Chapter 9: A Rude Guest
Sakura
My father visibly calmed himself with several deep breaths before he responded. “The emissary from the Imperial clan. He’s . . . difficult to speak to.”
Raif gave his brother an incredulous look. “You’re kidding. An ambassador from the emperor’s family, being difficult to get along with? Big surprise there, younger brother.”
Ren smirked. “True. But this one seems particularly keen on getting his throat slit before I can so much as properly understand why he is here.”
“What did he do?”
“He tried to—”
The tent opened and a tall man, with pale white skin and a bald head tattooed with the black crown of the Imperial Clan stormed out. “Duke Ren Gamra, your unwillingness to show proper deference and respect to a Count, sent from his Eminence’s own familial clan has been noted. It is not dishonor to serve one of the Dragon Blooded. I am sure that—”
Another man, this one wearing red robes emblazoned with a black emblem denoting the King of the Northern Kingdom, with its endless wall that once had purpose, strode out. His skin was just as pale as the Count sent by the imperial clan.
But he was short, as was common of people from the northern kingdom. His hair was black, and cropped short save a single bun of thick woven, braided hair that ran down just past his shoulders.
“I am sure the Count does not think to offer threat or insult to the Duke, within his own realm?” This second emissary said, bowing as one would to an honored peer to Ren, Raif, and then to me.
“Though you bring dark tidings of turmoil within the Jade Empire, it is important to keep a civil tongue. Though, who am I to speak of such hardships? For I bring glad tidings. My King will soon ascend after all. And whatever tumult the central provinces are experiencing, the northern kingdom will of course, offer whatever assistance we can in quelling such problems.” He gave another respectful bow to the imperial embassy.
“Yes, well. Even if your King does ascend to such a lofty perch, it would do him, and his servants, of all ranks.” The Taller, paler man from the central provinces glanced first to his counterpart, then to where Ren and Raif stood. Raifs hands twitched on the hilts of his swords when his eyes landed on the pompous jerk. “Well to remember that they serve at the pleasure of his eminence, and that they, and their royal courts, have a duty to serve. No matter their stage of achievement along the great path of cultivation. Or their status within their provincial government.”
Uncle Raif looked like he was chewing glass, and my father didn’t look much happier. Before either of them could respond my mother appeared, a forced and strained smile plastered on her face. “Gentlemen. The tea is ready. Let us hear your news, and proposals, while we can still enjoy it. If the steep sits too long, it will grow over strong.”
She was the picture of grace as she slipped between the two groups of men, and ushered the ambassadors back into the rather large tent. When they were gone, Raif asked his question again.
“So, what did he do?”
Ren nearly laughed as the tension left the air. “He demanded that I pour his tea.”
I gave out a little gasp, and both my father and uncle glanced my way and chuckled. Sakura knew that a lower level cultivator asking someone of a higher stage to do such a thing was a massive breach in protocol, baring familial relations, a substantial difference in their social status, or some form of ailment. I covered my gasp with a hand as was only proper.
“Yes, this one seems unaccustomed to entertaining those of a higher station. Or cultivation level.” My father shook his head. “Such attitudes are dangerous where his master’s will does not extend.”
“Dangerous for him.” Raif’s eyes burned with a type of rage I had never seen in him before. The only way I can describe it was blood lust. It wasn’t from his chie aura, he had that under tight control. But I felt an almost oppressive sense of danger come from him, and instinctively I took a step back. When he saw this his face softened and he winked at me. “But not for you dear.”
“I must go. Please don’t terrify my daughter too much.” Ren jabbed his brother in the ribs lightly, and the two clasped hands before my father disappeared again into the tent.
A few minutes later the after effects of that spike of power from my enraged father, and my uncle’s naked bloodlust cooled. My emotions evened out enough for me to ask one of the thousands of questions running wild in my head.
“So, what just happened?”
Raif chuckled and motioned for me to follow him. I did so, and he lead me around to his King Turtle. He began scrubbing a small set of scales that looked mildly irritated, with a soft brush coated in a kind of medicinal lacquer that smelled like bat droppings.
“You might not have put two and two together yet. You and the rest of the empire. But the northern king is on the very peak of the King rank. He is about to ascend. Probably is already in the process, no one knows for sure. But some of his loyal Dukes and Counts have been sent out to herald in his ascension to the Emperor rank. All those centuries fighting the threats along the northern border wall gave him plenty of opportunity to seek out opponents who would challenge him. They say he can transform himself, temporarily, into a dragon. Much like how our Emperor and his children can transform into human form.”
“Isn’t that good news?” I asked, confused how some social preening like he was describing could cause anything more than a few ruffled feathers. “Another great spirit to protect the empire from outside threats.”
Raif nodded as he continued to brush the lacquer softly into the set of half a dozen thick and slightly off color scales. “If this were an ascension of a Duke like your father into a Prince, or even a Prince into a King, you would be right. But the empire has only ever had one Emperor level cultivator at a time. And it has always been a dragon.”
