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=NaNoWriMo= Flight of the Black Eagle

 
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11/1/2011 8:51:10   
Argeus the Paladin
Member



Prologue:
Escape


It was a perfectly beautiful night on all accounts. The air was cool and breezy, as expected of a typical early spring evening. The sky, tinted in a particularly alluring light dark shade, was cloudless and dotted with a multitude of twinkling stars. The moon was both full and especially bright, something that, among others, suggested that somewhere underneath that sky the werewolves were rallying for yet another monthly raid.

As he rode along the moonlit dirt road cutting through the otherwise undisturbed countryside, Field Hetman Miroslaw Potocki could not care less about that last one. Nor could he care about the ‘Field Hetman’ part any longer. For all he cared, he was now but an ordinary traveler, draped in the simplest of garments with a simple traveler’s cloak draped over his person. The steed he rode was no war stallion, but rather a most ordinary farm horse just hastily purchased from a sympathetic peasant the other day.

And yet despite his best efforts to conceal it, his visage and his features was quick to betray his extraordinary nature. He had on his rugged countenance of a warrior a pair of keen eyes more used to observe the minutest of battlefield movements than any other purpose, a sharp and indomitable gaze that had never once showed fear and the pronounced jaws befitting of one so used to shouting commands and orders. His grasp on the horse’s rein was both firm and relaxed at the same time, unintentionally showing off his many decades on horseback on and off wars large and small. And on his side he still wore proudly an ornate saber, with an elaborate basket hilt and guard emblazoned with what amounted to a noble coat of arms gilded in gold. The air of a magnate from his stature was unconcealable, however poorly he dressed himself.

At first sight few people would even think that man was a fugitive. His dignified posture, his serene expression and his especially calm demeanor would be more in line with that of a tourist, enjoying what he could of the Bulgarian rural night. That his saddle bags were weighted down with his entire fortune condensed into banknote form seemed to have escaped most eyes.

The former aristocrat looked at the sky above, then at the road ahead and the particular landmarks it bore. If his memories served him right, he was not far from the series of Bulgarian seaside towns and fishing villages on the Black Sea. The moment he made it to the nearest town and boarded a ship through the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles, he would be safe from the Empire’s eyes forever.

Taking a deep breath, he turned around, facing what was the Holy Komnenian Empire’s territory, and said with all due solemnity.

“My deepest apologies, Your Majesty, but I have to leave,” he said, bowing deeply. “Let this servant of yours serve you in another life to repay the debt in this one.”

He was about to turn back and return to the journey before him when a series of exceedingly familiar sounds made his hairs stand on ends. From the road behind him, he could hear the thundering hooves of what would, to mortal ears, sound like the hundreds of thousands of fiery steeds heralding the Armageddon. Mingled with the rapid hooves beating against the ground were the clattering and fluttering of a disturbingly large number of scale armors and ceremonial feathered wings.

Anyone else faced with such a storm of movement behind him might have tried to run away, hide, or do any number of ignoble and undignified tricks in the hope of saving his skin. Not Field Hetman Potocki, for he had learnt through so many decades of fighting in the vicinity of those sounds that there was no escaping the pursuing hooves of the people and beasts who would most likely cause them. Not with his current pitiful horse and laughable equipment. Instead, he turned around, kept his blade firmly sheathed in the scabbard and faced the incoming horde bearing down on him.

From the thick darkness before him emerged first a couple of horsemen, then another row, then another and another, until he found himself stared down by no less than three dozen calvalrymen. Their equipment was uniform: A burning torch in the left hand, a long knightly lance in the right, a heater shield slung behind their shoulder and an arming sword with an especially decorated scabbard clearly visible under the torchlight on their side. They rode a breed of ferocious steeds, whose heavy plate and scale bardings did little to contain their grandeur.

Each and every of the riders wore a long coat of glittering scales underneath a breastplate bearing a heraldry device all too familiar to the ex-Hetman – a spread black eagle with a chi-rho emblazoned on its chest. On their heads they wore a specific design of visored pigfaced bascinets designed so as to completely cover their faces when lowered, giving an inhuman, almost demonic look in battle. Some, but not all of them bore on their shoulder a pair of reinforced oaken wings decorated with a multitude of silvered ostrich feathers, proudly glittering in the moonlight as they rode forth.

A single sweat drop ran down the Hetman’s forehead, but no more than that. Disgraceful s showing fear seemed, there was no shame in being at least slightly shaken at the realization of being on the receiving end of what was arguably the most powerful military unit in the entire supernatural world. Wiping away that unseemly sweatdrop from his face, the noble sat firmly on his saddle and looking straight at the column of men and horses, as though waiting for them to make their move.

When they realized the fugitive have no intention to run away, they similarly slowed down and halted in proper rank and file within a dozen yards of the noble. From the first row of riders a particular horseman left the rank and trotted forward. Unlike the rest of his peers, his wings bore a distinct golden tint, a great honor bestowed only to the Empire’s finest nobles.

As he approached the runaway noble, the horseman raised his helmet’s visor, revealing beneath it an exceptionally young face. Inexperience and the young age’s enthusiasm and idealism was quite deeply engraved on his every feature. The sort of ferocity and determination in his eyes, however, closely mirrored that of the Hetman’s closest friend and comrade-in-arms, as were the rest of his visage.

“Hetman Potocki the Saint,” the cavalryman shouted at the fugitive noble, his voice filled with what he probably perceived as righteous indignation. “Why did you betray the Empire?”

The noble looked at the young rider in the eyes, his expression infuriatingly calm still, something that perplexed his adversary to no end if the young rider’s surprised stare was of any indication.

“There are things you are entitled to know, young Julian,” Hetman Potocki answered. “And there are things you are not. This is one of the latter.”

The young rider, whose name was apparently Julian, immediately drew his blade and pointed at the fugitive.

“This is no time for cryptic clues, Hetman,” he said, his voice raising in both tone and volume. “His Majesty, my father and myself demand an answer – a good one.

“I’m afraid I cannot oblige, Julian,” the Hetman answered calmly. “As I said, there are things you won’t understand however I explain.”

“You are not in a position to negotiate, Hetman,” Julian said with as resolute a voice as he could muster. “As a loyal subject to the Holy Komnenian Empire’s crown, as a Somatophylax and as my father’s son, I order you to surrender your arms and come with us.”

“And what if I don’t?” the Hetman said, spreading as confident a smile as he could manage. “For your information, I still have my noble sigil on my person…”

Such move, surprisingly enough, unnerved the young rider to the point that a distinct anxiety was visible from his face. Briefly he tilted his head towards the rank of his own men, as though checking out whether they were still alive and well, before turning back to the criminal in question.

“You’re lying,” the rider said, trying his very best to hold his initiative, an attempt that, unfortunately, was too obvious to be of any help to him.

“Would you like to find out for yourself then?” the Hetman answered, his voice deepened enough to be as threatening as possible while still maintaining a superficial friendliness.

“Don’t you… don’t you dare to use it,” he exclaimed, a mixture of both fear and anger audible in his tone. Apparently, nobody had told him of that bit of information his adversary just revealed.

“Rest assured, young Julian,” the Hetman said, his voice completely relaxed. “I am not going to use the very gift His Majesty granted me for my loyal service over the last century to murder my brothers-in-arms…”

He then stared at the young rider’s eyes, as though issuing a challenge.

“… as long as you would prefer to remain my brothers-in-arms and be treated as such, that is.”

The rider clenched his gloved fists. The rustles from the general direction of the cavalrymen up to that time seemed to insinuate to the rider that they were eager for action, something he might have been glad to give them but for that new revelation. And for that, he had to raise his hand, signaling them to stop.

“You are holding us to ransom and you know it, Hetman,” he growled. “This is no behavior of a noble, let alone a Cataphract and an associate of the Chevalier family! This is a disgrace!”

A certain quick grimace passed by the Hetman’s face in the blink of an eye. It was a sad day for the Hetman to be called a disgrace by a young soldier literally a quarter his age. But he had no other option at the time.

“Be that what it takes, then disgrace I shall gladly bear until the end of my days,” he said.

“Don’t you even think of His Majesty’s trust and my father’s friendship?” the rider said, as though pleading.

“I have,” the Hetman answered promptly. “And with that trust and friendship in mind, I have few options aside from fleeing like a fugitive. As I have said, there are things you don’t need to know. Yet.”

“Won’t you change your mind?” the rider said. “This is not the way my father wants his lifelong friendship with you to go down…”

“Circumstances, young Julian,” the nobleman said. “I can do no more than that which I have already done.”

He then turned his horse towards the road ahead.

“And with that, I have to bid you farewell,” he said. “Tell your father that it had been an honor to have known and fought alongside with him for so many years now.”

Taking a few steps forward, the nobleman suddenly stopped his horse and turned back towards the still catatonic young rider.

“Oh, and I almost forgot.”

Then, with a swift motion to his belt, a move that almost caused the rider to draw his own blade in response on reflex, the nobleman did something unthinkable. He removed his ornate blade from his belt, scabbard and all, and threw it towards the rider. Surprised as he was, the rider’s reflex was good enough to retrieve the treasure without a hitch.

“This blade your father gave me as a present to commemorate my admission into the Cataphracts nearly ninety years ago,” the Hetman said. “I no longer have the sort of credential or the honor to bear it any more. May it find a better and more noble a wielder than this old man had ever been.”

Then he bowed to the cavalryman.

“Farewell, young Julian,” he said with all due sincerity. “If the gods will it, we shall not meet again.”

And then he kicked his horse’s side and pulled the rein, galloping straight into the moonlit road ahead, leaving the entire column of armored horsemen behind, still perplexed at the entire debacle that just happened and their commander’s behavior alike. One of them rode forth towards the young rider, still stunned by the events just now.

“Brother de Chevalier, aren’t we…”

His voice trailed off as he saw his commander looking back at him.

“No,” the golden winged rider said. “It is too risky to chase someone with his kind of Noble Sigil.”

“What should we do now, sir?” he asked, looking genuinely puzzled.

“Let’s return home,” Julian said. “It’s not like we can do anything, is there?”

Then he raised his lance and returned to his rank, shouting orders as he went back. Heeding his call, the entire column of horsemen quickly turned around and began moving the other way…

“I will find out about that… in due time, huh?”

*******



< Message edited by Argeus the Paladin -- 11/1/2011 8:55:34 >
DF  Post #: 1
11/2/2011 9:01:21   
Argeus the Paladin
Member

Chapter 1
Constantinople


Thirty years later.

The changing cycle of day and night did little to quell the bustling activities of the city of Istanbul. The sun had just barely set, and yet the many skyscrapers on both sides of the Bosphorus had flared up with a multitude of neon lights. The sea ferries from the vast number of ferry ports along the banks were running at full capacity, transporting from one half of the city to the other commuters and nightlife seekers alike. A large number of transports ships dotted the strait itself, traveling up and down the strait bearing goods of all kinds, daunted not by the coming night. Istanbul was an exciting city, and it made every effort to flaunt that fact.

Mingling among those various sea crafts, a certain oil tanker waded slowly into its designated pier in the commercial port of Karakoy. At first sight, the tanker itself was as nondescript and generic as mostly every other of its kind in service all over the world in that day and age – large, burly, and durably built enough to take quite a beating in the high seas. The actual kind of cargo it held within its belly, on the other hand, could not set it further apart from its peers.

On its vast front deck, a figure stood quietly, leaning against the railing as he watched the passing ships with all due fascination. His idyllic posturing aside, the figure bore on his visage mostly every feature typical of a Polish noble of the age long passed. He had an especially rugged visage, with sharp and angular features, if only slightly gaunt and pale for whatever reason. He sported a pair of blood-red and extraordinarily large eyes, one that, coupled with his pronouncedly sharp and thick brows, would appear both formidable and threatening should he as much as look as his adversary with any degree of focus at all. Equally pronounced were his cheek bones, a feature that only helped to heighten his overall fierceness. And to further add a wild, savage-like touch to his face, he wore a moderate length of hair, purposefully keeping it messy and unkempt, if only perfectly clean. The only things that detracted from his innate fearsomeness was his soft-looking lips, the kind most oftenly associated with a woman or a man of the most effeminate of nature, and the distinct lack of facial hair, not even a well-groomed set of moustache that a Polish noble would take great pride in maintaining. He simply had had little luck maintaining one.

Those facial features, unfortunately, were the only things bystanders could agree about regarding his looks. Depending on whom one would ask, they would receive a completely different answer. Some would describe his garment as an average, smudgy and oily oil rig worker’s jumpsuit. Others would see the same garment as a Turkish army technician’s uniform, complete with a pen in the front shirt pocket and a clipboard in his hands. Still others would say it was a sailor’s uniform, the sort of texture associated with both skilled mariners and Japanese high school girls alike, that he was donning.

If only the onlookers would compare their answers, they might have discovered such a stunning contradiction and reacted accordingly. Unfortunately, the bystanders had next to zero reason to do so. To the busy citizens of Istanbul, he was just another passer-by, a stranger to the city not at all unlike the dozens of thousands who came and go to their bustling ports on a daily basis. If that particular stranger they caught a glimpse of on board a perfectly ordinary ship was anything out of the ordinary, what difference would it make?

The figure fully understood that psychology, as much as he understood what sort of garment he was actually having draped over his person. The truth was, his garment was actually a moderately ornate and well-made, if only very much anachronistic, suit of scale armor with an elongated skirt reaching as far as the lower calves of his legs, concealing beneath it almost half of the pair of iron greaves wrapping around his lower legs. Over said scale texture on his torso, he wore an extra breastplate, both as an extra precaution in the unlikely case that the scales would not hold up against a hypothetical trauma, and as a means to display the coat of arms of the organization he was associated with.

The figure glanced at the heraldry emblazoned on his chest, flashing to himself as proud a smile as he could manage. On a blood-red background, an eagle pitch black as the starless sky was spreading its wings, as though reaching out for the very heavens itself. And just like how the figure bore the entire heraldic device on his chest, the eagle itself bore on its breast a stylized “chi-rho” – a letter ‘x’ impaled horizontally by a ‘p’.

To an ordinary human, that symbol might look at the very least slightly ominous. To him, that emblem might as well have been a sacred holy symbol that he had to protect and uphold with his very life if needed be. The long blade he wore on his side, now kept snugly wrapped within its ornately decorated scabbard, would be reserved for such occasions where he would likely have to lay down his lives to that end.

“So… this is Constantinople.”

He muttered to himself, his voice paradoxically both too soft for his generally fearsome countenance and too rugged for his arguably shamefully effiminate lips. That voice, nicely enough, fell right into the range of an ordinary Polish male of completely average looks and features.

So absorbed was the figure into the beautiful landscape both natural and manmade along both sides of the Bosphorus that he completely failed to notice the sound of another pair of iron greaves clattering against the metallic floor of the deck. As such, the voice that blared right behind him immediately thereafter came as a startling event of the highest order of magnitude.

“Well, they call it Istanbul now. The humans and the wolves alike.”

Instantly the figure swung back, his hand reaching for the hilt of his blade on reflex. His expressions tensed up, his teeth gritted and his eyes flaring up in alarm as he did so.

“Who goes there?” he exclaimed, his voice raising into a sharp crescendo.

For all his military trainings had taught him, said voice could very well been one of an intruder whose presence was a threat to his mission. As soon as he saw the challenger’s face, however, his tensed expression slacked down. His twisted mouth almost immediately changed into a smile.

“Colonel de Chevalier, sir,” he said, moving his hand away from the pommel of his blade and bowed deeply before the figure. “Sergeant Wladislaw Mieczowitz reporting for duty, sir.”

The person he identified as ‘Colonel de Chevalier’, at first sight, looked nothing like his title. Aside from the sheer perfection of the newcomer’s armor in comparison to his own, something that came with the territory, his face had little to none of that seniority, authority and perhaps a little harmless arrogance often associated someone of that position. His face was as baby-looking as was possible without compromising the resolute firmness and ruggedness of a veteran of many decades of battle. His cheeks were full, yet scarred. His forehead was broad and tall, yet uneven. His eyes were wide and bright, bearing a hint of innocence just like a child’s. Like his subordinate, he also wore zero facial hair. Unlike his subordinate, it seemed to be a conscious style choice. As such, at a glance he looked more like an especially popular French actor than a military man, much less one of a commanding position.

Whatever mildness and gentleness those features might have granted him, unfortunately, was betrayed by two things. The first was his broad, sharp jawline that, from a distance, looked as though he was in a state of constantly grinding his teeth. And the second was the way he looked at people. However childlike his eyes might look at a glance, the moment he started staring at others, said childlikeness would turn into something at the very least unnerving. It incited the kind of feel as though one was being stared down by an exceptionally powerful child who could tear one’s heart out in half a second if he so wished, and who knew he could do that.

No, that was not exactly an apt comparison, the soldier thought. For as far as he knew, Colonel de Chevalier was anything but malevolent. He was, however, entirely aware of the extent of his power and authorities, and knew how to use it to both protect his comrades and subordinates and further his own agendas. The soldier could not stress enough, however, that the former and the latter largely overlapped. Having been placed under the Colonel’s command for quite a few years now and joined battle on his side on many occasions, he had lost count of the instances where his commander would place himself into harm’s way to protect his various subordinates from it.

“At ease, Sergeant Mieczowitz,” the Colonel told the soldier with a mild nod and a smile. “Out sightseeing, aren’t we?”

The soldier bent his neck, looking at the ground. What the Colonel just said did not exactly sound like a reprimand, but it might as well be considering the context. After all, he was technically still on duty.

“Yes, sir,” he finally admitted. “My apologies, sir. I will return to my post and…”

His gut feeling was correct. His superior was not at all reprimanding him, if his soft-spoken comment was of any indication.

“Well, it’s not like there is anything to keep watch for at this time and place, is there?” he said, patting the soldier in the shoulder. “After all, Constantinople is not a city of war, not for a long while now. And I don’t fancy any change about that in the foreseeable future.”

He then walked towards the railing and leaned against it, facing the cityscape beyond the water margin, gesturing the soldier to follow him. Once the soldier was standing right next to him, the Colonel began speaking again, his voice relaxed and airy still.

“So, tell me, Sergeant,” he said, “how did you find Istanbul – Constantinople so far?”

“It’s bigger than any other city I have seen, sir,” the soldier answered. “I was just glad to finally see something other than the Polish countryside.”

Taking a brief pause, he continued.

“My old man had wished for nothing more than to join a leisurely cruise along the Bosphorus,” he finally said. “Pity that he’s not with me today…”

Sergeant Wladislaw Mieczowitz was speaking his mind. As far as he knew, under the Colonel’s leadership, regardless of occasion, being honest and sincere was both cherished and encouraged.

“I see,” the Colonel said, peering out into the open. “Here before you lie the city known for many things. One of the largest cities ever known to humankind and ours alike. A jewel much fought for throughout its entire history of existence. And the city that was – and still is – rightfully ours.”

“I understand, sir,” the soldier said. “One of those days we would return in force and take back what is rightfully ours. Such is one of the sacred missions of the Cataphracts, is it not?”

“One of those days, yes,” the Colonel said, shaking his head. “Some days we would return, but not today. Always keep in mind that we have our own mission, and to do with Constantinople that mission does not.”

The soldier hung his head. He was aware of that fact well enough.

“Sir,” he asked, trying to change the topic. “Are we landing here at all?”

The Colonel raised his eyebrows. While the soldier’s question itself was, if he understood his own words correctly, not at all on the complex side, it seemed to have stirred up some particularly turbulent thoughts on the part of his superior.

“No, not really,” the Colonel finally answered, his voice perplexed. “We would have, but there had been some changes of plans…”

Hardly had the Colonel finished his sentence when the soldier saw his shoulder being struck by what looked like an enormous palm. The smack that followed looked and sounded painful, even though the Colonel’s shoulder was as well-armored as any other part of his person. It sounded as though an enormous sledgehammer had just been swung at his shoulder and snapping his shoulder blade in half like a twig. In response, the Colonel only grimaced ever so slightly, before returning to normalcy.

With all the terror that such a sudden incident would warrant, the soldier stared over his superior’s shoulder. There, behind the colonel, he saw a figure whose stature and demeanor was more like an ogre or a gorilla than a person. Said ogre was wearing the same uniform he and the Colonel were wearing – a suit of scale coat with a breastplate over the torso bearing the black eagle heraldry. Both articles were huge in comparison to the regular size, as befitting of such a monster.

His face, however, was neither that of a dumb giant or a monstrous ogre. He was exceptionally handsome and attractive in the same way a professional athlete was attractive – a large, burly muscular body coupled with a playfully manly face. He sported a pair of hick brows, a military short hairstyle, stubbled chin and upper lip, a wide jaw and a pair of full lips that were almost perpetually smiling.

His smile, ironically, was his weakest point, if Wladislaw’s personal opinion was anything to go by. Without it, the newcomer was everything the holy Komnenian Empire’s exemplary military man stood for as far as looks went. While his features, as befitting of the general size of his body and face, inevitably lacked refinement, what he did have was as indicative of a soldier’s positive traits – endurance, bravery and a daredevil, bring-it-on attitude to enemies and dangers alike – as could be. His perpetually beaming face, unfortunately, meant that both friends and foes would have a hard time taking this person seriously. Wladislaw knew he never had.

“Wassup, Julian?”

He said, his jolly voice clashing with the semi-solemn air of the scene to the point of annoying. If only Wladislaw outranked him like the Corporal, he would have undoubtedly given him at the very least a verbal lashout for such nonchalant mannerism.

To that end, the colonel’s reaction was satisfactory. Nursing his bruised shoulder with his other hand, he turned back and looked at the newcomer in the eye, his expression remaining oddly unchanged but for the slight tinge of sternness glinting in his eyes.

“I thought we’ve been through with this the other day, Captain Hermann von Schlieffer,” he said. “You are going to address me as ‘Colonel de Chevalier’, ‘Colonel’, or a simple ‘sir’ when on duty. No ifs, whys and buts.”

His order was stated in a voice best described as devoid of any emotion one might attribute to such an incident. No annoyance, no anger, no fury, not even a rightful expression of authority aside from a mild stressing of the voice. The Colonel had always been like that when it came to disciplining his men. He would assume a voice and a gesture so impersonal, one might thought he would never lose his temper at all, however justified it might seem for him to.

That attitude, however, seemed to rub off on the huge newcomer the wrong way.

“For the love of the Lord above,” he grumbled, “would it hurt to loose up a bit once every so often, Juli-”

A razor-sharp glare from the Colonel stopped him from continuing any further. At least, not in the same vein he was going.

“I mean, Colonel, sir,” he corrected himself sheepishly, his face lengthened quite a bit in disappointment. “I mean, there’s nobody around except this lad Vladisky here. There’s no need to get all official, is there?”

His eyes turned towards the Polish soldier before returning to the Colonel, as though letting him know that yes, he was talking about him. Almost at once, Wladislaw’s face tensed up. There was a great number of things he could endure for the greater good, up to and including dishonor and disgrace in certain situations. Someone terribly butchering his name as such, however, was not one of them.

“It’s Wladislaw, sir. Wladislaw Mieczowitz, in case you have forgotten” he said, trying to suppress his urge to react in a childish and undignified way. He did, however, raise his voice noticeably, and spiced it up with as overt a contemptuous undertone as he could get away with.

Unfortunately for him, nothing escaped the Colonel’s eyes, and for his effort he got the same kind of stern look the Colonel had just used on the newcomer, the kind of look that sent a chilling cold down his spine within the blink of an eye. Immediately he backed down, his eyes glued at the ground instinctively to avoid that stare.

“We’ve been through this more times than I could care to count, Captain von Schlieffer,” the Colonel said, shaking his head. “There is nothing I can tell you about the code of conduct of an Imperial noble of your calibre that your father has not, is there?”

Then he rubbed his hands, straightened his posture, and gave the one called Captain von Schlieffer the most down-to-business look he could manage.

“Now, I fancy you have something worthwhile to report, haven’t you?” he said slowly and clearly. “I don’t suppose you have news of the Katanaphoroi, am I right?”

For a brief moment Wladislaw saw a sharp change in the captain’s visage, mostly caused by his lips shifting from its comfortably downward arcing smiling shape into a flat line. The rest of his face changed accordingly. His eyes, for instance, now had concern written all over them.

“Yeah, Ju- I mean, Colonel,” he spoke, his voice having slowed down and deepened a great deal. “I’ve received this message from Commander Ayasaki just now.”

He then produced from his person a plain envelop kept sealed by a sigil that looked anything but plain. Even from a distance, the striking green and silver color scheme of the seal still stood out to Wladislaw’s eyes. It was a stylized symbol consisting of two strange-looking, curved long sabers crossing over what looked like the frontal view of a silver wolf’s head, with teeth and fangs baring in full. Simple, yet threatening and ominous enough to do the trick.

As little as his knowledge of the world was, at least in relative to his seniors and commanding officers, Wladislaw knew exactly whom that symbol belonged to. The Misthophoroi Katanaphoroi were, last time he checked, the single biggest name in the current private military contracting scene of the Holy Komnenian Empire.

The exact workings of said organization, unfortunately, eluded him. For all he knew, they consisted of professional soldiers of fortune hailing from the Far East bearing their signature long sabers into battle with as much skill and finesse as the best Imperial elite. What opted them to leave their well-acquainted Oriental climes for the plains of Eastern Europe to set up shop was anyone’s guess.

Unfortunately, that they bore werewolf blood in their vein did little to earn the trust of the Imperial higher-ups. Fortunately, the more pragmatic members of the Elder Council knew better. As a result, Wladislaw had fought his latest battles alongside those fine Eastern men, whom he could vouch to be one of the finest and most trustworthy of all mercenaries there were.

“Long story short, we aren’t getting their service this time,” he said with all due exasperation. “There was some problem with their transport arrangements, or so I heard.”

The Colonel’s eyebrows knitted for a brief instance as he took over the telegram, unfolded it, and skimmed the message. The news he had just heard clearly had an impact on him, but only for that brief duration. Almost at once, his face returned to the normal state – looking relaxed and unconcerned in an emotionless kind of way.

“I thought as much,” he said. “I had not have much hope that they would be able to make it into Constantinople in time to fit our itinerary in the first place.”

“Well, I had,” the Captain answered, looking not at all contented. “Without them, we’d be hard pressed for reliable scouts and informants in Japan. And an extra sword or two would have been nice, you have to give me that.”

The Captain then gave as nonchalant a shrug as he could manage, as though trying to prove he was not caring about that entire business too much. The look on his face betrayed that attempt quickly enough. It was apparent, then, that whatever malcontent and displeasure he had spewing just then had been there all along, only masked under a copious amount of casualness and coolness preciously.

“See, that’s why we can’t have nice things,” he concluded, clapping his hands. “If only those lazy folks at the Military Bureau had been a little quicker…”

Once again, Wladislaw saw another especially fierce and stern stare from the Colonel towards the Captain, cutting his complaint short right then and there.

“Enough, Captain,” he said. “The walls have ears. You don’t want to be caught spouting insolences, do you?”

“But…”

“It’s a pity, yes,” the Colonel replied slowly and calmly. “Our mission would have been much, much easier with these mercenaries than without.”

He then turned back towards the cityscape, gazing out into the busy nightlife, as though taking his mind off the business for a moment.

“Consider it a test of our resourcefulness, resolution and cleverness by Fate and the Almighty Lord above himself,” he said. “Difficult as the mission now is, this is really not something the Cataphract can – is allowed to – fail.”

“Well, I am assuming you have some contingency plans,” the Captain said to the Colonel, his sore look still nowhere near normalizing yet.

Then he lowered his voice, as though having caught on to the previous ‘the walls have ears’ advice.

“I’ve worked hard on this for the last two weeks, you know,” he said, not making any attempt to conceal his exasperation despite his softer voice. “It just makes no sense to me seeing my coordination attempts just going completely to waste like this. Bam, and it’s down the drain.”

The Colonel responded by placing his right hand on the Captain’s shoulder in a sympathetic manner.

“We know, Captain,” he said. “We know and the Empire knows. Now it is best for you to think this way – what better could you do to serve the Empire’s best interest and the Cataphracts’ honor, now that it had failed?”

The fact that he was doing that while himself being at least half a foot shorter than his subordinate was inherently funny, at least to Wladislaw. Most importantly, though, said gesture had served its purpose.

“Well, I suppose,” the Captain said, his face softening up into a more cheery expression. “Then again, the Katanaphoroi weren’t exactly an absolute necessity, so there’s that.”

Taking a deep breath, he then walked towards the railing, grasping the uppermost rail with his oversized hands and gazed at the sea traffic below.

“Heh, nice city isn’t it?” he asked nobody in particular.

“Yes, ‘nice’ is not quite sufficient to describe that which you are seeing,” the Colonel said in a solemn, if not somberly nostalgic, note. “This here city used to be ours. It was where our illustrious forefather rebuilt for themselves the foundation of everything our kind stands for. On this soil their great valor and even greater deeds had been recorded.”

The Colonel inhaled deeply, filling his lungs with the cool, salty air of the Bosphorus as he glanced over the coastlines. In the horizon, the many famed landscapes of Constantinople both old and new spread before him. He slowly but resolutely raised his right arm, pointing to no specific landmark in particular.

“Look at it, Captain,” he said. “And you too, Sergeant, look at everything before you, and know that the many centuries of the Holy Komnenian Empire’s history began from this land, this sea, under this very sky. Let us live and serve the Empire in such a way that would not bring shame and disgrace to this land that gave birth to us as a people. And let it be known that…”

At that point Captain von Schlieffer fell back from the railing, cupping his forehead with one hand and waving the palm of the other at the Colonel’s general position.

“I’m having a headache,” Hermann said. “Could we just cut the formality and the big words and call it a day?”

Despite the content of his statement, there was nothing at all complaining or whining about his voice, which insinuated nothing more than a little harmless, if only slightly childish, mockery. If Wladislaw could understand as much, Colonel Julian de Chevalier would, naturally, have no problem reading though him.

He flashed a quick smile towards his subordinate.

“But of course,” he said, nodding slightly before returning to his business-like look. “Anything else I need to know, Captain?”

Hermann’s right hand met his forehead with an audible slap as he bent his neck a little.

“Ah, yes, I almost forgot,” the Captain said sheepishly. “We will be stopping in Karakoy until morning to restock. I’ve placed a sufficiently large order for the dockyard suppliers, so there’s that.”

“Excellent,” Julian said, nodding in agreement. “Make sure to restock the horses’ fodder as well. It’s going to be a long journey and we wouldn’t want our partners to starve, now would we?’

“You let me do it,” the Captain said confidently, pointing his thumb at his chest. “I believe I know what I am doing.”

Then he raised his hand over his head and waved it at his superior in an exceedingly casual manner.

“Right, I guess I need to head down now,” he said, his voice having now fully returned to his previous jolly and cheery tone. “Things to take care of, forms to fill, papers to file… you know, the usual fare for good old me.”

Then he turned back, stepping towards the stair down into the ship’s hold.

“I guessed as much,” the Colonel said, chuckling. “Make sure you don’t misfile the supply bills like that time.”

The captain instantly stopped, as if frozen on the spot. He slowly turned towards the Colonel, his neck seemingly pausing with every degree he moved it.

“That was six years ago!” he said, protesting.

