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jasbraq The Youngest Elder

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Meet the Berbignons


The Perrench siblings met within the noble dorm of the oldest Berbignon. ”That damned brat didn’t think meeting with his family was worth his time?” Armand looked as if a blood vessel might pop any second. The only thing keeping his anger from spilling over was the gentle hand of his sister keeping him calm. ”You know how he is, Armie. He has become busier lately.” The eldest sibling huffed as the others tried to keep him calm. ”Perhaps you are right, but Lucien will reach the age to attend. Him not being here. . .”

”It is quite alright, Brother. . . I did not expect him to appear anyway.” The youngest pensively lowered his head. But as the three sat around the table, all with different emotions on the matter, the doors opened and from it the silhouette of the third child would be seen.

”I’m truly sorry that I’m late. I had some business to attend to.” He used his own capacity to pull back the seat and placed himself onto it. ”Keeping someone as important as Doge Vermidra waiting could set the wrong impression of Perrence itself into their thoughts.

Armand’s anger was visible to everyone in the room. It was supposed to be HIS right, HIS inheritance as the oldest, but instead the third child gained it all for Oraphe liked him slightly more. It’s unfair, his whole branch of the family being cast aside into mediocrity if his younger brother has any child. He smirked rather smugly Yvain's way. ”So, how is it looking? Found any suitable partners for one as grandiose as yourself?” Yvain raised his eyebrow. ”Not any in particular, some ladies kept me company in Mezegol, and there was that one other woman.”

The oldest sibling’s smirk only grew more wide upon hearing his younger brother’s words. ”No, no, I meant as in a marriage partner. Me and Josephine are already expecting our first child, you see? It would be a shame for the heir of our great father to have no children except a couple bastards.” He took a sip from his glass, him being the only one who had emptied his glass several times over already. ”If my greatness is as people say it is, I must have a suitably great partner, no?” He twirled his finger on the table. ”Would you tell me if Josephine still resents me for not picking her sister as my betrothed?”

Armand’s expression turned sour once more. ”She did not like it in the slightest. She was groomed to be your perfect partner, yet you declined her effort, her determination to climb this social ladder our forefathers have created..” Yvain’s sigh was heavy, he did not wish to explain himself once more. ”She was only acting to be my ‘perfect partner’. I just wish for someone that is real with me. If she would’ve just been true with me instead of saying and doing as she was groomed to do, I would have accepted her.”

”You waltz over someone’s effort as just not being ‘real’ enough for you? How heartless can you be, little brother?” Armand looked around, to see his other two siblings looking rather uncomfortable with the situation. He could stop, but he had to say one last thing. . . ”Is that Revidian boy’s trueness good enough for you? I heard rumors that the two of you have gotten rather intimate. . . Father’s heart would break if he heard his favorite son turned out to have a taste for Revidian men.”

The third child’s eyes went wide, not with any anger but surprise. ”You’d dirty your own brother’s name for your own good?” Lucien backed away slightly from the table. ”Awww, is my baby bwotha angwy with his big bwotha?” The oldest rubbed his eyes as if he cried. ”No, I’m not angry with you, Armand. I am just disappointed. You say that I like Revidian men so much, yet the way you speak right now. . . It makes it sound like you truly enjoy having the Doge’s sausage in your mouth.” It was not the younger sibling’s turn to be snarky back.

”How dare you say that about your older brother, you brat?!” The leadvein began to draw, so much for the peaceful family gathering. It was then that the sole woman in the room stood up and with a hefty sigh roared out. ”Enough! Both of you are acting like insolent children.” She let out a sigh before taking her seat once more. ”You two will behave or I will make sure Lucien will be the one to inherit it all, securing your futures as either a one-way trip to the monasteries or if you’re lucky, ending up a titleless Zeno.”

The two’s eyes then both traveled to the youngest who reluctantly hid behind his chair. Yvain was the first to speak up after clearing his throat. ”I am sorry, Sister. I spoke out of line.” He lowered his head, but when the oldest of the four decided to be silent on the matter, Cecile spoke up. ”Very well, your apology is accepted.” Lucien was once more seated in his chair, it was a bit more troublesome since he was not as strong as the two brothers he looked up to, nor could he ever be. He looked Yvain’s way and he could feel something in the back of his neck, once the sensation stopped the boy seemed to smile and in return Yvain smiled back.

The rest of the festivities went rather smoothly all things considered, the two troublemakers kept in check by the one sister in the group.
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Hidden 2 mos ago 2 mos ago Post by Fallenreaper
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Mahal

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jasbraq The Youngest Elder

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Cautions and Ambitions


”You need to rethink! Father, he will drag us all so far through the mud that we will soon have to grovel to counts! The eldest begged the head of the house, yet the older man’s expression showed to be rather unimpressed. ”That may be so, but you are not showing enough worth to take his place, Armand. The pot truly is calling the kettle black.” Jacques’ eyes stared daggers into his own blood. ”Once you reveal yourself to be worth my blessings, I might think it over.” ”Father, what do you?-” ”What I mean is that once you stop being such an eyesore, I might give you a chance. If only you and your brother could be a bit more like your dear sister. Alas, perhaps there is still hope for Lucien.”

The lord of the estate sighed as he waved towards his servant. ”Let the other annoyance in.” The servant responded with a bow before she left the building. Arriving with the second son by her side. ”You wish to speak to me, father?” The boy greeted his own father with barely even a nod of his head. ”Do know that my time has become more valuable now that I am working in the direct interest of our King.” Armand’s built up resentment was all too visible the way his eyes looked at his own brother with nothing but disdain. He approached Yvain and laid a hand on his shoulder. ”Father wishes to discuss the recent development with you, ‘o great, royal pole-smoker.” and just like that he left the room.

”I assume you have heard of the developments in Palapar.” His words accompanied with an expression that could only be described as ‘uneasy’. ”You mean the inevitable? Anyone with a brain could have anticipated that in a world with the Traveller’s goons and their masked fools running amok, something of the sort would happen.” Yvain’s face showed nothing short of pure disgust. ”The fact that they’re our ally is revolting. Being so with the ol-” He was cut off by a sharp snap of the father’s fingers before he could finish his sentence. ”Yvain, we cannot risk mingling ourselves with such matters. It could become disastrous for us.”

Yvain squinted his eyes and lowered his head.”As you wish, father. But you are aware that the hypocritical Revidians will get involved. They’re like necrophagous beasts with how opportunistic they are to profit whilst not dirtying their hands. It's disgusting.” Even if he knew one decent Revidian did not revise his outlook on Prospero’s dystopia. ”That might be true, but we are not Revidian rats. Do your best not to compare yourself to them. We are inheritors of Avince’s vigor, the people that have surpassed them. They are but the bickering remains of a long splintered empire thinking themselves the descendants of it.” Jacques’ voice rang stern. ”I know that, father. I would never lower myself to compare myself to them.”
The older man slumped slightly into his seat. ”However we might have to come face to face with them. A war is truly looking inevitable, regrettable as it is. Yvain grinned upon seeing his own father’s onlook upon the upcoming conflict. ”This is not going to be just a war, father. It is a war of ideals. A war of philosophies. Not just about territory, but the ruler of the new world that arises.”

”I am Verusand’s chosen, born for the same greatness as their mortal flesh.” He spread his arms with a triumphant smile. ”If the Revidians want to spread their broken and flawed ideals. It is only natural that it lays upon the Perrench to correct them and punish them for their childish tantrums.” He shook his head. ”Nay, we should look upon this more broadly. We should prove their ideals wrong by spreading our own! To paint the world green!. . . . To bring forth a-”

PAX PARRENCII
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Roslyn Wicke
"What can you tell us about the threat?"
It Came from the Bog

Location: Viiqii - Qarii’Muuna, Mycormi
Just the Beginning
Roslyn and Xiuyang
Sounds Like Trouble
Some Times, Bigger Is Better
Trick Shot
Putting Evil to Rest
No Rest for the Wicked
Bow to Hellish Royalty
An Unexpected Choice



Other Scenes




OOC: This is messy as heck and apologies for that, I did my best to keep it in Roslyn's pov. I also smoothed out issues and stuff, with changes that better fit.
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Hidden 2 mos ago 2 mos ago Post by Jumbus
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Those United in Common Cause



Location: Ersand'Enise


For a pretty penny, a girl like Arianna Capobianco could afford a modest room within the merchant quarters. The rooms were more spacious than that of commoners and one could imagine it a little smaller than a nobles room, although she would keep no scope of reference.

Despite being in the second year, few decorations or memorabilia stood out in her room. A Revidia flag hung near her bed and a figurine of a dragon sat on her desk from the first year of trials. She had mixed feelings about the dragon, it reminded her of an outstandingly fun time she had at the event but it also brought back memories of a boy she liked on the team, the feeling was not mutual.

She wore trousers and a button shirt similar to what an on-duty Revidian navy woman might wear. The shirt fit poorly and she favoured rolling up the sleeves instead of going to resize it. For a girl who had no background or family history in the military, this was quite the shift in fashion from her compliance to the typical Revidian dresses. The later night required a meeting and she was not to look weak for it.

She slid the upper abacus bead of the sixth row down ticking the calculation over to 50,000, adjusting the beads from the lower rows she came out to the new running count of 52,235 Veneficus in monthly profit for Ersand’Enise Zenobucks taking away material costs and a rough estimate for labour, there was still more to cover.

She didn’t know why she picked Zenobucks for her economics assignment, she didn’t even enjoy coffee. She drank it because she needed the boost but she could never really say she enjoyed it. She simply chose the business in the closest proximity and with the best ease of estimation. Then again, what could she pick for economics that she would be truly passionate about?

She tried to think that her days ticking away at an abacus and crunching numbers would only be something she would have to cover in school. Arianna liked to forget her father had an abacus as a permanent fixture in his office when time came to do the accounts. Perhaps her future really did lay in the endless calculation.

Some students were made to excel, go on spectacular missions, and carve their names into the future history books. Then there were students like her, only there to, well, study. Arianna never stood out from the crowd once. She took the classes that were expected of her, she did reasonably well but not exceptionally so, her teams had a mediocre performance in the trials, she had yet to know love or even have her first kiss, and she never sought a position of renown because that was not her place. She was not exceptional, she did not stand out, and her life was nothing but enslavement to a fucking abacus. Crunching numbers to crunch more numbers such that you can have more numbers to crunch in the hopes that you have more numbers to crunch than your competition and that's just good business. It was pathetic…


My fellow Revidians, take a look at what this school has become... You see what is happening in front of you. No doubt, you see the injustices happening before you; those held in custody, and those being silenced for speaking out against it. Maybe you are scared to act or try to defend it because that injustice calls itself one of us... But I know Revidia, I know the beauty of its rolling hills, I have tasted its wine, I have danced with its women and men alike. Through all my travels there is a reason I always come back there out of anywhere in the world... But I ask you now to look at the up toward the Forked Tower, where a girl was taken from her home in the early morning and held there without a word. The Perrench think that we condone this, that this is the work of the Central Alliance. I want you to tell me if that is the Revidia you know. I want you to tell me if that is a Revidia you can take pride in. I say no, that is not Revidia.

