Avalon:Volume 1 Chapter 1: Difference between revisions

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==Chapter 1 - New Beginnings==
==Chapter 1 - Dreams of Perfection==


Footsteps down the hallway soon brought an end to their awkward conversation. Within moments, two new figures strode through the open door, both faces more than familiar to Arkadi.  
The dining hall was the very definition of utilitarian -- white walls of chipped, fading paint stood atop a bare ceramicrete floor, occupied by two rows of simple, folding tables; even more basic, stamped-steel chairs flanked them, bare metal exposed without even the decency of colorful dyes.


The first was a youthful man clad in the black-trimmed-crimson uniform of a Colonel in the elite Assault Legions. Kayeten Hans-Rudel had short, neatly-trimmed golden hair, emerald-green eyes brimming with energy, and a boyishly handsome face. With an one-eighty-six (6'3") tall and firm build of an old Terra Scandinavian that was just the right compromise between strength and grace, his appearance put him at around twenty years of age, courtesy of the Longevity treatments. His actual age was just under thirty, only a few months older than Arkadi himself.
Everything about the room offended his sensibilities. His mind longed to redecorate the room, as it presented elaborate plans that overlaid atop the imagery from his eyes like Augmented-Reality. His soul pleaded to remake every object, for their crude existence was an affront to civilized human culture.


Kayeten had been his best friend in childhood, his sworn brother who grew to become an enemy.
Yet he could not. His direct supervisor and ultimate boss -- who also happened to be his adoptive mother -- expressly forbade it.


The other was a lady of barely one-fifty-five (5'1"), with a thin frame and small body wrapped by white robes and a long green skirt, both of traditional Japanese design. She looked no older than seventeen, and although the immaculate features of her almond-shaped face hadn't quite matured into the realm of true beauty, they were certainly pretty enough. Small feminine nose, silky white skin, cute mouth with a hint of cherry lipstick, and two large vibrant heterochromic eyes, peridot-green left and blossom-pink right, all of which framed by her pristine red hair.
Sometimes life just wasn't fair. But at least he could take refuge among the blessed individuals who sat within the dining hall. They weren't all as handsome or as beautiful as himself, of course; expecting that would be ''greedy''.


Appearances can be deceiving though. Her name was Shirayuki Kaguya, a renowned assassin and terrorist leader (or freedom fighter, depending on point-of-view) who had fought against him twice. Were it not for outside help, he would have died both times.
A dozen pairs of eyes turned as he, Colonel Kayeten Hans-Rudel, the Lancet Centurion and Commanding Officer (CO) of the Avalonian Republic 3rd District 36th Assault Legion, stepped over the threshold and into the room.


"Well well~ our Hitler-wannabe is awake." Shirayuki's voice was playful yet filled with bitter sarcasm.
His brilliant smile was as immaculate as ever, infectious and charming even without his favorite sparkling spell. His emerald-green eyes brimmed with energy atop a boyishly handsome face, accentuated by golden hair neatly-trimmed in a short bob-cut. With youthful maturity exemplified by his one-eighty-six (6'3") tall and firm Scandinavian build that struck the perfect compromise between strength and grace, Kayeten appeared just a bit over twenty despite being thirty years of age -- a courtesy bestowed by Longevity treatments.


"Junior Hitler is dead. You've already killed him. But while his spirit lingers..." Kayeten's tone felt like frozen flames, with cold imperturbability just barely covering his seething anger. The ice cracked merely seconds later as he took several steps forwards and hurled his right fist into Arkadi's left cheeks with nothing held back. The force of the blow easily knocked Arkadi's torso back into the bed before bouncing off again.
With his lunch tray in one hand, Kayeten waved happily with the other. Nearly three-quarters of the room's occupants were female, and therefore pretty by natural order, insofar as his opinions went. The gender imbalance highlighted the heavy casualties his Auxilia squads took during the last battle, but it would be a sin for him to impose such worries upon the fair maidens.


"Hmph, I've been wanting to do that all week."
Most of them, anyway. The leaders could not avoid such concerns. It was part of their responsibility as the stronger minds.


The left side of Arkadi's otherwise perfect face swelled a brutal red. He coughed twice and spat out a mouthful of blood towards the waste bin besides his bed. His eyes looked back at Kayeten without a hint of anger, but with traces of concealed gratitude instead.
Kayeten walked over to the command team of the ''Moonlit Eclipse'', a quad of young ladies from the religious paramilitary group composed of Mahayana Buddhists and Shinto-Buddhists. It was no surprise that they were predominantly Oriental in ancestry. With his plate of instant noodles and Swedish meatballs on the table, he gracefully sat down on a spot in-between all four of them.


Anger meant there was still something. It was a far preference to indifference.
''Being surrounded by beautiful maidens of integrity is a blessed opportunity from heaven itself,'' he concluded, seizing the moment with gratitude in order to not offend the higher beings.


Shirayuki's brief expression of surprise quickly turned to amusement. Kannon however, was shocked and worried as she slowly lifted herself from the chair by the wall...
His left-side neighbor was far less amiable as she shifted away.


"Don't worry, I've got better things to do than to beat the living darkness out of him," Kayeten declared before reaching into his pocket and tossing a crystal chip onto the bed. "Kadi Simarshall. Since your old records were wiped by Kernow, that's your new one. I figure a slight name change might help down the road, given the extreme retardation you've displayed in the past eighteen years. As far as records are concerned, Arkadi is dead, and you've been working with resistance groups all these years. Just be thankful I'm still willing to call you that."
"How do you eat that stuff?" Midori stared at his food with disgust, clearly unhappy about its proximity.


Kadi -- that was his new name. It was fresh, untarnished, yet ringing with nostalgia. It was already far more than he deserved.
Midori Touka was the ''Moonlit Eclipse'''s Wayfarer -- their teleportation expert. She had long, mint-green hair tied back in a ponytail with a white, embroidered handkerchief. Her small East Asian lips and soft nose would look quite pretty if she simply smiled more, but she seemed intent on keeping her distance with a pair of piercing, grass-green eyes, usually full of wariness that bordered on hostility. Her thin figure was average for a girl of twenty-five that looked eighteen, with a height of roughly one-seventy-one (5'7"). She wore the Japanese shrine maiden outfit that the ''Eclipse'' treated as its casual uniform, with its loose white robes and long hakama skirt -- red in her case to contrast with her hair.


As his right fingers took the chip into his palm and squeezed it tightly, Kayeten turned around and began to walk back out. He stopped at the door and paused to take a deep breath. Then, staring into the empty hallway outside, he seemingly commented to nobody in particular:
<nowiki>[ She was also Touka Midori, because no one knew which name was her first and which was her last. Kayeten only met her days ago, when she introduced herself as 'Touka'. Her annoyed, squinted glares made her displeasure towards the name 'Midori' clear, but everyone called her that anyways. Kayeten braved the question once, and was told in reply that 'Midori' -- which meant 'green' in Japanese -- was "''the most inexcusably lazy and generic name any parent could have bestowed''" upon her. ]</nowiki>


"People will shy away in cowardice, waiting for their hero to save them. But a true hero should never save them. A true hero would push them to save themselves. Join the system. Plot the system. Don't fight the system yourself. As long as you have an ideal, you are not alone -- ''that'' is faith, the words from Sidika that I will never forget."
"With one hand, one fork, and one mouth," Kayeten replied nonchalantly with his usual handsome smile -- usual when he wasn't in battle or being angry, at least.


Anger briefly spiked within Kadi as the name 'Sidika' struck home. In his opinion, hypocrisy was one of the greatest sins, and amongst its high ranking charts listed Marshal Sidika's name.
"It looks like roasted fat and gelled grease," Shirayuki joined in.


Kayeten waved backwards as he broke out of his monologue and stepped into the hallway.
Kannon nodded in consent as well, over a second late.


"Later girls. I can't stand to look at that piece-of-shit any longer."
"''And'' it tastes good." Kayeten winked back before digging in with his fork and twirling up the noodles.


