Chapter 3: The Voice
Beyond the Depths
Opening: The Sliver of
Light
"And the light shineth in
darkness; and the darkness comprehended it not." — John 1:5
Truth.
Light.
The Crowned-Deep
hesitated—just for a moment. Through the teeth, through the accumulated weight
of every sin Dan had ever committed, or had been committed against him.
The ants scattered,
shrieking. The mandibles began to crack.
And a voice spoke—not from
above or below, but from within reality itself.
God's voice,
"Daniel."
Not a command. A
recognition. His name was spoken by the mouth that had breathed stars into
existence.
Dan's soul
flickered—orangish-red dimming to ashen gray, then flashing blue, then gold,
then back to ash. A strobe light of emotions, The Crowned-Deep tasted sugar in
its soul, and the stench of love angered it.
God, "You have one chance.
Not because you deserve it—mercy and grace aren't about deserving. Because I
won't let this thing have you without a fight."
Dan's fading, existence
flickering in and out of being with doubt.
Dan felt himself
dissolving. Not assimilation—something else. The relief of his soul vanishing
into nothingness, but somehow… He was held. Like water cupped in hands that
refused to let it spill.
Dan's voice, barely a
whisper, "Is this… is this how it feels to vanish?"
God, "Creation wasn't a
mistake; it was a risk that love chose to take, to redeem itself for evil's
sake. Suffering isn't erased."
God, "If I am your
Beloved, Daniel… if I am truly the God you curse… I was there with you when you
found your parents drowned in devotion to darkness… A darkness you never
understood, but took you anyway. But Dan… Daniel Voss, you are still my son. But
I won't force you. I never have. My love is free."
The Crowned-Deep roared—a
sound like oceans collapsing into themselves. It clawed at Dan's fading form,
desperate, hungry.
The Crowned-Deep, "He's
mine! Every choice, every sin, every—"
God, quieter, absolute,
but soft as breath. "He was Mine first." God's hand envelops The Crowned-Deep,
and a desperate cry of the unborn that had never seen light occurs. Scree—eech,
clash.
Dan saw it then—
His reflection. Not
who he'd become—the predator, the possessed. The man who'd traded his humanity
for a pocket full of pride, dignity, power, and satisfaction. But who he'd been
all along deep within, a seven-year-old boy who knelt beside bathtubs that
overflowed with water, shaking his parents, begging them to wake up... Please
God, make them wake up.
That boy. The one who'd
never stopped grieving. The one God had been calling to through thirty years of
noise, that had been dull of hearing, and understanding his own heart.
God, "One condition
Dan, surrender your false sense of control first. The illusion that you could
have saved them yourself. That you should have been enough, by yourself. That
you need power or control to matter to me. And that you need control to matter
to yourself. And I will save that baby that was baptized by his aunt behind his
parents' backs. The innocence that used to blow bubbles at the mirror and
wished he had a kiki (sister) with him to blow bubbles with. The soul that
grieved over and blew bubbles in the dark all his life, up until his parents
fell.—and most importantly, the man who still grieved in his last breath for
his dead parents."
Dan shuddered. His whole
spirit flickered bloody red, with gold intertwining within a flame in a
hurricane.
Dan, "I… I can't let go.
If I let go, it means they died for nothing."
"But if I surrender, it'll
mean my whole existence truly was... A vapor in the wind. A flicker of white
light overtakes Dan… "God's not cruel; sin is."
God, "They died because
broken people make broken choices, expecting impossible outcomes, because
half-truths… You lived because I wouldn't let their brokenness be the last
word."
God, "You were baptized,
son; always remember that."
Dan's soul flickered; a
sudden coldness hit the ashen parts of Dan's soul. Maryanne. The name felt like
a word from a language he used to speak… He could see a face—or the blur of one
in his soul's vision—smelling of salt and rain, but the details were messy. The
world was already pulling her memory back into the void , forgetting the
woman who had fractured The-Crowned-Deep. Potentially angering The Covenant of
The Drowned.
Dan, "I… I don't
remember her face. Why don't I remember her?"
God, "Because her
sacrifice was total, Daniel. She gave everything-even her place in the stories
of men. But I do not forget. You are here because she was willing to be
forgotten…Not because it was the way I wanted it, but because it's what the
fall required."
God,"You saved Maryanne's
life, Daniel. You gave her the ward-stone. You could have kept it, used it to
protect yourself from The Crowned-Deep. But you gave it away. Not because you
were good or deserved it.— but because at the end, when it mattered, you chose
her over yourself."
The gold in his soul
flared brighter.
God, "Do you know what
guards the tree, Daniel? That's the Crowned-Deep; it has stood watch since
Eden, learning every secret of good and evil, but never tasting the fruit."
God, "The
Crowned-Deep was made to contrast my glory, Daniel. But even The Deep forgot,
vessels of dishonor can choose honor. The Crowned-Deep was not yet named when
it found me. It was older than its name. Older than creation."
The Crowned-Deep hissed
desperately; it clung to Dan, "Daniel, do you know what Lucifer's throne
represents? The morning star will sit there—Revelation promises it. Remove the
throne, and the timeline COLLAPSES. God allows tribulation. Suffering intensified.
Billions screaming. Then judgment. Then… what? New creation? More chances to
fall? I offer a better way, erasure, mercy, void. I did your dirty work God."
God's spirit whispered
from the inside of creation, "You don't get to rewrite My story just because
you were born before the stars. The throne stands because I SAY it stands.
Lucifer gets his moment because prophecy WILL fulfill itself… You call it dirty
work. I call it REDEMPTION. The tribulation refines as gold is tried through
fire. The judgment purifies. The suffering—yes, the suffering—is BIRTH PANGS,
not a final death rattle. You want to abort the delivery because labor hurts.
But I'm bringing life through it. New creation, a redeemed people. Suffering
answered, not erased. You don't get to kill my plan to 'help' Me."
The Crowned-Deep said in
disposition, "Then You're cruel. You choose suffering when the void is
inevitable."
God spoke with integrity,
"I choose LOVE. Which requires freedom. Which permits suffering. Which I
entered through incarnation. You watched from Eden. YOU NEVER ENTERED, YOU
NEVER DIED AND ROSE AGAIN FOR YOUR CREATION.
I became human. I
suffered. I died. I bore it all.
You want to erase the
canvas because the painting has shades of gray.
I'm completing MY
Masterpiece."
The-Crowned-Deep spoke
from the bones of dead souls between void and flesh. "Then I will see it BURN
before you finish it."
Dan's soul stopped
flickering.
For the first time since
he was seven years old, Daniel Voss exhaled.
Dan broken, quiet, free,
"Okay, Okay, I… I forgive myself. God help me, I forgive myself, Lord,
forgive me please, I let go of everything."
The canal shattered.
The Crowned-Deep
screamed—not in rage, but in something close to grief, mingled with ego and
sadness. It had lost its witness.
The Crowned-Deep, "You
will never stop me! The undoing is inevitable! You hear me, GOD? I will be the
undoing!"
Dan's soul flared gold,
with a white afterglow—bright as the sun, warm as grace offered not as a
condition, but as a gift; grace as solid as the forgiveness that binds it.
