melissa
transported them to an entirely different world. Suddenly, they were no
longer the observers, but the observedâshrunken to a mere half-inch
tall. They scurried across a vast expanse of bed, which now seemed like
an endless white desert. Under their feet were pristine Egyptian
white-cotton sheets, threads though magnified, still soft under their
tiny forms. At the onset, it didnât seem like these nine unique
individuals shared any commonality; however, they all shared a silent
bondâeach one was a skeptic of the new gods. They were unconvinced by
that Melissa and her crew were the gods they claimed to be. Now,
ironically, Melissa upended their lives through divine intervention. Melissa
perched herself on the edge of her bed, one leg elegantly extended atop
the mattress, while the other dangled over the side, her bare foot
firmly grounded on the floor. She wore a simple yet charming black dress
with a floral pattern on it; the fabric draped gracefully over her
form, her smooth legs laid bare and her cleavage popping out. âMy
little darlings.â Goddess Melissaâs voice was like rolling thunder. It
rattled their bodies as they ran from her titanic body. âYou know it
hurts me so much when you refuse to believe Iâm god. All Iâm askingâis
for you to believe Iâm god and to devote your souls to me willingly.
Because if you donât, Iâll be forced to take it myself here and now. You
donât want that. I donât want that. Please, Iâm giving you one last
chance.â Her leg on her bed created a barrier to the tiny
non-believers, and her fingers toyed with them, herding them to the
center of the bed. The tiny mortals ran with all their might, trying to
navigate the luxurious sheets. Her leg and foot in the distance looked
like a mountain range. Her fingers deftly and swiftly came down from
above like unpredictable tornados emerging from the heavens. The
miniature people could not stop and rest as her fingers kept them
dashing around her bed alongside her legs. She was like a cat playing
with her prey. âI have a special dinner soon. And I wonât be able
to enjoy my meal, y mi familia, if I have so many non-believers walking
in my neighborhood. Worship me. Devote your souls to me, and I will
forgive you and love youâunconditionally. You will return back where you
came from, and will be free to enjoy your lives. Iâve given you plenty
of chances. Make your last choice, now.â Her last words were
enough for three tourists to stop running and drop to their knees.
Melissa convinced them successfully, and they were sure she was a
goddess and not some maligned freak with powers. Right on her bed, in
her presence, they prayed and devoted their souls to the goddess for all
of eternity. They instantly vanished and returned to the Brooklyn
Bridge, unhurt physically, but a little wiser about challenging the new
gods. There, on the bridge, they bowed their heads and silently thanked
Melissa for their second chance in life. The other stubborn
tourists had their reasons not to believe Melissa was a god. Be it a
strong conviction for the old-world religions, the thought that Melissa
and the others were actually Satan testing humanity, or that they were
something like superheroes with egos so inflated they thought they were
literal gods. Whatever their reasoning, they flat out refused to believe
Melissa, or the others, were gods. But their non-beliefs in the
new gods werenât benign. To Melissa and the other gods, a non-believerâs
presence was like having an un-scratchable itch, a sneeze that would
never come, or an eye twitch that would never cease. A malaise so
annoying, it was the only thing on the minds of a god. And unless they
dealt with the non-believers, it would never go away. This was
especially true for Melissa compared to all the gods. She simply could
notâwould not tolerate non-believers in her over-arching proximity. But
as compassionate as she was, she always gave them a chance to repent;
sometimes multiple chances. Though the conversion rate from non-belief
to belief was extremely slimâthere was always that chance. Three out of
nine was impressive for her latest batch. Melissa plucked a woman
from the crowd between her massive digits and flicked her into her
mouth. âMmm.â She toyed with her flailing body. The tip of her tongue
pressed the woman against the roof of her mouth and ran her against the
ridges there, causing the woman to wail in pain. Melissa swallowed her
while she plucked two more. She daintily placed them on her tongue as if
they were a decadent piece of chocolate. Melissa continued to moan as a
burst of exquisite flavors came rushing out with their fears and
anguish. One mortal slipped under her tongue, while the other rubbed
against her taste buds. Her mouth flooded with saliva. She swished them
around her mouth one last time and swallowed them with her saliva. Suddenly,
there was a knock on her bedroom door. âHoney?â Alejandro asked. He was
about to twist open the doorknob when Melissa looked over, squinted her
eyes, and telepathically locked the bedroom door. âAlmost ready?
Because Carlos says Vanessa is almost here.â He felt the locked door and
resorted to simply speaking through the closed bedroom door. âAlmost done.â Melissa scooped the last three non-believers into her hand. âIâll be right out. Need any help?â âI got it, honey. Dinnerâs almost done.â âSounds good.â Alejandro
walked away, his steps fading down the hallway. Melissa rose to her
towering eight-foot tall stature and padded to the bathroom. After
dipping her head in the doorframe, she dropped the last three
non-believers on her bathroom counter as she looked herself over in the
mirror. She ran her fingers through her hair and noticed one of the tiny
mortals on his hands and knees. âYou know,â she said, âas god, I
can tell if your worship is genuine or not. Trying to humor me with fake
praise is more insulting than not accepting me as god.â Melissa
grabbed the man and tossed him in her mouth like popcorn. He landed in
the back of her throat and tumbled underneath her giant uvula as he
slipped down her throat; she swallowed. His puny form was barely a lump
showing through her slender neck. Finished with her hair, Melissa
adjusted the top of her dress and squeezed her breasts together to
center her cleavage in the plunging neckline of her dress. Satisfied
with her divine appearance, Melissa grabbed the last two non-believers
from the counter and popped them in her mouth. - Melissa
exited the bedroom, her head diving under the doorframe as she entered
the hallway of their two-story apartment. She headed for the stairs and
as she walked by her sonâs room, she could hear him still getting ready
for dinner. Melissa sensed Vanessa was exiting the elevator and only
several paces away from the apartmentâs front door. Goddess Melissa
glided down the stairs, swallowed the two screaming non-believers in her
mouth, and opened the front door before Vanessa could knock. The
goddess looked down at the tiny young woman with a cherishing smile and
stood silently while she clasped her hands together in front of her
hips. In that moment, the two non-believers landed in her stomach and
wailed in pain as her divine stomach acid melted their bodies over the
next excruciating minute. Goddess Melissaâs presence never ceased
to amaze Vanessa. Even putting Melissaâs beauty and stature aside, she
had a divine quality that was hard to pinpoint. Like a glow or aura that
followed her, making her sharply different from mortals. Her mind
blanked as she stood star struck by the goddess. She stood still, taking
in the goddessâs inviting smile and presence, allowing her soul to bond
with the deity before her. Melissa gave her a subtle, encouraging nod. It
was enough to break Vanessaâs trance. Protocols with deities came
rushing back to Vanessa. In an instant, she dropped to the floor, bowed
her head, and recited Melissaâs prayer. Melissa took a deep breath as
she absorbed the worship. âVanessa, thank you for coming,â Melissa said. âLevĂĄntate and give me a hug, honey.â Vanessa
obeyed Melissa and wrapped her arms around the eight-foot tall goddess.
