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He had rather hoped his other duties would have waited a little, and perhaps come at him in an orderly fashion. Not all at once. Not now. Not with her.

But. He did say he would watch her back first. He did offer her the lead. And she’d let him. She’d let him.

“Go!” The power of the divine, the battle of armies, bat his voice from the air as soon as it leaves his throat, but she will hear him. She will hear him. “I’ve got your exit!”

Go, brave mouse. Your wish awaits. And if the dark closes in around you, do not throw your life away in despair. Turn around. See the light, marking the path home.

He will be waiting for you.

[Dolce is certain something’s wrong here, and Has a Bad Feeling About This: What’s the safest escape route? What’s the quickest escape route?]

********************************************

Vasilia stared at the empty space where a god once stood. Fury and sorrow alike stinging her eyes.

“Oh. Brilliant." She mutters. "At least it’ll be a short future of survival and hurt. With a finale ripped straight from the worst day of my life. Wonderful! What a prize to look forward to. It’s a good thing all those years of agony were finally worth something. Can you imagine? If it all just ended with! With!”

The old battlements wailed in anguish, as her claws slowly dug grooves into the stone.

“As if I needed you to tell me I'm destined for failure. Read the bloody room next time, you miserable skeleton."
“If it’s a matter of wishes…”

The enormity of the task before him is....well, he’s more than enough to disqualify her wish right now. Where is his crew? His ship? Where is the enemy? What is their plan? Where is Vasilia? Is she safe? And him, with barely enough blood left to realize how outmatched he is. But all of that would have to come later.

His hand rises, and finds an open drawer. Slide it out, out, out, until it can move no more. One hand grips it tightly. The other pushes hard against the floor. His head explodes in stars and darkness, but, he isn’t swallowed up. Not yet. Not if he rises slowly. Stops. Catches his breath. Repeat. Rising higher, from drawer, to countertop. A mercy, that his hooves find enough purchase to keep from sliding out from under him. Hand over hand. Hoof over hoof. Stumbling through a space half-remembered, and a darkness about his eyes.

Following a brave little light that would not go out.

“In the short term...I wish I could watch your back.”

The rest, he can work on after.

“My name’s Dolce. It's a pleasure to meet you.”

************************************************

The robes protect her. She is wrapped in finery too good for a simple guest. It brushes soft against her, fends off the ocean breezes, neither too warm nor too chilled. So why does her fur grow damp with sweat? Why do her arms shiver, no matter how tightly she hugs herself? Why does the wind rip straight through the fabric, through a gaping hole in her chest, scourging her heart with salt and emptiness? Why? Why?!

“...you’re getting ahead of things, sir Knight.” She shakes her head, and pushes the kindness an arm’s length away. “The end’s only just begun.”

“My first speech of the day, my first act of repentance, I delivered to the vast assembly of my household. Hundreds upon hundreds, packed into my family’s Great Hall. I spoke of a life away from this wretched planet. Of a future filled with hope, where whatever else may happen we would live and breathe as free creatures, free from the chains that hung so heavy around Lakkos. No more to fight the wars of wicked schemers, but to fight for ourselves, and a brighter tomorrow. And when the final echoes of my oratory crescendo faded from the assembly, they gave their answer in stunned silences, broken only by whispers they would not dare speak to my face.”

“I left Alethea behind, to speak with any who lacked the courage to address me directly. She later told me, under protest, and at my own insistence, that those who did speak with her wished only for the perspective that my right hand could offer. Was I truly so stupid, to think that they would believe the same old pack of lies? When could they resign, without falling prey to what was surely a twisted test of loyalty and adoration? Would she lie for them, and say they were moved by my words?”

“In the end, Alethea would be the only one to join me. But. Before that. I had a sacrifice to make.”

“Given the Thunderer’s favor in my ascent, one of my earliest projects had been to secure a safe, private passage to Zeus’ temple, that I could more easily make offerings for my continued success. Here, at the last, that passage granted me secrecy amidst the chaos of Lakkos’ muster. No one would pass me on the street, and wonder why I was not in my Plover, en route to battle. I arrived to find the temple mercifully empty; all the other Senators had made their offerings while I had anguished in my deliberations. Everyone else had already gone, tripping over themselves to prove their merit on the field of battle, and gain privilege over the spoils. I had no time to waste on second-guessing. I had to be swift, if I was to make my rescue in time.”

“And yet, when I finished my prayers, and saw Clarissa standing in the entrance to the temple, I stopped. She asked me what I was doing there, urged me to go with her, assured me that we could still make it, together. And I answered her.”

“My second speech of the day. I could not remember the last time I’d spoken so. The words flowed from my heart without thinking, without planning. I felt the radiance of Zeus herself upon my shoulders, in the command of my voice, better than in any performance I’d put on. Years, actual years of never knowing what to say to her, gone in an instant. It’s now, Clarissa. Our time is now. No more wasting away here. No more dancing to the tune of wicked, heartless monsters. We could get out of here, together, and never ever look back. The wonders we would see! The adventures we could have! The things we could do, together! This was our chance, our only chance, and we may never get another one. We may never have another day like today, so, so please, Clarissa. Please! Come with me!”

