not a big fan of socializing but she does like people-watching!
[ID: a pencil crayon drawing titled âObserving.â In it, Guodei is sitting in a window seat and lifting a mug to her mouth. She is a young woman with light golden-brown skin, short blue hair, and sharp silver claws. She has a prosthetic leg, scars on her arms and face, and indistinct tattoos on her hands. The lid of the cup, which has a straw attached to it, is sitting on the cushion next to her. /end ID]
Artistâs notes:
The cup is built with a straw but she doesnât like straws so she took the lid off.
Set a few months after leaving the Temple.
Not totally sure about the shape of her nose; Iâm not certain itâs consistent with the other drawing I did of her but I was sort of trying things out and tbh I think that because Iâd been thinking about a different drawing I might do with Rovian whoâs nose IS that shape and how I wanted to go about it slightly differently than usual I might have gotten a little mixed up. Itâs not too far off what I think the shape of Guodeiâs nose is but the bridge might look a little different? Not a big deal but I thought Iâd point it out in case itâs inconsistent with other drawings (past or future). I did put the edges of the nostrils in this time which is what I was trying out and I think Iâm satisfied.
I didnât outline the scars in marker this time! I think thatâs much better and more how real scars look.
Wearing her flower shirt, of course.
Trying out putting some more effort into shading and I think it paid off in some places and didnât come across as well in others. This is good information for the future.
Gave her a hitchhikerâs thumb like me.
Sheâs so awkward and doesnât really want to make friends, but sheâs really starting to get used to being around other people and sheâs interested in how ânormalâ people interact with each other, so she comes to the food hall a lot.
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Iâm so excited that you are enjoying Guodei because she is kind of everything to me. Blorbo from my brain
Yeah, she's so cool! I'm always drawn to stoic, emotionally repressed characters who are also assassins or good fighters, so she's like my kryptonite lol
Empires Always Fall Chapter Sixty-three: Zhe'Ärani: Stand Our Ground
content notices: violence, guns, blades, past abuse, Zhe'Ärani has a flat affect herself but she's also kind of demonizing Guodei for her flat affect + demonizing/dehumanizing her in general, referenced gender dysphoria, religion, battle, imperialism, vague brief body horror, grief, minor character death, killing, past major character death, friendship, family, defaulting to old hierarchy, touch, referenced conscription, guilt, referenced espionage & lying, allusion to torture, PTSD
Zhe'Ärani jumped, startled as Guodei stepped out of the shadows.
That was something she had noticed, with the other former Initiates. With herself, too, sometimes. They had a tendency to lurk.
She crossed her arms defensively, subconsciously correcting her posture.
"I need to shave," Guodei stated, as if that was something ZheâÄrani had ever cared about or needed to know the schedule of.
"Okay?" she signed.
"So I need a razor."
"Go ask the quartermaster." ZheâÄrani did not have some kind of secret supply of razors. She did not possess any razors.
"I wanted to make sure youâre okay with me having a razor," signed Guodei. "My-" She gestured to her growing stubble. "You understand. But I won't do it if it would make you feel unsafe for me to have a razor, because this is your home and we are your guests."
Zhe'Ärani rolled her eyes. Guodei did not need a razor to hurt her. Guodei was made specifically for hurting people and had multiple blades as permanent parts of her body.
"Why did you leave?" she asked.
"What?"
"Why did you leave the Temple?"
"I am- I was going to be a Lieutenant of Corysecli," Guodei signed. "My first directive was to protect the Vessel, carry out Corysecli's will, and uphold and respect Her Law. My second was to protect my cohort. I decided the second was more important."
"I wasn't aware you were capable of deciding anything for yourself," ZheâÄrani snarked.
"Ć i Arroakhai KjĂș, I have spent my whole life-" She cut herself off. "No. We're not going to do this, because I donât want to talk about it and you donât want to hear about it."
Part of Zhe'Ärani did want to hear about it. To have Guodei explain to her why she was like this. To find out what had made her a hard shell with an empty inside. To know what exactly had turned her more weapon than person.
But it was private, and she knew it could never make her forgive Guodei for Qatriong. Nothing could.
"Go talk to the quartermaster," she signed. "I don't care if you shave. I'm not afraid," she lied. "You can even cut your food with a knife, if it pleases you."
"The child- Qonai said she wanted to be like me," Guodei signed. "I couldn't let that happen."
They stared at each other for a moment. Zhe'Ärani slowly figured out what Guodei had meant she understood.
"If you want, like- hormones, surgeries, medical stuff," Zhe'Ärani began. "Our doctor has connections-"
An alarm went off, lights flashing and sound blaring so loud that even Zhe'Ärani could hear it.
Guodei jumped and drew her divine sword, proving Zhe'Ärani's point about the razor not mattering. "What's that?" she signed one-handed.
"I don't know." Zhe'Ärani slapped her hands over her ears. It must be new since the fire.
Since the last time the empire attacked.
Oh, no.
"I'm going to find the others," Guodei signed, just as Zhe'Ärani's father came tearing down the street towards them.
She'd never seen him run so fast.
"Evacuate," he signed, before grabbing her arm and pulling her in the direction of the forest.
She stumbled, then dug her feet in and pulled her arm back. "What's happening?"
"We're being attacked," Rokhesh signed. "Come. We have to go. They're twenty minutes away at most and we need to be well and truly gone."
Zhe'Ärani was done being pushed around. She wasn't going to lose her home yet again.
"Wait," she signed. "I have an idea. You go. I'll find you."
"Zhe'Ärani, please," he signed. "I can't lose you again."
"I'll be fine."
"I thought you were dead," he signed, eyes glistening with tears. "For nearly two years, I thought you were dead. Please don't make me go through that again. I only just got you back."
"Daddy," she signed. "I'll be okay. I can handle myself. I think I can protect our home, and I only just got it back. Isn't that worth it?"
"Not if it costs your life."
"It won't," she signed, a promise she was seventy percent sure she could keep.
"It's not fair to ask you to do this," Zhe'Ärani signed. "I promised you were safe here and this isn't that, but- There's not that many of them. I think we can do it. I⊠There's nowhere else for any of us to go," she added.
