Damsel
Medieval fics. Somehow we're drawn to them like mosquitoes
to a Bug Zapper. Have fun reading this, because it's got everything a good
medieval fic should have: romance, magic, humor, Sorato, me.
You?
Yep, I'm making a cameo appearance. Find me and win
absolutely nothing!
Not every prince wears shining armor and rides a
snow-white steed. Not every hero carries a sword that can pierce the hide of
the fiercest dragon. Not every princess is under a spell that can be broken
with love's first kiss. Not every damsel you meet is in distress, and sometimes
it's you who needs the rescuing more.
Embers glowed a
shimmering red in the great maw of the smithy's furnace, tongs heating in that
fiery beast to white-hot. Buckets of stagnant water were strewn about the
workshop, which forever smelt of smoke and brimstone. As far back as he could
remember, the blacksmith's forge had always provoked visions of a dragon's
lair. Yamato laughed inwardly, remembering his foolish days as a youth as he
plunged a smoking horseshoe into a bucket of water, smoke spewing towards the
ceiling with an angered hiss. His father was the local blacksmith, one of a
kind, and he had the fortune, or sometimes misfortune, of being his apprentice.
"Hurry up, Yamato. Desdemona isn't going to shoe
herself," his father chided, picking up his sledge again. The slender boy
nodded, pushing chin-length blonde hair out of sapphire eyes with sooty
fingers. He picked the shoe out of the water bucket and grabbed a small hammer
and a few tacks. The horse, a mare whom many in the village claimed was
possessed by the devil, did not enjoy having her leg hoisted into the air and
taken between the knees by a creature much smaller than herself. She whickered
in distain and gave the boy a sharp kick to the gut, sending him clear across
the room.
"That horse," he wheezed,
"puts the 'demon' in Desdemona."
Master Masaharu chuckled,
leaning his hammer against the anvil. "Are you all right, boy?"
"I'll survive. But I
think I'll hobble across the street and see if Jyou can make the ringing in my
ears stop."
Venturing across a crowded village street was a challenge
of itself, and when one has just been kicked by a hell-horse, things can get
quite unbearable. Townsfolk ambling through the market clogged the road, already
crowded by the merchants and their carts and stalls. Fortunately for young
Yamato the apothecary and village healer, one of his best friends, left his
door wide open for days when the young smith had to bolt across the street.
Jyou was waiting for him just inside the door, a vial of some horrid-looking
potion clasped in his hands.
"Another mishap, Yamato?"
The teenager grinned and
collapsed into the cushioned chair positioned by the hearth, his arms folded
across his stomach. "Aye, why else would I visit you?"
"What did you do to
yourself today?" the older boy sighed, going to his shelves of medicines. "Burn
your hand with another poker?"
"Nah, kicked by
Desdemona, the devil's steed. I've a bruise the size of a dinner plate to prove
it, too."
Jyou shook his head in
disgust, pulling out a paper packet from among a box of them.
"That horse is nothing
but trouble. Let me just see if this is the right stuff. How many fingers am I
holding up?"
Yamato squinted. "Six?"
"Two. This is the stuff,
all right. I'll brew it up right away. Glory, she must have sent you clear into
the next kingdom!"
"Just about," Yamato
mumbled ruefully.
As the young apothecary turned to pour the packet of
herbs into a mug, Yamato untied his apron strings and made himself a bit more comfortable
in the chair, wincing with every movement.
"Ah, did you hear the
news from the capital?"
"What news, Jyou?"
The healer handed off a
steaming mug, which Yamato drained in a single gulp, grimacing at the bitter
aftertaste.
"The princess is returning
from her studies abroad in a fortnight. Her parents are having a royal
cotillion for her, all the prominent figures of state will be there."
The blonde smith sighed,
running a finger along the rim of the mug. "Don't you wish we could go? Meet a
princess, or at least her fair courtiers? Instead we're here, a lowly
blacksmith's apprentice and the village apothecary. At least you had
full training at University."
Jyou laughed at his younger friend, tossing him another
package of herbs.
"Take another mug of this
before you bed tonight. As for your cotillion, I believe there's a way I can
get you there. Meet me here on the morrow, not that I need to tell you that
anyways considering how often you get yourself injured."
"Aye, I'll see you on the
morrow then, Jyou. Thank you for all your aid."
"Of course, Yamato.
You're more of a brother than my own flesh-and-blood brothers."
~*~
In the capital city of the kingdom, in the royal palace,
two of the princess's best friends and courtiers took their afternoon walk in
the sun garden, parasols poised over their bare shoulders.
"I can't believe the
princess will be coming home so soon! It seems like she's been away forever!"
The other girl nodded.
"Aye, she'll come back and the squires will be all over her. She's of their
age, you know."
