Shut up and be patient...the yaoi's coming.
-Laitoste
A
dark shadow swept over cracked, crumbling steps as it made its way to
the topmost tower of the castle. It moved purposefully, and with a
cool kind of confidence that comes from many years of practice,
practice that becomes experience, and eventually that experience
becoming habit. So it was no surprise that the mysterious figure
moved in almost complete silence, the only sound being the faint
clicking of feet on stone as it carefully climbed the winding
staircase and the occasional burble from the large, rather ragged
looking bird on its right shoulder. There were no pictures adorning
the gray walls of the corridor, no tapestries depicting heroes or
fair maidens, no windows even to let in the light of the outside
world. There was only the harsh rock caked with thin layers of
ancient grime, the chipped blocks of stone lending a sense of
foreboding and iniquity.
However, the cloaked shadow paid no
heed to the dust, dirt, the squeak of rats or the overall
disheartened aura of the passage in which it trod. Instead, it simply
kept on climbing, up and up, past a seemingly endless array of bricks
of rock and stairs of stone, until it reached a point where the air
was not so thick with shallow apathy. It stood on a small balcony,
positioned so one who looked from it could see in all four cardinal
directions at once, without interference from the rest of the
castle's many spires that lanced into the darkening sky. It was a
perfectly constructed watchtower. The shadow squinted into the light,
for though it was the daylight's death in the twilight, it was
still much brighter than the hole it had ascended from. Reaching
back, the dark figure pulled back its hood to reveal the face of a
young man, though one look at him would be enough to determine that
this creature was not human. Sharply pointed ears adorned with exotic
earrings, unruly white hair, and the slitted eyes of a cat; no, this
was no human, nor an elf. This was a yokai. The renkin wizard Kharl,
author of the demon bible, manipulator of lives and herald of chaos,
now stood as close to heaven as he would ever be.
"Do
you feel it? Right Bird, do you feel him coming?" Kharl turned
to the feathered mass on his shoulder, inquiring. The bird only
squawked and preened its black and blood red plumage, peaceably
ignoring the question. Its master merely smiled, his fangs barely
showing between his lips. "Bierrez, you fool." Kharl
stroked the matted head of his pet, "You didn't even bother to
mask your presence as you made your way back to me."
A
sudden gust of freezing wind struck the tower, blowing red feathers
from Right Bird and whipping the pale hair of the yokai back and
forth across his calm features. It sang and howled like a lone wolf
as it rushed through the turrets and gaps and spires of Kharl's
castle, swirling with the speed and ferocity of a dragon's wingbeat.
The alchemist narrowed his already lean eyes, their yellow hue
reflecting his tainted soul and his malicious intent.
"Let
us wait for him, Right Bird. Yes, that would be best." Kharl
flexed his long, slender fingers in anticipation, "We shall let
him come to us, that we will."
Without another word, he
pulled his hood back on and disappeared down the staircase as subtly
as he had emerged. His bird let loose a wail that echoed from the
depths of the tower and out into the open air, sounding with
shattering clarity all the way to the edge of the thick forest that
surrounded the castle. It rang and reverberated throughout the
majestic trunks of the immense trees, their russet leaves shaken from
their precarious perches on the topmost branches. Just as the
remnants of the wretched screech began to subside, a figure stepped
out from the ring of trees and into the realm of the stone citadel,
cautiously removing his clawed hands from his ears.
"Damn,"
Bierrez hissed, "He knows I'm here." The demon made his way
slowly to the entrance, giving the rest of the castle only a brief
glance, refusing to look any closer at his enemy's dwelling. He would
not let himself be intimidated by the alchemist. However, in his
effort to keep his eyes fixed on the thick stone door in front of
him, Bierrez failed to detect the faint flicker of a swiftly moving
silhouette that played across the scrubby grass at his feet. Before
he could draw another breath, it had vanished behind the wide base of
the closest tower, leaving not a trace of its secret
presence.
