Olivia knew motherhood would be magical, but she never thought literally! Suffering from what she thinks are hallucinations, it’s hard to believe the being of light she gives birth to is real, let alone his only purpose for entering this reality is to stop an evil being set on destroying their eternal, non-physical home, Omnipion.
The worst part? She made a pre-human vow to train him for this exact mission. Why? Because she’s the Adapter; a sage with the ability to persuade such a pure essence as him to fight.
Unable to remember her inhumane agreement, she sets out to free her precious boy from his horrific fate, claiming she’ll fight instead but, with an onslaught of evil incarnate ready to kill them around every corner, can she conjure her own supernatural gift in time to do so?
I MEAN…
- What if you were told that our human bodies were nothing but advanced avatars in a experiential game played by our non-physical selves that our eternal home, Omnipion, created?
- What if there was a dark, powerful being, opposed to Omnipion’s rules, set on destroying this mystical home by hacking into abilities hidden upon the earth that will enable him to do so?
- What if, by him gaining this ability to destroy Omnipion, it meant destroying all intelligent, sentient beings taking part in the game, on all habitable planets throughout the cosmos and also in Omnipion?
- What if your newborn son, a powerful being of light, was considered the only thing capable of stopping this dark, evil force?
- What if you were a high ranking being from Omnipion who made the pre-human agreement to come to earth for the sole purpose of giving birth to this pure being? To train him for the mission he hasn’t got the heart to fight?
- And what if, knowing all this, you could not relate to Omnipion’s agenda now you’d fully assimilated into this human form, let alone to a version of yourself who agreed to treat an innocent human child like he was nothing more than a magical weapon?
Would you still wish to save such a world?
Olivia wouldn’t!
After seventeen years on earth incarnating as human, she was now more Mancunian than magical. She doesn’t care that stifling her child’s magical gifts to pursue her own means she’s potentially putting life forms in this world and the next at stake. There was no way she would let a pure soul as him near such evil, let alone have him risk his life for a fight he’s being pressured into!
So what if it’s for the highest good, to spare beings taking some spiritual test her higher self apparently concocted and revered; training a child to fight such a war was a thing no loving mother would allow, especially now the urge to protect him screams louder in her gut than the program wired into it!
The problem?
She has to prove she can fight with her own gift; some crap ability to adapt inanimate objects. As she struggles to conjure this arbitrary gift, her child conjures many, showing her he’s much more capable than she could ever imagine. Having to face the fact that he’s not only a child prodigy whose intelligence surpasses all other babies of his age, and fear he could reveal his magical abilities in front of her spiritually conservative family, who already thinks she’s insane, as well as his father acting in mysterious ways her son is psychically, opposed to, doesn’t help with the “good feeling emotions” it apparently takes to conjure her gift.
It’s clear her solitary gift, even if she could conjure it, was nowhere near as powerful as his distinct seven. She knows she doesn’t have the unique power of light he holds within, the only thing the supermundanes of Omnipion claim is the only hope they have left to defeat the Disrupter. But does she care?
Nope!
Born the same time as her son, the Disrupter was also just a child at the moment. He may well look like a creepy gargoyle, and can possess people around him, like his mother and others from the dark army who follow and support him, doing his bidding with abilities of their own he’s granted them from his previous incarnations, but his age means he doesn’t possess the full extent of his dark energy yet. Yes, his residual energy may be powerful enough to kill her, which he’s not shy about making clear every opportunity he gets, but she feels this will give her the time she needs to learn more and come up with a plan. It also helps that, though she doesn’t want him to fight, her son can deflect the energy with his own residual power, a light equal and opposite to his.
Her supernatural gift may only allow for the adaptation of inanimate objects, thus making her nowhere near strong enough to oppose the incredible dark magic she must face, but her “natural” instinct of a mother’s love is!
But was love enough?
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