Ruby moved on home after reassuring the people in town that the new arrivals were safe if odd. It had been about an hour since she reached town, that and a proper breakfast with sweets helped her aura recover far enough to make the run in one go.
But she had Grimmchild now; the oddly warm bug was nestled under her cape to hide from casual inspection. He was surprisingly intelligent for a baby, too. Ruby coaxed him out once she was certain nobody could see for a closer examination. His carapace felt unexpectedly soft under her fingers, halfway between skin and chitin.
Holding him up to eye level, Ruby squinted. "Hm. I know I can take people along with my Semblance, but you're so young. Do you think you can take it?"
Grimmchild tilted his head, then snorted crimson smoke at her. Ruby rolled her eyes. "Yeah," she deadpanned at herself. "I should've expected that. Baby."
Unfortunately, this did not solve the conundrum. Yang threw up the one time she agreed to help Ruby test carrying someone else. Uncle Qrow took it better, but he still had some choice words about the trip; not the physical one at that. Ruby did not understand what had them in such a tizzy, but she saw the pattern.
Grimmchild uttered a coo before she could decide what to do. He leaned forward and touched his forehead to hers, then a foreign expression slid into her mind; a feeling of safety and assurance. She stared owlishly at the bug who met her gaze with honest curiousity.
"Ooookay. So you think you can, but should I really... okay, fine. But say something if it's too much, okay? Or make noise. Something."
Another coo was the only response.
Uncertain but willing to trust him, Ruby began to focus; her aura enveloped them both moments later and a storm of petals raced across the dirt road. They were not their usual red but proper crimson and some flickered with sparks of flame. Ruby failed to notice, too busy exhilarating in the thrill. She ignored Grimm, the creatures, on her way home this once. The island's forest and meadows flew by at a rapid pace.
Soon enough a sturdy wooden house appeared in the distance. Not terribly large but more than enough for three. Occasionally four, even. A small shed leaned against it, technically communal but mainly Ruby's domain.
Her aura broke a few dozen metres from the door, where she reformed and skipped a few steps forward before finding her balance and coming to stand awkwardly. Now all but rooted in place, Ruby glanced between her home and Grimmchild in her arms. He hid back under her cloak without prompting while she took a deep breath to calm her nerves.
An excited bark greeted her the moment she opened the door. Ruby caught the corgi before he could jump around her legs, cuddling him with a squeal.
"Hey, Zwei! I'm back!"
The black-and-white dog celebrated as if she was gone for years instead of hours. Her voice prompted another response from the kitchen, too: "Hey, sport! Guess who's back too!"
That was her father, Taiyang. Ruby was about to greet him back when the words registered. She beamed and set Zwei down before racing into the living room, where another man sat on the couch. He was halfway up when Ruby went airborne.
"Uncle Qrow!"
She slammed into his broad chest without regard and firm arms closed around her in a gentle embrace, followed by a dark chuckle.
"Heya, squirt."
Qrow smelled faintly of alcohol as he often did, but his grey suit was neatly done for once. Ruby deigned not to point out the faint stubble or how his unruly black hair needed a comb. Then again, a confused coo distracted both before she could really launch into anything to greet her returning uncle after a month-long absence. Qrow's attention shifted at once, eyes widening.
"The fuck is that?"
Zwei growled at the flying form of Grimmchild, dislodged by Ruby's sudden movement. The girl herself looked back with a surprised noise; she quickly slipped out of Qrow's arms and snatched Grimmchild out of the air. Her protective embrace confused man and dog alike.
As the silence began to stretch, Ruby put on a sheepish smile. "Um, I can explain?"
A beat.
Qrow's hand slowly rose to his jacket. It slipped into a pocket, producing a flask. Only after taking a sip did he answer: "Yeah, you better. What freaky kinda Grimm is that, why's it in here, and why're you holding it?"
"What's that about a Grimm?" Taiyang interjected while leaning into the room. His brows rose upon spotting the creature in Ruby's hands. He fully walked in then, drying his hands on a towel. Tan and blond, he was almost a perfect opposite to Qrow's dark and grouchy demeanour.
"Okay, I can see it now."
Ruby fidgeted awkwardly and began to ramble: "Uh, I mean, he's not a Grimm? I don't think?" Grimmchild mewled in rebuke, to which she made a face at him. "I mean not that kind of Grimm, stop sabotaging me!" He trilled in response, exasperating her. "Yeah yeah, just laugh at me. Ugh."
After shaking her head, she became aware of her flabbergasted uncle and father. Ruby sighed, still clutching Grimmchild to her chest. "Look, it's hard to explain. I mean, I met this guy just outside of town and it sounds really, really weird but he's not, uh, human? Like, not faunus either. Super weird. And he says I have some kind of magic, and that he'll tell me about it, but he needs help too, so I kinda... you know?"
She hesitantly motioned with Grimmchild by way of explanation, flustered and halfway hoping they did not understand.
Qrow stared silently for a long moment, then he took another pull from his flask. Taiyang snatched it from his hand and emptied the thing himself. Ruby would have been mighty grateful if the ground had opened to swallow her just about now. Maybe she could crawl away and hide from this heavy silence?
Zwei stared up at Grimmchild warily; the little bug stared back with great curiosity.
After some more silent staring, Qrow finally spoke up. "Okay, I'll say it: what the fuck?"
That... was a fair assessment. Ruby fidgeted nonetheless. "Yeah, it's kinda hard to explain. He wants me to gather some kind of flame from... uh. Where do I need to go?"
She asked Grimmchild, whose head turned her way. Then he pointed it toward a wall. Their lack of response caused the baby to wiggle out of Ruby's arms; he fluttered around the room on gossamer wings and landed on a map of Vale on the table. The residents and their pet observed cautiously how he pressed tiny paws onto the map; sparks flew before forming into a dozen softly glowing markers, each one crimson and in the shape of a flame.
