Crystal Points
Emania, Land of
Infinite Gods
What shall we look for, as
signs of distress?
Mass suicides?
Revolution? Terrorism?
No, of course not. Those
come much later, when the water is scalding hot....
-Daniel Quinn, The Story
of B
Quick
note: Italics are psychic speaking.
Episode
3- A Crystal Point Found? The Fire In The Volcano.
The
night grew chilly, and Makoto was glad to have the crackling fire so close by.
She warmed her hands by it, small though it was, and felt the heat permeate her
skin, almost as though it pushed though her bones. Good smells rose around the
Soldier of Thunder, since she was practicing her renowned culinary skills, this
time on a duck and a fish, both caught that morning in the river far below
them. She rubbed her cheek, afraid that the cinders from the fire would leave
black smears. It didn't really bother her so much, to be dirty in such a
strange situation as this. But thinking about eating dirty food just disgusted
her.
It
was very quiet, in the little clearing they had found, Rory and Minako getting
bored with watching Makoto and Balan gut and clean fish and fowl. They had left
some time earlier, just before sunset, and before the fog set in. It
wasn't too bad, at this altitude, but below, it was as thick as a
blanket, rolling over the valley below in a pure white haze, hiding the river
completely. "Has it lightened at all, Balan-san?"
He
was standing on top of one of the boulders surrounding their campsite, arms
folded and face frowning at the mists. Above, the sky was clear, and Makoto
could see the stars scattered in unfamiliar patterns behind his head.
"No. If it's this bad in the morning, we may not be able to
descend...won't be able to see."
"But
it's not that far. We could see the castle from here during the
day."
He
shrugged and turned away from the valley so far below him. The coiling tendrils
of fog writhing around as he moved. It was lighter where they camped, but the
mist was enough to cast ghostly shadows about. "We'll get there
tomorrow, if the weather clears up. I don't like it. It stinks of
magic."
"The
fog? Why?"
"Came
up too fast. There's no rain on the wind. And the sky is clear.
See?" His eyes turned skyward, and Makoto followed his gaze, seeing the
heavy moons hang in the sky. Three were visible, two waning, one waxing, each
pale, a different color. "Protect us," he said to the moons,
leaping down from the boulder he stood on.
To
those words, Makoto blinked in surprise. "The moons? Protect you?"
"Sure,"
he said as he walked over, taking an offered plate from Makoto. It was filled
with the fish she had baked in the coals of the fire. "You don't
know the stories, do you?"
He
said it so quietly, Makoto was afraid that he knew something...then again,
maybe he did. It didn't seem like she had much of a choice. "No.
But the moon always protects what's below it, doesn't it? Will you...tell
me the story?" She tucked her knees up under her, and rested her cheek
against them, smiling as she looked at Balan. The firelight reflected in his
eyes.
He
thought about it for a moment, not taking his eyes from her face. "They
say that dragons live in the moons. And look down on us as they travel though
the sky. Doesn't your world have similar fairy tales?"
She
felt her heart stop for a moment. But there was no reason to keep it a secret,
not really. And she had already said as much, by telling him she didn't
know the stories of his world. "Yes, actually. Of a rabbit pounding mochi
on the moon."
"Mochi?"
"Rice.
Making rice cakes."
He
lifted his eyebrows, then smiled, looking up. "Can't say that I see
any bunnies up there. But look. Can you see the dragon's tail?"
Makoto
looked at the greenish moon, waning in its path. If she tilted her head, she
could, just slightly, see how the dragon had its back to them, the tail curving
down and into the darkness of the new moon, its head looking over its shoulder,
wings spread and wide. "Hai, I can see it. What do you call your
moons?"
"That
one, the green one, is Air. The red one is Fire, and the yellow that you can
just see is Earth. You can't see Water tonight. It's still
dark."
Laughing
as she looked at him, she said, "Those are some pretty original names,
for moons. Air, Fire, Earth and Water."
"Oh
yeah?" Balan shrugged, looking a little smug. "What are the names
of the moons on your world?"
"Uh...."
"What?"
"Well...we
just have one...and...um, we just call it 'the moon.' So I guess I
shouldn't talk."
"Don't
worry about it," Balan told her, stuffing some of Makoto's fish
paste into his mouth. His eyes flew wide. "This is fantastic."
"Arigatou,"
she smiled. "I like to cook."
"I
wouldn't have thought that princesses cooked."
She
laughed a little, shaking her head, the ponytail bobbing. "That is much
more complicated that you must think, Balan."
"I
know it is. I'd like to know how you got here, Lady Lightning."
"I
don't know magic. Not really. The High Priestess called us. I'd
still like to know how."
Balan
thought about this, chewing Makoto's cooking carefully. She was still
looking up at the green moon, arms wrapped around her knees. It was childlike,
and with the moonlight and firelight, she was beautiful, even if still looking
somewhat trail-worn. Leaning back against one of the rocks surrounding them, he
let his eyes roam up to the moons again. They had chosen this spot since it was
surrounded by large boulders, safe from wind and out of sight from the valleys
below.
"They
say that when more than one moon hangs in the sky, the barriers between worlds
grow thin. And that travelers sometimes get lost in the mists between."
Makoto
felt his blue eyes on her. It was eerie, her skin prickling as though a static
charge were crackling though the air around them. She fought to keep herself
from blushing. It was embarrassing, and very unlike her. What was she thinking?
Baka.
She
was trying to sort this out. It was confusion, but a good kind. And electricity
was her element, not a thing to be afraid of at all. Needing a moment, she
tried to divert his attention. "Well, if the mist gets people lost, we
should start worrying about Minako-chan and Rory-hime.
