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Barsoom Tales I - COMPLETE
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<blockquote data-quote="barsoomcore" data-source="post: 1845211" data-attributes="member: 812"><p>"It's... it's almost pretty, isn't it?"</p><p></p><p>Arrafin stood next to Elena, watching Pavairelle burn in the distance. They'd gotten the guns out of the ruined Casino and on board a ship bound for the Narid, sailing out in the pre-dawn darkness as the violence suffusing the city rose in a desperate pitch of struggling factions. A detachment of Kishak soldiers had come hurtling down the wharf to where they untied and rowed out to their ship, Thuria's Dream. The captain, an elderly Shaeric fellow with no love for Kishak soldiers, had his crew rushing about getting the ship ready before they pulled alongside, and within minutes, it seemed, they were drifting out of the most famous harbour in the world, watching the Jewel of the Inner Sea burn.</p><p></p><p>Etienne hung off the stern rail. His home was burning. Marques, the Torn Curtain, the cherry trees on Duelists' Street, the city was awash in flames. He stared across dark water at the tall, steep-sided pillar of stone that Pavairelle capped, now glowing with redness and black smoke. His sour gaze drifted along to where Arrafin and Elena stood, Elena with the massive length of that great black sword leaning against the rail next to her.</p><p></p><p>"Yeah. Almost."</p><p></p><p>Nevid paid no attention to the flames. He found the captain, and with Isaac beside him, laid out the details of their voyage.</p><p></p><p>"We have on board a collection of Saijadani rifles, Captain O'Shannon."</p><p></p><p>"Aye, that ye have, lad. And they're fine weapons, too, I'll tell ye, and no mistake."</p><p></p><p>"Thank you. We are taking these weapons to the village of Hudra Keffil, a few hundred miles east of the Al-Tizim Canal Mouth. There we will exchange the weapons with Naridic fighters for gold, and head back north across the Inner Sea to Cadencia."</p><p></p><p>"Aye, that sounds simple enough. I've no charts of yer Hudra Keffil, but these waters are clear enough. A fine wind, a bit of luck, and we'll be off the Naridic coast in but a fortnight."</p><p></p><p>*****</p><p></p><p>Countess Sara del Istanzic did not weep because of the ruin of her family and her fortune.</p><p></p><p>Her house destroyed, her wealth taken, her little fleet burned at their anchors, and now the guns gone.</p><p></p><p>Smoke drifted across the harbour, obscuring her view of the sails below. Her property, overlooking the harbour on a high ridge of Temple Hill, looked as though a war had been fought on it. Dead bodies lay strewn about, but some of her guard had survived, and the sword she held limply in one hand was caked with blood.</p><p></p><p>She did not weep for the death of so many trusted men and women.</p><p></p><p>The Fifteenth Legion had mutinied and gone looting on Temple Hill. She didn't know how many had assaulted her estate, but they were many more than her small force could be expected to deal with. Her soldiers died where they stood, heaping the red bodies of Kishak warriors around them. Only an attack by another Pavairellean force distracted the Kishaks and drove them off, but not before they had torn her very house down around her and stolen everything of value there was in the building.</p><p></p><p>The streets were clogged with dead Kishak soldiers. Somebody had found the Jeddakkar, hiding in the River Palace, and hung him and his family from the arches near the Temple of Spring.</p><p></p><p>Countess del Istanzic watched the tattered sails in the harbour. The Kishaks were gone.</p><p></p><p>She wept because for the first time in her life, the Free City was truly free.</p><p></p><p>*****</p><p></p><p>"It's called the Talon of the Raven."</p><p></p><p>"I like it. Very dramatic. Why are we interested in the Raven's Talon, my vicious little child?"</p><p></p><p>"It destroys and commands the undead."</p><p></p><p>"It does?"</p><p></p><p>"Yes, Mother."</p><p></p><p>"To a considerable degree, I assume?"</p><p></p><p>"Yes, Mother."</p><p></p><p>There was a very long pause.</p><p></p><p>The two women remained perfectly still in a richly appointed bedchamber, dripping with silk and golden furnishings, massive flowers and draping curtains of lace and diamond. They were both Lohanese, though very different in appearance. The younger, submissive one wore simple dark cloth cut provocatively, and knelt with her head bowed. The other stood tall, her spectacularly elaborate gown shimmering and drifting about her, her hair piled up above her head in such baroque arrangements that it no longer resembled anything like hair. The structural engineering that had gone into her appearance was more advanced than that which had produced the massive castle where they talked.</p><p></p><p>She was Yuek Man Chong, residing in her new home of Castle Dannockshire. Where she walked, shadows hissed and whispered foul things. When she passed, hungry inhuman eyes watched, burning with lust and awe.</p><p></p><p>She smiled down at her adopted daughter, Kani Nakamura. Neither of them paid the slightest bit of attention to the young girl sprawled motionless on the massive bed, even when she cried out feebly.