“I thought...I thought the mantle of Zeus was on me so powerfully, that she didn’t recognize me anymore. My words had pierced her into awestruck silence, surely.”

“She asked me if I’d lost my damn mind.”

“Leave? I wanted to leave? I wanted to give up everything we’d ever worked for, just to run around the stars like, like some kind of space vagrant? Like a peasant? Come on, Vas. I would be dead to everyone if I did this. That’s it, game over, done. So would I just knock it off already? You can’t fight everyone on the planet! That’s all you’ve ever done! Picking fights you’ve got no way of winning, all because your public will hate you if you don’t. Well, look where that’s got you! They all hate you anyway! They’ve hated you for ages! How do I know that? Because it was so easy to get them to turn on you!”

“All I did was give them a little push, so you’d finally quit letting them push you around. I didn’t have to do much; they just, you know, needed permission to say how they truly felt. Don’t you see? You don’t have to keep fighting for them, Vas. I’m here. I’ve always been here, except you were too busy fighting everyone else to see it! So. Are you finally going to give this up? Or. Or…”

Nothingness. A gap in the record. A hitch in her breath. “I...don’t remember what she said after that. I can’t, remember it clearly, after she drew her spear. I remember I kept trying. To talk her out of it. Even when I had to draw my own glaive to defend myself, I kept trying. But my best words had already failed. What else did I have? Maybe, I thought, so long as I could keep trying to talk her down I could…I could forget that Clarissa had not once matched my medal count. I could ignore my instincts, telling me that she would keep coming after me, so long as she was conscious and capable. If I just, if I just shut my eyes, kept them closed a little longer, I could pretend I’d never seen the path to victory, and another one would reveal itself, but...but time. Time was never on my side. The battle was already underway, and every moment I stayed could cost the Starsong everything, I couldn’t afford to delay, I had to end it quickly and. And.”

The impact. The spray. The gasp.

“I created my opening, and ended it in one strike.” Echoing. Still echoing. Drowning out her own voice. “I didn’t even have time to wait and see if I’d killed her.”

“Because. Because I knew. Bloody and sobbing, stumbling down the steps of the temple, I knew. If I stopped now, it was all for nothing. Everything. The Starsong would be overwhelmed. The citizenry punished. I would face death or imprisonment. Clarissa…” No. No. No more. No. No. No. No. “So. I kept going.”

“After that, the fight itself was. Rather anticlimactic, I suppose. Or maybe I was too numb to tell. The Senators were not prepared for a sudden attack from the rear, and in the first moments I crippled too many of their power couplings. They eventually overwhelmed my plover, but they paid tenfold for it. Not counting the last one I destroyed on foot. Zeus was. Thorough, in her blessing. With the forces of Lakkos scattered, Alethea carried my battered body to the Starsong, but I’m afraid it was already too late.”

See now your guest in the Underworld. See the light recoil from her eyes. See the hollow in her chest, carved out by a lifetime of mistakes and weakness, which no mortal can endure and yet live.

“I died that day, sir Knight. The little girl who dreamed of forging peace with her beautiful voice is no more. I don’t know what creature they took out of Lakkos, and I’ve spent every day since wondering at the answer. I have lived like a lightning bolt, forever in the present, without a past, and no dreams for the future. I have done little else but hurt people, and a growing number of them didn’t deserve it.”

“That is the failure of my first life. A disaster I’ve not been able to stop, not even…” Her fist tightens, until the golden band digs red agony into her fingers. “Not even when I’ve had great reason to. All I’ve learned is how to be stubborn enough to keep living. And I’d hoped-” As if she had any right to. “I’d hoped finally owning my past would bring me more than a future of survival and hurt.”
Choice? What choice?

She is the strongest. She can hear Melody in danger. No one is going to stop her.

No one can stop her.

Every day she wakes to a voice in her heart, and every night she falls asleep to its truth. Some days it whispers. Some days it shouts. Now it bursts beyond her heart. All plans. All strength. All doubts. There is no part of Han that does not howl

the world is wrong, and I will burn it right.

A bottomless well opens, and essence pours down its insatiable depths. Never stopping, always hungering, only ever more, more. More than a body can hold. More than her body can hold. Waves of heat and power pour off her, essence releasing where it can hold no longer. A blazing star, a molten girl, drops to her knees. And from that blinding light erupts claws, scales, antlers, tail-!

A roar splits the light.

Paper burns to ash.

Pride crumbles to primal fear.

The air moves aside too slowly, and shatters before her in brilliant flame.

The Vermilion Beast of Lanterns comes. Flee for your lives.