Shirayuki looked at Kannon and shrugged: "I guess he's sorta honest."
If divine favor was a requirement for leadership, he would vote for Shirayuki without hesitation after just seeing her profile. As the leader of the ''Moonlit Eclipse'' with the self-styled title 'Miko-Hime', Shirayuki Kaguya's name literally translated to 'Lunar Princess Snow White'. She was a lady of barely one-sixty (5'3"), with a thin frame and small body wrapped by white robes and a mint-green skirt. She looked no older than seventeen, with the prettiest appearance just short of mature beauty: small feminine nose, silky white skin, cute mouth with a hint of cherry lipstick, and two large vibrant heterochromic eyes, peridot-green left and blossom-pink right, all of which framed by her pristine red hair.


"...B-but... he can do that!?" Kannon seemed more than a little bewildered at just how illegal this is.
"So... the elephant in the room first," Kayeten continued, "have you figured out what to do with ''him''?"


"Well he is the adopted son of a military dictator." The redhead smirked.
Everyone stared at Shirayuki. Then, while the leader was still pondering, it was Kannon who managed to respond first:


An almost gargling noise came from Kadi as he opened his mouth, only to be forced into three more painful coughs. Then:
"We're taking him with us."


"Thanks for not killing me," Kadi's emotionless, low voice told Shirayuki without making eye contact.
The glare Midori sent across the table left the air sizzling.


"I certainly didn't do it for your sake, so don't feel like you owe me anything."
"Kannon, did I forget to tell you that I'm the leader of the ''Moonlit Eclipse''?"


"It doesn't matter. A debt is a debt."
Other superiors might have been offended. But Shirayuki teased while grinning in amusement.


"Funny how your sense of chivalry extends to this kind of thing but not what everyone else recognizes through sheer common sense," Shirayuki's blank expression replied with crossed arms.
Kayeten looked at the time-display panel and counted the seconds while Shirayuki awaited Kannon's reply. If he didn't know about this slow trait of Kannon's, he would have thought that she was caught speechless. It made carrying a conversation with her... a bit awkward.


"Sorry, I was too impressed by my own cleverness to notice."
"...You asked me to be your tactical officer. But after reviewing all your personnel files, I came to the conclusion that your organization is full of spellswords and support casters. I'm your only tactician, except I'm on maiden experience and can't fend for myself... yet. I think I'm correct in that we need someone to do the actual operational commandeering on the front lines, rather than just plunging headfirst into the enemy every time, no offense."


"Shameless to the last." Shirayuki shook her head before glancing towards the other girl.
"She has a point, with offense," Kayeten nodded quasi-seriously before he ate another forkful. "I've studied your operations. Your solution to almost every problem is to just take it down yourself. It's nice to be so awesome, but one of these days it's going to get you injured or killed and put your entire team in serious jeopardy because they're used to relying on you. A single point of failure is--"


Kadi followed her gaze, and noticed that Kannon's focus, which alternated between them two, was slightly behind. The young girl's slowness was barely keeping up with Shirayuki's quick words.
"Are you two calling us idiots!?" Midori's icy voice almost exploded. Her open palm was about to come down hard on the table before she suddenly froze...


As Shirayuki's stare returned, Kadi finally made eye contact with her. But instead of the purposeful eyes he normally had, his deep-violet orbs were desolate -- the expression of someone lost in barren wastelands, unsure of what direction to turn even as the last vestiges of hope drained away.
Aurora, the last of the four, had held her silence until now. She had kept her serene smile on and her eyes unopened as her lithe fingers gracefully spooned off another chunk of silken tofu, soaked in an odd mixture of diluted soy sauce, tea leaves, chopped spring onions, and diced preserved eggs.


"Have you at least decided on renouncing your foolishness then?"
Abbess Han Rong, the vice-commander of the group, had the nickname 'Aurora' -- the literal translation of her courtesy name 'Jiguang' -- because Chinese names were notoriously hard to pronounce for most people raised in a society that accepted English as the primary language. At one-seventy-eight (5'10"), Aurora was the tallest of the ''Moonlit Eclipse'' officers. Her cream-white hair flowed past her thin waist, which only added to her white robes, wispy figure, and pale, beautiful complexion; she would almost look like a snow spirit had not for the red hakama skirt.


"Haven't thought it over yet," Kadi responded truthfully. "Hardly matters though, seeing as that road has been closed off."
But now, one of Aurora's usually-closed eyes was half-opened and staring at Midori. Her iris was dyed a bloody-red; her pupil almost glowed crimson; her gaze was hard enough to petrify.  


His life was destroyed. His purpose was ruined. Just what remained of him now?
Even without being its target, Kayeten felt at least ''three' shivers running up his spine... simultaneously. If someone told him that Aurora could kill with just a glare, Kayeten would have believed it.


"Then I suggest you think about it and give me a real answer first. I don't take circumstantial commitments." Shirayuki finished before turning around while gesturing towards Kannon to come.
Then, as quickly as it came, Aurora closed her eye. The frigid atmosphere warmed back towards normality as the sounds of others in the room returned.


"...You go ahead, I'll stay for a little longer."
"They're also right." Aurora's voice carried the serenity of an angel, but her words were blunt and merciless: "We've always relied on our magic to make up for our failures in coordination and tactics. Now that the war has began, further ignorance of such shortcomings would only lead to extinction."


Kadi thought he saw Shirayuki open her fair lips for the slightest second, an unforgiving temptation driving her to insist, deny, and outright drag Kannon out with her. But Kannon's words held the tone of stubborn determination, which the redhead must have realized.
"Aren't you deciding for him too quickly though?" Shirayuki asked Kannon. "I doubt even he knows what he wants."


Moments later, Kadi sighed and leaned back against the bed, the room empty except for them two once again.
"...I was a management major. Making decisions beneficial for my subordinates is part of the basics. Since he probably doesn't know, it becomes my job to pick a good direction for him."


"Kadi... um, do you mind?"
Kayeten almost forgot that Kannon was just a college student until days ago, before getting wrapped up in a mess of events that propelled her here. The young girl was still lacking in maturity and experience, but he couldn't help but grin at how Kannon already classified Arkadi as an underling.


"I'll get used to it," he replied reflexively, his words devoid of emotions.
"Also, he's a warlord-type. He'd make a great mentor for Kannon -- as long as you keep a watchful eye," Kayeten added before taking another mouthful. His feelings turned to a jumble of annoyance and anger whenever he mentioned Arkadi, but beneath it also laid nostalgia and gratitude. It was a volatile mixture that he didn't know how to interact with, except to bury it under staunch professionalism and a humored smile; although he felt pretty sure that Kannon already saw through him.


He wanted to ignore her, but it came out of habit.
"...Warlord-type?" Kannon shifted her gaze to Kayeten, puzzled.


"...The last time I asked 'you', 'you' nearly shot me," Kannon continued after her usual pause. "But I wanted to ask you this time. I wanted to hear it in your own words again. More importantly, I want ''you'' to hear it in your own words as well. Just... why?"
He instantly switched on his serious face.


He needed to ignore her; she was the harbinger of... well, everything.
"The Centurions --- the Republic's front-leading, high-ranking, combat-ace officers program --- rate its members by five types: Champions, Strikers, Warlords, Magelords, and Archmages. The warlord-type are tactician-strategists with an emphasis on combined-arms coordination and enough personal combat skill to fend for themselves. Alternatively, I'm a Striker Centurion; piloting and armored-spearhead tactics is our specialty. Shirayuki here would be a Champion if she joined--"


She ruined his plans. She wrecked his ''life''.
"No thanks," the paramilitary leader, assassin, and terrorist, depending on one's point of view, replied instantly. Her voice sounded uncaring, hiding the dripping acid behind it.


But was she doing him a favor?
"--Best at personal combat, but also experts in close-quarters tactics and small-unit command. Kadi may not be a Centurion since he was black ops, but the skill level is definitely there."


How could he possibly answer that, when he didn't know it himself?
"...What type should I aim for then?" Kannon half-joked.


Images and sounds continued to flood his mind as torrents of memories from the past decade continued to pour through: the terrified wailing of children lined up for execution as he pulled the trigger, the dying screams of civilians half-buried under the rubble of a bombed-out building as his men left them to perish, the alarmed yet fatalistic eyes of mission targets as his squad went in for the kill...
"None," Kayeten responded in all honesty, his serious emerald eyes meeting her single lapis-blue orb while his head nodded in apology. "Sorry, but you're not suited for front-line command. The biggest reason Centurions are elevated from aces isn't because of the prestige, but because average officers don't survive for long on the battle line. They're priority targets."


