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The Conquerer: A quality Zelda Fanfiction (Ch.1 up!)

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The Unsung Bard

PostPosted: Fri Jul 20, 2007 9:16 pm


COAUTHORS NOTE: I would like to start off by saying that this is no run of the mill Zelda fic. In this fic, we do not grant wishes that have been burning in fans hearts for ages. This includes couples, torture scenes, gratuitous sex, or anything else in that direction. This is art. The purpose of this fic is to tell a story, not to satisfy the general public. And with that being said, Ikken Isshu and I, The Unsung Bard, welcome you to enjoy the first book of the end time trilogy.

The Legend of Zelda: The Conquerer

Prologue: On the Moon


A masked jungle warrior.

A masked mechanical monster.

A gargantuan masked fish.

A giant masked insect.

All of them defeated by my hand.

My sword.

My power.

And each in turn fed my lust for freedom, my desire to finally escape.

Escape, finally, from this wooden Hell allotted to me at the beginning of time.

The beginning of any time that matters, at least.

I destroyed them. The warrior, the monster, the fish, the insect—all contributing to the final realization of my escape. One more kill, perhaps two, and the fool that thinks to use my power will find that he is the one being used.

And one more kill is exactly what I’ll get, isn’t it? And what a kill. The only thing, perhaps, that I want more than freedom. The destruction of that warmongering, senseless brute Majora. He probably hasn’t fared much better than I these many eons—after all, he was also allotted his own private wooden Hell, and has resided there for as long as I.

Well, perhaps not quite so long. Majora seems lately to have been quite enamoured of seeing the world through the eyes of a forest child… A Skull Kid. He has been gallivanting about and wreaking havoc for three days’ time. I have only seen glimpses of the world that was denied me, and small glimpses at that—four small glimpses. A glimpse of a jungle warrior, one of a mechanical monster, one of a gargantuan fish, and one of a giant insect, to be precise.

I suppose I oughtn’t complain about Majora’s freedom. After all, if Majora hadn’t brought about such chaos, I would still lie dormant, imprisoned. This forest-raised idiot would never have found me, would never have used me, would never have infused me with the power of those four…

Those vital masks. I believe Majora seeks to use those masks against this boy, this Link, in their final confrontation. Majora does not know that I stand against him, however. Those four masks are already under my control. Oh, yes, they will be subject to Majora’s influence, but it will not matter. He will not have had time to extend his influence into them. The masks are bonded to me now. They obey my will. And soon—very soon—Majora will fall at the hand of the Fierce Deity. As will the mind and body of this boy, Link. And before long, all of Termina—and perhaps further.

Soon, all the world will know and fear my name, the name of the Fierce Deity, the name of the Conqueror.

I am Riend.


- - -

The wide-eyed mask hovered in the air before Link as I watched silently. Link fingered my mask, and I silently willed him to don it, but his hand slid instead back to his sword. He pulled it over his shoulder and brandished it at the mask, which issued an eerie laughter.

Even as a familiar cachinnation penetrated my prison, I felt the searing energy coursing through me, saw the masks spinning away, cursed without a sound as they grew stationary on the walls around us.

Put on the mask, damn you! I thought adamantly, wishing, not for the first time, that I could communicate directly with Link. Instead of donning my mask, though, he shouted and ran at Majora. The evil mask plastered itself across the floor, and I finally realized that Majora had gained much more power than I had thought.

Red tentacles, wet and glistening with what looked like blood, emerged from beneath and propelled the mask as it spun, the once-decorative spikes that lined the thing now becoming deadly weapons. Link dove out of the way when he realized that it was spinning toward him, then got in a quick jab with his sword. The mask grunted noncommittally at the attack, then shrieked when Link struck again, this time thrusting the sword deep into the soft underbelly of the mask. Another thrust, and again I felt that searing power within. The masks on the walls shuddered, and then burst from the walls, soaring toward Link.

Put on the mask! I thought again, and I finally felt Link’s hand on the wooden mask.

An instant later, the surroundings darkened and I felt myself flowing from the mask into Link’s body, as if my very essence were filling him from the bottom up, until the mask itself was but a symbol, and I was truly alive again. The sword warped itself as the transition occurred—peripherally, I noticed that the blade split in two, then twined about itself, coming together at the point. Link was gone by this point—his mind meant nothing to me, though I knew it must be somewhere, lost within the endlessly deep reaches of my own consciousness.