[Han’s Feral jumps to 4. Han is Transformed. Rolling +Daring: 4 + 3 + 2 = 9. She can move in ways no ordinary person can]
All things considered, it’s not a good idea. The Ikarani must know he survived, and will have contingencies in place to finish him off. If she goes wandering, instead of staying put, she will almost certainly get caught up in the first disaster she comes across, and likely will not survive the encounter. None of this is wisdom. Apollo would not tell her to do any of this.

And on some level? She has to know it too. The fear that she’s spent her entire life breathing in now hangs thick around her, so thick she can hardly breathe, much less see, but somewhere in her heart she must know all this to be true. So what good would it do him to tell her it too?

Instead, he lies back. Closes his eyes. Gathers up what little strength he has, and uses it to carry his weak, stumbling voice all the way to her. Through the fear, and through the pain. Let her hear him just one, last time.

“The princess…wants to sail to Gaia.”

“We’re going to have to cross the Rift. I don’t know how we’re going to manage it. Just looking at it…it terrifies me. Even if we get past it, there are only stories of what lies on the other side of the universe. It will be to the gods if we find Gaia at all. But if we do? If we deliver what Lord Hades entrusted to us? Each of us, four of us, will be granted a wish. The princess wishes for a world where her mother steps down peacefully. She wishes for a world where the stars will be open to all. And the Empire of today will just be a bad memory.”

“Bella…I don’t know what Bella wants, exactly. But the ones Bella works for, they want to kill the Princess. They will then, most likely, organize a coup against the Empress, bringing forth whatever allies and plans they have had lying in wait for just such an occasion. But when the dust settles, they wish to sit on the throne, with no one to challenge them ever again. The Empire of today will be no more. And, I think a new Empire, born of blood and silence, will take its place.”

“Both sound at least a little impossible to me.” And yet, a chef had become a Captain, so perhaps that wasn’t as large a barrier as advertised. “So what impossible do you want, miss?”

[Rolling to Talk Sense with Wisdom: 6 + 6 + 1 = 13]

***************************************

This distraction is less enjoyable. Perhaps it is the point of the lesson. She will not think it so until later, if she ever does.

At once she is hackles and pinned ears, hissing and surging adrenaline. Her glaive whistles through the open air. Her fangs find no targets. Still she swings. Still she bites. Still she strains for some scrap of control as strength, overwhelming strength entraps her. She is pulled apart. She is crushed. She cannot breathe. Not like this! Not like this!

She is on her back, gasping for air. The Furnace Knight lands, well out of reach, completely untouched. He waits patiently for her to flex her fingers, to feel her arm moving under her own power again. To peel the glaive from a white-knuckle grip, one finger at a time. To rise, to return to the Underworld from someplace much worse. Then does he continue, in a slow and measured tone, free of threat and abounding in calm. There is the sky. There is the sun. There is his voice. None are going anywhere. Breathe, student.

She finds deep breaths filling her lungs. She finds nerves abating, retreating to an uncomfortable buzz that threatens to squeeze her chest tight again. She finds a voice, pulled taut and words nocked, and only by slow, steady strain can they be removed without violence. “I would appreciate. A warning, if that is going to happen again.” She shivers. She needs a drink. She won’t drink again. She takes her seat, and it is something she can do, and something she needs, and it is a start. She has to start somewhere.

“You’re right. Of course.” And she settles back into the comforting embrace of the storyteller. “I was a young, headstrong, fool of a girl wearing a Senator’s robes. I knew stagecraft, I knew fighting, I knew diplomacy, but I knew nothing of the long game of politics. Where all my opponents had decades of practice and fewer morals. Once, I sought to secure broader access to fresh water for those working in the scrapyards. It was all mine, for the low, low price of a shipment of plating. Said plating had been intended for additional solar shielding on the worker’s barracks, and yes, thousands would surely suffer terrible solar burns in the summer months, but they’d have water! They’d be alive! Dehydration or sunstroke, how would I care to let them die? Another time, I traded a run-down slum for bigger and better housing elsewhere. Within a month, the residents had been forced out, and a new luxury theater was underway. Meanwhile, my new housing project was still in the early stages of planning, materials would be double-claimed and take months to resolve, the builders were ‘accidentally’ promised their pay in advance, more funds would have to be raised, and all this time the people slept on the streets. So it was, everywhere, with everything I touched. Maybe you’re right, and maybe a more adept hand could have made a difference. But at what cost, when the vultures would devour everything they could get their claws into?”

“But if I’m being honest, it’s the wrong question to ask. In the late days of my rule, I noticed the tenor of my public appearances change for the worse. Where once I had only enjoyed broad, fervent support, the public of those days presented an unbearable tension. A clear marking line, between my wild-eyed fans, and...other, less ecstatic gazes. Desperation. Battered hope. Flickering embers of resentment. The same I would see in Alethea’s face, when she would come to demand an explanation for my latest dealings. More than the continued setbacks to my causes, this, I found the most intolerable. I doubled my efforts, not in statecraft, but in performance, seeking to bring them grander and more magnificent displays, anything to win back their adoration. No, the question is not if a different approach could have worked, sir Knight. It is if I was capable of playing my cards so close to my chest, playing the long game for the greatest good, if it meant giving up the praise and glory that catapulted me to fame in the first place.”

