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Renaud de Guiscard




As he walked through the shrine - a 15th century Buddhist temple, with half of it under ongoing renovations - Renaud was unsure whether the normalcy of it all was a good sign or a bad one. The clash would begin on holy grounds, or so he'd devined. But there was no evidence of any kind of battle between servants.

To tell the truth, he'd half feared to find the shrine a smoking ruin by the time he reached it, but everything seemed calm. Peaceful, even: the monks had all retired to their quarters as dusk fell, and the grounds had an odd serenity to them. He had read accounts of these shrines, and how part of their effect was magical in nature, the result of so many generations of honored dead interred there. Still, to experience it first hand was something else entirely.

In the end, he found Caster in the guest quarters. She'd wasted no time in establishing it as her workshop, he noticed: already, strange dolls and scraps of scrolls lined the room, though he could not say what any of it was meant to serve. Caster herself seemed focused elsewhere, either not noticing him enter or not bothering to acknowledge it.

"I had Louise Drive me here as soon as I could. The battle will begin here, it might have already started-" He stopped in his tracks, struck by how foolish he must seem. Everything seemed fine here. But the divinations had been clear: The battle would start that night, on holy ground. But asking her if she'd already fought a servant, this feudal japanese sorceress with not a scratch on her, suddenly seemed foolish in the extreme. "Caster, what are you doing?" He asked instead, salvaging what he could of his dignity.



G E N G H I S



The Sako church, as it turned out, was ideally suited for this kind of contest. It was some distance from the city centre and very isolated, surrounded by sparse forests and barren hills. The architecture seemed strange - nothing like the Nestorian shrines that he had seen in his life - but from what he had seen of the city itself, it seemed that these japenese had a penchant for copying western architecture.

He had arrived in no time at all, of course, riding at the speed of the wind, only to find the place barren of servants. One does not expect to find elk simply by wandering, of course. One finds elk through patience. He hid himself and his mechanical steed in a patch of forest near the church clearing, and waited as he had in countless other hunts of both beast and man.

Dusk came and darkness rose before he finally sensed an approaching servant. His alert eyes caught the source: a car driving up the hill path towards the church grounds. Here we go, he thought, filled with joy. Finally, he could finish that which he could not in life, that which his successors had abandoned: the unification of all peoples under blue sky.

He turned on the motorcycle and accelerated at impossible speeds out of the forest, straight at the vehicle. As he flew in the air towards the road, his scimitar materialized in his hand. It was strong, stronger than any normal blade, but it was no noble phantasm: his objective was to feign weakness, after all, so it would suit him just fine. And besides: he hadn't gone up close and personal like this in a very, very long time. Whichever servant that was was about to be in a bit of a surprise.
Renaud de Guiscard



Renaud eventually woke up from his collapse, still clutching Caster's strange charm. He certainly felt rejuvinated: he could not dispute its power of healing. All fatigue was gone, and he was filled with energy once more. He was somewhat in awe of what he was holding, in fact: he had seen many ancient and treasured magic items in both his family's possession and the Clock Tower's, and this was easily the equal of any of them. And she had simply given this doll that emanated power like a beacon to him like it was nothing. Truth be told, he was a bit annoyed that she had given him it, as if to patronize him, her master. And even worse, he knew the real reason he was annoyed was that she dwarfed his skill as a magus in every way. Perhaps it would have been better to have summoned a Berserker or a Lancer instead? It might have spared his ego.

It might also have spared himself some bad dreams. He wasn't sure what he had seen - glimpses of fire and death, nothing good - and he found himself wondering whether a link to any servant would give such unsettling nightmares, or if it was unique to Takiyashahime. Her war had ended in ignominious defeat, he knew: hopefully, his own line wouldn't meet the same miserable end as hers.