Mimi, daughter of the
Duke of Nerima, smiled as she replied, "I heard the squires are having a
tourney in University, winner gets to dance with her at the cotillion."
Sora, daughter of the
Baron of Nagasaki, nodded. "The winner will be so banged up after that they'll
have to dance in the healers' wing at University."
Mimi giggled and motioned
to a nearby page. "Be a lamb and bring us two mugs of chilled cider, if you
please."
The page, a slender boy
of twelve with hair the color of corn silk and icy blue eyes, nodded and
scampered off towards the kitchen.
"Now, that one looked familiar. Which page is he?" Sora
asked.
"Oh, he's Takeru, from
the house of Takaishi. Sweet kid, he is."
"Is he the one who
launched Daisuke from the Motomiya line into the duck pond during a joust
practice this morning?"
"Aye, that is the one.
The Motomiya boy's sister Jun claims her brother was making an advance on him."
"Oh?!"
Mimi giggled again,
sitting on a small granite bench nearby. Her best friend sat beside her,
staring at the perfectly blue sky overhead.
"Page Takeru comes from an odd sort of family, I'm told.
His mother is the heiress to a large county to the south, and his father's a
blacksmith in the village outside the capital."
"Does the Countess
actually live with the blacksmith?" Sora gasped.
"Nay, she and he had a
secret divorce when the lad was young. She lives on her estate."
"But then if the boy is
here at University going through knights' training, then when the father dies,
who will inherit the smithy?"
Mimi grinned brazenly.
"An older brother. One that apparently teaches the stars to shine in the
heavens."
"That beautiful?"
"Aye, and sings like a
lark too."
The boy returned with the
drinks promptly, issuing a small bow to the courtiers.
"Page Takeru?" Mimi
questioned as he made his leave.
"Milady?"
"Nice work on dumping
that boy into the duck pond. His sister said that hot head of his needed a
cooling."
The boy blushed and
nodded, this time leaving indefinitely.
Sora took a sip of the spiced beverage, glancing at the
clock tower on the north end of the castle.
"It'll be quite a
cotillion when the princess returns. Do you think any of the squires will dance
with us?"
"It's certain they'll
try. One of the girls, Hikari of the house of Yagami says her brother Squire
Taichi has been eyeing you for months now."
Sora rolled her eyes.
"I'd be better off with the blacksmith's boy."
"What do you think a boy
like him would be doing this moment?"
"Probably standing before
a hot fire, face glowing with perspiration as he hammers red-hot iron with a
two-ton sledge, biceps rippling."
"Oh! Oh, scandalous!
You'll be carted off to mass for thoughts like that, Sora!" Mimi giggled,
nearly falling off the bench.
~*~
Yamato lit the furnace fires and broke his fast quickly,
eager to get to the apothecary's and hear Jyou's plan. When his father finally
woke, there was nothing left of his son except for a few discarded dishes
leftover from his meal. Jyou was finishing his own breakfast when a sharp rap
sounded on his sturdy front door.
"It's open!" he called,
gulping the last quarter of a glass of cider.
"Good morrow to you,
Jyou."
"Same to you, Yamato. I'm
sure you've been up long before that cock started his crowing, eager to hear of
my conniving plot."
Yamato shook his head
with amusement. "You know me all too well, Jyou. So, is this a plan
proportionate to the great Brothers Grimm?"
Jyou laughed, getting up
from his table and heading over to a great sea chest by the wall.
"Not nearly as magical.
You know my two older brothers, Shim and Shuu?"
"How can I forget them?
Two of the king's youngest and greatest of knights!"
"That's them, not to
mention two of the cruelest older brothers to walk the streets of this town;
they took great delight in playing pranks on me as a youngster. I believe their
best venture was taking the glass from the inside of my specs so I walked
around University for a day blind as a bat."
Jyou
tapped the side of his glasses, winking at his younger friend. "Anyway, they
gave me all their hand-me-down livery, in hopes that I'd become a knight one
day too. Imagine their chagrin when I was seen in healer's livery. I was
thinking that you could fit into their squire livery and impersonate a
University student. You'll blend in with the other squires, and leave after the
cotillion is through. No one will ever catch you!"
"Jyou, it's a perfect
plan!" Yamato cried. "But I fear I will get caught. My younger brother
Takeru is a page in University, and if he sees me…"
"He won't! Cotillions are
so crowded with courtiers and nobility that one could never see over all those
powdered wigs and frilly dresses. You'll be perfectly fine. And I believe I'll
slip into one of my own sets of healer's attire and join you. One must seize
the day, isn't that so?" The older young man held up a tunic of cobalt blues,
silvers, and blacks.
"I believe this one is in
the best condition. Fortunately for us the royal family has had the same sets
of uniform for seven generations."
"Aye, it is. This shall
be our greatest adventure, Jyou. We'll go down in history as the commoners who
won the hearts of the fairest of ladies, and maybe even the Crown Princess
herself!"