To those who call themselves Revidian, I ask you to fight. What Revidia would we hope to inherit if we turn a blind eye to the corruption before us? But I am not asking you to fight Revidia or turn against the Central Alliance; only that you fight to remove a coward who hides behind their colours. Take up arms here and let it be known where the true Revidia stands. Follow me, follow my spear, and fight for its honour!

She remembered that speech word for word. She stood frozen watching Ersand’Enise crumble to the unrest of Penelope Pellegrin’s detainment. She sat back watching the gathering armies of students who looked to storm the Violet Enclave. As she was prepared to do nothing because it was not her place, he rose and told her to act.

Leon Solaire spoke of acting against Revidia’s wishes and joining the revolution, yet she didn’t feel she was betraying it. Despite politics, despite commercial gain, it was in Revidia’s honour to storm the Violet Enclave and free the pauper princess. He was like a knight bathed in gilded light who pointed the way and she found a purpose to follow.

Magic had previously been a help for mundane tasks and an extra assurance of self-defence. The night of the revolution, she wielded it to kill two people.

Shifting the first five rows, Arianna updated her running count to 91,327 Ven to account for special Zenobucks orders such as the absurdly popular spratz toppings and household ingredients such as ‘sugar s’... Sugar s…

The first one had been an older Enthishman she killed in self-defence. When the Revidian students made their charge behind the leaders, the old man rushed through straight to her with his blade drawn. She panicked and only just managed to put enough electricity through him before he took her head off. Her heart beat fast, she drew unsteady breaths for a while afterwards, and then she vomited.

The second was done with intent. He was a younger man with pale skin who barely got the chance to speak before lightning shot through him. The mercenaries had made it clear they meant to kill, she felt no remorse in the moment to treat them in kind.

It was an accomplished feeling she had to stand above a battlefield victorious. Arianna had few victories to call her own. She was not a large girl, had not come from a largely successful family, and was not particularly blessed by the gift. It seemed she was afraid, weak, or inferior everywhere she went. She no longer felt that way among the fallen of those who opposed Revidia.

When a second sun bloomed above the Forked Tower, Arianna had an epiphany that she had been lost. She had lived her life with no direction. Her grandfather was a lumber merchant who sold lumber for profit such that her father could inherit that and sell lumber for profit as well. She was at Ersand’Enise so she could compete with her siblings for the grand title of lumber saleswoman who lived only for making more profit. Profit, profit, profit, but what for? For what purpose did she exist other than to do the exact same thing her father did? What point did they really have in the world? Arianna looked at the second sun calling a successful end to the revolution and saw direction where she had never seen it before. She would serve the vision of that man named Leon Solaire who had given her purpose and cause. She felt like something more than she was meant to be…

Ticking up profits for the Zenobuck’s snacks had started to wear on her patience and became quickly frustrating. Arianna looked out her window to see the sun dipping below the horizon, slowly retreating its glow from Ersand’Enise. She happily wrote down her current tally and left her assignment to gather dust on her desk. She grabbed her faux military coat and draped it over her shoulders before heading out.

Leon had departed for Palapar so a special meeting was to be held for the Figli di Revidia, the Revidian student group. Arianna was excited.




The floor of the Fino a Colazione became quite a different place during an Orredes night. It was the cleanest the floors were in the entire week; just preceding the Lepdes and Victendes mayhem. The smell of the faint sea breeze clashing with the herbs and spices of the kitchen was not overpowered by excessive booze and was a welcoming scent to any Revidian who called the coasts their home.

Figli di Revidia gathered at a reserved end of the tavern with roughly thirty students in attendance. It was a mix between a social gathering and a pantomime of a small council, the food was plentiful and the jugs of wine runneth over. Short, tall, rich, poor, they all gathered here under the banner of Revidia. There was even a small bunch of students who shied away from the political nature of the group and spent their time making food in the kitchens for everyone and catching up with friends.

The group’s soul had changed since the revolution and the approaching reality of war. Before, there was endless speculation about the markets and internal plans among peers to manoeuvre accordingly. This often meant that people stuck to small groups of 2 to 4 out of fear that too many people having details would spoil a golden goose. It also meant that nobles talked to nobles, merchants talked to merchants, and commoners made the food as many only wished to go into business if the investment was mutual.

Now, instead of solely discussing a means to make a profit, they spoke of what they could do with those funds. How could Revidia manoeuvre to favour their victory in the war? What contacts did people have to sway neutral nations into Central Alliance sympathy? How could Perrence be chased away from their growing encampments at the borders? Standing around two central food tables they filled their bellies with food and wine while idling away with the chatter of finance and military speculation afforded by said finances. But even subjects of sport, food, and music found themselves more than welcome.

Toward the back wall was a table for the leaders of Figli di Revidia. Three chairs sat facing the group’s festivities while awaiting the topic for the night. Arianna sat in the central seat picking at the pizza made by Fiorella Caruso, a younger commoner girl who had personally served her and awaited a review. It was good but not exceptionally so, although Arianna struggled to think of the missing ingredient. For as much as she loved the girl’s culinary passion, there was more on her mind.

To her left sat another leader, Vittorio Garibaldi, the first heir to Garibaldi’s Pawn in Ersand’Enise. He was a larger, older boy of 19 who was well on the road to adulthood compared to Arianna. He wore round spectacles, neatly trimmed black hair, and had a larger stature with some fat and a little more muscle than someone in finance typically kept.

Vittorio was conversing with Ettore Muti, a 15-year-old with far too discerning eyes for someone barely beginning puberty. They tried to keep their conversation discrete but not secretive as they discussed the prospect of investing in lumber before the war started. Arianna thought it was strange that they wouldn’t ask for her input in the matter but she didn’t get the impression they were excluding her from the conversation. She didn’t feel inclined to participate.

To Arianna’s right was an empty chair. It was supposed to be occupied by Flavio Velluci, but his refusal to arrive on time had held up the entire meeting. He was a truly rat-like man who was lanky for his height and had very little going for him other than being the heir of the Velluci luxury products business. He dressed up an unfortunate appearance with enough gold to feign the impression of dignity and gravitas. Unlike Vittorio, he did not fit the maturity of a 19-year-old. His seat of responsibility was often empty.

The night wore on for some time before Flavio finally arrived. He was likely only a half hour late, but it felt longer to Arianna and she didn’t care to check the time. With all three seated, she was now caught between the two other leaders. Both were taller, bigger, older, richer and had more claims in life than her. But it was past time for her to be intimidated by that. Vittorio had stayed back during the revolution to protect his father’s store and Flavio was absent without explanation.

Vittorio ended his conversation and dismissed the Muti heir, who returned to join the crowd. He then faced the other students and smacked his hand a couple of times to announce the beginning of the meeting. As was customary, the chatter would die down in a minute or so as everyone was given time to finish their conversations. In the interim, he turned to look past Arianna and directly at Flavio with an all-too-polite smile. “How nice of you to join us, Velluci.” It was a pointed, sarcastic remark that demanded an answer for the luxury heir’s tardiness.

Flavio gave an exaggerated sigh and a half-hearted smile attempting to look nonchalant about the inquiry, but his acting was poor. “I was held up by family matters, Vittorio. If I could do something about it, I would.” The relaxed delivery had an undertone of annoyance. Arianna didn’t buy it for a second and barely stopped a scoff. His lateness was likely nothing other than the result of his own actions and she doubted Vittorio thought any differently.

Quiet began to take hold over the hall as the other students wrapped up their talks amicably and awaited the leaders to speak. Eyes were mainly turned to Vittorio who had called the special meeting. Very few people were unaware of the subject matter but they stuck out like sore thumbs while everyone else grew stern. Vittorio, however, smiled politely.

“Welcome to the meeting all,” he began with a formal presentation, “I hope you have found the food agreeable. I don’t wish to waste time or hang on moments that are better spent on drinks among family, so I will make this quick. I would like to discuss the matter of Leon Solaire and his pending membership in this group.”

“Although anyone who has tried my glasses would disagree, I am not blind. I have seen the impact the performer has had on this group since the revolution. This was originally a group for Revidian students to network and help find their future place within this country. There seems to be far too little of that now in favour of talk that is… idealistic, to say the least.”

“It is good to have ambitions and Leon can be an inspirational figure, no doubt many support his membership.” Vittorio looked down at the speech he had written down on a piece of parchment. “But I would like to temper that ambition with practicality. Leon Solaire is a dreamer who has yet to display any real grasp on finance or politics in our meetings, he barely shows up to half of them, and one could even question if he is a Revidian by birth, although I wouldn’t hold the last point against him.” He paused and looked up. “While I am not overly invested in the vote’s result, I would like to vote on the refusal of Leon Solaire’s membership on these grounds.”

Silence.

“You can’t be serious.” One of the wine-avid students at the back called. Arianna couldn’t see who it was.

Enzo Gallo, an unassuming 17-year-old commoner, spoke up at the front. “Leon took down the White Thresher in Mezegol alone while the other students there watched, you should know. That whole city loves him now. You can’t say he doesn’t belong here.” Arianna moved her hand up at her mouth to hide a tight smile. That statement wasn’t true. But she wasn’t going to correct the record and the other students had neither the knowledge nor desire to either.

“My cousin’s friend is gonna marry the Marquis’ son there because of him.” Suddenly called Arianna’s friend Fiorella Caruso, a food-making member of the group. “She’s a navy woman marrying a noble because of him.”

Vittorio frowned in annoyance and waved the chatter and emerging protests down to move the meeting along. “As I said, I am not concerned with the outcome of this vote. I simply wish to give voice to some of the less… vocal members of the group and let everyone have their say.”

“All those in favour of dismissing Leon Solaire, raise your hand.”

Vittorio, Flavio, Ettore, and four others raised their hands. The group’s policy of public voting backfired as one student even lowered his hand after the poor turnout. 6 out of 30, 20 percent gave a clear message that Leon’s place within the group was solidified. Those who voted against his membership calmly lowered their hands.