Minako-chan
will probably wander off somewhere."
"Hey!
I heard that!" They heard Minako's voice echo though the fog. Then
there was a pause. "Mako-chan? Where are you?"
Makoto
sighed, standing. "Minako-chan! Follow the smell of the food!"
"I
am not Usagi, Mako!"
"Oh,
for the love of..." they heard Rory exclaim as she emerged though the
mist. "Mina! This way!"
A
moment later, the red bowed head came into sight, coming though the thick fog.
"Hi, minna! Look at what Rory and I found!" She held open a bag
filled with blueberries. "There's bushes full of them down the
slope. You should see them all!"
"Not
that we could see them very well, ourselves," Rory sighed as she sat down
next to Balan, shaking out her skirts as she did so. "This fog is creepy.
I hope the witches aren't out."
Makoto
handed Minako and Rory plates of their own, taking the blueberries and checking
for any sticks still stuck on them. Seeing none, she began to pass them around.
"What would the fog have to do with those witches?"
On
their way, they had told Balan and Rory an edited version of their story.
Makoto made a mental note to tell Minako that Balan knew they were from another
world, and seemed to be taking it okay. Neither Balan or Rory had commented on
the disappearances of Ami or Rei, unsure what to say. Anything, it seemed was
possible, but the evidence clearly pointed the other way.
It
was Balan who replied to Makoto's question. "Anything that covers
true sight is an illusion. It obscures what really is. Demons ride in the mist,
and things that should not be spoken of, or else call them to us."
Makoto
nodded in agreement, as did Rory. Minako, though, felt a chill run down her
spine as she thought. She remembered battles that involved fog as thick and
blinding as this. Never in this massive amount, but with the same coldness in
otherwise warm air. It reminded her of Mercury. And their sister senshi was
hardly evil. Mercury didn't have the power to make a Shabon Spray this
large. But it was enough to make Minako wonder, and when she drifted off to
sleep later that night, her hope was growing.
Flames,
when a body is consumed, course over the flesh with such heat and intensity
that the pain seems exquisite. And when they fill the blood of a person, power
can melt though their flesh, either giving them power they never had before, or
killing them for their lack of strength. There is no time for a flame, only
life, death, and existence. Shifting shades of yellow and red, orange and white
filled the eyes of one girl, princess yet soldier. There was the feeling of
being disintegrated and reintegrated, burning. Ruby droplets of blood surged though
her body, flaming and fiery, consuming and incinerating doubt and pain. She
felt no time, no sense of space or sound. Only power, circling her and filling
her as she burned.
And
then, after a time, this feeling of fire ended, as all things must. She opened
her eyes, and was, at first, afraid. Dim shades of red and gold glinted off
every surface, gleaming from what seemed to be far away. She felt no pain, and
so tested out her arms, then her legs, standing and trying to take in her
surroundings.
"Hino
Rei," she said into the silence. "My name is Hino Rei, and I am not
afraid of anything."
She
looked at the polished surfaces, trying to convince herself of those words. Not
afraid of anything. Not Sailor Mars. She was fearless.
As
she stood, she tried to turn around, but found that was the limit of her
strength. She became dizzy, and had to sit down. "Hino Rei. Not afraid of
anything."
She
breathed a few times, hard. Then she once again stood, looking up carefully,
then around. There were no doors, on any side, and no hole above her.
But
there were jewels.
Golden
coins and armor, heaped in mounds around her. She stood on them, and they
clinked against each other as she moved forward, the facets of a large ruby
glowing balefully, catching her
eye. It was stuck out of the rest of the heap, loose pearls resting around it,
undone from a string. Wealth such as she had never seen, and it reached high in
the cavern. She stared, and laughed chokingly, disbelieving, then ran a finger
over the edge of the gemstone. "One handful of this, and I would be set
for life...." She turned around, and heard the unmistakable dribbling of
water. Then, she realized how thirsty fire can make a person, and she scrambled
for the fountain, hands bringing water to her lips over and over again.
When
she was done, her face and hair were wet, though steaming. It was hot. Very
hot, and sweat was mingling with the coolness of the metallic water.
"Hino Rei, and not afraid of anything."
She
stood, and headed towards the source of the fiery light. "If
there's a way in, then there must be a way out," she told herself,
tone defiant. Some might think it strange, that she said these things out loud.
But alone, after battle, she needed to hear the words as much as think them,
and she felt stronger for it.
As
Rei moved forward along the
passage, the light intensified, as did the heat. Waves of warmth rippled though
the air around her, and she placed a hand against the cave wall to steady
herself. "Hino...Rei...." then she continued forward, face set.
There was a sound like a furnace, a dull roar that never stopped for breath,
and as the Soldier of Fire came to the end of her journey, she looked across
what lay before her.
A
lake of fire.
Yellow
waves of molten rock swirled in eddies of orange flame, spouting out of the
whirlpools. Pinpricks of crimson light swirled upward, dancing in the
unbearable heat. One of these struck the ceiling, sending a chunk of rock down
into it, only creating further sparks as it sunk.
There
was no entrance, and no exit.
A
geyser of fire erupted before the ledge she stood on, and forced her to stagger
back, arms up and in front of her face to protect her eyes. Slowly, very
slowly, she backed away, back down the corridor in the cave, returning to the
treasures on the floor of the cave.
There,
she sat down beside the fountain, and did something she did very rarely.
She
cried.
