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Hidden 9 days ago 9 days ago Post by YummyYummy
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Silence. Not even a gust of wind. Everything had died in what was once called Viiqii. All that remained was a crater of salted land and rapidly decaying matter. Matter that was once the men and women of this village, now gone without a trace. Cawiuo Zast, Selena Creighton and Qelen the elder were among them too. But what had claimed the very last morsel of this land’s soul was not the horror that had made it its nest. An amalgamation of the worst things in the Hells had baptized it with his arrival. Now, it is permanently scarred.

Arcaan’toras’aamii had witnessed it all and managed to keep his head. He would never know whether Belthagor allowed it or if he was insignificant enough to not even be noticed. The once promising land he had hoped to leverage for his clan’s long term prosperity became ground zero for the most repulsive and monstrous thing he had ever seen. His eyes were hollow and his gait reduced to a limp despite being physically fine.

He found his tent an hour later, partially destroyed. Inside was Yamo’nabal’fiin, kneeling before a body wrapped in blankets. His eyes were red from tears he could not hold back anymore as they met Arcaan’s. The Aamii did not have to see what was in the wrappings to know, but he still endeavoured to see. Suulii was in it, many veins bulging all over her body with her severed leg infested with now decaying plant life. Her eyes were closed, her chest did not move with a stab wound in its centre and she looked cold.

In a land where all distinguishing factors were devoured and brought to death, where it was neither hot nor cold, where nothing lived or died, the world had never felt colder for these two men.

Esmii’nesta’tawar had vanished without a trace while Niallus Saberhagen fought off the Smiler until the bitter end to save his friend. Both were considered dead, leaving many friends and family to grieve without bodies to bury or cremate.

Few, if any, would know what truly happened in Viiqii. History would sooner forget it over the grander war that was to come and the inevitable calamities the Grand Demon Belthagor was preparing for Sipenta. But those that survived, the precious few with still their bodies and minds, will remember this day. Where the beginning of the end was birthed.

It came from the Bog.






Until last year, the world’s balance was held and controlled by a select few people. Some held more weight than others, but their roles in world events were undeniably above any other formal ruler of the world. Some called them the Gods of the mortal plain, others thought of them as none other than mere tyrants playing the role of a God. But now the biggest players were off the board.

Hugo Hunghorasz - Slain by everyone that mattered.

The Emperor of Nikan - Slain by his own brother.

The Silent Monk - Slain by his own hand.

Optimate Pious XIII & Optimate Justine III - Alive and poised for replacement if the need arises.

President Sanfor - Allegedly still presiding in Missai.


Half were gone, the other half nubiles compared to the ‘big three’. She bit her thumb’s nail as recalled some of these events unfolding. Exhilarating. There were now the ‘New Powers’, some already near their peaks, others budding at an alarming rate.

Emperor Cascal’umi’anthan - Emperor of Tarlon and Supreme commander of the Grey Fleet.

Empress Esuul of Tantiac - New head of the Sanguine council, allying it with Tarlon.

Karim Harrachora - Hugo’s replacement in all but raw skill and power.

The Twin Emperors - Heads of the new Sanguine Council.

Volto Dorado - The head of the Volti, now making their move.

The Mad Avatar - High Priestess of Viisan.


Juulet smirked in satisfaction as she carefully noted that particular one down. The best was saved for last, though in spite of her megalomania, she knew something was missing in this picture. It quickly broke that infantile smile of her’s.

The Traveler - The true wildcard.

She tapped her pen against her chin. Surely there was someone else of that calibre. Surely there was another extraordinary being to consider.

Of course, there was one that had been there all along. As she was about to jot it down above even the fallen ‘Gods’, the sound of a door opened prompted the one-legged Yasoi to perk up. None of the guests whom she could hear the footsteps could actually see her, instead they saw a dark chair turned opposite to them. It was one of those spinning chairs she was incredibly fond of.



The rugged man content with merely a tunic and other inconspicuous clothing spoke up. “Are you about to make a dramatic turn-”

Juulet spun her chair to dramatically reveal herself to the group of guests.

“Greetings! I’ve had shrimp prepared for this early supper.” the Yasoi opened her arms to display the long dining table before her. There was a silver bell over each plate where the guests were invited to take seats. “I was real hungry, so I figured this big meet would go well with the yums.”

Viktor, briefly known as Felix, shrugged as if this was routine and took a seat to Juulet’s right. To her left sat a Yasoi of about her age. Facial features suggested more masculine traits, but the build and long brown hair leaned feminine. They grimaced the moment Juulet opened her mouth and sighed in exasperation when offered a seat. They were also the first to remove the bell, revealing large, roasted prawns with a healthy amount of spicy sauce on them.

“Where’s Merit?” inquired the androgynous individual, the voice revealing without a doubt that he was, in fact, male. His voice was dry and demanding, but he didn’t raise it nor come off as downright aggressive.

“Busy.” replied Juulet. With a bell removed, she had given herself permission to indulge after setting her notepad to the side. “She’s met with our special guests already. We’re here to discuss business with ‘em.” she munched away with little regard for manners. She was a goddess, such petty worries were beneath her.

“That way you can burn away all our credibility again after all the work she’s done? You never cease to amaze me, babe.”

“Shuuuut the fuck uuuupppp Calion.” whined Juulet, surprisingly composed for how she was being talked to. It looked more like siblings bickering than animosity, at least from her. Calion, on the other hand, had a hint of venomous animosity in his eyes.

Viktor completely zoned them out and indulged in his meal as would any man used to the outdoors - mostly using his hands to peel the shrimp.

There was another participant that had entered last. A man adorned in fine Rettanese silks with the attire itself reserved only for the highest class within the capital - The Exemplars. Clad in a mixture of gold, green and brown, this round-faced, clean shaven man looking to be in his forties employed proper etiquette from his region, from using gloves for his hands when needing to touch the foods to expert use of chopsticks.

“Anyway,” Juulet took a bite from her grub without even bothering to decorticate. “I wanted to lube us up before the big welcome. Namely with discussing dear Viktor’s report. And also I’ve had the best fookin’ idea ever.” the accent slipped there, just a little bit.

All three raised a collective brow to that.

Juulet cleared her throat.

“Viktor, I see here our guy Don Balls kind of had it coming. That kind of leaves us in a pickle, don’it?” she cocked her head like an overly naggy teacher reprimanding a young student.

Viktor shrugged one shoulder, his interest clearly geared more toward the tricky shell of the prawn he had in his hands. “He was dead before I had arrived.”

“Yeaaaaaah, but you fucked up with controlling that thing. It slipped and screwed around and now here we are.” her wide and crazy eyes peered deep into Viktor’s hollow soul.

“It did.” he answered, staring her down without a change in his demeanour.

A silence reigned briefly, only for it to be broken by Calion.

“Wasn’t that what we wanted?”

“... Yeah, but the results aren’t to me liking. I gotta blame someone.”

Calion rolled his eyes. “If it’s such a big issue, find someone else to hold your hand in that adventure down south.” Juulet glared his way, he returned the favour. “That isn’t me.”

Juulet huffed and crossed her arms. “I’ve had another job for you anyway.”

“You’re not my boss.”

“Kind of am. Anywho- Now we’ve got all this nice info on our green pet project, but a new actual issue arises.” there was a shift in tone in the mad avatar’s voice. All eyes were on her now, including the mysterious Rettanese man who seemed frankly out of place. “The Big B is out early. We’re going to adapt.”

A new voice spoke. “If the Arrogant One’s presence is a true concern, then we would have been mobilized to silence him.” the regally dressed man spoke with perfect Avincian. “If no such thing has been ordained, then the matter must be settled. I believe Mister Strauss has performed his duty and retrieved the essential information we had been seeking.”

Juulet kept quiet and had nothing witty to add. “Hmmm. Sure.” she reached out to pat the Magusjaeger’s forearm. “You did good. For a guy that’s died like four times.” she snorted and Viktor chuckled.

“Let’s get the other part done hastily, please.” complained Calion.

Juulet clapped her hands. “Oh right! Thanks Cally!”

Calion groaned and rolled his eyes. He detested that name, and her.

“So, I met this painter guy, right? Total pushover artsy type. He had this cutest rock-person! And it could shoot a big laser too!” her gestures were trying to capture both the smallness of the construct and the flashiness of the blast. “And so I thought, how could I get one of those?”

“Golems. Ersand’Enise has recently integrated them.” spoke the Rettanese nobleman. “An art specific to the Dark Mages of West Callanast.”

Juulet pointed the man’s way. “Yeah, that! I saw how BIG and AWESOME they were during that big kerfuffle of revolution, soooo …” a big grin with nearly lidded eyes was directed Calion’s way.

“... What?”

“Sooooo I thought maybe we’d get a few of our own. And what better place than the source. That art Yanii mentioned a place called An Zini or something.”

“An Zenui.” corrected Calion.

“Sure. I figured you’d be the best suited to filter out the best of the best and retrieve it for us~” she leaned toward Calion’s, almost rubbing up to him like a cat. “C’mon, say yes, before I gotta put on my boss pants.”

The male Yasoi pursed his lips and, after brief deliberation, shrugged. “Not the worst idea you’ve had. And keeps me away from you. I’ll do some recon.”

An excited Juulet clapped in celebration. “Fan-fuckin-tastic! We’re going places, I promise. Just a few more steps …” she bit her lip in anticipation.

“Oh right!” she shuffled on her seat to adopt a more proper posture. “I think our special guests are here. Let them in!” she called out to the doorman upon sensing a cluster of unfamiliar energy signatures. Three sets of footsteps entered. All Yasoi. Two women and one man.

“Welcome ladies and good sir, have a seat. I, Juulet’oli’muustii’zan, High Priestess of the Nation of Viisan, humbly invite you to my table.” she opened her arms and nodded her head in respect, though she didn’t stand.

Cherii'cola'caliman and Arsii'cola'sevenuup were first to find their seats, with the martiarch Leluun’dorii’cola taking the spot opposite of Juulet.

“And we would be delighted to discuss how we can help you settle a few misfortunate scores.”

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Hidden 8 days ago 8 days ago Post by YummyYummy
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Dear Honourable Prospect,
Has your life taken a turn? Do you seek thrills you have long since desensitized yourself to? Or perhaps you wish to start anew?
Whatever your creed may be, one of Sipenta's mythical and lost marvels beckons the ambitious, curious and desperate alike. Deep in the frigid tundras lies the oldest gem of this world.
An expedition like none other in history to unearth a legend that can make dreams into tangible reality. A chance for a legacy. A chance for a new beginning. A new era.
The Abyssal Forge awaits you.


Whether it was morbid curiosity, a search for answers or a last chance to find meaning, you signed your soul to the once in a millenia opportunity to be the first to discover the Abyssal Forge. Its secrets beckon so sweetly, the potential infinite. The way you obtained your invitation could be interpreted as fate, a pure chance encounter, but at the back of any reasonable person’s mind, you wonder if this wasn’t all predetermined.

All invitation holders were brought to an innocuous meeting point, different for each. One was in the centre of Varrahasta inside a famous inn, another in a shed in the middle of nowhere Meatu. The response to their signed letter was a simple map with no other instructions. Most would be suspicious, but why even sign the letter if one wouldn’t even entertain the opportunity? There were no signs of danger after rigorous scouting, after all.

But the forces behind the plot had no intention of being discovered. Once in the respective rendez-vous points were found, the sensation of ants on every part of the body overtook even the strongest among you. Resistance was futile, magic had been stifled far too quickly compared to the anti-magic devices encountered in the past. Before long, the ceaseless, horrible sensation reached the head, numbing the mind as it did the body. You would awaken some time later somewhere unfamiliar, reeking of old and dust.




“Bzzzzztt.”



You could hear the sound of static near you. It repeated in regular intervals. The sensation of ants was still there but duller. You could move, but your magic was near impossible to tug out without causing your extremities to ache and your body to falter. As you come to more and more, your vision becomes less blurry and the source of the electrical noise becomes apparent: A wooden box with gold-coloured metal meshes of a circular shape. A contraption like you’ve never seen before, barring perhaps a few similarities to Sirrahi-tech, but far more rustic. In short, it was a radio.

“Bzzzt. I- Bzzzt. See you are awake. Good.”

The box produced a masculine voice. It sounded mundane, unfamiliar to you, though the grainy filter and static veiled the finer details and intonation. Upon focusing on the box, you notice a set of egg-sized metal capsule containers surrounding it. Three for a couple of groups, and two for another. As you keenly gain in awareness, you easily realize there is one for each person with you. Along with them was an equal amount of oil lanterns.

“Before we begin, open these eggs and swallow the pill inside. Lest you wish to perish slowly as did countless others.”




Whether you were already outdoors or you found a window to the outside, you would at some point see where you truly are. You had likely heard of Halge Larchelon before coming, the city known to have housed the first ever great forge in history. Now a large and dead ruin in the shape of a crater. That isn’t to say what created the crater was the cause of the lifelessness, but rather this city was once built inside of it with a large tower, one compared to the Forked Tower, looming over all.

You could not see the sun, nor even the sky that you knew for that matter. A thick fog contained the borders and spread about in the city while the heavens were perpetually swallowed by a blueish cloud with only a dim light source East of the tower that never seemed to move. There was the occasional lightning and thunder clap from these unusual clouds.

It was cold. Not freezing, just cold. The wind felt unnatural, almost stagnant as if it had been the same gust circulating for a long time.

A city ruled by a dark, featureless blue, dull grey and unimpressive brown. No life to be found, no home to preserve, and thus nothing to love, hate or feel passion over. And with the absence of all life, death too became stagnant. Memories now mere dust with nothing being built for thousands of years. Nothing.

A city that even the Gods had forgotten.



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Hidden 8 days ago Post by jasbraq
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Webs of Lies and Deceit


Secrets clad in silk.


Through the streets of the capital roamed an oiran who had caught the eye of some within high society. Her name was Hiraka Sayo. Her talents were prized, her beauty unmatched, but it was her skill in attentively listening while tending to the stressed men that were valued most. Night after night, the woman entertained the court’s men and women, gathering drunken gossip over sake cups.

One man, in particular, seemed to be rather loose-lipped and spilled some words for the woman tending to his needs. ”How has the emperor been?” The man stared in his cup ”I heard that the emperor might no longer be with us.” Sayo filled his cup and looked at the man questioningly. ”The emperor is no longer with us? Who rules over us in his stead?” The man stared at the oiran with drunken confusion. ”I’m not hic. . sure if he is dead. He left hastily and hasn’t seemed to have returned.” Words were shared until it was time to rest, collect payment, and bid each other farewell.

The next night, the oiran had struck gold, a third son of one of the daimyo. Nakamura Takahiro did not seem to drink too much, yet his presence was comforting if not a little tense. ”The other men don’t lie when they speak of your comforting presence, Lady Sayo.” Takahiro leaned back as he sipped out of his cup. Sayo in response to his words used her fan to conceal her smile. ”My, I am honored by your words.”

The oiran could then feel it, Takahiro was drawing. ”Truly a shame that a woman of such talents had to have ulterior motives.” The woman in response would back away. ”Lord Takahiro, I do not understand. Have I done something to offend you?” The man squinted his eyes at the woman. ”A normal lowborn would have fainted by this. It seems you are either a bastard or not what you seem to be.”

Two armed men soon entered the room as the man stood up from his seat. ”Hiraka Sayo, I hereby arrest you on the pretense of espionage on the great emperor.” The woman was cornered. ”But I heard of the emperor’s. .” ”The emperor is alive and well. Such gossip would hurt the stability of our great empire. His orders have called for your prying to cease.”