The entire family walked over to look at the map, Ruby sandwiched by the men.
Eight markers were spread across the valean plains, one in the city of Vale, and the final three sat at the edge pointing outward, to Anima. Grimmchild cooed and hopped back into Ruby's arms. She studied her father and uncle studying the map.
"Anything interesting in these spots?" Tai finally asked his brother-in-law. Qrow shrugged.
"Beats me," he answered before glancing to Ruby. "Any idea what this flame stuff's supposed to be?"
"Uh, he said something about bits of people. Like, soul stuff or spirits, I think?" She could not remember exactly what Grimm said. At least Grimmchild cooed in agreement, so she could not be that far off. The little bug fluttered down to Zwei when the corgi barked, allowing to be sniffed.
It was at this point that Ruby realised someone was missing. "Where's Yang? Still in Vale?"
Her father nodded. "Yeah. Probably won't be back before next week." He was not happy and Qrow grimaced as well. Ruby knew why; as much as Yang tried to hide it, she was looking for her mother again.
Well aware that her half-sister's absent mom was a sore subject for the entire family bar her, Ruby quickly pointed back at the map. "Soooo, can I go?"
A double "No" was the response she got, delivered so fast she needed a moment to realise. Ruby crossed her arms, pouting up at the men.
"Why not?!"
"Well gee," Qrow drawled in response, "maybe 'cause we got no idea what this shit is about? I'm gonna go have a word with that 'guy' and then we'll see how to get rid of that thing." His dismissive tone had Ruby clutch Grimmchild protectively. She stared at her uncle in shock and disbelief, making his harsh front collapse on itself.
That was where Taiyang chimed in, more measured than Qrow. He gently took her by the shoulders.
"Ruby, listen. We have no idea what we're dealing with. These things could be incredibly dangerous and we're not letting you just run head-first into danger." He had a point, not that she liked it.
"I mean, he did say I have to fight some guys that went out to gather up the fire."
"See? Not to mention, how can we even prove this magic is actually a thing?"
This time Ruby threw her father a flat look. "You mean beside the eight feet tall bug man and his baby bug child who can do fire stuff?" She pointed back at the map for emphasis, where Grimmchild's marks still glittered.
"...fair enough."
Ruby knew that concession was not permission to go. She doubted they would agree either way with how vehement they both were. Not that this stopped her from wracking her brain to figure out how to make them relent; Ruby may have inherited most physical traits from her mother, but she could dig in her heels like any Xiao-Long.
"How about Uncle Qrow comes along?" she finally suggested. "Is that safe enough to at least check it out?"
It may not be the best idea, but that definitely gave them pause. Her father and uncle exchanged looks, then Qrow grimaced. They knew she might just sneak out anyway, hence why Qrow sighed and pushed both hands into his pockets. "Alright, fine. But we're only checking it out, got it?" Ruby's beaming nod did not deter him. "You're still on break, right? Good, we're going tomorrow. Better hope you're up to snuff, squirt."
"Right back at you, old man!"
"Hey!"
She cackled and fled his mock indignation, cloak fluttering after her.
The rest of the day was calm, though she sometimes caught one of the two checking in on her and Grimmchild. Specifically Grimmchild, who curled up on her pillow while she read. Or on a shelf in the shed while Ruby worked. The day passed in a blur and soon enough she took the ferry to Vale by her uncle's side. With them were Grimmchild, safely hidden, and an excitedly panting Zwei.
"First stop is the plains," she muttered while looking over the map. Grimmchild's markings were as vibrant as the previous day. "South of Mt. Glenn."
"Bit of a trek, that." Even though he said it, Qrow quickly found them a cargo train to ride on. They hopped off an hour later, surrounded by grassland and the occasional woods or lake.
He mostly kept quiet, as did Ruby; she was too busy marvelling at the mostly untouched nature. A small number of Grimm were easily dispatched between the two of them, though she stumbled more than usual.
They reached their goal after another half hour of walking, right after cresting a hill. Just a few metres below its tip sat a lit brazier, the flame a familiar crimson. It was surrounded by flakes of muted light but nothing else revealed itself; not even another ruin.
They studied the thing for a moment, but nothing happened. Ruby glanced to Qrow, who looked back expectantly.
"Now what?" he asked, only for a soft coo to draw their gazes to Grimmchild. He made jerky motions with his head, pointing forward to the brazier.
"You want me to touch it?"
A trill was all the confirmation she needed, so Ruby stepped forward and made to grab the brazier. However, a masked buglet appeared from nowhere just before she could. Its colour was a muted red, closer to pink, and it was half as tall as Ruby. It also snatched the brazier away with a trill that almost sounded like laughter.
"Hey!" she shouted after it, indignant. "Give it back!"
The buglet waved the brazier mockingly before swinging it downward. A crimson fireball loosened and flew her way, but Ruby hopped out of its path. Grass burned away where she just stood.
Grimmchild screeched and Zwei growled. The buglet giggled, ascending skyward. Then a loud boom sounded as Qrow shot it with his weapon's rifle mode. Ruby followed up with a round from Crescent Rose, hammering a glittering hole into their enemy.
It laughed even as it fell. Ruby's rifle still transformed into its sniper form when Qrow advanced; his greatsword cleaved through the buglet, who dispersed into crimson sparks. They glittered in the light and Ruby found herself appreciating them, even though she squirmed at the thought of having killed the buglet.
Those thoughts were forgotten when its fading body unleashed a rivulet of crimson flame. The brazier dropped empty while Grimmchild absorbed the fire; its light faded swiftly, leaving only the four of them.
When nothing else happened, Qrow slowly lowered his guard. "Okay," he offered slowly, "so we're doing that a few more times and that's it?"
Ruby shrugged. "Looks like it? But the last three are in Anima."