“I know, right?” The Colonel answered, letting out what amounted to a short string of laughter, a rarity to a person of his stature. "That said, off you go then, Captain. Good luck with the paperwork."

"Likewise, Jul-," the Captain replied, smiling back. "I mean, sir."

And then he walked off, his gigantic form disappearing below one of the ship's stairwells leading below, as swiftly as he had appeared.

All the while, Wladislaw was watching quietly, flashing a relaxed smile himself. For all the difficulties ahead of him, he believed was under sound leaders, if only fairly quirky.

Above the skies of Constantinople, the moon had risen, bright and sparkling, as though promising him a journey ahead filled with exploits and valorous deeds fit for the annals of the Holy Komnenian Empire. Unfortunately for him, the vibrant cityscape of this historic city would not be the place that would observe firsthand such acts. A particular city in the East by the name of Tokyo would be, if he were to take his briefings at face value.

And Tokyo, well, that would be a story for another couple months.

********



< Message edited by Argeus the Paladin -- 11/3/2011 8:30:35 >
DF  Post #: 2
11/7/2011 8:34:44   
Argeus the Paladin
Member

Chapter 2
Tokyo’s Greeting


A loud conglomeration of noises consisting mainly of the ship’s whistles and the sound of a landing bridge connecting to the ship’s hold and locking in place woke Sergeant Wladislaw Mieczowitz from his slumber. He twisted and turned for a brief moment, slowly blinking and grimacing slightly in annoyance, as expected of someone whose sleep was abruptly interrupted by some unpleasant disturbance. He was quick to come to his senses, however. A brief yawn escaped his lips, bringing with it the last remnant of his sleepiness.

The scene before him could be classified as quite bizarre for a human being or anyone else unaware of its existence for that matter. The room he was in – if he could call it a room at all – was tubular, metallic, barely lit and bore the rather unpleasant smell of crude oil mixed with fermented blood. Aside from a number of bunk beds, some makeshift tables and chairs and several racks, closets and lockers housing his comrades’ personal possessions, the room was virtually empty.

The entire room was kept barely alit by a number of portable electric lamps, a luxury that might as well not have been necessary anyway, since both himself and his comrades could see quite well regardless of how well lit the room was. The ceiling was several dozen feet above his head, looming ominously in complete darkness, left completely untouched by the scant light. A number of makeshift windows, only recently carved into the metallic walls and apparently not part of the original design, suggested that the “room” was not originally intended for habitation.

He was not alone in this room. In fact, he seemed to be the only one asleep until the last hour or so, for the space around him was bustling with activities. His comrades, having apparently awoken a while now, were busying themselves with a plethora of random, nameless tasks. Some were retrieving their belongings from their respective lockers. Others were looking to their arms and armors, polishing the plates and sharpening their blades. Still other, apparently having finished all of those menial tasks, were gathering around the table, chatting away over their drinks.

All of them shared one thing, however. Their excitement and eagerness for what was to come in the next hours were obvious on their faces. When Wladislaw finally remembered exactly why that excitement came to be, that feeling spread over to him as well. His face beamed as he sat up on his bunk bed and straightened up his scale armor. Going to bed without changing to proper sleepwear meant not having to take his time putting on and off the Cataphracts’ ornate armor before and after sleep, in exchange for the armor looking rather messy every day upon waking up.

“You’re late, Sergeant.”

A deep, elderly voice sounded right in front of the soldier. Somewhat startled, the soldier stopped whatever he was doing and looked up.

Before his eyes was a face and posture all too familiar to him by then. Said face was wrinkled for the most part and adorned with a grey set of Hellenic moustache and short beard encircling his pair of thin lips and slightly underbitten jaws. His eyes were no longer as bright or lively as the young ones, having been dulled down significantly like aged glass. And yet in spite of his apparent age, his body was not much less muscular or steadfastly built than the typical young Cataphracts – namely Wladislaw himself – and his especially large hands seemed to suggest that he could well take the Sergeant on in a match of armwrestling any day. In one of those hands he held a loaf of bread with a particular blood-red filling, undoubtedly his meal.

Either way, the fact that such an old soldier was still alive and well, much less serving in the Imperial armed force, in and of itself was deserving of veneration and honor. At once the soldier stood up and gave as splendid a salute as he could manage given the current state of his armor.

“Lieutenant Euclides, sir,” he said, stomping his heels. “How could I be of service, sir?”

The old man took one complete look at the young soldier from head to heel, then shook his head in disapproval.

“How many times have I told you, kid?” he said, half amused. “Going to bed in the Hemothorax is a bad idea. Very bad idea.”

Wladislaw looked down at his clothing sheepishly. As much as he tried to mess up as little of his armor as he could, the current state of his uniform was quite akin to an unironed pair of khakis pants. Several rows of scales were entangled with the ones right above or below them. The breastplate’s belt and faulds were off. His gauntlets and bracers were misaligned. The inner padded cloth linings of his scale skirt and collar were crumpled. In short, at the very moment, he looked like the Cataphracts’ equivalent of a homeless vagabond in short supply for proper clothing.

“I will fix it up immediately, sir!” Wladislaw stammered, before bending his enck downward and began frantically working on his personal image.

“Well, it’s not like we have time for that, have we?” the old man said, chuckling loudly. “Fix what you can, then pack your things and prepare to leave. We’re off this ship in another half hour at most.”

Wladislaw rolled his eyes for a brief second before mentally smacking himself. How could he forget that?

“We… we are already in Tokyo, sir?” he asked back, as if just trying to confirm for himself.

“Yep, Tokyo,” the old man nodded. “The city of fish, skyscrapers, tea, fish, commerce, funny-looking picture books and fish. And have I mentioned fish?”

The old warrior let out a string of hearty laughter, causing Wladislaw to unconsciously laugh with him. It was, however, only a short while before his laughter died down. After all, that was where they were supposed to carry out their next mission, something that, Wladislaw could not stress enough, not something a true Cataphract could laugh at.

“Well, I’d be happy to leave this ship, sir,” he finally said, his hands still working on his armor. “There is only so long I could smell this rotten crude oil and still maintain an acceptable degree of consciousness.”

“This is nothing, son,” the old warrior said, patting Wladislaw on the shoulder. “Compared to the kind of stunts we had to pull off to even move around the Black Sea during the Ducal Succession War, this might as well have been a paid-for stay in a five-star hotel.”

He took a bite off the loaf, a few grains of salt and breadcrumbs sprinkling on the ground as he ate.

“Complete with gourmet food,” he finished, his voice muffled by his mouthful. “Well-salted, halfway-fresh Patriotic Sustenance three times a day? When I was younger, I’d be happy to march to the end of the earth for a quarter as much.”

Wladislaw nodded, less for agreement and more for sheer respect for his senior and superior. Patriotic Sustenance – a rather poetic name for a dish consisting solely of plain barley bread with diluted blood filling or dip and heavily flavoured by sea salt – was an edible food by all account, but it was nowhere near the kind of Imperial delicacies as it was usually made out to be. Not to him, at the very least.

“I’m finished, sir,” Wladislaw announced after untangling the last offending scale.

“Your share’s on the table. Eat while the bread’s still crisp,” the lieutenant reminded. “On second thoughts, skip that part. Pack your things quickly. You can eat on the way down to the pier.”

“Yes, sir,” Wladislaw said, saluting his superior again before marching towards his own locker and quickly opened it.

His locker, thankfully, was surprisingly empty. He had little in the way of regular clothing and personal belongings of sentimental values. He packed only two sets of coarse winter wear, the kind often sold in large quantities in charity shops, a number of trinkets and oddities kept in a securely sealed box, a single pen and notebook and a pair of reading glasses. The last articles seemed to have been packed less out of necessity and more out of the unconscious desire to look intellectual. Most of those items he could actually leave behind, owing to not having much use for them even during the two-month journey thus far. He could not foresee needing them, however long this whole Japanese business would last.

However, there was one particular item he would not leave behind at any cost. At the back of the locker there was a single silver dagger. At first sight, it seemed to be an article more suitable for an aristocrat’s silverware collection than combat, what with its having an ornately decorated hilt and guard, a velvet-coated scabbard and – as he picked up and unsheathed it – a delicate, slender blade that threatened to break with the least of manhandling.

And yet Wladislaw could vouch himself as to how durable that blade actually was, as well as how combat-worth it would prove even in the heat of battle as a killing weapon. His father before him had used it to take many a werewolf lives back in the border wars of the fifties of the previous century. And now that he was but an old and paralytic old noble on his porch back in their family holding in Poland, the duties fell on Wladislaw’s shoulders. A responsibility hard and heavy, yet more noble and glorious than any. Thinking so, Wladislaw picked up the blade and strapped it to his belt. If he could help it, the blade would not need to draw blood, as to preserve the keepsake in top-notch condition.

It did not take long for him to pack his remaining possessions. A shirt tucked here, a pant stuffed there, and the locker was cleared, its content nicely stuffed into a rucksack the young soldier now wore over his shoulders. Unpacking that mess and properly store them at their new destination would undoubtedly be another can of worm altogether, and he would prefer not to think about it at the moment.

He then swiftly walked to the table, picked up his share of food and took a bite. The rather overboard amount of salt dulled the taste and smell of preserved blood a great deal, such that he could not tell from his tongue whether it was human blood or just that of a random animal he had just swallowed. It didn’t matter hugely, in all honesty. It was not like he needed that much blood to subsist. Thinking so, he took another large bite at the loaf, washing it down with a readily poured glass of water on the table. That glass probably belonged to another of his brother, but he had made a habit of drinking off from other people’s glasses so much that they probably wouldn’t care about it anyway.

Hardly had he swallowed his food and drink when the only door into the room sprang open. At the doorway another figure clad in the uniform beast-plate-and-scale setup of the Cataphract stood, one of his hands still clutching the makeshift doorknob. This particular soldier was closer to Wladislaw than the old warrior both in age and ethnicity. He had the light blond hair, pale complexion and square profile of someone born in the snowy northernmost edge of Russia. The rest of his face, unfortunately, lacked the kind of ferocity that Wladislaw himself had and treasured. Most of his features were round and smooth, and apart from a minor battle scar across his forehead his face was as smooth as that of a child.

Instead of a blood red color like most of his peers, this soldier’s eyes were tinted in a color best described as a fine cross between hazelnut and blood red, giving him a more human look than his ken. At this point, though, all of Wladislaw’s comrades were aware that his eye color was only so because of his contact lenses. Indeed, the whole company knew he was an avid reader, something he made no attempt to conceal whatsoever. In this case, the uppermost edge of a paperback volume was visible from the still open rucksack he held in his free hand, apparently just barely stuffed in upon entering the room.

“Well, brothers, time to move,” he said, gesturing towards the outside. “Is everyone ready?”

A resolute ‘yes’ sounded from every populated corner of the room. The tone of voice of each of those statement were different, however. Some were excited. Some showed obvious boredom. Still others were tinted with a particular sense of uncertainty. Wladislaw made sure that his own voice could be heard loud and clear and carry as prideful a spirit as he could manage. He was, for the most part, pleased with his own voice.

The only one to not say yes was the old lieutenant, who instead proved his readiness by walking briskly towards his comrade, all equipment in good order and with his rucksack already on his shoulders to boot.

“How goes the transports, Sergeant Susanin?” he asked.

“All fine, all fine, Batyushka,” the figure answered, his voice raised in elation. “Apparently Colonel de Chevalier had taken care of everything since yesterday. Long story short, we have a coach waiting on us, our horses are already loaded into them container trucks, and all we need to do is take a seat, whip out a book and enjoy our trip.”

Sergeant Susanin tapped on his own rucksack, which, unlike Wladislaw’s and that of most of the others, were filled to the brim with what seemed to be a large collection of books.

“If this were anyone else, I’d believe you were going to a book club’s summer camp rather than a mission abroad, son,” he said, his voice bore both an approving and a warning tone well mixed with each other. “I do hope you know to put down the books and pick up the blade when the bullets and arrows and whatnot start flying.”

Batyushka, I’ve been here for half a decade now,” he said, his tone jovial still. “You’d think I’ve known my way around by now.”

Half a decade. That was a good while longer than Wladislaw’s own stay. Then again, Wladislaw had been the latest addition to the Cataphracts, and only older than the youngest among them by two years. Either way, being the youngest team member did bring certain benefits, and, like just now, being allowed to sleep in a bit was one of them.

Hardly could he delve further on this line of thought, for after exchanging a single understanding nod with Sergeant Susanin, the old lieutenant turned around, facing the rest of the still disassembled body of men.

“Everyone, line up in single file after me!” he shouted, his orders bearing the kind of vigor not expected from someone of his age and stature. “March!”

Waiting for the first soldiers to line up behind him, the old soldier then briskly marched out of the doorway with as much dignity and grandeur as deserving of his stature…

*******


It was just half an hour after dusk at the very most, and yet the Tokyo port looked stone cold. Here and there snowflakes dotted the sky, heralding the cold touch of winter with it. In other words, the Cataphracts found themselves right at home in this climate.

As he walked down the loading bridge leading down to the pier, Wladislaw could not help but open his eyes widely in awe. All around him he could hear the rhythmic, lively sounds of machines of all sorts chiming as testimony to a productive industry. And if that wasn’t enough, the sheer number of ships weighing anchor in the various piers around them made Wladislaw feel almost tiny and insignificant, the kind of feeling he had rarely troubled himself with. Then again, he was not exactly the well-traveled tourist, so there was that.

By all means, Tokyo was finer than any other city Wladislaw had ever set eyes on. Compared to the sheer size, sleekness and grandeur of architecture and modernity of facilities – at least as far as what he could see in the port – even Constantinople held no water against this city. If Constantinople only had skyscrapers. Tokyo was brimming with them, spreading all over the horizon as far as his eyes could follow.

What Wladislaw did not appreciate, however, was the absurdly large amount of urban lighting. There were lights everywhere – on the streets, flaring from the plethora of vehicles dashing about on said streets, emitting from the many windows of the various skyscrapers, dotting the landscape buildings, reflecting over large billboard signs, et cetera. As he walked down, he had to withdraw one hand to cover part of his eyes like a human being forced to look directly at the desert sun. For all he loved his kind and bloodline, being overly sensitive to lights of all sorts was a huge setback however he looked at it.

As soon as the last of his brothers had stepped down from the loading bridge, Wladislaw saw Colonel de Chevalier and Captain von Schlieffer stepping forward. The former pulled out from his person a silver scepter, briefly raised it upright above his head before pointing it at the asphalt ground before them. At that order, Wladislaw and his brothers began to form up ranks at the designated point.

From their vantage point, they could hardly speak for the rest of the port, but this particular pier was almost completely devoid of human presence aside from a small number of nominal dock workers. Wladislaw was glad for this, since he could not see any way a crew of five score Cataphracts assembling in rank and file on the pier could go well under the eye of too many humans. Their cloaking magic, useful as it might be, could not possibly quell an onlooker’s curiosity as to the nature of their column.

“I take it that everyone is here?” the Colonel asked.

“Exactly forty-six,” Captain Hermann said, a mischievous tint coloring his glance as he quickly swept his eyes over the position of a specific Russian sergeant in the line, “plus one bookworm, I may add.”

For one thing, Sergeant Sergei Susanin did not respond to Hermann quite enough to entertain him. Instead, he just stared back at his supposedly superior figure, flaunting his reading glass proudly. And for the other, Julian’s criticizing glare at the Captain’s professionalism or lack thereof certainly did not cut him any slack.

“I mean, ahem,” he cleared his voice before assuming a much more professional tone. “Full number, Colonel, sir!”

“Excellent,” the Colonel nodded. “I’d take over from here, if you will.”

“Right, the peeps are all yours, Ju- I mean, Colonel,” the Captain said, nodding at the colonel. “Just as per always, yes?”

And then he ran off at the general direction of the pier’s loading zone, his posture and general impression more in line with an excited frat boy than an officer. The way he called back at the Colonel like a juvenile street urchin with no education did not help.

“Make it fast, shall we? We don’t want to keep our rides waiting if possible.”

The Colonel nodded exactly once, before turning back to the rest of the column.

“Brothers, here we are,” he said as he walked along the front of the ranks, preparing to give one of his famous speeches at least among his men. “I’ve promised you Tokyo, and today we stand here on this little known land, being the brave defenders of the Empire we are.”

Wladislaw cringed slightly when he realized what the Colonel was about to do. Normally, he would be the first to welcome his leader’s speeches, but not on this occasion. For all his way with the inspirational words, the Colonel should have noticed beforehand that a pier of the commercial port of Tokyo was hardly the most inconspicuous place for a speech of an army that, to the human world, never existed. Fortunately, what few humans in their general vicinity seemed to be busying themselves with their own things, otherwise they might have had some serious problem with their discretion right then and there.

“But, brothers, this is the end of the road I’ve built for you,” the Colonel continued, seemingly heedless of Wladislaw’s rather subtle protest. “What would await we the proud Imperial Black Eagles in this unforgiving land?”

The Colonel paused, before returning with a firm nod.

“A difficult journey, that’s what. A difficult journey more demanding and unforgiving than anything you, my brothers, have seen before.” “Before us lie a vast unknown in multiple senses of the word. Enemies both known and mysterious made their homes here. Difficulties both physically and mentally challenge our endurance and willpower to the limit.”

As he spoke, his voice slowly raised to a gradual crescendo.

“Victory? Glory? Our names going down eternally in the Imperial annals as a synonym to successful expedition and as an admirable epic in and of itself?”

He lowered his voice to a low, if not somber, key.

“Or shall we face defeat and humiliation, such that our bleached bones would fall here unburied as a lasting testament of our failure to carry the duties His Majesty and our people – our brothers and sisters eagerly waiting for us at home – alike? Shall we conquer our challenges, or let it conquer us? Shall the difficulties bring out the best of a noble Cataphract, or will it strangle and drown him instead? Exactly where among this spectrum of victory and defeat shall our fate lay?”

He stopped briefly, glancing across the rank of his fellow Cataphracts, as though peering into each and every of his comrades. It looked almost like he was sowing a certain sense of thrill and suspense into his beholders. The moment those eyes scanned over his position, Wladislaw thought that his hair had stood on end owing to said thrill and excitement, such that his previous doubt and anxiety had, at least for the moment, vanished.

And then all of a sudden, the Colonel’s eyes once again centered on the formation as a whole.

“You decide,” he spoke in a low yet resolute note. “Ultimately our fate boils down to each and every of us and how we carry ourselves in this place.”

He stood firm in his place in attention, his right hand placed upon the pommel of his blade.

“I know what we have to do, but obviously I cannot do everything by myself,” he said solemnly. “So now, my brothers, I ask you this – are you with me? Are you willing to stand on my side on the journey ahead? Are you willing to brave the darker skies ahead and carry the name ‘Varangoi Kataphraktoi Somatophylakes’ against all odds? Are you willing to prove to the world at large that we the children of the Holy Komnenian Empire can and will conquer everything on their path?”

He drew his blade and held it in front of his face between his eyes.

“Those who stand with me, draw your swords!”

A resounding cascade of blades quickly unsheathed from their scabbards echoed across the immediate vicinity. By this time, Wladislaw no longer cared if any human would catch a glimpse of their ceremony. His sword was among the first to be drawn, if he were to say that himself.

“Glory be to the Holy Komnenian Empire and His Majesty Emperor Ioannes Sigismund Komnenos! We march to honor, glory and our enemies’ doom!”

The Colonel thrust his blade upright into the sky with a move as forceful and driven as his voice at that time.

“Huzzah!”

If the silence of the night was only breached by the rapid drawing of blades just now, the resounding triple “Huzzah” that followed completely shattered it. Under the moonlight, the Cataphracts’ blades and armors flashed and twinkled like a Milky Way on earth. Unfortunately for any human in the general vicinity, this marvelous display of the might and resolve of Imperial arms would completely elude them. Their cloaking magic also happened to conceal such rare beauties from the naked human eyes, for better or worse.

The Colonel had only just finished his speech and the men had barely quieted down when a series of heavy machinery and engine noises drew their attention towards its origin. Before them was a sight, while nowhere nearly as inspirational or majestic as the Colonel’s short speech, was rightfully deserving of a number of fascinated ohs and ahs from Wladislaw’s comrades.

Two lumbering beasts of a vehicle were rolling up next to the company’s line, their heavy wheels grinding ferociously on the asphalt ground. One was a container truck several dozen feet long and about five times as high as Wladislaw was tall, most of which occupied by a steel container larger than anything of the sort he had ever seen. The young noble had heard of and seen such an improbably long human model of transport from a distance before, but that was the first time he had seen such behemoth up close and personal.

The other, much more modest in comparison, was what looked like a trans-Poland chartered coach he had happened to take from time to time back home. Still, its size was nothing to be scoffed at, most probably large enough to house their entire company and then some. And as though to dispel any doubt whether those were their transport, Wladislaw saw a familiar, large and cheeky armored figure jumping down from the lofty cabin of the container truck.

“Well, here they are, Colonel,” he said to Julian. “Our four-legged friends are already up there taking their time leisurely chewing on grass in that comfy container,” he pointed to the huge container while beaming widely. “And that one’s for us two-legged people.”

The Captain eyed at the coach, snapping his finger as he raised his head towards its general direction. At once the driver’s door snapped open, and from its cabin a figure climbed out and shuffled towards the company commander.

At first sight, he appeared as generic as an Asian worker in the transport industry could be. He had a generally amiable expression with a seemingly perpetual smile, if only slightly wrinkled as would be expected of any middle-aged person regardless of races. On his relatively small frame compared to Wladislaw’s brothers, especially Captain von Schlieffer, he wore a uniform pants and shirt complete with a trucker’s cap over his head. If there was anything slightly interesting about him, it was the fact that he wore a weirdly textured necklace outside his shirt, but that was about it.

Yet before the figure could come near enough for Wladislaw to examine his figure properly, the Polish noble was preemptively drawn to a particular tingling sensation. From the way a significant number of his brothers-in-arms looked at one another with alarm written on their face, it was clear they’d sensed the same thing. Wladislaw just happened to be the most vocal of the bunch.

“You are… a werewolf?” he asked the driver aloud, wearing on his face as skeptical and suspicious a look as he could muster at the moment. In hindsight, it was probably not a wise idea, for the dagger-sharp stare from the Colonel put him back in his place rather quickly.

“We’d prefer the term Dragon Wolf, if you will, sir,” the driver answered calmly, before walking forward to the Colonel and bowed.

“Monsieur de Chevalier, I presume, sir?” he said in as broken a pseudo-French accent as could be expected from a not very well linguistically educated driver, before returning to his normal voice. “I, Yamaguchi Hayate, a humble servant of the Daimyo, am honored to be at your service.”

A number of Wladislaw’s brothers, up to and including himself, were snickering with varying degrees of loudness at the way the driver was carrying himself. For someone of Julian’s position and stature, however, his reaction would be under another level of scrutiny altogether, and he knew better than anyone how to properly respond.

“The honor is all ours,” he said with a completely straight face as he returned the bow.

“The Daimyo would like to offer his most humble apologies, sir, for his absence today,” the ‘driver’ said, still keeping his head down. “I hope you would understand our delicate position regarding this matter…”

While the men rolled their eyes at that unexpected turn of event, the Colonel seemed calm and collected enough. Apparently, the details of that meeting was something only himself and the Captain knew, which explained a lot.

“Yes, we do,” Julian answered. “It would be unreasonable for us to expect His Grace to meet us in person regarding this most… secretive mission, after all.”

“We are grateful for your understanding, sir,” the ‘driver answered, briefly turning back to the general direction of the truck and coach. “Unfortunately, owing to certain… last-minute complications, these humble transports were all we could prepare. But if there is anything else you would require, we would be glad to oblige if we could facilitate them.”

The Colonel spent the next moment carefully eyeing the vessels, before nodding in approval, a move Wladislaw could certainly see the sense of. He would not say the vehicles were particularly luxurious or comfortable. On the contrary, they were the textbook definition of industrial vehicles – rough and unadorned, yet certainly sturdy and roadworthy for their purposes. In other words, the perfect transport choice for a company of professional, elite soldiers.

“That would be all, I suppose,” the Colonel answered. “Thank you, Mr. Yamaguchi.”

“Splendid,” the ‘driver’ said, his voice elated.

He stretched his left arm towards the general direction of the coach.

“Now, if there is no other business you need to take care of,” he said, smiling broadly, “shall we be off, sir?”

“Our pleasure,” Julian said, nodding before turning towards his company. “Cataphracts, follow my lead!”

********

DF  Post #: 3
11/8/2011 9:23:14   
Argeus the Paladin
Member

Chapter 3
First Battle


The road leading out of Tokyo was marvellously built, much better than the kind of roads Wladislaw was used to seeing back in his beloved Poland. Then again, the young Cataphract’s life had been spent almost wholesale in the countryside, and no countryside roughly paved road could compare to the multi-laned, well-lit smooth asphalt motorways of one of the biggest metropolises of the known world.

The journey itself was almost a poetic scene in and of itself. The coach moved ever so smoothly on the wide road paved with silvery road lights amid a small, yet fast-moving stream of vehicles. The background was dotted with a small number of snowflakes and lined with an ever so thin layer of snow. The peaceful fields on both sides of the road lay idly, standing in direct contrast to the dynamic and modern infrastructure making up the rest of the picture. It was all in all the kind of scene that would whip a photographer or painter into a frenzied creative storm.

Wladislaw had, however, quite a few things in mind other than sightseeing. Barely half and hour had passed since they arrived on Japanese soil and already Wladislaw and most of his brothers had had their fill of surprises. First of all, there had been some major changes in their original plans of action, and, like most of the others, Wladislaw was kept in the dark about it until just now, when the Colonel decided to run a briefing session en route.

“Heading into Saitama, sir?”

Those words, parroting exactly what the Colonel had just mentioned a second prior, escaped his lips without leaving any lasting impression. A brain-dead newt probably knew more about Japanese geography than he did, a not-too-flattering fact he could not care less about. If the blank stare from half of the Cataphracts he could see from his seat was of any indication, his brothers-in-arms were not much better off on that respect.

“Yes,” Colonel de Chevalier said, standing in the aisles between the coach’s two rows of seats. “Our destination is a small township in the fringe of the prefecture. That’s where we will set up camp.”

“I don’t understand, sir. Aren’t we supposed to be garrisoned in Tokyo and await further orders?”

A fellow Cataphract asked exactly what Wladislaw was going to mention himself, and for good reasons. Ever since the company left the exalted halls of the Bucharest chapter house and board the oil tanker for Japan, they had been convinced that the bulk of their mission would take place in the country’s capital, or at the very least one of its satellite suburbs. Admittedly, changing their bases of operation would be more beneficial for their army, at least in the sense that they would be much less likely to attract undue attention from curious human folks. It did not, however, change the fact that the entire company had not seen it coming and therefore were caught in complete surprise.

“That was what we had expected,” the Colonel explained. “Between our departure from Constantinople and our arrival at Japanese water, though, there were some dramatic and rapid changes in circumstances. Between Captain von Schlieffer, Lieutenant Euclides and I,” he glanced at the other two officers, who silently nodded in acknowledgement, “we had to change the plans to provide for the new situation without letting you know.”

For a brief moment mutters and whispers filled the row as seemingly each and every soldier clung to the comrade seated next to them to voice their astonishment and speculation. Wladislaw’s mate Sergei Susanin, on the other hand, chose to respond to the entire business with naught but an ‘oh well’ shrug and resumed burying his nose in his volume of War and Peace. There was a reason why his glasses were comparable to his breastplate in terms of sheer thickness, after all.

“Right, shall we continue?” the Colonel said, pausing a little and looked around the rows of seats waiting for questions, only continuing when the men had mostly settled down. “Good. I have another announcement to make.”

If the mere changing of venue was already surprising enough for them, the Colonel’s next declaration almost made half the men jump out of their seat in bewilderment.

“In light of the latest developments and to best facilitate our original mission,” he said with as much solemnity as would befit an official pact, “I have taken the liberty to approve a temporary and unofficial alliance with the Dragon Wolves. In other words, for as long as we stay on this soil, their enemies are ours and vice versa.”

Wladislaw could very barely restrain himself enough to not let out a loud and unbecoming “What”. A few of his brothers failed to exercise such restraint, resulting in the coach’s interior suddenly finding itself taken over by an uproarious orchestra of various utterances of astonishment, bewilderment, disapproval, disagreement or otherwise. And unlike the last time, this moment’s shock was enough to make Sergei literally throw aside his book and speak up.

“But… but… aren’t we supposed to be at war, sir?”

There was a distinct hateful undertone to Sergeant Susanin’s voice. Wladislaw could hardly blame his companion. While the Polish soldier’s father returned mostly in one piece after the border wars of the last century’s fifties with the High Wolves of the Scandinavia, Sergei’s old man did not. And if he were to take Sergei’s words for it, somewhere down the line his grandfather died in battle against the werewolves as well, among the many nobles slaughtered like lambs in the-battle-that-must-not-be-named nearly two centuries prior. Even if he weren’t expressly hateful of werewolves – Wladislaw had always thought Sergei was too meek and mild-mannered to ever actively hate anyone, much less an entire people – he had reasons to not be thrilled by the Colonel’s creative idea.

“The High Wolves and the Dragon Wolves are different in principle, Sergeant Susanin,” the Colonel answered. “We have been having no quarrels with them for a few hundred years now, and,” he briefly turned towards the driver’s cabin, “they have proven to be quite supportive of our quest until this point.”

Whether that last part should be interpreted as an honest and sincere opinion or just a subtle hint to mean ‘you shouldn’t badmouth the ethnicity of that guy behind the wheel’, Wladislaw could not tell. Maybe a little bit of both was what the Colonel was going for, he could only guess. Either way, Sergeant Susanin threw back at the Colonel a somewhat doubting look, as though wondering whether their leader knew what he was doing. The way the Colonel looked back, he was making it absolutely clear to the Sergeant that he did.

“Of course, I do understand all too well this is a radical turn of event,” he said. “An unpopular decision, even.”

In all honesty, Wladislaw had never cared as much about the werewolf business as a good portion of his fellow Imperial citizens, though his young age might have had something to do with it. When he was born, the last Imperial-High Wolf war was in its closing days. Until the day he graduated from the Justinian Junior Officer Academy – scratch that, until present – the ‘war’ between the Empire and the High Wolves had for long been in name only. The few werewolf-blooded acquaintances he did have were quite okay people, ignoring their dislike of fine silverware and their tendency to disappear from public events at full moon each month.

But from the reaction of his comrades, Wladislaw could see where the ‘unpopular’ part came from. Fortunately, owing to their respect for their commander and the discipline of the Cataphracts, said reactions were only limited to inaudible mutters and grimaced faces rather than any overt forms of objection. On his part, the Colonel paused for a while, before bending his head in a bow, a gesture that was otherwise unthinkable for someone of his position and status.

“And for that, you have my apologies, brothers,” he said with all due sincerity. “I hope you understand that the nature of our task did not allow me to reveal to all of you what was transpiring.”

That apology was, however sincere Colonel de Chevalier’s attitude seemed, for all intents and purposes rhetoric. For one thing, Wladislaw was quite certain they could do nothing to object to his decisions, now that everything had already happened. And for the other, there were absolutely no reason to object. After all, when they set off from Bucharest, the Emperor himself had granted him the exalted general’s silver scepter, meaning that he was allowed to do whatever he saw fit to see their ultimate goal realized. Wladislaw and his average brothers had seen firsthand that there was always a reason to everything the Colonel had done, however absurd it might seem at the tome.