“I have thought on that question often, in this new life of mine.” Her eyes fall to the royal blue robes, draped over her motley frame. “I told you; I do not wear an honor higher than Captain, these days.”

“But where was I? Yes: An endless spiral of compromise, and a wavering public. This went on for years, and would have continued for many more, if a wild card had not upended everything. Lakkos’ military specialty was in the plover, I’d mentioned. We’d had no interest in spacefaring, as the Armada - when it returned - would surely be enough for the war to come. So when a Starsong cruiser cut through the atmosphere and opened broadsides against Senator Demetris’ household, there was no defense against it. His personal plover, the pride and joy of his household, was laid to ruin, and his security force scattered to the winds. The Starsong could’ve left just as easily; we had no way to stop them. But against all self-interest, they stayed behind to evacuate citizens who wished to flee with them.”

“The call came down from the chief of the Senate; all were called forth to punish the invaders. We would crush them with the full might of Lakkos. A storm of plovers, armed with the best scraps of the Empire, would crash down upon them before they could get airborne again. Any who refused would be thrown out of the Senate, their material assets seized, and divided up amongst more deserving statesmen.”

“Later, I would learn that the Starsong had, through some misadventure of theirs, stumbled onto our planet, and learned the plight of our people. One of their agents went undercover, sought out the lay of the land, crashed a wedding, might have stolen the bride? I can’t remember. Whatever the case may have been, they could not turn a blind eye to the misery they saw, and thus, their sudden assault. But all that, I would only learn later. That day, there was only one thought on my mind.”

“One hour. One hour, and one of my greatest foes had been rendered a nonentity. And if I did not fight to destroy the ones who did this, I would be destroyed myself.”

“One hour. One hour, and they had done more to tangibly help these people than I had done in my entire life. Everything I had ever worked for, revealed to be ash and dust by comparison. Hypocrisy, failure, laid bare in an instant.”

“Alethea found me pacing my rooms, the orders crumpled uselessly in my hand. Dear, loyal Alethea, she said what was on my heart, that I hadn’t the courage to say aloud: I couldn’t do this. I couldn’t live this life another day longer. And together, we devised a plan.”

“It was simple, really. If I was to no longer be a statesmen, I would need to leave. If the invaders were to survive, and the evacuees to survive, they would also need to leave. Our interests aligned perfectly. I would collect my plover, and the biggest shuttle I owned. To my vast household, I would offer the same as the Starsong; the chance to leave with me, and escape this wretched planet. Then, while Alethea handled the ensuing logistics, I would pay a brief visit to the temple of Zeus, and offer up everything I owned for my victory that day. Blessed by the gods, I would strike the Lakkos nobility a devastating blow from the rear while they were occupied with the Starsong, thus proving my own loyalties to my would-be allies. We take off, never look back, everyone lives happily ever after.”

Dear little Vasilia. Dear, stupid, silly, sun-eyed Vasilia.

“It was...it was such a simple plan. I’d already had my great epiphany. I knew I’d done wrong, and wished only to make it right again. Shouldn’t that have been enough?”

How can you still hurt her, years after your passing?
Perhaps it was a bit forward of him to ask for weeks when he could not even get seconds to ponder Hades’ warning before his body interrupted. Away the quiet. Return to chaos.

All that is familiar is dead. And yet, he still lives. His fingers are completely covered in a disgusting sludge of stew and sauces, and somehow that revulsion stands preeminent above the horror. Vasilia did always fuss about her coat when she was badly hurt. Never understood that, before now.

The mouse has long since run out of tears. Her arms tremble to hold back the shaking that wracks her body, for sorrow is not done with her. He tells his hand to rise, to reach out for her sleeve. His arm wails a dirge of weakness so terrible it sends him into a coughing fit. But dead bodies couldn’t breathe, much less cough, so perhaps that got the message across well enough.

"Excuse me?" Please miss, don’t take his rasping for growling. He’s not angry. This is just the only voice he has right now. "Could you help me stand up? I, I don't know if if I can manage it on my own."

***********************************

Mark of a good host; timely deployment of distraction.

Vasilia consumes the demonstration as only one with incomplete inexperience can. Yes. Yes. Wasn’t it obvious, after seeing the trick explained? How many battles had she snatched up an opponent’s blade by pure, happy luck, or a bit of rubble just when she needed something to throw? Yet she’d never considered doing so deliberately. How much could one Glaive carry? How much contact was required? For how long? Mmm. Oh, there would be devising indeed.

So taken was she that she almost forgot not to fiercely scowl at her host when he rudely drew her attention back to the ring around her finger. Almost. Thankfully for everyone’s sake, she managed to stop her mouth as it arrived at a thoughtful grimace. “You're getting ahead of things, sir Knight. How was I to think of marrying her, when I didn’t even know what we had? What I wanted us to have? That part, I put off until much, much later. There was so much else on my mind besides.”