"Fuck it, I've got time and questions now." He left a pause there before throwing a smirk at Ruby. "You up for running over the ocean yet?"
"Nope." She popped the P. "Never." And stuck out her tongue at Qrow, who snorted.
"Heh, figures. Then we better figure out a way to get there."
Ruby nodded and glanced to Grimmchild. "Any chance you can do Grimm's teleport thingy to get us there?"
He shook his head and Ruby deflated somewhat.
"Wait," Qrow interjected, brows furrowed. "What Grimm?"
It took a moment to explain how the man Ruby met was named such, after which he facepalmed. "Let's just keep going."
The other flames went much like the first, though Ruby did spot a herd of wild horses along the way. they were nothing like the pair she saw with the Grimm Troupe. Shy and wary of the humans passing nearby. Ruby quickly used her Semblance again to leave them be; Qrow was not happy about the fast-paced travel, but in his words: "It beats camping."
They got everything in the plains and the one from Vale by evening; that last brazier was thankfully hidden in a deserted back alley; Ruby carefully kept Grimmchild under her cloak while in town. They did not run into Yang, either.
"That went pretty well," Ruby chirped as they watched Patch approach. "Good haul, all in a day's work."
Her uncle nodded, clearly deep in thought. She was soon shooed to bed while Qrow talked to Taiyang. Ruby fell asleep in minutes after the day she had, Grimmchild curled up by her side.
Whatever her father and uncle decided, it seemed to have been in Ruby's favour; after an early breakfast the next morning, she and Qrow headed out for a cargo ship heading to Anima. "Pretty simple once you're licensed," her uncle explained along the way. "You get basically anywhere for free 'cause you double as an escort. Bit short notice but they were pretty happy anyway."
Ruby marvelled at how easily this worked; no one so much as batted an eye when they boarded. Zwei had to stay home this time, but Grimmchild remained nestled under her cloak.
Transit took a few hours, interrupted by the occasional gale or a few airborne Grimm; nothing dangerous but each little annoyance weighed on Qrow for some reason. Ruby caught him glaring at the electronics for most of the trip, especially while they were atop the sea.
They touched down in Shion village without issues despite it all. Instead of following their freshly enchanted map of Anima however, Qrow dragged Ruby into the nearest tavern for a late lunch.
Some people raised their mugs in greeting the moment they entered, others called out. Ruby shrank away a bit, but Qrow had it handled; he nodded at people and offered a word or two where it fit. He then leaned over to talk to the neighbouring table while they waited for their food; a group of elderly men happily told him the newest gossip. Grimm sightings, a row of petty thefts, and bandits in the area.
That last one had Ruby interject. "Bandits, you say? What do you know about them?"
Scenes of gloriously taking down criminals played before her eyes, but her expression must have given them away; one of the other patrons chuckled and destroyed the short-lived dream: "I admire your enthusiasm, lassie. But you shouldn't even think about it. Branwen tribe's not your usual bandit fare, they're tough as nails. Tougher than the White Fang, lemme tell you."
"But they're still bandits, right? So someone's gotta... wait, 'Branwen' tribe?"
Completely dumbfounded, she glanced to her uncle. The man she spoke to answered her question indulgently, completely unaware what actually confused her: "Ayup, the one. You're not from here, are ya?"
"Nah," Qrow drawled. "She isn't, we just arrived for a job. I'll explain it to her later. Sorry 'bout that."
"Oh, it was nothing. But that reminds me-"
And so the string of news continued. Ruby did not hear much of it, too focussed on that little nugget she got. Qrow pretended to listen as they ate their meal; once they were done eating, he somewhat politely cut them off and thanked them for the information.
Ruby barely held it in when they were back on the road, but even then she could not help but tease her uncle first: "I never thought you could be polite."
"Always pays to be, even if it's hard." He said no more, clearly grouchy. Both hands in his pockets, Qrow stalked ahead toward Shion's walls; they were far weaker than those of Vale. Patch only had small palisades because the Grimm population was always kept in check, but this was mainland Anima.
Ruby decided to broach the subject once they were outside of town. She did not know what was going on, but she doubted anyone should overhear.
"Uncle Qrow? Why are they called Branwen tribe? I mean, that's your name, right?"
At first he did not respond. They left Shion behind and Ruby let the silence fester; just like she thought, he ultimately gave in with a sigh. "Figures you'd find out one of these days. Ironic how Yang still hasn't." He paused to take a drag from his flask. "Those bandits are where I was born. Bit of a misnomer, anyway. 'Bandits'."
"So... they aren't bad people?"
He huffed. "Oh, they are. But they don't rob or kill... most of the time. I heard it became basically never since Raven took charge. She's pretty strict about that part unless someone royally pisses her off." Another pull was taken; Qrow peered into his now empty flask before pocketing it. "Thing is, what they do is loot villages after the Grimm rolled over them. Strength is key with them."
"It's kinda hard to imagine you going to Beacon then," Ruby admitted. Her mind caught up to what she heard after a few seconds and she frowned. "Wait. Raven? As in, Yang's-"
"And people started to blame their failing villages on us fourty years or so ago," another voice cut her off. Both whirled around and Ruby quickly spotted the woman lounging in a nearby tree. She peered down at the pair, voice sharp. Ruby felt mighty small under her attentive gaze.
"Said we drew the Grimm to them so we can cut a profit. Perhaps they should blame the petty squabbles of their chosen settlers, or corporate greed that sees them exploited. But no. They rather blamed a group that decided to thrive on their own merit, far away from any kingdom. As more hunters came to stamp us out, the previous leadership chose their strongest youths to train at Remnant's most prestigious academy. If they wish to fight us, then we will shatter their champions until we are left alone."
Silence reigned for a long moment. Raven Branwen's words cut like a knife and Ruby felt a little queasy at the prospect she outlined. Also intimidated, surprised, and overall lost.