That being mentioned, the company’s discontent did not look like it would wane any time soon. Unless proven otherwise, of course. And that was exactly where the last surprise of the day came in. Hardly had the men buried their discontent and quieted down when a loud beep blared from the general direction of the driver’s cabin. Wladislaw could not speak for others, but he was certainly startled. His hands unconsciously reached for his blade’s handle while he stared at the driver’s seat from behind in high alarm.

And then he saw the driver picking up what seemed to be a handset and began speaking, at which point he exhaled loudly out of relief.

“Yes sir, I have our guests with me here,” he said into the handset, his voice confident and cheerful. “Every other preparation is also in place, sir. Yes sir, yes. Now we are only a few miles from Sakurasaki and…”

His sentence was cut short by a bout of silence, presumably as the other end responded. All of a sudden, his reflection in the rear mirror took a turn for the worse. His eyes opened wide, as did his mouth in an expression best interpreted as bewilderment followed closely by gripping fear. Whatever the person on the other end told him must have been unnerving, to say the least.

“What?” he exclaimed. “Come again, sir?”

More silence ensued, this time much longer than the last. As the silence built up, so did the fright in the driver’s eyes grow. Wladislaw was quite sure he was not the only one to notice this, since by then half of the Cataphracts in the first three rows were gluing their eyes at the general direction of the driver and his rear mirror.

“No… no way…” he muttered in an increasingly trembling tone. “They… they are already here?”

Another suspenseful moment of silence, though much shorter than the last. From the tone of voice the driver assumed after that, it was most probably an express order.

“Yes, sir, I understand… I understand, sir… Certainly, sir, I’d speak with them immediately, sir…”

He slammed the handset down on its rack, the moment’s fright still not yet faded from his features. And then he pressed a particular sequence of buttons on his control panel, resulting in the coach’s hazard lights blaring to life on its rear end as he pulled over the roadside and parked it there. Before the Cataphracts could voice their question as to what kind of trick he was trying to pull, the driver had sprang from his seat and jumped on the aisle.

“Monsieur de Chevalier, sir, if I may?” he asked, his voice shivering still, as were his gestures. “There is something I need to tell you…”

Indeed his gestures were none too boasting. His hands were clasping together, his knees shaking, his shoulder shrunken in fright – all in all, an entirely ignoble display of someone begging for his life at the sight of the chopping block. Cruel as it might seem, quite a few of the Cataphracts were snickering at his rather lacking performance, Wladislaw included. The Colonel’s reaction, as per normal, was much more diplomatic and understanding.

“I suppose there has been some complication, yes?” the Colonel answered, his calmness stood in direct contrast to the driver’s lack thereof. “And you need our help to sort it out, am I right?”

“Nothing ever escapes your eyes, Monsieur de Chevalier,” he said hastily. “Here’s the thing…”

*******


Even as he was mounted astride his Hemohippeis, Wladislaw could hardly believe how quickly that night’s events had played out. He was glad to find that after such a long trip across the ocean and a few hours packed in a container crate, good old Wolodijowski was headstrong and steadfast still. Such was the great fortitude of imperial Hemohippeioi, a breed of horses that could take anything and everything war could throw at it – swords, spears, axes, arrows, bullets, fatigue, hunger and disease – in quick succession and still be able to come back for more.

It had been barely three hours since they set foot on this foreign land and already they were standing there on a battlefield, helms down, lances couched, reins in hand and ready for battle. Not that there was anything wrong with that in and of itself. The Cataphracts lived and breathed the air of the battlefield, such that a warm-up fight after a couple months making their home in a steel casket was a welcome change.

Still, it was a sudden turn of event in any sense of the word. Apparently their new ally had gotten themselves into a bit of a tight spot, if the driver’s words were to be taken at face value. The very enemies that inspired them to so hastily allying with the Empire in the first place had decided to strike on the very same day the Cataphracts arrived, and were, even as they were traveling, engaging with the Dragon Wolves near the town of Sakurasaki. The very town they were headed to in the first place, unfortunately. In other words, Wladislaw’s comrades hardly had any other option short of abandoning the ill-fated alliance.

And now the army, having hastily unloaded their horses and weaponries from the container trucks, had finally arrived in the general vicinity of the battle. The terrain was not exactly suitable for their style of combat. In front of them was a hilly, thin forest covered in snow. Behind them, their coach and container truck were parked on a rural concrete road, having just hastily dumped all their cargo for the impending battle. In between there was a distressingly narrow forest clearing, the only place they could effectively deploy all of their horses in a row. Naturally, that terrain was more suitable for guerilla warfare than the famed Cataphract charge. Even more distressing, Wladislaw could swear he could clearly hear the sound of fighting from the distance, but the treacherous terrain between here and there made it impossible for him to actually see anything transpiring ahead.

Not that it stopped the Colonel from trying. The column aligned themselves into three general groups behind their most senior officers, positioning themselves at the flattest stretch of land. Difficult terrain aside, the Cataphracts’ order of battle was not that different from their normal routine. The Colonel took control of the wedge in the center with the least experienced of the lot, while Lieutenant Euclides was in charge of a small contingent to cover their left flank. And on the right flank, standing a little behind the rest of the line, Captain von Schlieffer led those elite Cataphracts hailing from the Black Sea coast, the heartland of the Empire.

Wladislaw fell into the wedge behind the Colonel, as did Sergei, waiting for further orders. His hand gripped his kopia lance tightly, doubting whether he would find any use for it in this battle or not. On his side, his Russian teammate had elected to stow away his polearm, brandishing his cavalry saber in its stead. Both their faces were gripped with a certain sense of nervousness they had hardly experienced before. In their defenses, having to fight a completely unknown enemy tended to elicit unbecoming nervousness even among veterans, let alone inexperienced soldiers like themselves.

For the moment, the air was so thick with suspense one could cut it with a knife, only to be completely shattered when a shadowy figure dashed from the foggy woods towards their central column. The sudden movement startled Wladislaw for a moment, but only until he realized that compared to the column before him, the newcomer might as well be harmless even if he were hostile. Which, apparently, he was not.

Either way, from the look on Sergei’s face, Wladislaw reckoned he would have pulled the trigger with no second thought had his hand been currently wrapped around a gun rather than a sword. While wildly different from the High Wolves in attire and equipment, the sign of the wolf on the newcomer’s face was unmistakable, albeit only mildly so since the moon phase was not anywhere near full yet. Aside from a long curved saber and a generic cloth tunic, he had on his person nothing worthy of combat. And if his bleeding wounds were of any indication, such lack of armor was clearly ill-advised.

“Are you Colonel Julian de Chevalier, sir?” he said hastily. “Thanks the Heavens, we are saved!”

“You are one of the Dragon Wolves of Sakurasaki, I presume?” the Colonel said. “What is the situation over there?”

“Terrible, sir,” he answered, shaking his head profusely. “The bastards took us by surprise before the moon was up. We were on the brink of annihilation – I could barely break away to inform you, sir.”

“Who are the enemies?” Julian asked, eying the informant with two parts concern and one part suspicion.

“The Oni, sir,” the messenger answered, his voice still somewhat shivering from both anger and, if Wladislaw read his gestures correctly, fear. “Blasted demons set upon us by our enemies. It’s a long story, but we have no time – please, you must make haste!”

The Colonel twisted his rein around his left hand and gripped it tightly, drawing his blade and stared at the messenger with a commanding look.

“Then let us waste no time,” he said calmly yet decisively. “Lead the way.”

He then turned back to the whole column and shouted.

“Lieutenant Euclides, advance towards the left flank and maintain a fifteen-paces distance from the main body! All other units, follow my lead while maintaining formation!”

Fortunately, they did not have to move too far ahead to be able to catch a glimpse of the raging battle. All it took was to trot over the gentle hillside to the top. When Wladislaw was at the top of the hill himself, he let out a quiet gasp of bewilderment. Suffice to say, the ongoing struggle was about as fierce as the admittedly few times Wladislaw felt his life was in serious danger back in his homeland. And unlike those battles, his friendlies were on the receiving end of the beatdown.

At the opposite end of the woods, he could see a small contingency of werewolves numbering no more than two dozens desperately holding the line. Behind them Wladislaw could spot what looked like a narrow yet rapid stream cutting off their retreat. Judging from their opposition, unfortunately, it would not be long before they were forced into said stream.

Said opposition consisted of no less than a hundred lumbering demonic creatures about twice as tall as a normal person, but with admittedly a worse sense of fashion than those he was used to hearing about. Indeed, they would have appeared frightening with their unusually large size, blood-red skin and large hafted clubs the size of a child’s torso had it not been for their incredibly messy unkempt hair and an uniform lionskin loincloth that were entirely out of place. While Wladislaw was more anxious and worried at the time than amused, some of his more experienced brethren from Captain Hermann’s column found no problem in letting out a mild string of snicker.

“Thanks the heavens, they are still holding out,” the messenger said, exhaling loudly in relief. “Sir, we must hurry!”

The Colonel responded to the messenger’s fervor with a raised hand and a steel-cold face.

“All units, form up in a line and spread out,” he ordered. “Position yourself for a charge and ready your lances. Do not attack without my order.”

While the Cataphracts took their time to do exactly what they were told, the messenger’s face went wild. Whatever shreds of calmness he might have maintained just now, he had lost it.

“Sir, but… but my brethrens are in danger down there!” he exclaimed, almost to the point of shrieking. “You have to move at once!”

“May I remind you, friend, that I am the commander of this company, and I technically don’t have to do anything just because you say so,” the Colonel replied. “Know that beside honoring our alliance, my first and foremost responsibility lies with preserving my own brothers. I am not going to send them head-first into hazard if I can help it.”

For the moment Wladislaw almost pitied the poor messenger. The fellow was almost on the brink of tears.

“But…”

The look on the Colonel’s face, as always, indicated that he was not going to change his verdict whatsoever.

“Rest assured,” the Colonel said, his voice mellowed and sugared down quite a bit. “Give me a few minutes and all will be safe, on my honor.”

And then his eyes shifted to the battle itself, scanning both friends and foes in search of weak points in the latter’s formation that he could exploit. Seeing that their enemies were turning their back to a row of lances and horses, though, he might as well not bothered.

In the few minutes that the Catphracts aligned themselves for the charge, things had taken a turn for the worse significantly. The defenders’ ranks were thinning down quickly, being cut down or smashed aside by their opponents’ weapons one by one, until there were barely a dozen left still standing. Wladislaw had to give the defenders credit for being brave and devoted, albeit foolhardily so. The average Imperial footman would have broken rank and routed as quickly as his legs could carry him when faced with such impossible odds.

“Please, sir… save us.”

At that point the messengers’ voice had become terribly weak, be it from despair, exhaustion or his injuries. It was a desperate plead, one which, given the Colonel’s resolution just now, he was quite certain was hopeless.

The situation now, however, had changed. Over the hillside, the Cataphracts now were properly lined up, each soldier a good three yards from the next, plotting for themselves a straight path right down to the enemy line free of trees, stumps, uneven ground. They were dormant now, but just at the Colonel’s order, all hell would break loose.

As the Colonel swept his eyes over his own ranks, his eyes flared up, as did a smile bloom on his lips. It was the kind of empowering and rousing smile that could rekindle flame in an army on the brink of collapse, rally it and take it to victory against all odds. Or at least, that was what Wladislaw thought.

“Cataphracts…”

The Colonel then drew his blade slowly and solemnly, as though reveling in the tension of the moment, before pointing it straight forward with a rapid flick of his sword arm.

“… Charge!”

And that was all needed to be said. Within a second, the entire line of dormant cavalrymen sprang to life like the giant awakened, sweeping down the hill with an unstoppable momentum. The quiet hillside blared up with the noise of a hundred hooves thundering across the landscape as the Cataphracts charged forth, their long decorated lances couched underarm pointed straight at their enemies’ exposed backs.

Their enemies, so concentrated and reveling in the killing in front of them, never once paid attention to their posterior until it was too late. By the time they were alerted to the thunderous hooves drawing right behind them, they were too late. They barely managed to turn back to face an avalanche of hooves and lances pouring right on their face. The screams of agony and horror, something hardly seen from demonkind, were drowned out almost wholesale by the iron hooves and the morbid noise of long knightly lances tearing through flesh as though they were nothing. Within seconds, the rearguard of the demonic company was reduced to a heap of dead bodies impaled from one end to the other like a shishkebab.

The Colonel’s steed was the fastest of all. Dashing at their unprepared foes with his sword in hand, all it took him was three successive slashes to relieve his three nearest enemies of their left legs before riding straight into the very center of their lines. The unfortunate demons’ horrid screams and the noise of their bones crushed under the cascade of hooves could be heard well behind the Colonel’s charge as he pressed forth. On his part, Wladislaw’s kopia, like most of his comrades’ lances, were unfortunately stuck in the lifeless carcass of his first enemy. Drawing his blade, he immediately followed the Colonel’s example and rushed straight into the thick.

The battle was by no means over, however. Their enemies’ survivor were quick to reorganize, splitting themselves into two halves, one trying to push the werewolves remnants into the stream while the other defending themselves against the cavalry charge. Their inhuman eyes were blaring with the kind of desperation of wounded beasts as they sprang forth at the incoming Cataphracts with their hafted clubs raised.

Wladislaw managed to dodge one such club only at the last moment with a quick swerve so that the demon’s wild swing struck a sizable boulder nearby instead, smashing it into pieces in one blow. Even with his Hemothorax to protect him, Wladislaw probably wouldn’t have looked too pretty had he eaten one such blow. That clumsy attack, unfortunately for the creature, left it entirely defenseless against the Polish soldier’s counterattack as he swiftly, almost casually so, rode behind the beast and drove his blade right through his hunched back. Next to him, Sergei was doing almost as well, having just cut off another demon’s left leg and leaving him sprawling on the ground defenselessly.

Elsewhere, however, their enemies’ resistance was proving a handful for his more isolated comrades. One particular brethren, Wladislaw quickly noted, were forced to cycle around five angry demons trying to bash his head in without being able to launch any counterattack. Another had just ran his horse into a tight spot and had to dismount to fight a demon twice his size while on foot. Thinned as their numbers were, the demons were still outnumbering the Cataphracts at least two to one, and their immense strength and recklessness was nothing to scoff at.

And then a lightning-fast flash of metal shredded into the battlefield from the right flank.

“Did someone call for… the reinforcement?”

Wladislaw only needed to look back for a blink to know who it was, and even if he hadn’t that cheeky, almost playful voice was particularly telling in and of itself. Captain Hermann von Schlieffer was riding straight into the side of their already weakened enemies, mounted astride a significantly larger steed than his brethrens while the remaining detachment of the company following right behind him. Both of his hands were off the rein to account for his weapon, an abnormally large wicked long war scythe with a shining stainless steel edge twice as long as Wladislaw’s own sword. As to how sharp that weapon actually was, the Captain was all too happy to demonstrate by slashing the demon who tried to stand in his way in half, demon and club alike.

The cascade of lances following the Captain’s charge was as ferocious as, if not even more than the original. While the lance control of Wladislaw’s immediate squadmates still far from flawless, those comrades who had just joined battle had a far better control over their weapons and horses. Some managed to skewer two of their tightly-packed foes in one charge, for instance, while others almost effortlessly ran their blades through a few enemies in quick succession. After all, those were the best of the Cataphracts – The very best of the very best. The Colonel’s battle plans always consisted of saving those men until the very last moment to turn whatever fierce resistance their cornered foes could come up with into a full-on rout.

And this time, it was no different. Already some of the demons, finding two cascades of lances and horse hooves too much for them, were throwing their weapons down and running for the hills. The chaos and despair was contagious, and in no time the sizable squad trying to desperately snuffing out the remaining werewolves were also scattering, trying to escape the carnage. The Polish soldier smiled, his eyes flaring in excitement at the imminent victory.

“Well, you know what they usually say in those times,” he heard the Captain’s voice ringing loudly. “All units, run down those wretched peasants!”

The next few minutes could best be described more like a massacre of defenseless demons than a battle proper. Those few clubs that still tried to resist were cut down on the spot, crushed by the sheer momentum of the cataphracts and the werewolf survivors The battle concluded with the field filled with dead bodies and the wounded of both their allies and their enemies, while the Cataphracts suffered but a few minor injuries.

In other words, just another day of taking out the trash for the best soldiers the Holy Komnenian Empire had to offer…

********



< Message edited by Argeus the Paladin -- 11/9/2011 8:10:37 >
DF  Post #: 4
11/11/2011 6:33:31   
Argeus the Paladin
Member

Chapter 4
The Snow-Shrouded Town


After gathering all the loot they could strip from their fallen enemies and enjoying the rightfully earned applause from the surviving Dragon Wolves, the group set forth, leaving behind the coach and the container truck. Colonel de Chevalier’s reasoning was that the former could be used to transport their wounded allies and whatever loot they could scrounge up from the battlefield and loading the horses back into the latter could take ages. It was a ‘most noble gesture’, or so their driver claimed. Whether that was praise was flattery or sincere, the army was now trotting slowly up a winding mountain path as a result thereof. That their guide was traveling on foot did not help their speed a whole lot.

Wladislaw could not speak for everyone, but he personally welcomed the slow ride. The coach ride in the past hours had been a most uncomfortable experience to one who was not used to modern traffic. Even better, the mountain road was abnormally wide and well built for what was possibly only a rural township. And if the strange absence of an open book from Sergei’s side was of any indication, he probably shared the same line of thinking.

The guide himself was apparently the same runner who met them in the battle just now, having only been barely patched up so he’d stop bleeding. Having not paid much attention to him prior, Wladislaw hadn’t exactly noticed the fact that he was nothing short of ridiculously young until now. His eyes had the kind of clarity – if not innocence – of a high school student at best. Now that it was not taken over by terror or hysteria, his pitch sounded more like that of a teenage boy having just cracked his voice than a seasoned soldier. Taking into consideration that fact that the wolves didn’t live all that much longer than the run-of-the-mill human, he probably was about a third as old as Wladislaw was, give or take a couple of years.

“Name’s Shuichi, sir,” he answered to a random query from one of his comrades. “Aizawa Shuichi.”

There was a certain tinge of meekness in his answer, one usually associated with well-educated, mild-mannered Imperial young ladies.

“And you are a soldier?” Wladislaw asked, his tone doused in curiosity. “I’d expect a warrior to be a little…” he paused briefly, racking his brain for a word that would be least offending. “… more hardened?”

“No, sir,” he shook his head. “I’m just a civilian volunteer. A part-time soldier, if you will.”

Shuichi finished his answer with a quiet laugh, as though the entire fighting and possibly dying in battle was but a joke. His brief yet very noticeable bout of shiver as he said so, however, spoke volume about his mental stability after the entire ordeal.

“I’d hope your higher-ups are not so desperate as to send children to their death,” Captain Hermann remarked. “Because if that were the case…”

Two things stopped him from finishing his sentence. For the first, their guide’s face was turning deathly pale from a fine mix of fright and awkwardness. And for the second, the Colonel’s trademark quick yet extremely harsh glare just paid the Captain a visit. Since Wladislaw doubted Captain Hermann would ever care about the fragile feeling of a foreign kid, the latter probably took all the credit for keeping his mouth shut and his necks bent down.

“Pardon my aide,” the Colonel said to the young man. “He’s a good man, though not quite a gentleman.”

“N… no sir,” the young wolf shook his head again, albeit his elation was rather obvious from how quickly his cheeks regained color. “It’s not like I dislike working with the army…”

He then lowered his voice to a barely audible volume.

“But it is kind of true that we’re spread out too thin…”

Wladislaw was about to ask further, but the Colonel’s preemptive gaze around the column told him he had better not. There was a certain amount of sense in that move, for no sooner had the young man registered what he just spoke than his face turned pale again in panic.

“Ah, I’m sorry,” he stammered with a degree of awkwardness that was almost pitiful. “Did I… did I say some thing I shouldn’t have?”

“You said nothing,” the Colonel said, smiling understandingly. “Let us keep it that way, yes?”

“Y… yes, sir,” he said, trying to force a smile. The attempt failed laughably, but at least he made an attempt. And an attempt, in Colonel de Chevalier’s book, was in and of itself worthy of its own commendation.

It took the column almost an hour’s ride through the increasingly heavy snowfall before they saw the silhouette of modern buildings in the distance. By then, the snowing was almost as thick as in the Russian winter, an unsurprising occurrence considering their altitude. Wladislaw cringed at the thought a little at the notion of camping in that town. Suffice to say the last time the company undertook a mission in the thick of the Russian snow season, there was about a dozen times more snow shoveling than there was fighting. If Wladislaw liked menial labor, there were likely a hundred jobs other than the Cataphracts he could have taken up.

The moment they set foot into the built-up area, their guide’s face lit up with such joy and pride, whatever that had troubled him previously seemingly disappeared on the spot.

“Here we are,” Shuichi said, his face beaming in relief. “Welcome to Sakurasaki, sir.”

Wladislaw found to his surprise that the town did not seem to be hindered by the bad weather in the least bit. There were a significant number of cars parked along the main street. The street lighting and most other public facilities were in peak condition. And what surprised him the most was that the snow on the ground was not all that thick as the snowfall seemed to have suggested.

“This town was built about a centuries ago mainly as a tourist attraction,” their guide said, smiling broadly. “You see, we have two large hot springs here, so even at this height it never gets too cold. Which is basically all what the town economy is about.”

Wladislaw could hear a rather large number of ohs and ahs from the formation behind him, including his own.

“It gets a lot noisier during the summer,” he continued, glancing straight ahead. “During the Golden Week there’d be so many people around, you’d think you were in Tokyo or Osaka or any of those big cities in the lowland.”

The boy’s introduction was smooth and fluent enough, Wladislaw might have as well been forgiven for thinking he was some kind of professional tour guide. Then again, if the introduction was true, he might as well be a professional tour guide just by merit of being a resident alone.

The group arrived at the town center just in time to catch a glimpse of what sounded like the town clock tower chiming three in the morning. The sound of the bell was rather clear and sleek, suggesting that it was more or less a new addition to the city rather than a historical heritage. Either way, there was something particularly majestic and inspiring hearing a late night’s bell toll to Wladislaw.

“Ah, isn’t that the town hall bell,” Shuichi said, pointing at the largest building visible from the piazza. “We installed that several years ago in the last town hall refurbishment. It’s clearly livened things up a great deal here, sir.”

To Sergei, that sound elicited an entirely different emotion altogether.

“A snowy background and a late night bell?” he said, letting out a quiet chuckle. “Why, if that ain’t nostalgic…”

“Of course it is,” Lieutenant Euclides, riding just ahead of them, said. “How long had it been since you last went home to check things out? Six years? Ten?”

“Twelve, Batyuska,” Sergei said, his voice disturbingly indifferent. “Twenty, counting the years at Justinian. Or thirty one, counting my time in the Nikephoroi on top of that. And I don’t plan to return any time soon.”

Had Wladislaw not known better, he would have commented in one way or another. While Sergei normally was already not all that talkative, he had made it absolutely clear that he did not like to talk about his family. For all the years they’d known each other, the only thing the Polish soldier had managed to extract from him was that he enlisted in the army within a fortnight of his mother’s death. That was back when Wladislaw was still a juvenile lad happily running around just being a noble son and having fun. Piecing together the fact that his father apparently died around six decades prior and anyone could come to the conclusion that he did not have a happy childhood.

“I’d be damned, son, but you’d better return home one of those days, however briefly,” the Lieutenant said, turning all the way back to look at the Russian soldier’s face, a certain degree of concern writ on his face. “I’ve lived long enough to know dying without ever seeing your homeland one last time is a bitter thing.”

Batyuska, Murmansk had ceased being my home for long enough,” he said, breaking a smile. “I am now but a complete stranger back there – no friends, no family, nothing of value to miss.”

He took a brief pause and, still smiling, looked back at the Lieutenant.

“The Cataphracts is now my home and my family,” he said. “You are my father, this uneducated country bumpkin over here,” he sneered jokingly at Wladislaw, tapping him on the shoulder, “my younger bro, and all the other comrades my relatives. Why should I go back home when everywhere we go is my home?”

The Sergeant’s declaration, unsurprisingly, elicited a minor uproar of both cheers and laughter in the general area around them. On his part, Wladislaw’s mouth twisted in a rather odd way as he glanced back at his friend. He glared back at Sergei as his mouth twisted in a funny way, making it absolutely clear that he appreciated the joke for as long as it remained funny. Which, this time, it was.

“I’d pretend I didn’t hear that, Sergei” Wladislaw said, his mouth twisting into a rather odd shape in an attempt to not laugh. He burst out laughing in mid sentence anyway, but at least he tried.

“Yep, that’s fighting words,” Sergeant Euclides protested in between his own laughter. “Son, I’m pretty sure there’s a law against that somewhere.”

“He’s less well read than Captain Hermann, Batyuska,” Sergei answered, chuckling audibly as he looked at his Polish companion. “That isn’t going to look good on your record, Vladsky.”

The Cataphracts who were cheering just now had, at that sentence, almost immediately switched to laughing. Up to and including Captain Hermann, who, last time Wladislaw checked, was quite a distance from them.

“Lads, I heard that,” the Captain said, turning back to look at the Russian soldier, trying to contain his own laughter with significantly more success than Wladislaw just did. “One more word from you, good sir, and it’s off to the brig, did I make myself clear?”

If anyone else had said those words, they might have been halfway threatening. But this was Captain Hermann von Schlieffer, who, as a rule, was not to be taken seriously 99% of the time. And the particularly jovial look on his face made it absolutely clear that among the other one percent this occasion was not.

“Crystal, sir,” Sergei said, concluding his joke with a smile.

For the moment, the group failed to notice that their guide, still quite happily chatting away just now about his town’s trivia, had all but zipped his mouth during the whole exchange. If anyone would look at his face at that time, they would notice that his beaming face had completely vanished, in its place a sullen expression. His eyes gazed straight forward, staring down on the road ahead as he bit his lips hard. It was as though he was confronting a much hated enemy and expressing his detestation as said enemy deserved.

That subtle change of expression seemed to have escaped everyone’s attention, aside from the Colonel himself…

********


The town’s layout seemed straightforward enough to Wladislaw throughout their short trek from one end to the other. Apart from the main street with a respectable number of lanes and streets branching out from it, there seemed to be little worth seeing. Just as he was about to question the wisdom of choosing this sleepy township as a staging ground, however, before him a structure unlike any other he had seen that night emerged from the fog, leaving his mouth agape in awe.

The first sign of the incoming source of astonishment was a subtle crackling of magic in the air, too mild in nature to be sensed by most Imperial vampire citizens. Said magic seemed to spread out from the very summit of the mountain, covering the large cone of hillside like a paper-thin sheet of metaphorical silk. The nature of said magic, Wladislaw noted, was not too different from that of the standard-issue cloaking and disguising device the Imperial soldiers kept on their person at almost all time. To Wladislaw, such cantrip in and of itself was far from complex, and he normally called himself borderline illiterate in the finer arcane art. On the other hand, applying such insignificance magic on an entire mountainside instead of one person was an entirely different matter altogether. Not quite an impossibility, yet none the less extremely demanding, if not luxurious an enchantment.

However, when his eyes finally reached the building supposedly protected by said magic, there was no denying that said luxury and extravaganza was quite worthy.

“Here we are, sir,” Shuichi said, turning his head towards the building ahead. “Here’s our destination – Sakura-jo, the pride of our town.”

To say the building complex was simply a structure was an understatement of the highest echelon. The complex itself occupied the summit of the mountain and the hillside leading right down to the end of the main road, enclosed by a long, stoutly built yet elegantly sculpted brick and mortar fence draped around the peak. A wooden, red-painted, elaborate traditional Japanese archway stood between the army column and the interior, as though inviting the troop to march directly inside. A straight cobblestone pathway, lit up by a generous number of stone lanterns, connected the archway to a stone stair carved directly into the mountainside.

As Wladislaw’s eyes followed the stairway into the mountain summit above, his mouth opened wider and wider, until he could fit an entire fist inside it when he saw what was at the very top. Looming over the column on the mountain top, a massive wooden tower with an intimidating stone foundation stood as though sneering at the insignificance of the Cataphracts compared to its sheer size and grandeur. The many candlelights emitting from the various window sills suggested that at that very moment the tower was populated by no small number of tenants.

Wladislaw estimated it was at least a few dozen yards tall from the base of the tower to its very top. Its sloping walls supported quite a number of well-tiled Far Eastern roofs hanging over its base like a huge canopy. Unlike any castle Wladislaw had seen before in Poland or elsewhere in the old continent, there was an odd absence of defensive structures like drawbridges, ramparts, parapets and keeps anywhere in the building. And yet the sheer size and scale of the building meant that it logically could not be anything other than a castle built for defense and as a means to flaunt the power and wealth of its master.

Colonel de Chevalier took one good look at the entire looming structure before nodding in acknowledgement.

“The Castle of the Blooming Cherry Blossom, am I right?” he said. “I have heard much about the finest stronghold the Dragon Wolf has to offer even back in Bucharest.”

He crossed his arm as he continued looking, his face showing a healthy share of respect.

“It is every bit as majestic as the rumors made it out to be, I’d admit.”

As the group trotted along the cobblestone path, Wladislaw noticed that at the bottom of the stairway a group of people were waiting for them, all of whom were of wolf blood. A couple of them were carrying torches, but otherwise the entire group remained draped in shadow. If Wladislaw’s eyesight still served him well, they were all clad in a sort of uniform Oriental grey tunic-gown that concealed their gender rather well from a distance. Said garments were almost entirely plain and undecorated, save for that of the one standing at the very front of the formation, whose tunic had a fine bronze-colored inlay well sewn on the sleeves.

Said figure was, at a closer look, a great deal older than the rest. He wore a massive grey beard and moustache with a large yet sharp pair of brows of matching color, obscuring half of his face, as was expected of most aged wolves. The other half was deeply wrinkled and tanned in a much darker shade than the average Asian, most probably the result of an austere martial lifestyle. Such features might give the impression of a permanently frowning expression, frightening on one hand and not exactly conductive to diplomatic dialogue on the other. The only thing that hinted the Cataphracts of his mood was the delightful and grateful glint in his eyes as he looked at the approaching horsemen.

No sooner had the company gotten a clear sight of their allies than Colonel de Chevalier raised his arm, pulled back his horse’s rein and began to dismount. All of his subordinates quickly followed suit, one after the other in the line, until the entire corps was standing next to their horses. The whole maneuver took place within a mere few second without any verbal order from the Colonel at all, as though their mind were psychically linked. The Colonel capped the ceremonial dismounting by stepping forward and saluting the head of the other column.

His move was ceremonially responded in kind with a most traditional bow from the bronze-sleeved old warrior. And then he began speaking, his voice deep, clear and resounding, having lost none of the grand and commanding tone it used to have when he was younger.

“You must be Colonel Julian de Chevalier, I presume, sir?” he said, his massive set of beard and mustache moving up and down with his every word. “I am Mitsumaru Satoshi, retainer to His Grace the Daimyo and the humble caretaker of this stronghold. I have heard much about the Prodigy of the Holy Komnenian Empire. It is a pleasure to finally make your acquaintance.”

