Here's the rest!
WARNING!!
Spoiler, adult language ahead
-- Attached file included as plaintext by Listar --
-- File: dil2b.txt
** Chapter 12 **
Astonished, Allen watched his sister flee. She plowed through two
men carrying flags in honour of Asturia and Fanelia before
disappearing into the castle. He began to doubt his decision to
allow Celena to accompany him, damning himself for ignoring his
misgivings. He began an apology, and was cut short by Millerna's
hand on his arm. She was staring pointedly at his friend.
Van was staring beyond the flag bearers (who had resumed their
dignified positions) into the the grand portal that had swallowed
the woman that had once commanded the most elite of the Zaibach
forces. Allen knew a lovesick expression when he saw one, although
it was baffling why Van would be directing such a look towards not
only someone he barely knew, but someone whom he had every reason
to despise.
"King Fanelia," Millerna said gently, "maybe we should escort you
to your room?"
"Oh." With great effort, Van tore his gaze away from the door and
looked up at the princess. "Right."
While the Asturian and Fanelian guards saluted and dispersed, along
with the commoners, to ecstatically take part of the festivities,
the royal entourage headed for the guest quarters. Allen exchanged
baffled, worried looks with Millerna.
"I've taken care of it. Please don't worry," Eries whispered
quietly in Allen's ear. He raised an eyebrow at Eries' presumptuous
act, but to question a royal family member in full view of the
public eye was unbefitting a mere Royal Guardman, no matter how
heroic.
While Van's face began to harden over with the stoic mask required
of his station, Millerna began to fill the King's ears with this,
that, and everything about the upcoming festivities. She continued
prattling on like a little girl as they strode into the palace,
distracting anyone that might have been dwelling on the oddities
of the last few moments. The fact that she could act nonchalant in
the midst of Celena's abrupt departure was an unheard reminder that
what had happened had not been seen.
Allen stole glances at Van while they travelled the corridors. His
outward appearance remained dutifully as it should, but his eyes
were glazed. He nodded appropriately, responded functionally, but
his thoughts were clearly not on Millerna's current discription of
the exquisite ballroom that had been constructed to not only
entertain dignitaries, but to house prized Guymelefs as well.
A frown deepened on his handsome face. He remembered a young woman
from a foreign land, vibrant, full of love and energy, whose
innocence and unique beauty reminded him so much of she who he'd
lost so long ago that his heart had been captured.
Van, my friend. I hope you won't make the same mistake as I did.
Celena ran mindlessly through the twists and turns of the palace,
feuled by fear. The delightful porcelains and color wall hangings
that had so fascinated her before fused into a tearful blur. She
had care for neither human or object, and fleetingly she wondered
how many maids she'd shoved or pots she'd broken. Eventually, the
bright, populated environment gave way to gray and black. She
tripped on a hard stair, the back of her gown tearing, but this was
only a momentary delay. On she continued, her heart slamming
against her ribs, begging her to stop and at least catch a decent
breath. But she couldn't, she had to get away. She couldn't face
those eyes again.
At the top of the staircase her body finally won the battle,
collapsing itself onto the cold, stone floor. Violent sobs wracked
her thin frame. Overwhelming her was a profound sense of misery
and loss, the source of which was barely identifiable.
"Folken," she whispered, the name fleeing from the depths of her
soul to escape from her lips. The name was a frustrating mystery.
But to Dilandau, the man was Strategos to the Zaibach empire,
intelligent and respectable, but entirely too wrapped up in
meandering with scientific garbage to be a proper soldier. Not to
mention that he had some strange, loathsome associates who were
too often seen in his company. For instance, that disgusting
shape-shifter he'd had to deal with personally.
"Now that thing was even more disgusting than you are."
Celena scrambled to her feet and stumbled out into the open. A
short glance around told her that somehow she'd ended up on the
balcony of one of the castle towers. The sun was just beginning
to make its descent into the hillsides, painting the sky with
brilliant red and orange hues. Dilandau looked up wistfully at
the fiery color array. "Ah," he murmured, an eager smile stretching
his lips, "that reminds me of things I wish I were doing right now.