I did not want to resort to this. But it was already too late, the woman was dragged out of the room and brought to another that would be more suitable for questioning. The further they walked with the woman the more it seemed to. . . fade? The young man took notice and raised his voice. ”Search for that woman, now!”
The woman, or rather the man escaped. He cut his hair with a sigh. ”Guess that means Sayo’s role is over. Oh well.”

Never trust the word of a merchant


Hirokusa Daisuke, a man of opportunities and one of the merchants who had been forced to leave their posts within Rettan, arrived in the lands of the Nakamura. They were not as opulent as some other places within Nikan and even seemed rather poor. How can this be one of the bigger daimyos?

He soon arrived within the city that housed the Kagaku no Shiro, it stood out amongst the unimpressive buildings of the city itself. But once he met up with his fellow merchants, gossip began from his words. ”Hey, did you hear that the emperor was taken by the Rettanese?”

And as if merchants can’t help themselves, the rumor spread far quite quickly. Within a day or two even arriving within the Nakamura court’s lower high society. Who was fast to take the merchant responsible to the advisor. ”To think the dirty Rettanese would go so far as to kidnap our emperor! . . Or is he plotting something?” The man thought attentively. Was he playing with the merchant? Not that he could speak too far out of line as two samurai with antlers on their helmets surrounded his sides. ”Send him to lord Nakamura.”

Nakamura Daisuke sat in front of the merchant. ”So it is you who has spread these rumors?” The merchant bowed his head down onto the flooring. ”I just said what I heard when I was still in Rettan. I apologize for my transgression!” The daimyo raised his hand to sign to the man. ”There is no need. This might be advantageous to gain the support needed to show our neighbors up north to not mess with us.”

A soft breath left the older man. ”But in more good news, for that I know, the emperor is still alive and well.” He stared at the merchant, perhaps even at the man underneath. ”However, if you wish to know more, I would travel to the Ishii clan. If they push for a reason to speak to them, tell them it was me who sent you.”

As the merchant set off to leave in a bow the lord stopped him. ”Travelling all by yourself might be suspicious and most of all dangerous. Take some of my men with you.”

The Illusive against the Elusive


Fusuke, the renowned samurai from the Hirasou clan, who has served under the Nakamura for generations has traveled towards the lands of the Ishii. The countryside was utterly beautiful, a stark difference from his previous visit to the Nakamura. However, after feeling the mood of the residents there was a sense of anxiety in the air.

He wished to visit some of the craftsmen yet his task by the Daimyo of the Nakamura took precedence. Fusuke arrived at the daimyo’s palace and was greeted by one of his men. ”State your purpose.” The man looked right into his soul. ”I am here to find an audience by the order of Nakamura Daisuke to ask about the status of our great emperor.” The Ishii man looked rather unimpressed. ”The emperor is well.”

”Then what of the rumors?” Fusuke questioned. ”Are but rumors. The emperor does not wish to spread panic among the public.” His eye twitched. ”Then there is something going on with the emperor?” The man was about done with this rude samurai. ”You will leave this place and-” It was then that another man approached and whispered into his ear. ”You will stay. . . Lord Hirofumi wishes to speak to you. But your entourage will stay.”

The young samurai entered the Daimyo’s chamber alone and kneeled. ”Hirasou Fusuke, it is a pleasure to meet you. It has been quite a while since I last had someone from Constantia in my presence.” The man sat, stroking his goatee with a soft smile. ”Is it that obvious?” Half of his facial illusion faded to show a face closely aligned with his real face. ”For me? It is, I have lived a lifetime of trickery and deceit, a young man won’t trick this old man’s eyes.”

”Then do you know why I am here?” His head was lifted to look towards the old man. Hirofumi stopped stroking his goatee for just a moment to think. ”Perchance it was curiosity? Words from Ersand’Enise about the death of the Emperor brought a sense of adventure within your young heart?” Fiske’s eyes widened. ”Right you are, Lord.”

”The last time someone so overly unprepared entered my presence was Hugo Hunghorasz himself.” The old lord’s own words got a chuckle out of himself. ”You met Paradigm Hunghorasz?” The chuckle turned into a laugh. ”Indeed I have, we met during the war.” His laugh then faded. ”’It's a shame that he is no longer with us.”

”But if you are a curious student from Ersand’Enise.” He leaned forward. ”I can tell you about the emperor, if you do me a little favor.” The boy began to shine from excitement. For just a small favor? ”I will do as you ask of me.”

”Good, good. I’ll remember that.” He smiled contently before he began. ”Have you heard of the Sanguine Council?” Fiske stared blankly. ”The myth about sanguinaires and their spooky leadership?” He said jokingly. ”Yes, but it is not a myth, young one.” His pose then straightened.

Fiske looked upon the old man with confusion. ”But what do those stories of those sanguinaires have to do with them?” Hirofumi shook his head. ”Now, why would I tell you such a thing?”

”Are you telling me, the emperor was-?”

”He is, yes.”

”Is? Does that mean that he isn’t” Fiske stared at the man. ”The emperor is alive, as is his brother.” He chuckled at the boy’s surprise. ”Though among the sanguine council he is not known as the emperor, but as the Progenitor. His disappearance is the cause of the anxiety you must have felt before..”

”But is it not dangerous to tell me such things?” The boy looked worried as if he just gained the world’s glare upon him. ”Nonsense, boy. You promised to help me with a little favor, so it is only right I give you something in return.” His smile did not fade yet his presence became more domineering ”But you may only tell the right people. Such news must not reach the wrong ears.”

He then moved his hand, only for one of his men to appear out of nowhere. ”Now, for that little favor. I have this one from a lesser clan of us. He has been quite rowdy.” The summoned man then offered the boy a knife. ”Do you know what I am asking of you?” Fiske nodded, taking the knife. The man disappeared soon after. ”A member of a branch family messed with the main family to gain influence and potentially even rule over the main family. . . and you can’t have that.” He stared at the knife. ”And someone not from Nikan leaves no traces to you.”

The man nodded. ”See to it that it is done.”

Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap



The moon hung low on the horizon, its light cast over the Castle of the Kobayashi. Fiske donned attire that made him blend in further with the darkness of the night, a mask with no discernible features hiding his face. He had but one goal, to take the life of someone for the sake of another.

Slipping by the men on guard was not as he had expected it would have gone, but he is no longer the child at An Zenui who could not conceal his presence well enough that even a blind man could sense him. No, he had grown in his craft. It could be said that he moved like a shadow but even a shadow would be better perceivable.

It took some searching for the assassin to find his target, Kobayashi Noboru sat cross-legged in a dimly lit chamber. Was he praying? Not that it mattered, it only made it easier to get this dirty hit done. The blade closed in on the back of the man’s neck, but Fiske hesitated.

”You reek of hesitation, stranger.” A voice from a corner of the room spoke out, it was Noboru, holding out a knife. An illusion? He clicked his tongue. ”They don’t make killers like they used to.” The masked figure stayed silent on the matter. ”No exchange of words? It is a fight for life and death, the least you could do is make it more fun for me.”

Fiske froze up, only to charge at him with his blade. Or that was what he wanted the other to think. The real Fiske wasn’t visible to the naked eye. The man’s body collapsed but when the invisible hitman tried to take advantage of the collapse the man returned to his senses. ”So there is a little skill in you.” He dodged any attempt to slice at him. ”But to think they would send a child to deal with me.” The man then began to look more disappointed. ”I was hoping they sent someone of more renown.”

”I will do. .” The boy kept on swinging wildly. ”Hahaha, can you now? From what I’m seeing you’re struggling quite a bit.” No matter how much Fiske slashed at him, it did not connect for the man seemed to be incredibly slippery. ”Let's make it more fun, shall we?” He held his daggers tensely as two more Noboru showed up. Three different assailants to deal with? It was slightly too much for him to deal with and through the false slashes, some connected.

”Having a hard time? Guess it is time to end it.” The man laughed, followed swiftly by a long exhale. Masked lips crept up from behind the man. ”I tend to agree.” Was it another illusion? No, the stab wound was real. It disoriented the man to the point his clones dissipated followed by Fiske’s image soon disappearing alongside them.

Noboru’s legs did not move, instead they caved in. Nerves severed in one swift stab. ”Guards! . . Guards! Help!” He tried to crawl towards the door. ”They won’t hear you, I can assure you that.” Unheard screams followed until it became eerily silent. A sense of triumph combined with disgust filled the boy’s mind. His first big win against someone strong, but his first murder as well.

The Serpent’s Offer


The deed has been done, this little favor fulfilled and the boy returned to the Ishii estate. In his presence was Ishii Hirofumi and a man bearing two cups and a gourd of sake. He knelt and bore the daggers to the daimyo.

”May I assume that the deed was done without too much hassle?” The boy only nodded, his face grim from guilt. Sake was being poured into the cups and one was sent Fiske’s way. Hirofumi kinetically took his own cup and the gourd from the retainer. ”Leave us be, I will pour the drinks.” The retainer lowered his head and complied.

”You protect and ruin lives. Such is the path of men that devote themselves to the good that is balance.” He raised his cup before taking a sip. ”Do not beat yourself over it. Think instead of the lives you protected from the deed you have done.” Fiske stared into the reflection within the sake. ”But I only killed.”

”And with that one kill, you have helped uphold the balance” He poured himself another. ”Now, come. Drink with me, bearer of the Snakes..” Fiske stared at the daggers before staring back. ”These?” The man nodded. ”To the victor belong the spoils. You may be its bearer until someone worthy within our clan shows themselves.”

As the night passed Fiske began to doze off. A young lady would enter the room. ”Tsuyu, please escort our guest to his bed, he has earned it.” Tsuyu bowed her head with a warm smile. ”As you wish, lord Hirofumi.” The drunken Fiske was guided to his sleeping quarters.

The night passed and the morning dawned upon the castle. Fiske woke up feeling no hangover, instead he felt energized. The woman opened the door, concealing a smile with her hand. ”Young lord, I have placed the Snakes in a case for safe travels. I hope you will find your way home well.” Her smile then widened past her hand. ”I do hope to see you once more when you have to return the Snakes, or when you are around.”

Fiske stared at the woman who seemed rather happy to see him. ”Yeah, I hope so too.” He took the case and smiled back. ”I shall take care of these.” And thus he left his quarters to return to the school he set off from.
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Hidden 8 days ago Post by dragonpiece
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Crossroad

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Hidden 7 days ago Post by YummyYummy
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It was on the eighteenth day of Miret'thilan'dichora's absence that Zarina made it up to the attic and opened the back window to let some air in. The room had formerly been occupied by Jamboi and, all-too-often, Penny. With the pair having gone on extended leave under circumstances that most whispered had to do with the bulge in the latter's belly, the room had sat more or less empty, though it was still Ashon's space and felt like it.

Perhaps Zarina had needed to take her mind off of the happenings in Mezegol or the summons of her mother or Marceline's ongoing retreat from the world. Maybe she was just cleaning because it needed to be done. the space was getting rather musty. In any event, she pushed open the window and there was a loud 'thump' that made her jump slightly, though she likely never would've admitted such except in the company of her closest friends.

There, handing from a tree and swinging gently back and forth was a gift wrapped with a neat little bow and a somewhat crude but very fetching little smiley face pinned to a clipboard. She recognized the penmanship - or lack thereof - immediately.

Upon seeing what had made flinch, she re-thought the notion of sharing this to even her best of friends. There are enough embarrassments to poke fun out of her anyway. That said, as silly as the situation was, the hanging gift with a message dangling by it. Her first instinct was not to seize it and instead look around her, the outside. Up, down, left, right, even under her feet. She was sure this wasn't there twenty minutes ago when walked home.

At the absence of any presence, Zarina's amber eyes took in the familiar quirks of the message dedicated to her. A simple smile, one that communicated the author without a single word. Another peek of precaution out the window, one dedicated to the tree more than anything - tree people, a hassle - before giving up and taking in the spoils of her discovery.

With the smiley-message put to the side after a quick check, the avaricious part-dragon couldn't help herself. She pulled the ribbon and started to neatly undo the wrapping ... Until five seconds in and she got impatient. To shreds.

Inside was a strand of Osaian ribbonwood, imbued with manas in the manner of Tarlonese woodweaving. It was thin and flexible and slightly translucent. Attached to it was a small note that twirled in the breeze as Zarina held it.

"Dear Luuchii,

I miss you more than words can tell: your cute face and your hidden sweetness and your big ideas, so I begged my aunt to make you this so that we could be together. It's more than just figurative, too! The ribbonwood is a sanguinaire of a plant and it siphons manas. I let it bite me and take some of mine (maybe a fair comeuppance for a bloodsucker - now I know how it feels). They're in there and they can help whatever you use this for. I love you forever and always and I hope it helps you until we can be together again and for long after that.

Love,

Miret.

P.S. Have you done your laundry lately?"


“Nope.”

Zarina answered in yet another show of infantile habits. All with a massive smile that stressed her features, leaving her cheeks reddened from the extertion. The note was clutched close to her chest, her breathing exceptionally tranquil, as she leered at the peculiar plant. A sanguinaire plant, how macabre. And the visceral nature of it piqued curiosity. With some hesitation, she produced a gardening glove from one of the attic boxes she had stored and reached her hand out to the thing. “Now I need to figure out how to not have you eaten by my little feathered and fur babies, Miret.” she chuckled.

The plank was... a plank, having ceased sucking blood around the time it had been felled and carved. There was, fortunately, no danger, though its manas did seem to respond do hers immediately, trying to assimilate her colony, failing, and then settling for communing into it.

It was not too much longer, however, before Zarina found herself in the cellar, rooting around through baskets of unwashed laundry that she'd usually have used magic on or paid a washerwoman to clean. In the very back corner, after lifting one up, she noticed that something about it was 'off'. There was something solid in the middle, thumping around.

After a bit of digging and eventually meeting an anomalous addition in the dirty laundry bin - she did not revel in it whatsoever - Zarina plucked the next step to the treasure hunt. At first she was concerned with touching any of these, and still used her gardening glove. But then she realize this was Miret. Why so much paranoia? Rid of any unnecessary precautions, she extracted the next 'gift'.



There was a head of Eluuxo inside, only, it had a piece of paper with a little angry face pinned to it. "This is to remind you of what we will do when I'm back," the back of the note said. "Look your best for me, hmm?"

It was once again signed 'Miret', only in yasoi script this time.

"P.S. Have you studied for your Tinctures & First Aid exam?"

Zarina could only muster a dull stare at the cabbage. She dreaded the idea of somebody else accidentally stumbling upon it. The vegetable used for aphrodisiacs was quickly hidden away before she heeded the next 'clue.'

“Hah. Never a boring moment with you.”

Next stop was the the study where most of her course work and assignments were kept, including the practice tinctures. She opened one of the cubards under a shelf to find the box full of needles, threads, dried reagents and a few old instruction manuals.

There, she found another note and a smiley face with glasses and buckteeth. "Go to the library and take out that book we talked about, lazy bum. I love you."

Zarina rolled her eyes and capitulated to the mocking smiley's demands. The library was, well, a few feet away. The challenge was to recall what book was mentioned-

“Ah, right.”

The Greedy Dragon's Hoard, a young adult's novel about a dragon with immense wealth, a harem and the most beautiful of beasts. Eventually, one of his concubines burned down his den, and the melted gold melded into his scales, turning him gold and truly immortal. The book is mostly a variety of fables, ending with the dragon being far too heavy to leave his den. As to why they talked about it- Zarina was teasingly compared to the main character for reasons.