Wladislaw could barely contain his laughter at the title the old man addressed his commander with. There was no doubt about its accuracy – the Colonel was the youngest noble to have ever been inducted into the Cataphract in the last three centuries, having risen to the rank of Knight Brother within thirty years of his life. Though, nobody in the Empire, including the Cataphracts themselves, would refer to him as such. Perhaps it was a rule of diplomacy, something Wladislaw would unabashedly admit he was no adept at. That seemed to be the case, since the Colonel’s response was no less overly ceremonious.

“The pleasure is all mine, Lord Mitsumaru,” he said. “It is my great honor to be so warmly welcomed by the most exalted of officers of the Dragon Wolf.”

He turned back towards the Captain and the Lieutenant standing right behind him.

“May I have the honor of introducing my closest aides and officers, the fine officers who are essential to our company, those who would no doubt do their very best to help cement our alliance via valorous deeds on the field of battle.”

The Captain stood forward, his face and voice having strangely and fortunately purged itself of its supposedly permanent cheeky and nonchalant disposition. He saluted the elder wolf and spoke clearly and with as much ceremoniousness as the situation called for.

“Captain Hermann von Schlieffer, Lord Seneschal of Bavaria Haven Castle, First Class Knight Brother. Communications and Logistics Officer and Assault Specialist of the Varangoi Kataphraktoi Somatophylakes,” he said as he saluted. “My honor to make your acquaintance, sir.”

He was quickly joined by the Lieutenant, who started off exactly where he left off.

“Lieutenant Constantinopoulos Euclides, First Class Knight Brother and Drill Specialist of the Varangoi Kataphraktoi Somatophylakes,” he said with another firm salute. “I am glad to be of service, sir.”

The Dragon Wolf lord nodded in great approval, his beard and mustache barely able to conceal his smile.

“First of all, may I express our most grateful thanks to you, Colonel, and all of your fellow comrades and brothers-in-arms for what you have just done this night,” he said, the ceremonious tone doing little to conceal his actual, sincere joy. “Many of our sons and grandsons owe their lives to you for your timely and selfless intervention. And for that I thank you on behalf of both the Daimyo and the many wives and mothers whose dearest you have saved with your gallantry this day.”

Wladislaw was not quite sure about that ‘selfless’ part, for the ways things looked back then was exactly like that kid Shuichi pleaded. That they won decisively did not change the fact that had they taken a bit more risk, they might as well have saved a couple more of their fellow combatants. Then again, the Colonel had his point in doing what he did. In the end, the Polish soldier shrugged, the ethical edge of a higher-up’s military decision might as well be irrelevant from his point of view. After all, from the Colonel’s reaction to those words, he seemed perfectly fine with his decision and all the consequences thereof.

“We of the Holy Komnenian Empire honor the bond of alliance and brotherhood more than all others,” he said, smiling proudly with sot a sliver of guilt whatsoever. “Those who have sided with us and willing to take pain and shed blood on the field of battle on our side are our brothers. And as such what we did is only part of our duties to honor the alliance and protect our brothers.”

He took a brief pause to glance across the castle garrison, as though acknowledging that he as not just talking to their lord but also every one of them as a person, before returning to the Dragon Wolf lord.

“If you would continue to honor our alliance as we do,” he said, “then too shall I look forward to joining battle on your side and on your behalf against our common enemies.”

“We shall always keep that in mind, sir,” Lord Mitsumaru answered with a bow, “May this alliance last a thousand years and be beneficial to us both.”

And then his head sideway and raised his hand towards the castle.

“In the meantime, Colonel, may I extend my invitation to your company to stay in our humble stronghold for as long as it would convenience your purposes,” he said. “While it may not be on par with your grand chapter houses, I am confident it would serve all your needs during your stay.”

He turned to the Dragon Wolf soldier son both sides and clapped his hands three times. At once the two flanks of soldiers dispersed forth towards each side of the Cataphracts.

“If you would not mind, my men will take your horses to our stable,” he said. “Those fine steeds have earned their rest and comfort for the day.”

Wladislaw shrugged as a Dragon Wolf approached him, keeping his head bowed as he gestured for the horse’s rein. He handed the attendant the rein with naught but a nod, feeling more or less indifferent to the Wolves’ treatment of his horse. Sergei next to him had a much less friendly reaction, however.

“Take good care of him, keep your hands off the bardings and most of all, don’t touch my books,” he said coldly, thumbing at the large, bloating saddle bag dangling from the left side of the horse, “and everything will be fine. Got it?”

How effective Sergei’s demeanor was in deterring possible petty thievery or the likes was up for debate. What he did succeed in, however, was to frighten the poor soldier mindless. His whole body was shivering as though he was just tossed naked into the Siberia in mid winter.

“Old grudges die hard, doesn’t it?”

Said the Cataphract right next to Sergei on the opposite side of Wladislaw, to which he answered quietly for the nominal sake of tact.

“If you were me, you wouldn’t trust a werewolf with anything period,” he said, not showing any constraint for his spite. “Much less your horse and books.”

Thankfully for both the Dragon Wolf soldiers and the diplomatic effort, Sergei’s reaction was perhaps the worst that they experienced. After the Cataphracts had been relieved of their rides without a ruckus, the castle lord turned towards the line, raising both hands above his head with his open palms facing up.

“And now,” he said, his voice raised with joy, “I would like to personally take you to our main hall. We have prepared a feast worthy of the occasion, and I wish you would all join us on this occasion.”

A feast. Now that was new to Wladislaw. Granted, during their many missions to the various provinces of the Empire, the Cataphracts had been more or less treated as well as they deserved being the elite soldiers they were. In all those occasions, however, never had they been exactly treated as anything more than a company of troops – albeit troops of noble birth - much less exalted guests.

Either way, he was not holding his hopes up. The Japanese’s definition of ‘feast’, if he were to take the Lieutenant’s advertisement at face value, might as well be a fancy name for a dining table full of fish, fish blood and tea, not necessarily in that order. A quick glance across the line of his comrades revealed that they were, like him, not exactly thrilled by the idea. Though, judging from the sporadic beaming smiles on quite a few faces, it seemed they were at least entertaining the thought of being the night’s guest of honor. The Captain, unsurprisingly, seemed to have had his eyes turned into neon lights at the mere mention of “feast”. He did maintain enough self-control to not yell out loud and jumping up and down in ecstasy like he normally did at any mention of “party” or any synonyms thereof, so Wladislaw had to give him credit there.

“Thank you for your hospitality,” the Colonel answered, stretching his right arm forward. “After you, Lord Mitsumaru.”

And then he turned towards a particular Dragon Wolf teenager, who had been standing quietly at his side since the beginning of the meeting, knowing his place as a mere civilian volunteer. He patted the boy on the shoulder.

“You’ve done well, soldier,” he said with a genuinely encouraging voice to Shuichi. “You are welcome to join us for the feast,” he turned towards the castle lord. “Would you agree, Lord Mitsumaru?”

For a brief second, Wladislaw thought the Dragon Wolf lord’s smile had vanished as his fierce brows knitted as he looked at the young soldier. Or maybe it was just his imagination, for Lord Mitsumaru’s expressions quickly returned to a more cordial form as soon as the Colonel asked him.

“But of course, Colonel,” he said. “The young man had distinguished himself enough today, hasn’t he?”

The part-time soldier barely murmured a “Thank you, sir,” as he kept his face glued on the ground for the whole time. Judging from his mood, however, he did not seem to enjoy the honor as much as someone in his position would normally be.

“Maybe he’s allergic to fish or something,” Wladislaw thought to himself. The idea that he was probably missing the point by a mile and then some, unfortunately, never occurred to him.

********


< Message edited by Argeus the Paladin -- 11/14/2011 7:03:52 >
DF  Post #: 5
11/15/2011 7:42:29   
Argeus the Paladin
Member

Chapter 5
Of Banquet and Drills


It was the strangest dinner Wladislaw had ever attended, doubtlessly. As they stepped into the large hall encircled by a flimsy-looking wall built of nothing but oiled paper glued on a wooden framework, the Polish soldier could not help but stare at the bizarre setup. The grand banqueting round table style adopted by pretty much every Imperial noble and their grandparents was strangely missing, as were any and every chair. Instead, the guests were each seated, kneeling or squatting, at their own miniature table, aligned in two columns facing each other. At the head of the formation of tables, on an elevated pulpit, the castle lord sat with his legs crossed, raising his cup at the attendance below as a squad of court ladies - or the Oriental equivalent thereof - carried their food in little trays towards the guests.

Hyped as he was just a few minutes prior, throughout the banquet Captain Hermann made little attempt to hide his disappointment. If he had been expecting a noisy party to his taste like those he would normally enjoy in Bucharest’s many taverns, he’d have been sorely disappointed. There was a sore shortage of wenches, wine and wrecking things up, for one thing. And for the other, something Wladislaw could more readily sympathize with, the food was absolutely terrible. The Lieutenant’s statement that the people of this land were in love with raw fish was truer than the Polish soldier would like. The blooded wine was surprisingly good, however. Then again, Wladislaw thought, he probably couldn’t tell cheap Nordland mead from fine French vintage to save his life in the first place.

Wladislaw spent the rest of the banquet looking around the hall. Whatever he wanted to say about the Japanese food, he had to admit that their people had a way with wooden architecture. The kind of wooden stockades and halls of the Scandinavian high Wolves might be formidable to behold, but they were nowhere as elegant and delicate as the scene stretching out before his eyes right at the moment. While Wladislaw - or any Cataphract hailing from the stone underground havens of Central Europe for that matter - had every reason to question the wisdom of making walls made entirely of wood and paper, those flimsy walls created the kind of solemn air that simply could not be recreated by any amount of stone. The small amount of candles in the large hall, if anything, synergized with those walls quite well in that regard.

The racks of weapons lying around the room’s perimeter were equally remarkable. All of them bore exactly two curved sabers with a strange-looking circular guard and slightly crooked decorated hilts each, one significantly shorter than the other. Each and every of those blades were coated by a foreboding black scabbard, though whether that was a conscious pragmatic choice to strike fear into the hearts of enemies or just a choice of style, Wladislaw could not tell.

Equally as fascinating were some of the other participants of the banquet. Most of the Wolves attending were officers, soldiers and perhaps court advisors, nothing they had not seen before. The two girls seated next to and a good distance behind Lord Mitsumaru, however, was of another different category altogether. Had it not been for the Colonel once again preempting him, the Captain might have as well let out an entirely out-of-place whistle upon setting eyes on them. And for the first time, the Polish soldier sympathized with him whole-heartedly. Had he not observed first-hand, he’d have laughed at any insinuation that the blood of the werewolves could spawn girls not looking like apes, much less beauties like those two.

At first sight, they looked like each other enough to suggest that they were close siblings, if not outright twins. Both of them sported a delicate heart-shaped face crowned by a long, flowing stream of smooth black hair, a small nose, a pair of thin and soft lips, a pair of round and bright eyes, two full and rosy cheeks and a snow-white complexion tinted slightly yellow. Their differences seemed almost marginal at a glance – the one on Lord Mitsumaru’s left had thinner and more curved brows and a milder glance, while the other had thick, sharp and raised brows to go with a much sharper gaze.

Their hair colors were also ever so slightly different so to speak, as the former’s was tinted in a very light shade of blue while the latter’s bore an extremely mild red tint to it. That subtle hair color difference was well acknowledged by their tailors, since the color of the gowns they wore corresponded to their subtle hair tints – the former had a deep ocean blue gown while the latter a blood red one. Both of them, however, wore an identical oversized belt tied in an equally oversized ribbon behind their backs.

As the party went on, their differences became more pronounced to anyone who would take the effort to look. The milder-looking girl, surprisingly, became much more active than her sister. She would continually scan those feminine eyes along the ranks of the Cataphracts, smiling at each and every of them while making no attempt to conceal her eagerness to hear whatever they had to say. Unfortunately for her, the only one among them to be actually speaking at all was the Colonel himself, so for the majority of the time her eyes were wandering around his general location. Neither did she hide the mild exasperation when the Colonel did not seem to notice her presence at all, if her twitchy eyelids and puffed cheeks towards the end of the banquet was any indication.

On the other hand, her sister was so passive, she might as well have sunken into the background and nobody would care. Her face was perpetually glued to the table in front of her as though avoiding something. She also seemed to be shivering a little, but that might as well be Wladislaw’s drink playing tricks on his senses. Had it not been for a rather peculiar order from the castle lord, she might as well have stayed seated like a statue until the party was well over.

“Fuyuko,” he said, his voice rather quiet, yet abrupt enough to visibly startle the poor girl, “Go pour a drink for the exalted Colonel, will you?”

“Y… yes, father,” she answered with a clearly shaken voice.

And then she stood up, walked down from the raised platform towards the Colonel’s table, her entire form now unmistakably shivering with every step she took. Her apparent shyness made Sergei of all people look on with as much fascination and attention as he normally would pay to a rare book.

“A shy, feminine werewolf girl?” he leaned towards Wladislaw and said with as low a voice as he could manage. “Well, there goes my pet theory that all wolf women are round-shield-bearing, byrnie-donning, war-axe-swinging, face-painting, barking mad unwashed raiders.”

“Speak for both of us, Sergei,” Wladislaw nodded, before turning back towards the Colonel’s seat and waited for his curiosity to be sated.

Apparently most of the Cataphracts shared their thoughts. By the time the girl called Fuyuko was kneeling before the Colonel’s table, she had about three dozen pairs of eyes stared at her from every angle. If her face would go as red as a beetroot from the exposure – which it did – it was most probably not her fault in the first place.

“S… sir, may… may I…”

She stammered, her face still glued on the ground as she reached for the bottle of wine on the Colonel’s table. Her hand, however dexterous it normally was, was now reduced to a shivering wreck. Wladislaw’s father could probably handle a bottle better than her at that point, and he had been bed-ridden by diseases for the last few years. Thinking so, the Polish soldier cringed, bracing himself for the inevitable sound of porcelain shattered.

Which never happened.

The next thing the company saw, the Colonel had placed his gloved hand gently – or rather, as gently as a pair of gauntlet would allow him to – on her shivering hands and slowly pushed them from the edge of the table. His move, while as gentlemanly as could be, still managed to give her nervous self quite a nasty start. The girl jerked back, thankfully not knocking over anything in her fit.

“Ah…”

“There is no need to worry yourself, my lady,” the Colonel said, smiling at her with a polite bow to calm her down. “A barbaric soldier as I am, I know better than to have a high-born lady such as yourself pouring my drink. The basic rules of chivalry do not allow for that, I am afraid.”

He then picked up the bottle and poured himself a full cup, before, to everyone’s astonishment, pouring some drink into his still-empty water glass. Keeping his cup in his right hand, he stretched out his left and the glass in it towards her.

“But if you would like to raise a glass of fine wine with me in honor of your father’s hospitality in this rare occasion,” he said, smiling, “I would be honored to oblige.”

For a second the entire hall was taken over by silence, up to and including the banquet host. The lady in question at that point was almost torn apart by both astonishment and embarrassment, since her cheeks just turned a couple deeper shades of red within just a few seconds. In the end, she sheepishly raised both hands towards the Colonel, receiving the glass. The whole time, her arms were still shaking, though nowhere near the level just now.

“T… Thank you, sir,” she said, her stammering having been stabilized somewhat.

“It is just common courtesy, my lady,” Julian said. “May I ask you what your name is again?”

“My name is Fuyuko, sir,” she said, her voice now smooth and fluent, albeit still somewhat quiet. “Mitsumaru Fuyuko.”

“But of course, Lady Fuyuko,” the Colonel said.

Then he stretched out his empty hand towards the young lady, prompting her to take it. And once they were hand-in-hand, the Colonel stood up from the battle, pulling her with him. As soon as that was done, the Colonel looked around the room, raising his cup above his head and exclaimed with all his solemnity.

“Let us raise this glass of fine wine again in honor of this occasion today,” he declared. “Long live Daimyo Toyotomi Satsuma! Long live Emperor Ioannes Sigismund Komnenos! Glory to the alliance and death to our enemies!”

And then the festive atmosphere quickly turned into a martial one as the Colonel’s cup met Fuyuko’s glass. An echoing “Huzzah!” chorused from both columns of the party, vampires and werewolves alike as waves after waves of fists raised to the sky in unison. Amid the chorus, the Colonel turned to the girl and nodded, before turning back towards the host with a proud look in his eyes. Whatever Lord Mitsumaru had planned for him involving his daughter, he had turned it into something he would make better use of.

Lord Mitsumaru’s general expression might have been obscured a great deal by his beard and mustache, but his other daughter’s face was absolutely beaming. Had it not been for her binding gown and the fact that her father was right there, she might as well have jumped up and joined the chorus. Her sister, on the other hand, had finally bloomed a smile on her part. If there had been a tint of sadness in her eyes at all from the very beginning, it had now mostly faded.

In the moment’s martial spirit, however, both the Colonel and Wladislaw failed to notice that in the shadow of the banquet, the part-time soldier they brought into the hall remained absolutely silent, his face buried in his palms. Whatever Aizawa Shuichi was feeling, it was most definitely not positive. Or constructive, for that matter.

********


Wladislaw let out a brief yawn as he stood guard in the castle’s inner courtyard, not at all impressed by the performance before his eyes. Boredom was writ on the Cataphracts’ face as he leaned against his lance, his eyes half-closed and enervated. Out of all the things he could be doing at that time, watching Lieutenant Euclides drilling the werewolf recruits was about the last thing he wanted to do.

He would hate to admit it, but the entire episode at the banquet was the last exciting thing to have graced the group until then. For him, at least. For all he knew, the Colonel was as busy as a bee over the past week, running all over town and then some day and night, as were a few senior Cataphracts he had chosen to run his errands. Granted, most of those errands consisted of sleuthing around, hounding for information and clues about the target of their ultimate goal, but that was better than sitting around doing nothing. Then again, the Colonel had made it plenty clear that the mission they were on was mostly about investigation and a little espionage rather than outright military action, so it was probably his fault for expecting things that were just not part of the plan.

What annoyed the soldier even more was that he and his friends were still very well-treated despite the fact that they were, well, doing nothing. The terms of the alliance apparently allowed them to be fed, watered, given a good room to stay in and supplied with all the blood they needed for their sustenance for doing basically nothing. Aside from occasionally joining in the Dragon Wolf garrisons’ patrols that almost never ended in a worthy battle, that was. Even in the rare occasion that it did end in a battle, it was against a single local demon that the wolves were more than capable of taking down themselves. And so for the rest of their time the Cataphracts stood around the castle, taking over the job of some of the castle guards.

Thinking so, Wladislaw let out a long yawn of boredom. If all they had to do was to sit around like a bunch of retirees on holiday, the Emperor might have as well sent a detachment of Nikephoroi recruits. That was about all he could think at the moment, for the next second the sound of a wooden staff slamming hard on a bare torso startled Wladislaw enough to snap him from his trance.

Before him, a particularly familiar figure dressed in the common Japanese schoolboy winter uniform – black khakis pants and long-sleeved buttoned black shirt – lay sprawled on the ground. Even from his position, Wladislaw saw that the boy was not in a good shape. Bruises covered his cheeks, his forehead and hands were scratched and bleeding, his uniform was grimy and dusty. His hair was equally grimy, dust and dirt caked in between the strands and, from a distance, looked like he had just taken a grey-brown dye job. He was struggling to stand up, his bleeding hands still gripping tightly a curved, wooden practice sword.

In front of him, Lieutenant Euclides stood, wearing nothing but a coarse sack cloth pants in the middle of the snow. In his hands, he wielded a sturdy and dense quarterstaff which he spun around like a hollow twig before slamming it on the ground right before the fallen student. The look on the old Greek soldier’s face was absolutely frightening – raised brows, gritted teeth, eyes flaring like a teacher incensed at a student having forgotten his homework. Given what he was doing to the unfortunate student over the past hour, that comparison could not have been more apt.

“That was pathetic,” the Lieutenant said, spitting on the ground next to the student. “I’ve seen fan-waving, cat-hugging, crybaby court ladies do better than that.”

The student’s face grimaced and twisted in a combination of pain, anger and embarrassment. Unfortunately, the student’s humiliation was made about a thousand times worse by the presence of about three dozen Dragon Wolf recruits standing in rank and file behind the Lieutenant, watching the training in earnest.

“If you’re going to practice,” he said, pulling the student back to his feet, “do it properly, maggot.”

The line of Dragon Wolf recruits were turning at each other, murmuring inaudibly behind the Lieutenant. To their horror, the Lieutenant suddenly turned back at the line, glaring sternly at them.

“You, keep quiet,” the Lieutenant said, slamming his pole on the ground emphatically. “One more word I hear and someone is taking this bloody idiot’s place. Got it?”

Unsurprisingly the chatter was cut short almost as soon as it started. Those recruits had understood all too well after the past few days’ training with the old warrior that he did not joke around. The last fellow among them who failed to understand that was treated to a week’s worth of push-ups and pull-ups within the space of one hour. It was exactly as painful as it sounded.

“Now, where were we?” he said, turning back to the student, glaring sternly at him.

Wladislaw let out a quiet sigh. Aizawa Shuichi had always without fail managed to incite his pity over the past few days. Suffice to say, an amateur part-time soldier and the Lieutenant’s training regime simply did not mix well. His Russian squadmate, surprisingly enough, shared his sentiments.

“Nostalgic, isn’t it?” Sergei said quietly. “It was like only yesterday when I was in that idiot’s shoes.”

“Don’t remind me,” Wladislaw answered, shuddering. “Shoot me, but I’d rather pretend my boot camp had never actually happened.”

“I know, right?” Sergei answered with a chuckle. “Everyone has to begin somewhere, doesn’t they?”

“Well, on the plus side he did got pick out for personal training,” Wladislaw nodded. “That’s a good thing, at least.”

The next thing both soldiers heard was a dull thud, followed by the whizzing sound of a wooden blade whirling out of control and slamming onto the ground. The part-time soldier backed off a few steps from the Lieutenant’s position, staggering as he clutched his forearm. His practice blade was clattering on the ground as he stared at it, his eyes opened wide in bewilderment while his mouth hung agape, temporarily at a loss for words. Before him, the lieutenant stood, his polearm still the middle of the swing.

“No, no, no, no, no! That’s not how you handle a blade, you worthless pile of crap!” the Lieutenant shouted. “Which part of ‘grip the blade tightly with both hands and do not let go under any circumstance’ did you not get? Pick up the damn sword and try again, maggot!”

If memory served Wladislaw correctly, that would be the part when ordinary recruits like himself throw away their noble pride and enter serious mode as per their survival instinct. Or at least, that was what he did – fight back with all his might like a cornered beast until the Lieutenant was halfway pleased with his performance. It didn’t take too long – say, about half a year of toiling away or so – before the insults were replaced by praises and commendations. Regardless of what he had just said, deep down in his heart the Polish soldier still regarded his triumphing over the Lieutenant’s training as the greatest achievement in his life to date.

That particular student, unfortunately, took the low road out of the ordeal. For a second his teeth grounded as he bent down to pick up his weapon, about to make another go. However, instead of doing what he probably intended to, his eyes suddenly turned blank and his limbs enervated as he dropped on his knees. Before anyone, Lieutenant Euclides included, could react, the young wolf had collapsed face-down on the ground like a lifeless carcass with a dull thud.

The sternness and hostility in the Lieutenant’s eyes quickly turned into some degree concern.

“Stand up, you worthless maggot,” he shouted loudly in an attempt to pre-empt the recruit’s any attempt to flunk out on training. “Don’t you think you’re getting out easily on this.”

There was no answer.

“Hey, you,” he called out. “Do you hear me?”

Still not a single word from the recruit.

“I’m talking to you here, recruit!”

Once again, his words were met with absolute silence. Behind him, the murmurs and confused looks among the other trainees were beginning to brew, leaving the Lieutenant more or less speechless for a split second. He managed to regain composure, and rather quickly at that.

“I said quiet,” he exclaimed at the row of soldiers behind him with a ferocious glare, again silencing them down on the spot.

And then the Lieutenant rushed to the recruit’s position, squatting down next to him. A quick examination was all it took for the Lieutenant’s twinkle of concern to turn into full-on worry.

“Oh, holy mother of Christ,” he swore, before swinging his head back to the rest of the column. “Somebody get me a medic or two – this idiot here just knocked himself out cold!”

********


It was almost dawn when the Lieutenant returned to his barrack. To call the room a barrack was quite a misnomer, since it was essentially nothing more than an empty storage room converted into living quarter and therefore suffered from every weakness of a storeroom – stuffy, dry and somewhat uncomfortable to stay for prolonged periods. On the plus side, unlike the oil tanker’s makeshift quarters, that room housed only three occupants, himself, Wladislaw and Sergei.

Other than that, the room was quite adequately furnished for its purpose. Three warm bedrolls, one table with in-built heating and an ever-steaming kettle of hot tea was more than what they could ask for in the middle of winter. Unfortunately, it was about as boring as the rest of their castle life, something made obvious by Wladislaw’s perpetual slumped on the bedroll and yawning posture. Sergei was a lot more occupied, if only because he had on his various containers enough books to entertain a dozen men for ten years.

Seeing the Lieutenant entering the room, Wladislaw almost immediately sprang up in a manner not too dissimilar to a boy eager for a present from his wayfaring father.

“How did it go, sir?” he asked, his voice both curious and concerned. “Is he alright?”

The Lieutenant sat down on the table, poured himself a cup of tea and took a sip. And then he breathed out a large amount of exasperation in a long sigh.

“Well, he took some meds and was looking not too shabby when I left,” he said, shrugging. “Who could have guessed the bloody fool had a wee bit too little blood in his system or some other equally nonsensical heart deficiency. More like the latter, if I heard correctly.”

Sergei slammed the book he was reading shut with an abrupt flick.

“A werewolf with cardiac disease?” he asked, his voice filled with both astonishment and irony. “Now that’s new.”

“Beats me,” the Lieutenant answered, clasping his hands. “Given the doctor’s attention back there, though, his health problem was legit. Makes me wonder why he even bothered with soldiering at all.”

“Sir, we all saw the demon attack last week, didn’t we?” Wladislaw said. “I think it’s safe to assume he’s just one of those draftees mustered to hold back the tide of whatever.”

The Lieutenant glanced at Wladislaw with his eyes squinted such that the Polish soldier felt stupid inside.

“Did you see his eyes, son?” he said. “Youthful and burning with passion to rise above the unwashed mass to become something, just like both of you a couple decades ago. Back then you were just like the poor sot today, inexperienced, weak and useless in any sense of the word. And guess what? A few decades later and here you are, being my equals on the field of battle. Hardly unpredictable, eh?”

He took a pause to take another sip off his cup.

“I’ve been beating hundreds and thousands of youngsters into shape for almost a century now, you’d fancy I know how to judge a recruit from a mile away,” he said. “You’d also fancy a greenhorn who’d willingly be beaten over and over again with no real chance of turning the table within the course of an hour to be a particularly tough one. Like both of you, for instance.”

Sergei’s face shriveled a little in a bout of worry.

“What I worry more, Batyuska, is that this particular incident wouldn’t reflect well for us,” he said. “After all, you did beat one of their recruits senseless in what should have been a relatively harmless training session.”

“I wouldn’t sweat it, son,” the Lieutenant said, shrugging mildly. “Any drill officer would know that you have to completely shatter a recruit before you can toughen him into anything that isn’t wet paper tissue on the battlefield.”

He tapped on the mouth of the cup audibly.

“And guess what? Lord Mitsumaru is a drill officer too, if I read his looks right,” he remarked. “He’d know.”

“Either way, I doubt it is a good idea to have anything to do with this fellow,” Sergei said. “I mean, Batyuska, he’s not going to be of any use like that period. All the training in the world isn’t going to save you if your heart suddenly goes on strike in the middle of a charge.”

The Lieutenant let out a long sigh.

“You see, that’s why I don’t like the way this is turning out,” he said. “He had everything a soldier could ever ask for and then some. Courage. Determination. A sort of odd resilience to words of insult and intimidation. And apparently an ideal he held somewhere down the line. He could have been something great had it not been for this… setback.”

He then picked up the cup and poured the residual into his mouth, swallowing with a large gulp.

“Well then, I guess there’s nothing we could do to help out at this point,” he said, before standing up and walking towards his bedroll. “It’s almost dawn – you’d do well to get some sleep.”

********



< Message edited by Argeus the Paladin -- 11/16/2011 8:31:54 >
DF  Post #: 6
11/17/2011 8:49:34   
Argeus the Paladin
Member

Chapter 6
“Don’t Cry, Palaeologos”


Several days had passed since the practice ground accident. For the most part, nothing had changed significantly. The Colonel’s investigations were only getting busier and busier by the day, while the Lieutenant never exactly stopped training the wolf recruits in exactly the same manner he had been carrying since the very beginning. Captain Hermann alternated between helping the former and weaselling around the castle ground for most of the day. And Wladislaw and Sergei, among others, were still mostly unemployed.

That was, until the previous day. The last announcement from the Colonel was as refreshing to the Polish soldier as a pail of cold water in the middle of the desert. If he heard and interpreted correctly, they were going to leave that snowy province behind and march away somewhere they could find more action. Suffice to say Wladislaw failed to sleep that day out of sheer nervousness, an attitude he carried well into the next day’s patrol.

As per normal, Wladislaw was accompanied by Sergei and three random Dragon Wolf recruits. In theory, they were to stroll along the town’s perimeter, followed by traipsing along the main street and randomly walking into a side lane, keeping vigilant all the time. If there were any sign of threat or danger, they would have to report back to base as soon as possible.

Or at least that was how that was supposed to go. In practice, Wladislaw was the only one who kept his eyes on the road at all. Sergei had his head buried in one of his volumes as they rode along, and the Dragon Wolf recruits were too busy chattering with one another to notice anything at all even if their lives depended on it. Until the previous day, Wladislaw had to try his very best not to slap them upside the head for that. That day, however, was an exception.

“How’s that corner over there?” Wladislaw called out to one of the wolves in the party, his tone more lively and joyful than he had ever been since landing on Japanese soil.

The recruit, barely having broken from the conversation, hastily turning his face to and fro for a good moment before looking back at his mounted superior.

“Nothing here, sir,” he answered, shaking his head. “Unless I missed something…”

He didn’t, if Wladislaw’s sense had not played tricks on him. Not that Wladislaw did not see that coming, if the last patrols’ history was of any indication. He raised his arms with a shrug.

“I guessed as much,” he said, nodding in acknowledgement.

Then he let out a brief yawn before scanning all of his werewolf underlings.

“I’d expected this last patrol to be more eventful,” he said. “Well, I suppose you can’t expect anything out of the ordinary at three in the afternoon, can you?”

Except for their very existence, that was. No humans, cursed be their flawed beliefs, would ever expect a couple Imperial vampire nobles waltzing around in broad daylight with their werewolf allies. To be fair, without their Hemothorakes both Wladislaw and Sergei would have been toast in more or less the same way humans would expect them to under the sunlight.

“Either way, this is going to be our last patrol, so I’m good with whatever,” he said, not hiding his joy in the slightest as he turned towards Sergei and tapped him on the pauldron. “Right, Serge?”

