There was a smell in the void.
A scent thick with trembling thought, curling through unreality like steam in a freezing room.
It stank of anxiety—sharp, briny, metallic, like iron dipped in sugar and smoke. The scent clung to the outer shell of existence, unnoticed by the grand mechanisms that turned behind the curtain of the world, but pungent to those who lingered in the spaces between.
That smell belonged to a mysterious lifeform made of liquid.
It quivered as it watched the world being born. The world, fresh and trembling, layered in barrier after barrier, gleaming in cosmic purity.
To the liquid, the shape and elegance of the creation held no meaning. Its being could not comprehend the intricacies of this world's forging or the elegance of its mechanisms.
But it felt something.
A shiver of excitement coursed through its body.
It rippled with anticipation.
In its dormant state, the liquid hung in the in-between space—neither inside nor outside—without edges, without volume, suspended in a state of waiting.
Time passed, though it did not track it. Eons folded over themselves, silent and vast, and still the liquid remained. Until, slowly, it began to shed.
A single droplet fell from its body, trembling and curious. It slid from the mass like a child stepping away from a parent for the first time, and it dropped through the veil of protection around the world.
One drop, then another, and another—though never in quick succession.
Every hundred years, sometimes a thousand, passed in between.
Each droplet splashed into the growing land. Some seeped into the sea, becoming something unseen. Others were lost in storms, absorbed into clouds and stone. With each fallen drop, the body of the liquid lifeform thinned, became quieter, more compact.
This lifeform never wept. It never resisted.
It simply continued, content with its slow and quiet descent.
Eventually, what remained was no more than a pond-size of itself.
A small pool of slow-turning silver, shimmering faintly at the edges.
The scent of anxiety was softer now, dulled by centuries of passive erosion. But the feeling inside remained—eager, coiled, patient.
The final drop finally fell to the world below.
Through the first barrier.
The surface burned.
The liquid condensed, gaining density. Its shape adjusted, fibers of structure whispering through it like soft bones threading themselves into jelly.
Through the second, it compressed further, instinctively recoiling and folding into a cocoon of pressure. A core began to form—lightless, pulsing.
The third barrier laced it with memory. Not its own, but echoes of something familiar. Laughter, wind chimes, sobs in the dark.
The fourth peeled away its indecision. The liquid twisted violently, as if reacting to pain. Its shimmer gained color—white, laced with soft golden hue.
The fifth barrier embedded it with awareness. Sensory flashes. Language. The notion of "I." And many more things that it had lost in its creation.
The sixth stirred form. Limbs reached out, tentative and slow. A spine aligned itself, laced with light that breathed.
And then—
The seventh barrier.
The air rippled.
All else broke.
It emerged as she fell from heaven.
A body formed from convergence. Humanoid, but unmistakably other.
Statuesque, ethereal. Her skin radiated a soft glow that pulsed with steady rhythm, and from her back extended two wings, vast and feathery, each strand alive with psychic resonance. The wings shimmered, shifting with faint pulses of energy, casting trails of pale light.
Her hair dragged long and straight, pure white with golden essence coiling within it like threads of sunlight hidden beneath snow. The strands caught the world's light and bent it, giving off a soft glimmer—gentle from the front, elusive and mysterious from the back.
A halo of controlled fire hovered above her head, fixed in space but trembling from the friction of the turbulence. Each flicker of the flame enhanced her presence—divine, unshakable, foreign.
With air still brushing her hard, her eyes opened, golden and soft, filled with a light that didn't reflect the world but seemed to recall something beyond it.
But she was still falling.
Fast.
Without grace.
"Wha-what!?"
With a startled shriek that cracked the serenity of her arrival, her form spun awkwardly as gravity claimed her. She plummeted toward the world below, limbs flailing in a spiral that ended with a tremendous crash.
She landed headfirst.
The sound echoed like a dropped bell.
Her legs stuck out of the earth, straight and twitching.
The world around her vibrated in confusion, dust puffing around the crater of impact. Feathers flopped loosely. Her wings beat once, lazily, upside down.
There was a muffled scream.
"AAAAAAGHHHHH—!"
She clawed at the dirt, kicking her heels uselessly in the air. Her voice was smothered by the soil, but the sound continued—high-pitched, furious, and thoroughly confused.
Eventually, she managed to wriggle herself upright.
With a cough and a grunt, she flopped over, sitting in the shallow crater she'd made, hair tangled, wings splayed like a collapsed tent. Her eyes crossed slightly, then snapped open wide with realization.
"Wuh!?"
She wailed again, throwing her arms in the air as feathers fluttered off her wings.
Her halo pulsed indignantly.
She shoved dirt off her face, stood up with exaggerated effort, and inspected herself. Her glowing hair sparked faintly. Her skin flickered with residual energy, albeit tainted by the red that was trickling from her wounded head.
The world around her stayed quiet, seemingly stunned.
She brushed herself off, looked around with a mixture of awe and irritation, then exhaled a long breath.
"Wha… what…?"
Kivas Chariot was reborn in confusion.