“There have been human Emperor cultivators before though. Maung the Conqueror, leader of the great crusade into the east, was just one of them.”
He quirked a smile. “You always did love the story of Maung and his foolish crusade into the unknown east. Let me ask you little niece, do you know who it was that sent him along that path?”
I thought about it for a long moment, trying to recall the story. Maung had been a great warrior. Born from a lowly noble family, barely better than merchants he was found to have a talent that rivaled anyone else of that era. Including the, at the time, young emperor, Chow, the father of the current emperor, Dhow.
Maung rose through the ranks of a corrupt and slothful kingdom, overcoming obstacle after obstacle. Until finally he challenged the sitting king of the eastern kingdom and won. In his victory, when he was only a Duke stage cultivator, he ascended into the Monarch realms as a Prince.
From there, he fought countless sea serpents that preyed on the shipping and fishing vessels of the eastern kingdom. And his kingdom flourished under his reign. He eventually rose from Prince to King, and when he challenged and defeated the great Mother of Serpents from deep beneath the sea, he rose to Emperor stage.
But the story went, not all was well with the world. For while Maung had been fighting monsters, eastern empires looked west with greed in their eyes. The Emperor Chow received early warning of these expansionist intentions, and asked Maung to undertake the task of conquering the eastern continent with his strongest men and women at his side.
And he did. He set sail with his most loyal and powerful retainers to conquer the far eastern lands. Territory filled with land hungry barbarians, raiders, pirates, and worse.
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For seventy years Maung undertook the task. Setting up smaller nations and regions, Maung carved out an empire on the seemingly endless Eastern continent to rival the Jade empire. Or at least some said it was so. But the barbarians had their own warlords, their own guardians and protectors. Eventually, Maung and his noble warriors were overcome.
Some twenty years later the Jade Empire lost all contact with those far flung colonies in a bloody event known as the Sundering.
“The Emperor.” Was all I could say, for even saying that much my body reacted. My throat clenched, and my muscles tightened involuntarily.
“Careful what you say, my brave little niece. And where you say it. So close to one of the emperor’s dragon blooded cousins.” He quirked a smile and shook his head as he began rinsing the turtle’s scales off with a small bucket of clean water. “I am sure the emperor’s eyes rest, if only fractionally, on him even now.”
When he finished cleaning the scales, they looked if not healthy, healthier than they had been. He put away the cloth and buckets he had used, and then stared at her for a long moment.
“But you’re correct. It is a long-standing tradition that if a mortal man, or really any non-dragon blooded, ever rises to such lofty heights of power, they are given a task far outside the empire. Some legends say that is how the western human kingdom was founded. And not just them, but the Summer Isles, and even the slave pens of the southern continent’s jungle pyramids where the toad princes and their monstrous beasts reign. Every time it’s done under the pretense of some great service to the empire.
But King Kadra, that stubborn old goat, has already given greater service to the empire than any, even the emperor, could ask of their servants. He has sacrificed nearly three dozen siblings in war in the north. Three wives, and several hundred children, almost all of them decorated war heroes in their own right. None has given more, save the first emperor, and Dhow has acknowledged that reality personally.”
“So there’s no pretense to ask him to leave the empire.”
“Exactly. Let me ask you this, child. What happens when two wild Kame live within the same territory, and neither one is willing to move on?”
I knew what he was talking about. When two wild kames outside of breeding season lived in the same few mile range they would quickly come into conflict. Those conflicts were one of the greatest threats to small settlements within my family’s territory. While not hostile towards humans, when embroiled in conflict adult Kame’s cared little for anything smaller than them. The older the Kame in conflict were, the worse it got. The eldest Kames in nature reached the Prince stage, and entire mountain ranges were rearranged or leveled when they fought.
The idea that such wanton destruction could take place, on an even grander scale, sent shivers of ice down my spine. My mouth was dry when I finally got my response out.
“They fight.”
***
My mind still reeling at the idea of two Emperor stage cultivators dueling, and the potential devastation that could cause, my uncle began distracting me with work. He had me assist the other border guards in cleaning and maintaining the scales of their Gamera.
While I was trying to extract a particularly thick stick that had somehow gotten lodged in the scaled foot of one of the massive beasts, the one with the spotted yellow shell and angry red eyes, that did not match its gentle inquisitive nature, the talks finished.
My mother was the first to exit the tent. Her expression was a thunderstorm. One she calmed when she saw me. Trying to set an example, I knew. She was an emotional woman, much like my father. But she had always tried to be a ‘proper’ woman, and to instill the values of chastity in deed, dress, and speech into all of us children.
Not that it ever took very well.
“Sakura, what are you doing?” I could tell she was fighting a creeping smile at my predicament, and I couldn’t blame her.
I had one leg braced against the Gamera’s rear leg, my foot pressed up under one of its scales, trying to create room enough that I could yank the stick free. Both of my hands held onto the stick as I tried to angel it so I wouldn’t hurt the creature. Meanwhile the Gamera had tried to lick at the offending limb. And I, in a dress that had been soaked multiple times with sweat from first fevers, and then vigorous scrubbing at scales as hard as diamond, had been unsuccessful at fending off its giant, sandpapery tongue.
