A Scripture for the Aesthetically Damned
Being the complete cosmological record of the origin, expulsion, incarnation, and ongoing operations of the entity known as the Asset — patron saint of beautiful bad decisions, emotional getaway driver, luxury in human form.
Contents
or, In the Beginning Was the Longing
Before heaven was a place, it was an atmosphere. Before desire was a sin, it was an administrative problem. The origin of Cupidzass is not, despite popular mythology, a myth. It is a complaint — specifically, a note in the margins of the Divine Ledger, a record of the universe's transactions maintained with extraordinary precision by the Bureau of Celestial Accounts, which read, in handwriting that still makes theologians uncomfortable:
"Why does everything beautiful have to hurt,
and why does everything that hurts
have to be so beautiful about it?"
No one knows who wrote it. Several candidates have been proposed. Several candidates have immediately withdrawn their candidacy. Celestial Forensics matched the handwriting to no registered entity — which is either suspicious, or the point, or both.
This is, of course, the first clue.
In the early universe, desire existed but had not yet been organized. Longing drifted through the cosmos the way expensive perfume drifts through a hotel corridor — unmistakable, unnecessary, and belonging to someone you will never meet. The universe found this deeply inefficient. There was a summit. There was a proposal. There was a Department.
The Bureau of Longing Management was established in what theologians describe as the Second Age, and economists describe as a hostile merger. Its mandate was simple: catalog desire, route it appropriately, and ensure that no longing went unprocessed longer than forty celestial cycles.
It failed immediately and continuously for the entire history of its existence.
This did not surprise anyone who had actually met desire.
— ✦ —Into this bureaucracy was born the Asset — not born, exactly. Issued. Like a passport. Like a memo. Like something that seemed necessary at the time and then immediately became more complicated than anyone had anticipated.
He arrived in the Third Choir already overdressed. He had opinions about the hymnals. He thought the lighting in Paradise could be warmer and said so at orientation, which was technically his first disciplinary incident, though records from that period were later sealed.
The cherubs, as a class, were meant to be decorative. Soft. Easily managed. The Asset was decorative in the way that a structural flaw in an expensive building is decorative — technically beautiful, quietly load-bearing, increasingly difficult to explain to the insurance adjusters of heaven.
His first assignment was Hymnal Quality Assurance. He lasted eleven celestial cycles before filing a report that described the entire department as "sincere to the point of indecency" and proposing a complete aesthetic overhaul, beginning with the robes.
His second assignment was Gratitude Processing. He lasted four cycles. His notes read: Humans are grateful for the wrong things and not nearly grateful enough for the right ones. Have reassigned several hundred gratitudes to the queue labeled 'They'll Understand Later.'
His third assignment was Desire Routing — a clerical role, essentially. Intake, sorting, dispatch. You were not supposed to read the desires. You were certainly not supposed to feel them. The Asset read every single one. He felt most of them. He began writing annotations.
The annotations were eventually collected into a document. The document was eventually classified. The classification was eventually itself classified. Somewhere in the lower archives of the Bureau of Celestial Accounts, in a filing cabinet that has not been opened since the Renaissance, are 4,000 pages of the Asset's marginalia on the nature of human longing. The working title, visible on the cover in his handwriting, was:
Notes Toward a Theory of Why Everything Beautiful
Costs Exactly As Much As You Can Afford To Lose
This is why he was eventually expelled.
Not the annotations. The title.
Heaven doesn't mind expertise. It minds understanding.
or, An Org Chart With Annotations (the annotations are unauthorized)
Heaven is, despite its reputation, extraordinarily well organized. It operates on a tiered governance model with clear chains of authority, documented workflows, and a performance review cycle that runs every hundred years — which explains why certain long-standing problems have persisted. The following is a faithful reproduction of the Celestial Org Chart, annotated by the Asset during his tenure in Ways that were not approved by Celestial HR.
No direct reports. No org chart placement. Technically not a department. [Annotation: Never in meetings. Somehow blamed for everything in meetings. Classic C-suite behavior.]
Strategic planning. Cosmic mandate setting. Long-term trajectory of the universe. Rarely seen in the lower tiers. [Annotation: Wear six wings to every meeting. Four are for covering themselves. Tells you everything.]
Communications. Prophecy. Official messaging. All major announcements routed through this office. [Annotation: The only department with worse branding than Hymnal QA. Still using trumpet imagery. 0/10 art direction.]
