Sunday, July 1, 2018

A Lady's Prerogative II: Wounded Aerth - Epilogue by Brian Joseph Johns

 

Epilogue - Wytch Hunt



The Priest sat in his room, a tiny but comfortable lodging housed in the upper floor of the Church he presided over. He was currently seated at his desk peering through a looking glass out into the night sky. He sketched what he observed onto a piece of parchment with a quill and ink, the lakes and craters of the moon. He could only work in short spurts as the moon moved too quickly through the sky to get a good fix on any one part of it. The moon had been particularly bright this night and it had presented the perfect opportunity for him to pursue his hobby. Nobody in his congregation knew about it and he kept it secret from them, as did many in the clergy at that time. Just as many had in other fields in places of the world. 



He knew there were others as himself and that loving the heavens and its creation did not put him at odds with his faith. He would give his drawings to the school administrator and teacher, for whom he had an admiration and attraction. It was strictly against the rules for a man of the cloth to engage in a relationship or marriage. He still spent time with her but he was careful to keep it secret. He had just finished his work sketching what we would call the sea of tranquility and the surrounding features, which were theorized to be dormant volcanoes. He packed up the picture into a folder the tanner had made for him and stepped out of his room and out of the church and into the night.



He was only a twenty minute walk away from the teacher's home and he enjoyed the trip as it gave him a chance to take in the full night sky and air. He began his trek to her house along the horse path unaware that he was being followed. The path meandered through a small patch of forest before clearing into a congregation of wooden buildings. The air was brisk and he felt as if he was being followed. As he neared the halfway point, he stopped when he heard a twig snap behind him. He turned to face the source of the noise.



"Whose feet fall in the night?" he asked calmly.



When the figure stepped out he recognized it as that of Widow Milaise, a lady in her late thirties whom had lost her husband years earlier in a riding accident.



"Father Wilsen, you must help!" she spoke in a panicked hushed tone looking around her carefully to make sure that they both remained unseen.



"How may I be of service to your house M'aam. What ever is wrong?" he asked with a genuine look of concern on his face.



"They, the men of ire are coming to get me! Their plan is to fell me! See my death! They've gone mad!" she spoke again the stress permeating her voice and etching itself into lines in the corners of her eyes.



"Who? Who are coming to get you?" he asked her, offering his hand.



"Us. We have seen her in the midst of her black arts." Two men stepped onto the dirt path from the forest, just slightly out of breath. 



"Widow Milaise here is a Wytch practicing arts in the service of the dark lord his self." The second one spoke, his hand darting out and catching hold of Widow Milaise's hand.



She struggled against him but the man held strong to her.



"She killed her own husband in sacrifice to that the same dark lord. She's a demon's succubus she is, this one." spoke the first in accusation.



"I think that you're getting carried away over the bad yield of your crop this season Nilus. Let's go to the Church and I'll fix you a hot drink and we'll talk this matter to resolve." responded Father Wilsen compassionately.



With that the man holding Widow Milaise revealed a knife that he had been holding in his other hand and drove it into the Widow's chest. She gasped and screamed as Father Wilsen struggled with the other man to retrieve the knife from her wound and assist her. The second man began yelling.



"Murder in the night! Murder in the night! There's been a Murder in the night!" he pulled forth a bell, the one he'd use to signal town events, swinging it clanging and shattering the silence with its staccato.



Father Wilsen retrieved the knife from the Widow's body and tried to revive her with what little knowledge of medicine and the body that he had. He had to get her to the Apothecary if he was going to save her.



A few moments later a troupe of town folk had forged their way from nearby homes to onto the scene.



"Father Wilsen felled us a Wytch! The darkest kind! Widow Milaise had been a succubus for a demon of the dark lord his self! She offered her husband whom she was sworn to cherish and obey to the demons of the depths!" The man with the bell was addressing the crowd as they grew.



"Father Wilsen, this is unheard of and not the practice. We've nought had a Wytch these parts for more than twenty hands." Allen who was a member of the militia and had a little knowledge of law offered his input.



"It was time, I suspected her up to as much. My crops were worst yield to be had as were Harlan's and the Velt's by the same." the first pursuing man chipped in.



"She did for that and a whole other of ills that have our laps to us been given by the wind." told by another town member.



Father Wilsen looked around as he knew what was happening. He'd seen it before when the town had driven out Tobias Mesky. They'd said he had the plague and that he was sleeping with three of the wives' of the townsfolk. The truth was that someone else was sleeping with those women and it was customary in town for them to hang their saddlebags on the least senior or least welcome member of the town, driving them off with that baggage. 



One of those wives had come to confession on Sunday and told the Father in confidence that it was Walker Harlan. He'd fathered five children with other women in town while they were under wedlock to other men. They had loaded up Tobias with their baggage and sent him packing and she'd felt genuinely nothing but sorrow for him. The women would likely have refused had the town been more supportive of their rights, but these times were much different. Few men would cross those bounds, but every once in a while when one did who had protection amongst numbers, others often paid the price. 



Unbeknownst to them Tobias Mesky had died in the wilderness only two months later of exposure and starvation. Now they were washing their hands of anything else they could upon the body of the dead Widow as they had with her dead husband years earlier. It was out of control and far beyond his hands now and the Widow's body was sent to the Apothecary for embalming and preparation. 



As far as the town was concerned he'd felled a Wytch. He'd done battle with the dark lord his self and lived to share forth of his exploits. He never spoke of that night again though his nightmares continued speaking to him. He never spoke to the school administrator after that and eventually stopped his moon and star gazing altogether in place of the bottle.



For the years following those incidents, Wytch hunts had become the means of social laundering for many of the sins of the age from adultery to philandering and the cure for poor crops and bad weather. Some of those who had practiced the craft and had fallen to the path of the hunters, took part in stirring up this hunt as it was their intent to be the sole wielders of this power everywhere.



Many women and men were burned at the stake or submerged to a watery grave as a means of cleansing their spirit of these ills only to be cast with the sins of their murders and buried in for the ages. One such incident saw the early ancestors of a modern practitioner of the craft eradicated in one fell swoop. A mother and father killed before the town with a celebration following the deed. Nelony years later would learn of this upon an investigation into her ancestry as part of a school project more than three hundred and fifty years later.



Many good people had laboured to protect those whom were suspected of wytch sorcery and those whom they suspected would become targets for the next social expulsion of local sins. Many apothecares, doctors and healers had been victimized during the initial onslaught and they were among the first to be protected by the so called wytch allies of life. Later as more understood that there were real wytches whose craft was used to protect others, the too were cared for with great secrecy. They would hide those people, and failing that effort they would try to relocate them to somewhere safe, just as Nelony's one surviving ancestor, a boy had been rescued from the massacre that had seen the his parents murdered. They were able to ship him off through safe passage to Thessel Grove located a hundred miles east.



His first meal upon arrival with his surrogate family was Thanksgiving, and it was much different from the feast that we know today. It was a festival where the entire town gathered and many came from far outside of the town and shared a pool of their food and stock. Settlers from far and wide and the indigenous inhabitants put aside their differences long enough to thank their God(s) (as some of the indigenous people had many) and their land as this was the source of all they had.



It was in this atmosphere that the boy, the last of Nelony's surviving ancestors enjoyed home and hospitality with his surrogate mother and father. Years later he'd marry the most beautiful woman in town (that's what he told his grand kids while in the presence of his wife, who would pinch him playfully in response) and have two children together. Nelony's bumpy history had been kept from her, and when she had found out what had happened, it changed her and her relationship with nature became much stronger and her trust of people would have disappeared if not for Shaela and Mila.



Father Wilsen's memoirs which were buried with his body eighteen years following the night of the Widow's death explained the whole truth about that night. A truth that was buried with his body and remained that way until recent developments saw it unearthed centuries later.



The school administrator never found out the truth and did not attend the Father's funeral when he died though he hand delivered his last picture of the moon to her doorstep days before his death.



It was months after their incursion to the Estate in L'Arbres De Noire that Nelony had received a package in which the contents outlined the events that followed Father Wilsen's death. The truth about Father Wilsen's story and his heroic effort and the selfless efforts of the Wytch Haven and the True were the only things absent in this package. The efforts of many who risked their own safety operating in secrecy in order to preserve life and protect what an emerging people stood for were struck from the account delivered to Nelony. It told of the story of the slaughter of all of Nelony's relatives and the celebration that followed marking the end of the Order Of The Aerth Mother.



Nelony grew bitter and full of ire, and nature followed her in hopes of recovering her before it was too late, but it already was. She drew forth her plans to right this wrong keeping them from her two best friends, Shaela and Mila.


Somewhere distant and in darkness the Power Lord watched as his plans took hold.





Fiction: A Lady's Prerogative Book I: The Yearning And The Learning Part I by Brian Joseph Johns



Warning: This story deals with some mature situations. Reader discretion is advised.

Disclaimer: This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

Preface


This is the book that started the A Lady's Prerogative series, around which all other stories are fastened. It contains a fitting introduction to the world and it's characters without revealing too much about what is to come. If you're new to A Lady's Prerogative, this is the best place to start though keep in mind that this isn't just for ladies It includes a variety of heroic and villainous characters of all genders though the main characters of the story are essentially four Women. I will be publishing the entirety of the book over the next week or two which includes a much updated and edited storyline from the original publication of 2012. It is a part of a much bigger story that will unfold as you read this book and those that follow it.

Please do enjoy,

Brian Joseph Johns


The Preparation



Mila placed the candelabra on the table and traveled the distance around it, to a window near the far end. The table itself was oval in shape, with enough places to seat ten comfortably though only four places were set. No cloth covered its surface, only the evenly spaced place settings, which included an array of salad, shellfish, dinner and dessert forks, spoons for soup and legumes, and knives fit for cutting rolls or buttering them as desired. The center of the table housed the newly placed candelabra which was curtained with various serving dishes that contained sauces and other elixirs.



The table itself was made from a variety of different woods which were each sculpted and carved and assembled by a craftsman. She had custom ordered this table and supplied a large portion of the design herself. Everything in her house was as this table, things of which she had dreamt and that had made their way into the world by her creativity and sometimes, her obsession. Taking the idea from a dream and turning it into reality always required a skill or a combination thereof that she did not possess in the means necessary to make that dream, whatever it was. Finding the right person, with the right combination of skill, artistry and expression was always the interesting part.


She closed the window, through which the wind pushed the curtain into a willowy dance. This window, about three feet removed from the end of the table, looked out onto a grove that blanketed the property for fifty yards all the way ‘round the house before giving way to a thick overgrown forest. During the day, the odd chipmunk or squirrel would make its way through the grove in order to search for something that may have made its way to the ground from one of the orchard trees. There was no activity in the orchard on this day. Most of the squirrels and chipmunks were well into the task of preparing for winter, or had already settled in for their big sleep. The sun was already hidden beyond the forest and just beneath the horizon. She noted the state of the trees and the foliage that had spread itself onto the floor of the grove. She let the curtain fall back into place in front of the window, its dancing done for the day. It was still too early to prepare for her guests, as punctual and reliable as they were, they'd likely never arrived before dark. Fashionably late as it were. Besides,  Mila thought, there were still many preparations necessary for what was to follow.



She crossed the distance of the room through an archway that opened into the kitchen. The room itself sang with the same atmosphere as did the dining area. Lit well enough for one to see, yet dark enough to be relaxing at the same time. On a large cast iron gas stove, a trio of pots boiled, water frothing as the bubbles climbed, never quite reaching the edges to escape. In the center of each pot, was a second pot, a double boiler as it were. Within each of these boilers were suspended several pieces of string which were tied to a rod stretched across each boiler. Within each, a different colored liquid simmered, without bubbling, but moving just beneath the surface enough to let one know that something was happening. She proceeded through the archway and over to the stove, reaching for a handle at the end of one of the rods. She skilfully lifted the rods by this handle and placed them on a rack, where the strings, now covered in this liquid set to solidify.