When he shook off from himself those melancholic thoughts, he found a special small box among the many that had been brought up. He opened it, revealing a number of small bones inscribed with runic carvings. He grasped them gingerly. The Scepter might be his family's most treasured possession, but these were certainly their oldest. These were no chicken bones, though the uneducated observer might not recognize that fact: these belonged to creatures that had not walked the earth for over a thousand years.

Divination was an art that many magi shunned, for good reason. Whether it was augury, haruspicy, or his own specialty of scapulimancy, those that tried to read the fates rarely met with success. Answers were often vague and unhelpful; if you could even read the answer, it was incredibly difficult to discern the true meaning, as divination magic seemed to have a twisted sense of humor. Even as talented as he was in this art - he was certainly the best he knew, better even than his mother - he had to proceed carefully and know the limitations. Attempts to discern one own's fate never ended well, he knew, so he would studiously avoid inquiring of his own future... directly, in any case.

"Wyrd bið ful aræd", he muttered as he held the bones in his hands. Fate is inexorable. He felt a small stream of mana imbue on the bones, and he felt the runes reciprocate the connection. Most oracles you could find worked their power this way, imbuing mana into conduits to reveal the fates - those that weren't charlatans, of course. Naturally most did not truly comprehend what they were doing.

Neither did his ancient ancestors, the shamans of the north. Much as his family liked to imagine themselves refined and noble, this was their dark secret: They were descendents of fur wearing savages who sailed south in longships to reave and conquer Europe. Les Normands. The Guiscards brushed that truth under the rug, and pretended as if they were always aristocrats living in palaces, and creating refined artifacts like the Scepter as if to solidify that identity, but these bones were the true power of his lineage. He muttered the old norse words, and threw the bones on the hotel room floor, the motion calculated and precise to the smallest twitch.

"Caster Takiyashahime has gone to secure the Sako shrine," he intoned with a steady, clear, and confident voice. "I implore the spirits of my ancestors, show me what tapestry the Norns weave."

The bones landed, bounced, and bounced on still, continuing on as if possessed. Finally, they were still, spread out across the room. This was then the hardest part. He had to read the runes, and from their positioning and orientations, discover what meaning could be found, if there was in fact meaning to be found at all.

His apprehension grew as he reasoned the message behind the bones, his fears becoming more and more real as he became more sure in their meaning. Finally, he had it. Probably. The conflict will begin at the holy site, and the great spirits will clash. He cursed and jumped to his feet, throwing on his dress coat, and only taking a minute to ensure his appearance was proper before rushing out the door.

This was bad. Caster class servants were not suited to one on one combat, he knew, and typically relied on entrenching themselves. That had been the plan, for her to set up a connection at the shrine and draw mana from the dead there. But this was too soon. If Caster was about to fight another servant now, or if she was already fighting -

He raced down the hall, dialing his servants as he ran. He had to go salvage what he could, or risk losing before he even truly began.



G E N G H I S


Not bad, Genghis thought as he admired the machine in front of him. Not bad at all. He could find no fault in the resourcefulness of the Huang.

He did not know where the Witch had found the black motorcycle on such short notice, and he didn't really care. It was a fine machine. Not as good as a steppe horse, of course; a proper mount was less a partner than a tool, whereas a mechanical contraption such as this was cold and heartless. But as he sat down and held the throttle, he knew that this could work. With a Riding skill as impressive as his, he could push it to its ultimate limit, and then some.

It also helped that it would keep him incognito. He had even foregone his sable coat for riding leathers of the modern day, which should also help keep his identity hidden. He also had to admit he liked the clothing. Practical with nothing superfluous, that's how he liked it. Also, he looked damn good in it. He grinned, put on his glasses, and fired off from the garage, accelerating down the road like a rocket.

Where to? Well, he would go to where the other servants were. There was the Church, but it was neutral and inviolate. Fighting there was strictly forbidden.

