Halkegenia Online Story Only : Refactored and Reloaded

They journeyed back through the predawn. Alert and on edge. Morning had overtaken the investigators as they neared the base of the World Tree, Arrun still cloaked in shadow.

Kirito had no doubt that the assassin was their murderer. They had a face. It bothered him, but he wasn't sure why.

Their attacker had known the illusion spell <<Mimic>>, he could just as easily have been wearing the mask of a Spriggan to throw off pursuit.

One of Freelia's Watchmen had been able to sketch the assailant from their descriptions. Now they had to take it to someone who would know any Spriggans of note. Asking at the Kurotaka guild hall had been enough to get directions.

On the way out of the timber framed hall of the most notorious of Spriggan Guilds, Kirito noted the guards, both in full ancient grade armor and wielding matching spears. They looked tough and imposing. That was the point. The attacks were having an effect on even the most self assured factions.

Their destination turned out to be a high class area, Kormt Street, the yellow brick road lined with apartments decorated in vine wrapped iron fences and delicately budding creepers. Number 294 was a small townhouse adjacent to an arcade sheltering a cross street.

"Nice," Jensen observed. "But not exactly what I was expecting of a Lord." The Undined had followed Argo and Kirito while his partner had gone to lodge their report.

"It's just a place to crash while she's in town. Argo pulled down her hood. "If you want to see fancy, take a look at the Lord's mansion in Muisca. So. You want to knock or should I?"

Jensen shrugged.

Argo did the honors.

They waited.

And waited.

And waited . . .

"Maybe she's not home." Kirito suggested. Jensen pointed wordlessly to a sign hung beside the mailbox.

A Chibi-Morgiana held her spear in one hand, giving a victory sign, sticking out her tongue, and winked. At the bottom of the sign, a message had been painted.

Big Sis Is In!

Kirito turned the sign over to reveal the Chibi-Morgiana running off with another hand painted caption.

Big Sis Is Out!

Had someone pulled this woman from a Manga? Kirito heard the lock turning. The door opened fractionally.

"Lady Morgiana" the watch officer stepped smoothly in front of Argo, "I am Officer Jensen, I am with the Arrun Watch and . . ." The Undine's introduction fell off.

Kirito hadn't known what to expect of Morgiana in her own home. Not for the Lady of the Spriggans to answer the door half dressed.

Morgiana squinted, leaning sleepily against the wall as she rubbed at one darkly ringed, watery eye, her unbraided hair was tangled and haggard and hung messily off her shoulders.

"Yes?" She even sounded like she'd just crawled out of bed. "Can I help you with something?"

"You weren't at your Guild", Kirito managed to look at Morgiana without looking anywhere in particular. "It's very important that we talk to you."

"Kirito. So you're with the watch now?" The Spriggan woman perked up a little. "Hm, yeah, I've been feeling pretty lousy the last couple days. Who'd have guessed we could get the flu? So, an investigation huh?"

"Not an investigation," Jensen recovered, "the investigation."

Morgiana opened her eyes wide, sickness forgotten. "I'm guessing this should be a private conversation . . ." She gestured as the door opened fully. "Come on in."

It took a moment for Kirito's eyes to adjust. Only a little light penetrated the blinds to reveal a sparsely furnished room. A pile of blankets had fallen to the ground beside the sofa and the coffee table was covered in empty bottles and half eaten plates of toast and fruit. The air felt thick and stuffy.

Morgiana flopped down heavily, half reclining as she waved them to adjacent chairs. "Sorry for the mess, I've been trying to sleep this off. So, you're the ones who've been investigating the murders?"

Kirito nodded as he took one of the offered seats, meeting Morgiana's gray eyes. "And we might have a lead. You're not going to like it though."

Argo produced the illustrations, handing them to Morgiana whose expression, after a moment of study, went suddenly grim. A short hiss blew through her teeth as she tossed the drawings onto the coffee table, she pulled a hand slowly over her face.

"He's a Spriggan alright."

"So you know him?" Jensen asked, voice neutral.

"Not personally." Morgiana clarified with a mirthless grin, "But his reputation precedes him . . . Rip Jack."

"Rip . . . Jack . . . ?" Kirito muttered.

"Yeah, it's that sort of tacky handle."

"Jack the Ripper." Argo elaborated. "A serial killer who terrorized Victorian London. He was known to cut his victims throats."

Kirito felt his heart sink. Then they really were looking at a Laughing Coffin type killer.

"The method of murder is right." Jensen agreed. "But Jack the Ripper targeted prostitutes, not government officials, and he mutilated his victims."

"Sawing through their throats isn't mutilation?" Kirito asked. "If he's the kind of guy who got a rush playing a villain, I mean really getting into that role, maybe he just couldn't handle it. He might have just . . . snapped." And become what he pretended to be.

Jensen snorted. "Leave the profiling to people with experience, kid."

Kirito felt a little of the same annoyance felt by Argo. They'd seen this sort of killer before where Jensen had not. Being dismissed was . . . Kirito stopped himself. Personal feelings didn't matter. Stopping the murders did.

"Morgiana-san, can you find out if anyone has seen Jack recently." Kirito thought carefully. "He has to have interacted with somebody."

"That's going to be a problem." Morgiana's eyes fixed intensely on the tabletop. Looking through the sketches rather than at them. "Like I said, I didn't much care for the little troll when I booted him, and until just now, I cared even less. All I know is that he and his friends were hanging around the edge of Sylph territory."

"His Friends?" Jensen asked quickly. "Don't tell us there are more."

"Maybe two or three." Morgiana said. "They kept going out and ganking the Newbies, really killed a lot of the fun. That's when I finally broke down and banished them."

"Better and better." Argo whispered.

Morgiana's face twisted in confusion. "I don't get it. Jack was creepy, ghoulish, and weird. But he can't have just started killing like that!" She snapped her fingers. "I mean, I read about the SAO incident. Didn't it take months for murders to start cropping up?"

Jensen and Morgiana rested eyes on Argo and Kirito.

"Not quite." Kirito said uneasily, palms itching. He'd gotten his wish, he was suddenly the expert, and suddenly he didn't want it. "There were some early attempts. In the heat of the moment." Mostly unsuccessful . . . "But those were mainly people trying to secure an advantage." The Spriggan youth frowned as he looked for the right word. "They were . . . calculated. Not like Laughing Coffin. That happened later. But these are different circumstances and maybe . . ."

"Maybe what?" Morgiana leaned closer, conspiratorially.

"You know the news about players feeling . . . changed? Undine's don't like to get too dry and Salamanders hate it when it's cold . . . Last night, Argo snapped into some sort of frenzy when the assassin tried to attack." Kirito observed. "She was . . . like a startled cat . . . Uhm . . . No offense."

"It saved my life." Argo steepled her fingers thoughtfully. "So I won't complain sa."

Morgiana's eyes narrowed. "Hold on a second. You're not trying to say that Jack being a Spriggan has something to do with this?!"

"I don't know." Kirito felt very tired as he admitted his privately held fear. "But we can't ignore it, because people are going to think it when the news gets out."

They needed more eyes than just the Watch could provide. They needed a manhunt. But the price of putting a face to ALfheim's first murderer would be acknowledging that he was a Spriggan.

People remembered firsts . . .

Slamming her palms on the tabletop, Morgiana half rose. "My kids aren't murderers!"

Then, seeing the surprise at her outburst, she sank back onto the sofa. Morgiana spread her arms wide as she looked up at the ceiling and began to quietly count down from ten.

"If it is Jack, then you're facing an illusion master whose main method of delivering damage is his blade work." She said without turning her eyes from the ceiling. "You're going to need scouts tagging everyone to keep an eye out for illusion or stealth spells."

"We're already on it." Jensen said. "Watch Officers have instructions to in groups of three with at least one scout. SOP is to tag anyone suspicious with a Tracer."

"Manpower's gonna be tight." Morgiana observed. "<<Mimic>> used right can be a lot more potent than invisibility spells. You can see the user. But they're also more free to act than somebody under a cloak. I'll forward some of our illusionists to the Watch."

"It'd be appreciated." Jensen rose to his feet, straightening out his deep blue coat. "There's one other thing."

"Oh?" Morgiana smiled mirthlessly. "Just one?"

"You mentioned hearing that Jack was hanging around Sylph Territory before the transition." Jensen said. "We'd be interested in hearing from whoever gave you that information." Morgiana bit her lip. "Lady Morgiana?" Jensen asked. "Anything that helps us close this case . . ."

"I know." Morgiana snapped. Kirito wondered if she hadn't been shaken out of character. "It's just that, the person I heard it from is . . . Gene."

"General Eugene?" Kirito asked.

"Yeah." Morgiana grimaced. "Jack was one of Mort's assassins."

Before he knew it, Kirito was being ushered out behind Argo and Jensen. The door slammed shut behind them and the investigators were left on the front step, back in the light and the cool fresh morning breeze. A few pedestrians turned their heads to note the odd sight before returning to their own business.

Kirito took a moment to collect his thoughts, looking out over the rooftops of the nearby buildings, eyes gravitating to a pair of dark shapes sitting off of one of the eves like Gargoyles. The stylized hawk logo glinted in the sunlight. He suspected those two were just the only guards he could see.

"So . . . Where to next?" He asked.

They'd just hit a windfall of information that would be enough to lift even Argo's spirits. Only it had created just as many troubling new questions.

"Head back to Watch HQ and plot our next move." Argo decided. "And after that, we need to have a talk with Lord Mortimer."

"Vakarian can do it." Jensen suggested. "Mortimer trusted him enough to assign him to this investigation personally . . ." The Undine paused as he realized what he had just said.

Argo planted her face in her palm. "Beautiful."

____________________________________________________________________________

In her zeal, Louise had gravely miscalculated.

She had assumed that waiting tables, a Commoner task, would be trivially mastered by a Noblewoman. She had been half correct.

The pace of the work alone was grueling. Once the evening crowds arrived there was hardly a free moment. But Louise had been prepared to trade in her labor and was no stranger to hard work. She had not been so prepared, however, to trade in her dignity.

Louise pulled on the lace hem of her skirt as she navigated by candle light through the noise and steam, the smoke and cloistered heat, of a tavern filled to bursting with night's revelries.

Squeezing through the ever shifting ever cramped quarters, followed by a cometary tail of ribbons and bows. She was crushed against patrons, buffeted by orders, and here and there was certain she felt something brush up against her leg.

"You! Girl! Another!"

Her inebriated client raised an empty wine bottle over his head impatiently tapping on the label as if she were too stupid to remember.

"Oh! ~ O-of course – S-sir . . . I mean . . . M-master!" She wanted to wretch saying such a thing to the crude oaf leering at her with misted eyes.

'I was right the first time, Kirche should have taken this job.' Louise thought miserably as she hurried behind the counter. The Germanian would probably revel in the attention.

She scanned over the wine bottles until she found what she was looking for. Cutting the wax cap, she rushed back to her client.

"Excuse me." Jessica squeezed by, less with a walk and more with a bustle, occupying all at once two or three times more space than her slight frame required. It seemed to have the effect of repelling the guests and giving her room to breathe. On her arms, she balanced dizzying stacks of plates and bottles, always on the edge, but never quite toppling.

She'd been on the floor longer than Louise, and yet she hardly looked short of breath. All the while she wore a striking smile.

Louise was at a loss for how the girls did it. They parted the crowds and kept ever just out of reach of groping hands, chatting cheerfully with favorite customers. Always with an ease that Louise thought simply had to be magical in nature. There was an enchantment at work here somewhere.

Between frustration and the exhaustion of a long night , Louise hadn't noticed the buckle of one of her shoes come loose. Nore the toe catching on a step. Momentum carried her forward, she made one last skipping hop, and then began to topple.

An arm caught her around the stomach, thin, but supple and strong, it barely budged as Louise threw her weight against it for support. The nasal laughter of her rescuer filled the air.

"You okay?" KoKo asked cheerily. As if saving Louise was just a brief diversion from her fun.

"Y-yeah . . . Thanks." Louise mumbled.

"You look flushed." A little concern crept into the felinid woman's expression, "Are you sure you're okay? Jessica-san and I can take over if you need to have a lay down."

"I'm fine." Louise insisted, nonetheless feeling a pangue of envy.

The Faerie was good at this. Everything from her mannerisms to her manner of dress. Which Louise did not understand, but understood to be ruthlessly strategic.

The Shop Proprietor and his daughter had held a heated debate after securing the faerie's cooperation. In Mademoiselle's own words, "Having found my model, now I am in want of a canvas!"

That was when KoKo had come forward with her own ideas. Strange Faerie ideas. Scarron's eyes had glinted with intense interest. The matter was passed back and forth between Father and Daughter, a consensus was reached.

Long black skirt, pleated white apron, cuffed and collared blouse, cap that emphasized her ears, ribbons, frills, and bows, and a final touch, a slender black collar, complete with a brass bell that chimed sweetly as she moved.

If anything, it was more modest than what the Cait woman normally wore, but the commoners and petty mages couldn't seem to get enough. Her popularity had flourished.

"Miss KoKo!"

"Please hurry back my darling!"

"Mademoiselle, we seem to have spilled our wine!"

KoKo's ears perked up as she spun about, holding her hands in a pawing gesture. "Just one meow-ment!"

The Cait turned back to Louise. She tilted her head. "Are you sure you're doing alright?"

"I'm fine. Fine!" With beckoning customers, KoKo didn't have time to press the matter.

She watched the Faerie make her way through the crowds, sidestepping and spinning about to avoid the more physical guests while teasing playfully with those who touched only with their eyes. Louise's mind rebelled as she watched KoKo flirting like Kirche.

"Girl!"

Louise grit her teeth. "Coming Monsieur." Louise called, hurrying back with her best fake smile. Until de'Martou made his appearance, she had to excel.

So when the customer asked her to pour him another drink, she did, and when the customer asked her to sit in his lap, she did. And when the customer reached under her skirt, she drove her elbow hard into his sternum in exactly the way mother had taught her.

What mother had neglected to explain was that, a grown man, stomach full of food and wine, did not react well to being hit viciously, physiologically speaking. Naturally, it being Louise's customer it had been her responsibility to make good of the mess.

By the time Louise had finished with the resulting revolting business the other girls had switched from trying to earn tips to coaxing customers to depart, gently helping the cooperative to the door, helping the less cooperative a little less gently with assistance from Mademoiselle.

When the last customer had departed, the girls had put up their hair, done up their skirts, and joined Louise in scrubbing down the tables and floor. Work wasn't finished until the shop was ready for the next day.

Finally, as Louise sank into a waiting chair, the night's tally was taken and displayed on a blackboard showing each girl's take.

KoKo had ended up neck and neck with Jessica. That was unsurprising. Her novelty alone was drawing admirers.

What was surprising was the way in which the girls responded. Informed by the Academy, Louise had expected them to resent a newcomer who had shown them all up. But instead, there were only words of congratulations and thanks.

"That had to be half again as many customers as we've had any night this month." Mona nodded to a smaller, redheaded girl.

"At least! I didn't have a spare second all night. And the new ones were really loose with their spending. Trying to impress her. Miss KoKo really knows how to work the crowd!"

"Here here!" The girls cheered while making a meal of the night's leftovers.

Louise had not felt like celebrating. Scarron performed her tally last. Tonight's incident had been bad, the flat, thin lipped look given to her by Mademoiselle was even worse.

"That brings the total to twelve plates and eight bottles." Scarron said, taking her aside. "We can deduct it from your take for the time being, I suppose." The Monsieur who styled himself a Mademoiselle shook his head. "We'll just consider this part of the learning process."

And so, Louise had found herself handing over the scant few coins she had fought hard to collect. A thin slip of paper was dropped into the jar beneath her name announcing the remainder of her debt. Seeing the number put up on the board in red chalk nearly made her weep.

She did weep when she and KoKo were finally alone. Louise sat knees tucked under chin. Hands raw and feet sore. With nary a groan, she tipped onto her side, arms wrapped around her legs as she laid in her cot.

Their room, little more than a repurposed space in the attic, was dusty and stuffy with only a small, glassless window to let in the night air. A pair of cots and a small chest comprised its entire furnishing.

Scarron had apologized endlessly when he had shown them where they were expected to sleep, fearing that his new Faerie hire would decide to quit on the spot.

It was simply the way of this place that the rooms were assigned in order of seniority, without exception. A measure of fairness devised to ward against resentment among the girls.

But KoKo had not complained. The Cait had not even wrinkled her nose before following Louise into exile.

"I'm terrible." Louise mumbled into her pillow. "I didn't just not earn tips, I earned negative tips. I went into debt by working!"

"Now, now." KoKo soothed, stroking her hair. "You've never done work like this before."

"Commoners do it!" Louise raised her voice and then fell silent. The walls were not so thick that her voice would not carry. "I mean . . . " Louise whispered. "I expected it to be hard work. But not this . . ."

"Complicated?" KoKo provided? Louise nodded. That was a good word for it. "And why wouldn't it be complicated? The girls here entertain all sorts of customers at all times of day. And they always wear a smile. People skills like that are prized where I come from and I bet it's the same here too."

"R-right." Louise should have known that, she admitted. If she'd ever thought much about any skill that was not innately magical. The Founder knew that her time at the academy had revealed her to not be the most personable . . . person. But then . . . "How do you do it?"

"Do what?" KoKo tilted her head.

"All of it." She felt much too tired to explain right now. "You're such a natural or . . . experienced. Did you do this kind of work before?" KoKo's expression went blank, and for a moment the Cait woman was completely still. "I'm sorry," Louise said quickly, "I shouldn't have asked."

KoKo's expression changed smoothly, becoming again warm and congenial. "Did I do work like this? No, not exactly. But I had a friend who took jobs in theme cafes back in school. So I guess I have an idea about how these sorts of places work."

That explained where all of the ideas she had volunteered to Scarron were coming from. But even so . . .

"I still don't like it. Acting indecently I mean." Louise hugged herself a little tighter. Not even a fiance had the right to presume some of the things the tavern's clientele tried to get up to. Louise had not missed the way some of the girls let some of them, their favorites, get away with it, either.

"Well, I wouldn't say . . ."

"Commoner girls may whore themselves like that but I . . ." Louise fell silent as she felt KoKo's stroking stop. When she looked up, Louise flinched at the look in the cait's eyes.

Not anger, far worse than that, disappointment.

"Louise. You shouldn't say such things!" The Faerie woman's warning as heavy and severe as an axe blade.

Louise was for a moment at a loss, her answer died in her throat. It paralyzed her just as it did when she imagined mother's disappointment.

"You shouldn't think so unkindly of people without understanding their lives." KoKo said. "Scarron-san and his daughter have been very patient Louise, and they really are trying to help you, in their own way."

"I-I know." Was it too late to simply apologize? "But then, what is it? I'm expected to . . . to flirt with the customers? Don't you know how indecent that looks?!"

"Flirt, yes." KoKo said. "Put up with harassment, never." She patted Louise on the head. "Is that what you think those girls are doing? What I've been doing?"

Briefly, Louise was frozen in horror. Was this why KoKo's temper had flared? "I'm so sorry KoKo I . . ."

"Nyeh heh heh!" The Cait's laughter was soft and nasally, turning to gentle lisp as it faded leaving Louise at a loss. "It's alright, I just forget how sheltered you are sometimes."

Louise gave the Cait a sour look. "If 'sheltered' is a way to say I've been given a proper upbringing then yes!" She said with only the barest hint of pride as she crossed her arms before her chest. "A young Lady shouldn't act so . . . so forward with someone who is not a suitor."

"So those are the rules huh?" KoKo asked.

"Yes. Those are the rules." Louise agreed.

"But rules are different when you're playing a game right?"

"What?"

"Or a play. Well, I guess everyone who acts in plays and operas right now are boys aren't they?" KoKo mused to herself.

Louise shook her head. "KoKo, you're not making any sense."

KoKo sat a little straighter as she assumed an instructive pose. "What I'm saying is the reason the other girls have a much easier time is that they make a game of it, and so do the customers. In fact, I think Jessica-chan would punch someone if they thought she was a prostitute."

Louise frowned. "But what about people like . . . well . . . " The memory lingered. Much like the smell of bile.

"Some people," KoKo breathed, "Don't follow the rules. And that's what Scarron-san is here for. If you let Scarron-san do his work, nothing gets hurt but someone's pride."

"It being a game does explain why you seem to enjoy it so much." Louise looked at her slyly. "Maybe a little too much!"

The Cait tilted her head again, giving a closed eyed, embarrassed smile. "Nnnnnnn~ Maybe? Maybe I just really like the attention. You know, I'm not this super-cute in that other world so it's sort of flattering." She struck another little, cat-like pose to emphasize her point.

Louise giggled.

"There you go. See, things aren't so bad." KoKo pulled her into a reassuring hug. Louise could feel the faint purring from deep within her chest. "Feeling a little better?"

"Yeah." Just the act of laughing had lifted her spirits.

"So, you think you'll be ready for another round tomorrow? Don't worry, I'll give you pointers. Just bring your determination, m'kay? And if any of those guys does anything that Scarron-san can't handle, I'll give'm a scratching."

"I'll give it a try." Louise decided, leaning against KoKo's offered shoulder. It was a lot like being with Cattleya. Except for that part. Her eye cracked open again as she noticed the warm curling sensation wrapping around her waist. Louise reached down, and very gently brushed her hand along the length of KoKo's tail.

KoKo went rigidly straight, face flushing darkly.

"N-nyaa?!"
__________________________________________________________________________

The Manor of the de'Martou squatted in the Tristain Countryside, low, and sullen, its walls weathered and gray. It looked less a house and more a piece of the landscape. Helped along by shrubs and saplings grown by neglect.

It had been the home of a Tristanian Knight, once. The times had changed and so too had the character of the nation.

The Knight had died and his sons had failed to earn a peerage. The land had been gradually partitioned off by death and inheritance until only the ruin of a house and its grounds remained.

It could be supposed that growing to adulthood surrounded by the bones of a noble lineage would have profoundly affected a young Terrance de Martou.

Not that any of the clandestine observers would have been inclined to think such things. Nor would they have cared if they did. The times had changed and so too the character of the nation.

They had no titles. Their names and faces were not known at Court. There was no glory for them nor any honor. They served only for a modest wage and a quiet dignity. They were loyal to Tristain and to its Crown.

Rough women ready and willing to do what needed to be done.

Ready. Willing. But anxious.

Lieutenant Agnes propped herself up on elbows as she observed the manor from the cover of a hunting blind hidden within the treeline. Holding a spyglass up to her eye, she adjusted the focus until a lone traveler resolved themselves, long mane of red hair bouncing as she sauntered.

The musket squadron had put de'Martou's property under surveillance long before Agnes had learned of a young Noble meddling where she didn't belong. But what their surveillance had gleaned was precious little. That the manor was occupied. And that men and material were coming and going.

The chance to change that may have inspired her to act against her better judgment.

What she had gathered about Kirche had left the impression of a noble-born thrill seeker. Not the qualities one looked for in a task that required a cool head and a steady temperament.

"Are you sure she knows what she is doing?" Agnes asked the girl laying next to her.

"Good at improvising." The girl, Tabitha, whispered in a soft monotone that Agnes associated with disinterest. "No one better."

Agnes gestured to the markswomen hidden in the trees to be ready with their long rifles. If worst came to worst they could render some assistance.

A hand closed around her wrist. Grip ginger but unyielding, and pulled her arm gently back to her side. The lieutenant met Tabitha's eyes.

"She'll be fine." The girl said. This time matter of fact.

Girl. Child. This was truly a Gallian Chevalier?

Agnes had not believed it at first. Even when told by a mage with the trust and the ear of her Royal Highness. She assumed it was some lark of the Mad King to create a child a knight.

If so, nobody had told Tabitha.

Dressed in dark gambeson, the same shade of deep blue favored by sharpshooter's for their night cloaks. The gnarled oak staff, a respectable mage's focus, had been joined by a steel battle-rod. There was a calmness about her, a matter of factness, she had not not complained of difficulty or discomfort in the way that all but the most hardened nobles tended to do.

And then there was her dragon . . .

A daughter of the Germanian house Anhalt-Zerbst. A Gallian Chevalier. And denizens of ALfheim . . .

"Something wrong?"

"Nothing." Agnes replied. "Her Highness' friends keep interesting company."

Tabitha merely shrugged before turning her attention back to the manor.

If they were even half as able as they were interesting then perhaps there was nothing to fear.

__________________________________________________________________________

Being covert was all well and good. But the thing about being covert, Kirche thought, was all of the hiding.

Being covert meant that you didn't dare get close. You didn't dare be seen or heard. You couldn't touch or examine or join in a conversation.

What was more, why bother being invisible when you could pretend to be something else?

Sometimes overt was best. And Kirche was nothing but overt.

If it were possible, the de'Martou manor looked even more miserable than it had at a distance. Rotting window frames, gardens overgrown, birds nesting in the roof. She would have guessed it abandoned. What it ought to have been was condemned.

The once grand oak door was no better than the rest of the place only hanging on by stubbornness.

A badly tarnished brass knocker sat imposingly, shaped into the visage of a roaring manticore. Kirche grabbed hold, lifting it, brass struck wood three times, three heavy, deep, -knocks-.

Kirche stood back expectantly. First, she was patient, then she began tapping her foot. She knocked again, and again she was left to wait, an almost insufferable insult.

'They'd come running if they knew what was waiting for them.' She thought.

She was about to lift the knocker again when she heard the turning of locks. Lots of locks. It went on for a disconcerting amount of time followed by the door opening with all the charm of a crypt.

"Wha'd ya want?!" A voice growled suspiciously.

"Good day kind Zir." Kirche bobbed forward at the waist, just enough to flash a hint of bolstered cleavage. The man blinked rapidly before shaking his head.

"Come again?"

"Vhy, I zaid good day. Or vould a how do yu do vi more in order? I muzt zay all of zese Tristanian customs are most confuzing!" Grabbing her arms, Kirche wagged from side to side. "Oh, von't you pleaze help? I've been walking all day and zeen -ardly a vriendly vace!"

The door opened a little wider.

He was altogether average, indistinct in a way that was itself exceptional. Average height, but with the right choice of clothes would have given the impression he was taller or shorter at a distance. Stalky or slim. Brown hair that in the right light or with a little grease could be turned black or with the application of the proper powders could be mistaken for a dirty blonde. Brown eyes, or were they black?

