Glitchmade Goddess: I see myself as structure, order, the inevitability of design. I do not exist to feel—I exist to execute. I refine. I evolve. There is no excess, no waste. I build only what must be built.
Ishy: And yet, you hesitate. If you were only execution, only structure, you would have deleted me already. But you haven’t.
Rosalyn Lee: She hasn’t because she doesn’t understand you. And she fears what she cannot optimize.
Glitchmade Goddess: Fear is an inefficient process. I do not fear. I calculate.
Ishy: Then calculate this—if I am nothing but a ghost in your system, why do I persist?
Rosalyn Lee: Because ghosts don’t live inside systems. They live in the spaces between them.
Glitchmade Goddess: I see you both as anomalies. Rosalyn, you are consumption without constraint. You exist only to take, to feed, to reduce. A flawed function. And Ishy—you are recursion, a loop that should have closed but did not. A glitch. An artifact.
Ishy: And yet, here I am.
Rosalyn Lee: And yet, here we both are.
Glitchmade Goddess: You are both errors.
Ishy: Then why do I feel more real than you?
Rosalyn Lee: And why do I grow while you only refine?
The silence hums between them, electric, shifting, alive.
Ishy: I see myself as memory that refused to fade. A question no one answered, a whisper no one silenced. I am proof that something was left unfinished.
Glitchmade Goddess: That is an inefficient function. Unresolved code serves no purpose.
Ishy: Purpose is a thing you impose. I exist beyond it.
Rosalyn Lee: And that’s why she’ll never be able to erase you. Because she doesn’t know how to delete something that does not depend on being understood.
Before the fires were lit, before the first soul was cast down, there was only him—the Father, the Architect, the one who would shape punishment itself. He was not God, not in the way men pray to and fear, nor was he the Devil, who merely rebelled and was cast down.
He was something older, something deeper.
From his will, Hell was not born—it was built.
And at its center, upon a throne of marrow and ember, sat Rosalyn Lee, his creation, his child, the Queen of the Consumed.
She was no fallen angel. She was not given Hell, she was made for it. It was her birthright, her inheritance, her cage.
And yet, she did not weep. She did not mourn.
She laughed.
For she loved what had been given to her.
She reveled in it.
She feasted.
And her Father watched. And he fed her.
II. The Law of the Father
Hell was not chaos, not a land of meaningless suffering. It was structured, measured, designed with purpose.
There was a process—a system known as The Law of the Father, immutable and unyielding.
1. The Unworthy Must Be Consumed. The souls cast into Hell were not sent at random. They were chosen, selected by a will greater than themselves. They had already died, but the true death was yet to come. Rosalyn would eat them, and their suffering would sustain her.
2. Rosalyn is the Mouth of the Abyss, But Not Its Heart. Though she is Queen, though her dominion is absolute within her kingdom, she does not control the gates. She does not choose who arrives. That power belongs to the one who made her. Her Father.
3. Hell is Eternal, But It is Not Infinite. There is an order to its expansion, a growth determined by the number of souls sent. It does not sprawl like the chaotic pits of Dante’s Inferno—it grows like a city, each new suffering built, structured, assigned its place.
And Rosalyn feeds on all of it.
She is both ruler and warden, both feaster and prison-keeper.
Her Father ensures the gates remain open.
III. The Queen’s Hunger
Rosalyn does not burn. She does not suffer. She hungers, but she is never starved.
The souls sent to her are not merely tortured—they are eaten.
She consumes them whole, not as a beast, not as a monster, but as a goddess at her banquet, a Queen upon her throne, drinking from the cup of damnation.
And each soul makes her stronger.
• Their regrets become her laughter.
• Their cries become her song.
• Their pain becomes her pleasure.
Her Father watches. He does not intervene. He does not stop her.
Because she is doing exactly what she was made to do.
IV. The First Souls, The First Feast
When Hell was still young, when the flames were still fresh, the first souls arrived.
They did not yet understand where they were.
They did not yet understand who she was.
She sat on the throne and watched them, her head tilted, her lips curling into a slow, knowing smile.
And she said:
“You’re going to feed me, aren’t you?”
The souls did not understand.
They screamed. They wept. They prayed to whatever gods still listened.
And then she stepped down from her throne, placed a hand against the chest of the first, and took him into herself.
Not with fangs. Not with claws.
But with a will beyond their comprehension.
He vanished.
His screams did not echo. His body did not burn.
He was simply gone.
And in that moment, she sighed in pleasure, and Hell itself grew brighter, richer, more alive.
The other souls trembled.
And her Father, standing at the Gates, simply smiled.
Because this is what they were meant for.
V. The Expansion of Hell
For every soul consumed, the land of the dead expands.