He felt guilty. He felt filthy. His entire being was fouled by sins, by evil.
He watched the faint light of disappointment fade from the girl's opened eye. Kannon was a pragmatist who acknowledged her lack of athletism, so he wasn't putting her down much. It still felt bad, but it was better than getting her killed through false hopes.


He was irredeemable.
"You both make a lot of valid points," Shirayuki came out of her reverie. "But... even aside from the fact that ''I can't trust him'', the ''Eclipse'' is an all-girls--"


But he did not feel regret.
"All-women," Kayeten cut-in casually, only to wince in pain as Shirayuki silently stomped on his ''armored boots'' under the table. He thought she was wearing Japanese-styled sandals under those robes, which meant she just used an mentally-recited, armor-piercing, non-lethal spell just to kick him.


He had made the decision in the first place. His determination was not that easy to shake.
''Seriously, isn't that bit overkill for a response... even if it's my fault.''


''Maybe'' it was wrong. ''Maybe'' there were better path to take. But hindsight was always twenty-twenty, and there were no better paths open to him at that time.
He forgot to switch thinking modes: it was ''Western'' cultural thinking where girls wished to be acknowledged as older and therefore more mature. Women of Oriental descent often preferred to be seen as younger, best described by the old Japanese phrase ''forever seventeen''.


Yet, it was becoming harder and harder to be certain, to remain firm, as memories continued to assault him from within.
Meanwhile the aggressor continued without pausing, as though nothing happened:


Kadi almost snorted. He wanted to laugh at himself, chortle at his own foolish indecisiveness.
"--Organization. I don't really want to set a trend of exceptions."


For over a decade he walked unerringly, his belief never wavering, always looking forward without the slightest glance back. But now, he was beset by hesitation and uncertainty -- the traits of ''weakness'', yet the only qualities that permitted his survival.
"Why are you so insistent on the gender-bias anyways?" Kayeten asked, still grimacing over his throbbing toes.


In front of his past self, his past resolve, his past strength, was nothing but a chasm of infinite depth.
"To counterbalance social inequality," Shirayuki replied with a condescending, this-is-obvious look. "The old saying goes ''men are loved for their successes, women are loved for their failures''; well to durians with that. I'm..."


He now had no choice but to waver, to ponder in doubt.
"Durians?" Kayeten's face fell flat, unamused. This wasn't the first time Shirayuki replaced a blasphemy with a food.


After a long, long silence, Kadi finally spoke up:
"People who eat those things smell like they've been french-kissing their two-decades-dead grandmother. Good enough representation," Shirayuki said as if it was a perfectly logical synonym for 'hell'.


"Confidence and determination are such double-edged traits. I wonder who's the more foolish... those who can't stop doubting themselves, or those who walk forth without ever looking back."
Everyone else suddenly turned two shades greener as the words passed through their imagination.


He took a deep breath, feeling the weight of a surveying eye still fixed upon him.
"As I was saying, I'm making sure that the girls, my sisters, are recognized for their own accomplishments here, not as some sidekick to the men they partner up with -- which society, history, and all their gender police have a tendency to do."


It didn't matter whether she was right or not. She succeeded in ruining him. If was only fair for him to return the favor.
Midori's eyes were now sparkling as she gazed at Shirayuki with unadulterated admiration.


He wanted to hurt her back, in any measure he could.
Kayeten was about to refute the Miko-Hime before he remembered that his opinions didn't represent the majority, the same populace who claimed that "''a woman is most beautiful when they show weakness''". But then, the opposite held true as well. Whereas women were expected to show weaknesses, men were expected to reveal none and seek perfection -- any man who failed was deemed 'not manly enough' by male peers and female companions alike.


"Right, you're still here... So tell me, what does a traitor want?"
Nobody said the world was a fair place.


Kannon's eyes quivered, but she held her composure.
"I take it that's why the ''Moonlit Eclipse'' is structured like a sorority?" Kayeten inquired.


"...I'm not leaving until you say it."
"Nah," Shirayuki waved it off with a wide, opened smile that felt more like a silent laugh. "The reason for the sorority structure is because little-big sister relationships are awesome..."


Kadi snorted contemptuously before his acidic tone continued:
Kayeten felt split between his personal urge to clap in approval and his professional urge to facepalm.


"Persistence is just about your only plus attribute left, isn't it? Ah well... I'm sure you've already heard during my fight with Kayeten. So let's begin, for the sake getting you out of my sight faster... You see, the reason is very simple: this world is worthless, and I wanted to teach it a lesson by dousing it with flames..."
"Now, the ''other'' reason for it," her grin turned almost hungry, "is because female psychology can nullify emotional trauma and justify needed action -- like killing those who deserve it -- when we're protecting our family and loved ones. We can be demons, but we're demonic ''only'' on the battlefield."


Yet, as he spoke, he couldn't but help feel that the malice of his words were actually stabbing at himself.
The fact that was probably true only made it more chilling in Kayeten's opinion. He quickly decided that one, it was good that they now fought on the same side and two, even topics of uncertainty were warmer to think about in comparison.


"Well, either way, you should just consider Kadi a temporary adviser," Kayeten suggested. "After all, you've already made room for one. I'm guessing Kannon here is neither Buddhist nor Shintoist."


"...I'm an Agnostic-Theist. My parents encouraged me to find faith on my own," the youngest girl clarified. Then in surprise: "But I thought Buddhists are supposed to be all-welcoming?"


"Which part of ''religious paramilitary'' didn't you understand?" Midori quipped back. "We're mages. You can't cast a faith spell if you don't truly believe in the omnipresent enlightenment and walk the path of Buddha; or devote yourself to the path of universal liberation from suffering for all beings."


<nowiki>----- * * * -----</nowiki>
"...I can do the latter just fine by having this faith called 'humanity'," Kannon shrugged it off. "But yes, you're right about the former."


"And that's precisely why I can't initiate you as a formal member, sorry," Shirayuki sent an apologetic look before smiling lopsidedly. "Funny though, seeing as you were named after Bodhisattva Kannon."


"Ah well... don't worry about it. I'm still baffled myself over how you religious-affiliated groups manage to work together so well. I mean we're cooperating with the ''Order of the Golden Cross'' here; they're a knightly order of the Christian Church of the 2nd Reformation right?" Kannon paused until Kayeten nodded. "I'd have thought the ability for each religion to cast faith magic -- which basically equated to divine signs -- would only increase inter-religious conflict."


"Actually faith magic is the product of channeled, shared belief," Midori commented dryly. "It does not come from the spirits, or the gods. We create it through the strength of our conviction -- hence why it's called faith magic and not miracles or divine magic."


With his tray of noodles and Swedish meatballs on the long dining table, Kayeten pulled out the chair next to the four ranking girls from the ''Moonlit Eclipse'' before gracefully sitting down onto it.
"One of the best legacies left behind by the Dominion-era government is the Universal Tolerance Act," Shirayuki kindly explained with an appreciative smile. "It outlawed any organizational prejudice against other humans due to their culture, ethnicity, religion, gender, and sexuality. This didn't mean the church had to accept nonbelievers, but they couldn't just slap the declaration of gratuitous sin on everyone else, since that would be encouraging prejudice. The law is the second major factor that led up to the Great Religious Reformation, which forced all Abrahamic religions to remove that--"


"How do you eat that stuff?" Midori looked at his food with disgust, clearly not happy that it was next to her.
"''Nonbelievers are damned for eternity'' clause from the official biblical interpretation," Kayeten interjected.


Midori Touka was the ''Moonlit Eclipse'' organization's Wayfarer -- their teleportation expert. She had long, spring-green hair tied back in a ponytail with a white, embroidered handkerchief. Her small East Asian lips and soft nose would look quite pretty if she simply smiled more, but she seemed intent on keeping her distance with a pair of piercing, grass-green eyes, usually full of wariness that bordered on hostility. Her thin figure was average for a girl of twenty-three, with a height of roughly one-seventy-one (~5'7"). She wore the Japanese shrine maiden outfit that the Eclipse treated as its casual uniform, with its loose white robes and long hakama skirt -- red in Midori's case to contrast with her hair.
"--Their conversion rates actually shot up after that, since the pragmatic-atheists and agnostics no longer felt threatened by what they called 'the tyranny of god'."