She bristled at the way they all looked to Guodei. We're out of there! she wanted to shout. You can make your own choices! You don't have to follow that hierarchy anymore! She doesn't deserve your trust!
But they didn't have time for that.
Guodei had put her divine sword away, so when she signed it was clear and fast with both hands. "This place has taken us in when no other would have." She tipped her head to Zhe'Ärani in an unnerving half-semblance of a bow that made Zhe'Ärani immediately feel dirty despite Guodei remaining on her feet.
Finding no argument from the others, Guodei snapped back into a commanding mode. "Abhaonai, Nesyue, Retmiq: there are hunting rifles in a locked chest at the quartermaster's. We need seven; find a crossbow or something else smaller for Zhe'Ärani. Kjotar, take the child and go with them; when you have a gun, get her out of here and stay with her until one of us finds you. See if you can join the other people who left. Qonai, these soldiers will kill you if they see you, so you must stay with Kjotar. KaelĂa, LÄ«sandyr, you're with me."
Then it was just the four of them, Zhe'Ärani and KaelĂa and LÄ«sandyr and Guodei. Guodei's continued presence somewhat ruined that of Zhe'Ärani's friends.
Maybe because Zhe'Ärani was no longer one of them, or maybe simply because Guodei knew she couldn't give her orders anymore, there were no instructions for Zhe'Ärani.
"What direction are they coming from and how many?" asked Guodei as KaelĂa bent down to look through a bag.
"From the Industrial District," signed Zhe'Ärani. "Probably about⊠four dozen?" She cringed. Maybe this had been a bad idea and they were too outnumbered. One Initiate easily outmatched one conscripted soldier or probably even two, but⊠this wasn't even close to that ratio.
But.
"I'll need to stand on your shoulders," she told Guodei. She was, unfortunately, the tallest of them by far. Līsandyr was the next closest, but he would need his hands free to most effectively direct his magic, and he wasn't nearly as sturdily built in the shoulders.
Before Guodei could ask why, KaelĂa unscrewed the top of a massive jar of silvery liquid and formed the liquid into a pair of long, solid daggers. "Anyone kills me and I don't kill them too, they can have a nice slow death from heavy metal poisoning."
Mercury. With how little KaelĂa relied on her own magic, Zhe'Ärani rarely remembered that she had the ability. LogÄ, the most magically skilled of the Divine Soldiers responsible for training them, hadn't given her the same kind of intensive focus as they did Zhe'Ärani and LÄ«sandyr- and that was good, KaelĂa's points on the board had almost always been in the negative, and all more time would have gotten her were more negative points and more punishments and probably not any extra help and improvement. Magic required focus and patience and getting good at it required dedication, and KaelĂa didn't really have any of those in that subject.
That jar, stolen from the Temple, had to have filled most of the bag.
"There's a pistol in here if you can hold it," KaelĂa added, but Zhe'Ärani shook her head. Her hands were too small for most things made for average adults, including guns.
They stopped to get her hearing aids on the way across the commune. She wouldn't turn them on until she had to, because it really was overwhelming to have that amount of auditory input, but they were going into an unknown situation and it was best to be prepared for anything.
Nesyue, Retmiq, and Abhaonai caught up to them with the guns a few minutes before they expected the soldiers to arrive. They had five. Zhe'Ärani knew there had been a few more than that, but Kjotar had one and the evacuees had probably taken a couple. It was one fewer than they'd wanted.
KaelĂa's mercury rested like shining vambraces over her forearms. Zhe'Ärani wondered if it took more effort for her to keep it solid in one shape or to repeatedly change its form, given its fluid nature at this temperature. It must be painfully cold even through her thin gloves and sleeves.
"I fight best up close, anyway," she signed, the metal flashing. It peeled off her arms and into liquid blobs floating above her palms, and Zhe'Ärani decided she probably couldn't focus on keeping it in one shape for very long.
"You're more vulnerable at close range." Guodei shoved a rifle into her hands, almost making her drop the mercury if Līsandyr hadn't been there to catch it. "You're shooting. I don't care that it's less exciting."
The sight of KaelĂa holding a rifle sent an unexpected shudder through Zhe'Ärani. An old memory, KaelĂa's grin not yet made lopsided by scars, the gun loaded with paint but built to look and feel very real. Better start running!
She pushed it away and turned on her hearing aids. The first soldiers were starting to appear through the trees.
"I need to be above them now," she signed. "Līs- can you hold them still once there's more of them?"
Guodei dropped down to one knee and offered her hands to help Zhe'Ärani up.
"He's not good at large scales," KaelĂa snapped. "I can keep them back. You have ten minutes if you're lucky but probably more like five." She dropped the rifle and flung out a hand. The mercury followed in a very long, very thin line. "HEY!" she screamed at the top of her lungs. "SEE THAT WIRE? IT'S RAZOR SHARP AND IF IT GETS IN YOUR BLOOD YOU'LL DIE HORRIBLY SO STAY RIGHT WHERE YOU ARE!"
"Mercury's not-" Retmiq began, but stopped with a grunt when Nesyue elbowed him.
Guodei wrapped her hands around Zhe'Ärani's ankles and stood. There was a wobble as she rose, and Zhe'Ärani was hit with the sudden fear that Guodei's prosthetic leg would slip with the extra weight and she would fall.
She directed Guodei to put her on a branch of a nearby tree instead. It was almost as good a position and much more reliable and comfortable. A tree couldn't slip and no tree had ever betrayed her trust.
"Līs!" she signed. "Make me louder?"
He nodded and sent tendrils of gold magic her way as she imagined the shapes of the words she wanted to say.
She wasn't as good with words from her mouth. She hoped desperately that they wouldn't fail her now.
Līsandyr's magic wrapped around her throat and tingled as it sank under her skin.
"SOLDIERS," she said, and her voice was so loud it shook her. "GO HOME. YOU DIDN'T HAVE A CHOICE TO JOIN-" (Yes, they had, to some extent, but she needed to appeal to their preexisting beliefs for her magic to take hold.) "-BUT YOU HAVE A CHOICE NOW. YOU DON'T WANT TO DESTROY A PEACEFUL VILLAGE. YOU WANT TO GO HOME." If she squinted to focus her eyes, the group might be getting smaller. It was hard to tell with all the trees. "THIS PLACE IS DEFENDED BY A FULL COHORT OF ARMED DIVINE SOLDIERS-" (A slight stretch of the truth.) "-AND A VERY POWERFUL ELECTRON MAGE. IF YOU ATTACK IT YOU WILL DIE. YOU WANT TO GO HOME."
