Category: Crown Prince Yoshi

  • Crown Prince Yoshi – 12

    “Have you found Midori?” Namik’s sharp gaze rested on his steward.  “I want him here.”

    “My lord, General Midori was last spotted on the borders of Earith fighting against our forces,” Rocke said.  “All attempts to reach him have failed.”

    “You mean his inner circle has killed your messengers,” Namik said, his tone amused.  “Looks like I trained him well.  However, I must have left out vital lessons for him to defy me this way.  No matter, once we have taken the palace and Prince Saki crowned, Midori will find his way back.”

    Rocke stared at Namik’s feet, clearly ready to say more.

    “What?”

    “Sire,” Rocke said, his tone wary.  “They say General Midori protects the Prince Yoshi.”

    “Protects?”

    Namik stared at Rocke, anger rising.  It angered him that his men had missed assassinating Prince Yoshi, not once but three times now.  He’d heard of the incident in a village and dark rider spiriting the young prince into the forest.  The dark rider had to be his son.

    “Leave,” Namik said.

    Rocke nodded and hurried out of the tent.

    Namik grabbed the goblet of wine on his table and drank deep.  Shaking his head in disappointment, he slammed the goblet on the table.

    “Your anger will be your undoing.”

    Namik turned to find Prince Tailen had come in to the tent.  He scowled and gave the man a small bow.

    “What brings you here, Your Highness?” Namik asked.  “You should be in the palace helping the Empress mourn her son.”

    “Don’t mock me,” Prince Tailen growled moving to sit at the head of the table.  “We both know an impostor lies in the casket.  Almira is not as devastated as she should be, I suspect she knows the truth too.”

    “Your hold on her is weak,” Namik said.

    “She’s not easy,” Prince Tailen scoffed.  “Vulan trained her.  A man who subdued the Sand Queen.  What do you expect?”

    “If Saki is going to rule, you need to take more risks.”

    Namik worked to hide his disgust.  Prince Tailen was sly and thrifty, strong he was not, and the idea of serving him for longer than he had to disgusted him.  Still, if this was the only way to wrest power from the Taimeng House, then he would work with what he had.  Once Almira was out of the way, he would kill Tailen, leaving Saki open to his ideals.

    “The Imperial army will surround the palace,” Namik continued.  “The Fier Army will patrol the streets of Lexin City and guard all entry gates.  That should give you enough time with the Imperial Diet.  They will insist on following the laws of succession.  Without Yoshi, you have an easy task.”

    Prince Tailen glanced at him.

    “What of the Quad Council.  The Council works along the Diet, Namik.  The Diet might control the structure of the royal family, but the Council determines how the Empire treats a monarch.”

    “Don’t worry about the Quad council.  Both the ministers of defense and rites are from Fier.  They will convince the others to follow if they hope to survive this.”

    “What of Terra?

    Namik chose a seat then.  He stared at the map on the table.  He didn’t want to tangle with Terra or Lilind, the Queen of Sands.  He knew Almira had sent a messenger to Terra.  As long as the messenger didn’t make it, Terra would not make a move.  As for Dwind, they never bothered with Quad politics.  Piper Klud spent too much time worrying about her people, and Lilind considered Quad politics petty since her tangle with Emperor Vulan.  If he managed to wrest control before they got involved, Terra would bow to the new authority, and Dwind would shrug the change away.

    “Control Almira and we have Terra,” Namik said.

    “Yes, Almira has a strange love for Terra because of her husband,” Prince Tailen said, giving him a small wicked smile.  “The Empire mourns Yoshi’s death, his funeral is underway.  A successor must be named, and the Imperial Diet must meet to attend the task.  Almira will fight to delay that summit, but with your army at her gates, she has no choice left.”

    “This will only work if you’re committed, Prince Tailen,” Namik warned, he’d risked everything.

    Prince Tailen held his gaze.

    “I’ve waited my whole life, Namik of Fier.  No one is more committed to this than me.”

    Namik stood.

    “Then, I will lead the army into Lexin city tomorrow morning.”

    ***

    Lexin City

    Warning drums wrenched peace from the city.  Weeks worth of tension broke into chaos.  Almira stood in an alley and watched her people run on the streets in fear.  Screams of fear, angry voices, frantic men and women carrying their belongings.

    Her talk with Teng Heim had lasted all night.  On her way to the palace, the warning drums at the main Lexin City gates started.

    Now, women clung to their children as they ran to the safety of their homes.  The rumble of mammoth gates closing told her she still had loyal servants within the palace.

    She had been fifteen the last time the warning drums rang.  Her father was Emperor.  Lilind of Dwind had started the war then.  Lilind led an uprising against Emperor Vulan Taimeng.  Almira had watched her father face the Sand Queen, and come out the victor.  Emperor Vulan insisted on one-on-one combat.  Forcing Lilind to face him in the city square.  Almira watched her father fight the terrifying Lilind, heart in her throat as Vulan was wounded many times.  Thirty minutes of fast battle, and Vulan had defeated the Sand Queen, holding her down on the ground with the sword Yoshi now carried.

    Almira had asked her father why he hadn’t killed Lilind later that day.

    Lilind is one of our subjects, Almira,’ Vulan said.  ‘She is vital to the well-being of the Empire.  It is better to compromise with her.’

    Almira sighed now watching a small boy fall, screaming as people ran around him in panic.  What was she to do with Namik now?  Was she to compromise with him when he had dared murder her only child for power?

    She clenched her fists.

    Such wisdom was beyond her.

    “Save the boy.”

    Ara, her guard, rushed into the chaos and returned back carrying the boy.

    Almira adjusted the scarf over her head, hiding her face.  She took the boy from Ara knowing her guard would need her arms free to defend them.  Ara led the way down a dark alley heading back to the palace.

    Almira held the panicked boy in her arms.  Tears slid down the boy’s cheeks even as she held him.  Fear in his eyes.  Almira vowed then to squash Namik and Tailen for good.

    ***

    Zia Sayu pressed against the high wall keeping her from entering Terra, and prayed for strength.  Two days, and she had yet to find a way in.  Terra’s defenses were solid.  Her two assassins dogged her every step.  She was tired and thirsty, her supplies long gone.

    A rock dislodged to her left and she held her breath.  The dagger in her right hand held tight.  She stood still, waiting.  Letting the assassin come to her.  She would have the advantage of surprise.  She would not die here.  She had a duty to her Empress and the Phoenix.  Her grip on the dagger tightened, and her muscles tensed in preparation.

    A shadow appeared on the edge of the wall, and she stopped short when a white cat emerged.  It meowed in irritation and continued on.  Zia smiled, amused, and then followed the cat.

    ***

    Yoshi held Senbon’s reins turning him around in a circle, his gaze on the luscious green grass growing in a wide field behind the Furian Palace.  Vibrant flowers on trees surrounded them, thick vines dropping from tall branches created a wall around the field.  So utterly untouched and wild: beautiful, nature forged.

    “Can you win?” Midori challenged behind him, and Yoshi jerked his gaze to his lover.

    His breath hitched at the sight of Midori atop his black stallion, Midnight.  His Fier General was too handsome for words.  Midori smiled at him and Yoshi urged Senbon to catch up with Midnight.  They raced: fast and reckless.  Senbon was swift, but Midnight was strong and he kept up.  Yoshi laughed when they raced head to head, exhilaration in every gallop.  He slowed down Senbon and was pleased when Midori followed suit with Midnight.  They ended up on the edge of the clearing away from the palace and prying eyes.  Midori reached for his reins and moving his horse close, until they could lean close for a kiss.

    “Did I win?” Yoshi asked, meeting Midori’s gaze, his gaze dropping to Midori’s lips.

    Senbon shifted, and Yoshi sighed when a small distance grew between them.

    “You always win,” Midori said.  “At least in my heart.”

    Yoshi smiled.

    “Your words are as beautiful as this field the Iron Furian Princess has nurtured.  Who do you think she comes here with?”

    “Telia,” Midori said with a knowing smile.

    “No way,” Yoshi gaped.  “Are you serious?”

    “When am I never serious?” Midori asked.  “We should go back.  The head of your Black Guard will get antsy.”

    Yoshi sighed.

    “Yes, you are right.  I need to leave for Dwind.  Namik has reached Lexin City by now.”

    “Yes,” Midori agreed.

    “Can I convince you to lead the allied army while Sando, Telia and I head to Dwind?”

    “No.”

    “Midori.”

    “You asked me to stay by your side.  Don’t send me away, Yoshi.”

    Yoshi nodded, a frown dancing on his forehead.  He too didn’t want the separation.  Midori made his duties bearable, kept him focused.  Alone, the responsibilities swamped and paranoia set in.  There were too many who wanted him dead, and equally too many who wanted his support.  Midori helped him cut through it all for a moment of respite.

    “The Princess Naria will lead the allied forces to Lexin City,” Midori suggested.  “She doesn’t need to engage my father, she only needs to show unity until you can return with Terra and Dwind at your back.”

    “Do you think I’m strong enough to convince Lilind of the Sands to follow me?”

    “The Emperor Vulan was your grandfather,” Midori said.  “You are of his blood line, Yoshi.”

    Yoshi started to turn to Midori, and paused when he caught a shadow in the woods.  Meeting Midori’s gaze, he reached for Senbon’s reins.

    “My grandfather’s stories are intimidating.”

    Yoshi shifted on Senbon, ready to act.  Midori noting his stance, brought his right hand to the hilt of his sword.

    “Do you think my stories will be intimidating to the future too?”

    Midori smiled.

    “Of course, Yoshi.”

