A/N: This is not a story that follows your "typical" Jumpchain rules. There is some subversion and some original takes on the genre. Also I may or may not use some of the popular jump documents floating around out there. Now read, comment and enjoy
Summary: An old man who is perpetually
getting too old for this shit tries to make the omniverse just a little bit better, one Jump at a time.
00000
I was a crusty old man when I died. That's not usually how is goes, right? It's usually some young ignorant high school kid who gets whisked away to another world to live out his childish fantasies. Big titted elves that only want his sad loser self and all of the other pathetic power and sex fantasies you'd expect from some skinny loser who spent his time fantasizing about magical worlds with his hand firmly down his pants. Me? God knows I'd made mistakes, but in the end I'd lived a full life I felt satisfied with. There was nothing else I really felt I needed to accomplish when my time on this earth drew to a close. How many people can say the same?
Towards the end of my life I'd done the smart thing like I'd learned in my spiritual training and prepared myself for the end. I knew it was coming. When you get past a certain age, certain folks just get a feel for that kind of thing. I even had some idea of what to expect on the other side, or at least I believed I did. Death, while it still scared me some as it began to happen, was something I willingly accepted with eyes and arms wide open.
Which is why suddenly finding myself in a white room looking at a gaudily dressed teenage girl came as such a huge Goddamn shock.
"What the hell?" I said out loud, eyes widening as I looked at the smirking girl in front of me.
The girl was a looker alright, though that was mostly an academic observation on my part since it had been more than five decades since I'd been interested in anything that young. Still that didn't do much to raise my opinion of her given the rest of her. The dress she was wearing was some lace and frill monstrosity that looked like the mating of a candy store and a Victorian dress gone wrong. Her hair was a rainbow of color and the smirk on her face was teasing and mischievous. Besides that, I was personally of the opinion that she at least half a decade too young looking to wear a dress that low cut. Actually, on second though, no self-respecting woman on God's green earth should ever wear something that low and scandalous. It had to be black magic that was holding it up and I could practically see her belly button. A frown quickly settled across my features and I crossed my arms across my chest.
"If you're supposed to be God," I said bluntly, "then I want a refund."
The girl produced a fan out of nowhere then, opened it, and hid her mouth behind it while she tittered. I raised an eyebrow at that and struggled to keep my cool. I hadn't forgotten that just a moment ago I'd been in the process of dying. Being thrown into this situation was nothing like anything I'd been expecting and it was quickly starting to make me mighty twitchy.
"Listen," I said, anger seeping into my words despite my attempts at holding it in. "I'm pretty sure I'm dead and I'd like to get on with that. So if you don't have anything to useful to say young lady, just point me in the right direction and I'll be on my way."
"My," the girl said, snapping her fan shut. Her smile suddenly turned predatory. "You're just as ornery and stereotypically
old as your life record said you were. Not that I ever doubted it, you understand, but you can rarely truly appreciate these things until you see them face-to-face."
Her voice was musical, enchanting, and if I was the sort of person to believe in such things I'd almost be tempted to say
perfect. Perfection, however, was not something I gave much credence to these days. However perfect the package appeared I was still decidedly unimpressed.
"You got any other useless commentary regale me with?" I asked, trying to keep myself calm and only partially succeeding. "Are you supposed to be temptation or something? Because I gotta tell you lady, you really shoulda picked something different if your plan was to catch my interest."
I saw a flicker of annoyance cross her face before it was smoothed out in a smile. I tried not to feel too much satisfaction at that. "I'm not sure if I should feel flattered or insulted by your words, Benjamin," the girl said airily. "But you should relax. I'm no devil and definitely not what you might refer to as
God. More like a goddess really, with a small 'g'. And I'm here to make you an offer you can't refuse."
I stared at her for a long moment, thoughts churning. Then I took the time to really pay attention to my surroundings. I was standing, but my body felt distant. Not good exactly, and not pained and sluggish like it had been a short while ago, just... like it was an idea more than the real thing. The place we were in wasn't really a room like I'd originally thought. More like the suggestion of a room, all white everywhere with light somehow bending just enough to trick the mind into seeing four walls and a ceiling when in fact there was none. I thought about making a run for it, but what good would it do? I strongly suspected that my initial thought had been correct. I'd died. Now it looked like I'd been trapped by a devil, however much she claimed not to be one.