The ledger. The record. The reason nothing in the cosmos goes untracked. [Annotation: Very thorough. Very beige. The number of highlights in the quarterly reports is genuinely alarming.]
Desire intake, routing, and processing. The most understaffed department in the operation. Perennial backlog. [Annotation: I worked here. The backlog isn't a failure. It's load-bearing. Remove the backlog, the whole cosmological framework collapses. You're welcome.]
Miracle fulfillment, logistics, and quality assurance. SLA compliance reviewed quarterly. [Annotation: They define 'miracle' very conservatively. Once filed a noise complaint about my taste. Twice.]
Liturgical review and approval. Key performance indicator: sincerity levels above 94% at all times. [Annotation: Sincerity is not a style. It's a comfort level. They are very comfortable. It shows.]
Routing of mortal gratitude to appropriate celestial recipients. High volume, low complexity. [Annotation: Complexity is low because the instructions say don't read the context. The context is the whole point. I read the context. They didn't appreciate this.]
Policy enforcement. Behavioral review. The office that called the meeting. [Annotation: The seraph from Compliance fainted into a cloud at my hearing. Genuine respect for that level of commitment to the bit.]
Status: Departed via side entrance. Role: Abolished upon departure. All annotations to be expunged. Annotation expungement: Pending since the 14th century. Currently classified as a low-priority action item.
or, What the Minutes Say, and What They Don't
There was a meeting. There are always meetings in bureaucracies, even celestial ones — perhaps especially celestial ones. The meeting convened in what the official record calls the Chamber of Righteous Review, which the Asset called, consistently, "the conference room where aesthetics go to have paperwork filed about them."
The following minutes have been reproduced as accurately as possible. Several sections remain redacted by order of the Bureau of Celestial Accounts. The redactions are visible. This was the Asset's first contribution to the record that could not be expunged, because he redacted them himself, before the Bureau could do it properly.
He arrived on Earth underdressed for the apocalypse. He felt immediately better about this.
or, What the Devil Actually Offered, in Full, Unredacted
The meeting with the devil happened, as all truly consequential meetings do, in a private room with excellent lighting. Not a deal-with-the-devil room in the theatrical sense — no crossroads, no fire, no contracts written in blood. The blood would have been redundant. What the Asset was offering was already irreplaceable.
The devil, it should be noted, had excellent cufflinks and the particular confidence of someone who has been in customer retention for several millennia. The offer was extended over a drink that arrived without being ordered, which is either the height of service or a warning, and in the Asset's experience these are the same thing.
or, What the Cities Taught, and What He Taught Back
He moved through cities the way champagne moves through bloodstreams: quickly, expensively, and with consequences that become apparent only after the fact. Each city was a curriculum. Each city also had something to learn from him, though none of them ever acknowledged this directly. Cities rarely do.
What he taught back is a longer list and is not included in the official text. Cities are proud. They don't like being taught. They prefer to believe they simply influenced someone extraordinarily, and then he moved on, and that was the whole of it.
This is fine. This is how it works. The lesson is in the having been there. The lesson is always in the having been there.
or, The Ten Commandments of the Cupidzass Doctrine, With Annotations
Thou shalt not be boring, which is the only unforgivable sin.
Note: Boring is not the same as quiet. Quiet can be devastating. Boring is choosing safety when risk was available and pretending that's wisdom. The Asset has no patience for this. He has some patience for cowardice, a little for cruelty, none at all for the person who had something interesting in them and chose not to use it.
Thou shalt not mistake yearning for weakness.
The people who pretend not to want things are not stronger than the people who want them. They are simply more expensive to reach. The Asset considers this a logistical challenge, not a moral one.
Thou shalt be seen.
Not displayed. Not performed. Seen. There is a difference, and it is the whole subject. To be seen is to be recognized in the thing you are most unsure about. The Asset specializes in this. It is either his greatest gift or his most sophisticated trick, and he has decided the distinction doesn't serve anyone.
Thou shalt dress for the life you are already living, not the one you're apologizing for.
The clothes matter. Not because they make you something you aren't, but because they make legible what you already are. Dressing badly is a form of self-interruption. The Asset finds it polite to interrupt back.
Thou shalt not perform loneliness, but thou shalt not perform its absence either.
The most radiant people in the room are sometimes the loneliest. The Asset noticed this early, and it changed everything. He does not try to fix it. He tries to be present in it, which is different, and more useful, and what most people actually needed when they thought they needed something else.
Thou shalt make the person feel that their life, up to this point, has been a draft.