In
the dawn's beautiful, gleaming white light, the walls of Ansur castle
shone clearly. Only in fairy tales did people see such lovely castles, spires
high and straight, stones whitewashed and clean, free of lichen and moss and
age. A high wall ran around Ansur, and palace sat embedded into the side of a
mountain, looking down over its valley with the loftiness of a ruler. There
were many trees skirting the castle, though they had been cleared back and some
were fading into brownness.
It
took the four riders until midmorning to reach the shadow of the castle, and
they had to pull over to the side of the road abruptly as they heard the steady
tread of feet on the path.
"Balan?"
Makoto asked as they watched ranks of men in armor file past.
"What's going on?" The standard bearer marched among them,
the white unicorn on the field of blue, symbol of the North, leading the way.
"Is the North at war?"
"Not
that I last knew. This isn't good. I wonder what's going on."
"Best
way to find out is to ask Father," Rory said as she turned the head of
her mount. "Come on," she kicked the horse into a run, and each of
them turned and followed, charging up the slope, clouds of dust still unsettled
from the tread of feet a few moments earlier.
They
were forced to pull to a stop at the gates, which were unusually closed, the
portcullis down, though the bridge was still open. It was strange, to Rory and
Balan at least, to see the castle this way. Merchants came and traded within
the walls, and were usually open to everyone. It made the two of them more
nervous, since they had seen soldiers armed and on the march. "Open the
gates!" Rory called to the two men as she reined in, and as she did so,
reached up and unbound the knot holding her braided bun in place. The full
length of her hair fell down over the horse's rump. "By order of
the Princess Aurora!"
The
two guards left to guard it blinked from under their helms, then scurried to
shout to the men behind the portcullis, to pull it up. Slowly, it lifted though
its slats, the heavy weight groaning as it grew into passable height. Once open
enough, Rory kicked her horse forward again, and raced forward, the other three
following her lead.
Minako
and Makoto did not have enough time, with their haste, to look very much at the
inside of Ansur. They were aware they passed though an outer wall, with the
empty shells of market stalls. There were men in the inner courtyard, armed and
armored, these mounted, horses prancing in anticipation. Another standard
bearer held up the unicorn, and the flag flapped idly in the wind.
Rory
and Balan seemed to know where they were going, and after a moment, Minako
became aware that they had stopped, and that the halter of her horse was being
held by a boy, a groom. Swinging down, she nearly had to run to keep up with
the other three, who were already disappearing into the darkness of an archway,
then up steps that led into the main portion of the castle.
Even
as she walked, Rory once again became Princess Aurora, any laxness she had
gained over their trip about her demeanor and poise fading away as she strode
forward. With familiar knowledge, she turned corridors in the palace, bringing
them to tall, gold-etched mahogany doors, a page leaning casually up against
the wall beside. "Announce me," Rory told him. The boy blinked,
then gave her a quick appraisal, then the people with her.
"How'd
you get in? Peasants aren't allowed...."
"Peasant?"
Balan stepped forward at that, towering over the boy. He was a tall man, and used
that to intimidate, staring the younger one down. The page began to realize he
had just made a bit of a mistake. "Announce the Princess!"
"Prin...Princess...Auror..."
"Yes,
fool! Open the doors!"
His
eyes were massive in his face, and he leapt to obey the orders, grabbing his
trumpet as he shoved the doors open, raising the instrument to his lips,
letting the room echo with the loud blast. "Lady Princess Aurora, or
Northland!" He shouted, then retreated quickly to his former post, nearly
hiding in embarrassment.
Looking
out over the crowd of people, Minako could clearly see they were in the court
of the king. High windows allowed in the morning's misty golden light,
and intricate carvings soared high into the arched ceiling. Men and women in
rainbow shades milled on the stone floor, silks and damasks, light furs and
linens spilled in a riot of color around the room as the people turned to look
at the newcomer. Rory stood before them, Balan just behind her, and Minako and
Makoto beside each other, last. Not hesitating, Rory moved forward, and came to
a low curtsy before the dias in the room, a curtain draped throne upon it, and
in it, a man, sitting with a frown on his face.
Balan
bowed low, keeping his head down, and Minako and Makoto copied Rory, sinking
low to the floor, their dull, dirtied brown skirts settling around them as they
kept their eyes lowered politely. The man on the dias looked at the four in
front of him, as did the assembly in the room, which had slowly grown silent.
"Father,"
Rory said quietly.
From
under her lashes, Minako looked at the man, to see what kind of king he was.
And as she did so, her heart sank. It wasn't that he wasn't a
fitting image of a king; in fact, the heavily lined face suggested much
experience. He was a powerfully built man, broad shouldered and with callused
hands, dark brown hair streaked with steely grey. But the fact that his eyes
were set back in his face, almost set into the deep pockets of flesh around his
eyes...it disturbed Minako, the fact that she could feel his dark eyed gaze
settle on her so coldly, then dismiss her so quickly again. She didn't
like it. It made her blood run cold. And when he spoke, it was in low tones,
though easily heard though the assembly of shining nobility.
"Aurora.
You have returned. What is the news you bring us?"
When Rory replied, her tone was equally
formal. "Father. I am saddened to report, that I was not determined to be
one of the four princesses, for my lack of magic. The High Priestess gave
thanks for our attempt, and blessings to the land of the North for their care
of the land."
"A
shame," he told her, not taking his eyes away from the still bowed head.
"I am somewhat surprised at your appearance. Explain yourself, and the
fact that your retinue has not returned with you, but a pair of," he
hesitated, then let the word fall from his lips, as though dirty.
"...mercenaries."
Minako
watched Rory now, unsure of what she would say. The hands of Aurora had been
resting easily on the folds of her skirt, and now they tightened. Minako felt a
little glad for it. Rory was still on their side, and didn't like her
father's near-name calling. It was insulting, especially since he had
assumed it. Minako took a little solace in the fact that she could probably
Love and Beauty Shock the guy into the next room if she wanted. She stopped
herself from a satisfied smile.
