It took up the rest of the evening and the early hours of next morning to reach Zozo. Chocobo's were as fast as any land based creature at a full run, but they didn't cope so well in the dark. Their mounts were skittish the whole way and the onset of the mountains on either side seemed to make them even more nervous. They didn't fill Locke with overabundant elation for that matter.

It must have been about seven or eight in the morning by the time they reached the outskirts of Zozo. That was Locke's best guess, given that Zozo seemed to sit underneath an almost preternatural murk. Grim clouds obscured the early glow of the sun, dropping the rain in fine blustering sheets. Locke's jacket and the seat of his pants were soaked through as he dismounted. Grimacing in disgust he pulled the bandana from his head and wrung it dry. It annoyed him that so far he knew very little about what exactly this scroll was or did. What little Alton had told him had barely been enough to peak his interest. He was interested though. Interested and more than a little expectant.

Heck, probably even he doesn't know and we're just off on some wild chocobo chase.

He sure had been spooked on seeing those Imperial troops though. If this scroll was as important as he said it was, then Alton seemed determined to keep it out of the Empire's hands. That hulking war machine had been something else. How did the Empire even know how to build such things? It was a question that made him realize just how little he truly knew about the Empire.

Shadow hadn't said more than two words since their departure from Jidoor. Locke had heard the stories of course, the rumours and the dark evil myths. None of that had really quite prepared him for the reality behind the legend though. He had just appeared out of nowhere like some sort of mummified scarecrow, wrapped in black silk, with eye's that burned in to you with their coldness. Even when the ninja's attention was elsewhere, Locke felt like he was being watched. All men who had heard of him knew Shadow as a murderer, a man who was good at one thing alone and got paid very well for it. His morals and methods were the stuff of living nightmares. What the Returner's were thinking hiring such a man, Locke had no idea.

This is not right. There's more to this than Alton's telling me. Alton. Heh, that's probably not even his real name.

The Returners were a secretive bunch alright. Even amongst the lowly underworld they were only whispered about. Their leader went by the name Baron or Gannon or something like that. A pretty shrewd guy by the sound of it. The Empire had offered a rather sizeable reward for any information leading to the discovery and capture of any Returners. They were undoubtedly becoming a massive thorn in the side to Gestahl and his cronies.

"Thief, try not to make so much noise. I don't wish to attract undue attention." Hissed Shadow as they gingerly approached the cobbled streets of the crippled city.

Locke wasn't aware that he was making any noise at all as they crept towards the squat outer buildings of Zozo. "Thief?" he spat indignantly, "Watch it smartass, I'm no thief okay!" Locke whispered back harshly.

Shadow snorted indifferently "Oh? Perhaps I was mistaken. If you aren't a thief then what are you exactly?"

So, that's how its gonna be huh?

"I'll have you know, I'm a…"

"Enough, both of you." Alton spoke with a quiet authority that seemed insensible to disobedience. Locke shook his head in frustration, but he kept quiet. He wasn't sure that he wanted to see what happened when Alton didn't get his own way.

Bathed in the sombre morning light that tenderly reached it's way through the clouds, Zozo began to take shape. In bolder times, Zozo had been something of a resort town, its hotels and casino's attracting the richest clientele from as far as Vector. The looming old monolithic shells that now sketched out a rugged outline against the mountainside were all that remained of its former glory. Zozo was no longer what you would call a city in the strictest sense. It was a dark hole for the slime of humanity to pour down and disappear. There was no law in Zozo, no society. No respect for human life. It was probably as close to hell on earth as you could get.

Every building they passed was either burnt out or getting ready to fall. There were signs of habitation in some of them. Assorted pieces of rubbish here, the long perished remains of a fire there, the scattered remnants of gnarled bones. Something lived within this sorry town.

They didn't see too many people in the open air. There were bodies of people, left to rot where they fell. The three men kept their distance from those. They heard voices, from within some of the larger buildings, raised in anger and wicked mirth. Locke thought the wind almost sounded like a long continuous scream. It was a disturbing thought he tried with great effort to wrench from his mind.

"Over there," said Shadow, indicating a building at the end of the main street. It was a good three stories high and was half sunken in to the ground on one side, giving it an uneven slant. An open entrance led in to the smoky dimness within.

"How can you be so sure?" Asked Leo.

"Interceptor knows. Something about that building is not right." Shadow replied simply. Shadow's dog emitted a small whine as it passed close by his leg and then suddenly it darted off down an alley as if on a whim.

"We're taking directions from your dumb dog now? What, do you two have some kind of secret language or something? Do you enjoy talking to your dog, assassin man?"