She so hoped her voice had even been understandable.
KaelĂa's mercury snapped back towards her.
The number of soldiers that charged them was, definitely, less than the number that had originally been advancing on the commune. Maybe half the size. Still outnumbering them, but not as dramatically.
With a boost from Nesyue, Retmiq was quickly in the tree with Zhe'Ärani. He climbed up higher using a few more branches Zhe'Ärani couldn't reach and then unslung the rifle from his back.
Retmiq was an excellent shot.
Zhe'Ärani looked away. She wanted to keep an eye on KaelĂa and LÄ«sandyr, but every time she saw an injury she felt like she'd been punched in the stomach and every time someone went down she saw Qatriong's still body in her mind.
There was a soldier right below her now. Even a single one getting through could blow up her home. It wasn't fair to leave the others to fight while she covered her eyes and hid.
She dropped a foot or two straight down from her place in the tree. The soldier went down as she landed on them.
She didn't hear the soldier's neck snap, but she felt it. It was over before they even hit the ground together.
Zhe'Ärani thought of everything that a life was, and how she had just ended one. Just like that. Who would miss them. What they could have gone on to do over the next sixty years they wouldn't get, all the things they must have already done in the twenty or twenty-five years she'd just cut short.
She felt sick. How could the others do this so easily? How could Guodei have done it to Qatriong? How could anyone do such a thing to anyone else?
Why couldn't you have just gone home? she thought. I told you to go home. You could have gone home.
They were all happy with her. Celebrating. Everyone trusted the former Initiates now because they'd protected the commune.
"Hey, what's wrong?" Ghurvi'airra asked her. "Are you hurt?"
Zhe'Ärani shrugged and shook her head. She couldn't talk to Ghurvi'airra about this. She would be disgusted, or she just wouldn't understand.
All that time at the Temple and she'd never killed anyone. Until today.
She wished Qatriong were here to tell her what to do. She'd have understood.
She had to make an offering for the dead soldier's soul. One for Qatriong too.
On the way to find appropriate food- something Qatriong would like, and⊠something else for the dead soldier, whom she'd never find out the preferences of, she passed Guodei, and all of a sudden she just had to know.
Guodei wasn't celebrating. She was just lurking. As per fucking usual. Blood in the creases of her hands and dead empty eyes and lurking.
Zhe'Ärani had stopped hating her quite as much at some point. It came back with a vengeance now. She hated the way her shoulders tried to fix themselves around her and she hated the way her chest went tense around her and she hated the way she could always see Qatriong's blood on her hands even though it had long been washed away, and she hated the way Guodei never slouched or flinched or yelled and always just stared like she could see everything you didn't want her to, and she hated that no one else hated her even though Qatriong had been their friend too. It wasn't fair that Guodei could just take Qatriong's life away and rip Zhe'Ärani's heart out and get away with it.
"I killed someone today," Zhe'Ärani signed.
Guodei didn't say anything, just waited, and that made Zhe'Ärani even angrier.
"It was awful! How could you do that to people? To Qatriong?"
"I don't know, Ć i Arroakhai KjĂș, because I'm a monster," signed Guodei. "Is that what you want me to say? Does it make you feel better if I was just born wrong?"
She hated how Guodei always said what other people wanted to hear. She hated how Guodei always knew what other people wanted to hear when Zhe'Ärani could never guess right. "I want the truth!"
"Do you?" challenged Guodei. "Because last time I told you, you freaked out and started your own personal war against a millenia-old institution."
Zhe'Ärani screamed in frustration and kicked her in the shin as hard as she could. It was the wrong leg. All she achieved was hurting her own toes. She hated that Guodei was so fucking impenetrable.
"Qatriong was a danger to the Temple," signed Guodei. "Would you have rathered I bring her in alive? Because that's what GÄtnyx wanted, and she made very sure I knew that, but you know that Qatriong would never have allowed herself to be taken alive and questioned. She died quickly and privately. Would you have preferred to have watched her cry and scream and plead for her life as GÄtnyx had me make an example of her to all of you? She was always going to die, and she knew that. She knew she'd be discovered eventually. And you know, I respect her for that, it was brave and she kept it going for an impressively long time before anyone started to suspect, but there is no world in which Qatriong both joined the Temple as a spy and survived. The best I could do was make it quick."
"I could have saved her!" She could have used her magic and- and-
"You could not have saved her," signed Guodei. "No one could have saved her, including me. There is a very long list of things I have to live with and I'm sure there are more to come. Look, I owe you so much, Ć i Arroakhai KjĂș, but I'm not- I'm not going to get on my knees and beg for your forgiveness."
"Good!" Zhe'Ärani signed. "I wouldn't forgive you anyway! I never will! I wish she was alive and you were dead!"
None of that had made her feel any better at all.
KaelĂa ran into her between the food hall and the shrine. She was celebrating. Celebrating so enthusiastically, in fact, that she collided directly with Zhe'Ärani.
The impact dislodged her grip on the food. She burst into tears.
"Hey, be happy!" KaelĂa signed. "We won!" She seemed to notice the spilled food when LÄ«sandyr bent to pick it up. "You can get some more food. It's okay."
Zhe'Ärani sat down on the ground and hid her face. She put one hand in her mouth. It was all just too much.
She shrugged off the stiff arm KaelĂa tried to put around her. She didn't want to be touched right now
She felt Līsandyr's magic form a soft cocoon, separating the three of them from the too-much world.
They let her cry in silence. It was weird and awkward but maybe it was what she needed. Nothing was okay and she didn't want them to try to tell her it was.
When she eventually looked up, Līsandyr had cleaned up all the food and put it back on the tray.
She took her hand out of her mouth. "Līs."
"Yeah?"
"Is killing hard for you?" she signed.
He nodded.
"Is it always?"