"Father,"
Aurora's voice had taken a particularly frosty tone, and Minako was sure
the whole room heard it. "These two with Sir Balan and I have the
blessing and promise of safe passage from the High Priestess herself. It is
thanks to these two that my lord protector and I are with you now. Nearly as
soon as I had left the Fire Mountain, we were attacked on the trail, by the
demons that are breaking into this world through the Seal. The dame knight
Minako saved me as the carriage horses bolted. You should thank her for my safe
return."
Murmurs
rippled though the crowd, who were now watching this drama with complete
fascination. Seeing the eyes of the king was to see a distant fury.
Aurora's final line bordered on an order. "I do thank her. Rise,
all of you."
Each
stood, Balan from his bow, the girls from their curtsies. As was polite, they
kept their eyes from meeting those of the king, who continued, "Dame Minako,"
he looked between Minako and Makoto. Minako curtsied again, very slightly, to
acknowledge herself. His focus centered on the red bowed one, and with a slight
breath, she met his eyes fully, and kept her chin in the air. She nearly missed
it, but a faint smile twitched at his lips. "And your companion?"
"Makoto,"
the Senshi of Protection replied, glancing at Minako from where she stood.
"Dame
Makoto, and dame Minako. I am grateful to you for guiding my daughter back home
safely. If there is anything you require...." his face reflected a
certain disdain, most likely for their current appearance, "I will
provide it for you, in gratitude."
Together,
the senshi replied, "Thank you," and curtsied again.
In
the dusty sunshine, the king shifted on his throne, and the silver crown he
wore glanced in the light, sapphire stones catching prisms.
"King
Boreas," Balan then spoke up. "Upon our return, we saw Your
Majesty's soldiers and cavalry, prepared for battle and on the march. It
worried us that the Northland has gone to war."
Boreas
did not appear at all surprised. He looked at his knight, and it could be seen
that there was a slight contest of wills between them, the air growing tight.
Balan had spoken out of turn, and it did not please the king that he had done
so. But Boreas answered anyway. "The High Priestess has issued the Edict
of Cleansing. We received word yesterday of it. There is a center of these
witches hiding in our lands, and they have grown active again over the last few
weeks, attacking supply caravans. We have assembled a force to remove them from
their hideaway ."
To
this, Minako and Makoto's faces grew hard, knowing that these witches
seemed to be everywhere. Makoto, reacting more quickly, interrupted,
"Sire, if I may ask a thing of you?"
His
eyes turned again to the taller senshi.
"You
may."
"Two
of our friends were killed by a witch. We ask if we can go and help your
soldiers remove them."
He
arched a slightly shaggy eyebrow, and then replied, "Granted."
"Thank
you, Your Majesty," and they curtsied. Having seen too many movies each,
both knew enough not to turn their backs on the king immediately, but to back
away a few steps first. Then, as they left Rory and Balan to face the king
alone, they ran.
"At
least we can get revenge for Rei-chan and Ami-chan," they ran down the
halls, Mako in the lead, which was probably a good thing, considering Minako
would get them lost.
"I
still don't agree that they're dead."
They
turned another corner, backtracking, and arrived in the courtyard. Each was
growing short of breath, but it hardly seemed to matter. They were tired from
their traveling, sleep last night or not. "Minako-chan, they
couldn't possibly survived that...."
"It's
not like you to give up on them so fast, Mako. Who knows? Maybe they were
taken, and we'll be able to rescue them!"
Makoto
shook her head as she ripped the reins of her horse out of a startled
stableboy's hand. "Keep dreaming, Minako. What are the odds of that
happening?"
"I
don't know, but when we find Ami, we can ask her!"
Makoto
frowned, sighed, then kicked her horse. The last legion of cavalry was now
exiting, just clearing the gate, and the two mounted senshi had to spur their
horses faster to just barely slip under it as it closed. Calling over her
shoulder, Minako said, "We'll have to be careful! They won't
like seeing us henshin! Remember how Rory and Balan reacted to the differences
in appearance!"
"Hai!
Then we come from the sides!"
"Hai!"
And,
in agreement, they chased after the cavalry.
"Good,"
Caitlyn was saying as Ami finished pulling her hands over her hair. It was
strange, to Ami, looking down slightly and seeing the length of her hair on her
shoulders. "It's unusual for a woman to have short hair. It's
a mark of dishonor here. A few silver eyed women have it, but you should make
as little notice of yourself as you can. We don't trust strangers
easily."
"Hai,"
Ami agreed, somewhat nervously. For the last ten minutes or so, Caitlyn had
been giving her a crash course in basic illusionary, and it felt strange.
"My eyes, then? The same way?"
To
that, Caitlyn shook her head, considering her thoughtfully. They stood several
feet apart, Ember wandering off to the side, and Ami could swear the horse was
amused at the situation. "No. It'll be easier if you use your water
magic than a glamourie. It's strange, teaching you this. I've never
seen an illusionist without silver eyes."
"Well,"
Ami took a breath. "Now you have, ne? How?"
"Eyes
always have a thin sheen of water over them. Alter the color of the water
around the iris."
Ami
thought about this for a moment, feeling her stomach churn. If she could cast a
glamourie over her hair, then she could do the same over her eyes. It was very
strange, this world. In hers, she never could do such things. There had to be
differences in the structure of the physics, or something.... Her eyes closed,
and when they opened again, they were a dull silver color. "How are
they?"
"Dark.