As they dried, essentially becoming candles, she tended to the clutter on the stove itself, removing the pots and boilers to the sink. It would take some time for the candles to dry, for these were no ordinary candles. After she had put everything away, she proceeded to the living room to enjoy a bit of relaxation to summon up the kind of energy that she would need. She made her way down the hall, through the archway that opened into the room she sought. The living room itself was compact and bodingly dark and the walls were framed by tall baseboards, each etched with a multitude of carvings. The walls were painted in what looked to be a smorgasbord of streamers and confetti in a variety of reds, oranges and pinks which like the baseboard carvings, never repeated or made any kind of pattern all while concealing a common motif.



Her favorite chair, a large soft overstuffed, upholstered in cashmere sat a body length shy of the center of the room, with a large ottoman perched before it. She reached the chair and sat upon it, stretching her legs out comfortably on the ottoman. The chair faced a fire place, which like the baseboards, had their own carvings, but of a much different style than those on the baseboards themselves. The mantle piece above the fire place appeared almost as a framed mirror or painting. It’s surface ever so slowly changed in shape and color in harmonic appreciation of the burning wood. Even the wood in the fireplace played its part, dense pieces of cedar, its aroma filling the air. On a table beside her chair, sat a few books she'd left half read, although there would be no reading tonight. She closed her eyes and concentrated on the crackling of the fire, drawing its energy in as she drifted.


The Dream



She was in another place, a street in Alivale, the small township a good many miles from the house. The street was empty, but there seemed to be a festive spirit in the air regardless of the lack of patrons. She was walking down the street, in a clear midday sun, towards a “T” intersection. Across the street at the end of the “T”, was her destination. She looked to her left at a display window. A mannequin stood modeling farming apparel, holding a large pitchfork, its spokes reaching for the ceiling. Hay was scattered around the floor of the display window, making it look like a simple caricature of actual farming life. She looked to the face of the mannequin and thought there was something that just wasn't quite right. She tried to pause in her footsteps but found that she couldn't. She continued her journey, startled as she encountered another mannequin in the store window that followed, a lady modeling jogging sportswear. None of the mannequins seemed to breath yet they were definitely alive. None of them resembled anyone that she had ever seen in her trips to the town, though they were possessed of the same sense of familiarity.




As she reached the intersection, she heard the sound of moving water and was met with a cool and misty breeze. The street itself had become a river, the waters seeming to accelerate as she approached. She tried to stop herself from stepping out into the street/river but encountered the same resistance to her efforts that she had experienced at the display window. Her foot met the water, which was moving rapidly, roaring as it did. She braced for cold flow of water over her body, but found that she didn't sink as she stepped out onto the river. The rushing water supported her weight, which felt like mossy tundra under her step. The water didn't stream up her foot or shower her in splashes as she took each step, it merely flowed underfoot. She took her final step onto the curb and turned her attention from the rushing water to her destination. 



The store had a large display window, which seemed to be steamed over on the inside. She approached the display window, putting a hand to the glass. She peered through the window but was met with a thick gray steam that obscured the display environment. She brought her face closer, shielding her eyes of the midday glare with one of her hands. A face shot out of the steam from the other side and pressed itself onto the glass. Grey glowing eyes peered back at Mila. A listless expression on the face, its teeth clenched in a grim rictus.



“Graduation year is it? This year is going to be different Mila!” the face spoke, in a gargling like dialect.



“Just ask the kind Alivale folk what they think!” the face nodded in the direction of a crowd of storefront mannequins that had gathered on the other side of the “T” intersection across the river.



Each mannequin still held its canned smile, their inanimate expressions fixated upon her. The jogger sportswear mannequin backed up to take a run at hurdling the river. The mannequin ran a hard sprint, leaping into the air in a steep arc. If flew silently its arms and legs flailing as it did. Reaching the end of its arc, the mannequin failed to cover the full distance, plunging into the river. Mila stepped back against the display window aghast at the mannequin, eerily smiling as it failed to get a hold of the curb and was quickly swept down stream, tumbling through the water. As quickly as it disappeared, one of the other mannequins stepped forward, in a three piece suit, squatted and projected itself at Mila like a dapper missile. Despite the initial lack of momentum, the suit mannequin was able to launch itself far enough across to get a purchase on the curb. It held on, struggling happily against the force of the water to pull itself onto the sidewalk at Mila. As it managed to get its other hand on the curb, another suit mannequin leapt out of the crowd and into the water, spurred on by the former’s success. In doing so, it accidentally knocked a couple of other onlooking mannequins into the water. The first suit mannequin had started to pull itself from the water, Mila watching in horror as it did. The second suit mannequin had leveraged its distance across using the other waterborn mannequins as rafts, pushing off from one and catching the first suit mannequin’s leg. The first suit mannequin, unfazed and smiling, pulled itself up onto the curb.



The second suit mannequin, whose wig had fallen off into the water, climbed up and over the first, now already part way onto the curb. Mila, spurred to action by their success moved forward in an attempt to knock them back. Her foot connected with the chest of the second one in a solid blow, knocking the mannequin backwards into the water, where it disappeared quickly. The first mannequin, reached out and grabbed her exposed leg, its hand feeling like cold wax. She screamed, kicking it with her free foot. The suit mannequin held fast, as it reached for her other leg. In her frenzy, she noticed the farm hand mannequin at the front of the crowd, clumps of hay stuck to its feet. It arched its arm back, wielding the pitchfork like a javelin. The pitchfork flew through the air in a deadly arc at Mila. Mila reached for the suit mannequin’s tie, and yanked it to its feet just as the pitchfork reached her. It plunged into the back of the suit mannequin with a chunk sound that made Mila shudder. The mannequin remained unfazed by the wound, still smiling despite having stumbled backwards if only by the imbalance caused by the pitchfork. Mila pushed with both hands against the mannequin’s shoulders. The mannequin plunged into the water, cart wheeling downstream, still reaching for the curb with futility.



Mila looked back to the crowd, which seemed to have lost its collective nerve and was backing away from  the street. Catching her breath, she turned to confront the face in the window only to find it empty.



Mila sighed, still shaking a little. She had leaned against the store window to keep her balance when a cold waxy hand gripped her shoulder. She turned screaming to see the face of the farm hand mannequin smiling back at her. Her scream filled the air as a log in fire place cacked making a loud noise, suddenly waking her from her sleep.



She scanned the living room for mannequins, finding none to her relief. She paused a moment, allowing herself to calm. The house was even darker since the sun had completely disappeared, and the full moon crept its way into the night sky. Her guests would be arriving soon.



Mila made her way back to the kitchen hurriedly for some final preparations for the special candles, as they were an important part of the evening and part of her contribution to the night. She trimmed the candles of their excess leaving a bushy wick on the end of each. She placed each on its own holder which bore engravings lacking symmetry and if one looked close enough at them, they may have noticed a similarity with those on the mantle piece. She paused to admire her craftwork despite her disturbing dream. She took them each, two at a time to a hutch that stood upon a buffet in the dining space. They were evenly distributed across three separate shelves where, to an observer they would have seemed more pronounced than the space that surrounded them. Again she admired them within their setting then continued on with the final preparations.



Most of the feast had been prepared by her in the days prior to the date although the feast was not the main attraction of the evening. Every last vegetable, legume, berry that had made its way into one of the entrees she had hand picked. A lost art that was very important to those who understood its value. She retrieved each of the entrees from the stove, which she had cleverly converted to an oven sized steamer. She grabbed each of the serving dishes and placed them upon their setting on the table. When finished, she paused once more to admire the entirety of the scene before her. She sighed and made her way up the back stairs and to her bedroom. There she quickly washed her face and donned her white evening gown, which bore her curves in exhibition and yielded to her movement without constricting her. She wore her sexuality with confidence as a mature woman, yet retained her personal sense of poise. She considered intimacy as a sacred form of expression that should only be communicated between those who sincerely meant it. She braided her long hair and twirled it into a spiral shaped bun on the back of her head. She was as ready for the night as it was for her.



Arrivals




Mila made her way down the stairs to the dining room and took her place on the end of the table closest the kitchen. By that time, the air had already begun to move in scattered and erratic bursts making the candles on the candelabra dance, in erratic sudden moves. There she seated herself in wait for her guests to arrive, observing the coming show. Each air burst was now accompanied by the presence of a dense dark patch of space that no light could pierce. As quickly as they would appear, they would fade. She jumped as a bolt of static electricity shot from one of the black patches on one side of the table to a point in the corner of the ceiling. The air itself seem to darken as the show progressed. There was a loud POP and another bolt of static shot from the one of the corners of the buffet into a spoke on the candelabra. She jumped in her chair, startled but amused.



The air in the room seemed to fold into itself while the other settings began to shudder. Mila scanned the room, making sure there was no damage in the fray, when she noticed a butterfly fluttering to one of the chairs, quickly to be followed by another. Yet another followed those two and then one more. Additional butterflies continued to materialize as tiny puffs of smoke until there was a cloud of butterflies forming up onto the first chair. The mass of butterflies slowly congregated, taking the form of a combined larger shape on the chair, their wings still beating the air. Mila watched in awe as their wings slowed. They slowly combined into a human shaped cocoon, their movement continuing under the shell. A moment later, the movement in the cocoon had stopped and the cocoon itself dissolved, pieces floating into the air and disappearing revealing a beautiful woman seated thereupon. Her beautiful red lips and deeply penetrating eyes appeared first, followed by her shoulder length blonde hair which flowed down onto her indigo green dress. The lady sat quietly beside Mila, who was still keeping an eye on the show around them. From the comfort of her chair, she raised her hand and extended her index finger. Three butterflies fluttered to her from the dancing shadows within the room, landing on her finger. The lady held then close to her nose before releasing them back into the air. She then looked over to Mila.



The second place setting, the one across from her recent arrival, continued to rock from side to side, occasionally bouncing off the ground altogether. Mila had observed that the shadows in the room had began to take on a life of their own. The shadows combined, like a pool of liquid, streaming toward the chair from all directions. When the shadows had made their way to the chair, they continued up the chair, and like the cocoon, took on the form of a person. The shape slowly gained dimensionality and the curves of another beauty took form. Her black night gown clung to her figure yet still retained an air of elegance. She smiled with a hidden prudence as the contrast of the shadows were replaced by her pale white skin, her lips red and as dark as her gown, her eyes even darker with an elaborately etched eyeliner tail on each side of her eyes. Her face was pale white and smooth giving contrast to the make-up surrounding her lips and eyes. Her hair was more a deep triking red that pierced the darkest shadows. Mila heard something fierce from the shadows of the room breathing, watching them obviously having arrived with the shadow lady. The shadow lady craned her head back looking in the direction of the shadowy beast, and shushed it quiet. She held her silence, the three looking at each other and then to the remaining chair.



The last chair, which had come to life and was now hopping and rocking around an imaginary point at the end of the table. Then without warning, it suddenly stopped. For a moment there was complete silence and all of the activity ceased, the room visibly darkened. The three women eyed the room as if in disbelief that the show had ended, the shadow lady pursing her lips feigning disappointment. A low frequency hum began to oscillate, shaking the entire house and its occupants. Mila could feel her insides moving sympathetically to the low frequency harmonics as she fought the urge to gag. There was another moment of silence, then the walls and ceiling disappeared altogether revealing the night around them in all of its glory. A strong wind blew from out of nowhere towards the empty chair, as if the space the chair occupied had become a vacuum. Even the trees of the orchard which were visible to the ladies, swayed against this wind. The clouds themselves had become caught up as well, and had been pulled from miles around, out of the sky in a stream all leading to the chair. Several lightning bolts swept across the sky, followed by the blast of thunder. Mila gripped the arms of her chair as if hanging on for her life. When the cacophony had reached nearly unbearable proportions, a loud boom echoed out from the house, and the walls and ceiling reappeared, the momentum screeching to a halt like the end of a terrifying roller coaster  Amazingly, nothing in the room had been disturbed by the maelstrom, though its effects were visible on the faces of the three ladies. While they caught their breath in the silence, they almost failed to notice the last guest.



Mila paused for a moment, scanning the room with her eyes and senses, both simultaneously trying to see through a thin veil of mist that enveloped the room and to evaluate the room for damage. When she was satisfied with what her eyes told her of the situation she turned her full attention to the new guest. An elderly lady with sparkling eyes alight with the curiosity of someone a hundredth her years, sat in her chair, a mystical cloak flowing from her, billowing despite the still air.



"Please, stay seated. I insist." she turned to Mila and the other guests, who all simultaneously rose from their seats in unison with Yirfir.