~*~
The next few days flew by as though borne on a summer
breeze. The servants in the palace were bustling to prepare everything for the
cotillion, which was drawing closer with every slow tick of the clock in the
great clock tower. The kitchen staff slaved over hot stoves preparing exotic
dishes that would be presented with great gusto before the royal family. Flowers
were carted in from halfway around the globe and strewn about the great
ballroom. And among all the hustle and bustle, there was still the dresses that
had to be sewn and embroidered and altered at least ten times.
"I swear, those girls
must have punctured me with their pins," Mimi groaned, examining her
porcelain-white skin for any contusion.
"And if I have to stand
on another stool, I swear by bell, book, and candle I'll take a lance to
someone!" Sora exclaimed.
~*~
Before anyone knew it, the morning of the cotillion, and
the day of the princess's return, had arrived. Yamato was sick with
anticipation; barely able to concentrate on the porridge he was stirring. Hours
flew by, and he hardly noticed when he dropped a pot of molten iron onto the workroom
floor. The blaring fanfare of a chorus of trumpets stopped all work in the
village dead cold as the entire township lined the main street to wait for the
princess's carriage to pass. And pass it did, with a parade of magnanimous
proportions. Yamato stood near Jyou, watching in awe as the procession rode by,
never once seeing a glimpse of the princess.
"She's my age, you know,"
Yamato said smugly.
"Like she would fall for
a common 'prentice. Hey, look, there are my brothers!"
Shim and Shuu, full-fledged
knights under the king's service home from patrol on the borders, waved to
their youngest brother from atop their mounts, a pair of bays with steely
glares.
"Perfect matches for old
Desdemona, eh?"
Yamato laughed and
nodded. "Her little souvenir hasn't faded quite yet either."
"Well, come on then. We
have a cotillion to dress for."
"Indeed we do. Let me see
if I can make up some harebrained excuse to my father and I'll be over in a
few."
"Right."
~*~
Sora and Mimi were standing in the same bedchamber; both
with servants bustling to slide thirty lace petticoats apiece up the slender
waists of the Duchess-heir and Baroness-heir. Each girl shivered, gooseflesh
prickling their bare arms as they waited for the next piece of clothing to be
fastened into place.
"Please don't pull out a
corset!" Mimi whispered under her breath.
Just as the servants were
scrambling to fix a loose hem at the sleeve of one of the bodices, the doors
slammed open in the boudoir. A travel-weary girl stormed into the room, her
hair frizzy from a long, humid ride. The staff fell upon the ground in
prostration, and the girls could do no more than bow their heads in reverence
as they were so weighted down by their underclothes.
"Your Highness," they
murmured as one.
"What's this I hear that
the squires are challenging each other to a tourney, with me as the
prize?" she demanded with mock fury.
"Aye, Milady, last I
heard Taichi Yagami had won the joust," Sora stated.
"By the Heavens, I'd
sooner dance with a devil than with him! Last I danced with Taichi of Yagami my
poor feet were bruised for many a month!" the princess groaned.
"Highness, we must
prepare you for the cotillion. Come along," one of the ladies-in-waiting
chided.
"I'll see you two later!"
"Aye, Milady!"
Mimi lifted her arms as her team of ladies slipped a
dress of fuchsia satin over her head, the voluminous skirt billowing around her
ankles.
"So…how many squires do
you think will attempt to dance with us tonight?"
"None whatsoever if I can
help it. The Princess is right, not one of them can dance to save their lives.
Besides, the lot of them are about as charming as a toadstool."
"Well, that Taichi fellow
seems to be quite the lady-killer. Making advances on you as well as trying to
court the princess. I'd watch that one if I were you."
Sora rolled her eyes as
her servants finished adjusting her sleeve and trimmed a loose end on the gold
embroidery at the cuff.
Please let me find my
knight in shining armor. Please hear my wishes.
~*~
Yamato and Jyou had no trouble blending into the crowds
of healers and squires milling about in the Great Hall. In fact, no one seemed
to notice them all that much. It was probably because there were at least fifty
young men dressed in the cobalt, silver, and black tunics of squires, along
with silver hose and black shoes.
A/N: Yes, hose are tights. But think more like leggings,
okay?
The healers wore tunics
of similar cut, silver with muted blue at the cuffs, hems, and collar, with
hose of a matching color and black shoes as well. Yamato stood idly, fiddling
with a few locks of his slightly damp golden hair and waiting for the squires
to process in.
"Hey!"
The blonde apprentice
turned as a young man his age with a wild shock of chestnut hair dressed in
squire's livery approached him. The boy grinned foolishly, resting a hand on
the back of his neck.
"I haven't seen you here
before. What, were you out campaigning with the knights or something?"