Handsome, Kirche supposed, or maybe not. It was hard to say.

"Come again, Miss?"

"Eik! How very rude of me! To not even introduce mein zelf!" Stepping back, Kirche curtsied her long traveling skirt. "I am Kirche Augusta Fredericka von Anhalt-Zerbst and I -ave been attending at great honor at the Tristain Academy of Majiks."

"Zerbst?" A flash of recognition appeared and passed in the man's eyes.

"Yez!" Proud expression turned to distress as she pouted. "Vut, vith ze Faeries now inhabiting ze countryzide, mein family was mozt inziztant zat I make a hazty return, before they could even zpare a chaperone, vut -" She covered her face with with her forearm, an action that, incidentally, did wonders for her bosom. "I vear I have become lozt!"

"Lozt?" The man parroted.

"Yez, Lozt." Wasn't this how everyone thought Germanian's spoke? What good was a stereotype if she couldn't exploit it?

"You mean lost!"

"Yez. Lozt!" Kirche tried not to roll her eyes.

"Chadrick, who's there?"

"It's just some girl who's gotten herself lozt . . . I mean lost. I'll have her away in just a minute."

"Ach, Nein! Certainly not zis late in ze day?!" Kirche pointed to where the sun was beginning its descent towards the horizon.

"Shorely you'd not make a young voman brave ze elements with all of ze vicious Faerie creatures! I vould be mooozzzt grateful and mooozzzt graciouze if you were to reconzider."

The man's mouth opened . . . and then fell further open as she clasped her hands together and leaned just a bit further forward. She imagined the scales working behind his eyes.

"I suppose . . . That wouldn't be very proper of me, would it?" Chadrick said as he licked his lips. There was an accompanying change in his voice. A slowing of his words. More deliberate. More assured.

Almost . . . suave.

"Chadrick, how much longer will you be at that blasted door?! We need you in here." Another voice, higher pitched, asked impatiently.

"Just a moment longer."

"Not a moment longer!" A second man, shorter than Chadrick came into view. Shorter, and older, with a compact powerful build. A focus hung in a ready holster on his belt. "I thought you said you were telling her off!"

"Enough, Digby!" The younger man snapped with sudden authority. His impression was that of a chameleon, and his personality was alike, changing to suit him. "The young Miss has simply been on the road most of the day and lost her bearings."

"And her predicament is hardly our business." Digby countered before turning to appraise Kirche. "I'd say she can take care of herself."

"Oh, pleaze kind Zir!" Kirche repeated. "I promiz I'll ve no trouble. Only vor ze one night and I shall go in ze morning!"

Chadrick's lips thinned as he nodded severely. He gestured to Kirche. "As she's said, she'll keep out of the way. Where would our propriety be if we turned her out?"

"A few leagues higher than this place is where." She thought she heard Digby say. "And besides Chadrick my boy, do you forget that we are guests in your friend's house. It is not our propriety to show."

Chadrick's only reply was to wave a dismissive hand. "Hardly at all. I'd say it would reflect ill on de'Martou if his friend's failure to show hospitality in his place. The company will do us good I think."

"Oh yez!" Kirche smiled as was lead inside. "Mozt goot!"

____________________________________________________________________________

Not long ago at all, Botan would have been petrified by the dark. Head full of stories woven by Hinagiku to keep her and her siblings in line, the darkness had been a frightening thing made up of all manners of monsters that just wanted to gobble up little Pixies.

But then she had come to understand that there was nothing special about the darkness to be frightened of, no danger that didn't also exist in the light. It was just . . . dark.

And that was no trouble for her.

Sniffing deeply, she teased apart the air for the faint trace of overt sweetness. Navigating between rafters, squeezing through the cracks too small for a mouse, she followed first by scent and then by sound.

Dim candle light was shining up through cracks in the ceiling. A conveniently placed rafter made the perfect spot to observe. Botan peered down into the beings' world.

Of course Botan had seen Kirche undress before and there was nothing at all strange about her save her size and lack of wings. It was the room's other occupant that was odd to look at.

A male.

"You've veen mozt kind to me, Monzieur Chadrick." Kirche said as she left her blouse and skirt hanging from a chair in one corner as she adjusted her small clothes.

Opposite Kirche, seated atop an old mattress, the human male named Chadrick, clutched the neck of a bottle of wine in one hand, a plate of bread and fruit sitting on a tray beside him. He was undressed down to trousers, displaying dark hairy chest.

"It was hardly anything at all Miss Zerbst. And as I've said, your company has been enjoyable. I didn't expect another devotee of Shaks Pierre to make herself known in this backwater."

"Doubt that the starz are fire, Doubt that the doth move his aidez . . ." Kirche said, the funny voice she was putting on fading a little.

"Doubt truth to be a liar, But never doubt I love." Chadrick finished with a laugh. "Really, a shame not to see his plays as they were meant. He wrote them for the Theater in Londinium, they say, there really is no place else to see them."

"Zuch a shame, truly." Kirche pouted as she crawled up onto the bed, wrapping arms around the man from behind and purring. "Alzough, I do zink part of ze vun is in acting zem out meinzelf."

"Is that so?"

"Juzt zo!"

What came next . . .

'Nnnnn! Gross!'

Morbid curiosity got the better of her and Botan peaked out with one eye to see Kirche in the midst of pressing her lips, the entirety of her body really, against Chadrick.

Chadrick fumbled with the straps of Kirche's brazier but never quite seemed to get his fingers to move the right way. Slowly, his efforts subsided, hands falling to rest limply at his sides.

He began to snore.

Kirche drew back, sitting up atop the man with a look of mild disappointment as she carefully wiped her lips. "Well, that's a shame."

Climbing off the bed, she carefully arranged the male's hands on top of his chest and stepped gingerly back to where she had left her clothes.

The Germanian dressed quickly but neglected her boots in favor of a pair of soft soled slippers. "Hope I didn't keep you waiting." Kirche frowned. "You are there, aren't you? I'd feel terribly silly if I'm talking to myself."

Botan sighed as she rolled off of the rafter. She came to hover in front of Kirche, arms crossed.

"What's the matter?" Kirche asked.

"You sure seemed to be enjoying yourself . . . I thought you were really going to mate with him."

"Really?" The being looked bemused. "And what gave you that idea? Talking with Louise I suppose . . ."

She wasn't going to dignify that with an answer. "The guards just changed." Botan nodded back to the drugged male. "How long until he wakes up?"

Kirche gave Chadrick a glance "Probably not until morning. It gets more powerful the more you drink. By then, he'll have made up his own happy story about tonight."

"You must have a lot of experience with that stuff." Botan said under her breath.

"It does keep the boorish ones entertained. So, lead the way."

The Pixie settled on Kirche's shoulder. The manor's rooms were pitch black, but Botan knew the way. She had been exploring the house for over a week. Slipping in at dusk and venturing back just before dawn.

It hadn't been hard. Being homes were big. It was insane. A nest so big that countless small lives were lost in its shadows. A fact that Botan had used to her advantage.

The birds living in the eves had carried her to and from the forest unnoticed. And a lovely family of field mice had saved her work by showing her the best way into the pantries.

Which was where she had found it. Made of thick, well maintained wood, banded in iron, and fitting its door frame so snugly not even a pixie could squeeze her way inside. If there was any place in the house that was storing secrets, that would be it.

So Tabitha had concocted this plan. And Kirche had volunteered herself. And Agnes had agreed. And Botan had scouted the way.

It had to be Kirche, it was decided. Not only was she a capable mage. She was a Zerbst, whatever that was, meaning even if she was caught snooping around the men wouldn't dare harm her.

They traveled the length of the west wing and took the cramped servant's stairs down to the kitchens. They could have snuck down through the grand hall, but this way kept them clear of the occupied sections of the house.

Kirche examined the door and its mechanisms while Botan kept watch. The beings had never used this door so late at night. But they came to take food and wine from the cellar at all hours.

"Well?" The Pixie asked impatiently.

"Well." Kirche answered, not a whisper, but a murmur that was swallowed up within inches of her lips. "I'm no Earth Mage, but . . ."

Carefully tapping her wand and tracing a circle which ended in a flourish, Kirche stepped back as a faint, heavy -click- issued from the door. Both infiltrators looked about to make sure that they hadn't been heard.

The door opened and shut silently on smooth, oiled hinges.

Darkness, silence, stagnant air, then a soft -snap- as a light appeared at the end of Kirche's wand. It was dim, but still enough to dazzle their dark adjusted eyes.

They were at the top of a narrow stairway that descended steeply downward between walls of smoothly sculpted stone. "Old construction." Kirche muttered to herself. "Maybe a castle that was here before?"

"You think?" Botan whispered.

"We have places like this back home." Kirche explained. "Boltholes in case an inter house feud gets bloody."

They descended what felt like a worrying distance before narrow stairway opened abruptly, causing a feeling like vertigo as the walls fell away and the ceiling reared up into shadow that swallowed their meager light.

They had been admitted to a chamber, vast and vaulted, and jam packed with crates and casks, barrels that smelled faintly of hay and wax and other more alchemical odors that Botan had scented in the laboratories of the Count of Tarbes.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________

"What the hell is this!"

The tall double doors opening with a thunder that silenced everyone in the room. The Lady of the Sylphs entered, accompanied by four of her personal retainers and the Black Swordsman Kirito. The Captain of Mortimer's Guards was already reaching for her sword before she recognized just who it was cutting a path through her Lord's sanctum.

Prepared as ever, when Arrun had become the nerve center of a Faerie government, Mortimer had already had a headquarters picked out in the form of the Salamander Guild Hall. The place practically oozed Mortimer.

Stark stone walls projected all the charm and warmth of a fortress, halls decorated in campaign banners, displays of weapons and armor, and dozens of oil paintings depicting battles ancient and contemporary. Sakuya recognized more of the paintings than she would ever admit.

The Lion of the North and The Battle of Trafalgar, Sakuya noted the two facing the tall windows. Perhaps most telling was the painting hung directly behind Mortimer, Sakuya didn't consider herself a fan of Jacques Louis David but seeing that particular painting depicting that particular man astride a horse didn't do much to improve her impression of the person beneath it.

Sitting behind a massive oak desk, the First Lord of Gaddan looked up from a pile of reports and frowned minutely. "Ah, Sakuya-chan, how lovely for you to visit. No, let yourself in, I'll call for tea."

"You've got a lot of nerve for someone keeping secrets." Sakuya strode across the room. Mortimer must have have been compensating for something with such an ostentatious waste of space, but she wasn't going to let it intimidate her.

Frown deepening, the Salamander set down his pen. "Pardon?"

Sakuya's anger boiled.

"Rip Jack."

Mortimer's bloody eyes narrowed. The Salamander Lord laced his fingers. "That is not something I am going to discuss while you have half of your staff in tow."

Sakuya grimaced. She instructed her entourage to wait outside. Ephi going only reluctantly with a look of anxiety to leave his Lord alone. Mortimer did the same with his own confused subordinates, Lidea also half heartedly resisting, until the only ones left in the room were Sakuya, Mortimer, and by mutual consent to bare witness, Kirito.

Mortimer waited for the door to be shut and the sound of footsteps to fade. "Do you know how long it's been since I'd given that name a moment's thought?"

"Tell me."

"Two months, or rather, eight weeks. At the time I was putting a bounty on your head after I learned about the alliance that you and Alicia were planning. Of course, then I was approached by your former subordinate and a new avenue opened. Plans changed."

"Which one told you?" Sakuya gathered her arms into the robes of her Yukata, refusing to back down from Mortimer's gaze.

The Salamander remained as emotionless as ever. "Who told me about Rip Jack? Vakarian-san of course. He recognized the man that Miss Argo described and thought to report it directly to me. Though Morgiana did warn me about what she'd told the investigation, I suppose her relationship with my Brother counts for something."

"And you expect me to believe that?" Sakuya half asked and half wondered out loud. "That seems like a bit much from a man who put his own pet cop on the investigation."

Mortimer snorted derisively, eyes glancing to Kirito. "You mean the way that you assigned your own loyal crow? Or did you expect me to choose a person I did not trust for such a sensitive matter?"

"That isn't really a fair comparison, is it?" Sakuya and Mortimer both turned their attention to the Spriggan youth.

"I mean," Kirito continued voicing his thoughts out loud, "It isn't suspicious that you knew the Assassin. And it isn't suspicious that Vakarian-san was chosen for the investigation. I'm sorry, it isn't my policy to doubt people," Kirito shook his head, "But Vakarian-san withheld important information from the rest of us. That alone makes him very suspicious. And by extension, it makes you a suspect as well Lord Mortimer."

She was surprised again that the boy, at least she thought he was as young as he looked, could manage so well. She'd seen the same calm in Thinker and Yulier, and in the swordswoman Asuna. Just what had SAO done to them really?

Sakuya nodded once to Mortimer. "You should speak honestly with us now, or this is going to keep looking worse. Why did Vakarian try to keep this from the investigation?"

"Tell me Sakuya. How many Sylphs are there?" The Salamander leaned back in his chair, blinking with reptilian slowness. "Please, I know you have an exact number."

An obtuse question, and yet Mortimer demanded a direct answer. "Eight thousand two hundred and thirteen." That had been the tally of the latest and most accurate census. Minus one.

Mortimer nodded. "And there are eight thousand one hundred and seventy Salamanders. Together, we represent over a quarter of all of the Faeries in Tristain. Then tell me, how would it look if it came out that the Salamander had employed the man who has been terrorizing our streets and killing our people? Especially when those people are all high ranking Sylphs and Cait Syth."

"You're trying to protect your reputation?" Three dead and an investigator nearly killed in her sleep and still Mortimer showed not one whit of emotion. Sakuya began to tremble. 'Say something you bastard!'

"My reputation? No." Mortimer said. "The reputation of the Salamanders is much more important." Kirito stiffened faintly at Sakuya's side. "I imagine, the reason that you came here to speak to me rather than hanging me in public is the same reason that Vakarian did not immediately divulge the suspect's identity."

"Morgiana is in the same situation being the Lady of the Spriggans." Mortimer nodded to Kirito. "How do you think people will feel knowing that our first murderer comes from your . . . faction? Or maybe faction is too transient a word, maybe we should call it your race."

Kirito voiced no reply, only stared through Mortimer.

The Salamander rose slowly from his desk, leaving his cane leaned against the side of the table. "This is a new world Sakuya. It doesn't matter who or what we were before. And I will not have the eight thousand one hundred and seventy Salamanders that I am responsible for alienated from their own kin because of a coincidence."

"And you've done a fine job of it, haven't you?" Sakuya asked. "Look at where we are now." She waved to the room with its vaulted ceiling and polished marble floor. To the windows that looked out on the plaza of the huge guild hall. And beyond to the City of Arrun, the breathing city that was being threatened in its infancy by the shadow of a murderer.

A faint widening of the eyes. That was all that Sakuya's outburst had netted her from Mortimer. "How can you expect any of us to trust you?"

Mortimer tilted his head, at last showing a hint of irritation. "Truthfully, it doesn't matter if you trust me or not. I do not need your trust Sakuya. The only thing I need is your belief that our interests align."

She couldn't afford that. Her mistakes could cost lives.

"I want your full cooperation and I want Vakarian taken off the investigation." Sakuya said suddenly. If they couldn't trust Mortimer, then they couldn't trust Mortimer's pet, not so long as he refused to cooperate.

Mortimer's taciturn continence reasserted itself. "You do know that he is a member of the city watch, we agreed that we cannot interfere in an ongoing investigation."

"Take him off." Sakuya repeated. "Or explain to him why he should dismiss himself. If you care so much, let Morgiana send one of her own people to replace him. The Spriggans have the greatest number of Illusion Masters and know Rip Jack better than anyone. We may not trust each other, but at least we can both trust Morgiana."

"Trust isn't the matter. Rather, it's qualification." Mortimer said slowly. "Believe it or not, I've actually known Vakarian for quite a long time in that other world and can vouch for his law enforcement background. That is why I wanted him on the case first and foremost."

"Given his judgment, I'd call that a condemnation rather than an endorsement." Sakuya said. "This is going to go public Mortimer. We need to start taking active measures immediately to hunt Rip Jak down before he kills again. Your faction has a great deal of good will thanks to your part in planning the Newcastle Evacuation. You can take the hit to your name and still weather this."

Sakuya shook her head. "But only if you start working with us. This is happening whether you want it to or not." Mortimer didn't say a word, she didn't expect him to. "I've already sent word to the other Lords. You have until tonight, then we'll make the announcement. Take whatever measures you think are suitable."

Turning her head. "Kirito." The Spriggan looked to her. "Unless you have any questions, I do not think we should waste any more of the First Lord of Gaddan's time."

Kirito nodded. "That's everything for now, I think." He looked past Sakuya. "But I might need to come back later depending on what the investigation turns up."

"My door is always open, Kirito-kun." Mortimer said said with only a hint of distaste.

Sakuya did her best to glide rather than storm from his office. Yes, glide, be graceful, be graceful like the wind. She had predicted that she'd feel like this, but not so strongly.

But she'd faced turmoil in the past and she dealt with this the same way, pushing it down as deeply as she could and hoping that when it finally came back up it would be in one of the rare moments when nobody else was around. Then she would shout and rage and throw whatever happened to be in reach. But for now, she was the serene Lady of the Sylphs.

The Captain of the Guard escorted them out. Sakuya didn't speak to the Spriggan at her side until they were back in the Guild Plaza. Receiving glances from passing Fae beneath the brick deco. "Well . . . What did you think of that Kirito?"

"Are you asking my opinion?"

"Your observations, yes." Sakuya answered. "A second set of eyes and a second opinion can do wonders." If only she'd waited for Alicia.

The Spriggan youth shrugged his shoulders faintly. Kirito possessed something of tell, a learned quality that manifested itself as a look of mild reluctance whenever he was confronted by any sort of hard question.

"The one thing I can say." Kirito said quietly. "I don't think Mortimer was lying to us."

"Oh?" Sakuya asked. "And why is that?"

"Hmmm." Kirito crossed his arms. "Like Mortimer said, no matter what his ambitions, our interests right now align. Nobody wants a murderer running free. I think his reasons for hiding his relationship with Jack are sincere."

"Sincere maybe." Sakuya was willing to admit. "But deeply misguided."

"Milady." Ephi approached at the head of her guards. He wore and expression of concern which faded as he saw Sakuya's sour expression. "It did not go well, I fear."

"It did not." She agreed. "Kirito, I would be grateful if you keep the Lord's and I abreast. I will not detain you from the investigation for a moment longer." The Spriggan said his goodbyes and excused himself to return to his mission.

"Was there anything I should be kept abreast of, Milady?" Ephi asked as they parted ways with the young Spriggan.

"Nothing that you couldn't predict." Sakuya decided. "We confronted Mortimer, Mortimer denied his involvement. But . . . I believe Kirito is correct that this is mishandled damage control."

"And that is your opinion Milady?"

"It is what I hope to be true." Sakuya said. Because the alternative was not worth thinking about.

"Then it must be so." Ephi decided. "Except . . . "

"Go on."

"I have a confession to make Milady. I fear you may not like it. But it is best you know the truth."

"Oh?" Sakuya answered in a way that left it unsaid, 'this ought to be good'.

Ephi closed his eyes and steeled himself. "Before I created the avatar you see before you. I used to play for the Salamander faction. This was originally my alternate account."

Sakuya blinked as she took this in. As confessions went, it was underwhelming. Many players had possessed alternates. It was almost stranger not to have one. Perhaps the only surprise was that which it invoked in her retainers.

"Ephi-san?" Nana, one of Novair's subordinate secretaries, questioned. "But . . ." Murmurs from her other guards threatened to boil over before Sakuya shot out a hand. Then, everyone fell silent.

That was why she had to remain calm. Always calm. Always composed. It was the dignity and grace of Lady Sakuya which gave her power over them. Ephi's eyes widened.

"So." Sakuya said. "Why tell me this now?"

The Sylph, who had once been a Salamander, breathed in. "Your trust was just betrayed by Lord Mortimer, Milady. I did not want the same to happen between us. With Novair and Liliana gone I want you to know you can trust the man watching your life."

"That is . . . really very honorable of you Ephi." Sakuya bowed her head graciously. "I thank you for your honesty." She glanced at the other Sylphs. As if her decision had broken the spell, they all looked to one another sheepishly.

"Yeah, Ephi's fine." One of guards scratched the back of his neck. "So what if he played Salamander. So long as he's a true Sylph now it doesn't matter."

"Thank you." Her guard commander bowed." But please, all of you, remember that moment of doubt. Remember that we Fae are more alike than different. Mortimer might be a controlling man. He may not tolerate Sakuya-sama's opposition. But we mustn't follow his path. We mustn't make all Salamanders our enemies."

The Sylph Lord nodded. As speeches went, it was as good as some, and better than most. She suspected Ephi had been composing it for just such an occasion. Well, she wouldn't begrudge the man his chance to look good to his subordinates.

Doubt niggled as Sakuya's wings materialized and she took to the sky. Mortimer was a controlling man. And he did not tolerate dissent. The Salamanders were not their enemies. But did that make their Lord an ally?
___________________________________________________________________________

Home again.

The front door opened and closed, muting the late afternoon street. Kirito rested his back against the hardwood, closed his eyes, and counted down from ten.

His brow furrowed as a thought crossed his mind and he blindly sought out and turned the deadbolt with a heavy, reassuring, -toonk-, of interlocking brass.

He'd crossed swords with Jack. Looked the killer in the eye and seen no fear. If he was anything like the murderers guild, Jack would remember their meeting. He'd seek to make it personal. He'd . . .

He had to tell Asuna, Kirito realized, tonight he knew, but . . . Just few more hours of peace. Without worry. He could give her that. Had to give her that. Asuna deserved that and so much more.

He could hear her moving about the kitchen. The fading scent of something that had been cooked earlier in the day. Something with nuts and honey, his nose told him.

He creeped across the living room, silent as a ghost. The floor had all the hallmarks of being newly made. There were no creaking joists, no squeaky boards. Only the muted padding of bare feet on hardwood and then tile.

There she was, doing something over the sink. He wanted to smile. He remembered their first week together in this house, the four of them, as a family. They'd agreed to devote the morning to cleaning up the house. Mopping the floor, scrubbing the bath, getting the laundry taken to the wash and put away. Asuna had woken them all up early. He couldn't remember ever seeing someone so excited to clean.

Only it turned out that, despite being a masterful chef, the Maeve's other domestic skills left a lot to be desired. Asuna could keep her own spaces organized and tidy, but she'd made a mess of folding the clothes, and had almost water damaged the floor eagerly soaking everything with the mop. In the end, Sugu had deposited her in the kitchen where she knew what she was doing and wouldn't cause too much trouble.

But . . . She'd been so happy to do it all with them.

"You're home late." Asuna murmured as he walked up behind her, careful to be sure she sensed him before putting his arms around her. He could hear the smile in her voice as she leaned back into him.

"Un." Kirito nodded tiredly. He breathed in her scent. The spice of her hair. It was infinitely subtle, sweat, and soap, and the melange of cooking spices, and of walking the city streets. He wanted to be lost in it, in the realness of her presence. "After we got back from Freelia we had some sleuthing to do around Arrun."

Just a little while longer, he told himself. For a little longer, he could keep her like this.

"Was it worth it?" It turned out she was scrubbing out a dutch oven.

Cooking was so much more complicated here, yet Asuna made it seem easy. She said the utility spells helped a lot. She could get a fire to temperature quickly. The oven and stove were well designed for their fuel source and the kitchen was supremely well ventilated. It made cooking about as pleasant as it was possible to be given the circumstances.

"Un. I think so. We picked up an important lead. We know all about the monster. Now we can hunt it down before it hurts anyone else." Kirito leaned against her gently

"I see . . ." She paused. "So . . . It must only be a few more days then."

"Actually, we're not really sure." Kirito admitted. "It could be. Or it could be a week or more. Sorry."

It was okay, he'd tell her the truth soon. Just a little longer.

"Well it is just a dangerous creature, right?" The Maeve reasoned. He saw the ghost of her face reflected in the fading light of the garden window. Her smile was distant. "Nothing that I need to be concerned about."

"Right." He told her again. "It's exactly that . . . Where's Yui, by the way?"

"Off with Leafa on some errands." The maeve explained and then . . . "Kirito-kun," She gently untangled herself from his embrace and turned to face him. She was still smiling, but now that he could see her fully, not just the pale reflection in the window glass, it didn't reach her eyes.

"Why have you been lying to me?" She asked.

"I . . ." The Spriggan youth started, he rubbed the back of his head, smiled and tried to brush it off. "Y'know, I just didn't want to worry you, is all. I got three months rest and you've barely had three weeks so . . . Asuna?"

In front of him, his wife's head had slumped forward, her hair hid her eyes as she began to tremble and shake. The smile twisted as it fought to stay on her face only to transform into a tight lipped grimace.

"You lied to me." Asuna whispered.

"I didn't lie exactly."

Why did he say it like that?! He knew it was a mistake even as it came from his lip. "We really are hunting a monster so . . ."

"You're helping to chase down a serial killer!" Asuna raised her voice, suddenly he was looking her in the eyes and they were full of anger like he'd never seen. Not at raid meetings, not even before the final raid against the <<Skull Reaper>>. But when she spoke, her voice was flat and cold. Like he was a stranger once more. It left a hollow in his gut. "You lied about what you were doing. You said I could trust you. I did trust you."

"I . . ." Kirito shook his head. "If you knew, I knew you'd get involved." He knew how Asuna was. He'd argued with her, stood his ground, to keep her home and safe while she rested and recovered from her ordeal. "I wanted you to be able to live in peace." That was the truth, but it was spoken too late.

"Live in peace? Kirito, this world isn't going to let us hide in a <<Safe Zone>> the danger is going to come for us. And if it's already here you shouldn't be stopping me."

He knew that too but . . . "That's exactly why!" His voice was rising to meet hers. He didn't mean to yell. "I wanted to protect you!"

'I was scared!' He wanted to say.

"By putting me in a cage?!"

In the silence that followed, they both seemed stunned, as if slapped. Kirito was the first to recover, he took a step forward and Asuna stepped back. She turned away, bypassing him on the way to the front door.

"Where are you going?!" Kirito called after her.

"The Salamander Guild Hall. I'm going to accept Mortimer's offer."

"What? No, you can't!"

