4.6 Cleansing the World
Naron
I trust you know where the happy button is?
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Winter's last snow began to thaw by the time Sorey's group reached the small village of Gododdin; the villagers received him and Rose quite cheerfully. Within ten minutes of their arrival however, a walking tiger approached them with other hellions in tow.
Sorey hesitated at their sight, uncertain what to do; slitted eyes wandered between him and the seraphim that the gaggle of normal villagers had taken no notice of. The hellion tapped another man's shoulder, who let him talk to Sorey instead. "Hail, stranger," he greeted with a low growl. "Those lot be seraphim?"
"Um, yeah?" His confirmation led to excitement among the people and a crowd began to form, much in difference to what he initially wanted. "Do you need something?"
"Depends."
The tiger loomed over him for a moment, but retreated when a wrinkled hand landed on his arm; a kindly if somewhat pale elder smiled at Sorey. "Please forgive him, traveler," he apologised. "Many of us are on edge; we did not have many good experiences with new arrivals recently." He threw a flat look at the chastised tiger before addressing Sorey again. "But I am curious; are there truly seraphim present?"
"Yup, four of them in all. Edna is just moping inside Sorey 'cause she misses her sweetheart." The Earth seraph's voice echoed through his mind telling Rose to shut up, but his squire kept beaming at the elder. "We've come around to see if you need help with something."
"Hm." A frown marred the elder's face as he studied Sorey's clothes and cape. "The lady shepherd has already done enough for us to carry on," he revealed reverently. "Although she could not help any of our resident hellions. I recall there were at least some who would rather return to being human?" Several hands rose from the crowd, though Sorey's mind was still on the other part.
"Um, excuse me. I never heard of a lady shepherd going around?"
"Might be another impostor," Rose suggested, "but one who doesn't pretend for personal gain." Her comment earned quite a few irate looks and comments, but she shrugged at the crowd. "What? There's only one shepherd active and it ain't a woman."
"Quite true," the elder agreed readily. "She insisted she is no shepherd as well, but I continue to believe she earned being called thus. We did have an encounter with another impostor ourselves," he added, "so I understand your reaction. But where are my manners? I am Slenge, the mayor. Who would you be, young man?"
"Oh, I'm Sorey. Nice to meet you."
For some reason, Slenge's smile grew a fraction upon hearing his name. The elder waited until he introduced Rose and the seraphim before inclining his head. "Then I believe you are familiar with the lady shepherd, Margaret?" And suddenly, everything made sense. Sorey nodded while Slenge motioned all the hellions who needed cleansing forward. "She mentioned you would arrive one of these days; I admit that I expected you in Spring." Having spent a month in the cold wilds, Sorey understood why.
A minute later, all the men and women who desired it were cleansed and celebrated among each other; local seraphim had appeared to see the new arrivals and soon enough, everyone except Edna was chatting with the locals. Hearing of the river Margaret dug with help from the villagers amazed Sorey; his respect for the other woman grew even more when Edna confirmed that the soil had been enriched recently. Gododdin could now subsist of raising crops, the newly made farmers ready to work the land once temperatures rose a little further. Sorey was happy for them and so they remained to cleanse the surrounding countryside for several days, then headed out in higher spirits; admittedly, being able to sleep in warm beds for once may have contributed to their mood.
Meanwhile, Eguile's mood had dropped considerably when a fateful letter was delivered to his hand. Whoever penned it carefully removed any trace of individuality, leaving but an elegant cursive to imply good education. He scratched his head, wishing to be in contact with Rose and ask her opinion. With their leader out and about however, it was his call to make; he heaved a sigh, glancing between the two women who delivered that letter and knew its contents. "We will gather information for now," he declared. "Make sure the Bloodwings don't learn of this one, under any circumstance." He received dutiful nods and they trouped off to talk to whoever else needed to know.
Of course he knew it was hardly possible to observe the movements and presence of seraphim, but he could hope they held up their end of the initial bargain to not monitor them. It would be good to know if they did not, but they would have bigger problems by then; even just looking into their liaison to the Bones could be cause to think betrayal, but the job was offered; the least they had to do was their due diligence in ensuring it was not necessary. Whoever offered seventy five thousand Gald for the death of Velvet Crowe would do so for good reason, after all.
