You have questions, little scribe. I can tell.
I can hear the clicking of the Nameless’ long nails all around me and when She speaks I imagine, incongruously, canine jawbones clacking and grinning where they float in the head of a woman-shaped darkness. Asking questions of such an entity isn’t something I want to make a habit of, but after a hesitation I find myself saying, “Why me? I know I’m the scribe, but it doesn’t seem like you have a story to tell so I’m not quite sure why you waste your time with me. No offense.”
Every story is mine, the Nameless replies, beginning to end. Stories are chaos. Chaos drives stories. And besides, She spreads Her taloned hands wide, time has no meaning to the void. I exist everywhere and always.
“So that’s it? You just want to make sure they’re recorded?” That seems too simple – and far too benevolent for the Nameless. She likes games, after all, and She always wins. I just haven’t figured out what one we’re playing.
I don’t care about records. Your words will last only as long as the methods with which they are documented, and those methods will only last as long as technology and human civilization do. Which won’t be much longer. ‘No offense.’ She laughs, the sound echoing like flowing water in a cavern.
“Then why me?” I know I won’t get a straight answer but I can’t help asking anyway.
Oh, I’m not going to hand you all the answers, the Nameless purrs. Where’s the fun in that?
It was me.