The girl smiled knowingly at me. I scowled. Was she reading my mind or something?
"Make me an offer I can't refuse?" I asked skeptically. "So, what? You're the 'goddess' of wise guys then? Am I supposed to give you my soul or you'll break my legs?"
"Hardly," the girl scoffed. "I wouldn't have any use for such a thing. No, if anything, I would be the 'goddess' of travel. Facilitating transportation of things across the omniverse for the eventual betterment of all is my mandate, you could say."
I blinked at that. "What? Seriously, transportation? Like Hermes?"
"There are some similarities, yes. Except I operate on a much,
much larger scale."
Somehow, I knew she was telling the truth. Which was ridiculous. Everybody lied. I looked at her suspiciously. Was she using some kind of magic or trickery to get me to trust her? No, somehow I knew she wasn't. Deep in the core of my soul I knew she was telling the truth. Somehow.
"You're not lying?" I asked uncertainly just to clarify.
"Nope," she said, popping her 'p' like a damn kid.
"How could I possibly know that?" I asked. "Somehow, I do."
"It's an ability," she said with a smile. "An absolute truth and disclosure field on a conceptual level. Truly the power of gods and legends. It allows two parties who would never otherwise trust each other to at least negotiate in good faith, among other uses."
"Well... that's good," I said, somewhat taken aback by what she had said. Every word had rung true. Somehow, there was just no way it could be denied. "Is that something you use in all your conversations?"
"No," the girl said. "It's very rarely used. However I knew for a fact we'd be here for years with me trying to get you to trust me otherwise. I have better things to do than argue with an obstinate ass, I'm afraid."
I frowned at that. "You haven't exactly been a peach yourself," I practically growled.
"You're just far too prickly, Benjamin."
Annoying enough, that also rung as
truth.
"So you gonna tell me your name," I groused, "before you make me that 'offer I can't refuse'?"
The girl clasped her hands together in front of her and nodded, somehow giving the impression that she was taking this seriously. "My name is Jump-chan."
That absolute-truth field thingie somehow rung a little off on that one. "You're not being entirely honest," I accused.
"Sure I am," she said. "Jump-chan is just one of my many aliases. I doubt any of my other more official ones would mean much to you anyway."
Truth.
"Tell me. Are you familiar with the multiverse theory?"
I blinked at the unexpected segue. "What, like alternate dimensions and stuff? Places with alternate histories?"
"Yes. Exactly like that."
"Well," I said, feeling a bit bewildered. "I saw a couple of Star Trek episodes on the subject, I think. Can't say I know anything more detailed than that though."
Jump-girl nodded like it was expected. She then opened the fan still in her hand and with a swish all of a sudden color and light seemed to flow from her fan to fill up the space between the two of them. As I watched what looked like a three dimensional map of the stars began to take shape, except each "star" seemed to give off a different colored glow and...
feel for lack of a better term. Jump-girl walked up and pointed at a seemingly random light in the mess of what now had to be tens of thousands of different colored lights.
"This," began Jump-girl, "is a representation of your home multiverse cluster. Inside of it exist what are simultaneously an infinite and finite number of worlds and dimensions. Alternate histories of your entire universe all throughout time, numerous enough to be infinite for nearly all practical purposes. A remarkable cluster in some ways, and quite thoroughly mundane in others."
All that she said registered as true.
"However, no matter how far you look in your multiverse cluster you're never going to find some things that simply cannot exist there. For example, you mentioned Star Trek? The technology that makes that sort of civilization possible is incompatible with the physics of your multiverse cluster. No, for Star Trek and the Federation to exist slightly different rules would need to exist." Jump-girl then moved her hand and pointed at another small but brightly glowing light seemingly at random. "This multiverse cluster here has the required physical and metaphysical rules to allow the reality you know as 'Star Trek' to exist. Thus, all possible iterations of Star Trek exist in this multiverse cluster, since as I stated earlier all possibilities that
can exist
do exist in each and every cluster. Do you understand?" She asked, looking me right in the eyes with an unreadable expression as we looked at each other through the field of stars.