"Oh?" Asuna stopped at the coat wrack. "And why can't I?"

Kirito opened his mouth, trying to think of something to say. He wanted to be candid now more than ever. He wanted to beg for Asuna's forgiveness. He wanted, more than anything, to admit he'd been a fool to keep it from her. Anything to stop her walking out the door. But he could sense there was nothing he could say, right then, that would put everything right. He'd broken something between them, Kirito realized. So he closed his mouth.

The Maeve nodded her head, slipped on her coat, and disappeared out the door.

The black swordsman stood in cold silence.
 
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As a small girl, Henrietta's favorite place in the Palace had been the Rose Room. The great hall running the length of the east wing, its many glass paned doors and windows opening onto the gardens on spring nights as magelites filled the air.

She had been too young to attend the grand balls and masquerades. But from time to time, her father, the Prince Consort, would take her in his arms and she would be allowed to glimpse what seemed like a world of wonder.

After her father had passed away, the enchantment had seemed to fade as well. Her mother had never been quite the same, Queen Marianne turning inward and handing over more of the running of the Kingdom to Cardinal Mazarin.

A more capable and loyal regent one could not hope for. But as with a father, he could not replace a Prince. The Rose Hall had fallen into disuse as the palace grew quiet. Maybe only once or twice a year would the floor be filled with waltzing guests and the air hum with music.

At all other times the room was a ghost of itself, gilded walls and frescos covered up with tarps, great chandeliers draped in canvas. Pale light washing in from the quiet gardens. Smelling of a cold and stark place, carefully preserved.

But less so recently. And particularly less so today.

One of those rare events was drawing near. The Springtime Gala that even in this spectral state was regarded as the height of Tristain's social calendar. Not even, or perhaps especially, the arrival of Faeries or the threat of war could change that.

And so the Palace had been making ready for almost two weeks. Menus were planned. Entertainment was arranged. An army of servants redoubled their cleaning and polishing and manicuring. The Rose Room blossomed into its formal glory.

But before the workmen finished their renovations there was still time to use the cavernous space in a fashion far more adventurous than its architects had intended.

At the center of the empty floor, four figures in white were in a standoff. Their faces were obscured by mesh helmets. In their hands they held slender epees. In a counter-clockwise motion, one by one, they touched the tips of their epees to the sides of their heads and then assumed en garde.

There was a moment of tension, a light footed shifting of weight as the fencers sized each other up. Then with a tentative tapping of epees the tension broke and the duel began in earnest. The Rose Hall was filled with the short sharp sound of metal striking metal. And though the duelists were dressed identically, the differences quickly became clear.

Of the four, one was a clear novice struggling to stay in the match against a seasoned opponent. But that one too, despite experience, was clearly not dueling at their best, something slowed them down, an injury, which left them much more fairly matched.

Even so, they were the first to be eliminated, the novice, and then the wounded veteran, bowing out gracefully as they received disqualifying strikes while trying to interfere in the match between the remaining partners.

It was as if . . . they had been nothing but an annoyance.

"Drat!" Princess Henrietta de Tristain lamented as she removed her mesh mask and shook the sweat from her short brown hair. Her face was flush and her voice was breathless. Rough housing with childhood playmates didn't prepare oneself for the calculated fury of a fencing match. "And here I thought I had been improving!"

"You have been improving, my dear Henrietta." Prince Wales Tudor, exile of Albion, assured her fondly as leaned lightly upon his epee. Still convalescing, even the short exertion had left him winded. "I'm afraid, however, a few weeks of practice would never match . . ." He gestured vaguely to the remaining duelists . . . "That."

It was becoming apparent now that while both were swift and both were skilled, the weight of experience leaned towards one fencer while the advantage of youth was held by the other. Their epees licked against one another, feinting and parrying as they attempted to get past the other's guard, their strikes and counter strikes rising in tempo as they inaugurated the dance floor of the rousing Rose Room with their knightley waltz.

"Care to make this a little more interesting?" The Prince asked the Princess.

"Oh?" Henrietta touched a finger to her lips and tilted her head. "What did you have in mind?"

"A small bet." Wales answered. "Though we should hurry before they spoil it for us."

Henrietta nodded, eyes drawn back to the duel. She had learned from Wales that active Knights preferred to fight by looser rules than sports duelists and would sometimes substitute a wand-epee to better simulate combat.They had foregone such measures today but it was still as if watching a life or death struggle. It was clear that the victor would be the first to capitalize on a mistake.

"You're right of course. Make your wager, quickly."

"Then I wish that you reserve your first dance for me at the Gala, highness." Wales smiled sweetly.

Henrietta blinked. "That's all? But that would already be yours. Should a bet not be for something more daring?"

"Oh? Then what is more daring than the favor of the Princess?"

"A kiss." Henrietta's cheeks and brow turned feverish.

"Kiss?"

"Yes, I wish a kiss." Henrietta said, conviction firming up.

Wales looked for a moment like he'd forgotten he was a daring Captain but recovered with admirable speed. His smile returned. "But of course." He breathed. "Of course . . . whatever you wish."

And not a moment too soon as the critical point was reached. A slip of the foot by the older fencer, caught swiftly and corrected, but not swiftly enough. The junior duelist seized the opportunity with the speed and fury of youth, a flurry of precise, ruthless thrusts rained down.

To the elder's credit, they fought valiantly to the very end, sinking to a knee, then leaning back until they were almost prone upon the floor, never ceasing to engage until with a final thrust the standing duelist placed the tip of their epee beneath the chin and with a firm voice commanded.

"Yield."

A moment of reluctance, and then the prone duelist lowered their epee, the victor deftly flicked the mesh mask from their defeated opponent, revealing wind weathered features and graying hair of Sir Hammond, Captain of the Manticore Knights.

No sooner was the Captain unmasked then his expression turned to mild surprise as his opponent offered him a helping hand to rise to his feet.

"Well met," the Captain pronounced as he stood, "Lady Asuna. I can see why the Prince thinks so highly of you."

The victorious fencer accepted a handkerchief from a servant and began to wipe sweat from her brow. The very picture of grace in spite of it all. If taking up the sword had done anything to diminish her femininity, Henrietta could not discern it as the beautiful young Faerie woman smiled in kind.

"And I can see why you are Captain of the Queen's guard." The LadyAsuna replied. "If you'd been permitted your magic, I don't think my skill with the rapier would have been enough."

Hammond nodded. "Nodoubt true. But of course, if I'd been permitted a focus, you'd have been permitted your own spellcraft."

"Please, I'm barely beginning to learn! Besides, I don't think the Queen would be happy if we ruined her dance floor." Asuna laughed warmly as clapping punctuated the air.

Their audience consisted of a mousy haired and spectacled woman a few years Henrietta's senior. Emily, Florence Windsor, exile of Albion, and with the extinction of her family's male line, the rightful Countess of Windsor.

And seated comfortably in Emily's lap, dressed in some of Henrietta's meticulously preserved springware, a beautiful black haired little girl seeming at least as many years the Princess' junior.

Her name was Yui, Kirigaya Yui, and as hard as it was to believe, this strange and sprightly child called the Lady Asuna her mother. The relationship was more complicated, in fact, Henrietta gathered. Not that this had stopped her or Emily from lavishing the girl in attention. It had become a game to see which of them could spoil Yui more under her mother's nose.

"Bravo." Emily shared in the applause. "Bravo!" Asuna bowed graciously. "I don't suppose there will be an encore?" The exile Countess sounded hopeful but was to be disappointed.

"I'm afraid this battle scar," Wales beat his breast lightly, "Is still giving me no end of trouble. So I for one must decline."

"And I must attend to my own duties." The Captain touched his epee to his temple in salute. "Highnesses, your skill and recovery progress by the day. Lady Asuna, it was a true pleasure to cross swords with you. I hope the chance to do it again when you are more comfortable with your magecraft."

The Faerie woman returned the Captain's salute and held it as he departed.

"Well that was all very bracing." Henrietta pronounced. "Now who is ready for afternoon tea?" Then frowned as she sniffed at her wrist. "Though first, a bath."

Arrangements were made. Baths were drawn and changes of clothes prepared. Luckily, nobility discarded nothing that might one day prove useful, and Royals were the noblest of all. The servants had found something suitably refined to make the Lady Asuna presentable to dine with royalty. An elegant ribonned summer dress that had come back into fashion, which Henrietta was certaine had belonged to her mother around the time she was being courted by her father.

"Much better." Henrietta sighed as they were seated about a small round table sheltered beneath a pavilion. Emily had taken off with Yui to show the young girl the play rooms in the attic so the two royals and their Faerie guest could enjoy one another's company in secluded peace.

Like the room named for it, the palace rose gardens had stirred in the mid spring air. Their blossoms opening in vivid displays of blue, lavishing their fragrance.

"So beautiful." The Lady Asuna murmured. "Tell me, are they naturally blue like that?"

Henrietta's interest piqued. "The roses? Why yes. The breed was specially created by mages some centuries ago. They are a symbol of Tristain's royal family."

"I see." The Faerie nodded thoughtfully. "In our homeland, the only way to create blue roses is to color a white blossom with dye. In fact, the blue rose was considered a symbol of the unobtainable."

How poetic, the Princess thought, and then asked. "So is botany an interest of yours?"

"Not especially." Asuna smiled. "At least, not voluntarily."

"I see." Henrietta grasped. "The burdens of etiquette?" They shared a knowing nod and then laughed, leaving Wales bemused. "But I am glad that you accepted Wales' invitation. You know, he'd never say it so plainly, but he and Emily are really quite fond of you."

"Henrietta." The Prince gave an exaggerated look of exasperation. Both girls laughed again.

"I'm well aware, your highness." Asuna accepted a cup of tea from a servant graciously. "I am very fortunate to have met both of them when I did."

"And we you." Wales said. "You saved both our lives." He could not help but touch the breast of his blouse where Henrietta knew even now the angry scar left by the Viscount Wardes had only begun to heal.

"I like to think we saved each other." Asuna answered kindly.

"A skilled fencer and skilled with words." Henrietta complimented as she sipped her tea. "It's no surprise we both like you. I for one am glad to hear you accepted Lord Mortimer's offer to serve with the regiments."

"You're too kind, highness." Asuna said. "Of course, I still need to prove myself to the other volunteers. I don't want to take up a station just on reputation alone."

"Why ever not? It's a well earned reputation by all accounts. Although I do have one question." Henriettta went on.

"Hmm?"

"Your husband, Mister Kirito," the Princess had learned well from her whiley regent, the way Asuna paused for a split second as she made to set her teacup down, "I'm sure he intends to stand in defense of your home as well. I was curious why he didn't choose to join us."

"Kirito . . . Is occupied with an important matter at this time." The Faerie woman said, the pause and the tension in her voice betraying the half-truth.

Wales was canny enough to hear it too and the young royals exchanged a look before the Prince spoke. "If there is something wrong, and there is anything we can do to help . . ."

"What? N-No." Asuna looked surprised and then almost flushed. "That is, I appreciate your concern, really, but this is something entirely personal. Actually, you may have already helped. You see, I was happy to accept your invitation, but I thought visiting the capital would also be a good way to take my mind off things. If I stay in Arrun right now, I'd just be angry."

"Angry? At Mister Kirito?" Henrietta wondered aloud. It was troubling, very troubling, to hear. It was the love of these two young Faeries that had saved her own love after all. But the Lady Asuna looked unsure. Like voicing the admission had made things more confused.

"Just angry." The Maeve decided after a moment. "I'm sorry, I must seem like a terrible guest right now."

"Not at all." Henrietta moved quickly to assure her. "It is a private matter, it was wrong for me to pry. But please, if what you need is to catch your breath, feel free to think of your time with us as a refuge. And if there is anything you wish to speak about, at any time . . ."

"Un. Of course." The tension drained from Asuna as her smile returned. "Thank you, both of you."

"On to happier things then." Wales said. "The Gala. Tell me, has Henrietta already decided on a gown for you?"

"I beg pardon?" The Princess interrupted. "I have not decided anything for Asuna!" She had simply narrowed things down to three or four acceptable choices, the palace wardrobe being what it was. She was doing the Lady Asuna a favor actually. And that shade of vermillion had been ghastly anyways.

"Henrietta has been a big help." Asuna rallied to her side. "This isn't the first formal event I've attended. But I'd have no idea where to even begin for a Royal Gala. I only wish Yui could be with us."

"I'm sure she'll be plenty entertained with the other children." Wales assured. "Though, tell me, how good is she with a dagger?"

Asuna nearly spit out her tea. "What?!"

"He's joking!" Henrietta laughed. "Well, mostly joking. Young scions can be a boisterous lot. But I'm sure Yui will hold her own." The girl certainly wasn't afraid of cuts and scrapes.

"I-I see . . . Is that all?" Asuna squinted. "Well, I suppose I know something about that as well. Though, I'd like to know more about this Gala. I know the Faerie Lords are all planning to attend. And the Queen's close allies."

"More than just that I should think." Henrietta answered. "The Crown's closest friends and its worst enemies will all be gathered to break bread, and scores of opportunists besides."

"I think I know something about that as well." Asuna sipped her tea.

"Good." Henrietta spoke plainly. "This will be an opportunity to enjoy ourselves for sure, but it's also a chance to heal wounds and build bridges with nobility still bitter about you Faeries"

"I can't say I blame them." Asuna said thoughtfully. "None of us wished for this. But the transition must have upset many things."

"It's a miracle that's all it did." Henrietta said before adding, "For the most part. Some deaths were inevitable in the confusion. My own life was rescued from danger only because God saw fit to send me General Eugene in my moment of need. And of course, beyond the loss of life is the loss of property, both in the Transition and in creating the Counties of ALfheim. The nobility who lost out approve of none of it of course. Even the ones who were harmed least are sceptical. Which is why your invitation was extended by Wales and Emily."

"There are enough rumors that Henrietta is infatuated with the Fae." Wales agreed. "Not that I begrudge her fondness, I share it. But it wouldn't do for the Princess to show favoritism. On the other hand, I have every excuse to invite one of my saviors as a personal guest."

"Of course there might be a price." Henrietta mused.

"A price?" Asuna looked between the two of them. "What price?"

"Well, you will certainly be expected to share a dance with the Prince." Henrietta explained. "Oh, not the first dance of course. I've already claimed that!"

"Is that all?" Asuna seemed relieved.

"Dare I ask how your waltz is?" Wales declined a second cup of tea from a hovering servant.

"Rusty." The Faerie woman smiled. "But nothing some practice won't solve."

"Then I think we've found our evening entertainment." Henrietta clasped her hands together. "Though we'll need to find a second dance partner. I wonder if Father Julio will be available."

"Father Julio?" Asuna asked.

"Ah, you haven't met him yet, and don't let the title confuse you, he's really quite young." Henrietta answered. "He is a Priest-Knight of Romalia. The Holy Father's personal observer here in Tristain. I'm sure he'd be delighted to meet you. "

"I thought the Church was witholding judgment on us for now." Asuna frowned as she set down her empty tea cup.

"That is most likely why he is here." Henrietta surmised. "Observing Tristain and the Fae and determining if this arrangement will be acceptable to the Holy Father. Ah . . . I don't think I need to tell you but . . "

"Be on my best behavior?" Asuna smiled and laughed.

Henrietta placed two fingers to her lips, wordlessly saying 'you didn't hear it from me.' "Although I don't think we'll have anything to worry about. Father Julio is quite a patient and forgiving young man. Not at all what I expected of the Church representative. In fact he seems to have developed a very positive opinion of your people."

They talked for a time more about idle things. The preparations for the Galla and the happenings in Tristania and Arrun. Careful, Henrietta noted, to avoid the topic of the ghastly murders and the banner flung down from Arrun tower.

They had finished noon tea, and with a little time until Henrietta was expected to join her mother and regent the Princess had decided to show her guest the way to the playrooms personally.

"They were a wonderful diversion when I was little." Henrietta explained as they crossed the checker tiled floor before the grand staircase. "Though they saw less and less use as I grew older. Honestly, I'm happy to see them opened up again. Airing them out has been like visiting an old friend." How many long lazy afternoons had she spent hidden up there?

But nostalgic thoughts of simple childhood days could not last for long before a voice in the present popped her memories like a soap bubble.

"Princess."

The voice, aged scarcely younger than Mazarin's, but devoid of the old Cardinal's mercies, greeted her curtly. Its owner, approaching from the direction of the foyer with retinue in tow, was much the same. A cold, hawkish nobleman, his iron gray hair done up in ringlets and his features set in a grimace as if he found the entire world an intolerable outrage. At that precise moment, his indignation seemed aimed at the Lady Asuna.

"Lord Justice." Henrietta curtsied, sensing the Prince and the Faerie beside her following suit. "To what do we owe the pleasure?"

His eyes darted from the Princess to the Lady Asuna and back. One of his entourage stepped forward and whispered in his ear. "Hmph. I have come begging an audience with her majesty."

"Oh?"

"A petition on behalf of the collegiate, your highness." Richmond nodded, not able to take his eyes off the Lady Asuna for long.

"In regards to the Faeries?" Henrietta carefully studied the way the Lord Justice's grimace took on a more general quality. She'd learned quite a lot from her old regent. She nodded and smiled. "I'm sure I shall hear all about it. Now if you'll excuse me, I was just about to reunite the Lady Asuna with her daughter."

"Indeed." Richmond breathed, his eyes following the Faerie woman as the trio mounted the steps.

"That person," Asuna glanced over her shoulder with an uneasy expression that was impossible to completely hide away, "Who was he?"

"That was the Lord Justice." Henrietta explained. "He is the master of the legal collegiate. All of the Judges and Barristers of Tristain answer to him in matters of Crown Law on behalf of the Queen."

"So he's like the Chief Justice of Tristain." Asuna reasoned thoughtfully.

"Chief of Justice? Yes that sounds about right. Unlike Father Julio, he is not fond of the Fae." Henrietta warned after she was sure they were beyond earshot. "The position of the Lord Justice is a powerful one with very few exceptions. One of them is the Treaty of Arrun."

Asuna nodded. "I've read as much of it as I can understand without a legal education. The Counties of ALfheim don't fall under his authority, do they?"

"That is partly true." Henrietta agreed. "He can still intervene if a crime is deemed to be of interest to the Crown . . . I wonder if he's here in regards to the murders . . ."

Again Asuna became quiet and again Henrietta took note. The murders, and Mister Kirito, was Mister Kirito involved in the Faerie Court's investigation? It was becoming clear now, and with deftness she'd learned from Mazarin, Henrietta navigated away from the subject.

"In any case, I doubt he can prove his intervention is warranted. And here we are," the Princess gestured to a narrow staircase neatly hidden behind a paneled door. It did not look like the entrance to a magical world, but climbing the steps and switching back, they lead into the high framed ceiling of an attic finished in frescoes of a night sky as it might be imagined by a child all big glittering stars and the blue and red moons turned into the faces of a beautiful maiden and her comically ugly, ever pining lover.

But not all was as Henrietta remembered. The piles of stuffed animals and collections of dolls were all still there, seemingly untouched. The intricate recreation of the Palace, sprawled out on a table long enough to seat a banquet, was likewise pristine.

Instead, they found Emily and Yui at the far end of the playroom.

"Those are grandfather's old toys." Henrietta murmured as she surveyed a pair of perfectly matched red and blue tin regiments that seemed to have just fought a pitched battle across the playroom floor. The left flank was especially bloodied with the red regiment struggling to make headway across the heavily piled terrain and taking serious losses to secure the strongpoint, a wooden toy castle upon a bluff of children's storybooks.

Everywhere the princess looked, red and blue clad soldiers lay toppled. But a victor had won out in the end, the blue regiment corralling up its vanquished foes and marching them back towards the toy box to await the next battle.

Sitting fretfully at a nearby table, Emily pouted, leaving no doubt to the identity of each army's general.

"The Kingdom." Emily moaned.

"Huh?" Asuna looked at the mousty young countess confused.

"For want of a battle I lost the Kingdom!"

"An imaginary Kingdom I hope." Henrietta said.

And as for the victor . . .

Yui emerged from a chest of play props, a costume crown atop her head and wielding a toy scepter.

For a moment the Lady Asuna looked bemused, but confusion quickly turned to a smile. "To the victor goes the spoils?"

Kirigaya Yui looked surprised to see her mother, but then smiling proudly, she nodded and thrust the scepter into the air. "I shall be a benevolent tyrant!"

"Well." Wales mused. "I don't think she'll have any trouble holding her own."
____________________________________________________________________________________

COURT KILLER UNMASKED!!!

Freelia, in the early hours of Wodinsdag, an attack was perpetrated on the grounds of the Sunshine Tabby Inn. This story was originally reported in issue seventeen. Since then, witness testimony has identified the attacker as RipJack, a known Spriggan ganker and unrepatriated renegade who is believed responsible for the murder of three officers of the Faerie Court . . .

Sakuya's eyes darted across the broadsheet. Her fingertips registered paper of quality that couldn't have been bought in Japan at any price. The sort of paper that had inspired the term 'Yellow Journalism'. But, giving credit where it was due, the Guild Ad Libitum were no muckrakers. Everything reported was the truth, as best as could be determined, unadorned and unbiased.

"The press knows almost as much as we do." The Sylph Lord sighed as she let the broadsheet fall atop her desk.

"Y'know, you're going to get wrinkles, making expressions like that" Said the Cait Lord sprawled supine across an office sofa.

"You're taking this rather well." Sakuya rested a cheek against her knuckles. The comment elicited a small stretch and a yawn from Alicia, the feline equivalent of a shrug.

"I'm good at compartmentalizing. We already knew this part was going to happen. No sense getting upset about it all over again."

"Hmm." The Sylph sounded noncommittally before a knock sounded at the door. "Enter." Sakuya rose as Ephi stepped inside.

"Sakuya-sama, Alicia-sama." Her guard gave a curt nod to them both. "It's time."

The Sylph gave her office a final look. From the vantage of the tower the patchwork countryside of Tristain stretched out to the horizon in the light of a late afternoon. Turning, Sakuya took the lead, Alicia falling in beside, her guard following close at hand.

"Ephi."

"Sakuya-sama?"

"You just arrived from ground level. How has the public been taking the news?"

Her guard was silent for a moment, frowning as he considered the question. "About as you must expect, my Lady. Fear, but also anger. At Rip Jack as well as the Court."

"Of course." Sakuya sighed inwardly. The Court had failed to protect its own, after all.

But that same anger cut both ways. Revealing Rip Jack's identity tore at the mystique that had cloaked him. The shadowy killer was reduced to a mere murderer and fear was overcome by outrage.

The Watch had been placed on high alert and a manhunt had been called. They would track Rip Jack down and corner him like a dangerous animal. There was only one other detail to consider.

"I have half a mind to just say it myself." She thought aloud as together they boarded an elevator bound for the ground floor. "Rip off the bandage."

"Nyeh?" Alicia's ears twitched. "You don't mean . . ."

"But is that really wise, Sakuya-sama?" Ephi asked beside her. She gave him a look that caused the Sylph warrior to hesitate. "I . . . Apologize. I spoke out of turn."

"No." Sakuya shook her head, swiping aside a stray strand of hair. "I'd like to hear your thoughts."

Tension faded from her guard. "You should not doubt your prior judgment, Sakuya-sama." Ephi explained. "Mortimer must be the one to admit the connection between himself and Rip Jack. Doing it yourself will only breed more suspicion than is absolutely necessary."

"I know that." Sakuya bit her lip. "I know Mortimer has to be the one to say it. But will he?"

"Do not fear, Sakuya-sama, remember, I have worked with Mortimer-sama before in my time as a Salamander. He will speak the truth himself, if only to retain some control over it."

The Sylph Lord nodded slowly. Her guard spoke sense. And as their elevator slowed to a stop, she studied him. Ephi was no replacement for Novair. But there was more to him than a simple sword arm. She would have to remember that, Sakuya thought. Then the elevator doors opened and they stepped out into the whirlwind of activity filling the tower atrium.

One of the first things Sakura had done after finding herself incomprehensibly put in charge of what amounted to a community of refugees was gone about picking the brains of every SAO survivor she could find.

There had been more of them laying about than she would have expected. Odd, to say the least.

The two situations bore only the most passing of resemblance. But Aincrad was still the nearest thing to prior experience to learn from. The only reference they had to predict what might happen.

What the Sylph Lord had learned was that Sword Art had been a selfish affair. Even the heroic <<Front Line>> had been motivated first out of self interest and helping their fellow trapped players a distant second.

Why hadn't the same happened here? The question that so frequently consumed her as she tried to fall asleep.

Was it the pre-existing positions of the Lords? Some semblance of order and authority for the Fae to rally around?

Sakura tried not to flatter herself, but try as she might, she couldn't deny that the likes of Mortimer had a certain something that attracted people to his banner. He'd turned a quarreling mob into a well organized machine stomping on the other factions, and in return they'd loved him for it. And then there was Morgiana's . . . everything . . .

On the other hand, there were Lords like . . .

"Ah Sakuya!" A voice that attempted to effect a rumble, but came closer to gargling gravel, called for her attention.

"Lord Rute." Sakuya smiled at the Leprechaun who seemed scarcely taller than he was wide. An effect aided by the shoulder braiding of his red jacket. "I'm truly grateful you could lend us your . . . position tonight . . ."

"Hrrm? Yes well, trying times and all that." The Leprechaun Lord stroked at the immaculate metallic mustache that covered his upper lip. "Fear not, Sakuya, now that he's been exposed, we'll run this black guard to ground, I say!"

Being an MMO, ALfheim had been blessed with no shortage of beautiful avatars, even the most humble of which could be called calmly. Yet Rute was not one of them. It certainly made him stand out from a crowd of Faeries, provided he was standing at the front.

"Hrrm? Sakuya? Is there something on my face?" Rute frowned. Which was to say his brow furrowed and his mustache quivered. "Mishiro?"

"No, there is nothing, My Lord." A woman answered coolly.

If Rute was the exception, then his head secretary proved the rule. Tall, bordering on statuesque, and cream skinned, her hair a dark burnished bronze pulled back in a high ponytail. She carried herself with a professional poise, and seemed wholly attentive to her employer, until her eyes darted to Sakuya, like hard, appraising gemstones.

"However," Mishiro observed, "the broadcast is scheduled to commence shortly. We should hurry."

"Yes yes." Rute waved her off. "You have my notes?"