So of course, he thundered along the street in the direction of the Church. Time to kick things off.
Renaud de Guiscard




A shrine? A cemetery? He should have seen this coming. They'd meticulously planned every detail of this grail war, of course Caster would want to base herself in a nexus of magical energy. And her tone - Grandfather had always told him he needed to establish himself as the familiar's master, especially with a caster-class servant. A heroic spirit such as this might exploit any perceived weakness for their own advantage, perhaps even magically dominate their master if they deemed them too weak. A life of preparation and confidence came crashing down on him as, for a brief moment, it seemed to him as if he was doing everything wrong, and-

"If you believe it would be advantageous to do so, by all means," he replied dismissively as he got up to his feet, showing no hint of unease. "There is such a shrine in Sako, though it is beyond my current resources to commandeer it. Consider securing the site to be your first task as my servant, then." He checked the time lazily, as if unfazed by the feudal japanese sorceress that just materialized from thing before him. "I do not care how you achieve this, so long as the secrecy of magecraft is maintained."

"In the meantime, I am drained from my preparation and this ritual." Which he certainly was, he felt ready to collapse at any moment, his fatigue not helped by the steady drain of mana to maintain his servant. "I am going to sleep. I expect when I awake a servant of your caliber will be able to have secured a site for a workshop and make a report."

Without another word, he turned out of fog-filled room and into his own quarters, slumping against the door as he shut it.

Show no fear. Show no uncertainty. Hesitation is death.

For now, I rest, he thought. Then we find the other masters, and win the war. As he drifted to sleep leaning against the door, unable to put off his exhaustion any longer, his mother's words echoed in his mind.

"...And above all, you must win back our honor by destroying that Huang bitch."



G E N G H I S


The Khan of Khans watched the chinese witch work her strange magecraft, keeping a fascinated eye in spite of his bored expression. Truth be told, he did not think much of her when he was first summoned to this world. This was in part due to her evident wealth - he distrusted those who had never known privation or squalor - and partly because of her ethnicity. The Han and their southern kin were, in his experience, weak and cowardly, a people of serfs fit only to be ridden over, threatening only behind their damnable walls.

But it had not taken long for him to see that this woman was something fierce, worthy of being called his master. Even this strange ritual - mocking death in such a way, risking all for power? She, who had the appearance of a deer, but the heart of a wolf, was equal to any of his Noyans in life.

He was leaning against a wall, juggling his scimitar in the air and catching the blade with his hand, when she asked her question. "How would I win this war? Curious thought," he answered in a bored tone. "The answer seems obvious. Terror will not help us here, as our enemies will fight to the death. Destroy one, and the rest will turn on us as a threat."

"But as dangerous as a pack of wolves is, a lone wolf is easy prey. Division is our ally." Dropping his feigned boredom, he gave her a wolfish grin. "So we feign weakness. They will aim for the tallest trees first: we encourage this from the shadows. We seed discord, we provoke, we foster conflict and hatred amongst these warriors. When they are too distrustful of one another to form a united front, then we strike."

He spoke with complete certainty. He was not saying what might be, but what would be. He was the favoured son of Blue Heaven, after all.
Renaud de Guiscard



A black sedan pulled into the front of the Golden Plaza Sako Hotel. Nobody paid much attention to it: the four star hotel was one of the most expensive in the region, and as small as Sako was, it had a regular influx of wealthy businessmen and government officials who were not shy in their ostentatiousness. Of course, that the young man that stepped out was a foreigner solicited some curious glances, but even Sako had its international business. And dressed as he was in a black suit and sunglasses, he mixed right in with the crowd in the lobby. He was followed by an older man and woman, equally well dressed. The former pushed a trolley with suitcases and bags; the later carried only a slender black briefcase.

The receptionist, it can be imagined, was a bit perplexed to find himself having to deal with a trio of westerners. Just my luck, he thought, annoyed. He occasionally had to deal with foreign visitors, of course, but they usually had interpreters with them. There was nothing to do about it: he would have to rely on what little he remembered of his high school english classes. As he started stammering, though, the young man leaned onto the desk. He took off his glasses, and just looked at the receptionist with bored green eyes. And spoke in perfect Japanese, albeit with a strange accent.