Her eyes were level with Melissaâs navel, prompting Melissa to bend
significantly as if she were hugging a child. Melissaâs embrace felt
loving and welcoming; Vanessa felt her legs grow weak and almost hoped
that Melissa would lift her up so she could take a nap in her arms. The
sound of Carlos running down the stairs and up behind Melissa broke
Vanessaâs fixation on the goddess. âWhatâs going on?â Carlos asked. Melissa
let go of Vanessa and turned to face her son. Vanessa adjusted the
strap to her purse on her shoulder and hooked her hair behind her ear. âMom?â Carlos asked. âDonât tell me you made Vanessa pray to you.â âCarlito, whatâs with that tone?â âDid you seriously make her pray to you just now? Come on, mom. Vanessa is my girlfriend and your guest.â âI didnât make her, she chose to worship me.â Melissa turned and looked down at Vanessa and asked, âisnât that right?â âItâs okay, Carlos,â Vanessa said. âI like worshiping your mom.â âVanessa,
please never say that again. And, Mom, please, my girlfriend doesnât
have to pray to you every time she visits. She should be free to come
and go, without having to kiss the floor at yourâwhy arenât you wearing
any shoes?â Melissa placed one hand on her hip and scratched her head with the other. âMâhijo, why are you so upset? What did I do?â Carlos
ignored his tall mom and walked around her to join Vanessa. He grabbed
his girlfriendâs hand and pulled her into the apartment after slamming
the front door. He dragged Vanessa to the living room while she
nervously looked up at Melissa behind her. âCome on, Vanessa,â he said. âLetâs get this over with.â They
sat on the couch together. Vanessa felt tensions rise as Melissa
followed and sat on the couch opposite of them. Her large posterior
sitting across two couch cushions. Melissa crossed her legs, her
barefoot with black painted nails visible to the couple. She used her
hand to iron out the creases in her dress. Vanessa, feeling the eyes of
both Carlos and Melissa on her, nervously took off her purse and jacket,
setting it to her side on the couch. âThank you for coming, Vanessa,â Melissa said. âIâve been looking forward to having you over.â Vanessa was about to speak, but Carlos interrupted. âAre you making dinner, mom?â âYour dad is.â âDadâs cooking? Youâre making dad cook?â âIâm not making him cook. He wanted to cook.â âBut youâre a god. Canât you just blink us some Michelin-star food instead of making dad slave in the kitchen?â âMâhijo, your dad has been looking forward to cooking this meal. I wonât take that away from him.â Carlos
sat with his arms crossed, looking straight ahead and avoiding
eye-contact with his mother. Vanessaâs eyes shifted from mother to son,
surprised that Carlos could talk to his mother like that and not get
turned into a pillar of salt. âSo, Vanessa,â Melissa said, âhow long have you been dating my son?â âAaand here come the twenty questions.â Carlos said. âMâhijo, is there anything I can do or say that wonât upset you?â Carlos
got up to his feet. âYeah. You can start by changing your clothes.
Youâre my mom, and youâre showing way too much skin. Second, dadâs been
cooking in the kitchen all day. You havenât helped him with anything.
Not even setting up the table. Third, come clean about this dinner, mom.
Admit you just want to use this to interrogate Vanessa. To see if sheâs
worthy of dating godâs son.â Melissa rose to her feet to
match her son, though she loomed over him and everything in the living
room. Vanessa sunk deeper into the couch and trembled at the sight of
Melissaâs annoyed expression. The lights flickered on and off in the
apartment as Melissa took a deep breath. âIâve had this dress
since before I was a god, mâhijo. I used to wear it when your dadâs
parents invited us over to dinner.â Melissa brushed the dress with her
hands and returned to her seat on the couch. âIt still fits after all
these years. I wore this dress tonight, because of what it symbolizes to
me. I think itâs cute watching Vanessa coming to dinner to meet the
parentsâthe same way I did with your dad. That is all. Please, mâhijito,
I just want to have a peaceful dinner as a family. Your dad loves to
host and cook and I wanted to meet the new woman in my sonâs life.
Thatâs it.â Carlos rolled his eyes. âWhatever. Letâs just get this stupid dinner over with.â Vanessa
tugged on Carlosâs arm and said, âPlease donât talk back to your
mother; itâs disrespectful. And it hurts me hearing you talk like that.â Carlos looked at his mother and squinted his eyes. âMom, did you make her say that?â Melissa lifted her arms and gave him an expression like, what did I do? âShe didnât, Carlos,â Vanessa said. And then in a whisper she said, âPlease say sorry to your mom.â Carlos
shook his head and grunted. Without saying a word, he headed to the
kitchen in a huff. That left Melissa alone with Vanessa. Melissaâs cool
attitude and tender smile she gave Vanessa, shocked her. The goddess
remained seated with her legs crossed and her hands folded neatly on her
knees. How could the most powerful, important being in the universe be
so calm after that episode with her son? âGoddess?â âYes, Vanessa?â âI
was wondering âŚâ Vanessa rubbed her hands together as she fidgeted on
the couch. âI canât explain it. But I really want to get on the floor
and worship you.â âOh, honey.â Melissaâs smile never faded. She
looked over her shoulders and towards the kitchen before looking down at
Vanessa. âI would love that, but if Carlos saw youâheâd blame me for
making you worship me.â Vanessa nodded silently and her eyes shifted down to the bottom corner. In
a whisper, Melissa said, âOh, honey, I can tell you really want to. How
can I deny a mortal a chance to pray to their god? Okay, quickly,
before anyone sees. Crawl on the floor here. In front of my feet. Thatâs
it. Okay, good. You may worship me.â Melissa leaned back on the couch.
She grabbed a glass of red wine floating in the air next to her and
drank, as she felt Vanessaâs intoxicating devotion envelop her. - Carlos
burst into the kitchen as his dad was pulling out the roast chicken
from the oven. He wore an apron and had oven mitts on. His tablet played
music while he zipped around the kitchen, preparing each dish. âDad, what did mom tell you about this dinner?â âHello to you too, mâhijo.â âCome on, dad. Whatâs mom up to?â âI really donât know what youâre talking about. Weâre just having dinner together. Finally. As a familia.â âThatâs
right! We never have family dinners together, but now she conveniently
has time for her family? Itâs because my girlfriend is here. Thatâs the
only reason sheâs here.â âI guess your girlfriend should come
around more, huh?â Alejandro pulled out two chickens out of the roasting
pan and placed them on a plate to rest. He then checked on the Spanish
rice and corn he was boiling. An emergency notification popped on his
tablet. Once he was temporarily free of cooking, he checked the message.
âOh, boy. Look at that.â âSomething wrong?â Carlos asked, growing concerned as his dad looked at his tablet despondently. âLooks like Alex and Brad. Los Angeles this time.â âLos Angeles? What is it?â âItâs
a city in California, but thatâs not important right now. Looks like
Alex and Brad made a little mess downtown. Promise me you wonât google
it later. These pictures are a little graphic.â âGoddamn ⌠gods.â Carlos shook his head. âWill mom ever do anything about those two?â âIâll talk to her about it. Do everyone a favor and donât bring them up at dinner, okay?â - The
only sounds coming from the dinner table were the clinking and
clattering of cutlery on plates. The absence of conversation spoke to
the tension hanging heavily in the air. Melissa, still eight-feet tall,
sat at one end of the table. Alejandro sat across from her. Carlos to
her left and Vanessa to her right. The table was decorated with a white
cloth, candles, and two small vases with flowers from the Netherlands. Melissa
had a large serving plate in front of her. She had one of the roasted
chickensâthe whole chicken on her plate, surrounded by rice and two ears
of corn and several slices of toast. Already forgetting about the
non-believers she ate earlier, her new meal piled on top of their tiny
remains in her stomach. âThis is great, sir,â Vanessa said to Alejandro. âDelicious as always, honey.â Melissa used a ladle to scoop a generous amount of rice into her mouth. Carlos played with his food and didnât look up to either of his parents. Melissa
drank from a liter-sized wine glass, making it look tiny in her hands,
and washed down her dinner with the red liquid. âVanessa, I sense you
have some burning questions for me.â Vanessa set her fork down and patted her lips with her white napkin. âUmm, yeah. if itâs okay.â âWhat are they, honey? Donât be shy.â âJust wondering aboutâthe afterlife?â âWhat about it?â âIs there a hell?â âYup.â Melissa bit into a drumstick and ripped the meat off with her pristine teeth. âFour of âem, actually.â âFour?â âHmm. Yeah. Each god has a heaven and hell realm they rule over. My heaven is primo heaven.â Melissa made an okay
gesture with her fingers. âFluffy clouds, beautiful landscapes.
Everyone lives in their dream homes and spends time on their favorite
hobbies. Babe,â she said to Alejandro, âI have a special mansion saved
for you on top of a mountain overseeing a waterfall and jungle. It is
breathtaking.â âWell, I canât wait to die.â Alejandro smirked. âWhatâs hell like?â Vanessa asked with deep concern. âOh,
honey, donât worry about it. Youâre not going to hell. My standards are
pretty low for heaven. At least if you compare me to all those wacky
mythical gods humans made up.â She lifted a finger with every point she
made. âOne, be a devout worshiper to me. Two, live a just life on earth.
That means no murdering, no violent crimes, donât make life harder for
others. You know, common sense stuff.â âDevote worshiper?â âAbsolutely.
I donât care how âgoodâ of a person you think you are, if you donât
worship me or the other godsâstraight to hell you go.â Carlos spoke up and said, âYou guys are pretty full of yourselves, huh?â âWe are gods, mâhijo. Us creating and running the afterlife doesnât mean weâre full of ourselves, it just means we serve a role that can be difficult for humans to comprehend.â âBut
why do people have to worship you, huh?â Carlos asked. âYouâre willing
to send a good person to hell, just âcause they donât pray to you?
