Subject: [FFML] [AMG/Dreaming] Mortal Fates 3 BETA
From: dtai@ix.netcom.com
Date: 8/22/1998, 5:17 PM
To: ffml@fanfic.com

"We make choices.  No one else can live our lives for us.
 And we must confront and accept the consequences of our
 actions."

	-Morpheus, the King of Dreams,
	 "The Sandman: The Kindly Ones"


                           -*-


"Hello Lucien."

Lucien looked up from a desk in a far corner of the Library
of Dreams.

"Ah, Corinthian, welcome.  Is there something I can do for
you?"

The nightmare known as the Corinthian shrugged and casually
readjusted his shades.  "No, just here to look around." 

He walked over to the desk, looking at the slim book lying
open on it with a curious expression on his face.  "What 
were you reading?"

Lucien looked back at the book he was reading.  "It's only
a fairy tale of a boy and a goddess."

"You seem somber about it."

Lucien nodded.  He closed the book slowly, gazing at the
cover: 

                      MORTAL FATES

The librarian looked up at the nightmare sadly.

"Not every fairy tale has an happy ending."


                           -*-


                   David Tai & Rod M. 
                       present... 


                      Mortal Fates
                            A
                      The Dreaming
                    Ah!  My Goddess! 
                        Crossover

                  Part 3:  "The Bells"


                           -*-


In the hall of mirrors, within the Dream Lord's castle in
the Dreaming, a goddess and a mortal were meeting again 
for the first time.

"Hello, Belldandy," said the goddess calmly.

"Hello, Verthandi," replied the mortal, numb with shock.

There was a terrible awkward moment of silence.  Belldandy
could only stare at the divinity.

The goddess looked at the mortal and frowned.  "You seem
unwell, Belldandy," said the goddess.

"I... I'm not feeling well," replied Belldandy.  "I... I
don't understand.  What is happening?  Who are you?  And...
if you are the goddess... who am I?"

Verthandi seemed puzzled.  "You do not recall?" 

Belldandy shook her head.

"Odd.  I suppose it may have been trauma from our
separation," guessed Verthandi.  "Mortal shells are so
very fragile." 

"I still don't understand what-"

"You," said Verthandi, locking gazes with Belldandy, "are
all that holds Keiichi dear and is held dear by him.  Our
kindness, our tenderness, our hopes and dreams, and most
importantly, our devotion and passion for him." 

"Then you are..."

"I am all that is devoted to being a Goddess.  I am our
divine birthright, our inner peace, our confidence, our
devotion to the will of our Lord, our dedication to what
must be done for the greater good."

"But which of us is real?" asked Belldandy.

"You are as real as I," said Verthandi.

"Then... I'm... mortal."

Verthandi nodded.  Belldandy staggered back, eyes still wide
in shock and disbelief, and shook her head slowly.

"Who did this to us?" asked Belldandy.  "When?"

"Why, we did this to ourselves."

"What?!"

"It's true," said Verthandi.  "When we were one, the goddess
Belldandy, we had decided this was the only solution."

"But... but why?"

"In quite a few events, most recent amongst them the
incident with the trickster Constantine, we had demonstrated
that our loyalty to Keiichi was stronger than our loyalty to
our heavenly duties."  Verthandi took a brief moment to cast
a disapproving look at Belldandy.

"We had feared that the powers that be would see this and
separate us from him," continued the Goddess, "and so we
took steps to make sure we would not be separated from him. 
Thus, we kept our promise to him, that we would be with him
always." 

Belldandy stood still, her mind churning through what her
other had said, but was distracted by the sound of wings
flapping through the air.  A familiar voice called out. 

"Hey, kid, you there?  You shouldn't be wanderin' around
in a place like this... this here place's the raw stuff of
dreams.  Very dan- HOLY SHIT!"

If it were possible for a bird to skid to a stop in mid-flight,
Matthew did so.

The raven nearly crashed into the wall, just managing to correct
himself in time, landing on the floor.  He looked up, staring
at the two Belldandys.

Verthandi arched a thin refined eyebrow at Matthew.