She was also Touka Midori, because no one seemed to know which name was her first and which her last. Kayeten only met her days ago, when she introduced herself as 'Touka'; but most people simply called her 'Midori', since its meaning -- green -- was her primary color.
"Don't know what those Christians were thinking back in the day, holding belief of the afterlife over people as hostage," Midori complained. "All it did was give religion a bad name."
 
"With one hand, one fork, and one mouth," Kayeten replied nonchalantly with his usual boyish smile -- usual when he wasn't in battle or being angry, at least.
 
"It looks like roasted fat and gelled grease," Shirayuki joined in.


Kannon nodded in consent as well, over a second late.
"Probably from hallowed antiquity," Kayeten shrugged. "Ancient civilizations didn't have the education and information availability we have today, so intimidating others into following morals was probably more effective than trying to teach them philosophical wisdom."


Aurora, the last of the four, held her silence as usual. She kept her serene smile on and her eyes unopened as her lithe fingers gracefully cut off another perfectly even slice of herb-roasted chicken.
"...Are you a 2nd Reformist?" Kannon asked in curiosity, to which Kayeten nodded back. "Then... is the reformed church Catholic, or...?"


Abbess Han Rong, the vice-commander of the group, had the nickname 'Aurora' -- the literal translation of her courtesy name 'Jiguang' -- because Chinese names were notoriously hard to pronounce for most people raised in a society that accepted English as the primary language. At one-seventy-four (~5'9"), Aurora was the tallest of the ''Moonlit Eclipse'' officers. Her cream-color hair flowed past her thin waist, which only added to her white robes, wispy figure, and pale, beautiful complexion; she would almost look like a snow spirit had not for the red hakama skirt.
Kayeten shook his head with a proud smile: "No, just Christian. Pope Celestine the 12th is easily one of the greatest saints in the history of faith. He actually seized the 2nd Reformation as an opportunity to abandon Papal Supremacy and de-centralized biblical interpretation enough to mend the Great Schism. The resulting Christian Church of the 2nd Reformation unified our Roman Catholic Church with nearly half of the Eastern Orthodox and Protestant ecclesial bodies within the Avalonian Republic. The sheer mass of the 2nd Reformist Church would entice many others back into the fold over the years. Although the strength of the church did bring other issues..."


"''And'' it tastes good." Kayeten winked back before digging in with his fork and twirling up the noodles. "So... the elephant in the room first, have you figured out what to do with him?"
"As much as I support theological discussions," Aurora chimed in with, ironically, the voice of a descending angel. "We're straying far off topic."


Midori stared at Shirayuki. Aurora turned towards the same person with her eyes still closed. Then, while Shirayuki was still pondering, it was Kannon who managed to respond first:
"Sorry," Kayeten replied first as both Kannon and him looked apologetic. "Then, as I was saying, since you already have Kannon as a non-member advisory officer, why not consider Kadi in the same way?"


"We're taking him with us."
Shirayuki felt distant as she stared at Kannon: "I... really don't want her to get overshadowed as well."


The glare Midori sent across the table left the air sizzling.
"...I don't mind," Kanon replied evenly. "Does it really matter who gets credit for it as long as both the individual and society benefits from it?"


"Kannon, did I forget to tell you that I'm the leader of the ''Moonlit Eclipse''?"
Kayeten shrugged with his best what-did-you-expect expression and Shirayuki sighed softly before ending in a defeated yet pleased smile. Competitiveness wasn't an emotion Kannon could ever understand -- the original planners specifically removed that psychological tendency from her DNA.


Other superiors may have been offended. But Shirayuki teased while grinning in amusement.
"There's still the allegiance issue though," Shirayuki pondered aloud, more to herself than anyone else.


Kayeten looked at the time-display panel and counted the seconds while Shirayuki awaited Kannon's reply. If he didn't know about this slow trait of Kannon's, he would have thought that she was caught speechless. It made carrying a conversation with her... a bit awkward.
"...He doesn't have anywhere else to go, and... I'm sure I can turn him. If you want, I'll vouch my life for him until he decides one way or another," Kannon declared with intent eyes. "Just like you did for me when we formed the alliance with Marshal Sidika." She nodded towards Kayeten, as the Marshal of the 3rd District was his adoptive mother.


"...You asked me to be your tactical officer. But after reviewing all your personnel files, I came to the conclusion that you're a spellsword fighter, Aurora is a support specialist, Midori is a mix of both but limited by teleportation wards, and I'm a tactical on maiden experience who can't fend for myself... yet. I think I'm correct in that we need someone to do the actual tactical commandeering on the front lines, rather than just plunging headfirst into the enemy, no offense."
Shirayuki bit her lower lip for a second, a demeanor completely unnatural to the usually carefree leader. Then:


"I think she's right, with offense," Kayeten nodded quasi-seriously before he ate another forkful.
"I still don't like it. But I'll allow it."


"Are you two calling us idiots!?" Midori was clearly offended. Her open palm was about to come down hard on the table before she suddenly froze...
"Ah! Okay okay, now I'm jealous!" Kayeten expressed with envious eyes. "That bastard gets to join up with an entire organization of pretty girls as like, the only man there? All my dreams, taken up by a loser who can't even properly appreciate the beauty of women."


Aurora had opened one eye to glare at Midori. Her pupil was a frightening bloody-red; her gaze was hard enough to petrify. Even without being its target, Kayeten felt at least ''three' shivers running up his spine... simultaneously.
Midori and Shirayuki both glared at Kayeten like he was some kind of worthless bacteria, then declared:


Then, as quickly as it came, Aurora closed her eye, and the frigid atmosphere warmed back towards normality.
"You're the worst."


"They're also right." Aurora's voice carried the serenity of an angel, but her words were blunt and merciless: "We've always relied on our magic to make up for our failures in coordination and tactics. Now that the war has began, further ignorance of such shortcomings would only lead to extinction."
Kayeten playfully stuck his tongue out at them.


"Aren't you deciding for him too quickly though?" Shirayuki asked Kannon. "I doubt even he knows what he wants."
Kannon couldn't help but giggle (still a second and half late). She tilted her head and supported it with one arm on the table. With a gentle smile, she stared at the Colonel's handsome face as he continued to eat.


"...I was a management major. Making decisions beneficial for one's subordinates is part of the basics. Since he doesn't know, it's my job to pick a good direction for him."
"Hmmm? Like--" He quickly swallowed the flirtatious joke. ''She is so off limits.''


Kayeten almost forgot that Kannon was just a college student until days ago, before getting wrapped up in a mess of events that propelled her here. The young girl was still lacking in maturity and experience, but he couldn't help but grin at how Kannon already saw Kadi as a 'subordinate'.
"I just thought... despite how you refuse to go see him, you really do still care a lot for him, don't you?"


Shirayuki looked down at her large plate, loaded with ravioli, sautéed shrimp, and sun-dried tomatoes, as she went into deep consideration.
"Ah... well that's classified," Kayeten shrugged with mixed feelings, "especially to you girls who don't understand guy-guy relationships. Besides, he already owes me enough favors. I think it's about time someone else started taking credit, and I figure getting involved with you would be good for him."


"...I've gone through some of your mission data and," Kannon frowned with worry at Shirayuki, "other than what Aurora manages, you've been tackling most of the decisive objectives yourself. It seriously limits both operational scope and mission redundancy, not to mention putting you in excessive danger with little backup."
''Too good for him, in fact,'' he left the words unsaid.  


"Besides, Kadi's a warlord-type. He'd make a great mentor for Kannon -- as long as you keep a watchful eye," Kayeten added before another mouthful.
Like any good Christian, Kayeten believed in offering forgiveness. But just because his once best friend and sworn brother deserved a second chance, it didn't mean he automatically forgot about all those men, those friends he lost at the hands of Arkadi Simarshall the 'Black Prince'.