Majora’s mask had stopped moving, those wide eyes staring unflinchingly at me. I smiled as I realized it was the first time Majora had seen me. The other four masks had also stopped, perhaps due to Majora’s astonishment.

“I had thought it curious that such a child might rival my minions,” Majora said finally, his voice a high-pitched, evil wail.

I could not but widen my smile. “Is this truly the first you have learned of my presence? We both have our ways of getting around our immurements, Majora.” I spread my arms, sheathing my sword for the moment. “And now we have both broken free of those restraints—utterly and completely.”

It was true. I knew it—I was free. The previous four times Link had donned my mask, I had felt almost the same—but always with a cobwebby feeling, as if I were still entwined in that damnable mask. Now, though, it was gone, and I felt as I had felt in all the days before I had ever been imprisoned.

Majora, too, was operating without a medium save his own mask. True, I was using the body of the boy Link, but only because I was not aesthetically impressed by the appearance of this slavering, tentacled thing before me—and, without a human body, I would not appear much different.

“So you have come to kill me?” Majora’s voice was one of caution and aggression, trepidation and bloodlust.

“Killing you would do nothing,” I said. “I have come to destroy you, Majora.” The sword was in my hand in a trice, though I could have unleashed the sparkling energy at him without it. He shrieked as the light smashed into him, sending him backward into the wall. The four masks redoubled their assault, but they all shattered at a whispered command from my lips. Majora rose up and growled.

“You will pay for that,” Majora hissed. I smiled.

“Perhaps someday,” I said.

With a sound like that of human limbs being forcibly removed, two bizarrely long arms and two identical legs sprouted from the mask’s soft underside. He emitted a shrill cry, and came at me, swinging those arms and simultaneously unleashing a volley of dark energy at me. I raised the sword and easily deflected the energy, but one of his arms caught me on the side of the head and sent me sprawling. With a snarl, I hit the ground, rolled, and was on my feet fast enough to spin around and send another burst of sparkling energy in his direction. It hit the arm with which he had struck me, still extended, and instantly vaporized the limb. He shrieked yet again, and sprang backward. More dark energy, blasts so small and so numerous that it was like a swarm of bees coming at me. As if in a dance, I managed to spin and move my sword so as to deflect all but the smallest and fastest bolts, which caused little or no damage anyway. But the energy kept coming. My dance grew faster and faster, more and more exotic, until I was forced to unleash the bulk of my own power to neutralize everything he was throwing at me. Before he could recover from the blast, I ran at him and, with my sword, severed his other arm. He issued another shriek, and in the same fluid movement, I twisted the sword around the other way and severed both of his legs in one sweep of the blade. The mask clattered to the floor, wailing and shrieking in a voice that threatened to burst my eardrums. I kicked the mask, and it spun across the floor, leaving a trail of streaked blood behind it. All along, the terrible howl never ceased. For a moment—but just a moment—I believed it was over. Suddenly, though, the cacophony stopped, and the mask snapped to an upright position. Again, those eyes fixed upon me.

“You,” Majora enunciated once more, “will pay for that.” And I was thrown backward by the force of the released power as an entire body egressed from the mask, just as the arms and legs had done before. The body bade me think of a skinless animated corpse, save the two ridiculously long tentacles that writhed about on the ground beneath it. I raised my sword instinctively, but one of the tentacles snapped out like a whip, twined about the blade, and wrenched it from my hands. The other tentacle, as the first was withdrawing, snapped out in a similar fashion and bound my wrist. Then the first took hold of my other wrist. I could not move, and the grip was tightening. I tried to draw upon the reserves of my power, but they were drained because I had released it all just moments ago. Desperately I cast about for something, anything—Ah,I thought to myself. Yes, that’ll about do it.

“’Maybe someday,’” Majora screeched sneeringly, and I stared as the lumbering form, mask covering its chest, approached me. The strength of the tentacles holding me by my wrists never faltered. “‘Maybe someday.’ No! You die today, Riend.” The tentacles tightened again. “Even in the beginning, you plagued me. Your time is up, Riend.”

“My time is far from up,” I laughed suddenly, and Majora looked mildly surprised.

“You hide your fear,” Majora said. “Or you are an idiot.”