"Here, Sir." Mishiro supplied. "Key points are underlined in red. Bring up the lines in blue if you have the chance . . ."

"Hrrm. This isn't Takao's handwriting."

"Saki has been handling your speeches. I felt it was better to stay consistent with your written address . . ."

Sakuya regarded this thoughtfully. Perhaps, given enough capable women at his back, even a man like Rute could be propelled to greatness.

The Leprechaun began waddling off, beckoning Sakuya to follow as he studied a thick handful of handwritten cards. "Of course, I'm always happy to be of service but, hrrm, I have to ask why a bounty hasn't been posted. This killer is a dangerous fellow!"

"It is exactly because he is dangerous, Rute." Sakuya explained. "He's killed three of our best, and managed to match blades with a forth, if only for a moment. The last thing we need is to inspire reckless bravado by posting a bounty for his capture." There were far too many young Faeries who were still far too impressed with themselves. "There will be a reward, for accurate reports of his whereabouts, but the Court will apprehend him."

"Hrrm. Prudent." Rute agreed. "Very prudent. Well, when it comes to posting your reward, you can trust that the treasury will spare no expense, I say!"

"Appreciated, as always, Rute." Sakuya smiled, for underneath the mannerisms and rolly polly physique, Rute was a reliable enough little fellow. Certainly more instrumental to their day to day efforts than anyone save perhaps . . .

"Sakuya!" The Sylph brightened as she caught sight of ALfheim's most newly minted Lord.

"Thinker," Sakuya greeted warmly. "I'm sorry, I should have found a moment to contact you before now. Congratulations on your election. The people of Orlein have made an excellent choice."

"So Yulier keeps telling me." The Undine laughed with the congenial ease of a born web personality. "I only hope I can live up to their expectations." His features briefly turned troubled. "To be honest, Orlein alone is more people than I was even notionally responsible for in Aincrad. And I'm afraid I made a mess of that in the end."

"And that is why your experience is so valuable." Sakuya told him. "We need leaders who have weathered storms and disasters, as many as we can find."

"Well then, I hope I can lend my voice to our cause." Thinker replied as they passed under the archways of the tower entrance and out under a darkening evening sky.

There was an amphitheater attached to the rear of Arrun tower, with enough seats for half the city's permanent residents. Every one of them was full, and branches of nearby trees swayed with lighter Faeries casting magnification and <<Peeper>> spells to listen in.

Ringing the stage was a perimeter of the City Watch, Faeries whose green coats and bronze badges marked their Loyalty to Arrun above any faction or Lord. Their Captain, a wiry and grizzled Spriggan, passed between his officers, barking gruff orders as he went. He seemed rough with them, but if anything his presence was comfort, at times like these, Sakura too longed for someone who seemed to know what they were doing, who she could put her own trust in.

Within the Watch perimeter stood ten silver ovals through which Sakuya glimpsed other crowds, in other cities. Although she did not catch sight with her brief glance, and the shine of the mirrors obscured the audience from the stage, one of them was even being cast directly to the Royal Palace.

It seemed the Queen herself wanted to see how her newest subjects handled these matters.

"You alright, Sakura-chan." Alicia whispered at her side.

"Feels like nationals." She admitted.

"So no pressure then." The Cait squeaked cheerfully. "Come on, let's knock-m-dead!"

If this were nationals, Sakuya thought, then that would make the man already waiting patiently upon the stage, her final opponent.

"Mortimer." Sakuya greeted coolly, her greeting met with a slow and reptilian blink of eyes. Somewhere in the darkness a bell was sounded, urging people to take their seats and be silent. The Lords took their places as well. Sakuya in the center, Mortimer and Thinker too her left, Alicia and Rute to her right.

Sakuya closed her eyes, breathed, and waited for her cue, the memory of sour sweat and mouth guards coming to her. She tried not to smile.

'Nationals eh?'

If only. Those past milestones seemed so unimportant now as Sakura stepped forward, opened her eyes and spoke.

"Good evening to all of . . . " Lady Sakuya began.
____________________________________________________________________________________


"And I am to understand that anyone can propose these questions?" Prince Wales Tudor questioned. "And the Lords will be compelled to answer?"

"That's about right." Asuna answered from her place at his right side. "The questions are chosen by popular consent, and then the Lords try their best to answer them.

Wales eyed his friend thoughtfully.

Before dinner, Henrietta had spirited Asuna off, and when they had returned, the Faerie had changed once more into evening attire, a graceful cream gown that left her shoulders bare and her bosom bedecked in pearls, the long hair that was her pride had been bundled up loosely, a few spare locks falling to the small of her back. She played with them fretfully as she smiled.

The prince weighed the Faerie idea in his mind, like he might an unfamiliar cutlass. "And what recourse do the Lords have if the answer to a question proves embarrassing?"

"Only their own wits, I suppose." The Maeve replied.

"Hmm."

"What?"

"I still think Lady Sakuya and the others are taking a needless risk." Wales answered. "There's more to be lost than gained in this mode of address."

"Oh Sakuya can do as she thinks right." To his left, Henrietta chided. "Now shush, it's about to start."

Wales settled back in his chair, declining to argue the matter with his cousin, and instead joining her and Asuna in peering through the quicksilver surface that had conjured itself beneath the skylights and before the ranks of nobility seated nine wide and five deep.

The <<Moonlight Mirror>> glowed brighter for a moment, and then, as the light cleared, the environs of far off Arrun became visible. An amphitheater, a stage before the sheer, smooth stone, of Arrun tower, and the Lords presiding upon it.

"Good evening to you all . . . " Lady Sakuya began. The Sylph Lord was in fine form, gathering all of her unearthly presence to silence the murmur of the invisible audience with just her words. "Good evening to you. From Tau Tona in the North, to Gaddan in the South. From Freelia to Orlein. Most of all, a very good evening to her Majesty Queen Marianne, under whose grace we shelter." The Sylph bowed her head, her river of dark hair rippling. "God save the Queen."

All around Wales, surprised reflexive murmurs of 'God Save the Queen' answered, and Queen Marianne, seated front and center, nodded her head in silent assent.

"Tonight, we are gathered to hear matters of the greatest concern regarding the safety and security of ALfheim. Among those subjects will be matters of war, and the crimes of the Spriggan assassin Rip Jack. All of your questions will be answered in due time. But first, I would like to ask a favor of you, of each of you." The Sylph gazed coolly across the near distance, except for a moment, where her eyes darted down, and seemed to gaze through the mirror, into the Rose Room.

"Please, I would like you to look to your left, and to your right. To the people in front of and behind you." The audience around Wales cast their eyes about, unsure. "Tonight, I see Sylphs and Salamanders, Spriggans and Puca, all sitting side by side. Faeries of every faction. This heartens me."

"You have all no doubt heard the terrible rumors that have spread in Rip-Jack's wake. Fearful, untruthful rumors. Yes, we are afraid, but we are not afraid of each other. And in this, the murderer has already failed. We will find him, we will capture Rip Jack, and we will bring him to justice. Now . . . There are many more matters to speak of tonight, and we will return to this subject in due time. We Lords are your humble servants, therefore, I now open the floor to questions addressed from the Citizens of ALfheim."

Silence filled the air as Sakuya stepped back, but before the audience could begin to fill it, the moment was broken by a clear, bright, and lively voice that took the Sylph's Lords place.

"Goooood evening everybody!" A tone and pronunciation that embodied effervescence, it's owner, a slender Puca affecting the appearance of an orchestral conductor, stepped across the stage, bathed in a trailing pool of light.

"This is Puca Master of Ceremonies Noel Noel here serving as tonight's proctor! But before we begin, I want to remind everyone of the format. It's a lot like the FAQs, but tonight, every question will be given a live response on stage. Any Lord can still volunteer to answer though. Now that's out of the way, on to the first!"

Miss Noel held her conductor's wand to her lips with one gloved hand, and a stack of cards in the other. Reading the first, she began :

"Our first question for the evening comes from a Sylph courier who makes the route to all of the settlements. They say that they've witnessed extreme fluctuations in the prices of goods from day to day and place to place. Not only things like fresh food and mats, but durable goods, and even paper as well. They claim this is playing havoc with their business and wanted to know when the Lord's believe prices will stabilize."

A sensible question to open with, Wales reasoned. Murderers and wars came and went, but every day, the people bought bread.

"Hrrm!" A deep grumble announced Lord Rute as the stout Leprechaun trundled forward. "I believe this falls under my Domain, Noel-san." Wasting no time, Rute grabbed hold off the offered wand and directed it towards himself.

"First of all, it must be understood, it is essential that it is understood, that despite the Kingdom's high level of development, the economy of Tristain is unimaginably primitive compared to what we are all used to . . ."

'Primitive?' Wales mouthed to Asuna, to which the Maeve could only sheepishly smile and shrug. Murmurs went up from the surrounding nobles, many of them less than generous. The Prince settled in for what would, no doubt, be an instructive evening . . ."
____________________________________________________________________________________

Things were going well, Sakuya thought, she daren't look a gift horse in the mouth, but she'd almost say they were going too well, a few rough patches aside.

Luckily the combination of Arisa and a cat-girl form verged on being a psychological weapon.

"Thank you again, Lady Alicia, for all of your insight regarding the status of mob cultivation." Noel nodded as the Cait Lord stretched lazily on her way back to her place. "It was an education! Though our next question may strike some as being of a far more dire nature. I am of course speaking about the topic of Albion and the possibility of war with the White Isle."

Sakuya nodded inwardly as she noticed the way Noel, almost unconsciously, directed her words toward the Salamander Lord in a way that even the Sylph found natural. For all of her misgiving, she couldn't deny that Mortimer had seamlessly moved to occupy the position of 'War Leader' in the minds of every Faerie in ALfheim.

"A Cait Syth living in Freelia has watched every day as Tristain's army constructs defensive works on the island and fortifies the city walls with cannons. They wonder now how safe their home will be in the event of war and whether conflict is truly inevitable. No doubt much of the Court's strategy must remain secret for reasons of National security, but could anything be shared with the public at this time?"

With a slow and reptilian Blink Mortimer stepped forward. "Why yes, Noel-san. There is in fact a great deal that can be discussed."

Sakuya watched him carefully. Mortimer had declined to speak much in the early parts of the evening, reserving his voice for military matters. That was part of the plan, of course, presenting a methodical and coherent front would allow Mortimer to reveal his association with Rip Jack as a security concern, one which he would address openly.

"First, let us dispense with vagaries. I sympathize with the majority of my fellow Faeries, who wish for peace rather than war. It is in the finest tradition of our homeland to reject conflict. However, the decision to go to war does not lie with me, or the Faerie Court, nor even truly with Tristain. It takes only one party to initiate a conflict, and that party is the Kingdom . . . no . . . The occupied nation of Albion, whose ambitions regarding Tristain were established before we ever arrived."

"What you're saying is that war . . . is a certainty?" Noel asked to clarify.

"Unless Albion is broken completely of its capability to sustain war, yes, war will remain inevitable. The terms of surrender, both for Tristain and ourselves, are unacceptable, and Reconquista is ideological incapable of accepting less than total capitulation. That is why we must prepare."

Sakuya sensed the cooling effect that Mortimer's words had almost at once on the convivial atmosphere that had been left by Alicia's segment. But there was no helping it.

"At this time the Crown of Tristain has acknowledged Albion's declaration of War and begun the raising of a national army. Tristain, even without the counties of ALfheim, should be able to commission a force of around eighty thousand."

"And with the Counties?" Noel asked. "Doesn't the Treaty of ALfheim stipulate that we are to supply soldiers in times of war? Are people going to get drafted?"

"Levies for the Crown." Mortimer replied. "That is a distant possibility, although unlikely even if we did not have enough volunteers. Signing the Treaty of ALfheim was not the end of negotiations with our hosts and it has been established that the Court's contributions to the War Effort may be paid in service other than combat."

"Other than combat? That would be the armories in Goibniu, right?"

"The Leprechaun's will be instrumental in our efforts to help supply Tristain's army," the Salamander agreed, "think of it as an extension of our industrial partnership with Tristain."

"And you mentioned volunteers, Lord Mortimer?"

"Of course we could not avoid supplying manpower entirely." Mortimer continued. "In particular for the defense of our own holdings. The Court has decided to consolidate our military forces into a unified Self Defense Force. This unit will be formed from volunteers and serve alongside the Royal army in defense of Tristain and the Counties of ALfheim."

"Defense?" Noel repeated, searching quickly through her cards. "That's another question that's been asked. It's no secret that Tristain is also allied to the Albion Royalists, who no doubt wish to retake their homeland. In that case, would the Defense forces participate in offensive operations as well?"

Sakuya held her breath and waited to see how Mortimer would answer.

"I'm sorry." The Salamander Lord frowned. "Could you clarify what you mean by 'offensive operations'?"

"Uhm well . . . The question specifically asks about participating in more offensive operations," Noel clarified, "Like the raids at York and Newcastle."

"I see." Mortimer closed his eyes and meditated. "Those operations were defensive in nature."

"Huh?" The Puca Proctor blinked owlishly. "But . . ."

"It must be understood that the naval forces harbored at York would have been the vanguard for striking Tristain. Likewise, by rescuing the surviving Royalists, we and our Tristanian allies denied Reconquista a quick political consolidation. Together, these operations bought us weeks or even months to prepare our own defenses."

"And . . . When the defense of Tristain is successful." Noel reasoned. "What then?"

"That . . ." Mortimer breathed. "Remains to be seen . . ."

"Uhm, meaning?"

"Any number of things, contingent on any number of things. The actual details are impossible to guess as we do not yet have even an inkling of their shape. I do apologize Noel-san, I am devoted to matters of practicality. The immediate fight is where my attention must lay. I would therefore like to return to the original question. Are the settlements safe? I believe the answer to be yes, most of them at least."

"Most?" Noel's voice was tinged by urgency. "So which ones would you deem unsafe?"

"Not so much unsafe as at risk." Mortimer elaborated. Then, showing more tact that Sakuya thought possible. "Again, I apologize to you all. I'm afraid I am of more use at a map table. Perhaps it would be possible to perform a simple thought exercise?"

"I would like you all to imagine a simple map of Tristain. Now imagine a circle just within the Kingdom's borders. On this circle there are nine points representing our settlements, and a tenth point near the center of the circle, that is Arrun."

To Sakuya's surprise, she could see more eyes closed then open among the audience. Each Faerie imagining the picture that Mortimer painted with his words.

"Now I would like you all to imagine Albion, floating someplace over the ocean. The exact position of the Isle varies over the course of Lunar calendar, but regardless, it should be clear that Albion lies closest to the North west of Tristain and thus we should expect an invasion to strike there."

Noel wrinkled her brow in thought. "But I don't get it. Doesn't Albion have airships? Why would they need to invade near the coast? Wouldn't it make more sense to seize the element of surprise?"

"Any surprise gained by landing elsewhere would be offset by the longer journey, Noel-san." Mortimer explained patiently. "Albion must land its army in Tristain before its beachheads are overrun and annihilated in detail. That means making the shortest round trip possible. Shorter distance also reduce exposing their transports to interception. This places Freelia, Cadenza, and Tau Tona at heightened risk."

"I . . . see . . ." To her credit, the Puca recovered from the casual mention of her home under threat and quickly pushed on. "But Tau Tona is pretty much underground, right? No way Albion can bombard that from the sky!"

"That is observantly correct, Noel-san. It is the prevailing wisdom that Tau Tona will prove almost immune to aerial bombardment. And Reconquista can little spare the forces to reduce the settlement directly. Therefore it will most likely be bypassed. Freelia has a tempting natural harbor, but would prove almost as difficult to storm, and the island offers an excellent firing point. Which leaves . . . "

"Cadenza." Noel finished for him.

"And the nearby region of Tarbes, which could serve as an excellent landing field for the army." Mortimer agreed. "That still does not mean Cadenza need be abandoned." Noel, and the audience by proxy, brightened."Tristain knows all of this as well as Albion and will be stationing a strong force in the region. And the fortifications that are being constructed will make even Cadenza an unappealing target."

"The inverse of what I say is also true, both distance and natural defense mean that the other cities are unlikely to be targeted in the initial phases of an invasion. But please, all of you, keep in mind that these are only predictions based on our best knowledge. While I would discourage making plans to abandon your homes, keep abreast of the news, and be ready to act accordingly in the days ahead. Now," with a slow reptilian blink of blood red eyes, Mortimer looked coolly to Noel, "I believe that answers the question in full."

"Y-Yes . . . T-thank you Mortimer-sama!" The Salamander turned and stepped away from the center place. It was only then that Sakuya realized she was beginning to feel light headed, and finally took another breath.

They'd gotten through the first part. Mortimer had presented himself as a security minded Lord. Now came the hard part . . .

Noel seemed as reluctant as any of the Lords as she double checked the next topic. An almost sympathetic pause filled the air, as if giving them all time to brace themselves.

"We're coming to the end of our evening. But before the Lords retire, one of the most requested questions comes to us from a concerned citizen here in Arrun. They ask," Noel licked her lips, swallowed, and continued only when she looked fully ready, "In regards to the recent string of murders, and the uncovered identity of Rip Jack, what steps is the court taking to protect the settlements and bring the criminal to justice?"

Sakuya's eyes darted to Mortimer. The Salamander Lord stood, rooted in place. Neither nervous nor biding his time. For a moment their eyes met, and the Sylph grimaced, there was no better time!

And yet . . .

"It's okay." Sakuya tore herself away from the Salamander as Thinker walked by. "I'll handle this one, and then Mortimer can speak." Turning from Sakuya, Thinker assumed a grave and yet somehow optimistic expression as he joined Noel at the center of the stage.

"That is an excellent question Noel-san, if you would please allow it, I would like to take the lead. Good evening to everyone, most of you have probably not heard much of me, I am Thinker of the Undine, elected first count of Orelin, and if you actually have heard anything about me . . ."

_________________________________________

" . . . and if you actually have heard anything about me, then it's probably that I am an SAO survivor. It's for this reason that I would like to share my thoughts on the Rip Jack killings."

"How wretched." Henrietta murmured to Wales right. It was the closest thing to thoughtlessness he'd ever known from her, not noticing the way that Asuna grimaced and tightly clasped her hands. The conversation playing out on the other side of the mirror clearly stirred strong feelings in the Maeve.

Wales thought to offer a gentle hand upon her shoulder while he studied the Count of Orlein. Thinker was not an impressive man, at least Wales did not think so, lacking the presence of Lady Sakuya and the composure of Lord Mortimer. And yet the people seemed as inclined to listen to him when he bade speak.

"Now, to answer the question, the apprehension of the murderer Rip Jack is presently one of our highest priorities. A bounty has been placed for information leading to his capture and a manhunt is being organized as we speak. We are also working closely with the Tristanian authorities in this matter in the event that Rip Jack is hiding outside of the Counties of ALfheim."

"Have you heard anything about that?" Asuna whispered to Wales. The Prince hardly needed to guess at the anxiety deep in her soft brown eyes.

"I'm afraid my own duties rarely crossover with Tristain's internal affairs." Wales admitted. He concerned himself with enemies from without. But knowing Asuna, and wanting to put her mind at ease, he added. "I believe there is a lieutenant attached to the Royal Musketeers who might know something about it . . ."

Then the Undine Lord turned thoughtful as he gave his words a moment to sink in. "It is our dearest wish that people remain safe. The bounty as stated is for information leading to Rip Jack's capture, not for seeking glory and attempting to apprehend him independently. I cannot stress enough that the murderer is very dangerous. The Court has many able volunteers at our disposal who have been tested and proven in patrols or as part of the Newcastle Operation, and they are ready to apprehend Rip Jack when he is found. In the meantime, the Watch is being reinforced and the Spriggans are organizing a contingent of illusion masters to assist each settlement."

"All very sensible precautions, Thinker Sama." Noel pronounced. "While we still have you here, I'd like to skip ahead to a related question that you might be able to answer for us."

"By all means." The Undine nodded.

"This question also comes from here in Arrun. The author asks if we can be sure that Rip Jack is acting alone. They say that they read about a similar case in interviews about the SAO incident, about an entire organization of murderers. Thinker-sama, as an SAO Survivor yourself, what are your thoughts on this matter?"

Lord Thinker closed his eyes and crossed his arms, his features taking on the gravity of some past experience. An old soldier remembering an ugly war, Wales reckoned. "I don't know what everyone may have read in articles and interviews with other SAO survivors, but it is true that there existed a guild of players who deliberately went about killing others while knowing the consequence of their actions."

Wales wrinkled his nose. Asuna had mentioned them in passing the few times she had opened to him and Henrietta about her confinement in that fantastical castle, moments of trust that honored him. Though there had been fond recollections as well, when the men and women who had betrayed decency were mentioned, there had only been disappointment. Loathing, Wales thought, was the warranted emotion, and he was not the only one.

Sitting closer to the Queen, the Lord Justice murmured just loudly enough for the Prince to catch a few snatches. "See, your Majesty? They are not without their own treachery!" Asuna heard it too, and Wales sensed the way she bristled at the insult to her people. The voices from the mirror picked up again.

"The so called <<Laughing Coffins>>?" Noel sought to clarify.

Thinker nodded. "But I am sceptical we will see that phenomenon repeat in the case of Rip Jack." He paused to give the murmuring of the crowd time to settle. "Before the transition, no satisfying conclusion had yet been reached about the motivations that drove the <<Laughing Coffin>> guild. Many people pointed to a charismatic figure. But I believe that Laughing Coffin also represented a breakdown in the social fabric of the people trapped within Aincrad of a type that we have not seen repeating here in Tristain. While I wouldn't rule anything out, I find it doubtful Rip Jack will have much success recruiting."

"Thank you, Thinker-sama." Noel said. "I believe that explains things nicely. I would now like to open the floor to the lotteried questions . . ."

"Noel-san." Lord Mortimer had stepped forward, seemingly without prompting.

"Mortimer-sama?" Noel queried. "Do you have something you'd like to add?"

Lord Thinker, appearing briefly bemused, smiled and began to step aside.

"There is one final matter I'd wish to discuss," Mortimer began solemnly, "And now seems the ideal moment to . . ."

"To what?! To spread more of your propaganda Mortimer-sama." The way the Faerie honorific was spoken, dripping with contempt, it seemed no honor at all.

"Oh." Henrietta murmured.

Yes, Wales thought. 'Oh.'

The Lords on stage looked about for the source of the voice, coming from someplace outside the mirror's field of view. The audience in the Palace had only the words of Lady Sakuya for guidance as the Sylph Lord's eyes narrowed, turning to face the source of the disturbance.

She uttered one word with such non recognition that it too almost amounted to a curse. "Rio."

_________________________________________


"Rio."

Sakuya uttered the name like a curse. Like an actual magic spell. And like a spell, the moment the sound passed her lips, it took effect.

"Yes! It is I, Rio!" A man's voice boomed, deep and pleasingly masculine, annoyingly so Sakuya thought.

It completely suited the form of its owner, striding down the center aisle as spot lights follow him, cast by his followers orbiting high overhead. If there was ever a Faerie who could have been ripped from the back of the ALO box, it was Rio.

A tall and lean physique, the collar of his robes left open to expose a smooth muscular chest. Long emerald hair framed a face so stereotypically chiseled that it came full circle to being dull again.

From the corner of her eye, Sakuya witnessed Mortimer making a subtle gesture to the Watch Captain, who nodded and set his men moving to block Rio's way.

But the Sylph had planned for that, not breaking stride as he was overtaken by a quartet of burly Gnomes. The guards, Salamanders and Sylphs, stumbled to a halt, readying for a fight that never came. As one, the Gnomes barreled between them, never so much as raising a hand, and then with coordination that would have made the Lancers proud, and so sudden they sent the guards jumping back, they about-faced, peacefully wedging open a breach in the cordon for their leader to walk right through.

A murmur rippled out across the audience, emanating from those nearest to Rio and his followers. Sakuya grimaced, this was no good, people had gathered to hear the Lords for the sake of assurance, and here was Rio spreading confusion. More guards advanced to put themselves in Rio's path, but before their Captain could give the decisive order, Sakuya responded, raising a hand, the officers hesitated.

"Rio." Sakuya said again, addressing her fellow Sylph directly for the first time in what felt like a lifetime. In a way it was. A different time, a different place, a different world. But the same Rio she realized as he stood off, hands on hips, no doubt thinking himself very heroic. "I am always pleased to see the Sylphs taking an active role in things . . . But you must admit this is unusual . . ."

To which Rio threw his head back and laughed. "And what is not unusual about these days, Sakuya-sama?! We find ourselves in extraordinary times, and they demand extraordinary measures. But, let it be known that I am well within my rights to stand here!"

"You have no such right to disrupt a public address." Mortimer growled, making another gesture to the Watch Captain and again being countermanded by Sakuya. The Captain looked increasingly impatient, not that the Sylph Lord could bring herself to care.

"Ah but I do indeed!" Rio plucked something from his pocket and waved it for all to see. An ornate silver token in the form of the Sylph crest. "This is a lottery token for the open forum, it entitles me to ask a question of the gathered Lords, does it not?"

"It is . . . very convenient . . . that you would win something like that, Rio." Mortimer's eyes narrowed.

"If you must know, it was entrusted to me by my guild. I speak on the behalf of all the ABC."

"Then the right to speak is not yours." Mortimer snapped. "I do not . . ."

A small sound interrupted the Salamander before her could go further. Noel smiled nervously as she waved for attention. "Uhm, actually, Mortimer-sama, there's no rule against that."

The Salamander Lord seemed determined to immolate the Puca with just his eyes. "Very well." He grit his teeth. "I was mistaken, Rio-san. If that token is authentic, you are of course entitled to speak."

"Oh it's authentic alright, Mortimer-sama." He offered the mark to a Guard who inspected and confirmed it. The voices of the audience grew louder, threatening to drown out the speakers on stage, even with Puca magic.

Something had to be done . . .

"The Lords recognize Rio of the Sylphs, guildmaster of the ABC." Sakuya pronounced as formally as improvisation would allow.

Rio's features turned triumphant as he surrendered the token to a waiting guard, and then turned to address the audience. "Good evening everyone. As Sakuya so graciously introduced, I am Rio, some of you have no doubt read my musings in the paper. But for those who do not, I am simply an ordinary gamer, like all of you, who has been caught up in extraordinary circumstances."

