Avatar of WrongEndoftheRainbow

Status

User has no status, yet

Bio

User has no bio, yet

Most Recent Posts

Astella & An-Clastophon

Starring in…
Professional Relationship I




Astella leaned back, resting her elbows against the soft sand she’d just created as she enjoyed the scenery. The gentle, constant noise made by the Wellspring’s waters as they overflowed; the waves across the lake’s surface as the only hint of the massive current down below; the mostly clean air (with small hints of the scent of rotting flesh); and the skittering of I’Iro’s workers as they gathered material and made preparations for their debut project, the Central Plaza.

She liked it there. Unlike everywhere else, that place felt stable. There wasn’t much death there either, and animals had begun to return to the area to drink their fill of water and rest. She closed her eyes for a while, content with the darkness. It wasn’t that she preferred solitude to being around others, but she could certainly enjoy the peace that came with not having to feel like she had to entertain others.

As all good things however, this had to come to an end, as with no warning whatsoever, a familiar presence made itself known close to her. She turned and opened her eyes to see the dark form of the nameless divine that had helped during the attempts to unclog the Wellspring.

The An-Clastophon creeped up to the pedestal Astella had made; her eyes flitted over the cover of the book on top of it. She did not open the book however, and instead moved on to glance around the mountain.

’Lack of trust in my work from this early on, huh...’ Astella thought with a small twitch of her eyebrow. Finally, she decided to speak up. ”Not interested in what it’s gonna look like after it’s done?”

The demigod turned to look at Astella, responding, ”I would rather wait until it is done.” She then pointed at the god, and followed up, ”Astella, right?” A short hop down from the pedestal, and she was back on the rim of the wellspring, on approach to Astella almost idly.

”Yes, that’s the name, nameless one. I was sure you’d be somewhere far away by now, considering how quickly you disappeared after we got this spring working.”

The An-Clastophon shrugged, saying in return, ”I merely did not make my presence known. I have to try to be as obvious as the rest of you.” She plucked a spider that tried to skitter around her, holding it in her claws as she inspected the workings. Then, once she was done, she placed it back down and gave it a swift push to get it on its way.

”Careful with those spiders, my friend made them.” Astella sighed, then groaned, and then turned once more as the An-Clastophon came to a stop next to her. ”So if you’re not here to admire my work or my friend’s work… Then what? Are you here to sell me something?”

The demigod shook her head, ”I was sent here with the intent of establishing good will,” she waved her arm vaguely across the Wellspring, “to send the message that my master does not intend to oppose the rest of the gods.” The An-Clastophon then continued, ”I have my own reasons for not looking at the blueprints, independent of any malignance towards your work or that of your friend’s.”

Astella pursed her lips. A God that would not reveal themselves feeling the need to declare their innocence was probably anything but innocent. After a while, Astella began to make popping sounds as she turned back to stare at the water. It was only moments later that she spoke again, ”Okay. Sounds reasonable. I’m not looking for trouble either and being on good terms with someone capable of secrecy would be nice.”

The An-Clastophon nodded, offering, ”Depends on what you need kept secret.” She walked up to the water, and then crouched down. A single claw shot out, and she swirled it in the shallows of the Wellspring.

”Well, that’s...” Astella began, looking around and then leaning slightly closer to the An-Clastophon, whispering, ”... A secret.” She smirked and shook her head. Did this demigod actually expect her to reveal her secrets that easily? Her projects were far too important to risk being exposed that early.

The demigod looked up at Astella and responded, flatly, ”I did not expect you to. But I can’t help if I don’t know what I can do to help, hm?”

”For now, the best way you can help is by saving people’s lives and making sure the world is a safe place to live in. Eventually, once things settle down some, I might have more specific requests to make of your master.”

”That is about what was requested of me by my master to begin with,” the An-Clastophon stood up, turning to walk away. They then stopped, suddenly, and with a glance behind them, said, ”By the way; you will make requests of me, not my master. They prefer a more passive role.”

Well, nobody could say that the nameless one’s patron wasn’t on-brand. Still, to let an opportunity such as this slip just because she didn’t want to seem shady would be… Inefficient. So with a final sigh, she asked. ”You can procure things for me in the name of your master, right? Know that whatever I end up needing will probably be very difficult to obtain, and perhaps even frowned upon by our colleagues. If you’re still interested in helping me, then keep that in mind until the time I call for you.”

The An-Clastophon simply nodded, saying lowly, ”That is perfectly fine. My sin is not idleness, and I do not intend to air my dirty laundry.” Then, their head swivelled back to look ahead of them as they continued walking away.

Astella looked at the An-Clastophon as they walked away, then looked up at the weirdly coloured clouds above. An wasn’t a charmer, that’s for sure, but at least they didn’t waste any time. Plus, keeping a professional relationship would probably benefit everyone in the long run… As boring as that is, at least. At a given moment, the An-Clastophon’s presence vanished, and Astella knew better than to look around to confirm if it was truly gone. Instead, she just focused on relaxing once more.


Storm-Trod A-Lu-Ma

“The immature think that knowledge and action are different, but the wise see them as the same.”



Their birth was a matter both murky and entirely unimportant. A little lie, a secret to shod the secretive divinity. An instant ago or since the beginning of time itself; the same thing for all it was worth. No, what was of import pertained to the fact they were here, and they were here now. Grown in the skin of a man who perhaps was once not divine, or perhaps always was.

Chaos below, storm above. Water was welcome to men, though little enjoyment could be garnered from having skin flayed by hurricane. The crevices may have destroyed their world, but now the pits to hell served an entirely unintended feature. The rain sideways from true north, towards the mountain. A dozen mortal humans clung, bloodied and terrified, to the cracks and hand-ledges along the southerly edge of their doom.

He alone was not terrified; for he was resplendent, draped in his divinity. Though indistinguishable from man, what would kill man did not kill him. He rose from his place in the crevice, the rain whipping into him mercilessly. Horror gurgled in the throats of the humans as skin was stripped from his flesh. His blood poured ceaselessly down into the crevice, painting the humans red. Bare muscle came off in strips, launched headway with the rain; skidding atop the crevice and carried further beyond.

Yet, even bare of muscle and with battered organs and bone, he still walked, outwards, from the crevice and out of sight. The humans, hardly able to peek over the crevice, shouted hoarsely -- hearing each other as if only a whisper through the force of the storm. They yelled inconsequential things, all diverging to a single agreement; “Storm-Trod A-Lu-Ma,” they called, to give identification to the terror presented.

They did not know whether to worship or fear the Storm-Trod A-Lu-Ma, covered in his viscera as they were. The image was seared into their minds, unforgettable; they had spent their entire lives with him, by all accounts a regular man born at the end of the world and the end of gods. He had never once indicated he was anything but, and yet, wordlessly, without so much as a glance back, he walked to what should have been his painful demise.

The Storm-Trod A-Lu-Ma did not consider his former compatriots more than once. He would do his work quietly, in secret; and to do so he would need to hide from them. Beyond that, he did not think them worthy to worry himself over. Once he was out of sight, nothing more than a divinely-animated skeleton, bones pockmarked with particularly forceful droplets of rain, he truly began his work.

To interact directly with the other gods would not do; he knew of their existence, their divine pollutant stinking every sense he could muster. They blundered loudly, blind to the subtleties that swam under the surface. His power was finely-tuned, clean in a manner of sense. He could create agents to utilize his abilities in the obvious forms of his brethren, and remain a silent watcher in the background.

Thus was his decision to begin work on a demigod, linked intrinsically to him and sharing in his power. His primary agent, to see to all of his work in the world and beyond. Moulded from shadow, her form began to take shape. A monster by every sense of the word; tall beyond humans, with claws that could tear god’s metal. A mouthful of razor teeth, though food was unnecessary in the face of divine ichor. Ageless and timeless, with a sharp wit.

An-Clastaphon


“Having hands and feet everywhere; having eyes, head, and face everywhere; having ears everywhere; the creator exists in the creation by pervading everything.”


No words needed to be exchanged between the rain-struck skeleton and the demigod; her brain was built with all she needed to know. The god had no further need of the body, and so it dropped to the floor; as dead as a skeleton ought to be. The rain battered it out of sight, and she did not mourn. Her god was not truly dead, and would surely be back another time.

The An-Clastaphon leaped from the alcove, taking in the sight of the hurricane around her. She had work to do, and she intended to begin working immediately.


ay
Realm of Kolodiva

1 Interregnum

”All courses of action are risky, so prudence is not in avoiding danger, but calculating risk and acting decisively.”





The sun sat languidly on the horizon, a dull orange glow casting long shadows across the inn. In the dusty dawn, banners and flags fluttered in the breeze. Two opposing camps, with two opposing pickets, watching each other over the bridge. Upon the northern end of the river, three banners stood proudly; the banner of Anatol tep Constant, a dull bronze gear heavy set against a blood red background. Secondly, the banner of Bogdan met Bogdan, a brutish bear of top-heavy proportions dancing upon a field of yellow grain, triangles of red burning upon a blue sky. Finally, the banner of Marin met Valesti, the golden crown, flanked by the traditional sceptre and sword of duty, upon the royal purple of majesty.

Bogdan met Bogdan was a brute of a man; born disfigured at birth, he spurned intellectual pursuits to take up the mace. It was said that he could bash in plate as easily as one could snap a twig. Twice the size of a rightful man, he lumbered as would a beast, in hunt for its next kill. With him rode five-hundred hounds in human form; the exiles from good and just society. They were torturers and sinners all, Bogdan’s band of a nature too disgusting for any man with the slightest inkling of morality to bear.

Anatol tep Constant was a man of an entirely different calibre. An exile from the City-Republic of Domred, he openly embraced the shunned customs of the Constant Cults. The realm spurned him, and were the art of killing not so highly desired, it was no doubt he would have long since been run from the plains and the Anchor entirely. His welcome stood entirely on the basis of his ability; he was the sole living master of the Sword-Art of Natural Law. It was said that he could cut open a hundred men without a thought or a mercy. The sword-arts were a rare thing now, the dangers of its reputation having seen its practitioners all but wiped out in the unification wars Valesti had fought twenty years prior.