“You’ll never know,” I said, and prepared to strike even as I spoke. “I’ll never tell. But I promise you, my time is far from up. It’s a matter of comparing our advantages. You see, right now, your strength more than matches mine. One for one. We have both temporarily exhausted our magical energy stores. Two for two. The fact that I appear incapacitated is causing you to let down your guard. Disadvantage for you. So we are three for two, in my favour. To tip the scales completely, I would like to inform you that telekinesis requires virtually no expenditure of energy.”

Majora shrieked as my sword plunged into the back of the body’s head. The tentacles tightened so rapidly I thought my wrists might shatter, but I wrenched away, and he released me with little fuss. I wasn’t sure of the most effective point to attack with the sword, so I withdrew the sword with a hasty thought, then replaced it, lower, just behind where the left eye of the mask was. He shrieked again. His tentacles flailed about wildly, but it took little effort to avoid them—there were only two, after all. I called the sword to me and backed away from the screaming mask. I knew he was not finished, and my sword was flying even as the idea came to me. The sword flew out to the base of the left tentacle, and pierced the shoulder area. Another shriek came, but the tentacle did not fall, nor did it stop moving. So I resorted to my second plan. The sword began to hack arbitrarily at the shoulder area. Crude, but effective. Before long, The tentacle fell to the ground. It continued to writhe for a moment, and the second tentacle was already falling by the time it stopped. The sword returned to my hand and I stared at the shrieking, wailing, armless thing that had once been a terrifying monster, but was now just a hideous abomination.

I took a small amount of the ambient power around us and absorbed it into myself—a dangerous thing that I did not do often, but which I deemed appropriate for the current situation—and released it, raw and unadulterated, at Majora. He was blasted backward into the wall at an odd angle. Colliding with the wall, he bounced back and hit the floor, sliding briefly toward me before he stopped and lay still. After a moment, the remains of the body—the parts that were still connected, that is—retracted within the mask and vanished. The severed tentacles, as well as the arms and legs, burst into flame and vanished in seconds. The mask itself was still and silent, facedown on the floor.

I stared down at it. Even without invoking any sort of magic, I could see that the mask was empty, both physically and magically. There was only one thing I had to do in order to assure myself that Majora was truly dead. I walked forward and placed my foot on the mask. When I exerted a subtle pressure, the mask snapped in half with the clean crack of thin wood. I removed my foot and stared down at the broken mask. Like my own mask, as long as its denizen existed, the mask was all but indestructible. The fact that my foot had broken it meant that it had no prisoner. It had no denizen.

Majora was dead.

I turned and surveyed the room—all traces of Majora were gone save the wooden mask. The only blood left on the floor and walls was my own. All traces of the confrontation were gone. I turned back to the mask.

Majora was dead.

“Here’s to sibling rivalry,” I said dryly, and ground the mask to dust with my foot.

El apunte de escritor

"The Note of the Writer!" (Dun dun dunnnnnnnnn, dramatic reverrrrrrrb!)


Ikken Isshu here, just going through this story and adding my own little commentary to each of the chapters. For some unfathomable reason, I actually wrote the author's note on chapter three first... Bah, I'll do these in whatever order I bloody please. I'm also going through and correcting Bard's spelling errors on the chapter intros. razz Have fun reading, all, and enjoy the story. If you don't, I'll kill you in your sleep.

Ahahahahaha. I'm just kidding.

...right?

...No, voice... Bad voice... I don't want to kill my readers... Don't make me, voice... Please...

Just read the bloody story! .>


Note of the Man Behind the Curtain


Just to make things clear, I the Unsung Bard, am the man who comes up with the majority of the characters and plot points. Ikken is the one who slaps the meat on the bones. I provide outlines and content, he dresses it up and makes it look pretty. That is all, adieu.
PostPosted: Mon Jul 30, 2007 9:24 am


The Conqueror

Chapter I: Summoned


She was sore all over. Why? She felt like she was drifting. She didn’t want to drift. So she got her arms beneath herself and shoved. The world fell into place before her eyes—what was left of it, at least. Her world was gone. How? She felt like she was drifting. She didn’t want to drift.