The trio looked on returning to their respective seats.



"Well this is a far cry from what I expected!" she proclaimed proudly as someone who'd been to Mila's abode in the past despite this having been her first time.



"How quaint, yet bold in approach. I see you've been busy with the details?" she inquired of Mila, who smiled politely and nodded.



Yirfir was of course referring to the decorative work which ran lightly through the surface of all the walls, though barely noticeable, and especially such in the dim candle light. Mila's cheeks flushed as she was not accustomed to the attention, as she was the sole occupant of this stately manor.



Yirfir eyed each of the occupants at the table in turn, each obviously a little uncomfortable with her outward enthusiasm, as they had expected someone or something a bit more refined. The prison of age, kept by the young against the elderly. It was always naturally a shock to see someone like Yirfir whom had not lost her spice for life upon reaching her cliche shelf life. Yirfir would never relinquish that spark to anyone, and this is what had earned her loyal friends, young and old alike, as much as it had earned her fierce enemies.



"The table is set, so let's get the feastivities started" Yirfir exclaimed with intentional pun, punctuating her regard for the ladies' impression of her.



Mila smiled, amused by Yirfir's lively attitude. This occasion belonged to Yirfir, for she would be the guide for the night's adventure and it was her prerogative, a lady's prerogative to bare the joy of life in spite of those who thwarted it. Tonight was the real beginning of their journey.  A journey that did not always see those enduring its path, arrive safely at the destination. For this night was the beginning of their graduation. Their coming of age.



Two Of Hearts




Nelony, the lady of nature, the natural world and of the butterflies sat quietly taking in her surroundings. A butterfly perched on her shoulder, fanning its wings in practice of the next step in its simple life cycle. She looked on to Mila, who eyed her with curiosity.



"I love butterflies" Mila stated with genuine interest examining the elaborate painting that Mother Nature had etched onto the little creature's wings.



"They're pretty beasts, they are. But you must guard that they don't make purchase of your lashes," Nelony stated, as if well experienced of that scenario.


As if on cue, the butterfly on her shoulder fluttered to hers lashes, grasping at one, struggling with it a short time then continuing to the top of her head when it failed to pull them free.



Mila giggled quietly at Nelony's joke.



The feast had proceeded and Yirfir held the spotlight, savoring every moment of it. She had attended such gatherings for years before the ladies seated around her could walk. Mila tended to her guests, a responsibility she relished.



It was an another art form to her: the evening's festivities and the appetite of her guests were her palette. Each morsel of food and droplet of wine were the paint that she had applied to the her utensils, cutlery and place settings. Mila was by no means stuck to the trappings of what one would call a home-maker by cliche. She was just another kind of artist, and had taken up all such pursuits with the same attitude towards the activity regardless of what they entailed. Explore the wonder in doing it and enjoy the wonder it yielded.



Whether it was a practice in social etiquette, an exercise in firm regard for her ideals, she had applied her artful approach to the activity. Men had been a part of her life and they too were her canvas, though she had recently started to refrain from social encounters as she had found that she was often drained in her attempts to bond emotionally. Few men realized what an emotional investment women make in them and Mila was no exception.



She had never found a mate that had bonded with her at the level she sought. When she did meet someone, she had a tendency to push them away as she found herself on unfamiliar ground with such men as much as they'd found her unfamiliar. She'd met men who tried to assume the role of what they thought a man should be, rather than being themselves and this had always led to problems. They'd either try to dominate her, manage her time and constrict her freedom. Being an artist, her very being was about freedom and such relationships never fared well. She liked to play and was a playful lover. When she'd meet the kind of man who would treat her like a possession or try to take ownership of her, they would be gone with the wind. That was until she had met Ethran at the furniture finishing shop in town. She had ventured into town in order to find the price of finishing some furniture for her manor. She had arranged for a sales estimate at her residence as part of her project with the interior design of the manor, something she enjoyed, especially big projects as this one. Ethran had arrived at her place, dressed both professionally and casually, and she had found him quite attractive from the moment she had first laid eyes on him.



He hid his interest in her rather well and fooled even her keen senses while she toyed with his ego, as an artist as herself might. He flinched naught and kept at his estimate professionally evaluating each piece in turn asking her questions with regard to her requirements. Her level of frustration rose as she realized that they were not speaking the same sexual language that she was trying to communicate to him. He hadn't a "ring" nor would she have ever pursued someone committed to another as she had lost her by way of betrayal by her former husband.



Discouraged, she had almost given up and as a last attempt she had lured him up to the bedroom suite to evaluate her wardrobe and chest of drawers. He had played naive 'til the last moment, but when he had seen her invitingly strewn across the bed, her thigh visible up to her privates and her seductive gaze directed invitingly at his, he could no longer maintain his feigned disinterest. They had occupied the room for fourteen hours, emerging only once for finger food, which she brought back to the bedroom for their consumption which swiftly lead to hours more of intermittent love making. He had adored her and he embraced her artistic approach as he possessed his own, and by Monday morning he knew her better than most had, including her former husband.



Her encounter with Ethran had healed three years of pain she had experienced upon finding her former husband with another woman, in their own bed no doubt. She had left the house quietly that afternoon, tears streaming the height of her cheeks and finding gravity enough to hang drop to her blouse from her chin. Her pain had taken years to find resolve and she evicted her memories of him one at time over the following year. She had agreed to give him the house they had resided in together, though more to cleanse her memory of it and her time with him. He'd been one of the men who'd treated her as a possession though she'd pretended him not to be as such. Pretention can only keep the seams for so long before the threads unwind and they did. Early marriage for her had been more to escape the feeling of being in a world without her parents.



Ethran had made her feel vulnerable in a way that she had only experienced at the hands of her former husband, though Ethran was actually aware of her wholly. She had began to feel for him from their first encounter, and they had many encounters beyond. He would call her and they would meet in secluded, and sometimes public places, and share their need for gratification that could not be found with anyone but each other. Her vulnerability had reached a peak when she had called him one afternoon and had arranged to meet him in the evening, at his modest apartment in Alivale. He agreed, and her imagination had already begun exploring and anticipating.



When she arrived at his apartment, and they embraced she held him tight but pursued him no further than his embrace. For the remainder of the evening he felt at odds with her, even distrustful of her. He kept a barrier around his being for the night until they retired to bed, when something different had happened. When they retired to bed, he had made advances upon her as she was at her peak, potent and virile with artistic energy seeking manifest through his embrace. She avoided sexuality and asked him to lay beneath her naked, close. She indulged him, not knowing what to expect but ultimately expecting another sexual escapade.



"Line up your heart beat to mine" she asked him quietly, her cheek pressed against his chest. He sat still, not sure what she was implying, and when their heart beats didn't synchronize she lay still and disappointed upon his chest. He was not the one she'd been seeking and this symbol was important to her. Not because they could not achieve it. He could not make the time nor effort to explore something as important to her. Something that did not require money or any other extraneous influence, only his person and being and their being together. He was not the one for her and though he was a wonderful lover, he was for someone else. Not her.



When morning had come around, Mila had felt distant and even a little cold. She abandoned him in the early morning and sat curled up on bathroom floor crying quietly, trying to rid herself of attachment and the risk it held for her.  At breakfast she remained distant, her heart on the bathroom floor, bloated and beating, flushing ice from her system in abundance. He eyed her with delicate sensitivity, trying to breach her pain, but only colliding with her guarded feelings. When their connection had been lost and they did feel it. They knew it was over.



Mila watched left and headed back to the manor that morning and never saw him again. That was her last time with Ethran and any man beyond that. She fought back tears and hid from her pain and when it found her again she knew that she'd felt something for him, though she knew that she could never love him. Could she ever really love someone and become commited to a relationship as much as she was her art? Did being as such mean relingquishing her freedom? Mila slowly crept her way from her memories back to the manor dining area.



Alliance In The Night




Mila sat staring ahead, caught in the world of her memories.



"I said I think we need to start doing this a little more often. Don't you?" Nelony said to Mila who seemed to return from the depths of her memories.



"How about quarterly?" Mila said jokingly smiling for her friend.



"That sounds good. We could do up a newsletter and let everyone else at the Sanctum know about what happened at the previous meeting..." Nelony said taking a healthy sip of her wine and rolling her eyes.



"Just as long as Shaela doesn't get up on the chair and start dancing like she did last year. You know how she gets when she's had a bit of drink?" Mila said taking a modest sip from her glass, her cheeks reddened as she held back laughter.



"Absolutely. She starts out the evening all dark and glum, the mysterious lady of the shadows. A few glasses of wine later and she's the life of the dinner party." Nelony laughed.



"Maybe we're just jealous..." Mila said thinking back to last year's gathering.



"I'd say! I'd be swimming in men if I could dance like that." Nelony said running her hand down her dress a big smile on her face.



Yirfir spent a little time with each of the guests in turn, in order to understand them better, and find them within their shell because they all had one, even Yirfir. Shaela was confident and quaint, and spoke without revealing her intent, making her difficult to read, even for Yirfir. She kept her vigil on the end of the table deepest in the shadows, only slightly visible in flickering vestiges at the edge of the candle light.



"Shaela, you must realize that this is an important night for you. For all of you." Yirfir told Shaela, who only seemed to be half listening, the other half engaged in the conversation between Nelony and Mila.



"I see you have found another interest away from your shadows" Yirfir paused, slightly impatient with Shaela's lack of attentiveness.



Shaela, whose form was almost as that of a shadow and whom would have gone completely unnoticed if not for her striking eyes and pale skin and darkly contrasting lips, immediately focused upon Yirfir. Her voice emerged from her, a dark aural wind from deep within a cave.



"I am interested only in what I need to know to complete this night" she stated, keeping her eyes upon her contemporaries.



Shaela held forth the three mid fingers on her left hand, upon each of which a small flame sprang forth, and merged before her to ball no bigger than a marble. It quickly shot across the room, between Nelony and Mila, who were deep in conversation, and burst into a firework, startling them both as they shielded themselves.



Yirfir, stood watching the show, only slightly amused, while Nelony and Mila were completely caught off guard. Nelony's temper flared and she immediately rose from her chair, her hand thrown forth. She uttered an unintelligible word, and a loud pop like the crack of whip burst from a point near her extended hand. A large hornet, just a little smaller than her clenched fist materialized and sped towards Shaela, directly at her nose.



Time slowed and just before it reached the purchase of Shaela's sellion, Mila gestured moving each of her two extended fingers as paintbrushes across the distant canvas of Shaela's face. Intricately detailed and shaded lines crept their way across Shaela's face meeting in the middle, where a beautiful flower took form: a still life begonia tattoo. The edges of the tattoo curled from Shaela's face and it sprang forth, floating before her face, intercepting the hornet, which oddly enough had become happily part of the artwork. The picture fluttered harmlessly to the floor landing before Shaela.



Shaela looked down at it a little shocked, and then looked to Mila, who returned her gaze.



"Keep it. There'll be more" Mila offered, still sounding a little agitated.



Yirfir applauded.



"Bravo. Bravo. I am truly impressed. Let us hope that is not all that you have up your sleeves, for tonight you will need more than fireworks, hornets and paintings to help you succeed."



"I thank you Mila." Shaela offered sincerely. She looked over to Nelony and continued.



"Nelony, this is not over between us".



"You startled us Shaela. How would you have reacted?" asked Mila with a sincere concern.



"A lot harder than she did." Shaela's voice deepened and the room visibly darkened with her statement.



"You don't scare me." Nelony responded, a deep humming sound could be heard from outside, growing in intensity. A humongous swarm of insects, birds, wings and other avians of the night had  materialized outside in the fog laden air around the Manor. They buzzed and flapped with the intensity of Nelony's anger, each crawling and fluttering against the exterior seeking entry to the Manor.



An instant later, the Manor and swarm had all disappeared and they were standing in the orchard itself under the stars. Yirfir seemed to grow in size and presence before them, her cheeriness replaced by an omnipresence that terrified the three younger ladies, each cowering together in the grass that occupied the former plot of the Manor.



"If you will not find peace with each other, then you will find conflict with me." Yirfir's presence had become all imposing and deeply vindictive, and the three ladies gained hold of their fear and stood together.