Yet while he had hoped for Rose's council, she remained out of touch as Sorey's group scaled the mountains; just like he did before on the way to Elysia, he decided to take the direct path back to Pendrago. From there however, they immediately moved on toward the Great Camelot Bridge; including the return trip, this took them another month and Spring was out in full force by the time they reached.
Traversing the gargantuan bridge took them a whole day as well despite their seraph-enhanced speed; Sorey frequently stopped to examine a piece of architecture or gaze out at the sea in wonder. Some other travelers they met around the bridge's center warned them of bandits along the road, too.
"We'll be fine," Rose commented cheerfully once they were out of hearing range. "Not like a bunch of hoodlums can threaten us, eh?" She received a shrug from Sorey and no real response from the seraphim, as none of the latter were corporeal.
The shepherd frowned somewhat, a mixture of wonder and concern tinging his thoughts. "Margaret and Alisha were always a step or two ahead of us so far," he mused out loud. "but if there are bandits ahead, maybe they weren't to Zaphgott Moor yet?" He doubted that they were done in, but the absence of their handiwork the last few weeks came as a bit of a surprise.
"Who knows," Zaveid commented from within. "If they did, you'll hear about it soon enough."
"I get his point though," Mikleo added thoughtfully. "I wonder what they're up to right now."
"No, no, please I-"
The pleading lizardmen was cut off when a gleaming blade did likewise to his head. Gasps and whimpers sounded from a half-dozen other people as it tumbled to the ground; four of these people stood in a small enclosure, only one of them a hellion. Two more were arrayed in a crude line behind the now-corpse.
A flick of Margaret's blade sent droplets of blood flying, then she handed her weapon to Symonne; the seraph cleaned it entirely with a lazy swath of water while her partner dragged the body out of a red arte-circle. The arte itself became translucent again, then the corpse was placed next to a venomised beast they slew earlier as it tried to interrupt the proceedings.
"Next," Eizen growled. The pale human stepped forward hesitantly, needing more than one push from the shaking werewolf behind him. He slowly passed Eizen's intimidating figure and entered the circle, where Alisha kindly took his hand.
"Please do not be afraid," she soothed the man gently. "You merely need to cooperate and answer our questions, then you will be just fine." She forewent asking questions in favour of stroking his hand. Only when he calmed down somewhat did Alisha begin: "Do you feel you can answer now?" She received an affirmative and the arte flashed green.
From there on, she and Eizen began to ask the same questions they asked those before that man; what was his name, what was he doing out in the wilderness a few days from the Meadow of Triumph, on whose bidding he worked, and so on. Alisha found a hunter who worked hard for his family; the arte they settled in flashed green with every answer, even when he denied working for the Lord of Calamity or being aware of his actions aiding the same.
"It is just as I told you," Alisha finished the interrogation softly. "The truth set you free. Please wait over there with the others." Margaret reappeared at her side, blade sheathed as she led the hunter into the enclosure. Eizen scowled, but said nothing; he just called in the final suspect. The procedure repeated almost verbatim, therion and seraph having gotten used to their roles by now; Alisha would be kind to everyone until the moment of judgement, Eizen would be harsh. Margaret stepped in as a mediator and executioner where necessary.
Once six out of the seven they caught were cleared, Margaret bowed her head to them. "Please forgive us for the inconvenience, but it was quite necessary. The Great Lords called upon us to root out corruption. All of you were collaborators, but none knowingly or willingly. As such you are now free of suspicion. As for you, ma'am," she addressed a tense woman in the back, "we will look into the threat to your loved ones within the day. By the time you reach home, it will be no more." The lady gave only a subdued nod. "The six of you are free to go now, though I implore you all cease the actions we brought you in for."
They left then, at first hesitantly but then quite fast. The two living hellions were gone first, then the humans; Alisha waited until all of them left line of sight before devouring the lizardman's corpse. "I have to admit, Symonne's blessing is quite helpful in this endeavour. I do not think Margaret or I could play the villain so well, Eizen." The pirate snorted, his grave expression softening with the absence of people to intimidate.