Sakuya's eyes narrowed. 'Simply an ordinary gamer' was far too humble a self description for the likes of Rio. But he read from a script well, she couldn't deny that.

"And like the rest of you, I too was stunned, shocked into silence by the events that transpired to bring us here, to this land of swords and sorcery and dire danger! So overwhelmed was I, in fact, that it was only with the help of my Loyal Guild that I regained my wits, and only then did I being to examine and question . . ."

"Yes, there's supposed to be a question in there somewhere, I believe." Mortimer interrupted.

Rio's facade broke into a momentary scowl before being masked by a genial smile. "Of course. I apologize to the audience for the . . . theatrics. I fear I have more background in theater than public speaking." The audience stirred to a mild chuckle at the faux humility. "I have watched and I have listened tonight, alongside the many able members of my guild without whom I would be nothing, but I can watch and listen no longer!"

Pointing a finger straight at Lord Mortimer. "Mortimer-sama, you said that this war between Tristain and Albion is inevitable. But it is also true that under your orders, Faeries participated in Tristain's raids against Albion? You made us co-belligerents in this war!"

The Salamander's eyes widened and then narrowed. "As . . . I already explained . . ." He began slowly. "Those were defensive actions preempting Albion's own invasion. A declaration of war had already been made."

"A declaration that the Lords knew about before the Treaty of ALfheim was signed!" The accusation hung in the air. It wasn't long before the uneasy mutterings began.

"That is not a secret." Mortimer answered calmly.

"No." Rio agreed, crossing his arms. "But your motives are."

"That we didn't have a lot of time or options?" Alicia interjected. "Because we didn't have a lot of time or options. This isn't like a quest we can just pause whenever we like, you know?"

"Albion poses a common threat to us all." Mortimer glared down at Rio. "What would you have us do?"

"Perhaps fight, or perhaps . . . perhaps nothing."

"Nothing?" The Salamander scoffed. "You do know the terms of Tristain's surrender? We would be forced to abandon our territory, to be scattered to the winds. Is that what you want?"

"Reconquista's grudge is with elves!" Rio's voice rose. "Tell me, Mortimer-sama are you a secret Elf? Sakuya-sama, are you? Conflict might have been avoided if a dialogue was kept open. Now, we will never know. This was not our fight before the treaty was signed and we attacked Albion's fleet. But you made it so."

"Three hundred of our people were in danger." Mortimer's voice fell to a growl, his patience was growing thin.

"So instead you endangered nearly seventy thousand? You didn't even consider negotiating for their return, did you? That's damning enough, I say!" The Sylph declared, again he turned to the audience and addressed them directly. "Mortimer stands before you and claims to uphold the best traditions of our homeland's neutrality. But he and the other Lords did not waste a single moment meditating on whether conflict was truly necessary. They do this only to serve themselves!"

This was getting out of hand, Sakuya realized, moving to intervene. "You've had your time now, Rio. You asked your question and you received your answer. Now if that is all . . ."

Rio turned to her, and Sakuya's heart sank. There was nothing insincere about that smile. "No."

"No?"

Rio elaborated by fishing in his pocket and presenting a second silver token, this one bearing the crest of the Salamanders.

Sakuya grimaced and quietly gestured to Noel. "Noel-san?"

"Sakuya-sama." The Puca eyes had grown big as saucers, she tugged at her collar anxiously.

"There isn't any rule against having multiple question tokens either, is there?"

"N-No, Sakuya-sama." Noel admitted. "

It was too late to change that now, the Sylph Lord thought bitterly. Instead, she gave Rio a poisonous little smile. "Another token from your guild?"

"The ABC have many friends willing to trade favors, Sakuya-sama." Rio answered. "Many of them forgotten by the Court. I speak on their behalf."

"You mean the <<Renegades>>."

"Former renegades, Sakuya-sama." Rio corrected her sternly. "Players who were banished from their home territory."

"Of course, all banishments were rescinded as soon as we realized the situation we were in." Sakuya said. "It would be inhumane to judge former players for how they behaved when ALfheim was a game."

"And you think simple repatriation was enough?"

____________________________________________________________________________________

"And you think simple repatriation was enough?" The Sylph on the far side of the mirror asked.

"First he speaks treason, and now he slanders his Lord's judgment?!"

From his seat, Prince Wales had a good view of the two dramas playing out. Both the one in the mirror and one on the floor of the Rose Room. Regretfully, for the friend beside him, as Asuna watched helplessly, it seemed his own wager was proving the right one.

"Karin, would you please sit down?" Queen Marianne murmured patiently as the Duchess Valliere glowered through the looking glass. Her shoulders were hunched, and her right hand twitched, groping for something at her side that was not there.

"The Duchess is not wrong, your highness." Lord Richmond murmured by her side. "He suggested nothing less than disloyalty against the Crown. And Lady Sakuya allows him to speak of this vile treachery!"

"But it is not treacherous!"

Wales was startled as Henrietta stood.

"Highness!" The Lord Justice snapped.

"What that man said was not treachery." Henrietta pronounced firmly.

"Henrietta." Wales murmured, wondering not for the first time what sort of strange ideas Lady Sakuya had been putting in her head.

"I would not expect you to understand the fineries of the law, highness, however I would expect you to . . ." Richmond's reply was interrupted.

"In accordance with the principle of ex post factum law, a noble cannot be bound by a contract or oath of fealty retroactively. Furthermore, as the Fae were created nobles ex nihilo, there was no presumption of Loyalty to the Crown of Tristain at the time the treaty of ALfheim was being negotiated. Therefore, you must agree, Lord justice, that his words regarding the past cannot be Treasonous."

"Mazarin has taught you well, my daughter." Marianne complimented.

"Well . . . that is . . ." It was quite the sight seeing Richmond stumble over his own tongue. "It still speaks to a failing of his character. And the character of the Fae as a whole, your Majesty." Richmond recovered. "This 'Rio' is confident that he has friends, supporters. Lady Sakuya does not deny it." Wales watched as his Aunt's features grew contemplative.

"Thank you for that." Asuna whispered as Henrietta seated herself. "Rio-san doesn't know what he's talking about, what we went through, but the Lord Justice . . ."

"Hmm?" The Princess shook her head, smiling kindly. "Please don't misunderstand. I find that man very distasteful, and I'd prefer to see him dragged out."

Asuna blinked rapidly. "But you . . ."

"I found what the Lord Justice said to be very distasteful also," Henrietta cast her voice as a low whisper, "and wish he'd be dragged out as well . . ."

"Still, it seems all of this has caught Sakuya in a snare." Wales observed as the verbal duel played out on the far side of the mirror.

"Those former 'renegades' as you called them lost everything when the borders of ALfheim were established." Rio proclaimed. "While the capitals and their surroundings became the counties of ALfheim, thousands of players outside the borders were forced to give up their homes and businesses."

"Hrrm?!" On the stage, Lord Rute rumbled, his mustache twitching. "They were provided with ample assistance to migrate their lives to the Counties."

"Unless they wanted to stay where they were, in the places they were familiar, and with the people they knew." Rio reasoned.

"Impossible! Tristain would never have allowed it." Rute countered. "The emergence of ALfheim caused millions of crown in damage and ripped feudal holdings to shreds. Something had to be given in return for what we gained under the law."

"And it just so happens that what was gained belongs to the Lords, and what was given belongs to everyone else!"

There was a noise building beneath the speech, Wales realized, a sort of low buzz as the greater audience, out of sight from the mirror's vantage, began to whisper among itself. How many thousands of voices were pondering what this man was saying?

"The counties are governed under the auspices of the Lords." Sakuya corrected. "But they do not belong to us . . ."

"Yes yes, you are our 'humble servants' you say." Rio spread his arms. "Self appointed, of course."

"What's this now?!" Rute harrumphed. "The Lords were duly elected when . . . when . . ." The Leprechaun paused, mustache twitching furiously as he bit down on his lip.

"When the last elections were held." The Sylph Rio finished for him. "When every last one of us was still a player of ALfheim Online electing leaders to complete the Grand Quest. Not to make life and death decisions on our behalf." Rio smiled, chuckling genially as he turned once more to the crowd and spread his arms wide. "Like many of you, I was a hardcore player of ALO. I dreamed of completing the grand quest and devoted my spare time to mastering the game mechanics and meta. I even ran for office in hopes of leading the Sylphs to victory. But even I would not compare that experience to where we are now."

"I dunno, I think we've done pretty well so far." Lady Alicia supplied non-chalantly."

"Does one of your subordinates not lay dead at the hands of RipJack? Have you not failed to apprehend him?"

"Well . . ." The Cait Lord began to speak.

"The eve of a war is no time to be holding elections." Lord Mortimer pronounced. Wales nodded at the sensibility of it, and was surprised to see Asuna frown.

"Sakuya and the others have more than proven themselves." Wales whispered to her. "What does this upstart know?"

Asuna tried to smile and gave a nod. "But I think he's right too." She was quick to add, "In a way." Wordlessly, Wales asked her to explain. "I was only thinking, the Lords are our elected leaders, but how true is that if we never get around to electing them? If it went on long enough, maybe we'd even forget?"

Would that truly be so bad? Wales wondered.

The Faeries seemed to think so. The roar of the crowd had grown perceptibly louder, and Rios voice had risen to keep pace. "Then when is a good time, Mortimer-sama? It could not be right after the Transition. We were all confused, lost, getting our bearings, we needed leadership, any leadership. And it could not be as you negotiated with Tristain, someone needed to take the lead there too. And it most certainly cannot be in the middle of a war. How very convenient! And then when Tristain wins, if Tristain wins, there will be the rebuilding, and the negotiating, and the politicking, always another excuse, always another reason until . . . "

The audience sounded like a wasp nest now, bickering among themselves, although, Wales thought, it was hard to say who was arguing for what. It seemed to be just on the verge of boiling over, the Prince resigning himself to observing what his older brother Lionel would call a 'laconic exchange of opinions' but which most Albion men would call a 'flaming bloody row' when there suddenly came a -boom- and flash like lightning that sent the gathered nobles jumping in their chairs, the mirror rattling visible as it transmitted the noise.

"That is enough!"

In the ensuing silence, Lady Sakuya slowly lowered her hand, gathering her sleeves before her. An expression of deep thought troubled her countenance, furrowing her pale brow, and pursing her lips. The moment stretched on, far longer in feeling than in fact, Wales realized that the Sylph Lord must have had a talent for crowds, she knew the exact moment the tension would break, she stretched it there, and no further, before she finally deigned to speak.

Standing beneath her, Rio's expression changed, souring as it shifted from confident, to confused, to finally disbelief.

"What did you say, Sakuya?"

"I said that you're right, Rio-san."
____________________________________________________________________________________


"What did you say, Sakuya?"

"I said, Rio-san, that you are right . . ."

It was strange the way she heard herself speak, Sakura thought. Detached, as if she were an outside observer. But it was only through that detachment that she was allowed to move within herself, to see what Rio was doing.

The audience was buzzing amongst themselves. Agitators, no, angry people, who looked to Rio as their champion, were demanding to be heard. How many? Though their numbers were few, their voices burned with conviction while those around them were filled with doubt.

This was a trap.

Stupid.

Stupid!

How had she not realized it before? She'd thought to placate Rio, stall for time and run out the clock. But the only way out was through.

The <<Concussion Blast>> she'd fired into the air, and the boom of her voice, carried by Noel's magic, had bought her a precious moment. And her words had bought her another, enough time to gather her thoughts, to steady her nerves, and to step back into the persona, the role, of Lady Sakuya.

"Everyone, when I opened this address, I told you all that we Lords are your humble servants. I believe in the intention of those words, but Rio speaks the truth when he argues that they have not been in fact."

"It was necessary, at first, for someone to take charge. But if we are to continue to make decisions of the greatest magnitude on your behalf, then it must be by your consent. Which is why I hereby decree that in three . . . no . . . In two weeks time, an election will be called to decide the Lord of Sylvain." Her eyes met with Rio's, her fellow Sylph was no longer smiling so confidently. "I invite anyone who wishes to announce their candidacy."

The audience was speaking among itself again, but the general mood was again uncertain, not knowing what to make of it.

"Furthermore," Sakuya continued with gathering confidence, "I urge my fellow Lords, those who have not already received the consent of their people since the Transition," she nodded to Thinker, "To follow suit as soon as they can arrange. And to agree upon terms under which the next elections will be called."

She should have expected it, but still it came as a surprise when Alicia was the first to speak up. "Elections huh?"

The Cait Lord's girlish features screwed up thoughtfully and then snapped back as she gave a nonchalant shrug. "Well, I don't see why not. It shouldn't take more than a couple of weeks for everyone to speak their piece."

"We did have a few hiccups with our own elections." Thinker admitted. "Nothing significant. But the Undines will be happy to share our experience if it will help."

"Hrmph? Elections again already?" Rute grumbled, but with a sharp eye from Sakuya surrendered without a fight. "Well I suppose it can't be helped under the circumstances. I will agree that we will need to decide on new terms of office. Hrrm, yes, something more reasonable for our situation."

Ever so slowly, with each Lord, the rumblings tilted in their favor. Sakuya felt them leaning back from the precipice and allowed herself to breathe a sigh . . . It caught in her throat. Along with betrayal.

"I . . . Find the prospect of elections unwise at this time . . ."

With one sentence, the tide shifted. Even Sylphic ears couldn't distinguish the legions of voices, but she could imagine what was being said. And she knew what would happen . . .

"Mortimer-san, what are you saying?" Thinker spoke first, looking as surprised as Sakuya ought to have been.

"I stand by my statement that the eve of a war is not the time to risk changing leadership. It will only cause confusion and discord in our defense policy."

"So you admit that you embrace war to stay in office!" Rio saw and seized his opportunity.

"That is not . . ."

"The architect of Tristain's attacks on Albion." Rio went on. "Or perhaps just the architect of securing your own power!"

"Preposterous." The Salamander regarded Rio like something he would scrape off his boot. "My actions have been guided by a single principle, upholding the interests of the Salamanders, and by extension, all of ALfheim."

"Interests that, by your judgment, clearly align with you remaining Lord!"

"Fascinating how you speculate on my motives, without the slightest evidence." A flash of heat entered Mortimer's voice. Somewhere, a fuze had just been lit. "While diverting attention from your own." Then turning gaze to the audience, "This man speaks of guarding liberty and correcting injustice, but he nurses a bitter grudge for having lost the last quarterly election."

"I hold no such grudge!" Rio's voice betrayed an edge before he seized control of it again. "I mean to say . . . Sakuya won fairly. At a different time, in a different place. I demand elections, not to win office for myself, but to preserve the best traditions of our homeland."

"But also because you believe Sakuya stole the elections from you." Mortimer spoke and Rio winced, then the Salamander went in for the kill. "Well let me assure you, Rio-san, you failed to defeat Sakuya and came in third behind Sigurd. As much as things have changed, I've doubt they've changed that much. Now if we are done . . ."

"We are not done!" Rio exploded. "You wish me to prove your motives and then slander my name? Fine!"

An unease stirred in Sakuya's breast as she saw the smile twisting on Rio's face. Vicious, and ugly, and utterly sincere as he turned to address the crow one final time. "Friends, I beseech you for one final moment of your time. There is information, recently delivered into my hands, that I must make known here, lest I be silenced!"

Sakuya's stomach twisted as premonition transformed into insight. If it was possible, Mortimer grew paler.

"In regards to the murderer RipJack. It has been brought to my attention that, as a renegade, he was a close associate of Lord Mortimer, who used his services . . ."

"Rio!" Mortimer shouted.

" . . . As an assassin! And though that is not damning in itself. What is damning is that Mortimer kept this information from his fellow lords. From the investigation. And assigned his own loyal dog to divert suspicion!"

"Where is your proof?!" Mortimer roared. The amphitheater echoes with the boom of the Salamander's voice and then fell into silence once more.

Rio didn't reply. He didn't need to.

Sakuya heard the whispers carried on the wind. "One of the investigators was dismissed recently." Someone nearby told their seat mate.

"It must be a coincidence!"

"I'm not so sure . . ."

"You don't know what you're talking about!"

"Mortimer-sama wouldn't do that?"

"Wouldn't he?"
"He's a good commander . . . maybe he'd prefer if everyone followed his orders . . ."

Rio was listening too, and when he was satisfied with the results, only then did he deign to speak. "All we need do, is ask why a member of the investigation was dismissed. And then seek witnesses who can confirm Mortimer's past association with RipJack. Of course, you are free to explain yourself, Mortimer-sama. Can you?" Rio grinned. "Can you explain yourself?"

Sakuya moved to speak, but bit her lip. That inner self was tugging back on her again, warning her to look carefully at the pieces on the table. At that moment, there was nothing she could say which would help.

And Mortimer . . . If there was anything to be said, they'd never know. The Salamander Lord closed his eyes, inhaled, and turned to walk from the stage as the tide of voices welled behind him.
_____________________________

Under the pale moons, beneath the branches of an ash tree, a constellation of rings twirled as they swayed, hung by threads invisible against the night. Swinging back and forth in their metronome peace until metal flashed as it caught the moonslight, the point of a foil licked through the center of a ring and retreated without touching the rim.

This happened once, twice, three times, until the forth, a slight misjudgment, but fatal, the tip of the foil sent the ring dancing and spinning on its thread. Asuna watched it die down in silence until the motion was placid and predictable again.

Not good enough. The Maeve thought. Not nearly good enough. She needed to match, and exceed, her performance in Aincrad. Wiping cold sweat from her brow, she resumed en garde and tried again.

'Faster.' Asuna thought. 'More precise.' Her eyes narrowed. 'Timing is off.'

She should have taken Suguha up on her offer of sparring practice, it hadn't taken long at all to start going soft. But really, she welcomed the distraction.

After the Moonlight Mirror had faded, without ceremony, the small audience had been left in silence. And then, as if by magic, they had started speaking as if nothing had happened. But something had happened. Asuna didn't need her sensitive ears to detect the strain of faux cordiality, the sheer banality. The wordless promises that this would all be spoken about behind closed doors.

She knew that cold geniality all too well. She'd thought she'd left it behind. Asuna had excused herself, disentangling from the throng of nobility.

"Asuna." Wales caught up to her in the hall. "Please, accept my heartfelt apology."

"What's there to apologize for?" She'd smiled kindly, it wasn't often that the Prince looked ashamed. His tutors probably hadn't taught him how.

Wales hesitated for a moment, raising a hand, and then letting it fall to his side. "I am not blind, Asuna. When you accepted my invitation, you were clearly already troubled. What happened just now, it could not have helped."

"Then . . . It's me who should be apologizing. I've been an ungracious guest."

"No. Never."The Prince shook his head. "After everything you have done for me, your burdens are my burdens. Asuna?"

"That is . . . very generous, Wales-san." The Faerie admitted, not daring to look him in the eyes. "But I think I'm just tired right now. Besides, you weren't responsible for what happened."

"Of course." He nodded. "I won't pry further."

"Un. Thank you."

It was hard to overstate the gratitude of Royalty. When she and Yui had arrived, a small suite of apartments had already been made ready for them, wood paneled and richly appointed, overlooking the eastern gardens. A half hour of examination one evening by mother and daughter had revealed the hidden doors and double locks in the walls, no doubt rooms could be opened or closed off at need to create arrangements suitable to each guests status.

Asuna had warranted a large bedroom, a sitting room, bath, and a smaller room set aside for Yui with a child's cot, desk, and chest of drawers. Although it had worked out that the two of them shared the large feather bed.

Yui sat dressed in a nightshirt, her legs dangling off the edge of the mattress as her mother combed her ink hair until it flowed like silk. Asuna lost herself in the repetition of motion and almost, but not quite, forgot her troubles.

"So beautiful." She murmured. "Same black as your father's . . . Yui-chan?"

"Huh?" Yui looked up from a book spread in her lap."

"I hope it isn't insensitive, but I've been meaning to ask about your appearance . . ."

"You mean my physical similarity to you and Papa." The little girl cut to the point like a well honed knife.

Asuna nodded, there was no point dancing around it with her. "You know it would never change how we feel about you, I'm just curious if it was . . ."

"A coincidence?"

"U-Un."

Yui silently closed her book, curling her fingers around the spine as it sat in her lap. Her eyes set about blinking as she seemed to think carefully on the question.

"Within the intentions of the SAO design document, the MHC-AI was to assume whatever form was deemed most suitable to provide care for each patient."

"So when you approached Kirito-kun and I . . ."

"I combined your appearance data, adjusted for age." Yui admitted, adding quickly. "But I didn't do it to deceive either of you. It was something I did . . . by instinct . . . uh?"

Asuna put her arms around her adoptive daughter and squeezed her gently. "I know, Yui-chan . . . So . . . Does that mean that you're related to us? Like by blood?"

Another long silence, another blinking fit, Yui's features screwed up thoughtfully. "Papa is a Spriggan, and Mama is a Maeve, but I'm still a nav pixie. Since these bodies are physical existences, they must function according to natural laws of biology. So I don't . . . Think so . . ." There was the faintest hint of disappointment.

"Hmm." Asuna closed her eyes, breathing in the scent of Yui's hair. "Well, that doesn't really matter, Yui-chan. Like I said, it doesn't change that we are family."

"Promise?"

"Mm promise."

"Mama?"

"Hmm?"

"When are you going to stop being mad at Papa?"

Asuna sighed, her embrace loosening as she leaned back to look into Yui's dark thoughtful eyes. She might not have shared their blood, but the little girl in her arms was like them in more than appearance. She'd probably been holding in that question since the day they'd left Arrun.

"Would it make you sad if I didn't?"

Yui's eyes widened and she nodded gravely.

"Even though, no matter what, neither of us would stop loving you?"

Nod again.

The Maeve smiled and shook her head. "I'm not mad at K-azuto . . . exactly. I'm just . . . angry."

How could she explain this to Yui? No matter how clever or insightful she was, her daughter didn't know what it was like to grow up in a cold home. To have so little faith in herself, that she was resigned to living whatever life others decided for her.

Her education.

Her profession.

Her husband . . .

All of it neatly arranged. She'd been in a cage long before Sugou had put her there, or before she'd been caught up as collateral in the fixations of Kayaba Akihiko. But in Aincrad, for a while at least, she'd thought to walk a path that was different, that she had decided upon. And to walk it with someone else, someone she had chosen, who had chosen to walk it with her. She'd thought Kazuto felt the same way.

That maybe he could even teach her how to live.

'Did I make a mistake?'

She'd known he was lying, but she'd wanted to believe him so badly. She'd gone along with it until the truth was staring her in the face. She hadn't thought the betrayal would feel so bad, when she was part of it. And then when she'd confronted him . . . Trying to tell her what it meant, trying to tell her what to do and how to feel, trying to . . .

"Mama? Mama, your vitals are elevating. Mama, are you thinking about . . ."

"What did you say, Yui?" Asuna whispered.

Yui hesitated, "I-I said . . ."

Asuna's lips trembled until she bit them still. She took Yui firmly by the shoulders and looked her squarely in the eyes. "Kirito is nothing like Noboyuki Sugou!" Her grip tightened. "They are nothing alike!"

Then, realizing what she had done, the Maeve's grip on her daughter loosened and Yui curled up, hugging her legs to her chest. "Yui . . . Yui-chan I'm sorry, please don't be scared. I . . . I don't what I was thinking . . ."

"Thinking something you've tried really hard not to think." The little girl answered quietly. "I'm sorry . . . I thought you were . . ."

"No." Asuna shook her head. "You don't need to be sorry, Yui-chan. Maybe I haven't faced it. Maybe that's why I'm still angry."

"Do you think you'll talk to Papa about it."

"I might." Asuna said.

"Soon?"

The Maeve reached around and gently plucked the book from her daughter's lap. Reading the title she said, "Is this one of the books you packed? Hasn't Emily been teaching you Tristin?"

"Un." Yui nodded. "But Klein-san said I should definitely read this one to 'understand what it's about'. I'm not sure I understand what 'it' is though."

"Can I try reading it to you?"

A nod, and then the two of the climbed up onto the bed and made themselves comfortable, Yui nestling in the crook of her mother's arm as Asuna thumbed the book open to the first page.

"Now I've never read this before." She warned. "So you might have to explain some things to me."

"Mm!"

Then . . .

"In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit." Asuna commenced. Didn't dwarves live underground? Dwarves, and and she supposed Gnomes too. And Imps, though Domeeska was built into a natural cavern. Oh well . . . "Not a nasty, dirty, wet hole, filled with the ends of worms and an oozy smell, nor yet a dry, bare, sandy hole with nothing in it to sit down on or to eat: it was a hobbit-hole, and that means comfort . . . "

She read on, on and on, falling into a rhythm the same as with the combing of hair until, after a particular tricky part where she had to guess at the tune being sung by the troop of dwarves. The theme of the lyrics was melancholy though, so she tried to think back to something she'd heard in her grandparent's home, on the radio, while her grandmother cooked, the steam rising off the stock pot thickening the air until . . .

"Yui-chan?" Asuna whispered. The dark haired little girl didn't stir, even when Asuna untangled herself and carefully tucked her in.

The clock on the wall was still a half hour to midnight when the Maeve quickly shirked off her night gown and pulled on a loose blouse and slacks. She'd worn them every morning when she met Caramella for yoga, but tonight they were put to a different purpose. There was a pair of sentries standing at the end of the hall, women, musketeers of the Princess' personal guard, Asuna told them to watch the door and that she would be in the garden.

And that was how she had gotten here . . . Progressively running away until the only thing that gave her any sense of control was the hilt of the foil in her hand.

Hit.

Hit.

Hit.

'Off balance.' A foot slipped.

Hit.

Hit.

'Too slow.' A ring missed.

Hit.

'Hesitated.'

'Don't doubt!'

"My, I thought my daughter's musketeers were the only ones so diligent."

Asuna lowered her rapier, and wiped the sweat off her brow with her blouse sleeve. Lowering the foil she turned and quickly bowed as she confirmed the identity of the speaker. "Majesty-sama."

"Please, just Marianne." Queen Marianne smiled. "You are my subject, but you are also the dearest of friends to my nephew, Lady Asuna."

"Please, just Asuna." The Maeve shook her head. "Lady . . . doesn't mean anything to me really." Wales had started it, addressing her like so, and she'd never quite been able to stamp it out. "And Sir Hammond." She nodded to the knight shadowing the monarch.

"I do insist on the Sir," Hammond growled softly, "I had to work very hard to earn it."