With Anatol walked three-hundred and fifty dead men, their eyes cold and hollow. In the unification wars, it was said that Anatol’s band swelled with every burned village, the children ripped from their hearth and homes, painted in the blood of their family, and led to war. Anatol broke them, and trained them. Each was a machine of death and destruction, its eyes indifferent to the suffering meted out by its hands.

Across the river stood two banners and two mobs. One banner was laden with spears of red, emerging from the start of the field, the edges advancing to the top as the middle spears terminated early, forming a canton upon the middle of the blue field. The second banner depicted a prancing horse of gold, a sword of jet-black puncturing its chest, set upon an azure field. Two mobs, bannerless, milled about; peasants and levymen, not formally organized into bands, carrying whatever they could find; pitchforks, hoes, hand-axes, and all manner of tools. A few lucky ones carried daggers.

The speared banner belonged to the new Royal Castellan of Orleka, a stern man, famed for his loyalty to the rightful King Witalis. Miroslaw tep Witalis was a blue-blooded man, whip-smart and royalty to the core. He had been a natural stand-in for Witalis met Valesti, groomed nearly from birth for the task. Though a tender age of sixteen, he had been instrumental in driving the southern raiders from the realm, and securing the Guard-Upon-River. With him marched two-hundred pikemen, clad in royal-marked bronze armor; the cream of the crop of the capital. With him was Michal met Wilhelm, a veteran soldier of noble stature that had served with Valesti in the unification wars.

Michal was a staunch traditionalist, and had won favour with Witalis. It was this favour that saw him entrusted with the task of Gorody Bridge, to cut off the call of mercenary bands to Marin and to protect the vulnerable northern hinterlands of Orleka, while Witalis focused his efforts on Gornibon and its traitorous Imperious Bishop tep Caeden. With him marched another two-hundred stand of pikemen, clad in uniform bronze armor and drilled to exhaustion.

Two unbannered mobs of a thousand men each were forced into position by the two bands of pikemen, led by obscure captains of little note and little pedigree. They stood guard on the bridge, staring across at the mercenary bands of Marin. Thus was the field of battle, two armies staring each other down, tension building.




The inn had been sequestered by Marin, his household guard of two-hundred pikemen keeping watch outside. Only three men had been allowed inside with Marin; Anatol, Bogdan, and the innkeeper. The innkeeper kept to the background, keeping the men’s mugs full as they discussed their strategy. The discussion was hours-old at this point, as they touched upon how to best destroy the enemy arrayed before them.

“Gentlemen,” Marin spoke as he stabbed at the map with a finger, “we have explored every alternative and found them wanting. We must clear this bridge and open a path to the south, or my bid for royalty will be ended before it has even begun. The southern raiders, should they choose to ride for me at all, will arrive here and be defeated in detail by Witalis’ men long before we can expect reinforcements from the Anchor mercenary bands.”

Bogdan snorted, “These odds no good! Two of them for every one of us!” He slammed his mug down, anger in his voice as he considered the possibility. Marin replied, cooly, “Two thousand of them are but peasants. They are not prepared for the frenzy of battle. Of the entire army, only four-hundred will stand and fight.”

Anatol spoke, matter-of-factly, his voice even, “They will stand and fight if it is between our swords and the pikewalls of Witalis’ professionals. If we are to break them, it will have to be before the bannered bands can form.” Marin looked up, nodding, “Indeed, and therein lies the plan. If we can sweep aside the mob before the pikes can form, then it will be a battle in our favor.”

Bogdan responded, with sudden glee, “Terrify some peasants? When we go?” The other two waved in dismissal, receiving a derisive snort from the beast-man. Marin looked at the flag representing Anatol’s band on the map, saying next, “My household guard can force one of their bands to a stand-still near indefinitely. You, sword-master, can your men defeat a professional band?”

Anatol responded, as even-voiced as ever, “I have done so many times in the past, and I shall do so again. Then I will wheel into the final band, that you will have locked into battle?” Marin answered, “You and Bogdan, together. Bogdan should have chased off the peasantry by then.”

Bogdan’s smile grew wider as he imagined the slaughter of a professional band, and the loot to follow. Marin continued, “Bogdan will go in quickly, while my guard and your swordsmen get equipped. We will follow in behind as Bogdan clears us a path to engage the enemy’s pikemen in battle. We will break them here, or I will never see the throne.”

The other two made their assent clear. Over the course of an hour, they finalized the details of the plan, and moved to put it into action.




Bogdan’s men were ready quickly, with their leather cuirasses and their maces. Bloodlust drove them, the fury of battle driving them to a frenzy. The other two bands were of a higher sort, and took a longer period to prepare -- though they could do so autonomously, and thus Anatol and Marin were granted time to watch the opening blows of the battle unfold.

“So,” Marin spoke as he walked up to the hill Anatol had taken up to watch over the bridge, “what drove you to such madness?” Anatol didn’t look away from the bridge as he responded, cooly as ever, “Madness? You insult me and my work.”

Marin said back, “You deny Caeden and Gebei; in any other realm, you would have been quartered for it. We’ve been remarkably merciful. You’re a bright man, skillful with the sword. Why would you throw that kind of respect away to chase some cult?”

Anatol’s eyes twinkled as he spoke with an edge, “Separate thou the earth from the fire; the subtle from the gross; sweetly, with great industry. It ascends from the earth to the heaven, and again it descends to the earth; and receives the force of things superior. By this means you shall have the glory of the whole world, and obscurity shall fly from you,” he paused, turning his head to look in Marin’s eyes, “Do you know what it means?”

Marin narrowed his eyes, responding coldly, “It means you seek power by throwing away your reverence for the godly.”

Amusement writ across Anatol’s face as he continued, “Its force is above all force, for it vanquishes every subtle thing and penetrates every solid thing; so was the world created. Hence I am called Regent, having witness of the creation of the world.”

Marin’s face crumpled in disgust, “If you seek the throne, then why did you answer the call of my contract?”

Anatol responded, slowly, “Not a throne of man, Marin,” then, his tone lightened, “Bogdan’s men have engaged the enemy, now. Our men are doubtlessly ready. We should begin our march.”

Marin murmured his assent as they went their separate ways, taking their positions at the head of their respective bands. As Bogdan’s macemen terrified the mob of peasants and whipped them into a frenzy of activity, Anatol and Marin’s men marched uniformly across the bridge. Behind the peasants, the enemy’s pikemen had only just begun to form, unprepared for the assault.

The peasants, as expected, did not last long; once they realized there were no pikes to herd them into line, they fled as quickly as they could. Masses of men dropped their arms and pushed against one another to flee into the plains, as the professional bands meant to keep them in line shouted in disgust. Marin’s guard took up their position, locking pikes with an enemy band; doing little damage, but threatening to decimate them should they not respond in kind.

Anatol’s men, meanwhile, flooded between the gaps of the enemy’s pikes with terrifyingly little regard for their own life, their dead eyes striking fear into Michal’s band of pikemen. Pikes clattered against bronze plate, a kill here or there from opportunity their only comfort. Then the swords reached the front row. They dropped their pikes, taking up the dagger, only to be cut down with efficiency.

Courage faltered as the front row fell. Men broke rank, running for the plains. Seeing their brothers abandon them only further cratered morale; the desertions became more severe. By the time the second row had fallen, the entire band, Michal included, fled the field. Then, the dead swordsmen turned their haunted gazes upon Miroslaw’s band, locked in place by Miran’s guard.

Morale crumbled as sword met neck, the swordsmen charging into the vulnerable side and back of the ranks. Miroslaw’s men fought valiantly regardless, but as the bannerman fell, all hope of victory fled their minds. One man grabbed the banner, and with him fled a hundred men. Seeing their imminent defeat, the rest followed not long after.

Thus Witalis’ army had been set to rout. Bogdan, too, had disappeared; his men going on a long chase to brutalize fleeing peasants, entirely forgetting their part of the plan. It was no matter; the battle had been won, and mercenary bands could now flow freely to Cajnicea.



Realm of Kolodiva

1 Interregnum

”Man is above all else mind, consciousness -- that is, he is a product of history, not of nature.”



A clatter of gold, a thump of the body, a shout of alarm. A cry went up throughout the halls, “His Majesty has collapsed! Fetch the apothecary!” It was not long for the news to reach Witalis, on one of his inspections of the city ramparts. He rushed to the palace, his personal guard in tow, to the quarters of his father. With a wave of his hands, he ordered the palace guard, “I will handle this! Tend to the palace gate.”

His own guards took positions as the palace guard slunk away, one of them asking as Witalis entered the quarters, “Sir, whom are we to permit in?” To which Witalis responded, sharply, “Nobody. Not even the apothecary.” The guard hesitated for a moment in shock, before realization washed over him, and with a curt nod, he barred the door.

Witalis’ bronze armor clanked as he kneeled next to the bed of his father. Valesti looked on in mad desperation, writhing weakly as he sputtered, choked, and seized. The Royal Castellan shook his head, saying softly, “It’s finally come to this. You aren’t the man of my childhood anymore. The law has slipped in your madness.” He shook his head, almost sadly, continuing, “I’ll take good care of your kingdom. I’ll string up all those who disrespected us. I’ll string them all up.”

Valesti continued to seize as his son got up and walked to the king’s desk. He pulled out the chair, turning it to face the bed. Then, he sat down and watched. There was some indignant shouting outside the door. The apothecary had arrived, it seemed. Witalis made a mental note to have the apothecary impaled for such blatant disrespect of the orders of a Royal Castellan and King-to-be.

Valesti suffered for hours. The apothecary shouted outside the door the entire time. Witalis refused to take his eyes off of his father, his gaze hardening as his father slowly expired. Finally, with foam pouring from his mouth, Valesti seized one last time and fell silent. His breathing stilled, and his soul fled. The Royal Castellan stood, and with a disgusted glance at the corpse of his father, threw open the door.

A moment of inspiration struck. He pointed at the apothecary, and shouted, “Have him seized for failing to save the life of his majesty! Impale him at the palace gates for all to see!” Witalis’ personal guard, hand-selected for their loyalty, complied immediately. The Royal Castellan left them to the task as he went to assemble the city guard. There were pretenders to topple.




The sun lay low in the sky. No crickets sounded, as though even the animals of the realm had recognized the grave news that rode like a black wave from Gorleka. Only the sound of hooves on mud, the panting of the exhausted horse, and the yips of the rider who spurred on broke the silence. Noone else remained on the road, for the day was slipping and honesty did not dwell under the moon.