"Aye, I was. I'm
Yamato…line of Ishida."
"Taichi, house of Yagami.
My sister Hikari knows the princess."
"The Crown Princess?"
"Nah, her younger sister.
The wiry one who always has the scowl on her face."
Yamato nodded, chuckling.
"Ah, her. You're right, she does seem to scowl a lot."
Taichi started a barrage
of questions on Yamato, who did his best to lie through his teeth about all of
them. Finally another squire with short red hair joined them and interrupted
the interrogation.
"Hey Taichi, what's
going…oh, is this one of the returning squires?"
"Mm-hmm. Yamato, this is
my partner-in-crime Koushiro of Izumi. Kou, I'd like you to meet Yamato of
Ishida."
"Pleasure to make your
acquaintance."
"Same here."
The three boys chatted for a while, Yamato muddling
through the conversations as best as he could. Finally, after an eternity of
uncomfortable discussion, a fanfare resounded through the halls and the squires
and healers were led into the ballroom, where the orchestra had already started
a light spirited waltz. The lords and ladies of their respective lands were
already dancing in a whirl of color, their daughters standing by the walls
looking foolish. Jyou had disappeared into the crowd a long time ago, and
Yamato thought he had seen his neighbor speaking with a young Duchess dressed
in pink satin.
~*~
Sora stood still, holding her breath. The squires had
just entered the room, as well as the healers. A healer by the name of Jyou
Kido had already whisked Mimi off to join the dancers, leaving her in timid
isolation. Miyako, Countess-heir from Inoue's line, nodded in greeting, as did
her best friend Hikari. A flash of gold caught her amber eyes among a sea of
color. A blonde young man about her age was milling about the crowds, looking
lost and a little unnerved. She stayed rooted to her spot by the pillar,
fiddling with the gold locket around her neck.
I hate this dress so
intensely, she thought, glancing
downwards towards where her shoes were hidden by her gown. A bodice and full
skirt of sea green satin, embroidered at the square collar and hem with gold
ivy, and billowing silk sleeves of the same color, also embroidered with ivy.
It was beautiful, but so very hard to move in. Sora would have much preferred a
tunic and breeches like the squires.
She caught Taichi
staring at her a few times, but did her best to ignore him. It wasn't that she
despised him; it was more that she wasn't entirely interested in him. The waltz
had ended, and the musicians were beginning to play a lively tune. The blonde
squire glanced in her direction, her heartbeat quickening. He walked over
carefully, sapphire eyes sparkling in the candlelight.
"Milady, I would be
honored if I may have this dance," he murmured in the most gentle tone she had
ever heard. Dumbstruck, Sora nodded, and gave him her hand.
"I must admit, I dance as
well as an ogre," he mentioned, bowing over her hand.
"Then why are you dancing
with me?" she asked.
"Because you were
standing all alone there, looking quite left out."
To Sora's surprise, the squire never once stepped on her
foot, and had a rather good sense of rhythm. If he stumbled, it was over his
own feet, and no one around him caught the mistakes except she, and she made
almost as many.
"I should be better at
this, I've had enough practice," she muttered.
"At least you had
practice. Dancing is not one of the things I was taught."
Sora's eyes widened.
"Really? I thought all squires were given dancing lessons for cotillions and
balls and such!"
Yamato blushed. "Well, I
believe I was away for those lessons, out on patrol with the knights."
"I don't think we
introduced ourselves. I'm Sora, daughter of Baron and Baroness Takenouchi of
Nagasaki."
"I'm Yamato, from the
Ishida line."
They danced to the next three songs, a slower waltz,
another gavotte, and something somewhere in between. Suddenly the room exploded
with fanfare as a gaily-dressed herald appeared.
"My lords and my ladies,
Their Royal Majesties present their daughters, Princesses of Tokyo Kingdom.
Home from her studies, Crown Princess Aurelia and her sisters the Princesses
Nicole and Christine."
Three dark-haired girls
of varying ages processed in, the court bowing and curtsying before them. The
eldest, Crown Princess Aurelia, winked saucily at Yamato and made him blush a
deeper scarlet.
A/N: All right, all right, so I made myself princess. I
can do that, right?
M/N: Why do I not like the prospects of this?
~*~
Yamato had caught the princess winking at him, and he was
certain she was staring at him most of the evening from her throne beside her
parents, the King and Queen of Tokyo Kingdom. But as beautiful as the princess
was, he found himself falling for the young baroness he danced with. She smiled
at him warmly, brushing a lock of fiery red hair out of her eyes.
"Will I see you around
court more often?" she asked, pulling him aside, out of the way of the dancers.
"I'm afraid not, Milady.
I'm not…" Yamato was cut off as someone called out his name.
"There you are! I've been
trying to find you!" Jyou cried, clapping him on the shoulder. Mimi had her arm
laced in his elbow. "Have you met Duchess-heir Mimi of Nerima?"
