The Realm of Conflict
The streets were dark, some might consider them foreboding – they were fools. The darkness was a friend, an old compatriot that she had all but forgotten in her quest for pointless tit for tat hobby jobs. How she had got here, where she had come from…these things were forgotten and in any case were immaterial. She had missed the feel of the shadows at her back, had wondered if she would ever truly be alive again and now her answers were both positive and negative. She was alive, she was safe. For how much longer though remained to be seen. Through the fuggy mists she peered around the corner of a dingy alleyway, seeking out her seekers. The irony was not lost upon her as she gazed into the darkness and saw nothing of note.
Sunberth, city of a thousand greedy natures and as deep a pit of hell as anyone could have created outside of the old stories. She still didn’t understand how it managed to keep from burning down every season but for now such considerations were placed firmly at the back of her mind. She was being hunted and that was a terrible prospect in a city where dozens of mercenaries could be hired with little effort. The rattle of a metallic object skittering across the rarity of cobbles lashed out from ahead of her, she ceased the step she was about to take into the open and listened. The rattle came again, echoing into a veritable cacophony that filled her ears too loudly for tis nature. It almost made her stumble backwards and fear gripped her tightly.
What he petch is going on?! she asked herself as she whirled around and ran back into the warren she had tried to leave.
She was safe here, hidden and able to flee anywhere she wished. She knew the streets well enough, she had made them more dangerous in her time after all. She raced down one, dipped right and skidded as she turned rapidly to fly down another. Left, right, straight ahead – they would not be able to find her surely. She burst out of the warren in a random direction and found herself within the Castle Commons.
“Must’ve come through the warehouses, damn. Too open…too” she whispered to herself as her gaze whipped around seeking pursuit.
Her spirits fell immeasurably as she spotted a figure coalescing out of the darkness. It began as one and she readied her tonfa, now at her side she realized, and readier to fight to the death. It was only as other shadows broke off from the singular, spreading out to cover the entire area before her – there was no end to them. She cursed and whirled away, keeping her weapons in her hands for any suicidal eventuality that arose.
Akajia you bitch, where is my cover now eh? she made the oath as she fled.
It was towards the docks that she ran now, breathing laboured and energy sapping from her with every moment. She could see figures flitting around her, slipping out of buildings, looking out of windows. She was alone, surrounded and had nothing to her advantage beyond her own wits – and they seemed to be ebbing away themselves. The pier came into view and she slipped, slamming into the ground hard and sliding a few yards before managing to turn it into a roll. Dazed she shook her head and pushed herself up as quickly as she could.
“Must get out!” she panted to herself, “must get safe!” she all but shouted the last words.
She sprinted, all out now and energy all but spent. A warehouse appeared out of the mists, almost as if it had not been there previously. She slammed into the door and found it miraculously unlocked. She turned, shut the door and barred it from the inside. She was trapped now but at least has a defensible position, her gaze finding nothing in the way of an secondary entrance.
That was when the whispering began and though the words were spoken quietly they drove into her body as if they were nails. Her knees crumpled, her weapons forgotten as she clutched her head.
Such a good spy, such a clever spy. Didn’t see this coming did you? it was her won voice, the words mocking and bitter.
“Shut up!” she hissed.
So sure, so confident. It’s an act. You have no power. No ability the voice was more encompassing now, the tramping of dozens of feet accompanying them.
“No! I know…”
What do you know?! Nothing! You can’t even beat your father. He owns you. He sold you. The debt is still good
“Petch you! You work for my father? I’ll find you! I’ll-“ she growled, picking up her tonfa once more and managing to get to one knee.
The voice laughed and Zandelia could not remember feeling such a fear before.
Time to end this game. You are a fool. Face me! the voice screamed.
Darkness enveloped her and she curled into a ball, trying vainly to bat away the incoming morass of self-loathing. It was herself she knew now, her own worst critic. Somehow she knew, and the judging was vicious. She felt as if she were being ripped apart, the fear filling her and causing her body to tremble. She was weak. She was useless. She couldn’t even lie to herself.
“Leave! Me! Alone!” she screamed, the last of what breath she had.
But she was alone…against the night.