Did I understand? Well, in theory what she was saying was something I could understand easily enough, even if it was much more difficult to actually wrap my head around it. I mulled it over for a few moments before hesitantly speaking.
"That's all real interesting, I will admit. The idea that somewhere with slightly different rules literally anything can exist? Even the utopian ideas of some science fiction author back on Earth? It's... a lot to think about," I said, swallowing my discomfort and curiosity. There was still the billion dollar question though. "But what does any of that have to do with me?"
"You died. That means you can't go back," she said, not unkindly. "You realize that, right?"
I swallowed. "Yeah. It's not like I didn't see it coming. Body was too old, to worn down. It was only a matter of time."
Jump-girl nodded before her face turned serious. Suddenly the girl in front of him didn't look so young anymore. "Tell me. There is a modern term in use in your world nowadays. do you know what isekai is?"
I wracked my brain for an answer. It sounded familiar. Didn't my grand nephew go on about something like that to anyone who would listen two Christmases ago? Something about some Chinese cartoon character that landed in another world?
"Japanese character, actually," Jump-girl said, sounding mildly amused. "For about a decade the genre became all the rage before being gradually replaced by NTR and other worse trash, leading to the predictable collapse of the industry and the subsequent resurgence of Xianxia manga leading to the golden age of Japanese animation and comics dominating on the world stage. But that's neither here nor there at the moment."
I blinked. I had no idea what the hell she'd just said, so I ignored it and pushed on. "You still haven't gotten to the part where any of this has got to do with me," I pointed out. Then I frowned. "And stop reading my mind."
"Sorry. Hard habit to break," she said with a shit-eating smile that told me she wasn't going to be stopping any time soon. Then the smile gradually faded from her face until suddenly she looked decades older. It was a bit unnerving.
"My job is to try to make things better in the omniverse. However the nature of my powers makes taking direct action in multiverse clusters... problematic, for a lot of very good reasons. The way I get around this is by doing something similar to the isekai genre found in your world. I take the recently deceased, grant them powers and my blessings, and send them to do some good somewhere in the omniverse. That's why you're here Benjamin. I want to offer you a job, of sorts. To be my champion. To give you superpowers, essentially, so you can go out there in the multiverse and do some good," her smile became a sad, almost bitter thing. "I want you to become a hero,
my hero, more or less."
True.
I looked away from her eyes and tiredly rubbed my face. "Look lady, I'm not sure what kind of guy you think I am but... that's me, I'm just a guy. I mean I don't think I'm entirely without good qualities, but what in the Sam Hill do I know about being some kind of hero? Hell, never mind some kind of world hopping hero or something."
Jump-girl's face softened. "I don't think you're giving yourself nearly enough credit."
I shook my head. "Look, I'm just a tired, bitter son of a bitch. I'm sure there are plenty of young strapping men willing to saddle up, keep living and get superpowers at the same time for...
this, whatever this is. Do you really want someone who doesn't even want the job?"
Jump-girl's expression became positively thunderous, but I knew right away that it wasn't directed at me. "I made that mistake already. More times than I care to admit, hoping for a different result. Do you know what happens when you give young men eager for power the kind of strength they only dreamt about along with a dearth of limits and supervision? Whatever worse case scenario you can imagine, it's come to that, and worse. No. No more young idiots eager for 'adventure' who end up becoming monsters when they realize no one and nothing can stop them in whatever world I sent them to. No. No more. I need someone mature, someone who is a
real adult. A grown person with decades of following a moral code who is too calcified and set in their ways to ever give in to the temptation to become a tyrant. That is what I need. That's why I need
you."
True.
I shook my head, feeling bewildered by what I was hearing. "You don't even know me, lady," I protested somewhat weakly.
"Not true," she said. "I've seen your whole life, Benjamin. The highs and the lows. The good and the bad. For all your flaws - real and imagined - you never faltered from your own personal code even when you had every reason in the world to do so."
"I faltered," I protested, voice suddenly hoarse. "Many times. More than once."
