Trained in the Elemental Fist
Chapter 1
Examination
Nanyya of Herak, daughter of the exiled tutor to the Great Khan
of the North, stood in the chamber for the Tribunal of Arbitors,
waiting to present her petition. She dressed in the garb adopted as
a rook to Lord Marshal Baern; a leather hunting coat she dyed blue to
match that of the color of the Order that covered a simple chemise
tucked into leather breeches that lead into her tall herakeen boots
with their distinct upturned toe. Her anxiety crawled around her
body and she could feel the Qi inside of her mix with the powerful
emotion. Her Qi began to seep out from her hand into the surrounding
areas and her vision began to haze with a bluish light. Control
the emotion, she thought. She frowned that her thought was in
the voice of her father. She closed her eyes, trying to push him from
her memory without success. Her Qi was warm in her palm; small
tendrils seemed to slowly reach out from her skin and pulse with the
disquiet in her mind.
"Qi is the dance of the fire," she began, drowning out her
father's voice, "it is the rising of the wind and the flow of the
water...."
As she spoke, she lifted her hand and stretched her fingers. She
could feel the tendrils of her Qi reaching out from each digit.
"It is the stillness of the stone and the strength of the
steel..."
She slowly closed her fingers one by one, retracting each
invisible tendril back beneath her palm.
"It is the one element of all of the elements," she finished
as she redirected her Qi back into its proper flow inside her. Her
breath fell into a slow rhythm while her mind secured the worry she
felt. She heard the door behind her open and knew her goal of
becoming a Lord Marshal was close at hand.
She counted five distinct foot falls coming from behind her and
she opened her eyes to look at the twenty-three desks arrayed in a
half circle of two tiers. The five arbitors took their seats in
various places in the tiers. A small woman with spider web hair
walked up a small set of stairs directly in front of Nanyya and sat
at the desk at the top. The desk appeared to be slightly larger than
the others around her. When she was settled, her hazel eyes bore
into Nanyya.
"Rook Nonya," she said.
"Nanyya, Lord Arbitor," she corrected.
"Apologies, Na-NY-ya," said the Lord Arbitor as she pushed
the syllables out from under her Skarland brogue, "I am Sora
VcKinnty, Chancellor of Arbitors for the Order of Law and Justice.
Please present your petition to Secretary Verdun."
Nanyya began to walk toward a woman on her left taking her
petition from inside her coat.
"Over here, barbarian," said the man on her right. She
turned to the man without a break in her stride and presented her
petition for promotion to Lord Marshal. He read all the documents
through, looked up over his spectacles at her, and then reread them.
"Who prepared these for you?" he asked.
"No one, Lord Arbitor. I prepared them myself," she said.
He looked up at the Chancellor and said, "They're perfect."
"Good," said VcKinnty, "what is your surname?"
"I am not familiar with that," she answered. A raven-haired
woman snorted with satisfaction as if something about Nanyya was just
confirmed.
"A family name," said Verdun, "one needs to be entered into
our records."
"People of Herak have no family name," she stated. The Lords
Arbitor looked from one to another at the peculiar situation. The
Chancellor was the first to offer an answer.
"She is the first Herakeen to stand before us," said
VcKinnty, "let her surname be Herakeen," she looked at Nanyya,
"is that suitable for now?"
Nanyya nodded in agreement and returned to the center of the half
circle. A few moments passed as Verdun completed his task and
gestured his readiness to proceed.
"This examination will now commence," said VcKinnty, "Can
you uphold our laws and abide by the orders given to you from this
tribunal or the Master of Marshals?"
"I can." She replied.
"Laws so foreign to your barbarian culture?" asked the
raven-haired woman. She leaned forward placing her elbow on her
desk., tracing the line of her elven ear, pushing her midnight
strands up and over the sharp peak. She came to rest her chin on her
thumb, while her index finger molded into her cheek
"Lord Arbitor..." she began then realized she did not know
her name. The woman's emerald eyes glistened with a deep intensity.
Nanyya shifted with unease and averted her eyes ever so slightly.
"Luciel," the woman said with the complicated talasian
accent.
"Lord Arbitor Luciel, our laws here are no different than the
laws in my homeland. There are simply more of them here," said
Nanyya.
"Meaning?" pressed VcKinnty.
"The Nine Laws of Herak provide the basis for order and justice
and the khans interpret them just as you interpret the laws here. We
only have nine though in Herak."
A quiet chuckle from a dark-skinned man with long braids of gray
and black hair secured by a leather thong echoed around the chamber.
He looked at her with a wry smile peaking out from a thick beard that
too was braided. He sat forward and spoke.
"I am Lord Arbitor Obeyle, Nanyya," she bowed slightly with
the introduction and he acknowledged it with a nod and continued,
"so, you have not had an issue in joining our society?" he asked.
"No, Lord Arbitor Obeyle, if have not," she replied.
"And you are loyal to our realms?" he asked, "will you
defend us from foreign invaders when called upon?"
"My father," she said, careful to keep her tone controlled
despite what she felt for him, "swore to the magistrate that his
family would be loyal when we immigrated here. My actions as a rook
has shown my loyalty to the Order. Nothing would change should I be
made a Lord Marshal," she said.
