For the next week and a half Alia followed a simple schedule. First, she would wake up in Serena’s arms and give her a blast of healing magic. Serena had remarked that she suspected her body might be getting younger as a side-effect, although she wasn’t sure. The pair of them decided to keep an eye on things.
The next daily task was washing, followed by breakfast and a morning coffee. Serena had raised an eyebrow when Alia had returned with a twenty-pound sack of Jimari coffee beans but otherwise didn’t say anything.
Tos continued to turn up in the morning and help teach Alia writing and reading. She was getting good now and could understand more and more complex sentences. She also enjoyed the mathematics books he had brought her and was delighted to find that demons had discovered calculus! Although they used different symbols that felt strange at first, she got used to them. At seeing how proficient she was with numbers, Serena ntioned that her oldest sister, Nina, would get along with her.
They would then proceed to the academy to train. Alia never saw l again, but she caught sight of her brother once, who only glared at her but otherwise said nothing. As she continued to spar and practice her swings, Alia was feeling more and more confident by the day. The wooden sword now felt natural in her hands and the grandmaster and Serena were pointing out fewer and fewer mistakes.
Still, the first aura lay beyond her reach. It was a frustrating experience. Her experience as a mage only made it more challenging to get her aether moving in the unfamiliar ways required for the warrior’s aura. She was making so progress, although Alia felt like it was happening far too slowly despite both Serena and the grandmaster telling her she was doing great considering the amount of ti she had put in.
“Try imagining a convection current,” Serena said one ti.
“A convection current?”
“Right. When you heat a cup of water from the bottom, the heat travels like this.” Serena scratched a diagram into the ground. “Imagine sothing similar but instead of heat it’s your aether moving throughout your entire body.”
“I tried that! Look!” Alia focused inwards and flowed her aether around her body.
“That’s not the sa,” Serena said, “You’re flaring your aether like a mage and relying on your exceptional aether control to move it while it’s agitated. Aura needs a more delicate touch. You need to inject intention into your aether and let it react instead of forcing the expected reaction.”
That instruction had helped Alia greatly, and she soon felt she was on the right track. She was given a few more ditative exercises, which she practised as often as possible.
After training, Alia would wander around the city with Serena. Sotis Aiden would join them, although he had a growing list of other tasks that would keep him busy. Now that he had sent off the report about Alia it was mostly a waiting ga for whatever the Cascadian governnt decided.
Serena had been spending more ti around the ship as they finished the repairs and installed a new gun turret. The shipnt from Ponan had the last vital supplies they needed, and with the help of the greatlord’s n, they were ahead of schedule.
Serena’s weird dreams had stopped, although Anathor had warned them they might return when they left Kenhoro to sail south. Alia had questioned Serena about the nature of The Vengeance. Was it alive? Did it have a soul? Her questions only received half answers and an apology. Apparently, the answers she wanted were locked behind doors and protected by Serena’s superiors on a need-to-know basis.
It was a sha Tatiana was too busy to et up again. Even so, Alia was happy to make a human friend. Surprisingly, Serena didn’t seem bothered, stating she wasn’t the kind of person to stop her from having friends. She had been suspicious at first, but after her investigation into the rchant ca back clean, she didn’t ntion Tatiana again other than after their final eting where Serena made sure Alia recounted everything she had said ‘just in case you let sothing slip’.
They would spend their evenings at the inn, training and chatting. On occasion, they went out for food and drinks. Thankfully, there was no more drama or drunken lords to cause problems.
Then the night would co, and without fail, lips would et lips, and the fingers and tongues of one of them would have the other giggling and moaning. As the days ticked by, they grew ever more comfortable around each other and Alia would often not even bother to get dressed anymore when she woke up. Instead, she would lounge around naked while drinking her morning coffee, enjoying both the bitter taste and Serena’s eyes on her.
When they finally went to sleep, Alia would kiss her girlfriend and whisper ‘Goodnight, Ren’ and Serena would whisper ‘Goodnight, Lia’. Their little nicknas beca a small ritual that only they would witness every night. A sign of their growing relationship and trust.
All seed to be going well until one morning, ten days after she had t Tatiana for the last ti, Serena stomped into their room, frustration and worry visible on her face.