Don't you agree?"
Panting, Celena leaned against a pillar, exhaustion causing her
legs to quiver uncontrollably. "No, I don't."
He continued to gaze at the sky. "I see. Why, that would explain
why you didn't crack open that lovesick shit's head on the ground
like he deserved." Dilandau's gleaming red eyes and feral smile
widened even more. "Why, it would have been perfect to see his
brains oozing onto the parapet in front of all the little soldiers
and all his little friends." His voice lowered to an eager whisper.
"My heart pounds just with the thought of it!"
Through his shrieking cackle, Celena found the strength to shout,
"I won't do it! You can't make me!"
Dilandau whirled on her, suddenly furious. "Why? Because you think
you LOVE him?" He gripped her by the shoulders and shoved her hard
against a pillar. "Understand THIS. I hate him! HATE HIM!"
She stared at him, barely breathing, too frightened to move. He
leaned in close, peering malevolently into her wide, blue eyes.
"But you think you love Folken, don't you? I wonder why. What sort
of revolting trysts did you two have behind my back?"
At that, Celena became angry. No matter how transparent her memories
were, the emotions that had been felt were still prevalent. How
dare he stain the memory of the man she'd loved! She wriggled one
arm out of his grip and did the unthinkable.
SMACK.
The feel of her hand against his cheek was satisfying, and for a
moment she felt triumphant. They both stood still, frozen in the
aftermath of the motion. Dilandau's head slowly twisted its way
back towards her direction. Before then, she didn't think a look
so insanely furious could exist on a human face.
"How. Dare. You."
"I'm sorry?" she whispered weakly. She struggled, trying to do
everything in her power to free her remaining arm, but the leather
encased hand around her wrist had tightened to the point where blood
could no longer flow. The Dragonslayer Commander's free hand slowly
pulled backwards, the fingers wrapping into a fist. Celena threw her
free arm up to protect herself, screaming in pain and desperation.
Surprisingly, Dilandau released her and put his hands over his
ears. His face took on a remarkably comical, worried expression, and
his knees knocked together. "Aiii! Stop it! What did I do?"
Celena gaped at his suddenly high-pitched voice. She squeezed her
eyes shut and shook her head a few times. When she looked again,
Dilandau had disappeared. A beastwoman, dressed in the simple marked
tunic that marked the young of the cat-tribes, was staring at her
curiously.
"Allen's sister, right?" she quipped. Her paw-like hands were now
folded behind her back and her nose was quivering quizzically in
Celena's direction. "Are you all right?"
"Yes," she said, rubbing her bruised wrist. "I'm sorry, I thought
you were someone else."
The cat-girl apparently had little sense of subtlety; her narrowed
eyes and o-shaped mouth were blatant signs that she did not believe
Celena's statement.
"Riiiight. Who were you talking to then?"
"Me?" Celena pointed to herself and attempted to look innocent.
"Oh, no one! Just, you know, remembering lines from my favourite,
uhm, play." And if you buy that, I have a flying fortress to sell
you.
"I seeee." / Boy, Allen's sister is wierd! And she smells funny. Like
Guymelefs and fear and flowers all at the same time. / "Well, Princess
Eries' sent me to get you. She said that you got lost."
"Thank you, Miss."
"It's Merle." She smirked mischeviously. "Lady Merle! Don't forget
the 'Lady' part."
Celena mustered up all her remaining pride and stared the impudent
beast woman down. Dilandau whispered softly in her ear, echoing
aloud her inner thoughts. "What an obnoxious thing. I really should
teach her a lesson. Perhaps dangle her by her tail over the balcony
wall. What do you say?"
A mixture of frustration, fright, and irritation mingled on Celena's
face. Merle's ears perked up at the strange expression. "Eh? Did you
eat something funny?" She wandered closer to get a closer olfactory
perception.
"Hey! Stop that! It tickles!"
"Ew." Merle pinched her own nose and waved a paw in front of it.
"You reek! Did you even think to bathe this morning?"
"Of course I did!"
The cat-girl bent at the waist to get a closer inspection of Celena's
dress. "Everthing's wrinkly and ripped. I bet you were running."