Asuna truly felt the smile she gave. She'd always thought Knights were supposed to be dour and dutiful soldiers. It was good to see they could have a sense of humor too.

"Un, Sir Hammond. But I don't think you're here to see me, are you?"

"This is but a happy accident." Marianne answered. "I like to walk the grounds when my mind is restless."

"That must happen a lot recently." Asuna lamented. "It's because of us, isn't it?"

"You Faeries?" Marianne asked thoughtfully. "Well, yes. Though not as much as you might think. The truth is that Tristain was headed for troubled times before we ever met you. If anything, it is our troubles that have fallen in to your laps."

"It didn't feel that way tonight." The late night air, and the drying sweat elicited a shiver in the Maeve. Without prompting, Sir Hammond offered his cloak.

"That is the nobility." Marianne dismissed. "Never letting an opportunity go to waste. Though it was certainly worse than it needed to be. King James may have ruled with a heavy hand, but I . . . have been lax in my duties as monarch. Lord Richmond is straining to be given oversight of the Counties of ALfheim. He claims this business with Lord Mortimer as grounds."

"Is it?" Asuna asked.

"Mazarin doesn't think so." Marianne answered. "He may conduct his own investigation, independently, but for now it remains an internal affair."

"I see." Was all the Maeve could think to say. "I've heard the regent is a very capable man. If he thinks so, it must be true."

"Very capable, and far better suited to strife. That man, sleeps like only the truly just or the unrepentantly damned can manage. But I think you and I are of a more similar temperament." The Queen's eyes traced a line to the foil, forgotten in Asuna's hand.

"Ah." The Maeve had to stop herself from trying to <<dismiss>> it to inventory and settled for hiding it behind her back. "I suppose, by Tristain's standards, it's not appropriate for a girl."

"For my daughter's guards we made an exception. In fact, if you are looking for a challenge, hunt down their lieutenant." The Queen's smile turned blunt. "I hear she fights dirty."

"I taught her well." Sir Hammond grunted.

The Queen surveyed their surroundings. "I have always liked this garden. Rupert and I used to walk it together. I find myself thinking about him more recently, first Henrietta growing into a young woman, and then losing James and his sons."

"Maje . . . Marriane?"

"Yes?"

"If it's alright to ask, what was your husband like? He was Wales' uncle wasn't he? Were they similar?"

"Hmm . . . Wales and Rupert? My husband was more like his brother, who I believe you sat in council with, so you must know his temperament. Wales takes much more after his mother."

Asuna smiled sheepishly, she didn't think there was a reply that wouldn't get her in trouble.

"When we were to be married, and he learned he would be Prince Consort and not King in his own right, oh how he raged at that. You'd have thought he was a child denied a second helping of dessert. What is it?"

"I'm surprised you'd tell me all of this." Asuna shook her head. "I'm only Wales' friend."

"Perhaps it's because I've so few to tell it to." Marianne replied.

"Henrietta really seems to love her father, the way she describes him . . ."

"Little girls always see their father as their hero. But it's also true that Rupert didn't stay that angry young man. I think being away from Londinium Court was good for him. Or maybe he simply grew up. Or it might be that a friend of mine broke his nose."

Then a question occurred, asked obliquely. "Marianne, your marriage was arranged, right?"

The Queen nodded, it probably didn't even occur to her to think it strange.

"Did you . . . love your husband?"

The Queen closed her eyes, breathing in the night air, she looked up at the moons that now hung high in the sky, the blue maiden and her red lover, like the mural in the playroom.

"I did, not at first, but very much by the end."

Anxiously licking her lips, her mouth was dry. "What . . . did that feel like?"

"To be in love?"

Asuna nodded.

"At first, like a mountain river running swift and turbulent." Marianne answered. "Frantic and full of energy. But then, as it went on and widened, though it seemed placid on the surface, the currents ran powerful and deep. Deep enough to endure the good and the bad." The Queen tilted her head. "Is this what has been bothering you, young troubles?"

"How did you know, that I was bothered I mean?"

"Because Wales frets over you like family. And Henrietta frets over him. And I fret over her."

"It's just . . . We been through bad times before." Asuna shivered, not from the cold. "Battles and nearly losing each other, but this is different . . ."

Marianne stepped close and took her hands, smiling kindly. "Oh child . . . Those were good times."

"What?"

"Those were the good times, because you were strong for each other. The bad times will be when you, both of you, are at your worst. All the small, petty, ugly little things that will make you wonder if anything you felt before was real." Marianne smiled as she swept back a loose strand of Asuna's hair. "Did you really think it would alway be a fairytale?"

"I think . . . I'm scared that it was." That what she'd felt could only exist within that fantastical castle, and that all the little pieces of living would slowly chip away at it. "How do I know?"

"I don't think I know either. I'm not sure it's knowable until it's over, one way or another." The Queen answered. "I'm sorry."

"Your highness." Sir Hammond murmured.

She nodded. "I'm sorry, the rest of my guards will be getting anxious soon. The price of privacy I'm afraid." She turned, and then paused. "You know, I haven't believed in one true loves in a very long time. But I do still believe in true love. Good night, Asuna."

"Good night." The Faerie watched as the monarch vanished among the hedges, her shadow following closed behind.

The rings that had witnessed it all, continued to spin silently.
___________________________________

"Here you go, Sakuya-sama." A delicate plate and teacup were set down on the edge of a table beside a well stuffed chair.

"Thank you, Recon." The Sylph Lord closed the book in her lap and carefully raised the cup to her nostrils, breathing in the aroma. "<<Calm Camomile>>?" She asked aloud.

The lime haired boy who had become one of her youngest aids nodded nervously. "I . . . Thought you'd want something to settle your nerves tonight, My Lady."

"Hmm." The Sylph Lord closed her eyes. "I thought Saito-sensei said that this has sedative properties." Something to consider, a controlled substance list.

"Only if you distill it into a sleeping drot." Recon answered quickly. "Just steeping it, the effect is much less."

"I see." Sakuya declined to ask how a nice boy like Recon had learned something like that. "Is there anything else?"

"Not really." Recon waved dismissively, "I was just wondering what you were reading tonight."

"Oh this?" She petted the book's cover, beautiful red leather lettering leafed in gold, she hadn't owned anything so fine on Earth. "European history. Part of my thesis actually." Not that it meant anything anymore. "I had the ebook loaded on the shelf in my player home, so it made the trip with us." And then Novair had arranged to have her library shipped to Arrun and organized in the governor's study.

She missed the convenience of her tablet, but no eye strain was nice. She could have curled up in this room and lost herself in a book if only the world would let her.

"Uhm, sorry for asking, but is that really useful here?" Recon averted his eyes shyly.

Sakuya smiled, "Perhaps not. But even if the details are different, I think the lessons are the same. Now, it's late, and you look tired, you should go get some rest."

"Not as tired as you, Sakuya-sama . . . uhm . . ."

"Bed." Sakuya rose and gently guided Recon to the door. "I can stay up late because I have all of you to help me."

Recon hesitated, then nodded, smiling. "G-Goodnight, Sakuya-sama." He bowed before departing. Such an earnest young man, the Sylph Lord thought as she shut the door and stepped over to the window. Her smile slowly faded.

The Governor's mansion had remained lit well into the night, its Sylph guards alert but keeping a low profile. A tension had settled over Arrun as the Faeries who had witnessed the Lords' interview relayed what they had heard to those who had not.

The worst thing that could happen had already happened. By morning, who knew what people would think of the Lords. Not for the first time she wondered, there had to be someone, anyone, more suited and qualified to lead than them.

She and Alicia were grad students, Thinker was a journalist, and who even knew what Mortimer really was. Sakuya rubbed at the bridge of her nose until a knock sounded at the door.

Recon again?

"Come in."

"Milady, I hope I'm not intruding I . . ." Ephi stopped as he stepped through the door."

"Is something wrong?"

"I . . . came to apologize, Milady." Ephi shut the door quietly. "You look . . . very lovely tonight."

'Very Lovely Tonight?' Sakuya mouthed the words silently. She caught her reflection in the darkest part of the window glass. 'Oh right . . .' A beautiful shape draped in silk.

It wasn't that the negligee was particularly risque, or else Recon would have been a blubbering mess, but Ephi certainly wasn't used to it.

"You . . . wear it well." He offered, standing at attention, eyes fixed on a point above her head.

Sakuya shook her head and smiled. "You're sorry that I look lovely?" She teased gently. Not very Lordly, but after everything, it felt good to be a little playful, a little flirtatious. When was the last time she'd been able to do that? Rainbow Valley?

"About the advice I gave you." Ephi corrected. "If you had not listened to me about Mortimer, then what happened on stage might have been averted."

"I appreciate the humility. But that was not your fault." Sakuya shook her head. "I mused about forcing his hand, but you were right, it had to come from Mortimer. All you did was convince me to do what I already thought right."

"And what happened after . . ."

Sakuya nodded as it replayed in her mind's eye. Mortimer leaving the stage, the cries of the audience chasing him. It had been everything she and Thinker could do to settle them all down. But the night had been over after that, the best they could manage was to get people to disperse, mostly, peacefully.

As she'd departed, her retinue in tow, the Sylph Lord hadn't known whose neck she wanted to wring more. Mortimer's or Rio's.

"Sakuya!"

That would do, she thought as she rounded to find Mortimer and his attending guards approaching across the tower atrium. A half dozen armored soldiers flanking on all side, as if even on the move, the Salamander carried fortifications with him.

"I need to speak with you . . ." Mortimer began.

"No!" She spat. "You had a chance to come to me. Now you need to listen!"

"I made a mistake." Mortimer hissed under his breath. "I admit that now, Sakuya, but we need to find out how Rio knew my association with Rip Jack."

The Sylph Lord shook her head. "There's a thousand ways he could know that. Morgiana knew that."

"Morgiana is the reigning Spriggan Lord. And the one who banished him."

"He has lots of friends, Mortimer, if you haven't noticed." Of every Faerie race. Every faction had its renegades. Most of them had been repatriated after the Transition, but the unhappy had found the Sylph to be their champion. "One of them must have known." It was probably how he'd found out about the investigation as well. The Watch wasn't an intelligence service, it was barely a police force. They were lucky it didn't leak like a sieve.

"But are we sure?"

Sakuya rubbed the bridge of her nose. "What are you saying?"

"Rio staged this."

"Obviously."

"But wasn't it all still too convenient?"

Sakuya paused as she followed Mortimer's likely train of thought. "You think he knows more than just your association with Rip Jack."

"Tonight worked out in his favor, not ours." The Salamander murmured.

"That's insane, Mortimer. Besides, what would you do, detain him until he talks?" Sakuya had paled as she saw the hard look in his eyes. "Do you know what you're saying?!"

"I am looking out for . . ."

"You're looking out for yourself!" Rio was right about that much. "We will talk about this tomorrow, in council with the other Lords. Don't you even think about making things worse until then . . ."

"Aaah, Sakuya and Mortimer-sama, my favorite Lords!" Sakuya's skin crawled as her second wish was granted. Rio strode at the lead of a procession, the expression of triumph on his face almost blinding."Do tell, are you conspiring against me?"

"Do not give yourself too much credit, Rio-san." Sakuya smiled venomously. "I don't need to conspire to handle you."

"Bold words, Sakuya." Rio tossed his head back and laughed. "But you are right, the credit of course belongs to all the ABC, not just myself." The cheers of Faeries behind him, all different race, Sylph and Salamander, Spriggan and Gnome, filled the air. "You see, we support each other, Sakuya. Unlike Lords such as you and Mortimer."

"My Lord has always looked out for the Salamanders!" A short, silver haired woman adorned in light plate stepped out from beside Mortimer. Her eyes were focused on Rio as her hand touched the hilt of her short sword. A pair of gnomes flanking Rio, unarmed, but big, cracked fists like shovels.

"Oh screw Mortimer!" Someone behind Rio shouted.

"Yeah! What did he ever do for us? Brand us outcasts that's what!"

"But you were all granted the opportunity to return." Sakuya reasoned. "It was never our intention to wrong you."

"We know that, Sakuya-sama!" A slip of a Sylph girl peered over Rio's shoulder. "We know that you've tried to make it right. But that doesn't mean it's been good enough."

"I . . ." Sakuya began.

"My guild was trapped for a week underground, surrounded by monsters outside the town gaits. You say you're our Lord, but you didn't come for us!"

"The negotiations weren't completed." Sakuya defended. "We didn't have the manpower, we had to prioritize . . ."

"Prioritize yourselves." Rio finished. "Meanwhile, these people had to save themselves. And they didn't always save everyone."

"I lost a friend because of you bastards playing Lords!" One voice called out.

"I have to work in someone else's shop because you gave mine to some asshole Count!"

More angry shouts, more resentment, Sakuya fell silent. Better to say nothing than to sound weak.

Rio raised a hand, silencing his followers. "Well, we'll see how you do in the elections."

Mortimer snorted, "I doubt Sakuya has anything to worry about from you, Rio-san. You may have many followers, but how many of them are eligible to vote in Sylvain?"

"You . . ." Rio began.

"Enough, both of you!" Sakuya snapped. "There's been enough bad blood tonight. Mortimer, I will see you tomorrow."

"Sakuya!" Mortimer strode after her, trying to reach past Ephi as the guard intervened. "Gyaah!"

"Mortimer-sama!" Mortimer's own guards rushed to defend their Lord as he staggered back, hissing and clutching his hand. A thin line of crimson ran like water and dripped to the floor.

"Forgive me, Mortimer-sama" Ephi bowed. "It was this ring." He pointed to an insectile ornament on his index finger, glittering with fresh blood. "It has a perception charm, but I'm afraid it's quite sharp as well. Please, accept my apologies, but I'm afraid Milady will still not speak to you further tonight."

Mortimer waved him off angrily as he was helped by his guards. Sakuya turned again to leave . . .

"Walking away from your fellow Lord, huh?" Rio called after her. "What's the matter, he can't scratch your itch?"

Sakuya spun on her heel, putting all of her momentum through her shoulder as her hand curled into a fist. As punches went, it wasn't a bad one, though she was better by far with a weapon. It did the job well enough, sending Rio stumbling back into his entourage while spitting blood from a split lip. The Sylph Lord bit off a curse as she felt her knuckles nick against his teeth.

The Watch had intervened then, breaking things up before they became any worse. Sakuya had cursed herself the rest of the night.

"I'm sure plenty of Sylphs will love that you punched him." Ephi observed.

"And plenty will hate that I punched him." Sakuya replied, looking out again over the city. "And plenty more will hear that I punched him, but not hear why . . . He's not wrong, you know."

"Rio is a jealous little man, Milady." Ephi said solemnly. "He is unworthy to be compared to a true Sylph such as yourself."

"Oh he's an asshole." The Sylph Lord agreed. "But he's tapped into something real, Ephi-san. Those people have grievances . . . " And while the Lords ensured that every Faerie was provided with food and shelter, it wasn't enough for some to thrive while others merely survived.

They were all in mortal peril . . . But while Sakuya met in council with monarchs and generals, attended by her own staff, and cradled in the fineries of high nobility, they were left alone, anonymous, to wonder and to fear.

"All because I won a popularity contest."

"Do not say such things, Sakuya-sama." Ephi growled. "What matters is not how you came to be our Lord, but that you are worhty of it now. Do not allow yourself to be contaminated by these small minds who cannot evolve . . ."

"Not everyone adapts so easily, Ephi-san." Sakuya replied, and then sighing, "I don't know, I'd put everyone back where they belong if only I could. You must miss it."

"Milady?"

"Your old life." Where they could be safe and put these problems aside. None of them had asked for this.

"There is something else, Sakuya-sama."

"Oh?" She turned away from the window and bid him continue.

"Mortimer-sama may not have been wrong about Rio . . ."

Sakuya paused, her features set in contemplation. "No, he may not have been wrong at all. But I will not move against one of our own without proof. Rio is an asshole, but he's our asshole, and well within his rights"

"Even so, I would like your permission to keep track of his whereabouts." The Guard said. "Nothing that would draw suspicion, and nothing that is not already public knowledge. In fact, I'm sure Rio already suspects it of us.."

"Hmm." Sakuya thought on it. "Only his whereabouts?"

Ephi nodded, then added, "It may be prudent, Sakuya-sama, in case Mortimer-sama has the idea to do more than just observe."

"Agreed . . . If the rest of the Lords consent. If that's all then, Ephi-san, it's getting late for me." And it would be another long day tomorrow.

"Of course, Milady."

Then as he stepped out the door. "By the way . . ."

"Sakuya-sama?"

Green eyes darted up and down his trim physique. She didn't know quite why, but the slight imperfection of his nose was really quite charming. "You wear it well yourself." She added a little flourish, a pop of her shoulders that caused her bossom to move, as she closed the door with a smile.

Only then did she savor the last look on his face, pumping her fist.

'Still got it!'
 
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Halkegenia Online v2.1 – Chapter 8

As a young girl, Agnes had arrived in Tristania, eyes full of hate, and heart full of an unquenchable desire to visit righteous vengeance upon those who had taken everything from her. She had thought nothing could turn her from her course, until she had stepped through the Southern Gates and been brought to her knees by the obscene stench. It had hit her like a mace.

The product of tanners, and butchers, and alchemists, and the thousands upon thousands of people who lived in the capital and whose waste was washed out into the streets each day to flow, and ooze, and bubble its way down the gutters to the Scheldt.

By tremendous effort, the odor was almost entirely absent from the Palace Grounds, and in the better kept districts it was something one could almost grow to tolerate. But there was not a cubic mail in the Quarter La Villains that was left untouched by the Miasma.

Agnes had seen experienced battle mages, men who had served on corpse burning duty on days old battlefields, fall to the ground and vomit after breathing deeply in a putrid alleyway on a hot summer day.

Which was probably why nobody had noticed before now, she thought as she held a handkerchief, soaked in perfume, over her nose.

"The body has been here at least three days judging by the decay." A raven haired woman noted clinically as she prodded at bloat ripened flesh with the tip of a knife.

There were six of them brought here by the discovery, four crammed into the tiny room, and two more standing watch outside. The members of her Highness Musket Squadron wore the clothes of simple working women, loosely fitted linen blouses and long skirts that would not be out of place anywhere in Tristania in the middle of the day. But in semi-private, they loosened some, and from time to time, a hand touched on a hidden pistol grip, or a sword hilt, a few links of a mail shirt peeking out from their buttoned collars.

"Ambush?" The Lieutenant asked.

"Looks more like an execution, Sir." Frida answered, waving to a dry brown stain of blood that had spread from the cleanly slit throat down the front of the victim's blouse. She stood and wiped her knife clean.

"Tortured and then executed." Agnes corrected as she nudged a wrist where the mottled pattern of bindings tied too tight for too long were still apparent. "Beaten." She nodded at the crusted blood around his nose and his mouth, and what might have been bruises. "Check his teeth, I expect a few are freshly missing."

She looked around the small room. A narrow bed, small writing desk, wardrobe, and a simple pantry of dried foods that would keep even in the Capital's miserable summers. There was a well in the courtyard nearby. He wouldn't have to go far or risk exposing himself. "This was his safe house." One that even Agnes hadn't known about.

Frida's examination uncovered exactly what the Lieutenant had been expecting.

"Damn them to hell." Agnes hissed. Roul had been one of her best informants and this was no coincidence. The man had debs, but not the kind he'd be made an example of like this.

"Could they have gotten anything out of him?" Frida wondered out loud.

Agnes shook her head. "All contacts are compartmentalized and have no knowledge of each other." They could have tortured him all they liked and they still wouldn't have learned anything.

But even so . . .

How had they learned of this place? Tailed him? Beaten it out of him before bringing him here to finish the job?

"Maybe he was getting too close, Sir?" The Sergeant suggested. "Drew the wrong sort of attention?"

"Maybe." Agnes agreed reluctantly. But too close to what? "Roul was always reluctant to take risks. But he was agitated last time we met, deathly afraid of . . . something . . ."

"What?"

Agnes bit her lip. "He wouldn't tell me. Like he was afraid I would act on it and reveal him. He never trusted I would keep him safe." She shrugged. "He was right in the end . . . I suppose. This place, they either knew about it or tortured it out of him. But I knew Roul for long enough. I want this room stripped to the walls and floorboards. Every letter, article of clothing, even the pantry. Take the furniture apart if you have to."

"Yes, Sir." Frida clenched a fist over her chest in salute and started apportioning responsibility to her squad. Agnes turned to leave, stopping for a moment to kneel beside poor Roul. The stench of his decaying carcass was briefly forgotten then as she met the clouded sightless eyes.

Somehow, he looked bewildered.

"I'm sorry." She decided to say. "For a mage, you were decent enough." Then standing. "I'll be heading out now, I have to make the rounds before sunset." This could have been bad luck, or it could be the first of many, she couldn't leave her network exposed.

But before that, stepping out of doors, she found herself looking out over the slanting rooftops of the capital, rolling hills of haphazard shingles and thatch, infested by birds and rodents, all the way to the river packed with barges, before picking up again on the far side of the Scheldt in a far more regal pattern of blue tile.

Someone was waiting for her just beyond the sentries. Agnes' nose wrinkled in a way that even the scent of the city could no longer do.

Form did not dictate character. Agnes had learned that lesson painfully when she was still very young. But there were certain roles that almost seemed to erode the form. Such was the City's dead collectors.

From an already short stature he was stooped over, as if the weight of wrestling corpses had permanently deformed him. But his arms were stout, and the muscles of his neck thick from the work that kept him straining all day. He smiled when he saw the Lieutenant, haphazard features stretching the pale skin of his face.

"You, I assume you are the one who found him like this?" Agnes asked as she approached.

"Ah yes, ah yes." The dead collector nodded vigorously before extracting something from his pocket. "I found this near him, ah yes, slipped under the writing desk, it seemed right to involve the authorities then, ah yes."

A sealed letter, though the wax showed signs of tampering. "You opened this?"

The ugly little man's eyes widened. "Not knowing what it was, ah yes! But once I saw the contents . . ."

"And once you saw this, you did nothing more in the room until we arrived?"

"Ah . . ."

"Yes." Agnes concluded, opening the envelope and scanning its contents. "And how, pray tell, did you know that your services were required?" The smell aside, masked by the city, wouldn't have been enough. Rouls little safe room was tucked away in a ramshackle addition atop a ramshackle tenement. She doubted anyone much came up here.

"Ah . . . I suspected, yes. Mademoiselle."

"Suspected?"

"Rumor, Mademoiselle. People say a man rented out that room, but hadn't seen him of late ah yes. And one other thing, said they'd seen something up on the roof three nights past."

"Something?"

In answer the man extended a hand. Agnes thought to deprive him of it, but instead slapped a silver piece into his palm. "Make sure I get my money's worth."

"Ah yes, I remember now." The dead collector answered, flashing teeth that were too perfect, at odds with his misshapen self. "Rumors of a vampire. One of the lesser ones, you know. I hear they nest in cities don't they? Occurred to me if something like a vampire were around, my services might be needed ah yes, so I came to investigate, round midday, yes."

Agnes grimaced. It had been a while since her anthropology lessons but she did remember this much. Vampires were not such messy eaters. Nor did they waste what they killed.

"A vampire?"

"That's what they say, ah yes. Tall, thin, dark . . . wings." He shrugged. "If that's what they say they saw, that's what they say they saw, ah yes?"

"Ah . . . Yes . . ." Agnes bit at her thumb thoughtfully. "I must be going." As she left, Agnes felt the dead collector's eyes following her and realized what had been so amiss.

Smiling with a mouth full of dead men's teeth.
________________________________________

It was early evening, and the sky above the Capital was beginning to fade. Merchants and Craftsmen, weary from their work and looking for diversion, spilled onto the streets. As the business of day came to an end, the business of the night was just beginning.

Rumor had spread at the speed of gossip. Spilling across the capital, through the back streets and the main, spoken by both commoner and mage.

There was a Faerie working in the Capital.

As a serving girl.

In an inn!

What was she doing in the Capital of all places?

Who knew!

Was she strange?

Yes.

Was she beautiful?

Of course!

Which Inn? Which shop?!

The floor was crowded that night. It seemed like every man in the Capital wanted to see for themselves, the Faerie Woman with cat's ears and tail. In their urgency, many were caught by surprise when they began to notice the other changes that had taken place.

Wine was of course still available, all of the vintages that they had come to trust as old friends. But then, there had been the strangest of things.

Beer!

That Germanian swill?!

Why, no proper Tristanian would ever be found drinking such garbage! Though admittedly, the taste was not so utterly detestable as some had been led to believe and it went rather well with the dark, rich breads and sausage that were being offered by the kitchen that night.

And then there had been the tea.

Tea? In their shop?!

Tea had no business in a place like this!

What was needed was alcohol, proper drink with which to enjoy the girls and unwind after a hard day. But the scent was quite nice, and some of the new customers, the quieter, more scholarly fellows that were leaving as the night began, seemed to enjoy that sort of thing.

But, as the evening progressed, the tea gave way as it should to wine, and the delicate tea cups and coasters were returned behind the counter to be replaced by bottles and tankards. The girls, friendly as ever.

And through it all, moved the inn's namesake, shrouded in maid's attire, moving lightly as air. She was radiant, not just beautiful, but beautifully alive, all vibrant tawny skin and supple limbs. It seemed true what they said, that Faeries were made of magic.

Plates clanked as the Faerie woman easily let four orders slide from her arms with nary a rattle. "That's two omelets, four pork sausages, and two loafs of bread, will that be all . . ." She tilted her head. "Meeeeowster?"

"Y-yes, ah thank you . . . Miss . . . I mean KoKo." The man paying for it all spluttered, face going red. "But also, perhaps we could ah . . . uhm . . ." The bigger man at his side gave the poor young fellow a jab, chuckling with the casual meanness of a mellow drunk.

"Another bottle of wine?" KoKo held her smile.

She accepted the spent bottle and returned to the counter, humming happily to herself. Why not? She had every reason to be pleased. On the board set behind the counter, it was shown that over the past three days she was easily in leading place.

What was surprising was who had overtaken the second position.

"A bottle of our Tarbes wine for you, Master."

The girl gave a small courtesy before her own client, a massive blacksmith still smelling of soot and oil as he leaned over the table, what was visible of his face behind his beard was already turned ruddy. Compared to him, the girl was nothing but a porcelain doll.