He nodded again. "Usually."
"Soft," KaelĂa signed, but in a way that seemed like she was maybe trying to be affectionate.
"I was going to make an offering for Qatriong." She didn't mention the soldier she'd killed. KaelĂa would think it was silly.
Līsandyr nodded.
"Can you come with me?" she signed. "You don't have to do anything. I know it's not the same as what you're used to. I just⊠I just want company. Please."
KaelĂa wakes up with the urge to blow up its oldest and almost-most-important relationship
takes place a little while into them being at the commune, likely early in book 2
content notices: they are hurting each other on purpose, somewhat graphic references to murder, old grief that is not being dealt with very healthily, references to past child abuse
41 RÄmesai.Â
âItâs your birthday,â KaelĂa said as soon as it saw Guodei.Â
LÄ«s looked up. âHow old?â they said.Â
KaelĂa wasnât sure it knew either. It knew what year Guodei and Qonai had turned twelve, but the calculations were hard. It would have to ask ZheâÄrani to even know its own age for sure.
Guodei closed her eyes briefly. ââŠTwenty-two.âÂ
âThat means itâs been eight years,â KaelĂa continued, bouncing on the balls of its feet. It knew how long ago theyâd turned fourteen, too.
Guodei visibly tensed.Â
âSince you killed Qonai,â it finished.Â
âYes.â Guodei tried to turn away and end the conversation, but KaelĂa didnât let her.Â
âWas she crying when she died?â It didnât know why it felt especially like hurting Guodei today. Qonai had been dead for so long. âWas she scared? I saw her salute you. What did she say? Could she say anything, with your claws in her chest?â
âStop,â said Guodei.Â
âDid you ever think she would beat you? That she would be the one to live? Did you think she would kill you instead? When she grabbed your face-â
âKaelĂa,â said Guodei. The cracks in her composure were starting to show.Â
KaelĂa wanted to dig its fingers into those cracks and pull.Â
âDo you think she would have kept on holding you for so long?â it said. âFought GÄtnyx to keep your body? Bit the Vessel? Or do you think-â
Guodeiâs hand twitched.Â
âAre you going to hit me, Lieutenant?â KaelĂa taunted, heart pounding with exhilaration. It didnât know if it was looking for Guodei to hurt it or for confirmation that she wouldnât. âYou should. Put me in my place. Give me what I deserve. Qonai would.â It wanted Guodei to force it to its knees and whip it for misbehaving. It wanted Guodei to promise she would never even slap it again because GÄtnyx would never be there to make her. It wanted a reaction.Â
Guodeiâs palm slammed into the wall next to KaelĂaâs head. âI want to,â she growled.Â
LÄ«s sprang up, but Nesyue pulled them back.Â
KaelĂa flinched so hard it bit its tongue, but then it laughed. âYou snapped,â it said breathlessly. âHa! I made you snap! I knew it could happen, I knew you could snap, I saw it happen, you can snap just like me, and it took me eight years but I made it happen.â
âYouâre being cruel, KaelĂa,â Retmiq said.Â
âSo?â KaelĂa snapped. âI am a cruel person, Retmiq, and you really should know that by now. Havenât you been paying attention?â
âNot true,â LÄ«s mumbled, but LÄ«s was wrong about a lot of things.Â
âYou want to know what she said?â hissed Guodei, face ever so close to KaelĂaâs. âI told her I loved her and she said she wanted it to be quick and leaned her head back for me to slit her throat so she didnât have to slowly drown in her own blood in my arms and that was the only mercy I could give her so I did it. She wanted to live and she will always be dead because so did I, and yes, she was scared! Are you happy now? Does it make you feel better to know that? Do you want to tell everyone how they made sure I would never snap again? Do you feel good that Iâve lost control again anyway, that Iâm yelling, that I want to hurt you? Because I donât.âÂ
KaelĂa felt very small. It reached out to touch the scars Qonaiâs claws had left on Guodeiâs face.Â
Guodei caught its wrist in a painfully strong grip. âI will break your arm if you touch me now.âÂ
KaelĂa looked at her hand around its wrist and decided it didnât actually want to push things even further today. It didnât want to push Guodei even further over the edge and make LÄ«s fix up its crushed bones.Â
It let its arm go limp.Â
Guodei dropped it.Â
âIâm sorry, Lieutenant.â Well- the closest thing to properly sorry it could be with anyone who wasnât LÄ«s. It didnât want to leave this as a horrible gaping wound in their relationship. Things could just- go back to normal.Â
âCALL ME BY MY NAME!â Guodei screamed, then slapped her hands over her mouth, looking embarrassed and afraid. âSorry,â she muttered through her hands. âSorry. I have no right to ask for that. Sorry. Itâs just- you never call me- no one ever- Iâm not- sorry. Sorry.âÂ
There was a thrill in knowing it was even capable of hurting Guodei, but mostly now it just felt shitty and tired.Â
KaelĂa hugged itself. No one else would, or should, right now. âI miss her,â it said, voice wobbling like a childâs. âGuodei. I miss our sister.âÂ
âMe too,â Guodei said, her voice almost as small.Â
Eight years and theyâd never really even been allowed to grieve.