“That decides it then. Leon Solaire shall be an official member of Figli di Revidia when he returns from his trip.” There were cheers among the group that even Vittorio couldn’t help but admit a smile at in humble defeat. Arianna noticed that Flavio and Ettore were not so gracious, Ettore because of young age and Flavio… had no excuse. “Please continue with the food, the wine.” He waved them away formally. “And try not to hold the results of the vote against anyone, we are familia remember. Family can have their disagreemen...”



“Before that!” Arianna finally spoke up. “I would like to hold a second vote.” Vittorio gave her a raised eyebrow and Flavio scoffed with impatience. A few students groaned at being wrenched away again from the fragrant food while most turned to provide the youngest leader with her due respect.

“I would like to hold a vote on making Leon Solaire a leader of Figli di Revidia.”

Vittorio’s face dropped and Flavio piped up in a snarky tone. “You can’t. This group only has room for three.”

Arianna smiled at Flavio and turned to the student group captivated by the unfolding drama. “...replacing Flavio.”

Vittorio spoke quietly to Arianna but could still be heard by Flavio and the front row. “Arianna, with all due respect, don’t you think this is a poor time for this?” He looked past her and apologetically toward Flavio, who was about to have his reputation put on the block for public execution.

Arianna gestured gently to the crowd. “This is a democracy, is it not? I think we should let the people decide.”

The other two leaders shot each other worried looks and Arianna felt even more confident. There was a time not too long ago when such a prospect wouldn’t have even phased them and the vote could be dismissed. This was before Arianna had informed the group of Flavio’s habit of skipping academic classes in favour of burning his father’s fortune at dingy brothels. His reputation was even lower than normal after that. There wasn’t anything to speak of for Vittorio, but someone thought they had seen him buying Blue Ice in Mudville and that was enough.

Even if the rumours hadn’t gotten back to them yet, they could feel the undercurrent of their slipping influence. That wasn’t even mentioning Leon himself, the Sun King had a hold on the group that both could recognise.

Vittorio bowed his head briefly in resignation. He could already guess the outcome. “Very well, all those in favour of removing Flavio from his leadership position and replacing him with Leon Solaire.”

18 students immediately raised their hands making an instant majority to call the vote. Within a few seconds, that number had risen to 24. Then, after 10 seconds had passed, only Vittorio, Flavio, and Ettore had chosen to keep their hands down. The answer was clear.

Flavio’s face had grown red from anger and humiliation. He almost jumped out of his seat and spared no time in storming out of Fino a Colazione. Arianna watched him leave with a smile, if she had to guess, she doubted he would remain a member now that his precious leadership role had been stripped from him. Good riddance.

All eyes were now turned to Vittorio, who had removed his spectacles and rubbed the bridge of his nose in clear frustration. Flavio had been a problem he had left for too long and now his co-leader had used him as a means of pushing that fraud performer into a position of greater influence. He waited for a while longer after Flavio’s exit to respond.

“Flavio, I can understand.” He spoke with thinly concealed irritation, barely managing to look up from the table. “He had long neglected his responsibilities to this group and I had planned to deal with that matter privately. But Leon Solaire? Do you all really think he will be any better? Are they not cut from the very same cloth?”

“I know he isn’t in attendance tonight, but would Ciro Volta not be a better fit? Or even the Synesti heir?”

His questions fell on deaf ears.

“I have sat back and watched this group crumble since the revolution. I had thought it was something that would pass or that the sudden grand ambitions would find a realistic way forward. But I can’t entertain this any longer. Tell me,” he tried to look every single student in the eye at once, “if this is the group of Revidia’s future, are we really going to hand it over to that fraud musician and his love-sick fan girl?”

Silence met him. His words found no purchase because Leon Solaire was no fraud and they all knew it. He had proven himself time and again regardless of Vittorio's ignorance. A few looked on in sympathy, but many more in judgment.

Arianna stared daggers into the side of his head. She hated the way he described her and how simple it made her feel. Her vision was so much more than that… He was a man who had never found a purpose greater than the path provided to him, so he was blind. At the very least she knew his true opinions now.

“Very well. I resign and leave you all to your group of sycophants.”

Vittorio calmly rose to the erupting sounds of protest. Those who took exception to his labels thrown in contempt were throwing their own unfavourable words back. Arianna watched him stand and saw the heartbreak in his eyes. He truly had considered this group like family and took the shattering of that family as hard as anyone would. But he hid it well to the unattentive eye in favour of the decorum and dignity that fit his inheritance. He walked out of Fino a Colazione calmy. Behind him followed Ettore Muti and Mila Pioli, the daughter of a fish merchant whose father’s finances were even less remarkable than Arianna’s.

There was silence at first when the trio had exited the door. Many students stood shocked at what had just transpired. Some couldn’t believe the gall of Vittorio to say such things. Some glanced at Arianna, concerned that she could do such things.

Then a timely joke from Enzo Gallo got a modest three laughs and the atmosphere slowly returned.

Arianna sat back alone at the leadership table for a moment and watched the closed entrance of the tavern. Despite the planning, she still couldn’t believe she had pulled it off. It didn’t feel real. She half expected the leavers to come right back and join the group again like nothing ever happened. But something did happen, something big that could never be remedied.

She felt powerful.

She felt right.

She felt good.



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Mahal Agha
"Nothing I do matters, unlike you."


Bonds of Flesh and Bone

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A C T S E V E N : P A L A P A R





Chapter One: A Restless Slumber

Once upon a time, Ceboyan had been a small place. Thatch-roofed huts had perched upon stilts in the tidal flat and fishing boats had been the only traffic through its harbourmouth. As night had fallen, hearths and bonfires had winked out until there was only the faint twinkling light of the stars and the five moons.

There was nobody save, perhaps, for the very oldest among the residents of the sprawling, ramshackle city who remembered those times anymore. They fell increasingly within the realm of cultural myth, a fraying thread traceable to a distant and disappearing past: before the Virang had come.

And so it was that the sun set over this vast metropolis of some four hundred thousand souls, muted and moody behind a shoal of softly mumbling clouds. The bray of stray dogs traveled through the narrow winding streets and the clank and groan of cranes carried from ships being unloaded - even by night - at the docks.

One by one, the lights winked out and a soft rain began to fall. Yet, not all disappeared into the newly brooding darkness. There remained thin bands of light along the city's few large avenues. Within the port district, in particular, torches flickered amid the gloom as crews continued to work. Liveried security - the gleam of their brass buttons made mute in the prevailing conditions - hunkered in their guardhouses. Others grudgingly patrolled around the Royal Palapar Trading Company's warehouses, clinging beneath the awnings wherever possible. Back and forth swung the tremulous orange lights of their whale oil lanterns, greasy smoky spots of light that wavered as they walked.

The soft rains became a downpour and the torches began to falter. The arteries of light that snaked across the city and up the hillsides toward Mount Bantay retracted until they laid bare the truth of the this place. The docks remained lit - tentatively - and, now, one might behold, even as they disappeared for the night, where those veins of light had led. High up on the hills, overlooking the city, were palaces of a distinctly Virangish architecture. These roosted there, illuminated with magical light, defiant to the wants of nature. From more than one could be heard the sounds of music, conversation, and laughter. Ladies in fine dresses, too drunken to walk with grace, were helped into waiting carriages under umbrellas. Gentlemen, fancying themselves possessed of more daring stuff, made a dash for it in the rain, sliding in beside them. Others stood out on covered colonnades and verandahs, the tiny orange glows of their cigars lost amid the glow of the palaces. It was these events and the conversations held here that moved the city, after all.

Yet, there was two more places of note. The first was lower down, within the city, an oasis of greenery, garden, and light: the Royal Palace of the Queen of Palapar. If it was sleeping for the night, well-accustomed to the monsoon rains that had not quite yet come to a close, it retained some light for practical reasons. This grand old building, however, was rendered impotent by the second.

This loomed above even the retreats of that foreign aristocracy. Further up the mountain that the locals had always considered - and named - a guardian, lay the headquarters of the Royal Palapar Trading Company, who were not from this country but owned it in all but name. Though they had named their complex the Beacon Centre for its great domed tower and constant illumination, the locals had another name for it: Masamang Mata - the Evil Eye.




Introductions

























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The Palaparese Revolution: Chapter 1:
Mahal Agha
"Selim, what happened?"


Homecoming
Suffering in Silence



OOC: Reposted here to line up with the story better. :P
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M E E T I N G B Y T H E L A K E


"The young conqueror surveys his new empire and crows that it is vast, like Lake Albadón, but he knows nothing of its depth."
- Firrazi Proverb


The road west from Torra Corda stretches on into inner Torragon, straight as a line in some places. To one side is Lake Albadón and the sparse greenery upon its shores; to the other lies a vast and cruel desert, bleeding off into the horizon, seemingly endless.

It was into this scene that Ayla Arslan, a daughter of one of the greatest noble houses in the country, arrived. From the dust and winds, the endless mirror of the lake emerged, flamingoes and other waterfowl dotting its surface, peering up from their animal activities at the new arrival.

Not so far from its shore lay a gazebo. A simple wooden structure, it cast a rhomboidal shadow across the whitish sands as whitish curtains fluttered in the stifling breeze. Just outside was a horse. Just within was a man. He waited at a table. The girl arriving knew who he was.

Since they first met, that girl had grown into a young woman. Years of Ersand’Enise education and extracurricular activities had moulded the once demure girl—a lion cub—into a confident lioness. While a typical lady of the court might don her prettiest dress before an audience with the king, she had chosen a more practical outfit. She wore sturdy black boots and an embroidered rose-patterned corset styled like a tunic over a red blouse. A belt cinched her waist, holding the hilt of a bladeless sword, and a cavalier hat added a bold touch, with her red hair neatly tucked up inside as it shaded her from the sun.

As she strolled toward the gazebo, she admired the flamingos in the water before finally approaching the occupant. With a warm greeting, she crossed her arm over her chest, clenched her gloved fist, and bowed her head respectfully toward the gentleman.

The man inside was King Sancho VIII of Torragon, called El Alacrán in the Northern dialect. He rose to his feet and nodded in return. "Lady Arslan." A smile lifted his mustache from his upper lip for a moment, and he waved her warmly towards a seat. "It must've been a long ride. Have a drink. Have some tapas. Then, we discuss." He settled back into his seat and moved to pour both himself and his guest a drink.

Ayla took the seat offered to her by the King, pulling back the soft-cushioned wooden chair before settling in. “We find ourselves north of Varrahasta more and more these days," she remarked, her voice light with humour. "One might think we’d be used to the long rides and saddle sores by now.” She offered a playful yet sweet smile as she accepted the glass of wine and a rather delicious-looking empanada.

