Molly’s Motivation – A Journal Entry

I’m alone.

Lucie’s fallen, Mykal’s departed and Gabriel’s gone.

I’m alone in a never-ending office full of luminous immortals.

I can’t believe how quickly everything changed. One moment we were all friends, we were racing through the Light. I was dancing in the Garden of Forms.

I think I almost shone.

But Lucie said I’d never be a Star and then she went on a quest without me, and when they came back, things were different.

I don’t know why I care what Lucie thought, she was a liar, and after everything she’s now Fallen.  But I do. I care because she made me feel special, unique. She made me believe we were friends.

But if she was my friend the betrayal is all the greater.  Not hers, mine. I didn’t save her, couldn’t follow her onto Night-Stage.

My own fears held me back, but also her words, “You’ll never be a dancer.”

Words that first ignited anger, then sparked fear, now simmer at my core. I’m resigned to the reality of my existence.

I am not special.

I never was.

Lucie was right and when it came to it, when she needed me most, I let her down. I failed my best friend.

Lucie, Mykal and Gabriel were unique to me, but to them I was never unique, just one of many. They could never have felt about me the way I felt about them.  I’m a defective and deflated balloon, blown up only to be let go and streak pathetically round a room. The sound of a raspberry heralding my deflation. 

The only thing left for me to do is fulfil the orders of the First Message.

In a weird way, by helping, I still feel close to Gabriel.  Not that it matters anymore. The spark, that was there, is only a flicker now and will soon be extinguished, smothered by the knowledge that I am where I belong.

We’ve set up The Company. Of course, I wasn’t good enough to be Management. I wasn’t even good enough to be a Senior Analyst. I’m just a Decision Analyst. The Never-Ending Office is full of DAs. I’m one among many.

At least I have my own desk (more than I deserve). Here everything I have has a place and everything is kept in its place, especially my thoughts. 

Keeping busy, I bury any wandering memories about the beginning, about Lucie, Mykal or Gabriel.  Sometimes a stray recollection sneaks to the surface of my mind; the mirage of a smile, the ghost of a touch, the echo of a laugh. They are like moles popping up and leaving a heap of disturbed soil.

My mind is full of mole hills.

Keeping everything neat, tidy and in its place, I pat down the disturbed area and reseed the ground with efficient ideas.

Maybe as time passes, there’ll be fewer mole hills and one day there’ll be none. One day I’ll forget that anything ever changed in the Edge of the Light.

Al’s Sanctuary

Two more stops before Al can stable his trolley. He’s spent the day being the unseen miracle-grow for many busy and important luminous immortals.  Making his deliveries, he’s gathered gossip like a shepherd gathers wool and reaped smiles with his happy nature. Now he nears the highlight of his day – leaving the office with Molly.

After seeing her Shine once, many years ago, Al hopes to see Molly shine again. Not a stark, blinding light but a warm glow that drew out his own strawberry gleam and made him feel part of everything in the Light.

Stopping at Molly’s desk, Al collects up her bound scrolls and Molly helps him find Kassandra’s that, as usual, are scattered haphazardly about her cubicle.  Once all papers are safely stored on his trolley, Al starts back toward the Record Keeper’s Office.

Walking beside Al, Molly says, “You got the wheel to stop squeaking.”

Smiling, because she remembered, Al explains, “Lesley in Printing oiled it.”

“I’ve never been in Printing,” says Molly, “It must be interesting, going around the Never-Ending Office.”

“Not as interesting as watching what happens in the Wild,” says Al, trying to dim his blazing light, after such a compliment. Taking a breath, he asks, “What did you see today?”

“The usual disorder and chaos,” says Molly shrugging. “Having feelings and freewill really makes a mess. There was this one immortal, a young man in love. But then he fell in love with someone else. It’s ridiculous.”

“There must be a reason,” says Al. “Something must have changed.”

“His feelings,” says Molly, “That was it. No thought. No reason.”

“We can’t choose our feelings,” says Al, sliding his eyes toward Molly’s profile.

“Mortals have freewill. They can choose to feel however they want. If they can’t, they still have a choice about what they do with those feelings.”

“Don’t you think we have feelings?”

“Not like mortals. We only have the desire to do what we were made to do.”

“You only want to be an Analyst?” Al was sure Molly was made for more. He’d seen her dance. Keeping stride with her, he could see and feel her warm glow, but it was nothing to the moment she shone.

“It’s what I was made to do.”

“I don’t think I was made to push a trolley round all day,” says Al, stopping outside the Record Keeper’s Officer and gathering up the bound scrolls.