“I hit a wall, after those first games. Downside of of having everyone's eyes on you, you have everyone's eyes on you. There was only so much that surprise and natural talent could do in the face of entrenched power. And nothing unites adversaries quite like a common threat. My style - the Mad Orbit, yes? - was skilled against single armored opponents, but the scroll didn't have any techniques useful against bribed officials and overwhelming numbers. Other troublemakers, they could always sponsor a challenger at the next games, but I was just a little too good for them to ever knock me out completely. But they could keep a fair number of medals out of my pocket. They could keep me out of the higher positions in the Senate.”

“What other means did I have to rise higher? Oh, I had popular support, but this was not the Empire, where an Empress controls all. I was but one Senator of many. I needed their support, not the people’s, if anything was to get done. When they weren't busy keeping my power in check, the other Senators loved to have me around, hoping a little of my fame might rub off on them. But as soon as I started suggesting that they ought to spend a little less on their personal projects, no one would give me the time of day. No skill in oratory could overcome the sheer apathy they felt to the suffering that was in their power to end. The suffering they regularly profitted from. And time...ah, time was always on their side.”

“I still remember it clearly: Some idiotic over-mining for scrap had polluted a major water supply, leading to a terrible famine that year. I fought to put together a relief effort, and how they made me fight for it. Ninety percent of our funds were harvested from slimming down my own projects to the bone, and it wasn’t even a quarter of what we needed. The other ten percent? Pocket change, from Senators seeking to keep me off their backs for a day. We needed help. And my opposition knew how little room we had to bargain. A distasteful fellow by the name of Demetris headed up the resistance to my proposal, and he made it abundantly clear that we would have to personally provide a high enough profit before he would deign to spend a thing on worthless peasants. I could have stayed the course, and let them starve. Or, I could. Pursue other means.”

“Demetris never missed the races. Always happy to wax at length about how nothing brought out the true competitive spirit quite like hunger and desperation. He was their biggest patron, both on and off the books. One day, he ‘happened’ to bump into me in the VIP section. It was my first time there, you see, never had the time to accept his previous invitations. Wouldn’t he tell me a little more about it all?”

“Before the month’s end, Demetris and all his cronies voted unanimously in favor of my relief bill. And I...I quietly nullified every motion of censure I’d ever made in connection to the races, and never spoke an ill word of them again.”

“That was my first betrayal. The first little hope I sacrificed. It would have plenty of company, before long, but I never felt it so keenly after the first time. I knew that I was crossing lines that I did not want to. But every step felt so justifiable when I was taking it. The ends so necessary that the means weren't all that despicable. Whenever my conscience ate at me too much for comfort, I always had my crowds. One look into those cheering faces and all my worries seemed so silly. Wasn't this just what I had dreamed? The three of us, walking the halls of power, making the world a better place? Clarissa never seemed to wrestle with the same doubts. Alethea didn't always approve, but, well, she was always a bit of a stick in the mud, wasn't she? What was one rebuke when I had entire arenas chanting my name?”

Her fingers found her ring. Back and forth, they twisted it. Keeping it from settling in too securely.

“I never knew how completely someone could fade away, and never notice just how far they’d fallen.”

Someone else ought to be hearing this story too. She did not know what to make of the relief his absence brought her.
Aunty? What do you…doing, here? She can’t talk right now, she’s in the middle of. She was just yelling at. There was, someone here? Where, where’d they go? S’hard, with the, uh, the place, it’s kinda, y’know, there’s stuff here, but it’s just over there and here, so. So maybe a little sit would be nice. For a bit.

She sits, or maybe she just stops standing, but whichever it is she falls into a chair so comfortable it must have been made special for her. Room to lie back. Put her feet up. Rest her head. Her Aunty tucks her in, warm and snug, wrapping her in thick, heavy blankets like only she can, all while breathing a soothing stream of flickering whispers right in her ear. And in no time at all she’s got her Han mumbling all those heavy, heavy words she’s been carrying in her heart this whole time.

“It’s the Kingdoms, Aunty. They’re all wrong. Everybody’s fighting everybody all the time, and it never stops, and it’s never gonna stop, and everything’s going to wilt all the time ‘cause nobody’s fighting what actually needs to be fought. Demons, and N’yari, and Dominion, everybody’s trying to eat us up. United, divided, whatever, Kingdoms oughta do their job. They should, they gotta look out for their people. How’s a average person supposed to live their life if a cat could scoop them up the second they got their back turned? They can’t. It’s dumb. They shouldn’t have to deal with that. But they do, because, everybody’s who’s supposed to be doing it’s not gonna.”

“I’m strong enough to make it better. I know I am. I just. I just need more time. It’s gonna take a while, alright? I don’t need anyone else, I’m strong enough. I should be able to fix this. There’s just.”