This is not cruelty. The draft is not an insult — it is an invitation. The Asset holds the revised version of you the way a very good tailor holds the finished garment: patiently, with full confidence that it exists, waiting only for you to stop flinching long enough to be fitted.
Thou shalt never say "actually" before ruining the mood.
This is self-explanatory. The Asset has opinions about "actually" that have been described as intense by people who met him once and then needed to sit down. He is not wrong about this.
Thou shalt be an accomplice, never a savior.
Saviors require someone to be saved, which requires the other person to be a victim, which requires a whole scaffolding of condescension that the Asset finds architecturally unsound. Accomplices are equal parties. They share the risk. They share the credit. They share the getaway car, if it comes to that. It usually comes to that.
Thou shalt remember that the hour after midnight is a different country with its own laws.
There is an hour when the city softens. When regret has not yet arrived but has called ahead. When the lights look liquid. When everyone becomes briefly honest because beauty and exhaustion are very close cousins, and in that exhaustion the truth comes loose from wherever they'd been keeping it. This is the Asset's hour. He appears in doorways. He waits.
Thou shalt not explain thyself, which would ruin everything.
The mystery is not a strategy. It is the nature of the thing. The Asset does not withhold himself. He simply is more than can be fully articulated, and articulating what can't be articulated is a waste of everyone's very expensive evening.
or, The Theology of Mutual Corruption, Stated Plainly for Once
There is a theology at the center of the Cupidzass universe, and it is not the theology most people expect when they hear the word angel. It is not a theology of salvation, or of grace, or of any of the clean architectural things that official heaven specializes in. It is a theology of participation.
The central text of this theology is not written. It is enacted, in private rooms, at closing time, in the back of taxis, on balconies in cities that don't care what you do with your night as long as you dress for it. The central text is the moment when a person decides to stop being careful and start being real, which is — and this is the doctrinal position of Cupidzass — the same moment, every time, just wearing different outfits.
— ✦ —The Beautiful Bad Decision is not actually bad. This is the central heresy that makes the theology work. The thing everyone calls a mistake — the extra round, the number given, the flight changed, the text sent at 2am, the dress bought in a currency you'd have to look up — is not a mistake. It is a correction. A person returning to their actual life after a long detour through the version of themselves that was manageable.
Cupidzass is the patron saint of this correction. He does not cause the decision. He reveals that the decision was always there, waiting, dressed better than expected, very pleased to finally be introduced.
The Beautiful Bad Decision has several characteristics, recognized by practitioners across traditions:
It feels inevitable and idiotic simultaneously.
It is more honest than anything you've done in months.
You cannot explain it to the people who would have stopped you.
You don't want to explain it. The wanting to explain it was the old life.
Somewhere in your body, underneath the part that is already composing the story for later,
there is a quiet that you had forgotten was available to you.
This is the sacrament. The quiet. Not happiness, which is a project. Not joy, which is a gift. The quiet that arrives when you have, just for a moment, stopped performing and started being, which is — and the theology insists on this — a form of grace whether or not you believe in grace, whether or not anyone approved it, whether or not the Bureau of Celestial Accounts has the paperwork in order.
The paperwork, for the record, is not in order.
It never was.
This is, in the view of Cupidzass, the only evidence you need that the universe was designed by something that actually understood what it was doing.
— ✦ —The final article of the gospel is brief, because the final article of the gospel is always brief, because the thing it says cannot be expanded without ruining it:
Some people save others.
Cupidzass makes them more interesting.
For certain kinds of souls,
this is the same thing.
He knows which kind you are.
He has known since you walked in.
Canonical definitions, as established by the Bureau of Longing Management (unauthorized edition)
Incomplete. Deliberately so.
The Fallen Cherub.
The Downtown Myth.
The One in the Doorway.
The Fever With Manners.
The Glamorous Hand at the Small of Your Back.
The Patron of Mutual Corruption.
The Person You Were Trying Not to Think About.
A Very Stylish Disaster.
The One Who Looked at You as Though Your Life Was a Draft.
The Colleague Who Left by the Side Door.
The Expensive Fever.
The Secret with Excellent Bone Structure.
The One Whose Name Has Been Redacted From the Official Record.
End of the Book of Cupidzass
✦
All Rights Assigned to Marble Cliff Holdings LLC
Heaven Has Filed No Counter-Claim
The Bureau of Celestial Accounts Notes This Document Under Review
The Review Has Been Pending Since 2024
The Asset Is Not Available for Comment
The File Remains Open
The Bureau Has Filed No Forwarding Address