Ahead, the squat buildings of Cajnicea stood. Pinpricks of candle-light glittered in windows, and the torches of the city guard lit up the streets. The rider yelled his horse to a stop as a guard stepped out into the road, commanding, “Halt! What business rushes you into town so?”

The rider shouted back, his voice hoarse, “I bear grave news for Marin met Valesti, from the capital of the Unified Fiefdoms! I carry the seal of the merchant houses! Halt me at your own risk!” He fished an envelope from his pack, waving it in the torchlight. Indeed, it was a wax seal of the Cajnicean merchant houses, a right of passage.

The guard stepped out of the way, saying, “Gods give you luck, boy!” as the rider spurred his horse once more. He charged directly through town, and began to shout when he came into sight of the gate of Marin’s manor estate. He screamed, “I bear grave news for Marin met Valesti! I carry the seals of the merchant houses! Open the gate, and bear me to Marin met Valesti!”

The gate swung open, and the rider waved his envelope at the estate guards as he passed. They did not pursue him further, as the stable boy rushed out to assist with his horse. He leaped from the horse, taking off in a sprint to the manor. The front doors flung open. In the robes of a man intent on sleep, Marin blearily looked out at the rider.

The rider fell panting at the feet of Marin, and took a moment to catch his breath before speaking, “Sir, your father the King, he is dead! He was laid low by malady, his apothecary staked for his failure! Your brother, the Royal Castellan, has penned writs of levy. He intends to secure the realm as his!”

If Marin met Valesti had been tired, he was no longer. He turned to a guard and said, “Give this boy a letter of credit worth a hundred pebble, as thanks for his timely delivery of the news. Grant him the guest room with the wash-basin, and see to it that his horse is cared for especially well.” Then, without a moment to waste, he turned back into his estate, yelling, “Steward! Fetch the ink, and rouse two dozen messengers, immediately!”

He ran to his study, grabbing scrolls on his way. His steward rushed in with the ink, placing it down on Marin’s desk, before rushing back out to rouse the town’s messengers. He wrote his own writs, ones of contract and payment. Some addressed to bands of southern plainsmen, others to mercenary companies across the realm. He may not have maintained a standing army, but a horde of mercenaries would do the trick just as well.

He worked well into the night, his steward fetching each scroll and sending them out. There was a kingdom of riches to seize.




The news came to Gornibin with the morning missives, and soon, it was all the town could talk about. The death of the king! Rumor held it that he was poisoned! Stabbed by an assassin! Betrayed by his own guards! The entire city had collapsed, and taken his Majesty with it! The news grew more and more outlandish as it spread, taking on the form of an army of undead southern plainsmen razing Gorleka to the ground and salting the earth by the time it reached the ears of Kuba met Valesti, high in his cathedral.

He was not such a fool to take them at face value, of course; but nevertheless tidbits of truth could be taken from the rumors. His father’s death was a certainty. He scrapped his plans for the morning sermon, and took up quill and ink to draft a new one. He intended to see the throne, and he knew Witalis would see him as the threat he was. To secure the realm in the hands of the gods, the Bishop tep Caedan would have to form an army of the faithful.

Lucky, then, that he resided in a town of the faithful. He would have to drive them to action in the morning sermon, equivalate his will to Caedan’s, and whip the town into a frenzy. Then, he could withdraw the Guard-upon-River, and from their experienced ranks draw the core of his new army. With luck, he would ride, a victorious king, into Gorleka, to take his late father’s throne.

Then, the Cults of the Constant would be no more. The heresies of the Oreli would be snuffed out. Caedan and Gebei would stand triumphant, across a land of the holy and the devout. He would forge the realm into a bastion of the true faiths. All of Caedan’s enemies would repent, or they would burn in the pyres of retribution. All of them.

The bells rang for mass. Kuba took his leave of his study, taking the long flight of stairs down to take his place at the pulpit. That morning, words of fiery retribution, of holy war to come filled his preachings. Of the portents of doom should they fail, and the insidious plots of the Constant and the Oreli. The betrayal of the Royal Castellan, and the lack of faith that lead to the king’s death.

A faithful rage overtook the procession. The news would spread quickly, and the Guard-upon-River would surely abandon their posts as it reached them, for they were faithful and put their love in Kuba met Valesti, the true successor to the king. The divine right was his, and the gods walked with him.




The news from Gorleka filtered into the frontier lands to the far-east in the mid-day, carried with the Guard-upon-River. It passed from man to man until it had reached the experimental irrigation-fields Metody met Valesti had taken the liberty to inspect. He had nearly fainted when he heard it. He instructed his retinue, “Sirs, bring news of this to the villages! Instruct them that I am putting out a call to arms!”

He paused, before saying, “My brothers seek to claim the throne, but we all know they would lead it to ruin! Only I am fit to rule this realm, and together, we will see the best come to pass!” With a wave, he sent off his retinue, and he returned to his field tent. The excitement of the coming war pounded in his heart.

The rest of them were fools, ignorant of history, of governance, of everything. They were barely even literate. He was the only one, of all his brothers, fit to rule. They would see the realm driven to ruin, in ignorance and ineptitude. His fists clenched as rage filled him. The thought of their misrule drove him to deep anger.

Then, he steeled himself. His resolve hardened, as he repeated, out loud, to himself, “The only way to see it done right is to do it myself. I will see this realm made mine.” He smiled as he imagined an enlightened Kolodiva under his rule. He would be the philosopher-king, he would forge an empire to stand the test of time.

The rest of them would fall in line, and they would no longer threaten or cajole him. They would bow down to him and beg him for forgiveness; and he would have them all killed. All for the betterment of the realm; their ignorance would be deadly.

He would walk into Gorleka the enlightened king, and his rule would go down in history as the golden age of Kolodiva.




The Anchor learned of the news three days from Valesti’s death, along the trade-lanes. Filtered along by messengers to the ears of the Prince of Chruda. From there, the Prince of Chruda sent missive to Eliasz met Valesti, the estranged son of the king. Eliasz would see the support of the Anchor; in return, should he be throned, his policy would be most favorable to the northern cities.

Eliasz had no intent to honor such a promise, but nevertheless he freely and willingly agreed to it. He would keep the Anchor lulled with promises of riches and favor, until he could stand on his own two feet a king of the realm. With each northern city committing a small portion of their forces, together they would form an army capable of matching his brothers.

Thus was his right, a son of Valesti called to the endless pleasures of kingly rule. He would no longer live in a manor. He would call the palace his home, and he would walk along its marble pillars. Gold would be heaped at his feet, and feasts held every day in his honor. All of this was what he deserved.

He began to draft plans in his mind. The scorn of his father mattered no longer. He only had to reach out and seize what was his.




Alesky was tending to the flock when the men on horseback came, in shining bronze armor and carrying implements of war. They had called the village to the commons, everyone required to attend. Alesky was an honest and hard-working child, so he obeyed, leaving the flock in safe pasture within view of the commons. His father met him there, worry scrawled upon his face.

The sergeant-at-arms took a scroll from his pack, opening it. He read, “The year is now 1 Rule of Witalis. The king, Valesti, lays dead. The rightful successor, Witalis met Valesti, assumes his throne. The fiefdoms oppose the law. All able-bodied young men, of the ages fourteen to twenty-six are to march in the armies of the King. The punishment for failing to answer the call will be summary beheading, to be meted out at my will. Thus is the will of your king!”

The ten men behind him advanced, and began to round up the villagers. Aleksy was too young to join the levy, so he was sent from the commons. He fled to his house, looking out as his father, Chwalibog, was declared too old. He too fled the commons. It took thirty minutes for the troop to round up the suitable men. They marched them out at lance-point.

Aleksy’s father slammed open the door to the hut, a look of simmering disappointment and anger in his eyes. Juliusz came in shortly after. Aleksy asked, “What happened? Why did they take everyone away?”

Chwalibog’s gaze softened as he looked at his son, and he said, softly, “Sometimes the king demands things of us. It’s not a thing a young lad should worry about. Just.. Let it go from your mind. It’s none of your concern.”

Aleksy looked on, more confused than before as his mother, tears in her eyes, knelt down and hugged him tightly.


The Realm of Kolodiva

23 Rule of Valesti

“I put my heart and soul into my work, and have lost my mind in the process.”



The city of Gorleka had grown fat and rich. The city of light-upon-river, it was the capital of the Southern Fiefdoms. The throne of Valesti sat there, his stoic perch above the lands he had spent his life conquering. Its ivory towers were the envy of the known world, their glory rivalled only by the machinations of the thunderlords in their fortress upon the sky. All trade in Kolodiva, at some point or another, made its way through Gorleka. Armies beyond counting marched in the name of the King of Gorleka and the emperor of the Southern Fiefdoms. From its parapets, the steely-gazed Royal Castellan Witalis met Valesti plotted his machinations of law.

To the southwest lay Gornibin, a humble city in the shadow of the glory of Gorleka. Though its splendor lay in question, Gornibin was a place of hardy and capable men; woodsmen and farmers in equal measure. Where Gorleka failed to hold back the marauders of the Southern Realm, the men of Gornibin held firm; it was their efforts alone that maintained the guard-upon-river that held back the worst of the pillaging. Its churches hailed the name of Kuba met Valesti, the Imperious Bishop tep Caedan of the whole realm.

To the far west lay the town of Derazhi; its independence nominally maintained by its pioneering spirit. Where other men saw barren fields worth nothing, Derazhi men took pride in their ability to bend and tame. Under their careful guidance, the frontier plains were settled, and their stake carved out on the map. A stake they saw to none would take from them. Its hardy settlers praised the Lord-Architectural Metody met Valesti’s theories on cultivation.

The final city, Cajnicea, lay as the gateway to the northern states of the Anchor; Cajnicean farms occupied the last truly arable land in the north, and through Cajnicea flowed the mineral riches of the mountain and the grains of the plain. Though not numerous, Cajniceans commanded immense power over the flow of trade that far outweighed their mere numbers. At its beating heart, Marin met Valesti pulled the strings of the realm; though without royal position, he nonetheless held power over the kingdom.