Zarina dug for the book and couldn't find it. Miret had returned it a few weeks ago, before leaving. Instead, where the book had been, was another note: "The Grand Library, dork. ♥"

Zarina let out a frustrated sigh. An exaggerated response given she was always smiling.

To the Grand Library! Where she sought the same book.



It was not so very long after that Zarina found herself at the Grand Library. It smelled of books and dust that sparkled in the Dorrad sunlight. Voices echoed up through the foyer and there seemed - always - to be a slight stench of pigeons at the uppermost levels, where they congregated about the great glass dome.

It was on one of these levels that she located her book, but she found more than that. There was a little bottle of plushtail oil behind it, with a little note attached carrying a worried face.

"Dear Zarina,

Please remember to drink this when it's that time of the month. I love you no matter what, but you're better when you're not trying to eat me... well, you know what I mean.

Love,

Miret.

P.S. Have you cleaned the old dragon stables lately?"


Zarina took advantage of the tranquil nature of the library to give herself a brief break. Plushtail in hand, she contemplated whether to still take this game with joy or vexed that her lover hadn't just come and said hello. The thoughtful nature of the gifts and quips made her lean toward the former still.

After a quarter-hour of putting around, she headed to the animal farm - although not before killing two birds with one stone and acquiring meats from the local butcher. Dried, harder meats that were cheaper and quite lean. A bit too lean to be enjoyed by gourmands, anyway. The sack over her shoulder contrasted with her green silks, earning herself a few stares by gossiping lordlings and snarky commoners alike. She'd be lying if she said it didn't affect her a little, but she was keen on feeding her beasts herself.

Her allotted stables held three dragons: Alqasas, Thawra and now Sassy Xiao. The eldest, Alqasas napped and had grown wise to rushing in for food, knowing it was going to come eventually. Thawra was more like an eager dog - always wanting attention, and being hand fed. Being the smaller of the two Froabas, she developed quite the needy tendencies.

Then there was Sassy Xiao, raised wild but still a chick when taken in. She reportedly made daily messes in the brief time it had been housed.

“Oi, sit.” the rambunctious critter nearly lunged at its master out of a show of affection, but the size made the distinction between playing and predation very muddied. “No. NO!” Zarina took a quick step to the side and pointed her finger over the Emperor Kite's snout, nearly poking between her eyes. “Relax, and open wide, princess.”



In time, the three dragons were fed. While Zarina did so regularly, and went about all of her usual cleaning tasks as one might expect of a responsible dragon owner, she only went over the unused stalls once a month... on a good month. The last time had been shortly before Miret had been sent off to war.

Unsurprisingly, she found a smiling face gently carved into the cleaning bucket. Inside was a note left by her lover and a small bottle.

"This is Luudus Leaf shampoo. The Luudus plant grows in colonies along the southern edge of Nanoi, where it is rainiest, on coasts and islands of swampy inland lakes. It is a writhing vine and is known to eat people when it can. Harvesting it is an immense act of bravery and personal risk - no, I didn't get this one myself. I bought this from a vendor - and seen as a symbol of the importance of personal fitness and beauty. It is also the best shampoo that money - or a few fingers - can buy and will continue to clean your hair for two weeks after applied.

This is a reminder to always work as hard as I know you do, luuchii, but to look after yourself as well. While I'm right beside your snoring self as I write this, I imagine it'll be about a month until you find it and I hope you won't be too mad at me for being away for so long. I only ever cared about Tyrel and (kinda) Chad before I met you. You helped me care about myself and my future, about causes greater than me, about people who weren't yasoi, and - most importantly - about you. Do me a favour, would you? Space these out two days when you do the rest. If everything goes to plan, you'll have the best surprise of all waiting at the end of the last one."

Love you always,

Miret

P.S. Have you checked that Stella has been replacing the grinder filter regularly at your Proving Grounds location?"


The first paragraph was taken in like all the other letters, sat comfortably inside of Xiao's pen with the needy dragon's head rested over both Zarina's legs. Idle strokes kept the beast soothed and in partial slumber while the other held the longer note. It was the second paragraph that warranted a few pause. Embarrassment, loneliness, regret, want, fear. So many emotions flooded in at once. Her forehead met the base of her thumb, eyes closed in an effort to contain her feelings. She ended up letting only a sniffle escape.

“I miss you so much.”

Zarina whispered, prompting the semi-conscious Xiao to perk up for a second before falling back into comfort. “Other side of town, huh? Little shit.” the moment ended with a smile.

Respecting the request, the young beastmaster took the opportunity to do some errands - yet another task she usually delegated to hired work - by making the rounds through the shops and finally stopping at the Proving Grounds where her next message had be found. The last for the day.

The next day, after class, it was the Biology classroom with the fake skeleton - or at least she thought it was fake - where she'd find the next smiley-clue inside the skull.

Then it was the very first kiosk she had opened for Zenobucks. Inside the bin full of discarded coffee bags they returned to the merchants every two months for a light discount on extra shipping fees. The smile had a particularly smug look to it.

Initially she wanted to call it early if the clue hadn't led her back to her house. This one was easy to find: Riesco's mane had been neatly braided without Zarina's knowledge, and inside one of the braids was the next clue. There was no smile, instead the horse turned to perform his signature tongue-wag mockery. It never failed to make his rider burst into laughter.

Early in day two, the Virangish treasure seeker found herself at the Arboretum, by the tree where she and Miret had first met. Where she sought the shade after a botched three-legged race. “Where it all began. Corny. I love you so much.” she spoke to herself as she got to the tree and just took the chance to sit and watch the dawn kiss the city of magic.

While some of the surprises had been prepared and left waiting before Miret's departure, others had been slipped into place by a series of accomplices: a Seviin here, a Tku there, a Tommy at some point.

There didn't seem to be much here except a pretty view to make Zarina wax sentimental. That was when she detected a rustle in some nearby bushes. A quick energy sweep revealed no interloper - only the telltale signs of someone masking their energy signature.

“Oi.”

In the blink of an eye, Zarina stood just a foot away from the bush, arms crossed and eyes glaring down at it. Her position was such that the morning sun cast quite the shadow over the bush and whatever was hiding inside. “Where I'm from, we castrate peeping Toms.” she smirked.

There was nobody there, oddly. Zarina looked around in tandem with an energy sweep and saw a note nailed to the tree that she could've sworn hadn't been there before. When she approached it, it read:

"Look up."

She mouthed it as she read and... there was more than her own voice. Gazing down at her from the branches, hair dangling like curtains to either side of her face, was Miret with a soft smile and cheeks flushed with colour.

“Nice try.”

Zarina cackled and fought against the urge valiantly ... Before obliging with a swift and twitchy movement of her head. “Oi!” she called out as she spotted Miret. “Do you have a loicence for that tree there?” she asked with a mediocre Enthish accent. Hands on her hips, she expected the object of her affections to come to her after trekking for two days.

Miret dropped right down on top of her. "Here comes!" she squealed, hoping to be caught.

Zarina scooped her up in a bridal carry and the yasoi laughed, leaning in for a kiss. "Sostrong," she cooed, "My hero!"

A total fluke, Miret's voice made Zarina's knees weak and the shows affection reduced her tense muscles into mush, and yet she caught the trickster. “Hah. I may or may not dabble in some shellfish lifting.”

She batted her eyelashes as they parted and she was let back onto her feet. "Like my little scavenger hunt?"

Holding Miret in such a manner, however, quickly got embarrassing. Far too manly of a role! And she feared her increasingly permanent bitchface was going to make her into one of these easily identified sapphic phenotype the girls would incessantly gossip over. Gently she let her lover back down with careful consideration. “Uh, yeah, a date's never boring with you, is it? I'm just going to say it, I can't one up you.” she raised her hands in surrender.

But she didn't keep the distance for long. A quick step forward and she was brushing up to her sorely missed partner. “What brings you here, Luuchi? All this way, just for me? I'm flattered, but really?”

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Miret's fingers found Zarina's and intertwined them. "In my heart, always just for you, luush'elar." She began leading Zarina over to a picnic basket she'd hidden, and she took a moment to extricate it from the bushes. "Work, too, though," she sighed. "Always work, even when I'm on leave."

Unceremoniously yet with incongruous grace, she plopped herself down on the grass and patted a spot beside her. "I forgot the blanket," she remarked sheepishly and, for a moment, there seemed to be something small about her - vulnerable, even - as she looked up at Zarina.

“Well, it's an honour to have your scarce break time dedicated to yours truly.” answered Zarina, choosing to not dwell on either subjects. One made her far too many butterflies and the other forced the dregs of anxiety she bottled up back up.

A seat was taken on the dry grass, announcing the end of Dorrad and the hottest days having yet to come. “Luuchi.” a gentle hand remained over the Yasoi's and a mellifluous voice beckoned Miret's attention. “How are Tyrel and Chad? Without you around ...” then, a light squeeze of the hand. “Are you alright?”

Miret leaned in. "No," she whispered. "They're watching me, so smile as if I've just told you a funny secret."

“Pfft.” Zarina immediately blurted out, even letting a few spittles bombard her unfortunate luush'elar. Bent over as if getting over a flabbergasting joke, she passed her hand over her hair to comb it over her ear. “If you want to talk seriously, I know a few places.” she whispered, eyes narrowed to feign some foxy look, suggesting she had teased or something equally as playful. “Or we can just enjoy.”

Miret forced a blush, for such was her control over her face. "We totally should," she squealed. She pulled back, standing and twirling on the spot. "Just me and you and not a care in the world." She breathed a deep breath in and out, extending a hand. "Let's do it!" For a moment, her eyes told more: "Please," they said, "right now. I really need this."

Zarina sighed, just to put up the facade as the one in control. An attempt at reassurance in a time where many felt like their fates were held in the palms of men they never met. After a tap on her knee she hoisted herself up, reaching for Miret's hand half-way there. “Thanks, love.” a quick pelvis thrust with her hands on the small of her back prompted a light crack of her spine. “You and me. And my hippo. I need to feed it, actually.” she shrugged. “Did I tell you how it almost saved a platoon's life?”

Miret arched an eyebrow in curious amusement. "Oh really?" she chirped, "Do tell." With that, she squeezed Zarina's palm and made to follow her wherever she might lead the pair.

“It put the King of the Sea to sleep.” answered Zarina with a whimsical and dramatic voice. “I would likely not be in one piece either if it weren't for that nascent warrior.”

With a quick glance to both sides, she made both herself and her lover zip through space-time to land in her bedroom. “As comfy as it is, this isn't the place.” the Virangish rushed over to the opened cage where a sleeping house hippo was plucked out to instead sleep in a handbag loaded with fresh lettuce. “Biby - check. Now then, hand!” this time she offered it whilst keeping up with the inherited habit.

This time a portal was opened and ... They were on a mountain and behind them a lonesome cottage. “Welcome to my Dorrad villa.”

Miret's eyes widened and she turned on the spot. "W-where are we?" She sucked in a great big breath of the fresh cold air. "I mean... it's gorgeous!" She seemed, at least momentarily, at ease.

“Sawand.” Zarina smiled cheekily, tugging at her partner's hand as they approached the building. “I'm willing to bet even Tarlon doesn't have folks in this little prize I've won.” and soon they were inside the warm, homely establishment.

Miret twirled about as she followed her luush'elar in. "Sawand," she enthused. "Whew-ee." Her eyes darted one way and then the next, taking in the unique architecture, the cozy homeliness, and Zarina and her odd but adorable little pet. "Was this from the Trials, Luuchii?"

“M'hm.” there was a front desk, unmanned and neat. “Ashok is probably getting provisions.” she mumbled to herself, deciding that waiting was pointless and unhooked one of the keys from the board. “The rooms are great, we get out own fireplace if it gets chilly.” again she held her luush'elar's hand, guiding her to room 3 of the cottage inn.

It was as homely as could be with a double bed, a kitchenette in an adjcent room, proper latrines and an expensive begemot rug. And, of course, the promised fireplace surrounded by stone. Zarina placed her bag on the rocking chair and sat on the bed. “If you need a place to crash, this room is always kept vacant.”

Miret curled up beside her. "It's lovely," she remarked softly, eyes roving about as she snuggled in. There seemed to be something of a wistful air to her. "A place of our - your - own." She smiled at Zarina. "I'm sorry for being gone so suddenly and so long," she sighed. "You deserve better." Her eyes darted about the wonderful room again.

No words came from Zarina, only a blush. And then a tight squeeze of her arm around Miret, tugging her close. “You came back, that's all that matters.” she laid a peck on her luush'elar's forehead. “What's been troubling you, Luuchii?”

"Heh," Miret snorted. "I almost died." She shrugged and shook her head ruefully, cracking a sad little smile. "After all you've seen and been through and all that I have, that doesn't sound like such a big deal, does it?"

She sighed. "I was doomed, to tell you the truth, and so was Chad and so were all of us if Tyrel hadn't arrived." She bit her lower lip. "It got me thinking that, aside from you, what do I have to show for my life? What have I done with it?" She shook her head again, tightly, this time. "I'm tired of war. I wanna take my family, my friends, and you, and... get out." She paused and shrugged, shooting a hopeful glance up at Zarina.

Instead of giving her opinion or pushing back against the negative thoughts plaguing Miret, Zarina merely caressed the distressed woman's head, focusing on the minute little locks of hair to neatly straighten back behind the pointed ear. “Mmm.” was her response to Miret's wants. “But we can't simply abandon our homes, now can we?” her head tilted as she peered down at the curled up Yasoi.

“I'm being called home. Likely because of what's happening in that Coffee Island - Palapar.” lips pursed and hands clenched harder. “It's coming soon. The war. And all I'm worried about, honestly, is the same as you. What have I done of real note in my life? Not because I think I'm going to die ...” although the fear lingered, even as she put on her brave face. “I owe it to my family to fight for them and become something. The same way you owe a lot to your family - Tyrel and Chad.”

Miret managed a quick, nervous smile. "You always know just what to say," she admitted, forcing a deeper breath and then a second. She smiled again, a bit more relaxed this time, but it faded quickly. "Tyrel is being called there too," she offered, "but it's a trap." She shook her head. "She disobeyed orders in Yarsoc and..." Miret trailed off for a moment. "She tore that queen - the one who'd toyed with Chad and I - apart like a plaything."

The Tarlonese shrugged. "She saved us all and won the battle and afterwards -" She rolled her eyes. "- it was retroactively sanctioned." She sat up and crossed her legs, running some fingers thoughtfully through the hair that Zarina had untangled. "You should've heard them: all the soldiers chanting her name." She scowled. "The emperor and the empress and high command will not like it. it is the job of the Avatar of Vyshta to die before her twenty-fifth birthday, and that is only a few years away now." She knit and unknit her fingers nervously. "I don't know what they'll do to my sister there," she mewed, "but it'll be bad - another bad thing in a stupid conflict all about people's pride and money - and I have to find a way to stop it."

Zarina absently stroked Miret's hair and cheek as her worries and recounts were being aired out. Once again, there was only listening with the occasional little affirmative sound to show she was paying attention. A light inhale, stronger than her idle breathing, came in reaction to the revelation of Tyrel's presence in Palapar. A crucial piece of information, should Zarina actually go there.

“You're hurting enough, Luuchy. It shouldn't always be you taking action. It shouldn't be you always getting hurt.” delicate brushes of her thumb over Miret's cheek slowly guided the Yasoi's gaze to Zarina's. “But if you must take on the world itself like a raging bull, then I'll do it with you. At worst, we both die horribly together.” she grinned and chuckled halfheartedly. “But, promise me one thing.” she stared right into Miret's eyes, digging to find her very soul. “No matter what happens with this war, you won't hate me, and I won't hate you.”