Bierrez reached the door, and without a second
thought, reached down to the rust encrusted handle that was shaped
like the head of a giant bird. As he gripped the cold metal and
started to push the door open, the yokai felt a spark of pain pierce
his skin and found that he could not move his hand.
"What
the hell? I'm not in the mood for this, dammit!" Bierrez yelled
in frustration. He leaned back and used his free hand to claw at the
bird- faced handle that held him captive in its small, yet
surprisingly sharp beak. It did not yield to his anger, or to his
pathetic struggling. Cursing under his breath, Bierrez was about to
attempt to kick the rusty handle clear off when, without warning, the
stone door flung itself open, sending the demon sprawling into
Kharl's less than comforting abode.
He rolled through the
fractured rock of the archway, for the bird's beak had released his
bleeding hand when the door had suddenly opened, and continued to
roll in the thick carpet of dust and grunge until he hit the base of
a grand sweeping staircase. Well, it had been great at one time. In
its current state, it didn't look much better then the cracked floor
Bierrez had tumbled on. The many marble steps were all chipped and
broken, the railing was torn off in places, and it was thick with the
scent of demon and one other, a stranger smell that did not seem to
be from something tangible yet present all the same.
Disoriented,
Bierrez simply lay where he had fallen and stared blankly up at
nothing in particular, ignoring his hand with its deep cut, though it
throbbed with pain. It wasn't long until the yokai regained his
senses and staggered to his feet, brushing himself off
indignantly.
"I'll get him for that," he threatened,
"I'll make him pay dearly for getting me involved in this game
of his." He examined his wound, licking the blood that dripped
from his long fingers, and cursed.
"You even fight dirty,
you damn alchemist! That stupid handle of yours bit my right hand, on
purpose no doubt!" He licked his cut again, just to be sure, and
hissed to suppress his fury. "It's poison alright. Even if it is
only paralysis, I can't fight Kharl unless I get myself a weapon.
He's such a coward, afraid of the very skill he gave me. Coward!"
Bierrez was shaking with rage at the injustice and cowardice of his
enemy, but would not let Kharl see him this way. It would merely
please the alchemist further.
Carrying his limp right hand in
his left, Bierrez started on up the decaying staircase, taking care
not to slip or fall and thus increase his anger and Kharl's
amusement. His pride would not let him. Even so, it was a slow
process, picking a path up the debris littered flight of desecrated
steps, but finally, Bierrez saw a small corridor that disappeared
into the shadow of the castle. With renewed motivation, the demon
leapt over the last few stone blocks and landed neatly in the center
of the hall, smirking in triumph.
"That was easy,"
he said with almost childish pride.
"A little too easy,
wouldn't you say, Bierrez?"
Yellow
eyes gleamed in the darkness of the far end of the hall, seeming
almost to smile, "You didn't really think you could get in here
without me letting you in like the dog you are? I was sure your mind
had matured beyond that point of idiocy, although you may yet prove
me wrong, my little pet."
Bierrez whirled around to face
his foe, "Kharl! You spineless little toad! How could you do
this to me? How could you control me like this!? How could
you...!?"
"Now, now, one question at a time,"
Kharl said as he emerged from the shroud of shadow and dust that had
hidden him so well, "And I will not be addressed that way,
Bierrez. You will call me by my proper title, or you will suffer in
ways that even you, someone with much experience in the ways of
torture, can even begin to fathom."
Bierrez crossed his
arms in defiant response, making a profane gesture with his left hand
beneath his elbow, lip curled in frustration.
"That was
uncalled for," Kharl said silkily, "It only proves your
childishness." Brushing his white hair from his eyes, the
alchemist murmured the words of a spell to bind and twist, to wrench
and tear, to extract the haughtiness that Bierrez possessed and
transform it to a more manageable state...like pain, perhaps.
As
Kharl became absorbed in weaving his curse, Bierrez noticed the lack
of commentary from him and considered striking the alchemist while he
was in the middle of his spell. His only hesitation was his honor,
which screamed at him that what he intended to do was just as low and
cowardly as the trick Kharl had used on him earlier, the one that
rendered his main weapon useless.