The cities of the Anchor had long refused the clarion call of unification; their independence maintained through fire and war. The greatest among them, Chruda, dominated the western ranges, a monumental city built into the mountainside. From it, mineral riches poured forth, made by the finest blacksmiths and artisans across the whole Realm. By its banner the Anchor rallied, the scheming Eliasz met Valesti taking his place among their walls in stark rejection of the scorn of Valesti.

To the east of Chruda lay the manors of Jasztad, a small but fierce town of the Anchor who made their living in the monopolization of trade between Chruda and Cajnicea. It was here that the lords of Kolodiva took their journeys, well-managed and idyllic pastoral farmland to greet them. Thus it was that Chruda thrived.

In the north, laid bare in the shadow of the thunderlords, the city Domred worked their political theory; the only true republic in the Realm, Domred held a particular curiosity and scorn among men. Its people were capable statesmen, their institutions the most efficient in the Realm. The city held its head high, regardless of its plague of cults.

Privie lay in a child spur of the Anchor range -- originally but a monastery of soldier-monks dedicated to the glorification of Gebei, around them a city grew. Under the watchful eye of the monastery, the fortifications grew as well. Privie stands proud, a fortress unassailable, manned by the most devout and most disciplined troops in the realm.

Finally, the last city of the Anchor, in the eastern reaches, Ungmir sat a bastion of ore. Its mines were the richest in all of Kolodiva, and from it the copper, tin, bronze, and iron that all the cities relied upon flowed. Its men were hardy, used to the dark and the heat.




“You hold no position, Marin, you are ineligible for the throne! It is the law of the realm!” The voice of Witali rang out, ripples of murmured shock flooding the hall. On the throne, Valesti stared at the assemblage before him, pale-faced and hollow-eyed, his pupils focused on something only a man in the throes of madness could see. He seemed an edifice of stone as Marin responded. “I’ve purchased my right to presence! You can’t kick me out, and I will say what I wish while within this hall!”

A huzzah rose from the merchants, the aristocratic hangers-on jeering in response. Metody shouted above it all, scoldingly, “Witalis, you cretin, how would you know the laws? It is doubtless you are illiterate! And Marin, you are no better, you take the credit of your betters! You lazy, self-absorbed mongerer!” The hall descended into a furious uproar.

Witali shouted back, “I would have your hide tanned if you were not Lord-Architectural, Metody, you--,” just then, Kuba launched into his own blistering tirade, “Metody, you are a godless whelp! Were Caedan to see you, he would avert his eyes in shame! You are a failure of a man!”

Kuba drew his sword, fire in his eyes as he encroached on Metody, and with a cry of rage Witali responded, drawing his own sword as the guards brought their spears to bear. Marin ducked out of the way, sliding a dagger from his sleeve. The shouting reached a crescendo -- and then Valesti’s voice rang out, silencing all.

“Stop!” he cried, holding up a hand as he stared blankly at the ceiling, “None of you will ever see my crown! I would sooner dash it into a hundred pieces than pass it to any of you! No, I wait for the successor!” His raised hand closed into a fist, his index finger outstretched as he pointed up at the ceiling, his gaze transfixed as he muttered weakly, “The successor. He will have my throne, the successor.”

Unwilling to raise complaints with their father the king, the brothers muttered as they sheathed their weapons, the brief confrontation forgotten as they watched the pitiful display before them. With a shake of his head, Kuba made his exit. Marin, unwilling to watch his father in a delusional fit, ingratiated himself into a crowd of merchants. Metody simply looked at the floor, waiting for his father’s fit to be over. Witali got to work ordering the guards back into their positions, keeping his back turned to Valesti.




Aleksy met Chwalibog was an honest, hard-working child. His father had ordered him to tend to the flock, and Aleksy obeyed. On the outskirts of his village, so small it was not even granted a name, he kept a close eye for predators that would harm the livestock. The livestock was the lifeblood of the village, and to place such a responsibility in the hands of a mere ten-year-old was the ultimate signal of trust.

Aleksy wished to ensure that trust was not misplaced, for he was an honest, hard-working child. All day he had walked the fields with the flock, proudly keeping his guard up and his wits about him. Only once the sun was set, the flock put safely to rest, and he had returned home did he let himself relax. His mother, Juliusz met Toporek welcomed him at the door, her face a beam of pride for her loyal and steadfast son.

Chwalibog met Mieszko was once a strong man, but in his age and peace had grown heavyset; a small price to pay for the prosperity they now enjoyed. Peace had brought for them plentiful bounty, and with a tear in his eye, Chwalibog thought of his son’s innocence. Aleksy had not met the kiss of war, and thought little of the killing of men. Chwalibog could not be more proud, for Aleksy was an honest, hard-working child who knew only the way of peace.

After dinner, Aleksy went to bed early. He wished to be rested for the day after, for his father would once more ask him to tend to the village’s flock. It was an important task, and the son did not wish for exhaustion to slow him down. It was in these ways he made his parents and his village proud.



Enmity



The departure of the retinue was a flurry of activity; throngs of masked men scurried to and fro, provisioning for their journey and saying goodbye to those who would remain. When the last of the food had been packed, the last whetstone put to storage, Tiamat’s men swelled to a particularly dry patch of the coastal bog, for final inspection. The prince did a count, surveying the heads arrayed before him.

When he finally spoke, he said, “With us marches a hundred-fifty Yari, another sixty free blades of the clans, two-hundred-fifty for support, and a mix of other men numbering about thirty.”

Tiamat, with a satisfied nod, responded back, “We have a long journey ahead,” before she turned to the assembled crowd, raising her voice as she spoke to all in sight, “Before us is a march that will span half the continent. We will face threats none of you have ever before laid eyes upon, and the lands and weathers you traverse will be at once unfamiliar and dangerous. Yet, this land is not without its wonders, and we shall also see awe-inspiring sights, vistas unimaginable, and civilizations foreign.”

She paused, letting her words sink in before continuing, “The journey will be hard, yes, but it will not be without its rewards. You will be traveling further than any Reshut has travelled before. When you return to these shores, and sail across to your homeland, you will do so as great heroes! Your names shall become common knowledge, and you will not want for the tales you have to tell.”

Then, she wrapped up her speech, “The clans eagerly watch our travels, and wish for our success. You are the finest men the Reshut have to offer. Before you stands the opportunity your ancestors and your future children alike will only dream of. Let us depart in good spirit, to the lands that lay beyond.”

A mingled cheer of anticipation went up among the crowd. When Tiamat beckoned them to follow, they went in good order, into the swamplands. The coast faded away, swallowing the ship that bore them as they ventured westward.


Several Days Later
[/hr]

The group was deep into the swampland, morning light filtering through the drooping branches of wetland trees. In the camp, there was motion, as men broke tents and scuffed out fireplaces. They would be continuing on soon, but whispers from the quartermasters had reached the Prince’s ears. He moved to confide in Tiamat, saying, “We have gone through our rations more quickly than expected; at this rate, we won’t be out of the swamp before we are out of food.”

Tiamat considered the issue, answering, “I had not considered this. Though it may slow our pace, we need to begin foraging. I want groups sent out to find foragables, and return them to bolster our supplies.”

The Prince asked back, “A temporary measure, or shall we do this until further notice?”

Tiamat gestured aimlessly, saying, “For as long as we are travelling. Forageables should make up the bulk of our diet, with our preserved supplies only there to fill in gaps. This is how you travel sustainably.”

He nodded, calling to the quartermasters and passing on the instructions. Ten men a group went out, searching the surroundings for edibles. They brought back many common edibles, but one group’s find was of particular interest. A single berry had sated the hunger of an entire man, and it showed no indication of stopping.

Word of the berries spread throughout the camp, and soon groups were hunting specifically for the berries, bringing them back by the sackful. The retinue regained its good spirits and travel resumed apace. Then, one night came when the first fright of the journey occurred.

With a groggy massage around the edges of his mask, Ginyu Hachimana tried to rub away the sleep leftover in his system upon waking up. Hard pulls straightened out the folds in his robes and a tight grip about the shaft of his spear kept his balance from appearing to struggle - still, it was no secret that he had been sleeping poorly. Stepping over bog and puddle - occasionally stepping in some, too - he headed towards the rock in the middle of the wetlands upon which they had placed a sentry post. He rolled his neck around with a gentle snap and spoke, “Hey, Furada! Shift change.”

The rock, however, didn’t seem to respond. Hachimana groaned deeply and approached further. “Wow, alright, falling asleep during watch is as low as it can get, you damned fool. The daimyo will have your--”

As he turned the corner on the rock, he choked a gasp and dropped his spear. There, visible even in the darkness, laid the scattered remains of Furada spread within an area of several square metres. Hachimana stepped back slowly, his body so busy steadying his panicked breathing that he forgot to pick up his spear. His eyes darted in every direction and his gait hastened even further. Before he knew it, he was running back to camp. “WE’RE UNDER ATTACK! FURADA’S BEEN-- GAH!”

A rusty dagger pierces straight through his neck and out through the mouth and mask. He was breathing his last before he hit the ground. Behind him, horned shadows with six limbs made their accelerating approach, slow at first as though to test whether their cover had been blown, then faster and faster to the sound of mustering warriors in the camp. They screamed their vile screeches and growled with guttural fury as they descended upon the Reshut.

The prince’s voice echoed through the camp, hoarse and tense, “Enemies in the treeline! Form square! Four-man deep!” He pointed his blade at the middle of the camp, further shouting, “Crossbows in the inner ring of the square! Blades in the center!”

Tiamat, for her part, had taken up the sword and made her way to the center, having fitted a plate of bronze over her chest. She let the Prince take command as she focused on ensuring she was in position. The retinue, well-drilled for the possibility, formed rapidly, though not necessarily fully equipped, as many were forced to abandon armoring to ensure they could reach the formation in time for the attack to hit. The Yari were brought downwards, a three-thick wall of pike heads to force the encroaching enemy back, with the fourth row in opportunity range once the initial walls had been passed.

The enemy fought like nothing the Reshut had seen before, however: Where normal limbs should have limits do the number of directions they could twist, these monsters seemed to throw rigidness to the wind, their flexible joints allowing them to nearly snake their way between, over and under the weak spots in the spear wall. While four limbs kept them in balance, another two sliced at the capes and skin of the Reshut with dull weapons. Their tails whipped away what spears they could, throwing the men off balance.

