Chapter 1388 Gifts for Agra III (final)
Almost ten hours later, Vorlag was back in the mess hall, a tankard of ale in his hand, his laughter echoing through the chamber. The mess, the chaos, the overturned tables and spilled food... it was all... normal.
A crowd of Agra worshippers had gathered, their faces painted with the usual grotesque symbols, their eyes gleaming with a mix of excitement and... something else. Fear? Reverence? It was hard to tell with these guys. Many of these were new recruits, eager to prove their loyalty to the God of Chaos. They'd heard stories, whispers of Agra's power, his... unpredictability. And they were... fascinated. Terrified, but fascinated.
"So, Captain," one of the younger cultists asked, his voice a mix of awe and apprehension, "what's he... like? Agra, I mean."
"He's... intense," Vorlag chuckled, taking a long swig of ale. "Unpredictable. You never know what he's gonna do next. One minute, he's all charm and smiles, the next... well, let's just say you better hope you're not standing too close."
"Is it true... he can... control chaos itself?" another cultist asked, his eyes wide.
"Control it?" Vorlag snorted. "He is chaos, you idiot. He's the goddamn embodiment of it. He doesn't control it, he... becomes it."
"But... how did he... become the God of Chaos?" a third cultist asked. "I mean... isn't that title... kinda... self-proclaimed?"
The question wasn't unique to these new recruits. It was a doubt shared by many in the realm of the Gods. Gods without domains – without a specific... area of expertise, like War, Healing, Wisdom, Time, or Space – were often viewed as... second-class citizens. They were the gods of... nothing, really. And without a domain, without a reason for mortals to pray to them, to offer them their devotion, their worship energy... they were... powerless.
And power, in the realm of the Gods, was everything. It was what fueled their ascension, what determined their place in the godly hierarchy. Without worshippers, without that steady stream of worship energy, a god couldn't climb the ranks, couldn't gain influence, couldn't be a proper god. They were... irrelevant. And Agra... Agra didn't tolerate irrelevance. He demanded respect. The kind of respect that came with power, with fear, with... worship. He wouldn't accept being a second-class citizen in the divine hierarchy. He would be a god. Whether the others liked it or not.
"Back in the day," Vorlag began, wiping a bit of ale foam from his beard, "Agra... he was a nobody. A god without a domain. He wandered from place to place, like a... cosmic hobo, trying to find his purpose. Now, he was a handsome bastard, I'll give him that. And the mortals well, they loved him. He slept with... pretty much anyone who'd have him. Men, women... didn't matter. He broke hearts wherever he went. Left a trail of satisfied worshippers in his wake."
The cultists around him chuckled, a mixture of awe and vicarious pride in their god's sexual conquests.
"But... no matter how many mortals he... blessed... with his... divine presence," Vorlag continued, his voice taking on a more serious tone, "there was always... something... missing. He wanted... respect. He wanted the mortals to worship him. To look at him the way they looked at Seshat, or Fortuna, or Zorian. With... reverence. With... fear. "
Agra's actions, his... indiscretions, hadn't gone unnoticed by the Pantheon. They saw him as an... embarrassment. A stain on their... divine reputation. Thus, Zorian, the God of Sun, the self-proclaimed leader of the Pantheon, had decided to... intervene. He'd sent his angels to... retrieve Agra. To bring him back into the fold. To make him... behave.
But Agra didn't like being told what to do. One day, Zorian's angels had found him engaged in a rather enthusiastic orgy. And Agra, though less volatile back then, still had a temper. A fiery, unpredictable temper. And when those prissy angels had barged in, interrupting his fun, seen him in all his glory, he'd felt... humiliated.
They wouldn't have dared to interrupt another god's... private time. But Agra? He was just... Agra. The god of... nothing.
And that day, Agra lost his shit. He didn't try to reason with them, didn't even bother to cover himself. He just snapped. He unleashed his power, raw and untamed, and slaughtered them all. The angels, the mortals... everyone who'd been participating in his festivities. He went from horny god to homicidal maniac in the blink of an eye.
"And when the people of Luxor heard the commotion..." Vorlag continued, taking another swig of ale.
"Luxor?" one of the cultists interrupted. "Isn't that... the God of Wealth's domain?"
"Yep," Vorlag confirmed, grinning.
"Shut up, Gork," another cultist said, elbowing his friend in the ribs. "Don't interrupt. We're getting to the good part."
Vorlag chuckled. "So, the Luxor folks, they burst into the room... and they see... blood. Chaos. Bodies everywhere. Screaming, crying... the whole nine yards." He paused, taking another drink. "Now, most gods, especially domainless gods like Agra back then, they would have freaked the fuck out. They would have tried to fix things. Explain themselves. Beg for mercy. But not Agra."
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