    The shadow shifted, running at them, Yoshi caught the glint of a sword and jumped off Senbon faster than Midori.  He swung his sword, meeting the intruder’s attack with a strong swing of his sword sending the intruder staggering back.  Before he could engage him again, Tai Migi appeared and took over the fight.  In mere seconds, their would-be attacker was pinned to the ground, a dagger in his shoulder, and Tai Migi crouched over him.

    “Who sent you?” Tai asked, his tone laced with cold anger.

    When no answer was forthcoming, Tai twisted the dagger in the attacker’s shoulder drawing a sharp scream.

    “N—Namik of Fier,” the man cried.  “I—I’m o—only a messenger, sent to Lord General Midori.”

    Yoshi froze, his gaze going to Midori.

    “What is your message?” Tai demanded of the messenger.

    “I—

    “State your message,” Midori roared.

    “You belong beside your father,” the messenger said.  “Lord Namik looks forward to having you at the table.”

    Midori stepped back and Tai Migi sunk a second dagger into the intruder, killing him.

    “Why did you do that?” Yoshi demanded.  “We could have gotten more answers—

    “You are too close to General Midori.  A messenger sent to him by Namik will cause unrest in a budding alliance,” Tai answered.  “It is best for all of us if no one knew this man made it this close.”

    “My father will have sent more than one,” Midori said, his tone low.

    “I’m well aware,” Tai answered, getting to his feet.  He kept his gaze on Yoshi as he spoke.  “Your Royal Highness, must you keep the General by your side?”

    Yoshi held Tai’s gaze.

    “Yes.”

    Tai stood watching him for a moment longer, then nodded, giving him a small bow.

    “As you wish,” Tai said.  “The Black Guard will hunt down any lingering messengers.”

    “This was to be a private hour,” Yoshi commented, looking into the surrounding trees, half expecting the head of the Black Guard to appear.  “Who else watches?”

    “There’s only me,” Tai said.  “You’ll never be alone, Prince Yoshi.  However, when it’s only me, you are alone.”

    Yoshi knew then his world was changing slowly.  Soon, more than Tai would know what he ate for breakfast, who he kissed, when he kissed…

    Midori touched his shoulder.

    “The body—

    “I will deal with this,” Tai said, his gaze on Midori’s hand where he touched Yoshi.

    Yoshi knew what bothered Tai, but made no move to remove Midori’s hand.  He would hold on to this one happiness.

    “When you are finished, start prepping for the journey to Dwind,” Yoshi said, turning to Midori.  “I must meet the Princess Naria before I leave.”

    “Yes, Your Royal Highness,” Tai gave him a short bow.  “I will report to you when I’m done.”

    Yoshi swung onto Senbon and urged the stallion into a hard run, needing to escape.

    ***

    “You will hurt him,” Tai said, when Midori moved to mount his own horse.

    “What?” Midori stopped looking at the man who unsettled him.

    Dressed in black, his face covered but for his eyes, Tai Migi was dangerous.  Midori didn’t need to see him fight to know it.

    “The longer you stay by his side in this capacity, you will bring him harm.”  Tai’s gaze narrowed.  “When that time comes, I will be the one to remove you.”

    “You threaten me?” Midori asked, gripping the reins tight.

    “I don’t need to,” Tai answered.  “The Empress, however, she protects what she must.  This warning is the only courtesy I will extend.  Midori of Fier, if nothing else, know that the Empire comes first for that one you cling to.”

    Tai returned to the dead man on the ground, leaving Midori to stare at him.

    Midori mounted Midnight fast, and urged the stallion after Yoshi.  He did not need Tai’s advice.  He knew very well who Yoshi was, what loving him entailed.  Still…

    Yoshi slowed Senbon down, allowing him to catch up.  One glance at his handsome Prince and the doubt receded.  Yoshi smiled at him and that was enough to send Tai’s warning away.  He didn’t care what the future had in store for them.  As long as right now, Yoshi kept smiling at him.

    “Race you to the stables,” Midori challenged.

    Yoshi grinned and they set off in a fast race, Yoshi laughing when they stayed head-to-head.

    Midori locked away the sound of that laugh deep in the vault in his heart.

    ***

    An hour later, Yoshi sat at the head of a gargantuan table in the Furian Palace Court Room, facing officials and nobles from both Earith and the Furian Forest.

    “The Princess Naria will lead the allied forces into Lexin City.”

    Protests and murmurs of complaints filled the room, rising until Lord Heloth dared voice the words.

    “Why not you?” Lord Heloth.  “We have come together under your banner, Your Royal Highness.  Why must we now serve the Furian Princess?”

    “I go to convince Dwind to join forces.”  Yoshi kept his tone neutral, his expression blank, giving away none of what he felt inside.  “Lilind of Dwind will listen to no one else.”

    Midori listened as the nobles argued, and came up with suggestions to keep the Princess Naria from leading the allied forces.  Their irrational fear for the Furians annoyed him, especially after all the Princess Naria had done.  Keeping Fier’s rabid army clear of Earith, fighting for them…

    “Why can’t you name General Midori your proxy?” Lord Heloth suggested at one point.  “He is a proven leader.  He kept the Fier Rebel army at bay until you came back to the Earith border.”

    Midori started to protest but Yoshi beat him to it, slapping his palm on the table, startling the room into silence.

    “The Princess Naria leads the allied forces,” Yoshi roared.  “Her title ranks higher than General Midori or you Lord Heloth.  The Princess Naria knows more of war than all of us in this room.  She has kept the Furian Forest at peace for more years than I have lived.  Anyone who dares question my authority will face my Black Guard.”

    Silence filled the room.  Many mistook it as acquiescence to Yoshi’s words, perhaps an acknowledgment to his threat to meet the Black Guard.  Midori recognized the fact that these noble men and women had finally caught a glimpse of their future ruler.  Yoshi’s voice had rang with undeniable authority.  His gaze cold as he delivered his first edict.

    “Namik of Fier has reached Lexin City.  Our army must face him soon.  We need to draw his attention away from the Palace.”

    “Do you think Dwind will join forces with us?” Princess Naria asked Yoshi then.  “Lilind of the Sands rarely moves a finger when the Quads are at odds.”

    “It is my duty to try,” Yoshi answered.  “If she won’t join us, I will return with Terra’s forces and we can face Namik together.”

    “How long will you be away, Your Royal Highness?” Lord Heloth asked, when Naria took over talks on planning the allied forces.

    “Five days,” Yoshi said.  “It should take us three days to cut through Earith, and enter Dwind.  Depending on Lilind’s answer, there will be no need for stealth, I will enter the Imperial Lands and meet you at the gates into Lexin City.”

    “Who goes with you?” Princess Naria asked.

    “Sando, Telia, General Midori and the Black Guard,” Yoshi said.

    “Will that be enough?” Lord Heloth asked.  “If we lose you, this war is lost.”

    “One of my men will join us,” Midori said, speaking for the first time.  “Lenoth is a seasoned warrior.”

    “I will hold you responsible if anything should go wrong,” the Princess Naria said, her voice colder than Yoshi’s.

    Midori wondered if there was a Royal School hidden in the Empire that taught them how to intimidate their lowly subjects.  Midori inclined his head in understanding and Princess Naria continued on with her plans.  The planning took over three hours.  By the time it ended, preparations were underway for departure.  Midori lost sight of Yoshi as he went off with Sando to talk to the soldiers in the army in person.

    To keep up morale, Midori sighed.

    Yoshi had no idea that having him around was enough of a boost for the men and women in the allied forces.  A Prince who had spent his life hidden away from the world by the powerful Empress Almira, now walked among his people, fought beside them…got wounded…Yoshi was stealing hearts at every turn.  Midori stood on the edge of the clearing near the army barracks and watched Yoshi sit around a fire, joining five other men.  The men laughed at something Yoshi said, and Sando paced behind him in a state of agitation.  No doubt worried one of the men would dare touch Yoshi, or some similar foolishness.  Yoshi patted a soldier’s shoulder and Midori grinned.  Poor Sando.

    “He is changing you,” Lenoth said, coming to join him.  “You smile more readily than you did before.”

    “Do I?” Midori asked, swallowing back his smile, though it was hard for him to stop staring at Yoshi.  “Have Naro pack enough for three days journey.  Once we reach Dwind, we will know what to do from there.  Ask him to consult the Prince’s Chamberlain on further arrangements.”

    “I have never been to Dwind,” Lenoth confessed.  “I hear the sand shifts according to Lilind’s mood.  When she is angry, it rises up into the sky, covering all who dare brave it to their death.  I would hate to suffocate in sand, My Lord.”

    “Your imagination is alive and well,” Midori soothed.  “I promise not to let you suffocate in sand.”

    Lenoth flashed him a grin.

    “I can’t promise you won’t sink into the sand, though,” Midori continued.  “The ground does turn soft in Lilind’s dunes.  One step is all it takes, and you are swallowed up.”

    “Cruel Lord General,” Lenoth scoffed.  “Looks like the Prince has done nothing for your sense of humor.”

    Midori laughed and Yoshi turned at the sound.  Their gazes met and held, and for one solid second, the reality of the war ahead disappeared.  Then Lenoth touched his arm, seeking his attention, and Yoshi looked to the soldiers eagerly talking to him.  The second passed, but Midori locked it away deep inside: a treasured memory.

    ***

    Zia Sayu crawled along a murky dirty drain.  Her fingers touching rough rock, squashy muck she dared not examine.  The stench alone enough to wake the dead.  She coughed, her gaze on the light at the end of the tunnel.  The cat she had followed into the drain long gone.  Skipping on nimble feet along the drainage edge no doubt coming out with no speck of dirt.

    Such cunning creatures, cats.

    At least she had lost her assassins.  The drain the cat had chosen was sunk under the wall, hidden by long blades of grass.  She would never have found it without the cat.  She kept walking forward, her bag balanced on her head.  The ring on a chain around her neck carefully protected by her tunic.  Once she was within the walls of Terra, then her real task would start.