Yirfir's halo in the moon had become that of large and angry beast, easily four stories in height, two glowing eyes peering down at the three ladies, who huddled together momentarily held in fear.



Nelony broke the stand off as her temper flared again.



"We're not afraid of you!" she shouted.



"Silence!" Yirfir's voice echoed throughout the orchard.



A moment passed while they stood waiting to see what would happen. When nothing did Shaela stepped forward. The shadow that trailed her cast by the moonlight (Shaela's favorite kind) had grown to the form of a large dark cat-like creature which had emerged from a portal there within. It was easily a third the size of Yirfir's beast. Its shadowy snarls and breath could be felt by all three as it stood vigil.



"Don't you talk to her that way!" Shaela demanded coming to Nelony's aid.



"Then I shall deal with the two of you together!" Yirfir boomed.



"You'll deal with us all three!" Mila jumped in front of the other two.



There was a tense standoff, the cat beast roaring and Yirfir's giant lurching forward to meet it's challenge and for a moment, they feared the situation had gotten out of control.



"That's better" Yirfir broke the tension, the beasts faded and the Manor returned along with Yirfir's unimposing demeanor, her glass of wine in hand, a smile crept to the corner of her mouth and quavered a moment.



The tension in the room slowly dissipated, and Yirfir continued, an ecstatic and deliberately slow chuckle emanating from her like the wiles of a lady who possessed the secrets of great pleasure. She basked in the afterglow of her magic, and eyed each of the ladies in turn.



"As you know my darlings, this is an important night. For all of us. For each of you. It will determine your place within our gathering and other gatherings like ours. It will determine your place within the Sanctum and within society itself, and how you will serve them both, should you survive. You will need to do so together and not apart." Yirfir spake her wisdom and the three listened intently. She had abandoned her prior aloofness in favor of the age born cliche which at least two of the dinner guests had expected of her. In time they would learn to be aware of what one would not expect from another.



History Lost




The town was quiet at this time, roughly eleven post meridian and a slight fog had settle over it, blanketing it with mist. The street lamps penetrated this mist and were reflected by the damp roads and sidewalks, giving the whole an eerie and solid glow. The town had stood for a long time, springing forth from the brush as a farming community nearly three hundred years ago. Before that for a breadth of five hundred years, it had been home and habitat to a variety of fauna in its temperate climate, each etching out its existence in the peaceful environment which had become the overgrowth of a conflict over nine hundred years prior to that. That conflict found people fighting over the fertile lands for their value as a potent source of food and sustenance. Before those fighting for claim to the land had found it, it had remained free of any form of civilization for over three thousand years prior to the conflicts of those fighting for claim of its beasts and berries. It is the conflict from that era, almost five thousand years ago that brought the stranger to the streets this night.



He walked slowly down the main street, the same one where Mila had admired the storefront mannequins, before fleeing them in terror in her late afternoon dream. He took notice of the stores, each a small business run by a member of the community, who likely had relatives that went back to the time the town was settled or those whom had come seeking a new start. He had no interest in the store fronts or the pasts of those who kept them though he did admire the perseverance of the people, while he pitied their ignorance. He brandished a walking stick in his right hand, which clicked with each step. His head was furnished with a designer hat, from years before though it gave no indication of whom that designer might be, or what era it originated from. From beneath the hat, stringy strands of white hair dangled to the shoulders of his black knee length long coat. Dressed a gentleman, and an elderly one at that, Jasmer strode down the main street, his tall frame of six and a half feet casting an even taller shadow on the fog and streets.



He had come here seeking history, though not the history you might find in books. He was looking for a history that occurred before there were such records of history. Where such tales were passed on by those who knew of them, and only in spoken word, though it was not the words that he sought but something they might speak of. The problem though for him was in finding those who knew those words, and that could be a tricky business, even for someone as gifted as Jasmer. He had in the last sixty years found no less than six people that had known those words, those tales. Getting at each of those people and their tales had been a long and difficult process, but a man of his perseverance and determination made it appear like clockwork, and time was Jasmer's ally. In this evening he needed the seventh piece to his puzzle and he was less than an hundred feet from that piece and getting closer to it with each stride. He smiled to himself thinking "lucky seven".



He tapped the door with the platinum plated head of the cane, which bit at the door with each contact. Jasmer was met with silence, but his patience had met sturdier adversaries and he waited. The locks clacked on the door and the hinges creaked as it opened. A small man peeked out from behind the oak eying Jasmer with an expression between suspicion and familiarity. Jasmer smiled deceivingly as it were.



"May I help you? You are aware that it is past the browsing hour?" the small man inquired.



Jasmer smiled and responded as he had for hundreds of years.



"I assure you I'm not here to browse. You came recommended to me by a close friend." Jasmer replied to the small man who was the shop keeper in the flesh.



"Well, we're closed as you can obviously see." the man behind the door extended a shaky hand and pointed  to a painted sign.



Jasmer eyed the sign, though more to humor the artist who had constructed it, as he had seen many before and deceived them each.



"No I'm not here to see your sign. I can assure you of that. I want to see your collection." Jasmer smiled, and few could refuse.



"It is long past our store hours. I suppose I could let you, but only for a few minutes." the shop keeper opened the door for Jasmer to enter the store.



"It will be worth your while, Sir." Jasmer assured the shop keeper as he stepped in.



The shop was tightly filled with racks that had been hauled in from the street where they'd been set up to lure the tourists who frequented the area.



"Let's hope. Is there something in specific that you're looking for?" the shop keeper asked.



"Yes, as a matter of fact there is. I am looking specifically for the works of two artists. The first is Leanare Wentward." Jasmer said examining the shop's interior.



"Oh, a history buff are you? You're in luck. I have a display full of her works right here..." the shop keeper made himself some space to open a rack he'd indicated.



The shop keeper unfolded the rack which displayed nine paintings in all. Each was from a time between sixteen forty-eight and sixteen fifty-six, when the painter had accomplished most of her works. The first row were still life renderings depicting various tools and implements, or vegetation from that time that were used by the colony. The second row had a painting of a large galleon setting in to port which was bustling with foreground activity. Jasmer eyed it carefully before moving on to the next two. The other two were portraits of some of the colony members who had posed for the portraits in their best attire. Jasmer peered at them quickly before moving on to the last row with his discerning eye.



The last row contained two paintings of interest, one depicting a vertical pyre, upon which was a single occupant held in place by wrist cuffs and obviously in agony. The second depicted a forest scene with a huntsman in the foreground dropping his arquebus and screaming in fear of an enormous shadowy feline figure just ahead of him. In the painting even the silhouette of this enormous beast was terrifying. Just beyond and off to the bottom right corner could be seen a mysterious lady with bright red hair, her eyes glowing over her pale white skin as she skulked forth just behind the giant feline beast. The last painting was that of what appeared to be a clergyman brandishing a knife high in one hand a halo purposefully painted above his head. His other hand clasped a ferocious looking beast of a lady who appeared devilish in the depiction. Perhaps a demon or wytch as the red haired lady from the prior painting. The artist had obviously taken liberty to portray the Woman in such a way in battle with this clergyman. Jasmer peered at it as a visible dismay crossed his face.



"When will we ever learn." Jasmer said quietly under his breath.



"Yes, most of her work was during the great hunt. A time of... turbulence in our history here in Alivale. But part of our heritage nonetheless. She was a conscripted artist by the forces who commanded the great hunt of course. Many of her paintings were based upon accounts taken from the time during the hunt itself." the shop keeper shared the history of Alivale and the artist's connection to it with Jasmer.



He listened still examining the paintings, each of them with a discerning eye before returning his attention to the shop keeper.



"Yes. I can see that. What about the other artist, I believe her name is Mila Rendebelle." Jasmer inquired of the shop keeper.



"Mila? She's a local artist you know. She lives just a hop skip and a jump away, up on Orchard Meadows. The orchard is actually her's you know? We have that sculpture right there, a beautiful piece and I have three paintings in the back if you'll excuse me..." the shop keeper ducked into the back of the store while Jasmer examined Leanare's display.



Picked up the painting with the galleon setting to port, and turned it over on the display so the back of the painting was facing out. There in the bottom left corner was a piece of folded canvas that was tightly stuck between the the painting and the frame. He tugged at it until it became dislodged from the frame and then unfolded it before examining its contents.



...

They came at night and took away,

A house my home, my husband's grave.

They took it all and in their claim,

they left me none except the blame.



Tanara Milaise 1651.

...



He quickly folded up the note and pocketed it before moving on to examine Mila's sculpture. It was a beautiful porcelain statue of what appeared to be a wood nymph (Mila did live on an orchard after all). Her arms were by her sides part way following her twirling motion which had been implied by the sculpture. The lady's face was a full and bright smile full of joy. Her clothing was elaborately modeled vines and foliage which wrapped her body and covered her privates in a subtly alluring fashion. The base upon which she stood had an decorative pattern which encircled the platform.  Upon close examination Jasmer realized that it was not a pattern at all but in fact a language of some form. It was definitely ancient and sometime after the era of the five clans and most certainly not cuneiform despite its striking similarity and symbolic nature. He took a moment more and deciphered it, finding it to be a mixture of ancient Lyrael, a long disappeared language used by artificers of ancient magic. He read it aloud and stood back.



"Velara Selenis Trecocious Nubium" the words left his lips quietly as the sculpture began to shimmer and glow.



The little lady of the sculpture began to animate and dance, her voice coming to life and singing a beautiful melody though no words. She spun and pirouetted on the sculpture's pedestal as the music of her voice quietly filled the air. At that moment Jasmer's mind fell upon Yirfir. He remembered fond moments with her and the look of her face and the curves of her body and the scent of her as the sculpture wove its spell. After a moment he quickly realized he'd lost his train of thought and returned his attention and focus to the base of the sculpture. Fifteen seconds later the statuette stopped, ceasing its dance and the melody of her voice as it once again became motionless appearing as it did before he'd spoken the words etched onto its base.



"Here's three more of Mila's. My wife must have sold the other two earlier. Was that music I just heard?" the shop keeper asked brandishing three more paintings.



 "Yes, I love to sing you know." Jasmer said somewhat cynically.



"You're playing with me. Heh. So would you like to buy one of these. I hope that you didn't waste my..." the shop keeper was interrupted.



"I'll take the whole lot. Everything that you have by Leanare Wentward and Mila Rendebelle." Jasmer said confidently pulling out his wallet.



The shop keeper's demeanor immediately changed from one of mild irritation to that of the joy and exuberance of one who'd just won a fortune as this was the biggest single sale he'd made ever.



"Certainly! For the Miss Leanare's paintings I can give them to you for eight thousand. For Mila's, these three paintings are two thousand a piece but I'll sell the three for four thousand. The sculpture for the same making it a grand total of sixteen thousand dollars." the shop keeps told Jasmer trying to keep his excitement at bay.



"There's sixteen thousand. In cash." Jasmer counted out sixteen crisp thousand dollar bills for the shop keeper.



"I've never seen these you know. How do I know they're even real?" the shop keeper asked.



"I assure they are." Jasmer said as the room around him darkened and his face and hands started to glow with a green tinge.



"Right now though you're going to do something else for me. You're going to go to bed and have a wonderful sleep. I did not buy these paintings from you. A little old lady from the west coast came in here and insisted on buying the whole lot. That's what you'll remember and that's what you'll tell your wife. I'll let myself out thank you." Jasmer held his hand towards the shop keeper as he spoke.



"Hmmm. I seem to be a little bit tired. You can let yourself out? I'm just going to hop into bed then. Thank you very much." the shop keeper responded immediately making his way back into his attached house and up to his bedroom.



As the shop keeper disappeared into the back, a dark doorway opened from the thin air. Air flew around the room as the air pressure of two different locations in space attempted to balance itself through the portal. The air failed to slow but that did not stop the many figures that emerged from it. They moved about collecting the art that Jasmer had just purchased and disappeared with it into the newly opened portal. He followed behind them when all of the art he'd purchased had been collected.



It was going to be a long night and there was still so much to do Jasmer thought as the last of his paintings made their way into the nether.



Unwanted Dinner Guests




Yirfir eyed the three before her, each a fine lady and each in their own right, but this wasn't about what one could see. She walked the room, her experience one step before her and her wisdom between.