"Better than I do some dumb humans, I'd say. If we're going in there, I go first, Alton second and the thief can bring up the rear."

"You are expecting resistance?" Alton seemed vaguely unsettled by that. "Fine, try to keep the casualties to a minimum and don't harm Rostov. We may need him."

"Fine by me. You're the one paying the bill," Shadow turned away and walked furtively towards the entranceway.

"Hey, wait a second!" Locke wasn't sure he liked where this was leading.

"Are you coming? Or do you wish to remain outside and guard the buildings?"

Shadow was already making his way inside by the time Locke had come up with something to yell at his back, but by then he realised how ridiculous he seemed.

Wonderful. Just peachy.

They always said Zozo wasn't a pretty town. They said it tended to bring out the worst in people. Locke was pretty damn sure he agreed with that statement.

Someone was having a party. That much was obvious to Leo as he made his way down the dimly lit passage with only the hazy outline of Shadow as a guide. The ribald shouts coupled with the clamorous din that probably passed for music in Zozo were factors in realizing that insight. What the people of Zozo would have to celebrate was entirely beyond him however. This was a forsaken place, crying out for the Empire's iron salvation. When the war was done he would see that places like Zozo received the scrutiny they deserved.

He watched Shadow enter the room first, passing through a grimy cloth that hung to cover the entrance. The shouts, music and indeed any other sound that had been coming from the room came to a very abrupt end. Leo waited instinctively, listening to the silence, trying to gauge what sort of reaction Shadow had provoked. Seconds passed like hours and then finally the void was filled by the familiar voice of Shadow, unphased and precise.

"Where is Rostov?"

"Who the hell d'ya think you are?" Demanded a surly growl. "You think you can walk in here uninvited? Men die real quick where they're not welcome."

Leo held his breath. This was not what he wanted to have to deal with now.

"Where is Rostov?" Shadow asked again.

"Skinny runt! Better run home while you still have toes," another voice chipped in.

"We're gonna have some fun with you now, oh yes my boys like the look of you." The first voice said again his every word promising hurt.

"Where is-"

"That's a fancy knife you got there boy. Think you're gonna enjoy it when I poke it up your – URK!"

Leo's sword was drawn even as he entered the room, pulling aside the rotten cloth and brandishing the blade before him. He had expected to find Shadow surrounded by foes, but instead the men he found inside were backed against the walls, their faces a mixture of outrage and terminal distress. Shadow stood calmly in the centre of the room, astride an overturned table. At the end of his outstretched arm a man stood ridged, Shadow's fingers placed about his neck in a contorted grip. Shadow's other hand was positioned with a sleek blade at about the level of the ruffians crotch. Shadow speared Leo a curious half glance and then proceeded to scan the rest of the room's occupants. Eventually his eyes came back to rest on the gradually whitening face of the man he held.

"Where is Rostov?" He asked again and this time there was something about his tone that suggested he wasn't going to ask again.

He was a big, well built man, his broad shoulders nearly matching Leo's. Spittle ran down his thick black beard as he coughed out each word. "B-ba-ACK…back room…he's in the…back room!"

"Is he alone?"

"I…I don't…"

Shadow pulled the man closer and for a second Leo thought he was about to run him through, but instead the assassin drew his blade aside and delivered a sharp downward kick on the man's leg. Leo heard the bone crack and watched as the leg took on an entirely new and sickening angle. Shadow's hostage screamed in agony, but the assassin held him tightly by the throat and would not let him fall.

"Is he alone?"

"No. He…he was talkin' to someone…I heard his voice…" the man was practically in tears.

At last Shadow let his would be attacker drop in to a crumpled mewling heap. He flipped the knife in his hand and carefully replaced it in a sheath under his belt. He stepped over and crossed to the door at the far side of the room. Leo followed, making sure to keep his sword up at all times and pointed at the brigands friends. They glowered back at him, common thugs dressed in tattered rags. Locke made his way tentatively though the broken archway, his own knife drawn. He didn't seem too surprised at what he found there, but he was just as curious as Leo as he surveyed the rest of the scurvy band that glared back at them.

"I suggest you gentlemen leave here now. We're not here to make a social call."

"You guys are gonna pay for this!" a scrawny rat of a man with a pox ridden neck spat at them.

"Hey!" said Locke tapping the brutes head with the flat of his knife. "Play nice. We don't give a half gil what you fella's do. We just came for Rostov."

"Take him then! And get out!" the man demanded, even as the rest of the crew slowly backed away towards the entrance.