Then snapped the crossbow strings. The closest monsters were peppered full of bolts and killed on the spot, while those that were graced with the cover of their comrades cast themselves back out of reflex. Those that had chosen to remain near the enemy out of sheer lack of sense quickly found themselves at odds with Reshut bronze as the Yari dropped their weapons, unsheathing short blades that they hacked viciously with.

The monsters who didn’t make it away in time fell swiftly. Those that did manage to escape fled back into the bog. After a minute of quiet, there came a chorus of violent growls, as the skinny, boney beasts that had attacked them were joined by three larger, bulkier specimen sporting goat horns from their wolven heads. They seemed somewhat wiser than their smaller kin, for they didn’t dare approach the yari line. Instead, they ripped large chunks of peat out of the bog and hurled them towards the frontline, their smaller kin cheering them on.

The Yari pressed against each other as they saw the peat fly towards them, opening holes in the formation between tightly-packed Reshut as the peat flew groundwards -- the formation was tight to begin with, however, and not much space was freely available. Screams went up as some unfortunate Reshut were clipped by the corners of the peat, smashed groundwards with the weight of the soggy earth.

With the formation spreading, the smaller kin charged forth again. One of the larger ones remained in the back as two of them also descended onto all six and charged forward. The Yari were unable to return to position, still dazed from the bombardment. The crossbowmen had hooked their strings and drawn to full, but scattered from the openings in the formation as the Iskrill shot forwards, leaving the swordsmen in the center.

The smaller Iskrill danced around the swordsmen, seeking instead to jump at the crossbowmen. However, that was easier said than done, as a quick-witted shift in placement put much too many swordsmen between them and their targets for a flanking maneuver to be possible. Instead, one of the larger ones functioned as their vanguard as they tried to take on the swordsmen.

“Hoshinori!” shouted one of the frontliners, and from what had been the second line came fifteen halberdiers equipped with razor sharp naginatas. They formed a phalanx and dedicated themselves to controlling that single hunter, allowing the crossbowmen time to position themselves even better. The giant Iskrill seethed its fury and tried to find an opening, but these were much more aggressive than the spearmen from earlier. It roared for its peat-throwing third companion, who dropped its handful and knuckled its way into the fray.

The prince hoarsely shouted commands to the rest of the formation, bidding them to hold their ground as the swordsmen herded the Iskrill. Tiamat for her part brought herself face-to-face with the third Iskrill, parrying and striking with terrifying speed and efficiency. The crossbowmen presented, waiting for opportunities to get beads on Iskrill. It was in that moment that one of the hunters got a little too infuriated by the stalemate with the naginata and tried to circle around them. The crossbowmen didn’t hesitate and took the shot. The giant’s front was pierced by tens upon tens of bolts and staggered backwards before rolling onto its back to breathe its final breaths. The other Iskrill saw it - it was clear that the resource sunk into this attack began to outweigh the potential rewards. The naginata troop advanced, joined on the flanks by yari-men who still held onto their blades or had chosen to pick up their yaris again. The other two giants began backing off, protecting their smaller comrades as they scuttled into the darkness again.

Once the attack had been beaten off, the Prince yelled out, “Tend to the wounded! Sixty men, get fully equipped and keep a picket for further attacks!” Tiamat harried the escape of the Iskrill who she had squared off with, but once it went into full retreat, she turned to survey the formation. She pointed her blade at the swordsmen who had held back the hunter from the crossbowmen, saying, “You! From what clan do you hail and what are your names?”

The naginata and swordsman retainers spun around to meet her gaze and all bowed deeply. Their masks all sported patterns of blue flowers on green waves, all drawn with varying degrees of detail to designate rank and wealth. The one with the most beautiful mask raised her torso slightly higher than her companions. “Nuzami Hoshinori of the Hoshinori clan, my lady - retainers of the Hashimoto clan.”

Tiamat praised them, “That was quick thinking. I’m proud to have you accompany my journey.”

Hoshinori’s bow deepend. “W-we are here to do our duty, my lady.”

She responded, “Indeed you are, and you did so excellently.”

The naginata warriors remained bowing until Tiamat had left. While they had been victorious now, the aftermath revealed that the assault had taken a greater toll on them than they had expected - twenty-one men had met the Death God at the gates tonight. Given their situation, they couldn’t return the corpses to their families to be buried at their ancestral shrines. In lieu of this limitation, the warriors gathered up the dead and placed them on a pyre made of peat and moss. A monk read the warriors their last rites as the peat was lit aflame, and the sight of their burning comrades didn’t exactly do much to lighten the spirits around the camp. Nevertheless, they had died on the line of duty for their daimyo - the most honourable death there was - and they would press on with their souls to power their march.

When day broke, their duty continued; the Prince called for the retinue to break camp, and with the din of activity their belongings were packed, leaving behind the tents of those who had not lived throughout the night. As they marched in loose columns through the endless swampland, Tiamat, at the head of the columns alongside the Prince, began to sing.

She sang out,
“From Kylsar, the dense Kylsar
From east, swampy east
As silent, fearsome thunder
Into battle march Reshut
As silent, fearsome thunder
Into battle march Reshut.”

The assembled Reshut found the lyrics at the tips of their tongues, though they had not previously sung such a song before, and a murmur broke out as some joined in,

“Made them tough
Dense Kylsar,
Ruthless storms of the seas
And muddy bog.
Ruthless storms of the seas
And muddy bog.”

More of the retinue began to join in, emboldened by those who first started, and the song picked up in volume,

“No tiredness nor fear,
They fight for night and day,
Only the white mask
Fell on one side.
Only the white mask
Fell on one side.”

The song suddenly ramped into a fevered intensity as all the Reshut joined in, singing at the top of their lungs,

“Huh, Kylsar, my home Kylsar,
We'll stand up for you.
To the waves of western shores
We'll send your greetings.
To the waves of western shores
We'll send your greetings!”

The song, as quickly as it climaxed, settled down, quieting though all continued to sing,

“Just remember, Kylsar, in the dark times
As an ode to old glory
The honor of gorgeous folk
Your sons will defend.
The honor of gorgeous folk
Your sons will defend.”

Once the song had completed, the columns broke out into sporadic cheers, more energy in everyone’s steps.



Enmity



A large amount of Reshut had entered the grand palace for the dinner, the daimyo had explained to Tiamat as the dinner was prepared that the attendees were various retainers of the clan or members of its vassal clans. These kinds of dinners the daimyo had every two weeks or so, to ensure the loyalty of his realm. The grand hall had been filled with tables and cushions to harbor the vast number of attendees, Tiamat got the honor of sitting alongside the Kinoshitas themselves, sitting to the right of prince Tanehira, with his other siblings, and their mother sitting alongside them. A variety of food was laid out for them, despite Tiamat’s lack of a need to eat, fish, rice, roasted insects, and other delicacies of the isles could be seen.

“So,” Tanehira spoke, eating a rice ball just underneath his mask “How are you enjoying the Isles?”

“Though I cannot say I am made for the swamp, you have been most kind and enjoyable,” Tiamat responded, looking around the table. She did not even have a plate in front of her.

“I am glad you think so, though I am curious as to where you will travel to next” the Prince said in return.

Tiamat turned to look back at the prince, saying, “Perhaps I will stay here a while. Get to know your clan and your city more.”

He chuckled “Well im sure my father would be more than happy to let you stay with us,” He turned to look towards the Daimyo, who was engaged in a convo with another of his sons, who Tiamat had been informed earlier was the heir to the clan. “Though I hope he does not hark on you constantly about tales from the mainland.”

Tiamat giggled, saying back, “Don’t want him to hog me, do you? Perhaps I’ll have to sneak out to avoid being roped into telling tales instead of following you.”

“Come now,” He turned back towards Tiamat, giving her a playful shove, “It's nothing like that, I just wish for you to not get roped into an eons worth of telling tales to him, my father rarely knows when to quit when nothing else is bothering him.”

Tiamat continued to tease, “Yeah, solely for my benefit, surely. Don’t worry, prince, I’ll make sure I make time for you.”

She was sure that if the prince was not wearing a mask, he would be blushing deeply, though, she wasn’t sure Reshut blushed.

Suddenly, the Daimyo rose, ringing a bell to attract the attention of the crowd, “Gathered Lords and Ladies,” he spoke “I have a special announcement I wish to make,” he gestured over to Tiamat “Our most gracious guest, Tiamat, has told me grand tales of the mainland, and, it is my decision to officially announce that I, Kinoshita Narikazu, will be sponsoring a grand expedition to the mainland!” A brief silence followed, before a loud round of applause erupted from the assembled guests.

Tanehira turned to Tiamat “Huh, you sure convinced him, he’s been debating on that for months now.”

She whispered back to Tenehira, “From what I gathered, he wanted to do it anyway. He just needed a good reason to justify it.”

He shrugged “Sounds like my father.”

The Daimyo continued, “To lead this grand endeavor, will be a navigator from the eastern clan of the Ohta, who has offered her services to us, Ina Hikohira!” A female reshut stood, dressed in a fine blue silk robe, her mask had an interesting design of an anchor surrounded by water. She bowed to the cheering crowd, and was brought up alongside the Kinoshita. The daimyo continued “In short time the Reshut will finally lay their feet upon the mainland! A new age dawns for us!” More cheers, and the dinner continued, with a far greater spirit washing over the guests.

Hikohira spoke to the daimyo for a brief period, before arriving in front of Tiamat and the prince, bowing she spoke “Greetings, you must be Tiamat, I am Ina Hikohira, a pleasure to meet you.”

Tiamat stood up in turn, giving a curtsy as she said back, “Indeed I am. I am pleased to make your acquaintance, miss Hikohira. I am surprised that a visitor spinning tales merits the attention of an esteemed navigator and soon-to-be expedition admiral.”

She chuckled “From what the esteemed daimyo told me, he has been gathering many tales, but apparently you were the one to finally decide his mind about it.” She turned for a brief moment to look at the guests “But nonetheless I am honored to be chosen to lead an expedition, I must confess the idea of finally seeing the mainland is exciting and so, when Lord Kinoshita offered to fund my venture I jumped on the chance.”

Tiamat responded, “Oh, I merely told him what I had seen. I would not take claim to such an illustrious position as having been the deciding factor for the works of a Daimyo. Nevertheless, the mainland is a large place, and I do not foresee you ever running out of places to explore. A dream come true, I imagine?”