"It's an acquired skill," he deflected with a shrug. "But I agree. I never considered that one could use illusions to allow interactions between seraphim and humans without resonance."
"Ah, stop it you~"
Symonne preened under the praise, though the levity did not last long. Alisha soon slumped to the ground with a sigh, eyes on a bloody patch of grass. "At least it was just one today," she murmured; Margaret winced, crouching by her friend's side to squeeze her shoulder. Alisha could not even muster a smile. "I'm not happy that we have to scare them so if one fails," she admitted. "Could we not put them in separate groups and keep the forsaken ones back until the rest is out of sight? Or something of the like, at least?"
"That might be a good idea," Eizen agreed readily. "People often lie out of fear to give the 'wrong' answer. Our little princess-and-pirate routine works well enough, but hiding the true consequences ought to help with that." His accomodation did not seem to improve Alisha's mood much, though. The earth seraph studied her momentarily. "How many?" he then asked.
"Fifty-two," was the immediate response. "We processed two hundred and thirty six since we started three months ago, but fifty-two were found guilty and eradicated." Alisha slumped further, even her tail drooping onto the ground. "I wish there was a better way."
"Do you want out?"
"...no."
Their eyes met momentarily, reaper and monster in accord. "I appreciate that you ask for my sake every other week, but I can keep going. As much as I wish there was a better way, I can see none and thus have to accept this. It does not stop my heart from crying, though." She paused, throwing a glance to Symonne. "I just know that if she actually paid attention, there would have been a lewd remark of a sort."
"Yeah," Margaret agreed. "Probably about crying on Eizen's broad shoulders and letting him comfort you, or something like that." She huffed, unwilling to disrupt her partner's distant thoughts. "We've gotten to know each other quite well, haven't we?"
"Aye. This is what happens on a journey like this one; you grow closer to the people you travel with, whether you want to or not. The group wouldn't stay together otherwise." Eizen displayed a rare smile before turning to Alisha again. "But for what it's worth, don't forget that every single person we kill willingly threw in their lot with the Lord of Calamity. They knew his goal and aligned with it anyway. They knew others might come after them for it, too. It was their choice, so the consequences are also theirs to bear."
Alisha nodded sadly in response. "I wish I had your certainty in my way of life," she murmured. Then her gaze fell back onto their daydreaming friend. "Perhaps we should take a break soon; she gets ever more distracted with every passing week."
"Hm?" Symonne jerked, becoming aware of the eyes on her. "Sorry, I spaced out. Where to next?" She could only stare in confusion when the other women laughed at her. Even Eizen cracked another smile.
Far distant in Lastonbell, the subject of Symonne's pining was busy weaving strands of mana together; every colour of the rainbow and more were present, their glow casting shadows over his and his teacher's face. Magilou Mayvin sat motionless, following his work. Laphicet hardly even blinked until the structure was stabilised between his hands, amber eyes wide in wonder.
"Impressive," the elder commented when he let the partly finished arte float for a moment. "It has only been three months since we started; you're shaping up well. Laphicet needed half a year for this arte in particular, even though it's his own blessing. You might be done in under a year." The seraph boy grimaced once again, much to Magilou's amusement; she had taken to using Maotelus' original name in spite of how much it annoyed her student.
"How long did you need?"
"About a hundred years? Give or take a few?" She shrugged at Laphicet. "I had to figure it all out on my own, though. And there were other things to do in the interim."
The boy nodded in understanding, though most of his focus remained on the arte. "Just like you need to go back to Ladylake every day to pretend you're just an ordinary old lady?"
"Precisely!" Magilou chuckled. "You of all people should understand the value of a good cover by now." She leaned closer after saying so, eyes on the arte. "This is starting to shape up, too. Hold it steady a while longer. But while we have a moment, I'm oh so curious: why are you helping restore Maotelus? Last time we met, you hated him."
Laphicet squinted, daring to let the construct out of his sight for a moment; he met Magilou's gaze evenly, beginning to explain: "I never hated him, though I might as well have back then. My emotional range was impaired, so even just annoyance about the situation registered far stronger to me. I don't like him, true, but I can put my feelings aside for Velvet's sake." The elder listened patiently until he fell silent, then she hummed curiously.