“Mommy,” she called. “Daddy. Where are you?” They couldn’t be far. They were never far. Calling them always worked—they were Mommy and Daddy, after all. Why shouldn’t they answer to their own titles? But they weren’t answering. No matter. She’d find them. Where? She felt like she was drifting. She didn’t want to drift. Mommy and Daddy didn’t seem to be here. She continued to search, never once stopping to wonder why all of this burnt rubble stood in place of her home. Mommy and Daddy were nowhere near. They didn’t respond to her calls, even though a hint of fear had suddenly crept into her voice. When? She felt like she was drifting. She didn’t want to drift. Her throat was tightening, and a tear was making its way down her left cheek. Now she ran away from the wreckage, tripping several times over pieces of wood that had escaped the fire. Someone had done this—it hadn’t happened all on its own. But—Who? She felt like she was drifting. She didn’t want to drift.

“They’re dead.”

“What?”

She felt like she was drifting.

She didn’t want to drift.

She wanted to go home.


- - -


Mera awoke terrified, but the dream itself was already forgotten by the time her eyelids had opened. With a deep breath and an exhalation to match, she pushed herself to a sitting position. She was sore all over—From training yesterday, no doubt. It wasn’t exactly easy, training to become one of the Sheikah, and it was damned near impossible to do it without a few injuries along the way.

Mera winced as she made her way to her apartment’s adjoining bathroom.

“Should have taken a bath last night,” Mera muttered to herself as she ran a bath. To say nothing of the rest of Hyrule, the Sheikah, at least, were fairly well off. That much was obvious, what with lowly trainees being able to stay in private apartments with running—and hot—water. “Or at least stretched a bit before going to sleep,” she continued to grumble. “I never stretch after practice, and I always regret it the next morning.”

She slowly and gingerly stripped off her bedclothes; then, in the wall mirror, carefully examined the bruises that covered her body. With grim recollection, she recreated yesterday’s events, remembering each bruise as it had come to her. There, beneath her left armpit, was her most foolish mistake—she’d actually raised her arm to block a painfully obvious feint, opening herself for an easy strike. The wince she gave now was not caused by the painful bruise, but by the memory of her mistake.

Turning from the rest of the bruises, she stopped the bath water and sat on the bench beside the tub. It didn’t take long to soap up her thick, reddish-brown hair, but it took nearly thrice as long to wash it to her satisfaction. It still felt mildly greasy when she’d finished, but that was only because the Académie Shiekah didn’t spend nearly so much on soap as they did on lodgings. She eased herself into the bathtub and allowed herself a soft moan as she was submerged to her chin in the hot water.

“I wonder,” Mera mused as she soaked. “I wonder what Sito is up to lately. I’ll bet he’s planning something big.” She hadn’t heard from the older man for several days. Ordinarily, he went missing for a few days whenever he was planning a treat for the students at the AS. The last time he’d vanished, there’d been a Yearend party the likes of which the Académie hadn’t seen in decades. Mera smiled. A smile could still be gotten from anybody at the AS, just by mentioning Avaso’s dance routine. That had been something to talk about—up until, and including, the moment he’d fallen off the stage and into the bushel out of which they’d been bobbing for apples.

As if the memory of the barrelful of water had reminded Mera of what she was doing, she sat up sleepily and began to scrub away at herself. She didn’t spend as much time on her body as she’d spent on her hair, and she was done in a handful of minutes. She reluctantly got out of the tub and let it drain while she dried herself off and went into the main apartment to find some clothing.

“‘General Practice’,” she recited from memory. “General Practice today. Wonderful. That means more bruises.” As she grumbled, she pulled from her wardrobe a fitted shirt designed with practicality in mind; it was green, in keeping with the style of Faroke Sheikah garb, and, once donned, was elastic enough to hug her body without being too tight or getting in the way. It also had a handful of pockets, conveniently placed yet somehow designed to be near invisible to anybody who didn’t know what he was looking for. Mera also grabbed a pair of fitted leggings to match, and some polished boots in the Faroke style—once she slipped her feet into them, they would look like an extension of her leggings, right down to the thin elasticity. In truth, though, Mera could walk on hot coals with those boots, and not feel a thing.

She donned all of her Sheikah garb, and returned to the bathroom to check that the tub had drained (it had) and to examine herself in the mirror. Once she had adjusted her uniform to her satisfaction, she combed her still-wet hair back and secured it tightly in a simple bun. Older, more experienced Sheikah were capable of managing long hair without tying it back. Unfortunately, Mera always found herself reduced to fumbling and cursing when she left her hair undone, so that was not an option for her.

