If Yves has a book wherein the name of every being that comes into
existence is recorded, then it stands to reason -- Kronos' reason, at any
rate -- that the Archives should contain a book of the name of every being
ever soul-killed.
Kronos not being given the freebies of the Symphony, his version is not
automatic. Rather, it includes the painstaking efforts of multiple
Servitors who have been taught the various Songs of Symphony. Each asks a
single question, repeatedly: "What is the true name of the human, ethereal,
or celestial soul which was the last one destroyed prior to (the last
answer they got) in (the realm they are assigned to), if any?" Obviously,
the biggest contingent focuses on Hell; however, the group is organized by
time period and little by little has confirmed a comprehensive,
nonoverlapping list.
The assigned demons have, through long and tedious questioning, pushed the
tally of souls all the way back to the creation of Hell; very few soul
deaths took place in the millions of years before the Fall, most having to
do with non-reincarnating primitive humans. Heaven has even fewer; the
Marches have many, almost rivaling Hell. The process is rapidly moving
back in time now; soon, the error-checkers will get, to the question "Was
any soul destroyed before (last name gained) in (this realm)?", the answer
"No."
In addition, of course, one group keeps up-to-date with modern soul-deaths.
Kronos' statistics on the population of humanity and their ultimate
dispositions, coupled with occasional questions about the date of the
last-checked death, keep the group relatively sure they're staying on pace.
The Essence expenditure is enormous, of course, but for some reason Kronos
has made this a longstanding project, and few in Hell would try to deny him
this odd obsession.
Flunkies for the name-generating teams run about the Archives, collecting
such information as they can on each. Limited by time rather than by the
information available, even the best-known souls can only manage a
paragraph or so before the next name must be researched. Such information
as can be gathered is listed next to the name, along with the time, place,
and manner of death.
The master copy of the result is The Book of Dead Souls. A reading of the
Book, even without any special attempt at delving into its nature, can
impose a deep sadness on anyone. It is a litany, a liturgy even, a paean
to the irrevocable loss of uniquenesses and identities. Whole existences
are reduced to a few lines of text no different from other lines of text,
dozens upon dozens crowding the Book's pages. Raphael's and Legion's
entries are casually separated by a single human of little consequence,
dying at just a certain moment on the other side of the world. Raphael has
five lines, Legion three. The mysterious Metatron has not even that much.
Naturally there is, by the nature of things, a copy in The Library.
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