Meanwhile, Qrow grimaced. "Yeah, that. And yes, that Raven. What are you doing here anyway?"
The last line addressed his twin sister, who hopped from the branch she settled on. Landing gracefully, the notably tall woman prowled forward like a lioness. Even though her hair was black like Qrow's, the comparison remained the same. A short glance already told her how much Yang got from her mother; both were tall and curvy, moving with supreme confidence. But where her big sister often bore a cocky smirk, Raven's lips were drawn into a thin line.
"The Nuckelavee appeared near our previous location, so I took us away from there."
"...yeah, makes sense."
"Um...." Ruby had no idea what a Nuckelavee was, but she felt decidedly worried about the energy between these two. Raven intimidated her with her mere presence. She also had no idea what to say and only realised after already making noise. "...hi?"
All attention was on her again; Raven's piercing glare had Ruby hide behind her uncle, which clearly did not impress the older woman. "Why did you bring her here?" she demanded of her twin. "Are you playing at something, little brother?" If she did not sound so severe, the title may almost be teasing.
"None of your damn business," Qrow snapped back, scowling. He turned away and began to stomp off. "Which way, Ruby?"
"Err, I, I mean." She shuffled awkwardly, looking between the siblings. "Shouldn't you, I dunno, catch up or something?"
Qrow stopped to glare back, Raven was indifferent. The silence dragged on for uncomfortable seconds before salvation appeared: a number of bear-like Ursa, some Beowulves, and even two Griphons. The latter faintly resembled the horses Ruby recently met, barring their beaks and wings. And the pitch black fur, of course.
Brother and sister put their differences aside the moment their cries became audible in the distance; Qrow drew his greatsword, Raven's oversized sheethe began to rotate; once it settled, she drew out a sabre with solid Fire Dust blade. Crescent Rose finished unfolding at the same time, earning a nod from Raven.
What followed was a slaughter. Ruby took a few good shots before the Grimm got in reach of Qrow's weaker rifle. A Griffon lost its wing, one younger Ursa its head. Then they were upon the trio; Grimm could not think or feel, meaning they never had the chance to regret their choice of target. Qrow and Raven almost danced between them, overwhelming power and grace in equal measure. Where one left an opening, the other closed it instantly. Ruby almost got hit when she paused to watch for a moment; it was hard to believe those two were estranged for over a decade.
Ruby herself took care of a few stragglers while the other two finished demolishing the larger Grimm. She was half tempted to ask if this twin telepathy thing actually existed, but bit down on it when Raven's gaze turned her way again. The woman stood to a backdrop of black mist.
"Qrow trained you well," she noted.
A hesitant "Thank you?" was all Ruby could muster. She had no idea if this was actual praise.
"Don't get complacent."
Her piece said, Raven made to leave. The moment she turned her back on them, Ruby had an epiphany: not only would Yang kill her if she did not at least try to reach out, siblings acting this cold with each other was simply wrong. In a moment of insanity, she called out: "Wait!"
When Raven stopped to stare her down again, Ruby shrank back. Her heart beat rapidly, the adrenaline of battle not yet flushed from her system. With courage she did not know she had, Ruby squared her shoulders. She had no idea how to go about this, so she may as well ask the first thing that came to mind: "Do you want to come too? We're doing magic stuff!"
Qrow groaned in the background, but neither paid him any mind. Raven's expression softened into something curt but not actively intimidating. "Magic, you say?"
Ruby could not believe that actually worked. She quickly kept talking: "Yup! I kinda-sorta adopted an alien magic bug and we're feeding him with stuff!" Grimmchild's head popped out from her cloak in response and he cooed a greeting at the nonplussed woman. Raven stared at him for a long moment.
Qrow snorted into the silence. His own grimace had mostly faded, features smoothed out. "Yeah, that's how I felt the last two days," he provided conversationally.
"...is Ozpin behind this?"
"If he is, he hides it damn well."
"Ozpin?" Ruby could not help but ask. "Like, Beacon's headmaster Ozpin?" When neither twin answered, she looked down at Grimmchild. "Do you know him?" He shook his head in response, prompting a disappointed "Aww".
In the meantime, Raven glanced between the three of them. She cocked her hips and was about to speak, only to be interrupted by a loud crack from behind.
Just as Ruby turned, she came face to face with a tree falling her way; the mundane threat was easily dodged by turning to rose petals. Upon reconsolidating into herself, Ruby saw her uncle scowl at nothing. Raven had taken a step toward where a metre thick log now lay; upon seeing her unharmed, the bandit queen gave a nod of acknowledgement.
"Alright, I want to know what this is about. Lead the way."
So Ruby let Grimmchild point them... and cringed upon realising she technically never introduced herself; the other woman did not seem to care. Ruby also tried to hold some conversation along the way and Raven was even willing to talk a bit about life in Mistral. Administrating a group of over a hundred souls took quite a bit of work, especially free spirits like her tribe. She did not entertain anything in regard to Yang, though.
Once they found the brazier and made short work of the buglet, Ruby hopped up and down while Grimmchild absorbed the flame. "Isn't this exciting? Real magic!" Unfortunately, neither twin shared her excitement. Raven waved off her joy, at which Ruby sighed. "Ugh, you act like you already saw a buncha cool magic."
Seeing Qrow stiffen, she paused to rewind what she just said. Ruby's eyes narrowed. "You did, didn't you?" she accused warily. "There's magic on Remnant, right?"
"No."
"Yes."
The twins stared at each other while Ruby stood at the sidelines. She and Grimmchild glanced between them, the girl with surprised excitement. Not that either of them were acknowledged for the moment.
"Now isn't the time," Qrow growled at his sister, who scowled right back.
"You even adopted his favourite excuse to lie. Why do you let yourself be chained like a dog, Qrow? He doesn't care for his pawns, you know that."