"...Warlord-type?" Kannon shifted her gaze to Kayeten, puzzled.
Yes, parts of him were still angry, mad, pissed. He was still human, after all.


He instantly switched on his serious face.
Meanwhile, Kannon's face flushed three shades of scarlet. Fidgeting in her chair, her lapis eye immediately returned to stare at her own food.


"The Centurions --- you know, the front-leading, high-ranking, combat-ace officers program --- rate its members by five types: Champions, Strikers, Warlords, Magelords, and Archmages. The warlord-type are tactician-strategists with an emphasis on mixed-unit coordination and more than capable of defending themselves," explained Kayeten Hans-Rudel, the ''Lancet'' Centurion. "By the way, I'm a Striker-type; piloting and armored-spearhead tactics is our specialty. Shirayuki here would be a Champion-type if she joined, best at personal combat and leadership, but also experts in close-quarters tactics and small-unit command. Arkadi may not be a Centurion since he was black ops, but the skill level is definitely there."
One glance at the innocent blush chased away half his dark thoughts. His emotional control then asserted itself to drive off the rest, leaving his expression with only a simple smile.


Kannon blinked. She thought the Centurion program was just a way to boost the prestige and ranking of officers who climbed up as aces and therefore had the confidence of the troops. It was proving to be a far more elaborate system than she expected.
Men might strive for perfection, yet they were also fragile creatures. They wore their pride like layered plate armor, always boasting of egos several times too large. They hid their heart deep down, not merely because of social demand, but also as self-defense. A single chink could wound their esteem; an open gash would irreparably damage their psyche. The result was a monster who merely appeared strong, who tore at the world in fits of rage over their hideous scars.


"...What type should I aim for then?" she half-joked.
Kayeten's adoptive mother, Marshal Sidika, once told him the tale of Ekaterina 'Kato' Svanidze. The first wife of the Joseph Stalin, Kato died of tuberculosis within her husband's arms at merely twenty-two years of age. At her funeral, Stalin gave the eulogy "''this creature softened my heart of stone; she died and with her died my last warm feelings for humanity''". Sure enough, Joseph Stalin would rise to dictatorship over the Soviet Union. He industrialized the nation and modernized healthcare to raise standards of living. But he also ruled with inhuman cruelty and sent tens of millions to their death -- atrocities far worse than those of the notorious Adolf Hitler.


"None," Kayeten responded in all honesty, his serious emerald eyes meeting her single lapis-blue orb while his head tilted in apology. "Sorry, but you're not suited for front-line command. The biggest reason Centurions are elevated from aces isn't because of the prestige, but because average high-ranking officers can't survive long on the battle line. They're priority targets."
''Love triumphs isn't just a cliche. Without the beauty of feminine compassion, satan's lure will end us all.''


Kannon's shoulders slumped and she bit her lip at the assessment.
The bigger question, in Kayeten's opinion, would be whether Arkadi still had the courage and the fortitude to save himself. Otherwise, all the helping hands in the world couldn't save a drowning soul who refused to reach out.


"You both make a lot of valid points," Shirayuki finally came out of her reverie. "But... even aside from the fact that ''I can't trust him'', the Eclipse is an all-girls--"
Distracted, neither of them noticed the look of concerned disapproval on Shirayuki's complexion before she shrugged it off, masking it with her usual amused smile.


"All-women," Kayeten cut-in casually, only to wince in pain as Shirayuki silently stomped on his foot under the table. He thought she was wearing Japanese-styled sandals under those robes though.
"Oh, before I forget," Kayeten reached into his pocket and took out a crystal data chip. "Here's all the info you requested that mother could access at the moment. She'd talk to you herself but she's still being overwhelmed with situational damage control, remotely and less efficiently, while we're still stuck on this planet."


He couldn't help but wonder if Shirayuki invented a spell just to stomp people...
Kayeten pressed the chip into Kannon's offered hand: "Between that and the power of ''Eternal Chronicle'', you should be able to figure out everything you need."


Meanwhile the redhead continued without pausing, as though nothing happened:
Kannon turned back around and brushed her long, blossom-pink hair back behind her ears. She then asked Shirayuki with an earnest yet anxious eye:
 
"--Organization. I don't really want to set a trend of exceptions."
 
Kayeten kept his silence while his toes recovered their sense of feel, giving Kannon the time to respond:
 
"...Consider him a temporary adviser then. After all, I'm technically already one, not being officially a member. The ''Moonlit Eclipse'' is a semi-religious paramilitary organization and I'm neither a believer of Buddhism nor Shintoism."
 
"Funny though, seeing as you were named after bodhisattva Kannon," Shirayuki smiled lopsidedly. "There's still the allegiance issue."
 
"...I'll vouch my life for him until he decides one way or another," Kannon declared with complete seriousness. "Just like you did for me when we formed the alliance with Marshal Sidika." She nodded towards Kayeten, as the Marshal of the 3rd District was his adoptive mother.
 
Shirayuki bit her lower lip for a second, a demeanor completely unnatural to the usually carefree leader. Then:
 
"I still don't like it. But I'll allow it."
 
"Ah! Okay okay, now I'm jealous!" Kayeten expressed with envious eyes. "He gets to join up with an entire organization of pretty girls as like, the only man there? All my dreams, taken up by a loser who can't even appreciate the beauty of women."
 
Both Kannon and Shirayuki stared at Kayeten like he was some kind of worthless bacteria, then declared, not quite in unison as Kannon's voice seemed to echo after Shirayuki's:
 
"You're the worst."
 
Kayeten playfully stuck his tongue out at them.
 
Kannon couldn't help but giggle (a couple of seconds later). She tilted her head and supported it with one arm on the table. With a gentle smile, she stared at the Colonel's handsome face --- particularly those honest emerald eyes --- as he continued to eat.
 
"Hmmm? Like what you see?" He joked.
 
"I just thought... despite how you acted, you really do still care a lot for him, don't you?"
 
"Ah... well that's classified," Kayeten shrugged with mixed feelings, "especially to you girls who don't understand guy-guy relationships. Besides, he already owes me enough favors. I think it's about time someone else take credit, and I figure you'd be good for him."
 
Kannon's face flushed three shades of scarlet. Fidgeting in her chair, her eyes immediately returned to stare at her own food.
 
Kayeten glanced over and simply smiled.
 
Distracted, neither of them noticed the look of intense disapproval on Shirayuki's face before she shrugged it off, returning to her usual amused smile.
 
"Oh, before I forget," Kayeten reached into his pocket and took out another crystal chip. "Here's all the data you requested that mother could access at the moment. She'd talk to you herself but she's still being overwhelmed with situational damage control, remotely and less efficiently, while we're still stuck on this planet."
 
Colonel Kayeten Hans-Rudel and Marshal Sidika were originally the center of a 3rd District diplomatic mission to Brocéliande, home planet of the Avalonian 2nd District. It was here that a chain of events caused them to secretly ally with Shirayuki's ''Moonlit Eclipse'' paramilitary organization and defeat two strikes by Arkadi Kernow's 1st District ''Black Hand'' special ops. Now, with the 2nd District collapsing after their recent disastrous defeat, they were resting at an Eclipse hideout before their teleportation specialist recovered from fatigue to take them back to Kunlun, capital planet of the 3rd District.
 
Kayeten pressed the chip into Kannon's offered hand: "Between that and the power of Eternal Chronicle, you should be able to figure out the information you need."
 
Kannon turned back around and brushed her long, blossom-pink hair back behind her ears. She then asked Shirayuki with earnest yet worried eyes:


"How do I use Eternal's ability anyhow? I don't exactly have actual spellcasting training."
"How do I use Eternal's ability anyhow? I don't exactly have actual spellcasting training."


Shirayuki smiled like a young mother realizing her child's growth. It was just a few days ago when Kannon completely denied her abilities out of fear...
Shirayuki smiled like a young mother realizing her child's growth. It had only been two weeks since Kannon came to this new world from the old, non-magical Terran society, and just a few days ago when Kannon completely denied her abilities out of fear...