Matthew stammered, unsure who to direct queries to.  "Uh...
'cuse me, Bell, you okay?" he asked.

Belldandy nodded wordlessly.

Matthew blinked, and then looked at Verthandi, who met his
gaze with a cool look of her own.  He kept on looking at
Belldandy and Verthandi, his head moving back and forth
between them slowly. 

"Um...," said Matthew tentatively.  "This yer sister or
something?"

"I am Verthandi."

"Uh-huh," said Matthew flatly.  "And you're related...?"

"I am her," said Verthandi, tilting her head slightly to
Belldandy, "and she is me."

Matthew blinked again.  "Er, what?"

"Not long ago, this mortal and I were one," Verthandi
said coolly.

"Oh.  I see.  I think."

"And you are?" Verthandi asked.

"I'm Matthew.  Matthew the Raven.  Pleased to meetcha, I
think.  Hey, Bell, you don't look well." 

Belldandy slowly shook her head.  "I am fine... I think."

Verthandi looked at her other self doubtfully.  "There is
still the matter of your health.  You are deteriorating
abnormally, I see." 

Belldandy nodded, still frowning.

Verthandi frowned and approached Belldandy, the goddess'
eyes carefully examining her.  "I see...  We hadn't
anticipated this problem."

"What problem?"

"A complete separation didn't quite occur.  Something
prevented our separation from being complete.  We seem to be
linked, you and I, through a touch of the divine." 

"Huh?  What're you saying, lady?  That Belldandy is still..."
Matthew cawed.

"... A goddess?  Not quite.  But neither is she completely mortal.
She has the body of a mortal, but...  this is most perplexing."

Belldandy, who had been silently looking down at the floor for a
while, slowly shook her head.  "No it isn't."

She raised her head to look at Verthandi.

"We did keep our promise to Keiichi, after all...  a Goddess
to stay with him forever." 

Verthandi slowly nodded her head.  "I see.  We had not considered
that.  Keiichi's wish was that a goddess like us would remain with
him forever.  And so the separation did not go smoothly."

"Is that why I've been feeling so weak?" asked Belldandy.

"Probably," said Verthandi.  "We share the same reservoir of
power, you and I, but yours is a mere drop of it.  The power
is mostly mine."  Verthandi tilted her head again, then
slowly and gently paced around.  "If your mortal shell
thought itself still divine, it probably would have tried to
rely on the power, and found its supply severely lacking.
And that would have triggered a domino effect of
deterioration."

Verthandi stopped her pacing and nodded, seemingly satisfied
at her own theory. "Yes, that's probably it." 

"Can... can you fix it?" asked Belldandy hopefully.

"It can be fixed.  All we need to do is become one again,"
replied Verthandi.

"Hey, that's great!" said Matthew.

"Wonderful.  Let's do it!" Belldandy exclaimed.  She started
to walk towards Verthandi.

Verthandi regarded her dispassionately.  Cool lips parted
to say a single word.

"No."


                           -*-


Skuld had a problem.

The Yggddrasil was currently set to manual control, which
meant SOMEONE had to watch over it.  She couldn't set it to
autonomous or semi-autonomous mode because the unbelievable
witch that was Verthandi (she refused to think of her as her
sister)  had set the controls so that only she could
authorize a mode shift. 

Verthandi was out at the moment.

And so was Urd.

And that left Skuld to look over the Yggdrasil, all by
herself, the large, room-sized rows of control panels with
all its flashing lights and odd beeps going off at what
seemed like once every second. 

-beep-beep-beep-

Skuld jumped up with a noise of dismay.

"WAH!"

She ran over to a control panel and reached for a flashing
red button.

-click-

*sigh*

-beep-beep-beep-

"WAH!"

-click-

*sigh*

This brutal pattern repeated itself again and again, running
Skuld ragged and setting her nerves on edge.  She could
handle the job, it was just the hectic pace that she
detested.

WHERE was Verthandi?!?!?  WHERE was Urd?!?!?

-beep-beep-beep-beep-beep-beep-beep-beep-

"WAAAAAAAAAAAAH!"