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Retmiqâs sick, Guodeiâs trying to take care of him, theyâre pretty awkward with each other since it hasnât been that long since leaving the Temple and everyoneâs still figuring out what that means
content warnings: vomiting, likely-terminal illness and grief over it (itâs vague but at least for this scene operate under the assumption that Retmiq has cancer and is doing chemotherapy; I havenât totally hammered everything out for him for next draft so the nature of his illness might change), pills (for nausea), past physical abuse, now-uncertain but previously explicitly hierarchical power dynamic, implied past medical abuse and educational neglect
Retmiqâs head drooped over the toilet. Heâd thrown up once. It was hard to tell if he was going to throw up again or just going to keep being nauseous without anything more actually happening.Â
Guodei slid a glass of water and some pills in a cup along the wood floor. âThese are supposed to help when you can swallow them without vomiting again.âÂ
Retmiq nodded wearily. They had a cabinet for medicine now that they could just have whenever.Â
âItâs not fair that the treatment makes me sick too,â he muttered.Â
Guodei hummed. âWhere are Abhaonai and Nesyue? They shouldnât have left you.âÂ
âThey went out,â said Retmiq shortly. Abhaonai kept going into the city and only coming back very late. Nesyue had started going too. Retmiq had gone with them once and hated it and he wished they would just stay here with him. He was sick. âSorry for making you take care of me instead.âÂ
âItâs fine,â said Guodei. Retmiq felt like there was an undertone of itâs my job.Â
âThe doctor said if we didnât do this I definitely wouldnât make it,â said Retmiq. âShe said even if we tried this again thereâs still an eighty-five percent chance I wonât.â Remembering something Guodei had said a long time ago- they didnât teach us a lot of math, we only need the basics- he added, âWhich is a lot.âÂ
Guodei nudged the water again.Â
Retmiq took the pills even though he didnât really feel like he could keep anything down yet.Â
âThe doctor here is nice,â he said. âSaid she would try and keep me as comfortable as possible if I didnât want to do this again. Gave me all the information and let me choose.â
Guodei nodded. âWhen we came here, I had some wounds on my back that werenât healing well, and carrying the child had split a lot of them open again, and I needed her help. It would have been easier if I laid down but I didnât want to lie down and she didnât make me and she didnât punish me for making things harder for her or for taking a long time with the questions. She just cleaned them and closed them and bandaged them. I appreciated that.âÂ
I promise you that I will do my absolute best for you, Retmiq, but your odds of long-term survival are low.Â
âI donât want to die,â Retmiq whined.Â
âI donât want you to die either,â said Guodei.Â
âI want to go home.â If he was going to die- why did it have to be here, without ever seeing his family again? âI wish I could just go home.âÂ
âBack to the Temple? But-â
âNot the Temple,â Retmiq said. He felt too miserable to care about interrupting her. His stomach was not happy about the pills. She could hit him if she wanted to- though she hadnât since the Temple, but he was still scared anyway- and he probably wouldnât feel much worse. âHome. I wish I could just see my parents and sister again.â
âOh.âÂ
There was no before for Guodei. It must be weird for her to hear Retmiq talking about his.Â
âI canât,â said Retmiq. âIâm sure Iâd be caught, and Iâm not well enough to travel, and I donât know if theyâd turn me in if I did make it, but I justâŠâÂ
âYou said being able to rest was helping,â said Guodei, as if it was enough to save him.Â
Retmiq nodded. âItâs slowing things down,â he said. âBut Iâm probably still-â
His stomach finally revolted, and up came the pills, burning all the way.Â
Guodei put an awkward hand on his back as he threw up again.Â
Empires Always Fall Chapter Sixty: Zhe'Ärani: Are We Safe Now?
content notices: police, violence, killing, blood, brief body horror, kidnapping, theft, PTSD, partial nudity, past abuse, past branding, past whipping, brief infantilizatition, past ableism, familial and platonic relationships, pet names, nicknames, past character death, mentioned past pregnancy and abortion, doctor visit, implied past sexual abuse, cult, dissociation (not POV character), threats
With the state the city was in, it was even riskier for Zhe'Ärani to keep doing her murals, but she had to. She was being sent more and more names and pictures every day. Someone needed to make sure these people weren't erased and forgotten.
She was deep in focus. She needed to get the colours right on the hair. She wanted it to look as real and individual as possible. It was easier without distractions, so she'd turned her hearing aids off.
It meant she didn't know she'd been caught until the shadow loomed over her.
She didn't even have time to scream before she was face-down on the ground with her arms wrenched behind her.
After a brief freeze, she twisted around and bit as hard as she could into the first fleshy thing she could find. She had been trained as an Initiate of Corysecli for nearly two years. She wasn't helpless and she refused to let her body act like she was.
Her hands were cuffed, but she could bite and she could kick and bite and kick she would.
There was a second person, and then a third- a Divine Soldier, not one from the Prime Temple so probably one of the locals- coming for her, but then there were suddenly a lot more people, and-
Strands of golden magic, LÄ«sandyr's magic, twisted through the air. No one else could see the way it moved through space like she could, but Zhe'Ärani was only half human.
The gold threads pierced through the body of the police officer she was fighting, and then-
Zhe'Ärani turned her head to the side and threw up as the officer's body did things a body never should, folding up into a neat little square of meat and fabric and hair and blood.
She shoved herself backwards along the concrete until she was- not a comfortable distance away, but a bit less immediately close.
What the fuck.
She didn't see Līsandyr kill people very often, and certainly not like that.
She caught a glimpse of some of the other Initiates- Nesyue having tackled the second officer to the ground, KaelĂa and Abhaonai and Kjotar and Retmiq facing off against the Divine Soldier because four Initiates might just stand a chance against one full godsworn- before LÄ«sandyr's tall form blocked her view.
He squatted down in front of her.
"Okay?" he signed.
With the confused mush of emotions inside her, Zhe'Ärani wasn't sure if she was, but she nodded anyway. She knew what he meant. She was bruised all over and her shoulders were definitely strained, but she wasn't seriously injured.
He reached around behind her, hands closing around her wrists, and a moment later she felt the cuffs release.
"Thank you," she signed, not looking at the formerly-a-person meat cube.
Līsandyr held out his hands to help her up, and she took them.
Nesyue had her hand on KaelĂa's shoulder as its repeated stabbing came to a stop. Retmiq was nursing an injured arm and helping Abhaonai cover a deep-looking slash in his leg, and Kjotar's nose had been smashed. All four of KaelĂa, Abhaonai, Kjotar, and Retmiq had bright red arterial spray spattered across their robes, and in KaelĂa's case its face.
Guodei stood at the end of the alley, facing away from them. She had the kid- Qonai, the little girl who was meant to one day replace her as Lieutenant Initiate, whom Zhe'Ärani was ashamed to realize she'd hardly thought about at all since leaving- in her arms, and Qonai's face was ruddy from screaming and her fists were pounding against Guodei's back, but she was far too small to have much effect. Despite herself, Zhe'Ärani felt a pang at the wounds that must be reopening under the blows to cause the spots of blood high on the back of Guodei's robes.
All three of Zhe'Ärani's attackers were dead.