"I can't say that I have.
It's a pleasure to meet you, Milady. Jyou, this is my dancing partner
Baroness-heir Sora of Nagasaki."
"What I wanted to tell
you is that you better make your presence known before the Majesties because
Princess Aurelia's been asking about you to everyone who passes her."
Sora looked dismayed. Her
best friend was smitten with the same squire she was falling for. How
can you do this to me, Lia? How?
"You should go to her. I
wouldn't want to be responsible for getting you sent to the executioner's
block," Sora mumbled, casting her gaze towards the floor. Yamato tilted her
head upwards with his fingers, her eyes meeting his sapphire glare.
"Don't look so sad,
Milady, it's only a dance or two. And to be honest, I'd much rather stay and
get to know you better." He kissed her hand with the air of a gentleman and
made his way towards the princess.
~*~
By the end of the evening, Yamato had gotten himself
thoroughly confused. Princess Aurelia had danced with him the rest of the time,
her amber-brown eyes transfixed on him. It seemed that she too had been placed
under his spell. Yamato admitted to himself that he thought the princess was
indeed pretty, and actually quite charming under that royal façade, but he felt
as though he had already given his heart up to the forlorn-looking redhead in
the corner. He and Jyou managed to slip away with the rest of the guests
undetected, and headed for home in the dark of night.
"Ah Mimi, thou dost make my heart sing!" Jyou cried as he
and his younger accomplice sat astride the horses they had borrowed. Yamato
shook his head in amusement.
"Your Mimi pales in
comparison to the fair lady I danced with," he said wryly.
"Yes, Princess Aurelia is
as fair as ladies come, but I believe she is too far above your station."
"I was talking about the
baroness."
Jyou let out a little
"oh" of surprise. "The baroness? That redheaded girl you were with earlier?"
"Sora," Yamato corrected.
"Aye, I wish I had gotten a chance to talk with her more. The princess was
cordial enough, but she seemed so…"
"Uptight? Snooty?" Jyou
suggested.
"Proper."
The cobalt-haired young
man nodded, shifting his weight in the saddle. "You'll have to tell your lady
you aren't who you pretended to be. She has the right to know."
"I know, I know. I'm just
afraid I'll lose her. I mean, what hope does a blacksmith have with a
baroness?"
"The same an apothecary
has with a duchess."
~*~
Sora and Mimi were sitting in Sora's chambers, free from
the restraints of the thirty petticoats and various other garments. Sora
snuggled deep into the warm robe she had thrown over her nightclothes and
glanced out the window. Mimi, dressed similarly, was leaning on the sill.
"It was such a lovely
party, wasn't it?" Mimi sighed, watching the road as courtiers filed out in
their carriages.
"Mm-hmm."
"The cake was a little
overdone."
"A trifle."
"You're absolutely
smitten with that squire, aren't you?" the young duchess asked, her brown eyes
narrowed in amusement.
Sora blushed, getting up
from the velvet-cushioned divan and closed a set of heavy brocade curtains.
"He was very
handsome, and quite the gentlemen, wasn't he?" she murmured.
"If only more squires
were like that," Mimi agreed. "I, however, prefer Jyou. He told me that he had
already finished University training and was working as a village apothecary
and healer. He said he only came because the stars told him an enchanting
duchess would steal his heart."
"How romantic. If Lia
hadn't taken Yamato so early on in the evening, I might have gotten a chance to
talk with him more. If she weren't the princess I'd give her such a clouting
for that! She knew I liked him, she could see the look plain on my
face!"
Mimi shook her head in
distaste. "Well, you'll just have to make it clearer to her, and him too, the
next time around."
"Aye, if there is a next
time."
~*~
A few days had passed, not more than a week, and the
cotillion was still fresh on everyone's minds. Master Masaharu had come down
with the summer chills, curable only with rest in bed and hot tea. Thus, he
left Yamato in charge of the forge while he was incapacitated.
"You've had plenty of
training, you'll be fine," the man whispered, his tired-looking dark eyes
staring up into his son's deep sapphire ones. Yamato took the job because he
had to, not because he wanted to. The village girls all stopped by just to gawk
at him as he stood in front of the fire, sweat beading on his forehead, sledge
in hand. But not one of the little shepherdesses, milkmaids, or milliners could
deter the teenager's thoughts from Sora. She became almost an obsession to him,
and he would sit up at night longing for her.
One afternoon Yamato stopped by Jyou's little house, a
roll of parchment in his soot-stained hands. The young apothecary was nowhere
in sight, yet his coat hung readily by the door and his hearth snapped with a
cheery little fire.
"Jyou? Jyou, where are
you?"
The cobalt-haired young
man emerged, his eyes reddened behind his glasses.