Sounds pretty fucking narcissistic to me.â âWatch your language,
Carlos,â Alejandro said, his dad-voice making Vanessa bounce in her
seat. âDo not speak to your mother that way.â âHow can you defend
her, dad? She sends people to hell just âcause they donât worship her?
How mentally insane is that? How do you let your fucking powers get to
your head andââ Carlos vanished from the dinner table
mid-sentence. Alejandro and Vanessaâs neck snapped towards Melissa. The
goddess appeared calm and content. She grabbed a bottle of her favorite
Costco wine and poured it into her oversized wine glass, but the bottle
was empty. With that, she grabbed the pitcher of water and poured it
into her glass, the liquid transforming to wine as she did so. âHoney,
youâve outdone yourself with dinner. It was so good.â Melissa left
nothing but bones on her plate. She let out a burp she tried to conceal
in her napkin. âWhat did you do with Carlos?â Alejandro asked. âDonât
worry about him. Heâs safe. Heâs obviously upset about something and
has been taking it out on me all night. Once heâs cooled off, Iâll bring
him back.â âBut honey, what did you do with him?â Melissa shot her husband an icy stare. âSorry, honey,â Alejandro said as he drank from his own glass of wine. âHoney, can you go wait in the kitchen? I want to speak to Vanessa in private.â Alejandro
nodded in agreement. Before excusing himself, he grabbed Carlosâs
unfinished plate and his own. He took the dishes to the kitchen, letting
the swinging kitchen door close behind him. Vanessa couldnât look up at
Melissa. There was something so uneasy about Melissaâs calm demeanor
that it made Vanessa squirm in her seat. âSpill it,â Melissa said. âExcuse me, goddess?â Melissa
cocked her head and looked down at the petrified girl. She leaned over
and placed her enormous hand on top of hers. Melissaâs thumb gently
stroked her tiny fingers. Vanessa looked up into Melissaâs probing eyes
and felt naked under her gaze. âNo need to be afraid, honey,â Melissa said. âIâm still waiting for you to ask that burning question you have.â No
matter how soothing the goddessâs voice was, no matter how comforting
her words, Melissaâs presence terrified Vanessa. The goddess had the
power to smite her, claim her soul, and choose a myriad of ways to
torture her for all eternity. How could that not be terrifying to everyone? âMy parents.â There was a long pause as Vanessaâs bottom lips quivered. âGo on.â âTheyâre non-believers.â Melissa pulled her hand back and sat back in her chair. She grabbed her wineglass and downed the rest. âThatâs a shame.â âI was wondering, Goddess Melissa, if theyâre destined to hell because of their beliefs?â âYou already know the answer to that.â Melissa sipped on her wine. âYes, butââ âBut
what? They either devote themselves to a god or theyâre damned for
eternity.â Melissa saw Vanessa wince and tear up. âHoney, I donât mean
to sound so harsh, but thatâs the honest truth.â âIs there anything I can do? Can you make an exception for them? Just this one time?â âNo exceptions. And all you can do is try to convince them before itâs too late.â âToo
late? Please, Goddess? I beg you!â Vanessa pushed her seat back and
dove to the floor. She crawled on her hands and knees over to Melissaâs
feet under the table. âPlease, Goddess, please! Donât send my parents to
hell.â Melissa allowed the young woman to kiss and grovel at her feet for several moments as she enjoyed her wine. âVanessa, get up.â Though Vanessa stood up, and Melissa was still in her seat, Melissa still towered over her. âItâs my turn to ask you a burning question. Is that okay?â âYes, Goddess.â âWhy are you dating my son?â Vanessaâs
eyes snapped shut, her face had an expression of someone caught
red-handed. Her knees gave way, trembling under the weight of her
nervousness. As she twisted at the hips, attempting to turn away from
the goddess, Melissa grasped her hands and anchored her in place. Caught
up in the moment, Vanessaâs breath hitched, causing her to gasp
awkwardly. âVanessa, Vanessa, I think I already know the answer. I
hope Iâm wrong, but I know Iâm not. Please come clean with me. Why are
you dating my son?â Vanessaâs lips moved, but no words came out. âBecause his mother is a goddess, right? Youâre dating him because of who he is, in relation to me.â Vanessa nodded. âAnd
you thought if you got close to him, youâd get close to me? Which is
true. You got pretty close to me.â Melissa pulled Vanessa delicately
close to her for emphasis. âYou thought, maybe if I liked you, Iâd make
an exception for your parents? Is that how you planned things in your
head?â Vanessa nodded. Streams of tears traced down both cheeks. âYou
might think Iâm in your head, honey; crawling in your mind and using my
powers to know what youâre going to say before you say it. But Iâm not.
I donât use my powers to read other peopleâs minds. So, I need you to
talk right now. Come clean with me. Do you even want to be my sonâs
girlfriend?â âNo.â Vanessaâs admittance felt like a heavy weight
off her shoulder. To finally admit something sheâs been holding back all
these months. âI like him as a friend. Just not that way.â âYou slept with my boy, though, right?â âYes.â âThat
means you slept with someone you donât like, so that you can come close
to meâclose to me, just to ask if I can permit your non-believing
parents a pardon. My number one law. A law Iâve never left go
unpunished.â Lightning struck outside. âAnd what did this cost, Vanessa?
Was betraying my son worth it?â Melissaâs eyes glowed white with anger.
The audacity of this mortal. The incredible favors she was asking after
betraying her sweet little boy. Vanessa was only a snap-of-the-fingers
away from disintegrating into nothingness. âPlease, Goddess Melissa, donât kill me.â Melissa,
still gripping Vanessaâs hands, gave her another tug so that the girl
could face her. âLook at me.â Tears flooded Vanessaâs eyes, blurring her
vision. âThink about the position you placed me in, Vanessa. He hates
that Iâm a god. Iâm always getting blamed for every little thing that
goes wrong in his life. And when he finds out about you, and how you
used himâheâll probably never talk to me again!â Melissa released her
grip from Vanessa. The young woman dropped to the floor and resumed praying at Melissaâs feet. She kissed her toes as she asked for forgiveness. âWhat do you even expect me to do, Vanessa?â âPlease donât smite me.â âWell,
first things first, youâre going to tell my son the truth. Ugh, I wonât
hear the end of this. Second, Iâm going to meet your parents. I would
love to shake hands with the people that raised a manipulative
daughter.â âYou wonât kill them, will you?â âTheyâre non-believers, honey. Of course I will.â âPlease,
Goddess, please, please! Iâll do anything! Please spare them. Iâm sorry
for everything Iâve done. Iâm sorry they donât believe. But. But. But
youâre the benevolent goddess, right? You can forgive them. You can
forgive me!â âUgh, you had to pull that âbenevolent goddessâ card, didnât you?â Melissa
leaned back in her seat and drank her wine. She splayed out her toes
and motioned for Vanessa to continue kissing and worshiping. Despite her
heavy meal, her stomach was empty, and she was looking forward to
consuming Vanessaâs parents as dessert, but what Vanessa said was really
bothering her. Melissa did a lot for the world. She reduced crime in
New York; she helped the needy, cured blindness, and removed diseases.
All she asked for in return was devout worship and commitment of oneâs
soul for eternity. Was that too much? âI cannot allow your parents
to continue living as non-believers,â Melissa said. âThey have to
decide themselves to repent. As for you, you betrayed my son. Slept with
him and pretended to be his girlfriend just to ask me a favor. On top
of all this, you want me to be benevolent.â âPlease, Goddess Melissa.â Vanessa quaked uncontrollably on the floor before the goddessâs feet. Melissa
grappled with her options in her mind. Could she show leniency? Show
compassion? But what message would that send to the world? Betrayal of
her family is âokayâ because sheâll just forgive them in the end? There
were so many other sins Melissa could turn the other cheek on. But
non-belief? She never forgave that sin, and she wouldnât start with
Vanessaâs parents. Especially after using her son like that. Melissa
used her toe to lift Vanessaâs chin. âHereâs what Iâll do. I give
everyone a chance, but Iâll give your parents something Iâve never given
before. 24 hours to start worshiping a god, preferably me, or Iâll end
their lives and doom them to hell forever. Iâve neverâeverâgiven anyone
that kind of leniency before. As for you, you will tell my son the truth
about how you used him. I hope you understand how great of a deal this
is for you, Vanessa. Now tell me, what are your plans after graduation?â âThank you. Goddess, thank you so much! I ⌠Iâm going to university. I got accepted toââ âOh, honey. You wonât be going anywhere.â Melissa had an expression that was a mix of faux anguish and playful teasing. âHuh?â âYouâre
going to be my personal servant for the rest of your life. Does that
sound good? I mean, you said youâll do anything for your parents,
right?â Melissa asked with puppy dog eyes. Vanessa stopped crying and looked up at the goddess in disbelief. âLike
you said, Iâm benevolent, right? So, Iâll give you 24 hours with your
parents. Try to convince them to worship me. Regardless of the outcome,
Iâll come to collect you. That sounds fair, right? After all the
terrible things youâve done to me and my son. And the incredible
leniency Iâm giving your parentsâthatâs only fair, right?â Vanessa hesitated, but nodded in agreement. Her tears smeared the makeup across her face. âGood.â
Melissa took a deep breath and let it out slowly. âThank you, Vanessa.