Celena cringed. "So?"
"Oh no!" Merle gasped and wrung her hands. "Are you going to start
having visions?" she wailed. "And saying wierd things? And playing
with funny looking cards?"
Celena was absolutely baffled. "What in the world are you talking
about?"
"Oh, nothing," Merle mewed. "Let's go! I have to take you to your
room so you can get clean and look somewhat decent. Don't get lost
again," she added under her breath.
Celena followed the kitten down the tower stairs and through the
maze of extravagent royal decor. Neither of them spoke during the
journey, although there was significant time to spark a conversation,
due to the troubled plays of their own thoughts. Celena was
preoccupied with keeping Dilandau at bay. Whispering taunts
promising violent thrills were starting to become tempting, but she
managed to force him back. Barely.
Merle's hackles were rising steadily. The guardsman had illustrated
Eries' desire that Merle not mention Van's name when fetching
Allen's sister, as well as a brief necessary description, but there
were some very important other details that she felt had been left
out.
That ugly short hair. That ditzy, clueless demeanor. That rude
manner! Why, if it wasn't for the fact that she looked like Allen,
she might as well be escorting Hitomi!
** Chapter 13 **
The ballroom for the occassion had been constructed with such
delicious skill that nobles felt it necessary to point out the fact
to the Princesses upon the beginning of every conversation. Even
after the twentieth similar remark, the two sisters continued to
agree that the architect they'd commissioned had truly done a
wonderful job.
>From the main entrance, one could sample practically all the sights
that were to beheld. A high, windowed ceiling let in both light from
the sun and the pair of moons, lending a magical aura at night to a
room moderately lit by slender, golden candlebras. The white
alabaster that arced down from the ceiling met a small strip of
simple plaster border, from which dropped walls decorated at precise
intervals with a combination of both new and old tapestries.
Emanating from these silk paintings were the spirits of men and
women from vital moments in Asturian history; the oldest depicting
the first King stabbing the ground that would later house the royal
palace, the newest of Alliance and Zaibach Guymelefs and soldiers
standing in friendship and triumph while a white dragon flew
overhead.
Van stared at that one the longest.
Between the tapestries alternated unopened, high crystal windows
and opened windowed doors. Noblemen and women of all the Allied
countries (which now included a few black-cloaked Madoushi) mingled
amongst magnificent marble pillars that swirled with subtle blues
and greens. Their expensive shoes walked upon polished stone floors,
some of which was covered with rugs exotically sewn with patterns
of dragons, a gift of the young Duke of Fried to his friends and
family. On the far end, solemnly watching over the festivities,
their polished armour and swords glinting slightly in the pale
candlelight, were selected Guymelefs from each Allied country.
Noticeably empty was the middle throne that had been reserved for
Fanelia's royal instrument, Escaflowne. Even though they had
suggested replacing the dormant Guymelef with one from the country's
samurai legions, the King had refused, quietly adding that his
brother would have preferred the vacancy.
Flanking the empty space were the only other Guymelefs that could
have rivaled Escaflowne in size. On the right sat Scherezade, the
golden insignia on its blue cloak gleaming from the shadows. On the
left sat a Zaibach Oreades model, officer class, made in deep blue
and gray metals.
Celena's breath caught in her throat when she saw the hulking
machination looming down at her. Her hands shook, vino dribbling
onto her knuckles. If only they had been thoughtful enough to
provide one in his personal reds...
She forced herself out of Dilandau's musings, spinning away from
the looming reminder of her (his) past, only to spill the remainder
of her drink onto a black cloak. The man turned to catch her,
grabbing the glass before it could shatter upon the stones.
"Are you all right, miss?"
At the polite query, Celena looked up. Dread filled her heart at the
familiar sight of the dark clasps and overlays that marked a
Zaibach Madoushi from the rest of the crowd. The man was middle
aged, of a slight build, and clearly had been handsome at one point.
However, stress had etched fine lines around his eyes and mouth,
and a pair of thin spectacles aged him even further. Long brown hair
was neatfully tied back, some of which stubbornly sprouted out at
the top, the remainder spilling down one shoulder. Her mind's eye
brightened the color of his hair, removed the glasses and the
creases, deepened the voice...