Fortunately, it wasn't that far back to the commune. They weren't exactly inconspicuous, and the car the police and the Divine Soldier had presumably arrived in wasn't big enough for eight.
"You okay?" Zhe'Ärani signed as they waited for a patrol near a closed boat-rental place to turn the corner away from where they needed to cross.
"Fine," KaelĂa replied. "LÄ«s checked me over."
She knew that. He'd checked everyone over. "The Divine Soldier- You knew each-"
The way Moghrlai Gurodstadit's Divine Soldiers and KaelĂa had greeted each other all that time ago had been like family.
"I'm fine." KaelĂa stepped out into the boatyard and waved the rest of them along, ending the conversation.
Qonai almost tipped the stolen- borrowed, Zhe'Ärani told herself, she'd bring it back sometime- boat, then cried herself to sleep in Guodei's arms. Zhe'Ärani found herself tearing up in sympathy.
"She figured out we weren't going back about three days in," Abhaonai signed. "It's her home, and she's not even five, she doesn't know any different. But we couldn't just leave her there."
Zhe'Ärani nodded. It would have been far worse to leave her behind. No one should ever go through what they had, especially not a little kid, and she would never have gotten out after this.
"Poor thing," Abhaonai added.
Zhe'Ärani nodded again.
"It adds kidnapping to the desertion, treason, breach of contract, theft, leaving without permission from a legal guardian, breach of Temple law, and now murder," signed Retmiq. "You're a saint for taking us in with all that following us, Zhe'Ärani."
"We don't have saints in my religion."
"It's a figure of speech," signed Retmiq.
"Oh."
"He just means you're risking a lot," signed Abhaonai.
"She was already in danger anyway," signed KaelĂa.
Zhe'Ärani nodded.
None of them mentioned that GÄtnyx had already tried to send Guodei to kill her some time ago.
The cabin for the Initiates had been built and ready for a while now, waiting for when they'd arrive.
"This is for you," Khadnarrai explained. "You can move these screens and set up the space however you want. You can use the kitchen here, but we also have a communal meal area that you're welcome to share."
Rokhesh set the bag down on the floor. "We collected up clothes from the quartermaster and some donations. Hopefully there will be something to fit everyone. If you can all take your measurements, someone can take them to our sewist and have a few things made or some of these altered. If you want to all look through these and get changed, Zhe'Ärani can give you a tour later and introduce you to some people."
"I painted the house a quiet colour for you," Zhe'Ärani told LÄ«sandyr. Like her, he didn't do well with change, and she wanted to make this transition as easy on him as possible.
Līsandyr nodded vaguely in acknowledgement, hugging himself.
Rokhesh opened the bag and held out a small pair of overalls to Qonai. They had grass stains on the knees from whoever had owned them before. "Why don't you try these on?" he said.
Zhe'Ärani got her bass voice from him (well, and the testosterone, but it was his genes that was acting on) and could hear him almost clearly with her hearing aids on.
Qonai kicked his outstretched hand.
Rokhesh dropped the overalls and pulled his hand back. It was too sharp for Zhe'Ärani to hear, but his lips formed the shape of an exclamation of pain.
Something in the room shifted. Zhe'Ärani didn't see anyone really move much individually, but all of a sudden, the Initiates- herself included- were standing as if to protect Qonai. The way the tension was directed, she realized with a pang that she was no longer one of them.
Qonai burst into tears. Even with her hearing aids, Zhe'Ärani couldn't really make out her high child's voice, but she was saying something, the same thing over and over. She only caught a couple words- "sorry," "bad."
Guodei tucked Qonai defensively behind her legs.
LÄ«sandyr was standing frozen, eyes fixed unmovingly on Rokhesh. He flinched away when Zhe'Ärani tried to hold his hand to comfort him.
It seemed to take Rokhesh much longer to figure out what was happening than it had Zhe'Ärani. After an endless moment, he half-squatted to be closer in height to Qonai. "Hey, there. Qonai, is it? Did I scare you?"
Qonai didn't respond, just hid her face in Guodei's robes, but Kjotar next to them nodded and crossed his arms.
"I shouted because you hurt me, but that doesn't mean I'm going to hurt you, okay?" Rokhesh's gaze travelled over all of them, even Zhe'Ärani. "We don't do that here." He signed the same thing, so Abhaonai would know too.
"You don't need to change your clothes if you don't want to," Khadnarrai signed. "What you wear is your choice. The clothes will stay here, and you can look through them, and whenever you're ready, or if you just need something to wear while those robes are being washed, they will still be here for you."
From what Zhe'Ärani could make out, she repeated the same thing out loud, to make sure she was understood.
The tension slowly died down. Kjotar sat down on the floor and started poking through the bag, with Abhaonai soon joining and sorting the clothes into size groups. KaelĂa gently pulled LÄ«sandyr over to itself and murmured to him quietly. Nesyue took a T-shirt with a big flower printed on the front and tossed it at Guodei with a smirk.
To Zhe'Ärani's surprise, and maybe Nesyue's too given the way her eyebrows shot up, Guodei took the shirt.
With her back to the wall, she pulled off her bloodstained robes and dropped them unceremoniously on the floor. "Burn it."
Zhe'Ärani couldn't not notice the uncomfortable way Rokhesh and Khadnarrai reacted to the Temple brand over Guodei's heart and the smaller scars flecked across her chest and belly. They couldn't even see the whip scars or any unhealed wounds apart from some bruises. There was a reason she was still wearing a full half-sleeved shirt and long pants, even though it was getting hot enough that many people were just wearing the Gharan wrap dress that left the back and arms and much of the chest exposed and let everything breath with its looseness.
She almost laughed at the incongruity of Guodei in a flower shirt.
Looking up from his careful search of the clothing piles, Retmiq did laugh.
Guodei made a rude gesture. "Shut up. Clothes are clothes and I'm not wearing those robes anymore. They're so dirty by now anyway." She was facing Zhe'Ärani pretty much head-on, so what she couldn't hear wasn't that hard to fill in with lip-reading.
Retmiq snapped his head back to the clothes. "Yes, Lieutenant."
Nesyue gave Guodei a look. "She didn't mean it like that, Retmiq."
