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The Galactic Pantheon Novellas
The Galactic Pantheon Novellas
The Galactic Pantheon Novellas
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The Galactic Pantheon Novellas

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In the millennia since leaving Old Earth, humans have spread far and wide across the galaxy. A pantheon of sub-level gods was created to oversee the expanding population, always to protect them out of sight, never to become one of them - and never to experience love. Or so they thought.

Collecting all four novellas from the Galactic Pantheon Series.

The Flickering Flame
Grace Pendergast is a disgraced reporter who thinks the galaxy would be better off without her. But then she meets Finara, the goddess of fire. As sparks ignite between them, Grace must choose between carrying out her original plans - or accepting an eternity at Finara's side.

The Shifting Ice
Dom Zhang has just fallen to his death when Rasson, the god of ice, rescues him. Dom would be grateful, except for the fact that Rasson has chosen Dom as his consort. And Dom has no intention of settling down - even if marrying a god comes with certain perks.

The Whispering Grass
Sanyul Bello has never failed to complete a mission - until he tries to assassinate Isabis, the goddess of savannah. She decides to punish him by showing him what it's like to be her, but what she doesn't expect is to create an intense connection between them.

The Creeping Moss
When Renaei, the goddess of tundra, needs a bodyguard the choice is simple: Lorne Lavine. Renaei is sure she has found her equal in him. But Lorne has worshipped her his entire life - how can he ever see her as a woman instead of an untouchable goddess?

LanguageEnglish
PublisherAlyce Caswell
Release dateAug 20, 2020
ISBN9780648544425
The Galactic Pantheon Novellas
Author

Alyce Caswell

Alyce Caswell, when she isn't buried in a book or drinking her way through a giant pot of tea, is a keen writer of fantasy and science fiction. Her space opera family saga, The Galactic Pantheon Series, has been released digitally through various retailers.

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    The Galactic Pantheon Novellas - Alyce Caswell

    The Flickering Flame

    CHAPTER ONE

    ‘Full disclosure: yeah, I look pretty hot, but I come with baggage. A whole galaxy full of baggage. I also happen to be the goddess of fire which I understand is a bit of a deal-breaker. You mortals tend to want a marriage that lasts a lifetime, not an eternity. You’d get immortality out of it, but then you’d have to stay with me until the end of time. Shudder.’

    Finara, goddess of fire (the Firine was her official title in the Galactic Pantheon), sat back in the booth and waited for her companion to respond. She lifted her glass, either painted neon pink or containing a viscous material of the same colour, and held it to her lips. The resort’s galaxy-renowned drink, apparently. It had some fancy name but it clearly wasn’t all that important because it had slipped her mind. In her domain there were innumerous planets with unstable volcanoes, flaming lakes and raging bushfires — she couldn’t be bothered to remember every little detail about every little world that fell under her control.

    If the mortals required her immediate attention, she gave it, but never any more than they needed. She looked after them because it was she had been created to do. Finara still wasn’t sure the mortals deserved her assistance — or anything else from her, really.

    Occasionally she indulged in some public fire dancing. It seemed to be the only thing Finara did that merited any adoration from the mortals. She was hired by hotels to perform impossible feats while wearing fun skimpy outfits and then used the money she earned from doing this to visit her favourite brothel, the Enocian Harem. Humans generally refused to supply goods and services to someone who didn’t have any coin-chips to spend.

    When Finara had finished her shift at this particular hotel today, mopping a towel over her forehead, she had noticed a giant vidscreen announcing a bout of speed dating in the bar. It had occurred to her that this would provide a cheaper alternative to the brothel. Her coin-chips could go into other exciting things, like flashy clothes and shiny baubles.

    The human sitting opposite Finara in the booth was an improvement on the previous offerings. This mortal was well above average in height, unlike the others who’d plonked themselves onto the red leather seat in the booth. Finara was quite tall herself, so this woman pleased her immensely. She’d had short lovers and hadn’t found any inadequacies in them, but she preferred their eyes to meet her own instead of her (admittedly ample) chest.

    The mortal woman’s skin was somewhere between bronze and tan, and her brown eyes were dark and deep, as though they held delightful mysteries. And that mouth…large and promisingly sensual. Finara hadn’t seen her date’s tongue yet, but she imagined its length would be more than suitable for her needs.