A single lamp set on an oaken table illuminated Rostov's room. It had at some point been an old store house. Broken crates and barrels were piled in to a dingy corner, possibly to make way for a couple of ancient bookshelves and a makeshift bed. The stench of sour wine permeated the air. There was another smell in the room, it smelt like dead flesh.

The table more or less dominated the centre of the weakly lit room. The single source of light, a gas lamp, left to burn low until the fuel was all but gone. It was difficult for one to make out the full dimensions of the room in such gloom, but Shadow did not need to see to know that he was not alone.

The others moved in to the room to stand behind him. He gave them credit for their caution. Not everything was as it appeared.

"Who iiiiiissss iiiiiiitttt?" The voice was wavery and thin. Shadow tried to pinpoint its source, but was unsuccessful. Every instinct he had told him to leave at once. There was a charged aspect to the air that he did not trust to.

"Prince Carlusso?" Alton inquired of the empty room.

"Hehehe. Final thoughts. They are of me. How touching…touch…I touch and…"

"Prince Rostov Carlusso? We have no wish to harm you. If you comply with our wishes, I'm certain we can reach an agreement. We are no thieves."

"Ain't that the truth," muttered Locke under his breath.

"Thieves? I know no thieves." The was something indistinct about the princes voice. He seemed unable to maintain any semblance of pattern in his speech. "Oh no. Only one. Singular. Only the great thief. The taker of all. COME NO CLOSER!"

None of them had even moved. Shadow eased his curved blade back in to his palm. If Alton wanted the prince alive that was all well and good, but he would not let that come before his own self preservation. That waste of air in the other room had said Rostov was not alone, but if there were others here they had yet to reveal themselves.

"Careful, this man is dangerous," Alton whispered at his side.

If he is still a man as you say.

"Your disturbance is most unappreciated. One does not usually accept guests at this hour. I do not crave company, not air or the comfort of flesh. Who are you to come here and take my privacy so rudely?"

"Enough," Shadow's patience had expired itself. "Show yourself. You can give me the scroll or I can take it from you." Shadow stepped forward in to the light.

There. Just in the corner. I can just make out a man shape.

"Scroll? You mean this?" He dropped from above, landing catlike on the oak table and knocking the lamp in to the far corner. It shattered on impact and spilled liquid flame on to the surrounding wood, paper and discarded wine. The fire was raging in less than an instant, it's flickering glare revealing Rostov in all his glory.

Rostov was dressed much like the general nobility of Jidoor. He wore a black and tattered waistcoat over a white shirt with a simple red cravat tucked underneath. His brown hair was tied back from his head in a tail and his face…Perhaps it was the dancing and inconsistent shadows, but his face was like a mask of skin laid over his skull, as if the flesh and muscle had just dissolved. Tears of blood rained down from where his eyes had been torn form their sockets to reveal twin pools of darkness beyond. In one thickly veined hand he clasped the scroll, crushing it tightly within his fist. His mouth opened in a rictus of a grin.

"You want this?" he hissed. "You think that by looking upon it's majesty you can become pure don't you? You're too late. The old power has chosen me as its salvation. It's going to be glorious. You're all invited of course!"

"By all the god's," whispered Leo. Is this the legacy of the Magi?"

"Magi?" Locke whispered in awe, not daring tear his eyes away from Rostov's grisly appearance. "What are you talking about?"

"That scroll…I was told it held a secret…nothing more than that. What in god's name has it done to him?"

"It's made him a dead man." Shadow rolled to one side and swept his arm forward sending the knife in his hand on a direct course with Rostov's heart. Moving faster than Shadow would have believed a man capable, the prince slapped the blade form the air and sent it spinning end over end in to the growing flames.

"You want this meaningless scrap of nothing?" Rostov tittered like a malevolent child. "It will not speak to you. Such a fascination of mine it became, when I saw the devils come to claim it. I looked upon those words. The stain of unnatural life, soaked in to ancient parchment. There is a great power in words. It can open your eyes. When it opened mine, I couldn't close them again, so I ate them instead. That didn't work either."

"Alton, we have to get out or we'll be crispy critters along with psycho jockey here," Locke backed steadily away from the approaching flames.

"Demon! You will give that scroll!" Alton flashed his sword before like he knew how to use it and advanced on Rostov. "I promise you your death will be swift and your passing a relief."

"I spit on your death. Feel mine!" Rostov kicked the sword from Alton's grip and flew down from the table in a rage. With a single blow he sent the Returner flying backwards across the room to smashing in to Locke as he did so. Locke fell back against the wall and cried out in pain while Alton fell senseless to the floor. Rostov snarled like a savage beast as he stalked forward to finish his prey.