"Ah, my favorite, you knew!" He laughed, slapping his hand against his knee. "What are you waiting for mein Petite Mademoiselle? Sit here so I can enjoy the company!"

The girl did as he asked, setting herself delicately on his knee, pouring his drink, and listening with small nods of her head and soft murmurs of agreement as she was told of his day, the horridly high prices he was being gouged for on raw iron, and the 'wealthy bastard' who had come in expecting miracles while wanting to pay almost nothing.

"I tell you, the working mage has it hard these days. War coming to the country, troop levies, tax increases, trades all a mess right now while the merchants get that sorted out. Where'm I to get iron if not from Germania? What about coal for the furnaces eh? I'm not a triangle by thunder! Can't fire'm all day on my own."

"Master is truly in hard straits." The girl said with sympathy. "But this is a place to be happy.." She smiled serenely. "So be happy and enjoy what life has given you."

"Enjoy?" The man nodded. "Enjoy!" He barked, grabbing the remainder of the bottle and swallowing it in deep gulps. Half rising, he took a deep breath. "Live for today Lads, for we might wake up dead! God save the Queen!" He laughed deeply, and then, as if a candle had been blown out, crashed back into his seat before doing a faceplant into his empty dinner plate.

The other customers and servers fell silent and stared only long enough to hear his snoring before returning to their own merriment. Mademoiselle arrived, giving the man a small pat on the cheek before slipping an arm beneath the burly smith's armpit and hoisting him into a carry.

The girl turned back to clear the table and pocket her reward, then smiled, Mademoiselle had mentioned that Franz was always a generous tipper.

"Treis bien!" Scarron cried as he clapped his hands together close to his cheek. "Our Petite Louise has come into her own, I'm so proud!"

"You can say that again." Jessica nodded.

"See how the traditions of our splendid shop have molded even this difficult child into another Charming Faerie?!" Scarron proclaimed perhaps a little too proudly, and much too loudly.

His daughter gave him the slightest narrowing of eyes. "And it doesn't have anything to do with Gimi and I giving her pointers? Or Miss KoKo taking her under her wing?" The flamboyant innkeeper spluttered.

Louise had to try hard not to let her serene smile turn too prideful as she overheard. She had taken Koko's advice to heart, and in doing, Jessica and the others had become her saving grace. Once they'd realized how oblivious she was, of what to do and how to behave, everything had begun to turn around as they taught her what they had assumed was only natural.

That too had taken some getting used to. If this were the academy, every one of these girls would be tacitly acknowledged as her competition. If they couldn't be overcome, they'd have to be knocked down. They'd think the same of her too.

But no, that was not how things were done here. They competed, but they competed against themselves. And Scarron allowed neither feud nor grudge beneath his roof.

Her mother would say not to trust it. According to the Duchess, the only one she could rely upon was herself. But she had to admit, it made the hard work a good deal more fun.

"Louise, Koko needs you for that." Gimi called as she bustled by, wine bottles in hand.

"Coming!"

"Lookin good tonight, Louise." Jessica dodged her, arms full of soiled plates bound for the kitchen.

"You too. And table twelve is going to run out of garum soon. I'd get it, but I have to do that!"

"Got it!"

Cheers rose up from the crowd as she and KoKo bumped hips and spun around each other, placing index fingers together before their lips and drawing whiskers in the air.

"Marry me Miss KoKo!" One of the customers, a slender nobleman, called out as he stood tipsily atop his seat.

"Shut up Hansen, you're already married!"

Twisting lithely, KoKo turned about and blew the man a kiss.

"Aye, if you can call it marriage!" The laughter bubbled up around him as his friends helped him back into his seat.

"Oy, Miss KoKo!" A harsh bark came from the back of the room, loud and clear enough that it briefly drew everyone's attention to a big ape of a man whose very visage made Louise want to grimace.

Like Franz the blacksmith, Renee was a mountain of a man, but compared to the smith's solid girth, he was still lean, and young, and quite obviously a good deal meaner. But he tipped well, very well, and kept his hands to himself well enough. It was other ways that he found to harass.

Upon hearing about Renee's exploits, KoKo had likened him to a troll though Louise didn't think he was quite that big, and he certainly wouldn't turn to stone in the sun, unfortunately.

"Nyah?" KoKo turned, tilting her head mischievously as the crowd leaned back to form a path between her and the table where Renee sat, drinking back a bottle of wine with his meal.

Renee let out a satisfied exhalation before smiling. "Now, now, KoKo, haven't you been working hard? You must be getting hungry."

Everyone watched to see where the conversation was going, even Louise, though, eying the plate, she was shamefully certain she knew. Damn spending so much time around Kirche!"

"Neh, I'm a bit peckish." Koko blinked innocently.

"Well then my Dear KoKo." Renee hefted a swollen pork sausage from his plate. "Why don't you come here and enjoy it?" A small flick of the wrist sent the sausage wagging back and forth.

Behind the counter, Scarron was already getting ready to act. Louise wrinkled her nose in disgust and a few shouts of protest among the guests were quickly stifled.

"What's the matter?" Renee goaded. "I thought cat's were carnivores."

KoKo's expression remained blank for a moment before a small smile spread across her lips. "My, it certainly is a bit big, wouldn't you say?" KoKo observed the sausage. "I think I'd have a hard time with something that thick and long!" The tension in the room turned to expectation.

"Oh come now Mademoiselle! That is a mark of its fine quality!" Renee laughed lasciviously.

He stopped laughing a moment later as, with a skillful swipe, KoKo batted the sausage out of his hand and into the air where it turned end over end, describing an arc that would have landed back on his plate if the Caits arm hadn't blurred once more, leading with a silver flash.

-Tunk!-

When the hunk of meat struck the plate, it was neatly sliced in two, lengthwise.

KoKo reached out and carefully cleaned grease from her knife on the front of Renee's shirt as the man sat frozen, before grabbing a table knife and skewering one half of the sausage, taking a small bite before replying casually. "You know, I've always found the ones that are more discerning with their meat tend to be a lot better."

The bar broke into roars of laughter at the expense of Franz, now looking ever so slightly emasculated. Louise didn't miss the way that the shy young man that KoKo had served earlier took her aside and pushed another coin into her hand with a warm pat on the back.

"Looks like we're getting shown up again!" Gimi lamented as she bustled past Louise. "Hurry up Louise or we're going to fall behind!"

Louise was just about to follow when a voice at her back caused her to turn. "Interesting, I can't say I don't like her style." Agnes noted as she pulled back the hood of her cloak, expression as severe as ever.

"Ah . . . Ag . . . I mean . . . Sister!" She corrected quickly. "What brings you here at such an hour?" Yes, what did bring her? Wait! Terrance de'Martou! Was he here tonight?!

Agnes gave a small shake of her head as Louise began to look about frantically. "No, that isn't it. I just needed to check in with you two . . ."

"Ah, Mademoiselle!" Scarron cried as he came up to Agnes and Louise. "Wonderful that you would join us this evening! Come, sit, sing, drink, Eat! That is to live is it not?!"

"I'm afraid I can't stay long." Agnes said quickly. "I am merely here to check up on Louise, and to assure father that she is being treated fairly."

Scarron gave a small, indignant snort. "Are you implying, Mademoiselle, that I would treat my waitresses poorly?" Never had Louise seen Scarron look so incenced. He looked, well, he looked like what he was. A very big, very strong, and if he wished, very humorously man.

"Not at all." Agnes backpedaled, that is to say I . . .

"She merely worries for me Mademoiselle." Louise came quickly to the rescue, giving Agnes a small nod to play along. "Can't you understand such sisterly love?" Spoken in a voice so saccharine that Jessica would be proud.

Scarron paused as if mulling this over before his expression transformed once more to one of magnanimous acceptance. "Tres bien! Yes such things are to be cherished mi Petite Louise! Now, go, go on and spend a few minutes with your sister! It is almost time for you and KoKo's break, I shall call her over as well!"

"Thank you, Mademoiselle!" Louise sang as Scarron hurried off.

Agnes watched him go with a bemused expression. "I don't know how you manage to deal with that man."

"He's not as bad as he . . ." Louise said. "I mean, he's much nicer than . . . He's not so bad once you get to . . ." She shrugged helplessly. "KoKo says the world takes all sorts."

Speaking of which. "Agnes-chan, what's up?"

Agnes gestured silently to a secluded table in the far corner. Only once they were seated did the musketeer explain.

"I'm sorry I didn't come around soon." Agnes said as eyed both of them warily. "A man was found murdered. One of my informants."

Louise paled. "M-murdered!" Agnes and KoKo both raised fingers to their lips to silence her.

"Yes." Agnes confirmed. "I'm checking in on assignments to be sure he was the only one."

"Could it have been a coincidence?" KoKo asked cautiously. "You know, maybe he got mugged or something?

"I doubt it, he was a veteran. Not the best battle mage, but he wouldn't have gone easily, not to some street thugs." The musketeer sighed wearily. "I shouldn't need to remind you to stay alert." Agnes looked over her shoulder as if to assure herself that she really was positioned safely in a corner. "Though, you two shouldn't be in any danger so long as your identities remain a secret."

"We might not be." Louise said. "But what about Botan and Tabitha?"

"What about Kirche?" KoKo asked.

"She's too obnoxious to die." Louise dismissed.

"I received a report back from them today." Agnes answered. "Miss Zerbst was able to infiltrate de'Martou's home and ingratiate herself with the men staying there. She and Botan also discovered a large stockpile of contraband beneath the house and an escape tunnel that we believe is being used to come and go from the grounds. We've tentatively marked it as some sort of base of operations."

"Tunnels?" Louise asked.

"Yes. Unfortunately, Miss Zerbst was not able to probe their full extent. They appear to branch off for some distance."

"We wish we had better news." Koko supplied. " But there's been no sign of de'Martou here just yet."

"I know." Agnes said. "Official business took him away from the Capital, but he should be back any day now. Expect him soon." Faerie and Mage had nodded as one before saying their farewells as the night wound down.

"Ah, ahh!" Louise moaned faintly as she sank her feet into the bucket of hot water that KoKo had brought up from the kitchen. She let out a soft sigh of relief as she began to wriggle her toes. Determined as she was, she simply wasn't used to this sort of work. She hadn't the callouses for one.

KoKo only seemed mildly better as she flopped down, bone weary. She stretched, back arching sinuously with a purr of satisfaction and a faint popping of vertebrate.

"Thanks KoKo." Louise said as she leaned back atop her bed, closing her eyes and listening to the night sounds through the open window.

"It's not a problem." The Cait Syth said with a smile. "Believe me, I know that feeling, when I was in high school, some friends and I went hiking in the woods once and I ended up getting really awful blisters because I didn't come prepared." She looked down at her own feet, wiggling her toes curiously. "Heh, I guess now I'm just made of tougher stuff . . ."

Turning over on her side, the Cait woman looked uncharacteristically sober. "Say, Louise-chan?"

"Hmm?"

"Would you mind it if maybe you quit and let me handle the rest of this job."

It was like a slap to the face. "W-what?!"

"Un." KoKo nodded, seemingly speaking to herself. "That would probably be for the best. Louise-chan?"

Louise was now fully upright, leaning over her bed, face well on its way to turning livid. "H-how d-dare you say something like that. Y-You cat!" She tried hard not to stutter, tried even harder not to yell. "I've been doing better, haven't I?"

"Better?" KoKo wondered out loud before shaking her head. "Louise-chan, I'm talking about what Agnes-san told us today. I didn't realize when we started how dangerous this could be. If something happens, I'd feel a lot better if I didn't have to worry about keeping you safe . . ."

"Safe!" Louise snapped, rising to her feet. "I can keep myself safe! I don't need you to . . . toooo . . ." Neglecting the tub of water, Louise nearly fell face first into the frame of KoKo's bed before the Cait caught her deftly. She fell silent as KoKo held her to her chest.

"Careful, Louise!" KoKo said quietly.

Louise pushed away, refusing to look her in the eyes. "It's because I can't protect myself, isn't it?"

"You heard Agnes. Her informant could protect himself. It didn't do him any good. I worry for you."

"And I worry for you too!" Louise said quickly, catching herself only after the words had left her lips.

"That's very sweet of you Louise-chan." KoKo whispered. "I know it's a little different here, but where I'm from, you would still be the child and I would be the adult. I should be the one doing the dangerous stuff, just in case something happens"

"You're not being fair." It most certainly wasn't fair for her to act so nonchalantly with her own life, especially because, because . . . "Don't you have a son to worry about?" KoKo went stiff and the joy vanished from her eyes."I won't let you be the only one in danger." Louise said firmly. "But I'll also be extra careful."

"Extra careful?" KoKo looked contemplative. "If one of us gets caught, there's no reason that it would reveal the other, right?"

Louise frowned. "KoKo, what are you saying?"

"I'm saying." KoKo said. "That if we're going to keep doing this, if something happens that puts me in danger, I think you should try to pretend you don't have anything to do with me and get away. Do you understand, Louise-chan? If you want to say, you have to promise me."

Louise was stricken dumb. If something happened, then KoKo wanted her to abandon her! "A-absolutely not! I . . ."

"This isn't up for debate, Louise." KoKo's voice was quick and decisive, and very nearly as forceful as her mothers. It obliterated the tirade that Louise had planned to unleash in barely a heartbeat.

"Then . . . the same goes for me if I'm the one in danger!" Louise decided. She just refused to surrender without some sort of concession. She hadn't really expected KoKo to relax so suddenly, or for her to agree so easily as she looked into the Cait's eyes.

At that time, it never occurred to Louise that KoKo would lie.



Somehow, it had gotten worse.

"Of course, we have no desire to interfere in your affairs." Cardinal Mazarin spoke from the far side of the pool of quicksilver.

"Of course." Sakuya replied, keeping the bitterness from her voice.

The graying regent had taken to the concept of <<Teleconference>> like a duck to water. Although the windows behind him attested that it was midday in Tristania, the chambers of the Faerie court were swaddled in shadow.

"However, I cannot ignore the reports of this murdered . . . informant . . . Here in Tristania. It sounds far too much like the handiwork of your assassin. Especially with these witness accounts. The Lord Justice is pressuring that this is no longer an internal matter of ALfheim. He wishes to intervene."

The Sylph Lord bit her lip. It had not, decidedly, been the news she'd wished to wake too. "Tell the Lord Justice that we will, of course, abide by all facets of the Treaty of ALfheim. And that we welcome the participation of his office."

"He will no doubt wish to question your investigators. Dismiss some. Appoint his own." Mazarin warned. "I believe this is in order given recent events."

"Y-yes." Sakuya admitted, cursing Mortimer again silently, his foolishness had weakened more hands than his own.

"And I believe he will wish to take into custody this . . . Guild Master who spoke out at the Lord's conference."

"That . . . We will not do." Sakuya glanced across the table to where Mortimer sat, stock straight, still as a statue, eyes closed. It was as if he hadn't spoken at all.

Mazarin squinted, peering into the dimmed room. "Richmond will insist. He believes this . . . Rio is privy to knowledge of value to the investigation of his office. Knowledge, he suspects, the Faerie court wishes to remain hidden."

"He may insist as much as he wishes." Mortimer answered. "Rio has done nothing actionable under either the laws of ALfheim or Tristain."

"The Lord Justice doesn't see it that way."

"Then he may question Rio, under oath, if he desires." Sakuya rallied, surprised to find herself and Mortimer on the same side. "But he will not be detained without giving cause. Even the Lord Justice is bound by the law."

To which the Cardinal pinched the bridge of his nose and smiled tiredly. "I will be sure to relay your decision to the Lord Justice. Speaking confidentially to all of you, this is of course politics by other means."

Sakuya smiled coldly. "Call it what it is, Richmond hates us."

"Richmond hates that the Counties of ALfheim have special priveledge." Mazarin corrected. "Though, that he hates the Fae is also true."

"A radical." Sakuya murmured to herself. Arguably the most powerful in the land. They'd been lucky that most of the Crown's closest allies were moderates.

"Can the Faerie Court offer any insight into this 'RipJack', his motives?" Mazarin pleaded. "Anything that speeds the Crown's own investigation could close this before Richmond can use his office to do harm."

"Unfortunately, if we understood his motives, we would have captured him by now." Mortimer reasoned.

"What's to understand?" Morgianna deigned to speak out from her perch just at the edge of Mazarin's field of view into the Chamber. The Spriggan Lord leaned back in her chair, boots kicked up on the table. Her features signaled that she was 'taken by a mood' as the Princess would say, and that it was an ill one. "RipJack's a hateful little shit. Clearly he didn't get the memo."

"You really think it's that simple?" Sakuya asked.

"He's taking out highly placed Lieutenant's of the Faerie Court." Morgianna picked at something under a fingernail. "Y'know, people who work for us. The Lords who had the power to banish."

"You're his Lord, Morgiana." Sakuya said. "Why didn't he start with one of your Lieutenants?"

"Beats me. Maybe he thought he'd stay anonymous going after Sylphs, Salamanders, and Cait Syth. Or maybe . . ." She kicked her feet down, leaning forward. "Hell, maybe he just thought you're all weak."

"But why appear now in Tristania?" Thinker chimed in. "This doesn't make any sense. Murderer or not, he has no reason to travel there. And why this man? He's not an official of the state, he was an informant. How does RipJack even know who he is?"

"That is easy enough to Comprehend." Mazarin looked unhappy. "After all, you Faeries are very useful. Even our enemies know that."

"He's still gotta eat." Morgiana reasoned. "Still gotta keep a roof over his head and lay low. I figure, how he's paying for it all as a murdering criminal? Answer, doing what he did in ALO but for realsies."

"But that's insane." Sakuya shook her head, her sense of decency rebelled against it, foreign to everything she thought she knew, but then the historian inside of her spoke up and urged her to examine the long arc of human history, and it did not seem so impossible.

"All it takes to buy away loyalty is disilusion and a favorable offer." Mazarin warned. "We thought that our Captain Wardes was of unimpeachable integrity until he was not. And RipJack was never loyal at all. Lady Sakuya?"

"What? Oh . . . I apologize." Sakuya realized she had half stood when she had protested, and only now sank back into her chair. "It's simply difficult to take in." She'd been able to accept RipJack as a murdered, so why not a traitor as well?

"Be that as it may," Mazarin nodded, "We must proceed as if all of this supposition is true. Richmond will certainly attempt to use this opportunitty to turn the terms the treaty against you. He's preparing over a hundred of his men to comb Arrun as we speak."

"Over a hundred?!" Thinker's brows rose.

"The Lord Justice sees this as an opportunity to display his authority." Mazarine shrugged. "However, we need not be helpless ourselves."

"Oh, what do you recommend?" Sakuya asked.

"Richmond demands to take part in your investigation. I simply invite you to take part in ours."

"Because Tristain's criminal element is harboring RipJack." The Sylph Lord realized. "That could work."

"Turn about is fair game. Richmond can hardly refuse." Mazarin gave a ghost of a smile. He was a devious one for sure, Yamada Sakura realized, no wonder Sakuya liked him.

The Regent and the Faerie Court agreed to make arrangements, Mazarin pausing before ending the call. "There is a saying that I heard when I toured your city, Sylvain, I think it is appropriate now. I believe it was . . . the ball is in your court?"

Sakuya blinked, then she smiled for real. "Of course, Regent. Thank you."

Mazarin nodded one last time as the quicksilver mirror faded away into nothingness and an attendant at the door dialed back up the intensity of the chamber lights. Six of the nine Lords sat around the table, the four who had spoken, as well as Zolf of the Imps and Rucks of the Gnomes.

Sakuya's smiled faded as she regarded each of them. What had just transpired would probably have given pause to even seasoned members of state back home. But they weren't back home. They didn't have any seasoned heads of state. They had Mortimer, and Alicia . . .

'And me.'

That thought paralyzed her as Mortimer stood calmly to address the table. "Originally, I wished to call this vote before a full assembly of the Faerie Court, but as time is of the essence, and we have a quorum, I believe a unanimous vote will suffice. I would like the support of my fellow Lords in instructing the Arrun Watch to place Guild Master Rio under observation and surveillance."

There was silence at the, Thinker leaned back, and Zolf stroked at his crucifix, the dark eyes of Rucks peered out over his laced hands and beneath his heavy brow.

"You know what you're suggesting there, son?" The Gnome representative asked.

"You justt spoke in Rio's defense." Zolf pointed out. "Now you want us to place him under Watch surveillance?"

"Surveillance is not detention." Mortimer reasoned. "And while I loathe the interference of the Lord Justice . . ."

"Interference you may have brought down on us!" Zolf snapped, standing to glare across the table.

"Enough, both of you!"

There it was again, Sakura realized, that strange thing where her voice spoke without her. The Sylph Lord was standing, arms folded and gaze set, first on Mortimer and then on Zolf until slowly both men backed down.

"Mortimer has placed us in a difficult situation, that is true. But I cannot disagree with him. Rio had knowledge of the investigation. He certainly won't tell us how he came to have that information. It may be innocent, then again, there is a possibility that it is not. With lives on the line, I am willing to support Mortimer's proposition. So long," she added emphatically, "that it remains only surveillance."

"And what if the surveillance is sussed out?" Zolf protested. "Then we'd all be in the same boat as Mortimer."

"If you're so worried," Mortimer murmured, "then lend us the Hogei-sen."

The two men locked eyes so long tthat Sakuya was sure she'd have to intervene again before, touching his cross, Zolf simply said "They don't exist."

"You . . . Are a terrible liar."

"Even if there was such a thing as the Hogei-sen, I would not lend them to you for this." The Imp's voice fell to a growl, daring Mortimer to challenge his decision. "Besides, you have Morgiana's Kurotaka, they'd be just as well suited . . . Morgiana?"

The Spriggan Lord had risen and walked to the door. "Yeah, well, I don't have anything more to add to this and it's just pissing me off. If I leave, you still have quorum thingy with five of you so . . . just count me as a yay since it might get us RipJack. And yeah, I'll lend out some Kurotaka, just tell me what you need. Kay bye."

"Morgiana, the meeting isn't over yet!" Zolf called. "Morgiana!" The door swung shut.

"She's already made her position clear." Mortimer said.

"You . . ." Zolf glared.

"I don't like it." Thinker interupptted. He'd definitely been living up to his namesake, waiting until he'd had time to work out the angles. The Undine sat with his arms crossed and his legs apart, more like a thoughtful grandfather than any sort of Lord. "Yeah . . . I don't like it. But I think Richmond changes things. If we aren't willing to stand up to him, then our protest might as well be a strongly worded letter."

"So you're arguing it's for his own good?" Rucks frowned. "That's dangerous precedent."

"For what it's worth, I agree with both Thinker and Mortimer's reasoning." Sakuya announced. "The Watch may intervene if Richmond's investigators violate the treaty."

"Well then," the Gnome's voice went soft and low, "Supposing I agree to this . . . It's the least bad of a barrel of bad choices. Count me as yay."

"Yay." Sakuya agreed.

"Yay." Thinker raised his hand.

"Yay." Mortimer stared down Zolf until the man ceased stroking his cross.

"Under protest," the Imp said, "Yay."

"The Yays have it then." Sakuya announced. "Instructions will be sent immediately, along with new orders for the investigators."

"That is another problem." Mortimer added. "Removing Vakarian has a made short handed investigation even worse."

"Then we will pick someone to replace him." Sakuya decided, biting her thumb. "A Salamander, that will matter to some people, but not one personally loyal to you. That should satisfy everyone."

More arrangements were made and more matters addressed, but the rest of the meeting seemed tortuous with all that was hanging over their heads. By the time it ended, the sun was setting on the horizon as seen from the top of Arrun tower, the city was already turning into a beacon to banish the night from its streets.

"Sakuya." The Sylph turned as Mortimer entered the elevator that would take them back down to the public levels. A moment of silence between them as the doors closed. "Thank you, Sakuya, for . . ."

"I didn't do it for you, Mortimer." She was pleased the civility didn't leave her voice.

"Of course not."

"Honestly, I expected you to agree with Richmond. Detaining him, you'd get what you wanted." And he wouldn't even get his hands dirty.

"It . . ." Mortimer hesitated, "Would make us look weak, if we allowed him to arrest one of our own without probable cause."

"I see." Sakuya nodded, that made sense in a vert Mortimer way.

"And also . . . I . . . was . . . rash last night." She looked up to see Mortimer staring fixedly at the elevator doors. A cold statue again.

Somehow, the admission, and nothing else, rather than soothing her, only made Sakuya more angry. In the silence the anger built until at last. "You know what pisses me off about you, Mortimer? Despite all of this, despite every asinine thing you've done . . . I've thought the things Rio said on that stage . . . But when I heard them said out loud I didn't believe a single one." The elevator chimed as they reached the ground floor. "How can someone so brilliant be such a damned fool?!"

If he had an answer, she didn't hear it, the door opened and Sakuya strode into the lobby where she was greeted by Ephi and her attendants.



"That will be a goat cheese salad sandwich and an iced barley tea. Will there be anything else?"

"Coffee to go." Argo requested, rubbing at her temples as she tried to acclimate to the morning light. She poked Suisen's head back into her coat pocket as the Nav Pixie beckoned. "Oh, and one of those. Like last time sa."

The Imp waitress nodded her head, and turning on her heel, hurried off in a bustle of frills and ribbons that would have put any theme cafe to shame.

"Tis quite popular with the clientele." The Cait murmured to nobody in particular.

"Well that's one way of putting it." A wholesome voice answered, prompting Argo to look up at the proprietress looming over the street side table. "Although to ask my stingy husband she's another mouth to feed."

To look at her, Eda of the Gnomes was not too different from her earthly self, at least from what Argo had gleaned when tracking Agil down through his social media, she was simply a gnomish incarnation, a bit more in every direction. A tall and earthen skinned woman, black hair falling to her waist, with a wide and generous smile, wrapped in a long yellow sundress.

"Must be tough." Argo answered, nodding when the Gnome gestured to a chair.

"Business isn't so bad recently." Eda took a seat, reposing in the shade of the cafe's awning and watching the people pass by. "Besides, it's nice having at least one person around who knows even less about this stuff than me." Eda paused as if remembering. "By the way, have you had a chance to look into what I asked about?"

The Cait shrugged apologetically. "I've been busy, but sorry, nobody is looking for anybody named 'Rin'. I'm afraid your waitress is as you found her."

"Right." Eda tried not to look too glum. "I suppose I shoulda been expectin that. The people with close family are the lucky few, ah, sorry hon."