She took in the surroundings, her gaze sweeping over the vibrant landscape. “This must be one of the jewels of the north, with such a breath-taking view,” she added, gesturing toward the flamingos gracing the nearby lake. “Who should we thank for this pleasant scenery?"



The king smiled again, briefly, plucking from the plate. He nodded. "It is what some would call a 'hidden gem'," he admitted, taking a bite and chewing. A light breeze rippled the surface of the water and a quartet of ibises took wing. "A place not known to those courtiers who want only to fill the king's ear for their own gain."

He watched the birds for a moment before addressing the second part of Ayla's question. "It is a place we thank An-Orafe for, in our prayers, but I have always thought that we owe equal debt to An-Ejerran." He tilted his head and stroked his goatee. "Why do you think that is?"

Ayla secretly suspected that the Queen's influence had been involved in choosing such a beautiful location, but she smiled pleasantly nonetheless and nodded when the conversation turned to the gods. The empanada was spiced in the manner preferred by the men of the north—bold and fiery—unlike the sweeter versions she was accustomed to in Varrahasta. Thankfully, and unsurprisingly, there wasn’t a Virangish pepper in sight.

“Then we shall prepare to be plied with food and wine, while our ears are filled for the King’s gain,” she quipped with a mischievous smile, her sharp tongue making light of the situation as she used the jest as an excuse to indulge in the spread laid out before her.

Sancho let out a snort of laughter, but it quickly gave way to something more pensive. "Certainly," he admitted, "I hope to gain, but your words remind me of something that dear Felipe told me before he left to be with Ejerran."

He sat in profile now, almost a silhouette as the morning sun shimmered off of vast Albadón. "One cannot rise while the ship he is on sinks." He lifted his glass from the table and took a sip of his wine. "This was what Huarcan Frannemas did not understand." He glanced her way, setting it back down. "That is why I killed him. He was willing to sink the ship to rise within it." His eyes, in shadow, found the young woman's. "It is a lesson I believe that you know," he decided, "So tell me, Ayla Arslan, what is the ship that we are on?"

As the ripples of wine settled within the chalice, Ayla's eyes rose to meet Sancho's. "He was a mutineer on a surrounded ship," she said, shaking her head, "though not one that's sinking—yet." She took another sip. "There's no real appetite for war in the East. Trade during peace brings prosperity to its people. The raids in the West are a different matter; they embitter the people." Her gaze sharpened on the captain. "So the ship needs a carefully plotted course to avoid troubled waters—it can't rely solely on the winds."

"And yet, much as it may yearn to, it cannot defy them either." Sancho breathed out into the desert air as a flock of sandpipers came to land at the water's edge. "The Firrazi have a saying: The young conqueror surveys his new empire and crows that it is vast, like Lake Albadón, but he knows nothing of its depth." He took a bite of his empanada. "What do you think this means?"

Ayla pondered the saying for a moment, though the fact that it was Firrazi made her a bit skeptical. "It suggests looking beyond what's on the surface. While some may focus on the size of their armies and navies, real strength comes from stability, loyalty, and the discipline of individuals in battle. Overlooking that depth might hide how fragile a situation truly is—like a lion made of parchment." She tapped her lip thoughtfully. "Just one of many aspects of an empire, for brevity."

"You are not wrong," the king admitted, "from a certain point of view." Wind stirred the curtains and the hair of the people withing. Horses snorted and flicked their manes outside. "And I don't disagree, but the Firrazi like to remind us, in their bitterness, that they know this land in ways that we do not." He snorted at the notion; whether in dismissal or agreement, it was not quite clear. "It is a parable designed to trick us Torragonese, for Lake Albadón is, at most, five meters deep. Should the winter rains fail to come one year, it might disappear entirely."

He breathed in the lakeside air, tinged as it was with hints of dust and salt. "It is a reminder of how tenuous - how ephemeral - are the monuments and works of we individuals in the face of greater forces." He breathed out. "I think it is also, in a teasing sense, a call to understand, truly and humbly, before acting." He swirled the last remaining wine in his glass. "This is why we must go to war." He glanced out at the vast salt lake, brow furrowed, before turning back to gauge her reaction.

Ayla raised an eyebrow at the mention of war, especially considering King Sancho's impassioned plea for peace in earlier years. During her time at the academy, however, she had encountered many factions and individuals aiming to shape the world to their own agendas. The statement left a void she felt compelled to fill. "With whom?" she asked.

Sancho grimaced at her well-but-not-perfectly-hidden confusion. "The people who would see us laid low." He furrowed his brow and continued. "Would that we could be like cattle, left to feed and fatten on the plains with no care in the world, but that is not the truth of things." He shook his head. "The bull may appear complacent, but he is anything but, for he cannot be." A lone cloud drifted lazily across the face of the sun, providing a moment of welcome relief. "He is surrounded, always, by hungry wolves and serpents and tigers."

Sancho batted the imagined animals away. "Trust you me, girl: they circle even now, and I imagine you can guess who most of them are." He shook his head again, tightly, and reached over for the wine bottle. "The blood our answers spilled to reclaim this land demands a price." He poured, pensively: deep crimson wine splashing into the glass. "Since I took el Trono de Hierro, I have built a Torragon of peace. I have furnished universities and libraries and ports for trade." He sipped. "I have patronized artists and scientists. I have shaken Osman's hand as a friend and equal. At the start of last year, I repealed the laws against Darhannics."

A couple of swans alighted on the lake's surface, and tiny waves lapped at the shore as their ripples spread outward. Sitting in profile, the King breathed deeply: in and out. He turned to Ayla, gaze heavy and direct. "It won't be enough." He was earnest. "Two of my dukes rebelled against me. Frannemas, you know, and I slew the bastard with mine own hand." He sniffed and glanced away, at the lake and the swans. "Herrera was in league with him, ready to march on their 'soft' ruler. Only the quick death of Huarcan persuaded her otherwise, and after I disinherited his brats I'd have had a rebellion on my hands had I tried to remove her as well. Ejerran knows Tojarra is frothing."

He stood all at once and held the bottle out towards Ayla's glass, raising his eyebrows inquiringly. "We are of the same cloth, to some measure," the king concluded. "We speak for peace and sense and mutual benefit and nobody listens." Finished with the bottle, he set it down on the tabletop and turned to face Albadon, crossing his arms. "At the summit, last year, I convinced none who had a real say." He glanced over his shoulder at the youth. "It was something from Hunghorasz, the old wizard, that made them pull back." He tapped one of his temples. "I can still feel the way he went into my head and forced a decision." Sancho snorted. "At least it was the right one."

He pivoted on his heel and leaned over the back of his chair. "It is a regrettably simple conclusion, Lady Ayla." He pursed his lips for a moment. "Most everyone wants to fight: on every side of this thing, and I will not let Torragon be served up as a feast. Can you work with that?"

Ayla nodded as she mulled over her thoughts, reflecting on the complexities. "Peace is not easy," she began thoughtfully. "It takes hard work and is anything but complacent. Sometimes, people need to be reminded that it is in their best interest not to act against it, or persuaded by other means." She continued, using the earlier metaphor by Sancho to make her point clearer. "A complacent bull is weak—others start to ignore and violates its boundaries. This stirs the bull into action, forcing it to use violence to make others respect it, a war. Now, an active bull, constantly vigilant, dissuades people from crossing its boundaries. If they try, they're met with a snort and a show of the horns. Violence isn't needed because the threat alone keeps others in check, thus experiences peace. But it's important not to be an aggressive bull, as that would cause others to band together and outnumber the bull, seeing it as a threat."

She paused for a moment and added, "You could argue that peace is a war—a war fought with words, influence and clout."

"Perhaps it is so," the king acknowledged, as a gust of wind stirred the feathers in his cap, "and perhaps it is not." He pursed his lips grimly. "I've called you here, Lady Ayla, for two reasons." his wine sat on the table, he was drinking none of it now.

"The first is that you have helped your country immensely. You acted decisively when the Queen's and my lives were threatened, for which you've my gratitude, and again to secure Revidia's secret weapon for us." He shook his head. "Such things should not exist and, if they do, they should not be kept from friends." There was a brief, ironic smile. "You could say that you sharpened the bull's horns and diluted the serpent's venom."

In the distance, the sun lay atop the water, its surface a mirror to the sky and the plains. A pack of dwarf halassa grazed on a copse of bushes. "The second," Sancho began darkly, "is that the time for metaphors and waxing philosophical over what may happen is at an end." He tapped the table twice and worked his jaw, eyes meeting hers. "They will have their damned war whether we want it or not." He sighed in vexation. "I want to make it as short and decisive as possible."

He glanced down before meeting her eyes again. "I've no desire to spill blood over Revidian and Perrench squabbles." Sancho shook his head tightly. "Neither is a clear evil, much as the leaders of both will rail that his counterpart is." He glanced out over the idyllic scene of the inland sea. "And we are a continent away. Our only real danger is the unbridled ambition of some in Virang." Now, he lifted the glass and took a sip. "Osman is a good man. I had hoped to build an understanding with him, but I fear his days are limited and his influence wanes." Sancho swirled the wine and watched it for a moment. "The new generation do not remember war, and so they treat trade as if it is a thing to be won, and encourage the most radical form of their religion, and fund Hattim of Firraz in his campaign of terror against the Nordeste."

He scowled into the sun before his eyes flicked Ayla's way. "We are going in opposite directions, and it is time for the bull to use his horns, while he can still quickly put the panther in its place." He tilted his head. "Is this something you can help me with?"

Ayla nodded thoughtfully after listening to the reply, then straightened her posture, adopting a more formal bearing. "What is it that we need to do?" she asked in a composed tone.

Sancho regarded her and... was there a hint of discomfort on the face of the king? "An act that will make our names live in infamy like that of your ancestor." His bearing became grim, serious, earnest. "But one that could save millions of lives by putting a swift end to the war." In the distance, a flock of flamingoes lifted from the surface of Lake Albadon. "I am asking you, Ayla, not commanding. Is this something you think you could countenance?"

She gently put her hands together as she sat and listened, as she prepared herself for what was about to be spoken, “Yet without my ancestor, there would not be a Torragon or our people.” She nodded, as she consented, “Please continue.”

Sancho nodded at her words. "Mine own, Felipe de la Sangre, was infamous in his time." He shrugged. "And perhaps since, though he has not had the unique misfortune of having his name live so in infamy as Alizée." A fly came to rest upon the white curtains, tiny and black and eager to take of the food on the table if given the opportunity.