“You were made to be happy, friendly and incredibly organised,” says Molly, placing a dropped scroll on top of the pile. “You’re the lynch pin of the whole operation.”

Al’s smile is lost behind the pile of scrolls.

Pushing through the door, he hurries to dump them on the Keeper’s desk fearing, that when the door swings shut behind him, Molly will leave.

But she doesn’t. She never has.

Wrenching the door open again, he expects to see an empty corridor, but as always, finds Molly waiting.

The friends walk out of the Never-Ending Office together.

Gabriel’s Sanctuary

In the beginning, knowing he was the best-looking luminous immortal ever made, Gabriel would stride among his adoring fans.   His tall stature, golden hair, and glorious façade would draw others to him and his warm voice, would hold them enthralled, like watching embers dance in a fire. The crowd would hang on his every word, everyone listened to him. Despite this influence Gabriel’s only desire was to be adored because the gleam of so many eyes on him made Gabriel glorious.

Even strong and silent Mykal loved him and the beautiful Morning Star Lucie could not outshine his voice. Instead she would whisper praise and adoration in his ear. Gabriel accepted the adulation as his due. So that when the Morning Star suggested they go on a quest to the Master’s Estate, Gabriel agreed without thinking and when she told him he was to be the First Messenger, he believed her implicitly.

Returning from that quest, Gabriel was held in awe because his voice was now the voice of the Unmoved Master. He spoke and the luminous population got to work.

His new status raised him high, to the top of a pedestal, to the heights of a mountain.  But being so elevated, removed Gabriel from his adoring fans, who were now busy doing everything he had instructed them to do. But the more he saw the more he feared his influence, and he wondered if he’d done the right thing.

Walking among the crowds, he still felt their gleaming awe but whereas before he had only desired it, now he needed their glow to fill the shadow at his centre.

He tried to speak to Lucie, but she was busy co-ordinating the Stars and he realised that away from others Lucie never listened to what he said. Mykal was a much better listener, but he wasn’t much of a talker and had stoically accepted his new role as Defender and was busy, organising troops.

Alone atop his mountain, Molly finds him.

“Where have you been?” he asks.

“Helping establish the Never-Ending Office, as you instructed oh glorious one,” she says, rolling her eyes and crossing her arms.

“Have you made up with Lucie?” asks Gabriel.

“What?”

“She said you were mean to her. That’s why you didn’t come to help with the Red Tape.”

“And of course, you believed her,” says Molly, her light flaring with her voice. “You didn’t think to ask me?”

“She’s the Morning Star,” says Gabriel with a shrug. “And your best friend.”

“And you believed her about that,” says Molly, but this time her light narrows onto Gabriel. “I thought, just maybe, you’d see through her, that you were different. But you’re just like everyone else.” Her words illuminate the shadow at Gabriel’s centre, the ones he’s tried to ignore. Gabriel rises above Molly, saying “I’m not like everyone else,” and spreading his wings, declares. “I am Glorious,” and he flies off to the sanctuary of his adoring fans, away from Molly’s penetrating gaze.

Molly’s Sanctuary

Running away from Lucie’s hurtful words, Molly discovers the Master’s Garden of Forms, where grows everything that would exist or ever existed in the Wild. Angry, Molly’s light blazes with blue fire and her head echoes with Lucie’s voice, “Let’s face it, you weren’t made to dance.” “You’re just not good enough.” Seeing little of the Forms around her, the glasses and hairbrushes, the carts and the cogs, Molly plods on.  

With every stride, along the well-kept paths, Lucie’s words get louder and louder, until they fill up Molly’s head, like lava in a volcano ready to burst. Unleashing her fury, in a flurry of feathers, Molly shoots up, as high as she can go. Or at least until she’s high enough to see the base of the Black Mountain, where all the Luminous have congregated around Lucie the liar.

Molly could have flown up and on forever, but the sight of the crowd gathered around her so-called best friend causes her sink back to the ground. As she falls, she mutters a response to the echoes in her head; quippy remarks that would have overshadowed Lucie’s light if only she’d thought of them at the time.

Deflating, Molly now starts to doubt herself. She wonders if Lucie was right. Molly can’t dance like Lucie, but does that mean she wasn’t made to be a Star? All the other Stars can dance the way Lucie wants them to, only Molly can’t dance like them. Maybe the Unmoved Master didn’t make her to dance, but then what was she made for?