“Oh absolutely!” The navigator’s eyes shined behind her mask “The chance to meet foreign cultures and races, to discover new lands, brave mighty storms, find hidden treasures! I can only hope the mainland meets all that I've dreamed it to be.” She paused for a moment, turning back to the guests, where a few had called her name, “Oh, I must get going, it was a pleasure to meet you Tiamat.” She bowed once more, before heading towards others.

“An interesting figure.” Tanehira added.

Tiamat turned back to look at Tanehira, explaining, “I gather she is leading the expedition for her own sake rather than the Daimyos’. Their goals align, however, so I suppose it is a victory for your clan and for her.”

The prince nodded “the prestige such an adventure would provide will definitely put us above the other clans, a much needed victory I must admit, as for lady Ina? I’ve heard good things about her, but I have no doubt she would’ve gone to the other great clans had we not gotten her first.”

She acceded, “Indeed. She has a wanderlust she is desperate to fulfill. Clan divisions are not an obstacle in that regard. That may prove favorable, though. She will be much more driven to reach the mainland.”

He nodded “quite, I must admit I am ever curious to see what she finds, but, enough of that, let us enjoy the rest of this dinner!”



A day after the dinner, the young prince was once more leading Tiamat through the city, this time around the prince had been given a sack of bronze coins for his own purchases, their adventure found the two in the docks of the capital, a vast array of ships, some bearing symbols beyond that of the Kinoshita, two of which Tiamat had been informed were the symbols of the Hashimoto and the Ohta. A few contingents of the Kinoshita forces could also be seen, armed with long spears and bows, to keep an eye on the other great clans she had been told.

“We tend to dislike one another, but that doesn’t stop us buying Hashimoto blades, or the Ohta selling us anything they can get their hands on.” The prince spoke, staring off towards the ships.

Tiamat pondered, “What is important in Hashimoto blades? Do you have forges? Surely the Kinoshita are capable of supplying blades as well.”

He chuckled “Well of course, but, as i'm sure my father informed you, the Hashimoto are masters of the blade, both of its construction and of its use, but, they are rare that's for sure,” He patted the blade at his own side “One of only 50 made, by one of the finest Hashimoto craftsmen, getting the supplies needed to construct such nice blades is difficult, we have little copper or tin, so making bronze is a rarity we reserve for only the finest of weapons or craftsmen.”

Tiamat turned to the Prince, and had she a way to show it, she would have visibly been confused. She followed up, asking, “What about iron? It’s difficult to find a place without iron.”

“Yes, it is common, but even the master craftsmen of the Hashimoto have little use for it, they can’t construct as nice blades as they can with bronze, from what I understand it’s too soft, not as durable for combat, so in effect, useless to the Hashimoto and even to the Ohta or us Kinoshita.”

Tiamat asked incredulously, “The isles do not know how to harden iron? You must take me to a forge.”

The prince looked confused, but accepted Tiamat’s demand. He led her through the docks to the artisan quarters, eventually arriving at a forge, where a reshutian blacksmith forged away at what appeared to be builder’s tools, the smith looked up as they two approached. “Hail young prince Kinoshita! What can I do for you today?”

“My companion wished to see your forge, if you are willing to show her.”

“Why, of course.” He looked at Tiamat and gestured towards his forge, “Tis right here, not the best but it gets my work done.”

She nodded at the forge, quickly launching into business, “I wish to show both of you a technique. Do you have a stock of iron rock?”

The smith and the prince paused for a few moments, before the smith finally spoke “Why..yes, it's right over there.” He jabbed at a pile of scrap where some iron rock could be seen “Don’t know what you want that for though.”

She did not respond to the jab, simply giving the order, “Bring a barrel of water and one of your molds for a blade. I want the furnace stoked to a heat suitable for the liquifying of metal.” She grabbed a furnace pot, stuffing iron ore into it rapidly.

The smith went about the order, a barrel was brought and a mold, stoking the fire to an intense heat, meanwhile the prince just watched, his curiosity growing.

Tiamat placed the pot into the furnace, watching the iron ore melt down. In the meantime, she took the barrel, moving it next to the anvil and placing a set of tools nearby, including a hammer and a pair of forge tongs. She then went to the forge’s equipment rack, taking a heat apron and a pair of thick gloves, putting them on. Once the metal in the pot had fully liquified, she reached in with the gloves, pulling the pot out and carefully lifting it over to the mold.

She carefully poured the molten iron into the mold, slowly. Once the mold was filled, she placed the pot aside and placed the mold next to a wind bellow, repeatedly stamping down on the bellow to cool the iron. Once it had solidified, but still glowed a fierce and angry red hot, she dumped it out of the mold onto the anvil. She immediately grabbed the hammer, bringing it down violently upon the edges of the blade, chipping away at the iron steadily.

The blade took form, as she flipped it over and chipped away at the iron on the other side, bringing the edges to a point. Once she saw fit, she placed the hammer aside and grabbed the tongs, taking hold of the blade and plunging it into the water with a plume of steam. Then, she lifted it back out of the water, and still carrying it in the tongs, placed it back into the furnace. She presented the order again, “Refill the barrel of water and return it to its place next to the anvil.”

The smith did so, seemingly taking notes mentally throughout the entire process, the prince meanwhile had summoned for a scribe, who arrived sometime during Tiamat’s demonstration, the prince was now recounting every last detail to them, still watching with pure fascination.

Once the blade was red hot once again, she took the tongs and pulled it from the furnace. She dropped it back down upon the anvil, and taking up the hammer once again, continued to beat at the edges. The blade further took shape, the edge becoming more and more prominent. She beat down the middle, carefully preparing a groove in the blade to cut its weight. Then, with the tongs she plunged it once more into the water, filling the forge with yet more steam as the blade hissed furiously.

Back into the furnace it went. She turned to the forgemaster and said, “Refill the water, and bring the handle and pommel.”

He did so, the prince leaned ever closer, the scribe writing down everything with a furious speed.

Once the blade was red hot again, she took the tongs and pulled it out, plunging it back onto the anvil. Another round of beatings with the hammer solidified the shape of the blade, and it took on a recognizable swordly shape. Once she was pleased, she took the tongs, and for one final time, plunged the blade into the water again with an angry hiss. She lifted the blade out, grabbing it in her hands as she walked over to the grindstone. Repeatedly depressing the pedal, Tiamat ran the edge of the blade against the grindstone, carefully bringing the iron to a sharp edge.

Then, once she was satisfied, she took the handle, fitting it over the tang of the blade. The pommel screwed to the end of the tang, securing the handle against the blade. Then, she looked to the prince, pointing the blade at his own, “Take your sword, and strike at me with a heavy blow.”

The prince unsheathed his sword “are you sure? I do not wish to end up harming you”

Tiamat raised her blade, saying, “You will not harm me. Strike at me.”

“Very well” The prince swung with his blade, striking towards Tiamat, but clearly not wanting to harm her truly.

She suddenly brought up her iron sword, bringing the flat of her blade against his sword. The bronze clashed into the iron with a flurry of sparks, but the iron did not yield. She had successfully blocked him, and the iron blade did not falter. She then sidestepped, slashing the blade across a nearby banner, cutting it cleanly in half. Tiamat flipped the blade around, presenting the handle to the prince, saying, “It is both sharp and capable of maintaining its shape.”

The prince, scribe, and smith were stunned, the prince carefully sheathed his own blade and took the iron one, testing it with a few swings before bringing it up to gaze at. “My my Tiamat, you do not fail to impress me,” he turned towards her, “Anything more you know you wish to grace us with?”

Tiamat immediately imparted, “That sword is not an exact analogue. It requires more care than your bronze blade, and it is brittler. It must be sharpened more often and it must be kept clean. Never sheathe it when it is dirty, or it will rust and crumble to dust.”

The prince nodded while the scribe continued to write the words down “I see, it is quite the effort, but as you said, iron is far more common, my father will most certainly want to hear of this, and I'm sure the other clans will pay a fortune to learn this.”

She bowed, “I would be pleased to accompany you to present the blade. I’m sure it will meet the Daimyo’s expectations.”

“Of course! Come follow me.” The prince quickly led Tiamat back to the palace, with the smith and scribe following quickly behind them, both curious to see what would occur. They wound through the muddy pathways of the city, on the way, Tiamat spotted someone else wielding a bag of the bronze coins the Reshut so commonly used, they were counting some when suddenly, one dropped, falling into the mud and sinking away rapidly, with the Reshut seemingly disappointed, but making no great move to search for the coin.

Soon enough, they had found their way into the palace, passing by the guards and entering the great hall, the prince practically bounded in “father! We have something great to show you!”

The daimyo looked up from his work “What is it my son? Another wanderer you’ve found on your travels?”

The prince looked at Tiamat, handing her the sword “You understand more than I do, you should be the one to present it.”

She took the blade, saying, “Very well,” before kneeling and presenting it to the Daimyo, saying, “I have shown the Prince a new method of forging to make use of the waste iron your mines produce. Through heating and cooling the iron rapidly, it is possible to harden it into a usable form.”

The daimyo pondered, picking up the blade, and testing it himself, “My my Tiamat, did the mainland show you this? This technique is most intriguing, if it truly does what you say it does, it'll most certainly change things around here.”

She remained kneeling, answering, “It remains largely unknown upon the mainland as well -- at least, when I was still upon the mainland. The electric barons understood well how it worked -- being so closely tied to the constant as they are -- but had little enough use for forged goods that they never ran short of their bronze. It is a technique used only rarely.”

“I see, well, I most certainly thank you for this Tiamat, your stay here has been most useful to us.” He spoke, bowing towards her in thanks.

She looked up towards the Daimyo, saying next, “If it may please you, I have another consideration for the clan.”

The Daimyo rose “And what would that be?”

Tiamat explained, looking back down, “On my way to the palace to present the blade, I witnessed a man lose a bronze coin in the mud. Though those losses are relatively small, collectively, should a number of people lose a coin here and there it should add up to thousands in lost coinage.”

She paused to let it sink in, then continued, “When I was presented with your temple, I discovered you had a secret method to produce the fiery red dye used. Were you to dye strips of silk with that method, it would be most difficult for others to recreate. You could be assured that any such strips produced would be produced only by your clan.”

