Chapter 3 – The Council of Rebirth

538 Words
Chapter 3 – The Council of Rebirth Silence. Not the kind that follows death — but the kind that precedes something greater. Joshua opened his eyes to nothing. No pain. No floor. No ceiling. Just an endless expanse of light stretching in every direction — soft and pure, like the space between one heartbeat and the next. He blinked, then frowned. Slowly, he got up and stretched his body. Every joint cracked with life; every breath felt sharp and real. > "That stupid truck… what kind of god uses a truck as a teleportation device?" He muttered, rubbing his shoulder as the faint sting of impact still lingered. He looked around, expecting clouds, harps — maybe a few angels with bad singing voices. Instead, a low hum began to rise — deep, resonant, and strangely human, like a heartbeat syncing with his own. Then the light shifted. Shapes began to form out of the brilliance — towering seats carved from gold, stone, shadow, and flame. Thrones. Twenty-four of them. Each occupied by a figure whose mere presence could unmake reality. At the center, elevated above them all, sat a being whose gaze alone felt like gravity — calm, patient, infinite. The Council of Rebirth had convened. A voice echoed through the light — ancient yet gentle, both near and everywhere at once. > "Joshua Vail. Your mission on Earth is complete. You exceeded human expectations. You will be remembered as the man who rose from dirt to dominion — the mortal who rewrote destiny itself." Joshua smiled faintly, satisfaction flickering in his eyes. The voice continued: > "Out of millions, you have been chosen for a new mission. Hence, your summoning." Joshua tilted his head, brow furrowed. > "Summoning?" > "Yes," the voice replied. "You must have already met the Elder of Summons." A radiant beam of light fell upon one of the thrones. Sitting there — illuminated like a relic of absurd divinity — was an elderly man with a wry smile, seated on what looked unmistakably like a truck-shaped throne. Chrome gleamed. Wheels turned lazily. Headlights pulsed like holy sigils. Joshua froze. His expression darkened. > "You… don't tell me—" The old man raised what could only be described as a bumper, in apology. > "Sorry for the rough arrival," he said sheepishly. "Timing was off." > "The f**k?" Joshua snapped. "You drove into a skyscraper and hit me!" > "Technical error!" the Truck Elder protested, clearly embarrassed. "Look, I've been doing this for centuries. Sometimes the gears jam!" Joshua squinted at him. > "Why a truck? You couldn't just— I don't know— call?" The Truck Elder scratched his chin, the metallic sound echoing. > "Sorry, I got carried away. Old habits die hard." The other elders chuckled. One, whose throne was carved from pure wind, leaned over and whispered: > "To be fair, it's tradition now. Mortals expect it." Joshua pinched the bridge of his nose and sighed, a small laugh escaping despite himself. > "Of course it is. I die by a meme." Laughter rippled through the thrones — even the flames of the fiery one flickered brighter, as if laughing too. For a moment, the void felt… lighter. ...
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