"Good day to you, Jyou. I
was wondering if you knew when the next post rider would be here, I have a
letter I'm sending for Sora, I'm going to tell her the truth and…Jyou, what's
wrong?"
"You haven't heard the
news yet?" he asked in a hoarse whisper.
Yamato shook his head,
the color already draining from his fair face. "What news?"
"The castle was broken
into by a sorcerer just this morning. He's kidnapped your baroness Takenouchi.
I pray Mimi is safe."
Yamato's eyes widened in
panic, his breath coming in short gasps. "This…it can't be. No, no it's not
possible. I've got to find her, I've got to get answers!"
The boy ran from the apothecary's as though he wore the
winged sandals of Mercury, flying down the street to the stables.
"Iori! Iori, boy, get out
here!"
A short boy of eight
emerged, holding a bridle in his small hands.
"Master Yamato, good day.
Can I help you?"
"I need a horse, the
fastest one you have," the blonde boy said tersely, his eyes wild with panic.
"B-but all the horses are
gone, all of them lent out! The only one left is one you'll not want," the
dark-haired child stammered.
Yamato tossed his apron
on the ground and dug a silver coin out of his pocket. "I'll buy it off of you,
Iori. I'm in a dreadful hurry, boy!"
Iori nodded. "I'll tack
her up this instant."
The child was gone and
back in mere moments, leading a dark mare out. She glared at Yamato venomously.
"I just bought
Desdemona?!" he moaned. "Ah, well, in an emergency I suppose beggars can't be
choosers."
The young man turned to the horse and looked her into the
eyes. "Listen to me, you. I am your master now, and you will obey me.
Life and love is at stake, and I will not be stopped by some nag who is just as
stubborn as I. Understood?"
The horse whickered in
reply, and Yamato didn't care to think about what that meant. He vaulted into
the saddle and dug his heels into her flanks, sending the horse bolting down
the streets towards the capital.
~*~
The garrison of knights, in full armor, weapons gleaming
in the light of midday, was a cold and unwelcoming sight for Yamato as he
approached the castle. The drawbridge had been lowered, but security was so
tight a slip of parchment could not slide between guards. Desdemona was foaming
around her bit now, snorting in lack of the breath needed to fill her enormous
lungs.
"Rest here, Desdemona.
You cannot come inside anyways," the boy murmured, patting her side, soaked
with perspiration.
The sentinel standing
before the bridge was a portly man, well fed on mutton and potatoes. Visor
raised, pike in gloved and gauntleted hand, he scowled at Yamato as he tried to
cross.
"State thy business here,
commoner!"
Yamato bowed his head in
acknowledgment to the man. "I come only seeking answers, and offer my services
to the crown in hopes to save Milady Takenouchi."
"Oi, 'e looks t' be a
bloody 'ero, 'e does!" a younger soldier laughed in poor Cockney.
"A hero? In such common
cloth? Thou surely jests!" the stout man chortled.
Yamato glowered at the
men, fury smoldering in his eyes, the heart of a flame.
"Where are your manners, gentlemen?" A clear, female
voice rang out. A willowy figure shrouded by a light cloak stood behind the two
sentries, her hands on her curved hips.
"Oi, 'oo be that?" the
Cockney soldier asked.
"A lady 'tis she, and one
who knows not how to hold her tongue," the generously proportioned one replied.
"You should be ashamed of
yourselves, you're the King's Garrison and yet you are as crude as the pimps
and prostitutes hiding in rat holes in the city," the woman taunted. Yamato
cringed. This was a direct blow to the prides of the two men.
"Marry, 'tis thou who
needs a lesson in manners. Dost thou know not to speak in the presence of a
man?"
The girl drew back her
hood, revealing a dark-haired teenager, a slim gold coronet adorning her brow.
Her eyes narrowed as she issued a wry little comeback.
"Dost thou know to
bow in the presence of royalty?"
The two men and Yamato
gasped, falling to their knees right away.
"Princess Aurelia! We
didst not know 'twas thee!"
The crown princess smirked, blinking at the young smith
prostrate on the wooden drawbridge.
"Rise, Squire Yamato. I
wish to speak with you in private, if you may."
"Aye, Milady Princess."
The heat of a blush
washing over his cheeks, the young man followed her into a well-groomed garden,
dripping with flowers of all hues and in full bloom. The gentle gurgle of a
nearby fountain spilling into a pond where colorful goldfish darted among lily
roots and irises added to the solemnity. The princess's eyes were serious as
she faced Yamato, her expression grim.
"Tell me everything
that's happened, Aurelia. From start to finish."
~*~
The princess sat on a low stone bench, maroon satin
pooling on the verdant grass like a puddle of blood. Her amber-brown eyes were
bright with tears as she stared at the young man looming over her.