"I'm fine, thank you."
"Were you admiring the craftmanship?" The Madoushi looked up
wistfully at the Oreades. "I admit, we really don't need such
symbols of war anymore, although sometimes it serves as quite the
reminder. Doesn't it, young lady?" He turned, only to find an empty
space. Confused, he swiftly scanned the immediate crowd, only to
see her silvery mop retreating towards one of the doorways.
"It's her, isn't it?"
He turned to his female companion. Despite the festivities, and
his urging, she'd refused to put on more tasteful attire and
instead remained in her Guymelef pilot's uniform. He patted her
shoulder, mindful of the spike that jutted out from the shoulderpad.
"Yes, my dear. We will need to watch her carefully."
The tall woman nodded, looking through the thick crowd of noblemen
and royalty at Celena's retreating form. "This is dangerous. I
should have been allowed my sword."
"With the bond between these countries as shakey as it is?" He
chuckled. "No, if he is truly still a danger, I have taken my own
precautions."
Van's eyes had followed Celena much of the night, in between being
introduced to a few of the rather comely daughters of his peers.
After the third girl (some painted second daughter of a portly
Egzardian politician trying to weed his way into international
circles), he muttered something halfway polite and began shoving
his way through the crowd.
(In a far corner, Gaddes whispered a small cry out triumph, and a
crew of gentlemen who looked distinctly uncomfortable admist the
refinery handed him their bet money.)
Allen watched Van from the middle of the room. Surrounded by
fawning dignitaries, their proposals and praises, he was unable to
do anything other than smile and nod where he stood. The Asturian
princesses, noticing his distress and their guest's sudden
disappearance, were likewise trapped. All three silently cursed
both their honour and their luck.
Van ignored the gibbering protests of the offended Egzardian and
started shoving his way through the crowd. A few moved out of his
way instantly, recognizing the face of the Fanelian king. Others
had to be prompted by their fellows or pushed aside. These men and
women turned their noses instantly at the ragged looking boy. In
his unwillingness to decorate himself in a "kingly" manner (amongst
all manner of objections from his friends and advisors), Van had
simply worn what was comfortable to him; a sleeveless red tunic
laced at the top, his pale slacks, leather boots, and the teardrop
pendant.
His heart pounded. It had been little over a year since he'd
watched Hitomi disappear into the column of light. Each passing
day made the ache in his heart grow a little more. There were times
he thought he could see her standing with him in his personal
chambers. Sometimes she was dressed in Millerna's gown, bringing
back that one awkward moment that she had taken his breath away,
sometimes she was in that strange short pleated skirt and jacket
that she often preferred. He would tell her everything; how Fanelia
was being recontructed, how Merle was growing, the troubles with
his new responsibilities, how he missed her, how he wished he
could touch her, how he wished that he could have done what was
right more often while they had been together...
Her eyes would gaze at him lovingly, and she would nod
sympathetically. When he would speak of that which could have been,
she would become sad and turn away. He would reach out to gather
her into his arms, to comfort her, to meet his lips on hers, and
the apparition would disappear, leaving him only to his empty room
of stone and wood. Merle would always be there afterwards. Her soft
arms would wrap around his body, closing him in a tight embrace
while the tears quietly fell. Only she knew of these late night
moments, when the legendary boy King who'd rebuilt his country
from ashes and rubble gave in to his lonliness and regret.
So when Celena's beauty took his breath away and stopped a pulse
that had been racing with a buried anger, he nearly screamed aloud.
What would all those moments of pain be worth if he found himself
adoring that which he had sworn to hate?
Van clenched his fists and continued pushing his way through the
seemingly endless throng of perfumed emissaries. He had to speak
with her, if only to see the sneer n her face, hear the malicious
tones that had to be in her voice, and gaze into eyes that would
reveal the ugliness that lay within. Then he could deny lump in his
throat and the ache in his heart.
There would be no way he would let himself love Dilandau Albatou.