Another pause, then she finished, “If you were to peg these strip silks to the value of your coinage -- say, certain lengths of silk are worth certain amounts of coinage -- and permit any in possession of the silk to turn them in for coinage, or any with coinage to turn them in for the silk strips, you could have the rarity and value of coinage with the lightweight qualities of silk. You could not only carry more silk, but if dropped it would not sink into the mud and be lost to your people.”

The Daimyo thought further, letting the entirety of Tiamat’s proposal sink in “I see, that would be, certainly useful, and would ensure we no longer had to deal with counterfeit coinage, I shall most certainly consider your idea Tiamat,” He gestured towards another scribe, who wrote it all down. “If you have any other grand ideas, I will certainly listen, you continue to impress me.”

She snuck a glance at the prince, before saying, “I humbly request I be permitted to continue my walk of the city with the prince. Perhaps I shall think of more things during such a walk.”

The Daimyo nodded “be on your way.”

The prince lead her once more back to the docks, as he still had business to be done, once more by the ships and the soldiers marching through the streets, they eventually found their way to silk merchants, the prince spent quite some time figuring out some more silk to be produced into some robes for the royal clan. While the merchant went to check his stock the prince turned towards Tiamat “Any further ideas of that great mind of yours?”

Tiamat pointed at the ships in harbor, asking, “Do all your vessels look like that?”

“Yes they do, until recently we’ve had no need for anything beyond the isle’s waters, which are, as I assume you’d guess, shallow compared to the waters probably around the mainland, we haven’t tried the waters beyond the isles but, we haven’t had a need to, until recently.”

She shook her head, “Those shallow vessels would not survive in the harsh ministrations of the open ocean. What is their superstructure like?”

The Prince thought for a brief second, gazing at the ships, “If i recall correctly, there is little of such superstructure in many of these ships, the Ohta are the only ones with a noteworthy amount to them.”

“I need a scroll and some ink. Where may we get some?” Tiamat asked, suddenly.

The prince tossed some coins to the returned silk merchant and told him to have the silk delivered to the palace, he led Tiamat to another merchant, one who sold scrolls and some ink. He quickly bought some and handed it over to Tiamat “I assume another of your great ideas?” he asked.

Tiamat responded, “One that will save the lives of your expedition. Your vessels are shallow, and will be drowned by the waves. And presumably your superstructures aren’t sturdy, and will be hammered and smashed into pieces by the water. If you take logs, and keep them whole..”

She drew a blueprint, of a vessel’s superstructure, deep-bottomed and hewn entirely out of thick logs. The logs lashed together and criss-crossed, sturdily linking together, and she explained, “If you place the planks atop this superstructure, it should be sturdy enough to withstand water hammers, and sit high enough in the water that the waves should not drown it.”

“I see, it would, most certainly be useful for our expedition to not drown in the waves as soon as we go beyond the Isles, once more, you impress me Tiamat, shall we deliver these to my father then?”

Tiamat nodded and said in return, “Very well, let us present them to your father.”

The duo once more headed their way through the winding streets to the palace, this time, Tiamat overheard something, two soldiers of the clan, both with bows strapped across their backs, speaking to one another.

“My arms really started to ache after a while, now I can’t even perform basic actions without my arms shooting out in pain every now and then, not to mention pulling this damn thing back.” One of them spoke, clearly speaking of the bow attached to him.

The other one responded “You’re telling me, but you have to admit, being able to kill a bandit from yards away is incredibly useful.”

“Ya I'll give you that.” the first one spoke once more.

Tiamat couldn’t hear the rest of the conversation before she was dragged away by the prince. Once more they returned to the palace, the guards at this point now bothering to hail them and just waving them in. They found the Daimyo once more, sitting in his more personal chambers this time around.

“And what do you bring to me now?” He asked, not even looking up from his work.

Tiamat kneeled once more, presenting the rolled-up scroll, saying, “I have designed a vessel for your expedition, that will survive in waters your current coastal boats will not.”

The daimyo took the scroll, unraveling it to investigate the contents, he whistled upon seeing it “This will, most certainly be a work to design, but,” He set the scroll down, looking up at Tiamat “Another of your ideas that will aid us, im sure Lady Ina would appreciate having a ship that could actually survive the endeavor.”

Tiamat simply responded, “I am happy to provide assistance, sir.”

The daimyo bowed to this “In that case, if you have any of your other ideas, feel free to stop by, already the ones you have given to us will be more than useful, the other clans will be eager to learn them.”

“If I may be granted another scroll, perhaps I may present to you another design that may help your troops,” Tiamat requested.

The daimyo merely pushed over a scroll, “Now this one im sure to be interested in.” He spoke, Tiamat could tell he was only half joking while saying it.

She took the scroll, laying it down as she spoke, “The bow has its advantages, and indeed still will over the design I am about to present, but it presents itself as a viable alternative.” She drew an odd design, a block of wood with a groove cut into it and two wooden fringes expanding out on either side, bowstring tied through them. They attached to a piece of bronze that could slide up and down the groove, and Tiamat placed a bronze assembly in the back. There was a trigger, that when placed into position would lift another piece of bronze up to force the sliding assembly into place in a taut position. When depressed, the trigger would drop the blocker and the slider would release its pressure, propelling an arrow forward.

She presented the design, saying, “The force by which the arrow is launched is greater than the bow, and will prove better against armored targets. It also spreads out the exertion of drawing the strings into manageable chunks. You press the device against the ground and use both hands to pull the slider back. Once it is at full tension, you impress the blocker upwards and force it to remain tensioned. Place an arrow into the groove, against the sliding block. Once the blocker is depressed, it launches forward with a mighty heave.”

“I see, an interesting and strange design I will admit, though I'm sure we will begin to test it out, there are still bandit camps to clear out.” The daimyo looked up at Tiamat “And what do I owe you in exchange for all of these beautiful designs?”

Tiamat said back, “If the prince be willing, I wish for us to join the voyage to the mainland. It has been long since I was there, and I wish to make contact with those I knew once again.”

The prince’s eyes lit up, the daimyo sighed, “Very well, but please, do keep an eye on him, he is my flesh and blood after all.”

Tiamat elected to compliment, saying, “He is extremely capable. I suspect he will be the one keeping an eye on me, rather than the other way around.”

Tanehira was bubbling with excitement “I shall not disappoint you father!” He turned towards Tiamat rapidly “Oh this shall be so fun!”





Tiamat



The world around Tiamat hurled violently as the portal launched her; swirls of color and burned afterimages of turmoil flying by in the breach of dimensions, divine and mundane. Had it not been for her divine constitution, such a display would have driven her mad and scattered her body in a hundred thousand particles of dust, floating between the dimensions. Then, she spotted the first coherent light. The end of the portal, Galbar.

Tiamat was spat out unceremoniously. Without so much as a flash of light, she was launched through the air, coming to land in a shallow bog of mud and stagnant water facefirst. Behind her, the portal vanished. In the distance, some shouts -- someone must have heard her land. Sitting up in the mud, she sensed them, divine sight peering upon them.

She drew in her second set of arms, crossing them as their sleeves melded into her silken robes. From the air, she wove an ornate scarf, wrapping it about her head, only her horns sticking out. Then, an ivory mask, flat as her soon-to-be visitors. She mounted it upon the front of her head, tucking it into the hood. White gloves formed to cover up her metallic hands. Then, determined to be dignified before the first mortals she would ever see, she stepped out of the bog and onto flat ground. Mud slicked off her clothes, leaving them as clean as could be.

From the dense tree line came three masked figures, wearing long red robes and each wielding long spears and swords, the head of this group bore an intricate mask divided into four different colors, green, blue, black, and purple, their sword was drawn but upon seeing the fallen form of Tiamat, they lowered it.

“We heard some commotion, are you alright?” They spoke, their two companions looked around the area, seeing if there was any more people. Tiamat looked them over, picking up their language and responding, “I’m alright; I believe I must have scared an animal, and it jumped into the water.”

The head figure seemed to accept this, sheathing his sword upon his hip, he bowed as he continued to speak “Kinoshita Tanehira, what brings you to our neck of the swamps traveler?” the two others returned to Tenehira’s side, planting their spears into the ground, it was then when Tiamat noticed they all wore intricate bronze armor and were regal in their dress, their robes being of a fine silk make.

She stood up straight, saying back, “Tiamat. I’m not familiar with this land; perhaps it is unladylike to be lost, but I must profess that is the case.”

Tanehira chuckled “nonsense, the isles can be a bit of a problem to navigate, and if you are lost, our city is not a far distance away, if you wish to accompany us on our return there.”

She nodded, answering, “I would appreciate that. I am not well-suited for the swamps. Lead the way, sir Tanehira.”

“Of course.” With that he turned and headed deeper into the dense forest.




After a long walk, the group eventually found themselves upon a winding dirt road, eventually leading them to a set of mighty gates, carved from the dark wood that came from the swampy forests beyond, at the front of the gate stood two more masked figures, wielding similar spears and armor to the others.

“Hail Prince Kinoshita!” One guard spoke, rapping on the gate to signal it to open, which it slowly did. Revealing the city beyond, beautiful buildings of wooden make, most sitting upon tall stilts to avoid the swamp and flooding that occasionally happened. Tanehira turned towards Tiamat. “Welcome to Tategawa, capital of the mighty Kinoshita Clan.”

Tiamat peered through the gate at the city beyond, turning to Kinoshita as she responded with a slight curtsy, “A magnificent capital, indeed. Your clan is the most impressive I have ever seen, Prince Kinoshita. I thank you for bringing me here -- I would not have found it through the bogs otherwise.”

She then looked beyond the prince to the city beyond, asking, “You have taken me thus far. Though it may not befit a prince, I would greatly appreciate if you would be willing to grant me a tour of your capital.”

“Of course! I'm sure you’ll find my clan takes great pride in its city and construction and please, call me Tanehira, Im technically not even the heir to the clan,” He chuckled, his two guards joining him, “but that is for another time, for now, if you’ll follow me, we’ll start with the grand temple.”

The prince led Tiamat through the city roads, detailing small things here and there, the occasional shop or house of a prominent family or people he knew personally, the exact height of each stilt, something his father had instituted, and various other items. Eventually they came upon a massive building, in the front stood a mighty gate with two poles and and another more triangular piece of wood at the top. The building itself had a mighty pointed ceiling and held several roof-like flats surrounding a portion below it, it seemed to be built of thin wood and was coloured a bright red.