    Her goal: finding Lady Tinya Hellis, Terra’s Commandant the Empress’s sister in-law.  Lady Hellis’s castle was carved out of the cliffs by the ocean and guarded by the men who trained the Prince’s Black Guard.  Zia stopped and touched the blades on her back, hidden under the dark fabric she wore.  Sneaking in was impossible, fighting her way through was the only option.  But before that…she pressed her back against the tunnel wall, crouched and closed her eyes.  She needed at least four hours of sleep if she hoped to succeed.

    ***

    yoshi2

  • Crown Prince Yoshi – 11

    It was remarkable, Yoshi thought as he entered a large banquet hall at the center of the Furian Castle.  Midori stayed a step beside him.  The Furian community was made up of women, not a male insight.  From guards, to cooks, serving women, to council members and generals, there were only women.  The Earith Generals were already present and enjoying the food on large log tables, garnished with beautiful ferns and colorful flowers.

    A group of women played music at one corner, one string instruments set in different tones, and their music turned the atmosphere festive.

    “His Royal Highness, the Prince Yoshi,” Sando announced into the room, and everyone turned to face him.

    The hundreds of hopeful gazes settling on him frightened him, yet he had to remain stoic, and in command.  Yoshi gave a short nod to acknowledge the bows of greeting he got from the crowd.

    “Your Royal Highness,” Naria said, breaking away from her council members.  “I’m honored to host you in my Palace.  The last time you were here, you were a boy visiting with Her Majesty.”

    “That was a long time ago, Princess Naria.”

    “Indeed,” Naria said with a nod.  “The burden on your shoulders is now heavier.”

    Yoshi forced a smile.

    “Not too heavy.”

    “Well said,” Naria said.  “Please, let’s sit.  There is food to eat, drinks, and people to meet.  Your Royal Highness, we must celebrate the start of a new world.”

    Yoshi led the way to the dais, taking the seat of honor.  Naria sat beside him, a server coming to pour him wine as soon as he was settled.  He picked up the gold goblet, brought it to his lips, though he didn’t sip the wine.  Paranoia had set in, his assassins were many.

    Placing the goblet on the table, he spoke to Naria.

    “Your women fight with admirable passion,” Yoshi said, his gaze searching the crowd to find Telia.  “I have had the privilege of fighting alongside Telia these past weeks.  She has saved my life.”

    “She is a noble fighter,” Naria said, her tone tinged with fondness, her gaze soft when it settled on Telia.  “You are safe with her.”

    Telia caught them looking at her, and stood up to give a short bow.

    Naria raised her goblet in acknowledgement, allowing Telia to take her seat next to Hinna.

    Sando brought Yoshi a plate of food, giving him a nod of assurance.  The food was tested.  Yoshi wondered which of Naria’s servants had been handed that job.  These were dangerous times; it wasn’t safe to be his food taster.

    Yoshi took a slice of peach and ate it with a small sigh.

    “Royal Highness.”

    Yoshi glanced up from his plate to find a tall bulky woman standing four seats down a long table below the dais.  Unlike Telia with her grace, this woman was hard, nary a soft curve in sight.

    “’Tis an honor to have you here in our palace,” the woman said.  “I am Aruku of Furian, the First General of the Furian army.  I ask you listen to a humble servant’s request, your Royal Highness.”

    The hall had gone silent, the music stopped, and all eyes were on him.  Yoshi gave her a short nod of approval.

    “Our Princess Naria has long fought for peace in the Northern borders.  She has kept the rebels from reaching the Imperial Lands, served Her Majesty, the Empress, with every breath.  Kept your people from suffering when she could, she offers sanctuary to those who need it from Fier.”

    “And the Empress is grateful for Her Highness’s tireless care,” Yoshi said.  “We value the Princess Naria’s devotion to this Empire, General Aruku.”

    “I would ask you consider the Furian people’s request to join the Empire’s government.  We have every right to help make laws and govern—

    “That is not a decision to be made here,” Heloth of Earith cut in, standing too.  He looked formal in his army uniform.  “The Quad council is not a matter to be decided by His Royal Highness alone.”

    “His Royal Highness asks our people to fight for the Empire,” Aruku said.  “The Empire will need our swords, our blood, the Quads are at war, and you expect us to join with you and solve your problems without reward.”

    “The problem you speak of is not simple,” Heloth countered.  “The fight spills into the Furian lands, if you don’t help, there will be no Furian Forest to protect.”

    “What do you gain from our fight?” Aruku asked.

    “Peace,” Heloth said.  “Peace for all of us.”

    “Peace,” Aruku turned to look at Yoshi.  “The Empire will be at peace, and the Furian people will be forgotten again.  Your Royal Highness—

    “General Aruku,” Naria cut in.  “Your concerns are valid.  However, the Furian people follow my rule, my will.  The Empire at peace is my will, for the sake of our people and those in the Quads.”

    “Your Highness, you remain our wise leader.  But, all the Quads have ever done is taken from us, never given.  Your Royal Highness, am I wrong to ask for consideration for my people?”

    Yoshi pushed his plate of food aside.

    “The Quad Council is governed by the people,” Yoshi said.

    “Your Royal Highness is the people’s chosen,” Aruku pointed out.

    “That is currently unclear, General.  The people are divided by fear of an impeding war.”  Yoshi gave her a small smile.  “A war that will ravage the Empire if allowed to continue, there will be no Quad Council when Namik of Fier is done.”

    “Your Royal Highness,” Aruku started, shaking her head, disappointment clear on her features.

    She wasn’t the only one.  He saw similar expressions on all the Furian gazes directed at him.  They would follow the Princess Naria’s edicts if she fought by his side, but they weren’t happy.

    Yoshi glanced to his left, meeting Midori’s gaze.  Midori gave him a small nod and he let a small sigh escape.  Pushing his chair back, Yoshi got to his feet, waving his hand down so that everyone remained seated.

    “General Aruku,” Yoshi said, meeting her gaze, then shifting his to include the hundreds of Furian people in the room, mixed in with officers from Earith.  “Fellow Furians, men and women of Earith, let’s make one thing clear.  Namik of Fier is fighting for power, and we are fighting for the freedom of choice and peace.”

    “The world we knew before this fight has disappeared.  Distrust brews among our people, anger builds as lives are lost and families are scattered.  This war is a fight for the right to have a peaceful meal with our loved ones.  When we win this fight, you will have a right to choose how to govern the Empire we save and build together.  The tunnel darkens each day and we’re far from the light.”

    Yoshi met General Aruku’s gaze.

    “Promises can only be made when the war is won, and peace reigns.”

    General Aruku gave him a startling smile.

    “Can I take that as your word, Your Royal Highness?  Will you allow me to remind you that the Furian People need to be remembered in your government?”

    Yoshi returned Aruku’s smile.

    “If we’re still standing at the end,” he said.

    Aruku gave him a low bow.

    “Your rule will prosper, Your Royal Highness.”

    “You sound confident, General,” Yoshi said, resting his hand on the back of his chair.

    “My people are skilled in battle,” Aruku said.  “Thank you for listening to a lowly officer, Your Royal Highness.”

    The hall settled into excited murmurs as Aruku took her seat, the music started and the room was once again buzzing with conversation.

    “You handled that well,” Naria said, turning to look at him.  “Managing not to make any clear promise of government position, Almira trained you well.”

    Yoshi sat down, folding his arms against his chest.

    “Your General is speaking for your people, Princess.  Your people seem discontent with the current Quad Council.”

    “The Empress and I have tried to keep a distant relationship,” Naria said.  “She didn’t want to know what happens in the Furian Forest.  As long as I didn’t interfere with the Empire’s laws, she never pushed for a Furian member on the council.  However, there have been requests directed at her without my knowledge.  Whenever the requests were too insistent, Her Majesty presented them at Council meetings, but as you know, the Quad Council is not keen on my people.”

    Yoshi glanced at her.

    “It seems your will is no longer enough, Princess Naria.  You won’t be able to keep a distant relationship with Generals like Aruku in your court.”

    “Yes,” Naria said with a sigh.  “Times are changing.”

    “Perhaps the Furian People should change as well,” Yoshi said, glancing at Hinna who was playing with Telia’s hair.  “Allow the next generation to have choices—change the way you treat yours sons.”

    “I had a brother once,” Naria said.  “I loved him too…though I don’t know what became of him when the Furian elders took him away from my mother.”

    “The Furian women are bred strong,” Naria continued.  “I cannot change ingrained traditions; no men have lived in these palace walls in centuries.  It’s not an easy matter.  However, with your guidance, perhaps we can start mingling with the Empire’s people.  Split the veil in half, so that the people are not so afraid of us.”

    “It won’t be easy,” Yoshi said, his gaze on Telia.

    “Nothing worth having ever is,” Naria answered with a wistful smile.  “We will fight for you, young Prince.”

    Yoshi nodded and reached for his goblet only to find it gone.  He frowned when he saw his plate had been taken away too.  He glanced up to find Midori walking up to the head table.  Curious gazes followed his progress, Yoshi wondered what Midori wanted.

    “I have a request of His Royal Highness too,” Midori said, stopping before Yoshi’s table.

    “Midori of Fier,” Naria said straightening in her seat.  “Imagine my surprise to see you in my hall.  Your father has wrecked havoc on my borders for years.”

    “My father’s choices are his own,” Midori said, giving the Princess a short incline of his head.  “Mine lie with the safety of my people.”

    “Telia has sworn consequences should those choices lead His Royal Highness into more danger.”  Naria smiled, her eyes narrowed, their depths filled with warning.  “Whatever punishment she chose, I will triple it, even if it means following you into the afterlife.”