** Chapter 14 **
A large group of more than slightly inebriated guests had
congregated near the doorway Celena had been heading towards and h
ad closed off any chance for escape. Their expressions were dark,
and the lips that met the vino were pressed into thin lines.
Obviously some of the dignitaries were rather disgruntled from
being pressed into the same room as their former enemies and current
rivals.
As her hand reached out to make a polite request for room, a small
commotion erupted to her left. She looked over, where a crude
looking young man dressed in an outlandishly casual tunic and pants
was roughly making his way through sparkling dresses and expensive
coats. A few brief moments passed before she was able to recognize
the teardrop pendant swinging from his neck and the reddish black
eyes that were bearing down on her like two sharp shot arrows.
She had to get away.
Desire for subtlety pushed aside by panic, she toppled a wigged
Asturian councilmember and the robed Daedalian he was flirting with,
neatly twirled to avoid a vino-bearing maid, and began winding her
way through the maze of conversing gentlemen and women. She made her
pathway erratic, going every which way she could, hoping to lose her
pursuer. Yet every time she turned she caught the strange gleam of
his signature pendant. She peered through the gap between a through
a few tightly knit Basramlic scientists (slightly chilled by their
nonchalant conversation concerning experimentations on small live
mammals), finally finding what she'd hoped was an unlocked door. She
began shoving her way through.
Warm fingers, calloused and strong, wrapped around her upper forearm.
She turned, praying to all the gods that it was not who she thought
it was, and her breath stopped. Their eyes met. All the conversation,
music, the clinking of glasses, the shuffle of expensive cloth faded
under the low throbbing of her heart. His mouth opened, to condemn
her or to adore her she did not know...
...And remained that way, the words frozen in his throat.
Those eyes of hers! Just as arresting to a man's heart as Allen's
were to a woman's, full of passion and beauty, set into a narrow,
heart-shaped face that was soft on the edges and angled only in the
nose. Her lips were neither full nor thin but made to look perfectly
appropriate for her other features, correct for speaking, enough for
kissing. Her dress, Asturian style, was tight at the top and bloomed
into a skirt below, exposing the roundness of her breasts and the
smallness of her waist, but leaving questionable the shape of her
legs. The pale, exposed arm was soft to the touch, but hard within,
which meant that unlike the flowery, giddy maids that he'd had the
displeasure of meeting earlier, she was no stranger to physical
exertion. To Van, everything was so wonderously inviting. He began
to draw her closer.
Fear blurred the beauty, for it was then that he saw what he'd
originally hoped for. The emotion in her eyes became touched by the
hints of a malicious intent, burning with a hate that was all too
recognizable. The shapely lips curled minutely, further blackening
her appearance, as the psychotic within struggled to come to fore.
The interplay of desire and hate made the Van's face blur before her
eyes while the remainder of the room swirled in the background. She
fought tears of pain and frustration and tried pulling her arm away.
"My Lord Van," she said, her voice surprisingly cold and steady,
"did you need something of me? If you are looking for my brother, he
is over there."
"I'm not looking for him," he returned.
Celena thought he sounded almost... disheartened. A snarl was
Dilandau's only appraisal. She lowered her voice, conscious of a
few people who had started to discreetly eavesdrop on what appeared
to be Van's advancement on a possible candidate. "You are making a
scene, my lord. Release my arm."
"You'll run again."
Celena swallowed. It had crossed her mind. She raised her tone.
"I apologize for my rudeness earlier, my lord. Are you interested
in my hand by chance? If so, you'll need to talk to my--" Van
jerked her forward suddenly, bringing their faces within a
handspan's of each other. From one side she heard the stifled,
horrified gasp of a hopeful queen-to-be. "--brother," she finished,
her tone barely above a whisper.
"Who are you really?" he hissed.
"I don't understand the question," she responded, much louder than
was necessary. Her (his) anger was becoming more difficult to
restrain. Dilandau grinned triumphantly, his fingers breaking
through the fraying barrier between their minds. "Let go of me this
instant."