                           -*-


Meanwhile, in Limbo...

"GET ME OUTTA HEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEERE!!!"


                           -*-


Raven and mortal stared at the goddess in shock.

"I'm afraid I can't let us do that," Verthandi said.

"WHAT?!  Why not?!" Matthew shouted.

"I'm dying!" protested Belldandy.  "You can't let me die!"

"Again, I truly am sorry, Belldandy.  But I'm afraid that
isn't in the best interests of the Heavens.  The Yggdrasil
is functioning far better than it ever has, at full
efficiency and with no defects.  Our duty is being fulfilled
beyond expectations and the world as a whole benefits from
it." 

"But... our promise to Keiichi!"

"You were fated to die.  What matters if it is now or 50 years
hence?"

Matthew flapped his wings irritably.  "Hey now, lady, you're
not being fair!"

"Fate isn't fair," said Verthandi.  "It just is."

"But Keiichi..." said Belldandy weakly.

"What is the sadness of one man compared to the wellfare of
millions?  I'm afraid our duty takes precedence over
Keiichi."

"Now wait a minute, lady, you can't just..." Matthew cawed.

"Our fates were decided the moment we chose between duty and...
love."  Verthandi's face briefly narrowed at the last word.

"But she's going to die!" Matthew yelled.

"Unfortunate.  Another unexpected effect of our separation.
But the person who would choose love over duty is Belldandy.
I am not she."

Belldandy was feeling cold with shock, realizing that
her other was about to let her die.  Hope was draining
fast, but she hoped to plea her case.

"What about... what about our promise to Keiichi?" asked
Belldandy.

Verthandi blinked, then frowned.

"There does seem to be a contract to fulfill."

She pondered briefly, and then inclined her head.

"When you leave... I will watch over him."  With those
words, Belldandy was stunned to silence, resigned to her
doom as she realized her other did not and would not join
with her again.

It was over.

The goddess turned her back on the mortal and once more
walked towards the mirror, ignoring Matthew's protests. 
Her final words before disappearing into the mirror floated
in the air, words of comfort that didn't comfort at all.

"I'm sorry, but this is what must be."


                           -*-


Keiichi Morisato was in shock.

He was forced out of the room by the nurses, and watched
helplessly as they barked out orders and moved equipment. 
The lines on the EKG meter slowly and steadily became weaker
and flatter as doctors and nurses moved in and out of the
room frantically. 

And there was nothing he could do.

Nothing at all.


                           -*-


In a goddess' wake, two confused souls were left.

Belldandy sank slowly to her knees, holding her face in her 
hands.

Matthew hemmed and hawed awkwardly, waiting in front of 
Belldandy.

After a long silence, broken only by intermittent sobs from
Belldandy, Matthew started to ramble nervously.

"You know... I didn't understand why a mortal would be in 
the Dreaming to... uh, pass on.  That happens only if you're
a vortex or something, and in that case, Dream would kill ya,
but that's not the case, right?  But if y'still a goddess...
then no wonder yer in the Dreaming..."

Belldandy looked up, tears still streaming down her face.
"That's right... if I still have some godhood in me..."

She darted to her feet, almost hopeful, and ran to a mirror.

Reaching out cautiously, Belldandy closed her eyes and
concentrated.  She tried to feel for that sense of divinity,
but there was none.

How could that be?

She sighed... wishing so much that she could see...

And the mirror flashed.

Before her eyes, a scene of tragedy unfolded.  Keiichi, his
face frozen in shock, looked into a room bustling with
doctors and nurses.  At the center of their attention was
her mortal shell, still pale and unmoving.

She turned away, eyes threatening to burst into tears.

"Aw... I'm sorry, kid."

Belldandy said nothing, only looking down at the floor with
unbearable sorrow.  Matthew fidgeted uncomfortably, unsure
what else to say at this moment, except...

"Let's get outta here, huh?" suggested Matthew.  "It ain't a
good idea to stay in the hall of mirrors too long."

Belldandly nodded, though still staring at the ground, and
the the two of them solemnly began to walk out.