You really helped me control my emotions. I was pretty close to
snapping, but your worshiping and words really put things into
perspective. Okay, off you go to Carlos.â With Melissaâs last words, Vanessa vanished. - Vanessa
fell into a darkened room. The air was musty and thick with the odor of
worn leather and oils. The room felt expansive, like an airport hanger,
and the ground felt fibrous, like thick papyrus. There was something
looming beside her, soaring high overhead and extending off into the
distance. âCarlos? You in here?â she asked while repeatedly shouting Carlosâs name. Over time, her eyes adjusted to the dark and details surrounding her came into focus. âOh, this is fine.â She
was in Melissaâs shoe box. A shoe box that was also occupied with the
goddessâs black high-heels. She guessed she was probably less than a
quarter inch. Just the soles of Melissaâs shoes loomed over her. Vanessa
remembered back in school when Carlos used to complain about being
shrunk and sent to the shoe box as punishment. He used to call it his
celestial prison. âCarlos!â Over the next ten minutes,
Vanessa walked around the shoe box without finding Carlos. Did the
goddess send her to the wrong shoe box? Did Carlos find a way out? Heâs
spent time in the shoe box before. Maybe he had a way out. Vanessa sat
on the toe section of Melissaâs high-heels. The surrounding odor didnât
bother her, but it wasnât exactly the most pleasant thing either. She
buried her head in her knees and wondered where Carlos went, or if this
was a huge tease from the goddess. How was she going to come clean with
Carlos if he wasnât there? Melissaâs Duel âTheyâre
just like the other beings weâve dealt with. Cretins unworthy to wield
godâs powers. Their minds never exploring or peering at life outside
their planet. They are so self-absorbed, so myopic, they play with
mortals like toys, no different from a child in a sandbox. Their minds,
unable to punch through the upper-levels of their atmosphere. All they
care about is playing with their civilization.â âTheyâre the most
pitiful race weâve met so far,â the second demon said. âThese humans
think theyâre the only life in the universe. They do not know whatâs
coming, haha.â The demons took on human male appearances. They
wore pinstripe suits with raincoats; their collars popping up to shield
the scales running down the back of their necks. Glasses hid their
yellow eyes and gloves covered their blackened, pointy nails. They stood
in Manhattan, in Times Square, far away enough for Goddess Melissa to
not sense them. The first demon said, âthe humans theyâve chosen
to be gods are deeply flawed, consumed by their own human weaknesses.
Itâs almost laughable how easy itâs been to manipulate the male and that
female with wings. Just the slightest push, the tiniest suggestion, and
they copulate as giants on top of their grand cities. Theyâll
extinguish their civilization for us, without us lifting a finger.
Vanity and ignorance are our greatest allies. Imagine these mortals, who
barely understand their own world, now playing with forces they canât
control. Itâs a recipe for self-destruction.â âShould we alert the Worldeater?â âWe
neednât rush the Worldeater. I think we can unravel each of these
supposed gods with the simple pull of the string. In their downfall,
theyâll hand us godâs power on a silver platter,â the first demon said. âSo what are we doing here?â âAlexandra
and Brad are the easiest gods to manipulate. Let their lust for each
other destroy humanity. Hailee, weâll use her lover and the one they
call Grace. I guarantee sheâll hand us her godly powers if we give her a
lover. Melissa ⌠sheâll be a tough nut to crack.â âSheâs obsessed with her family? We should kill them.â âSheâs not obsessed with her family.â âThen what?â âSheâs obsessed with mortals worshiping her. And thatâs my plan.â - âHey
honey, anything the matter?â Alejandro asked. He was sitting on the
kitchen counter, his tablet in his hands. His eight foot tall wife
ducked into the kitchen and padded over to him. She leaned in and gave
him an oversized kiss. âDo you think Iâm a âbenevolentâ goddess?â âOoh,
do I ever.â Alejandro set his tablet down beside him, spread his legs,
grabbed either side of Melissaâs waist, and pulled her close to him for a
tight embrace. Her well-endowed chest squeezing into his tiny form. Her
warmth, her scent, as intoxicating as the day they first kissed. âYou
are the most powerful person in the world. You can literally have anyone
you want; any life you want. And yet, here you are with me. Iâm not
even worthy to share the same space with you. Not tall enough or
handsome enough to share a selfie with you. Iâm a nobody with barely any
courage to look you in the eyes. And thatâs how I felt on our wedding
day. And look at you now. Beautiful and kind as ever. Still married to
this nobody. Benevolent doesnât even begin to describe you, honey.â âAww, honey. Youâre not just saying that?â Alejandro took her massive hand and placed it on his chest, over his heart. âYou tell me.â Melissa
took in a long breath and felt the love overflowing her husbandâs heart
and pouring over her hand. She leaned in again and gave him a wet kiss.
They both embraced, their arms exploring each otherâs bodies. Melissa
pulled Alejandro close to her and squeezed the air out of his lungs. He
didnât mind it in the slightest. His hands gracefully played with her
breast and failed to reach over her buxom ass. After several
moments of passionate kissing, it smoothly transitioned to pecking and
nibbling of each otherâs ears and necks. Between breaths, Melissa said,
âyouâre not lucky to be with me.â âEh?â âIâm lucky to be with you.â Their
kissing ramped up tenfold. Melissa man-handled Alejandro and slid him
across the kitchen counter. They knocked over dishes, pots, and pans.