My back was coated in a thick layer of mucus, while the inquisitive creature kept looking at me, blinking it’s dangerous looking red eyes. Its expression was soft and curious, mirroring my mothers as if to ask what, exactly, I was doing?
It was at that moment, frozen as my mother looked on, and the two embassies of powerful and dangerous men exited the tent with my father, that the stick decided to loosen its death grip on the giant turtle’s scale.
The Gamera let out what for it might have been a small gasp of relief, but the noise was loud enough to rupture the eardrums of a mortal if they had been standing too close.
I, on the other hand, fell backwards.
I tried to correct my balance by swinging my leg back down in a spinning kick that would see me land in an approximation of a warriors stance. A move that Sakura’s muscle memory had perfectly memorized. Unfortunately, that muscle memory didn’t account for the fact that the floor of the ankle deep river I was standing in was made of rocks.
Rocks covered in slick algae.
I fell face first into the river.
Raif was there in a flash of lightning. He lifted me bodily out of the water, and before I could so much as blink I was covered by a thick blanket that doubled as a towel.
“Please excuse her appearance, gentlemen, it is my fault entirely. I requested my nieces help in looking after our spirit beasts. She obliged. We thought you would be in counsel for longer.”
So my uncle does have a silver tongue, when he needs it. I bit my own tongue, the Genji side of me preventing my Sakura nature from either blushing, or exploding in anger. It was hard, teenage hormones are difficult things to master. And it seemed, I was going to have to learn to do so again.
Yu broke away from the group of men, and led me back to Crash. There, she handed me a new set of clothes, helped me tame my hair, and offered me several dry powder shampoos that smelled like flowers. After a quick sponge bath, she helped me apply the cleaning powder and scents, and I felt like an entirely different woman.
Girl.
Woman in a girl’s body? I still wasn’t certain who among the two personalities that were slowly merging in my mind was more mature.
“Come now. Your father and the others will be back soon with their hunt.”
“Hunt?” I asked, Sakura’s memories providing me little information on why a hunt would be appropriate here.
“Yes.” Yu wasn’t even trying to hide her annoyance. “Your father invited those pompous know-it -alls to go hunting konchuu. Your uncle’s patrol was in the area hunting a wild mating pair of rhinoceros beetles before their brood could put the trade routes nearby at risk. I suspect he was hoping to take their larva back to the border for his common born troops. But your father saw it as a potential bonding experience. You know men, such activities lead to lifelong friendships, if they are done right. Even if the competition comes to blows.” She snickered slightly as she pulled the last clasps of my traveling dress together around my lower back.
I knew what Rhinoceros Beetles were, back on Earth. My father had shown me his prize winning brood. They were large, hard shelled beetles. Each one had a unique horn shape that they used to push opponents around in duals men like my father had gambled on.
Sakura had little to no understanding of what they were. All I could remember were a few instances where she, where I, had seen commoners use giant bug creatures tamed to help with manual labor. But those were soft shelled creatures, usually the size of dogs or draft horses at the largest. And none of them had looked like the gigantic Beatles from Earth that shared their same name.
“Don’t worry. Your father and uncle can handle a few beetles. Come, we must see to dinner preparations.”
***
By overseeing my mother meant ordering the border guards to haul out their cook pots, and scrub them clean. It didn’t take long for the burly soldiers to finish, but my mother didn’t stop there.
She ordered all three pots filled water, and fires started under them. Once they were about the task, my mother pulled me aside. “That leaves us to hunt, harvest, or purchase the ingredients other then the victors course, that’s your fathers job, but the rest of it is up to us.”
Genji had never been hunting before. But Sakura had, and from her memories I had enjoyed the chore, though not so much as my brother had.
“I know how little you enjoy hunting. Luckily elderberries are quite common along the roadways in these lands, so we can pick them on our way to the village.”
“Village?”
“Yes daughter. You don’t think your uncle was operating out here on a long patrol do you? This isn’t his post. No, he was here visiting one of his former men-at-arms, a man who rose to knighthood some years ago who retired to this region after he was injured fighting those knife-eared savages along our southern border. He was given a hovel and some lands nearby as his retirement prize, and from what Raif says, it has grown into a proper little village. One with a small market.”
She smiled at me, waiting for my response. Sakura enjoyed visiting markets, but not for the reason my mother seemed to think. Sakura had enjoyed visiting markets mainly because it gave her, gave me the opportunity to scout new potential projects, and to mingle with the locals.
“I overheard the soldiers say that there is a tailor there who I am sure can help improve your traveling wardrobe.”
That made me smile. The traveling dress I was wearing was loose, and mother had been forced to synch it as tight as possible for fear of it slipping in places. And it still felt looser then I liked my clothes fitting. I had, it seemed, lost some weight because of the fever.
“That sounds wonderful, mother.”