Passing a patch of mirrors, Molly sees her dark-hair, flying wild and framing her pale, unremarkable face. Just as dark lashes frame her blue eyes, her only striking feature. Compared to Lucie, with her strong nose, high cheek bones, full-lips and shining light, Molly shouldn’t even be called a Luminous Immortal. Of course, at this moment Molly’s pale-yellow glow looks dim in comparison to Lucie the Morning Star. But even at her best, Molly is only a spark next to a sun.

Collapsing into a convenient Form of chair, Molly looks around her for the first time and sees other chairs, intermingled with some tables. None of them are the same yet they are all called tables and chairs. Slabs of stone, smooth marble, wooden benches, they are all different but despite their differences they all have a place in the Garden of Forms. Maybe there’s room for her too.

She just needs to find her place with the other Luminous Immortals.  Leaping into the air, Molly flies towards the crowd gathered at the base of the Black Mountain. But then she sees Lucie, Mykal and Gabriel shining brilliant against the dark rocks further away. They have set off on an adventure without her.

They don’t need her after all.

Watching the three heroes walking away, Molly sinks into the branches of Redwood, the tallest tree in the Always-Orchard. Its branches cradle her like a parent’s arms, her first sanctuary.

Al’s Trolley

The trolley stands in the storeroom, a wooden beast of burden. On entering, Al, the Collector, pats its smooth surface, as if greeting a favourite pet. The wheels squeak in reply.

Unhooking his clipboard and quill, Al checks the supplies on the trolley.

“Ink pots. Two, three, four packs. All shades. Okay,” he mutters to himself, his eyes flicking between the list on the clipboard and the trolley. Scratching a tick on the parchment, he continues, “Stamps, two, four, six. Check. Scrolls, five boxes. Good. Repair kit, including replacement beads. Yes. Red tape…ummm, running low.”

Walking deeper into the storage room, Al checks several shelves and wonders why there hasn’t been another delivery of Red Tape. 

The deeper he goes the more shadows his light makes. The looming storage seem like monsters, and as Al’s light dims they get bigger. Fortunately, he finds a full box of Red Tape, before his light goes out. 

Carrying it quickly back to the trolley he unloads the tape and makes a note on his clipboard. He’ll need to speak to Management about increasing the next order.

Finished, he pulls the trolley into the corridor, then pushes it along the soft, white carpet.

With every step, Al’s light intensifies, like turning a dimmer switch.
Reaching the open plan area is his second favorite part of the day, because now he sees the warm glow of his most efficient colleague.

Although he wants to race straight over, he restrains himself. Molly has always been friendly, but he knows she doesn’t feel the same way about him. 

Her core doesn’t flash, when he’s near. Nor do sparks race through her light when he smiles. 

So, fingers tingling and chest hammering, Al allows himself a single sigh before forcing his legs to walk the normal route.

Gossiping to the many luminous immortals who work in the Never-Ending Office, Al delivers the various supplies from his trolley. But all the time, he’s conscious of that one light. Occasionally, he glances over in the hope that maybe today Molly will be looking out for him too.

But today is not that day.

With the practice of thirty-thousand Wild years, Al allows his feelings for Molly to simmer, whilst collecting gossip. Keeping busy is a good distraction. 

Everyone is talking about Gabriel, as Al expected, but one worker’s question catches his attention.  

“I wonder what will change this time?”

After the first message, the Collection and Distribution Plant, the Never-Ending Office and the Postal Workers were established. It was how Al became Collector. Maybe if things change this time, he’ll be able to do something different.

Maybe he’ll be able to stand out, to be noticed, even by Molly.

Arriving at Molly’s immaculate desk, Al finds her reading a scroll. Even doing admin she shines with a light warmer than anyone else’s, like the glow from a house in the night.

“Hi Molly,” says Al.

Smiling, Molly looks up, “Morning Al.”

Like a neon sign, Al’s light buzzes with happiness.

Gabriel’s Bag

Walking into the tent, one of many in the Boundary Camp, Mykal, Prince of the Luminous Defenders, stops and watches Gabriel, the Glorious First Messenger of the Unmoved Master.

Dressed in a white tunic and trousers, Gabriel stuffs various items in a beige, canvas bag.  One item is a stack of folded parchment – letters, which the Glorious One wrote but never sent. Next are a pen and ink pot, the tools of his trade, followed by a grooming kit to keep up his glorious appearance.  Mykal’s mouth twitches at the reminder of his friend’s vanity. He recalls the times when all other angels have been streaked with mud and dirt but Gabriel has emerged sparkly clean.