    Finara should have had soothing hazel eyes, but she preferred to keep them aflame, the fire that obscured her pupils and irises held there by constant concentration. Finara had never managed to darken her olive skin through exposure to sunlight, though thankfully she wasn’t as pasty as Kuja, the rainforest god. Finara had been born with brunette hair, but she kept it black to reveal her permanent mood: rebellious.

    Except her racing off to have sex with mortals hadn’t turned out to be anywhere near as rebellious as what her brothers had done. Sandsa, the Desine and oldest sub-level god, had thrown away his position in the pantheon to be with a mortal woman, however briefly. Then Kuja had challenged the Creator God, their father, pleading for the right to marry the mortal he loved.

    When the Ine (the name Finara and her siblings used for the Creator God) had revealed that his children had been allowed to fall in love all along, this had caused something of a stir among the gods and goddesses — previously they’d gone after and punished any sibling who had dared to look at any mortal for too long. Finara continued to enjoy bedding anyone who was keen, but the activity had lost much of the danger and, with it, a lot of the fun.

    The woman on the other side of the booth reached up and patted her hair as though to ensure everything was in place. Finara wasn’t sure why. The mortal’s hair was a mass of frizzy coils that looked like they would never sit the way they were told to; what the gesture did instead was make the crescent-shaped scar that ran through her left eyebrow all the more obvious.

    ‘What exactly does a fire goddess do?’ the mortal asked.

    This didn’t match the responses Finara had been getting all evening. Mostly people had laughed when she’d announced her identity. One man had even run with it by pretending to be a Chipper, an agent responsible for enforcing planetary laws across the galaxy, and had said that he would spank her for being a sub-level god. The Chippers worshipped the Creator God and inserted chips into their temples (hence their name) in order to reach him; these chips gave them special abilities which aided them in protecting the Creator God’s mortal children.

    Finara had enjoyed the accompanying images in the man’s mind when he’d tried to seduce her, but she was a little over men of late. Her brothers were always slinging insults and powers at each other, trying to prove who was the best of them, but her sisters were more reserved. Finara could simply walk up to them and begin a conversation, no exhausting ego required.

    ‘What does a fire goddess do?’ Finara mused. ‘Aside from wasting my time in this dive, you mean? I do some fire dancing here and there. Shit pay, but it’s something. A woman’s got to fulfil certain needs. Coin-chips help with that.’

    ‘Ms Fire Goddess — ’ A disapproving frown warped the mortal’s features. ‘ — that doesn’t sound very godly. Shouldn’t you be keeping mortals out of danger? Suppressing volcanoes that are about to erupt, for example?’

    Finara scowled and set down her glass with an audible thunk. ‘Firstly, the name is Finara. Secondly, I can’t just tell a volcano to settle down. The eruption would get a lot worse if I tried to do anything. And besides, you have two legs — you can run away. You mortals don’t need me to help you with that.’

    Silence. Well, as much as silence could be in this place; the bar was filled with the murmur of voices and a lilting jazz tune that was just loud enough to force the couples to lean into each other to make themselves heard.

    Finara was starting to wonder what she’d said to offend her companion when the mortal cleared her throat noisily, reached beneath the table and pulled out a silver prosthetic leg. She dumped it between them, knocking over Finara’s glass in the process.

    ‘You can buy those fully functional synthflesh legs, they’re much more realistic,’ Finara said, her lip curling up towards her nose as she surveyed the pink puddle her drink was forming on the table. ‘They’ve been out for at least five hundred Old Earth years.’

    The woman’s scarred eyebrow slid up her forehead. ‘We mortals can indeed get top-of-the-line models. If we have deep pockets.’

    Finara grimaced. She supposed she wasn’t the first person to mention it. ‘Sorry — I shouldn’t have said that. But still. If your warning systems are even halfway decent, they can give you enough time to hobble off before a volcano explodes.’

    The woman stared at her. Unable to restrain herself any longer, Finara delved into her companion’s mind, finding disbelief mixed in with indignation. There was also an unexpected spike of humour.

    ‘I’m Grace Pendergast,’ the mortal said. Her lips quirked into a smile. ‘And I’m glad I am not one of your followers. This meeting would have destroyed any adoration I had for you.’