Almost grey. But passable, I think. Keep your head down, do as I say, and no
one should notice. Understand?"
"Hai,"
Ami replied. "This camp...what will the people there do, when they find
out that there's a demon army headed this way?"
"We've
been attacking arms caravans for months around here. The king, Boreas, has been
collecting quite an armament. He'll be plenty ready for it, but we like
to keep an eye on things. We may evacuate the site, if it's likely
there'll be a battle too close. We have wards up, and we're well
hidden, but things hidden always get found, eventually."
With
that, Caitlyn swung herself up onto Ember's back, and reached down for
Ami's offered hand, settling her down behind. "Be careful. I
can't be with you the whole time we're there. If we get separated
for too long, remember the cover story. We'll be in and out as fast as
possible. Not many know about why I left. Eliana didn't want to send the
entire contingent of silver eyed up the Fire Mountain. Probably best, since
most would not take to having you be from another world very well. Many of us
think we should just destroy the Crystal Points. They're afraid the
priestesses will use that power to seal us away, as well."
As
they started forward, Ami couldn't help but ask, "But
wouldn't destroying them keep anyone from replacing the Seal?"
"Yes.
That's why we didn't tell many people."
Ami
looked up to the branches over head, considering that. So, even among the
silver eyed, there were factions.
They
only traveled a few minutes, before the sounds reached their ears. Ami peered
over Caitlyn's shoulder, and after a moment, they cleared the rise. And,
looking down, they saw the first smudges of smoke rise from newly lit fires,
where men in armor ran between breaks in the trees. On the currents of wind,
the unmistakable sounds of screaming reached their ears. From where she sat,
Ami felt Caitlyn shudder once, almost as a convulsion, and she could sense the
energy drain out of her, as a feeling of despair swept in. Then, like the tide,
it turned, and her back straightened, a forced gesture, and when Caitlyn spoke,
it had lost any of the kindness Ami had begun to hear over the last couple
days.
"Get
off."
"But
I can...."
"No.
Get off." Caitlyn nearly pushed Ami from her seat, keeping a grip on her
arm, but still sending her staggering as she hit the ground. "This
isn't your fight. Get out of here."
With
that, Caitlyn wheeled Ember around, and gave her a sharp kick, sending them
flying down the hill, and Ami saw Caitlyn draw her sword for the first time as
her cloaked winged out behind her. Ami sighed, tired, closing her eyes, then
opening them again to look down into the forest. There was a rise in the middle
of the starting fires, a sign there may be a cave. That made sense, a good
place to hide. But also a trap, if not cautious. Over the treetops, something
caught the eyes of Ami, a blast of electricity that arched over the foliage, as
though surrounding something. She started forward, then hesitated. It was
possible, of course, that one of the sorcerers below was using magic. Then, a
moment later, another burst of energy, yellow and orange stars that ribboned up
and spiraled, then, they too faded away.
It
was confirmation enough for Ami.
Hand
lifting into the air, she began to run forward, the flood of shining water
encircling her again.
They
let no one see them henshin, and when two more figures entered the field of
battle, few, if any noticed, save maybe any who came into their path. If any
thought the armor, or lack of armor, was strange, they didn't have time
to comment. Around them, men seethed, horses charging back and forth as men cut
their way into the defenders, who were still streaming out of the mouth of a
cave in the thickest section of the swirling melee.
Colored
lights punctured the fight, rainbow colors in blue and red hues, yellow and
purple and green, then others colorless, the more deadly sort, silent and
without warning, and many soldier fell without knowing what had happened. But
there were many more soldiers than witches, and each was armed, steadily
gaining ground. And as these two new fighters entered, the enemy fell much
faster.
They
broke, eventually, the lines, and it dissolved into chaos, men and women
running, shrieking as they were cut down, soldiers calling out in pain as magic
struck them in turn. It did not take long for blood to stain the earth,
covering the brown leaves that had fallen to the forest floor.
In
the panic of battle, Sailor Venus found herself separated from Sailor Jupiter,
though occasionally she could see the electric bolts of lightning that
accompanied her attacks. Venus looked around her, and chose her next target.
One of the soldiers was backed into a tree, sword up, blood from a gash running
into his eyes as two male silver eyed approached, one armed with a sword, the
other's fingers lit with dazzling blue sparkles, their eyes brightly lit,
glowing as they approached their victim.
"Venus
Love-me Chain!"
The
armed man saw the attack coming, but had no time to turn. It pierced his heart,
and he collapsed to the ground, his companion a moment later, the glitter of
blue dying as he died. The
man she saved looked at her, and Venus smiled at him, waving that she had been
recognized. The soldier stared at her for a moment, then grinned, tapping his
helm in a salute to her. She saw him mouth the word, 'thanks' then
turn away, running back into the mill of murder that was being run before the
cave mouth. Appreciation was always welcome, and she saw another witch go down
under his blade a moment later. A little more revenge, for what was done to
Mars and Mercury. Then she saw a new, familiar faced witch on a dark red horse
charge into the thick of battle, screaming as she hacked her way into a knot of
soldiers.
Eyes
narrowing, Sailor Venus chose her new target.
Jupiter
faced off with the man, a silver eyed who was fighting with such a sense of
desperation she couldn't understand why he was even there. Again he
lifted his hand, and again she rolled out of the way of the shockwave, a silent
blast that she remembered experiencing before, at the monolith at the Fire
Mountain. This time, she was ready, and landed neatly out of its way,
electricity already crackling around her as the antennae grew out of the
gemstone in her tiara, and the energy gathered into her hands.
A
single target. A single blast, concentrated in one place.