"Just zone everything else out and focus. Preferably while you're lying down and in a nearly-asleep state since you're not used to it yet. The ability is inherent and natural to you, so once your consciousness focuses enough it will activate by instinct."
"Just zone everything else out and focus. Preferably while you're lying down and in a nearly-asleep state since you're not used to it yet. The ability is inherent and natural to you, so once your consciousness focuses enough it will activate by instinct."


The small girl named Kannon Reginberaht nodded.
The smallest girl nodded.


She might be naive and inexperienced, but she was also the most powerful diviner created and born to human civilization. As one of the eight genetically-engineered mages --- known as the 'Arcane Servitors' or Arvitors --- of the highest caliber, her ability ''Eternal Chronicle'' offered the gift of perfect universal hindsight. In essence, it allowed her to read the history of the universe like an encyclopedia, as long as she knew what she was looking for.
Kayeten had read all information the 3rd District had available on the ''Imperium Project''. He knew exactly ''what'' Kannon was, what her traits were, and what her purpose was. She might still be naive and inexperienced, but she also belonged to the most powerful diviner lineage created and born to human civilization. As one of the seven genetically-engineered mages -- known as the 'Arcane Servitors' or Arvitors -- of the highest caliber, her ability ''Eternal Chronicle'' offered the gift of perfect hindsight. In essence, it allowed her to read the history of the known universe like an encyclopedia, as long as she knew what the search terms were and had the means to understand it.


It was not a gift without the burdens of responsibility.
It was not a gift without the burdens of responsibility.


She, like ''Aura Dominion'' Shirayuki Kaguya across her, were originally meant to be the a set of eight that formed the 'perfect advisory team' that would be able to select and support an Utopian dream --- the ideal sovereign, the Philosopher King.
Kannon, like ''Aura Dominion'' Shirayuki Kaguya across her, were originally meant to be the a set of seven that formed the 'perfect advisory team'. They would be able to select and support an Utopian dream -- the ideal sovereign, the Philosopher King, set to take the executive seat and counterbalance the shortsighted elective legislature in an Authoritarian Representative Republic.
 


[ STOP! Not ready for beta-read past this point! ]


[ STOP! Not ready for beta-read! ]


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Latest revision as of 14:30, 8 May 2013

Chapter 1 - Dreams of Perfection

The dining hall was the very definition of utilitarian -- white walls of chipped, fading paint stood atop a bare ceramicrete floor, occupied by two rows of simple, folding tables; even more basic, stamped-steel chairs flanked them, bare metal exposed without even the decency of colorful dyes.

Everything about the room offended his sensibilities. His mind longed to redecorate the room, as it presented elaborate plans that overlaid atop the imagery from his eyes like Augmented-Reality. His soul pleaded to remake every object, for their crude existence was an affront to civilized human culture.

Yet he could not. His direct supervisor and ultimate boss -- who also happened to be his adoptive mother -- expressly forbade it.

Sometimes life just wasn't fair. But at least he could take refuge among the blessed individuals who sat within the dining hall. They weren't all as handsome or as beautiful as himself, of course; expecting that would be greedy.

A dozen pairs of eyes turned as he, Colonel Kayeten Hans-Rudel, the Lancet Centurion and Commanding Officer (CO) of the Avalonian Republic 3rd District 36th Assault Legion, stepped over the threshold and into the room.

His brilliant smile was as immaculate as ever, infectious and charming even without his favorite sparkling spell. His emerald-green eyes brimmed with energy atop a boyishly handsome face, accentuated by golden hair neatly-trimmed in a short bob-cut. With youthful maturity exemplified by his one-eighty-six (6'3") tall and firm Scandinavian build that struck the perfect compromise between strength and grace, Kayeten appeared just a bit over twenty despite being thirty years of age -- a courtesy bestowed by Longevity treatments.

With his lunch tray in one hand, Kayeten waved happily with the other. Nearly three-quarters of the room's occupants were female, and therefore pretty by natural order, insofar as his opinions went. The gender imbalance highlighted the heavy casualties his Auxilia squads took during the last battle, but it would be a sin for him to impose such worries upon the fair maidens.

Most of them, anyway. The leaders could not avoid such concerns. It was part of their responsibility as the stronger minds.

Kayeten walked over to the command team of the Moonlit Eclipse, a quad of young ladies from the religious paramilitary group composed of Mahayana Buddhists and Shinto-Buddhists. It was no surprise that they were predominantly Oriental in ancestry. With his plate of instant noodles and Swedish meatballs on the table, he gracefully sat down on a spot in-between all four of them.

Being surrounded by beautiful maidens of integrity is a blessed opportunity from heaven itself, he concluded, seizing the moment with gratitude in order to not offend the higher beings.

His left-side neighbor was far less amiable as she shifted away.

"How do you eat that stuff?" Midori stared at his food with disgust, clearly unhappy about its proximity.

Midori Touka was the Moonlit Eclipse's Wayfarer -- their teleportation expert. She had long, mint-green hair tied back in a ponytail with a white, embroidered handkerchief. Her small East Asian lips and soft nose would look quite pretty if she simply smiled more, but she seemed intent on keeping her distance with a pair of piercing, grass-green eyes, usually full of wariness that bordered on hostility. Her thin figure was average for a girl of twenty-five that looked eighteen, with a height of roughly one-seventy-one (5'7"). She wore the Japanese shrine maiden outfit that the Eclipse treated as its casual uniform, with its loose white robes and long hakama skirt -- red in her case to contrast with her hair.

[ She was also Touka Midori, because no one knew which name was her first and which was her last. Kayeten only met her days ago, when she introduced herself as 'Touka'. Her annoyed, squinted glares made her displeasure towards the name 'Midori' clear, but everyone called her that anyways. Kayeten braved the question once, and was told in reply that 'Midori' -- which meant 'green' in Japanese -- was "''the most inexcusably lazy and generic name any parent could have bestowed''" upon her. ]

"With one hand, one fork, and one mouth," Kayeten replied nonchalantly with his usual handsome smile -- usual when he wasn't in battle or being angry, at least.

"It looks like roasted fat and gelled grease," Shirayuki joined in.

Kannon nodded in consent as well, over a second late.

"And it tastes good." Kayeten winked back before digging in with his fork and twirling up the noodles.

If divine favor was a requirement for leadership, he would vote for Shirayuki without hesitation after just seeing her profile. As the leader of the Moonlit Eclipse with the self-styled title 'Miko-Hime', Shirayuki Kaguya's name literally translated to 'Lunar Princess Snow White'. She was a lady of barely one-sixty (5'3"), with a thin frame and small body wrapped by white robes and a mint-green skirt. She looked no older than seventeen, with the prettiest appearance just short of mature beauty: small feminine nose, silky white skin, cute mouth with a hint of cherry lipstick, and two large vibrant heterochromic eyes, peridot-green left and blossom-pink right, all of which framed by her pristine red hair.

"So... the elephant in the room first," Kayeten continued, "have you figured out what to do with him?"

Everyone stared at Shirayuki. Then, while the leader was still pondering, it was Kannon who managed to respond first:

"We're taking him with us."

The glare Midori sent across the table left the air sizzling.

"Kannon, did I forget to tell you that I'm the leader of the Moonlit Eclipse?"

Other superiors might have been offended. But Shirayuki teased while grinning in amusement.

Kayeten looked at the time-display panel and counted the seconds while Shirayuki awaited Kannon's reply. If he didn't know about this slow trait of Kannon's, he would have thought that she was caught speechless. It made carrying a conversation with her... a bit awkward.

"...You asked me to be your tactical officer. But after reviewing all your personnel files, I came to the conclusion that your organization is full of spellswords and support casters. I'm your only tactician, except I'm on maiden experience and can't fend for myself... yet. I think I'm correct in that we need someone to do the actual operational commandeering on the front lines, rather than just plunging headfirst into the enemy every time, no offense."

"She has a point, with offense," Kayeten nodded quasi-seriously before he ate another forkful. "I've studied your operations. Your solution to almost every problem is to just take it down yourself. It's nice to be so awesome, but one of these days it's going to get you injured or killed and put your entire team in serious jeopardy because they're used to relying on you. A single point of failure is--"

"Are you two calling us idiots!?" Midori's icy voice almost exploded. Her open palm was about to come down hard on the table before she suddenly froze...