There’s fire, deep down in her heart. It stirs, and she must stir with it. But ah, little one. Don’t you know? You’re much too weary for such heat. Let your Aunty rub your back and smooth your hair. Let her press those tricky, tricky words out of you. Give it all to her, and you’ll feel much better, won’t you? You know you can tell her anything.

“There’s…so many people to beat up, so much to get right. Why doesn’t anyone listen to me? Why…why are all the knights so terrible? Why aren’t any of the princesses doing anything? Why’re the city folk alright with the N’yari picking on us so much? Why do the priestesses care so much about my stupid clothes? Why’s the Sapphire Mother so angry I’m trying to fix everything? There’s no one else, Aunty. I gotta. I have to do this. Won’t let ‘em take my home. I won’t let ‘em. It’s, it’s mine…you can’t take it…I won’t let you…”

“Burn. I’ll burn all of you down.”

Aunty pulls the blankets squeezingly tight. Piles up them up ever higher. Firm, reassuring pressure around her little one’s body, her limbs, nursing her aches and stilling the insistent buzzing in her head. Han doesn’t have to stand anymore. Doesn’t have to think anymore. Tethers of body and mind drift far, far away. All she has to do is just. Be. Breathe in sweet comfort. Exhale her heart.

Fade, gently, into a poisonous dream.

“Go ‘way, Aunty.” (Surely she doesn’t mean it, not her dear Aunty.) “Don’t need anyone…”

“You’ll just…burn too……”

Piripiri!

You hear every word.

You see the fire in her eyes dim under flashes of sickly green mists, as she hangs limp in the snake's tightening coils. Even at your most precise, if you try and cut her loose, you know that demon will twist her body into the blade.

But, perhaps. Perhaps this battle is not one of knives.

Will you let her keep fighting it alone?
Piri!

Circle in the dark. The light that had once embraced you has gone out or fled. Track your foe by the glint of their eyes and the shine of their fangs. Every moment of stillness you steal away must be paid back in full. Watch, for it will soon come time to collect. One moment of explosive precision, and the battle will be over. Do not blink. Do not be caught slow.

Then a Han-shaped comet strikes foot-first into the serpent and it goes flying into the night in a jumbled heap, hissing the serpent equivalent of oaths only suitable for a fourth-born to know.

And there you are, holding what are unmistakably knives, coiled under the weight of violent anticipation, now facing down the slack-jawed comet. She has many more teeth than a serpent. In case you were curious. “What.” She barks. “The hell was that?!”
“I’m sorry, sir. I don’t know if it is the same at all. If, if…”

A thousand pardons, Lord Hades. Please, he begs your patience. Let him collect himself. Let him screw his eyes shut against the searing vision of Lethe. Just minutes ago, he was whole. It’s not something you can keep looking at if you’ve got to keep moving forward. And he’s got to. He’s got to. But the river is so wide, and he’s never felt so small. If he stares too long, the idea of it will fill him past bursting. What was he saying? Grab onto the thought. Hold onto it for dear life, and don’t be swept away, silly sheep.

“If I go now, I go alone. If I am back here in a few week’s time, then, that’s a few week’s time. That’s at least time enough to talk to Vasilia. With time to spare. Who knows what else we might do? Then, when we Reach the rift, we will have reached the Rift.”

He still can’t look. But he turns to where he remembers Hades standing, all the same.

“That has to be enough to make it different, right?”

************************************************

Vasilia runs the rich, vibrant blue through her hands. Her fingers speak to softness, but had she been listening when they were just a guest’s robes? Blue shouldn’t look so good on her. “Thank you, but. I don’t wear an honor higher than Captain anymore. Though not even that, these days. But if we’re talking in the old days...”

“I had triumph. Oh, I had more triumph than anyone could believe. I mentioned the inherent advantage of the Glaive? The style at the time drew heavy inspiration from our Plovers; hulking walls of armor, slamming into each other until one of them yielded. Then there was me. Armored only enough to prevent serious injury, leaping circles around my enemies, and piercing any weakness with laser-accuracy. I practically revolutionized single combat overnight. To the crowds, I was more than just a new face, I was their face. I could speak to the common citizen far more than any of the more sheltered elite that I regularly tore apart. I spoke to a future they longed for. Not to mention I was a fiend in the ring. Not one opponent faced me that didn’t have some button I could push, some weakness I could exploit in delightfully entertaining - and effective - fashion. ‘Sensation’ would be putting it lightly. My name was on everyone’s lips, that first Olympics. I earned my seat, and then some.”

“Alethea was not so lucky. Her family bet everything they could afford - and then some they couldn’t - on her debut, and she bombed out completely. But my star was rising so rapidly, I managed to catch them on my ascent. Her family came under my house’s protection and care, and I took Alethea on to manage my affairs. Of which I had considerably more than I did a few weeks prior. Have you ever found the stakes for sleeping late turn into a matter of life or death overnight? Honestly, I think I would have been swallowed up alive without her. I...well, I hardly thanked her enough at the time, but she managed me just as often as my business. She could do that, you know. Say things that only a lifelong friend could get away with, when I needed to hear it. And Clarissa...”