She
thought of the battle on the slope of the volcano, of Mercury, and of Mars.
She
summoned the lightning, and then, with its added energy....
"Jupiter
Oak Evolution!"
He
had blocked her Supreme Thunder a moment earlier, a shield of some kind
blossoming out around him like petals on a cherry blossom tree. This time, a
more powerful attack, aided by the same rage that gave her the power she now
used. Her leaves flew out as she spun, and they struck the same point in the
shield repeatedly, pounding down on it, and she heard a horrible, ear
shattering scream as his ward cracked like glass, then shattered, the points
glistening in the red firelight around them, the last of her leaves slamming
into him and sending the warlock back and to the ground.
Breathing
hard, Sailor Jupiter stayed bent for a moment, gathering herself. She was
sweating with effort, and ran a hand over her forehead to wipe away the salty
water before it trailed into her eyes, blinding her. But as she hesitated a
moment, she watched the space behind the man blur and swim, rippling and fading
away as he died on the ground, clothes charred and giving off a burned smell.
From
where she stood, Sailor Jupiter felt a strange kind of sickness at what was
revealed by the death of the man. Unable to maintain his magic, it had fallen
away, revealing a small huddle of children, the oldest of which was a girl no
more than ten. This girl, the eldest, was already urging the younger ones to
run. She turned, and Jupiter saw gleaming tears in her silver eyes as she
placed her arms outward, shaking. She was terrified. But at the same time,
there was an incredible amount of determination in her small face.
Suddenly,
Jupiter wanted to throw up.
Instead,
she turned and ran back into the carnage that was going on around her. And if,
perhaps, she had looked behind her, she would have seen the little girl
suddenly sag and stumble away, the mental preparation for her death seemingly
premature, the anticlimax of it sucking any strength from her body.
"There
are...children here...."
It
didn't make sense.
"There
are children here....."
If
this was the base of witches, where they plotted and planned to kill and kill,
to destroy Emania, to bring the Silence, to break the Seal, to let in
Chaos...to...to....
Then
there was another man in front of her, and Jupiter could only scream,
"Supreme Thunder!"
Sailor
Mercury ran though the carnage and milling murder, the blood and the magic and
the death. Too many fell under blade, and too many fell under spell. It was so
different, than battles she had seen before. Oh, the lights were the same,
perhaps, but battles never had so much...blood. No one got hurt, just youma. Or
daimon, or droids, phages or whatever was clearly evil. Not people. People were
supposed to return to normal. They were supposed to unfreeze, or regain their
memories, be healed from whatever it was that had caused them to turn. Their
Star Seeds returned to them. Mercury squeezed her eyes shut as she ran through
the thick of it, her goal within her sight.
Caitlyn
was still mounted on Ember's back, and was slashing her way though a
thick knot of soldiers, her sword now charged with pure white energy, her eyes,
which always glowed faintly, were now blazing, and Mercury saw that there was a
similiar reaction in the faces of the other silver eyed. Emotions, too clearly
written.
At
the same time, she was also scanning with her eyes, looking for Jupiter or
Venus. And as her gaze found the Soldier of Love, they widened in panic. She
saw Venus pulling her hand up, kissing her fingertips as she prepared her
attack.
Mercury
launched herself into the air. She could not let Venus kill Caitlyn. Venus
didn't know what was going on. Didn't know that the silver eyed
weren't evil. Didn't even know that this was no more than a witch
hunt. Mercury felt herself hit Caitlyn and she sent them flying from the
saddle, tumbling to the ground as the line hearts flew around Sailor Venus, and
her cry could be heard over the clangor of swords. "Venus Love and Beauty
Shock!"
It
struck the tree several lengths beyond where they fell, and the tree
splintered, the branches on fire, crashing down as people cleared the space
below it, smoke wafting up into the air, darkly. It burned the lungs, and
filled eyes with water as people ran.
"Ami?"
Caitlyn asked as Sailor Mercury pushed herself to her feet, facing a shocked
Venus, who was staring, seeing what had just occurred. Both Caitlyn and Venus
watched Mercury's face show conflicting emotions, calculating, then
settling on a course of action.
Venus
had seen Mercury's movement countless times, but never from this
particular angle. Her arms went up and around her, centering before her as a
ball of white light glowed between her palms, then flying around her as she
spun in a circle. "Shabon...Spray!"
The
cold fog flew out, dispersing. Within moments, the entire area was covered in
the haze, and Venus stared at the swirling mist in disbelief. Mercury was
alive. And she was fighting against her.
What
was going on?
Sailor
Mercury then turned, watching the scared Ember bolt off into her fog, and she
saw figures of men vanish in and out of sight as they searched. Red glows
burned in the sunlit fog. She knew, with the light and heat of day, that the
Spray would not last long. But it would be enough.
"Shine
Aqua Illusion!"
The
water doused the burning tree, sending the stink of wet char into the air.
Then, Mercury turned to Caitlyn, her face carefully neutral. "Your people
are outnumbered, and they're going to lose."
"I
know," Caitlyn agreed, and around them, the swirls grew thick. "It
seems our alliance is over, Ami. Good luck. And hopefully, when we meet again,
you won't have to use any of those tricks I taught you against me."
Then
she turned, and the silver eyed sorceress vanished into the mist.
"Venus!
Jupiter!"
Mercury
waded her way into the fray, the people quickly losing their will to fight as
their vision left them. "Venus! V-babe!"
"Mercury!"
Though
the strands of sunlight, Venus saw Mercury appear, waving, pushing her way
though the clouds she had created. "Venus!" Suddenly, they both had
arms full of a laughing senshi, both relieved.