The other sergeant’s reaction was much less enthusiastic than Wladislaw would have expected. He merely pulled down his glasses, glanced at the Polish soldier for exactly one second before resuming reading.

“Really?” he said, “I’d never have guessed.”

“Ah, come on,” Wladislaw said, looking significantly down on his mood. “Didn’t the Colonel himself say so last night?”

Sergei closed his book and stared at his comrade from forehead to chin, as though determining whether he was joking or not. When he realized Wladislaw’s joy and expectation was utterly, completely earnest, his face grimaced in the same way a self-proclaimed intellectual would at what he perceived to be nonsensical stupidity.

“One, this isn’t the time or place to talk about that,” he said, shooting a very quick glance at the three werewolf recruits behind them for emphasis. “And two, what make you so sure you’ll be in the advance team in the first place?”

“Faith in my abilities?” Wladislaw said, his eyes rolling back at his comrade. “Or my determination and willpower, or…”

Sergei’s loud cough cut the Polish soldier’s boasting short just when he was about to reach the peak of his enthusiasm.

“Sorry to pop your bubble, but the other big names in the assault squad – Montefoglio, Ceauscu, Bohdan, Akhmed or Stefan, for instance – can do everything you can better than you,” he said. “Except for maybe your Sigil, but nobody uses it anyway.”

“Well, that may be so, but…” Wladislaw answered, breathing out loudly in frustration. “You know, you could have at least gone along and say something positive for once. Like how the Colonel appreciates our painstaking efforts thus far, or…”

“Sorry, brother, that’s not gonna happen when I know that’s not gonna happen,” Sergei answered, shaking his head, the expression on his face making it absolutely clear that tolerating nonsense was not in his book. “Now if you don’t mind, you have a task and I have a book. Let’s get back to work, shall we?”

Wladislaw shrugged as his mouth twisted in displeasure. He was, however, not so willing to let his festive mood be put down so easily. Just at about that time, he began to take notice of multiple utterances of the name of a rather familiar recruit they had chanced to know in the past weeks.

“Hey you,” he called out to the werewolf soldiers. “What is this about Private Aizawa?”

Almost all at once he found himself stared at with all due curiosity and suspicion by all the three recruits. Which made quite a bit of sense, for all those while he had been against them chattering on duty in the first place.

“Nothing, sir,” one of them answered, looking back and forth between himself and his teammates. “Right, guys?”

The other recruits also shook their head furiously in denial. Wladislaw’s left hand reached for his chin as he mulled over for a brief second before coming up with what he thought was the best indirect way to pry their mouths open.

“Well, I was just going to ask on Lieutenant Euclides’ behalf whether he has recovered,” he said, shooting a sly glance over his subordinates. “I guess I’d just have to assume that the fellow’s completely fine and report to my superior as such.”

Little did the Polish soldier realize he aimed for the apple and hit the watermelon instead.

“Oh, Lord Euclides won’t have to worry about good old Shuichi, sir,” one of the recruits blurted in a tone best understood as being mostly jovial with a dash of jealousy. “The bastard gets to skip on all trainings for a week, sleep in really late, and have Lady Fuyuko of all people look after him herself. I tell you, that’s everything a man could ever, ever ask for…”

It was only when his two friends glared at him in horror and bewilderment that he realized he had spoken something he shouldn’t have. The reaction of both Cataphracts did not help. Wladislaw leaned towards the soldier’s general direction, his eyes squinting and his brows knitting, with “Are you serious?” all but written on his face in block letters. Meanwhile, Sergei simply lowered his book and glared at the poor folk, a gesture that implied that he had heard something more intriguing than the pages he was reading.

“Err… forget I ever said anything, sir,” he said sheepishly, realizing his errors. The way both officers were staring at him with all due attention meant that there was now no way for him to get out of the huge mess he just made for himself.

“Hold on, isn’t Lady Fuyuko that blushing chick in the feast the other day who is Lord Mitsumaru’s daughter or somesuch?” Wladislaw said, “What on Earth does she have to do with our Mr. Have-A-Heart-Attack-During-Military-Training?”

Sergei cleared his throat loudly as he threw a sharp glare at Wladislaw.

“My advice to you – read up Tristan and Isolde or anything along those lines. I have a copy somewhere in my stock,” he said with a mild snicker before staring back inquisitively at the unfortunate soldier, his eyes filled with a kind of professional interest only seen in researchers examining their latest specimens. “Tell me more about this… intriguing turn of events. Depending on what you say, I may have to throw away yet another pet theory about your kind as well.”

“Err…”

For a second the unfortunate soldier looked almost pitiable. His forehead was sweating from the combined glare of both the Cataphracts and his companions, the former urging him to speak while the other imploring him not to. In the end, he opted for the least offending route.

“Why don’t you ask him yourself, sir?” he said, trying his very best to sound calm. “It’s his story, after all. And I’m pretty sure, err… not just the chap himself, but also Lord Mitsumaru wouldn’t like us going around spreading rumors.”

The two Cataphracts were about to ask further – Wladislaw out of sheer boredom and Sergei out of the morbid curiosity of someone who was at least somewhat curious about the Asian werewolves – when a particular string of sounds stopped them from doing so.

At the first notes, it sounded nothing out of the ordinary. Somewhere along the lane, a certain female voice was humming a melodic tune. It was a beautiful voice and a beautiful tone, something in and of itself not that special. After a few seconds of listening to it, however, both Cataphracts, one after the other, turned towards the direction of the voice. Both of them displayed a certain expression of serious astonishment that was probably the least likely sentiment such singing could possibly induce.

“Did you hear that?” Wladislaw asked hastily, staring at Sergei.

“Yeah,” the Russian soldier nodded, listening closely.

“Is it just me, or is that song not…”

“It’s certainly not just you,” Sergei answered, turning his head to and fro to best hear the song, “Don’t cry, Palaeologos in D Minor. That tempo… that melody… That rhythm… There’s no mistake about it.”

All the while, the three Dragon Wolf soldiers stared at the Cataphracts with the oddest look they could muster.

“Um, I might be overstepping my boundaries here,” one of them asked, “but exactly what is that? And who is this Parairo-whatever?”

“That’s the point,” Sergei answered the werewolf recruit. “Your kind is not supposed to have known this song.”

“With all due respect, what is that supposed to mean, sir?” another recruit asked, a tinge of displeasure at what he probably interpreted as overt racism from Sergei’s tone.

“Quiet,” Sergei said. “Now’s not the time.”

He looked around for one last time before signaling everyone else to follow him, presumably in search of the source of the singing. It didn’t take them too long to do that, given the town layout’s simplicity and the fact that at that time not many people were out on the streets.

After about a couple minutes, the five patrollers stopped outside a certain compound at the end of the block. The building itself was not very special-looking aside from its large – if not oversized – garden and the distinctly European architecture, something that would more commonly be seen in the bigger cities down in the plain than in that resort town. That was perhaps the reason why despite having gone past that building a few times now, it never registered as a point of interest to either Cataphract. It was only at a very close look would they notice the sheer amount of care the architect and builder had put into it.

The three-storeyed building was obviously built with elegance in mind rather than grandeur, with an ornately decorated fence gilded with a generous amount of gold, most of which was, unfortunately, well covered in snow. The garden was filled with quite a few kinds of winter flowers and trees kept well trimmed and groomed. A gently sloped tiled roof kept most of the snow from the house’s front, revealing the exquisitely decorated window panes, sills, steps and railings unmarred by both the snow and the cold. From inside the building, a few shimmering candles were shining through the dark windows, giving a feeling of refreshing warmth in the middle of the cold.

And in the middle of the garden they saw the source of the song. A single house maid, dressed in a blue-white French maid uniform frillier than anything Wladislaw had seen in any Imperial noble family he had been to, was busying herself trimming the hedge with a scissor that looked too large for her person however they looked at it. She looked and sounded much younger than he would expect of a house maid, and not to mention quite pretty. Her features were more or less generic for an Asian young woman, with a pair of thin brows and ever blinking eyes, a thin pair of lips that were continually opening and closing and a shoulder-length mass of deep black hair blowing about in the wind. It was the kind of humble yet nondescript beauty of a peasant girl, one that, for the most part, lacked both the sophistication and condescension of court ladies. The only thing that made her slightly more sophisticated was a pair of reading glass about as large as Sergei’s. Whether that was a conscious style choice or an adoption out of necessity, Wladislaw was in no position to tell.

What he could tell, however, was that she lacked the kind of supernatural aura that every non-human creature and their grandfathers – literally – had. She was just as human as the last bystander who, thanks to their cloaking magic, most probably thought Wladislaw and his companions were a band of motorbike-riding delinquents out looking for trouble. Given the nature of the song she was still humming on her lips, her very nature made no sense whatsoever, something Sergei was rather quick to acknowledge.

“She is just a human?” he yelped, his face making no attempt to conceal his bewilderment. “But… but that makes zero sense!”

Taking a deep breath to calm himself down, he took another good look at the building from one end to another. Unfortunately, there was no particularly telling sign of who it belonged to or the likes, as though the master of the household had no desire for his name to be made public in that town.

“I… We need to know who this mansion belongs to,” Sergei said to the soldiers, his face looking absolutely serious and sullen. “Do any of you have a clue?”

“This is Mr. Ichimonji Kanno’s countryside getaway the last time I checked,” one recruit answered. “He usually goes here for a week or so with his daughter during the Golden Week holiday or any other time he could manage.”

“And who exactly is this ‘Ichimonji Kanno’?” Sergei asked, staring at the recruit in a way that was not too different from an interrogating officer.

“Err… no offense, sir, but have you been living under a rock or something?” the recruit who just raised his voice to Sergei previously answered. “Who doesn’t know about the President of Ichimonji Heavy Industries, one of the wealthiest and most influential men in Japan and the whole world, for that matter?”

Wladislaw didn’t, and he was pretty sure neither did Sergei. They had for the most part stopped caring about the businesses of humans ever since they joined the Cataphracts unless said business would directly impact on their people. The last ‘big name’ Wladislaw remembered in the human world was a particular Russian statesman by the name Boris, and that was about it. Understandably, Sergei’s face at that time had that “There goes my pride” look about it as his sullenness was mostly replaced by the sheepish expression of a student having forgotten to do his homework.

“Damn me,” he said, “but I don’t know anything about this person. Anything you can tell me about him?”

“Well, I could,” the soldier answered with a cheeky, victorious smirk, “but seriously, sir? You’d be better off browsing some newspaper, magazine or Ichimonji Heavy Industries’ website.”

“The general gist is that,” another chimed in, “he’s probably rich enough to buy off this entire town and then a few, and he has a thing for fine arts. You know, sir, just like every cultured businessman ever.”

Sergei clasped his hands together, as though he had just struck an especially valuable realization.

“I think I have just found the clue we’ve been hunting for,” he murmured mostly to himself before turning back to the rest of the column. “Men, get a move on! Return to base this instance!”

********


Perhaps it was Wladislaw’s sheer curiosity that had gotten over him. Perhaps he was unconsciously smitten with that pretty human girl in the frilly maid outfit. Or perhaps, just maybe, a spark of brightness of the moment had led him to realize what Sergei and his vast bookish knowledge failed to. Whatever the case, the Polish soldier was now away from the rest of his party, standing directly in front of the gardener girl, separated from her by just the width of the metal fence. It honestly didn’t even take that much to initiate conversation – a hearty praise was as good as any illusion magic the less sociable of his kind could conjure to her type somehow.

“Oh my, did you just say you like my song, mister?” she said, blushing a little as she adjusted her glasses.

“That’s quite a famous song among my people,” Wladislaw said, nodding with a broad smile that was not completely insincere. “As it happens, my grandmother used to sing that song to lull me to sleep as a child. For a Japanese girl, you recreated the feel of a Balkanian folk song perfectly.”

Then, leaning on the fence in a posture he thought was most typical of a biker youth, he looked straight in the girl’s eyes.

“May I ask what your name is?” he said, smiling in an attempt to copy what Captain Hermann usually did in Imperial feasts.

Normally the Captain’s attempt to be a dashing cavalier would fail miserably owing to either his not-so-stellar reputation or his very size, but Wladislaw was more moderate in both aspects than his superior. It took a while for the girl to get over her bout of embarrassment and speak, but her demeanor suggested that the Polish soldier had succeeded more than he could have expected.

“My name… is Midori,” she said, her head hanging down a little, before raising again. “Um… so what is a European like you doing here anyway?”

Almost immediately she retracted what she said, quickly bowing with her cheeks even redder.

“Ah, I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to come off so… rudely.”

“Don’t sweat it,” Wladislaw said, smiling broadly, “As a matter of fact, I am an avid student of the histories on a trip around the world to discover and learn. There’s so much out there that you can’t learn from books, would you not agree?”

To Wladislaw’s own astonishment, his lies came off much more smoothly than he expected it to. The only reason he could think of as to why aside from the intervention of the Almighty Lord was that the whole thing about traveling around the world and learning about other peoples and cultures had been on his father’s lips constantly ever since he retired from military life. Perhaps at some points that had rubbed off on him somehow.

“So, Midori,” he asked, “how did you know of this song?”

“My master often sings it when he is alone,” the maid answered, her voice still somewhat shaky and giddy. “I thought it sounded beautiful, so I asked him to teach me. But I… I never know what its name even is.”

And then she suddenly stared at Wladislaw, her eyes twinkling hopefully as her hands clasped.

“Please, mister, could you tell me what this song is about?”

“It’s a rather famous Balkanian folk song,” Wladislaw said. “The name is ‘Don’t cry, Palaeologos’.”

“What an… odd name,” Midori remarked. “I thought it was something… more romantic.”

“Well, depends on what you mean by romantic,” Wladislaw answered. “The song is an ode to the last emperor of the Roman Empire, Basileus Constantine Palaeologos the Marble King, a hero who died most nobly in battle against the Ottoman Turks in the last stand of the Romans in Constantinople more than five and a half centuries ago. Its crux is about how, like Jesus Christ the Redeemer, his death is that of a saint and that one day he shall arise to drive the invaders from the city’s sacred walls. It is, so far as I know, more romantic and noble than any love story.”

Wladislaw’s eyes flared with enthusiasm as he spoke every word. It was as though he was taking the opportunity to vent his nationalism to a foreign girl he hardly knew. Which, in hindsight, was not quite a smart move. From the looks on Midori’s face, it was apparent she understood not half of Wladislaw’s words.

“Um…”

The Polish soldier would have went on for another while had he not noticed that the speaking more on the subject of Constantinople, the old Byzantium and Constantine Palaeologos would be extremely counterproductive to his cause.

“Or, in other words, it’s a patriotic song, my dear Midori,” he quickly mended his words. “A patriotic song cannot really be understood without the context, would you not agree?”

“I guess…” Midori said, trying to change the topic to avoid the awkwardness. “Anyway, I was wondering… would you mind telling me some more about yourself? We don’t get to travel around the world so much, you see.”

The next words Wladislaw spoke, which he could swore was entirely out of his over eagerness to squeeze some information out of her, turned out to be fluider a flirt than Captain Hermann could ever think of when he was sober.

“Oh, believe me, I couldn’t be an interesting person even if my life depended on it,” he said, smiling at her. “Let’s talk about you, your job and your master, shall we?”

If Midori had paid more attention to his expression, she would have understood that his gestures were anything but romantic – in fact, he was bearing the same kind of grim face he’d bring to the field of battle as he spoke those words. Then again, she would probably have been better off had she not kept her head down all the time.

“Me?” she asked back, her voice now having turned into full-on stammering mode. “But… but I… I am just an ordinary student working part-time in her winter break…”

A full-time lady killer would never have missed that chance to sweep her off her feet even more. Wladislaw, unfortunately, was none of the sort.

“Well, if you insist,” he said, shrugging. “So what can you tell me about your master?”

His rather ungentlemanly gesture made it plenty clear that he was not really interested in her in the first place. How much of that signal the maid picked up, however, was another different thing entirely. Judging from her still profusely blushing face and yet to have normalized tone, it was safe to assume all of that went over her head.

“Master Ichimonji? He’s… just a businessman like any other, I guess,” she said, expressing, if any, a very mild perplexity at the tourist’s strange interest. “He’s really kind and artistic, though.”

Wladislaw nodded, smiling along with her. So far, everything was going alright for an amateur spy like him. The next question Wladislaw chose to ask, however, was so tactless he might as well told the girl outright who he actually was.

“I don’t suppose he has some kind of… strange guests around, does he? Folks who don’t really look or sound ordinary?”

Even the most self-absorbed romanticist would be alerted by such a seemingly nonsensical and downright weird question, and Midori was no exception. Whatever shyness and bashfulness the girl was displaying throughout the conversation abruptly disappeared as she heard that. Her eyes opened wide at the Cataphract, the pink blush on her cheeks vanishing almost completely as she stared at him.

“I’m sorry, mister,” she said, her voice tinted with a sense of weirdness that demanded an immediate explanation. “What did you just say again?”

Wladislaw’s face at that point was probably incredibly funny to everyone except himself. Nothing said “Crap, I screwed up” as well as a pair of completely blank eyes and a blank face to go with it. Unfortunately for the amateur secret agent, he remained stuck in that blatantly conspicuous pose for a good moment before he could gather enough of himself to make an excuse.

“Ah… eh… I mean, I’ve always been… shall I say curious about the way the wealthy and powerful conduct their day-to-day business?” he said, clearing his voice. “I hope you’d forgive the naivety of a country folk, would you not?”

That last sentence was actually more sincere than any of the statements about himself Wladislaw had uttered in the past few minutes. Whatever could be false, the Polish soldier’s self-admitted naivety due to being a rural person for most of his life was true. For all it was worth, until just very recently, he was still being the butt of the chapter house’s many jokes about his lack of metropolitan sophistication. Fortunately for him, the girl, for some weird reason, somehow apparently found his lack of refinement and confession thereof to be endearing.

“Mister, you could have said outright that you’re curious,” she said, smiling with both eyes closed.

Then she let her eyes wander all over the sky for a brief moment, before taking a deep breath and looked back at the Cataphract.

“You know, I was pretty curious when I first started out working for Master Ichimonji, too,” she said. “It’s like meeting people from an entirely different world. I was really worried back then – would they be angry if I fail to heat the tea just right? Leave but a tiny speck of dust on the floor? Or just opening a door I should not have? Or, should I be really unfortunate, if someone decide to hide on the roof with a sniper rifle aimed at the Master’s head, would I…”

And then, realizing that the scenario she just blurted out was not much less absurd than Wladislaw’s question, her cheeks flared up again as she giggled sheepishly at her conversation partner.

“I’m sorry,” she said, covering her cheeks. “That was really random, wasn’t it?”

Wladislaw might be smiling to coax her into continuing there. What he was thinking, on the other hand, was that her wild imagination had put him off hiring French maids for his estate forever.

Feeling comforted by someone who did not laugh, the maid stretched her hands out for emphasis serenely as she nodded at the soldier.

“Anyway, like I said, it was a little awkward at first,” she said, her face beaming proudly. “But in the end, everything turned out alright. Master Ichimonji is kind and generous, and is always willing to look the other way when we make a mistake. His daughter is a bit… spoiled, so to speak, but she’s a good girl at heart too. I’d never thought that being a house maid could be fun before, but it really is.”

She concluded her narrative with perhaps the most optimistic face Wladislaw had seen ever since setting foot in that country. Then again, between being stuck in a sleepy snowy town and facing a recruit who had a tendency to fly into a random bout of depression or a heart attack on a daily basis, Wladislaw’s assessment might have been quite skewed in the first place. Her positive mood was contagious enough, such that by the time she finished her part, the Polish soldier felt quite uplifted himself.

“That’s good to hear,” he said, smiling gently at her.

And then the town hall bell struck five in the afternoon in the distance, reminding the Polish soldier of the meeting that was supposed to take place at six that day. That meeting was supposed to decide his ticket to leave that town, and there was no way he’d allow himself to miss it.

“Well, looks like it’s time for me to leave,” he said to the maid. “It’s been quite nice speaking to you. You’ve taught me quite a but of a local experience, haven’t you?”

The girl’s face returned to its previous shy and timid state as she stayed quiet for a while, presumably to gather herself before asking him.

“Say, mister,” she said, her hands clasping tightly. “How long are you going to stay in town?”

“Unfortunately, not long,” he answered. “If all goes right, I’d expect to leave in a few hours at the earliest.”

The girl’s face sank a little in disappointment.

“I see,” she said, her voice lowered. “I guess it’s goodbye then…”

And then suddenly her eyes flared up, as though having just remembered something particularly important.

“Could you tell me, mister,” she asked, “what is your name?”

Wladislaw let out a light chuckle, before glancing at the girl and said.

“I am called Wladislaw,” he said, declaring with all the pride of his father’s son and an Imperial noble. “Wladislaw Krewocki Mieczowitz.”

********



< Message edited by Argeus the Paladin -- 11/18/2011 7:13:37 >
DF  Post #: 7
11/22/2011 7:03:24   
Argeus the Paladin
Member

Chapter 7
Aki Hirano


Many miles away, in a luxurious apartment in central Tokyo.

A young man sat, half-lying on a comfy sofa in a manner quite reminiscent of how Roman noblemen some two thousand odd years ago were often depicted. It was supposed to be a comfortable posture, if only his clothes had not done all it could to turn it into a rather uncomfortable experience. His legs were more than a bit restricted quite a bit by a tight-fitting pair of jeans more suitable for young ladies rather than men. Meanwhile, a glossy, unbuttoned glossy leather jacket was draped over his shoulders and arms, one whose signature design included so many studs, belts and zippers, none of which would have served any practical purpose, that it was less of a utility and more of a nuisance. Not that he had any major quarrel with that garment, having probably been quite well conditioned to sitting in that suit for extended periods.

On the table in front of him, next to his glass of steaming black tea and the television remote control, was a pile of magazines and catalogues lying strewn all over the place like a secondary table cloth. Each and every of those magazines, different in design and style as they were, had one thing in similar. All of them bore on their cover a picture of a certain pretty boy, if only clad in radically different clothing and posed in different postures. Be it in summer T-shirt and short or winter jacket and striped scarf or any number of fashion in between, said pretty face was perpetually stretching the same smile at the camera, one the young man found to be mechanical and almost soulless.

That was not to say the face was not attractive. On the contrary, the young man had seen many a girl, teenaged and bearing all the romanticism and the love for that which was cute, cool or glamorous as would normally be expected from such a demographic, squealing their lungs out at the mere sight of that cover boy. For all the soullessness and mechanicalness, the cover boy might as well be an embodiment of all three.

He had a cute face, in the same sense that a young girl or a toddler was cute, dominated by effeminate, soft features that were made even more marshmallow by a massive quantity of makeup. His eyes, already large and round, were made even more pronouncedly so by dark eyeliners. His brows, already curvy and arguably alluring, found themselves further darkened by copious amounts of artificial colors. His lips, already pink and juicy, were turned into a parody of a thick-lipped woman’s. Other girls found that attractive, the young man found it an affront.

The cool part would invariably come from his posturing, bending his body in photogenic poses next to anything and everything his producers would regard as fast, furious or screaming awesome. And he meant anything – a set of drums, an electric guitar, a pair of giant amplifiers, an exceedingly fast motorbike, an untamed wile horse, or even something as random as a starfish or a model of the Tokyo Tower. As for glamorous, at least a few of those magazine covers were dedicated to that part. No less could be expected of someone who, by sheer luck, an overwhelming amount of talent or any other reason for that matter, was a rockstar at the peak of his career. Indeed some of those photos captured the very essence of someone in that job – surrounded by adoring fans screaming his name while smiling as broadly as his jaws could support.

The young man on the sofa stared at the pretty boy in the pictures with a sort of odd concentration despite his apparent fatigue, as though he was taken over by a spell of hypnotism. Occasionally he would shut his eyes, turning briefly from said ordeal that he was quickly tiring of. And yet he had no choice but to examine each and every of those photos with a scholar’s focus, for, like that flat and the general luxurious background he was basking in, said displeasure came with the package. Not to mention the young man was, in grimly glaring at the grinning cover boy, essentially staring at himself.

For he was the one the media hailed one of the most popular musicians and young idol of his generation, and whose “territory” included, among others, posing as such. Little did the media knew he was not what they thought he was. To the public, he was Aki Hirano, the object of affection and desire from not small a cut of the female teenage demography and a member of the wealthiest rung of Japanese celebrity. To his ancestors, his father and everything they stood for, he was Brutus Julius Aetius Hieronymus, son of Gaius Strabo Hieronymus, a proud noble of the White Vampires Consulate and, by dint of historical heritage, a Roman in all but name.

And he’d be damned for his dedication to the Japanese music industry, if the mores and ethics of the classical Romans were to be a standard for his life.

“Why, Brutus Julius Aetius? Why did it come to this?”

It was a question he had asked himself aplenty, one that he had himself answered – or attempted thereto – quite a bit. And yet time and time again he would find himself, in the dead of night with no one on his side, again asking the same question. His subconsciousness had never exactly registered and accepted the justifications he had come up with, sometimes maybe as early as the very previous day. By all accounts, it was not a simple question, as was its asker and subject not a simple person.

The name Aki Hirano was paraded on the front cover of the magazines in an extremely flattering manner, not too different from a badge of honor of sort. That name, he was told by one of his managers, was worth an inexplicably large sum of money in and of itself, as was his voice and his looks.

And yet he never actually feel any sense of pride or honor from it. Just as he loathed his effeminate, excessively cute and artificially cool demeanor as those picures were too keen to show, he equally hated that name. His real name, Brutus Julius Aetius, depending on whom one would ask, was either a loaded name a nostalgic patriot with high hopes would give his child or a pretentious foreign-sounding name that was as out of place in Japan as, say, Arabian turbans or Nordic honey mead. He could vouch that his father could not be more firmly planted in the first category, but others would be freely entitled to their opinions.

Such name was given to him in the hope that he would, in his life, repeat and exceed the deeds of the three greatest Roman heroes in his books. He would be a Brutus to strike down tyrants and bring liberty to his people, a Julius Caesar ho would inspire men and beasts alike to achieve the unthinkable, and a Flavius Aetius who would defend the Consulate and its people against impossible, sweeping odds with all the stalwartness of a steel wall. Such a high hope, if not ambition, for one’s child would be nothing more than the base folly of a common tavern braggart, one would be forgiven to think. The situation of his kind back when he was born, however, as was the position his father was in their community, would justify the great hope in him somewhat.

Three hundred years prior, his ancestors, a settler community of the White Vampires arrived in this J-shaped archipelago to avoid the terrible supernatural wars that ravaged their European homelands. On board their ships they brought the goodwill of the Consulate, a lifestyle still locked in the prime of the late Roman Republic, and the hope to continue living as such. Like the Dragon Wolves, their exquisite grasp on magical technologies, their enchanted steel and their willingness to cast their lot with the local warlords allowed them to, after much bloodshed and glory, secure a place they could call home away from home. Similarly to their grudging werewolf-blooded neighbors, the Shogun himself awarded them with land, freedom and an oath of secrecy. Unlike their neighbors, however, by the time Aki was born his kind’s fortune had taken a turn for the worse. After a series of conflict that might as well take entire libraries to tell in full, his compatriots on both sides of the world had suffered. Or so he was told.

As a descendant of one of the most prestigious, if not the most prestigious family of all the White Vampires on Japanese land, was it not entirely fair for his father to expect great things from him? Was it not completely justifiable that he would take up the sword and the fate of his compatriots into his own hands? Was it not utterly and undeniably compulsory for him to do his duties with all the zeal and devotion that, since the times of the Roman Republic that birthed his people’s existence as a nation, had been the norm for the likes of him?

And yet he was not a revolutionary like Brutus, not a shrewd military leader and politician like Caesar and certainly not a defender figure who would look at a Hunnic horde in the eyes and taunt them to bring it on like Aetius. What stately skills Fortuna failed to grant him, she instead made up for it by giving him one of the most handsome face and beautiful voice that his pedigree and upbringing could afford. In hindsight, it might not entirely be an unwelcome gift.

Suffice to say, in exchange for having draped on his person the not quite dignified clothes of a singer, he was able to secure a fortune of wealth that he – or more accurately, his people – had been continually in needs of. Still, if his father had not been blind and his mother not dead and buried, they would have most certainly weeped at what a mockery of proper Roman virtues and honor he had become. His defense for said conducts, ironically enough, had been the very thing that his father stood for. After all, how could he take up the sword when said blade was dull, rusty and broken? How would he carry a banner for his fellows to gather under if said banner was tattered and torn? How would he fulfill the fate of his people if he couldn’t even fill his own belly with food?

A Roman noble, much less a White Vampire noble, was only as valuable as his coffers, it seemed. And his throngs of adoring fans who would see him dance, hear him sing, relish in his stage theatrics and imagine they could take him home with mayhaps a leather collar of sort was more than willing to fund his familial coffers. If that was what it took to provide a steady income for the noble purposes his father had put on his shoulder, it might as well be his duty to see it done. The disgrace and dishonor of one who would sell his face and voice to the public could be well forgotten should his goal be met.

For all he knew, Lucius Cornelius Sulla himself was once in his shoes, and look where he was when all was said and done…

A gentle knock at the door cut Aki’s train of thought in half. Almost at once the young man sprang up, straightened his garments and briskly strolled towards the doorway, zipping his leather coat up in the meantime. There was only one person he knew of who would bother to visit him at that hour, and he would ill like to look like a regular tramp with an improper sense of fashion before said person.

His hunch was quite accurate. A particular figure, now all too familiar to him, revealed herself at the doorway as the door inched open, exactly the person he was expecting.

Said figure was, as far as looks went, the very definition of a living paradox. On one hand, her body was just about the size of a junior high school girl at most. Yet, looking at her well-developed, shapely form one would have no doubt that she had well crossed the threshold of adolescence into adulthood. Her skin tone bore a rather weird color to his eyes, bearing more resemblance to the Asian profile than her heritage and pedigree would have otherwise indicated. The result of a typical base Mediterranean olive skin mixed with more than a dozen years basking in the frigid Arctic climes, last time he heard.

Similarly contradictory were her features. Her mouth and lips were stern and pronounced, the sign of an able and determined leader. Her eyebrows were curled in a certain way that suggested great sorrow and loss as well as a desire for vengeance. And yet her eyes were ever gleaming with a sort of childlike innocent with a dash of mischief, betraying her stately presence mercilessly. And in contrast with her otherwise extremely feminine general features, her hair was inordinately short, hanging only as far down as half her neck. The jagged hairline, however, suggested that its owner had only until very recently been grooming a luscious hair stream instead.

Equally mismatched were her clothing. On the outside, she wore a long leather coat with curious, glossy purple lining and inlays. Said garment was a symbol of status and prestige to their kind, yet something more or less standard-fare, if not slightly eccentric and liable to drawing sneers from human bystanders. Underneath that coat, however, she wore something that Japanese girls of those days were quite well known for – a set of sailor schoolgirl uniform with a blue knee-length skirt with white leggings, a white shirt with a dark blue chest ribbon and a student’s bag on her side. Apparently she needed no fancy cloaking magic to conceal her nature, for as she stood she was already well on the way to pass for a normal Japanese schoolgirl, if only one with a rather curious sense of fashion.