Her hand already rests on an apple. To hold, to contemplate, to toss in the air, to stare long into while judging all the various ways that one might actually eat the thing, to take long, savoring bites. She draws her hand back. And pushes the plate away.

“Ah, well, she won her share of medals too, of course. She was, she was there, too.” The words disgust her as soon as she hears them. “No, no, that’s all wrong. Ugh, honestly, why do stories have to lay things out with words? As if everything can be so neatly sorted out?!”

The Furnace Knight offers no wisdom. Only patience. Patience long enough for the quiet to arrange her thoughts, and lay her ears low.

“My apologies for my...outburst, sir Knight. This section is...difficult. To explain. Difficult to explain. Alethea had her hands full managing my estate. We only really saw each other on business, in those days. Meanwhile, Clarissa and I both attended the Senate, exhibition matches between the Games, public events, speeches, training together...sometimes quite late at night, even…” Her breath came shaking. A hole in her heart throbs. “We were young. We were all we’d ever known. We clicked so well. We each kept waiting for the other to stop pushing, and, the next day, we would be back to preparing speeches as if nothing had happened. She never said anything. I never said anything. Then we’d have a late night attending the theater and it was all over again. And again. And again, again. Never complaining, yet never remarking long on it, and neither of us giving the other the opening to change it. Gods, what, what idiotic little messes we were.”

Her knuckles clenched white against fistfulls of blue.

“I suppose, no one ever taught us how important it was to put things down in those troublesome, blasted words. For all I knew their power. Perhaps because I knew their power. Perhaps, I was just a young coward, coming into their fear. If all you’ve ever done is win, how terrible the thought of losing...”
“You may as well get comfortable, Sir Knight.” She certainly wasn’t going to stand the entire time. The battlements made for a good enough bench, the parapets a table for food and drink. “It’s not a short story, nor one I tell often. I see it often enough, in my head, but out loud?” Her heart turned inside her chest. An absence, at her side. “Not even...I’ve only told snippets, never the whole thing. I don’t know what ought to be cut and what ought to stay. I don’t know if you are the right audience, but…”

She had to start somewhere.

Enough stalling. The beginning was a fine enough beginning.

“I don’t supposed you’d have known of Lakkos, except as a footnote in the star charts. It is positioned just so, between the orbits of much greater stars, that anything adrift in that sector will wind up crashing to its surface. In the old days of humanity, they made the atmosphere thick, yet yielding, that nothing would hit the planet with enough energy to shatter it or itself. Even living things could enter atmo with only mild burns. They turned it into a scrapyard, I think. A mine for parts and materials. The old machines and foundries are still there. As are every servitor they set to work there, and every servitor who found themselves drifting through space in that sector, once humanity retreated to Tellus.”

“But before humanity completely vanished, the Armada made one last call, to scoop up any remaining humans by imperial decree. They left.” She coughs. “An impression. Along with a fair number of ‘artifacts’ from the capital. Likely meant to ensure they’d never forget the awesome power of the Empire. It turned out to be highly educational. We learned a lot. And never forgot it. Overnight, the planet was united in one sentiment: To build the biggest and best plovers and war machines, that they may serve the invincible Empire as their allies, when they returned in their war against the stars.”

“Our worship went further still. We sought to emulate the perfect ways of Tellus. We selected our leaders through the divine rites of the Olympics, showering them with crowns and gold, as they did in the Empire. We held great, public trials of combat and skill, but mostly combat. Power was, after all, the chief virtue of the Armada. But we picked up their knack for corruption rather quickly too. Those who won at the Games enjoyed positions of wealth, power, incredible fame, while the rest of the peasants spent their days mining scraps for the Senator’s pet plover projects. And though the Games were open to all, well, if you didn’t have the time, money, or equipment to properly prepare, what chance did you have?”

“If there was a silver lining, at least our wars became rather less bloody, but none the shorter. Why send your precious plover into battle with your neighbors, and risk damaging your best asset to the Empire? Better to sabotage their works, while jealously defending your own. Take them down a peg in the next Games, and enjoy the spoils of victory afterwards. But with no end or Armada in sight, the arms race never ceased. The toll on the citizens never faltered.”

“Mind, I know all this through hindsight. Years of time spent away, epiphanies from awkward stares, that sort of thing. At the time, I was merely the only daughter of a noble house of Lakkos. Our star had been rising, and there I was; bright, strong, quick-witted, fiercely competitive, gifted in speech, a gem in need of polish only. They told me I was destined to rule, and I was quite ready to tell everyone else the same. Greatness, glory, light, those were all I could see in my future, and I shone with promise.”

