Chapter 20 == Good Ending

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"I hated the choices you made."

"But I--"

"No more excuses!" Set's fangs clicked in frustration, "I had given you chance after chance for righting the wrongs you've done to our marriage, but you've fled in terror because you didn't want to deal with the consequences."

"I was drugged! I couldn't do anything!" Her voice was tense as she appeared to be holding back tears, her figure becoming more substantial and less ghostly.

"Yet you thought it was best to not divulge to me what you were doing. I was there that day when Isis asked you to visit, watched you get everything ready with a doubtful look on your face," Set stopped in front of Nephthys, lifting a hand to rest against her cheek, "Why?"

"Because I knew you hated Osiris, of how you coveted his throne and power. I feared that you would fly into a rage if I mentioned his name..." The tears were thick from her eyes, streaming down and over his hand before evaporating from the heat rolling from his form, "You never showed interest before in what I did."

I moved closer to my possessed body, noticing that Thoth was completely ignoring what was going on behind him. Either that or he couldn't hear what was happening.

His fingers deftly scrawled something along the papers' surface, methodically writing down whatever his spell was on each sheet. Out of the twenty I had prepared, he was halfway through.

"I want you back with me, Nebthwt. I stayed silent while our sister spoke with you because I hoped that you would take a stand against her on your own, but you continued to bend to her word," Set shook his head a little in disbelief, "When I had confronted to two of you in our home, you played the victim and cried innocence."

"I tried--"

"No, you didn't! You spoke as if my actions were a certainty against you!" His white fangs flashed in the light while his hand dropped from Nethphys' face, "I never believed Isis' words against yours, yet you lied to me when I pressed you for the smallest bit of information."

Nephthys' tears flowed freely down her cheeks as she let out a cry of sorrow mixed with realization, her hands pressing against her face while she slouched forward a little. Set only stood by as she released whatever pent up emotion held her, his eyes never wavering from her form.

"Will you stop running from me?" The deity of chaos shifted back a little, allowing his sister-wife more room, "Will you stop this ridiculous plan of yours?"

"I have no choice at this moment. She's made a bargain with Thoth," Nephthys regained most of her composure while taking deep breaths.

"That's not what I asked."

She seemed to flinch away from Set before looking up at him, "Yes..."

With the soft admission, Set stood up straight and shifted his gaze towards me. While I expected him to start admonishing me for what I was having Thoth do, I was only left speechless as Set turned away and moved back towards the wall he had been leaning against. His eyes warned me that he still regarded me less than an ant, something I had grown accustomed to from him.

Nephthys wiped away the remaining tears from her face, letting out a soft breath before her figure flashed in a bright light that forced me to turn away.

When I looked back, she was gone.

"It was intelligent of you to not interrupt," Thoth's voice sounded, my body standing up smoothly while the stack of papers in my hand became engulfed with green fire.

"I'm not that rash, birdbrain," Set made it clear who the comment was targeted towards, "I learned my lesson millenia ago to not mess with your spells."

"The timing for the spell would've been better if it was closer to the full moon, but I gave her as much of a peaceful send-off as I could," The ibis-headed deity walked up to me.

I opened my mouth to answer before I felt myself become pulled into my body as it stepped through me, Thoth walking on his original path without flinching. My hands burned like fire while the wounds I sustained through the torture raged with pain, my legs unable to stand under their own strength as I knelt on the ground.

"It would've been better if you had just let me do as I wished," Set continued as the transformation happened, ignoring the small grunt I made when I fell, "Everything was to be finished in the morning."

"Your little puppet will be disappointed by an empty cell," Thoth commented. His words reminded me of my original bargain with Set.

"Since I'm no longer the host for Nephthys...you need to uphold your end," I looked up at both deities, their human-sized forms appearing small when I was used to their larger-than-life displays, "Send me home."

"I don't remember promising that you would be returned to your time."

"You are bound to your word, Set," Thoth interjected, his right wing lifting as a scroll appeared at his lead feathertips, "Everything you and (y/n) have spoken has been written down."

Set narrowed his eyes into a glare, shooting a withering glance at the deity of knowledge before his lips spread into a snarl, "...fine."

I didn't know how I would be sent back, my eyes showing my fear as Set moved around Thoth to approach me, "What about my body?"

"I believe I have already told you of this, (y/n)," Thoth barely turned towards me with a small smirk, "The state of the body has no bearing on your soul."

Set's furred hand wrapped around my neck and lifted me up into the air effortlessly, "Which means I don't need to be gentle."

I grabbed at his fingers while I gasped for air, "Always the gentleman."

"I look forward to seeing you again."



My hand fell from the doorknob, the metal cold in my hand while I heard the neighbors across the way shout at each other about something that seemed unimportant. Sunlight poured through the stairway window that was broken, allowing some bugs to fly in and out at their will.

A sudden wave of lightheadedness washed over my form as a shudder danced on my skin.

"I'm...back?"

I rushed to grab the housekeys that rested in my jogging shorts pocket, opening my apartment and nearly sprinting to the hall mirror. The reflection looking back at me appeared to be the same, my hair neatly done up to stay out of my face, the tank top loose while a sports bra kept my chest modest.

Lifting up the tank top, my eyes widened in surprise before letting out a laugh of disbelief. Like a set of brands, two symbols had been carved into my skin. Both held familiarity with me.

One was a tapered bar with six wavy lines falling from under the bar, the symbol filling my head with memories of the ill-tempered deity.

The other was one that was more attributed to the medical field, a winged staff wrapped by two serpents. I smiled at the memory of the ibis-headed deity and his extensive living library.

They had kept their end of the bargain.

A God's Bargain (EgyptianGod!Brothers and Reader)Opowieści tętniące życiem. Odkryj je teraz