"That's not how this is and you know it!"
If his rising volume had any effect, Raven did not show. "Tell that to Summer," she spat back with actual venom. That name was all it took to send a little shock through Ruby's system.
"What do you mean?" she interrupted their argument. "What's Mom have to do with all this?"
Qrow growled, but his sister began to smirk. Turning Ruby's way, she answered her question: "Nobody told you? Summer went on some secret assignment, courtesy of old Ozpin. She went on her own and you know the rest." Just like Raven said, Ruby knew. Old pain flared in her chest while the older woman continued: "I imagine he never told Qrow anything, even after I let him know that."
"He did, actually."
The interruption had Ruby and Raven look to him; Qrow's expression was tight, voice softer than before. "He told me what he knew and I went to check, but the trail went cold by then."
"Okay," Ruby began a moment later. She was still a little hurt, mightily confused, and needed time to come to terms with all of this. She wanted to ask Raven more about her mother, but now was not the time; they got sidetracked from the actual subject. "Anyway, about magic? Is Professor Ozpin involved in magic? Does he have some? Do you have some? How can I tell?"
The twins exchanged a long look. In the end Qrow heaved a sigh. "Just remember to keep this a secret," he told Ruby. "Most people don't know for a reason."
His smirking twin transformed into a bird just then. Qrow followed right after, a raven and crow fluttering around each other. Ruby watched them fly with distinct disappointment; that was not magic, that was lame!
Once both siblings turned back to normal, she crossed her arms. "Boo! That was like nothing! I've caught you turning into a crow years ago!" Ignoring the shocked "Wait, what?", she went on: "I always thought that's your Semblance. How is it magic?"
Qrow was too dumbfounded to respond. Meanwhile, Raven huffed without any humour. Ruby faintly wondered how she managed to make everything sound so derisive.
The older woman made to speak but stopped herself upon spotting her brother's conflicted expression. After an uncomfortable moment of silence, she shrugged it off and explained: "The bird transformation was bestowed on us by Ozpin. He has a few more tricks than that, but he won't tell anyone. That aside, there is easy proof of magic existing."
She motioned for an approaching Grimm, which Ruby shot wordlessly. "These things are not natural. Technically speaking, auras and Semblances can be called a type of magic too."
"Wait, really? So magic is weird soul stuff?"
"...yes. Weird soul stuff, let us call it that." The implied rebuke had Ruby cringe, but Raven did not actually berate her. "That aside, where else do you need to go?"
Ruby checked the map and pointed, after which Raven showed her a trick; she flew there as a bird, then opened a portal to Qrow. Ruby beamed as they passed through the crimson vortex; that was far more impressive than turning into a bird. "This is so useful!" she gushed and Raven seemed mollified by her enthusiasm.
Like this the three of them gathered the final two flames. A quick meal in the field was all the breaks they took. In the end Ruby could not help but reflect; she spent a day out hunting with her uncle and... aunt? Raven loosened up a bit as the hours passed. But what did Ruby tell Yang? Not saying that she met the mother her big sister searched so long was out of the question.
When the twins stiffly said their goodbyes, clearly keeping it civil for her sake, Ruby decided to make another attempt. She approached Raven cautiously.
"Just to make super sure, you, uh, you're not going to come talk to Yang, right?"
The resulting stare, Ruby weathered despite still feeling intimidated. Yet she could not quite meet Raven's eyes, either. A few seconds passed, then the older woman turned away. "No. Yang still needs temperance before I will see her."
"Huh? How so?"
"Being associated with me will create a great many enemies for her, not to mention foolish opportunists who will attempt to get at me through her. I will not spend my life protecting her. So either she grows stronger still to wear being my daughter proudly, or gets that temper of hers under control to keep the secret."
Ruby was reeling. She never realised this could be an issue. It made too much sense even though she felt it was wrong. By the way Qrow snorted however, he did not buy it. "That what you tell yourself? Really? Yang's plenty strong and smarter than you give her credit for."
"And when Salem comes for her because of me?"
Only silence answered. Qrow's jaw worked soundlessly, which intrigued Ruby. She never heard of such a person before. "Who is Salem?"
With her uncle unable to respond, Raven answered instead: "It's is best not to know for now. That knowledge is a burden you aren't ready for. Grow stronger and find me on your own means, then I will tell you."
"Okay." Not perfect, but better than 'I tell you when you're older'. "How strong?"
"Strong enough to be a Huntress."
Raven let that sink in for a moment, then raised one hand. She was still not looking at them, but a portal opened by her side. "I will send you back to Tai."
Qrow walked through without hesitation.
"And Ruby?"
The words stopped her right before the gate. Raven was still not looking at her. "Summer would be proud of you."
Ruby's eyes widened, but she was pushed through before she could say anything. She stumbled into her living room right in front of her uncle and confused father. The portal dissipated mere moments later.
Into the renewed, doubly awkward silence, Ruby ventured: "Soooo... she wasn't so bad?"
Qrow just sighed and went off in search of alcohol. His flask was long empty. Soon enough his voice sounded from the kitchen: "Is Yang home yet?" When Taiyang denied that, a disembodied "Good" was the only answer. Then Qrow stuck his head out the door; he was so serious that Ruby straightened up unconciously. "Not a word to your sister. Knowing her, she'd run off to Mistral the moment you tell her."
"Ugh... I hate how I can see that. But I'm bad at lying to her."
"Just don't bring it up," Taiyang advised with a grimace. "She won't either."
Nobody was exactly happy with the state of affairs, but there was little else they could do.
The next day both men escorted her back into town and past to the Grimm Troupe's camp; their tents were just the same as before. Ruby went straight for the main one, trying not to think of Divine; that woman remained extraordinarily creepy. She did wave at Brumm, though. The hulking musician grunted in response, which prompted curiousity from her father and uncle. Neither had a chance to start interrogating him lest they lose Ruby, though.