</p><p></p><p>"Fetch this talon for us, Kani. It will please us."</p><p></p><p>"Yes, Mother."</p><p></p><p>"And you would so love to please us, wouldn't you, my sweet little one?"</p><p></p><p>A long, bone-white finger extended, the black nail lengthened and sharpened until it was more dangerous than the talon under discussion, and reached under Kani's chin to tilt her head up.</p><p></p><p>Kani began to weep. Her mother's beauty blinded her. She had never, ever been capable of speech while looking at the perfection that was her mother.</p><p></p><p>She shut her eyes against the vision above her.</p><p></p><p>"Yes, Mother. Please, Mother. Please. Let me please you."</p><p></p><p>Yuek Man Chong laughed. She never tired of her daughter's desperation. Or of denying her daughter what the poor deranged girl wanted most.</p><p></p><p>"Go."</p><p></p><p>As Kani stumbled out, the statuesque vampire turned to the girl on the bed, who was just then trying to sit up, as though shaking off the effects of a deep sleep. The girl's eyes widened at the sight of the white figure clad in brilliant silks drifting towards her.</p><p></p><p>Kani paused once at the sound of screams from above, and went on.</p><p></p><p>When it was over, when the last hissing desperate cry of pleading anguish had died away, when even the sound of blood dripping off the gold furnishings had ceased, Yuek Man Chong stood perfectly still, her face caked with blood, staring down at what had only hours before been a beautiful young girl.</p><p></p><p>She stood there, staring, for days. She did not blink. She didn't need to. She had been dead for much longer than the girl she'd been torturing.</p><p></p><p>*****</p><p></p><p>Kimiko Torokan sat in silence. The Blood Sanctuary had not been touched, not even when the violence in the streets had risen to its highest crest. The enigma and sanctity of the Blood Council was inviolate.</p><p></p><p>Had been inviolate. Torokan concentrated, forcing herself to remember every shriek of Yasami's. Every protestation of innocence. She had done it. The crime was hers.</p><p></p><p>Torokan considered every detail of the other women at this Sanctuary. Undoubtedly more of them served Shang. Undoubtedly some that did thought they were opposing him. She knew that she herself might be serving that evil spider, the man who had taken the central truth, the ultimate purpose of the Blood Council and rendered it worthless, worse than worthless. He had made a thing of darkness out of what was meant to be humanity's greatest defense.</p><p></p><p>Her hatred rose strong in her mind, but she pushed it away. She could identify half-a-dozen obvious servants of his. There would be more.</p><p></p><p>But Arrafin, that little Naridic girl with the astonishing intelligence, who'd grasped at glance formulae it had taken Torokan months of labour to comprehend, she might prove the wedge that opened a crack in the schemes of Matai Shang. There was nothing more Torokan could do for the girl, and she knew that it more than likely that Shadow's dark fingers would kill the untutored young woman before she ever became a factor, but just knowing that somewhere out there was growing a factor Shang had never, could never, have considered, gave the Blood Sister strength.</p><p></p><p>She would continue to resist. She would fight Matai Shang to the last breath she possessed.</p><p></p><p>*****</p><p></p><p>Collette sat motionless, watching the woman across from her with complete concentration.</p><p></p><p>"My dear de Maynard, you may relax. I am not a del Orofin."</p><p></p><p>"What is it you want with me? When I'm in disgrace from Pavairelle to Petrahegna?"</p><p></p><p>The other woman smiled.</p><p></p><p>"Certainly not. Disgrace? For disrupting relations between de Beliard and the del Orofin? If you were Saijadani, I'd call you a patriot."</p><p></p><p>"Yeah, well, I'm not."</p><p></p><p>A very heavy purse landed on the table. Collette's eyes flicked down to it, and back up. The other woman laughed.</p><p></p><p>"Oh, dear, you have learned suspicion, haven't you? I've told you, I'm not a del Orofin, to stick a sword in my dinner guest."</p><p></p><p>"No," replied Collette, not relaxing one bit, "You're a del Maraviez, to slip a knife under your trusted ally's ribs."</p><p></p><p>Isabella del Maraviez leaned back, her good humour gone.</p><p></p><p>"I can tell them where you are, Collette. I don't have to offer you a thing. Pilar will pay me handsomely for your head. Or just directions to it. I advise you to take my money and listen to my offer. Several years ago, you helped to discredit a Petrahegna noble and his family."</p><p></p><p>"If this is about del Valencia, I heard he was dead. Killed by Kendorik."</p><p></p><p>"There is another del Valencia, you know. The mother."</p><p></p><p>Collette forgot to be cautious. She stared in shock at Isabella. The del Maraviez woman smiled again.</p><p></p><p>"Find Emmanuelle del Valencia, Collette. I will keep the del Orofin off your back."</p><p></p><p>*****</p><p></p><p>"You've found her?"</p><p></p><p>"Yes, Your Eminence."