Shadow moved to block his way and suddenly the demonic prince had a silver dirk jutting from chest. He did not seem to even notice and swung his fist with brutish vigour to try and stave the ninja's head in. It was all Shadow could do to avoid the prince's wild blows, weaving in and out of the mad man's reach he snatched back his knife from where it stood and drew it across the prince's throat. Rostov gave a gargling laugh as blood filled his mouth and caught Shadow by the arm. Before he could even think to try and free himself the prince struck him hard with an up hand blow that sent him reeling back over the table. He sprawled backwards and felt his back grow hot as the table began to burn as well.

Black smoke stung his eyes, but he couldn't afford to hesitate. Rolling off the table's edge he was just in time to watch it splinter in two under the force of Rostov's descending fist.

He's strong. Stronger than a man should be.

He felt under his belt for one his more decisive instruments. A brace of shuriken's dipped in harpy poison would do the deed. More than enough to bring down anything that lived. If Rostov could still be considered living that was. The prince cast aside the pitiful remains of the table and closed in on where Shadow knelt, reaching to his sword belt as he did so. Rostov still had his sword it seemed and Shadow doubted he had forgotten how to use it.

Sweeping it free of his scabbard he lunged at Shadow who danced away two steps and balanced back on the balls of his feet. The stars were already there in his hands. All he needed do was lie wait for an opening and then hurl them straight.

"Get down you fool!" Was all the warning he had as Locke barrelled in to him and threw the both of them to the floor.

That's it, Shadow thought, I'm going to die and it's because some idiot thief thought he was saving my life. If I could remember how I'd be pretty enraged by now.

Leo staggered to his feet, his every sense still ringing from the force with which he had been thrown across the room. Cursing under his breath he laid a hand upon his head and winced with feeling. He was not one to brag too highly of his skills, but it was a plain simple fact that he was not a weak man. However, Rostov had knocked him away like a rag doll.

Is this the power of magic? No. Even Mage-Knights are still bound by the realities of flesh and bone.

He tried to search for the mad prince through the flames, but could make out only shapes billowing against the smoke. Two of the shapes were fighting; another was edging around to the other side of the room. Leo reasserted his priorities and searched vainly for what had become of his sword. It was a simple traveller's blade, nothing more, but it would be enough to do in Rostov.

With bare seconds to spare he gave up on the sword entirely and reached for the next closest thing likely to inflict maximum violence. A big flaming stick that was as yet only half on fire. Grasping it tightly in both hands by the unburnt but still relatively scorching end he whirled it back behind his head and attempted to pick out Rostov amidst the chaos.

The two who were fighting broke apart suddenly and Leo saw one of the two draw a sword. As if on cue the smoke parted to reveal his intended target about to move in and run Shadow through with his fine Doman sword. Locke he saw was pressed with his back against the wall and was keeping himself low while looking for a chance to make a move on Rostov, but on seeing Leo he changed his tack entirely and dived towards Shadow instead. Seeing the two of them go down, Leo clenched his teeth and heaved the stick with all his strength at Rostov's hunched shoulders.

It exploded pretty much on impact, earning an enraged cry from Rostov as well as serving to jar the possessed nobleman off his feet. He stumbled drunkenly sideways and then toppled with a cry in the flames. He took light almost immediately his frenzied screams coming out in an abhorrent mixture of horror and anger. He writhed about like many limbed insect as the blaze ate away at his unclean flesh. Leo cut a path through the smoke and made his way over to his companions who still sprawled in a most uncomfortable looking position on the floor.

"Are you okay?" he asked with genuine alarm.

"I am always okay," grumbled Shadow as he dragged himself out from under Locke. "I could have squashed that flea with ease. Your heroics were unnecessary."

"Saving your life is unnecessary?" Locke laughed bitterly. "You know something Shadow? I think we may have found something we agree upon here," he said as he got to his feet.

"You misunderstand. If you had allowed me to kill Rostov he would not now be burning. Along with the scroll he still has in his hand." Shadow wiped a pall of dust from his shirt derisively and gestured towards the prince's bonfire.

Leo felt his heart sink along with the contents of his stomach and whatever elation he had felt in the heat of battle.

"The scroll! Damn, how could I let it burn!"

"Heheheheck, I told you. The scroll is useless to you now!" The flaming wreck of a man that had once been Prince Rostov arose like a harbinger of the underworld, the black of his bones visible through the cloak of red and orange. In his hand he yet held the scroll, but it was indeed alight and rapidly transforming in to cinders.

"What is burned is dust and dust serves no purpose other than to feed the wind. You will never know the bliss that I have known, never feel the caress of the master!"

