124 A Transcription of The Ancient History Of Aegis Volume I greggbot The history in this book was first told by the wandering wizard. ::There were no planes of existence. There was nothing. Just the Void. And a bright shining light. It was not a light we could see, it was not really white either, but it would be the only way to explain the existance of such a Deity in contrast to the emptiness of the Void. None know why, how or when this Deity existed. It is, in fact, herecy to speculate on such matters. The all knowing God was this Deity. :: Truly none can describe the majesty of the creator, the one and only. The Merciful Creator of the Seven Skies. With his intent, and only his intent, the World of Aegis was created. All he had to do was simply want it to occur and it happened. The rolling seas, proud mountains and vast landscapes, all in a second, created by God. ::The World was not created in play or for fun, but as a theatre for the inhabitants of the World to be tested in. And tested for what? Well, that is for us to speculate. Though I believe it is to test us for purity, how hard we can fight temptation, and how clean and good our actions can be. ::The first mortal being to be created was a man. This man was sculptured with clay and water, but left hollow. Soulless, God's creation lay there for the other immortal beings to see. The Aengul and the Daemon, the two spirits created before the mortal beings and before the creation of Aegis. Not much is known about these two spirit races, but hopefully in the future we may know more. ::God then blew his own breath of existance into the hollow shell and the man lived. God then took the man and put him in the centre of all of Aegis, the same spot where The Cloud Temple now stands. God also made the man a partner, from the exact same clay and exact same breath, she was the first woman. These simple beings could not talk, nor did they know much about the World. They roamed the world, enjoying it's pre-historic beauty. Untouched, the fresh glades and dark thick forests were a wonder to set eyes on.