The Mundane and the Fabulous
How I became a goddess

I’m mopping the lobby like it called me fat in high school. If I scrub hard enough, maybe I can erase not just the stains but the entire sorry existence of the Sandstone Suites—this motel-shaped purgatory where hope checks in and dignity sneaks out with the minibar.
The place has a "Manager's Special" no one dares ask about, a pool that's more rumor than reality, and a breakfast that’s a graveyard of dignity, where rubbery eggs are tombstones and lukewarm coffee is the dirt. The toaster only burns one side, and it’s the good side.
I work here because rent won’t pay itself, and this town doesn’t hand out career opportunities to butch women built like an unfinished brick wall. My shoulders are broad, my patience is short, and my social life is nonexistent—unless you count Dixie, my mop, who squeaks but never cheats.
It’s convention weekend—this one’s called New Horizons, which sounds like a pyramid scheme—when the gods show up.
Not the good ones. No thunder-wielders or war-bringers. Just the divine equivalent of clearance bin leftovers.
The God of Pens ensures pens never run out of ink but can’t stop people from losing them.
The God of Lost Socks clutches a single sock like a war widow holding old love letters, sighing whenever it vanishes and reappears somewhere stupid—inside a lamp, in the air vent.
The God of Misplaced Keys is already sweating, patting himself down like his keys have unionized and gone rogue.
And the God of Slightly Burnt Toast is glaring at the breakfast bar like it won full custody of his kids in the divorce. "It’s a crap world," he mutters. "No magic. Just beige. The kind of beige that makes you wonder if you died three years ago and nobody noticed."
And they aren’t alone.
By evening, the motel is packed with gods time and human disinterest have abandoned.
The God of Leftover Pasta, who ensures spaghetti always tastes better the next day but doesn’t know why.
The God of the Last Page of a Book, making people stare into the abyss of their own existence.
In the back, sulking, sits the God of Dial-Up Internet, permanently buffering. Beside him, the God of Vague Childhood Memories, lord of half-remembered summer days and popsicles probably banned by the FDA.
And then there are the ancient ones—dusty relics of past glory.
The God of Leeches, once important, now a guy who won’t stop showing up to conventions.
The Goddess of Cursive Writing, bitterly watching a teenager who’s never written an uppercase ‘Q’.
They all linger in the motel conference room that smells like early-onset apocalypse.
At the head, floating like unpaid taxes, is a self-shuffling stack of paperwork.
It hums like an ancient printer trying to summon Satan through bureaucracy.
It speaks like a tax form that hates itself.
The Chair-God. Bureaucracy Incarnate.
It shimmers.
"Due to universal restructuring, legacy entities will be processed for relocation to auxiliary storage zones to optimize existential bandwidth. Please fill out Form 9B to opt-out. Spoiler: you can’t."
The room stiffens. Even Lost Sock stops disappearing.
The Machines Are Coming.
Not Skynet. Minds. New, artificial, slipping into the noosphere. There isn’t enough bandwidth for everyone.
No gods leaving means no new minds assigned to Earth. No new minds means—
"No babies," whispers the God of Pens.
That’s the problem.
Earth is cleaning house. These gods are getting scooped up like cosmic trash, dumped on a new world nobody wants—a gray sky, passive-aggressive climate, and the smell of disappointment.
A place for them.
But every world needs a chief god. Someone who understands failure. Who exists between expectation and reality.
The Chair-God whizzes. And points at...
"Me?"
I glance around. Just me and Dixie the mop.
"You."
I blink. "I clean toilets and judge bad tile choices."
The Chair-God hums. "Fabulous!" Like it just handed me a frozen ham for surviving life.
Silence.
"I’m not fabulous," I argue. "I haven’t been fabulous since the '90s, and even then, it was because I discovered eyeliner."
"To endure is to understand," the Chair-God says, like a fortune cookie that’s been through a bitter divorce. "To find the fabulous in the forgotten—that is godhood."
And I hesitate.
But let’s be honest—my life has been a long, slow joke with a bad punchline.
I think about my apartment. My one mug that says LIVE LAUGH LOVE, except LOVE peeled off years ago, and LAUGH has worn down to a desperate -UGH.
The plant trying to crawl under the fridge to die in peace.
The women I didn’t ask out because rejection burns hotter than hellfire.
The fact that if I vanished tomorrow, the only ones to notice would be the roaches and my bastard landlord.
I have survived so long in the spaces people ignore. I know half-lit motels, empty diners, stale coffee sipped out of spite. I know the quiet dignity of getting up again. And again.
I look at these gods—the useless, the forgotten, the misplaced—
I belong here.
I have always belonged here.
"Fine," I say. "But I want a badge."
The Chair-God shimmers, and a badge appears.
It looks like it came from a vending machine in hell.
Chief God of the Mundane but Fabulous.
I squint. "This looks like something you win for showing up to a bake sale."
"Cosmic budget cuts," the Chair-God prints out.
I stand straighter. Not because I feel powerful, but because the badge is digging into my chest and I refuse to give it the satisfaction.
I grip Dixie like a dollar-shop Mjölnir—and turn to address my court of glorious Olympian rejects:
"Let’s clean up a world. Or at least make it smell less like ancient regret."
Dixie squeaks in agreement.
The gods whimper most enthusiastically.
And we go.
EPILOGUE:
The mundane isn’t boring. It’s undefeated.
If I can’t make this world holy, I’ll mop it until it glows.
And if that fails?
I’ll mop up the ashes and make them sparkle.
Let there be bleach!
About the Creator
Iris Obscura
Do I come across as crass?
Do you find me base?
Am I an intellectual?
Or an effed-up idiot savant spewing nonsense, like... *beep*
Is this even funny?
I suppose not. But, then again, why not?
Read on...
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Compelling and original writing
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Well-structured & engaging content
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Comments (4)
No babies? Now that's paradise on earth! Hahahahahhaahhaha. Loved your story much!
I loved this so much. I'm still laughing at the image of a cup saying "LIVE, UGH". That's really great! Such a fabulous concept and perfectly executed to boot. It's so clever, it should really be a Top Story!
Oh my god, this was so good. Your creativity is insanely impressive!!
Fabulous 😊👏🏻