Miret was a strong woman, or had always appeared so to the world at large. She had won the Trials of Ersand'Enise. She had ended the tyrannical reign of Queen Talit in Tanso and served with distinction in Yarsoc, all before her twentieth birthday. She had shared herself with many men and some women. She had spoken before crowds of thousands and embraced the empress herself.

To be small, to be vulnerable, was not something that she ever got to do anymore, except with a very precious few she had known since childhood... and Zarina. "Speak for yourself," she snorted weakly. "When I go, it'll be either out of boredom when I'm a thousand year old elder sanguinaire, or in a blaze of glory." She smiled softly, ironically. "You're welcome to join me in either one."

The fact that their countries were enemies was not lost on her either. "I could never hate you," Miret replied softly. "I even love your laundry habits... or how you hog all the covers in bed."

A fire crackled in the hearth, picturesque mountains and blue sky filled the windows, and they were both away from conflict and politics and the worry of what others might think, at least for the time being. Miret leaned in and kissed Zarina. "Most of all, though, I love this."

“I do not!” Zarina protested without any real conviction to be found in her voice. “I just move a lot when sleeping all comfy-like. Doesn't happen often.” with that, she tugged her lover closer as to actually lie down on the guest bed for some much needed cuddles. And then a kiss.

They were to stay like this for a while. Minutes? Hours? They didn't count. This was just too nice. “What's the plan, then? If things do get worse and worse? When do we just ... Stop? Do we even?”

Miret shrugged. "I expect shit'll hit the fan, and a lot of it, and soon." She shrugged weakly. "I expect I'll fight back and I hope you'll join me." She took a deep breath and managed a brave smile. "I already know others who will." She shook her head. "Not gonna let a little cabal of beard-stroking old men tell me what to do my entire life. For now, though," the yasoi concluded, "let's just spend some time. Let's just... love each other."

Zarina flinched. “Why would shit hit a fan?” of all the things Miret had said, this just stuck. “Is that one of your Tarlonese sayings?” a cheeky grin came with the remark. But soon she settled back into a tone-appropriate demeanor. “Of course.” was her answer with conviction, even if she was ignorant to most machinations from the upper echelons of society.

Hours passed. It had been dark out in Sawand for a while now. Zarina had fallen asleep with an ease she hadn't experienced in a long time. The Yasoi she clung to may have had a role to play in that. Very peaceful. It'd be the footsteps outside of the room that woke her up. “Mmmm ...”
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They spent the next few days like that: in each other's company, making up for lost time, all other cares shunted firmly to the side. They bathed in the hot springs, hiked the mountain passes, shopped in the markets of Pashtali, and picnicked on the summit of Mt. Amathikandu. Of course, they made their appearances back in and around Ersand'Enise. Miret sent her messages to Tyrel, and Zarina to Ysilla and Ayla. Of course, Miret shared her war stories, and Zarina hers: conquests of Yarsoc and Parmoy, battles against a mad behemoth and seditious forces. These were tertiary at best, though. Both were far more concerned with the whipped cream on Zarina's nose or the smell of the ponies or their tenth game of checkers for the night.

It was, by most metrics, the most perfect week that either might've imagined. Were the Gods truly all-loving, they might've decreed that it never should end. Of course, they were not. It took only a day for the news to spread across campus: a secret bounty at the edge of Mycormii and Kerremand, a horrifying monster, Cawuio-Zast, Esmii, and Niallus killed, Sven a shambling wreck and Roslyn little better, Edyta rushed off to Varennes on urgent business. Ingrid was a fearful, listless thing. She was lost and searching, but it did not take Miret long to learn that she was searching for something in particular. It was a sign from the Gods. It was a sign that brought her into contact with Tyrel and Tyrel into contact with Chad and Ashon and Ailet, but they were not so foolish as to appear in the same place.

It was just after dinner - for Miret was loath to ruin good food with heavy words - when the sanguinaire took her beloved aside and delivered the news. "Zazzy, there's a life I need to save," she said simply, "and doing it will both risk my life and change the world."

Tales of a grand demon thwarted by a few travelers and rebellious jailers, and big sea creatures felled by the sun itself were highlights from Zarina's contribution to the dream. Was this what they meant with Vashdal's dream coming into this world on the day of Marhazanet? Perhaps Miret would be her monolith that guided her back to the hardened faith she once had.

The endless fiesta felt impervious to the outside world. In a sense, it was. Unless, of course, one of them welcomed it in. Miret was the one to disturb the nest, blindsiding Zarina completely. By her lover's demeanor alone, the Wildblood's heart began to race. “No.” was her immediate answer, lacking any inflection in tone or strength in her voice. Then, she repeated. No. this time she stressed the word like one would do when warning a house pet when it was clearly eyeing a vase it wanted to topple. “You don't have to.”

Miret considered for a moment, face pained, pensive, and... implacable. "It's my sister. I have to." Her brows came together and her fists clenched and unclenched. They sought Zarina's. "But... She hesitated for an extended moment. "It is so much more, as well." She shook her head, glancing at the idyllic scenes of alpine meadow through an arched window.

Zarina's nostrils flared and her gaze was avoidant while her lover's sought it. Her clenched jaw was her safety when it came to emotional outbursts and she was about to have one. But, the immense good she had experienced had done wonders. With a loud exhale of pure exasperation, she too sought Miret's eyes. “Tell me everything, then.”

Miret's face was a mixture of hesitation and resignation, and she took a breath. "Tarlon is both a beautiful and a horrifying place," she declared, starting with a simple truth that Zarina likely already knew. "From a primeval forest - the most hostile place on Sagand - we have carved a great civilization." Her lips pressed together in a tight smile and she nodded. "It is a place of rules and laws and traditions so that we soixé sil pa hax might resist our baser natures." She spoke differently than usual, with the practiced reverence one approached solemn childhood lessons.

"I believe in our purpose as it is told us, and so do my sister and Chad, and our other friends. You are good, Zarina." She shifted on the bed, drawing her legs up beneath her into a slouching kneel. "You see past our minor differences, but most people - human or yasoi or something else - fail. Why, we kill each other even within our own species, for any number of stupid reasons." She studied the other's eyes to make sure that this wasn't too much, that it wasn't too far off-topic. "We yasoi are outnumbered and we need to be strong and united - all of us - or we are at the mercy of people who see us as outsiders, who have shown a willingness to take our land, impose their laws, and treat us like lesser things." She shook her head. "Tarlon is our chance to not let that happen, the Grey Fleet is our chance to bring our Constantian cousins aboard, to have a chance to stand beside humans as respectful equals."

She let out a snort. "Of course, there are those among us who don't see it that way. They see that most of you don't stand as tall, both literally and in the Gift, and consider you as inferior as some humans consider us." She rolled her eyes in exasperation. "There are others who don't believe in us as a people, either. They see the Liberation as a conquest and think of how to enrich themselves." She grimaced. "We call them Huu'teshax because we are, quite frankly, terribly racist and cannot resist ascribing negative qualities that we see in ourselves to other peoples."

Miret rose all at once, pacing beside the bed. "Cascal and Esuul are of this ilk." Her heart pounded inside of her ribcage. How forbidden it felt to voice the thought, but it was out there and it was done. They couldn't see her here: not in Sawand. It was beyond their reach. It was free, truly. "Few know this," she continued, "and, of those who do, even fewer see it. They care nothing for the yasoi, nothing for Tarlon, and nothing for saving those in the Fallen Lands from the tyrants and addictions that ravage them." Miret shook her head. "It is only about their own power and their desire to live eternally as gods incarnate." There was more - much more - but she paused before getting to the meat of it.

Zarina made a point to stifle any emotion she could manifest as Miret displayed her deepest heart. Information and opinions that would be seen as scandalous by many, now all confided to a human of all people. She didn't show it, but the human had never felt closer than she did now. By all accounts, one of the "others" hearing any bit of this was a rarity. All she did was nod and keep her eyes on her partner, hand over her’s and her posture mimicking Miret's with only the sparks of wood from the hearth interjecting from time to time.

Her hand squeezed Miret's. “I believe it.” she said, eyes wide and clear windows to her honest soul. “The previous Gods in the world are dead. Now's the time for them to take everything. I understand.” she scooted closer until her shoulder met the Yasoi's, and she finally rested her head over it. “What are you going to do? I can't stop you. So I'll do the next best thing.”

"There was something that Tyrel and a couple of the other candidate Vyshtas discovered as girls, hidden on Tantas'ilwash." She was in narration mode now. Still, she stroked Zarina's hair. "Vyshta does not live as a true goddess because Esuul has usurped her: Esuul the sanguinaire, who lives eternally on the mortal plane, who recovered her leg with blood magic almost as soon as she became the Avatar."

She shook her head, adding a tiny bit of separation so that she could look her beloved in the eyes. "It's all a farce: girls chosen to act as figureheads and then killed off before they can ascend." Her fists balled. "Mine own sister, who saved me from my darkness, who lets me draw her blood so that I may draw breath, who would lay down her life for me and for her people." Miret's breathing came fast and agitated. "They will murder her. She is ten times the person they are and they will murder her because they've been doing it for a thousand or more years."

Miret's eyes flashed. "I believe in our people. I believe in our mission, but Cascal and Esuul do not. They are using us and allow none to become strong enough to challenge them." The fire tempered itself and she reached for Zarina to embrace her. "Tyrel is our best chance - the best we may ever have - but they are trying to kill her while making it look like the work of others." She swallowed. "She has always protected me. Now, I will protect her and protect this world from those tyrants." She had gone on at length, and checked to ensure that she had not said too much, that she had not turned Zarina away from her. She regarded the other, colour rising in her cheeks. "We're making a plan, you know..."

Zarina blinked, her mind locked on one specific notion: A God walked among them. A God that her own beloved wished to slay. A God at the head of the biggest threat to her home. The gravity of the situation was vertigo inducing. She had to scoot back and find the headboard to rest her back against. She needed a moment to just fathom it all. “Sanguinare Vyshta. Dami's will, Miret ...” her hands shivered a little. Hetraxa, plagued Threshers and Sand Wyrms felt so small and forgettable.

Then came the notion of a plan. It did not bring any real reassurance. A look of grave concern met Miret's gaze. “Why not just run? Hide? We have a nice place here ... They can all come. Your family. Mine too.”

Miret tilted her head. "Running's not like you," she remarked, concern sparkling within her eyes. "What's wrong, luush'elar?"

“I'm afraid of all that's coming. This is terrifying me, Luuchy.” Zarina hugged her own core. “I'll fight for my home but ... Gods? Monsters ... Someone I love's going to get hurt. And I don't know if I'm strong enough to do anything about it.”

Miret wrapped her arms around Zarina and kissed her cheek. "Hiding only postpones the bad and makes it inevitable." She held on for a few seconds. "I don't know either, and I wish we didn't have to fight. I wish there were no wars or diseases or selfish people who destroy and dominate, but there are, and I believe we're not the only ones who see what we need to do." She shook her head. "I know we're not the only ones."

Outside, in the distance, a herd of mountain goats picked their way across a slope. A large bird circled overhead, scanning the ground for its next meal. "You're strong, though - even stronger than me, just by a bit." She smiled and pinched a bit of air with her last statement. "Thing is," the sanguinaire continued, "I don't think we win by being stronger. I think we have to be smarter."

Zarina let herself fall into Miret's embrace. Safety, a sense of it anyway, was what she needed right now. Too many close calls, and it was only going to get more intense from there.

“You talked about a plan.” she remembered. “I'll help, if you will allow me. I'm scared enough to want to hide, but I won't run. Not from what matters.” as she uttered that final words, she turned her head to face Miret. “Also, you're just saying that ...” a faux-pouty face was forced. An attempt at drowning out the tension, just a little.

"Lying is a mortal sin in Tarlon," Miret replied, stone-faced. "They cut your tongue out for it if they catch you." She blinked, twice. "I meant what I said."

Zarina paused and squinted. A very brief staring contest ensued. “... No they don't.”

Miret opened her mouth wide and stuck hers out and the moment of mirth was well-needed, given their heavy subject matter. "So, basically, the plan," she chirped, "Right?" She flashed a smile that belied her own unease. "You ready for me to hit you with this stroke of genius?"

Zarina had anticipated something like this and nearly swiped that tongue once it came out! Luckily, Sanguinaire reflexes were a thing. “You know, they do have laws kind of like that in this country.” she smirked before relenting with a hearty chuckle. “Alright, hit me, Luuchy.”

"You'll have to catch me first!" she chirped, leaping free from the covers. "It's sunnier upstairs." She bounded out of the door with a cheeky smile and disappeared down the hallway. Her footsteps could be heard taking the stairs three at a time.

By the time that Zarina caught up with her, she was snuggled on the large sofa half-buried beneath a mound of pillows and blankets, grinning mischievously. "I have a question, oh dearest of dears," the yasoi asked, shifting a bit to make room. "And I promise I won't be mad, whatever your answer is." She batted her lashes. "Have you ever had to do a double take to tell me apart from my cousin?"

Zarina giggled and sighed in relief as she followed her playful puppy of a girlfriend. She wasn't as hasty and took the stairs two at a time instead with a relatively normal gait. Once she found her Yasoi buried in a grave of fluffy delight, she set her hands on her hips as if she was the responsible adult among the two. “On with it, my precious petal!” the fingersteeplers had taught her well, even the dramatic arm wave was on point.

The question, however, prompted her to furrow her eyebrows. She cocked her head and actually did a double take between the window taking in the last few rays of twilight and her lover. “It's not a trick question, right? The obvious reply is she obviously has one leg.” she shrugged, but then thought of it more. “You ... Do look similar. Very, very similar. I never thought to ask about that, actually.” she took a few steps forward to claim her seat among the pillows, a few inches from her sprawling Miret.

"Yes," the woman in the blankets admitted, the dying sun framing her in fire. "That leg is a dead giveaway." She pursed her lips momentarily. "In fact, it's the main thing that most people remember about their Avatar of Vyshta." She rolled her eyes and waved dismissively, before reaching out to squeeze Zarina from the side. "Hey luuchy," she whispered in the human's ear as she snuggled in "Wanna know something cool?"

Zarina was far too at ease to realize the dupe unfolding right before her eyes. Eyes so easily deceived, as was her ear as she took in that whisper. She sucked in her lips, the playfulness of the moment was very much to her liking. However, the smile she wore flattened. One thing she could rely on still was her nose. “You smell of curry.” she remarked, though it almost sounded like her answer to the Yasoi's question. The grin returned with narrowed, foxy eyes too. She leaned into the girl that had squeezed her, undoubtedly affectionate like a cat craving attention. “You should have told me that big goat tikka meal wasn't enough for you, Luuchy~” she stuck the tip of her tongue out. “You're really good with voices. First a rugged sailor, now my very heart? Did they teach you theatre back in Tarlon?”

Tyrel grinned. "Are you sayin' I'm a fraud?" she prodded, hugging Zarina anyway. "I missed you, luuchy-in-law, so I ate ‘something' special, just for the occasion." She made a teasing kissy face. "You saying you don't like it?"

"Hands off my Luush'elar, you one-legged strumpet!" Miret bounded out from a closet, and Tyrel only squeezed tighter. "Make me." The cousins - they almost may as well have been identical twins - sat to either side of Zarina. "This is part of the plan," Miret advised, kissing her beloved on the shoulder.