"You're going to want to get your manager."
* * * * * *


"Sir, you don't understand. There's just no room."

In a large and meticulously ordered office, an old man sighed and rubbed his forehead in exasperation. He'd worked his entire life for the company, and managed to become the manager of the Sako hotel branch through fanatical adherence to company policy and a deep well of patience. But even that well was running dry right now. He was already up to his eyeballs in dealing with the conference visitors, he didn't need to deal with a foreign rich kid who didn't understand how a reservation worked. "There's... there's absolutely no room. Zero. Nothing. We're completely booked with the International Apiculture Development Conference, there are no rooms that I could offer you even if I wanted to."

The kid in front of him was just leaning back, fingers steepled, completely expressionless, looking at him as if he were an infant having a tantrum. "So make room," he said quietly.

"Make-" The manager blinked in disbelief at the spoiled brat's arrogance. "Look, there's a Golden Plaza in Oga that's more sizable, you might have better luck there. Or you can find another hotel in Sako. I'm sorry, sir, but there's nothing more I can do for you, I'm very busy and have other business to get to. Maybe try reserving in advance next time."

"I apologize, I must not have made clear who I am. I'm Renaud de Gusicard, heir of the Maison de Guiscard."

"I don't know who that is, and frankly I don't care."

"You should, you fool," Renaud snapped icily. "You see this watch? It's a Verriac, artisan crafted, one of a kind. It's worth ten times the car I rode here. I own it because my family is the oldest and wealthiest house west of the Rhine." He glanced back. "Louise! Sortez-le, l'ignorant mérite un lesson d'histoire."

One of the two figures behind him, a dark-skinned woman in her fourties, stepped forward, snapping open the briefcase as she did. The manager's objection was cut off with a gasp as he took in the sight of a beautiful golden scepter crowned with a double headed eagle spreading its wings. It seemed to glow. Or was everything else darkening in its presence?

Renaud leaned back and pulled it out of its case, and held it over the desk with both hands. "This is the Scepter of Chartres. Forged by an ancestor of mine, Lucbald de Chartres. Priceless, beyond what you can even comprehend. It's been passed down, uninterrupted, in my family for a thousand years. It was carried by the Guiscards who advised Capetians, Valois, Bourbon, and, occasionally, Plantagenets. If I were mad enough to sell it, I could buy your entire pathetic chain and tear this hotel down. I own it - or rather, my family owns it - because we are the among most distinguished and prestigious lines of Europe."

He gripped the scepter, feeling his mana feed into the mystic code as he stared, unblinking, in the old man's eyes. "So, when I tell you to make room, it's because it's an incredible honour for you to have me staying in this... fine establishment. Unless the prestige of having accommodate someone of my caliber does not interest you, or your superiors?"

The manager simply stared, mouth agape, unable to form a coherent reply for several long moments, his eyes unfocused. Suddenly, he shook himself off. "Yes, of course, I apologize. I wasn't in my right mind." His voice was faltering, almost dazed. "I'll find something. We can maybe... maybe get one of the guests a room in another local hotel, and pay for it as compensation."

"See that you do," Renaud said simply as he got up from the chair, putting his glasses back on. He took a moment to admire the scepter again, a faint smile coming to his lips, before placing it gently back in its case. Louise clamped the case shut.

* * * * * *


"What now, sir?" Maxime asked.

Renaud glanced at the two from the other end of the large suite they had been granted. It wasn't up to his usual standards, but he had to admit, for a small city it wasn't terrible. Three bedrooms, a lounge, a small kitchen, and all in western style. It could certainly have been worse.