Retmiq pursed his lips. "I don't know," he signed.
"No, she's right," said Guodei. "We're not doing that anymore."
Nesyue put her hand on top of Retmiq's tiny curls. "You have to be more clear with him."
Retmiq snapped something that Zhe'Ärani didn't catch.
"Okay. Sorry. I was just sticking up for you."
Retmiq met Zhe'Ärani's eyes briefly. "Babying me," he signed.
Zhe'Ärani rolled her eyes. "Nuisances."
She and Retmiq heavily suspected he, too, was like her and LÄ«sandyr. AiĆĄoko, or 'Social-Emotional Dysregulation,' or whatever they were to call it, all three of them different in very similar ways. She didn't know if LÄ«sandyr agreed- all he would say on the matter was that it was rude to speculate, and that he would never want to imply someone was like him, which (still) made Zhe'Ärani so angry at everyone he'd grown up around that she had been distracted from finding out what he thought of Retmiq by her anger and LÄ«sandyr's shame.
When Zhe'Ärani was no longer talking to them, Rokhesh pulled her gently aside.
"You don't have to tell me anything if you don't want to, Rani," he began. "I don't want to upset you by making you talk about it. But I noticed- A brand? On Guodei's chest."
Zhe'Ärani's hand drifted up to her own chest.
"Did they do that to you, too, sweet pea?"
Zhe'Ärani was about to dismiss it, say it wasn't that bad, there had been so much going on that day and she had been so overwhelmed by it all that she barely even remembered being branded.
But.
It was a big deal. Even if she hardly remembered the pain- GÄtnyx had branded her, like they used to do to slaves, like some people did to farm animals, to mark the Temple's ownership over Zhe'Ärani's body.
She nodded, angry tears welling in her eyes.
They had fucking branded her.
The tour of the commune started at the quartermaster's. Zhe'Ärani had recruited her reluctant old friends ÄvolĂș and Ghurvi'airra to help with both carrying anything they might pick up and with being local teenagers (who hadn't been missing for almost two years and didn't have gaps in their memories) to show the Initiates- former Initiates- what kinds of things they might want to do as (mostly, except for Guodei on one side and Qonai on the other) teenaged residents of the commune.
Abhaonai tapped her on the shoulder and she turned to face him.
"Kjotar wants me to tell you that he's never met this many people who look like us before," he signed.
Zhe'Ärani nodded. Kjotar talked to others if he had to, if he was ordered to report or if he really needed something, but mostly he just talked to his brother.
Ghurvi'airra's eyes followed Abhaonai's hands. "Are you Gharan?" she asked.
"Our mother was," Abhaonai signed. "We were both born in Zioshue, though, and Kjotar was still pretty young when she died, so while we knew a couple other people with the same ancestry, he doesn't remember them. It wasn't very many, anyway."
"Big age gap?"
Ahbaonai shrugged. "Five years."
"Is it common for a pair of siblings to be in the same Temple?"
"Not by birth."
"I told you, they make it so the Temple is your family now instead," signed Zhe'Ärani. She recalled how LÄ«sandyr's sister hadn't seen him in years. "If you have any other family from before, they don't count anymore. They usually don't get to visit."
"Some kids will compete to get in as a legal escape if things are bad at home," signed Abhaonai. "Some of the other contestants I knew were trying to do that. We didn't quite⊠know about⊠you know. Wouldn't have brought my seven-year-old brother into the Temple if I'd really known what it would be like."
Nesyue never talked about her birth family, which made Zhe'Ärani wonder that had been the case for her. She had won her place like Abhaonai and Qatriong, not come from a noble or military family like LÄ«sandyr and Retmiq.
ÄvolĂș let go of the bag of toiletries resting on their lap. "Wait."
The toiletries almost spilled, and Zhe'Ärani flung her arm out to stop the bag from tipping over.
"You compete to get in?" ÄvolĂș asked.
Sometimes Zhe'Ärani really felt the gap of experience. The others who had been raised in the commune had never really lived in the real empire. There was a lot they just⊠didn't know, because they'd never had a reason to. It wasn't as though they got usable service from most external TV or radio stations out here.
"Yeah, they hold tournaments in recruitment years," signed Abhaonai. "I don't really know what the other Temples do. Most of them weren't recruiting that year and fighting was what I was good at."
"It was different for me," Zhe'Ärani clarified. She didn't want her friends thinking she had turned to heresy on purpose.
"They hold these fights for twelve-year-olds?" ÄvolĂș signed. "Like, to the death, or⊠like a no-holds-barred, bare-knuckle, no rules kind of thing, or what? Is it at all safe?"
"It's not usually to the death."
Sometimes Zhe'Ärani also really felt it that her perception of normalcy had been very much altered by her time at the Temple and she couldn't quite put it back into alignment with her old friends'.
"Not usually?"
"It's not supposed to be," signed Abhaonai. "It's dangerous, though. It's not staged. Things happen. It wouldn't work if it wasn't real."
Qatriong had once confessed to Zhe'Ärani that she had killed her opponent in her semifinal match. I couldn't yield and ia-rĆ« wouldn't either. By the time I realized⊠Skulls are fragile. It was over fast. Abhaonai was a year older than Zhe'Ärani and Qatriong and would have seen that match as an Initiate about to have a new cohort member.
KaelĂa interrupted by making a beeline for ÄvolĂș, completely bypassing Zhe'Ärani. It gesticulated as it spoke, and though it was facing away from Zhe'Ärani and she couldn't use lip-reading, she assumed from directions it was gesturing that it was asking something about the burn scars it and ÄvolĂș shared.
ÄvolĂș nodded and showed KaelĂa something in the bag.
She was glad her old friends and her new friends were interacting.
The doctor had the Initiates all sign up for appointments on a big sheet with eight spots.
"You can come alone or bring someone else with you," she explained. "I'd like to do a full physical exam on each of you at some point, but if you're not comfortable with that right now, all we need to do is talk. I want to go over vaccinations, illnesses, any major injuries, medications- Basic medical history. Height, weight, and blood pressure if you're up for that. It shouldn't take too long, but I've blocked off a couple hours each. If there are current injuries, I can also treat those."