“What’s up?” Alia asked.
“Just overlooking the loading of the new cargo down in the docks, and guess who I bumped into? Or rather, who bumped into ?”
“The greatlord?”
“Worse. The Dragon is in Kenhoro.”
“So?”
“So? The man has direct command over the eastern admiralty! I’m used to taking my orders from Greatlord Oshiro! That was who swore into my commission! Bastard…” Serena poured herself a coffee and sat down, mumbling a few curse words.
“I guess he gave you an order?” Alia asked, sitting up.
“Intelligence has detected movents of Christdom church agents in Kenhoro and Tanhae. The Federation are up to sothing as well. Kenhoro’s getting hot.” Serena took a sip of the coffee. “The Dragon wants us to take a civilian cutter down to Shimashima, while Dagon will sail The Vengeance towards Ponan before turning south and eting us.”
“Why?”
“Because with so many foreign agents poking their noses around the likelihood that you’ll be attacked or soone will try and kidnap you is too high. There will be Speakers hidden in the enemy agents, and we’ve already had one fight in the city where Words have been Spoken,” Serena said with a thoughtful expression, tapping her horns. “I suspect it’s so kind of counter-intelligence move. I bet they’ll leak where we go through certain channels to identify leaks and see who moves to follow us or The Vengeance.”
“We? I can co with you?” Alia asked.
“Of course,” Serena said. “He all but stated he expected both of us. I think it’s fair to assu the Dragon is aware of our relationship now. Which ans…” Serena gave a soft sigh. “My family also knows.”
“I can’t wait to et your family! It’s going to be fun!” Alia said with a grin.
“Fun is not the word I would use…” Serena muttered.
“When do we have to move?”
“Now.”
“Now!?” Alia blurted out. It was so short notice!
“The cutter waiting for us at the eastern docks is called The Sakamoto. It’s one of the last lines out before travel shuts down tomorrow or the day after. Storms will start hitting the city any day now.”
“But, but…” Alia cast her eyes around the room that had begun to feel like a ho. “What about our stuff? The masks? My coffee!” She went over and hugged the enormous sack of Jimari beans.
“Ha!” Serena scoffed at her actions. “There’s people waiting for us outside. I’ll have them get whatever we miss and put it on The Vengeance. As for us, pack your clothes in a bag.”
“This is happening so fast!” Alia cried, “Do we have rooms on this other ship?”
“I don’t know. But it’ll be packed. They probably picked it because it’ll be packed. I bet you whoever’s working behind the ticket office today is an agent in disguise taking notes on whoever has a sudden pressing need to board The Sakamoto.”
“Right, right,” Alia said as she hurried around the inn room collecting her worldly possessions. She made sure to fill the pockets of so of her clothes with what coffee beans she could, which made Serena shake her head.
Her girlfriend joined her packing, and within a few minutes the pair of them were downstairs saying goodbye to Mister Weng. After exiting the inn, Serena talked to a mysterious man smoking a cigar.
“Can you get the rest of our possessions and get them on The Vengeance?” Serena asked the man.
“Boys!” he called, and a pair of demons appeared from around the corner. “Go upstairs with Weng and get everything that doesn’t belong to the inn. Get it on the ship!” The pair of demons headed inside, and the man produced two tickets which he handed to Serena.
“These are your tickets for The Sakamoto,” he said. “It leaves in an hour, so you’ll need to hurry.”
“Will the ship have an escort?”
“No, not until it gets closer to Shimashina. This is all short notice.”
“Right, we’ll be off then.”
“Good luck.”
With that, they hurried to catch a tram to the eastern docks. When they arrived, Serena handed over the tickets to the demon sitting inside a windowed office who glanced at the pair of them before stamping them. Alia wondered if that demon was really an agent in disguise. He looked exactly like the bored minimum-wage worker you could find anywhere.
Finding the bay The Sakamoto was docked in gave Alia a shock. It was very different from The Vengeance. The cutter was made entirely of wood and didn’t appear to have a walkable deck. Instead, a gangway led into an opening on the ship's side. It was about half the size of The Vengeance but looked far sleeker.