"Well, we were here in
the garden, alone, and ironically we were discussing you."
"Me?"
"Aye. Sora takes quite a
fancy to you; she's talked of nothing but you since the cotillion and she gave
me a right piece of her mind for stealing you away. To be honest, I have
absolutely no interest in you. I only needed a dance partner and I had
absolutely no intention on dancing with the Rajah of Katmandu or some
farfetched place like that. I told her if she wanted you so badly I'd help her
to get you if at all possible…oh, take no offense, Squire Yamato."
"None taken, Princess."
"Anyway, by the by, and
completely out of the blue, came this sorcerer. Like in the blink of an eye.
One moment he wasn't there and the next he was two inches from us! He only came
this high on me…" Aurelia gestured with a hand on her breastbone, where her
heart beat wildly in her chest. "And he had these green eyes, wild, almost
catlike. And his face was hidden with his cloak, and the rest of it was
shadowed with his hat."
A/N: All right, so Wizardmon is an evil sorcerer. I'm out
of options in the magic department and he's the best we've got around here.
"But how did he end up
with Sora?" Yamato inquired.
"See, he was demanding
for the princess, and before I could even open my mouth and say anything, Sora
told the bloke she was the princess! And I was some lady-in-waiting!
Imagine! And then they were both gone in a cloud of smoke that smelled of
dragons and darkness. That is all I know. You'll send for your lord knight and
go after her, won't you, Squire Yamato?"
Yamato took a deep breath, casting his eyes towards his
rough leather boots.
"Princess, I have a
confession to make. I lied to you, and I lied to her."
"Begging your pardon?"
"I'm not a squire, nor
have I ever had training in University. I'm a blacksmith…worse; the son of a
blacksmith, newly finished his apprenticeship. I've of no noble blood; I'm as
common as the dirt we stand on. I only said and did what I had to escape the
mediocrity of my life, in hopes that I should meet a damsel who could accept me
as I am, an ordinary bumpkin who won't aspire to much more than a blacksmith. I
was going to tell her, but as you can see fate was against me. I beg your
forgiveness, Princess, for my deception."
Aurelia smiled at him,
the light of the midday sun glinting highlights in her dark hair.
"You're either the
bravest or the craziest young man I have ever met. However, were it I in your
stead, I would've done the same. I have been waiting some time now for a person
such as yourself to appear, and now you have. Please kneel, Yamato."
Confused beyond all hope, the young man did as the
princess told. She lifted the skirt of her dress just enough to pull a dagger
out of its sheath, strapped securely to her thigh. The pommel and hilt
glistened in the light as she tapped the blade on her palm.
"Do you swear to serve me
and my court for the rest of your days, to fight for honor and justice, willing
to die for your cause? To be noble and true and uphold the rights of chivalry
and gallantry as sanctioned by King Arthur himself? And above all, will you vow
to aid anyone in need, no matter their race, gender, age, religion, or economic
class?" she questioned solemnly, resting the flat of the blade on his
shoulders.
"By the tombs of my
ancestors, I swear to it."
"Henceforth you shall be
stripped of your past identity and all past errors. You knelt before me as
Yamato Ishida, apprentice smith. Now may you rise Sir Yamato Ishida,
Champion of the Princess."
Yamato stood slowly, assessing his situation with the
thoughts of the greatest scholars. He, a common apprentice, who had just
admitted to lying to the Crown Princess, was just knighted by that very
woman. Bemused, he waited for her next command. Instead, Aurelia sheathed her
dagger and motioned to a passing page.
"Page?"
"Your Highness, how might
I be of service?"
"I must send you on
several important tasks. First, run down to the storeroom and empty out my
chamber down to the last link of mail. Then to the kitchen with ye and bring a
month's provisions. And see that my Champion's horse is properly seen to as
well, he has just rode in from the country and I'll be sending him out again
within the hour."
"Aye Majesty," the boy
said with a curt bow. Yamato held up a hand, stopping the page.
"Milord Sir Knight? Is
there something you require?" he queried.
"Pray, what is your name,
page?"
The boy grinned, his pale blue eyes lighting up. "Verily,
I'm Takeru Takaishi."
"And what of your
parents? Who are they?"
"My mother's Natsuke
Takaishi, to be sure, but I've not seen my father since I was a right lad of
four. I do know he's called Masaharu Ishida, and my brother's name is Yamato."
The knight blinked for a
moment, his pulse quickening. "Takeru? By Heaven, is that really you?"
"Yamato!" The blonde page
flung his arms around his elder brother, a tear escaping his eye and sliding
down onto his tunic.
"Look at you, Takeru!
What a fine young man you've become. Father would be proud."
"Ah, 'tis nothing
compared to you, Princess's Champion."
"But it's a right shame
that Her Majesty's greatest knight has to be of such common blood," Yamato
sighed. Takeru gave him an odd look.