"Including any invader from Herak?"
"I doubt it, Obeyle," said a woman with icy features and a
flame of red hair tamed by a gold ring encrusted with jewels.
"Lord Arbitor Drauselle," said the Chancellor, "contain
your remarks to questions," she turned to Nanyya, "what is your
answer to Lord Arbitor Obeyle's question?"
"Without hesitation," Nanyya replied.
Confidence began to replace anxiety in Nanyya as the examination
continued. More questions were asked of her. Are you familiar with
Breed's Doctrine? What was the impetus for the creation of the
Order? What is the section of the Turingen Accords describing the
duties of a rook? Where are the one hundred and eight districts? How
many rooks under one Lord Marshal? Nanyya answered each question
without error. As she barely finished the answer to a question,
another was fired out from one of the Lords Arbitor.
After an hour of the question barrage, there was a pause. She saw
them exchanging looks amongst themselves. Luciel seemed impassive;
Obelye and VcKinnty were impressed. Drauselle showed nothing but ice
while Verdun never once looked up from writing even as he asked
questions. She braced herself for the what she surely knew would be
the next set of questions.
"How did Lord Marshal Baern die?" asked Luciel, confirming
Nanyya's suspicions.
"He was killed while exercising a warrant," answered Nanyya.
They waited for a reaction from her but no one saw tears in her eyes
since she left them at his grave two weeks ago.
"Did you support your Lord Marshal in every way?" asked
Obeyle.
"I did, Lord Arbitor."
"Where were you at the time of his death," asked Drauselle.
"I was assigned messenger duty," replied Nanyya, "I asked
to go with him but he was insistent on my assignment. He said it was
of low risk and one such as myself was not needed."
She could feel Drauselle's eyes roam over her, as if looking
for some physical deformity or stain of evil painted on her. The
intrusive attention given to her pulled at Nanyya's previous
anxiety. She could feel the flow of her Qi begin to shift.
"Why was that?" she asked.
"I do not know, Lord Arbitor," said Nanyya. Drauselle's
eyes continued to bore into her.
"Was it because of the witchcraft you practice?" Drauselle
finally said.
"I practice no witchcraft," said Nanyya quickly but she had
not anticipated this line of questioning.
"Do you not wield some barbarian magic? Something Baern would
know not to trust?"
Of course not! screamed her inner voice. Thoughts sped
through her mind as she looked for an answer. He never doubted my
abilities! The Elemental Fist saved him so many times! Did he trust
it though? Did he trust me? She quashed those thoughts
immediately, knowing that they were false. Calm! You must remain
calm! She thought. Her Qi could smell her anxiety returning and
began to lick at it. Qi is the dance of the fire, it is the rise
the wind and the flow of the water. It is the stillness of the stone
and the strength of the steel. It is the one element of all
elements.
When she finished, her Qi returned to its normal flow in her body
and she slowly continued to recite the mantra in the back of her mind
to maintain her composure as the waited for her answer.
"Yuanxiu Quan Kuxuei is the scientific study of what flows
through all of Arthera," she began, "I believe your scholars call
it Aither. We call it Qi. This is the flow of energy that is
inherent to the planet and those who dwell on it. The Science of the
Elemental Fist teaches us to harness that energy, both from within us
and around us. We can use it to heal; we can use it to defend
ourselves."
"The science of barbarians is sophistry at best," responded
Drauselle, "did Lord Marshal Baern not trust you because of your
witchcraft?"
"No Lord Arbitor, He trusted me many times with his life and
the life of the troop. I cannot tell you why he died only that I
obeyed his orders."
"Corruptions such as yourself continue to endanger these
realms," Drauselle continued as if Nanyya had not answered, "how
can we trust this magic that is a danger to..."
"Stay your preaching, Lord Arbitor. She has answered your
question." said VcKinnty, "don't let the politics of Reine
cloud this examination."
"She is a witch and a barbarian and I do not see why we are
even entertaining this horse thu.. person's petition?"
"There is one point that needs to be addressed," said Verdun.
"What is that Secretary?" asked the Chancellor.
"Her requirements are incomplete. Her petition is perfect, but
Baern died prior to completing her time in service and she does not
have his endorsement."
"Then she cannot even petition," said Drauselle triumphantly.
Nanyya felt a sharp pain of fear stab her in the heart. No, no,
no! ran through her mind as the thoughts of her dream of wearing
the star of Lord Marshal started to die. The Qi inside her surged and
she turned all of her focus inward to control it.
"She will have to be dismissed," said Luciel.
"Or..." said Verdun, "she could serve under another Lord
Marshal," he looked at some pages on his desk that he had set
aside, "we have no one to take Baern's troop yet, as we are still
attempting to replenish the Lords Marshal ranks we lost during the
last Chasm incursion," he said, moving and scanning pages in one of
his ledgers, "but we could put her under Ganteau." The room was
silent at the suggestion. A glimmer of hoped warmed Nanyya's chest.