"Well, now I do my part," he said casually. "We were fortuitous with the number of rooms, I'd say: One for you two, one for me, and another for... well, for my business. You can see the sights - what sights there are in a place like this, anyway - or go get something to eat, or whatever suits your fancy. I'm not planning on going anywhere. The rest of my day will be a bit tiring, and after all that travelling the last thing I want is another drive anyway."

Louise smiled. "That sounds perfect, sir. Maxime and I are going to check out a restaurant we heard about here, apparently it-"

"I really don't need to know the details," Renaud interrupted. He waved dismissively from the couch. "Go, have fun. While we still can."

It didn't do to be too close to servants, he reflected when he was left alone. That goes for aristocrats, and doubly so for magi. He knew the couple's names, their duties - to, as needed, cook, clean, and drive him as he pursued his war unimpeded by mundane matters - and that's about all he needed to know. They were paid, of course: while some mages used magic to control the minds of their subordinates, the Guiscards had long found that to be a crude and unreliable art. The human brain, faced with magical control, tends to resist, which always seems to cause incidents at the worse possible times. The Scepter was symbolic of his family's wisdom and mastery: instead of dominating the mind, true power came from suggestions, subtle and reasonable. Give the mind an idea, empower it with magic, trick it into thinking it had come up with it... that was true control.

Not that they were controlled that way either. As his mother was fond of saying: frankly, money ensures the loyalty of the common rabble far more reliably than any magic could.

Still, while after long service they were trusted to be blind and mute, Renaud found their presence inconvenient. The less involved they were with the Holy Grail War, the better. This was his war, and he wasn't so heartless as to want to see them caught up in it any more than necessary. A true mage of his caliber fights their battles alone. La noblesse oblige, after all.

He got up with a heavy sigh. No point in delaying. It was time.

* * * * * *


He had, in the end, needed to make some alterations to the third room. The bed, to his incredible annoyance, took up far too much of the room, and he had to spend half an hour dragging it out of the room's too-small door, cursing himself for telling Louise and Maxime to leave as he did so. But he eventually managed to get it into the lobby, his first victory in this holy grail war.

The floor space freed, he was able to begin drawing the summoning circle, using materials he had brought in all that luggage. This was not as difficult as he had feared, no doubt in part because he had practised this very ritual for two decades now. He did catch his hand shaking as he started: What's wrong with me?, he wondered. I'm... excited. Yes, excited. His entire life had been endless, brutal, agonizing training for this war. This was the culmination of his existence, his entire raison d'être. He couldn't be blamed for being a bit excited for that.

"Foolish boy," he could imagine his mother snear in his head. "Of course you can be blamed for that. Your incompetent hand will ruin the ritual. Control yourself. Your duty to your name is more important than your sentimentality."

"Careful now," he muttered to himself as he drew the lines. He did not make any errors, to his relief. His hand might be shaky, but years of drills guided him.

I think that's it. It's done. Everything was ready. All he needed now was...

He pulled a small box out of a coat pocket, and opened it. He pulled out its content: A small scrap of paper, ancient, lined with faded kanji characters. This was it, the catalyst that he'd been given. With this, he could summon...

"This servant is ideal for our cause," his grandfather, his voice frail from disease, had told him. "Summoned to her native land, her abilities will be all the more considerable. Of those masters we know in this war, none have a native catalyst such as this: in this way, with luck, we will be in an advantaged position."

"And also," his mother had interjected, "What we know of her legend indicates that she is, among servants, most likely to be attuned to our own desires. A servant who understands the importance of honour, of duty, of family... unity in purpose will lead you to victory more surely than pure power ever could."

Yes. That was all true. But in spite of all that - or perhaps because of it? - he felt nervous looking at this scrap of paper. He was about to summon a being on a level of existence far, almost incomprehensibly, beyond his own. One who was nearly the embodiment of his family's ideals. In a sense, his lifetime of effort and training was about to be put judgment. He silently prayed his power and strength of will would not be found wanting.

For the Maison de Guiscard.

He knelt to the circle. "Fill, fill fill...."
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