Sancho batted a hand dismissively. "Virang has risen much, some as a result of my own leniency towards it and the desire that both us and they might rise together and break the endless cycle of two grand alliances, mutually exclusive." He leaned forward and plucked an enchilada from the platter. "They are too strong for us to trample as we may have in the past." He regarded the morsel and shook his head... annoyed? Regretful? Admiring? "They will dig in and hold on and occupy us while the other Darhannics pounce and Belzagg either overwhelms Joru and takes us from the East, or Perrence joins them."

The king bit in and chewed. "Millions on all sies will die for the ambitions of few and grudges passed down for centuries, now meaningless." He swallowed. "I want to avoid that. We need a quick, decisive victory that will humble them where they stand and act as warning against any who might consider taking their part." He glanced out at the curtains as they flapped and the fly took off. "Something strategically decisive, scored away from their innocents, that leaves them utterly at our mercy." He took a second bite and chewed, eyes narrowed as he glanced at the lake and back at Ayla. "Can you think of such a thing?"

Ayla was presented with a near-impossible task: figuring out how to take down Virang without unnecessary bloodshed or loss of innocent lives. As soon as the Torragonese forces mobilized, Virang would respond in kind. Both sides had permanent garrisons ready for such a situation, and they would have to cross the Merapora making a land approach infeasible. Even if they attempted to circumvent the defences through Inipor, Gandakar lay to the south. A naval approach, even with allied support, would struggle to pass Izan without incurring heavy losses before reaching the capital.

"It would have to be like lightning," she mused. "Using portals to transport groups to capture key locations, then moving in the armies to catch them by surprise." She shrugged, acknowledging the difficulty of her suggestion. "Unless we could somehow position ourselves as welcomed liberators, there would be significant resistance—and for that, we'd need an enemy to liberate them from."

Popping the final bite of enchilada into his mouth, Sancho paused, and a grin spread across his features. "This is why I come to you, Ayla." He finished chewing and swallowed. "For this is precisely our plan." He pushed the plate away and paused for a moment, collecting his thoughts. "The Virangish rise has made them less amenable to us, true." He nodded. "but it has made them many enemies."

The plate sat there in the middle of the table, a sprinkling of crumbs dusting its surface. "Among those is Tarlon, who will soon try to force the Bin Ada again." The fly took off from its spot on the curtain, circling around the two of them and zeroing in on the plate. "Osman fears that they will move on Paggon, which they refer to as 'lost lands'." Sancho shifted in his seat and regarded Ayla frankly. "He is terrified of it, in fact, if our people are to believed. Losing Paggon means losing their stranglehold on the Bin Ada and the tolls they take for trade into the Ensollian."

The fly made its move and, with a single quick motion, Sancho swatted it. "He is willing to sacrifice Palapar for Paggon." The tiny creature lay broken upon his glove for a moment until he flicked its corpse free. "His advisors are not. Many own vast amounts of land there that this new unrest threatens." The king set his gloves aside and turned to Ayla. "Tell me, now, with more of the picture in place, how might you proceed."

Ayla listened carefully to the foundations of the plan. From what she gathered, the idea was for Torragon to pose as the liberators of an anticipated Tarlonese invasion of East Severa. It was true—the Tarlonese would never expect Virang and Torragon to work together, and both nations would be able to repel the yasoi. If the Tarlonese were bold enough to attempt such a gambit, they would likely stoke tensions between the two nations, causing a war, and then swoop in to seize any territories they desired.

“There are only two main conditions for such a possibility to exist: a weakened Virang and for Tarlon to move against Virang proper.” Ayla leaned back in her seat, contemplating. “A decisive action against Virang would guarantee the conquest of Paggon and control of the strait. Both are likely Tarlon’s long-term goals, so there is motive, but the opportunity is lacking.”

“For Virang to be weakened, it would need to become embroiled in Palapar, and it cannot achieve a decisive victory—neither for the rebels nor for itself. There would need to be a stalemate, encouraging reinforcement from the mainland as they try to tip the scales in their favor.” She moved imaginary figures across the table. “With the mainland and Paggon vulnerable, and its forces occupied across the Asperic Ocean, controlling the strait would prevent Virang's forces from returning, allowing Tarlon to achieve its objectives. They would hope this would create an opportunity for us to strike at Virang.”

“However, Virang wouldn't send its forces to Palapar if they knew it would leave them so vulnerable.” She knocked the imaginary figures from the table. “They would want a guarantee—a strong, ironclad one. Virang might draw support from Belzagg toward Joru to keep us focused on the Eastern threat, bolster their numbers from Perrence, or even consider an agreement with Eskand.”

She placed her glass to the north of her position on the table. “Then there’s another factor: ReTan. They seek vengeance against Tarlon, and control of the strait would threaten their trade. They might consider working with Virang against Tarlon in these circumstances. So, Torragon's objective is clear.” She moved an imaginary fleet from Varrahasta toward ReTan. “We need to strengthen our partnership with ReTan. That means working with them against Tarlon.” She marked an imaginary cross over the straits. “This benefits everyone. We work against Tarlon and demand concessions from Virang for our support, such as tariff-free ReTannese trade for Torragon and rights on the Merapora. Virang would accept nothing less—they require a guarantee of our self-interest in iron.”

She drew a semi-circle on the table, symbolizing a protective line against Tarlon. “This might prompt Virang to take risks in Palapar.” She moved the imaginary figures back to Palapar. “But then you have the same problem again with Tarlon…” She let the cyclical situation hang in the air, unresolved.

Sancho leaned forward as Ayla spoke, taking in her analysis of the situation. "You understand the picture well for one with limited information." He nodded appreciatively. "So let me share the rest that I know, as a king, with you."

Leaning back somewhat, the king stroked his beard twice over. "Firstly, Tarlon's appetites far outstrip what its teeth can chew. The people in charge know this. Second -" He ticked another point off on his fingers. "Osman with his famous prudence and his... wariness of us, is seen to be losing his battle with old age in Virang."

Sancho did not reach for his wine or a snack or anything of the sort. He narrowed his eyes shrewdly. "The Tarlonese are easy to fear and to hate, to ascribe goals and motives to that we can decry." Not so far away, his horse snorted and stamped the dirt. "It is a common disease of people." He batted it away. "But I see, in them, a people not so very unlike us: They want to live as they wish, on their own land, unbothered by others, and they will do whatever they need to ensure that." He shook his head tightly. "Beyond that, I do not agree with them on much." His voice sunk, even though the seemed to be here completely on their own. "But one does not need complete agreement from an ally, merely common purpose." Now, he took an empanada. "Of course, we could let Virang think much the same."

“Keep our enemies close, divided, and pitted against each other?” she succinctly summarized the course of action Sancho was proposing.

"Something like that," he allowed as, in the distance, the dust trail of another rider could be seen. "But, perhaps, a common enemy might make for a useful ally." He rose in preparation to greet the fast-closing rider, who was just now entering sensory range. "We can only hope that Virang sees it that way," he added by way of conclusion.
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Ripples from the far west




The shadows cast through the windows of the study spread through the room and soon enough the only light within the room came from artificial lighting, the eve had arrived yet the young grandmaster slumped over his desk. Frustration plastered over his normally radiant expression. ”It does not make sense. Why would they all care so much for a worthless bunch of islands?”

Fingers ran across his cheek, he could feel it but not see it. Yvain could only sigh as there was only one person who could be the one in the room with him. ”How long have you been with me, Élisée?” A chuckle followed the woman’s breath, her fingers moved into a pinching motion. ”Ever since you entered.” And pinch she did, his cheek was not safe. ”I have to make sure my young lord is safe and sound. . . Olivier would put it all on me if something were to happen to you.” Her hand let go of the nobleman’s cheek, moved to his neck and softly prodded it with two fingers, nails digging into his radiant skin. ”What if a blood mouth were to come by and take that precious blood?”

Yvain’s hand grabbed the woman’s and removed it from his neck. ”We’re in Perrence, I doubt there would be any snooping around here.” He leaned into his seat. ”And if there was, they’d have to get past more than forty trained men all knowledgeable in their gift. The woman shook her head whilst clicking her tongue. ”Have my words not stuck with you?” Her face loomed in front of him, revealing a sad… albeit fake expression. ”You hurt me so! I taught you so much to be a dashing spy master and you did nothing with them?” Her saddened expression soon gave way to a more jovial one.

”Lesson one! Everyone co-” ”Could be out to get you, I know. But could realistically be a blood mouth within our inner circle?” Élisée’s shocked reaction turned to a mischievous one. ”What if I was one? What would the great flame of Perrence do then?” The boy chuckled before he even answered. ”Then I guess it means I would have one less burden to deal with.” Yet would he be able to actually deal the killing blow to a person so close to his heart? ”A burden? What a nasty way to describe the person protecting you!” The grown woman pouted childishly. ”A burden I am quite fond of.”

It was then that he realized the looming issues and leaned over his desk once more, to the surprise of the illusionist. ”That island nation, Palpeer? Palpara?” ”Palapar, young lord.” The boy snapped his fingers. ”Yes! That’s the name. Do you know why everyone’s so involved with their struggles?” The woman shrugged. ”Perhaps they want the coffee from the source?” Yvain’s eyes met with the woman’s. ”I know you know the reason, would you tell me?” Élisée’s lips contorted to a smirk. ”If you guess it, I’ll tell you aaaaalll the details.” The boy closed his eyes and let out a deep breath. ”Resources?”

”Kind of?”

”Population?”

”Nope!”

”Coffee?”

As the woman opened her mouth to reply the door opened with a signature creak. An older man would reveal himself. ”Some have said it to be the bank of Osman. A brown gold mine if you will.” He bowed his head. ”Mind if I come in?” Yvain’s expression began to shine once more. ”Olivier! Of course I do not mind. Come, sit.”

The woman however, rolled her eyes and was hastily no longer visible. ”Call for me when the old people talk is over.” The nobleman smirked. ”You know I won’t.” She chuckled. ”I know, that’s why I’m always closer than you think.”

The greying man sat down. ”You are beating yourself up for things so far away, boy.” Those words, it caused something to snap within the young lord and with force he’d hit the desk. ”No! it has to be important! It needs to be. . . Why would so many different actors collide into nothing but a big coffee plantation? Freedom fighters, slavers, political allies and political enemies. All of them are on those islands. Is it just to weaken Virang? There has to be more to it, right?” He was nearly pulling his hair out just speculating on his theories.