“Cutters are built for speed,” Serena explained, “Lightweight and powerful engines. No armour. We’ll reach Shimashina by tomorrow morning.”
They boarded the ship, pushing through the other passengers and their luggage. They found their rooms near the engines in the rear of the ship. They knew they were near the engines because they could feel the rhythmic beating of the lift engine sounding from sowhere close by.
“Guess first class was sold out,” Serena said as she opened the door and peered in. The room was small, with a single tiny bed and a thin table. Alia’s room was opposite and it was equally compact.
“Like sardines in a can…” Alia mumbled.
“What are sardines?”
“Small fish. Packed tightly together in a can for transport.”
“Do they taste good?”
“... Nah.”
“All this happened so fast,” Alia said, swinging her legs. There wasn’t even enough room to cuddle on the small bed so Serena laid on it while Alia sat on the table. “What about Aiden? Oh! We didn’t get to say goodbye to grandpa Gu or Lord Yulan!”
“Aiden will have been updated and he’ll let the grandmaster know sothing ca up,” Serena said, yawning lightly. “Mister Weng will notify Yulan if he cos knocking at the inn. What ti is it?”
Alia glanced at the wall clock ticking softly. “Dinner ti! Wow, it’s already been so long! How far do you think we’ve travelled?” The pair had kept to themselves since The Sakamoto had set off. At one point, Alia had even retired to her own room and napped. The sounds of the engine had lulled her to sleep.
“Eight hours… a cutter like this will travel at fifty knots so… a little over seven hundred klicks.” Serena said while placing a hand on her stomach. “I’m hungry. Are you hungry?”
“Yeah!”
“Let’s see what passes for food around here… co on.” They both left their room and made their way to the dining room. It was a long, thin room with small tables and cubicles to the sides. Waiters moved trollies of food down the centre and at the far side the kitchens could be seen where a handful of chefs worked as they chopped vegetables and sizzled at.
“Do you have a reserved table?” A passing employee asked.
“No,” Serena said.
“Sit anywhere where there isn’t a reserved sign. Ring the bell when you’re ready to order! nus are over there!” The employee pointed and then rushed off to collect more plates from the kitchen.
Alia bounced over and picked two nus then followed Serena to a table. As they sat down, Alia was delighted to find that she could read the majority of the dishes. The lessons from Tos were really paying off! Alia eventually settled on her choice but when she looked up at Serena she found her girlfriend was looking down the dining room with narrowed eyes.
“What’s up?” Alia asked.
“Listen to what those employees are saying.” Serena nodded in the distance and Alia focused on her hearing. Two uniford employees were having a whispered discussion. Alia’s high perception easily captured the contents.
“A stowaway!?” Alia whispered, “Soone snuck onboard?”
“In the engine room… they’ve barricaded the door…” Serena mumbled, before sighing and standing up. “I’ll investigate this. Stowaways are not uncommon but considering the situation I’m going to double-check. You never know…”
“Want to co with you?”
“No need. I’ll just have whatever you’re having. I won’t be long.”
“Okay!” Alia chirped.
Serena left and inford the employees who she was. After a mont of deliberation, they lead her back down the room, past Alia and through the doors. Alia ordered her food and relaxed, humming to herself. She didn’t want to be nosey, but she couldn’t help but eavesdrop on the surrounding conversations. Everyone was travelling for different reasons. So were trying to return for a family birthday, others for a business eting. So were travelling for leisure, while others were catching a connecting ship to go further afield.
As Alia listened the hairs on her neck rose as sothing rippled through the aetherfield. Her instincts scread at her and she had just enough ti to throw up a ward around her.
And then the ship exploded.
She had just enough ti to see bodies and wood fly against her ward before being lifted off her seat as the room twisted and tumbled wildly. She was flipped in the air and was only just able to grab onto a wooden pillar. Looking at her feet she could see an enormous hole in the ship where the kitchen was and beyond it the darkening night sky.
Chairs, tables, food, and cutlery bounced around the room, along with two dozen bodies, so of which were screaming and the others quiet.
Alia gritted her teeth and boiled her aether. She threw out a healing spell, covering what she hoped was the entire ship. What else could she do? Where was Serena? She needed to find her.