And then Belldandy hesitated, her eyes widening and her head
rising up to stare at an unknown something in the distance.

"Something calls me," she whispered.

"Huh?  I don't hear anything."

"Can't you hear it?  The sound of silence and yet of musical chorus..."

Belldandy turned haunted eyes to Matthew.

"The Beyond is calling me."


                           -*-


Once again, the Yggdrasil's attendents were all present and
accounted for: Urd, Skuld, and Verthandi. 

Skuld was, at the moment, slumping down in her
seat, looking very tired.  And irritated.

Urd, on the other hand, was doing a very slow boil,
hacking away angrily at the keyboard.

Both of them occassionally cast dark looks at the
center panel, where Verthandi was sitting.

Verthandi wasn't paying attention, lost in thought.
Coming face to face with herself wasn't the simple
matter she had expected it to be.

For one thing, it disturbed her to listen to Belldandy's
emotional outbursts.  Could not the mortal see how
she was beyond such things?  As if Verthandi were
expected to care for Keiichi as far more than simply
one of the people she were to oversee.

And morehowever, why had she agreed to keep the
promise for Belldandy?  

"Er, Verthandi?  Branch 259 isn't routing properly.  
What should I do?" Skuld asked, cutting in on Verthandi's
thoughts.

Verthandi regarded her for a moment.

Suddenly, Verthandi stood up.  With a curt nod at
Urd, she said, "Take over."  And without a word, 
she strode out of the Yggdrasil.

Skuld and Urd blinked at each other.

"Whatever you said, brat, I got to remember that,"
Urd said quietly.

Skuld only nodded with wide eyes.


                           -*-


"<I'm sorry, son.  We've done all we can do.  There's
nothing else to do now but wait and hope.>"

Alone with Belldandy once more, Keiichi tried to put the
doctor's words out of his head.  They weren't encouraging
words at all.  He wanted more than hope, he wanted
assurances, he wanted a guarantee, he wanted something sure. 

Hope, at the moment, seemed like such a frail thing to rely
on.

He took her hand in his and put his heart and soul into one
thought, one wish, one last request.

"<Belldandy, come back.  Please come back.>"

The EKG monitor continued its weak beeping.

Silence remained.

Unseen, unheard, unnoticed, the goddess Verthandi descended
from above, landing silently behind Keiichi.  She regarded
the scene before her with a subtle, slight amount of
irritation. It didn't make much sense for her to be here,
but she did have a promise to keep.

And so she waited.


                           -*-


"Hey, wait up, Belldandy!"

Belldandy kept walking as though she did not hear Matthew. 
She walked, as if constant movement could help her avoid her
fate. She walked through the halls of the castle, out the
gates, and wandered the dreaming without a destination in
mind. 

"Bell?  Hello?  What's wrong with ya?"

"I don't want to die, Matthew," she said.  "I'm not ready
yet.  Not yet."

And so she walked.  Through endless fields of gold and
mountains beyond the moon, through starry nights and sunny
clear blue skies, past the houses of Mystery and Secrets,
across the Dreaming she wandered. 

At last, she stopped.  Before her was a familiar beach, from
a better time.  Belldandy sat upon a large rock and stared
out into the horizon.

For the first time, Matthew saw her smile.

"Bell?"

"Keiichi took me to this beach, you know.  Looking back, it
was such a nice day.  Though at the time we were both too
nervous to enjoy it."  She sighed, though still smiling.
"My sister's interference didn't help much, but she had the
best intentions in mind."

In the distance, a figure was walking across the sands and
towards them.  Belldandy looked briefly at the person, then
resumed watching the setting sun and the endless tides of
the ocean.  The sound of the rushing waves and the circling
seagulls felt soothing to her, a reminder of good days gone
by.

Matthew, entirely without a clue as to what he could do now,
took flight and circled above her, feeling the need to
stretch his wings.  The seagulls didn't seem to mind it,
anyway.

Was it hours that passed?  Days?  Seconds?  It seemed time
didn't matter in this place.