Olivier shook his head. ”The King has said nothing of the brewing conflict there, so focus on the things that are more important to Perrence.” Yvain stared down the man. ”And that is what worries me, old friend.”
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Paydirt


There were a few places where Belleville was still called Mudville—places that were truly nightless, that resisted the movement to turn the at once famous and infamous getaway for mischievous students of Ersand'Enise into a respectable and boring place. At times, these places still stood as illuminant bastions of liquor and laughter well into the night.

This was not one of those places, and not one of those times.



Though no one saw them, they came in force, causing rats to scatter like roaches exposed to sunlight. Though no one heard them, boots descended upon the streets of Belleville with the eerie silence of owls. El Maestro and two Torragonese guns for hire marched through the back alleys of the northern coast of Mudville like they owned them. Their target: an ordinary and disused-looking warehouse, not unlike the one that had been destroyed not so very long ago. They approached their stationary prey with the ease of a spider, weaving a path through the streets that took them from stone to patch of cobblestone, disturbing neither puddle nor pebble. Such was the art of these assassins, who carried on their backs weapons far deadlier than a scorpion's venom.

Quiet as a whisper, and invisible to drunken, untrained and unwelcome eyes around them, they observed two Revidian guards at the door, and twice that number in the surrounding alleys, appearing as homeless street bums but acting as clandestine guards themselves. El Maestro knew their names and their routines—he had been here before many times. If they had seen or heard anything as he and his escort ascended nearby buildings to access the roofs, they had paid them as much mind as the rats in the rafters. Poor luck for the guards: the rats chewed through a board that had been used to bar a broken window. When swung to the side, it offered an entrance both hidden and tempting yet dangerous for a small intruder. After some tense negotiations between the broken glass and vital organs, El Maestro was in. His escorts would have to manage another way.

He scanned the familiar surroundings as he navigated the maze of shelves on the ground level, observing several changes to the warehouse's inventory. Most of these were the expected exchanges of supplies typical of the owner's regular operations. One missing object was an atypical change, but also one which El Maestro had been expecting. They were neither the first nor the only intruders here. Someone had come before. "Clean work, gentlemen." He congratulated them before he saw them. Sure enough, they revealed themselves in short order. One jumped down from the rafters just as El Maestro had done, while another rose through the floor. "It was too easy, boss," one replied. "The security here is rather lacking, wouldn't you agree?" The two "gentlemen" nodded. "We've allowed them to get comfortable in this job, and so they've become lazy," he judged. "Our prize has already been taken, to boot. I must confess, I've never had a job go quite like this. The least they could have done is entertain me just a little."

No sooner had he diagnosed the injury than he proceeded to pour salt into it, raising his pistol into the air and firing a shot.



His escort did not panic. They did not question his actions nor attempt to hide themselves as the Revidians poured in from outside and began to assume formation alongside those within. "Stop!! Identify yourselves!!" the senior guard shouted at the trio. El Maestro and his escort slowly turned to him, holding their position as more Revidians slowly trickled in. "Identify yourselves, now!!" echoed the captain of the warehouse's guard as he joined the ensemble. Only when the full number of their prey had arrived did El Maestro lower his hood. "You?! What are you doing here, Volta?!" he demanded of the young Revidian, prompting the intruding trio to exchange glances.

So, it's not Ciro who's betrayed me...



"Good evening, gentlemen. I came to make a simple withdrawal... only, it seems that what I desire is not here. Now, why would that be..?" "Ciro" inquired with a winsome smile.

"What?! Don't get ahead of yourself, kid. You're not a member of the Solari family," he growled.

"Hey, that stings. No need to bludgeon me with technicalities like that, alright? I'm sure she won't mind."

"Don't do anything rash. You're surrounded... come out peacefully. There's still a chance this won't end badly for you."

"...Is that right? You may want to look again, and consider just who exactly is surrounded."



With his squad's guns trained on the intruder, the captain glanced behind him. Suddenly, the door was barred by more Torragonese elites. Suddenly, he could see and recognize their faces. He'd been outmaneuvered from the start. Now, the ball was in their court. "Perhaps you haven't heard the news in your drunken stupor. I'll explain..." As the captain turned back, he found the barrel of the teen's pistol pointed directly at him. "An 'Impostor Xiuyang' was seen wielding the Sanguine Bayonet—the very same one which was stored at this warehouse... and at the same scene, multiple students of Ersand'Enise are now dead. Do you understand what this means..?"

The barrel of the captain's rifle shook. If his failures even slightly contributed to the possibility of a member of the Solari family to be under threat of investigation... he and his men were screwed, and he knew it. "On behalf of my love, who cannot be seen out at this time of night due to your miserable failure... you are all fired. Furthermore, on behalf of the Solari family, who are rather busy at the moment, you're under arrest." He watched the meaning of the words sink into their faces as he lifted the muzzle of his pistol away from them. "I want them all alive... but if they try to escape, don't hesitate to break them," he finalized, before turning his attention to the rows and rows of shelves.

And some did try to escape, for they knew the fate that awaited traitors of the Solari. A few quick gunshots rang out behind the disguised Xiuyang as she once again turned her attention to the warehouse shelves. Weaving her way through the aisles, she took quick inventory of her own belongings, doubly confirming the strange truth that the Sanguine Bayonet was the only thing of great value that was missing. Who would only steal one artifact? Was it a bribe..?

Watch who you trust, okay? Aside from me. Trust me!

Queen Hylaenii's words continued their haunting echo in Xiuyang's heart. While she had many people in her circle, she truthfully only trusted a few of them. Some of those people had the connections to find out where Solari-owned properties were—but, only the Solari themselves knew why this particular location happened to be important at this exact point in time. There was one more thing Xiuyang needed to check. Once she was confident that she wasn't being followed, she crawled to the other side of one particular shelf, and entered into an isolated spot that couldn't be accessed any other way, but was otherwise unremarkable. She lifted up the false bottom of a particular crate, shielding herself from the hidden gas trap... only to find that it had already been triggered. She began to grow nauseous. Leaping down into the hidden underground pit, she searched the shelf of rare and valuable books for the one they served as cover for.

A small, blue leather-bound book with a cavalier hat on the front—a book that, while antique, was very ordinary-looking, and had many others that looked exactly like it. It was a brand that had been popular in Torragon about 50 years ago, and many wealthy young ladies of a previous generation would have written all kinds of innocent secrets within, rendered invisible by a special, particular kind of paper that reacted to manas... but this was not her or her mother's diary, nor was it an innocent book. It was a temporary record that contained many secrets of the Solari, their companies, and their business partners. Bribes, blackmail, other illicit transactions... anything done recently which needed to be recorded, but had to stay off the bank records—a book so secret and dangerous in the wrong hands, that it could only be brought up in family conversation with a codename: Paydirt.

It was gone.

Xiuyang's heart raced. This was impossible. Only the Solari knew of this book's existence, and only she and her father knew its current location. She meticulously double-checked every book on the shelf to ensure that she wasn't going insane. There was no way... Who could know of it? Who could steal it? What did they plan to do with it? Realizing that her hidden grotto was now a crime scene, she began to look for evidence. With some difficulty, Xiuyang sensed around the area. The earth had not been moved recently... the gas trap had been activated. The intruder had accessed her hiding place from above. She began the long ladder climb back up, feeling around in the darkness for anything that could have been caught in the narrow tunnel. It was a long and agonizing minute before her manas began to react to something she'd caught with her hand: a hair she didn't recognize. It's long... red... Trypano? She explored the structure of it—something which she could only do intuitively with her Facemimic manas, but could not begin to fully comprehend: Oraff's holy instructions. No... this person is too short to be Trypano. Besides, she's too straight-laced for this kind of work... Maura? She'd have the motive... Ayla, I'd hate to imagine it... No. This person is neither Torragonese nor Revidian. Revidian is closer... but not quite Perrench, either... Damn! If it was compatible with me, I wouldn't have to guess! I could just look in the mirror...

It left Xiuyang with more questions than answers—questions which would torment her. Any female of mixed blood, with red hair and a RAS of 7 or above. Does that really narrow it down..? It does rule out pure-blooded nobility, but they have lackeys for this kind of work. It'd be easier for me if the culprit was acting alone... Exiting the mass of shelves, she addressed one of her escorts, still disguised as Ciro. "Something important is missing, after all. An old diary," she began. "What shall we do?" one replied. Xiuyang handed him a piece of paper. "Check every antique and pawn shop for a book of this description. Ask them if anyone has shown any interest in buying such a thing..." The man took the paper and nodded. Xiuyang waited for him to leave, then turned to the other man. "Put out some feelers in our usual disinformation channels. Quietly suggest that some dirt on the Solari family is for sale. Take note of any interested parties. Let them run around looking for the seller. Take note of who they suspect..." The man silently nodded, and faded away.

Watch who you trust, okay?

I want to trust Ciro... but I can't just dismiss the fact that he seems to know everything about me without telling him. Just like the Twin Emperors... unlike the others, he wasn't shocked to learn about Facemimic. I should have expected that... my little "pranks" didn't surprise him at all. And, why did he seem unhappy with Maria? Her mind continued to race. Tears wanted to fall, but she wouldn't let them. Damn it, Hylaenii! Why did you have to go and say something like that?!

Ciro was just like her father, she realized. It was easier to keep tabs on the goings-on of Belzagg than her own lover's personal business. On some level, she accepted it, but on another, she resented the fact that it only seemed to go one way. ...I need to focus on what I can control. If I'm to become a Tan-Zeno, it shouldn't be impossible to obtain some basic personnel records. The hair could have ended up there by chance... but if it was on me, it shouldn't be a stranger's hair. Why don't I recognize it..? Exhausted, she massaged the temples which were not hers, with fingers that were not hers. I'm running out of time. Tomorrow... she told herself, as legs that were not hers took her back to her dorm building.

Ipte, I'm tired...

Tired of never having the strength to trust or believe in anyone.

Myself least of all...
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Hidden 8 days ago 6 days ago Post by Jumbus
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Reunion Rondo



Event: A Prelude | Location: Just outside San Sameno | Including: Juulet @YummyYummy












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Hidden 5 days ago 5 days ago Post by Emeth
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Judgment






Shortly After Ransom Demand - The Ever Tree


It was blood money, and they both knew it.

But, much to Xiuyang's chagrin, she found her conscience advising her that it was Seviin's right to do with her share as she pleased. If she threw it into the ocean, so be it. If she threw it back in Xiuyang's face, did she really have a case to take offense?