Līsandyr kept himself noticeably back.
"I can go with you, LÄ«s," Zhe'Ärani signed. Her checkup upon her return had been necessary, but it had been miserable, and she'd known the doctor already and hadn't had any preexisting problems with doctors.
"I'm coming with you too," signed KaelĂa. "Just sign up for today, then it will be over." It took the pencil and wrote in its name and then his right underneath. "I can do the talking if you don't want to."
Līsandyr nodded shallowly.
"If you touch me without my permission I will break your hand." KaelĂa waved towards LÄ«sandyr. "If you touch him without his permission I will cut it off, and if you hurt him I'll let you bleed out from it." It pointed at Zhe'Ärani. "They're my witness if anyone tries to say I didn't give fair warning. Sign, don't speak, I want Ć i Arroakhai KjĂș in the loop. Everyone clear on that?"
Zhe'Ärani nodded.
"Okay," the doctor signed. Zhe'Ärani thought she was doing a good job not being scared.
"Good." KaelĂa started to pull its shirt off.
Zhe'Ärani knew it liked to get things over with quickly, and none of the Initiates really had a sense of privacy.
"I was just going to go through a questionnaire to start," the doctor signed.
"Oh."
"Actually, let's just do this for both of you at the same time," she signed. "I just need a yes or no from each of you. Some of these vaccines are usually given at a very young age, so you may or may not remember if you've had them, in which case we should do bloodwork soon to find out, because it can be very dangerous if you don't." She looked at Līsandyr. "Do you understand what's happening?"
Līsandyr nodded.
"Okay. I'm going to start now. When were you last vaccinated for PNIV?"
KaelĂa stared at its fingers for a long moment, then looked to Zhe'Ärani for help.
"About four cycles ago," Zhe'Ärani signed. "All of us were."
"Most recent flu shots?"
"Same time."
It went on for a few minutes. KaelĂa was able to answer most of the questions, but both of them were unsure when the questions got to early childhood vaccinations, as had been expected.
"Were you taking any medications when you left the Temple?"
KaelĂa named something Zhe'Ärani recognized as a stimulant, then added, "We're all on hormonal birth contol. GÄtnyx didn't want to risk any surprises."
Not after Qatriong, Zhe'Ärani filled in. It had been a little before her time, but Qatriong had told her about it. LÄ«s lied for me so I could tell them and get rid of it. GÄtnyx still punished us for the inconvenience, but it would have been worse if she'd known it was an outsider, and I'm glad I dumped him but I didn't want to get him killed.
Maybe Qatriong's (supposed) treason had been a long time in the making.
"And are you, or have you ever been, sexually active?"
"No," signed KaelĂa.
Līsandyr bit his lip.
Zhe'Ärani thought again of LogÄ, the way they sometimes held LÄ«sandyr's face, the way LÄ«sandyr leaned into it. The way LÄ«sandyr had turned hostile and scared when she'd brought it up.
"And you?" the doctor pressed. "There are certain illnesses you can get-"
"He knows that," snapped KaelĂa, breaking the silence.
LÄ«sandyr whispered something in KaelĂa's ear.
"He doesn't want to answer that question," signed KaelĂa. "We're done talking about it."
The doctor backed down. "I'll just leave that section blank, then."
"Do that."
"Let's move on. Have either of you ever had PNIV?"
Even though it had been a long, full day, or perhaps because of that, Zhe'Ärani struggled to fall asleep. She wondered if her cohort were settling in okay in the cabin on the other side of their shared greenspace.
She hoped it wasn't too upsetting for Līsandyr.
She had barely fallen asleep when she was shaken awake. Her father and Abhaonai stood over her, an unlit flare in on of Abhaonai's hands and a two-way radio in the other.
"Qonai seems to have run away," Rokhesh signed. "Your friends don't know the area. Tamri has gone with Guodei and Nesyue. Abhaonai thought you might go with him and Retmiq. I'm going to get another flare, in case we find her hurt, and go out myself. She'll get lost very easily in these woods. The other three are going to stay in case she makes it back on her own."
"Okay."
Rokhesh left to find another flare, and Zhe'Ärani pulled her boots and raincoat on over her pyjamas. She put the flare in her coat pocket.
Abhaonai passed Retmiq the radio at the door. "You'll have to be in charge of this. Let us know if you hear anything."
Retmiq nodded.
"She must be so scared," Zhe'Ärani signed. "How long has it been?"
"Can't have been more than a couple hours," signed Abhaonai. "I woke up and thought I'd check on her and the bed was empty."
"I assume she's trying to go home- go back to the Temple, I mean- but she can't have gotten far," signed Retmiq. "She'll be looking for the river, most likely, so she can cross back into the city and find the Divine Soldiers there."
"Can she swim?" Zhe'Ärani asked, a horrible image floating up in her mind like a drowned corpse.
Abhaonai and Retmiq exchanged a glance.
"I don't know," signed Abhaonai. "They taught us to swim- But the current-"
"Surely she would know better than to go in the river or get to close to the banks," Retmiq signed.
"She's four," signed Abhaonai. "And she's never been outside the Temple before- how would she know?"
"Fuck."
They searched for over an hour.
Retmiq put out a hand. "I think I hear something."
The three of them stood still.
After a moment, Retmiq nodded, then beckoned them to follow him.
A few dozen metres away, Qonai was curled up in the eroded space between the roots of an old tree, shaking like she was crying.
Abhaonai tapped Retmiq's pocket where the radio was, then carefully approached her.
Zhe'Ärani made to follow, but Retmiq stopped her.
"He's good with kids," Retmiq signed. "And she likes him. I don't want her to feel like we're cornering her. And, no offence- GÄtnyx was very firm on you being a traitor. She doesn't like you anymore."
"Oh." It made sense. "You should radio the others to let them know we found her."
Abhaonai sat on one of the exposed roots. They talked for a while. Eventually, he offered her a hug, and she took it.
Abhaonai gave them a thumbs-up behind Qonai's back.
so pleased with the decision (a year and a half ago now? two?) to make Guodei a woman. it's always cis guys in fantasy who get to be sympathetically Like That. hashtag #womeninmaledominatedfields