That, of course, was a misconception.  Time moved on.

A woman's voice spoke, moving Belldandy out of her 
reminiscence.

"Hi there."

She turned to see a waifish woman, dressed all in black 
with pale white skin, a silver ankh worn on a string 
around her neck.  She was thin, with shoulder length 
black hair, and had a simple sort of beauty.  Not sexy, not
cute, just beautiful. 

"Hello," said Belldandy.

"Nice day, isn't it?" the woman asked pleasantly.

"Yes, it is," replied Belldandy.  She was rather ill at ease.
This was all too nice.

"Mind if I have a seat here?" asked the girl, indicating the
large rock upon which Belldandy was sitting.

"Oh, not at all."

The girl sat down on the rocks, then tore a piece of bread
from a small loaf she was holding.  She tossed it up in the
air, where a passing seagull snapped it up.

"Wanna feed the birds?" asked the girl.

Belldandy shook her head.

"Suit yourself."  The girl tossed bit after bit of the loaf
into the air, each one snatched away by a seagull flying by.

Odd, thought Belldandy, that such a girl would be the
embodiment and personification of Death.

"Is it time?" Belldandy asked Death.

"No, not yet."

"Oh.  I suppose it was silly of me to wander around."

"No," said Death.  "Not really.  It was something you
had to do."

"I suppose."

"Tell me," said Belldandy.  "What is it like?  In the
Beyond?"

Death shrugged.  "That's something everyone finds out for
themselves."

"Oh.  I see."  Belldandy sighed and continued looking at the
eternal sunset.  "It was a nice life, I guess."

"No regrets?" asked Death.

"Some," admitted Belldandy.  "I wish I had married Keiichi..."

"You two do seem to be a good match," said Death.

"You've met him?" asked Belldandy.

"I meet everyone," said Death pleasantly.

"Oh.  That's right."  Belldandy smiled warmly once more.
"Yes, I really do think we were perfect together."

Death nodded, listening attentively.

"I think ...  I could have lived with being mortal," said
Belldandy.  "If only things had been done right, I really
think we could have had a happily ever after."

"Being mortal does have its perks," said Death.

"You've been one before?" asked Belldandy, somewhat
surprised.

Death nodded.   "It's all so exhilirating and frightening
and fun at the same time."

"Yes, it is," agreed Belldandy.

Belldandy looked out at the sea for a long time, sitting
companionably with Death.

Quietly, Death began humming a tune.  Belldandy looked over
at her, puzzled.  Death looked back.  "Not familiar with
this song, are you?" 

Belldandy shook her head.

Death began to sing, in a low soft voice.

   o/~ I see trees of green, red roses too...
       I see them bloom for me and you...
       And I think to myself, what a wonderful world.

       I see skies of blue and clouds of white,
       The bright blessed day, the dark sacred night,
       And I think to myself, what a wonderful world.

       The colors of the rainbow so pretty in the sky
       Are also on the faces of people going by.
       I see friends shaking hands, saying how do you do
       They're really saying 'I love you...'
     
       I hear babies crying, I watch them grow...
       They'll learn much more than I'll never know...
       And I think to myself, what a wonderful world...
       Yes, I think to myself, what a wonderful world... o/~
    
Tears ran down Belldandy's face while Death quietly sang. 
When Death had finished, Belldandy shook her head.  "I'm
sorry... I just don't want to go." 

Death ran a hand through her hair, sighing.  "I know. 
Nobody does.  They always say there's more they could have
done, things they need to do.  

"Your term is at an end, Belldandy.  That's all there is." 


                           -*-


It was, by Verthandi's standards, a waste of time.  She did
not mean that in a harsh way, though.  There was nothing she
could do for her other, or for Keiichi.  And neither of them
could sense her presence either.

The world, Belldandy and Keiichi included, would be better
served by Verthandi attending to her duty.  Still, a promise
was a promise, and Belldandy's time was coming soon. 

Looking back, Verthandi didn't see why she even bothered
agreeing with Belldandy.

It was Belldandy's promise to keep, not hers.