“This! Is the Grand Temple, built by my father shortly after his ascension to Daimyo of our clan, it holds the largest collection of images and statues for the gods across the isles and is what put us upon the map.” He turned towards Tiamat, obviously looking for a sense of approval. His talk of the history of the building seemed to have an air of happiness and pride to it.

Though even at the best of times, Tiamat was not built to be easily readable, she did her best to show her approval. With a clear tinge of interest, she asked, “I have not seen a construction so colorful before. I simply must learn how you managed such vivid and vibrant coloration. What gods are worshipped within?”

“The colour is a clan secret currently, as for gods, why, the four gods of course! Yamatu, our creator, Akwael, god of magic, Aritafek, god of construction and our clan’s patron god, and Kalaru, god of the ocean and the moon, why do you ask?”

She spoke, still transfixed by the temple, not looking at the Prince as she answered, “I am afraid I am not familiar with the isles. I am most familiar with the electric barons of the sky, whom worship the constant. Have you heard of them? I am unsure if they have ever elected to leave the mainland.”

The prince shook his head “I am not familiar with them no, I doubt any of our people are, we tend to stick with the four, as they impact the most in our lives.” He looked at the temple and its form, once more turning to Tiamat “You come from the mainland then?”

She finally turned from the temple, returning the gaze of her mask to Kinoshita as she continued, “Indeed. I am not from any one civilization, simply a wanderer. I have been to the sun plains, the anchors of the world and the airy fortress of the lord-regent who rules them -- made of stone and brick, yet floats as a feather, and the gardens southward. I’ve been through the seas of Kalaru and beheld its wonders, seen its reefs and its deeps. I have even been witness to the mana-islands of Akwael’s creation.”

She continued, “Now I have wandered here, to your isles, across the seas.”

Tanehira looked, thoroughly impressed, he stood there silent for a moment. “My my, that is, an impressive collection of travels, perhaps, once our tour has finished, you would like to join me to the palace? I'm sure my father would love to hear about your tales, and he would be more than happy to feed and let you rest with us.”

She gave a slight curtsy once again, saying, “It would be an honor, sir Kinoshita. I would be in your debt.”

“Well then, let us continue the tour.” With that he led Tiamat once more down the winding roads of the city. He brought her to the various lesser temples situated throughout the city, the hall of artistry where some of the finest art of the clan was placed, down to the docks where the flags and symbols of various other clans could be seen, and even to the various outer regions of the city, where the poorer citizens lived, but where the mighty architecture of the clan could still be seen.

Eventually, he led her to another massive building, one while of similar design of the grand temple, was more wide and seemed to be designed in a more regal or defendable way. In front of it was a mighty garden full of various plants from the isles, within Tiamat could see various guards and other reshut, all of an incredibly regal make, two more guards stood in front of the path leading to the palace, they bowed as the prince arrived.

“Prince Kinoshita, your father is inside.”

“Thank you Nasu,” He turned around to Tiamat, “Follow me, ignore if they stare at you, outsiders are rare in the palace.”

He led her into the palace, inside was even more regal than its outer form, mighty silk curtains, beautiful artwork, and displays of wealth were constant. Eventually they found themselves in a massive chamber, low tables and various silk pillows within, at the far end was a large pedestal, with its own table, at which sat an incredibly regal reshut, his red robes made of fine silk and a large horn like crown sitting just above his mask, upon which displayed the symbol of the Kinoshita alongside another one.

Tanehira bowed “Greetings father.”

The Daimyo bowed in return “I am glad you have returned from your endeavor son, and who is this you have brought?” He gestured to Tiamat, obviously hoping she would answer herself.

Tiamat bowed in turn, speaking reverently as she addressed the daimyo, “It is an honor to be in your presence. I am Tiamat, a wanderer from lands far. Your son, honorable as he is, rescued me from the grips of the swamps that confused my direction. I am in the debt of the Kinoshita clan.”

The Daimyo chuckled with a hearty laugh “Ah yes, he tends to do that, his incursions into the swamp bring us many a wanderer or lost person, come, sit,” He gestured to some cushions across from him “I am always interested in hearing tales from beyond my city.”

Tanehira bowed “If you shall excuse me father, I shall leave you with Tiamat for now, I wish to go about some tasks.”

“Of course my son.” The Daimyo waved, allowing him to exit, once more turning towards Tiamat.

She emerged from her bow, taking a place on a cushion across from the Daimyo. She followed with, “It would be my honor to regale my tales. I come from the mainland, and have seen a many great deal. Any questions you may have, I am prepared to answer.”

The Daimyo thought for a brief moment, stroking his mask, “Well, I guess my first question would be, what are the people like? Are they friendly?”

Tiamat paused for a moment, thinking, before answering, “The peoples of the mainland are a great many deal numerous and unique. There exists, side-by-side, cultures both welcoming and ruinous. Despoilers and enlightened lands of progress in equal numbers. There was only one land in particular I stayed in long enough to grant a good many details of -- the electric barons of the sky and the throat of the world.”

“I see, and who are these, electric barons?” The Daimyo leaned forward, obviously interested in what the traveler had to say.

Tiamat continued, looking slightly downwards in respect to the Daimyo, “The electric barons are alien, unlike any other creature of the mainland. Their domain is that of the clouds, and they care little for the surface we walk upon.”

She paused, before launching into further explanation, “They are principally gravity and lightning. A hundred thousand bolts of lightning make up their thought, held in place and controlled by a well of gravity that overrides the force that holds us to the ground. To near one is to know what it is like to float.”

Then, she spoke of their politics, “Their culture is one of both progress and battle, though they do not fight with sword and shield. From a wondrous castle made of stone and brick, that floats as though a feather, their lord-regent rules. It is said he was enthroned by that which he worships, the personification of the constant itself. He knows the gods and was witness to their walk upon the land in the time before.”

Another pause, to let things sink in, “From his castle, he rules over a great deal many baronies, which exist above our terrestrial civilization. Their royalty is that of intrigue, and though warfare between one another is strictly prohibited, a cowl and a knife in the back sees their advancement. It is said that the lord-regent rules only by his worthiness, that it is only him who can balance the demands of his court.”

The Daimyo was silent for quite some time, letting the details sink in “I see, quite the interesting people, but, I feel as if it is unfair to milk you of these tales constantly, so, if you so desire, you may ask questions about my people as well, for each question I ask of course.”

She nodded, responding first with, “I greatly appreciate the opportunity,” before following with her question, “on the mainland, the swamp is avoided, and the peoples of the world build only upon the dry ground, where it is firm. I am most curious how your peoples grew to accept the swamp and learnt how to build upon it.”

He chuckled “Well, unlike you mainlanders, we had very little choice, most of our isles are covered in swampish forests or are rocky highlands, we merely tried various methods again and again, my grandfather, founder of our clan, was the one who adapted our current method of construction, stilts and slight drainage of the swamps to better establish a foundation, other clans beyond ours use similar methods, though our clan is the best at it.” He pondered a few moments, thinking of his own question “So you say the people of the mainlands are diverse, I can only assume the climate is as well? I am curious as to what the weather is like there.”

Tiamat nodded, “Indeed it is. It is most generalized as hot southwards and cold northwards, but there exist notable exceptions. For example, the sunplains, which are beat with an intense heat, though exist in the icy north amongst frozen highlands and vast glaciers. It is said the goddess of the sun walked there, and bathed the land in her countenance, warming it to this day.”

She continued, “In the center of the mainland lays the tallest mountains in the world, anchors by which Galbar spins. To its south, a land of plenty, fecund soil and rolling hills, named the Garden. To the world anchor’s west, a vast desert and a sister chain of mountains. To its east, a primeval forest, all its trees merely flowering roots of a vast cyclopean mother-tree that reaches far into the atmosphere in the deep south of the mainland, amongst a vast jungle.”

The Daimyo’s eyes could be seen lightening up behind his mask, he took in the descriptions of each area in with great interest “It sounds, quite, interesting, this land sounds like quite the beauty, I do so hope my people will find their way to it someday.” He thought for a long while, before finally remembering he had a guest. “Now of course, your question.”

Tiamat looked up to the Daimyo, asking, “Your son has told me your clan is the most powerful on the isles. Of course, that means you are not the sole clan. What other clans lay claim to these isles?”

He laughed once more “While I would not call ourselves the most powerful, we are certainly one of the greater clans, we of course lay claim to the western portions of the largest island, Azakua, there are two other great clans, to the north lay the Hashimoto, they are a feisty bunch of warriors but honorable in their conduct, they are as great with weapons and blades as we are with construction and design, to the far east lay the Ohta, traders by nature, they are crafty and can sell you a broken table for the price of an artisan painting, there are several minor clans of course, some vassals of our clan, others vassals of the two other greats, other independent, there are countless."

"Now, my last question, what sort of material and power do the people of the mainland hold?"

Tiamat answered, watching the Daimyo through her mask, “As with their culture, their power varies. Small city-states who lay claim to only their immediate surroundings coexist with great imperial ventures, who marshal armies that stretch from horizon to horizon. The electric barons, by the provenance of their form, are virtually untouchable by terrestrial hands. Great stone constructions dot the landscape, from vast castles with jade roofs to cities that you could not cross within a day’s time. Others still live humbly, in small wooden huts or within dugouts of dirt and sod.”

"It seems these Barons are one of the more mightier forces there, you may have one last question, as I have nothing more to ask of the mainland."

Tiamat responded, “The barons are mighty, indeed, but share no interests with us. They need not what we have and do not deign to look upon the ground,” she paused, before continuing with her question, “I suppose my largest question that yet remains is, what do you plan to do with the tales I have spun?”

He thought for a while, pondering how to respond "Well my curiosity for the mainland is rather great, my people have never gone past the confines of our isles, I have long wished to make a foray into the mainland, and these tales can be useful as to knowing what exists."

Tiamat dipped her head in respect, “Exploration is a respectable goal. I am honored to have assisted you.”

He dipped his head in return "As am I to have assisted in helping you learn more, now, would you like to join us for dinner?"

She said back, “From my time in the baronies, I am no longer capable of eating, nor do I require it to survive. However, I would still be honored to join you regardless.”


© 2007-2024
BBCode Cheatsheet