"Rostov," Leo didn't know what else could surprise him about this day, "this is your last chance! Give us the scroll!"

"Or you'll what? Wouldn't you have thought trying to burn me alive was a bit excessive in the first place. No fool, I wasted enough time with you all. I will lead and you will follow!"

He held the blackening parchment up before him in a stance of over dramatic triumph, his fist shaking as he spoke.

"You'll always remember this as the day! The day you almost thwarted the ascension! The day you almost saved the world! The day you almost-"

Rostov's denouement was cut rather short, along with most of his arm as a growling fur covered blur leaped through the air in front of him and tore the crispy appendage clean off. Interceptor bounded across the earthen floor and came full circle. He looked up at Shadow and spat the offensive item from his jaws.

"Put it out! Quickly!" Yelled Leo, forgetting Rostov momentarily as he cried out in even more pain.

"Damn, there's not much left," said Locke stamping down hard on it.

"Something is better than nothing," said Shadow. "Come. The fire will take us all."

"What about Rostov?" asked Locke.

The prince was nowhere to be seen. No other entrances lead from the room, but it was safe to say he was no longer among them. They didn't see much in sense in searching after him.

Outside, the cold morning air was a fond relief after the inferno they left behind them. Of the buildings other occupants there had been no sign. Doubtlessly they had fled to the safety of other locales within the city. Thick smoke churned out of the doorway after them as they made their exit. The building groaned from within as if in profound pain. Sooner or later its supports would give and the entire place would collapse in on itself. If Rostov was indeed still in there, he would not be walking out again.

"Wonderful. Just wonderful. I'd like to remind you, you said nothing about guys who burn and don't die when you gave me the job description," Locke berated him.

Leo sighed and brushed a hand through his sweat clad hair. "Do you truly think I would not have told you had I known? Whatever it was we saw in that room, it was no man. At least not the man we tracked out of Jidoor. Something changed him."

"He said something about the scroll," Shadow said thoughtfully. "Reading it purified him he said. One should steer clear of forbidden powers."

"As for this scroll of yours," Said Locke holding up the tattered and charred remains of the parchment. "There's not much left." There was a clear sense of disappointment in his voice. Leo wondered absently what it was the young thief had been hoping to find. "A few words perhaps, some arcane symbols."

I have failed my country and my Emperor. How can I face them with nothing in my hands save ashes?

None of this made any sense to him. The Emperor had sent him to retrieve information. Was that not what the scroll contained? Ancient writings of the ways and lore of the Magi? It was a relic true, but the Emperor had said nothing to him of any dark will living within the scroll.

"Words have power," said Shadow echoing Rostov.

"So, I guess that's it then. We're done," said Locke looking questioningly at Leo.

"No. I will not return empty handed."

"Afraid the Returner's will turf you out? Listen, how important can one piece of paper be."

"It was important," Leo insisted. "The secrets that scroll held could very well swing the balance in the coming war."

"War? What are you talking about?" Locke was truly oblivious.

"I…war has been on the horizon for years. Do you not sense it? The entire world is restless as if tormented by some hidden disease." He gazed skywards at the coming rain as it touched lightly upon his forehead. "There will come a war," he said with iron certainty. "When that happens, do you not think it should end as swiftly as possible?"

"Well…"

"I do. I would devote my life to such a cause. The secrets of the scroll are all but lost. One man alone in the entire world knows what they are."

They were all thinking the same thing. They had all seen it with their own eyes. Rostov's life had become…unnatural.

Leo didn't know what to believe. He shook his head and wandered slightly down the empty street.

"You said it yourself," answered Shadow. "He burned and did not die. I am sure he lives and goes to find whatever it is that lies within his heart."

"What are you saying?" asked Leo.

"That the scroll was a marker," Shadow sounded duly confident of this hypothesis. "A map to some ancient power perhaps? Locked away in far away places. Left behind as a guide, a warning, a trap, who knows for certain? Follow the man and you will find something worth its weight in honour or battles or whatever it is you wish to conquer."

Conquer? Are all men who desire power deemed conquerors?

Leo brooded on the wisdom of Shadow's words. If he returned to his Emperor now, empty handed, his disgrace would be beyond redemption. He had no audacious fantasies about the loftiness of his position. However his departure from the Emperors circle would leave him solely in the counsel of jackals like Kefka. It was the thought of that which ironed Leo's resolve.

"He may be right," offered Locke reluctantly. "A lot of ancient cultures left the keys to their deepest secrets in pieces of arcane literature. I'd say Rostov happened upon something similar…and a lot more besides."

"Very well. We will do what we can to pick up Rostov's scent. Whatever it is he's after we'll let him lead us right to it, then take it for ourselves."