Melissaâs enormous hand slipped between his legs, finding his erection
fighting through his jeans. Her hands grabbed the waist of the jeans and
pulled them apart. His fly and button, tearing as if they were made of
wet napkins. She pulled down his boxer briefs, revealing his throbbing
member. With no sign other than a hungry, lust-filled expression, Melissa lowered her massive head and took his member into her mouth. âHoly shit,â he said, before moaning uncontrollably. His legs twitching from the divine feeling. âItâs not even my birthday.â The
tip of Melissaâs tongue played with his balls while the rest of his
cock was inside her mouth. The tip of his penis ran along the ribbed
ceiling of her mouth, giving Alejandro sensations he didnât know
existed. His hands were on the back of her head, which was about the
size of a pillow, and he pulled her into her. He could feel her breaths
on his waist, and his bones vibrating as she moaned. Her tongue, longer
than his member, explored his sensitive areas and found pleasurable
nerve endings he didnât know existed. Melissa would then tightly
purse her lips around his member and suck him like a popsicle. Alejandro
cried out, thinking for a second that sheâd blow his cock off. She
sensed when he came close to blowing his loads and manipulated her mouth
to make him last longer. Melissa edged him for several minutes. He was
sweating with a heart beating a mile a minute. His member was swollen
red and ready for release. Melissa gave him one more popsicle suck, and
that was enough to set him off like a geyser into her mouth. Melissa
gobbled his seed and licked up and down his cock like an ice cream cone. âMi
amor,â Alejandro said. His wife had completely sucked his energy and
his balls dry. He fought to stay balanced on the kitchen counter and
keep his head up. He spoke in short bursts between his heavy breaths. âI
love you so much.â âMy turn, mi amor.â - âWorshipers, what an asinine concept. For one, only a human with no imagination could come up with such a concept,â one demon said. âNo shortage of Melissaâs worshipers here, boss.â The
demons were wreaking havoc in Times Square. There was a lot of
commotion between people, crowds gathering and fleeing, and many asking
what was happening. There were no gunshots, loud bangs, or anything that
would suggest an attack. But the large throngs of people with panic on
their faces only panicked others. âAre you a Melissa worshiper?â the demon asked. âNo,â a random citizen said. The
demon would then point his clawed hand at the human, causing the human
to inexplicably internally combust into flames. They would scream until
their internal organs melted. Then their bodies would liquify into a
smoldering pile of tissue and fat; congealing into a mass about the size
of a manhole cover on the ground, flames eating away at whatever was
left. If the demons encountered someone claiming to be a
Melissa-worshiper, theyâd handcuff them and add them to the chain of
humans they had on a leash. Soon, the two demons had twenty humans they
were tugging on a leash. Many stood clear of the demons and looked on
with morbid curiosity. Few people actually left and evacuated Times
Square. Police and other authority figures that attempted to intervene
turned into a pile of smoldering goo under their touch. If these
were pre-ascension days, people wouldâve lost their minds witnessing
these physics-breaking powers. But in the days where a jilted lover
could grow herself to 30,000 feet to terrorize a commercial plane, or
monolithic Pantheon standing in rural Texasâthis spectacle in Times
Square seemed rather tame. The demonsâstill unknown as demons to
the populaceâtook their captured humans to the dead center of the
square. They kicked the walls of a wooden crate with playbills plastered
all over it, and revealed a white, oval, metallic object. The demons
then got to work, strapping metallic collars to each human and then
tying them to the white object. âDo not reveal who we are to the goddess,â the first demon said to the other. âOr youâll ruin the plan. Follow my lead.â The demon pulled out a cell phone and called Goddess Melissa. - Goddess
Melissa sat back on her couch, her head leaning so far back that she
was looking up at the ceiling. She was taking quick, raspy breaths. A
moan escaped between her lips and her eyelids fluttered as another
climax exploded deep in her, radiating outwards. As her husbandâs love
for her engulfed her, her skin blazed, radiating a fiery glow. Her
phone rang. âWhat the fuck?â It was on the coffee table next to her
feet. Her toes curled with every orgasm she experienced. She reached for
her phone and pressed the âend callâ button and resumed relaxing on the
couch. The phone rang again. âHow the hââ Melissa picked up
the phone and looked at it closely. It said it was from an unknown
number. It was rather odd to receive a call from an unknown number since
only the other gods, Alejandro, and her son, had the number. A
celestial whitelist on her phone shouldâve prevented any unapproved
phonecalls. âWho is this?â Melissa asked. She had one hand on her phone to her ear, and the other hand between her legs. âGoddess⌠Melissa.â
The voice was coarse, deep and sounded like it came from a dark wizard
from a fantasy film. âAre you enjoying your momentary stay as a god?â Melissa looked back at her phone, brought it back to her ear, and asked, âWhat are you talking about? Who are you?â âYou can say Iâm a bit of a truth-seeker. I have a fun game for us to play, Melissa.â âI donât have time for games with mortalsââ âI am no mortal, Melissa.â The way the demon said her name was like a snake. The S sound hissing over the phone as he drew out the pronunciation. âAnd youâve known Iâm no mortal since I spoke my first words.â âGet to the point. Why are you calling me?â âPlay
a little game, Melissa. That is all. A little test of your divinity to
prove youâre unworthy, unfit, unsuitable, irredeemably irresponsible for
wielding such great power! You are no god. And I will prove it
to all humans. And expose what you really are. An unremarkable mother
from a shithole neighborhood, who lacked confidence to even drive a car,
let alone drive an entire civilization. Now, granted the power of the
universe, you let it go to waste on pitting, meaningless mortal issues.
Youââ âOkay, I get it, Jesus fuck. Iâll play your stupid game, if itâll just make you shut up.â âGood. Come to Times Square. No funny stuff, Melissa. One wrong move from you, and Iâll level Manhattan and destroy all of New York City. Understand?â The demon didnât wait for an answer and hung up. Melissa
tossed the phone on the other side of the couch and fished for her
husband out of her pussy. Alejandro was doll-sized and saturated in her
sexual juices. âHoney, something came up.â Melissa placed him on
the floor and returned him to normal-size. She walked over to the front
door and slipped on her Chuck Taylors. Alejandro wiped his wifeâs
viscous fluids from his eyes, which ended up re-sizing with him.
âThereâs something funny going on in Manhattan.â âIs it serious?â he asked. As he walked, her juices dried and stiffened his clothes. âI
donât know. Probably just a prank from one of the gods. Iâll be back
soon. Oh, before I forget.â Melissa took a deep breath before she said,
âI shrunk Carlos and his girlfriend. Theyâre both in my shoebox with the
black heels you like. Vanessa lied about liking Carlos, and only faked a
relationship with him, so she could ask a favor from me, sparing her
parents that are committing a sin against me every day. She slept with
Carlos, but that was only to gain his trust. I told Vanessa to come
clean with Carlos. Theyâve been in the shoebox for the last half-hour,
so I can only imagine how mad they are at me. Let them out when you can.
Bye!â âThe fuck?â - Melissa teleported herself to
Times Square in her Pantheon height of 150-feet tall. She floated over
the square and looked for an empty area to land. The crowds in the
square quickly made space for the gigantic goddess, allowing her to step
onto the road, crushing no one. The sea of people parted before
Melissa, creating a path leading towards the center of the square where a
duo of mysterious figures held the city hostage. Melissa walked over to them, careful not to tread on anyone under her black and white Converse. It
was a peculiar scene. 30 humans with metallic collars around their
necks were hooked up to a white sphere that was reminiscent of those
1950s style atomic bombs. Two men in pinstripe suits and sunglasses
stepped forward in front of the hostages to greet the goddess. Melissa
planted her feet next to each other and looked down at the creatures
that didnât feel human to her. âYou the one that called?â âYes.â âWhat is this? What are you doing?â âWhy, this is the game, Melissa.â Almost
every news media outlet was in Times Square. Dozens of tripods with
cameras littered the square. Reporters spoke frantically into their
microphones as they covered the unfolding events. News vans with their
antennas sticking out were far in the rear. Police were trying to push
the crowds back. Worshipers, including those chained up at the neck,
fell to their knees to worship Melissa. âIs that what I think it is?â Melissa pointed at the sphere. âIf
you thought, 50-megaton atomic bomb, youâd be partially correct. For
this is a tamper-proofâor should I say, deity-proof, 50-megaton atomic
bomb. It can glass all of Manhattan, destroying New York City, and
devastating Northeast America. Millions will die in a split second.
Millions over the next few weeks. And millions more over decades.
Marvelous invention, really.â âOkay, and?â âNot compassionate, are you? Donât care that the lives of millions are at risk?â âI can easily protect everyone from an a-bomb, a-hole. What weak game are you trying to play?â âI guess the deity-proof part didnât click in your head, Melissa.â
The demon in disguise waved his arm out and did a pirouette as he
hopped towards Melissaâs sneaker-clad feet. âEven your powers are
incapable of disarming, teleporting, shielding, moving, vanishing, or
tampering this bomb in any way. And as an added safeguard, I hold a
dead-man switch.â He lifted his gloved hand to reveal something that
looked like a pen, with his thumb over the cap. âIf I let go of this
button, the bomb goes off.â Times Square was silent. Even the ads
that ran incessantly on billboards and buildings were muted. Only the
howl of the winds going through buildings was audible. Melissa had her
arms crossed as she took in what this thing said. She only considered it a thing, because it was definitely not mortal. If it were celestial, it was something beyond her comprehension. Where these two things
stood, all she could sense was a void. No soul. No presence. It
reminded her of that encounter she had on the cruise days ago. An entity
that eluded her godly senses. âWhy would you do this?â Melissa asked, fear absent in her voice. âWhy threaten millions of innocent lives?â âBecause I want something.â His fingers twirled. Melissa
looked over at the bomb. Just like the two men, there was a void where
the object stood. Like a celestial blackhole. There was no way her
powers could reach out and interact with the object. For the first time,
traces of apprehension seeped into her. âWhat do you want?â Melissa asked. âTo play my game!â Melissa bit her lips and shut her eyes as her patience waned. âWhat is this game?â âThought
youâd never asked.â The man skipped to the bomb with 30 people tied to
it. âThese mortals claim they are your devout worshipers. If they all
publically recant their devotion to you and the other godsâmaking them
non-believers as you put itâand you harvest each of their souls in your
trademark fashion, Iâll disarm the bomb. If not, the bomb will explode.â âMy options are, kill 30 people, or kill an entire city?â âNo,
no, they have to choose to stop worshiping you. And then you eat them.