Meanwhile, Grimmchild left the confines of her cloak and dashed ahead capriciously. He flew loops and stopped to rub his face against the tent's cloth. Ruby paused to try touching it after seeing that and the velvety texture surprised her a bit. Qrow did the same behind her and whistled.
"Damn, this is some fine stuff. Sturdy, soft, and warm to the touch. Any idea what it's made of?"
"Maybe they worked Fire Dust into the fabric?" Taiyang offered, but Qrow made a sweeping motion.
"For the entire thing?"
They kept arguing, though their eyes were never far from Ruby's back. She skipped ahead wholly unconcerned until they entered the auditorium. Once again nobody awaited them, but she remembered Grimm's little trick; he arrived in an explosion of crimson flame and with a sweeping bow just like last time. Taiyang and Qrow shut up to study him warily while Ruby bowed back; he stood heads taller than even them.
"Ah, you have returned, young Ruby. And with two more no less. Your father and uncle, I understand?" While Ruby nodded, Grimmchild fluttered around his father's head with excited coos. Grimm looked him over once he landed on a thin, almost skeletal hand. "And the little one is growing quite nicely."
Qrow stepped forward then, interrupting Grimm's musings: "Yeah, about that. Care to explain your whole deal a little more? What kinda ritual is this supposed to be?"
Now Grimm studied him, absently stroking the child's head. The silence stretched uncomfortably as he seemed to look straight through the seasoned Huntsman.
"It is a ritual of succession," he finally began. "To raise the Grimm Troupe's next master. It is a ritual of grandeur, to appease the furious fallen. It is a ritual of growth, for child and caretaker both. This ritual is many things, dear Qrow. Dangerous for you and yours, it is not. At least not in the physical sense." A dark, goosebumps-inducing chuckle followed. "I do pick caretakers of strong will, but my judgement of their ability to cope is not perfect."
Qrow scowled but Tai interrupted before he could tear into Grimm. "How about we take a step back, I was meaning to ask something else."
"Indeed. But first of all, introductions." There was actually some reprimand to his tone, prompting raised brows. He bowed again, though less deep this time. "I am Grimm, master of this troupe. It is a pleasure to meet the both of you, Qrow Branwen, Taiyang Xiao-Long. I greatly appreciate the assistance rendered to my chosen caretaker, Ruby Rose."
The formality did not calm Qrow, who scowled; only Taiyang bowed back a little awkwardly, though his brother-in-law twitched forward when he slapped his shoulder. Tai was clearly not keen on a fight. "The pleasure is ours. And of course we'd help family."
"Family, hmm." Grimm inclined his head. "It is. Now, your question?"
"Where do you come from? Something, er, someone like you has never been seen on Remnant before."
Grimm nodded at that. Crimson flared in his eyes, interest clear in his voice. "Ah, Remnant is what you call this world? An aptly chosen name, considering how much was lost. Alas, this is a question I can not answer, for I have no true beginning. I lasted eons and beheld an untold number of realms. From each I took a piece along with me, remaking myself in its image. For today I dwell on Remnant. Yesterday it was Hallownest, and who knows where I shall go tomorrow?"
Silence followed his announcement. Even Ruby was surprised by how ancient Grimm described himself to be. She was tempted to ask more about the other realms but Qrow spoke up first: "Okay. But why's the other guy human and you aren't?" He pointed back to where they could still hear the accordion play.
"Ah, Brumm? He is as everchanging as I am. Alas, our arrival on Remnant did not begin as the ritual otherwise does. The conversion was not total. And as it was I who decided to reach out to Remnant, it is also I whose form failed to adjust in time. Forcing them to suffer for my whims does not a good troupe master make."
Qrow stared hard at Grimm, brows twitching. "That... makes no sense."
"But does it have to?"
"Yes?"
"How unfortunate." It was clear Grimm did not actually care. "I can give you no more than I did." Instead of indulging their curiousity further, he clapped his thin hands. They clacked quite loudly. "Now we should continue the ritual. Qrow, Taiyang, please enter the stands."
"Wait a sec, how do you know our-"
Before Qrow could finish his question, both of them vanished in a puff of smoke. They reappeared on the stands a moment later; Taiyang was intrigued, Qrow annoyed. Meanwhile, Grimm turned back to Ruby. "The next part is for you and you alone. Draw out my essence so that the child may absorb it."
She straightened up once it became clear staying back was no longer possible. His words confused her a bit, though. "Um, how do I do that?"
"You already know how. Fear not, failure is of no consequence to the ritual. Merely try again."
Ruby did have a suspicion what he meant and did not like it. Grimm embraced Grimmchild, who crawled under his cloak; the larger bug began to glow crimson, his eyes smoldering like coals. An expectant silence swept the room as all three humans waited for what came next. Grimm raised a single hand and filled the auditorium with a resounding snap. Crimson and purple apparitions took every free spot, their white masks hiding all expressions and faces. They chitter-chattered excitedly with each other. Qrow and Tai stood out like sore thumbs but were accepted with grace.
Grimm himself offered another sweeping bow to Ruby, who bowed back. Then he vanished in a puff of flame, reappearing behind her. Ruby took his claws to the back before she realised where he went, stumbling forward with a cry. By the time she turned around, he was already gone.
"No fair," she shouted at the room, "that's my trick!"
Laughter rang from the stands in response. Even Grimm himself chuckled, directing her attention to the other side of the stadium. A series of crimson fireballs flew her way in the form of bats. They arced when Ruby weaved around, one flew by close enough to let its heat be felt. While Grimm vanished, she unfolded Crescent Rose with a huff... and some satisfaction when the crowd oohed and aahed over her weapon.