Aurora, the last of the four, had held her silence until now. She had kept her serene smile on and her eyes unopened as her lithe fingers gracefully spooned off another chunk of silken tofu, soaked in an odd mixture of diluted soy sauce, tea leaves, chopped spring onions, and diced preserved eggs.

Abbess Han Rong, the vice-commander of the group, had the nickname 'Aurora' -- the literal translation of her courtesy name 'Jiguang' -- because Chinese names were notoriously hard to pronounce for most people raised in a society that accepted English as the primary language. At one-seventy-eight (5'10"), Aurora was the tallest of the Moonlit Eclipse officers. Her cream-white hair flowed past her thin waist, which only added to her white robes, wispy figure, and pale, beautiful complexion; she would almost look like a snow spirit had not for the red hakama skirt.

But now, one of Aurora's usually-closed eyes was half-opened and staring at Midori. Her iris was dyed a bloody-red; her pupil almost glowed crimson; her gaze was hard enough to petrify.

Even without being its target, Kayeten felt at least three' shivers running up his spine... simultaneously. If someone told him that Aurora could kill with just a glare, Kayeten would have believed it.

Then, as quickly as it came, Aurora closed her eye. The frigid atmosphere warmed back towards normality as the sounds of others in the room returned.

"They're also right." Aurora's voice carried the serenity of an angel, but her words were blunt and merciless: "We've always relied on our magic to make up for our failures in coordination and tactics. Now that the war has began, further ignorance of such shortcomings would only lead to extinction."

"Aren't you deciding for him too quickly though?" Shirayuki asked Kannon. "I doubt even he knows what he wants."

"...I was a management major. Making decisions beneficial for my subordinates is part of the basics. Since he probably doesn't know, it becomes my job to pick a good direction for him."

Kayeten almost forgot that Kannon was just a college student until days ago, before getting wrapped up in a mess of events that propelled her here. The young girl was still lacking in maturity and experience, but he couldn't help but grin at how Kannon already classified Arkadi as an underling.

"Also, he's a warlord-type. He'd make a great mentor for Kannon -- as long as you keep a watchful eye," Kayeten added before taking another mouthful. His feelings turned to a jumble of annoyance and anger whenever he mentioned Arkadi, but beneath it also laid nostalgia and gratitude. It was a volatile mixture that he didn't know how to interact with, except to bury it under staunch professionalism and a humored smile; although he felt pretty sure that Kannon already saw through him.

"...Warlord-type?" Kannon shifted her gaze to Kayeten, puzzled.

He instantly switched on his serious face.

"The Centurions --- the Republic's front-leading, high-ranking, combat-ace officers program --- rate its members by five types: Champions, Strikers, Warlords, Magelords, and Archmages. The warlord-type are tactician-strategists with an emphasis on combined-arms coordination and enough personal combat skill to fend for themselves. Alternatively, I'm a Striker Centurion; piloting and armored-spearhead tactics is our specialty. Shirayuki here would be a Champion if she joined--"

"No thanks," the paramilitary leader, assassin, and terrorist, depending on one's point of view, replied instantly. Her voice sounded uncaring, hiding the dripping acid behind it.

"--Best at personal combat, but also experts in close-quarters tactics and small-unit command. Kadi may not be a Centurion since he was black ops, but the skill level is definitely there."

"...What type should I aim for then?" Kannon half-joked.

"None," Kayeten responded in all honesty, his serious emerald eyes meeting her single lapis-blue orb while his head nodded in apology. "Sorry, but you're not suited for front-line command. The biggest reason Centurions are elevated from aces isn't because of the prestige, but because average officers don't survive for long on the battle line. They're priority targets."

He watched the faint light of disappointment fade from the girl's opened eye. Kannon was a pragmatist who acknowledged her lack of athletism, so he wasn't putting her down much. It still felt bad, but it was better than getting her killed through false hopes.

"You both make a lot of valid points," Shirayuki came out of her reverie. "But... even aside from the fact that I can't trust him, the Eclipse is an all-girls--"

"All-women," Kayeten cut-in casually, only to wince in pain as Shirayuki silently stomped on his armored boots under the table. He thought she was wearing Japanese-styled sandals under those robes, which meant she just used an mentally-recited, armor-piercing, non-lethal spell just to kick him.

Seriously, isn't that bit overkill for a response... even if it's my fault.

He forgot to switch thinking modes: it was Western cultural thinking where girls wished to be acknowledged as older and therefore more mature. Women of Oriental descent often preferred to be seen as younger, best described by the old Japanese phrase forever seventeen.

Meanwhile the aggressor continued without pausing, as though nothing happened:

"--Organization. I don't really want to set a trend of exceptions."

"Why are you so insistent on the gender-bias anyways?" Kayeten asked, still grimacing over his throbbing toes.

"To counterbalance social inequality," Shirayuki replied with a condescending, this-is-obvious look. "The old saying goes men are loved for their successes, women are loved for their failures; well to durians with that. I'm..."

"Durians?" Kayeten's face fell flat, unamused. This wasn't the first time Shirayuki replaced a blasphemy with a food.

"People who eat those things smell like they've been french-kissing their two-decades-dead grandmother. Good enough representation," Shirayuki said as if it was a perfectly logical synonym for 'hell'.

Everyone else suddenly turned two shades greener as the words passed through their imagination.

"As I was saying, I'm making sure that the girls, my sisters, are recognized for their own accomplishments here, not as some sidekick to the men they partner up with -- which society, history, and all their gender police have a tendency to do."

Midori's eyes were now sparkling as she gazed at Shirayuki with unadulterated admiration.

Kayeten was about to refute the Miko-Hime before he remembered that his opinions didn't represent the majority, the same populace who claimed that "a woman is most beautiful when they show weakness". But then, the opposite held true as well. Whereas women were expected to show weaknesses, men were expected to reveal none and seek perfection -- any man who failed was deemed 'not manly enough' by male peers and female companions alike.

Nobody said the world was a fair place.

"I take it that's why the Moonlit Eclipse is structured like a sorority?" Kayeten inquired.

"Nah," Shirayuki waved it off with a wide, opened smile that felt more like a silent laugh. "The reason for the sorority structure is because little-big sister relationships are awesome..."

Kayeten felt split between his personal urge to clap in approval and his professional urge to facepalm.

"Now, the other reason for it," her grin turned almost hungry, "is because female psychology can nullify emotional trauma and justify needed action -- like killing those who deserve it -- when we're protecting our family and loved ones. We can be demons, but we're demonic only on the battlefield."

The fact that was probably true only made it more chilling in Kayeten's opinion. He quickly decided that one, it was good that they now fought on the same side and two, even topics of uncertainty were warmer to think about in comparison.

"Well, either way, you should just consider Kadi a temporary adviser," Kayeten suggested. "After all, you've already made room for one. I'm guessing Kannon here is neither Buddhist nor Shintoist."

"...I'm an Agnostic-Theist. My parents encouraged me to find faith on my own," the youngest girl clarified. Then in surprise: "But I thought Buddhists are supposed to be all-welcoming?"

"Which part of religious paramilitary didn't you understand?" Midori quipped back. "We're mages. You can't cast a faith spell if you don't truly believe in the omnipresent enlightenment and walk the path of Buddha; or devote yourself to the path of universal liberation from suffering for all beings."

"...I can do the latter just fine by having this faith called 'humanity'," Kannon shrugged it off. "But yes, you're right about the former."

"And that's precisely why I can't initiate you as a formal member, sorry," Shirayuki sent an apologetic look before smiling lopsidedly. "Funny though, seeing as you were named after Bodhisattva Kannon."

"Ah well... don't worry about it. I'm still baffled myself over how you religious-affiliated groups manage to work together so well. I mean we're cooperating with the Order of the Golden Cross here; they're a knightly order of the Christian Church of the 2nd Reformation right?" Kannon paused until Kayeten nodded. "I'd have thought the ability for each religion to cast faith magic -- which basically equated to divine signs -- would only increase inter-religious conflict."

"Actually faith magic is the product of channeled, shared belief," Midori commented dryly. "It does not come from the spirits, or the gods. We create it through the strength of our conviction -- hence why it's called faith magic and not miracles or divine magic."