She found herself standing in front of Seviin's door just at the tail end of sunset, agonizing over what to do. She knew she was inside, probably praying. If she just left the money here and didn't speak to her, what kind of message would that send? Then again, if she found herself getting loudly lectured and chastised by Seviin, Juulet was surely sleeping just one or two rooms over, and that could only end badly.

Indeed, she had no choice, she told herself. This was for the best. She would crack the door open just slightly, leave the pay, the ransom, and the other box on the floor, and sneak out with no fuss. If she wanted to give her an earful about it later, at least it wouldn't be here.

It was with this in mind, then, that she opened the door as slowly as could be done.

But Seviin was not, in fact, in her room. The Ever Tree had been grown in such a way that every dormitory opened up onto the branches and they acted as a sort of patio before graduating off into a series of perches, ladders, and places to hang things. The Constantian yasoi always seemed to be more comfortable with it than the Tarlonese. Ashon was regularly out there when he was around instead of in his unofficial residence in Zarina's attic. During her visit, Juulet had often sat astride some branch or another, humming or carving something and swinging her singular foot back and forth.

Seviin felt herself ever less Tarlonese by the day, but she could feel Mother Oirase here: alive beside her in this space. She was sitting cross-legged on one of the many small platforms with her back turned and legs crossed, doing her evening meditations. She made no sound, not above the whisper of the wind, the rustle of the leaves, and the tinkling of a dozen chimes, and Xiuyang surely should've passed unnoticed.

Then, with a striking suddenness, the priestess raised a hand, all five fingers pointing straight upwards. These she flicked in a universal "come at me" gesture.

Well. Alright, then, Xiuyang thought, both bemused and somewhat resigned. She didn't know what to make of Seviin's intentions, but she was pretty sure this was going to end in a lecture. Would there be some even greater sin she had to repent for? Some grand display of penance she would want to see? Then again, she was pretty sure she wanted her to kill Dorothea for a moment back there. What did she know about Seviin, really?

She shrugged, following the gesture and entrusting herself to the branches, cradling the stack of boxes in her arm. Her feet were steady, but there was tension in her body. She hadn't returned to the Ever Tree since the day Juulet had hunted her like a dog, and her confidence wasn't what it once was. For now, she simply accepted that she was going to join Seviin on this platform, place the boxes between the two of them, and await whatever this was going to be.

All at once, Seviin lay back. It was so quick that it seemed almost odd that she hadn't conked her head. She spread her arms out and her long white hair spilled past the edge of the platform, dangling below like a wispy, gently swaying ghost. She patted a second platform beside her. "The stars are coming out," she said. "Maybe we can watch them together if you're not busy?" She turned her head where she lay and smiled up at Xiuyang.

Xiuyang jolted slightly, as if some small part of her expected Seviin to... what—knock her off the tree? But she maintained her balance, and then there was that slightly supportive smile once again. The smile went unreturned. Xiuyang's eyes seemed confused as she set the boxes down as she had planned from the start.

"I'm always busy," she replied. Despite her words, however, she let her hair down, removed her hat, and took the spot next to Seviin, laying her hat where her head would rest. Her short black hair had become long, and it settled around the inside of the hat like a bowl of noodles. She looked up at the sky, silent as she had entered.



A little bit of time passed in silence.

"I judge you, Xiuyang," Seviin said softly from the burgeoning darkness, "as I judge myself. As I judge everyone." She took a deep breath and watched a moth settle upon the glass of a nearby lantern. There was no hot flame, however, and it was not burned. "That doesn't mean I dislike you." She snorted. "Or very necessary funds." She puffed her cheeks out in something like relaxed frustration. "I've been learning to be a little less rigid and I'm not sure I like it."

"I've tried being a bit more rigid, myself. In my training, in my studies, in my manners. It doesn't suit me. It's exhausting. How did you survive until now?" Xiuyang replied, a bit of tension released with every word. Slowly but surely, her posture morphed into something more relaxed and comfortable. She rested her head on her hands as she tried to spot new stars as they appeared.

Silence hung for a while again, until the question on her mind had to come out. "...Did you really mean the things you said to Mother Gracie? ...About me." The one eye that Seviin could see might have flicked her way for just a moment, or it might have been a trick of the light.

"People know about Tarlon only what our people want them to know, Seviin replied, her voice quiet and pensive. "We are imbued with purpose from the moment we are born, for nobody can afford to be unproductive, or so they tell us."

She shifted, bringing her long, pale arms around behind her head and turning back to face the darkening sky. "I don't know if it's true anymore, but it... animates us. It brings us together. One society, united in purpose, under the gods," she snorted, but perhaps it was not all bitter irony. "Jaadas, juuras, tan'daxii." Perhaps she believed some of it. "But their purpose is killing people." She turned to Xiuyang and a tear slipped free of the corner of her eye. "I miss my home, Xiuyang. I miss my routines: they kept me going. I miss the unshakable strength of my faith, and I will not lose it." She seemed to draw strength just from those words alone. "I never say anything that I don't mean." She managed a tight smile, her single tear drying as she looked Xiuyang's way.

"I know that feeling," Xiuyang sighed in reply to her comment about being given purpose from birth. She'd had her suspicions that Seviin struggled with her country's actions, and now she had those confirmed. In truth, she found some part of Seviin's faith admirable, but she just couldn't muster enough to match it.

At Seviin's reply, Xiuyang tilted her head slightly toward her. If there had been any evidence of her skepticism before, it was gone now. If she'd stopped herself from crying the first time, she couldn't bear it anymore. She turned away, and if she let out a sound, it was so soft that it could have been the wind. She rested the back of one of her hands on her forehead, her teeth grit in frustration at her inability to hide her feelings.

"You have no idea..." She abandoned the thought before finishing it. "Everyone judges me, Seviin. They take one look and they judge me, and I let it happen because it's easier if they all expect nothing. But you—" She choked up. "You were right—about all of it. I'm always... doing my best..!" If there were more words, she couldn't produce them. She simply wept.

A hand reached out in the gathering darkness and its fingers found Xiuyang's. "If you truly wish to do good and make an effort, then I believe that you are good and that you will be loved for it." The yasoi's fingers closed around hers. "You can speak to me," she offered, "and I will listen... suunei."



"That's... all I want!" she choked out. "I just want them to appreciate my efforts, but it's never enough! Not for my father, not for the yasoi, not for the gods... not for me." Her voice trembled, as did she. "Only Ciro understands me... and you." She smiled lukewarmly. "...I want to help them, Seviin. I really do, but I... I don't know if I can. I just..." Her lip quivered. "I hate them. I hate their eyes—every time I look into an addict's eyes, I'm reminded of Juulet and Yarsoc. I'm reminded of—of what they would have done if they caught me. If I didn't run away... if I didn't..."

She squeezed Seviin's hand and forced out a breath. "I killed them. We—I killed all of them, Seviin. I didn't want to! I did nothing but try to help, but Juulet..." She stopped short of blaming her. "It's not fair," Xiuyang cried. "I don't deserve this! I can't talk to anyone about it. I don't know how to heal. I don't know what to do!" She sobbed. "Is this what I deserve?" She second guessed herself. "For breaking my oath..? Was it a test? Am I a failure? What else could I have done..? I don't..." She went silent as words failed to meet her lips.

Seviin's response was simple in the way that her speech often was. "If you struck first and did not have to, then I do believe that this is your penance." She swallowed. "If you did not, then it is your sense of guilt because you are a good person who did something you regret."

"Juulet is a bad person," she continued. "The world has made her that way and the only cure for it is likely her death." Seviin sat up abruptly, and brought her legs in crossed. The last hints of light lingered on the horizon and a mosquito hovered over the back of one of the yasoi's hands. Idly, she watched it land and allowed it to drink.

"I don't know!" Xiuyang agonized. "I can't know if my actions were necessary! All I can know is that pissing off Juulet set these events in motion." No matter how many times she ran what pieces she could recall through her mind, again and again she came up short. "I didn't try running. I knew he'd catch me." Silently, she cursed herself for being too weak to stop Juulet. If she could have just finished her off by the side of that lake, the rest of them would not have died, and she wouldn't be asking these questions. She'd have been free. ...Then, there was a spark. An idea occurred to her. "...Let's say... there was a timewalker who could see only the next ten seconds. Is it wrong if she strikes first, knowing the outcome to a near certainty if she doesn't?" Xiuyang composed herself, slowly, still not meeting Seviin's eyes as she rose.

She did, however, catch what she was doing. "Seviin, you have a... Those things spread plague, you know," she insisted, though not too strongly, perhaps because she was relatively detached from such a concern. If she showed interest in what she said about Juulet, she was leaving it on the back burner, much more interested in her hypothetical "barely a timewalker" question. In fact, it was the kind of question that seemed barely hypothetical. Xiuyang still hadn't told Seviin what happened, not directly at least. It seemed she hadn't told anyone.

Perhaps Seviin had pointedly ignored Xiuyang's main supposition; perhaps she was simply giving herself more time to think. "And we have Binding and Chemical magics." she shrugged. "Mother Oirase made it to do something and she makes nothing that is unnecessary." For some moments, the silence lingered, and the insect lifted off and flew away, its simple brain likely uncomprehending of its good fortune.

"I believe that you huusoi call that timeracer or perhaps foresight." Seviin furrowed her brow in momentary thought. "One has a right to defend oneself, but there are almost always ways other than dealing death, especially if one can see the future, no?"

"We have magics, but we're exceptional," Xiuyang reminded her reflexively. Then, she seemed to settle into giving it some more thought—and the more she thought about it, the more it seemed to unsettle her. There was, on one side of her heart, her oath, what she said, and what she believed that she believed: that killing was wrong. Then, on the other, there were her instincts, what she did in the heat of the moment, that showed her what she actually believed, deep in her unconscious: that those who harm and exploit others forfeited mercy. Consumed by her desire for justice for a crime not yet committed, she didn't even think about putting the man to sleep or using illusions to escape.

There was, on one side of the coin, the woman Xiuyang thought she was. Then there was the side of herself that had to be shown to her—and just as she supposed Seviin would if she knew, she wanted to hate it, but wasn't sure if she could. Did not all sapient beings know, instinctively, deep within their souls what was right and just and fair? Yet did not the wicked ignore the plea of their own soul for self-gain, to their own condemnation?

There were practiced killers on both sides of Xiuyang's family line. Was she doomed to become like them? But if Oirase made nothing unnecessary, was there a place in the world for people like that to be used for good? Yet if that were true, then there was also a place in the world for the yasoi that were killed in Yarsoc that day, and for the Cola family. Even if killing them had not been criminal, treating them like inhuman garbage surely was.