"Mercury-chan,
I thought you were going to try to kill me!"
"You
know me better than that, Venus! Where's Mako?"
"I
lost her in the battle. It may take awhile, in your fog. Why did you save that
witch? She's the one who-"
"I'll
explain later. Is Mars with you, too?"
Mercury's
face fell as Venus' did, looking away and releasing her friend from the
hug. "Come on. Let's find Jupiter. I knew you weren't dead.
And if you're not, then neither is Mars." Venus brightened as they
broke though the whorls of fog. "We're Sailor Senshi. We
can't die!"
It
took them only a few minutes to find Sailor Jupiter, sitting beneath a
smoldering oak tree. She sat there, eyes staring down emptily in her lap, and
at the head that lay resting there. A little girl, with a heavy gash down the
side of her face, blood dried.
"I
couldn't stop him in time. I couldn't save her." Jupiter
looked up at the two other senshi, and in her sadness, didn't react at
all to Mercury's reappearance. Her voice was flat when she told them,
"There were children here."
Venus
and Mercury stood there, looking down at their friend in the misty sunlight,
cradling the little body of the girl. "Jupiter," Mercury said
softly, leaning down and offering her hand, "don't let her have
died in vain."
Sailor
Jupiter looked at the peaceful little face, eyes dry. She couldn't feel
anything but emptiness. It was wrong. It was all wrong. "We have to stop
it, Ami-chan. All of it. They were just kids. What could they have done?"
"Hai,
Mako-chan. Come on."
Laying
the limp body down on the charred remains of the leaves, Sailor Jupiter took
Mercury's hand, and joined her sister senshi.
They
returned to Castle Ansur, and for having so much to say, they spoke very
little. Detransforming, they slipped in the gates with other returning
soldiers, women rushing with bandages and cloths, medicines and herbs, all to
help their returning husbands and sons. The three girls watched this in a
strange state of disbelief. Who was right?
Battered
and exhausted, Minako and Makoto's introduction of Ami to Rory and Balan
took only a few moments. Then, Balan was shouting for servants to prepare a
large room, and Rory shooing away any curious onlookers. Three battered young
women, returning with the troops. It was unusual, but the majority of people
were too busy with their own battle wounds to care.
Ami
foggily kept up enough energy to keep the small glamour on her hair. Why that
seemed to be the only thing she could focus on, she didn't know. Maybe it
was its irrelevance that made it important. Something else to concentrate on.
Each was distantly aware that Rory herself had produced medicines, and was
patching them up, a gash on Minako's leg, a burn on Makoto's arm.
It didn't seem to matter. After a little while, she packed up her bag and
ordered them to sleep. But the three waited until they were again alone, and
moved out onto the verandah, knowing that before they slept, they would have to
talk.
And
so Makoto leaned up against the half wall, the sun setting on the hills beyond
her, splashing red and yellow across the green tops of the trees, and tinting
the creeping ivy around them in fiery shades. Minako sat down on one side of
the doorway, arms around her knees, leaning back against the stone wall. Ami
kept herself just under the archway, still half in the shadows of their room.
Quietly, they spoke, catching up on what had happened to each of them over the
last week or so. So much, in so little time.
Minako
and Makoto spoke of the village of Shaking Pines, of how they met Princess
Aurora, and of Balan, their journey to the north, and how they had presumed Ami
and Rei dead when they awoke after fighting the silver eyed sorceress.
Ami,
in turn, spoke of what had happened to her, of Caitlyn's goals, the
hatred for things illusionary, how it seemed that she herself had this power,
and then of the demon army that she and Caitlyn had stalled in the valley.
"We're
glad to have you back, Ami-chan," Minako told her as she rubbed her eyes
sleepily. They were red, and slightly puffy. "But if there was an army of
those goblins coming, they would be here by now."
"Hai,"
Ami agreed, and pulled out the Mercury Computer. "I've been
monitoring since this morning. There is no sign of them within a two kilometer
radius of Ansur Castle. That suggests that the Castle is not their
target."
"Then
what?" Makoto asked, shifting on her position on the half wall. She
kicked herself up onto it, feet still tapping the ground below her. "None
of this fits. There's way more going on here than we first expected. If
the silver eyed aren't evil, then who the hell is the enemy?"
"The
man I saw on the black horse," Ami replied instantly. "Just looking
at him, I get this horrible feeling. But you're right. Too many people
are set against each other. Caitlyn-san suggested that there were even factions
within the ranks of her kind."
"Then
we'll have to be careful," Minako concluded. "How'd you
get her to bring you north, anyway?"
"I
said that was where we thought the first Point lay. Caitlyn-san didn't
argue. No one seems to know anything about where these things are. Which is why
the fact there is a goblin army marching this way worries me so much. If the
castle isn't going to be placed under siege, then where are they
going?"
"I
don't know. But you slowed them up a day or so, ne, Ami-chan?"
"Hai."
"Then
you bought us some time to sleep," Minako sighed, blearily pulling the
red ribbon out of her hair, and sending the pale yellow hair down loosely
around her face. She wrapped the bow around her wrist, then stood. "We
won't be much good if we're all about to keel over. We'll go
out and look for this army tomorrow. But right now...I need some sleep."
She
yawned again, and turned back into their room, the rustling sounds of bedcovers
being undone heard. Ami looked at Makoto, then moved to stand beside her at the
edge. Makoto looked over her shoulder from where she sat, seeing Ami looking
down and out at the space below them. "We'll find Rei-chan,
Ami-chan. I didn't think you were alive either. You said you came north
because that was the plan. Rei knows that too. She's on her way. She has
to be."