    ‘Great, that means I still have plenty of opportunities to make you adore me.’ Finara straightened her glass then brought a pink-stained finger to her lips to suckle the alcohol from her skin. ‘Grace, huh? I could have sworn that name went out of fashion around the time everyone realised they could reach their creator just by sticking chips into their temples. Kind of lose the awe of the Creator God when you realise he’s actually listening to you.’

    ‘I suppose it’s hard for you to feel awe for your own father,’ Grace responded, picking up the leg and concealing it beneath the table once more.

    ‘Yeah, he’s pretty shit when you actually know him,’ Finara said with a sigh. ‘Omniscient but completely lacking in any emotional capacity. He chose a human mother for me and my siblings just to get the right mix of raw power and compassion.’

    Grace leaned back in the booth, surveying Finara through narrow eyes. ‘I think you needed a little more compassion in your DNA mix.’

    ‘You think?’ Finara smirked. ‘Hey, you mortals don’t deserve my compassion. None of you worship me, not really. You only remember me when there’s a fire or an eruption and you think flattering me with nice words will make me turn nature against itself for you. The nerve.’

    A siren pierced the room before Finara’s companion could respond. Since a portly woman had been using an antique bell to denote the end of each speed dating session, this caused several pairs of eyes to shoot up towards the vidscreen on the wall above the bar.

    Pyroclastic flow expected in five minutes, the screen announced while an accompanying voice read out the words. Make sure you’re safely within the hotel’s forcefield!

    Finara clucked her tongue, irritated. She’d felt the flow coming, but she had ignored it far longer than she usually did because she had started to enjoy Grace’s company. The hotel was well protected by its shield generators, even this close to the cluster of volcanoes that had made the planet Arksaw famous — apparently they resembled the face of a famous mediaist if viewed from orbit — but there were always some thrillseekers who wanted to dance with danger.

    ‘I better go make sure everyone’s made it behind the forcefield,’ the goddess said, levering herself out of the booth.

    ‘Is that concern for us mortals I hear in your voice?’ Grace asked.

    Finara snickered. ‘Well, the more people who survive this, the more tips I get during my shift tomorrow. You should come to my next performance.’

    Three years ago, she would never had this conversation, nor would she have dared to teleport in front of mortals. But ever since the Creator God-loving Chippers from the Galactic Law Enforcement Agency (GLEA for short) had started saying that it was imperative to get along with the other gods and their followers, there had been less of a need to hide her existence and what she could do. Exposing herself as a goddess was no longer going to incite an ideological war.

    Finara blew a kiss at Grace.

    And then a swirl of fire roared up around the Firine, encasing her body before it completely erased her from the bar.

    • • •

    Grace Pendergast stared at the empty space her date had left behind.

    So too did everyone else in the bar, completely gobsmacked. They’d probably had the same spiel from Finara but, judging by their expressions, they hadn’t believed it. Grace hadn’t believed it either, not really. Her date had been too irreverent, too improper…and she’d had little regard for mortals. Everyone knew that the Creator God loved all of them, cherished them, protected them. Surely his immortal children would do the same.

    A man in the adjacent booth grabbed his communicator and said loudly, ‘Put me through to the Chippers! I just saw one of those sub-level gods!’

    ‘No, you fool!’ the man’s date said, lunging across the table and knocking the device out of his hand. ‘Call Ton Tinel or another mediaist — they’d pay a shitload for this kind of exclusive!’

    The bar descended into chaos. Rolling her eyes, Grace stood and took the only clear path to the door. Once outside, the only sound she could hear was the clacking of her heels on the tiled floor.

    Immortality, she thought as she walked through the columned piazza that featured in the hotel’s advertisements.

    Immortality, she repeated to herself as she entered her tiny, poky room.

    She sat down on the edge of the bed, detaching her cheap prosthesis. There wasn’t a point in wasting her funds on a better one, because she wouldn’t be alive long enough to enjoy it.

    Immortality, Grace mused. The gods have to live with their mistakes forever.

    I’m glad I don’t.

    She turned on her room’s vidscreen. Within moments it was filled with the frenzied face of a mediaist who happened to be holidaying on Arksaw — but not without their equipment, of course. The unsteady footage, provided by a vidcam being waved from the ramp of a starship, hurt her eyes but Grace squinted, focusing on the goddess who was grabbing tourists and throwing them into rings of fire. The startled and fearful humans didn’t die; they were being transported out of matching rings inside the forcefield, where they were safe from the fury the planet was unleashing.