</p><p></p><p>The mutilated thing grovelled on bare stone. The very old man sputtered with laughter, steel limbs creaking around him.</p><p></p><p>"Assemble the slaves. We must prepare."</p><p></p><p>"Yes, Your Eminence."</p><p></p><p>Matai Shang shuddered at the thought that he would once again possess his beloved creation. The Demon Goddess. Yuek Man Chong. She would be his again. The image of her, shrieking as he toyed with her, sent him into a bubbling, gibbering parody of ecstasy.</p><p></p><p>She would know he owned her. She would remember she belonged to him.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="barsoomcore, post: 1845211, member: 812"] "It's... it's almost pretty, isn't it?" Arrafin stood next to Elena, watching Pavairelle burn in the distance. They'd gotten the guns out of the ruined Casino and on board a ship bound for the Narid, sailing out in the pre-dawn darkness as the violence suffusing the city rose in a desperate pitch of struggling factions. A detachment of Kishak soldiers had come hurtling down the wharf to where they untied and rowed out to their ship, Thuria's Dream. The captain, an elderly Shaeric fellow with no love for Kishak soldiers, had his crew rushing about getting the ship ready before they pulled alongside, and within minutes, it seemed, they were drifting out of the most famous harbour in the world, watching the Jewel of the Inner Sea burn. Etienne hung off the stern rail. His home was burning. Marques, the Torn Curtain, the cherry trees on Duelists' Street, the city was awash in flames. He stared across dark water at the tall, steep-sided pillar of stone that Pavairelle capped, now glowing with redness and black smoke. His sour gaze drifted along to where Arrafin and Elena stood, Elena with the massive length of that great black sword leaning against the rail next to her. "Yeah. Almost." Nevid paid no attention to the flames. He found the captain, and with Isaac beside him, laid out the details of their voyage. "We have on board a collection of Saijadani rifles, Captain O'Shannon." "Aye, that ye have, lad. And they're fine weapons, too, I'll tell ye, and no mistake." "Thank you. We are taking these weapons to the village of Hudra Keffil, a few hundred miles east of the Al-Tizim Canal Mouth. There we will exchange the weapons with Naridic fighters for gold, and head back north across the Inner Sea to Cadencia." "Aye, that sounds simple enough. I've no charts of yer Hudra Keffil, but these waters are clear enough. A fine wind, a bit of luck, and we'll be off the Naridic coast in but a fortnight." ***** Countess Sara del Istanzic did not weep because of the ruin of her family and her fortune. Her house destroyed, her wealth taken, her little fleet burned at their anchors, and now the guns gone. Smoke drifted across the harbour, obscuring her view of the sails below. Her property, overlooking the harbour on a high ridge of Temple Hill, looked as though a war had been fought on it. Dead bodies lay strewn about, but some of her guard had survived, and the sword she held limply in one hand was caked with blood. She did not weep for the death of so many trusted men and women. The Fifteenth Legion had mutinied and gone looting on Temple Hill. She didn't know how many had assaulted her estate, but they were many more than her small force could be expected to deal with. Her soldiers died where they stood, heaping the red bodies of Kishak warriors around them. Only an attack by another Pavairellean force distracted the Kishaks and drove them off, but not before they had torn her very house down around her and stolen everything of value there was in the building. The streets were clogged with dead Kishak soldiers. Somebody had found the Jeddakkar, hiding in the River Palace, and hung him and his family from the arches near the Temple of Spring. Countess del Istanzic watched the tattered sails in the harbour. The Kishaks were gone. She wept because for the first time in her life, the Free City was truly free. ***** "It's called the Talon of the Raven." "I like it. Very dramatic. Why are we interested in the Raven's Talon, my vicious little child?" "It destroys and commands the undead." "It does?" "Yes, Mother." "To a considerable degree, I assume?" "Yes, Mother." There was a very long pause. The two women remained perfectly still in a richly appointed bedchamber, dripping with silk and golden furnishings, massive flowers and draping curtains of lace and diamond. They were both Lohanese, though very different in appearance. The younger, submissive one wore simple dark cloth cut provocatively, and knelt with her head bowed. The other stood tall, her spectacularly elaborate gown shimmering and drifting about her, her hair piled up above her head in such baroque arrangements that it no longer resembled anything like hair. The structural engineering that had gone into her appearance was more advanced than that which had produced the massive castle where they talked. She was Yuek Man Chong, residing in her new home of Castle Dannockshire. Where she walked, shadows hissed and whispered foul things. When she passed, hungry inhuman eyes watched, burning with lust and awe. She smiled down at her adopted daughter, Kani Nakamura. Neither of them paid the slightest bit of attention to the young