That is what you do with non-believers, right?â The man looked at a
nearby news camera. âOh, did I spill some awful secret about the
goddess? Not everyone knows you eat non-believers, Melissa? Are you ashamed, maybe?â âThis is your pinche game? Make 30 people stop worshiping me, so I can punish them and save the city?â âWhat
makes you so sure theyâll stop worshiping you? If they die now, they go
to heaven. If they recant their devotion to you ⌠they go to hell for
all eternity. Your rules, not mine. Do you think all 30 will recant
their love for the benevolent goddess? Go to hell for eternity so that others may live? Or let everyone die, to guarantee their entry to heaven?â A
text message came in on Melissaâs phone. She pulled it out of her dress
and quickly glanced at it. It was from Alejandro and said, âcanât find
Carlito anywhere.â âI think I know what that message says.â The
man skipped to the crowd chained to the atomic bomb. Out he pulled
Carlos. He had a metal collar like the others. âThe game will last for
ten minutes. If they ALL donât agree to go recant their worship to you,
and you eating them all in public, the bomb will go off.â The
other man pressed a button, and a counter popped up on every billboard
in Times Square. Ten minutes was counted down in bold red print. The
first man lifted his hand up with the dead-man switch and gave it a
jiggle. - Melissa felt an unfamiliar sensation since her
ascension to godhoodâher heart dropping to the pit of her stomach. Below
her, amidst the vast crowd of Times Square, her sonâs eyes met hers,
filled with terror and silent pleas for help. She took a moment, slowly
blinking, eyes shifting around the square, trying to fully grasp the
situation unfolding before her. The creatures orchestrating this
crisis were unknown to her, their motives not entirely clear, and their
willingness to carry out their morbid threats a mystery. However, their
non-mortal nature, coupled with the bombâs celestial-lead shielding,
left no room for doubt. This threat seemed too real, and it demanded her
full attention. People filled Times Square as if it was New
Yearâs Eve. Countless cameras continued broadcasting her every move live
across the globe. The world was watching, waiting for her response;
everyone at home wondering how the goddess would handle the situation. Melissaâs
mind raced back to her days as a police officer. She had been in tense
situations before, but nothing like this. Could she teleport the bomb
away? No, it was impossibleâthe bomb was immune to her powers, as a
ghost to human touch. What about a protective bubble, strong enough to
contain a 50-megaton blast? The creatures had claimed it wouldnât work.
Siding with caution, she quickly dismissed that option. The more
she considered the bombâs resistance to her powers, the more it seemed
she had been skillfully backed into a corner. The choices were
unthinkable: allow the bomb to detonate, killing millions including her
family, or force the hostages to renounce their faith, condemning their
souls to hell. Neither was acceptable. Her son, her husband, and
innocent lives were at stake. There had to be another way out. Doubts
crept into her mind. Were the creatures right in their scathing
assessment of her? Was she truly not worthy of her divine status, or was
she just a pretender about to be unmasked before the entire world? Her
gaze shifted quickly between the key elements of this dire
situationâher son, the bomb, the malevolent creatures. Did they really
think of everything? They were awfully confident in their plans. Perhaps
⌠âMâhijito!â Melissa said. âWhy arenât you in timeout? I sent you to your room like thirty minutes ago.â All eyes in Times Square, including the demons, shifted to Carlos. Carlosâs
head popped back, not expecting his motherâs words. He looked around
and saw that the news cameras and the entire crowd were all focusing on
him. He looked up at his towering mother, accustomed to seeing her in
her gargantuan height, and groaned, âmom,â with a wavering voice. âDonât âmomâ me. I sent you to timeout, and you got yourself kidnapped. Havenât I taught you better?â âI
just showed up here. Those dudes grabbed me out of nowhere. I was at
the dinner table one second, and the next, I was chained up.â Melissa shifted her gaze to the creatures. âIs this true?â The
demon looked at his companion and let out a laugh with the shake of the
head. âNine minutes left, and this is how you intend to use it. We took
your son, imprisoned him under your nose, and you didnât notice him
until we brought him up. Hear that humans? The one you worshipâthe one
you call godâcanât even detect when her son goes missing. Some goddess. I await your next move, Melissa. I know you sense it, as do I. Your worshipers are abandoning you. They recant their devotion to you. Eat them, Melissa. Eat the non-believers and save the city!â âDonât
anybody dare stop worshiping me. You might think youâre saving the
city, but you must maintain your faith in me.â She looked at Carlos with
her last words. âAmazing,â the demon said. âMarvelous creatures,
humans are. So, self-absorbed. Youâd rather level a city than lose a
worshiper?â âIâd rather them maintain their faith in me. Faith that I, as their god, will protect them.â The demon laughed. âThat is rich. Of all the gods Iâve tested ⌠Never have I met such an arrogant species. Even for a god, you are irreparably egotistic.â âWhat makes youâor anyone hereâthink I canât bring everyoneâs life back after the bomb goes off?â âCan
you? Have you ever brought the dead back to life? You havenât. You
donât know if you can do it. And you especially donât know if you can
bring back millions. Nice try, Melissa. The only way our game ends is by our rules.â Melissa shook her head with a smirk. âYou got me. You tiny, little pendejos thought of everything, havenât you?â âWe
have.â The demon smiled widely and adjusted his tie. He looked at his
partner and gave him a wink. The timer dropped below five minutes. Those
chained to the bomb recanted their beliefs in hopes the goddess would
save the city. âFeel that Goddess Melissa? More and more have given up on you. They know youâre no true goddess.â âThey
havenât given up on me. They think sacrificing themselves is the noble
option here.â She then faced the hostages with collars and said, âIt
isnât the right choice. You donât want to go to hell for an eternity.
Donât lose faith in me, children.â The demon shrugged. âLooks like weâre seeing this all the way through.â âNot afraid to die?â Melissa asked. âNo. We wonât be affected, nor would you.â âMom!â Carlos said. âYou have to save the city. Just sacrifice us already.â âMâhijo, I will not. And none of you better stop worshiping me.â âMom!
What the fuck? Thatâs what you care about? Worshiping? Theyâre just
doing the âtrolley problemâ on you. We all know the answer. Itâs better
to kill a few to save the many.â âCarlito, you have to stop using curse words with me.â âSeriously?
Who gives a fuck about that right now? New York is about to get
vaporized. You have to save it. Sacrifice us to save millions.â âI will not tolerate any mortals, and that goes for you, too, mâhijo, in losing faith in me.â Carlos
broke down, despair and disappointment filling his heart. Was his
mother willing to kill millions because of her obsession with
worshiping? Was this how all gods acted? Were her actions driven by the
fact she was a god? Or was this the behavior of a narcistic human
corrupted with absolute power? His mother was no longer the mother
he knew. She had gone off in the deep-end and shed any semblance of
humanity she once held. As he looked up at her dark eyes, he couldnât
find traces of her humanity. She stared back at him, eyes as dark as
night. No humanity. No soul. And the warmth she once hadâthe loving eyes
that looked over him all his life were gone. Carlos lowered
himself and sat on the ground on his bottom. He was doomed from the
start. Either his mother took his soul and saved the city, or the bomb
take his life along with millions. Was it worth worshiping someone like
his mother? Someone so self-absorbed that she would rather have millions
die than risk a single apostate. It wasnât worth worshiping his
mother, even if that meant hell. Under the gaze of who he considered his
former mother, Carlos became an un-believer. âOh, Carlito.â Melissa slumped her shoulder as she exhaled dejectedly, as she felt his wavering belief in her flicker away. âWonderful, isnât it?â the demon said. âEven your own son doesnât believe youâre a god.â The
crowds murmured, and the cameras hummed as they recorded the silence.
Melissa stood proud and tall, unwilling to move where she stood. It
remained like this as the timer went down to two minutes. Then less than
a minute. As the timer dropped to 20 seconds, every citizen in
Times Square still clutched to hopes that Melissa would sacrifice the 30
hostages and save the city. But the goddess stood still with her arms
crossedârefusing to doom 30 to hell for eternity to appease these
twisted creatures. She looked down at them defiantly. The creature faced the camera, and therefore the world, and announced, âthis is who you worship? A false god? You are right with your opinions of her. She. Is. No. God.â
With those last words, he looked at Carlos. âEnd your worship of the
false-gods. Reject them, as her son rejected his very own mother.â People
cried and others ran with less than five seconds left. Melissa looked
on, unphased as the counter dropped to zero and the bomb exploded. - Immediately
following the nuclear blast, there was a flash of light ten times
brighter than the sun that lasted half a minute. Once the bright white
light subsided, in the blastâs wake, was a vast wasteland where New York
City once stood. Those two creatures, still unknown to Melissa that
they were demons, still stood in place in their undamaged suits.