Well, anything worth
fighting for is worth fighting dirty for, Bierrez thought with
relish. He told his pride to go and stuff it somewhere and prepared
to slash at Kharl's catlike yellow eyes, which were so intensely
focused and blazing with a power greater than Bierrez had seen in a
long time. The arrogant yokai merely dismissed this show of strength
as a bluff and yet another facet of Kharl's deception, and prepared
to leap with claws extended and tear out the eyes that had looked at
him with more contempt then he cared to remember.
"Kharl!
Your time has come! Die!" Bierrez screamed, his voice echoing
off the thick stone walls. He ran a few paces and, gathering his
strength, jumped straight at Kharl. The demon alchemist stood with
stunning calm, and as Bierrez sped closer, he thought he could make
out the faintest trace of a sinister smile drawn across his enemy's
lips.
At just the right moment, before Bierrez could strike,
Kharl's hand flashed from the folds of his black robes and snatched
the demon right out of the stale air, holding him a good two feet off
the ground and tightening his deathlike grip around Bierrez's
delicate neck. As the captive yokai choked and writhed, Kharl brought
his face near and whispered words that made Bierrez's blood run
cold.
"My time came an eternity ago,"
Bierrez's
green eyes widened in disbelief and he clutched at Kharl's icy hand
like a frightened animal, trying to remove them from his throat. He
was losing air at an alarming rate; if he could not free himself
soon, all his efforts to achieve revenge were in vain. The smirk that
crawled over Kharl's face as he watched him suffer only intensified
his struggle...but he could only hold out for so long.
Damn
it. Bierrez thought. His mind was fading quickly, and his claws fell
limp at his sides, which had stopped heaving. An inauspicious
stillness had washed over the once spirited yokai, rendering his body
weak and helpless and his mind clouded with dull, throbbing
pain.
...I couldn't even touch
him...
...pathetic...
...I'm such a weakling...just
let me die already...
He cursed himself over and over again,
hoping to fill the ever widening void growing within his soul, but he
knew his time was up. The defeated demon closed his eyes, shutting
out the triumph that flooded over Kharl's face, letting his head fall
back and his body relax until it was cold and static. His lungs drew
no breath; the only movement was a light breeze that found its way
into the desolate hall of the castle and ruffled the orange strands
of his hair.
Kharl smiled slyly, and loosened his grip around
Bierrez's neck. The yokai fell to the ground with a soft thud,
stirring up small clouds of dust and dirt. Turning away, Kharl called
to his bird, stretching out an arm for it to land on, and stroked its
unkempt head as though nothing had happened.
"He was a
fool, Right Bird," the alchemist said, "but a brave one,
I'll give him that. To try to confront me in my own domain, well, it
seems as though Bierrez didn't think much of my power, no, that he
did not." The demon shut his eyes, making a sound like a stifled
laugh.
"He is dead to me now."
Right Bird
burbled plaintively, and began to preen itself. Kharl made no further
comments on the crumpled from of the yokai behind him, and proceeded
to the front entrance that had accepted a brash and vengeful Bierrez
only minutes before. He opened the door without difficulty, the
drying blood of its latest victim still clinging to the rusted
handle, and slammed it shut without so much as a backward glance. The
only traces of Kharl's presence were a few black and red feathers
drifting in the diminishing zephyr and light footprints in the dust
on the floor of the citadel.
The beings of the living world
would experience never again a demon with such a taste for blood and
revenge as that of Bierrez; not when his cold body lay flaccid like a
rag doll in the heart of his enemy's stronghold; not when his tainted
lifeblood ran more and more sluggish with each second that passed;
not when his once bright features rested motionless in the stagnant
air that caressed his face. But perhaps when an inexplicable phantom
withdrew from a large shadow in the stone wall, scarlet eyes
radiating curiosity and anger as it knelt beside Bierrez, running
graceful fingers through his limp hair; perhaps the coming of this
creature could restore the soul of the dead yokai. Perhaps Bierrez
could live again...
...perhaps...