Zarina was essentially sandwiched. And by two near-identical people. It did not help that it was the very face she had fallen in love with. The feelings were beyond confusing. The kiss on the shoulder made her almost paranoid as to who had really done it. Fucking Tarlonese.

“To trap me between you two?” she squirmed, just a little, without any real desire to actually break free. This was her idea of a safe and happy life, with perhaps less kinkiness. In the midst of this internal crisis, the nature of this experiment hit her like a bag of bricks. “... You're going to pull a switcheroo.”

They both nodded at the same time. "We're the linchpin of it," said Probably-Miret. "But we're not alone," Probably-Tyrel added. now that she looked carefully, she could make out the subtle differences in their face shapes. Tyrel's was a bit more heart-shaped. Miret had ever so slightly sharper features.

"The idea," the former began - "My idea," interjected the latter, "so don't you get mad at her." - "is to buy myself some space and time, quite literally, so that I can visit the Temporal Chamber in Ersand'Enise, Tantas'Ilwash, the ruins of Sairax'Solcuun, or some other remnant of Toleus and accelerate through five years of my life."

Tyrel's smile faded as she spoke, perhaps realizing the cost. Miret reached around and through Zarina to squeeze her sister's hand reassuringly. "Thing is," the sanguinaire warned, "they're always watching her, unless she's somewhere outside of their reach, like here." Both Dichoras nodded glumly.

"So, we switch!" Tyrel declared, the worry in her tone and expression shining through the confidence she was trying to project. "We go someplace they can't track, not at the same time, of course." Miret continued.

"Teleport around a few times to throw them off." This was Tyrel.

"And then Miret elopes with you while Tyrel dutifully returns to Tarlon and plays ball."

Tyrel nibbled her lower lip, uncomfortable. She shook her head. "That's my least favourite part of it, luuchy." She brushed some hair from her eyes. "I've no right to ask so much and then just abandon you."

There was one question that lingered in Zarina's mind, one that kept mostly static in this sandwich. “The leg.” she reached out to touch the probably-Miret's very leg, almost protectively. “The ploy won't work without it. Or rather, with it. So you have an idea.” her jaw clenched, there was only one way to fool magically potent observers, and that was to not actually employ gimmicks. “I don't know how you pull this off. I'll admit, you'll fool these people with the face, voice and even the smells quite frankly. But ...” she shook her head. “You're not actually going to do that, right?”

The two Dichoras shifted uneasily, glancing at Zarina and each other in turn. "The solution is Ailet," offered Tyrel with an uneasy shrug. "I think there have to better ones. I'm... used to being how I am, but it isn't easy, I think." She regarded the others. "It isn't."

"You manage more than fine, and she's a professional fleshcrafter." Miret shook her head. "She made herself a new leg, and that's after a decade of not having one." Miret shrugged. "I can walk in your shoe for a few months. It won't kill me."

'No, but they will," Tyrel rejoined. She turned to Zarina. "She's determined to do it, and I don't think it's a terrible idea. It's our best shot at winning and gives us two shots at having an avatar ascend, but..." She twisted to regard her cousin. "There is so much risk and you'll have to spend months just learning how to walk well without always using magic."

"Well shit," Miret remarked, drawing into herself a bit. "Now you're giving me cold feet."

"Plural," Tyrel reminded her before turning to Zarina, pained. "Zazz, here we are on the precipice and I don't think I can ask her to do this, and you should have a say too. There has to be something better we can do..."

Zarina swallowed, the very hand that caressed Miret's then went to her own. Just imagining the process of amputation and rebuilding prompted a visceral reaction out of her. For a moment, she felt lightheaded. An odd reactions from a wildblood, but she had yet to have a true maiming baptism. She dreaded it, truthfully. “I-I hate this.” she spoke what was exactly on her mind. “That's a horrible thing. Fuck. Eshit Fuck.” she sank into the pillow, pupils thinned and locked into the sunset.

She swallowed again. “How are you ... Even sure it will work? If that witch has the power already- I don't even really know this Vyshta stuff. It's all so-” she didn't have the words for it. In her moment of increased stress, she sought Miret's hand. Well, who she definitely believed to be Miret. Her eyes then found her lover's. “It'll put you in so much danger, Luuchy. If they find out. If they even get suspicious ...”

It was Tyrel who answered, however. "That's why we have this bolt hole, then." She nodded slowly. "I do hope we can find a better way." Her gaze found Miret's. "I don't think you realize how much I lean on magic to keep up with everyone else."

Miret shifted in the covers, kicking them free, and stared down at her knees and her feet. A shiver ran through her. "You are under no -"

She raised a hand to cut off Tyrel's protest and the latter shifted as well, blankest sloughing away. "I know, suunei." She wiggled her toes and flexed her knees. "No more than a year?" she questioned, and the Avatar of Vyshta nodded slowly. "And you trust that sketchy four-eyes?"

Tyrel swallowed. "With my life, believe it or not." Unable to sit any longer, she stood, crutches hurtling across the room from where they'd been left beside a potted palm. "And in terms of how I take over, well... there are two theories." She began to pace and Miret made to tug Zarina to her feet as well.

Outside, the sun shimmered orange and fuchsia on the plains and snowcapped peaks and the handful of distant shepherd's huts trickled smoke from their chimneys. "You, uh... mind if we walk?" Tyrel prodded weakly. "I think better on my foot."

There was a delay in reaction time for Zarina. Far too much information at a scale she dreaded to think of. Not to mention the initial fear, now made all too real as she paid far too much attention to the amount of legs in the room. She did get up and held Miret's hand, tightly. “One year ...” her latest fixation. She peered Tyrel's way. “Suunei. What does Chad think?” he voice wasn't as shakey. Meek and considerate, as someone who could sympathize with the poor man that wasn't even in the room to discuss this.

"He tells me that he is alright with this," Tyrel replied, "that he can live a year away from me if it means that we have a lifetime together." She shrugged. "He swears that he will be by Miret's side. He will protect her and trust that I will return on time to protect them both."

She took a couple of steps and tilted her head in the direction of the balcony door. She needed to walk. She needed to breathe. Thankfully, the couple was amenable to it, and so they stepped outside and she leapt over the balcony and they followed, all three landing in crouches. Tyrel was out ahead of them, her one-legged strides long and quick, her black leggings shimmering as they picked up the vivid colours of the sun's dying rays.

She twisted about as they began to catch up and her eyes were red-rimmed. "Ypti, I'm sorry," she mewed. "Really, I am." She shook her head. "He's saying it, but I can see in his eyes that he thinks it's the end, that he worries it's goodbye." She would not let them see her face. "I'm not strong enough to stop them." She shook her head again, adamantly. "You're not." She twisted and gestured at Miret with her chin. "Neither are you -" She found Zarina. "-at least, not as you are now."

"Suunei," interjected Miret, and Tyrel slowed for a moment in acknowledgement. "Luuca?"

"Shut up." Miret hurried until she was pacing her cousin. "You're wallowing and you're not a wallower. I make my own choices, you know, and so does Chad."

"Because of me," Tyrel wept. "Because I'm the thing they wanna kill and because you wanna protect me." She swallowed, tears streaming down her cheeks. "You shouldn't have to."

"It is for you," admitted Miret, "but also for us, and also for everybody who will keep suffering as long as those tyrants draw breath."

The mountain meadow was peaceful in the dusk: dew laying upon the ground, the air fresh and crisp, jagged grey-brown boulders strewn about as if by Oraff's hand. "You're the best chance we have, and you're a good one, so we're throwing what we have behind you. We're here to lift you, just like you'll lift us, just like you always have."

The Avatar of Vyshta, stripped of all her fancy clothing and titles, was just a scared young woman with too much weight on her shoulders. She stopped abruptly and sat on one of those boulders, staring out at the mountain pass and breathing. She swallowed. She turned to regard the couple and her eyes flashed. "I'm sorry you had to see that," she apologized. "We can do it," she affirmed. "I shall be empress. Sit with me a moment -" She patted the large rock beside her and looked, especially, at Zarina. "- and I'll tell you how."

Zarina kept silent. It was not her moment, but Tyrel's. Instead, she basked in the foreign land she had grown familiar with. The climate was gentle and the sights worthy of a few pages in a pretentious novel. She wasn't ignoring Tyrel, but decided to not look at the woman at her worst. She deserved to keep her dignity. She did, however, look in Miret's direction each time she spoke, fingers interlocked with her's.

When beckoned by the empress to be, she sat just below the offered stone, using instead as backrest as her eyes were taken by the sunset. A perfect view, her Innkeeper had once mentioned, of the descending sun between two major peaks. It was the end of a beautiful day and the end of the comfortable days she got to enjoy with her friends, family and Miret.

“For what it's worth-” a quarter-lidded glance was dedicated to Tyrel. “I think you have a special opportunity with everyone at the school. Gods-among-men are being replaced by the younger and ambitious, and we have this opportunity to take the thrones too. Especially if we're in it together.” she undid the bun from before, letting her hair flow in the mild mountainous breeze. “You've a chance to mould more than Tarlon, but the world. And if Luuchy believes in you-” any chance was a good one to take in her lover's gaze, and so she did. “I do as well. And with greater foresight than just Tarlon, we can make a difference. I think.”

Tyrel paused, her chest rising and falling slowly. She took in the scents and the sights. She heard and felt the breath and warmth of the two people close to her. "Thank you, Zazz." She smiled into the burgeoning twilight, face appreciative. "I needed that." She nodded. "It is our time now." She felt more certain of it after her brief crisis of confidence than ever before. If Zarina, who owed her nothing, was willing to stake her life on this plan, to be part of it, then how could she doubt the sincere words of Miret and Chad? How she could just take off running right into the sky! How immense she felt here, on this mountain in Sawand.

The Avatar of Vyshta smiled. "It all begins," she began, "with a little window - one that opens only once a millennium - during which the Gods are mortal and might be born again." How the thought of it filled her. How it made her heart race! "And that is an opportunity not only for me, but for any who may seize it."

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Another "Raffaella"






Mission accomplished, Zarina’s friend was thwarted and the Imam was alive. A depressing celebration of cheap red wine in one of the commandeered Virangish homes was her go-to for an evening of unwinding. Or maybe this was merely a ritual to prepare for the chat with Raffaella. Regardless of intent, two glasses of wine were prepared with the tall teen sagging into her wooden seat and her eyes focused on a small stack of papers. Copies of reports, it seemed, from the official stamps.

“Hey.” she greeted her fellow compatriot with mellowed, half-lidded eyes and a lopsided smile. “How’s the duty been for you so far?” she inquired, the mundane nature of the question veiling the increased concern she had for a colleague she had once seen as the little sister of the team.

"...Evening, Zazz," came the reply, lacking the verbosity and grace of her earlier performance. The high pitch wasn't there, either, but it was a bit different from her usual pouting, too. The only explanation seemed to be that something didn't go well, and Zarina wouldn't have to wait long to find out what.

Raffie placed her hands on the armrests and hopped up into her chair. She eyed the wine, seeming to consider it. She was an "adult" now, whatever that was supposed to mean, so no one could hold it against her if she indulged a little, right? She took the glass by the stem and rocked it back and forth, ponderously.

"...Osman was right, Zazzy. That's just the plain truth of it," she sighed.

Indulged in a sip of her vintage as she crossed her arms under her chest and assessed the girl-turned-woman from neck to shoe. Her gestures were precise, the fruit of experience with her betters - very Afravalesque, she called it. It became very clear to Zarina that she wasn't talking to a child anymore. “He has said many things.” but only a couple could lead to such gloom. The older of the two swallowed her worries with another gulp of her drink. “What's been troubling you?”

At that, Raffie made her signature pouting face. Well, perhaps it was annoyance with Zarina playing coy, or perhaps she was trying to lighten the mood just a little. She certainly seemed to have the self-awareness to know that it looked a little silly, but that also meant she knew how to use it to lower someone's guard. "What do you think?" she sulked.

The temptation of the wine seemed to get the better of her, but she partook of it slowly and with class. "I've had another dream, Zazzy. Our plan isn't working. Or well, it's not going to work. If we don't change course—and I mean, like, 'hard to port!' changed then we're going to lose Palapar."

Zarina inhaled deeply and raised her chin in acknowledgement of the question and opted to indulge in her vintage before confessing something. Calm and collected, mellowed by the drink no doubt. “Our King spoke to me and Ren. I'm unsure if you've been made aware of the subject matter.”

This demeanor of her's did not survive Raffaella's second addition to the conversation. A look of concern reigned on Zarinas expression, the same one she had back at the royal garden. “A dream.” she repeated. What dream?” she was already mentally berating herself for entertaining the delusions that had made her friend almost unrecognizable.

She wasn't done. To avoid falling in the trap of indulging too much in notions beyond herself, she presented her own concern. “What do you make of Ren?”

Raffaella considered. She sipped her wine. She considered some more, regarding Zarina with eyes that could have been wary, tired, or both. What should she say—that an international web of corrupt politicians and career criminals were plotting the downfall of Virang? No. She needed to start smaller if she wanted to gain her friend's trust back. She exhaled deeply.

"Ambitious to a fault. Not a shred of virtue. 'Might makes right.' Useful in a pinch," she diagnosed rather brutally. "I thought we could use him to break the rebels' will to go on fighting and cut the bloodshed short. It's not going to work. More massacres will happen, sparking more outrage. Soon, they'll have better weapons and become even bolder."

Zarina sighed in relief. Common ground, at least there was something to work with other than "dreams". “Your opinion is that he isn't the right tool for the job, then.” a crude summary to get to her point. “I agree. And was far too keen on following our leader's plan. Not a shred of a second thought.” stressful memories induced a desire for safety - routine. She filled her glass once more and non-verbally offered to do the same for Raffie.

“I'm not sure what to do about all of this, but it seems you've more insight than me on some things here.” an expectant look was shot Raffaella's way after a hearty gulp of the drink. Far less chic than her younger colleague. “Tell me what's been running in your mind.”

"Imam Tikli doesn't deserve to die," she observed plainly. So, it would seem she had been privately briefed on that. "He remains a faithful and active steward. He is not tired because he is old, he is tired because he believes politics interfere with his work. So, some powerful people have decided he has outlived his usefulness, I suppose, but that is for the gods to decide."

She took another sip of her wine. "I can tell you my honest opinion, because you know I'm not strong enough to stand in the way of whatever you want to do, right? So if you really want the truth, yes, I had a dream about outside forces interfering in Palapar. But the 'wise and experienced' care nothing for divine inspiration when it contradicts the set of preexisting notions they call an 'education,' so someone with actual muscle on the field needs to go prove it if we want a change of plans. I've nothing against the Sultan, but even I was hesitant to admit that he was right. Others will need more convincing."

Zarina took a deep breath. A relief, but also an exasperation. “He doesn't deserve to die, but some believe he should. If you know what I do, then do you think his death would be a boon to our cause?” she didn't drink this time, she needed to focus. Focus on every gesture made by this person she hardly knew, in truth.

“Dream or not,” she did end up drinking again, but only to mimic her counterpart without even thinking of the drink. “our good friend Tku has proven that. The question is: What do you propose? Do we go with the Sultan's plan? Do we even want to?” question after question, as if she never even knew this person from the start. Then again, this Raffaella was not the Raffie she had shared victories and hardships with.

"Well... To begin with, Osman really doesn't want him to die in his heart of hearts, does he? It was just a pretense for the next stage of the plan, I thought. So, if it's not going to work anyway... nothing good can come of it, I think." She certainly appeared to be genuinely considering Zarina's query, if only to be respectful of her perspective, though her own was biased. Still, that childlike expression was an infuriating poker face, too.