    “Aunt, the General has proven his loyalty,” Yoshi said.  “He has protected me.”

    “For now,” Princess Naria said.  “What request would you make of his Royal Highness?”

    Midori smiled then, his gaze on Yoshi.

    “It is quite simple after all this is a celebration of sorts.  The allied forces are now working together.”

    Midori extended his hand, giving Yoshi a formal bow.

    “All I ask of His Royal Highness is one dance.”

    Yoshi bit back his smile, amused by Midori’s antics.  The murmurs of surprise filled the room, all eyes were on Yoshi to see if he would refuse Midori’s request.  Yoshi met Midori’s gaze and read a challenge.

    “Only one dance?” Yoshi asked with a smirk.

    “If one should turn to two, or three, I would not object,” Midori said, still in his formal bow.  “Will you grant me this simple request, Your Royal Highness?”

    “I’m afraid your request is not so simple, General.”  Yoshi bit his lower lip, this time to keep from laughing as approving murmurs filled the room.  Most of the officers were still wary of Midori.  “The requests we grant could have far reaching repercussions.”

    “Your toes in pain would be the only repercussions, Your Royal Highness.  I must confess, I have two left feet”

    Midori winked.

    Naria chuckled, her amusement prompting others to join in the laugh.

    Yoshi stood then, glad the atmosphere had changed from wary to merriment.  He took Midori’s hand, biting back the small moan of pleasure when Midori’s warm fingers wrapped around his.

    “If that is all we shall endure, then you have your dance,” Yoshi said, meeting Midori’s gaze.

    The music changed to a slow melody as they stepped down to the open floor between tables.  Midori placed Yoshi’s right hand on his left shoulder, taking Yoshi’s left hand, he closed the small distance between them.  Midori placed his left hand around Yoshi’s waist.

    “I see you, Yoshi,” Midori whispered, as they moved in slow steps.  “How hard it is for you to hold on to your armor among them.  You take my breath away.”

    Keenly aware of every gaze in the room on them, Yoshi met Midori’s gaze.

    “You’re taking risks.”  Yoshi matched Midori’s tone.  “I can barely hide what I feel for you.  Your life will be in danger, Midori.”

    Lord Heloth and the Princess Naria joined them, dancing close.  Yoshi let out a soft breath as more couples joined in.

    “Namik of Fier is my father.  My life is always in danger.  Forget the risks for one night,” Midori said into his ear.  “Forget the assassins, the war, politics, only think of us, here dancing to beautiful music.”

    Yoshi fought the urge to step closer and lay his head on Midori’s shoulder.

    “Do you want to escape?” Midori asked.

    “How can I?”

    Everyone would notice him leaving, they always did, no matter how discrete he was.

    “Trust me,” Midori said.

    Yoshi met dark eyes surprised to see that leading him into an alcove and they were off the main floor.

    Midori took Yoshi’s hand and led him out of a side entrance, leading them into a corridor.  They broke into a run, that ended when they entered Yoshi’s chambers.  Midori closed the doors and pressed Yoshi against them.

    “Alone, at last,” Midori said with a triumphant smile.

    Yoshi gripped Midori’s shirt.  He tilted his head up, a relieved sigh escaping when Midori kissed him with unrestrained hunger.

    ***

    Lexin City

    The city was rife with unrest.  With every step, unseen by her people, Almira caught glimpses of fear, uncertainty…a family packing up belongings in to a cart, she hoped they weren’t going into the Imperial Lands.  The mourning drum rolls in the palace didn’t help matters.  The Capital was tense.  She secured the scarf around her neck, making sure it hooded her face in the shadows.  She didn’t stand out, but a glimpse of her face on the streets would cause a wild panic.

    Cutting through the city square, Almira led the way through back alleys that led her to an old city library.  She used the back entrance, as the front was guarded by two palace guards.  The back was a service entrance, and her guard handed the old man seated at the entrance a bag of coins to forget he’d seen them.  Once inside, she turned right at the first corridor, and walked straight to the end.  There, she opened a heavy oak door and entered a dusty apartment.

    The living room was empty, the couches old, the tables dusty.  She smirked as her guard closed the door.

    “Guard the door, Ara.  No one enters,” Almira said.

    Ara gave her a short nod, and drew a dagger from her sleeves.

    Almira headed down a short corridor and entered a large room with laden shelves from top to bottom.  She past two shelves and paused when she saw the old man seated at a table in the middle of the room.

    Teng Heim was older than the great big oak tree growing in her palace courtyard.  Last she’d checked the records, the big oak was over ninety years.  The pristine white hair on Teng Heim’s head was always held in a tight ponytail.  His grey robes older than the great big oak tree…Almira bit back a scoff.  She couldn’t tell what was more mysterious.  How Teng kept his old grey robes intact, or why he walked straighter than the great big oak in her courtyard.

    “Her Majesty in my home, the world is surely at an end.”

    Teng’s voice was strong, and filled with amusement.

    “Perhaps,” Almira said, walking along the closest bookshelf, her finger running over the books on the shelves.

    Old tomes, stories from her father’s time, and her grandfather time, some even older.  Teng sat at the simple table in the middle of the room mixing herbs for his tea.

    “Perhaps the world is simply rearranging itself for the future.  Perhaps, your vision is blurred from all the herbs you drink.”

    “My vision is better than yours, Majesty.  Prince Tailen wants his son on the throne, he has planned his coup for years.  He has made one move and left you defenseless in your palace as though you didn’t see it coming.  Which one of us has poor vision, Head of House Taimeng?”

    “Teng Heim, this Empress has never been defenseless.” Almira scoffed.  “Only pressed into a slight disadvantage, never forget that.”

    “Is the Crown Prince alive?”

    “He lives, as is expected of this Empire’s heir,” Almira said, though a pang of fear filled her chest.  With Namik’s armies matching on the city, she couldn’t be sure Yoshi was still alive.  She had gotten no news.

    “And the funeral?” Teng asked.  “His Highness will think you have abandoned him.”

    “The Phoenix knows my thoughts,” Almira said.  “He has a task to complete.  While I wait for him, I have need of your help, Teng Heim.”

    Teng sipped his tea.

    “What can this old man do for Her Majesty?”

    “The task is not easy.”

    “As is expected from a slightly disadvantaged Empress.”

    “Can I rely on you?”

    Teng Heim stood up from his chair and came around his desk.  He bowed low, his white hair almost touching the polished floors of his library.

    “I serve the House of Taimeng, my slightly-disadvantaged Empress.  That will never changed.”

    Almira straightened to her full height.

    “Then tell me every secret you know about my Palace.”

    ***

    On a bed of rose red sheets, Midori kissed soft skin, his lips tracing a phoenix down to the sharp talons curved around a green coiled branch. He swirled his tongue on the sensitive spot at the small of Yoshi’s back.  His hands moving to cup Yoshi’s cheeks, smiling when Yoshi arched into his touch.  He massaged Yoshi, then urged him up on his knees, so that he was kneeling on the bed.

    Midori palmed his hard cock, lining it up with Yoshi’s entrance.  He slid in fast, eyes closed in pleasure at the feel of Yoshi’s heated depths engulfing him, squeezing him in a tight vice.  He was addicted to this dance they couldn’t seem to stop.  Yoshi moaned, his fingers bunching the sheets, as Midori surged into him, taking him, driving them both into a violent race, seeking release, not wanting the end…the sweetness of their heat addictive, wanting more, and more, Midori curled over Yoshi, running his hands over Yoshi’s back.  His lips on Yoshi’s right shoulder, he took Yoshi’s hard cock in his hand and stroked him.  The resulting moans from Yoshi, enough to bring him close.

    The Prince was hot in his arms, so deliciously hot, he couldn’t get enough.  He wanted more of their heat.  Yoshi came with a harsh cry, and Midori gave in to his own urgent need, gripping Yoshi’s hips tight, he came in hard jerks that sent them both sprawling on the bed.

    Yoshi turned to him minutes later, moving into his arms.  Midori sunk his hair into luxurious silky hair, and accepted Yoshi’s soft kiss.  Then Yoshi’s stomach growled, and he laughed against soft lips.

    “Hungry?” he asked, looking into Yoshi’s embarrassed eyes.

    It seemed unreal to see a Prince blush, especially a Prince he’d watched order armies into battle with a steely gaze.  This Prince, now in his arms.

    Yoshi hid his face in Midori’s chest.

    “I didn’t get to eat much at the banquet.  Sando kept removing the food from the table too fast.”

    Midori kissed Yoshi’s shoulder.

    “I saw,” Midori said, lifting his head slightly from the pillow to check if Sando had followed his instructions.

    There was a table near the windows laden with trays holding fruits, a fowl and a jug of wine.  He smiled.  Sando was the best, he decided.

    “Sando is terrified you will be poisoned under his watch,” Midori said.  “He made sure your food was brought here.”

    Yoshi wrapped his arms around him.

    “But I don’t want to move,” Yoshi said.  “I really like it here.”

    Midori held on to Yoshi for a while, enjoying the moment.  Having Yoshi in his arms, he felt at peace.  Still…the future intruded.  When the war ended, Yoshi would be Crown Prince soon to be Emperor, living in the Palace at Lexin City.  Heir Apparent to the Empire.  His future would be planned, down to the children an Emperor would need to ensure a strong reign.  Yoshi would no longer be his alone.

    “Tomorrow morning,” Yoshi said, interrupting his dark thoughts.  “Will you go for a ride with me?”

    “But—

    “I want to ride with you, Midori,” Yoshi said, lifting his head from Midori’s chest.  Their gazes met and held.  “Not in battle, not because you guard my life, but because you’re my lover.  I want a full hour with you.  Can’t you give me that?”