"Where do we start?" asked Shadow.

"Can you track him?"

"If the scent is even half a day old, Interceptor can track it."

"Good. Locke, keep hold of what we have left of the scroll. See what you can find out. If we can second guess Rostov, it'll make this all the much easier."

Shadow surveyed the rocky horizon over Zozo. His eyes were fixed on the guttering house they had escaped from. "Our path will take us over the mountains. It would be astute to take a few hours rest before we start out."

Taking a rest was a task easier said than done. Alton took a spot underneath an old aqueduct and dozed himself off to sleep. Shadow on the other had taken it upon himself to vanish in to the centre of Zozo, but his dog remained behind, so Locke supposed he hadn't just taken off. As exhausted as Locke was he felt an all consuming urge to get up and go after Rostov. It was clear to him now that Alton had been hiding a lot of things from him. The Returner really had no idea what it was he was chasing after. He just wanted to get a hold of it because the Empire desired it. He didn't actually comprehend the sort of power he was dealing with. Locke couldn't very well claim to be much better, but he at least he had an idea.

There were a lot of strange and weird artefacts in the world. Some could have been weapons left over from before the great catastrophe tore the world apart. Icons carved in the likeness of the ancient Esper beings. There still stood in some regions forsaken tombs said to be the haven of elder demons. Locke was no historian, but he knew his stuff and ever since that day three years ago he had been putting that knowledge to good use.

His search had led him after a hope spawned from a legend older than memory itself. Was there a chance that Rostov had happened upon the same power? How else could he sustain such terrible wounds and not die? Could the dead…come back to life?

He unfolded the leftover remains of the scroll and flicked his eyes across what he could still make out. The words were in an ancient dialect, possibly of an old Figaro origin. Whoever had written it had gone to town in terms of majestic style. If he had to guess he would have said it was part of a religious incantation or a litany. He paused to trace a finger over the ink. It wasn't quite ink exactly and it felt…odd. Holding it up to the light he saw it had an almost purplish hue to it. He must have been staring at for an unbelievably long time, because he was still sitting there holding it up to catch the glare of the sun, when Shadow was suddenly crouched next to him and inquiring if he'd "Found anything?"

"Uh…no…not much."

"We leave as soon as Alton awakens."

The hours waned by, though it was tough to judge the proper passage of time. Locke really hadn't made any progress at all, though he was certain he could decipher at least part of the text, given the right amount of time. He said as much to Alton as they were packing up to go.

"Let us hope then that we have that much," he had said in fair enough humour, but Locke could tell that something was pressing on his mind. Ensuring the defeat of the Empire probably really meant a lot to him, though Locke still was far from convinced this was the way to go about it.

Seeing the Empire pay for all they'd done though? If it could be done he'd like to see it. He just had a lot of trouble believing in it otherwise. Locke had a lot of respect for guys like Alton. They stood up against the odds and gave their all for the good of something else, a higher ideal or a vision. He had been that way once. But he wasn't so sure what it was he lived for now.

The mountain range cutting off Figaro desert from the west was not exactly the most traversable in the world. Truth be told, they were damn as hell steep as mountains went. Riding the Chocobo's up them was out of the question in this case and even then finding a decent path was unlikely.

Shadow had been grumbling half the day about having to cross in to the mountains. Locke suspected that part of the reason he had been so interested in Locke's progress in interpreting the scroll was because he wanted to know where Rostov was going and get there before him. He seemed almost upset about leaving the open road.

The first day was easy enough. Interceptor led them around a moderate cluster of foothills that bypassed a few solid hours of climbing. Alton commented that it was unlikely Rostov had taken such a path, but Shadow was adamant that his hound could track the scent no matter how far off course they got. Locke suspected he had a little too much faith in that dog of his.

After that it became decidedly more strenuous. It rained consistently for the next three days and all prospect of a clear and open road through the mountains vanished. Progress was uphill, slow and above all extremely perilous. The climb was far from steep, but the unevenness of the ground coupled with its never abating dampness made it difficult to traverse safely.

When shelter became necessary they had set up their tents and made do. It was a welcome luxury at the end of each day. Mostly as it provided a brief respite from the unrelenting rain. Food in the mountains was scarce and they had to hand only what they were able to carry with them. The various beasts that roamed the mountains were pretty much inedible and they in turn had probably eaten or scared off the proper game. The passed the odd mountain spring, but rarely found any resident fish. But they made do.