"That's right," Jump-lady said with a nod. "And you regretted it, and resolved never to do it again. And you've held strong. For more than thirty years, you've held strong." She gave him a kind supportive smile. "Now that's the kind of record I think I can put my faith behind, don't you?"
True.
I looked away, suddenly feeling ashamed. I didn't deserve that kind of praise. "So, these bad apples of yours," I said, not so subtly changing the subject. "You say they ran wild, made a mess of things. No offence, but why didn't you stop them?"
Jump-lady frowned, a touch of frustration entering her voice. "When a champion of mine enters a multiverse cluster my ability to monitor and...
correct their activities becomes severely curtailed. Only when they exit the cluster do I once again have full admin control. Eventually, once they get strong enough, I can't force them out. So there they have remained in the last cluster I sent them to, God-kings of their own petty kingdoms in some tiny corner of the omniverse. I hate those thieves. I hate them. They are some of my worst mistakes, and I have been around for a
long time."
I nodded slowly as I digested that. "So... your plan is for me to hunt down these douchebags then?"
Her eyes widened and Jump-lady let out a startled laugh of surprise. "My, you know, I was so concerned with getting the right sort of person to help me fulfill my purpose I had not even considered it. No. I don't know. Maybe?"
"I've never a problem beating the living lights out of someone who deserved it," I said with a lopsided smile, remembering old times.
"So you'll take the job, then?"
I faltered, then forced myself to look her in the eye. "I was actually ready to die, you know. It's a natural process. My time had come. I'd been hoping to finally be able to let down my burdens."
Jump-girl smiled, her expression sympathetic. "You also hoped to see your wife again, yes?"
I grimaced and looked away. "Expected it? No, not really. It sounds too good to be true, so I doubt it is. But hoped? Yeah. I hoped. For sure I hoped."
"Almost every damn day," Jump-lady added quietly, finishing his thought.
I could only nod before gruffly adding, "I thought I told you to stop reading my mind."
"Sorry. Old habits," she said, not sounding sorry at all. "So, are you going to take the deal?"
Slowly I shook my head. "No. I'm sorry, but no. I want to move on and... I'm not sure if I'd be any good at it anyway."
Jump-girl nodded as if she'd been expecting it. "What if I sweeten the deal?" she asked.
I almost said no before stopping myself. "I'm listening," I finally said.
"You wife," she began, "When you get strong enough, if you want, I can reunite you with her soul. You might be able to bring her back to life. Or, you could simply say goodbye. Finally get that closure you've never been able to get. I suspect that would be more valuable to you than anything else I could offer you."
Truth.
"Y-you can really do that?" I asked, disbelief and even a little wonder in my voice. "You can bring the dead back to life."
Jump-girl made a so-so motion with her hand. "It's more compilated than that," she said. "But I
can deliver on what I promised, when you are ready."
Truth.
My wife... my Zola. Dear God. Was this real? The "truth" ability let me feel the truth of everything being said and promised down to the very core of my soul. This was the closest thing to an absolute guarantee I would ever get from anyone or anything. The chance to see my Zola one more time? To... say everything that went unsaid? That needed to be said?
Maybe even bring her back to life?
I... wasn't sure how I felt about that last one. I really wasn't. But everything else?
Yes.
Well then. In that case, if this was going to happen, then it needed to happen properly.
I straightened my back, pulling myself up to fully to attention, strong and straight. "And you only want me to be this champion thing to help people?"
"To make things better," corrected Jump-girl. "So overwhelmingly, yes."
I mulled that over for a minute. "I get to decide how I help people. I don't want any backseat driving. If you're going to be giving me power to change a bunch of people's lives, then I sure as hell am also going to take the responsibility that goes with it."
Jump-lady genuinely smiled at that. "Already asking for more responsibility? My, my faith in you being the right person for this job is increasing by the minute."
"Yeah, yeah, laugh it up. So? Do we have a deal or do I get to go on to the afterlife?" I asked.
Jump-lady beamed at me and nodded. "We have a deal."
She then held out her hand for me to shake. Cautiously and with suspicion clearly written on my face, I reached out and shook her hand. I gotta say, the broad grin on her face instantly started giving me second thoughts about my decision.
Looks like life is about to start getting interesting again.