    Midori sighed, bringing his hand up to cup Yoshi’s jaw.  How could he ever say no to this Prince?

    “Then we’ll go riding,” Midori said with a smile.

    “Good,” Yoshi said, happy.  “Now we can eat, I’m starving.”

    Midori chuckled watching Yoshi jump out of bed.

    “When we’re around people, I need to call you by your title, especially when you become Crown Prince,” Midori said, taking a grape from the tray on the bed between them.  He brought it to Yoshi’s lips and smiled when Yoshi took a bite.

    “No.”  Yoshi chewed the delicious fruit, rubbing his thumb over Midori’s dark beard.  “Just Yoshi.”

    “What about Prince Yoshi?” Midori asked.

    Midori sat with his legs folded.  Yoshi too, though he had some of the sheets draped over his lap.  They were both naked.  Yoshi’s hair gloriously free, settled around him.  Midori played with the strands close to him.

    “No,” Yoshi said.

    Yoshi took a peach, and sliced a piece with his knife.  He fed it to Midori and smiled when Midori held his hand, taking the fruit into his mouth and nipping Yoshi’s thumb.  Midori held Yoshi’s gaze, his fingers wrapped Yoshi’s hand in his, pressing their clasped hands against his chest.

    “Yoshi,” Midori said.

    “Yes,” Yoshi nodded.  “Always use my name, Midori, even when others press you to stop.”

    “What about the Empress?” Midori asked.  “What will she do when she finds out about us?”

    “She will do what makes me happy,” Yoshi said.

    Midori wasn’t so sure.

    “Stop,” Yoshi ordered, his gaze hard.  “Don’t worry yourself about my mother, Midori.”

    Midori nodded and poured wine into one glass.  He took a sip first, then held the goblet to Yoshi’s lips.  Yoshi took a healthy sip, and they both laughed when drops slid own Yoshi’s chin.

    Midori placed the goblet on the tray and leaned to lick away the sweet wine.  He was happier than he dared voice, which was odd considering the war they fought beyond the Furian Forest.  Yet, here on this bed with Yoshi feeding him slices of fruit and drinking wine with him, it almost felt like paradise.

    ***

    yoshi2

  • Crown Prince Yoshi – 10

    Telia caught her first glimpse of the Princess Naria mid battle.  Skirts blazing red, a pair of swords in hand, the Princess fought hard, cutting down the enemy with every move.  There was no wasted motion, only efficient sweeps of her blades.

    Her heart squeezed tight, instinct driving her closer until they fought as a team.  When Namik’s men started a retreat, the Prince redirected the army to stop the fleeing troops.  In one bloody evening, they wiped out the rebel forces that had plagued the Furian Princess for weeks.

    Her sisters called victory, around her, but Telia could only stare at the Princess.  She froze when Naria gave her a smile.

    “You are back,” Naria said in greeting.

    Telia nodded wishing they were alone, and then she could hug Naria as she wished.

    Naria held her gaze giving her a short nod.  “Henna?”

    “She’s safe,” Telia said.  “She travels with the ordinance troops.”

    “Good choice,” Naria said, wiping her blades on her skirts.  Her gaze swept over the Furian women and stopped when she saw the black guard fighting in the fringes of the field.  “You guard him.”

    Telia’s gaze shifted to the Prince’s army.  “He has many who guard him.”

    “Many who want him dead as well,” Naria said her gaze turning speculative as the Black Guard shifted and Prince Yoshi appeared, walking toward them.

    Telia almost sighed as Naria’s soft side disappeared, replaced by the fierce ruler of the Furian Forest.

    Yoshi’s clothes were stained, a smudge of mud on his chin, Telia watched him wipe it off without a thought.  His sword held tight in his right arm, his cloak sweeping the muddy ground.  There was no sign of the unsure man she’d first met running from assassins.

    To her eternal surprise, Princess Naria bowed low as Prince Yoshi reached them.  Telia found herself imitating the gesture, followed by all her Furian sisters on the battlefield.

    “Your Royal Highness,” Naria said.  “Your servant is grateful for the relief.”

    “I have sent half the army after the retreating enemy forces.  They will lock down the border into Fier, and purge resistance,” Yoshi said.

    “I welcome you to the Furian palace,” Naria said straightening to her full height.  “We have much to discuss, and you must be weary from constant travel.”

    Yoshi thanked her with a nod, the simple gesture sending the Black Guard and Naria’s forces into a frenzy of activity.

    “She is beautiful,” Midori said riding beside Telia on their way to the Furian Palace.

    “The Princess,” he said when she glanced at him in question.

    “Yes,” Telia agreed unable to stop the admiration in her voice.  She cleared her throat and stared at the nearest black guard rider.

    Midori gave a long sigh beside her.

    “Wish it was different for us,” he said.  “Caring for such great people is difficult.”

    Telia glared at him.  “I’m not like you.  Your emotions for the Prince are obvious.  You should try to hide it.”

    “Why?” Midori asked chewing on the end of a grass blade.  He winked at her when she continued to glare.  “We’re out here, at war.  Death stalks us with every swing of the blade.  Why should I hide my love, Telia, when it can disappear in a blink of an eye?”

    “Poetry from a warrior,” Telia teased.  “Very well, General, wear your heart on the sleeve for all to see.  It will only bring you pain in the end.  He is not yours to keep.”

    Midori threw the blade of the grass to the ground and gripped his reins.

    “That’s for me to deal with, Furian, just as you must live with your love for the Princess Naria.”

    Telia watched Midori urge his horse forward to join the Prince at the head of the convoy.  Her heart clenched tight as her gaze swept over Princess Naria’s back.  She was a mere warrior, not good enough yet to join the council, and live close to the Princess.  All she could do was watch from afar.

    Watch and wish, she thought with a sigh.

    ***

    Majestic trees grew tall and thick around the Furian Palace.  The walls of the ages old palace turned green from rich moss.  Vivid flowers in every nook and cranny, a brook running through the courtyard carried fresh water into the palace and through the forest to the various homes and settlements belonging to the Furian community.  The Princess’s most trusted guard secured the palace.  Women in pale red tunics managed the palace affairs: cooking, cleaning and repair.

    Yoshi stood in a private portion of the beautiful courtyard, clean again, in fitted dark green trousers, his feet bare on the fresh green grass.  He stared up at the trees above him, the air so clean and pure he could forget there was a war raging around him.  A breeze swept in and he closed his eyes enjoying the solitude.  He took in a deep breath.

    He hadn’t been alone for days.  The black guard, army generals and officers…constant crucial decisions keeping him awake.

    Gentle fingers combed through his loose hair and he opened his eyes, a soft moan escaping when he leaned back and Midori wrapped an arm around him.

    “You’re breathtaking,” Midori whispered in his ear.

    “Did you get your wounds tended?” Yoshi asked, taking in a deep breath.  This time, his nostrils filled with Midori’s clean earthy scent.  He nestled deeper into Midori’s heat.

    “Yes.”  Midori brushed his lips on Yoshi’s left temple.  “I have missed you.”

    Yoshi chuckled.

    “You’ve been with me the whole time.”

    “Not quite,” Midori protested.  “I don’t have you when you’re the Prince.”

    Yoshi shook his head.

    “That doesn’t make sense.”

    “Doesn’t it?” Midori asked, rocking him from side to side.  “I almost wish we could stay here forever.  The Princess Naria can handle the allied forces.”

    “Now who is having wishful thoughts,” Yoshi teased, turning so that he could face Midori.  His breath hitched at the sight of him.

    Midori wore a red tunic over his perpetual black trousers, his wavy hair falling around his shoulders.  He too was barefoot.

    Midori cupped Yoshi’s jaw, his thumb tracing over Yoshi’s lower lip, before he leaned down and kissed him.

    Yoshi closed his eyes, leaning up to pull Midori’s head down, wanting to keep the contact.  He opened his mouth letting Midori explore his mouth.  Yoshi took in his heat, his scent and taste, savoring, memorizing.  His arms wrapped around Midori, he lost himself in the sensation of their kiss.  He never wanted to stop.

    A soft cough penetrated the haze of growing need.  Midori broke the kiss reluctantly; Yoshi buried his face into Midori’s shoulder for a moment, and then sneaked a glance over Midori’s shoulder to see Sando standing a few feet away.

    “I apologize for the intrusion, your Royal Highness,” Sando said, his cheeks flaming red.

    Yoshi laughed into Midori’s shoulder.  “Sando, you’ve seen me naked before.  You dare blush at one kiss.”

    Sando looked down.  “It is not that, my Prince.”

    “What then?” Yoshi asked still clinging to Midori.

    Sando shook his head.  “Nothing, My Prince, I came to help you get ready for the banquet.  The Princess Naria is throwing one in your honor.”

    “We are at war.  Who has time for banquets?”

    Yoshi complained, holding on to Midori for a moment before he let go with a sigh.

    “Banquets are battle grounds too, My Prince,” Midori said.

    “I’ve asked you to use my name,” Yoshi chided.  “Please don’t deny me that.”

    “Yoshi,” Midori said with a small smile.

    Yoshi blushed and caught Sando staring at him.

    “What?”

    “Nothing,” Sando said quickly.

    “I will have you flogged if you keep saying nothing.”  Yoshi scowled.

    “You won’t do it,” Sando said with a quick grin.  “Come, My Prince, you must get ready.  Princess Naria will be waiting.”

    Yoshi grumbled under his breath, not ready to leave Midori’s side.

    “If you like, General,” Sando said.  “I can have your dress robes brought to the Prince’s chamber.”

    Yoshi glanced at Midori, his gaze hopeful.

    When Midori gave Sando a short nod, Yoshi smiled, happy they weren’t going to lose any time together.