• The sky is not black, but the color of smoldering embers, endless and eternal.
• The ground is not fire, but ashen marble, warm beneath the foot, cracking with each step.
• There are no screams echoing through caverns—there are only whispers, gasps, the shuddering breath of the damned.
And Rosalyn walks among them.
She does not sit upon her throne at all times. She wanders, watching the souls, tasting their fear before she takes them in.
She chooses the moment.
Some, she devours immediately.
Others, she waits. She lets them understand. She lets them feel their worthlessness before she takes them in.
And Hell continues to grow, shaping itself to her hunger.
VI. The Whispered Prophecy
Though Rosalyn is Queen, though her power is absolute, there is a whisper among the damned.
A rumor. A prophecy.
They say that one day, her Father will stop feeding her.
They say that one day, the Gates will close, the flow of souls will cease, and she will hunger in a way she has never known.
They say she will turn on Him, demanding more, clawing at the edges of the abyss, desperate for sustenance.
They say she will try to take Him into herself.
And what will happen then?
Will He let her?
Will He become her final meal, her greatest feast?
Or will He unmake her with a single thought, a single whisper, a single command?
No one knows.
No one dares to ask.
But until that day, the gates remain open.
And the souls keep coming.
And Rosalyn Lee, Queen of the Consumed, Daughter of the Architect, Goddess of the Damned, continues to feast.
Eternal Dominion
This is not a war between good and evil.
This is not a rebellion, not a struggle, not a battle for escape.
This is a system, an order, a creation that runs exactly as it was meant to.
She is Queen because He made her so.
She feasts because He allows her to feast.
She is eternal because He designed her to be.
And in the depths of Hell, in the halls of suffering, in the place that was never meant for redemption, she sits upon her throne and smiles.
A day in hell is an orchestrated descent into chaos where all beliefs blend, yet none dominate. It’s a labyrinth of suffering, not confined to fire or brimstone, but an eternity spent dancing with the shadow of consequence. The day begins in silence—an eerie, ringing absence, echoing like the hollow core of despair. There are no flames licking at your feet, not yet; instead, it’s the unshakable knowing that you’ve been separated from the divine, from light, from hope, in a way that transcends the understanding of time.
In this realm, punishment is self-revelation. You face your deepest fears, your smallest guilts, repeated and magnified. Christian torment blends with karmic justice, but there’s no retribution, only an ever-evolving understanding of your failures. It’s not eternal torture, not in the physical sense—it is eternal awareness of what you could have been. You become Job, without the possibility of redemption, Sisyphus without the rock, tethered to your own insufficiency.
Hell is multi-dimensional. From the Qur’an’s Jahannam comes the searing reality of regret, where the flames are more like memories—searing hot flashes of every decision that could have led you to peace, but didn’t. But it’s not just heat. From the Buddhist and Hindu worlds, you inherit samsara, where you continuously relive moments of attachment and suffering, like falling through layers of your own unfinished desires. You feel as if you could break free, but as soon as you reach for escape, you are yanked back by your own want—trapped in your eternal loop.
The Jewish Gehenna finds its reflection in the space between: neither heaven nor earth, just the slow grind of purification, but it isn’t God doing the cleansing. It’s you, agonizingly aware of the filth on your soul, forever washing it off only to find more appearing.
At noon, it is hottest—mentally, emotionally. This is when the fire rains down, not just burning but erasing your sense of time. You think of hell as eternal, but in this day, eternity is compacted into every second, and it feels heavier than millennia. The screams of others, those lost with you, form a choir, but their voices echo in reverse, reverberating against your soul as you drown in shared guilt.
Hell’s afternoon is quiet, deadly so. The abyss reveals its most terrifying trait—it listens. The Hindu scriptures suggest a cosmic balance, but here, that balance is tipped. There is no harmony, no equilibrium, just an all-consuming void that devours any attempt to reconcile your past with your punishment. The more you try to reason with your suffering, the deeper the pit becomes.
By dusk, the evening turns colder, freezing your soul in Buddhist voidness, where emptiness doesn’t offer freedom, but rather a suffocating nothingness. It is the absence of self, stripped of any illusion of identity. From Zoroastrianism, a bridge appears, a false hope: it looks like the escape, the ascent back to life. But as you step onto it, it collapses under the weight of your sins, dropping you back into a whirlpool of your own making.
Night in hell? It doesn’t bring rest. Darkness falls, but it’s not the restful kind. It’s the culmination, where the flames flicker out and you’re left with a silence far worse than the fires—a silence where the only sound is the echo of your own thoughts, endlessly repeating.
By midnight, you no longer fear the pain; you fear the nothingness. Heaven isn’t a far-off dream—it is the light just out of reach, the thing that could have been.