“Well,” Mera said to the girl in the mirror. “Ready to learn something today?”

“Sure,” she replied to herself, “but I doubt I will.”

- - -


“By the love of Nayru,” Amrick said, “with each passing day, you grow more beautiful.”

“By the wind of Farore,” Mera retorted with a friendly smile, “with each passing day, you blow more hot air.”

Amrick laughed as he stabbed at the ham on his plate with a fork. “Guilty as charged. I can’t help it if I’m a hopeless romantic.” Mera laughed at this and pushed a grape between her closed lips, pretending not to notice the way Amrick stared.

“You know,” he said, voice cracking just slightly enough to make Mera smile, “you shouldn’t tease like that. It’s very unprofessional.”

“Would it be more professional to jump on top of you right now?” Mera said with a raised eyebrow.

Amrick thought for a long time, then said, “If I said ‘yes,’ would you do it?”

Mera burst into laughter. After a moment, Amrick joined her.

“Attention, all students and trainees!” The barked shout came from the head of the dining hall, and Mera was suddenly painfully aware that she was one of only five students in the hall. “If you’re still in here, you’d better be injured, sick, or otherwise excused from studies!”

“Whoops,” Amrick said, bumping the table as he jumped up. “None of the above. Gotta go. Catch you later, pretty lady.” And he rushed off, leaving his half-eaten breakfast on the table. Mera shook her head, finished off what was left of her cold Deku coffee, and carried both of their trays to the kitchen. Then she made her quick but unhurried way to the practice yard.

Once she arrived, she easily shrugged off her tardiness with a simple, “My apologies for being late. I was helping another trainee.” As she’d expected, the instructor frowned and let her join the other trainees.

“As I was saying,” the instructor said (and after a moment of wracking her brain, Mera recognized him as Teron Elik, an instructor whose name she always had trouble remembering), “the two of you I spoke to last time will be practicing with me in the south sector of the yard. The rest of you will continue your instruction on your own—you know what you’re supposed to be doing. If you don’t, come see me. Today shouldn’t be anything special for any of you”—but Mera thought she noticed his eyes lingering on her for a bare moment—“so I don’t expect any disruptions to the normal schedule. Now,” and he began to walk away from the students, “Ryte, Anna, come with me. The rest of you, begin.”

Mera headed to the weapons rack, taking only a moment to remember what she’d been practicing with the previous day. There was a single manoeuvre she’d been trying to perfect with a sword. Trying to perfect it in practice had gotten her a painful bruise in the small of her back. Now ought to be a perfectly fine time to try it out, though. She picked out a thin, light épée and weighed it in her hand. She didn’t remember seeing the sword here before—perhaps it was a recent donation. Whomever had donated the thing must have paid a fair price to acquire it. It was a high-quality thing, only marred by a nasty chip in the ruby that formed the pommel of the sword. Still, it had good balance, and a beautiful blade. Not to mention the fact that the ruby complimented her hair wonderfully. She took a few experimental swings with it, and decided she liked it.

So she took the épée to a relatively open area opposite a training dummy (a scarecrow attached to a wooden stake), and assumed a classic fighting stance, with the assumption that her straw-filled opponent would be doing the same. She was following the classic style of Gerhard Locke, a famed Hylian swordsman of centuries past, for three reasons. First, it was a popular style, and fair to assume that she might someday fight an opponent who used this style. Second, it was her favourite sword fighting style. Third, it was one of only three styles which could appropriately accommodate the manoeuvre she wanted to try. So she saluted the dummy and raised the sword with her right hand, blade extended across her line of sight to the left.

Closing her eyes for a moment of concentration, she called silently to the power of the Goddess of the Wind. It came effortlessly, saturating her entire body in an instant. Now she raised the sword, blade erect and vertical, and directed the power into the blade. Someday, she reflected, she’d have to figure out how to do this in action. No opponent would simply stand still and allow her to prepare an attack like this. Nik certainly hadn’t, when she’d tried it the previous day. Ah, well, such was the price paid when one tried to develop one’s own sword techniques. As far as Mera knew, nobody had ever done this before. Perhaps that was because it was so damned difficult.