    ***

    Midori caught up with Sando thirty minutes later while Yoshi talked to the head of the Black Guard about the evening ahead.  Gripping the slender servant’s arm, he stood so that his gaze was on the Prince.

    “Why does he ask me to call him by name?”

    Sando started to glance back at the Prince, but Midori stopped him.

    “He will be suspicious if you look at him.  I need to know.”

    “General,” Sando started.

    “Don’t make me force it out of you.  Unlike the Prince, I have no problem inflicting pain,” Midori warned.

    “Palace rules,” Sando said.  “The moment the Empress turned over her power to the Prince, he became the father of the nation.  The Empire’s parent….” Sando gave him a smile.  “No one will ever call him by name, not even the Empress.”

    Midori stared at Yoshi then.

    “He got lonely as the Prince,” Sando said.  “I imagine his loneliness will only increase from now on.”

    Midori let go of Sando and watched him hurry away.

    Yoshi finished with the head of the black guard and walked to him.  Yoshi looked royal in a brilliant red tunic that was embroidered with gold string on long wide sleeves.  The tight gold clip on top of Yoshi’s head held his hair, restricting it again.  Midori wished he could remove it and comb his fingers through the soft silk.

    “Naria invited her council to the banquet,” Yoshi said, his honeyed gaze thoughtful.  “Her council will seek political seats in the Amana government.  The Empress has long battled the leaders of the Quads, but they have refused to grant the Furians these positions.  The argument is that the Furians are a spiritual faction.  No one wants to deal with their ideologies.  I’m not sure I can change that for Naria’s people.”

    “I told you the banquet is a battle front,” Midori said, caressing Yoshi’s jaw.  “The only thing you need to concentrate on is getting her people to agree to fight with you against Namik.”

    “She is my aunt,” Yoshi said with a frown.  “When she looks at me, she still sees the little boy who grew up begging her for her best horse.”

    Midori pressed a chaste kiss on Yoshi’s lips.

    “Have faith, Yoshi.”

    The smile that graced Yoshi’s lips at the sound of his name set Midori’s heart skating.

    ***

  • Crown Prince Yoshi – 9

    “Your Highness,” Heloth Janir, Lord of Earith started.

    “Before we start,” Tai said.

    He spoke in a low tone, and stood behind Yoshi’s seat.  Still, his words carried through the large tent silencing the army officers and the Earith nobles attending the meeting.

    “Who are you?” Heloth asked.

    “Who I am is of no concern to you,” Tai answered.  “Her Majesty Almira has officially handed the Prince Yoshi control of the Empire.  The Prince Yoshi is now, your Royal Highness of Amana.”

    Heloth’s gaze returned to Yoshi.  “I apologize—

    “Regardless of my title,” Yoshi interrupted then, holding Heloth’s gaze.  “There are women and children living in fear in the Earith woods, Lord Janir.  They have little food, while your people live in comfort.”

    “Your Royal Highness,” Heloth said in surprise.

    “General Midori has fought to keep your lands safe.”  Anger burned deep inside at the thought of the children he’d met nights ago sleeping in the cold.  “His people run and hide in the woods like the forgotten.  We cannot move forward until a solution is found.”

    Heloth stared at him silent for the first time.  Yoshi wondered that the man was not eagerly offering help.

    “War is not kind,” Heloth started.

    “No,” Yoshi said then.  “War is not kind, but decency is expected in times of hardship.  The General has protected your people from the plight facing Fier.  You must show kindness, Lord Janir.  Allow the Fier people suffering in the woods into the town.”

    A round of protests filled the tent from the Earith nobles.  Yoshi contained his own anger at the reluctance to offer help to homeless families.  He understood the people of Earith worried that the people of Fier would turn on them.  Hand them over to Namik, and start a new rebellion…

    He raised his right hand to silence the room.

    “I understand your fears,” Yoshi said.  “However, those families suffering in the woods are not your enemy.  They carry no weapons, and only seek safety.”

    “But Your Royal Highness,” Heloth said.  “How long do they stay?  Who is to say that they won’t want to remain in Earith—?”

    “They are citizens of this empire,” Yoshi cut in.  “Where is it written a man from Fier cannot live in Earith, and one from Earith won’t live in Fier?  Is this the type of Empire you want, Lord Janir?  What would you do if the situation was reversed?”

    Heloth frowned.

    Telia stepped forward, inducing a round of murmurs as the nobles recognized her attire.  Her long red skirts were clean; she must have changed after the battle.  Her presence brought frowns to many.  The Furian women were known for their bloodthirsty nature, many feared them.

    “I speak for the Furian Princess,” Telia said.  “The Furian forest offers sanctuary to those in need.”

    Yoshi hid a smile when Heloth gaped and turned to look at the surprised nobles.  None of them expected kindness from a Furian.

    “Thank you, Telia,” Yoshi said.

    “Your Royal Highness,” Heloth said then, “Earith will accommodate those in need as well.”

    “Are you sure?” Yoshi asked his gaze sweeping over the nobles who had their eyes cast down.

    “Yes.” Heloth answered, “I will handle it personally.”

    Yoshi nodded and glanced at Midori.  He got a short smile in answer.  Yoshi felt an answering heat sweep through him.  It was the least he could do for Midori’s people.  The Fier people would suffer much before he took control of the Empire again.

    “Earith is still at risk,” Yoshi continued, his gaze sliding back to Heloth.  “The Furian Princess fights to keep Namik’s army from taking over the forest.  As long as they fight so close, Earith remains in danger.”

    “What do you plan to do, Your Royal Highness?” one of the Generals in Heloth’s army asked.  “Last we heard Namik has taken control of the Capital.”

    “His Royal Highness fights to protect the Empire,” Tai said.  “Earith must form an alliance with Terra, the Furian Princess and Dwind—

    “Dwind?” Heloth shook his head.  “That is a divided Quad.  It is hard enough to get the Klud clan to Quad meetings.  How do you suppose we are to convince, Lilind of the Dunes to form an alliance?”

    “The alliance is necessary,” Tai said.

    Yoshi understood Heloth’s skepticism.

    Dwind was to the south of Amana: a desert land.  The people of Dwind were divided into two clans.  The natives of Dwind were sons and daughters of the sands: a people who manipulated the sand itself.  Their leader was Lilind.  A woman they considered a mother and a spiritual leader.  Lilind often left the politics of the Empire to the Klud.

    Yoshi frowned.  The Klud were children born from the mix of Dwind natives and men from different parts of the Empire.  They lived in an oasis in the middle of the Dwind Quad.  Their leader was Pipa Klud.  She too preferred to keep a distance from Empire politics.

    “Leave Lilind and Pipa to me,” Yoshi said.  He’d have to approach them in person, and without an army.

    “What of Terra?” Telia asked.  “Namik won’t leave them alone.  He knows Lady Tinya supports the House of Taimeng.  Namik will attack Terra the same way he has Earith.”

    “Terra has the ability to isolate itself from the rest of the empire,” Midori said.  “They have an army to rival the Imperial Army.  The problem is how to get past their walls to seek help.”

    Tai touched Yoshi’s shoulder, giving it a squeeze.  Yoshi realized then where Zia Sayu had gone.  His mother must have separated the twins for this purpose.  Zia had gone to Terra to get help, while Tai came to him.  If he managed the alliance with the Furian Princess, Earith and those of Dwind, their allied Army would rival Namik’s forces.

    “Terra will know when to help,” Yoshi said, knowing Zia would find a way through, no matter the obstacle.

    “Your Royal Highness,” Telia started to protest, but he stayed her with a sharp glance.

    “We have no time to argue,” Yoshi said, thinking the faster he got on the road to the Furian Princess the better.

    Tai moved to his left side and motioned for the head of the Black Guard.  The man who walked through the Earith nobles and army officers was covered from head to toe.  Yoshi didn’t know his name, or his face.  He carried a wooden box, gilded with gold.  He brought it to the table where Yoshi sat, and Tai opened the lid to reveal a royal seal.

    Sando brought a new scroll to the table, holding it straight as Tai held out the seal to Yoshi.

    Yoshi placed the seal on the red ink on his right, careful not to smudge.  He pressed the seal on the new scroll and lifted it with a grim sigh.  With one stamp, he was taking over the responsibilities he’d chafed against for years.

    “All in this room now serve his Royal Highness, Prince Yoshi,” Tai said, lifting the scroll to reveal the new seal.  “You shall honor this seal.”

    “We declare our allegiance to you, Prince Yoshi Taimeng of Amana, heir to the throne,” Heloth said, and his people repeated.

    Tense relief flowed through Yoshi.  The lives of these people were now in his hands.  He was making a promise to fight Namik to the death for the Empire.

    Meeting Midori’s gaze, Yoshi prayed he had the strength.

    ***

    Zia Sayu raced her horse across the Imperial Lands headed to Terra.  The white horizon ahead seemed close, yet she knew it wasn’t, she had two more days before she could reach Terra.  There would be two more days before she would find a way in and find the Lady Tinya.  Risking a glance behind her, she frowned when she saw the two shadows in the distance.

    Riders, Zia thought, sent after her by a spy in the palace.  Zia leaned even closer to her horse and urged him into a faster pace.  The open lands ahead didn’t offer any security.  At some point, her horse would tire, and she’d need to stop.  The riders would catch up.  She frowned.  Thinking of the ring on a leather strip around her neck, she knew she’d have to fight soon.

    ***

    Amana Palace, Lexin City

    Prince Tailen paced the length of his hall.  His gaze returned to his son, Saki, who was crouched by the windows playing with a kitten.  Twenty-one years old, and the boy still liked playing with pets.  Tailen shook his head with disgust and wondered why he even bothered to fight his cousin for the throne.