A broken watch-glass makes the cut, despite having a crack down the middle of its face. Mykal has never been sure if it even works.

Finally, Gabriel picks up the Staff of Summoning and collapses it to fit inside the bag. The Staff is a long, gold stick that can be collapsed like a telescope. It was a gift from the Master and enables Gabriel to amplify his message and send it directly into the heart of his listeners.

“What are you doing?” asks Mykal.

“Packing,” says Gabriel.

“Okay, I can see that but why?”

In response, Gabriel hands Mykal a rolled-up parchment. Unfurling and reading the page, Mykal’s regal brow frowns. Gabriel has been recalled to deliver a message. Risk of contamination certain!

“You’re going,” says Mykal. It wasn’t the staff that made him reach that conclusion; it was the letters and the grooming kit. Gabriel was always far too concerned about his looks to enjoy a Defender’s position on the Boundary.  When Gabriel doesn’t deny the statement, Mykal asks, “But what about the fight?”

“You don’t need me,” says Gabriel. “We both know I’m too good-looking to be a Defender.”

“You’re more than a defender oh glorious one. You’re my friend and contamination will taint your dazzling facade.”

“You’ve always had such a protective glint Kal,” says Gabriel, pushing passed him. But catching sight of his glorious appearance in a mirror, Gabriel turns to admire the reflection and continues, “Don’t worry, they say contamination won’t ruin my good looks.”

“But it means you won’t be able to return,” replies the Prince, meeting the reflection of Gabriel’s golden eyes, “Ever.”

Shifting his focus, Gabriel watches his own molten pupils solidify into golden steel as he says, “This is my chance, Mykal.  Our chance to change the flow of the fight. Maybe, if I go down there, into the Wild, maybe I can help. If I could speak to them before it happens – tell them what they will become.”

This was the reason Mykal loved Gabriel: through the arrogance and beneath the glorious appearance, the First Messenger cared.

He pretends he doesn’t, denies having a single good feather and yet agrees to contaminate himself to help mortals. So, what if he does this with perfectly quaffed hair and a dazzling smile?

Molly’s Desk

On the boundary between the Light and the Wild is the Never-Ending Office, where Molly Most-Efficient works at her desk.  Made of ash, it has four legs and one draw, and all its edges have been smoothed to give a simple grace.

The desk has been Molly’s for thirty-thousand Wild years.  On the left-hand side are three brown trays. Facing the aisle, they wait, like open mouthed chicks, for today’s work load. They are labelled in black script; Decisions Pending; Decisions Made and Last Decisions.  Each morning Alexander (“Call me Al”), the Collector, drops a pile of scrolls in Pending Decisions, along with a smile that Molly returns with ease.

Then breathing in her favourite fragrance, Molly selects a scroll. Unfurling it, she notes the location details and taps what appears to be a paperweight, the size of her palm. This is her watch-glass. Sitting in the middle of her desk, it allows her to see events in the Wild. At first glance the centre of the watch-glass appears misty, but as Molly concentrates an image solidifies. A mortal comes into focus, but the watch-glass shows more than the normal senses.

Waiting for the image to clarify, Molly stretches her hands to the wooden frame at the back of her desk and makes sure the beads on her morality measure are set to the centre.  The morality measure looks like a large abacus crossed with a toy roller-coaster.  Different shaded beads sit and slide along thin wooden dowels, but they don’t just run from left to right they go at angles and arches, up and down, and round and round. Interpreting the morality measure is the job of Decision Analysts like Molly. Most analysts get through a few decisions each day, Molly Most-Efficient gets through many.

Watching the mortal, Molly spins, slides and positions the beads on her morality measure, like a musician playing an organ. But rather than music she produces a score.  Finished, her nimble fingers retrieve her stamp and ink pads from the draw. She sets the score and stamps the scroll.

The last item on Molly’s desk lurks in the shadowed corner, where the cubicle partitions meet. Red Tape sits in a convenient dispenser, like mortal cello-tape but rather than clear and sticky it’s blood red and once it binds something it can never be cut loose. 

Binding the scroll, Molly places it in the Decisions Made tray. Al collects these at the end of the day. At that time Molly glances at the third tray and sighs at its inefficiency. It has sat there unused for thirty-thousand Wild years. But Molly hopes one Wild day it’ll be filled, and she’ll get the chance to order an entire life, to see a mortal make their Last Decision.

In A Philosophy of Angels, Molly’s dream comes true. But in getting her light’s desire she discovers a terrible secret about herself and the Red Tape that she has so efficiently been tying for the last thirty-thousand Wild years.