“Here, I must mention my friends: wild Clarissa, and dear, stern Alethea. Daughters of nobility both, I met them through the many, many training classes we attended to prepare us for our debuts in the Games. We were the same age, most of our days were spent together, then most of our free time afterwards, we got along so well. Clarissa and I were both from rather notable families, at the zenith of their power. Alethea, though, her family’s fortunes had been sinking, and she was their last shot at retaining what standing they had left. It was through her that we had our window into the world outside the palaces, of the terrible fate that awaited her should she fail to take home any prizes. The same fate that most of our citizens woke up to every day, without hope. We swore that we would all win - and thus save her from poverty - but I went one step further; I swore that we would put an end to the endless ‘wars’ that had inflicted such harm on our people. With all I had going for me, with how I was learning to break and mend hearts with nothing more than words, surely I could turn the hearts of all of Lakkos to peace?”

Here, she pauses. “You asked, when we first met, about where I first learned of the Glaive? Well, this is where I started. Amid the detritus that our family had claimed as treasure was a single, unspoiled scroll of wondrous martial forms. They detailed a style I had never seen before, one I could hardly believe was possible. Of course, it was years until I learned what grav-rails even were, but at the time, I thought I could surely master it, with enough effort. I spent all my spare hours in training, practicing, trying to get it right. I never quite managed to replicate it *exactly*, but I got rather close. Close enough to devise a form that no one on Lakkos had ever seen. I could say that inherent advantage was the reason why I picked it up but...no, that would be a lie. Because you’re right; there are other styles that could have given me similar results much quicker and easier.”

She nudged a grape around her plate, steering it expertly through the pile of produce without stopping. “I think...what ultimately drew me was the promise of the Glaive. There are things I can do in this style, openings I can create, victories I can achieve, that I can’t get anywhere else. All it takes is enough imagination, inspiration, and instinct. And that is how I wished to fight.” And perhaps she’d never told this story out loud, but the words slot into her heart so neatly that they couldn’t have been anything other than the truth.

***********************************************************

Failure.

Funny, he’d been so worried about getting so many Captain-ly things wrong, when it was the quest itself he ought to have been looking out for. Not that he’d been careless with his life, it’s just. It’s not something you can really keep looking at if you’ve got to keep moving forward. If he’d never done anything dangerous, he’d still be in the Manor’s kitchen right now. Whole. Alive.

They’d told him so. Hadn’t they told him so? No good would come of a chef wandering from the fold. The mouse’s cries came through fuzzy but the Majordomo’s snarls were on his neck, heavier and louder than any bell. Reason! Order! The right thing, in the right way! So it was! So it always must be! He, the silly sheep, he thought, maybe, if he wore the Captain’s hat, maybe he could be a Captain, and not a chef, and never have to fear the consequences again. Silly him. Silly Dolce.

So quiet, about Lord Hades. No dogs barking there. Quiet, and still. Rest, at last.

No trouble, moving his hand now. Slowly, it rose, white against the black of Lord Hade’s perfect suit, save for, for a little glimmer of gold, ‘round his ring finger…

So I swear…

He stopped. Fingers hovering over Hades’.

“That...that so long as I draw breath…” He heard himself mumbling. “First of my loyalty. First of my heart. Never...never to leave…”

Whole? Alive? When had he ever felt that way in the Manor? Would he have ever left if he was so happy there? Why, his hours had been filled with nothing but books, and kitchens, and meals that no one ever ate, and long nights without rest wondering what was the matter with him. Hadn’t he prayed to Hera then too? Hadn’t she promised him an answer? And though she spoke in action, and not words, was it not the same answer she’d given him a few weeks ago? Then, his goal was to run, to leave, to live among the stars and have others taste his cooking every day. And now? Now?

“I’m, sorry, Lord Hades.” He draws back his hand, and gently curls his employer’s hand shut. “Not yet. There is. I think.” Still so tired. Still so hard to think, but, but, he couldn’t, just couldn’t stop now. “I want to make Redana’s dream real. I want ships where no-one is afraid. I.”

His vision blurs. With tears, and cigarette smoke.

“I want to talk to Vasilia. There’s, oh, there’s so much I need to tell her. We can’t, we can’t leave it like this, not any longer, please, we can’t...”
Snakes are just tiny dragons that never learned how to fly, breathe fire, or have legs. Kinda like little scaly puppies, except they might try to tie you up and/or eat you up if they get too feisty. And these ones? These ones are demonically feisty.

And still she finds time to snort at the silly maid. “What, you’d rather walk?” Her shoulders roll beneath you, and you could be forgiven for thinking she’d actually drop you. “Screw how this goes, this is what you’ve got. And I said.” She bares her teeth at the oncoming hoard. “I could do this all night!”

She clutches (muscles flexing beneath your fingers) the two of you tight (strong hand pressing into your stomach) and the ground cracks beneath her feet as she leaps (stomach-turning, up is down, hold onto her tight now) for a tree branch big enough for the three of you.

[Rolling to Defy Disaster with Daring: 5 + 2 + 2 = an oh-so-close 9. She takes an XP from Piri’s Help Me!!! Han will be risking Azazuka's safety.]
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