    Saki was no Yoshi.  In all essence, the Prince Yoshi was perfect for the throne.  He’d see the Empire into higher prosperity were he to be Emperor.  However, Tailen thought continuing his pacing; Yoshi would also push Tailen into farther into obscurity.

    The House of Taimeng would rule for generations to come.  Tailen scowled.  He couldn’t have that.

    “My Lord,” his faithful servant said entering the room.

    “Is he here?” Tailen demanded.

    “Yes.  I will show him.”

    Tailen breathed out in relief and hoped this meeting would bring him the piece Namik was missing.

    Lord Hong Ma walked in dressed in his full uniform.  The head of the Royal Investigative Bureau held a powerful position in the palace.  This man knew all Almira’s secrets.

    “My Lord,” Hong Ma said giving him a short bow of recognition.

    “Do sit, Lord Hong,” Tailen said indicating one of the comfortable benches set around a short table.  “You must be thirsty from working all day without rest.  I heard the Empress has charged you with the security in the Palace.”

    “It is my duty, My Lord,” Hong Ma said without hesitation.

    Tailen hid the wince at the title.  He’d always hated that he’d never been Your Highness.

    “There was an assassination attempt?” Tailen asked then, wanting to know what Almira knew.

    “There was,” Hong Ma said and kept silent.

    Tailen frowned.  “Did you catch the culprit?”

    “The incident was resolved,” Hong Ma replied not offering any more information.

    Tailen gave an inward sigh.  He was going to need to push harder.

    “You answer to the Empress,” Tailen said.  “I understand that but, I am her family too.  Any attack on her is an attack on me.  I must know what happened.”

    “I suggest you talk to the Empress Almira,” Hong Ma said then.  “My allegiance is to the House of Taimeng, My Lord.  I cannot reveal anything else.”

    “The scales might shift,” Tailen warned.

    “My thoughts won’t change,” Hong Ma said getting to his feet.  “Will that be all, My Lord?”

    Tailen stared at the tall man with a frown.  “Yes, do send my regards to the Empress.  Tell her I wish her a long life.”

    “Yes, My Lord,” Hong Ma said before he turned and walked out with swift strides.

    The moment he was gone, Tailen cursed under his breath.

    “You can’t win against her,” Saki said drawing his attention.

    His son stood by the windows holding the kitten.

    “What do you know?” Tailen cursed under his breath.  “We are doomed if Namik can’t enter the palace when he arrives.  His army might be strong, but if we don’t have the power to reach the people, we are rebels.”

    “The funeral is in hours,” Saki said.  “My favorite cousin dead, I can barely believe it.  Use the Imperial Diet to your advantage in the morning.”

    Tailen frowned staring at his son.  He hadn’t told Saki the truth about the imposter they were parading through the streets of Lexin City.  Saki had a strange fondness for Yoshi that wouldn’t help his cause.

    “Explain,” Tailen said, crossing his arms against his chest.

    “Convince the Imperial Diet matters of State must continue,” Saki said with a smile.  “With the Empire in mourning for my cousin, three months…issues will be at a stand still.  Even worse, the Empire’s successor is gone; the Empress needs to show strength and stability.”

    Tailen smiled.

    “If the Imperial Diet insists, Almira has no choice but to choose an heir despite the mourning period.”

    “Yes, the Empire must be secured for the future,” Saki said with a small grin.

    Tailen grinned.  “You are a Crown Prince, indeed, Saki.”

    “Thank you, father,” Saki said petting the kitten lightly.

    Tailen frowned.  “If only you’d leave your childish ways behind.”

    ***

    Almira fought the urge to rip off the white silk gown she wore in place of her usual clothes.  The gold trim on the edges did nothing to embellish the garment.  The impostor’s funeral was an hour away.  She was meant to watch the people carry the casket out of the inner palace’s courtyard.

    “Sayuri.”

    “Yes, Your Majesty.”

    “I must visit the apothecary.”

    “But, Your Majesty—

    “Be Discrete,” Almira cut her off.

    She had no intention of sitting through a fake funeral.  Her thoughts needed to be on her son and getting him back to his rightful place.  Visiting the apothecary was Almira’s way of telling Sayuri that she needed to leave the palace without notice.  There were prying eyes in the walls, and windows.

    “Yes,” Sayuri gave her a short bow and left her chambers to make arrangements.

    An hour later, Almira walked beside Sayuri dressed in plain blue robes.  Sayuri wore the white silk gown prepared for Almira.  Sayuri’s face was covered with light gauze that effectively hid her face.  No one would question the headgear; this was the first time an Empress was in mourning in the empire.  When they reached the entrance into the courtyard, Sayuri paused and Almira touched her arm to reassure her.

    She took a step back as Sayuri stepped out flanked by three women.

    Almira didn’t wait for the applause that filled the courtyard.  She instead took the corridor to her right followed by one of her guards.  Her most trusted after the twins.  Ara was also a child she’d saved from the streets.  She was loyal.

    Almira breathed in relief when she stepped out into the bright sun outside the palace.  The streets were filled with people, all heading to the palace for the mock funeral.  Almira adjusted the scarf covering her hair and took a small side street heading deeper into Lexin City.

    ***

    “The funeral is underway,” Midori said, matching Midnight’s pace to Senbon.  Yoshi led his army to the North.  They’d had two skirmishes on their journey.  Both with Namik’s men left behind to man bases created to manage war supplies coming from Fier.

    Yoshi took over the two bases they had encountered, and rerouted those supplies to Earith, securing the Earith border.  If they managed to help the Furian Princess, the North would unite.  Midori smiled.  They would ride toward the Imperial Lands as one army to face Namik.

    “The Empress can handle herself,” Yoshi said, his tone too resigned.

    “Your Highness,” Midori started.

    “Don’t worry about the funeral,” Yoshi said.

    Midori frowned and reached for Senbon’s reins, ignoring the nervous glances he got from the Black Guard surrounding them.  He moved Midnight even closer.

    “Yoshi,” he said, needing to see Yoshi’s eyes.

    The sun was fading in the distance.  The Furian forest got closer.  Midori wished he could steal two minutes with Yoshi.

    “I’m fine,” Yoshi said squeezing his hand through leather gloves.  “I have a mission now, Midori.”

    “You had one before,” Midori said letting go of Yoshi’s reins, when the prince tugged on them.  “The funeral worried you.”

    “The funeral gives me a deadline,” Yoshi said glanced at him with hard, determined eyes.  Midori gaped.  “I need a united army before the week ends, Midori.  I must save the Empress before Tailen decides to kill her.”

    Yoshi urged Senbon into a faster pace.  Midori wasn’t surprised when the Black Guard responded in kind, increasing their speed to keep up with the prince.

    Telia rode up to Midori side.

    “How do you like the Prince now?” she asked with a sly smile.

    Midori scowled.  She gave him a smirk.

    “You’re the one who wanted a Prince,” she said and raced after the speeding Black Guard.

    ****

  • Crown Prince Yoshi – 8

    Midori watched for Yoshi, seeking him out in the midst of the dark cloaked army.  Yoshi cut down the three or four soldiers that made it into the circle, but otherwise he stayed safe.

    Yoshi’s men changed the tide of the battle.  In the next hour, Namik’s men were dead, Earith was safe, a cry of victory filled the air, and Midori smiled when echoing shouts filled the sunny day.

    Midori moved to meet Yoshi, but he couldn’t get into the tight circle around Yoshi.

    “My Lord,” Telia said appearing behind him.  “Walk with me.”

    Midori smiled happy to see the Furian woman who’d promised to stab him to death if Yoshi got hurt.

    “You came back,” he said, unable to hide his happiness.

    “His Highness changed his mind,” Telia said.

    Midori glanced back at the elite army around Yoshi.

    “He’s chosen to declare his status.”

    “It is what you wanted,” Telia said as they walked toward the makeshift settlement Midori’s men had created for defense.  “Don’t smile too hard.”

    “Why?” Midori asked unable to stop his smile.

    Yoshi choosing his title was a good thing, the right thing.  There was hope.

    “Because, Yoshi in hiding mode and Yoshi in his title are two different things,” Telia said with a bit of sadness.  “Things have changed, he’s changed.”

    “Of course he would,” Midori nodded in approval.  “Yoshi was bred to manage an Empire.”

    “Yes, so I’ve heard,” Telia said heading to a set of new black tents set in the middle of the settlement.

    Five men guarded the perimeter of the largest tent.  Telia gave the guards a nod as she led Midori in.

    Midori stopped when he entered the lighted tent to find a man standing in the middle holding a dagger.  Glancing at Telia, Midori frowned.

    “What is this?”

    “Don’t ask her,” the man said.  “Your concern is if you leave here with your life.”

    “Excuse me?” Midori brought his right hand to his sword.  “Who are you?”

    The man was covered from head to toe in dark cloth.  Only his eyes were visible and they were shaded with black.  At Midori’s question, the man gave a small chuckle.

    “Forgive me for not introducing myself,” the man gave a short nod.  “You may call me, Tai, General.”

    “What do you want?” Midori asked with a frown.

    “What I want, is what his Royal Highness, the Prince Yoshi, wants,” Tai answered.  “He’s chosen to trust you.  I’m here to find out if that trust is misplaced.”

    “It is not,” Midori said.

    “So you say,” Tai said taking a step closer to him.  “I know you well, Midori Sanori, son of Namik, heir to the seat of Fier.  Your father wages war against the House of Taimeng.”

    Midori scowled.  “My father wages war, I’m fighting to keep my people alive.”

    “Yes, that is true too.”

    Tai took another step closer.

    “Your people,” Tai said his head cocked to the side.  “To the Prince, every living soul in Amana matters.  Your concern remains with the few in Fier.”

    Midori tightened his hold on his sword handle.