Mera now extended her sword arm out to the side and bent her knees just enough to be able to push herself in a clockwise rotation, as rapidly as possible. As she spun, the power in the blade extended out past the end of the blade itself. She’d found that spinning was the most effective way to extend the power. Unfortunately, she’d never been very good at techniques that required her to turn her back on her enemy. Regardless, she completed an entire rotation, and the by-now glowing green blade, twice as long as the épée itself, sliced cleanly through the dummy’s body. She realized belatedly that it had also sliced through the wooden post. She then realized, even more belatedly, that she’d destroyed the dummy. “Damn it,” she muttered, and called to memory the simple time-reversal spell that all trainees were taught on their first day.

It seemed impressive, but really, it was a pathetic spell. All of the dummies, and certain other things in the AS, were enchanted to be susceptible to several spells. One of these spells was a very simple time-reversal spell which would return it to whatever state it had been in several minutes ago. Needless to say, the spell had been developed to repair destroyed or damaged training dummies. As Mera completed the spell and performed the accompanying gesture, the severed parts of the dummy moved in an exact reflection of their earlier motion, and settled atop the remains of the dummy. The rips and frayed edges vanished, and the dummy was like new. Well, not quite new. It was like slightly used.

Mera looked at her sword, and the faintly glowing power that still rested within it. She swung it idly, and watched as the power within swelled slightly. It occurred to her that the centrifugal force, not the spinning itself, was what affected the power’s extension. Perhaps she simply couldn’t swing it fast or hard enough. With a disgusted sigh, she banished the power and returned the épée to the weapons rack.

She had just begun to search for a new weapon when an arrow wedged itself in the wooden weapons rack, bare inches to the right of her head. She growled to herself.

“Setras,” she said amiably as she turned around.

“Mera,” the tall, thin, blonde boy sneered. “Having fun? I’d suggest you try the daggers. From what I’ve heard, they’re the favoured weapon of thieves and beggars.”

“While we’re on the subject of what weapons are used by different people,” Mera said without missing a beat, “why are you using a bow? I thought snakes fought with their fangs.”

He sneered again, baring the teeth in question.

Setras was a rich boy who’d made it into the AS by virtue of his family’s prestige and wealth. He seemed to have a tradition of insulting Mera at least once each day, but never before an instructor. He didn’t like her, and the feeling was mutual. She generally tried to avoid him, but when he accosted her like this, there really was no chance of that. So she plucked a quarterstaff from the rack and hefted it experimentally.

“Well, as long as we’re both here,” Mera said casually, “What say we test those fangs of yours against this oak quarterstaff? Or, if you prefer, there are some lovely daggers you could use…”

She ducked the arrow that came at her. “Now, I know that wasn’t meant to hit me,” she said as she dashed toward him, swinging the staff in a simple horizontal sweep at chest level. He danced just out of reach, then let fly another arrow. This one scratched the side of her face, but it didn’t feel as if it had left a mark. She made her way back to the empty area where she’d been practicing earlier, deftly avoiding his shots all the while. She paid careful attention to the quiver on his back—when it was depleted, she knew, he’d draw his sabre, and he was lethal with that thing. She managed to catch him flat across the chest with the full weight of her body against the quarterstaff, but this caused her to lose her balance. He was thrown backward, but managed to kick her in the right calf as they went down, and she gasped with the pain of the blow to the relaxed muscle. She was able to roll away from him before he tried another kick, and by that time, he was halfway to his feet and already drawing an arrow. She used the quarterstaff to push herself to a standing position, then, on an impulse, hooked it around and caught the bow out of his hands, flinging it off to the side. In the same movement, she brought the staff back around and, taking advantage of his surprise at losing the bow, knocked him off his feet by sweeping the staff underneath him.

Setras was visibly angry by this point, as might be expected.

“After daggers, cheating is the favoured weapon of thieves and beggars,” he spat.

“Don’t name me ‘rat’ and then complain when I fight like one,” Mera said simply. “You’re just the pot calling the kettle black, buddy boy.”

“I’ll show you a black kettle,” he snarled, and Mera could already see the flames gathering about his hands.

“Setras!” Setras froze and paled at the furious shout from across the yard. Mera looked to see Teron striding toward them. “What in the name of Din’s fire do you think you’re doing? I shouldn’t have to tell you that the usage of raw energy is absolutely forbidden within the Académie—do you want to kill somebody?!”

Yes, Mera thought dryly.

“N-no, Instructor,” Setras stammered, all previous confidence gone.