"Common? Yamato, Mother's
the Countess of Shinjuku. If Father hadn't kept you for himself you'd be the
right heir. Brother, you've a county in your blood. Common, indeed! Now, promise
me you won't go getting yourself killed before we've had a proper chance to sit
down and talk. The instant you get back I want to hear everything, from the day
we said goodbye to the day you set foot back here in Odaiba. Understand?"
"Anything you want, Takeru.
Anything you want."
Takeru laughed and darted
off into the castle and its labyrinthine hallways, ready for a quest of his
own.
~*~
Aurelia waited for the boy to be out of earshot before
taking a deep breath.
"Yamato, I wish to give
you a few small gifts, but…"
"Princess, you have given
me so much already, how can I accept much more?"
The girl laughed, shaking
her head ever so slightly. "The livery and armory are gifts of the crown, they
have nothing to do with me. The gifts I present you with are from my own hands
and heart."
She dipped a hand into a
concealed pocket in her skirt, pulling up two pendants hanging on chains of
silver strands woven together. One a sapphire, the other a ruby, both the size
of a copper piece and cut to be smooth, almost flat, like the stones one finds
tumbled by a river or the sea. Both had runes etched into their surfaces,
symbols of power and strength. Aurelia clasped the sapphire talisman around her
knight's neck, the stone cool to the skin on his breastbone.
"I give each of my
courtiers a set of these talismans, one for herself and the other for her one
true love. As you can guess, I never had the chance to give Sora hers. As my
champion, I give you the responsibility of presenting this charm to her…and
make certain you give it as a declaration of your love. These are fairy-craft,
and will protect you from almost anything if given as a sign of undying faith.
The talisman you bear is marked with the rune of Friendship, hers marked with
Love. One cannot exist without the other…ironic, is it not?"
Yamato pocketed the other amulet, silently vowing to do
whatever he must to prove his love for Sora. The princess looked uneasy after
giving the young man the charms, as though unsure of how to word the next thing
she would say.
"My other gift is
rather…eccentric. You see, the blood of my family is steeped in magic older
than time. Verily, I am the last Far-Seer of the Agianna line."
Yamato's eyes widened as
he stared at the dark-haired girl staring smugly back at him.
"You can predict the
future?"
"See the future,
not predict. Predicting the future is for charlatans from street fairs.
I can see the future, yes, but only in hazy amounts. Fate has a way of making
sure my subjects know little of what I speak. I shall do as I can, but
understand the divine powers of Heaven do not care for mere mortals tampering
with destiny."
"I understand well,
Princess, and will take whatever you offer."
She closed her eyes and
took a deep, cleansing breath, the scent of honeysuckle and jasmine leaving a
saccharine taste in the back of her mouth.
"Thy journey takes
thee to the west,
Where endless night
doth reign.
Thou must be true to
thine own heart
For lady fair to live
again.
A form by day, a form
by night,
Is true for she and
thou.
Friendship and Love
must unite
In passion's one true
vow."
The glazed look left her
eyes as she blinked several times. "That is all I see."
Yamato bowed, rising only
as Takeru reemerged with several other pages, all carrying the treasures of the
princess's storeroom. A stable boy also accompanied them, Desdemona burdened
with provisions and a new set of tack sanctioned by the crown.
"I thank you from the
depths of my soul, Princess Aurelia. I shall take your words to my heart, and I
dare not return until my quest be fulfilled and the kingdom safe from the
oppresses of a sorcerer most foul."
In a matter of moments, the boy had stripped out of the
plain, homespun tunic and breeches and was hastily replacing them with the
clean livery the pages presented him. He was grateful to see that the princess
was wise in choosing armor, for none of it would hamper his travels. A light
breastplate of the strongest steel forged to be worn under his tunic, colored
in the sapphires and emeralds of the princess's signet. Riding breeches of the
softest buckskin, a warm caramel hue. Sturdy gloves of dragon hide that would
not buckle, and boots of the same. He fastened belt and sheath around his
slender waist, testing the sword. It sang true as he lacerated the air, finally
sheathing it with a bit of reluctance. Slipping a dagger into the top of his
boot, Yamato bowed once more to the princess, took up the cloak Takeru held out
for him, and slid his foot into Desdemona's waiting stirrup.
"Fair thee well, Sir
Knight!" the pages chorused.
"Pray that Heaven keeps
your soul safe, my Champion," Princess Aurelia whispered.
For you are going to
face an enemy no mortal has ever dared challenge, she thought ruefully as he galloped off towards the
horizon.
~*~
This is
all you get for now! But don't think I'm going to neglect it like the other
chaptered stories I try and write. I wrote this one all the way out and put it
into chapters afterwards.
Like Charles Dickens!
Right. So…how'd you like it? Huh? I need to know these
things!