30th Ash, 123
Stardew Valley, Astralar Mountains
It had been a long discussion, and more than one; what should the heart of the Golem's instructions be. There would be many, and those had been written out and passed back and forth between the two young mages a dozen times or more, but the heart needed to be more than just lists of how to plant seeds and harvest fruit.
There were sections of do no harm clauses for the farmers and their animals, as well as clauses that allowed harm to be done to predators who might attack, but those weren't a heart either.
Even as they were stretching out to feel their power for what was really the first time, in a place where they had room to grow without feeling they should make themselves smaller for the sake of others they were also realizing that they were, in fact, still very young. How did you write a fundamental core for a being that would be, even to a minor degree, sentient? Did they have the right? Were they foolish to imagine themselves wise enough to do such a thing?
These thoughts ran, plague-like, though Torin as he carved molds by hand. They worried at him as he poured molten metal and hammered plates into the shapes that would become, somehow, creatures with their own worries and hopes. He had never wanted to be a father. Which was a lie, he liked children and the idea of raising one conjured images of joy as fearful as they were bright. Entertaining such thoughts felt both selfish and evil. There was poison in his blood and no innocent being deserved the curse that might come out of him if he gave it a chance.
What was he doing undertaking an act of creation that was no less real than procreation?
It was different, not only because he couldn't hurt a golem in the same way his father had hurt him. Sivan was the difference.
See, Torin was allowed to live because Aurin would pull him back, hold him down, beat the bastard right out of him when it reared itself. And now, Torin was allowed to make something new, life that was new, because Sivan wouldn't let him accidentally slip something awful into them. Sivan would protect them, would protect him.
It was still scary, in a way that gave him a sudden and keen sympathy with the fear and love he saw in the eyes of Draisen, the young farmer when they looked as where his wife's pregnancy was just starting to show. Neither Torin nor Sivan would be giving birth in the same way, and it wasn't particularly dangerous for anyone involved to make a golem but they would still both sweat and labor and probably bleed for them before they were complete.
Stardew Valley, Astralar Mountains
It had been a long discussion, and more than one; what should the heart of the Golem's instructions be. There would be many, and those had been written out and passed back and forth between the two young mages a dozen times or more, but the heart needed to be more than just lists of how to plant seeds and harvest fruit.
There were sections of do no harm clauses for the farmers and their animals, as well as clauses that allowed harm to be done to predators who might attack, but those weren't a heart either.
Even as they were stretching out to feel their power for what was really the first time, in a place where they had room to grow without feeling they should make themselves smaller for the sake of others they were also realizing that they were, in fact, still very young. How did you write a fundamental core for a being that would be, even to a minor degree, sentient? Did they have the right? Were they foolish to imagine themselves wise enough to do such a thing?
These thoughts ran, plague-like, though Torin as he carved molds by hand. They worried at him as he poured molten metal and hammered plates into the shapes that would become, somehow, creatures with their own worries and hopes. He had never wanted to be a father. Which was a lie, he liked children and the idea of raising one conjured images of joy as fearful as they were bright. Entertaining such thoughts felt both selfish and evil. There was poison in his blood and no innocent being deserved the curse that might come out of him if he gave it a chance.
What was he doing undertaking an act of creation that was no less real than procreation?
It was different, not only because he couldn't hurt a golem in the same way his father had hurt him. Sivan was the difference.
See, Torin was allowed to live because Aurin would pull him back, hold him down, beat the bastard right out of him when it reared itself. And now, Torin was allowed to make something new, life that was new, because Sivan wouldn't let him accidentally slip something awful into them. Sivan would protect them, would protect him.
It was still scary, in a way that gave him a sudden and keen sympathy with the fear and love he saw in the eyes of Draisen, the young farmer when they looked as where his wife's pregnancy was just starting to show. Neither Torin nor Sivan would be giving birth in the same way, and it wasn't particularly dangerous for anyone involved to make a golem but they would still both sweat and labor and probably bleed for them before they were complete.