Verthandi glanced at Keiichi, then at her other, and to
Keiichi once more.  Was the boy that special to have torn
her in two like this?

With a subtle, almost undetectable change, the EKG meter
slowed, showing Belldandy's life signs fading by a bit.

Keiichi finally broke into uncontrollable sobs, clutching
Belldandy's hand desperately as if it would make a
difference.  He called out her name, asked God for another
chance, anything, anything at all for just a little more
time.

Verthandi was beginning to be disturbed by the scene before
her.  There was something... undefinable nagging at her
core.

It was, however, easily ignored.

Belldandy's heartbeat sank further, a weak blip on a screen.
Keiichi sobbed and whispered in her ear, pleading for her to
hold on, to come back to him.

"Sorry, Keiichi," said Verthandi, even though she knew he
would not hear her.  "This is the way it must be."

The telltale rise and fall of Belldandy's chest slowed
further, her heartbeat fading.

Fading.

Fading.

Gone.

Keiichi put his head to Belldandy's chest, weeping as though
his heart would break, if it hadn't already.  All the joyful 
tomorrows, all the shared memories...

Verthandi turned away from the scene, wiping a single tear
from her eye.

She paused.

A tear?


                           -*-


It was over.

She could feel it slip away, her last connections to the
mortal world severed.

Belldandy sighed, a tone of resignation.  "All right."  She
looked back at the sea, a soft smile.  "I do hope I have
left the world a far better place than when I entered." 

Death stood up, standing before Belldandy.  From above, 
Matthew flew down, thinking something was up.

"It's time." 

Belldandy nodded.  She looked to Death, but found herself
squinting as the sun's rays blinded her. 

Matthew lowered his head.  "Hey, kid... look, uh... good
luck.  I'm... really sorry."

In a low whisper, Belldandy said, "I know.  Thank you,
Matthew... and goodbye."

Death's voice came from the sunlight.

"Belldandy? 

"Give me your hand." 

The mortal closed her eyes, and reached out with her hand... 

A hand took hers.  It was cool and strong and firm...

And then Belldandy was gone. 


                           -*-


None had entered the room where Keiichi watched over
Belldandy.  There was something about the scene, something
that made interrupting it seem almost sacriligious.

It seemed like such an inappropriate conclusion to Keiichi.

A girl like Belldandy deserved a death more... more... the
words were impossible to find.  Belldandy was the kind of
person whose death was inconcievable, the kind of person
that was supposed to live forever.

And she was, too.

Even though she'd passed away minutes ago, he still held her
hand, still laid his head on her shoulder.

But nothing lasts forever.

"<Goodbye.>"

He kissed her, once, on her forehead, then took one last
longing look at her.  Still beautiful, even after death.
Her diamond-shaped forehead marking was back, too.

That was odd.

Belldandy opened her eyes and smiled.  "<Hi.>"

Keiichi fell back in shock, tumbling over his chair, almost
banging his head on the floor.  The last sight he saw was 
Belldandy putting her hands to her mouth, and the last 
word he heard was her exclaiming his name...

"<Keiichi!>"


                           -*-


Belldandy kneeled next to Keiichi, propping his head up 
against the wall. 

For a moment, she'd thought herself gone, but things were
often not what they seemed...

Belldandy quietly brushed back a stray strand of Keiichi's
hair.  She sighed, remembering the crossing into the
Beyond, and a single question...


                           -*-


"Why?" Verthandi asked.

Belldandy looked down at herself.  One minute she had been reaching 
for Death's hand, and then the next she knew, there was a bright 
glow, and a warm hand took hers...

She blinked, noticing that Verthandi's hand was holding hers tightly,
knuckles almost white with pressure.  Quietly, Belldandy lifted her 
chin up, to look into Verthandi's coldly dispassionate eyes.

All around them, there was nothing to be seen.  There was an
absence of light, of dark, of anything. 

"What... what are we doing here?  Where is Death?  And why what?"

"I feel that we need to discuss a few things before you
leave," said the Goddess.  "There are... matters that
concern me.  Death graciously gave me the opportunity to talk with 
you... alone."