Aki frowned at her presence at his doorway. Despite his previous expectation, the fact that a middle school girl suddenly showed up at his doorsteps in the middle of the night for no apparent purpose would most certainly not do his reputation any favor. Reputation that, he might add, he was needing to protect desperately. Her unreasonably childish display was not at all helping.

“Greetings, Quaestor Brutus Julius Aetius,” she said with a warm voice, which quickly turned into a mischievous undertone. “Oh, why the long face? Aren’t you happy to see me?”

She glared at him, her mischievous undertone quickly turning into an overtone.

“Or would you rather me do this instead?”

And then she squinted her eyes, before withdrawing her cuffs to the general vicinity of her chin, then blinked at him in a manner that could not be interpreted as anything rather than some parodical mockery, albeit some harmless one. The voice she let out, a high-pitched shriek, albeit quiet enough to not wake up Aki’s neighbor, depending one who one would ask was either exceedingly cute or exceedingly annoying with no middle ground whatsoever.

Aki-sama!”

Aki shuddered. He had had to listen to enough squealing as is as part of the job, and that annoyance showed.

“Please, Your Grace,” he said, rolling his eyes at the visitor. “I’d very much appreciate it if you’d come in quickly – we wouldn’t want to attract undue attention, now would we?”

He did not give the girl any time to respond – quickly he grasped her wrist and jerked her into his domicile with a quick pull, eliciting another, albeit much more quiet, squeal from her. No sooner had the girl been fully dragged inside than Aki slammed the door behind him, breathing out loudly in relief.

If he had not known previously or seen her more brilliant moments when she carried herself with due dignity and spirit of a head-of-state-to-be, he would never have believed she was the person he was supporting on their grand conspiracy. No, he corrected himself, it was not exactly a conspiracy. After all, they were only struggling to retake what was rightfully theirs, or at the very least rebuild that. Regardless of what he would call their effort, however, that strange girl was a central and indispensable element to it.

“Alright,” he said to her. “My apologies for the rudeness, Your Grace. Next time, please don’t do that again. It’s annoying, if you’d allow me to be frank as is.”

He flicked his head towards the minibar before looking back at her with a friendly smile.

“So… would you like a drink, Your Grace?” he said. “Just like the other times?”

The girl nodded, before walking over to the sofa, as though it was her own home rather than the singer’s. Granted, judging from how frequently she had been paying him visits, she might as well be a semi-resident by then.

“Well, there are just the two of us now,” she said, looking back at him with a gentle smile. “You could just call me by name. Would that be fine, Aki?”

For seemingly no reason the singer’s cheeks flared red very briefly.

“But of course, Your G- I mean, Florina,” he said.

“See? Was that hard?” she cheered, clapping her hands together as she stared at him triumphantly.

********


“I see.”

Simple as those two words were, it took a good while and no small amount of effort before Florina could utter them as softly as the breeze. The look of innocence and childlike mischief in her eyes had now been completely culled as they, as per the rest of her face, bore a grim, ominous nervousness. The initial shocked – mingled with quite a bit of unbecoming fright, Aki would admit – expression she bore at the news took a similarly long time to fade away. Aki could understand that sentiment well enough. For someone who had had her share of close brush with the Cataphracts’ death squad, she had every right to be afraid.

Her shocked expression was then followed by a look of perplexity and contemplation not too different from a philosopher’s posture at his table. Her hands cupped around the mouth of her glass as she looked at the swirling liquid inside it, as though her fixation would help take her mind away from things she did not want to remember. Said fixation and perplexity, unfortunately, fitted neither her pretty face nor her position among her kind, albeit for entirely opposite reasons.

For the next few moments she spoke nothing. The only movement from her part was a repeated, almost obsessive-compulsive, sprinkling of sugar from the tiny jar on the table into her drink. Or rather, what looked like sugar at first sight but a long shot from the commercial sugar sold in markets at a closer inspection. Ordinary sugar, as anyone could vouch for, was neither sparkling nor tinted in a bluish-purple shade.

Said “sugar” had formed a thin layer of precipitation at the bottom of the glass by the time she was done with that and took a nervous sip. During the whole process, the girl must have as well emptied a third of the jar, but Aki seemed to pay it no mind. He was, more than anyone else, quite aware that the girl’s body was in need of all the sparkling sugar it could get, given what she was doing on a daily basis.

Still she remained silent for another solid while to calm down and gather her thoughts before she lifted her eyes towards the idol singer, both her arms propping her chin as she leaned against the table. Judging from the way her expression seemed forced and strained, she was making an earnest attempt to look stern and to-the-point. Said attempt, however, was undermined from the very start by her naturally cute and amiable features and the fact that just a few minutes ago she was seized by fear. Still, Aki appreciated her attempt.

“Well, you don’t need to trouble yourself about the Cataphracts as of yet,” Aki said with the warmest and most reassuring voice he could muster. “As far as we know, over the past two weeks they had been quite inactive. They’re as good as blind and deaf in this country, and no doubt are wasting a lot of time trying to hammer out an alliance of sort with the Dragon Wolves.”

“Still, the matter remains that they are here,” the girl said, her voice undeniably shaken despite her best efforts.

She took a large gulp from her glass, less from gluttony and more from a desperate attempt to calm herself down enough to make a halfway meaningful contribution.

“I’ve got a gut feeling that things would turn out this way ever since I came to this country,” she said, letting out a long sigh. “I… just never thought Ioannes Komnenos could have been so bold as to send the Cataphracts so early.”

“I have thought the same, to be honest,” Aki said, nodding in acknowledgement. “Our sources have all indicated that with the latest court turmoil around the power mongering between the Chevaliers and the Ionikos clans, the Black Vampires would not be able to afford to field another overseas mission for at least a decade or so. The kind of risk that would entail would be too great to undertake, at least for sane rulers.”

“But as I said,” Florina said, her eyes rolling at the idol singer, a good measure of fright and frustration tampering with her attempt to maintain a dignified presence, “The fact remains that the Cataphracts are here, snooping around, building up their influences and planning god-know-what. How could they probably do that? Or how, for that matter?”

Aki shrugged. The look in his eyes, however, was a long shot from indifference.

“We are trying to find that out, Florina,” he said. “On both counts, if we’d have more time on the matter.”

Again the girl’s face as kept down as her eyes glued on her glass. And then, all of a sudden, as though having just realized something of dramatic importance, she jerked her head up, a certain veil of dread shrouding over her face as she stared at the idol singer.

“Aki, could there be any chance that,” she began urgently, only to freeze in mid-sentence, most probably owing to the inherent terribleness of the hypothesis she was about to bring up, “our cover has been blown and they are here for us?”

She took another short pause, maintaining a dreadful eye contact with the idol singer during the whole episode.

“Because… because if that were the case…”

Her voice trained off as her face displayed what appeared to be a stiff struggle between her fright and her conscience that she had better maintain an air of courage to fit someone of her position. Again, she was not quite as successful as she would have liked, looking, at best, rather like a confused and frightened schoolgirl trying too hard to appear rough and tough, an impression not at all helped by her garments. It might be a cute and perhaps endearing sight, but authoritative and dignified it certainly was not.

And yet again Aki could more than understand her sentiments. He responded in the very same way an elder brother would to comfort a little sister in dismay, by placing his hand on her head, looking at her with a most reassuring gaze, and smiling in such a way as to tell her that nothing was wrong. It was a most convincing performance, since, at the bottom of his heart, that was something he believed in - that nothing was wrong and everything would be fine. For the moment, that was.

“No, I doubt that is the case here,” he said, his calmness in both expression and voice being the surest proof of said confidence. “Everyone agrees that the Black Vampires have far too much on their table lately to care about an enemy they thought to have all but crushed some three decades ago.”

Almost immediately Florina’s expression turned sour. She gripped her glass tightly between her small, quivering hands, making it absolutely clear that it was not something she liked to hear. Or at least, that was what her expression seemed to suggest.

“Ah,” Aki said, quickly correcting his voice. “My apologies – I should not have said that.”

“No, it’s alright,” Florina said, trying to contain her sentiment. “No amount of sugar-coating could deny the fact that my father had lost. If I am to do anything to save our people, take up his legacy and retake what is rightfully ours… I have to come to terms with that.”

She forced a smile towards Aki, gesturing him to go on. The idol singer nodded and cleared his voice before taking a sip from his own glass.

“Anyway,” he resumed. “The point is, we have every reason to not be concerned with their presence for a while.”

“But then,” Florina said with all due concern and seriousness, “why would they even come to Japan?”

Aki squinted his eyes at her momentarily, as though showing his disapproval for her failing to register a most widely known fact. He was quick to dispel that look when he was struck with the realization that the girl had the most valid reason for her ignorance. After all, most of her admittedly still relatively short life was spent living under a rock, both figuratively and literally. Even until now she was still living under a rock, knowing very little about how to carry things out until he would tell her how to. With that in mind, she might as well be completely justified for knowing zero about things as complicated as global politics.

She might as well begin learning whenever she could, he thought.

“Well, perhaps I failed to tell you this,” he said, lowering his voice. “No matter, it’s as good a time to tell you as any. Long story short, Mina Hikaru is in Japan.”

Florina let out a quick gasp of astonishment, for which Aki was quite understanding.

“Eh?” she exclaimed, complete bewilderment writ upon her face. “You mean that Mina who led an Anti-Ioannes movement since the last decade? That one who almost took over the Black Vampires’ southern provinces with nothing but a rousing speech and the same one they were offering a five-thousand-gallon bounty for over the last few years?”

“Yes, that Mina,” Aki nodded.

“But of all the places, why Japan? Or how is she still alive for that matter?” Florina said, still quite taken over by disbelief. “Last time I checked, she had disappeared ever since she lost her last holding and most of her followers in Europe a few years ago. Back when I was at Siberia, we have all assumed that she was either killed or captured.”

“Mina Hikaru is kind of a big deal back in the Black Vampire land,” Aki said. “They would have made a huge fuss about it if they successfully eliminated her. That goes without saying, actually.”

He took another sip, sprinkling another tablespoonful of sparkling sugar into his glass.

“And it is kind of well known that her mother was a Japanese woman,” he continued. “It is just natural that she would return to this country to seek refugee, lick her wounds and plan her next move. Of course, the Black Vampires could not really afford to let her fully recuperate, would they?”

On his face a particularly interested smile flared, one that was both reassuring and not the least cheeky.

“Either way, that Ioannes decided to deploy nothing less than his imperial guards on this mission would indicate that he’s taking this quite seriously. We could call him names, but a fool he most probably isn’t,” he said, pausing a bit to take another sip. “And with the favorite son of the Chevalier clan at the head of this expedition, I’d suppose the next few months would be quite… interesting, to say the least.”

Again Florina withdrew to her deep thoughts. The layer of solid sparkling sugar at the bottom of her glass kept building up in the meantime, having apparently doubled in thickness before she opened her mouth to speak again.

“If that is the case, Aki,” she asked, her voice filled with both curiosity and concern, with perhaps a dash of annoyance as to why she had not heard of that story and the opportunity it entailed earlier, “then Mina is no different from us, is she? Both she and us refugees in this country seeking to rebuild our powers, struggling to get by while avoiding the Imperial hounds, and most of all, we all want Ioannes Sigismund Komnenos’ head. Why haven’t we joined force with her yet?”

“Believe me, between Tribune Ametius and myself we have touched that possibility,” Aki said. “We finally decided against it. For one, most of us aren’t really willing to trust the Hikaru movement. For all their anti-Ioannis sentiments, they are still Black Vampires at the end of the day and would be more than guaranteed to return to their old ways the moment they get their way with the changing of rulers. And for the other…”

Aki’s left hand reached for his chin, cupping it briefly as he selected the most proper words to best get his point across without being too blunt to the girl.

“I really, really don’t want to say this, Florina, but you need to understand that,” he said, his voice having taken a turn for the more solemn, “as we stand we are too weak and powerless to do anything remotely consequential in the grand scheme of things. As such, we have to hide in the dark, and joining force with anyone on any side at all, would compromise our cover and threaten our very existence.”

Florina let out another brief “I see” before yet again bending her neck and look at the table. By then Aki had quite understood that such gesture was the girl’s very instinctive self-defense mechanism against anything that threatened her world view. A passive resistance, yet unbeneficial to her position if she were to take over her father’s post all the same. Thinking so, he lifted Florina’s chin up with his fingertip and stared at her eyes with all his sincerity with mayhaps a dash of sternness, eliciting a mild yelp from her part.

“Look, Florina, I know it’s hard to swallow, but we both know better than anyone, don’t we?” he said. “We just don’t have that kind of manpower to do anything aside from just building up what humble foundations we are still mustering.”

“But… but… we have done our very best, haven’t we? So… why haven’t we… why couldn’t the Legions be rebuilt?”

As she spoke, her eyes moistened a little. Certainly she had been trying to hold back her sentiments, a trade that she had been consistently showing to be a novice with questionable talents for.

“I know how you feel,” Aki said, reaching for a tissue and wiping her eyes gently. “Unfortunately, I also know that raising a legion is a bigger business than anything a person – or a few people for that matter – could muster. Money, manpower and enchanted steel, that sort of thing. As it stands, it will be many months, if not years before we could muster enough sympathizers for a single cohort, much less a legion proper.”

He patted her on the pack as he continued looking into her eyes, giving as warm a smile as he could.

“Everyone is doing their best,” he said. “Including you – your father would be proud of your devotion and spirit, even when it comes to such minutiae as enchanting the steel in the forge. So don’t worry a bit. What will come will come if everybody does their best, won’t it?”

Florina’s somber expression slowly changed back into a merrier one as her mouth reshaped into a smile. Indeed, Aki might have quite a few shortcomings, but optimism and high-spiritedness had always been his strength, a strength that was as infectuious as it was unfaltering and convicted.

“And that is why I trust you, isn’t it, Aki?” she remarked.

********



< Message edited by Argeus the Paladin -- 11/23/2011 22:47:42 >
DF  Post #: 8
11/25/2011 6:07:28   
Argeus the Paladin
Member

Chapter 8
The Castle’s Secrets


Whether or not he wanted to admit it, the fact remained that Wladislaw was forced to stay behind in the Castle of Cherry Blossoms despite his best effort to not have to. Even what he thought was his ace in the hole for a ticket did not quite turned out the way he thought. What he and Sergei had discovered by accident the Colonel had already put a red mark in his notebooks, making the entire admittedly embarrassing ‘flirting’ with the local girl a bit of a redundancy from Wladislaw’s part. When he would think about it, it was quite a folly that he would even think that something as obvious as that would go unnoticed by the Colonel.

In any case, Wladislaw and Sergei would do best to be contented at their post, for the way things went they would be grounded in the castle for a while, together with the rest of the junior members of the Cataphracts under the vigilance of Lieutenant Euclides. What he thought at the moment to be some kind of damnation to a long while of boredom, however, quickly took a turn to the more exciting within the days. Maybe too exciting – ever since the Colonel left the camp was in a constant uproar of rumors, hearsays and speculations from both their werewolf allies and his comrades alike.

And rumors, however untrue or ungrounded, had the tendency to drive people restless. Those who did not have a steady supply of books to entertain themselves, that was. Perhaps that was the reason why very late that night Wladislaw returned to his quarters from guard duties while just outside the room the corridor was about as noisy as a fishmarket. In the meantime, within the room’s safety Sergei was still engrossed in his books.

“Close the door,” Sergei said as soon as the Polish soldier stepped in, barely shooting his glance up at him for one brief moment.

Wladislaw’s response to his companion’s seemingly disinterest in the surrounding was one of frustration. He had gone long past the phase of being astonished at his friend’s demeanor by then.

“You’re still reading? In the middle of all the fuss?” he asked as he walked towards the square table, now having been filled to the brim with so many volumes of doorstoppers it might as well bend and break at the smallest provocation. With the Lieutenant’s moving off to another room, the Russian soldier was quick to commandeer and turn that table into his personal study with gusto, and it showed.

“That’s exactly why I told you to close the door,” he said, not bothering to lift his eyes off the pages. “And I hope you aren’t getting worked up over the rumors or something.”

“Oh yes, so apparently the fact that the High Wolves are planning to jump in is not something worthy of concern, I suppose? And there’s that entire business about our host’s run-in with his fellow nobles in the Daimyo’s court, for that matter.” Wladislaw answered, his voice soaked in sarcasm. “Sometimes I wonder, Serge, what would interest you more than your mini-library?”

Wladislaw’s friendly attack seemed to have coaxed Sergei into speaking, for he slowly closed his book, laid it on top of the pile and slowly turned his eyes towards his teammate.

“We’re soldiers, brother,” he said, his voice still maintaining an uninterested tone to it. “Soldiers need only know to follow orders. And that’s all there is to it.”

“But we are nobles too,” Wladislaw protested. “Isn’t learning the intrigues of both the court and the common man part of the parcel of being a noble?”

“Well, you are, I’m not,” Sergei said with a shrug, looking at him with a straight face not the least marred by annoyance. “That’s your answer right there.”

Wladislaw’s expression shifted apologetically, mentally kicking himself for forgetting such a most basic thing about his friend. Sergei, unlike pretty much everyone else in the unit aside from maybe the Lieutenant, did not come from a noble background. His father, last time he revealed any detail about him, was a nobody who made a living as a simple landed farmer in the frozen North, right until he went down with a hand axe to the head.

“Then again, I could entertain myself a bit with some gossips,” he said, propping his head on the table as he dashed a glance at this companion. “So what is the word around the castle?”

“Aplenty,” Wladislaw said, picking up his voice. “I don’t suppose you’ve missed the High Wolf’s latest address to His Majesty, did you?”

There was a distinct tint of anxiety to Wladislaw’s voice as he spoke.

“That one?” Sergei said, chuckling ever so mildly. “If I were His Majesty, I’d laugh it off. I’d bet half my books that those damned Northswolves are just doing what they do best – barking at the moon.”

“That could be so,” Wladislaw nodded, before his face turned towards a more concerned one. “Still, the prospect that we’d have Silver Shield Huscarls walking on the streets of Tokyo and wrecking stuffs is quite… entertaining, to say the least.”

“Or so you think,” Sergei said, entertaining no small amount of contemt at the very idea Wladislaw was getting at. “It’s the Northswolves we are talking about. You know, the very same breed of people who’d had not the slightest clue how o keep their nobility from killing each other if their lives depend on it. The feuds between the jarls and thegns up there make our very own Ionikos-Chevalier conflict of late look like a lover’s quarrel.”

He clasped his hands emphatically.

“In short, there’s more chance of a warm winter in Siberia than the Northswolves suddenly sending a detachment here,” he said, smirking. “But obviously our Japanese allies aren’t quite as aware of that, am I right?”

Wladislaw would argue otherwise, if only because of Sergei’s admittedly not-so-pleasant attitude. Unfortunately, the Russian soldier probably had much more claim to truth on this particular occasion than Wladislaw himself would ever have. It was common knowledge that the folks in Northern Russia lived next to, consorted with, traded alongside with and generally got along with the High Wolf denizens like closes of friends. Unless it was wartime, then they’d both be more than happy to smash their dear neighbors’ heads open with a large claw, a battle axe or a great bardiche in short notice. In any case, it was common knowledge around the Empire that nobody who paid blood taxes to the Emperor knew more about the Northswolves than Sergei’s fellow countrymen.

“I thought High Jarl Aedric Alesiadr doesn’t usually joke around on matters as serious as declaring wars or issuing threats around,” Wladislaw commented. “Did you see his tongue in the address to His Majesty? He seems pretty serious this time.”

Sergei shrugged, shaking his head ever so slightly.

“Nah,” he said. “Aedric is pretty much the last wolf from Andronikos Wilheim’s reign. Older than my father by a couple decades, give or take. And you know what they say about old wolves. A dying wolf looks to his cave rather than run around for the glory of the hunt.”

He tapped his finger on his book’s hard leather cover as he remarked.

“And that’s not just for the wolves, I’d wager. He said. “When you’ve lived through so many years and seen so many things both good and bad, you’d stop caring about such trivial things as glory or triumph. You’d care more about living out your days in peace and making sure your sons and daughters have a good future ahead.”

“You’re speaking as though you’re nearing the graves,” Wladislaw said, his semi-jovial tone didn’t quite conceal his amazement.

In response Sergei just tapped on his piles of books.

“Read more,” he said. “If you compare the voice of an old writer with that of a young one, you’d realize the same sort of difference.”

Wladislaw shook his head. He had made a point never to touch Sergei’s pile of books even if his life depended on it. As he sat down at the table, he brushed aside a significant quantity of books as though to prove that point.

“So aside from this entire philosophy shenanigan,” he said, “you’re certain nothing will ever come of this, I guess?”

For a brief moment Wladislaw thought his friend’s face had taken a turn for the more serious and concerned.

“I wouldn’t use ‘certain’ – Emperor Andronikos was quite certain he’d crush the Wolves once and for all back then, and look where it took him,” he said. “But we can agree that it’s better if the Northswolves stay where they are.”

He paused for a moment to collect the volumes Wladislaw had brushed aside and stacking them neatly into another pile.

“Believe me,” he continued, “you don’t want to face a row of those Silver Shield mutants. They’d eat you and your horse before the moon is up and spit out the saddle.”

As he spoke, he straightened up said book pile, making sure it wouldn’t topple over. And then he glanced back at his teammate, assuming a face several degrees more serious than previously, complete with his hand cupping his chin, his eyes falling into a contemplative trance and his mouth ever slightly twisted like a philosopher troubled by an egg-and-chicken existential question.

“What worry me more than all this High Wolf hearsay,” he said his voice greatly lowered, “is how our host is holding up. Can’t really remain in the party when your party host is taken away for any reason at all, can we?”

“Oh, now we’re talking,” Wladislaw said, grinning at his friend. “And you claim you don’t listen to gossip.”

“I wish I could, but look,” Sergei said, glancing at the general direction of their room’s doorway, “Our room is right next to the main corridor, and,” he grimaced a bit, “excellent soundproof material these paper walls are not.”

Wladislaw could testify that. Just by sitting around in the room doing nothing he could catch a glimpse of more gossip than he could process, both wanted and unwanted, interesting and uninteresting, funny and unfunny. Aside from the general upheaval about the High Wolves’ official threat to the Empire and Lord Mitsumaru’s difficulties in the Daimyo’s court, Wladislaw had heard plenty of unrelated and irrelevant gossips. Some, he might frown at the notion, were stuffs as frivolous and meaningless as Lady Yukiko and Fuyuko’s hairband colors, complete with a fair share of giggles and whistles. He wished he was making that up.

“So what did you hear?” Wladislaw asked.

“Not too much, but I guess I’ve gotten the general gist of the business,” Sergei nodded slightly before resuming to his contemplating pose. “It’s just conflict of interest between your average high nobles each wanting a bigger share of the cake when you look at it. Just like back home, if you catch my drift.”

Which Wladislaw certainly did. The Holy Komnenian Empire, for all its grandeur and glory, was not a big happy family and, depending on whom one would ask, the grand nobles might or might not be consistently making an attempt to help. Aside from the biggest feud between the Ionikos and the Chevalier clans, a plethora of other grudges between even lesser nobles plagued the empire with no end in sight. Such grudges might start on the basis of race, belief, allegiance or even things as simple and petty as a couple acres of land or a few heads of Hemoheilotai.

Unlike the High Wolves’ jarls, Wladislaw thought, down there in Central Europe they had laws to control that sort of crap. Which just made things worse in a particular way, since instead of ripping each other’s throats out literally, the Imperial nobles had taken to backstabbing others in the dark figuratively and sometimes literally. If he heard the rumors right, the same thing had just happened to their elderly castle garrison commander.

“Seems like it,” Wladislaw said, nodding in complete agreement. “Slanders and lies certainly go a long way in these climes, doesn’t it?”

“Spare me,” Sergei said, raising his hands above his head at what he perceived to be naivety from his friend. “This sort of crap happens everywhere back home from Bucharest to Brittany, just that you aren’t there to see it.”

Having no other thing to add on that matter, the Polish soldier just gave a single nod of appreciation before continuing.

“Anyway,” he said, “I heard that if bad comes to worse, our hospitable host would be demoted elsewhere and leave the command of this castle’s garrisons to another noble. A noble that the folks around here apparently don’t like, if I heard that right.”

“I heard quite the same thing. A worrisome business as any, I guess,” Sergei said, his voice becoming more and more concerned. “Don’t get me wrong, a newcomer could string the whole lot of them up and practice decimation for all I care.”

He tapped on the table impatiently.

“The problem is,” he said, “we are still part of that garrison, at least unofficially so. Pretty sure things could change quite a bit around here if a new man arrives for better or worse.”

“I think we can trust the Lieutenant on that,” Wladislaw said reassuringly. “The old man might be nothing of the Colonel’s sort when it comes to negotiation, but he can get things done on our behalf if push comes to shove.”

“Not like we have any better option at hand,” Sergei said, before picking up the book he was reading, waving it at his friend’s direction. “In the meantime, I’m back to my books – want to take one to kill the time?”

“No thanks,” Wladislaw said, letting off a quick but very noticeable shudder before standing up, walking towards his bedroll and rest his back. He didn’t need any more of the sort for the day.

*******


Curiously the Cataphracts got their next night free from all duties – a holiday of sort. Not that there was anything better to do within the confinement of the castle and the sleepy town in any case, but at least Wladislaw could entertain the fact that he didn’t have to stand guard for hours on end any more.

And then it dawned upon the Polish soldier that ever since they first came to that castle, he had never exactly explored the place as much as he normally would have liked. That might as well be as good a chance as any for him to just waltz around the place and see what the Japanese wolves had to offer. After all, if the rumors were right, and if Lord Mitsumaru was to be replaced by a certain noble everyone seemed to dislike, he would be hard pressed to find another opportunity of the sort in the foreseeable future.

It was a dark and moonless night pelted with snow, an ideal hunting weather for the barbarous vampires, a poetic inspiration for Imperial artists and an ominous sign for the ordinary humans alike. To Wladislaw, it just meant that he’d have some peace and quiet as he braved the castle’s hallways. Apparently the wolves disliked moonless skies almost as much as the humans and most likely were then holed in their room, if the empty corridors were of any indication. Thinking so, he happily set off, leaving Sergei to his books as per normal, planning to take a quick tour of the main castle building’s halls and hallways and then head down to the courtyards.

Wladislaw the explorer was quickly disappointed, however. The Japanese architecture was interesting to behold at first sight, but the endless corridors of papered walls and wooden planked floors grew old rather quickly. The courtyards were slightly more interesting, marked with no small quantities of elegant stone decorations, but the sheer large area of the yards themselves meant that the decorations were few and far between anyway. The castle ladies dressed in the same kind of ribboned gowns as the two girls in the banquet – apparently the Japanese traditional dress of one kind or another – might have been a spectacle to behold and maybe flirt around with, but he was no Captain Hermann von Schlieffer. Here and there he would encounter a spectacle worth beholding, but, like the stone decorations in the yards, those were too few and far between to save his journey.

If he hadn’t suddenly decided to pay a quick visit to one of the castle’s storerooms, he might as well have returned to his room tired and disappointed. Said storehouse located a good distance away from the main castle building’s southern stone foundation, conveniently hidden behind a row of snow-covered cherry trees of which the castle, true to its namesake, had a slew of. Wladislaw only discovered it entirely by chance as he wandered off the cobblestone path at random. The entire structure was a good distance away from any beaten path, suggesting that it had been quite a while since they saw any major usage.

As he walked closer to the building, said fact became painfully obvious. The wooden lacquer of its walls were weathered and worn off, as were its roof battered and in disrepair. Its steps and doors seemed equally cracked and broken. The area around its base was covered in snow, dirt and moss in equal measures so to speak, having somehow not been cleaned for ages. Wladislaw could not help but wonder why, for all the care the castle residents seemed to give to the rest of the stronghold right down to the barracks and servants’ quarters, they would knowingly leave such a derelict remaining in their yards. Not that it was any sort of astonishment in and of itself, for as far as he remembered his father’s estate had its own shares of disused building left to rot.

What did astonish him were two sets of footsteps in the snow leading from the general direction of the main castle building right up into the storehouse. Fresh footsteps, even, a sign that raised his alarms on the spot. Immediately he assumed a battle pose, drawing his blade and raising his shield as he approached the building’s vicinity with as much cautiousness as he could muster. It was quite likely that someone was out exploring just like himself and stumbled upon that less traveled path, but he couldn’t take the chance.

His borderline paranoid caution grew into full-blow battle station the moment he approached the front steps. From the inside of the building he could hear some feint chanting of incantation, followed by the rumbling sound of an exceedingly heavy footstep on the old wooden floor. All of which might or might not be benign, but the moment he heard the distinctive sound of solid metal clubbing on the ground, the sort of sound associated with a large mallet or a warhammer, all bets were off. At once he rushed forwards at the front door and, fancying it might be bared from the other side, kicked it open.

Since the door, as would be expected in a traditional Japanese building, was a sliding door, it didn’t fling open. Instead, under the weight and force of Wladislaw’s kick, it broke off from its frame and was sent flying inwards, leaving behind a cloud of smoke and fine dust. As the cloud subsided, the scene before Wladislaw all but confirmed his paranoia, albeit not exactly like he had imagined. Within the interior of the building – far bigger than he thought it was – a battle was raging. To call it a battle, however, was a huge stretch.

Towering in the middle of the room were three of the same breed of demons the Cataphracts had routed the other day. Each was predictably equipped with a tiger-skin loincloth, an excessive abundance of hair and beard, and most importantly, a huge skullcrushing hafted iron club. The way the ground rumbled with every step they took, Wladislaw was surprised why it had not given way yet.

Naturally, that was the least noteworthy thing on his mind at the moment. An infinitely more important thing was that they were attacking someone. And this someone, incidentally, was a girl at least half a foot shorter than and two stones lighter than the Polish soldier himself. To defend herself, she had nothing but the baggy, red pant-skirt and white tunic on her person, and maybe perhaps a curved saber. That was, if the saber lying on the ground several feet from her position was hers. Aside from that, she was entirely defenseless.

The moment Wladislaw realized what was going on, one of the hairy demons had already charged at her with his club raised, his two fellows following closely behind. To the Polish soldier’s dread, he was too far away from them to intervene on time. And then he realized that he still had a particular weapon on his belt he could use. His father’s silver dagger was still strapped to his belt, having remained undisturbed for a while now. Without thinking – there might as well be no time to – he drew the dagger, quickly taking aim, and threw it like a dart at the front demon’s back.

“Hey you, catch!”

The Polish soldier’s aim was not exactly his strong suit, and instead of planting itself in the demon’s skull, it instead hit the creature’s club-wielding hand, causing it to flinch. It was better than none, however. Taking that chance, Wladislaw drew his long blade and raised his shield, charging towards the other two creatures, expecting a bloody clash…

Which did not come.

The things Wladislaw saw in the next few minutes was beyond his wildest imagination. It began with a flaring, murderous flare from the girl’s eyes. Then, like a bird set free, she sprang forth, leaping on the demon with Wladislaw’s dagger embedded on its arm. And then nary a blink later, said arm was already torn into two halves, spewing blood everywhere as the creature shrieked and screamed in pain. Barely another flash later and the creature was already lying on the ground, whatever life it had having left its body as its throat was torn apart as violently as its arm. Its head was almost separated from the rest of its body, if the Polish soldier saw correctly.