"I see. You must love her very much." He did not respond, thinking that his answer was quite clear; Magilou understood just fine and let off. "Alright, let's get to the next step."
Sorey hesitated at their sight, uncertain what to do; slitted eyes wandered between him and the seraphim that the gaggle of normal villagers had taken no notice of. The hellion tapped another man's shoulder, who let him talk to Sorey instead. "Hail, stranger," he greeted with a low growl. "Those lot be seraphim?"
"Um, yeah?" His confirmation led to excitement among the people and a crowd began to form, much in difference to what he initially wanted. "Do you need something?"
"Depends."
The tiger loomed over him for a moment, but retreated when a wrinkled hand landed on his arm; a kindly if somewhat pale elder smiled at Sorey. "Please forgive him, traveler," he apologised. "Many of us are on edge; we did not have many good experiences with new arrivals recently." He threw a flat look at the chastised tiger before addressing Sorey again. "But I am curious; are there truly seraphim present?"
"Yup, four of them in all. Edna is just moping inside Sorey 'cause she misses her sweetheart." The Earth seraph's voice echoed through his mind telling Rose to shut up, but his squire kept beaming at the elder. "We've come around to see if you need help with something."
"Hm." A frown marred the elder's face as he studied Sorey's clothes and cape. "The lady shepherd has already done enough for us to carry on," he revealed reverently. "Although she could not help any of our resident hellions. I recall there were at least some who would rather return to being human?" Several hands rose from the crowd, though Sorey's mind was still on the other part.
"Um, excuse me. I never heard of a lady shepherd going around?"
"Might be another impostor," Rose suggested, "but one who doesn't pretend for personal gain." Her comment earned quite a few irate looks and comments, but she shrugged at the crowd. "What? There's only one shepherd active and it ain't a woman."
"Quite true," the elder agreed readily. "She insisted she is no shepherd as well, but I continue to believe she earned being called thus. We did have an encounter with another impostor ourselves," he added, "so I understand your reaction. But where are my manners? I am Slenge, the mayor. Who would you be, young man?"
"Oh, I'm Sorey. Nice to meet you."
For some reason, Slenge's smile grew a fraction upon hearing his name. The elder waited until he introduced Rose and the seraphim before inclining his head. "Then I believe you are familiar with the lady shepherd, Margaret?" And suddenly, everything made sense. Sorey nodded while Slenge motioned all the hellions who needed cleansing forward. "She mentioned you would arrive one of these days; I admit that I expected you in Spring." Having spent a month in the cold wilds, Sorey understood why.
A minute later, all the men and women who desired it were cleansed and celebrated among each other; local seraphim had appeared to see the new arrivals and soon enough, everyone except Edna was chatting with the locals. Hearing of the river Margaret dug with help from the villagers amazed Sorey; his respect for the other woman grew even more when Edna confirmed that the soil had been enriched recently. Gododdin could now subsist of raising crops, the newly made farmers ready to work the land once temperatures rose a little further. Sorey was happy for them and so they remained to cleanse the surrounding countryside for several days, then headed out in higher spirits; admittedly, being able to sleep in warm beds for once may have contributed to their mood.
Meanwhile, Eguile's mood had dropped considerably when a fateful letter was delivered to his hand. Whoever penned it carefully removed any trace of individuality, leaving but an elegant cursive to imply good education. He scratched his head, wishing to be in contact with Rose and ask her opinion. With their leader out and about however, it was his call to make; he heaved a sigh, glancing between the two women who delivered that letter and knew its contents. "We will gather information for now," he declared. "Make sure the Bloodwings don't learn of this one, under any circumstance." He received dutiful nods and they trouped off to talk to whoever else needed to know.
Of course he knew it was hardly possible to observe the movements and presence of seraphim, but he could hope they held up their end of the initial bargain to not monitor them. It would be good to know if they did not, but they would have bigger problems by then; even just looking into their liaison to the Bones could be cause to think betrayal, but the job was offered; the least they had to do was their due diligence in ensuring it was not necessary. Whoever offered seventy five thousand Gald for the death of Velvet Crowe would do so for good reason, after all.