    Finara laughed throughout the entire affair. She even waved at the vidcam that was tracking her progress. Grace had a feeling the goddess could destroy the device without even blinking, but for some reason Finara wanted everyone to witness her using her powers, wanted everyone to know what she was.

    When at last all the tourists had been evacuated, Finara held out her arms, welcoming the gaseous blast from the volcano. It tore through her, around her, then smacked into the forcefield before being diverted around the hotel and its denizens.

    For an instant, the goddess remained visible in the pyroclastic flow. Her body became pure fire, then blew apart into a million pieces.

    Grace nearly reached for her techpad, to start writing about meeting a sub-level god, but forced herself to dismiss the words that arrived in her mind, the words that begged to be Webcast to the galaxy, to anyone who would listen.

    Those days were over. She was no longer a small-time mediaist. She was a cripple who deserved the fate she had inflicted on others.

    Grace hopped over to the bathroom, a hand on the wall to steady herself. Once the water was running, she removed her slip of a dress, pausing to laugh at the floral pattern she had thought pretty enough to finally entice someone to divest her of her virginity. As a teenager, it had been a prize; to a woman on the wrong side of thirty, it was a burden.

    A small part of her had hoped that she would meet someone at that speed dating event, someone who could convince her to forget the terrible mistakes she’d made, someone who could provide a reason to keep going.

    There just didn’t seem a point anymore. Grace had lost everything that had ever made her life worth living.

    She had one more week until her funds ran out. One more week until she too embraced the devastation unleashed by the nearby volcanoes.

    Except her body, once vaporised, would stay that way forever.

    CHAPTER TWO

    When Grace emerged from the steamy shower cell, having spent a good hour in there while continuously hitting the ‘start’ button, she found her towel mysteriously missing. She groped blindly along the rail for a few seconds, perplexed, then nearly toppled over when the towel hit her stomach — she had caught it with the hand she’d been using to brace herself.

    The mist inside the bathroom slowly cleared, revealing the source of the soft projectile.

    Leaning against the door, as if she had a right to be there with her immortality, her scarlet outfit and her two functioning legs, was the goddess of fire.

    ‘Now tell me that wasn’t hot,’ Finara said with a laugh.

    Grace hastily wrapped the towel around herself, grimacing when she realised that she had to surrender a view of either her breasts or her thighs. There was nothing she could do to conceal the stump that had replaced her right knee.

    Grace fought for something to say, but somehow the only thing that came out was, ‘You could have at least handed me a bigger towel. This is indecent.’

    ‘Indecent is what I’m going to do to you after dinner.’ Finara grinned. ‘But forget about that. You must have watched me saving all those mortals. How good did I look, huh?’

    Her eyes scanned Grace in a way that made her feel…not uncomfortable, but confused. What did the fire goddess see that the mirror did not show? Were Grace’s generous hips, wider than her cup size, somehow enticing instead of awkward?

    Would Finara still look at her like that if she knew just how much blood was on Grace’s hands?

    Grace cleared her throat. ‘Get out.’

    Her discomfort must have shown — or had the goddess read it from her mind? — because Finara suddenly looked guilty.

    ‘Sorry,’ Finara said, then disappeared inside a roaring vortex of fire.

    The goddess’ voice returned but it was muffled; she was now on the other side of the door, in the small bedroom. It sounded like Finara was complaining about the mediaist’s coverage of her appearance. Grace remained frozen in place, her breathing shallow, the soft towel sliding its way down her body and drooping onto the floor. Shaking herself out of her stupor, she threw the flowery dress back on, wishing she had brought one of her more comfortable and less revealing pantsuits into the bathroom with her.

    She made herself presentable, blew out an unsteady breath and then waved a hand over the sensor on the tiled wall. The door opened to reveal Finara stretched out on the bed, taut stomach on display. Grace’s techpad lay beside the fire goddess, apparently untouched, but the first thing Grace did after she navigated her way across the room was retrieve the device and slide it into a pocket. She then sat on the bed, facing away from Finara, and clicked her prosthesis back on.

    Her mind raced. If the goddess had looked through the techpad, she would have seen Grace’s files, those old Webcasts, possibly even the one that —

    ‘I want to take you to dinner,’ Finara declared.

    ‘We just met,’ Grace reminded her. ‘I don’t know you well enough to have dinner with you, let alone allow you to do indecent things to me.’