When the Polish soldier could string together the event to make out what exactly had happened, the deed was already done. In front of him and the rest of her opponents, the girl stood, her eyes burning in an inhuman flash. As far as Wladislaw knew, that was the tell-tale sign of someone who was taken over by a surge of uncontrollable magic, possessed by a primal force beyond the grasp of his kind. In other words, it was the sign for her enemies to run as fast as they could the other way. And even then, it might have been too late.

Now it was the other demons’ turn to be terrified. Nervously they backed off from the girl they were out to smash to bits merely seconds before. Neither of them, unfortunately, had the guile and agility to do so. The next second saw the girl literally gliding at the first one, jamming the dagger into its forehead and dragging it all the way down its body vertically, cutting it open like a cow’s carcass. The disturbing mix of flesh being messily rended and the bloodcurdling scream it caused was nauseating, even to one whose racial definition was one of bloodshed and violence like Wladislaw.

The second creature was slightly more fortunate, in the sense that its death was slightly less messy. Having just landed on the ground after finishing said downward cut, she immediately leaped forward at the creature. With a swift movement, she stabbed it on the side of its head and flew around the creature’s skull, effectively removing the upper half of its cranium in a manner not too unlike a tin can opener. Within the second the unfortunate creature was already dead with an empty head. Literally.

It took Wladislaw a while to comprehend what was going on. Even when he had registered that the immediate thread had been exterminated with extreme prejudice, he was still at a loss of understanding of what exactly had happened. There was only one way to find out.

He walked towards the girl, who, after finishing off the last beast, was standing absolutely still as though entranced.

“Hello?” he called out. “Are you alright, miss?”

In hindsight, that was perhaps the least intelligent thing Wladislaw had done that day. For no sooner had he finished his question than the girl turned back to him with the same burning eyes she was staring down on her inferior opponents. Her expression was absolutely frightening to the ordinary person – cold, inhuman and seemingly not caring how many lives she would take. Feeling slightly unnerved, Wladislaw’s shield arm tightened as he stopped approaching her. In hindsight, that was perhaps the most intelligent thing he had done that day.

The next thing Wladislaw saw was the girl suddenly and without a warning word charging at him at full speed with her dagger primed. The Polish soldier had barely enough time to raise his shield to cover his face. Hardly had he done so than the dagger collided on the heater shield’s surface.

And then there was the grisly, ear-rending sound of metal being torn apart. Wladislaw’s blood ran cold as his left arm suddenly went numb. A quick glance at the point of impact revealed exactly what had happened. The silver dagger had somehow broken through both the Cataphract heater shield’s surface and the enchanted Hemothorax’s scaled gauntlet, both of which were well known throughout the supernatural world for being as close to invulnerable as it could get. Blood spilled from the Cataphract’s torn arm, trickling down the scaled surface of his armor and dripping on the ground as a testimony to the vulnerability of said armor.

Wladislaw’s mind, however, was clear enough to realize his armor was the last thing he should worry about at that time. Given her fighting style with the dagger, he had to break out from that position before she’d tear not just his armor but his entire arm open with that blade, or worse. Thinking so, he quickly braced himself and bashed her as hard as he could with his shield, putting his entire weight and strength behind it.

For a brief second, the pain on Wladislaw’s arm was almost unbearable. The blade had slid right through his arm, piercing through to the other side, barely missing his bones. His bash, however, was quite successful. The crazed girl was smashed aside with such force she lost her grip on the silver dagger, letting out but a tiny whimper as the blade’s handle left her hands. Now she lay sprawling face down on the ground, having been knocked backwards several feet from the sheer force of the bash. Powerful as her ability – or whatever he could call that anomaly – was, the girl’s fortitude was exactly as expected of someone of that size.

Wladislaw spent the next seconds stabilizing his breathing, still very much shaken by the last few minutes’ events. The first thing to come to his mind as he calmed down was that he could not, by way of his sense of duty, let such a monster as such walk around freely in the area. Thinking so, he took measured steps towards the downed girl, his naked blade flashing in the candlelight. As he approached the downed girl, he raised his blade above his head as he muttered a quick prayer…

“Stop!”

A sharp shriek apparently muttered by an out-of-breath voice suddenly blared behind the Cataphract just as he was poised for the kill. Wladislaw turned back to find another girl standing before him, this time someone he knew for a change. If her amiable heart-shaped profile, mellow-looking eyes and brows and light features weren’t yet a dead giveaway, her streaming black hair tinted slightly blue was. Mitsumaru Yukiko, if Wladislaw remembered her name correctly, was looking exactly like she did back at the welcoming banquet with the sole exception being her clothing. Instead of the blue gown with a matching ribboned belt, she now wore the same sort of garment like the girl just now – a reddish skirt-pant hybrid and white tunic, each way more baggy than would be practical.

As soon as Wladislaw recognized her and lowered his blade accordingly, the newcomer rushed over to the downed girl’s position, giving her what the Polish thought to be an overall checkup. She then let out a sigh of relief, suggesting that everything was fine for his assailant.

“You are… that second daughter of Lord Mitsumaru, am I right?” Wladislaw asked, trying to contain and control his intrigue. “What are you doing here, may I ask?”

Her expression was more or less concealed by the shadow – and the fact that his blood loss did not do much good to Wladislaw’s vision – but the Polish soldier could see that she was getting quite a bit mad.

“That is my line!” she shouted. “What are you doing here? Have you any idea what you’ve just done?”

At the moment the Polish soldier was at a loss for words. Last time he checked, he was doing whoever that strange girl was a huge favor according to the rules and ethics of a follower of the House of Chevalier.

“I… I thought I was helping…”

Yukiko’s expression mellowed down as she heard that. Only just a bit, however.

“Well, thankfully my sister is alright now,” she said. “Otherwise you… no, we would be in a bigger problem than you could imagine.”

“Hold on,” Wladislaw said, barely containing a gasp as he stared at the downed girl. “She is Lady Fuyuko?”

Wladislaw’s face tensed up.

“This is a serious matter then,” he said aloud, before turning back towards the door with an abrupt move, almost immediately alarming the girl.

“Wait, where do you think you are going?” she exclaimed.

“My superiors need to know about this,” he said. “Demons inside the castle, the daughter of the castle garrison captain attacking an ally and all that… what else should I do?”

Now it was Yukiko’s turn to be forced into a submissive position. Her face blushed a little, less out of embarrassment and more out of a general state of perplexity when her secret was threatening to be compromised.

“D… don’t do that!” she exclaimed. “You’d be… in some serious trouble if you do!”

Her threat, if it could be understood as such, carried no weight at all just from the way she stammered alone.

“Give me a reason why I should not,” he said, shaking his head firmly, “when my comrades’ safety are under risk of being compromised right here.”

“Are you… are you blackmailing me?” she raised her voice, her cheeks unconsciously flaring even redder at the moment.

If Yukiko had any shred of idea that he was trying to blackmail her, said idea would melt away should she look closely at his face. Aside from the grimacing from pain, there was zero smugness, only a steadfast concern for his friends and brothers-in-arms. Barely had Yukiko conjured the correct words to explain the situation to the Polish soldier when a slow yet heavy string of footsteps could be heard from the distance. At once her face tensed up as she darted a glance at Wladislaw.

“We don’t have time to talk now,” she said, gesturing him to go away. “You better leave, or both of us will be in trouble!”

As she spoke, she gestured towards a side exit previously Wladislaw did not notice, presumably telling him to go as quickly as possible.

“But what is going on?”

Yukiko let out a quick sigh of exasperation at Wladislaw’s apparently unfazed curiosity. In what appeared to be the spur of a moment, she untied her hair and pressed her teal-colored hairband into the Polish soldier’s hand.

“I’ll tell you later, alright?” she said urgently, if not pleadingly. “Just leave and don’t tell anyone, and I’ll make it worth your while! Okay? Please?”

If there was anything his Szlachta’s upbringing and the Colonel’s influence managed to teach him, it was a basic courtesy to women.

“Right,” he said, staring at her sternly. “But if I hear any more funny business from around here, the Colonel will be informed within the day. Did I make that clear?”

And then he quickly turned around and dashed towards the hidden doorway, clutching his injured arm as he dashed off…

********

DF  Post #: 9
11/28/2011 10:36:47   
Argeus the Paladin
Member

Chapter 9
Medical Services


Five days had passed since Wladislaw got a hole carved in his arm, and he was still a long way from recovery. Perhaps it was the silver doing its work, being as venomous to the flesh of his kind as any dire spider’s bite. Or perhaps an injury of that caliber, one that would normally be able to kill a healthy human just by sheer trauma, in and of itself was nothing to scoff at. Either way, waking up every dusk with a tearing, burning arm through his forearm as though an overheated rusty spike was embedded in it was completely unwelcome.

That he was forced to refrain from seeking proper medical attention for fear of drawing suspicion did not help his case. As much as the Imperial martial tradition idolized courage and perseverance, his trials was very much going to be unsung by its very nature. In reality, he might not have had any obligation honoring Yukiko’s request, but he was a Szlachcic proud and proper. And a Szlachcic, he would always proudly boast as his father had his whole life before him, would rather die than dishonor his oaths. Unless, of course, he would find it contradicting his duties to his liege and his unit, but that would be a completely different story altogether.

What infuriated him was neither the pain nor the burden of a secret, but the complete and utter silence from the two ladies of the castle, as curios as it was annoying. No less than a dozen times he had requested, via various means and channels, to see Yukiko for that part of the story she kept from him. No less than a dozen times he was turned away on the ground of her absence. The excuses quickly grew old, not to mention the giggles behind his back by the troupe of castle ladies who might or might not understand what was going on between the two of them got on his nerves rather fast.

It was the same that evening. The first thing on his mind after excusing himself from the dining table, having gorged himself silly on Patriotic Sustenance not because of gluttony but because of said necessity, was to deal with his wound. He made his way down to a supposedly less traveled corner of the castle ground, behind a large cherry tree. Scouring the surrounding, making certain with all the paranoia his current situation would warrant, he quickly produced from his person his lifesaving device, a particular trinket he had been relying on as though it was a proper substitute for medication.

At first sight the trinket looked ordinary enough, not too different from the kind of commemorative ornaments struck in droves by powerful and vein nobles to show the world their family’s prestige and power. It bore a symbol the Polish soldier had had memorized since he was but a young lad. Its blood-red background was imposed by a pewter spread eagle, bearing a striking resemblance to both the Black Eagles heraldry and the national emblem of his nationality. The only difference was the longsword the eagle grasped in its claws as its wings soared for the sky. Such was the heraldic device of his family, a coat of arms he was supposed to bear with pride as not just a family member, but also his father and his clan’s foremost heir.

The medal, incidentally, was much more than just a simple ornament with sentimental values. Being the heir to the title, estates, oath of fealty and powers of an Imperial noble family, however minor, would grant one his share of supernatural power a good share of supernatural power coveted by most of those outside his social class. Such power, telling from the subtle grayish glow around the gilded rims of the medal, had pledge itself to Wladislaw’s every whim by dint of his status. And did he need such power those days.

Wladislaw looked at the starry sky, inhaled then exhaled as deeply as he could. Slowly removing his wounded arm’s scaled gauntlet, he exposed his injury to the crisp, cold air. The wound still looked as bad as it did the previous day, a swollen gash like a spreading blight upon the rest of his arm, turning the entire skin patch around it into a color akin to a dead man’s flesh. If not for his kind’s virtual imperviousness to disease, he would have been dead from infection within the day without medical aid, he’d wager.

Holding the decoration before his eyes, he began to mutter a quiet yet swift incantation that, to a foreign ear, might sound like he was speaking in an ancient language unknown to men. Such chanting went on for a few seconds before culminating in an audible, raised climax.

“Binding of the Commonwealth!”

As those words escaped his lips, several things began to happen, all of which quite remarkable even to those versed in supernatural rituals. His blood-red pupils flared up as though a miniature lump of hot coal was burning within them in a manner eerily similar to, yet not quite the same, as Fuyuko’s last performance. As his light burst alight, so did the subtle glow on the medal’s surface intensify, until it coated his right hand in the same pewter-colored nimbus. The most obvious impact of whatever he was doing was on the ground before him, which quaked and trembled, albeit ever so slightly, having been given just enough life for his purpose.

And then from the earth a large number of stringy, fleshy reddish tendrils the size of a small electric wire burst forth, punching through the white snow, twirling and flowing towards his injured arm like a gathering of hungry worms. They homed into his injury with the kind of precision one would only expect from skilled field surgeons, wrapping and coiling around his arm, binding up the swelling, gaping wound. When all was said and done, they detached themselves from the ground, and like a hanging vine being cut off from its roots, quickly drying and shriveling up into a hardened chitinous bandage, melding themselves into Wladislaw’s flesh as naturally as any scale part of a human’s regular healing mechanism. The end result of his fancy, if only slightly squeamish performance to the eyes of the uninitiated was that his left arm was now bandaged up and his pain culled. For the moment, that was.

Wladislaw exhaled loudly in what appeared to be relief as soon as his arm was so mended. Said relief, unlike the other times he had relied on it, was quickly replaced by a significant anxious expression on his face. Normally, the treatment he had taken should have been more than enough to deal with any and every battle wound that would not kill him, so far as he had the blood to spare to fuel it. There was nothing that his trick, coupled with eating or otherwise consuming enough blood to sustain the spell, could not solve, or so he liked to think.

For the past few days, however, his healing tendrils had proven to be much less than adequate. Within a few hours, the fleshy poultice would wear off, the chitinous bandage shatter instead of melding into his flesh as though part of his own skin, leaving his wound again wide open. It did help to dull his pain for a while, he thought, enough to undertake his immediate soldierly obligations without raising any alerts. Never before had he found his father’s words when the family Noble Sigil was passed down to him more accurate.

“Powerful and useful as the Sigil is, never grow too proud, since it is not omnipotent,” he muttered. “Well, now I know.”

He shrugged to nobody in particular before turning around, intending to return to his post. Circumstances, unfortunately – or rather, fortunately, depending on how one would look at it – would dictate otherwise.

“Uh… hello?”

An otherwise harmless voice, if only thoroughly unexpected, broke out in the general vicinity behind Wladislaw, startling him and sending a spasm all over his body. Immediately the soldier spun around, his right hand instinctively reaching for his sword, dropping the left gauntlet he was about to put back on dropping on the ground with a solid clang as he did.

Normally emphatic enough of a gesture to tell whoever would violate his admittedly bloated personal space to turn around and run, it probably wouldn’t help him too much in this case. For before him now stood, coincidentally, a familiar-looking girl with black-tinted-blue hair tied in a twin ponytail by two striking, aquamarine hairbands. Which reminded him – he still had on his person one such hairband that, to his dismay, served absolutely no purpose until then.

Wladislaw’s reaction to the newcomer was a curious one. On one hand, he was quite relieved, if not outright thankful to the hands of fate that it was that girl rather than anyone else who had caught sight of his ritual, otherwise things could have very possibly turned hairy. On the other, the fact that she was there right before his eyes out of a complete coincidence after his repeated attempts to find her over the past few days to no result whatsoever went a long way to trigger his temper.

“Why, hello there, my lady,” he said, his voice harsh and completely doused with sarcasm. “Took you damn long enough to drag yourself back here, didn’t it?”

In his bout of annoyance, Wladislaw failed to notice that Yukiko Mitsumaru was wearing something completely different from the last times. No more formal ceremonial dresses known more for cumbersomeness and bulkiness than for practicalities, at the very least. Instead, she was wearing the winter version of that schoolgirl uniform her country was most famous for. A thin felt vest was draped over her blouse while a student’s bag slung over her shoulder for the sake of completeness. There was also the presence of a thin pair of glasses over her eyes, not unlike a significant portion of students from her background. A good number of young males would find her new appearance charming and strangely endearing. Not Wladislaw, whose grimacing countenance and rolling eyes suggested that he was fuming with indignation at her very sight.

The girl was taken aback for a while, nailed frozen in her place at Wladislaw’s distinctly ungentlemanly attitude, to say nothing about her possibly catching a glimpse of his ritual. While still probably caught at a loss for words at Wladislaw’s magic, it took her but a blink to realize exactly why the soldier was in such a poor mood. Or at least, that was what her apologetic posture – neck bent, shoulders shrunken and eyes planted firmly on the ground – seemed to have indicated.

“I’m sorry,” she said quietly. “I didn’t intend to… abandon you like that…”

Wladislaw squinted his eyes at her, his general expression still far from contentment.

“Abandon?” he said, his mouth twisting. “I wouldn’t use that word if I were you. Nobody has the right to ‘abandon’ a Cataphract except God, the Emperor and his father.”

He stared down at her as he spoke, as though taking joy and savoring in her puzzled, confused look. From the way she kept staring at her feet while her hands twitched and fidgeted uncontrollably, she had apparently never quite been in such a position before.

“I…”

It took a while for her to finally look up at Wladislaw, still avoiding eye contact out of sheer embarrassment from her own shortcomings.

“I was… busy,” she finally said. “There were quite a few things I had to take care of in the past few days, and…”

“I do hope whatever your business was, it was more important than my keeping the deal between us,” Wladislaw snarled. “The way things were, my patient is wearing dangerously thin for you.”

If her rapid switch in expression was of any indication, Yukiko was about to protest on impulse in a manner quite expected of a teenage girl. Such words of protest, thankfully for her, never escaped her lips. For no sooner had her eyes narrowed to prepare for a rant, they happened to chance upon the grievous-looking wound on the Cataphract’s arm, complete with its equally grievous-looking bandage. At which point she let out a quick gasp.

“Are you… are you hurt?” she spoke quickly, her voice filled with a sort of good-Samaritan concern. Which was ironic, since, by all accounts, it was her sister who caused that wound in the first place.

“A silver dagger – my silver dagger – through the arm like a pike through a half-naked Cossack’s torso,” Wladislaw said, his voice ringing out in annoyance at the seemingly stupid question, raising his wounded arm as though it was both a mark of honor and . “You tell me whether it hurts.”

To Wladislaw’s surprise, Yukiko’s expression as she heard him was one of complete and utter shock, as though the entire thing about his being badly wounded by her sister was new to her. As soon as she registered the fact, the look of guilt on her face could not have been more complete. She shivered as she spoke.

“I… I… I’m so sorry,” she said, extreme concern writ on her face. “If only I knew before…”

“Oh really?”

Once again Wladislaw narrowed his eyes in disbelief, making every effort to show her that he didn’t buy it. The dagger was sunken to the hilt in his shield arm that night, a pretty obvious sight however he looked at it.

And then he realized that compared to the keen sights of his kind in the darkness, even the most pure-blooded werewolf would seem short-sighted and half-blind in comparison. He grudgingly mended his words, still making it absolutely clear he was not pleased with her in the least.

“Well, I’d chalk it down to a failure to concentrate on your part,” he said, his voice picking up a bit of goodwill. “Apology accepted.”

Then he bent down and picked up his gauntlet, putting it on his left hand as he resumed speaking.

“That aside,” he said, the intensity and annoyance in his voice having reduced a notch. “I believe you owe me an explanation. Two, if I were to include your unexpected disappearance.”

The fact that Wladislaw technically had no right to know what Yukiko did with her time conveniently flew over both their minds. The Polish soldier because of his inflated hubris and ill temper, and Yukiko owing to quite possibly having never been so directly criticized before by one who was by and large a stranger.

The girl took a deep breath to calm herself as she began to turn around, left then right, scouring the general area for any possible eavesdropper or any other curious, unwanted folks. While the place seemed empty at the moment, it remained not the kind of place for discussing discrete matters. The way she looked at Wladislaw’s injured arm suggested that she was, perhaps by her own good nature, at least moderately concerned about his well being.

“Do you have time to spare?” she finally asked.

“Not as much as I would like,” Wladislaw answered, shrugging. “Though I doubt my superiors would have an issue with an hour off or so.”

“Perfect,” Yukiko said, clasping her hands together as she measured her words for a short bout. “I’ll wait for you in my room if you wouldn’t mind. It’s safer there, and I happen to have just what it takes for your arm.”

“I see no problem with that,” the Cataphract said. “Lead the way.”

Contrary to what he was expecting, the girl instead waved her hands and shook her head hastily at him.

“No, no,” she said. “We both will be in big trouble if anyone sees us walking together. You’ll have to find your own way, I’m afraid.”

Wladislaw narrowed his eyes at the girl again in disbelief. He had every reason to think it was just another of her tricks to buy more time, yet there was no way he could justify that paranoia without actually doing what she told him to.

“If you say so,” he finally said, his tone quickly switched into a more serious, warning tone. “But if I find this to be another time-wasting trick, I’d be forced to inform our authorities on my findings. Clear?”

“Trust me,” she said, breaking out a smile as she strolled forward.

********


Wladislaw did not have to regret for taking her words for it. The only difficulty he met trying to join up with Yukiko this time was solely owing to his not very stellar sense of direction and the fact that the girl’s room was not in the most conspicuous of places. It took him upward of twenty minutes of running around the castle’s upper floor corridors before he could find his destination, but the moment he found it was the moment the business was done. Yukiko was already waiting for him inside, quickly opening and closing the door for him as quickly as the wind.

It was the first time Wladislaw had ever set foot into a girl’s room. A Japanese girl’s room bearing the distinct mark of a largely modern lifestyle with all the cutesy and slickness it entailed, for that matter. The actual furniture weren’t many to begin with, consisting of only a tea table, a working desk, a bookshelf and a built-in wardrobe with two mirrors. Wladislaw made a point to glance into the mirrors, quietly grinning at his own reflection. The myth that his kind didn’t have a mirror reflection was exactly that – a myth unaligned humans passed around out of sheer ignorance.

Such grin was only very momentary, however. What struck him as being far more remarkable was how the room looked and felt way smaller than it actually was. Perhaps such feel had something to do with the way the girl crammed all sorts of junks into it. The shelf was filled to the brim with colorful picture books, all of one size and arranged as neatly and with as much care as Wladislaw’s father used to give to his encyclopedias. Both the tea table and the working desk were dotted with plushies and figurines of all shapes and sizes, no doubt memorabilia scoured from junk dealers – or so Wladislaw thought. No self-respecting warrior in their right mind would stock exceedingly cute humanoid cats or super-deformed girls with unrealistic hair color in their holds. And that was not even counting the various posters she had plastered on the walls, more than half of which bore the image of an effeminate singer who probably made the historian Anna Komnena look like a manly man in comparison.

“That’s my hero Hirano Aki,” she said, her voice rising a little in excitement as soon as she saw the Polish Cataphract’s eyes turning towards the posters, only to again descend sharply when she realized Wladislaw was visibly cringing at mere sight of the picture. “Um… why are you looking at him like that?”

Wladislaw cleared his voice as he turned away from the picture to avoid any potential awkwardness or digression. From her part, that was. If he were to speak his mind, he’d say that such a man, were he an Imperial citizen, would quickly become the butt of the “a man to every woman and a woman to every man” joke considered to be in fine taste ever since the age of the late Roman republic. That would be, however, neither here nor there.

“Nothing,” he shook his head as he followed Yukiko’s example and sat down at the tea table with folded legs. His face quickly returned to its business-like appearance as he looked at her with all due sternness and seriousness.

“So I thought you could answer a few questions now, could you?”

“Not yet,” she said, smiling ever so gently at him, the kind of warm smile that normally would work like a charm on many a gentleman. “I need to see to your arm first, don’t I?”

The exceedingly cute expression on her face, eyes closed as her curved lips stretched into a mostly lovable smile, mirrored those of the collection of little figurines on her table quite well. Whether that face was endearing or annoying was entirely up for debate, and to the Polish soldier to was more the latter than the former.

“If you please,” he said, trying to repress his rising impatience. “Be quick about it.”

And then he quickly took off his glove and pulled his scaled sleeve up, throwing the former on the ground with a loud clang, revealing his mangled flesh barely held together by said chitinous binding that, by then, was starting to give way. Yukiko responded to his lack of patience with a rather calm gesture in comparison, standing up and walking towards the cupboard. She then produced from one of the drawers behind it a single jar of blackish ointment, some cotton wool, a medical sterilized cloth strip and a good measure of surgical thread. As soon as she caught a glimpse of Wladislaw’s makeshift organic bandage, she paused a little to think, and then rummaged through another drawer until she found a small pair of small scissors and surgical tongs as well as a brand-new, especially sharp scalpel.

“That’s… quite the collection,” Wladislaw rolled his eyes as he spoke, his voice filled with curiosity. “Do you carry around all these in your room all the time?”

“Just a way to practice,” she said as she sat back down on the table, laying the medical supplies before him. “I want to become a doctor later on, curing the sick, saving lives and all that. Don’t you figure this isn’t good experience?”

“I suppose,” Wladislaw said, shrugging very mildly as he stretched his wounded arm out in her full view.

And then Yukiko began to work, relieving Wladislaw’s arm of its scaly coating. The parts that were already dried, brittle and breaking down were skillfully removed with the tongs, while those parts that still clung to his skin were cut apart by both the scissors and the scalpel, then clamped off. Simple as it sounded, it still took her quite a while and a great deal of effort and concentration, evident in the sweat droplets rolling down her forehead. The amount of care she placed on the work indicated that she was trying her very best not to hurt the wounded soldier, an effort that might as well be moot. Over there in Komnenian lands, pain was seen as a mark of honor and quite rightfully so.

When that was done, she wiped her sweat with a sigh of relief before switching to her bandaging tools. Before her, Wladislaw’s arm now lay, the full extent of the injury clearly visible under the lamplight. To say that his magic did not help would be wrong, since the large gaping wound had closed somewhat over the past few days, albeit only just. The rim of the gash was turning black in color, a certain sign of his skin poisoned and dying. On the other hand, the general texture of the large patch of skin around it was pale and discolored, probably owing to being coated up in a scaly bandage most of the time. The only thing that made the injury somewhat less nauseating than something of that caliber on a human’s body was the complete absence of pus, abscesses, lymph or the likes. Yukiko’s face suddenly going slightly pale at the close-up of his wound suggested that this amateur medic, throughout all her life, probably had never seen something of the sort before.

“This is going to sting a little,” she said, whipping up a spoonful of the blackish ointment before spreading it on his injury as thinly as she could.

If Wladislaw did not feel pain since the beginning of her treatment, now he did. The moment the tincture touched his gaping wound, everything before the Cataphract’s eyes went black and starry, his sensation overwhelmed by the sheer amount of pain the medicine caused. If the pain was to persist for just another further moment, he would have been convinced that he was being played for fool and poisoned rather than healed. Such paranoia never came to fruition, however, as just a few seconds after that initial searing pain, both that pain itself and his original ailment began to subside. Maybe it was just him and the residue of the pain, but he could swear that the blackened patches were thinning down by the minute as the medicine took its course.

Still grimacing in pain, he nevertheless managed to muster enough of himself to ask.

“What is this thing?” he said, his teeth gritting as he spoke, resulting in a rather distorted tongue.

“Just herbal tincture mixed with silver antidote,” Yukiko said, grinning proudly. “We never have to use this very often, but whenever we have to break out this jar it would be an emergency. Like you.’

“Color me proud,” Wladislaw said, trying to force a smile. “Not every day that you are so wounded to require emergency treatment, isn’t it?”

Yukiko smiled and nodded as she reached out for the roll of cotton wool and sterilized strips, thoroughly wiping the surface of his wounds before wrapping them snuggly in medical strips, tying a firm yet loose knot over it to conclude the treatment.

“There, that’s done,” she said, her face flaring up in elation. “You’d better take some silver antidote to aid the healing process. I think I do have some around here – hang on a second…”

And then she turned around, stood up and shuffled towards the cupboard, rummaging through the supplies for another while before finally producing the bottle. It looked more or less identical to the bottle of poultice, aside from its content being pills rather than paste. She then returned to the table with the bottle and a glass of water.

“Here you go,” she said, handing both items to the Cataphract, which he gulped down with gusto.

“I can’t believe I am saying this,” he admitted after swallowing the pills, “but you’ve got quite the hands for medical treatment. Thank you.”

The girl giggled as her cheeks blushed a little at the unexpected praise.

“I’m happy to be helping, Mister… err…”

Her voice trailed off as her cheeks flushed even brighter when she finally realized that, despite having quite a bit to do with the Cataphract, she still had not learnt what his name was. At this point, her embarrassment had stopped being annoying and wheeled right back to being endearing, if only ever so slightly, to Wladislaw. He smiled at her and spoke, his voice filled with pride as per his family tradition whenever declaring his name and title.

“Sergeant Wladislaw Mieczowitz, Second-class Szlachcic of the Holy Komnenian Empire’s Polish-Lithuanian Administrative Region and Associate Brother of the Varangoi Kataphraktoi Somatophylakes,” he said with all due solemnity, a voice that was more or less out of place in a teenage Japanese girl’s room. “At your service.”

********

DF  Post #: 10
11/29/2011 9:59:43   
Argeus the Paladin
Member

Chapter 10
Clan Business


“Now, I guess you still owe me those answers.”

Wladislaw’s return to the original topic was as sudden as his tone was tactless, as the girl’s twitching eyes could testify. She quickly gathered herself, however. After all, it went without saying that he did not come there for some free medical treatment and some exchange of pleasantries.

“You’re an exacting kind of guy, don’t you know that?” she broke out a tiny giggle, before returning to a more serious turn of phrase. “What do you want to know?”

“What were those demons doing in the hold?” Wladislaw said, his face completely serious as he uttered each word. “If there is a traitor among the garrisons, I want his name.”

Yukiko stared at the Polish soldier without blinking, as though trying to find out whether he was joking or just plain ignorant. Wladislaw’s persisting serious, no-nonsense look, unfortunately, implied very much the latter.

“If I told you there had been no funny business threatening any of us that night,” Yukiko answered calmly, “would you believe me?”

Wladislaw was taken slightly aback. There was no reason for him to say yes, both from a logical and from a cautious point of view. Yet Yukiko’s tone and expression hinted nothing of treachery or deceit. That seemingly obvious contradiction caused the Polish soldier’s face to twitch confusedly.

“I want some further explanation before I can say anything about that,” he finally said, picking the most neutral answer he could muster. “The fact remained that some enemies were within the castle walls and…”

“Not exactly,” Yukiko retorted, interrupting his sentence. “Those Oni… weren’t our enemies.”

Whatever confusion Wladislaw had had a moment ago erupted into full-blown disbelief. He stared at her with the most inquisitive look available to him, his blood-red pupils locking onto hers, his forehead wrinkling as his senses strained to detect the smallest sign of lies from her.

“Nice try, young lady,” he said, his voice raised threateningly, just barely shy from being openly hostile, “but I am no fool, I’m afraid. Try a little harder next time if you want to conjure a convincing lie.”

“But… but I wasn’t lying! That’s just how it is!”

“Prove it,” Wladislaw said, as though commanding. “Or it’s off to the Colonel with you and your lies.”

The girl’s reaction to his order was a curious one. Her gaze remained innocent and truthful, but at the same time she was clearly hesitating. The room was slightly cold at that time, yet her forehead was dripping with sweat. She muttered something inaudible under her breath as she fidgeted with one of the figurines on the table nervously, like a pupil standing before the whole class with all eyes on her, having just been confronted with a question she had not prepared for. Whatever she would need to reveal to make him believe her, it would seem, would also reveal something completely unrelated that she did not want him to know.