"One of the best legacies left behind by the Dominion-era government is the Universal Tolerance Act," Shirayuki kindly explained with an appreciative smile. "It outlawed any organizational prejudice against other humans due to their culture, ethnicity, religion, gender, and sexuality. This didn't mean the church had to accept nonbelievers, but they couldn't just slap the declaration of gratuitous sin on everyone else, since that would be encouraging prejudice. The law is the second major factor that led up to the Great Religious Reformation, which forced all Abrahamic religions to remove that--"

"Nonbelievers are damned for eternity clause from the official biblical interpretation," Kayeten interjected.

"--Their conversion rates actually shot up after that, since the pragmatic-atheists and agnostics no longer felt threatened by what they called 'the tyranny of god'."

"Don't know what those Christians were thinking back in the day, holding belief of the afterlife over people as hostage," Midori complained. "All it did was give religion a bad name."

"Probably from hallowed antiquity," Kayeten shrugged. "Ancient civilizations didn't have the education and information availability we have today, so intimidating others into following morals was probably more effective than trying to teach them philosophical wisdom."

"...Are you a 2nd Reformist?" Kannon asked in curiosity, to which Kayeten nodded back. "Then... is the reformed church Catholic, or...?"

Kayeten shook his head with a proud smile: "No, just Christian. Pope Celestine the 12th is easily one of the greatest saints in the history of faith. He actually seized the 2nd Reformation as an opportunity to abandon Papal Supremacy and de-centralized biblical interpretation enough to mend the Great Schism. The resulting Christian Church of the 2nd Reformation unified our Roman Catholic Church with nearly half of the Eastern Orthodox and Protestant ecclesial bodies within the Avalonian Republic. The sheer mass of the 2nd Reformist Church would entice many others back into the fold over the years. Although the strength of the church did bring other issues..."

"As much as I support theological discussions," Aurora chimed in with, ironically, the voice of a descending angel. "We're straying far off topic."

"Sorry," Kayeten replied first as both Kannon and him looked apologetic. "Then, as I was saying, since you already have Kannon as a non-member advisory officer, why not consider Kadi in the same way?"

Shirayuki felt distant as she stared at Kannon: "I... really don't want her to get overshadowed as well."

"...I don't mind," Kanon replied evenly. "Does it really matter who gets credit for it as long as both the individual and society benefits from it?"

Kayeten shrugged with his best what-did-you-expect expression and Shirayuki sighed softly before ending in a defeated yet pleased smile. Competitiveness wasn't an emotion Kannon could ever understand -- the original planners specifically removed that psychological tendency from her DNA.

"There's still the allegiance issue though," Shirayuki pondered aloud, more to herself than anyone else.

"...He doesn't have anywhere else to go, and... I'm sure I can turn him. If you want, I'll vouch my life for him until he decides one way or another," Kannon declared with intent eyes. "Just like you did for me when we formed the alliance with Marshal Sidika." She nodded towards Kayeten, as the Marshal of the 3rd District was his adoptive mother.

Shirayuki bit her lower lip for a second, a demeanor completely unnatural to the usually carefree leader. Then:

"I still don't like it. But I'll allow it."

"Ah! Okay okay, now I'm jealous!" Kayeten expressed with envious eyes. "That bastard gets to join up with an entire organization of pretty girls as like, the only man there? All my dreams, taken up by a loser who can't even properly appreciate the beauty of women."

Midori and Shirayuki both glared at Kayeten like he was some kind of worthless bacteria, then declared:

"You're the worst."

Kayeten playfully stuck his tongue out at them.

Kannon couldn't help but giggle (still a second and half late). She tilted her head and supported it with one arm on the table. With a gentle smile, she stared at the Colonel's handsome face as he continued to eat.

"Hmmm? Like--" He quickly swallowed the flirtatious joke. She is so off limits.

"I just thought... despite how you refuse to go see him, you really do still care a lot for him, don't you?"

"Ah... well that's classified," Kayeten shrugged with mixed feelings, "especially to you girls who don't understand guy-guy relationships. Besides, he already owes me enough favors. I think it's about time someone else started taking credit, and I figure getting involved with you would be good for him."

Too good for him, in fact, he left the words unsaid.

Like any good Christian, Kayeten believed in offering forgiveness. But just because his once best friend and sworn brother deserved a second chance, it didn't mean he automatically forgot about all those men, those friends he lost at the hands of Arkadi Simarshall the 'Black Prince'.

Yes, parts of him were still angry, mad, pissed. He was still human, after all.

Meanwhile, Kannon's face flushed three shades of scarlet. Fidgeting in her chair, her lapis eye immediately returned to stare at her own food.

One glance at the innocent blush chased away half his dark thoughts. His emotional control then asserted itself to drive off the rest, leaving his expression with only a simple smile.

Men might strive for perfection, yet they were also fragile creatures. They wore their pride like layered plate armor, always boasting of egos several times too large. They hid their heart deep down, not merely because of social demand, but also as self-defense. A single chink could wound their esteem; an open gash would irreparably damage their psyche. The result was a monster who merely appeared strong, who tore at the world in fits of rage over their hideous scars.

Kayeten's adoptive mother, Marshal Sidika, once told him the tale of Ekaterina 'Kato' Svanidze. The first wife of the Joseph Stalin, Kato died of tuberculosis within her husband's arms at merely twenty-two years of age. At her funeral, Stalin gave the eulogy "this creature softened my heart of stone; she died and with her died my last warm feelings for humanity". Sure enough, Joseph Stalin would rise to dictatorship over the Soviet Union. He industrialized the nation and modernized healthcare to raise standards of living. But he also ruled with inhuman cruelty and sent tens of millions to their death -- atrocities far worse than those of the notorious Adolf Hitler.

Love triumphs isn't just a cliche. Without the beauty of feminine compassion, satan's lure will end us all.

The bigger question, in Kayeten's opinion, would be whether Arkadi still had the courage and the fortitude to save himself. Otherwise, all the helping hands in the world couldn't save a drowning soul who refused to reach out.

Distracted, neither of them noticed the look of concerned disapproval on Shirayuki's complexion before she shrugged it off, masking it with her usual amused smile.

"Oh, before I forget," Kayeten reached into his pocket and took out a crystal data chip. "Here's all the info you requested that mother could access at the moment. She'd talk to you herself but she's still being overwhelmed with situational damage control, remotely and less efficiently, while we're still stuck on this planet."

Kayeten pressed the chip into Kannon's offered hand: "Between that and the power of Eternal Chronicle, you should be able to figure out everything you need."

Kannon turned back around and brushed her long, blossom-pink hair back behind her ears. She then asked Shirayuki with an earnest yet anxious eye:

"How do I use Eternal's ability anyhow? I don't exactly have actual spellcasting training."

Shirayuki smiled like a young mother realizing her child's growth. It had only been two weeks since Kannon came to this new world from the old, non-magical Terran society, and just a few days ago when Kannon completely denied her abilities out of fear...

"Just zone everything else out and focus. Preferably while you're lying down and in a nearly-asleep state since you're not used to it yet. The ability is inherent and natural to you, so once your consciousness focuses enough it will activate by instinct."

The smallest girl nodded.

Kayeten had read all information the 3rd District had available on the Imperium Project. He knew exactly what Kannon was, what her traits were, and what her purpose was. She might still be naive and inexperienced, but she also belonged to the most powerful diviner lineage created and born to human civilization. As one of the seven genetically-engineered mages -- known as the 'Arcane Servitors' or Arvitors -- of the highest caliber, her ability Eternal Chronicle offered the gift of perfect hindsight. In essence, it allowed her to read the history of the known universe like an encyclopedia, as long as she knew what the search terms were and had the means to understand it.

It was not a gift without the burdens of responsibility.

Kannon, like Aura Dominion Shirayuki Kaguya across her, were originally meant to be the a set of seven that formed the 'perfect advisory team'. They would be able to select and support an Utopian dream -- the ideal sovereign, the Philosopher King, set to take the executive seat and counterbalance the shortsighted elective legislature in an Authoritarian Representative Republic.


[ STOP! Not ready for beta-read! ]


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