Grimm reappeared right in front of her a moment later. Ruby squeaked and leapt back, evading his swipe. Crimson lines followed each clawed finger. He leapt after her and vanished, replacing himself with a number of normal fireballs. One caught her straight in the chest but Ruby dispersed into petals before Grimm reappeared. His next volley of flaming bats charred a few petals, but the majority reappeared behind him. Ruby swung Crescent Rose with all her might, leaving a deep scratch in Grimm's carapace.
They locked eyes for a moment, the young reaper's momentum gone. Then so was Grimm. Ruby put her back to the wall and spotted his reappearance immediately. Again she vanished in response, making his attacks all but useless. But this time Grimm vanished before her swing connected.
It took a few repeats of this to realise he was playing cat and mouse with her. Whenever one appeared, the other vanished. The crowd cheered in the background. Sometimes she thought she heard her father's voice, but Ruby was too focussed to listen. Her aura dropped continuously without any progress. She grit her teeth and stepped out of his next swing normally, upon which Grimm followed up with another. Ruby swung right back, hitting him square in the face while her aura shattered. She was thrown back, legs weak.
The crowd broke into roaring applause.
Their first fight was over.
As she realised no more attacks would come, Ruby slowly collapsed her scythe. She was panting, heart beating all the way up to her chest.
Once the noise subsided and their audience vanished as suddenly as it appeared, Grimm inclined his head at her. "A good start," he judged. "You are a delight to dance with, young Ruby. Take some time to recover, then we shall try again."
He bowed once more and vanished, but only after Ruby returned the gesture. She sank to the ground then, sighing.
"Man, why was this so hard? The bugglies were like, poof, gone!"
A snort alerted her to Qrow and Taiyang returning to her side. Her father hoisted her back up while Qrow explained: "You had a good thing going for a bit. He caught you unaware at the beginning and that cost you a lot. Then you got stupid at the end."
"Ugh, I know! It's just so, so stupid! He could do the vanishing trick a lot faster and kept playing chicken with me!"
Both men chuckled. As they often did, her father comforted her while Qrow tore her down. "Sounds about right. The way I see it, he wants you to see the pattern in his attacks and react accordingly. If you don't play ball and do your own thing, he reacts to you instead. If you fail at either, you get beat up."
"You weren't so bad though," Tai added gently. "There were some good maneuvers there. I doubt he gets many people who can use his own technique against him. If you watch how he does it some more, you may be able to learn a few things for your own use. Like just now, we saw how you can dodge just about anything with the right timing. Just like Qrow said, you've got to figure out the pattern to his movements."
Ruby nodded slowly, thoughtful. This all made sense.
"You're surprisingly okay with the fighting," she ventured carefully.
Qrow shrugged in response while Taiyang sighed. "Not much we can do," her uncle drawled. "You're as bullheaded as the rest of us, we all know you ain't stopping. We already made it this far. 'sides, he did stop the moment your aura broke, so he's not an actual asshole about it. Might as well not waste time trying to stop you."
Ruby giggled about that and leapt up to hug Qrow. "Heh, I knew you'd see it my way one day!"
He snorted at that. "Yeah, yeah. Let's grab some food and kill an hour or two. You better not waste the whole day on this."
"No promises!"
Ruby did, indeed, waste the whole day on this. Her second fight with Grimm went better than the first, though. No longer caught unaware, she evaded the first strike and hit her opponent instead. From there she tried to take the initiative, only to have it taken from her two swings later. she slowly began to see the pattern to each of Grimm's attacks, but sometimes a new one slipped her up again. A storm of flying fireballs, she answered once again by dispersing. Her petals danced but this time too many were hit and her aura took the final blow.
She came out of it not happy but hopeful; Ruby was learning. This time Grimm stayed around to converse some more, too; he told her of the light in her eyes and how it resembled one he knew well. Yet it was not the same, so he told her to meditate on her spirit. In time she would be able to harness it. Ruby stuck out her tongue at that; meditation was her least favourite thing to do. She was so bad at sitting still.
"Alas," Grimm provided sagely in the face of her disappointment, "the road to improvement is paved with tasks one finds distasteful."
Her father and uncle shared a mutual grin while Ruby pouted. She completely missed the worry hidden underneath.
Her third attempt went further than the second. Ruby began to move in accord with Grimm's motions. She learned to gauge the reach of his swings and exploit the opening he left right after. But she still took too many hits and had to submit. Somehow, the many cheers helped invigorate her despite the disappointment. Their crowd still enjoyed the show.
"I can not tell the exact nature of your light," Grimm admitted during the following pause. "But simply looking into your eyes, I find it radiates a gentle hum even while dormant. Whether your personality was formed around its nature or you molded the light to fit your personality, I can not say."
"Wait, you mean that stuff changed who I am?"
"Not quite. You were always you, never anyone else. It is possible that this power made you develop differently. But does it matter? Ruby Rose is Ruby Rose, regardless her leanings."
He leaned closer while Ruby tried to work through this new conundrum; she did not like the idea of not being her own person. Only a chitinous hand cupping her chin cut off these thoughts. "Although perhaps it is also this light that makes you such an exemplary warrior. You do not surrender or retreat. You learn exceptionally fast and adapt your own abilities to match. Few caretakers were skilled enough to lead the dance, if even just a short time."
That... sounded a lot better than the other stuff. Ruby could not quite believe it, though. She averted her gaze shily. "I'm not that good. Qrow spent years hammering the scythe into me."
"Still learned it years faster than I did," her uncle quipped. "And I had old Ozpin to tutor me personally. That man knows how to use every weapon under the sun." Then he threw her a lopsided grin, hands folded behind his head. "And on top of that, last year's competition says you're the third best sniper in Vale. First and second place are both seasoned Hunters. That tell you something?"
"Stop it! I'm not some super prodigy!"