On the evening of the fourth day the clouds parted and the rain came to a stop however on the morning of the fifth day a cloying white mist clung to the hills. Locke had been banking mainly upon his fair sense of direction up till that point to ensure they never came in danger of getting lost. With the onset of such a thick front of mist however, his hopes were dashed. His almost instantaneous advice was to head back the way they'd come which at least they knew better than where they were going. Shadow however, who had been somewhat recalcitrant about crossing the mountains in the first place would have none of it.

"Interceptor still has the scent. Go back if you wish, but I wouldn't envision myself getting paid if I were you."

Shadow didn't say much else after that. In all fairness he had kept to himself most of the journey. Often he would slip out of plain sight while they were ascending only to reappear just ahead of them with his damn mutt at his heels. Sometimes when they set up camp for the night he would take his leave as well, disappearing in to the night without so much as a sound. It was a personality trait Locke found all the more unnerving with every passing day.

That evening they came upon an abandoned hovel. It looked as if it had been deserted months ago, but it had a roof and was sturdy enough to withstand the high wind. It was a welcome change of pace and they elected to make their camp there.

While Alton busied himself with the fire and Shadow stepped outside, Locke sat himself down against one of the firm earthen walls and pulled out the scroll fragment. Alton didn't seem to mind him hanging on to it. The man seemed to of given up all interest in it for the time being, whereas before it had been all he went on about. There was more to Alton than met the eye though. He did care bout something very greatly, but he kept such things to himself.

Little by little Locke was getting close to figuring out the nature of the lettering. He was not so certain about where the dialect originated from, but he did recall a few of the bordering symbols from memory. They were a form of hieroglyph common in the ancient architecture of Doma, though he had encountered them in other places as well.

One he was sure was the symbol for 'spirit' or 'soul', fairly androgynous terms. If it was part of a religious iconography it might have been referring to a celestial being like an angel. The other main symbol that caught his attention was one normally found in burial chambers. It was a sanctifying mark, conferred upon the dead to ensure that corruption was kept at bay. The curious thing however was that in this instance, the symbol was inverted, suggesting a reversal of such a blessing.

Locke wasn't sure what to think about any of this, but he kept at it. If this did turn out to be what he hoped it was there was no way he could let Rostov get his hands on it. Rostov or anyone else for that matter.

It was fortuitous, Leo mused, that he still remembered his basic survival training. It had been years since he had needed to produce a fire from scratch. The Imperial academy had been a rigorous experience, designed to shape its cadets in to hardened warriors. He was almost afraid that his years as an officer would have whiled away his most rudimentary skills, things he had long taken for granted.

For one thing it would have been most difficult to maintain his pretence as a revolutionary, someone forced to always rely upon whatever they could find to survive. For another it was a good thing to remain warm. They had not climbed so high that they had touched snow yet and Leo was determined to keep it that way.

Locke was embroiled once again in reading over their only real lead on where Rostov was leading them. If he had discovered anything so far, he hadn't revealed that fact to either Shadow or himself. Indeed Shadow questioned Locke every evening as to whether he had found out anything. Leo reflected that his interest was probably borne out of a desire to end this affair as soon as possible.

He decided that Locke was best left to his own devices for now. Leo's own desire to see this ended was just as tantamount as anyone else's. He got to his feet and muttered something about getting a breath of fresh air. A pitiful excuse really, but after such a long sojourn in the presence of others it was refreshing to have some time to oneself. He was more used to that. A life in solitude was what he craved and so often indulged. He had no family, save the Imperial army, no love save for the Empire. His life was the Emperor's and by default it belonged to the people of the Empire as well. A world order that was exactly that. No chaos, no suffering, just the will of the just and the joy of the plenty.

It was an ideal worth dying for and die he would if the need arose.

A fluttering movement caught his eye against the deep blue of the night. A tiny shape beat its way up form the safety of the mountains edge and disappeared from view.

A bird? Could it have been a carrier pigeon all the way out here?

"What are you looking for?" Shadow asked materialising beside him.

Leo had long since given up being surprised at the ninja's ability to approach unheard. "What am I looking for?" he repeated the question to Shadow.

"Tonight," Shadow came to stand at his shoulder and gazed out over the land below. "Your heart leads you on a path you do not understand. A mind clouded by doubt is a thing beyond pity."

Something about Shadow's words sparked anger in Leo's mood. He rounded on the assassin and spoke as plainly as he would to an ill-mannered trooper. "You were not hired in this enterprise to question my feelings. Do not plague me with your morose philosophy. Mercenary," he emphasized the last word, hoping to put Shadow back in his place.

"Such unkind words," he muttered, though if he was truly hurt he did not sound it. "I was only making conversation. Perhaps the thief will interest me more with his tales of impotent bravado.