“That’s the second time this month you’ve been caught breaking serious regulations,” Teron said. “Get out of here. Report to the Council. You’d better pray to Din they don’t expel you—I know I would, if I had the authority!” Setras hung his head as he left the yard. Teron looked to Mera, and his expression was no less severe.

“Well?” he said. Mera knew the routine.

“He insulted me,” she said with a shrug. “He seemed to want a fight, and sparring isn’t against the rules, so I obliged him. I won, and it’s no secret that he’s a sore loser. That’s about where you come in.”

Teron sighed. “You ought to know by now that you two don’t mix well,” he said. “Can you just try not to butt heads too much?”

Mera bit back a sharp retort and nodded. Teron was a superior, after all. “Yes, sir. I apologize for the commotion.”

“Trainee Mera!” The shout wasn’t angry, but it demanded attention. It came from the eastern entrance to the practice yard. When she looked, her jaw fell open. She quickly shut it.

Standing at the entrance to the practice yard was Pheos Myranna, one of the highest-ranking Council Members of the Sheikah. She hurried to answer the summons, coming to a nervous halt before him.

“Yes, sir?”

“Follow me,” he said quietly but not unkindly, and turned away from her. She obliged. Not long into their walk, Pheos turned his head and eyed her appraisingly. “I remember when you came here,” he said. “Barely a young girl, a truly sad sight. Now you are nearly a woman—and soon to be more.”

Her stomach performed a deft back flip. “More, sir?”

Pheos nodded. “Much more. You are to be tested for acceptance into the ranks of the Sheikah Faroke.”

She actually stopped walking for a moment, then hurried to catch up with him. “Really, sir? I’m—you—tested?” She stopped again, hurried again, and grinned. “This is one of Sito’s jokes, isn’t it?”

He looked at her, puzzled. “Certainly not, Mera.” She noticed that he was not addressing her as ‘child’, as he usually did. “Do you not feel prepared? As you know, the Graduation Testing can only commence when both the Council, and the Trainee to be tested, agree that it is time. If you do not feel—”

“It’s not that,” she said, and realized that she did not feel ready, “it’s just that—well—I’ve been in training for so long, and I guess—”

“It seems strange to think you may ever do anything else,” Pheos said with a smile. “That is not an uncommon sentiment. For what it’s worth, Mera, I feel that you will do fine. The testing will take place in here,” and he stopped before a cherrywood door. Mera looked at Pheos’ face, at his warm eyes, for just a moment, then turned to the door.

I am ready, she thought to herself. And if I’m not, well, it’s not like I have to leave the AS. I’ll just keep training until I’m ready. But that doesn’t matter, because I’m ready now. I really am.

And she laid a single shaking hand on the doorknob. She hadn’t realized her hand was shaking. Why was her hand shaking? She’d been nervous before, but that had never happened. Her breathing seemed oddly fast—and shallow. She wasn’t taking in much air with each breath. Ah, well. She was breathing rapidly enough to make up for that. The door was still closed. The knob wouldn’t turn. Why wouldn’t the knob turn? Oh. She wasn’t even trying to turn it. Funny, how she hadn’t realized that sooner.

“…Mera? Are you all right?” Pheos’ voice sounded oddly distant. Mera nodded.

“Mera, can you hear me?” She nodded impatiently.

Yes, yes, I can hear you.

Her hand slipped off the knob. Were her palms that sweaty? She caught hold of the knob again.

“Maybe you should sit down.”

I don’t need to sit down. I just need to open this damnable door.

“I’m going to get you a glass of w—Mera!”

Suddenly, her hand slipped off the knob again.

She felt like she was drifting.

Until she hit the floor.

Author's Note


Well, this is The Unsung Bard here, formally known as the infamous rebel Twilight Eye What's that? Never heard of me? Prepostorous! this is going to be the final attempt at a story i have tried and failed several times. Luckily, now I have a friend to do all the wordage for me.Yes, the plot and the majority of the characters are all mine, but you have to thank the Great and Powerful Keski for the awesome dialouge and the stunning narative. Well, we have the mystery of Mera on our hands now. What will happen next? What will the 'test' entail? What awaits the characters introduced thus far? What is Sito up to? And where the hell is Link?

Tune in next week for Mera's testing!

The Unsung Bard


The Unsung Bard

PostPosted: Tue Sep 18, 2007 9:31 pm


*bump* crying
Reply
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