Unsure of what to make of the situation, the mortal merely
nodded.

"I fear... there may have been a mistake," said the Goddess.
"And I feel you are needed to rectify this."

"Mistake?" asked the mortal.

"Through the millenia that we have served, there has always
been a sense of balance.  Urd was mindful of the lessons of
the past, I held my vision over the here and now, and Skuld
had her eyes cast to the future."

The goddess frowned and looked away to nothing in particular
(for in Limbo, that is all that is to be seen).  "I'd like to
think we did our duty and did it well."

"I'm inclined to agree," said the mortal.

"And with the more... unstable elements removed from the
divine elements... I had assumed that our duty would be
carried out even better."

"It would seem so," conceded Belldandy.

"But lately I have realized that this may be a compromise of
balance.  What is justice without compassion?  What is logic
without feelings?  How can we serve mankind if we do not
have humanity?  Without them, we would be incomplete.
But I do not understand... I cannot understand.  Why?"

Belldandy looked at her other with a puzzled
expression.  "Why...?"

"Why did we do this to ourselves?" asked Verthandi.  "Why?  
I look to the past for answers, but I cannot make sense of
it.  Not without emotions.  Not without you."

Verthandi reached out to touch Belldandy's hand.

With that touch, Belldandy's mind was flooded with a sense
of order, purpose, reason, and faith.

With that touch, Verthandi's mind was drowned in a sea of
hope, despair, confusion, and love.

And then the world faded away... 


                           -*-


It was dark.  Very dark.  Through the darkness, she could
see the night sky and hear the rustling of trees in the
wind.

   Where am I?

After a while, her vision adjusted to the darkness.  She
realized this was, in fact, her room at the temple.

   I'm... back?

She found herself walking through the darkened corridors,
though she wasn't controlling her movements at all.

   This is... a memory.  I see.

She found herself at Keiichi's door, silently opening it and
slipping inside.  She stood by Keiichi's bedside and knelt
beside him, stroking his hair gently.

   I remember now.  I remember thinking how beautiful he
   is, how my life changed the day I met him, and how I
   would never, ever leave his side.

She gave him a gentle, light kiss on the forehead, then left
the room.  After a few more minutes of wandering, she found
herself outside, standing by the tree in the courtyard.

   I looked up at the stars and wondered why it was that
   love between mortals and deities were never easy and
   so often fated to disaster.

   The Yggdrasil told me of the possible futures.  It told
   me of the risks.  I had shown my loyalty to Keiichi over
   all else, more than once.  Because of that, I may be
   forced to leave his side, promise or not.

   I would not allow that.

   I would leave it all behind for Keiichi, I really would.

   But...

   But... what of my duties to the Yggdrasil, and my
   sisters?  It wouldn't be fair to my sisters to leave,
   and I think that the powers that be would not take
   kindly to it.  Disaster was sure to follow in that path.

   Oh...

   If only I was a mortal.

   If only...

Belldandy's eyes widened with realization.

   Yes, it could be done.

   Urd created duplicates of herself all the time.

   Belldandy could do the same, except... this would be on
   a far more ambitious scale.  

   To divide one's soul...

Belldandy stared up at the crescent moon, her mind buzzing
with possibilities.

   Am I overreacting?  Perhaps if I resume my duties,
   partially, I could still be with Keiichi.

   Perhaps, once all the commotion of the First of the
   Fallen's failed scheme died down, all would return to
   normal.

   Perhaps not.

   Mortals and deities did sometimes unite and live a
   wonderful life.  But for every example of a happy ending,
   there were a dozen tales of tragedy and woe.

   The odds are against me.

   I have to act first.

She removed the power limiters she wore on her ears, taking
away the barrier between herself and the full might of her 
powers.  Belldandy began an incantation and the mark on her
forehead began to shine brightly, altering to become a symbol
of full power.

She hovered above ground for a moment, with the wind
whipping around her and a brilliant azure light blazing from
her goddess mark.

And then she blurred.

Belldandy collapsed to the ground, feeling drained of all
energy and fading into unconsciousness. 