"I don't know. I really don't know. All I can do is continue to fulfil the role I've been given. I do have my security detail. If I stay close to the Imam, that can buy us some time. I could try talking Ren down, but honestly, I think he's just using me. He doesn't believe in my dreams, either."

She gave Zarina a meaningful look as she said that last word. "If you want to go through with this, Zazzy, I won't use my dreams as an excuse not to give it my all. But, I've given you my honest belief. I think we will lose Palapar. All we can do is minimize our losses. Or... we could strategize our losses." Her eyes flicked away towards her wine, evasively.

This wasn't an easy position to be in. Zarina's only real ally happened to be a girl who determined her decisions and outcomes of events through dreams. The world had never felt lonelier for the young dragon. “I will not act with the notion of inevitable loss, Raffie.” she stated firmly, her attention removed from the glass of wine that tempted her more and more to zone out everything in this very moment. “We'll get ahead of whatever machinations are at play. We may take losses, but I will fight for Palapar. We need everything we have to survive the coming storm, as a country.”

The oldest of the two ran her fingers through her hair to tight them into an improvised bun. She had grown tired of it getting in the way of her eyes. It made her look more exhausted - no, more defeated than she really was. “I'm glad you haven't fallen for the madness the brass has fallen into - that this is over because they've caught a few rebels.” she forced a smile, one that radiated something that was genuine. Was it entirely? Likely not, but there was a serenity gained from at least being heard. “It's nice to have a friend.”

Zarina cleared her throat and continued. “There's a good chance the ball is something they'll gun for. And likely not with improvised tactics. If what we believe is true, we may be seeing an attack backed by our enemies targeting the pillars of leadership. I'd like to stop that, but I cannot do this alone. And I sense I'm not going to have many fans when I fearmonger.”

Raffaella took a deep breath and exhaled. "Okay, Zazzy. Okay." She nodded sadly, appearing every bit the young girl in need of guidance that Zarina had remembered from the Trials. If there was a positive interpretation to be made of the girl's delusion, perhaps she had a reliable gut feeling that something was wrong, and the dreams were just a coping mechanism to give herself more confidence.

"I'll support you, Zazzy, because you're my friend. A real friend. Your eyes tell me so." She nodded to herself and smiled. "I'll go to the ball. Let me take the heat for being scared. You can be the brave heroine who investigates a young lady's unfounded fears and figures it all out in the end."

It was an herculean task to not see the person before Zarina as the same child she had looked after during the trials. The mannerisms were there, but the intent behind her words had actual weight. It was uncanny, like something else was piloting this individual. Still, Zazzy was neither clever enough nor callous enough to doubt it was more than eccentricities and the natural result of 'growing up'. “I appreciate your support. It means ... A lot. Especially when I know I won't be miss popular for much longer when this is all over.” big exhale, like Raffie's. “However, are you sure your place should be in the ball? If our fears are accurate, it will be a mess. A dangerous one.”

Zarina scoot closed, dragging her chair in a clumsy and almost infantile manner to close the gap between herself and Raffaella. An empathetic if a tad awkward hand reached out to touch the other's shoulder. “The last thing I want is one of my only friends on this island to get hurt. Do you reckon the Imam may be in danger as well?”

Any time Zarina touched Raffie, it was striking just how small she was. The fluff and frills almost seemed to take up more space than she did. "...Yes. But he... I, um..." She seemed to consider her words. "He is prepared to die. He accepts it. I don't want it, but... so long as I draw breath, I minister to the living, not the dead. If you need me there, I'll go. I don't want the Imam to die, but if protecting him only slows you down and delays the inevitable... am I wrong? If this is the path you've chosen, I'll sincerely do my best. You'll be there, right? So I won't be scared, then. ...No pressure. I mean, I'll be 'scared,' for our purposes, but not really."

Raffaella coaxed a smile from Zarina that grew in size the more she talked. There was familiarity, now that all the prose and metaphors were done with. Was this truly Raffie? She would not know, but it worked in softening the silver dragon. “How about you choose where you'll do best?” emotion trumped over strategy and reason, one of Zarina's many flaws. Like an orange cat far too easily brought to showing its underbelly. “I'll be at the ball. I must be. It's where our vital decision makers will be. If you feel better suited to be with me there, so be it. If you think your actions can make a difference toward the Imam's situation, then you have my blessing.”

A deep inhale, and then an exhale. Careful breathing seemed to be a theme here. Zarina spoke again. “I would rather not sacrifice a good man for our victory, no matter how slim or impossible it might be. If your intuition is true, his death would be meaningless anyway.”

Raffie shook her head sadly. "I can only get in the way of those who would do him harm. I cannot change their minds." Her eyes widened, as if she'd only just thought of something. "They may just as quickly come after me. That he is in less danger with me there might just be a tempting fantasy, beckoning me away from what I need to do. Your resolve is real. I trust it more."

She reached up and took Zarina's hand. "But if I must confess, we don't seem to be communicating very well here. We seem to be talking in circles, and I can't make sense of it. Truly we must protect our 'decision makers' if we can't decide something like this on our own. Unless there's something troubling you that you're not telling me about, and that's the real reason why you don't want me at the ball." She peered up at Zarina curiously. The demeanor changed, but the same cogs were turning. Perhaps Raffie really was a child at heart, and the students of Ersand'Enise, far away from the stuffy politics of Virang, had been privileged to see it. The mistake they had made was in taking her for a fool. "Why won't you be 'miss popular' anymore?"

Zarina squeezed the much smaller hand. Her lips pursed like she was holding something back. She addressed the last question first. “Our friends are watching all of this very closely. My efforts to win this will not only earn some the scorn of those with lofty ideals, but also our very chain of command is about to hear it from me. This conflict is drawing a hard line in the sand and I fear I'll be standing opposite to many of those I hold dear. It hurts, you know?” she let out a long nasal sigh before seizing the entire bottle with her idle hand and crudely drank from it.

“Which is why, as I step in a world where my circle of friends may dwindle, I could not take losing more of them.” the squeeze strengthened even more, not quite enough to be uncomfortable. “If our enemies go in hard during that ball, I won't be able to keep our priorities safe if they were to put YOU in danger too. My own priorities will be predictably in your favor.”

Raffie's eyes drifted from Zarina's face to the bottle in her hands. "I see. So I'd be in the way. That stings a little. But, I do get it. I'm not strong like you are, Zazz. But, can't you share this burden with me even a little? I'm already not very popular. I don't have any friends besides you and Ayla."

Raffaella was right, Zarina saw a weaker addition as a liability. But this was a concern born of only emotion, in truth she would need the numbers. “I remember how easily scared you were during that last trial. When Desmond met countless dreadful fates. Ipte forsake him that day.” she let out a half-hearted chuckle. Those weren't the best memories, even if they were good times. “I guess I still see you as the junior of the team.” she went to take another sip but abstained just as her lips were about to meet the bottle. “We made a pretty good team, didn't we?” she flashed a complicit grin. “Okay. Think you you can have my back?”

Raffie pursed her lips, trying not to laugh. "Oh, yeah! Des'm was nice to me too, but I haven't seen him in a while," she mused. "Of course we made a good team. We were the best team. Like, objectively. It was a whole thing," she said, as if declining to tell a long story to someone who wasn't there. Then she, also, smiled complicitly.

She used her free hand to fish for her enchanted rosary. A sound like a static discharge sounded off as she grabbed it, and a strange warmth flowed through Raffie's hand and into Zarina's. "Of course I'll have your back, Zazzy, if you'll have me."

Good feelings all around, and Zarina was only tipsy too. Inebriated just enough to miss that unusual sound but aware enough to feel the warmth. Her features mellowed and the bottle was put back on the table - enough for one night. “Then it's settled, we're jumping into hell, hand-in-hand.”

Zarina leaned back and sagged into her seat. “We're going to win. We were supposed to fail our revolution, but we won. We'll win this too.” her eyes had drifted away to nothing in particular, like she wasn't talking to anyone specific. “There're spare bedrooms in here. I'd lie if I said a familiar presence wouldn't leave me less paranoid at night.”

"I hope so, Zazzy." Even Raffie couldn't help but feel a little encouraged by Zarina's bold statement about the revolution, something which seemed so distant now. It certainly wasn't impossible that the outcome of a prophetic dream could be changed, but the more people were affected by it, the greater the change of course needed to avert it. Her mother's diary spoke of such possibilities. Would warning Zarina really change much, though?

It didn't change her endgame, she decided. She didn't need to be strong enough to change the outcome, she just needed to be right. If they succeeded, it needed to be because Zarina had believed in her dream warning them in advance. If they failed, she just needed to survive and minimize Virang's losses, and ensure that the losses served her and her allies rather than the enemy within.

Losing Zarina wasn't something she could afford. At least, that was what she believed. Was it based in emotion, or tactics? She'd made an agreement with herself to set the thought aside for now. Zarina didn't believe in her dreams, but at least she wouldn't stand in the way of her dreams, nor did she gaze upon her with eyes of scorn like so many others.

"How could I say no to that face?" Raffie said, mirroring something Zarina had also probably said to her before. "You know, I think I've also spooked myself a little with all this talk of assassins. The idea of sleeping alone really isn't appealing to me, either."
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An Unexpected Guest


Tku wandered around with purposeful aimlessness, dropping things from his bag from place to place. What they were was hard to tell but he did drop something that contained some mana. He shouldn't, no couldn't stay around the palace with Zarina around. Seeing how his friend had hardened without him noticing hurt his heart. Such a tragic failure. But all was not lost. No, no, no, for what Tku saw was a bright side to his week. He felt a certain mage on a ship entering port. One of enough strength to bring strength to the Virangish forces. But his senses also told him that this one's constitution was something similar to a tethered. He wouldn't dare just approach after interacting with the likes of Marci, Maura, Abdel, Jocasta... "Why do I know so many tethered? I thought they weren't that common? Another lie of the Quentics perhaps." Then he remembered Dalisay and honestly the list was starting to be longer than his family. He waved his thoughts from it and continued to spy on who the tethered was and it was... "Marci?" he said out loud, as he started his approach. What a spectacular person to see after so long, truly he was blessed at times.

Marceline started, back straightening and little hairs standing on end at the familiar voice in this foreign place. Tku, she thought, the 'enemy'. Marci was not stupid. She'd been able to pick up on that cue from Zarina. Her enemy, the tethered thought. My.... ally? She turned on the spot, cobbles jostling her as she did, and found herself facing Tku through a partially-parted crowd. Both were clearly foreign, both distinct. He... was wearing an eyepatch. "Tku..." She trailed off, setting hands to wheels and rolling a push forward. She looked him up and down. "It's good to see you." A smile bloomed on her face and she held out her arms for an embrace, motioning him inwards.

Tku made note of her newfound wheelchair but made no gesture to its presence. He was merely glad to see her smiling after what she had been through and his smile held all the warmth he could muster nowadays. He bent down and embraced Marci firmly like an old friend. "It is good to see you smiling Marci," he whispered as he let go. "Just-" Tku seemed to have many questions but settled on one, "How have you been Marci?" he asked as he went to her side, signaling they should continue moving in the crowd.

Marceline squeezed back with most of what she could muster. It had been two months but, with the aid of her mother's metabolic spell, she'd packed on a year's worth of muscle in her upper body while losing about that much below. She didn't want to hurt him, and so she just held on for a bit. "It is so good to see you." When they finally parted, she adjusted her seating a little and smiled, brushing some hair from her face. "The answer isn't exactly straightforward, but I'm here and..." She trailed off and sighed as she settled in to his left. "It's Zarina." Her eyes flicked his way before she had to return them to the diabolical cobblestones. "I came for her." She shook her head in frustration. "Not to dump this on you, but I sense you might've had something similar happen?" She blew some hair from her eyes. "The world's going mad and she's hopped so eagerly on board." There was a vulnerable shrug. "I'm worried she's gonna ride it right off the edge and self-destruct."

Tku was forced to notice how Marci, the Torragonese rat has arms like an Eskandish lumberjack. "Quite the marvelous arms you've grown," he flexed his arms and laughed at how insignificant his arms were. Tku listened, nodding very attentively when she spoke. He wasn't even phased; instead, he used his binding and 'fixed' the cobblestone for his friend. "It warms me that you came to see her and I think she could use a friend right now." Tku nodded. He seemed saddened for a moment, "I may have experienced something similar. Something embittering. I worry the same Marci, worry that she is holding on to it so that things make sense." Tku said. "But it isn't good to speak like this so publicly, she's still my most precious friend." Tku shook his head. "Would you care to join me for some tea where I am staying? Or do you prefer coffee?" he laughed light heartedly.

Despite herself, Marceline smirked. "I've had more than enough coffee for five lifetimes." She shook her head, flashing a small smile of thanks Tku's way as she noticed his work with the stones. "You lead, and I'll follow." She furrowed her brow for a moment. "and I'd like to pick your brain, too, if I can." She shook her head, coasting quickly forward, body language betraying some of the youth and restlessness that had always characterized her. "Things seem to be really... hot over here." She wasn't referring to the weather, either. "What, in Dami's name, happened?"

Tku let out a small laugh through his smirk, "It's a little far but I know you're capable." he said as he guided her, "Pick away Marci, I doubt I could lie to you if I wanted to," Tku waved them a direction. The question she asked was rather... complicated. But he sighed, "Well, let's start with why I'm impersonating Tojarra..." As they walked, Tku livened up the streets, putting things randomly, growing flowers, fixing a scraped knee when he could. It was all very random but he kept his story to her rambling from when she was injured. From the raid on the violent enclave, trading an angel feather to a crow, almost dying to an aberration, becoming a Tan-Zeno of all people, him meeting some interesting Islanders, and losing an eye to Ren, his new roommate with an old hegelan man. Not even to mention the classes he has taken up with managing Zeno Bucks and what an absolute "joy" that had been. By the time they got there, Marci was exasperated by how Tku could seemingly babble forever. "Tku," she politely interrupted, "I mean what has been happening in Palapar." Tku opened the door to his flat, "You know I was just about to get there," he rolled his eyes. The flat was filled with paintings, a very typical studio for an artist like himself. Though the art was odd, it was more akin to capturing a moment rather than a scene. What portraits were here made no effort to hide how poor the conditions in Palapar were. "A lot and a little has happened in Palapar," Tku finally answered. "Some riots, revolts, and massacres. Sadly, just another occurrence for the natives in Palapar." He rolled over a tea cart to the couch.

Capable Marceline, though. Always the focus on that now. Tku was a good man, though, and he meant well, so she smiled through it and responded with something humourous, mundane, and noncommittal. In truth, she found herself so engrossed by the scenes around her, so busy immersing herself in this new place, that she simply let him speak. It only occurred to her, after nearly ten minutes had passed, that he'd been going on for quite a while. Some of it was new to her. Some of it an insight - into the situation themselves or his thinking on it. It stood out to Marceline, at least, that Ren was a monster, plain and simple: something as bad as Juulet, in his own way. Then, they were there, and Marceline floated up the stairs - a skill she'd worked hard to master in Torragon. Once she'd settled at the top, she cast about. The space was so perfectly Tku that she couldn't help but smile briefly. Then came the part about riots, revolts, and massacres. She pursed her lips and grimaced distastefully. "See, but I don't think they are just another occurrence." The teenager shook her head. "There was something else this time - some special element - or something like this would've happened before." She tilted her head inquisitively. "What was it?"