Melissa, alive and unscathed, shrunk herself to eight-feet and
approached the creatures, her black dress and Converse shoes untouched
by the blast. âWhat is the matter with you?â she asked. âYou just killed millions!â âWe did not, Melissa.
You had the choice to stop it. You deemed killing millions was better
than accepting and reaping the souls of the non-believers. This pitiful
planet and yourself will have to live onâknowing what a colossal fraud
you are. Or, you can abdicate your role right now. Give up your godly
powers.â âNever!â âSo be it. Weâll be on our way now. Pleasure to have met you.â âWait!
Wait, wait, just wait. This canât be happening. This just ⌠canât be
happening. You canât have this power of destruction. I ⌠I shouldâve
been able to stop this. I know thereâs a way. The bomb wasnât guarded. I
couldâve stopped it. You couldnât have possibly thought of everything.â The creatures laughed. âGod
powers or notâyour human-origins are your greatest limitations. A brain
woefully incapable of handling a simple moral test. I expected nothing
from you, Melissa, and I am still disappointed by your inaction.â âYou pendejos canât possibly be smarter than me. The bomb had a weakness. I just know it.â The
creatures looked at one another and let out another round of hearty
laughs. âThey never look, do they? I see no harm in telling you now, Melissa,
but had you looked on top of the bomb, you wouldâve seen three switches
and a button. A plain mechanism to render the bomb nothing more than a
static prop. A child wouldâve been able to defuse the bomb with or
without celestial powers.â âYouâre kidding me? If I justââ âYou
wouldâve never gotten close. After all, I have the dead-man switch.
Which I donât need anymore.â The demon let go of the pen device and
tossed it at Melissaâs feet. Melissa bent over and picked it up, examining it. âIf only I knew this from the start. I guess you did outsmart me.â âWe always do.â The creature faced his companion and said, âlet us waste no more time. Our work here is done. For now.â âNot from around here, are you?â Melissa asked. âWe are done speaking with you, Melissa. You are of no good to usâanymore!â âBecause if you were from earthâyou wouldâve known ten minutes havenât passed since you started the timer.â Both
creatures stopped in their tracks and looked over their shoulders at
the eight-foot woman with a grin on her face. The bomb had destroyed New
York as far as the eye could see. No structure, tree, or rock stood.
They had devastated or extinguished life within a 50-mile radius. There
was no bringing the dead back or reversing time. What was done, was
done. What was Melissa going on about? Why was she suddenly
confident with a smirk that said she knew something they did not? The
demons accomplished their set-out goal. No matter which choice Melissa
made, she would always be deemed unworthy to be a god by her
civilization. There was no way out of their fool-proof game. The
demon turned, his posture uneasy. âWhat do you mean ten minutes hadnât
passed? You donât possess the ability to manipulate time. Nor could you
change the timer on the bomb.â âSure.â Melissa wiggled the
dead-man switch in her fingers. âBut I still had the power to change the
screens and billboards around Times Square, to show a fake countdown.â âYou didnât.â âWhen
I spoke to my son, and everyone turned to him, I sped the countdown
with no one realizing. That goes for you two. Ten minutes havenât
passed.â âNice little trick, but the bomb has clearly gone off.â âHas it?â The
demons were no longer holding their composure. They slouched their
shoulders slightly and felt a noxious unease course through their black
veins. âOf course it has! You failed to save lives, Melissa.
Theyâre dead. All dead. Your son is gone and so was this pathetic excuse
for a city.â He extended his arms out, showcasing the surrounding
wasteland. âAww, you nervous?â âDelusional! Either that, or
youâre trying to make me give away something. It wonât work.â The demon
walked out to the side. âAccept it, Melissa. It is all gone.
Allââ He bumped into something. Like an invisible barrier. Where there
shouldâve been nothing but wasteland wasâsomething. The demon lifted his
hands up and touched it. There was a wall. A wall he couldnât perceive
with his vision. He looked over his shoulders at Melissaâher grin only
growing wider. He looked back at the invisible wall and pushed. It
budged a little. He pushed harder. The walls came tumbling down.
Surrounding the demons and Melissa were walls projecting a false
reality. They werenât actually in the wastelands of New York. They were
still in Times Square. Nobody had died in a nuclear explosion; they were
still alive and standing around, watching the goddess play the
creatures for fools. The timer on the bomb still had 60 seconds to go
before it exploded. Though the bomb was impervious to her goddess
powers, the world around her was not. She sped the timer displayed
around the square and encased the creatures in an illusion, making them
think they saw the bomb explode. They were living in a virtual reality
dome that the goddess conjured without the demons sensing it. She fooled them. âIt
canât be.â The demons, the crowds in Times Square, and everyone at home
watching TV watched Melissa calmly walk over to the atomic bomb. Less
than 15 seconds on the real timer. Her eight-foot stature overshadowed
the hostages that were chained up by the neck to the bomb. âBut the
dead-man switch!â he said. âIt shouldâve exploded when I released it.â âToo
bad you didnât think of putting a goddess-blocker on it, too.â When the
demon released the switch in his hand and tossed it at Melissaâs feet,
he didnât notice the button hadnât depressed. Melissa used telekinetic
powers to keep the button from releasing and thus prevented the bomb
from exploding. Melissa fiddled with the controls at the top of
the bomb and defused it with only a second left. Once its celestial
blockers were down, Melissa teleported the entire thing out of the
planet and deep into space. She then started helping the hostages out of
their neck harnesses. âThis canât be!â The demon lifted both his
hands. Red orbs of power forming in both hands. Without looking, Melissa
pointed back at them with a finger. A force-field materialized between
both creatures. The shield effectively blocking his powers from harming
anyone. âHow?â Once finished releasing all the hostages, Melissa
returned to her colossal 150 foot tall stature, her gargantuan feet
causing some people from the crowd to run. Everyone else in Times Square
fell to their knees in awe. The goddess bested these creatures and
saved the city without losing a hostage. Melissa looked down at the creatures before her feet with arms crossed. âNow that thatâs over, I got some questions.â âWe failed. We failed our master.â âLetâs start with that. Whoâs your master? Where are you from?â The
demons ignored Melissa. They pulled daggers from inside their coats.
Without further explanation, they jammed the knives upwards through
their jaw, the sharp end of the knives piercing their brains, killing
them. They dropped to a heap on the ground. âAy, chingada. I
shouldâve seen that coming.â Melissa turned to face the crowds. âCrisis
averted, everyone!â Cheers broke out at Melissaâs proclamation. The
goddess had saved them from an unknown, powerful threat. And sheâd done
so in such ingenious ways. It only proved that Melissa was a genuine
goddess, worthy of her powersâthe complete opposite of what the
creatures were trying to prove. For the first time, the people viewed
Melissa, not only as a goddess, but as a protector. But the
hostages werenât feeling as lively as the rest. They had doubted the
goddess could save the city and abandoned their faith to her. Even after
she told them not to. They had become the thing she hates most:
non-believers. Her son, included. âItâs okay, everyone. Iâm
not angry in the slightest,â Melissa began, her gaze softening as she
looked down at the hostages who had lost faith in her. âI understand the
crazy choice you allâve faced. Your willingness to sacrifice your spot
in heaven, to save the lives of others, speaks volumes to your humanity.