Yet while he had hoped for Rose's council, she remained out of touch as Sorey's group scaled the mountains; just like he did before on the way to Elysia, he decided to take the direct path back to Pendrago. From there however, they immediately moved on toward the Great Camelot Bridge; including the return trip, this took them another month and Spring was out in full force by the time they reached.
Traversing the gargantuan bridge took them a whole day as well despite their seraph-enhanced speed; Sorey frequently stopped to examine a piece of architecture or gaze out at the sea in wonder. Some other travelers they met around the bridge's center warned them of bandits along the road, too.
"We'll be fine," Rose commented cheerfully once they were out of hearing range. "Not like a bunch of hoodlums can threaten us, eh?" She received a shrug from Sorey and no real response from the seraphim, as none of the latter were corporeal.
The shepherd frowned somewhat, a mixture of wonder and concern tinging his thoughts. "Margaret and Alisha were always a step or two ahead of us so far," he mused out loud. "but if there are bandits ahead, maybe they weren't to Zaphgott Moor yet?" He doubted that they were done in, but the absence of their handiwork the last few weeks came as a bit of a surprise.
"Who knows," Zaveid commented from within. "If they did, you'll hear about it soon enough."
"I get his point though," Mikleo added thoughtfully. "I wonder what they're up to right now."
. .
. .
. .
"No, no, please I-"
The pleading lizardmen was cut off when a gleaming blade did likewise to his head. Gasps and whimpers sounded from a half-dozen other people as it tumbled to the ground; four of these people stood in a small enclosure, only one of them a hellion. Two more were arrayed in a crude line behind the now-corpse.
A flick of Margaret's blade sent droplets of blood flying, then she handed her weapon to Symonne; the seraph cleaned it entirely with a lazy swath of water while her partner dragged the body out of a red arte-circle. The arte itself became translucent again, then the corpse was placed next to a venomised beast they slew earlier as it tried to interrupt the proceedings.
"Next," Eizen growled. The pale human stepped forward hesitantly, needing more than one push from the shaking werewolf behind him. He slowly passed Eizen's intimidating figure and entered the circle, where Alisha kindly took his hand.
"Please do not be afraid," she soothed the man gently. "You merely need to cooperate and answer our questions, then you will be just fine." She forewent asking questions in favour of stroking his hand. Only when he calmed down somewhat did Alisha begin: "Do you feel you can answer now?" She received an affirmative and the arte flashed green.
From there on, she and Eizen began to ask the same questions they asked those before that man; what was his name, what was he doing out in the wilderness a few days from the Meadow of Triumph, on whose bidding he worked, and so on. Alisha found a hunter who worked hard for his family; the arte they settled in flashed green with every answer, even when he denied working for the Lord of Calamity or being aware of his actions aiding the same.
"It is just as I told you," Alisha finished the interrogation softly. "The truth set you free. Please wait over there with the others." Margaret reappeared at her side, blade sheathed as she led the hunter into the enclosure. Eizen scowled, but said nothing; he just called in the final suspect. The procedure repeated almost verbatim, therion and seraph having gotten used to their roles by now; Alisha would be kind to everyone until the moment of judgement, Eizen would be harsh. Margaret stepped in as a mediator and executioner where necessary.
Once six out of the seven they caught were cleared, Margaret bowed her head to them. "Please forgive us for the inconvenience, but it was quite necessary. The Great Lords called upon us to root out corruption. All of you were collaborators, but none knowingly or willingly. As such you are now free of suspicion. As for you, ma'am," she addressed a tense woman in the back, "we will look into the threat to your loved ones within the day. By the time you reach home, it will be no more." The lady gave only a subdued nod. "The six of you are free to go now, though I implore you all cease the actions we brought you in for."
They left then, at first hesitantly but then quite fast. The two living hellions were gone first, then the humans; Alisha waited until all of them left line of sight before devouring the lizardman's corpse. "I have to admit, Symonne's blessing is quite helpful in this endeavour. I do not think Margaret or I could play the villain so well, Eizen." The pirate snorted, his grave expression softening with the absence of people to intimidate.
"It's an acquired skill," he deflected with a shrug. "But I agree. I never considered that one could use illusions to allow interactions between seraphim and humans without resonance."
