God is a woman. With a reddish ponytail. She wears a dark blue skintight suit and is facing a big screen.
Inside of the screen is a number of children, floating and swimming inside a grand aquarium.
"God," begins the first child. "Can you die?"
"I can die, yes." answers God. "Then the next person will take my place."
"When you die, will you still be able to think? To project your thinking to us every weekend like we do here?" she continues.
God smiles. "Thinking is the privilege of the living."
The next child takes the screen. "God," he says, "can we see how you look like?"
"Of course," says God with assuring certainty, and moves her face closer to the screen. God smiles at the child; the child gasps at the look of God's face. "In fact, the organization introduces its new God at the beginning of every year, on its YouTube channel. You can also ask questions there,"
The child smiles and hands the screen to the next person in line.
The screen turns black and acquires a glitch. God holds her breath for a while. Finally the image of a long row of small bones appears on the screen. It seems to be moving, like the gear of a bicycle.
"God," it seems to be the voice of a he. "Do you know who I am?"
God looks at the form of the row of small bones for a while. Something seems to reach her mind and she lets out a soft chuckle, realizing who in the world could possibly have the ability to turn to such form. "Is it you, Benjamin? What is an ex-God doing in the aquarium?"
The row of small bones keeps still for a while. God is examining him once again and realizes that he is not Benjamin. Benjamin is in the audience, probably entertained by her response.
"—your construction specialist."
There seems to be a concert of soft laughter in the audience.
"They told me I could ask questions."
God smiles and the laughter in the audience dissipates. "Of course you can. Thank you for asking the question."
The construction specialist says nothing any longer.
"One last question." says God.
The screen moves to a child with a goggle on one eye. She has bright hair that covers up her face even underwater.
"Hi darling," greets God.
The child does not say anything for a while and closes her eyes. Then she opens them again. The goggle glows at her action.
There is cheering in the audience.
"Does the variable three alpha to the power of eighty one scare you?"
The question raises sounds from the audience. Then something appears on the screen. 3α81. The α encircles the child's goggle, appearing as if an eye.
God stays still. "Does it scare anyone?"
"It does." says the child. "Most children gasp at the sight of it. It seems to be a very scary mathematical entity for most of them."
The air goes still again for another moment. The letters appearing golden in front of the child's eyes still glimmer on the screen. She is floating; everyone's floating. God herself. The tech coordinator next to God's room. Everyone is floating but the audience.
The child, the audience, and even God herself seem to be waiting for God's answer.
"It doesn't scare me," says God. "We embrace variables here, don't we? We embrace mathematics. We know it's the working gear behind many things. The answer to much of philosophy."
The letters seem to glow brighter.
"If we see it as a foreign entity apart from our daily understandings, it might be scary. People who see it for the first time might find it scary. But darling, little one, if you incorporate it into a working; let's say, a multiplication, do you still find it scary? I believe not. It even becomes fun, doesn't it?"
The end of the child's lips finally forms a curved bow. She favors the answer.
"Especially when you can cancel it out with anything over alpha to the power of anything." adds the child.
They both smile at each other. The distance feels really close right now even though God's room is in one place and the aquarium is somewhere else far away. Nothing feels to be in their way except the screen itself. There is silence in the audience, followed by cheering when the screen is finally shut down. It will be long before the child comes in training, if she ever will be. It would be her choice later on whether or not she wants to take it. To strive to become God, like Victoria. Or Benjamin. And have her seat in the audience after her year passes.
Or maybe she would choose to become like me. Unable to ever be God by choice, and instead dreams about them every once in a while in sleeps that last longer than the morning sun.
//we all have strange dreams all the time. we just don't always remember.//