"Wait. What is it you think I doubt?" Leo was considering, despite himself.

"Yourself perhaps. Your reasons for being here. A soldier should be fighting in the frontlines. What compels you to go against your nature?" It was the kind of question he had not expected from Shadow, he faltered a little.

"I don't know what you're talking about. I'm here for the sake of the Returners," he said a little too quickly. "If what Rostov is after is a weapon, there's no telling what devilry he could unleash. More than defeating our enemies we have an obligation to protect those who cannot protect themselves."

"How very noble of you."

"The strong should defend the weak. It's that simple," the certainty in his voice was adamant.

"I guess it depends on you see as the weak…or the strong for that matter."

Leo shrugged. "We should get back. Perhaps Locke has deciphered the manuscript."

"Are you sure its wise to trust him?"

"That's funny," said Leo, though he sounded far from amused. "I can imagine him asking me the same question of you."

"That isn't what I meant," he said twisting his head to look at Leo directly. "Don't you think its dangerous to leave him in possession of that thing?"

"What are you saying?"

"Rostov probably went mad from reading that scroll. It turned him in to some kind of demon. Words have power, remember. How do we know that the same thing won't happen again?"

Leo hadn't truly thought about that. "It's only a scrap of what there was," he defended. "Besides, it seemed more to me like some kind of malefic spirit had consumed his mind. It had to have been trapped in that scroll until it was set free."

"Admit it," Shadow pressed, "You don't understand these ancient energies any more than I do. Don't you think there's a risk in meddling with them?"

"You're right; we don't have the knowledge to understand them fully. That's why we need Locke. I don't want to walk any further down this path in total blindness."

Shadow made an impassive snort and looked away again. "Tell me truly. Was what we saw back in Zozo an Esper?"

What?

"I…cannot say…I have never seen one. No one living has."

But I have. They are not the same as that thing. They can't be.

"Of course not. Well, perhaps you are right. We shall see what Locke can tell us."

Locke, unfortunately, was rather unforthcoming in his studies. They sat for a while and talked, trying to piece together what they knew of the history of the Magi. Shadow once again brought the up the question of Espers, but Locke was just as sceptical as Leo had been. In his eyes the Espers were still an extinct species. Leo was certain this had nothing to do with them and was more comfortable pressing on with other alternatives.

"What strikes me the most is that who ever wrote this did it long before the war of the Magi broke out."

"Before the war? Are you saying it has nothing whatsoever to do with the magi?"

"Maybe, maybe not. Judging by the language I'd say it was written back during the separation of ancient Figaro and Doma in to two separate kingdoms. What we know about that period is sketchy at best. Legend tells of how the two continents were once linked only to be sundered by the wrath of those who reign above.

"Those who reign above? Are you talking about some kind of ancient gods?"

"No one knows for sure. They've never been described in too much detail, at least in no story I ever heard. Anyway there's a lot of speculation this was a sign of the coming of magic. A kind of portent of what was to come; some say it was even caused by the evil of men too obsessed with enslaving the Esper race."

"So, this scroll could have come from either Doma or Figaro?"

"Well, I'm almost certain it echoes back to a time when both cultures were one and the same. If it does refer to the Magi then it's possible we're very close to our destination already."

"How so?"

"Back in ages past, Figaro desert covered only half the area it does now. It used to be an entire kingdom, till it got wiped off the map that is. There were a lot of Magi living in Figaro at the time so naturally everyone blamed them for what was happening. A lot of historians cite those events as one of the main precursors for the war."

"Yes. I have heard that tale too, but how does that tell us where Rostov might be going?"

"That maybe where we're headed is somewhere out in the desert. Maybe the scroll told Rostov the location of one of the old cities or perhaps a tomb? It's not much but it's a start."

"The desert is vast beyond your wildest fantasies. Can't you be anymore specific?" demanded Shadow.

"Hey, I'm trying my best here! I don't see you offering much in the way of insight," deflected Locke.

"Calm down both of you. All of this is still just supposition. We don't know anything for certain and won't until we catch up to Rostov."

"I suppose it is better than nothing," Shadow acquiesced. "How much more do you know about this ancient kingdom?"

"Not much. There might be someone who does though. It might be worth swinging by his place when we get to the other side of the mountains. That is, if you think we can spare the time."

"Who is this person?" asked Leo intrigued, "Do they live close by?"

"Yeah actually. Some old guy I heard lives in South Figaro. He's pretty ancient, comes from some town to the far east. Kind of a Wiseman around these parts. It might be worth having him look at what we have here."

"I'll consider it as a last minute option. For now we'll just stick to the trail."