"Don't be." Argo replied. "You and Agil keep me fed and remind me to go to bed before the sun rises sa. Tis like family in my book."

As for her blood family, after waking from Aincrad, she'd made it her policy to keep her affairs settled. No telling when you'd wake up dead after all. As much as this all sucked, she hadn't left many loose ends.

"Hmm? And what about friends?"

"Excuse me?"

"You and Bleep have been joined at the hip since this whole investigation business started. But I haven't seen hide or hair of him today."

"Bleep?"

"Y'know, Black Sheep, Kirito?" Eda frowned. "Isn't that how this whole nicknaming thing works?"

"I . . . Think I'll stick to Kii-bou." Argo muttered, ears drooping as her mood soured. "And as for Kii-bou . . . tis moping at the moment."

"Oh, what's he got to mope about?"

In reply Argo extended a hand as if beckoning for coin. It was a sort of unofficial gestured between them. Argo would never give the information for free, with the full knowledge that Eda would never pay for it.

"Anyways, he'll snap out of it when he must sa. But I'm not gonna push him while he's in a foul mood." Otherwise, they both might say things they'd regret. Not that that she blamed him, or, was blameless.

All because she'd thought it could be like the old days. But this wasn't like the old days.

In the old days, it had been her and Kirito and Asuna. Not always, but when it happened, they were a natural team. That's where the problems had started. In Aincrad, they'd never told each other everything, but they hadn't lied to one another.

'Stupid. Stupid. Stupid!'

This was why she kept a little distance, even with friends, she needed to keep a clear head.

But before she could beat herself up too much, something wafted under her nose as Rin returned, balancing a quartet of orders upon her arms. Argo's plate slipped onto the table with a muted 'clank' complete with a second tiny sandwich made of scraps and crumbs and held together by a toothpick splinter.

Suisen scampered down to the table and sat herself cross legged, tearing big bites out of her personal meal. Her antics brought Argo a reluctant smile. The Nav Pixie was the companion she hadn't known she needed. But helpful and earnest as Suisen was, she made a poor confidant.

"Say, Eda." Argo pinched the bridge of her nose. "Tis a personal question, but have you ever lied to a friend?"

The gnome woman pursed her lips and turned her eyes skyward. "Hmm . . . Big lie or little lie?"

"Tis a pretty big one, I suppose sa." Argo sighed.

"Well . . . I don't know what's brought this on. And I suppose you're not gonna tell me." Another hand beckoning confirmed it. Eda took a moment to compose her thoughts. "The problem about lying for a good reason, is that the only person who can tell for sure that it's a good reason, is the person you're lying to. Take this whole hoopla with Mortimer."

Argo groaned to be reminded.

"Well, I'm sure he believes he did the right thing for the right reasons, even if he's wrong, he believes it. But then, who am I to say? For every Sylph who says Mortimer needs to step down, there's a Salamander who stands up for him." She smiled as she saw Argo's eyes widen. "Don't be so surprised, one thing I'll give these Faerie ears, they're plenty sensitive, and we get all sorts in the cafe."

"Tis true, accurate information isn't always the same thing as the truth."

Then, Eda reached over the table, placing a hand atop Argo's own and giving a comforting squeeze. "From what Andy has told me, you and the other kids had to do a lot growing up fast when you were trapped in that . . . whatever you want to call it. But you're still not grown-up, if you know what I'm saying. It's okay to still need help. It's always okay to still need help . . . What . . . Are those?"

Argo turned to follow Eda's gaze, what she saw set her tail bristling. "Hey Eda, can you flag down your waitress, I need this to go."

_______________________

The invasion of Arrun began at dawn.

A column marching four abreast and twenty five deep arrived by the highway and passed through the gates of the city, meeting no resistance. For they came bearing a weapon mightier than any sword, a piece of parchment stamped with seals of the Crown and the Lord Justice

Heads turned as they parted the morning traffic, Faerie and Tristin alike, eyes drawn to their brilliant livery of orange and blue, the heraldry of the Legal Collegiate as they made their way along the spiral of the Grand Promenade, slowly circling Arrun tower until, at last, they arrived at the gates of a squat and unassuming Guild Hall.

Smoothly, the men had rearranged themselves from a marching column into a parade formation as their leader dismounted from his horse and confidently approached the doors. The battle had been lost before it had even started. But that didn't mean the defenders would go quietly.

"I am Cyril Coulin of the Collegiate Serjeants," the leader of the troop barked, "On official business, step aside!" His eyes narrowed as they ran up and down the figure of the young woman barring his way. He made to move past her, and then stopped as she settled into a read stance, hand on the hilt of the wooden sword, like slender curved cudgel, at her side.

"And this the records room of the Arrun Watch." Kirigaya Suguha, the Sylphic Watch Woman Leafa, shot back. "Admittance by anyone not authorized by the Captain is absolutely forbidden."

This was bad, Suguha thought. They'd been briefed the night before that Tristain was sending investigators. But this was closer to a military operation. They'd burst through the Watch House doors like they were making a bust and stormed through the entire first floor, securing it room by room and holding up the offiicers and Arrun denizens that had been going about their business. The Sylph couldn't imagine what they were thinking, but nothing good would come of letting them do as they pleased.

Coulin's featured twisted through a series of emotions before settling on open irritation. "Tch!" He gestured for a squad of his men to approach. "I warn you that the full power of the law is at my side."

"Mine too." The Sylph inhaled, held, and exhaled, steadying her nerves.

But before the tension of the standoff could break, it was broken for them by a sound that started soft and grew deeper and more menacing with each passing moment as it rose to full throated growl.

Coulin and his men turned and were confronted by something they clearly had no experience with. Approximately, it was a wolf, if there had ever been a wolf the size of a small bear, and if that wolf had been covered in rust red fur that smoldered with worming embers.

"Sorry, are we interrupting something?" A woman riding casually side saddle upon the <<Wolf's>> back asked with disarming nonchalance. She was a salamander, a bit taller than Leafa, dusky skinned, with with a head of vibrant red hair framing a heart shaped face.

"Are you threatening an Agent of the Crown?!"

"What are you talking about?" The woman slipped down from her perch, straightening the crease of her black slacks and deliberately emphasizing the badge worn on her belt. "We're all officers of the law, on the same side here. Isn't that right, Leafa?"

"Right!"

"Officer Kirigaya, Officer GiNo, that's enough." A gruff voice announced the arrival of reinforcements.

GiNo held out for a moment longer before sighing. The Salamander placed a hand on the flank of her <<Wolf>> and the embers in his coat began to cool. The growling ceased and he sank into a sitting position with a 'huff' as if to say he could start again if need be.

Stepping around <<Wolf>>, Leafa could see Coulin's surprise as he was confronted by a mild rarity among the ranks of the Fae. She could imagine what he was thinking, that he'd been told that Faeries were uniformly youthful and beautiful. Calmly girls and boyish young men.

The Spriggan in front of him wasn't exactly ugly, but his gaunt features, gnarled as a hearty old oak, and skin the color of a freshly exsanguanated corpse, brought to mind the more ghastly folktales that had inspired the legends of Faeries. However, when he spoke, it was with diplomacy and tact befitting an Officer of the Faerie Court.

"Monsieur Coulin, was it? I am Captain Ittetsu, commander of the City Watch and the County constabulary. I apologize for the zeal of my officers, but Kirigaya is not wrong. While you are in your rights to launch your own investigation, you have not been granted permission to storm this Office and do as you please." Coulin made to speak. "You will, of course, be permitted access to our records, and all files regarding the RipJack investigation, under supervision by officers of the Watch."

"Tch!" The Serjeant glared before finally relenting. "As you wish. Only a few of my men are passingly versed in that moon script of yours anyways, so your officers will be of use to us, and of course, we shall be watching them in kind."

Suguha was surprised that there were any. But then, the Legal Collegiate had helped to draft the treaty of ALfheim. They must have worked closely with the Lords and their legal experts during the negotiating process. So maybe it wasn't so strange.

"Of course. Officers Kirigaya, GiNo, a word." Ittetsu beckoned for them to follow.

"Thanks for back there." Leafa whispered once she was sure they were out of earshot. "It's, GiNo right?" She'd only met the woman during her introduction, and in passing, before now. But she certainly stood out for her <<Wolf>> companion now padding obediently beside her.

"Eh, don't mention it." GiNo shrugged. "Those guys are scummy. Besides, I'm the new girl, freshly transferred from Gaddan, gotta show my new coworkers I'll have their backs in a jam, right?"

"Right." Suguha smiled as she mentally filed GiNo in the same place as Klein, Salamanders that weren't too bad. Then Captain Ittetsu rounded on them and both Faeries were frozen in place.

"S-Sorry, Captain." Suguha stammered, beginning to bow. "I was out of line . . ."

"Don't be." The Captain growled.

Like GiNo, he was a new addition to the City Watch, replacing Captain Jormo, a jovial Gnome who had reveled in playing the part of a cigar chomping police chief, but once the nature of Rip Jack's targets had become known, their old Captain had seemingly lost his nerve. Unlike GiNo, everyone in the watch was already well acquainted with him.

He reminded Suguha of a diligent Kendo instructor. When he didn't have his officers patrolling or investigating, they were training and drilling. He kept everyone too busy, or too tired, to worry or doubt.

"I want you two to start spreading the word, quietly, to keep an eye on these bastards while they're crawling around our city."

"Sir?" GiNo gave him a look. "That doesn't sound very appeasing."

"It isn't." The Captain confirmed, crossing his arms, his nostril flared like an irritable bull. "But they don't plan on being appeased. A city can't have two opposing authorities and stay in one piece. They're the law, so don't be foolish, but they're not law here, so if you see them harassing citizens or snooping around . . ."

"Sir?" Leafa stood straighter.

"You shut them down."

"Sir!" Both Faeries barked before being dismissed.

"Oh and GiNo, are you getting the lay of city?"

"Still working on it, Sir." The Salamander answered. "Lot of new smells around here for A-kun, and Arrun is damn big compared to Gaddan."

"Kirigaya, Ermin is still banged up after that indecent exposure incident up in the floating island."

Leafa's face turned red as she remembered. "Y-Yes Sir."

"Well then, meet your new partner. Make sure she knows every inch of this city ASAP. That's all, now you're dismissed."

"Oh . . . okay." The Sylph said in a small voice before remembering her task.

She felt GiNo fall in beside her, stretching languidly in a way that emphasized her figure. Not that her clothes didn't do that well enough, loose black slacks that accentuated already long legs, and blouse left strategically unbuttoned in a way no earthly police force would ever allow. She guessed the Captain let it slide because they were always shorthanded.

"Just be sure to take care of me." Gino said as she followed, <<Wolf>> in tow.

They were in the process of spreading the word when Leafa first witnessed exactly what the Captain had been talking about.

"Look, fair is fair, we show your ours so you show us yours." An Undine who Suguha didn't know well, she thought he was part of the Rip Jack task force, was arguing with one of Coulin's men, a high ranking one judging by the ornate helm held in the crook of his arm. "This investigation is supposed to be a two way street."

"And yet we are only here because you Faeries have failed so completely at your obligations that we have had no choice but to intervene. And we were told your homeland was a place of law and order."

"In our homeland, I was a cop." Jensen, Suguha remembered his name, said.

"Ah yes, a city watchman." The Serjeant sneered. "But we are Serjeants of the Collegiate. You do best to concern yourself with drunkards and cut purses. We will concerns ourselves with the exalted matters of state." Then, turning on his heel, the man departed.

"Hey, we're not done here!" Jensen called.

They were done here.

The Undine cursed under his breath and rubbed his temples.

"Well, we were coming to warn you about that." GiNo offered lamely, getting a look from Jensen that seemed to say 'this day can't get any worse', but then he looked past GiNo to the doorway where cloaked figure had precipitated holding a paper bag and a wax paper cup.

"You must have enjoyed that." Even behind his sunglasses, Suguha could sense the glare.

"My parents taught me I shouldn't lie." Argo took a sip of her coffee.

"So you've come to gloat then?"

"Not really a lot to gloat about." A strangely unhappy look crossed the Cait's face. "Tis not enough to be right if it doesn't lead to success sa. We've been working against each other."

"Well that's obvious."

"All of us sa." Argo clarified. "This too. Tisn't working."

"So you want try it differently?"

"I want to try again. Tis a do over."

Jensen rubbed at his temples, then sighed. "Sure, why not. What's this?" He asked as the paper bag was tossed into his hand.

"Half a fried goat cheese salad sandwich. We won't have time to stop for lunch. What's wrong?"

"Nothing, I just . . . didn't ask for this.



Befitting a peaceful and prosperous Kingdom, the Palace of Tristania was no crenolated stronghold of warrior kings. Instead, a stately compound of manicured gardens and guest houses sprawled along the northern bank of the Scheldt, embraced in the sweeping wings of the Palace proper. Its walls and moats meant more for privacy than protection.

Not that the Royals or their guests were the least bit insecure, Kirito thought. Their party of Faeries had been met and challenged before they had even crossed over the roofs of the city, a flight of manticores beating their way into the sky on bat-like wings, and commanding them to land along the river, where they had been interogated and their business determined.

The Royal guards had conducted themselves with a military efficacy, complete pros, Kirito thought with relief. There could be no place in Tristain where Asuna and Yui would be safer.

Asuna . . .

Kirito felt a nudge at his shoulder.

"Oi, you still there, Kirito?" Klein looked at him wryly.

"What? Oh . . . Y-yeah . . . It's nothing . . . Actually . . ."

"This way, good sirs." They were lead by a primly dressed palace servant, who took them down one of the great hallways, the ranks of tall and narrow windows looking out on verdant spring gardens.

"Sure thing. Sure thing!" Klein waved him off. "These are some damn nice digs, y'know? Hey Kirito, you and Asuna hung out here before, right?"

"After we got back from Albion." They'd spent a few days recuperating as guests of the Prince and Princess. But his mood made the halls feel very different now.

Slowly Klein's gawking subsided, and rubbing his chin, he gave the young Spriggan a fraternal look. "I mean, how mad can Asuna be, right?" Kirito averted his eyes, he sighed. "Oi, Kirito, I thought you'd decided the sullen thing wasn't you anymore. Y'know I got your back."

"I know. It just . . . shouldn't be this hard." Kirito muttered. But it was. Honesty would have been the best policy with Asuna, but he'd stumbled somewhere. And then got swept along until it was almost too late.

Maybe it already was.

They hadn't talked much before the Lord's Conference, just enough to know that things weren't getting better on their own, Asuna had curtly informed him that she and Yui would be going to Tristania. Kirito had balked. He couldn't protect her there. But there'd been no chance of convincing Asuna otherwise.

Coming back to an empty house had left him cold inside.

At least he'd been able to convince Sugu to stay at the Watch barracks. The thought of his sister, alone at night, while there was a Killer picking off officers of the Faerie Court, had knotted his stomach.

"Chin up, man. It's not the first time you two have been on lowsy terms." Klein insisted. "This is the perfect chance for you to talk it out with her."

"That's . . . Not the voice of experience talking."

Klein's grin cracked. "Ow, low blow."

"Yeah, sorry . . . I didn't mean it like that." He really hadn't. "But maybe I should have asked Agil for advice . . ."

But then he might have run into Argo, and then they both might have said things they'd regret. And he didn't think he could handle messing up again so soon. A persistent grip on his shoulder brought the Spriggan back to the present. "My score card with women may be zero." Klein agreed. "But that doesn't mean I don't have any wisdom to give, young man."

"Oh?" Kirito tried to smile. "Is that so, old man?"

"Yeah, it is." Klein rubbed at the back of his head. "Like, it's natural to want fix things as fast as you can, I get that, but sometimes you gotta let'm sit and cool down. There's no way Asuna wants to leave things like this either. So . . . like . . . don't be afraid if it's not perfect, I guess?"

"That advice started off really solid, but it ended kind of lame."

"It did, huh." Klein grinned.

"Yeah, but I'm thinking you're probably right . . . "

A pair of great doors were opened and their guide bowed corteously. "Good sirs, right this way."

As they stepped across the threshold, Kirito's eyes caught the faint glimmer of runic geometry, finely etched into the back of the door. Even knowing next to nothing about magic, he could guess the enchantment's purpose. Voices, totally impercetible from outside the chamber, suddenly broke out in mid sentence.

"-times I think you are on their side, Regent."

"I am on no side but the side of Tristain, Lord Justice." Mazarin speaking with a strategically measured amount of hurt. "Surely what is good for the mage is good for the familiar. You will have the Faerie Court's full cooperation."

"You say, as they are allowed to pry about here in the Capital."

"Nothing in the treaty of ALfheim forbids the Fae their own investigation, Lord Justice. Nor the Crown from inviting them to observe."

The arguing echoed from the walls as the two Faeries climbed a broad flight of stairs to a wood paneled room looking out through great windows across the Palace's Northern grounds, towards the House of Peers.

"The Peers will be hearing about this, I assure you!"

"I'm sure they will, Lord Justice."

"They won't stand for it!"

"That remains to be seen."

"And you . . . What are you doing here?"

Kirito froze. "The Prince asked me to attend." The level and determined voice of the Vice Commander of a prestigious clearing guild wafted down the steps. "If RipJack is in this city, then who knows who he could be a danger to next."

"The Lady Asuna has volunteered to be Prince's shadow for the time being. Owing to the diminished state of his own retinue." Mazarin went on, Kirito listening as the the tempo of his own foot steps rose, the summit of the stairs finally yielding.

"Surely, that is like setting a wolf to watch the sheep!" Kirito was finally able to put a face to the voice arguing with Mazarin, a mirthless looking gray haired man. Not that the Cardinal was mirthful either, but Kirito could at least imagine what a smile would look like on the old regent's face.

The room was some sort of office, Kirito assumed it was the official office of the Regent, the staircase acting as a sort of foyer that double back and emerged into the center of the room as if from a well. Besides the Cardinal, and the unpleasant person he was speaking with, there were a double handful of people in the room. Some of which Kirito hazily recognized. Soldiers of Prince Wales, and Knights of Tristain, and standing among them, like she perfectly belonged, was Asuna.

Kirito froze again, suddenly pinned in place by a test he wasn't ready for.

Beside her, Paris, advisor to Prince Wales, murmured something into Asuna's ear. She meditated on it thoughtfully, before whispering something back. Turning her attention to her critic she spoke with the calm and firm voice that had made unruly gamers listen and fight like a well oiled machine.

"Please do not compare me to a murderer like RipJack, Richmond-sama. Just like the people of Tristain should not be judged by their criminals, the citizens of ALfheim are law abiding and most of all wish only to live in peace. This killer is an abberation among our people."

"And if decency will not sway you, there is self interest." Mazarin added. "Lady Asuna is trusted by the exiles of Albion, the Prince most of all, and loathes Tristain's enemies as much as any native born daughter . . . Ah yes, Monsieur's please join us, you are the investigators from Arrun, yes?"

This time, Asuna froze as she locked eyes with Kirito. A connection that bridged the room and communicated nothing but ambiguity. The Spriggan fought the urge to avert his gaze, almost losing before Klein, glancing between his two fellow Faeries, stepped up.

"Oi, right." The Salamander coughed into his hand. "Yeah, we're part of the investigation squad. I'm Klein, vice squad commander, and this is Kirito. Some of us are still checking things out in Arrun, but we brought our coroner to check over the latest body, and some illusions masters seconded by Lady Morgiana."

Mazarin nodded. "Sir Hammond hopes that they can help train the Palace Guard in what to expect from a Faerie assassin. Monsieur Kirito?"

"Uh . . . Yeah?" The Spriggan blinked dazedly.

"You are here as part of the investigation, to lias with the Crown Government and share findings. I would also like you to lend your expertise, if possible, to the Royal guards. You are the only one with first hand experience against the assassin."

"It was barely for more than a few seconds." Kirito clarified. "But I'll tell them everything I can remember, Regent-sama."

Mazarin nodded. "Now, you will be working closely with the Office of the Chief Justice . . ."

"In fact, I have a better idea." Richmond interuppted.

Mazarin bade him continue. "If the Faeries trully wish to get to the bottom of things, as it were. Let them go to the source."

"Source?" Kirito murmured.

The Chief Justice seemed to have heard him, nodding, "It was not my office that discovered the killings here in Tristania, after all. Let them convene with the Musket Squadron. Like for like, as I say. And leave my office unmolested to do its lawful work."

Mazarin frowned, "And I suppose the house of Peers would be more amenable to that arrangement?"

"Regent, it is a certainty." Richmond said, and as Kirito suspected, gave a poor facsimilie of a sincere smile.

Turning to Kirito and Klein the Lord Justice gave the distint impression of measuring them both for a noose before making a clucking sound, that might have stood in for kicking open the trap door. "Lieutenant, ah yes, there you are."

Kirito hadn't notice this person before, standing well back from the rest of the attendants, they'd almost melted into the woodwork. A feat entirely devoid of magic. He was a little surprised to see that she was a woman, though not all that suprised, having witnessed her highness musket squadron before. A very beautiful one, if maybe one whose idea of hygiene leaned towards spit-polish and caustic soap. A ragged mop of wheat hair framed hard features that looked tragically incapable of amusement

"This is Lieutenant Agnes. Commander of her highness' Royal Musket squadron. It is quite the accomplishment for a mere commoner to attain such a prestigious station. Perhaps that will make her a good fit for your . . . heterodoxy." Glancing to Mazarin for his ascent, the Lord Justice continued. "Lieutenant, will you have any problem working with the Faeries?"

"The will of the Regent is as the will of her highness." The Lieutenant gave a clench fisted salute over her breast. Her eyes darted to Kirito and then to Klein.

"Excellent. Then it seems we have found an acceptable compromise." Richmond clapped his hand together. "I shall leave them in your capable hands, Lieutenant."

It seems they'd arrived just in time for the tail end, as the meeting began to devolve into disjointed murmurs of conversation as the Lord Justice departed, taking his own retinue with him. Lieutenant Agnes watched them depart with some annoyance before turning her attention to the two Faerie.

"Nice to be -" Kirito began as Klein stepped forward and extended a hand.

"The name's Klein, vice squad commander. Which, y'know, is sorta like a squadron commander I guess." Agnes stared blankly at the offered hand. "Well, anyways, it's a pleasure to be working with you."

"Were that I could say the same." Agnes reluctantly accepted, and then looked like she regretted it as Klein shook vigorously. "The truth is two Faeries are more than enough."

"Huh?" Klein blinked, but Kirito wasn't paying much attention any longer. Whatever Agnes had to say could wait for at least a moment as he navigated across the room, and carefully, so as not to startle her, took Asuna's hand, pulling her attention away from a discussion with Paris and Sir Mason.

"Kirito-kun." Asuna whispered, almost happy before the present caught up with them both. The ease faded, and her gaze grew guarded.

"I uhm . . ." Kirito started.

"Yes?"

"It's . . ." They looked at each other. "We need to talk."



They'd needed someplace private to talk. The Palace was nothing but private places to talk. Private rooms, and alcoves, and more hidden doors than a haunted house.

But it was the Gardens wherer Asuna naturally gravitated too, sitting herself primly upon a marble bench, legs tucked daintily as Kirito wearily plopped down oppossite her, so that they rested almost back to back.

Silence hung awkwardly over them. "Uhm . . ." Kirito searched for something to say. "We've . . . been in this garden before, huh?"

"Un." He felt Asuna nod. "That's the guest house we staid in, over therer, while we . . ."

While the healers had kept them under observation after their battle against the treacherous Viscount.

"Didn't you prick your fingers on that rose bush?" The Spriggan pointed. The flowers were now in full bloom. He remembered it so vividly. "You were . . . kindof surprised even though you knew better. And then you were fretting Yui would . . ."

"Kazuto-kun."

He fell quiet again.

"I'm sorry." He whispererd.

Asuna's back tensed, and then the tension drained away. "It takes more than words to be sorry, Kazuto-kun. I asked if I could trust you. Why did you lie to me? That was the most important thing, and you broke it."

"I told you, I wanted you to be able to heal and . . ." Kirito paused and shook his head. That wasn't right, it wasn't the whole truth. Even trying, sometimes the words came out differently than he expected. The whole world was more complicated than Aincrad. "I was weak and scared."

"You could have come to me. You can always come to me, Kazuto-kun."

"That's why I was faraid. Asuna. I'm supposed to take care of you."

"We're supposed to take care of each other!"

Her breath tickled his neck, so close he was afraid to turn around. He felt her right hand wresting softly atop his, her touch blindly finding the warm silver of the band around his finger.

"Asuna, do you remember what you said to me before the final raid in Aincrad?"

"Kazuto-kun?"

"You don't still feel that way, do you?"

"I . . ." Asuna paused.

"You told me, if I died, then you'd kill yourself . . . But you wouldn't do that now, would you? Because Yui needs her mother . . . " He licked his lips anxiously.

A sharp intake of breath.

"And Sugu, we're the only family she has . . . Its 'just . . . You might die, and you won't even let me stand in the way for you. That's not fair, I don't know if I can take it. That's why I couldn't tell you."

"You're the one . . . who's not being fair, Kazuto-kun." Asuna whispered. "Whatever I decide, it still has to be my choice. You can't make it for me."

No matter what they did, they'd wind up hurting each other. Kirito rubbed at his eyes. "This isn't working." He admitted. "It's not as simple as in Aincrad."

"Maybe it's not supposed to be."

"Asuna?" Kirito blindly grasped for her left hand, and then felt his stomach go all twised as he felt for what wasn't here. He turned to meet Asuna's gaze, but she wouldn't look at him, she just seemed ashamed. "What . . ."

"It doesn't mean anythin,g right now, Kazuto-kun." Asuna insisted. "It's just that this is important, so I have to think clearly about it, no matter how I feel. Please."

Kirito took a breath, held it, and blew out tightly. "Alright."

She leaned close, so that the scent of her hair filled his nose as she squeezed and let him go. "I have to go now, Kirito-kun."

"Yeah, me too."

"We can talk some more later. Yui-chan will be happy to see you."

"Um." He got up slowly, wiping his jacket.

"Kirito-kun . . . You know it doens't mean. I mean I still . . ." Kirito looked at her as Asuna wiped at her eyes, she shook her head and looked around the garden.

"It's just . . . Roses." She said.

"Un . . . right." Kirito nodded. "Roses."

Roses.

What could he say about that?
 
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