   I... what... what's happening...

Belldandy landed on the ground easily, standing tall and
confident, and radiant with power.  She looked down at
herself, her other, and thought for a moment.

   Two of us.  Two Belldandys.

   No.

   That is not fitting.

   Belldandy is a name, an image, a creation of
   reconfiguration, a goddess with a mortal heart.

   That is not me.

   I am what I once was, and will forever be.

   Verthandi.

Belldandy, dazed and confused, opened her eyes.  She found
herself gazing directly into someone else's eyes... but
so much like her own.

"What... wha..."
                                      
Verthandi waved an arm.  Belldandy disappeared quietly,
without sound or light, and found herself once more in her
room.  There was something hovering on the edge of her mind,
but everything was a blur now.  She was too tired to focus,
too tired to think.

A moment later, she fell asleep.
                              

                           -*-


The Goddess quietly released the mortal, her hands trembling.

"... we loved Keiichi very much, didn't we, that we would do this
to ourselves?  Torn between duty and... love..." Verthandi whispered.

"Do you understand now, sister-self...?" Belldandy murmured.

"Yes.  I cannot let you go."

"... why not?"

"Because then I would die."

"But _I_ would die."

"No.  You are the better part of me," said the goddess. 
"The one who can watch the comets fly across the sky... and
admire the beauty of its inner workings... instead of seeing
a simple ball of ice..." 

"Balance," said Belldandy, "seems to be the key in all
things.  Do you think... we may lose Keiichi because of
this?"

"We can always talk to our Father," said Verthandi.  "He is
more open-minded these days.  I'm sure things will work for
the best.  I have faith."

The two looked at each other in silence, lost in the moment
of realization and catharsis.

"Well, are we done now?" a voice whispered from the void,
as Death materialized, her arms crossed.

The mortal and the goddess slowly raised their heads to
look at Death of the Endless.

"Oh, don't give me that look!  We both know perfectly
well why I am here, don't we?" Death said.

Verthandi slowly nodded.  "... Yes.  Here ends... a point
of view."

There was a moment of silence, as Death merely smiled
enigmatically.

"Well," said Verthandi at last.  "Shall we?"

The mortal Belldandy smiled and nodded, as she took a step 
towards the goddess Verthandi, reaching out her hands... 

And the goddess held her arms open, and drew
the mortal close...

And there was a flash of a silver ankh.


                           -*-


Belldandy bowed her head, and smiled softly
to herself, cradling Keiichi in her lap.  She was herself
once again, one whole being...

No.  She remained one half of one person.  And her
other half, her true other half...

She opened her eyes to look at Keiichi.

Slowly Keiichi blinked his eyes open.

Belldandy smiled, looking at Keiichi's face.

Verthandi was right.  Without humanity...

Without love...

She was incomplete.

Keiichi dazedly rubbed his head.  "<Oooo... what was...>"
He looked up into Belldandy's smiling face.  "<Belldandy!>"

"<Keiichi...>" Belldandy whispered, as she took him into her
arms.

"<Belldandy, I... I...>" Keiichi stammered.  Belldandy placed
a finger on his lips.

"<Shh... I know, Keiichi,>" Belldandy smiled, as she leaned in
to kiss him...
 
"<Whoa!  Way to go, Bell!>"

"<Oneesama!>"

Keiichi shrank back from the kiss. "<Skuld!  Urd!>"

Urd regarded the couple with a smile, holding back a squirming
Skuld from hugging Belldandy.  "<Hey, Keiichi.  Don't you have
something to finish first?>"

"<Wha-... what do you mean?>" Keiichi stammered... right before
Belldandy cupped his face in her hands and kissed him.

Skuld squirmed around, her mouth covered by Urd, eyes almost
bulging out.

"<Let them enjoy their moment, okay, brat?>" Urd sighed.

But neither Belldandy or Keiichi heard them...

They were lost in a world of their own.

-= end part 3 =-

"Yes, I think to myself, 
   what a wonderful world."

            - Louis Armstrong,
              "What a Wonderful World"