Ami
nodded, but the foreboding feeling was ghosting around her eerily. It
wasn't the same without them all here. "Minako-chan is right. We do
need some sleep."
"Un.
You look strange, with long hair." Mako slid off the wall, and began to
walk inside. "Are you sure you can keep it up?"
"Hai.
I think so. Such a little thing, though," she sighed. "Good night,
Mako-chan."
"Good
night."
Then
the shadows of the sunset deepened into purple, and the hour of the sunset drew
to a close.
Somewhere,
if she thought about it, Rei could swear she read that people could survive for
weeks without food, so long as they had water. Water she had, and it was cool
enough to drink, circling in the pool. She had found its source, a tiny, narrow
crack large enough for her to wriggle her fingers in. She was so hot, and was
glad that the water flow was constant. She would have been dehydrated in short
hours without it.
After
a time, she had gathered herself, and begun to methodically search the cave.
Her mind wrapped around a single thought.
If
there is an entrance, then there is an exit.
That
was logic, wasn't it?
She
wandered her cave like a maze, burrowing around the infinite wealth, searching
for a trapdoor, or a crack in the cave. She tapped on the surface of a highly
tarnished mirror, thinking of how mirrors were sometimes considered doorways.
But the fact that it was cracked and covered in coins made her doubt its being
a portal. Rei ran her hands over the walls of the cave, searching for hidden
passages. Once, she even henshined, gathering up enough strength to send a
Flame Sniper shooting up into the ceiling, hoping to blast a hole. The result
was for her to get showered with dirt and fragmented pebbles. She fought with
despair. There was no way out.
But
there had to be. There was an entrance.
Somewhere.
So,
she continued to stumble around her prison, blindly looking, blindly searching.
She didn't want to face the fiery lake again. Too much heat, too much
fire, even for her. But as she slipped in and out of dark consciousness, she
thought of her prayers at the Great Fire in her shrine, of how her scryings
there had shown her things.
If
she could do it there, would it also work here?
This
fire was far larger, and not under any control, especially not hers. Soldier of
Fire or not, the idea of commanding the inside of a volcano was terrifying.
Though, slowly, as she again sipped cool water from her hands, she decided she
had no choice. She had to try.
Her
clothes were soaked with perspiration, sleeves heavy and plastered to her arms,
her hair damp and clinging to her neck and back. "Hino Rei. Sailor Mars,
Soldier of Fire. And not afraid...of anything!" With grim determination,
she once again walked towards the burning light, waves of heat rippling thickly
around her as she tried to breathe in the sulfuric stench. Into the inferno she
walked, and again stood on the ledge of the lake.
Her
knees hit the ground gratefully, since she could rest. So drained of energy,
she felt dizzy as she brought her hands up before her, chanting softly as she
prepared her meditation. The mantra came brokenly, and with gaps and pauses as
she tried to breathe, the gouts of flame spiring up before her in swirling
sparks.
"Please...show
me...the way out...."
Something
steamed on her face, and Rei realized she was crying again, the heat turning
the tears to vapor even before they rolled off her cheeks.
"Someone...show
me...the way...."
Blackness
gathered at the edges of her vision, rimmed with a ring of fire.
Who
is it, that summons me?
The words echoed in
Rei's mind, deep and low, with a slightly acid tone.
"Someone...please...."
her violet eyes closed, and she felt herself falling forward, palms smacking
into the stone as she collapsed, lying lengthwise on the ledge.
Who
are you, to call for me?
"Hino...Rei...and not
afraid of...of...anything....."
The
heat around her grew so thick, she could reach out a hand and touch it with her
fingers, the clear waves of intensity.
Looking
out through black lashes, scattered with droplets of water, Rei could see the
fiery forge before her grow high and tall, solid. Something large grew from the
molten rock, and it peered over her, looking down with great crimson eyes.
You
do not live well, here. A pity. You should, since it is your element.
"Who...."
In
the speech of old tongues, to ken a thing is to know it. It was the torch, the
light of a fire that brings knowledge. So it is with me. Share my strength,
Princess of Fire. Share it, and grow strong.
Rei felt the consuming heat
around her contract, instead filling her heart with flames. And she found the
strength to push herself upright, meeting a molten set of whirling eyes, which
watched her out of a heavily scaled head. A long, sinewy neck arched up out of
the inferno, and heavily taloned claws rested on the lip of the ledge. Such a
creature existed only in the myths of her land, giant, scaled creatures that
breathed fire, and brought with them either good luck or death. The head of
this creature pushed close to Rei, and she touched the snout, using it as
leverage to sit herself up. The wedge shaped head moved back a bit, and Rei saw
a stone set into the space between the eyes, a ruby that glittered in the
firelight, the delicate prisms refracted within the edges.
"You're...a
dragon...."
Come.
It is time for you to leave this place. Your friends will have need of the
Soldier of Fire.
Rei had no time to react, as
the creature moved forward with lightning speed, and she felt herself falling
onto the back of this dragon, as wings spread out behind her, and then, instead
of flying, they plunged into the fire below.
******************************************************************************
That felt good.
Rei-chan
is back!
Told
you this chapter or the next, didn't I? I decided to add that earlier
scene as I went along. This
chapter ended up being a touch shorter than I thought it would. Just a couple
pages, but the first two came out to be 18-19, and this one only 16. I'm
just picky, I guess. The next one is probably going to be long. Oh well. Hm.
Not much of a random babbling this time. Should be interesting from here. I
have the next couple scenes in my head right now, but beyond that....a rough
idea of what needs to happen, but not the scenes between. We'll see.
Ja
until next chat.
-Queen
iceaffinity@hotmail.com