girl sprawled motionless on the massive bed, even when she cried out feebly. "Fetch this talon for us, Kani. It will please us." "Yes, Mother." "And you would so love to please us, wouldn't you, my sweet little one?" A long, bone-white finger extended, the black nail lengthened and sharpened until it was more dangerous than the talon under discussion, and reached under Kani's chin to tilt her head up. Kani began to weep. Her mother's beauty blinded her. She had never, ever been capable of speech while looking at the perfection that was her mother. She shut her eyes against the vision above her. "Yes, Mother. Please, Mother. Please. Let me please you." Yuek Man Chong laughed. She never tired of her daughter's desperation. Or of denying her daughter what the poor deranged girl wanted most. "Go." As Kani stumbled out, the statuesque vampire turned to the girl on the bed, who was just then trying to sit up, as though shaking off the effects of a deep sleep. The girl's eyes widened at the sight of the white figure clad in brilliant silks drifting towards her. Kani paused once at the sound of screams from above, and went on. When it was over, when the last hissing desperate cry of pleading anguish had died away, when even the sound of blood dripping off the gold furnishings had ceased, Yuek Man Chong stood perfectly still, her face caked with blood, staring down at what had only hours before been a beautiful young girl. She stood there, staring, for days. She did not blink. She didn't need to. She had been dead for much longer than the girl she'd been torturing. ***** Kimiko Torokan sat in silence. The Blood Sanctuary had not been touched, not even when the violence in the streets had risen to its highest crest. The enigma and sanctity of the Blood Council was inviolate. Had been inviolate. Torokan concentrated, forcing herself to remember every shriek of Yasami's. Every protestation of innocence. She had done it. The crime was hers. Torokan considered every detail of the other women at this Sanctuary. Undoubtedly more of them served Shang. Undoubtedly some that did thought they were opposing him. She knew that she herself might be serving that evil spider, the man who had taken the central truth, the ultimate purpose of the Blood Council and rendered it worthless, worse than worthless. He had made a thing of darkness out of what was meant to be humanity's greatest defense. Her hatred rose strong in her mind, but she pushed it away. She could identify half-a-dozen obvious servants of his. There would be more. But Arrafin, that little Naridic girl with the astonishing intelligence, who'd grasped at glance formulae it had taken Torokan months of labour to comprehend, she might prove the wedge that opened a crack in the schemes of Matai Shang. There was nothing more Torokan could do for the girl, and she knew that it more than likely that Shadow's dark fingers would kill the untutored young woman before she ever became a factor, but just knowing that somewhere out there was growing a factor Shang had never, could never, have considered, gave the Blood Sister strength. She would continue to resist. She would fight Matai Shang to the last breath she possessed. ***** Collette sat motionless, watching the woman across from her with complete concentration. "My dear de Maynard, you may relax. I am not a del Orofin." "What is it you want with me? When I'm in disgrace from Pavairelle to Petrahegna?" The other woman smiled. "Certainly not. Disgrace? For disrupting relations between de Beliard and the del Orofin? If you were Saijadani, I'd call you a patriot." "Yeah, well, I'm not." A very heavy purse landed on the table. Collette's eyes flicked down to it, and back up. The other woman laughed. "Oh, dear, you have learned suspicion, haven't you? I've told you, I'm not a del Orofin, to stick a sword in my dinner guest." "No," replied Collette, not relaxing one bit, "You're a del Maraviez, to slip a knife under your trusted ally's ribs." Isabella del Maraviez leaned back, her good humour gone. "I can tell them where you are, Collette. I don't have to offer you a thing. Pilar will pay me handsomely for your head. Or just directions to it. I advise you to take my money and listen to my offer. Several years ago, you helped to discredit a Petrahegna noble and his family." "If this is about del Valencia, I heard he was dead. Killed by Kendorik." "There is another del Valencia, you know. The mother." Collette forgot to be cautious. She stared in shock at Isabella. The del Maraviez woman smiled again. "Find Emmanuelle del Valencia, Collette. I will keep the del Orofin off your back." ***** "You've found her?" "Yes, Your Eminence." The mutilated thing grovelled on bare stone. The very old man sputtered with laughter, steel limbs creaking around him. "Assemble the slaves. We must prepare." "Yes, Your Eminence." Matai Shang shuddered at the thought that he would once again possess his beloved creation. The Demon Goddess. Yuek Man Chong. She would be his again. The image of her, shrieking as he toyed with her, sent him into a bubbling, gibbering parody of ecstasy. She would know he owned her. She would remember she belonged to him. [/QUOTE]
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