Mila remained silent, the good hostess making sure that the food was present and the drink flowed and keeping herself contained within. Nelony enjoyed being pampered by her friend as she had not often received as often as she was present to give. Shaela on the other hand was there to protect herself and her interests among them, though inside she was just as protective of them all. She had learnt that to care was weakness and this conflicted with her person fiercely and fueled the harsh elements within her.



The anticipation became apparent within the air and though Yirfir recognized it she belayed it before she spoke.



"Ladies, if you would for a moment. I am here to introduce you to a world that you've been striving to earn by the expression of your unique abilities each." Yirfir paused, sipping of her wine and savoring it though not letting it savor her.



 "You have worked hard your whole life to achieve this night, though never knowing for sure what it may hold for you." She continued, relishing another sip.



Yirfir was about to continue when there was a loud "pop" as if the air in the center of Mila's room had collapsed into itself to fill an empty space. Before Yirfir stood a tall darkly clad figure, eyes glowing intensely. Yirfir startled for a moment quickly reacted gesturing with her right hand and mouthing a word silently. A gray ambiance slowly to encompassed the the darkly clad figure, each portion of their figure being consumed by it and becoming still, though perfectly. Before long it was entirely consumed.



A moment later another "pop!", followed by another and there were two beside Yirfir, one grabbing her right arm. Her wine glass quickly changed form to a spiked glacious blade, the wine falling to the floor. She swung it at her assailant while the newly appeared attempted to grab at the wine glass/blade.



Shaela leapt to action, a blue bolt of ice and lightning climbing the exterior of her arm through her fingertips and arcing to Yirfir's attacker. He cringed slightly as the bolt impacted, his grip upon Yirfir's arm lost, he shielded himself. The first assailant had been completely consumed and stood as a statue before them, Yirfir's makeshift blade narrowly missing him. The blade impacted upon her other attacker's shoulder, forcing him to use the hand he was restraining her with to defend himself. She withdrew long enough to see Nelony firing a barrage of seeds from her fingertips like bullets. They impacted the assailant's forehead burrowing deeply leaving it pocked with seed filled pimples. He screamed as each seed sprouted to life, a small plant emerging from each entry point. The plants each grasped at his eyes while he screamed.



"Now that's more like it!" Yirfir exclaimed, waving her hands, slowly clasping her fingers turning the cloaked figure's garments into a netted trap tightening around him and constraining him.



The last attacker having recovered from Shaela's bolts redoubled his efforts to constrain Yirfir. He grabbed what looked like a cattle prod from his belt and swung it at Yirfir's unprotected arm. Mila shouted, arcing her hands and rippling her fingers floor ward. The outline of a trap door etched its way onto the floor in intricate design wood grain and hardware, hinges appearing and a latch snapping open. The assailant's cattle prod barely missed Yirfir's arm before gravity took hold and pulled him into the depth's of Mila's imaginary trap door. A scream echoed from the interior before the door latched shut again.



"What'd you put in there?" Nelony asked Mila.



"I don't know. I'd hate to think." she replied.



There was another loud "pop" and this time the assailant appeared ready and from behind Yirfir. He threw a large hood around Yirfir's head, blinding her and suffocating her simultaneously pulling a drawstring on the hood which closed it tightly around her neck. A moment later there was a loud and concussive pop and Yirfir was gone with her assailants all four.



"Yirfir!" Mila screamed, leaping forward.



 The air held a misty point of tension where they had vanished. It floated a gaseous swirling energy, slowly disappearing and closing the only door and clue there was to Yirfir's whereabouts.



Old Friends Meet Again




Yirfir sat in an old oak chair which offered little give and great discomfort. Her hands were bound tightly while her mid section was bound to the chair. Her captors had only moments earlier removed the burlap sack that they had used to obscure her vision while they ushered her to the realm. She looked around the room, little bits of burlap fluff clinging to her face irritating her.



The room was somewhat small at about 20 feet for each wall, with a door directly behind the three brutish guards who stood behind her. An oak table with intricately designed relief work on its borders sat in front of her. There were no signs of damage or scuffs to the table that would indicate it had seen any sort of violent use which relieved her.



"Do you brutes have any kind of common decency?" she glared around turning her head as far as her neck would allow her.



Her other senses made up for the lack of turn in her neck and she spied three of her captors, all hooded and cloaked. They were likely the muscle used by whomever had brought her here and seeing as they all wore roughly the same clothing, they were organized in some form and had structure and discipline and likely a hierarchy and chain of command.



"Where did you learn your etiquette? In a bowling pin factory?" she asked and was only met with silence.



"I take that back. I've met bowling pins with great etiquette. I don't know where that leaves you." she continued, still no response.



She heard the door click and someone else stepped into the room. The temperature immediately dropped a notch and the room lost a bit of its tension. She immediately recognized the essence.



"Jasmer, Is that you?" she inquired politely and with renewed cheer.



"Why is she bound! Remove those bindings at once!" He shouted, menacing over the brutes.



Two of the brutes immediately started removing the ropes carefully from her waist and hands.



"Its about time, I thought I was going to be here for ages with Tweedledum, Tweedledee  and Tweedle-burlap." she stated, mildly wiping face with her free hands, fluff falling fleetingly to the floor.



"I am truly sorry my dear. I had been held up with a pressing matter and had expected to be here much sooner." Jasmer offered his apologies.



"Well my dear Jasmer, you should know better than to keep a lady waiting." she took hold of the conversation.



"Would you care to join me in the lounge for a drink and perhaps a dance?" he asked her and she knew immediately what he meant.



Jasmer was a great verbal dance partner and she expected that this was going to be no exception and there was already so much to learn and so much to catch up on.



He held out his arm and she took it. The brutes stepped aside quietly as they passed through the doorway into the hallway beyond.



The halls were finely manicured and crafted, with Wayne Scott wooden paneling intricately carved detailing similar to that of the table, indicating a unified design between both furniture and house decor that she immediately noticed as would have Mila.



Rows of perpetual candles, which were contained in lanterns that lined and hung from the ceiling, the shadows on the walls dancing slightly as they disturbed the air in the hall. The hall stretched a short ways and then opened into a foyer with arched supports held under wooden pillars spanning a domed ceiling. Each archway leading to a different hall and branching off into four rooms. They turned and entered the lounge, a bar tucked away in one corner and a small fountain with seating nestled in the other. A large empty floor space, the dance floor was surrounded by a flowing moat, fed by the fountain in the corner and lit by more perpetual candles nested in the wall. The music could be heard softly just over the chirping of the fountain.



"Such a beautiful place Jasmer. How did you keep it hidden from me for so long?" Yirfir inquired politely.



They approached the bar and Jasmer spoke as he pulled a bottle of wine from that had been brought up from the cellar earlier.



"It was initially built in the sixteen hundreds by Master Daryn, one of the Lords of Merival, seeking a recluse to match his enormous tastes and wealth. As time went on, it was passed on generation to generation with it eventually ending up in the hands of the Wellingswirth family, and from that time we've been minding it and keeping it in its former glory." Jasmer offered her, as he studiously poured her wine, sampling it in his own glass before he allowed any to flow to hers. He carefully grabbed the glass by its stem, and she gracefully accepted it, smiling.



"Now my dear, let us toast to long lost friends reunited on this the one night." Jasmer raised his glass.



"Yes my dear Jasmer, let's." Yirfir responded, a little eager to move on in the conversation.



They both sipped their wine, its rich and fruity flavor filling their palette.



"Jasmer, why on earth did you have me absconded by force to the other side of the world?" she asked him, still holding onto the Casus Belli firmly.



"My dear, these are complex times and one does not truly know their allies by familiarity alone. I had feared that you might regard me in such a manner and therefore employed the assistance of the members of the Uxgard Norbids to assist. They obviously had different ideas about what 'gentle persuasion' meant. I assure you that I meant you no harm." Jasmer answered, his eyes never leaving her.



"Why did you not invite the others. Obviously you knew they were there. Why me?" She asked him, a slight expression of concern with a hint of disgust.



Jasmer smiled, requesting Yirfir's hand extending his and she hesitatingly gave hers.



"You must understand that we; you and I have a past. One that we can't just bury. This time needs us. It's lost. There's no direction anymore. We've both been through centuries and seen wonders that few would know and most would miss in the blink of an eye. The world is sick and she needs us now. She needs our leadership. A direction that we can give." Jasmer pleaded with her, grasping her hand, stroking it gently with his fingers.



"When you say lead, do you mean control?" Yirfir's eyes pierced his affection and once again he was on the defensive.



"Lead. Control. They are but the same animal with each a different set of horns." Jasmer spoke, still stroking her hand.



She withdrew it from his grasp.



"And which set of horns have you?" She demanded firmly.



"Neither. My interests are not with the responsibility of lead as they used to be. I'm more of a historian for the current time. A calling I'd long neglected and the glass from which now I drink." Jasmer took a mouthful of wine, savoring it while deep in thought.



"And in the process it is our history that you've sacrificed." Yirfir withdrew him from his place in thought.



"Us? Our history together? It was the Sanctum that kept us bound to one another. When it fell, so did we." Jasmer replied coldly.



"The Sanctum never fell, but rather it was you. You abandoned us in our greatest hour of need. For what? To side with those who oppose everything for which we stood?" Yirfir spoke appalled by the very statement.



"The Sanctum was lost and so were we. The world needs a new direction and we needed to unify with our enemy. To put aside the war between us that has gone on for millennia. Neither of us know the truth anymore. How can you say that for which you fight is on the firm ground of truth?" Jasmer posed.



"They won't allow others besides themselves and their ilk to wield the power of rule. Control. In turning your back on us you've abandoned life, fairness and freedom. What we wield was meant to be shared and taught to others, not horded for the purpose of power over others!" Yirfir exclaimed.



"Perhaps and for the sake of peace, it is time that we put aside our differences and moved forward together rather than apart." Jasmer seduced.



"Our differences are what define us and that for which we stand. You'd ask us to put aside our values and to keep our silence? This sounds like a very one sided offer. You used to stand for something Jasmer. What has become of you?" Yirfir peered deep into the man she'd once loved.



"My dear, I've lost nothing in my lust for progress and the providence we once provided the rest of humanity. Perhaps with time you'll agree to coincide with my point of view." Jasmer summed up his stance.



"You've lost everything if only you seek the consent of silence from others. It seems that we are done." Yirfir finished her wine placing her empty glass on the bar.




Continued in A Lady's Prerogative Book I: The Yearning And The Learning Part II

Brian Joseph Johns
http://www.shhhhdigital.com
Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Copyright © 2012 Brian Joseph Johns

Fiction: A Lady's Prerogative Book I: The Yearning And The Learning Part II by Brian Joseph Johns

Continued from A Lady's Prerogative Book I: The Yearning And The Learning Part I




Warning: This story deals with some mature situations. Reader discretion is advised.

Disclaimer: This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

Part II

Unraveling A Mystery




Mila examined the remains of the portal, which slightly wavered in the air though remained in exactly the same point in space while the room itself seemed to move ever so slightly. Her eyes caught details and of its shades and color and she concentrated intensely trying to get a fix on Yirfir.



"Have you got anything yet..." Nelony asked, Mila shushing her quickly.



There was silence and for a moment, the gateway fluctuated, as if Mila had reached into it.



Mila felt a buzzing in her ears that seemed to grow intensely. There was a tug in her solar plexus, and she felt startled momentarily but then quickly regained her focus. It was as if the entire room was pulled away, along with the country side below her which flew by in a flash and then she was in a dark and quiet place. She was floating, nothing under her feet and in a strangely eerie place, the air twisting with her vision like a fluid. When her vision cleared, She spoke. Her lips moved where her perception had manifested itself but the sound come from her body thousands of miles away for Shaela's and Nelony's ears.



"I'm in a large room with a fountain and what appears to be a bar. Two people are talking below me, they're drinking wine. A man, very tall and... Yirfir, it's Yirfir." Mila spoke as she tightened her eyelids in concentration.



"Great, Yirfir's left us for a date. He'd better be a hunk!" Shaela said sarcastically, Nelony giving her a friendly tap in the shoulder.



"Where are they Mila. Can you see any signs of their location?" Nelony asked.