"Yes," said VcKinnty, "Lord Marshal Ganteau has delivered
two rooks for examination and ten to the Constabulary. He is eligible
to recruit again. Do we agree that Nanyya Herakeen may complete her
service and stand before us again in two months' time? I vote,
Aye."
"Aye," said Obeyle.
"Nay," said Luciel.
"Aye," said Verdun. There was a long hesitation as all eyes
went to Drauselle, except Nanyya's. She looked forward at
attention, maintaining the Qi that seemed so volatile inside her,
listening as the voted on her fate.
"Nay," said Drauselle. Nanyya struggled to remain standing.
"There are enough votes in the affirmative," said VcKinnty,
"We will allow you to complete your time under Lord Marshal Ganteau
and be sponsored by him. Do you accept this chance?"
"I do," replied Nanyya as joy flooded through her. Her Qi
rode the wave singing inside of her with perfect harmony. Verdun
made a note of something on his desk. VcKinnty then stood as did the
rest of them.
"You have your wish," said VcKinnty, "you are
dismissed." As Nanyya watched the Lords Arbitor file past her,
a different examination unfolded. Ove a hundred leagues to the west,
Boris Gorka gazed through the leaves and branches at Shova, a fishing
town in the Borderlands. It sat on the northern shore of Lake Vaiva,
one of two lakes that supplied five countries with dracfish oil for
their lamps. He wrinkled his nose at the strengthening smell of
rotting dracfish. The motion accentuated the hideous scar from a
musket ball on his left cheek. It seemed to from a second grimace as
the damaged skin contorted with the muscle movement.
The stench was sewn into the arthen road where he sat on his mount
as years of wagon trains loaded with barrels of dracfish oil dribbled
their contents onto the ground. They tasted the smell as its oily
molecules hung in the air and coated their noses and throats. The
heavy wagon wheels ensured the road would forever enjoy the brutal
stench and Gorka's Bloodriders were doing just that. The men and
women under his command that reveled in the blood of their victims
lost their stomach to the malodorous air. As the wrenching of guts
died away, Gorka motioned the loose formation forward, breaching the
edge of the forest and trotting down the road, through the stench,
knowing that it ended with one of their more prosperous raids awaited
them--or it should have been.
Gorka spread his three score of marauders out to advance into
Shova, only to find the once prospering village empty. The smell
remained, but no one walked the streets, no sellers lined the market,
no livestock wandered their pens, no boats floated at the dock. The
store houses were empty of the hundreds of barrels of the oil
rendered from the dracfish that would go out to villages and towns to
fill their lanterns to light their streets and homes. Gorka ground
his teeth harder at each discovery. He didn't have to look at his
band to know their disposition. Never a good thing to dangle an
empty hand in front of starving dogs, he thought. They reached
the edge of town opposite from whence they came.
"Ket," he called out as he looked out on the roads leaving
the town. A gray-skinned man-cat from Khmer rode up to his side,
"find them," ordered Gorka.
Ket dismounted and looked at the sign in the road. He carefully
moved in circles, inspecting the ground with his eyes, his hands, and
several other senses that khmeray seemed to have. Soon, he was
following a trail that he could only see. Ket stopped and stared
east for several moments before remounting his horse.
"They took the road to Siegel," announced Ket, "no more than
three weeks ago."
Gorka looked in the direction indicated by khmeray, as he
considered his options. He could take them back west but there was
nothing raid worthy for weeks perhaps months. He could take them
north, but the harvests were only just beginning; nothing of value
would be there either. South took them into Khmer, which was
something he knew not to do. No, the choice was simple. Tanti, his
second, rode up to his side.
"They're getting restless, Boss," she said in a hush, "What
are you thinking?"
"We follow," he said.
"Out of the Borderlands?"
"Yes."
"And Ganteau?"
"To Hell with Ganteau," he said, "we're done feeding him
and fighting over the scraps. Have them make camp. Spread the word
that we are crossing over tomorrow. Have them clean their weapons;
flog anyone without fresh flints in their firearms."
"Yes Gorka," said Tanti. She turned and shouted several
commands. The marauders started to grumble but silence blanketed the
band when Gorka turned to look for the sources. They dismounted and
began searching the emptied buildings. Several surly looks continued
to sit several faces but they kept them hidden from Gorka, or they
thought they did. He knew who were the troublemakers were. If they
gave him a reason, he would snuff them out.
As the night progressed the mood lightened
as the word spread on what the next day held. Foraging in the empty
town produced a stash of rum casks that were broken open and drained.
They sang, they drank, they fought, and snuck off in pairs--or
more--into the night. Gorka pulled a tarnished watch on a chain
from his pocket to look at the time in the firelight. Took his
pistol out and fired it into the air. Everything stopped. Gorka
watched with satisfaction as his marauders dispersed to their last
set of duties. Relief was sent out to their sentries and a final
check of the horses were done. Soon Gorka's camp was completely
silent as the band retired to the buildings they made into barracks.
Gorka himself entered what would have been the constable's office,
stripped off his boots, reloaded his pistol, and laid on a cot that
he drug from the cell. Within moments, he was sleeping with his
pistol in one hand and dagger in the other.
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