Grimm interrupted before she could continue her denials: "It does not do to refuse that which you are. Understanding yourself is an important step on the road to enlightenment. You are indeed gifted in the art of battle, Ruby. However, as you seem to realise yourself, the gift itself is not a mark of pride. It means nothing if not harnessed. What sets you apart is tenacity, a willingness to learn. Even though our first dance saw you soundly defeated, you did not give up on a task that seemed insurmountable."
"You sound like you got experience with that," Tai quipped. "Care to share?"
Grimm's eyes dimmed at that. All jovialty vacated the room as he stared down the three humans. While both Huntsmen squirmed under his attention, Ruby was mostly curious.
"I beheld the impossible a scant few years back. A tiny sprite challenged a true goddess, armed with but the relics of fallen Hallownest. I watched from afar how She was called to battle in her own domain, summarily defeated, and swallowed by the void. A primal being was slain before my eyes."
Ruby could only stare, trying to comprehend what she just learned. She had a million questions at the tip of her tongue, but something in Grimm's solemn tone struck her as odd. A tinge of sadness. "Did you know her?" she ultimately asked.
"Of course I know my older sister."
Oh.
"I'm so sorry!" Ruby followed up immediately. "I shouldn't have brought it up."
Taiyang chimed in there, supporting her. "Yeah. I don't know about gods, but I'm sorry for your loss." Qrow nodded along as well.
For some reason their reactions seemed to amuse Grimm. His chuckle reverberated through the room. "While tragic, She and I have always taken some distance to each other. We each live our own lives. Not to mention that my sister is nothing if not tenacious. Her spite is legendary. I imagine I will see her again sooner or later."
He seemed to laugh at something that was left untold. Ruby almost asked if the light he knew that was almost like hers belonged to this sister, but decided not to. Instead she changed the subject. Questions about other realms Grimm saw were indulged kindly and hours passed.
By the time her Scroll announced full aura, Ruby was giddy to try again. Tales of alien worlds hyped her up to leave the best impression she could. Thus she committed a blunder. Forgetting to bow first, she immediately shot Grimm in the face.
The audience gasped, he shrieked in anger... and lunged. Dozens of slashes rained down on Ruby before she even realised her mistake, breaking her aura in an instant.
She was left lying on the ground, uncertain what just happened. The crowd fell silent as it vanished, but Grimm did not reappear. She was not injured, though Tai and Qrow quickly checked her over anyway.
"Welp," Qrow quipped. "Guess that's why you don't piss off a showman. He's sandbagging hard."
Ruby's mood took a nosedive after that. She knew she messed up, but no amount of apologising to the empty room brought Grimm to show himself. For a time she thought he did not want her around anymore at all, but then Grimmchild cuddled against her. He reappeared each time the fight ended. That had to mean something, right?
Uncertain, Ruby dashed back to Brumm. The accordion squeaked to a stop when she appeared right in his face, babbling about what happened. He did not get a word in edgewise until Qrow followed to pluck her off him. But Brumm had listened.
"Hrm," he made. "Master upset. Give time. Will return."
That helped calm her greatly. Grouchy people she could deal with. Ruby thanked Brumm profusely, who grunted and went back to playing. Then Qrow and Taiyang took her back to town for an early dinner.
And indeed, Grimm revealed himself once they returned for a final attempt. He did not speak until Ruby spoke, though: "I'm really sorry about earlier. I wasn't thinking. It won't happen again."
A tense second passed, then Grimm inclined his head. "Very well. You are forgiven." His voice was still a bit curt, but he offered his customary, sweeping bow again. "Now, shall we try once more?"
Ruby bowed back and Grimmchild fluttered to his father. It was all the response they needed. The pair bowed again afterward, then the dance began anew. She still took hits on occasion but Grimm's motions remained somewhat constant. Aim and reach varied, but there were always four flaming bats. Always five fireballs after an upswing. There was always a moment of pause after his swipes.
Ruby's aura hit the red again as their dance continued. Her Scroll's screeching alarm, the crackling flames, and shouts from all around turned into white noise while she focussed solely on Grimm. His arm was taken off by Crescent Rose on the next pass, though a bat clipped her waist. She leaned under his next swing by millimetres, scythe already halfway around his waist.
A shot rang out and the weakened carapace broke under her recoiling blade. Grimm was neatly cleaved in two, then exploded into flame.
Ruby stood there as the crowd cheered, uncaring for the victor. She panted and stared dumbly, trying to comprehend that she won. Grimmchild appeared from the fires, cooing at her. His now crimson carapace emitted an almost sweltering heat; four wings adorned his back instead of two, fluttering with a faint hum.
"I did it," Ruby murmured as she held the baby.
Then Grimm returned, completely restored like the previous times. He apparently cared naught for being rent asunder. Rather, he gave another bow. "That you did. Now, for the penultimate act of this ritual. Once more I ask you to gather Remnant's flame and feed it to the little one."
Her slowly emerging jubilance was cut off by that. Ruby stared up at him. "Wait, again?"
"Yes. Once more, so that he may grow and prosper."
Ruby sighed. Of course she had to do it again. "Alright," she agreed. Her dad raised no quitter.
The man himself was by her side moments later, hugging her tightly. Ruby squeaked and swatted at him to let go; Grimm merely watched their celebration with curiousity, though. It felt a little less embarassing when he did not laugh. Neither did Qrow.
"Good job, kiddo," he simply said once Taiyang let go.
After they said goodbye to Grimm, the men escorted her outside. Only once the cool night air hit her did Ruby realise how tired she was. Even with breaks, four big battles left her yearning for bed. Well, three big battles and a beatdown for being a dum-dum.
The sun already crested low on the horizon as they walked. Ruby yawned, looking between her father and uncle. "Do we have time to look for more flames?"
"Depends where they are. I'm free a bit longer."
"Let's worry about that tomorrow," Tai mediated. He had a point, too. This could wait for after she had a good night's sleep. And a small mountain of cookies.