"They're in a mansion. Very extravagant. Elaborate wood carvings in the interiors. The designs, I know them. The paneling. If I can just get a closer..."



Mila found herself moving at high speed and was suddenly tugged as if a tether had pulled her very quickly over a large distance. Still under the illusion of momentum she fell to the floor.



"Are you OK?" Nelony asked her.



"Fine. Fine. Let me think!" Mila turned onto her side, and then her feet, while deep in thought. She was onto something.



She stood up quickly and ran through the kitchen and down a hall into her library and retrieved a book from the bookshelf. She opened it, splayed onto the desk in front of her and shuffled through its pages hurriedly. The book detailed a large series of design styles as used across the ages. She flipped through the pages to the middle of the book, backing up a few pages and then stopping.



"That's the style. That's the style of the relief work on the walls." Mila exclaimed pointing at it excitingly and smiling, quickly catching Nelony's wine glass as she bumped it nearly knocking it onto the floor.



"Great! Where is it then." Nelony asked again eagerly.



"Yes we certainly have some smiting to do and my kitty's so very, very hungry." Shaela's fingers crackled with energy, which arced and jumped between her fingers.



"Not before I get a look at Yirfir's hunk!" Nelony exclaimed, a yellow tail butterfly fanned its wings on her shoulder.



Mila smirked at the two of them before continuing.



"I don't know where it is, it doesn't say where it's from. It's only about the style" she explained.



"Who wrote the book?" Asked Shaela just barely catching Nelony's wine glass as she slid it back onto the end table near the book shelves.



Mila fanned through the pages to the publisher's notes in the front.



"We have to go. I know where we can find the answer. We can be there by tomorrow midday if we leave now." Mila exclaimed.



"Who says we need to travel the long way?" Shaela grinned as if on cue.



Before Mila could answer, the air in the room started to move, books fluttered in the wind and each were enveloped in energy before completely disappearing and momentarily thrust out of this world into that of the half space.



"I hate it when she drives!" Nelony exclaimed before the volume of crackling energy encompassed her and she disappeared.



A few sparks passed through the walls of the room, arcing through the shelves and finally through the air at Nelony's glass. It ever so slowly teetered over and shattered onto the floor.



Jasmer's Gambit




Jasmer had left the Yirfir to her own company momentarily, disappointed with Yirfir's initial decision. He had almost been certain that she of all people would have seen what was happening around them, to the world, to people, to values. The night was still early and his charms were still fresh. He had the advantage of knowing Yirfir like few he thought, after they were once...



He turned at the end of the hall into the station of the Uxgard and closed the door.



A cloaked figure stood, his back to the door but menacing all the same. His height equaled Jasmer's and then some.



"Well?" the floor resonated as the cloaked figure spoke.



"She's proving a bit more tricky than I thought" He answered.



"You said she could be persuaded to join us..." continued the cloaked figure.



"I said she would. And she will!" Jasmer spoke boldly and confidently, trying desperately to maintain the confidence of the cloaked figure.



"I think that you are putting too much credence in her..." the cloaked figure barely had time to finish.



"You said you'd let me handle all things to do with her and the other Ladies." Jasmer stated furiously, holding his ground.



"I said that I would allow you to try, and that if you failed, she would die along with all of the others." said the cloaked figure, whose calm unsettled Jasmer.



"She will be convinced by the night's end." Jasmer continued, a bit withdrawn.



"And what of the Ladies' scrying, what do you know of that" the cloaked figure continued in question.



"Scrying? There was no scrying, except by that of your foolish Uxgard Norbids and their Tether-world passages. Probably trying to get a peek at our embrace. Sick beasts! Perhaps you should have hired sorcerers rather than voyeurs!" Jasmer bluffed, increasing his impatience a notch.



"I will see to them and deal with them. Go and convince your friend to join our allegiance. There is much to be done and the Merival Lords await a reply as do the Culdar Rath. This plan has taken ages. Don't fail. If you do, you fail her." the cloaked figure turned, and through the opening of his cowl Jasmer saw nothing but complete nothingness.



Jasmer held his ground, though shaken.



"I shall do as I planned and it shall happen. She can't resist me." Jasmer continued waltzing on his ego precariously, while standing his ground against an impossibly more powerful foe on nothing more than his feelings for her.



The cloaked figure suffered from no such weakness as ego or emotions. Just time but not aging and obstacles often begat by the frail meandering of the mortal kin.



When Jasmer left, an Uxgard Norbid entered the room quietly, one of those who took part in Yirfir's capture.



The cloaked figure growled in a language full of cutting consonants and slashing sibilance and the air itself seemed to seethe in pain.



The Norbid nodded in subservience and proceeded to its assigned tasks. The girls were to be brought here, without Jasmer's knowledge. Jasmer's trust had been lost, but he was still needed.



Sato And Barris




Sato lay in his bed upstairs above the shop, deep in a restful slumber, ever trustful of Barris' watch over his life's work. As a preserver of rare treasures and the lost art works of time, Sato had traveled much of his way around the globe several times in his youth, and had seen more than his share of the wonders concealed beneath the surface of reality's veil. His shop was a testament to this and to most it was a trinket shop located just off the Thames in West Shepperton, where he had settled after a life of adventure.



Weeks after moving into the shop and slowly filling its rustic spaces with his wondrous treasures, a young man in his late twenties had arrived to peruse his wares. The young man examined the shop, a twinkle in his eye for he had never in his life seen such a collection of wonders. It spoke to him that same way that each piece in the shop did of Sato, for each piece held a part of his story, and its wonders were the very narrative of his life's adventure.



Barris would show up every day, and every day that he did, Sato would tell him one story, each that spoke of the voyage that brought him to the particular item now in his possession. Before long the two had become friends, like they had been all of their lives and not long after that, Barris offered his service as a volunteer. Sato accepted the service and rewarded it every day with one of his treasures and its story and before long, when word had spread and business had started to pick up, Barris was an employee and business partner in training to Sato.



Barris had one day been minding the shop when some of the hoods from a local hangout had dropped into the shop to pick on Barris, whom they'd heard was working for the uninvited "old man" as they referred to him. Barris had asked them to leave when one of them had dropped and chipped a delicate vase, which had broken Barris' heart as he saw it fall, for it was like seeing a piece of Sato's past dropped carelessly to floor. They had turned to Barris at his challenge of them to put him in his place when Sato arrived. One held Barris by the shoulder against the wall, insulting him and calling him names like they had all throughout school. Barris in his fear had remembered noting how they'd really not changed much at all, before there was a blur of motion and the pressure on his shoulder subsided.



All three were spread out on the floor of the shop but none hurt seriously. They all three of them rose to their feet and quickly left the shop, never to be seen again by Barris or Sato. That was when Sato had told Barris one of the most profound truths of his life.



"You were hurt because the vase broke. But the vase is not you or me. You were hurt because it broke after all of the trouble I went through to get it." Sato paused.



"The vase is only the end of that journey. It is only a thing. The real treasure is in here, in us and cannot be broken, stolen or removed from us in any way. Even if the vase is gone forever, we still have that story." Sato looked at Barris with great compassion and concern.



"But what if we lose us? What if we die?" Barris asked.



"The story is still there as is our effect upon the world." Sato replied.



"Even if you and I are gone and the vase is gone. We have left a path upon the face of everything. That is never gone. Even if everyone denied we were here at all. They too will be gone, but their effect upon everything remains." Sato paused and then continued.



"If you are a boat that passes through the waters of life, you leave a wake in your path and the water that you affect leaves waves that never stop moving, ever. Even the most calm and still waters are moving with the effects of every rain drop that has plucked the surface of that water like the strings of a koto." Sato finished.



"You mean..." Barris paused, looking intensely at Sato.



"Yes, continue." Sato waited patiently.



"We are never gone." Barris replied, a smile of relief crossing his face.



Sato smiled, and continued.



"The vase is the artist's story. Seeking and finding the vase is mine. The artist in making the vase and me in seeking it are each boats that leave their wakes upon the waters of life. Even if the vase is gone, neither the artist that created it nor the lover of that vase is gone, for we have etched our creation into the very face of everything, so be gentle with that brush, for she is very delicate and beautiful. Protect her." Sato stated, his presence and wisdom settling.



"What about us? What do we become when we die?" Barris asked Sato thoughtfully at ease.



"I do not know. That's a good question to ask a philosopher or theologian. I believe that we are eternal, by way of our effect here and beyond. I am here, so I focus on here. If I plan to go somewhere, I make my plans and deal with them when I arrive there unaware of what might change those plans. You may find a different answer when you look for it." Sato replied, the serenity in his voice accented.



From that moment Barris settled into his life in a way that he hadn't since he'd learned to walk, unafraid of being... gone, and more concerned with being. He also recognized Sato and his profound effect upon what was to come ahead.



Barris returned from his reflection of the past to his whereabouts and his book. It was by one of his favorite authors, a writer named Poe, from whom the term Poetry was named after his style of verse, which in his time had become very popular.



Even if Poe was gone, there would still be poetry. Even if his books were burnt to cinders, and the ashes spread to the entirety of the world, the effects of Poe's words upon the emotions of us all would ever be there, present like Poe's yearning for his lost love.



Barris had left home at the age of nineteen seeking his own path in life. He'd been the son of a seamstress and a factory worker who'd lived north of the Thames their whole life.  His parents were both creative and hard working and enjoyed each other's company immensely as they had enjoyed raising Barris.



Barris had run into his first real troubles in school in the form of an overzealous administrator, one who'd been taught that physical discipline and the fear of God was the only way a man could live and thrive in this world. The man had been a devout and zealous man, having limited Barris' and other students' reading rights for their whole school lives, allowing them only books approved of by the clergy.



Two of Barris' other school teachers, Mrs. Fallows and Mr. Jerens would secretly bring Barris' other books, and hide them in his desk. Their private little library as they'd call it and this had opened up Barris' mind to the world of possibility. Furthermore, it allowed Barris to explore the world in many ways without actually taking the physical risks to gain new experiences or consider different points of view that he might never have been exposed to otherwise. His first favorites were the works of Mary Shelley then followed by Herbert George Wells and Jules Verne. He's also grown fond of poetry too reading the likes of Emily Dickinson and his favorite, Edgar Allen Poe. He'd often curl up with a good book and become lost in the worlds of the author and good friends with the characters within.



Barris' parents encouraged him too in this way and he pursued this aspect of his life fully. At school though, it was a little bit different and though there were great teachers who kept the vigil over such reading, there were the tyrants whom stood against it. Barris most profound encounters were with just such a man whom sought to limit Barris by such notions and by Mrs. Fallows and Mr. Jerens, who stood in defense of reading and the freedom to chose. Barris was most certainly a product of a generation who sought freedom such smothering points of view. On television, Doctor Who would allow him to escape his world through the travels of a Time Lord and the Tardis, and occasionally have eyes for the Doctor's beautiful companion, Mary Jane. On Tuesdays he'd watch Dave Allen At Large and then on Friday nights he'd watch the comedic parodies of Tracy Ulman and Benny Hill, both of whom he adored enormously.



During the week he'd once again be at odds with his oppressing administrator at the school while himself and some of the other teachers would share books and ideas freely between one another. He`d find himself victim to local bullies, and occasionally find himself under attack for what he was reading. This kind of pressure had slowly pushed Barris into a world of his own and had often left him secluded. When he was nineteen, despite the fact that his home life was good, he left in pursuit of his life and his future.



He'd spent most of his time working odd jobs to earn his living and to pay his way. Over the course of years until he was twenty six, he'd wandered without much direction. When he'd happened upon Sato's shop, it was like a light had shone from the shop and led him there through the darkness. Sato was a little bit wary of Barris at first but soon thereafter had learned to appreciate Barris' company and wit for it was similar to his own. Barris would come in to the shop and look around, checking some of the older books Sato had procured through his travels. Sato would watch Barris carefully and whenever he took interest in something, Sato would come over to him and tell him the story of how he'd acquired that item. From that point their friendship was bonded and would be as such for the times ahead.