Tku steeped the tea as he waited for the dense ball to relax and bloom."My opinion? Just as Virang sees Palapar as a necessity for the war financially, Palapar has also realized this. It's common to try something when the defenses when the masters are busy." He mainly pulled this from the way Zarina spoke at the Idasque. No doubt that someone has distinctly pointed that out to her many times. A sonic bubble formed around them as the tea finished its first steep,"That and people can't look away anymore. Not Torragon, not Revidia, not any group with a heart." Tku poured them both a glass bursting with citrus.

Marci quietly accepted the tea, and held out her hand for Tku's cup, taking it as well. He had a tea pet, sitting there forlorn and unused, and so both cups were quietly poured out into it. She poured seconds for the two of them with her kinetic abilities and set these down on the small table between them. "We don't drink the first steep, Tku," she said with tender admonishment, but it was merely a distraction from the heavier subject matter at hand. She considered how to broach it. "But are they doing it out of the goodness of their hearts?" Marceline questioned, her opinion clear in her tone. She shrugged. "Perhaps individuals within the greater body are, but I fear they're merely using these people's fight to..." She quieted for a moment and shrugged again. "...be their own people and make their own decisions to their strategic advantage." She took her first sip and flashed a smile of thanks. "I pray to Dami there's some other party working genuinely on their behalf."

Tku held the tea just inches from his lips when Marci educated him. If he had not been wearing such thick makeup, you could see him blush. "You think someone would have told me by now," his voice seemed as embarrassed as amused. He took a sip of the 2nd steep, "I will say that it is much more refreshing." Tku was rather even as she spoke, treating her with warm respect. However, there was a part of him that felt some hesitance to engage with her. He knew her only for the better part of a year and even that most of that time she was gone, taking care of herself while those who loved and cared for her carried heavy stones. Even Tku wasn't so mindful that her absence didn't sting when he saw how much damage it created. He sat still, no fidgeting with his brushes or things in front of him. It was an expression one does not associate with Tku, quiet contemplation. He met Marci's eyes, But she is here now, Tku allowed himself. "Dami has a way of giving those who are chained a path to seek their own self-determination," Tku nodded at Marci. And back to fidgeting with what he now knew was a tea pet.

The Gods are not real. It was a stray thought that rose, unbidden, to the fore of Marceline's mind, and she quickly corrected it. They are real. Perhaps they're just not truly Gods. When she spoke, however, she went with something considerably different. "Maybe she does, but she gives opportunities to all, and not all use those for the good of others." She shook her head. "Zarina and I quarreled - I'll be frank - but one of her concerns, even if it was self-serving in the end, was that they'd just be trading one tyrannical master for another. I couldn't entirely dismiss it." She took a sip of the tea, and there was a wonderful fruitiness to it. much like its owner, she thought. "I'm a believer in making your own way. You know something of me. You know that I come from a refuge, that my grand name is a sham. I was an illegitimate daughter thrown away when they found out what I was. I don't remember them." She nodded slowly, considering, and took a second sip. The tea was lovely - perhaps a recipe for Zenobucks. "I've had friends and even family who've helped me along the way, especially in these last few months." Awkwardly, she set the teacup and coaster on her lap. "It isn't easy being half a person." She shook her head and smiled tightly, as if to apologize for the moment of wallowing. "My point is that I am a product of my own free will, but also that of others." She regarded Tku evenly. "I'd not have founded Zenobucks were it not for a conversation with Zarina. I'd not have escaped that refuge if she and Ayla, Yalen and Jocasta, and the others hadn't come. I'd not have ended up a cripple had Juulet simply lain down and accepted her just comeuppance." The tea sat there on her lap. A bit had tricked over the rim of the coaster when Marci had shifted, but she did not feel its burn. "These people are not strong enough to succeed on their own against Virang, and so they will have help as Dami sends it." Marceline shook her head. "But those who help have the same free will and their own reasons for helping. They will call in their debts or, at the very least, expect certain outcomes." She lifted the coaster and the cup to her lips, noting the stain on her dress, and sipped. "I won't pretend to have no ulterior motive," the tethered admitted. "Zenobucks is how I unchain myself and I want to guarantee the stability of its supply chain, no matter who wins, but..." Gently, she set the cup back down. "Fuck anyone who keeps another in inescapable servitude." Her eyes flashed. "Fuck anyone who betrays those who trust them." She shook her head. "I know I've been called cutthroat and impulsive and selfish." She waved a hand as if to bat it all away. "I've had plenty of time lately for soul-searching, trust me." She regarded him, eye to eye, and furrowed her brow. "Thing is, I do have a side here. Virang is wrong. Zarina is wrong. But Revidia, and Torragon, and Tarlon?" She tilted her head, allowing the question to linger for a moment. "They're not in it for anything better. You seem to be, though." Her gaze searched his. "Please tell me you're not in it alone, that there's some kind of plan."

Tku had some thoughts about what Zarina said to Marci, it was not how she expressed it to himself, Imam, and the very Queen of this nation. But he would let that go, for now, he wasn't here to argue specifics of what one zesty woman says. Tku was merely here to listen to her. He learned that she was from a tethered refuge and an illegitimate child. Is that why there are so many tethered at Ersand'Ernise? Whatever the case, she seems to be selling what she is and why she can be trusted. A central conceit, her resume, and her question. How very straightforward. She laid out her reasonings quite convincingly. Maybe not well enough to disclose information normally but Marci held great power and Tku could no longer think of this as a mission of a few. Alad, Kidlat, Dalisay, the people who have already died. They relied on this to succeed. "A traveler never comes alone." As their gaze met each other, Tku's eyes wandered to a simple mask on the far table. "I respect that you must seek things for your own freedom, I have done quite a stellar job running it in your absence. Your honesty is refreshing compared to others and for that, I can try to achieve a stable line. But I need your word if you want to know more Marci." Tku simply offered. He had the information she wanted but he needed her word, that would be enough for Tku.

"My word?" Marceline inquired, arching an eyebrow. "That my intentions are genuine?" She blinked. "You already have that." She pursed her lips, lifting the cup again and draining the last of the tea. "I am loyal to those who are loyal to me. I'm selfish only to the point where it could hurt them." She shook her head. "One thing that I will not do is harm Zarina." She peered right into him as best she could, or maybe it was just the idea that she might have some sort of piercing gaze. "I assume we're on the same page with that, though."

Tku sighed, "I apologize Marci, to be honest, Zarina's coldness has shaken me at times on who I could trust. Even with what has happened between us, I would never hurt Zarina, I care for her far to greatly to do so." Tku smiled weakly, it was tiring to think of Zarina right now for him. "I promise I will not try to wrong you Marci." He poured a second glass for them. "It seems we will have much to discuss."

That, indeed, they did. Just what the nature of those discussions were, however, was known only to the two of them. When Marci poked her head out the door some two hours later, rolling down the quiet streets by night, she twisted to watch Virangish guards taking down the bodies from earlier. They, like the curfew that had pressed so strongly upon this place for the past few weeks, were gone. The tethered did not linger long, making her way towards an inn in the upper city with the help of some kinetic and chemical magic. She seemed at once more relaxed than she had been upon her arrival and more determined than she had been since a certain fateful night two and a half months ago.



Morning, Mr. Salvatore


Knock knock

Tku headed to his front door, throwing a robe over himself, "Just a moment," Tku finished his makeup as it was far more important than any guest that could be at the door. "Yes?" he opened the door, leaning on the railing. In front of him was a boy, maybe only 12 years old, with a satchel of letters and other small packages.

"Ah, Ramil do you have more letters for me?" Tku asked as he stood up and turned his head to snatch his coin purse.

The young boy nodded and just said "yesh," with a small lisp stemming from his lack of confidence.

"Since you came all the way here, I should pay you for your troubles," He pulled out 5 coins and handed it to him as Ramil handed a bundle of letters. Ramil took off quickly, running back to the streets, "Don't spend it all in one place!" Tku shook his head, That child could slow down some, enjoy his childhood a little more, Tku thought with some guilt.

He read through the letters and requests as he finished getting ready for the day, humming all the while. One portrait was chosen from them, someone named Salvatore and he could be found... here He grabbed his supplies and put his tea pet at the door. His art station was set and ready, all that was left was to make a few phone calls.

"Ring ring, Marco Salvatore," Tku said with a pleasant tone, "I heard you are looking for a portrait, yes? If so let me fill you in on how to get to me. I'm sure you can manage." After that was a somewhat convoluted direction that ended with asking a child at a bakery for a coin to get some pastries, simply pointing to the 'Coin man'. Why it needed to be so confusing was worthy of many questions

Left at the fruit stand… left, no, right at the jeweler… fuck, which alleyway was it again? Marco was slowly making his way through the city one stop at a time, while constantly reciting the directions given to him by the strange voice in his head. It was a deeply uncomfortable sensation at first, as the words felt like they were coming from his own internal dialogue. It was like having thoughts that weren’t yours. Although Pictor had repeatedly assured the Century that he could only hear thoughts that were directly addressed to him, Marco was not entirely convinced. However, the usefulness of this ability of the artist’s could not be denied, especially to a covert operation such as theirs.

To avoid trouble on his way to the Obenjan, Marco once again stalked the streets in disguise, this time as a traveling musician. He was raised as a Rezaindian through and through, but while church children were educated according to the principles of their chief deity, almost all were expected to take electives and hobbies in order to satisfy more than one member of the Pentad. To please Ipte, Marco had taken up various creative pursuits to fill the time where he wasn’t fighting or training his swordsmanship. Although he had become a good sculptor, his musical skills were actually quite mediocre. Still, the wooden harp he hastily slapped together with binding magic would serve as a pretext. Nobody would spare a second glance at a musician walking the streets so close to the palace, as more than one noble kept a bard in their retinue for their personal amusement.

By the time he made it to the bakery, Marco had gotten himself lost three times already. Thoroughly exasperated by the tediously long list of instructions he had been forced to follow, he tried not to let his annoyance color his inner voice as he reached out to Pictor.

Okay, I’m approaching the, uh… the coin man? What do I do next?

Tku enjoyed his odd routine, it was random and set by some random dice. Still, maybe it was a little cruel to send him on an elaborate tour of the city, Tku let out a devilish smile. "All you need is to walk through the door and I'll be there." Inside the 'Coin Man's' house was none other than the Obenjan. "Please, shut the door on the way in," Tku pulled a seat out for Marco's portrait, "Do you prefer coffee or tea?" Tku offered.

”Coffee, thank you.“ Marco nudged the door closed with his foot and invited himself in. He took every sarcastic remark that threatened to spill out of his mouth and buried them deep inside. As stupid as this entire errand was, there was no point questioning the painter’s motives. He was offering to help, and if he wanted to play jokes on people along the way then that was his business. As long as it sped up the revolution Marco was prepared to drink mud. At least the furniture in this house was nice. Being able to sit after such a long walk felt good.

Tku prepared coffee with some flair, almost exactly as Zarina had taught him months ago. "Here you are Mr. Salvatore, help yourself to the cream and sugar on the table." Tku sat behind his canvas and a sonic bubble dropped down on them, giving them some privacy. "Mr. Salvatore, is there any specific portrait you want me to make?" Tku began to sketch Marco as he was.

Marco skipped the sugar and stirred in just enough cream to cut through the bitterness and heat of the coffee. After taking a big gulp to quench his thirst, he set the cup on its saucer and left it on the table before addressing the painter. ”Well, there are a couple of things to consider. I am obviously a Revidian, and a young looking one at that. I tend to draw attention around here, even when I don’t intend to. I’d like a portrait that doesn’t make me look out of place, even if I were to walk into the palace to present it to the queen herself.“

"I see, something low profile, a casual portrait." Tku started to choose the colors he wanted, "Good, you know that you stand out. I can make you a portrait where you won't but why don't you give me some ideas." He peered past his canvas to Marco, "Any people or professional caught your eye on your trip here?" Tku structured his face, how would I have do his makeup to match the people here? His features are rather soft so molding him is simple. But his tones are rather light. He layered things with a pasty light color and applied layers to get to a darker complexion. Well enough.

"You know, there is this kitchen I've always wanted to work at inside the palace." Marco suggested. "Therefore, how about you paint me as a porter?"

"A most noble job," Tku nodded as he took it into his painting, the clean hands that had been soaked in water, the grease on the face from working in the kitchen. It was coming to him how he should look. The painting came fast as silence took over for a good hour or 2.

Just before the final brush stroke, Tku showed him Marco's new identity. "Is this to your liking?" It looked to be a Kitchen Porter of mixed heritage between Virangish and Palapareese. The hair on the arms was thick but was near hairless near the hand and wrists from constant abrasion. It looked simply like a porter that you would pass without much thought.

The painting sent chills up Marco's spine. Even after growing up in the future, he was never THAT hairy. He almost wanted to request a do-over, but the artist likely made him look like that for a reason. In any case, he would just have to put up with it for one night. "I don't know if this will make me pass as a native, but at least it doesn't look like me. Even if I were to bump into someone from the academy, it would be impossible for them to make the connection. I think we can make this work."

The shock at the hair was quite hilarious to Tku,"Splendid," Tku performed the last brush stroke as the portrait sucked in some energy. "When the time comes, all you have to do is look at your portrait and say its name." Tku handed him a note with the name 'Atay Sabbagh'.

"Now will you be paying in magus or kurush?" he asked.

"Magus." Marco reached for his coin purse and counted out the agreed upon sum without trying to haggle. It was rare for him to have need of the stipend given to Centuries by the Quentic church, so the money had just been piling up with nowhere to go. "Thank you again for your services. I will make good use of this." Marco wrapped the painting in a piece of cloth and stuffed the note into his pocket. Before departing, he also made sure to finish the rest of his coffee. It was more delicious than he had expected.

"Please excuse my rudeness, but I must take my leave. I have other errands that require my attention today." Marco gave a respectful bow before heading for the door with his precious cargo in hand.

"of course, everyone is so busy nowadays," making no huff about it and followed him to the door. "It was a pleasure to do this Portrait with you, live well Mr. Salvatore," Tku waved him off as he began to finish his own plans. Tomorrow will be quite tiring but I cannot slow now. No, I must stay steady until the end.
Hidden 3 days ago Post by Fallenreaper
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Mahal Agha
"What happens now?"
The Palaparese Revolution: Chapter 2
Location: Agha Plantation, Kalingnan


Open Rebellion-Feat. Lunara
Locked on the Scent
Tethered Communications
Goma Hunt
The Masked Man

Lunara Agha

Assault upon the Plantation
Secrets Written in Blood
A Daughter's Duty
A Heartfelt Speech
...Fin?


Strained Kinship
Hidden 2 days ago Post by Emeth
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That's Amore





It was Ardanes, now: well into Rezain. The days were a little bit shorter and the nights a little bit cooler. In truth, it was a welcome reprieve from Dorrad's searing heat. They sat on the balcony of a handsome townhome in Cantativa, away from the hustle of Civitalunga or Avincia, with one platter of bruschetta and another of fritto misto. There was a bottle of red wine on the table and a great full Ciero in the sky.

Ciro Volta sat across from the woman he would marry, trying to eat like a gentleman. He had business to discuss, but food was to be enjoyed first. There was no need to sour the taste of it. "I could tell you something like, 'that's my mother's recipe'," he chuckled, "but I think neither of us would be afraid of the truth. It comes from the kitchen of a poor woman in Farrodiné who was well compensated and is a bit less poor now." He smiled appreciatively as he chewed.

