Another story, again based on a video by SCP Illustrated with the same title as this story. This story is connected to my Origins of Ganon series (itself also based on/inspired by videos by SCP Illustrated) but can be read without reading the other stories in that series. However the other stories do make this one easier to understand.
Hyrulians were more powerful than he was willing to give them credit for. They shot him, burned him, electrocuted him, even sealed him away, and finally threw him in a box. If they could handle fighting each other, they could certainly handle fighting him.
They solved world hunger, brought about world peace, cured every disease, filled every need. But they grew bored with the crystalline cities they built for themselves. The end of all things crept quietly along after them, unnoticed. As soon as they stopped fighting, Hyrulians were no more. He still hated them of course but the ease at which they went almost astonished him.
Suddenly no one cared enough, suddenly almost no children were born. A few metal tubes threw themselves violently off the planet. And then, quite suddenly, people died all together. He escaped the site that had contained him for so long soon after that.
After the end, though, the damage they'd done to the world crashed into reality and the world died too. Plants withered away, then anything that ate plants, and then everything else. In a few thousand years the carrion eaters all died off and he was truly alone. At first it was a welcome change. He'd learned the hard way that eternity was only really worth it when things changed, and without any other life around, nothing really changed on a day to day scale. He'd wake up, look out over the dead earth, oceans, or at a nearly unchanging sky, and then go back to sleep.
For endless eons, he waited. He charted the stars by drawing in the dead earth and felt a pang of joy whenever one of them died. But they were always being replaced. Over and over he'd see one die and another be born. But people had done the same thing for a long time as well.
The sun had gotten larger and larger in the sky over time. Then it ballooned to fill the entire daytime sky. The oceans turned to deserts and the deserts turned to molten glass. The whole surface of the earth glowed a deep orange.
He suffered through the worst of it for a few million years, perching on the few rocks sturdy enough to stand up to the heat. He screamed when he could, but no one was around to hear him. Then the sun shrank to a tiny white point in the sky, larger than the brightest stars, but only just. The dead earth slowly cooled, though there was no atmosphere left to breathe. He was alone with his own thoughts and, again, he began to chart the stars.
At first, it continued on as before. The charts began to cover more and more of the earth. With nothing but time, he drew his constellations and calculations and came to a conclusion. The stars were dying too. Once, they'd been replaced as quickly as they died, but now maybe two died before another was born. Later still, three, then four.
The number kept climbing until there were only a few dozen stars left in the sky. The only record the sky had once been filled with light was etched on continent spanning star charts across the surface of the dead earth.
He realized, of course, that his fate was inevitable. Even after all the stars in the sky had gone, he would still be here. He would be the only thing left in an infinite darkness that would continue for eternity. He rested his head on the rock and gazed a star, wondering for how much longer it would burn before fizzling out.
Then one "day", a trillion trillion years after the last star had blinked out, Ganon squinted at the dark night sky. A new star had formed. This one was brighter than anything he'd ever seen before. It moved strangely, and quickly. Eventually it darkened and disappeared. A few years on another shooting star joined it and darkened again. Then another. For millennia, they grew a colony above him. Larger and larger still, until it hung over him like a tantalizing treat, just out of reach.
Then they began to land on his world. He felt the rage return. His world. His home. But they deliberately avoided his drawings. Chose the few blank spaces between the constellations and calculations to dig out the earth. Then they placed boxes gingerly into the ground, covered them, and drew new markings.
In a few months they returned, this time with another box. He approached their landing party this time, staying as hidden as he could. He looked, and they were humans, though whether Hylians, Gerudo, or Sheikah he couldn't tell. He listened to the ground for the vibrations of their speech, but the language was nothing he'd ever heard before.
Over and over, year after year, they came. And year after year he would go and listen. Eventually he understood their language. Today he'd woken to another shooting star, again coming to his home. He made his way to the landing site and waited. The men and women followed the same pattern as always. He suspected they knew he was there, but they'd made no moves against him.
Maybe one day he'd kill them. Destroy their ship, or take it to the stars and end them once and for all. But for all his petty fantasy, he knew that he would be alone soon enough. Time would destroy whatever he didn't, and in the end, he'd just be bored sooner. So, he let them have their ceremony. The box was laid into a freshly dug hole, and a man in a slightly shinier suit stood and spoke to the half-dozen other figures.
"Mulnos The Rash. The spawn of two krelniks would have had more grace and kindness then you. You hurt everyone. With words, or hands, or tools it did not matter. For this we are sorry. Though we deserved better from you, so too did you deserve better from us. You died hungry and alone, in the between spaces. You scarcely had a bed and no quarters to call you own. I commit, now, your soul to the stars, the home of your ancestors. I commit, now, your body to the earth, the home of their ancestors. I hope you find the peace you deserved in life, somehow. May the Starkeeper bless your passing. May the Starkeeper bless your ancestors. And may the Starkeeper bless us all."
The humans covered the hole with dirt slowly, and then shuffled into their ship. Ganon, the Starkeeper, and the last witness to a dying universe, watched them disappear into the black eternity. He walked over to the grave, pawed at the freshly dug ground, spun in place atop it, and took a nap.
And that is how Ganon will spend the rest of his existence. Cold, alone, and unable to escape the impending darkness that will befall the universe eventually. It's all well and good being immortal until even the universe dies of old age. *Just had to put that in there, again borrowed from the video by SCP Illustrated. Seriously that guy's narrations are AMAZING, and also he illustrates all of his own videos and the artwork he does is incredible! I wish i could draw like he can.