Sato on the other hand, had grown up in much different beginnings. He was born in Osaka, Japan in nineteen twenty two, the son of a family of traveling entertainers. As such, Sato had spent most of his life exposed to music, dance and even martial arts (which he picked up on quickly). By the age of seven, he was a very accomplished acrobat even taking part in the family's onstage shows in small parts that often garnered him laughter and applause. He had also started his formal training by that age and by the age of twelve he was a black belt in the Shotokan school of Karate. He expanded his martial arts training from there seeking tutelage from the likes of Morihei Ueshiba himself in Aikido.



When he was sixteen, his family was asked to attend a by command of the Emperor performance, where he and his family performed the show they'd developed for their tour for the Emperor himself. There was no audience other than the Emperor and his entourage which was much different from all of their shows. Audience participation had always been a big part their performances. During the show the Emperor responded very little though the performers had done the best show of their lives, in terms of skill, timing prowess and pure artistry. When their performance was finished and for the first time in history, the Emperor responded by applause, and even stood for the performers. They of course immediately dropped on the stage lowering themselves before his eminence. If the show had turned out that well, it was merely the will of the Emperor and Sato and his family had been so very honored by that moment.



By the age of twenty one he was a martial arts master, having studied under five different teachers achieving a black belt status in all the corresponding arts. Not to mention he was a skilled acrobat and musician too having learned the taiko drums and percussion. Just before his twenty forth birthday, he was conscripted by the Imperial Japanese Navy and in training as a copilot and gunner for the light bomber squadrons. Three months later during his first mission which was part of a bombing mission upon an American carrier, his Mitsubishi was shot down while in combat with a P-38 just offshore from a small island in the pacific. The two planes had become entangled in a vicious aerial dogfight. Both pilots were skilled and creative in their approach to aerial combat and their fight actually lasted for a nearly ten minutes. Ten minutes in aerial combat might as well be an eternity when compared to anything else because when you are in aerial combat, every aspect of your being is in full tilt. Those moments



It was no different for the two men flying those planes and they fought valiantly each trying to disable the plane of the other (a common respect among pilots was to shoot the plane, not the pilot). An honor among warriors and the two peoples, the Americans and the Japanese were not so different as they pretended to be in this way. Kinai, the Japanese pilot had managed to end up on the tail of the P-38 in a long fought nose pointing battle between the two. The P-38 had the advantage technically in almost every way with its twin engines and dual fuselage. Kinai had somehow managed to outmaneuver the enemy pilot. Sato sat in the back of the plane watching for that opportune moment when he could take out the P-38 with the tail guns of the Mitsubishi. There was little else he could do while their plane tailed the other. Kinai fired his guns and clipped ailerons of the P-38 and hoped that would balance the combat between them. He quickly swayed as the P-38 zigged and the zagged trying to lose him. He fired again once again clipping the ailerons and the elevator, puncturing the plane with holes.



The P-38 dove right and the Mitsubishi could not follow in suit. Instead Kinai turned the opposite direction hoping to keep his distance from the P-38 enough to find the P-38's tail again. The P-38 gained speed in its shallow dive which it converted once again to altitude as it climbed to meet the Mitsubishi. 


Kinai realized he had taken the turn too quickly and was going to beat the P-38 to their meeting point which meant that the Mitsubishi would lose their tail. They'd now become the prey of the P-38. Sato's senses returned to normal as they exited the high G turn, the blood vessels in his head eased and his vision returned to normal. There behind them he saw the P-38 in all of its magnificence. It looked like a savage bird ready to pounce on its prey. He fired a volley from the tail guns of the Mitsubishi, narrowly missing the inside wing. For a moment, the P-38's cabin passed directly in front of Sato's cross-hairs and he could have killed both the pilot and gunner in a single shot. His finger tensed on the trigger as he watched the plane pass into the kill zone. Instead he held his fire, for he was a warrior, not a murderer. It was the plane, the P-38 that was his current enemy, not the men inside. Sato hoped that he did not make the wrong choice and that the P-38's pilot and gunner was as honorable a warrior as he.



The Mitsubishi quickly converted its speed gained from the hard turn Kinai had taken them on into altitude as he aimed the Mitsubishi at the sun. He was attempting one of the most difficult aerial maneuvers under the cover of the light. The light of the great sun, like the glorious flag of their country to which the Mitsubishi rose. 


The P-38 turned to follow the Mitsubishi into its climb but was less responsive as a result of the earlier damage to its elevators. The pilot fought with the controls and managed to keep the P-38 directed at the Mitsubishi but could not get into position to fire immediately. Nor could the pilot see the Mitsubishi accurately for the sun had obscured his view, blinding him as he followed. As the two planes slowed in their ascent and gravity took hold, the Mitsubishi yawed right and the plane's attitude quickly redirected downwards, directly at the P-38. Kinai had once again turned the tables on the P-38 and while the P-38 was blinded, he fired. The bullets ripped into the fuselage of the P-38, hitting the leg of the pilot. The pilot panicked and squeezed off a shot from his guns which in turn hit Kinai ripping across his chest. The two warriors saw each other clearly for the first time as the two planes closed in distance, and for a moment the two men shared more respect for one another than anyone could ever have known. Two warriors who'd fought beyond their limits and met their equal in each other on the field of battle. The Mitsubishi impacted the fuselage of the P-38, instantly killing both pilots, leaving the copilot gunners to fend for themselves in the now rapidly descending and burning wreckage.



It was Sato who'd managed to eject first, his shoulder clipping the canopy sending a shaft of pain down his side. He spun through the air descending as the the Mitsubishi and P-38 slowly separated from each other, breaking into their own independent spins towards the ocean below. A moment later and much to his relief, the other copilot and gunner had managed to eject from the P-38. The fell and when perfect calm had settled into them, their chutes opened. They watched each other a few hundred meters from each other as they slowly descended towards the ocean and the small island below. The two planes plunged into the shallow and sandy shelf of the island, breaking apart into pieces with no explosion. For Sato it was the most peaceful moment of his life and a moment that had changed him. He took a moment to be thankful for the two men who'd given their lives in battle and without whom, he and his descending counterpart from the P-38 would not be alive.



A few minutes later they touched down and despite the pain in his shoulder, Sato swam out to the point where the other man had fallen. That man whose name he later found out was Borden Gaines, had become entangled in his own chute and with his leg broken, he was unable to free himself.



"Get away. Let me die in peace you Sap filth!" the man sputtered trying to stay above the water.



Sato looked on and reached to his belt, pulling forth a large knife presenting it to the man.



"Oh, you're gonna cut my throat eh? I always knew you pricks had no honor. Go ahead!" Gaines spat.



Instead of advancing for Gaines' throat, he cut the lines of the chute that held Gaines and were pulling him out to ocean. Sato then collected a bit of the chute, wrapping it up in his arms and throwing it over his good shoulder while he dragged the man back to the island and beach thereupon.



When Sato got to the shore line with him, Gaines had gone into shock. Sato worked quickly to set his leg, making a splint from some palm branches he'd found and securing it with line from the parachute he'd managed to salvage. With the remaining parachute, he made a make shift tent and shelter for the two men far from the shore and tidal lines. He left the man in it as he surveyed the island for food and water. The two men became reluctant friends and lived there barely surviving for seven months before they were rescued by an Imperial Japanese Naval carrier, which had been conducting a search and rescue for a lost flight in the area. Sato was given a hero's welcome aboard the Hōshō while Gaines was sent to the brig as a prisoner of war.



Sato would periodically go to see Gaines, bringing him food and sometimes even Saki that he'd sneak past the brig guards, or bribe them to look the other way. Gaines appreciated every bit that he got but had lost his faith that he'd ever be free. When the news of the second attack by the Americans upon Nagasaki by the super bomb reached them, the carrier proceeded at full speed to protect its homeland of Honshu and Japan. Some of the crew had formed a coalition to kill all of the American prisoners on board. The coalition planned to kill each one by decapitation and discard the bodies to the sea. When they'd arrived to kill their American prisoners, it was Sato alone who stood them down.



"Out of our way Sato. You saw what they did! The American scum! To our homeland!" one of the coalition officers barked at Sato.



"Silence! You would give these honorless Americans the respected death of a warrior when they know nothing of the Bushido?! I will not see you deface our traditions by giving them such an honorable death!" Sato yelled back at the members of the coalition.



Sato stood ready to draw his katana should the need arise placing himself between the entrance to the brig and the coalition soldiers who numbers were around twenty.



The coalition soldiers returned their sabres to their belts reluctantly.



"What has become of you Sato! Have you forgotten your allegiance? Do you disobey the will of the Emperor?" one of the officers screamed at him as he spit on the floor.



"No. I only remember that I am a warrior, not a murderer." Sato stood keeping his vigil over the brig.



"Thanks for what you did, Sato. I really mean that." Gaines said through the tiny opening near the top of the door to his cell.



"Silence! Do you think I did that for you or your sake! You do not deserve such a death! You know nothing of the way! I've only proven that your head is only worth the spit on that floor and nothing more." Sato yelled back to him.



Gaines knew immediately that Sato had to do that, in order to ensure that nobody suspected that Sato was protecting him.



By the time of their return, on August twenty first, nineteen forty five, Japan had already surrendered and were scheduled to sign the treaty formally on September second in 1945 bringing an end to the war. Gaines had no living family and decided to stay in Japan with Sato's help of course. Sato spent the next seven years with his new friend Gaines helping to clean up the damage in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. One day after most of what they could do to assist in the work of rebuilding Nagasaki and Hiroshima was done, they walked together through the ancient city of Nara, Sato's old neighborhood in Japan.



"Sato, my good friend. Can I ask you a question?" Gaines walked with a slight limp from the injury he'd sustained during their aerial battle.



"You may always ask me a question. I may not always answer though." Sato responded.



"Look Sato, just cut the philosophy for moment and let me ask you a question as a friend. We've been through a lot together." Gaines said stopping, a tall and dignified pagoda stood in the background behind Sato.



Sato smiled at his friend's comment and replied.



"My friend, there is no philosopher because what you see and hear of me is what you get." Sato smiled his hands behind his back.



"That's what I mean. Did you really mean what you said on the carrier? When I was in the brig? Do you remember? They were going to kill me and you defended me, but you told me that I had no honour. No substance or whatever you regard that as being in Japan. So did you really save my life because you thought I didn't deserve a warrior's death? Or were you stopping them from killing me?" Gaines asked him looking deep into Sato's eyes and perhaps his soul.



Sato stood silent for a moment as he pondered the question once again looking for the words to describe the answer. His English was good, but being able to translate was not good enough when the words that you needed to say did not even exist in the language that you needed to say them in.



"My friend. You have honor in what it means to Japan. More so than many I've known and I've known many more who by their experiences should, but don't. You have courage and yet you have a heart for the suffering. You could have left Japan after the treaty had been formally signed. Instead you saw the destruction that war had brought to our door step and you chose to help us rebuild. I remember when I saw you caught in the parachute, helplessly being pulled out to sea by the undercurrent of the island. You thought I was going to cut your throat when I pulled my knife. Instead I cut you free from what would have killed you. My words were just as sharp as that knife on that day in the brig, yet they saved your life rather than taking it though I fear that in doing so, I damaged you my friend and that was not my intent. The men I addressed had lost their honor, their way. The Budo. The Bushido! They were there as murderers, like shooting a ferocious predator while it is trapped inside of a cage. There are no words to explain the shame that this brings us, when one does as such. There are no words in English for such a travesty for it is without honor to do so. Yet in order to save you from such intent, I had to say some things that I did not mean to be so sharpened to cut you so much as save you. Like the knife I used to free you from the parachute that was dragging you out to sea. The parachute saved you from the fall, but not the sea. The knife could have been an instrument of your death, but instead was the instument used to free you from it. Like my words. They were there to save you, not harm you but it is understandable that you felt that way. You stayed even though you did feel that way and you never asked me for such resolve until after you'd given your help, not before. You my friend have more honor, more real honor than most people could ever conceive of because you sought reprieve by asking me not before, but after you'd given your help to us. Your enemy and one that attacked Pearl Harbour to start this conflict and at the cost of a great many lives. I have learned much from you my friend and for that I am ever so grateful and humble before you. We have done our part here. You've given your time in helping us to recover. As we are done here, I must go to your America and there I will do the same for Pearl Harbour. There will be many who spite my presence, but there were those who were resentful of yours here. Especiallly after the damage the super weapon of your country's war effort caused to our cities and the soul of Japan. You stayed anyway and you helped us to rebuild. To heal the wounds of war. We'd neither of us be alive if not for the actions of the pilots on that fateful day for they were the last time that either of us, you and I drew our weapons against each other. Let's keep their sacrifice an honorable one for they serve to let us know the high cost of being out of words to solve our problems. So much so that we must resolve our differences with violence. I will know how you felt these seven years when I spend the same in Pearl Harbour and give my help there. Then I will ask you the same question that you just asked me. You my friend are a true warrior and you have restored my faith in the Budo. I've relearned the Bushido through you. My words in the brig were not meant to hurt you, but to save you. You did not turn and flee once you were free, you offered your hand to a fallen foe. I did not cut your throat while you were in the water but instead saved you from the sea. We are one and the same. My friend and brother." Sato replied to Gaines.