Finally, she wiped the sweat off her forehead with her sleeve, slowly lifting her head at the Sergeant, having chosen the lesser of the two evils. the look in her eyes that of a gossipy girl about to divulge to a best friend another best friend’s secret, hoping ever so vainly that said secret would be kept safe while it almost invariably never would be. The analogy went on so far as to the actual words she uttered.

“If I told you what I know,” she said pleadingly, “would you promise to keep it a secret?”

“Depends,” Wladislaw said coldly. “You can’t make me promise to keep a secret of some details that could very well save lives – my comrades’ lives.”

Again the girl hesitated, keeping her neck bent as the fidgeting continued. It became obvious that Wladislaw was proving to be far less reasonable than she had thought he was. Once again she weighted her stake, momentarily not knowing what is better.

“I don’t have all day, you know,” Wladislaw reminded. “You could tell me what you know right now, or I’d have to do my sworn soldierly duty…”

Then he placed his right hand on the table, as though preparing to stand up and leave. Such bluff – if it was intentional, that is – finally broke the stranglehold. Almost at once Yukiko reached out and grabbed his hand. Or rather, what she thought she was doing. Wladislaw’s gloved hand was much, much larger than her tiny palms, creating a moderately humorous sight for his perusal.

“Wait, hold on!” she cried out. “Don’t go!”

“Then go ahead and tell me what I need to know,” Wladislaw said, his voice raised mercilessly, proving that he was indeed running out of patience.

The girl was about to take another pause when she realized that Wladislaw was not going to put up with that fiasco much longer.

“Alright,” she finally said, her voice suddenly shrunken into a quiet mutter barely audible, as though she did not really intend him to hear the last part in the first place. “But… please don’t tell anyone. If you can help it, of course.”

Taking a deep breath followed by a large swallow to calm herself down, she began to speak.

“Those demons… they were nothing more than – if you will – mercenaries,” she said, “for lack of better words.”

Wladislaw rolled his eyes. The disbelief in his general expression was still there, though enough of it had disappeared for him to gain a nominal amount of trust in her words. Barely enough to maintain the negotiation, that was.

“How so?” he asked, his voice now a fine mix of both said disbelief and a particular, conductive degree of professional intrigue. “Last time I checked, you don’t go around negotiating with demons, much less trying to recruit them. Not if you are sane, at the very least.”

“It’s… sort of hard to explain to an outlander like you,” Yukiko said. “Among the circle of priests and shrine maidens here, demons and spirits are just part of the many denizens of the world who can be tamed and coaxed into doing their biddings as well as being destroyed or exorcized. The Oni are just the easiest to be so manipulated as such.”

Wladislaw remained silent as he withdrew into a pondering posture when he realized exactly how hypocritical his last question was. Using being from other races – sometimes other planes of existence or some other metaphysical drivels along those lines – to do their bidding had been the norm in the Holy Komnenian Empire since the humble beginning of King Pergamonios I two millennia prior. The backbone of their entire economy had lay in the hands of the humble Hemoheilotai, for instance. Those human serfs, having sworn their blood and labor to said nobles in exchange for protection against pretty much everything from other supernatural factions’ encroachment to global financial downturns, were more indispensable to the Empire’s existence than half of the nobility.

That resonance did not mean Wladislaw had run out of questions, however.

“The fact remains,” he said, “that on our very first day here we were attacked by the same demons. How would you explain that?”

“Like I said,” Yukiko answered, “the Oni are quite easy to muster and rile up to do one’s bidding. They are the first choice for our – mostly my father’s – enemies because of that.”

She took a deep breath to ease her tension before continuing.

“But that doesn’t mean we can’t hire a few when we want to,” she said. “The three Oni you saw the other day were rented wholesale… by my father.”

Wladislaw’s eyelids stretched as far as it humanly could as he stared at the girl, making no attempt to conceal his astonishment.

“Say that again?” he said. “So let me get this straight – Lord Mitsumaru, in all his infinite wisdom, hired some mercenary demons to beat his daughter up?”

His mouth twisted and twitched as he looked at her for a few before speaking up a few.

“I hope you do realize how ridiculous this sounds, don’t you?”

His doubting words and expression was quickly doused when he took another glance at Yukiko, who, by then, was adopting a serious set of gestures herself.

“My sister… she’s special,” Yukiko finally said. “I don’t know the exact details, but she was born with the kind of power none other in the clan had, or our entire people for that matter.”

“What kind of power are we talking about here?”

Wladislaw asked, his curiosity beginning to be whetted. He leaned slightly forward towards her, showing, if nothing else, his eagerness to know more about that matter.

“If that’s the power to stick metal blades through enchanted Hemothorakes with impunity, we’d be in big trouble to make an enemy out of her,” he thought, shuddering slightly at the thought.

“We don’t really know,” Yukiko shook her head “That’s the whole point – all the priests and priestesses both legitimate and otherwise my father had consulted throughout the years never exactly reached an agreement on that matter. Some said she had a demon’s soul intertwined with her own, others that she had a particular connection with the spiritual world and can freely tap into it, still others resorted to… nonsense I can’t comprehend very well. The only thing they agree with one another is that my sister is going to be an… enormous asset against my father’s enemies once she knew what her power is and how to harness it. But…”

Yukiko’s voice then trailed off as she stopped, hesitating as to what she should best say. By then Wladislaw was listening especially attentively. He had known about something along those lines going on in the Empire, but it was the first time he had observed it in person.

“But what?” he asked impatiently.

“But until then…” Yukiko continued, her tone shivering and her voice growing softer with every word, “they say she is a continuous danger to both herself and everyone around her.”

“And have you any inkling of what said powers might be?” Wladislaw asked. “If I were you, I’d be sure to take… precautions to avoid any regrettable accidents.”

“My father could keep Fuyuko in an ivory tower forever if he wanted to,” Yukiko said, glaring at Wladislaw rather harshly for even thinking about such a suggestion. “But I doubt I need to tell you why that won’t work and why my father will never do that, do I?”

“Well, I suppose,” Wladislaw answered sheepishly, before returning fire with another question. “But what does it have to do with the demons the other day?”

“It is generally agreed upon by my father’s advisors that the best way to glean out my sister’s powers,” Yukiko said, pausing a little in mid-sentence for emphasis, “is to place her into a battle situation. The more powerful the opponent, the more likely she would, they say, be forced to use her powers as a bid for self-preservation. And that is where the Oni came into the story.”

As Wladislaw listened on, his previous intrigue slowly grew into a distinct disgust.

“So let’s see if I got the gist of it here,” Wladislaw said. “So your father’s best bet to help your sister is somehow to hire some demons that have proven to be extremely deadly to the uninitiated to beat her up in the hope she’d freak out and do something about it?”

He took a brief pause to gather his wit before continuing.

“Sergei’s old man is better at parenting than that,” he commented, “and he’s been dead for sixty years.”

Yukiko’s expression turned sour. She looked at the Cataphract, her arms propping her head, her hands cupped around her cheek as she let out a quiet sigh.

“I know,” she said. “At first everyone was against that idea. Then a few… unfortunate events happened, and it became clear that our clan has more enemies than we could handle otherwise. My sister was aware of that too – she more or less chose to go this way out of her own free will.”

“I see,” Wladislaw said, nodding. “And your place in the grand scheme of things is?”

“I take care of Fuyuko,” Yukiko said. “A sort of morale officer, conductor and medic for her ‘training’ sessions, if you will. I make sure nothing ill happens to her during the whole session, treat her bruises and cuts and keep her motivated and happy in between. It’s… the least I can do, you see.”

There was a dash of shame in Yukiko’s voice. The reason behind it was largely obscured by her ambiguous tone, however. Whether said shame was because she was powerless to help her sister more, because she was not the chosen one or both, Wladislaw could not tell.

“And then the other day’s incident happened,” Wladislaw chimed in. “Now it might be just me and my lack of acquaintance with your obscure magic and powers, but if that performance she put up was not a splendid display of power, I don’t know what is.”

“That is exactly what my father have been bothered by since then,” Yukiko said, nodding quickly. “She did display some terrific power, but the outburst was anything but controlled.”

She looked at Wladislaw, smiling with a particular degree of gratefulness in it.

“I’d have to thank you for that, Mr. Sergeant,” she said. “Had you not knocked her out back then, nobody knows what kind of damage Fuyuko might have caused under that trance.”

”Self-defense, is all,” Wladislaw answered, shaking his head rather humbly, before his face took a turn for a more concerned look. “How did your sister fare since then? I hope I didn’t injure her or something…”

“No, you didn’t,” Yukiko said, her face glowing. “Whatever caused her to erupt the way she did had also granted her some kind of odd resilience. She has been quite alright since then, if only with a bit of a headache.”

Wladislaw, however, was not convinced.

“I didn’t see her in the past few days,” he said. “And I’ve been all over the castle looking for you then.”

Yukiko paused, the smile on her face promptly extinguished.

“That… that’s because my father decided to keep her… locked up until he’s looked into the matter,” she said, her voice now filled with anxiety. “I… I honestly don’t know whether that is good or bad any more.”

She took a brief pause to inhale deeply before continuing.

“That’s why I was away all the while,” she said. “Between school, looking after Fuyuko so she doesn’t feel lonely or sad and my… other duties, I was quite hard-pressed for time. Until today, that is.”

Wladislaw nodded in acknowledgement. That explanation made perfect sense, now that he looked at it.

“And has your father reached any conclusion about why that happened?” Wladislaw asked. “If he figures out why, this whole business would be done, I presume?”

“Unfortunately, no,” Yukiko shook her head. “And the way things go, it would be a good while before they could reach any conclusion at all.”

“What’s exactly the problem then?”

“We didn’t know what exactly happened that triggered that,” she answered. “It’s a long story, but that day’s training was a little… abnormal. In short, Fuyuko decided to begin on her own before my father or I have arrived. And then when I made it there… everything’s already done.”

A flash of realization coursed through Wladislaw’s head as he ehard Yukiko’s assessment.

“Well, you do have a witness as to what happened back then,” he said, his lips curving into a rather arrogant smile. “Me. I’d be pleased to offer what help I can on that matter if you need.”

Yukiko’s eyes opened wide at Wladislaw. The look on her face indicated she was punching herself mentally for not having thought of that earlier.

“I… forgot about that,” she said, her expression filled with joy. Such expression, unfortunately, quickly died down as she realized something else.

“But… no, not really,” she mumbled, shaking her head ever so mildly. “Our clan’s business had always been particularly... complex. Even if you are to show up, it could very well not solve anything.”

“If a witness doesn’t work, how about a simple piece of evidence?” he said, his voice raising a little as he drew his silver dagger from its scabbard and placed it on the table.

Yukiko’s eyes opened wide as she stared at the new object and examining its exquisite handiwork, her face filled with intrigue.

“And this is…?”

“Everything your sister did that night, she did it with this blade,” Wladislaw said, smiling. “In hindsight, it might have been a mistake throwing it out there for her, but hey – what’s done is done. But if anything could help you with that investigation, it’s this weapon.”

There was a brief moment of silence as Yukiko weighed her options. Said silence took much longer than Wladislaw would like, but just before he was able to raise his voice to protest, Yukiko finally spoke up.

“I’ll see what I can do with this,” she said, breaking out a brief smile with a distinct optimistic undertone. “If it works well… I don’t know how I can thank you.”

“Well, if I could do a service in the name of the teachings of the House of Chevalier, the deed itself is a reward,” Wladislaw said, beaming brightly. “And also as my thanks for the free treatment.”

He raised his injured arm for emphasis, raising a quick blush on the girl’s cheeks as a result.

“I’d just ask you this again, Mr. Sergeant,” she said, her voice now calm and solemn. “Everything I’ve told you today is… clan business, and I’ve already done a disservice to my family by telling you that. It would not do anyone any good if words get out to anyone else of what we discussed today, would it?”

“I’d keep that in mind,” Wladislaw said. “Though, if at any points your clan business runs against our best interest, I’d have to do it. Am I clear?”

“I guess so,” Yukiko said, letting out a long sigh. “Let’s hope it doesn’t come to that, shall we?”

“Likewise,” Wladislaw said, before standing up and heading for the doorway…

********


The local Shinto shrine of Sakurasaki was located in a natural recess overlooking the plateau on which the town rested. Its only connection to the outside world was a rocky, winding stairway carved into the mountain itself, branching off from one of the smaller lanes. The naturally quaint air of the place, coupled with the difficult terrain it occupied ensured rather few visitors and pilgrims all year round aside from the major holidays. And even then never would more than a couple dozens would populate its interior at any given time. Currently, in the dead of winter, with its main entrance more or less coated in snow, very few people, if at all, would think of venturing to it unless a family ritual called for it.

That was where Yukiko was now headed, not as a pilgrim but as someone going back home, if the clothes she wore was of any indication. A wooden pair of slippers, a loose white tunic and an even looser, red baggy skirt-pant hybrid were rather impractical in that freezing weather. Yet she wore it anyway, since there was no garment that would give her a better sense of self-identity and association to the place as that traditional shrine maiden outfit.

Then again, the weight of that garment had lately become rather hard to bear on her part. She had been frequenting the shrine less as a ritual maiden as her religion called for and more like a pilgrim looking for solace and advice, only to, like a dog being thrown a bone, be assigned with more even tasks to carry out after the immediate weight in her heart had been lifted. The duties of a shaman in the unique backdrop of the town and all its complex relations that were not always obvious had been tiring her out each day more than the last.

Busy in her thought, it was only when Yukiko was near the top of the stairway did she realize that there was one set of footsteps in the snow-covered steps more than there usually was. One probably caused by a heavy, metallic pair of boots, since they pressed deeply into the snow and left a pronounced, sharp mark in it. Such footsteps, until the Cataphracts’ arrival two weeks prior, had been totally unseen of in town. A sudden, gripping bout of anxiety descended upon Yukiko when she thought about it for a second. With due haste, she picked up her pace and hurried into the shrine’s main hall.

The sound of people talking within the main hall could be heard as soon as Yukiko crossed the donation box halfway through the front yard. Or rather, a single voice of one man speaking loudly and menacingly, a voice that belonged to a battlefield or a public forum rather than a holy site as this. Fearing the worst, Yukiko’s brisk pace transformed into a sprint, dashing into the shrine’s main hall, heedless of her bulky clothing.

A she stopped outside the hall’s doorway and shot a quick glance inside, a scene completely foreign to her was playing out. The senior priestess, flanked by two of Yukiko’s fellow shrine maidens, was in the middle of conversing with a figure Yukiko had never seen before. Her racing heart slowed down slightly, knowing that at least her fellow shrine maidens were not in danger. Taking a deep breath, she briskly stepped aside and watched.

The strange figure, at first sight, looked quite like a Cataphract to Yukiko’s eyes. Then again, not being used to foreign supernatural peoples and their styles of arms and armors, she had every reason to lump them all together under the category of ‘weird armored outlanders’. His torso was fully clad in a thick, hardened leather cuirass over mail knee-length hauberk, covering half of his splinted greaves and boots that protected his shins and feet. Behind his back he strapped an imposing, double-bladed great long war axe that made the Cataphracts’ standard-issue longswords look like harmless penknives in comparison. Naturally the figure himself was huge, towering at least a whole feet over the priestess and one and a half over Yukiko herself.

In contrast to his heavily clad body, he left his head bare, perhaps to better stimulate conversation. To Yukiko, that was a counterproductive choice, since his face laid bare was more frightening and savage than anything a faceless helmet could impose. Wild ginger hair and formidable beard and mustache, grotesque-looking black-blue face paint, a pair of bulging eyes always staring arrogantly at the opposition… he was everything her father was, only much, much more savage. Add in his large, eagle nose and a mouth ever ready to open wide enough to swallow whole a trout and Yukiko had every right to shiver at his mere countenance.

Her senior priestess appeared to be able to maintain a far greater degree of composure compared to Yukiko, since she still looked as calm as ever, like a completely undisturbed pond, answering everything he had to offer.

“I doubt I understood your request, Emissary,” she said, her voice as resolute as it was polite. “Our shrine here is independent of the Daimyo’s influence and jurisdiction, not too unlike the men of the cloth from the West. Anything you want to know, you would be far more successful to ask Lord Mitsumaru – or any noble slated to take his place – himself rather than us.”

The armored man merely smirked with the air of arrogance of someone who thought he knew everything, regardless of whether his perception was right or not. He paced to and fro in front of the priestess for a few, before stepping up in front of her, staring down on her as he spoke.

“Really now, priestess?” he asked, as though interrogating. “My Jarl has plenty of evidence from reliable sources that the shrine here does participate in a few… unofficial pet projects of curious interest, the kind that the Daimyo normally would not admit to exist but are there to his benefits anyway…”

His voice was deep and far more wolfish than even the most wolf-blooded of Yukiko’s ken. For all she knew, his normal voice was already about as frightening as her father’s when he was furious, something both she and Fuyuko never wanted to risk.

“Those projects, even if they exist at all, have nothing to do with us, as I have been telling you since the start,” the priestess answered, still largely maintaining her countenance, though her slightly raised voice suggested that her patience was wearing thin. “I sincerely suggest that you double-check your sources or otherwise find a better means of validating your intelligence.”

“If that is everything I wanted, we would have far better and more efficient methods to do it,” the armored ‘emissary’ answered with a chuckle. “What I want from you, priestess, is a proof of your cooperation and goodwill. That you are willing to support our just cause should the time come. That you are a friend of the High Monarchy and a worthy ally of both High Jarl Aedric Alesiadr and my Jarl.”

His voice lowered slightly as he scanned his eyes across the room, making the priestess’ attendants flinch in fright.

“Would you seriously give up on that chance?” he said emphatically. “Such is the prize everyone, up to and including men of the cloth in our Northern homeland would desire.”

“We honestly have little interest in what you are proposing, Emissary,” the priestess answered. “With all due respect to the High Jarl and his willingness to associate himself with our humble establishment, we are but a small monastic congregation. The politics of the realms does not interest or concern us as much as you think.”

The armored figure was about to continue his reasoning when suddenly his face tensed up, his thick, sharp brows knitted while his eyes caught fire. His right hand reached for his axe, not yet brandishing it, though making absolutely clear that he was not hesitating to do so if bad comes to worse.

“Who goes there?”

His voice bellowed out, echoing around the hall like the howling of a wild dire wolf. Yukiko’s heart skipped a beat – she had, just a second prior, leaned too hard on the doorway and caused an admittedly small creak.


For the moment Yukiko was at a loss for what to do. She had seen plenty of menacing figures throughout her life, many of whom bore arms more vicious and countenances more inhuman than their guest. And yet the moment her sight set upon the flaring pits of seemingly primal rage that were the axeman’s eyes, she couldn’t help but feel overwhelmed. It was nothing like the demons she and her fellow shrine maidens were used to confronting. Frightening as they were to laymen, they essentially were no more frightening than a prey’s desperate glare to a crew of hunters armed to the teeth and well-trained enough to put them down with gusto. Both Yukiko and those monsters knew without saying that the demons posed zero threat to her comrades and normally would be treated with contempt accordingly.

The axeman, however, was a huge unknown to her. Knowing that the head priestess would stand by her no matter what, she was not exactly afraid of that axe of his. His looks, however, were another entirely different story. The look in his eyes, a near-perfect reflection of what he was as a person according to her philosophical beliefs, was so saturated with a kind of grudge and hatred so intense that just a quick glimpse at it made her break out in cold sweat.

Yukiko finally reached a decision just seconds before the axeman would step past the doorway and spot her after quite a bit of mulling oer that understandably felt like a long winter. She took a deep breath, stressed her shoulders and clenched her fists – presumably to stop herself shivering. And then, as calmly as she could artificially forge her expression and features to be, she stepped into the open to face the axeman, bent on depriving him of the pleasure of finding her out.

It was quite an unpredictable move, at least from the axeman’s perspective, as his rapidly morphing expression testified. The warrior’s face, as soon as his eyes had swept across Yukiko’s face, changed dramatically. He lowered his great axe as he stared at the girl, the fury in his countenance just now having lessened by no small amount. In its place, however, there now was a particular dose of disbelief and astonishment, which, in his case, translated into a tone that was no less frightening than his roaring voice in the first place.

“Who in Toutatis’ name are you?” he demanded, his voice booming even louder as he stared at her.

At this performance Yukiko’s brave and dignified façade began to crack. Whatever sliver of self-control she had at that point was barely sufficient to keep herself from collapsing prone on the ground huddled in a fetal position with her hands over her ears. All the while, she was shivering like a malaria patient, only stopping when the head priestess intervened on her behalf.

“Pardon me, Emissary,” she said, bowing ever so slightly with her hands clasped as she shuffled between Yukiko and the warrior. “May I have the pleasure of introducing to you,” she briefly glanced at Yukiko before returning to him, “Mitsumaru Yukiko, one of my fellow sisters…”

She nodded meaningfully at the warrior before continuing.

“… who also, conveniently, happens to be Lord Mitsumaru’s elder daughter.”

The priestess’ formal introduction, part of her style as far as Yukiko knew, still painted a light blush on her cheeks. After all, of all the things she differed from her twin sister, not liking to be talked about was a trait they both shared.

“Really now?”

The warrior’s response to this revelation, on the contrary, was interesting enough. He squinted his eyes making no attempt to conceal his intrigue as he scanned Yukiko from top to toe with all due curiosity. It was as though he was taking note of her face, her features, her garments, her bodice… right down to her very essence as a person. His sudden interest in her did not help Yukiko’s confusion and fright much, and for the next moment she was starting to shiver. Not a good performance in and of itself, but she doubted anyone could do better in her shoes.

It took the Emissary a while before he lifted his inquisitive eyes from her form, his hand rubbing his chin.

“Hmm… yes,” he finally nodded, acknowledging what he had seen. “Toutatis’ gift is understandably not so strong with you, but what you have is still… far more noticeable than that of your kind I have seen lately.”

He took another complete look all over Yukiko before stowing his great ax behind his back again. He then bowed her, a gesture presumably mimicking the Japanese tradition, and yet was so insultingly clumsy in its execution that she was unsure whether he was being at all offensive on purpose or was just that ignorant of proper Japanese gestures. Or maybe it was that axe of his that made the whole gesture seemed off. Yukiko probably wasn’t the most qualified person to make that judgement.

“In any case,” he said, having made some effort to rein down his booming voice into a more restraint and civil tone and volume, “well met, daughter of Mitsumaru.”

“Y… yeah, nice to… to meet you, mister,” Yukiko stammered, not knowing what better to say. “And… and you are?”

The head priestess shot a quick glance at the warrior, as though telling him outright to keep his mouth shut before speaking on his behalf.

“Thegn Hestrulfr Sverdborg, a retainer of Jarl Ingvar Seaxnar of the High Wolf Monarchy,” she introduced with all due formality, less because Yukiko might be interested in it and more to stroke the emissary’s sense of self-importance. “Or, in terms you are more familiar with, Yukiko, he’s a… foreign dignitary here to discuss particular matters with the Daimyo and your father.”

“I… I see. My pleasure, sir” Yukiko answered, nodding in acknowledgement as she broke out a customary, diplomatic at the figure just like the good Japanese girl she was brought up as. “By the way… you were discussing something with Sister Natsumi, aren’t you? Then… then I guess I have no business here…”

That last part was not entirely diplomatic. Suffice to say, after multiple incidents earlier in her life – or her sister’s, for that matter – she had learnt that the best way to live with her father in peace was to not bother about his businesses and dealings. After all, given enough tough lessons, even the most curious kid would learn to rein in her bad habits. That attitude carried on well until her young adulthood.

“That’s smart,” the emissary said, his massive beard quacking in a chuckle as he nodded at her. “This does not concern you in the slightest. We shall keep it that way, yes?”

He turned around, turning his back towards her.

“I give you ten seconds to make yourself scarce,” he said. “We wouldn’t want anyone not concerned to get tangled up.”

At that point, the head priestess’ eyes flared up, as thought having caught a gap in her opponent’s defense. Which she did, figuratively.

“You said it yourself, emissary,” she said slyly. “Your dealings does not concern Yukiko, and neither does it concern us by extension.”

The emissary was, understandably, bewildered at her sudden declaration.

“Hold on,” he rolled his eyes at her with both bewilderment and a pronounced look of anger. “What does this girl have to do with the business we are discussing?”

“Emissary, it is only reasonable,” she answered, accentuating her statement much more than previously, “that we can’t be expected to know more of what goes on within the walls of Sakura-jo than the daughter of the castle lord himself.”

Her eyes darted back to Yukiko for a brief moment, before turning back to the emissary.

”If Yukiko here can’t help you with whatever you are seeking,” she continued, “we naturally can’t, now can we?”

The emissary was stunned for a moment as le looked back and forth at the two offending women. Even the most dim-witted of warriors would know that there was a point where no amount of threats and coercion would work, and that seemed to be the point for him. Finally, he exhaled loudly before turning back to the priestess.

“Fine,” he growled, “Have it your way.”

“Our pleasure,” the priestess bowed. “Now, if you would excuse us… we need to return to our prayers and other humble monastic duties. We would bother you no longer.”

The emissary glared dagger at the priestess, before striding towards the doorway, defeated and empty-handed. Before he left for good, however, he did turn back for a final threat of sort, complete with a direct pointing at her.

“But by Odin and Toutatis, I shall get to the bottom of this,” he said loudly. “And if I find out you were hiding something from me, anything at all, priestess, then you shall have to answer to High Jarl Aedric Alesiadr himself. And his fury, make no mistake, is a thousand times more fearsome and a million times more brutal than that of a humble Thegn.”

Having said that, he began to stride down the steps, leaving behind not even a farewell. The echoes from his steel sole still lingered about the main hall for a while before the cold winter wind drowned it down. It was only when those menacing footsteps had finally been out of the picture that Yukiko emptied out her lungs in relief.

“Sister Natsumi,” she asked the head priestess. “What was that all about?”

“Trouble,” the head priestess answered, sighing deeply in mid-sentence. “All you have to know is that the High Wolves’ agents are here in Japan. In Sakurasaki, actually.”

“But… but aren’t they like half the globe away?” Yukiko asked back with all due bewilderment. “What exactly are they doing here?”

“Well, they are,” Natsumi answered. “And as for why, your guess is as good as mine. Apparently something in Japan, in this very city, seems to have piqued their interest.”

Yukiko cupped her chin, racking her brain before exclaiming.

“Could that be…” she raised her voice, her face still taken over by a certain sense of dreadful revelation. “Could they be after our Cataphract friends?”

“Not quite, I reckon,” Natsumi answered. “For one, Hestrulfr came here just very shortly after the Cataphracts arrived. It’s not likely he could go from the Scandinavia to Japan within half a day’s notice.”

And then her expression changed for a more serious look as she paused, apparently hesitating for some reason.

“And for the other,” she finally said, “well, there are things that do not concern you, Yukiko.”

Needless to say, Yukiko was not amused.

“But… I’m worried. About Fuyuko, about you, about all of our sisters and everyone we know!” Yukiko said. “There must be something I can help, right? Right?”

Natsumi, predictably, was unfazed.

“As I said,” Natsumi answered. “These things do not involve any of us, including both you and Fuyuko.”

She then smiled warmly at her subordinate, as though coaxing her back into calmness.

“I appreciate your concern either ay,” she said, before promptly changing the topic with so much as a quiet clearing of her throat. “Anyway, I guess you have something you wish to tell me, don’t you?”

She glanced at her two attendants, signaling them to leave them to themselves for the moment. The unspoken order was carried out quickly enough – a moment later, it was only Yukiko and Natsumi standing opposite to each other in the shrine’s main hall.

“Well, I’m all ears,” she said. “What do you have to say?”

It was now Yukiko’s turn to hesitate. For a brief moment, she just stood there, not knowing where to begin.

“I… I met him again,” Yukiko finally said.

Natsumi’s eyes flared up with great interest.

“Oh?” she asked, her voice raised a little. “And how did that go?”

“Well, I guess,” Yukiko answered after measuring her words. “He’s… a strange individual in my books. He seems to be a reliable sort, though not a saint by a long shot.”

“Nobody is,” Natsumi said. “You should have known that by now, shouldn’t you, Yukiko?”

“Yes, but… but that’s beside the point,” Yukiko answered, feeling confused at her own words. “He’s just… strange. I mean, he is a foreign soldier who just got entangled in a rather… intriguing local business that could swing in many ways to his benefit, and yet… and yet his only concern is whether it would affect his Empire’s interests in any way.”

Contrary to Yukiko’s attitude, Natsumi seemed to be strangely indifferent.

“That’s hardly surprising,” she said. “They say that the typical Imperial noble are either religiously loyal retainers to the Komnenid bloodline or figuratively and literally bloodthirsty zealots who knew no friend and family but the Empire itself, depending on who you ask.”

“Their priorities are… messed up,” she winked at the junior shrine maiden, “if you’d like to look at it that way.”

Natsumi then clasped her hands together as she turned to Yukiko.

“But the more important thing is,” she said. “Did he reveal any more about what happened that night?”

Yukiko immediately produced from her person the offending object – the silver dagger her sister was using in that night’s mess, wrapped in several layers of cloth and paper.

“Here, Sister,” she said, unraveling the pommel and drew out the blade. She bit her lips as she did so, taking care so that the silvery edge would not touch her skin at the slightest. She still grimaced slightly in discomfort, but noticeably so, as her hand wrapped around the handle made of fine silver.

The head priestess’ eyes opened wide as her playful and carefree expression earlier turned into fascination. Said fascination, however, seemed to have stemmed not from the blade’s design and make, but rather from the very material of the weapon itself.

“Silver?” she asked, glaring at the blade inquisitively. “I should have guessed.”

“What’s wrong, Sister?” Yukiko asked, her voice understandably tinted with anxiety. “Will… will Fuyuko be alright?”

It took a few seconds for the priestess to register her subordinate’s question. She dashed her eyes quickly from the blade back to the presenter, making every effort to conceal her apparently abnormal interest in the blade.

“Huh?” she said as she snapped out of her trance. “No, nothing. Nothing wrong so far as I know.”

She then lifted her lips in a reassuring smile at her subordinate. Unlike her previous attempts, however, this smile of hers was not the least convincing or reassuring for that matter.

“Just relax, Yukiko,” she said. “She’s going to be just fine. Trust me on this.”

Before said hesitation could be further questioned, her voice once again resumed its natural assertiveness.

“Well, you know what you should do,” she said. “Securing an… ally among the Cataphracts is of vital importance for us, Yukiko.”

Yukiko’s eyes were firmly planted on the ground as she listened to her elder, maintaining that posture for a while after Natsumi had finished her instruction.

“Sister Natsumi,” she finally said. “Would you reckon… he would bother to even lend us a hand?”

“I’d say so,” she nodded. “I can’t make any guarantee, but you can, you know, try. Our interests, after all, aren’t that far off from the Empire’s, at least for the moment.”

“I’ll do my best,” Yukiko answered, nodding firmly. “If it would help Fuyuko and my father, I’d do anything.”

[center[********


< Message edited by Argeus the Paladin -- 12/14/2011 21:43:22 >
DF  Post #: 11
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