"Ten seconds," Xiuyang scoffed. "Is it too much power, or not enough?"

She went quiet for a moment, but it still seemed like she had more to say, so it passed in silence. "I don't consider it a trifling thing to owe a debt to the gods. I almost never pray, and when I pray, I pray for others, never for myself. The first time I did pray for myself, I prayed to Exiran. Before that, I'd hardly acknowledged Exiran's existence at all, but I asked if he would stay Juulet's hand, and he answered me right away. That's how... I know the gods are kind, Seviin. I just... it was hard not to feel abandoned in that place, and it's hard to feel worthy to ask for anything after what I've done. ...Would you pray for me, instead?"

Seviin sat there as crickets chirped and flies swirled about the tiny suns and moons of the hanging lanterns. She breathed, unblinking. "I pray for all," she replied. She nodded slowly. "But most especially for those who ask for it in earnest." She smiled softly and, in one smooth, limber motion, rose to her feet.




The Power to Become








Suddenly, Xiuyang felt the familiar embrace of an unwelcome presence.

"How pitiful. After all this time, you're still lying to yourself and everyone else."

Xiuyang waved a hand in front of Seviin's half-smiling face. It was as if time had stopped. Even in the context of the worst of her nightmares, this was a new experience. "What part of that was a lie? Besides, who invited you? This is a precious memory of mine. You should stay out of it!" she demanded of the disembodied voice.

Xiuyang felt the gravity of her presence before she saw her: a short, young girl with matted hair that was either a dark red or bloodied, Xiuyang couldn't tell. Most strikingly, the girl had no face. "Huh. That's a fitting look for the voice of my self-loathing."

"For a broken vessel, you sure are cheeky. To call this your 'precious memory...' You'll forget all of this when it becomes an inconvenient moral burden for you to bear later on—and, for a Quentic to not pray, even a heretic like yourself... How useless can you be? Just pray for Sipenta's future... Oh, but you can't. A future without war and death is a future where the Solari are no longer needed. Isn't that so?"

Unsettling as it was, Xiuyang glared determinedly at the blank face. "I can't dispute that my family profits from war. Even if I pursue medicine, that's still true."

"Right. So long as there's violence in this world, a Solari will have a place in it. But if conditions improve, there's no place for someone like you in Sipenta. A useless politician married to a plantation owner... an arms dealer married to a useless politician... and you, you'll marry a banker? For someone who's spent their whole life defining themselves by what they're not, you sure are turning out just like a Solari."

Unable to meet the girl's imperceptible gaze any longer, Xiuyang looked away. "It's who I am. I am a Solari... I can't outrun the passage of time, as Maria so often reminds us."

"So you do get it. Why fight it? Why rationalize? Watching you do that is exhausting. Just play out your role as a villain. It'll be fun. Who knows, maybe you'll even win. With Ciro at your side, you could mold this world to suit your own tastes. With Solari connections and Volta money, you two would be unstoppable. The puppet masters..."

Xiuyang scoffed and shook her head. "It wouldn't be like that. We'll do great things. We'll probably change the world, but molding it? I don't want that kind of power."

"So, walk me through this: you reject the role of villain, and accept that you don't have the power to take on the role of a hero. You had the chance to become a martyr, but instead, you killed a bunch of yasoi, which you regret."

Xiuyang looked down. "...I do. I don't blame myself anymore, but I wish I'd never... No. I'm glad I got the chance to meet Tyrel. I just wish I'd been strong enough to defeat Juulet."

"Right. So there are no more roles for you to play. You're just set dressing—a useless person, like your sister Desi. At least Maria gets things done. She's accepted the role of villain. She wears it well."

Xiuyang scowled. "She's not 'useless.' There are more roles than just heroes, villains, and martyrs. Everyone serves a purpose. Maybe you're just a terrible storyteller. Ever consider that angle?"

"I don't really care how your story plays out, so long as my purposes are fulfilled in the end."

"The ends justify the means, huh? History is littered with villains like that. Seems like I'm more qualified to be a hero than you." Xiuyang took a step towards the girl.

The girl stepped forward, too. "What will you do, then? Will you stand in my way as a hero, or as a villain?"

"I don't really care what 'role' I play, so long as things end well for me and mine." Xiuyang turned away and proceeded down the branch.

The girl followed, sliding across the ground like a shadow. "For someone with little to no sense of self to speak of, that's a pretty self-absorbed thing to say."

"Is it? I remember reading somewhere once... 'He who does not provide for his brothers, yea, especially of his own blood, his faith is of no consequence, and he is worse than an infidel.' Charity starts at home... that's not evil."

"Your 'family' are a bunch of criminals married to tyrants. They don't need the help. The greatest danger they face is betraying each other." Xiuyang was cornered, now.

"Maybe, but I have friends who need 'me.' Not some 'role' that I play. Rather... I'm a Solari. I can play any 'role' I want. I have the power to become anyone, and I'll become whoever Sipenta needs me to be, any time Sipenta needs me." With that, Xiuyang stepped off the Ever Tree.

But the shadow would not let Xiuyang escape. She floated down along with her. Time slowed, and the fall seemed to last an eternity. "You say you have 'the power to become whoever Sipenta needs?' Yet, you've used it as 'the power to cast off any role or burden which inconveniences me.' First, you were an Oraff loyalist who swore never to kill. Now, you're flirting with the idea of serving Eshiran, bringing anyone who threatens the future of your country and family to whatever kind of ruin is most expedient. It's not some 'god' you serve, but your own whims. You cannot have self-determination without a determined 'self.' One day, after you've tried on and cast off every mantle and creed, you'll reach the end of your life, this chapter of Sipenta's history will have ended, and there will be no more roles for you. What you'll find is that you have not become 'whoever Sipenta needed,' but 'nobody.' You'll lose whatever 'self' you had and be forgotten to history as a nameless and craven Scoundrel."

Some time passed. Then, finally, like a revelation, the ground met Xiuyang's feet. "...You know... I've been trying to justify my own existence by thinking of ways to leave some 'legacy,' but that's not right. If a Solari like me goes all out, always trying to do the most good using all of my power... it's only natural that a Facemimic won't leave a legacy. History will forget my existence... or at best, remember me as a collection of 'unidentified persons.' So... 'Nobody' will be my role. So long as the gods remember me and my deeds, I'll accept it." Xiuyang gazed up at the starry sky, laid out exactly as she remembered it.

"You're saying you accept it? You're just going to give up on leaving a legacy?"

The stars reflected in Xiuyang's eyes. "It's not as if I'll be totally forgotten. Just as my ancestors passed down their stories of life in ReTan... If I live long enough, my children will remember what I did. My friends and their children will know it, too. Though they'll just be 'stories,' and not 'history...' my grandmother's 'stories' are, in a very real sense, the 'true history' of ReTan, unadulterated by politically convenient half-truths. Even if a day comes when those stories are no longer told, that matters more than a name in some cobbled-together 'history book.' It's overrated. ...It's funny... I idolized the idea because I spent so much time reading history—but now that history is happening now, it doesn't seem so important anymore."

"I can't follow that train of thought at all. Then again, you'll eventually change your mind and give up on this, too."

"Maybe I'll just become someone who's 'determined' like you said. What I do know is that I'll never cast off my friends. I'm thankful for all of them. None of them are burdens, or 'unnecessary...' right?" Xiuyang looked back up towards the Ever Tree. She thought of Seviin, who taught her this lesson, and of Ashon, who embodied it.

"Your words can't reach them here."

"I'd like to think that they did, somehow or other."

"That's just your incomprehensible fantasy."

"Huh. A devil that doesn't believe in miracles. Is that fitting, or ironic?"

The girl watched as Xiuyang faded away, escaping the nightmare.

"...I suppose 'Nobody' is a fitting role for a broken vessel. But, what will you do? You have friends on every side of this conflict. You think you can end it without losing most of them? When you do, you'll come crawling back with another lame excuse, I'm sure. Your 'Gift' is strong, but your 'heart' is weak. You think you can escape this nightmare you created? Just try it. You'll be back."

The nightmare flickered and fizzled out. Then, it was erased, and forgotten by Xiuyang.

But, though it was erased, it remained, like a faded stain.





Esparza Estate - Torragon


Home... Xiuyang blinked her eyes awake, then cast them about the familiar scenery. Familiar, and yet, how surreal it all was. Only the finest luxuries for a daughter of Esparza and Solari. Ciro had reacquainted her with a taste for such things. So why, here, did she not care for it? Why did it all feel so fake? Because when Ciro spoils me, it feels deserved. He appreciates me. We work together to earn those moments. Her own thoughts answered her. She couldn't help but be surprised at the positivity of the first thought that came to mind—like some kind of poison had left her body. And it's not alcohol for once. What did I dream about? I do feel like Seviin was there... It's like I had the best sleep of my life.

A gentle knock came at the door. Nary a moment's peace... "Wait in the drawing room," she replied. Rubbing sleep from her eyes, she set about applying her makeup. It had become somewhat of a routine. Some days saw more effort than others. Doing it here brought back some memories, much of which were unpleasant. She scowled into the mirror. Then, she pouted. Then, she smiled. The smile felt a bit less fake. She leaned back from the mirror, and found that what she saw didn't look so bad. Then, she took a small step back. Then, another step back. The scars are almost invisible from here. I could have gone thicker with the makeup, too. Is this how everyone sees me? I never realized... On a whim, she blew a kiss at herself in the mirror. Immediately, she was embarrassed. Ugh! I'm feeling all mushy. It's like I've found a whole new way to be disgusted with myself. Lucky me.

Hastily, she gathered her lost marbles and walked back to the bedroom door. There, she paused, in front of the emblem of her family: a falcon with a snake in its talons—a hypocritical symbol if ever there was one. My goals haven't changed. The nature of a Solari's work and methods haven't changed. The only thing that's changed is how I think of it. Rather than 'being forgotten as nobody,' I have 'the power to become nobody.' One label is 'deserved,' while the other is 'earned.' If I worked hard to achieve it, I can be satisfied with it, even if it's not a 'legacy.' My achievements are mine—even if I wear the faces of others, no one can take them from me.

...

Don't you see, father? The answer was right in front of you. You wanted to change the status quo... It wasn't your ideals that held you back, but your obsession with being recognized for it. That is where you failed... and it's why I will be better than you. Just watch me...




Xiuyang took a seat across from her Torragonese contact. "What is it?"

The man retrieved a binder full of documents and placed it on the table. "Paydirt," he replied simply.

He had no knowledge of the deeper meaning behind the word.

"Well done. I'll attend to these at once. Continue your work."
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