“Serena!” she yelled out as the wind scread outside.
“Serena!” she scrunched her eyes shut as tears ford.
“Serena!” she was scared. It didn’t matter how powerful she was. She was scared!
“Sere-” A familiar hand grabbed onto her. It was Serena.
“Serena…” she couldn’t help but blubber as her emotions got the best of her.
“It’s okay!” Serena yelled over the wind. “The engines blown! We need to get outside! So we can see!” Alia nodded. Serena looked at the hole where the kitchen was. “There must have been a bomb in the kitchen as well! It’s an assasination! Co on!”
Together, they climbed up the dining room as the ship was now in a nose dive. They weren’t fussy about handholds, using their extre strength to simply grip into the wood as they pulled themselves towards the hole. As they reached their goal, Alia threw out another ship-wide healing spell. Who knew how many people were getting hurt by things flying around?
They climbed out of the ship and if it wasn’t for her strength the wind would have pulled her off. Looking down, she could see smoke billowing from holes all through the ship's structure. And beyond that… was the ground. The dark green expanse of the endless forest was approaching faster and faster as they approached terminal velocity.
“What do we do!?” Alia tried to think how to save everyone on board. She could throw out a healing spell just as they collided but would that help? In airplane disasters, bodies disintegrated. She wasn’t confident she could ti it right, and even if she did, could she heal sobody if they were in pieces?
Luckily, Serena seed to have a plan.
“Can you Speak!?” Serena yelled. “I can’t! I’ll destroy the ship and blow us away! But you can!”
“Okay!” Alia yelled back, folding the aether into Aseco and then ejecting the remaining aether so Speaking wouldn’t cause a power release. “Aseco,” she Spoke and she felt herself beco divine as the godly aether rushed into her body. She glowed an incandescent golden, so bright anyone a hundred klicks around would see.
“Good!” Serena yelled. “Flare your aether as hard as you can! Against the lumina! Hold the ship up!”
Alia gritted her teeth and did as instructed. Her connection to the aetherfield was extrely strong and by flaring her aether she could levitate against the vast lumina far below. She pressed her aether as far as the First Word allowed her and for a mont she felt the ship slow as the force she produced counteracted against the thousands and thousands of tonnes falling towards the ground.
But it wasn’t enough. She could slightly slow the dood ship, but she couldn’t do enough to prevent the crash from being devastatingly fatal to everyone inside. The thod of generating force from the lumina-aether reaction wasn’t efficient.
The First Word wasn’t enough.
“I need to Speak more!” She yelled, looking at Serena. “The First Word isn’t powerful enough!” As her words reached Serena, her girlfriend’s eyes widened as she registered Alia’s intentions. A sombre mont passed while they looked at each other with complex emotions.
Serena gave the smallest of nods. “Do it!”
“Promise !” Alia called, “Promise you won’t change how you see ! No matter what I beco!”
“... I promise!”
“Okay!” Alia closed her eyes, focusing inwards, ignoring the screaming wind or the ground rushing to et them. She focused only on the divine aether inside her as she moulded the aether of Aseco into the advanced Word. It was the first ti she had done this for real, but her instincts didn’t let her down and in a few monts it was ready.
Alia opened her eyes and Spoke the Second Word of the branch of divinity.
“ASCELPIUS!”
The world slowed to a crawl as it took on a sepia tone. All sound was muffled apart from the ethereal thud that erupted from the divine aether in Alia's body, rippling through the aetherfield and the mists. The noise snaked its way through the planes of reality as it sought its owner.
It was a knock on the door, so to speak.
After a mont that felt like a dozen seconds to Alia, but was only microseconds in real-ti, an answer ca back.
“Oh, mighty and dreadful daemon lord, arrayed in human flesh. Dost thou seek to sully my nature? Dost thou desire my embodint?”
It took Alia a mont to register the words being spoken in her mind. The experience of having Ascelpius communicate with her directly was akin to being blasted by amounts of aether far denser than any attack she had witnessed in the world so far. No wonder the Second Word was such a montous achievent here! The average Speaker would be risking their lives just making this initial step!
Well, the deity had asked her a question, and keeping him waiting would be impolite.
“Um… yes, please?” Alia chirped.
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