    ‘That’s what the dinner’s for, to get to know me,’ Finara persisted.

    Grace looked at the door. She wasn’t sure if she should make a run for it or try ordering the goddess to leave.

    Finara sighed. ‘You don’t have to order me. You can just ask.’

    ‘So you can read my mind.’

    ‘Surface thoughts, mostly. I can go in deeper if I want, but it takes effort.’

    ‘Can all sub-level gods do this?’ Grace asked before she could stop herself. She shook her head, annoyed. She wasn’t a mediaist anymore, she wasn’t curious, she was just…

    ‘No,’ Finara answered, continuing to watch Grace with those fascinating flame-filled eyes. ‘Some of my brothers and sisters can; some can’t. Others are more powerful and have abilities like telekinesis and healing. Oh — and each of us has special individual powers that help us look after our assigned domains.’

    Grace felt her palms itch from the need to grab her techpad and write down everything Finara was telling her. She crossed her arms, restraining the urge. ‘You shouldn’t be telling me this. I’m a mortal.’

    ‘And here I thought you were a mediaist,’ Finara said.

    Grace flinched, a hand clasped to the bulge the techpad was making in her pocket.

    ‘Relax, I didn’t rifle through your things,’ Finara assured her. ‘I didn’t have time. But some of your Webcasts were flitting through your thoughts. You remember all of them — word for word. That must be handy. Well, don’t you want to interview me? Get a scoop? Gain viewers?’

    ‘I did not come here to revive my career,’ Grace snapped.

    ‘Then why did you come here, Ms Has-Been Mediaist?’

    Grace feared the goddess had already seen it in her mind.

    Finara shook her head. ‘No, you’re keeping that one pretty close to your chest.’

    ‘I came here to die,’ Grace told her. The next part was harder to say, for some undefinable reason. ‘Now get out. I don’t want to see you again.’

    Grace didn’t dare look at the goddess’ face as it dissolved into flames.

    • • •

    As soon as the fiery vortex that had transported Finara to her destination fell away, the rainforest began assaulting her with cloying humidity. Grimacing, Finara strode down the path leading from the waterfall, where her brother always insisted she appear so he’d have some warning of her arrival, to the hidden abode belonging to the Rforine, the rainforest god. This world, Bagaran, was famous for having been the battleground of the first and last conflict between the Chippers and a sub-level god.

    Since then, Kuja had managed to establish peace with GLEA — with the assistance of one Head General Zareth Sins, who was actually the former lover of the Rforine’s wife. Kuja had married Fei without telling her about his godhood and had begged Finara to help him hide his true identity. Fei had been justifiably pissed off when she’d found out what Kuja had been keeping from her (especially since he’d neglected to mention the fact that he’d made her immortal), but now she and Kuja shared a happy existence with their son, Micadei.

    And Fei’s mortal mother, Berale Neron.

    Berale stood at the entrance to the rainforest god’s residence, which seemed bigger than when Finara had last seen it, but she didn’t find this surprising. The hovel grew whenever extra space was required — the rainforest was always eager to help their god with his needs.

    Eyeing the Firine, Berale said, ‘You just couldn’t help yourself. Had to go on the Webcasts and show off to the entire galaxy, didn’t you.’

    Finara snorted and waved a hand towards the sky, where a GLEA vessel had once orbited, its weapons trained on the defenceless planet. ‘At least I didn’t almost start a war with the Chippers. Come on — hurry up and hug me before I change my mind.’

    The mortal obliged her. Berale’s hair, shot through with grey, indicated that she was ageing, that she would die sooner rather than later, her blood and bones feeding the rainforest. Finara did not understand why the woman was at peace with this. Thanks to Kuja, Berale’s daughter and grandson would live eternally. They’d probably forget Berale, given enough time.

    Finara had continued to visit Kuja in the hopes that she would learn how to make her followers love her, the way Kuja’s loved him. Though this had yet to work, Finara enjoyed the company of her brother’s family. There was something comforting about having somewhere she could retreat to, somewhere she didn’t have to be a god.

    ‘I need you to answer a question for me,’ Finara said, carefully extracting herself from Berale’s embrace.

    ‘No time for pleasantries, as usual,’ Berale noted, hands dropping onto her ample hips.

    ‘Why would a mortal want to die?’ Finara rushed out.

    Berale stared at the goddess, then laughed and stood side on, opening up a

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