"Ah, stop it you~"
Symonne preened under the praise, though the levity did not last long. Alisha soon slumped to the ground with a sigh, eyes on a bloody patch of grass. "At least it was just one today," she murmured; Margaret winced, crouching by her friend's side to squeeze her shoulder. Alisha could not even muster a smile. "I'm not happy that we have to scare them so if one fails," she admitted. "Could we not put them in separate groups and keep the forsaken ones back until the rest is out of sight? Or something of the like, at least?"
"That might be a good idea," Eizen agreed readily. "People often lie out of fear to give the 'wrong' answer. Our little princess-and-pirate routine works well enough, but hiding the true consequences ought to help with that." His accomodation did not seem to improve Alisha's mood much, though. The earth seraph studied her momentarily. "How many?" he then asked.
"Fifty-two," was the immediate response. "We processed two hundred and thirty six since we started three months ago, but fifty-two were found guilty and eradicated." Alisha slumped further, even her tail drooping onto the ground. "I wish there was a better way."
"Do you want out?"
"...no."
Their eyes met momentarily, reaper and monster in accord. "I appreciate that you ask for my sake every other week, but I can keep going. As much as I wish there was a better way, I can see none and thus have to accept this. It does not stop my heart from crying, though." She paused, throwing a glance to Symonne. "I just know that if she actually paid attention, there would have been a lewd remark of a sort."
"Yeah," Margaret agreed. "Probably about crying on Eizen's broad shoulders and letting him comfort you, or something like that." She huffed, unwilling to disrupt her partner's distant thoughts. "We've gotten to know each other quite well, haven't we?"
"Aye. This is what happens on a journey like this one; you grow closer to the people you travel with, whether you want to or not. The group wouldn't stay together otherwise." Eizen displayed a rare smile before turning to Alisha again. "But for what it's worth, don't forget that every single person we kill willingly threw in their lot with the Lord of Calamity. They knew his goal and aligned with it anyway. They knew others might come after them for it, too. It was their choice, so the consequences are also theirs to bear."
Alisha nodded sadly in response. "I wish I had your certainty in my way of life," she murmured. Then her gaze fell back onto their daydreaming friend. "Perhaps we should take a break soon; she gets ever more distracted with every passing week."
"Hm?" Symonne jerked, becoming aware of the eyes on her. "Sorry, I spaced out. Where to next?" She could only stare in confusion when the other women laughed at her. Even Eizen cracked another smile.
Far distant in Lastonbell, the subject of Symonne's pining was busy weaving strands of mana together; every colour of the rainbow and more were present, their glow casting shadows over his and his teacher's face. Magilou Mayvin sat motionless, following his work. Laphicet hardly even blinked until the structure was stabilised between his hands, amber eyes wide in wonder.
"Impressive," the elder commented when he let the partly finished arte float for a moment. "It has only been three months since we started; you're shaping up well. Laphicet needed half a year for this arte in particular, even though it's his own blessing. You might be done in under a year." The seraph boy grimaced once again, much to Magilou's amusement; she had taken to using Maotelus' original name in spite of how much it annoyed her student.
"How long did you need?"
"About a hundred years? Give or take a few?" She shrugged at Laphicet. "I had to figure it all out on my own, though. And there were other things to do in the interim."
The boy nodded in understanding, though most of his focus remained on the arte. "Just like you need to go back to Ladylake every day to pretend you're just an ordinary old lady?"
"Precisely!" Magilou chuckled. "You of all people should understand the value of a good cover by now." She leaned closer after saying so, eyes on the arte. "This is starting to shape up, too. Hold it steady a while longer. But while we have a moment, I'm oh so curious: why are you helping restore Maotelus? Last time we met, you hated him."
Laphicet squinted, daring to let the construct out of his sight for a moment; he met Magilou's gaze evenly, beginning to explain: "I never hated him, though I might as well have back then. My emotional range was impaired, so even just annoyance about the situation registered far stronger to me. I don't like him, true, but I can put my feelings aside for Velvet's sake." The elder listened patiently until he fell silent, then she hummed curiously.
"I see. You must love her very much." He did not respond, thinking that his answer was quite clear; Magilou understood just fine and let off. "Alright, let's get to the next step."