Van's voice rose as well. He hadn't meant to goad her this far,
but now that he'd started he didn't know how to stop. If she was --
if she still IS him -- he needed to prove it. Then, he could be
finally disgusted with her, be done with this whole ridiculous
infatuation, and return to thinking about the woman who truly
mattered. "You know damn well what I mean." Unconsciously, he
tightened the grip around her arm. Those nearest to them were
blatantly staring at the outlandish conversation, creating a
steadily growing bubble of silence with Van and Celena at the
center. "Answer me!"
Celena backhanded him.
The crack of knuckle meeting cheekbone reverberated in a room that
had become empty of sound only moments before. There was none of
the prim and proper manner that a lady's slap would have entailed.
This was a blow blessed with skill born of practise, and the
explosion of a fury which had waited long for release. Van's rolled
with the blow, staggering when he could have fallen, his mouth
filling with the coppery taste of his own blood. He regained his
footing, then stumbled a few steps backwards when Celena screamed.
Those eyes that had captivated him only minutes before were now
wide and crazed, and he could swear that their blue depths had
begun to redden. Tears were finding ragged pathways down her cheeks.
Tufts of hair sprouted between fingers whose grasp destroyed the
once elegant style. She screamed again, and fell to her knees. Van,
as well as any nobleman or woman within arm's reach of her,
stepped back in horror.
"Stop it, STOP IT!!"
// You really don't know, do you? You don' t know what he's done
// to me!
A bright sword flashed. Pain seared up her right jaw.
// The least of his transgressions.
Bloodcurdling screams filled her ears. Familiar boys' voices howled
for aide and mercy, only to be cut off by the roar of flame-engulfed
chemicals.
"No! No! Don't let me see!"
// What about him? He who we both cared for...?
// ...Not Folken...
A kind face filled her vision, comforting to the both of them,
smiling that wide, unusual way that only his people could. He held
her when others were abusing her, stroking away tears of terror and
loss, always understanding, being there when nearly no one else was,
an affirmation that there was something else out there that was
better than this...
He was loyal. Immeasureably loyal. Without the Strategos to direct
him, with his Dragonslayers to idolize him, there was no one except
for him. One lone beastman under his command, but one wealthy in
skill. Under the obedient exterior was there, perhaps, a note of
compassion...?
...And now he was crying out his last, desperate words. They echoed
from the tiny speaker inside the Guymelef's chamber. "Change back!
Go back to that sweet girl you once were!" Then that roar, the same
one that had taken his compatriots... Escaflowne's terrible form
approaching, suddenly blockaded by the swirl of a dark blue cape...
...Jajuka...
// ...Jajuka...
Sadness and anger colored the chilling shriek that burst from
Celena's lips. She hunched over. Van took a few hesitant steps
forward, horrified that he had been the catalyst to whatever fit
she was having. He put a hesitant hand on her shoulder, then
immediately snatched it back. Onlookers gasped, and someone called
out for a doctor.
"By all the gods, let me through!" Allen desperately tried to get
past the throng of gaping emissaries without being impolite, but
most were unwilling to let go of a view to a most fascinating
dilemma. After a few moments he lost all sense of propriety, and
began shoving men and women out of his way. Someone began shouting
for the castle guards. The elder princess began cajoling those that
took offense, while the younger raced through the path left by the
panicked war hero.
At Van's touch, Celena's shoulders expanded and retracted, almost
as if she had taken an impossibly deep breath. Her dress ripped, as
well as the corset underneath, exposing the pale flesh of her back.
The king marvelled at the tone, wondering how a girl so delicate
looking could have muscles that rivalled his, although he could
swear that the general size of her had grown. Something inside of
him cried warning, but he was far too immersed in guilt to notice.
Celena grew suddenly calm, releasing her hair to transfix a gaze on
her hands as if seeing them for the first time.
"C-Celena," Van stammered, trying to put a reassuring hand on her
shoulder. "Are you okay--"
A hand shot out and grasped his neck. He was pulled upwards, choking,
the torn remanents of Celena' gown falling away to reveal a young
man's hardened chest.
"Vannn..." Dilandau whispered, relishing the ability to vocalize the
abomination. His mouth stretched in an eager, bloodthirsty smile.
"I'm feeling quite well, thank you."