Xiuyang sat across from her lover, clothed in her finest silks. The first time they'd spoken, she had worn a mask. Then, she'd borrowed her sister's face, and thought he wouldn't notice. Then, she'd decided to learn how to apply makeup, almost from scratch. Now, there were just a few precise and gentle touches. Slowly, over time, her face had become more visible, her smile easier and more confident, more genuine.

It had also made her face easier to read. A smile could mean many things, and her smiles were becoming easier to tell apart—a product of their time spent together as much as it was the girl's heart mending. The smile Ciro saw now was a happy and contented one. She was admiring him as much as she was admiring the food. It was no secret that she loved his generosity and good taste.

"My compliments to our chef. I'll savor this moment to her success. It looks delightful." She had her chopsticks ready—was it poor manners to eat Revidian food with chopsticks? Surely Ciro wouldn't mind. She seemed to be in a similar conundrum to her beloved: how to eat this bruschetta like a proper lady. The chef may have been poor, but the ingredients were quality and not used sparingly. Her attempt at a ladylike nibble ended with a small dab of tomato sauce on her nose, to which she snickered before wiping it off and taking a more adventurous second bite. All was well. She would enjoy the food for several minutes before the wine would even cross her mind. She hardly drank these days.

Ciro tried to bend the bruschetta slightly, to make it concave. He'd have ended up feeding the table and his lap had he not caught the pieces with kinetic magic. He made a makeshift heart shape out of them in the air. "Did you realize there would be this much cheese when you sat down tonight?" he asked.

Xiuyang rolled her eyes good-naturedly. "Wouldn't have it any other way, Big Cheese," she replied, responding to one double-meaning phrase with another.

"And this is why I love you," Ciro remarked, holding out the bottle of wine and arching an eyebrow questioningly. He shook his head as he poured. "Many other reasons, too, of course." Two full moons loomed large in the sky. The waters of the Green Canal shimmered under their light. "But you are the partner I need: the one who I don't have to act seriously around, the one I don't need to explain my jokes to."

His face turned pensive, then, and perhaps a bit troubled. "I know the nature of my family, and some of that of yours." He regarded the deep red liquid in his glass before his eyes snapped upwards, finding hers. "Promise me that we will never let them use us or turn us against each other." He fairly bled anxiety into the night.

Xiuyang nodded at the offer of wine, taking up her glass and holding it out for Ciro to fill. A light blush formed on her cheeks, another perk of the lighter use of makeup. The feeling of ease and safety was mutual. She was glad to hear of it.

The night moved forward as smoothly as the boats in the canal, but something was about to rock their boat. Dark clouds were brewing, and Xiuyang moved to shoo them away with all the authority of a Zeno welcoming a new year of students to the school. Nothing and no one would intrude on this moment.

"Never," she agreed, soberly and with a kind of held-back intensity. "I swear it. ...It's not my sister, is it?" she suggested preemptively. Desi's husband had chosen her over Maria or Xiuyang, and Maria's jealousy would flare up from time to time. Her charms had not worked on him, and they'd likely not worked on Ciro either, but she had to be sure.

Ciro shrugged almost... evasively, and glanced out over the canals. "Well, I get a bad read from her: bitterness." He shook his head. "Grasping." He pursed his lips. "A desire to move up." He tapped the table with a finger. "My uncle was the same way, and it cost me my father. Oldest tale in the world."

The food was all-but finished. He'd timed it that way. Telling her more about himself would build trust with Xiuyang, and that was something that he needed. In truth, the family's mercantile ventures were not as profitable as they had once been. Trade was moving, increasingly, to the oceans instead of the Ensollian and Revidia hadn't a ghost of a route there. Banking was the future. The Solaris could keep the ships.

And yet... he found that he did not see them as enemies. He did not want to ruin them, not in any way, unless they acted first. There was no such thing as a wealthy merchant in Revidia who had not stabbed backs or cut throats, figuratively and, in an indirect sense, literally. Ciro was just shy of his eighteenth birthday and still not fully in control of the Volta Company, but he had ruined people. He'd had men killed. He'd been utterly ruthless. "Amore mio," he said softly, as a sonic bubble took shape around the pair, "he didn't work alone. There is another who must pay Ecceran's price." He glanced down at the blood red wine in his glass and then back up at Xiuyang, mysteriously, searchingly, darkly.

Xiuyang was about to crack a joke about how Ciro had just described most noblewomen when he'd suddenly dropped the bombshell. "I'm so sorry. I can't imagine..." The words felt hollow in her mouth as she gazed into her wine. In many horrible nightmares, she had seen Juulet come for her family. She had seen the church come for her family, led by any one of the students who knew that she was a Facemimic and claimed to be her friend. But, to be betrayed by her own blood? It was unthinkable. Even Maria, for all her bluster, would never dare to pull the trigger, because—

Xiuyang felt the familiar presence of a sonic bubble as Ciro addressed her so fondly, so softly. She wanted nothing more than to move to his side, but the weight of his words kept her in her seat, engaged in the careful dance of discussing matters of great import while appearing to have only a casual conversation. The conflict played out on her face as her eyes grew in their intensity and her appetite for wine along with them.

After a longer drink, she placed her wine glass down, but not for a refill. She tented her fingers. "We Solari have an understanding with one another. We wear many faces, and we each have our own hopes and dreams, but we are all one 'Solari.' He who makes an enemy of one, makes an enemy of all." Her eyes flicked to meet Ciro's, shimmering like the reflection of the moons in the canal below. "Who broke your heart, amore mio?"

Ciro listened and he wasn't certain, to be truthful, though he did not entirely let this show. "We Volta are, in theory, much the same... or at least, we were."

He drank no more, for he was master of himself. "It is l'Anguilla himself, though he is not aware that I know, so far as I can tell." He picked at his last bit of food idly - poor manners, to be certain, but he could relax that way in front of Xiuyang. "And now he comes to me," the merchant prince continued, "with a task that I know is a trap, but which I cannot completely refuse, lest I lay bare my suspicions and allow him to wonder if I know still more." He twisted to reach into his satchel, left beside his chair under the moonlight, but he paused. "I will admit, it is an intriguing thing, and I welcome your insight on it."

Xiuyang's face blanched. Her blood turned cold. "...The Doge himself..?" She looked upon Ciro with eyes that didn't want to believe what her ears were hearing. "How could this happen..? Should we..?" Her voice trailed off as she at once considered and dismissed every option that came to mind. Tell her father? No. He had told her quite young never to tangle with the Eel, but when asked by innocent young eyes if the Doge was a "bad man," he had replied only that people were more complicated than simply being good or bad.

Should they flee Revidia? No. The keys to the future they were building together were here, and the future of all Constantia stood to gain from their success. There was too much on the line to let one man stand in the way, even if that man was the Doge himself.

Kill the Doge? It seemed the height of madness. The kind of chaos that would result... but Ciro knew this. He knew, and setting aside whether or not they should, the fact of the matter was that Xiuyang could not, even if she tried. He was not asking her to commit treason, any more than Seviin had been suggesting that she kill Juulet. Ciro was simply stating facts, for the time being, and she trusted his judgment.

She did not cast judgment on him for killing his uncle, for the penalty of betraying one's own blood could only be death. So it was for the Solari, and so she imagined it must be so for the Volta.

"What is the nature of this task? This trap of his?" she asked, holding back the true heat of her emotions, but not the presence of them. "If he plots ill against you, I will bring those plans to ruin. Every fiber of my being, every tool at my disposal. I'll hold nothing back. Please, let me help you," she pleaded, reaching across the table for his hand. She knew that Ciro had been bearing his burdens alone while she had been making him to share hers. It was unfair, and she was making an effort to change it, but he had to let her in first.

Ciro lifted his glass of wine to his lips and drank. One could not see the lower half of his face. After a moment, however, he placed it back on the table, settled, and took Xiuyang's hand. He breathed deeply, twisting to pull a sealed envelope from his bag, though the seal was broken. "It says little," he remarked, extricating a folded letter from it, "though I know more, and he knows more than me, still. He held it out for her to see and opened it, letting her read and wonder before any commentary.

Dear Honourable Prospect,

Has your life taken a turn? Do you seek thrills you have long since desensitized yourself to? Or perhaps you wish to start anew?

Whatever your creed may be, one of Sipenta's mythical and lost marvels beckons the ambitious, curious and desperate alike. Deep in the frigid tundras lies the oldest gem of this world.

An expedition like none other in history to unearth a legend that can make dreams into tangible reality. A chance for a legacy. A chance for a new beginning. A new era.

The Abyssal Forge awaits you.
Signature: __x

Please send this letter through your local post office.


Xiuyang took the letter and inspected it. Anxiety gave way to confusion, which was always conveyed through her most amusing faces. "He... wants you to sign a letter and put it in the post," she assessed, deadpan, with a tone that suggested an anti-climax. She pinched the bridge of her nose. "Can something this shady-looking really be an important task from the Doge? This looks like bait for the desperate. Is he insulting you?" she asked, irritation evident on the curl of her lips. "A chance for a legacy, a new beginning." There was a time such words would have tempted her to action, but now, she saw them in a new light: manipulative.

But slowly, the clever girl's cogs began to turn, and after a moment, she gave her true assessment. "No, I get it. He wants to send you on some fool's errand so you'll be out of his hair. It means he is about to make a move you disapprove of, right?"

It wasn't quite right, but it wasn't quite wrong, either.

"But we have tricks he doesn't know about." When her eyes met Ciro's again, it was his own eyes that he saw looking back at him from within Xiuyang's face. It was only for a moment, but it was a little uncanny. "As I said, we are all one 'Solari.' If he requires 'you' to go away for a while, I can become 'you.' Someday, you might be able to become 'me' as well. Until then... while they aren't exactly pocket sized, they are 'portable.' The mirrors, Ciro. Being in two places at once isn't a dream for you, it's a reality!" Her hushed whispers got a little excited.

"I think he wants to have his cake and eat it, too," Ciro offered, leaning in conspiratorially and mouthing a small kiss. "At least, that's my impression." He smirked and leaned back again, sipping the last bit of his wine.

"There is something to the Abyssal Forge beyond the ability to create things: something strategic for him both personally and in the interest of Revidia." He pursed his lips. "I have done some digging and I think that the Tarlonese are connected to this. Minister Padovan's office has been unusually busy, but not Materazzi's or Barone's. Tartarelli has been salivating over the coming war for months, now, and Zappa is inscrutable as always. I think there is an effort to pull them over to our side, perhaps as counter to what the Torragonese have been up to lately with Virang."

He shrugged. "My take is that they need something there and can't get it, or need backup, and we stand to gain. If matters go well, then it is a clandestine operation but, if they go south, l'Anguilla will have cause to disavow whoever was involved." He sniffed. "It's me he's out for. We've been playing this shadow game for some time." Ciro examined the letter idly. "I could not live with myself if you stepped in and something happened."

"But then, what will you do? It's the same for me, you know. I can't imagine a future without you in it. ...No pressure." She squeezed his hand lightly, giving him a warm smile. Then, she narrowed her eyes in thought. "So, you're saying this isn't just some wild goose chase, but a real lead. You're also saying it might be dangerous, but here you are, asking for my opinion on our best course of action. If you had someone more capable than me that you could ask, I think you would have—and if I had someone like that, you'd have skipped the middle man. ...Well, it's me, so maybe you wouldn't." She weaved her fingers with Ciro's, playing with them a little.

"I trust you, Ciro, and I trust your judgment. I'd be in a lot of trouble if I didn't, since I'm something of an advisor of yours," she japed. "If you would rather I not go, then let me know how I can help, and what needs to be done while you're gone—but, I am willing to go on a little adventure. Considering everything that's happened, with the doppelganger of me that appeared in Qari'muuna and attacked Ingrid, and the incident in Palapar... maybe it'd be good for me to escape the public eye for a while, again, rather than become a distraction from the good you're trying to do." She sighed, but she didn't allow herself to dwell on the thought like she would've done before.

"Like I said, you can sign it and send me. I won't get cold feet. Or if you think it's too risky, or if there's some benefit to having the Doge know you sent me, I'll sign my name and go as myself. Do we know if anyone else will be there? Anyone we trust?" she asked curiously.

Ciro listened as she spoke, his attention - for all intents and purposes - undivided. "I believe we should test him, just slightly," he concluded. "If you would like to lose some heat, you should at least go as yourself." He tapped the tabletop rhythmically, pondering. "Change one element he anticipated and thought he would control." His eyes flicked from his tapping finger to Xiuyang. "See how he reacts."

Regardless of his discomfort, he flicked her the letter, eyes large and deep and settled upon her. "I love you, Salomé Solari." In the background, the crickets chirped and a fresh breeze blew up the hill from the ocean. "I will have someone ready - someone useful - to switch with you if you are in danger."

Xiuyang nodded in understanding. Ciro knew the Doge, and this was his move to play. With Xiuyang signing her name, she could be satisfied that they were keeping another of their cards hidden, as well. She had reached for her quill and was just about to sign the letter when Ciro reaffirmed his love for her. Her hand hesitated for what could've only been a fraction of a second before the deed was done.

The delivery was so serious, it could have been a final farewell, and if it were anyone else, she would have had second thoughts—but, she'd made a habit of putting her faith in this man, and watching as things worked out for the better. Now, while she was doing it again, he was also doing the same with her, and the weight of the moment was not lost on Xiuyang. She smiled warmly as he reassured her that she would have an out if things went south.

"And I love you, Ciro Volta. More than you could ever know."






"When the moon hits your eye, like a big pizza pie... that's amore~♪"

"When the world seems to shine, like you've had too much wine... that's amore~♪"


Xiuyang sang softly to herself as she walked the dirt roads of some small town in Miatto, appearing to have no particular destination in mind. She had memorized the map several days ago, after all, and walked this road several times before. She had observed the shed in question and peered inside with the Gift, as she would do this time.

There was a sudden chill, and the inexplicable but all-too-familiar sensation of being watched. Was there a rustling of more than just the wind?

"When it's all on the line, but you're still feelin' fine~♪" she improvised, drawing a pistol, a smile forming as she brought the muzzle to her lips, like a finger shushing a partner in crime who was absent.

"What's that?" she spoke, rather than sang the line, as one would do to build drama in a musical.

She ducked around a corner, peering into an alley, her gun pointed at a barrel. A rat scurried. A homeless man coughed.

"Don't you see? Why couldn't it be?" she said as she looked around, to quell her nerves.

All was still in the night. Xiuyang tapped the barrel of her gun against her chin contemplatively, as though it were her finger, resting just outside the trigger guard.

"Yup! That's amore~♥" She smiled brightly.

She would continue on until she reached the rendezvous point, at which point the weight of the risk she was taking would hit her stomach like a ton of bricks. You promised you wouldn't get cold feet, she softly scolded herself. If your word means nothing even when given to Ciro, then... The rest didn't need to be said.

She bumped the door of the shed open with her shoulder. The first two times she had opened it, it creaked horribly. Last time she was here, she had ensured it would not do so again. She relied on her beanie to show her the truth, looking for any dark figures lying in wait. She saw nothing, however. Instead, she saw the static before she began to feel it crawl on her body. She tried to draw, but instead felt her knees grow weak as she lost her balance. It was in her mind, now, obscuring her vision along with the fog creeping inside the shed. It drowned out the all-consuming cacophony of the frogs nearby.

What... is this?! Is this magic? Is it an episode? I can't see... myself. Can't hear... Can't ...think...

"Ciro..."
she mumbled as her eyes glazed over. "a... mo... r- re..." Her outstretched hand gave up its final twitch.
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