Gaines eyes welled up and the both of them were once again at peace. Gaines had known the answer before he'd asked the question and the truth was that Gaines had asked the question not for his sake, but for Sato's for Gaines knew the end was nigh. In nineteen fifty two, Gaines died of Cancer of the colon and was laid to rest in Osaka in a funeral that was paid for by Sato.



Sato kept his promise and traveled to the United States and to Pearl Harbour where he lived and worked for eight years helping the people there to renew their lives. Most of the people there resented his presence, but there were a few who loved him for his help.



Sato spent the next forty years adventuring around the world, visiting other countries and learning their traditions. In every one of his adventures, he'd acquire something that often symbolized his adventure or trip and as he accrued these set pieces from the story of his life, he stored them each one until in the late nineties, he opened a shop in Shepperton just off the river Thames. A shop that one day a lost man in his early twenties would stumble upon and form a bond with its owner. Barris and Sato were two of a kind, both lovers of art and literature and most certainly destined to be friends. Where Sato's adventures had ended, so would Barris' adventures begin.



Friend Or Poe




Barris had been eye deep in a book of poetry, its words consumed one by one by his voracious appetite and renewed vigor. Barris had been a conundrum all of his life. A poet after his favorite and the namesake itself. A warrior yearning after the Knight's soul of Chivalry and the Bushido, married happily into one. Sato had introduced him to the possibility of it all and overwhelmed him by its magnitude, but he was happily at home in his struggle to understand and learn its virtues nonetheless.



"Take this kiss upon the brow, and in parting from me now". Barris spoke as he read from the book.



The store was quiet as the early morning around him and he pondered the Poe's words like a glass of the finest wine, likely poured by Dickens, whose was likely poured in part by Shakespeare and both with a dash of Clemens or more aptly Twain as he was known by most.



"This much let me avow." he continued reading, savoring the words which let him know that he was alive.



A moment of eerie silence engulfed him and the air stood still as if it had suddenly become stale.



Something seemed a bit off and a strange sensation found him.



As if on queue, the store sparked to life literally. The store began to glow as the static energy spun about the walls like the magical ladders of Tesla's coils.



Barris shielded himself with the book momentarily as the energy crescendo-ed and a shape, the shape of a beautiful woman emerged from its center. He thought of Poe's lost love thinking she's here.



Barris jumped away from his book, first seeing Mila, in all of her majesty materialized before him like a goddess of old. Her eyes caught his, and he stared in disbelief of her beauty.



"Uhhh. Hi there." she said trying to sound in control but only tripping over her tongue, and blushing a bit too.



Barris stared at her in the paralysis of awe of her. He tried to mouth his words, though they left his throat quietly and dryly.



"Mr. Sato, I think you'd better come down here quickly." Barris reeled back into the dark corner from the desk at which he sat.



Another shape emerged from the shape of the static maelstrom and she too was shapely and angelic though different from the first lady. Nelony would be considered heavier by some men, but she was shapely and beautiful and appeared as if she had walked right out of a renaissance painting, a work of art herself like the buxom of mother nature herself.



"Well then you'd better wake up now, love" Nelony winked at him, a couple of butterflies leapt to life from her shoulders and towards his face.



A third lady materialized near Nelony from the out of the maelstrom which had died to the size of a sparkler and Shaela took form behind the elements that preceded her. A cloud climbed from behind her, and then slowly crept into the shadows modestly. Her shape like that of a slinky cat, ready to pounce and she bore her appeal like a dangerous and untamed beast.



"Is this the cute one that you saw in all of his hunkiness? He's a bit young for Yirfir isn't he?" Shaela asked, staring Barris down as if she was ready to devour him.



"Yirfir is charming enough to date men half her age if she so desired!" Nelony shot back as Shaela defensively.



"What is the meaning of this! How did you get in here? I will not have this of my... our shop!" Barris exclaimed, startled away from Poe, which was sacrilege to him.



"Sato!" he yelled reeling behind his book.



"Poe, your book! You read Poetry?" Mila stated.



"Huh? What about Poe?" Barris asked, looking at his book and then back to her, afraid that he had missed a moment of her by glancing away.



"I mean Poe, Edgar Allen! You know who I mean" she stated to him.



"Yes I do. And by whose passage should I expect an Angel such as you? Benny Hill?" He asked quizzically.



"No. I'm Robert Frost you buffoon! Do I look like Benny Hill? Or maybe you think I'm one of those girls who'd chase him around do you?" Mila shot back at him playfully.



"Are you saying you don't like Benny Hill?" He asked her carefully, evaluating her.



"I love Benny Hill. I loved the little bald gentleman running away from..." Mila continued carefully.



"What about the Doctor?" Barris asked.



"You mean Dr Zhivago?" asked Nelony.



"No. She means Doctor Frankenstein" Shaela interrupted, her accent accentuated her hands imitating two bolts from her neck.



"No dammit. I mean the Doctor! Doctor Who of course!" Barris exclaimed.



"Exterminate! Exterminate!" shouted Shaela, pointing her fingers at Barris.



"No, no. The Daleks are long gone! Er, sort of. It's all different now!" Barris replied.



"Look! We're here looking for a number two Wayne-Scott forty-seven link Oakchest tile! I came here because you're the experts!" Mila exclaimed, leaning slightly to one side her arms crossed.



"You mean the one used by the Merical's?" Barris asked carefully.



"I think its the Merival de Gennre's developement circa sixteen ninety-two Mila replied confident in her knowledge and her artisanship.



"I'd better get Mr. Sato. Uhhhh, don't leave... You especially. Please?" Barris said spying Mila.



Before Barris could leave, Sato emerged from the shadows.



"I understand that, you have interest in a wall tile from one my books." spoke Sato, firmly and calmly addressing the inquiry of the ladies.



Mila stood in place, as if in awe of Sato's presence.



"Sato? The Mishima Sato?" she asked, bowing before him respectfully.



He paused momentarily and did something that shocked Barris.



"Mila? Mila Rendebelle? You mean the Mila Rendebelle?" Sato said, pointing at a painting on the wall, bowing before her, lower and lower.



The painting, the moment Sato had pointed it out seemed to glow with magnificent colours and shades, depicting what appeared to be a ballet dancer whose form emerged from the clouds, before entering into a pirouette in the sky.



Mila paused a moment and then smiled at Sato and Barris, blushing.



"Look, we have a friend that needs rescuing and we need your help! Would you two just get to the point!" Shaela exclaimed, thinking of Yirfir and the men who had abducted her.



Nelony nodded in agreement with Shaela despite their prior spat.



"Mr. Sato. I need to know where the number two Wayne Scott number forty-seven tile described in your book, Legends Of D'Auberge And Other Architecture was used in construction in the estates of Europe." Asked Mila, reeling from the fact that the legendary Sato knew of her existence.



"Yes I know and now I am aware of what you seek. That form of building is very prominent in France, though legend holds that the estates that used such materials and methods of construction are hidden well within in L'Arbres De Noire." Mr. Sato replied.



"I've heard of the Noire." Shaela responded, her expression grim.



"It contains the sacrificial sites that were used to eradicate the Aerth Mother Order. Legend has it that the last of the Aerth Mother Order were shipped from the port at West View in the mid sixteen hundreds where they were sent to a ceremonial burial grounds in the forest and executed. Definitely by the early vestiges of the forces of Lorr." Nelony finished for Shaela.



"Has everyone around here gone completely nuts? You're talking about goblins and witches and forest critters like they're real? And what's a Lorr?" Barris asked looking around completely lost and somewhat maniacal.



Mila looked to him compassionately feeling a little bit of pity for him. That and she was even beginning to like him. He'd need to be educated and being educated was a little bit of a frightful process.



"Lorr is the originator of the Power Lords, the Norbids and rumour has it, the Culdar Rath. He represents all that opposes the forces for the preservation of life, peace and freedom. He's long been our enemy and we keep things safe from him. Let's just put it that way." Mila explained to Barris.



"When we graduate that is." Nelony continued modestly.



"I'm not waiting until I graduate to deal with Lorr or anyone on his side." Shaela said impatiently looking angrily to men.



"Uhhhh. Am I sensing that its a bad time to be a man right now? There seems to be a tad bit too much anti-testocerone sentiment in the air." Barris said uneasily.



"I can fix that for you if you'd like!" Shaela said to him fiercely reaching for the lower extremities of his body.



"Don't you dare touch him! Or his..." Mila defended Barris.



"...fragile ego?" Nelony finished for her.



"Perhaps you need to focus on the problem at hand rather than my friend's ego?" Sato stepped in.



"Exactly! I like my ego exactly where it is. Thank you very much!" Barris backed up folding twisting his legs together defensively.



"I think Sato meant the forest. L'Arbres De Noire? I mean Yirfir needs us and we'd better find it." Mila stated thoughtfully and compassionately looking to each of them.



Barris looked to her and smiled clearly and silently mouthing the words thank you.



Charm And A Night Cap




Yirfir cradled the wine glass in her hand, eying the room, the shadows playing with her perception. The fountain still quietly shimmered and filled the air with mist. The music of Franz Liszt filled the background silence and kept her company while Jasmer was in his absence of her. She had tried summoning a Waether Ward without success. She'd attempted to breach the forest veil unsuccessfully. She'd even tried to phase herself between the walls of the estate without luck, as if they'd contained the very means to diffuse her abilities.



In the meantime she'd douse herself in drink and enjoy Jasmer's company when he returned. They had been lovers long ago, before the Reign Of New and the collapse of the Sanctum. She had lived through that, though just barely escaping the wrath of the Uxgard Norbids and their ever thirsty Power Lords. The Reign was a common house that held the peace between the families, and independent orders or the world, forming a law between them that each adhered to and that each benefited from in both the learning and yearning, which appropriately referred to knowledge and the arts.



The Norbids were a vile order who'd learned they could extract power by pitting learning and yearning against ignorance. That is, they would benefit by pitting knowledge and and the arts against those whose ignorance was easily turned to ire. Everywhere there was something to be gained by the conflict between our learning and yearning and ignorance, you'd find the Norbids. The Power Lords, a very powerful order had started the wars that lead to the collapse of the Reign Of New and consumed the powers of the Sanctum and all of its secrets by pitting those who didn't understand it against it.



Jasmer had been a much different and more principled man, that Yirfir had fallen for. His determination fully paved the way for the the Sanctum to accumulate its wealth of the arcane arts before his lust for liberation gave way to a lust for power, and like the Norbids and Power Lords he ultimately fell before his own greed for it. She'd barely escaped his clutches then though she longed for him, still in love with the man he was more so than the man he'd become.



By the time he'd returned from his absence, Yirfir had all but given up, her glass empty as her spirits.



"I must apologize for my absence my dear. I haven't forgotten about you." he smiled.



"How could you?" Yirfir asked, her charm never lacking lustre.



"You're right. I never could. Care to join me for a nightcap?" he asked her seductively and as a gentleman, though there was something coded in his inquiry and she knew it.



"Just one drink though, you know what happened last time." she replied, unsure of his motives or of her own.



"Of course my dear." He agreed.



They strolled the distance to the bedroom suites in the north west wing of the manor together, her arm looped around his. Their night continued though without conversation and went on until the next morning. There were many things in life that simply got better with age.


Continued in A Lady's Prerogative I: The Yearning And The Learning Part III



Brian Joseph Johns
http://www.shhhhdigital.com
Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Copyright © 2012 Brian Joseph Johns