To choose an eternity in hell to save countless livesâthatâs courage I
canât help but respect and honor.â Her eyes then drifted to her
son, a deeper reflection in her voice. âHowever, I sense that many of
you lost faith not just to save others, but because you doubted I
couldâve saved you. Faced with danger, you questioned whether I truly
was a god capable of protecting you from harm. Iâm notâIâm not angry
about this. Please donât be afraid; rather, itâs made me think ⌠If your
faith in me is so fragile, so easily shattered under pressureâthat
means Iâve failed you as your god. You donât trust in me. And I donât
blame you. Iâm sorry everyone. I promise to try harderâto be the god you
all deserve.â People looked at each other and were ashamed to
admit the truths Melissa spoke. More importantly, Melissaâs speech
revealed a seldom seen side of the gods: humility. If not already on the
ground, the crowds got on their hands and knees and worshiped Melissa
from the bottom of their hearts. âLetâs go home, Carlito.â No More Lies They
transported back to the hallway outside their apartment door. Melissa
was back to eight-feet stature and Carlos stood beside her. Melissa
clasped her hands and waited for her son to make the first move. But he
just stood still with his eyes looking straight ahead at their closed
front door. âMom?â Melissa looked down at her son with a hopeful expression, eager to hear him open up to her. âYes, mâhijito?â âCan you unlock the door?â âOh.â
Melissa waved her hand, and the door swung open. She followed him into
the apartment and immediately kicked off her shoes. Over in the dining
room, Alejandro sat alone and perked up when he saw his son and wife
enter. âIs Vanessa still here?â Carlos asked. âYup, right
here.â Alejandro pointed at a plate on the table where a single slice of
bread stood. Vanessa, hardly a quarter of an inch tall, sat on the
untoasted bread as if it were an expansive bed. Melissaâs steps
boomed over to the shrunken girl. Her appearance was grander that a
mountain to the frightened young woman. âThatâs right. Let me fix that.â
Melissa returned Vanessa to her normal-height, re-sizing the girl on
top of the dining table. Vanessa apologized as she kicked over dishes as she climbed down from the table. Carlos rolled his eyes. âWhy did you shrink Vanessa, mom?â âItâs probably best that she explains. Vanessa, do you have something to say to my son?â Vanessa
was a wreck. Aside from the traumatization of being insignificantly
tiny, she was terrified of confessing. âCarlos, Iâve been lying about
being your girlfriend.â Carlos put his hands in his pocket. He looked up at his mother, ready to accuse her, but then turned back to Vanessa. âWhat?â âI
donât want to be your girlfriend. I never was.â Vanessaâs breathing
quickened as she saw the heartbreak in Carlosâs face. âI only got close
to you, so I can talk to your mom. My parents, see, theyâre nonââ âStop.â
Carlos shook his head. He fought back tears as he tried to look Vanessa
in the eyes. âYou only dated me ⌠because who my mom is?â The
silence between their words was deafening. âYes. But I swear, Carlos, I
didnât mean for it to get carried away like this. I was just going to be
your friend. I didnât mean for us toââ âFuck?â Vanessa looked up at Melissa and then at Alejandro. The cat was definitely out of the bag. âYes.â Carlos
then rubbed his hands on his face. He looked up at his mother, who
remained silent and had a look of concern for her son. âSee? This is
because of you. Itâs always about you. Nobody cares about me, other than
Iâm related to you.â âMâhijito, Iââ âStop. Just âŚâ Carlos
shooed his mother away as she came to him with a hug. âJust stop. I hate
this family. I hate this family and I hate you.â Carlos turned away and
came to pass Vanessa as he headed for the stairs. As he walked by his
ex-girlfriend, he said âbitch.â Carlos stormed to his room and slammed
the door. Vanessa was sobbing. She looked up at Melissa, who appeared to be on the verge of tears. âGoddess, Iââ âLeave Vanessa. Just go, before I do something I regret.â Vanessa
didnât need to be told twice. She grabbed her things from the living
room and bolted out of the apartment, feeling Melissaâs wrathful eyes on
her the entire time. Alejandro remained seated at the table, unsure
what to say to his wife. âWhat am I supposed to do?â Melissa asked her husband. âRight now? Nothing. He needs time and space.â Melissa
sat at the dining table with her husband and chewed on her nails, lost
in thought. Vanessa got off too easy, she thought. Her kindness was
taken advantage of. But if it wasnât Vanessa, it wouldâve been someone
else. Carlos was in for a lifetime as the son of the Benevolent Goddess. People would seek him to get close to her. âI
donât get it, honey,â Melissa said. âI can cure illness, manipulate the
weather to my desire, defuse an atomic bomb that is impervious to
god-powers in the middle of New York and save millions of lives against
all odds, but I canât help our son.â âThatâs an oddly specific metaphor.â âHeâll always hate me for being a god.â âHe doesnât hate you. His heart just got broken, and heâs taking it out on you. Lemme talk to him.â âAre you sure? You wonât make it worse?â âHey, look at who youâre talking to.â - âSon? Mâhijo?â Alejandro stood outside Carlosâs room and rapped on his door. âCan I come in and talk to you?â âGo away.â âIâm
coming in.â Alejandro walked into his sonâs bedroom and discovered him
lying on his stomach on the bed. âHey, bud. Iâm sorry about everything
that happened.â Carlos grunted. He planted his face flat on his bed, unwilling to look up at his father. âItâs
terrible what Vanessa did to you. But I had a talk with her before you
and your mother showed up. Vanessa did what she did, because she loves
her mom and dad. Theyâre non-believers, Carlos. Sheâs terrified that
theyâre going to hell.â Carlos turned over in his bed and faced his father. His eyes were heavy and his face drooped. âVanessa
thought, if she talked to your mom, maybe she could convince her to
spare her parents from hell. Iâm not trying to excuse what she did to
youâbut you can understand how desperate she was, canât you? That love
for her parents. She was willing to ask your mom to her face, to spare
her parents. I donât even have the courage to ask your mom to get me a
beer, let alone to bend the rules of the afterlife.â Carlos got up in his bed and swung his legs over the side. âDid you know mom eats non-believers?â Alejandro burst into laughter. âEat
non-believers?â He asked, expecting his son to also laugh. âCan you
imagine? Especially considering how much she eats nowadays?â Carlos
lifted a brow as he looked at his dad. âThatâs what those people said.
Those terrorists. They said mom eats non-believers, and they wanted to
prove it on TV.â Alejandro wiped the last tears from his eyes and
noted how serious his son was. He sat on the bed beside his son and
asked, âWait, what are you talking about?â Carlos explained what
happened in Times Square. It surprised him that his father was oblivious
to the near annihilation of New York. But Alejandro was busy taking
care of Vanessa when those events went down. âWell, that canât be true. Your mother doesnât eat people.â - Alejandro
and Carlos switched topics and spoke more about Vanessa, relationships,
and heartbreaks. When Carlos felt better, Alejandro told him to take
all the time he needed before speaking to his mother. He left his sonâs
room and gently closed the bedroom door. Alejandro was about to rejoin his wife in the dining room when a nagging feeling pulled him back from the stairs. She eats people? Alejandro asked himself. Has she been doing it under my nose? It was in the realm of possibilities. His wife had plenty of private time, between the Pantheon and even when she was home. Like when she had the bedroom locked and to herself. He
turned on his heels and walked into his bedroom. He closed the door
behind him and looked around forâhe wasnât sure what to look for. What
was she doing in the bedroom for so long? She was a god; she didnât have
to dress up or prep her hair or do anything. Why the privacy? His
eyes fell on the bed. The sheets were disturbed. The sheets were white
as snow and shimmered under the warm glow of the bedroom lights. He
spotted a tiny crumb, standing out sharply against the pristine sheets,
like a single ant crawling along a white countertop. Alejandro plucked
the crumb between his thumb and index finger and brought it to his eyes.
It took a moment for his eyes to focus, but when they did, what he saw
only confused him. It was a camera. Alejandro scoured the bed for
any more objects. In the next minute, he found a purse, a solitary
sandal, and a baseball cap. None were his nor his wife. And these
objects were hardly visible. He sat on his bed and went through the
objects in his palm, trying to make sense of what he was looking at. Melissa
came through the door, causing him to snap his neck up. âThere you are.
How long have you been up here? Still in the mood to be my little
dildo?â âHoney ⌠?â âHmm?â âDo you eat non-believers?â Melissa closed the bedroom door and raised a brow. âWhy would you ask that?â âHoney,
please donât lie. I found these.â He lifted his hands to show the
microscopic objects he was sure his goddess wife would see with her
inhuman eyes. In fact, those very eyes bulged widely upon noticing them.
âDid you eat the people these things belonged to?â âOh, shit.â
Rated: đ´ - Sexual Themes and Violence
Word Count: 13348 |
Views: 4 |
Reviews: 0
Table of Contents |
View Full Story
Added: 03/15/2025
Updated: 03/30/2025
Story Notes:
CW: This fictional story about gods deals with religion and a myriad of
mythic god stories that have taken place throughout mankind. If you have
delicate sensibilities regarding religious beliefs, maybe skip this
story, yeah?