    Tai looked slight; almost harmless in the way he moved, the way he spoke.  However, his eyes…those dark eyes, a dark aura lingered there.

    Midori felt uncomfortable standing too close to Tai.

    “I serve the House of Taimeng,” Midori said, holding the unsettling dark gaze.  “The Prince is the leader my people choose.”

    Tai captured his gaze for one tense moment, and then smiled a startling flash of teeth.

    “As it should be,” Tai said with a small nod.  “Remember your promise, waiting Leader of Fier.”

    “My promise,” Midori said.

    “Yes, your loyalty to the House of Taimeng is a promise, Midori Sanori.”

    Tai nodded and bowed low when the tent opened behind Midori.

    Yoshi came in looking bloody, his red and yellow cloak sweeping the ground.  The gold helmet covering his head made him seem taller, more powerful.  It also hid Yoshi’s eyes.

    Midori faced him and bowed his head.

    “Your Highness,” he said in greeting.

    “Tai, send a scout to the Furian forest.  Find out how the Princess Naria fairs, we ride out as soon as Earith is secure,” Yoshi said without looking at Midori.

    Tai gave Yoshi a short nod then seemed to disappear in the shadows.  Midori wondered if there was another exit in the tent.

    “Telia, ask Lord Janir and his son to see me in the next hour.  No one should come into this tent for thirty minutes.”

    “Yes, Your Highness.” Telia left quickly using the only visible exit.

    Yoshi waited a few minutes after Telia left before he pulled off his helmet.  Midori stared at the heavy gold clip holding Yoshi’s hair on top of his head.  The thick tresses left to fall down Yoshi’s back in a sweaty mess.  When Yoshi lifted his head, Midori felt his heart wring in his chest.

    Yoshi looked every bit the prince now.

    Midori wondered why he hadn’t seen it that day at the stables, or at the bath.

    “Speak freely,” Yoshi said in a quiet tone moving to place his helmet on a chest in the corner of the tent.  “The men guarding this tent are mine.  Their allegiances cannot be bought.”

    Midori watched Yoshi untie the heavy cloak he wore.  It dropped to the ground with a soft whisper.  Yoshi wore dark armor: black metal intricately forged to cover his chest and back, legs and arms.  Midori moved to help Yoshi untie the leather ties on the sides.

    “You came back,” Midori said.

    Yoshi exhaled as they both lifted the armor over his head.

    Midori placed the armor on top of the chest.  He placed his hands on Yoshi’s shoulders, smoothing his hands over the silk black tunic Yoshi wore.

    Yoshi leaned back against him.

    “I—,” Yoshi broke off.  “You were right.”

    Midori rubbed his hands over Yoshi’s shoulders, down his arms.

    Yoshi turned to face him and a frown creased Yoshi’s handsome face.

    “You’re hurt.”

    Midori started to protest when Yoshi touched his left arm and the cut he’d gotten earlier.

    “I’m fine.”

    Yoshi reached for the ties on Midori’s black cloak.  It fell to the ground with a whisper, followed by his sword belt.

    Yoshi made short work of Midori’s red and black armor.  They placed it beside Yoshi’s on the chest, and then Yoshi was tugging off Midori’s black tunic.

    “Your Highness—,” Midori started only to have Yoshi press a finger on his lips.

    “Please use my name,” Yoshi said meeting his gaze.

    Midori read fear in Yoshi’s eyes…he could understand the fear…but mixed in to that was need and longing.

    Midori dropped his gaze to Yoshi’s parted lips.  He’d dreamt about those lips the past few nights.  Remembering how soft they were against his.  Yoshi moved closer, tilting his head back slightly in invitation.

    Midori gripped Yoshi’s upper arms as he leaned to kiss him.  He meant to brush his lips, to taste, to feel Yoshi’s soft lips, but one touch led to a burning need.  Yoshi responded to him like a smoldering flame, igniting in his arms.  Yoshi moved closer, pressing against Midori’s naked chest, his arms going around Midori’s shoulders, his hands smoothing over strong shoulder muscles.

    Midori let out a groan his arms tightening around Yoshi.  He deepened their kiss, his tongue plunging into Yoshi’s mouth, taking all he could.  They sunk down to the ground, Yoshi on Midori’s cloak with Midori kneeling over him.  Midori wasted no time stripping Yoshi off his tunic and the black trousers.

    “We don’t have much time,” Yoshi said, his breath hitched as Midori kissed his nipples.

    Midori dusted kisses down Yoshi’s chest, stopping to swirl his tongue in Yoshi’s belly button.  Yoshi closed his eyes and bit back a soft moan.  Midori bit sensitive skin, wanting to hear Yoshi’s moan; he smiled when a soft sound escaped Yoshi’s lips, sending thrills of satisfaction through him.  He’d wanted to do this for so long.  Wanted to feel Yoshi, kiss him like this.

    He continued his exploration, pausing at the sight of Yoshi’s beautiful cock, so hard, already weeping.  Midori looked up to find Yoshi watching him through hooded eyes.  His own cock ached in his breeches, needing inside Yoshi, but they didn’t have time for that, nor the privacy.  Holding Yoshi’s gaze, Midori took Yoshi’s cock into his mouth.  Yoshi’s reaction was immediate; his hips surged forward, sliding his cock deeper into Midori’s mouth.

    Midori pushed Yoshi’s legs wider apart, still holding Yoshi’s gaze, he sucked on the head of Yoshi’s hard cock.  Breaking their gaze, he concentrated on taking Yoshi’s cock into his mouth, surrounding the slender hard length with his heat.  He used his tongue to stroke the underside of Yoshi’s cock, sucking the sensitive head.  Yoshi bit his lip hard, his fingers sinking into Midori’s hair as he surged into Midori mouth.  It didn’t take long before he was rewarded with Yoshi’s pleasure.  Hot jets of Yoshi’s semen came in bursts, tasting of peaches and a tinge of salt, he held on to Yoshi’s hips until the wave of pleasure passed.

    Midori let Yoshi’s cock out of his mouth, his gaze on an ecstatic Yoshi; he sat back on his haunches desperately wishing they were somewhere private.  He ached.

    Yoshi let out a breath and sat up.  Reaching up, he swept his thumb over the corner of Midori’s lip before his hand dropped to Midori’s trousers.

    Midori tried to stop him, but Yoshi came up on his knees, and pressed their lips together in a needy kiss.  Midori groaned when Yoshi reached inside his trousers and took his hard aching length.  Yoshi stroked him fast, their lips locked, their kiss consuming as heat built deep inside him.  Yoshi took in his moans as he came into Yoshi’s hand.  They held each other after, until their breathing settled.

    “Your Highness,” Sando called from outside the tent, interrupting them, their precious time together over.  “Lord Janir and his son wait for you.”

    Yoshi buried his face into Midori’s shoulder with a sigh.

    Midori held him tight, and pressed a kiss on top of Yoshi’s head.

    “Don’t leave my side,” Yoshi said.  He pulled back and met Midori’s gaze.  “No matter what, promise me, Midori.”

    Midori nodded, sure that he’d follow Yoshi to the ends of Amana if asked.  “I promise.”

    Yoshi nodded and got to his feet, his glorious body so beautiful, Midori wanted to reach for him again.

    “Sando, bring water,” Yoshi said, and then glanced at Midori.  “Bring a healer as well.”

    “Are you wounded, Your Highness?” Sando asked his voice filled with panic.

    “Do as I say,” Yoshi said without further explanation.  “Invite the Black Guard to the meeting, we shall use General Midori’s quarters.”

    “Yes, Your Highness,” Sando answered.

    A servant brought water fast, rushing in with a large jar and bowl.  Sando must have anticipated Yoshi’s needs.  They spent the next few minutes cleaning up.  Sando came in carrying clothes for Midori.

    “I got them from your quarters,” Sando said with a small nod.  He moved to the chests and got Yoshi a white tunic and black trousers.  Once Yoshi was dressed, Sando spent a few minutes fussing with Yoshi’s hair just as the healer came in.

    “Where are your people?” Yoshi asked sitting on a bench watching the healer work on Midori’s arm.

    “Safe,” Midori said.  “We sent them deeper into the Earith woods.”

    Yoshi nodded.  “That’s good news.”

    Midori sighed when the healer finished covering his wound.  He wore his tunic and took the hot drink Sando held out.  The taste was bitter: mixture of herbs meant to speed up healing.  It tasted awful.  He shivered and stood to allow Sando to help him wear his armor again.

    “Earith is not fully secure,” Yoshi said then.  “The Princess Naria must have relief.  As long as she’s fighting Fier, Earith is in danger.”

    “Agreed,” Midori said, adjusting the sleeves of his dark armor as Sando secured them.  “Where did you get the army with you?”

    “The Black Guard,” Yoshi answered.

    Midori frowned.  He’d never heard of the Black Guard.  Before he could answer, the man named Tai seemed to appear behind Yoshi.  His presence so abrupt, it startled Midori.

    “Your Royal Highness,” Tai said in greeting.

    Yoshi gave an exasperated sigh.  “Must you move so quiet?”

    “We’re at war,” Tai answered.

    “Have you done as I asked?” Yoshi asked.

    “Yes, the Furian Princess fights,” Tai said.  “She’ll appreciate relief.”

    Yoshi nodded and stood up.  “The faster we can organize Earith’s security the better.”

    Midori scowled at Tai who placed a black and gold cloak over Yoshi’s shoulders with familiarity.  Yoshi adjusted the cloak without a thought.

    “What is the Black Guard?” Midori asked, thanking Sando with a nod when he placed the dark cloak he’d abandoned earlier over Midori’s shoulders.

    “The Prince’s guard,” Tai said following Yoshi out the tent.  Midori tried to stay in step with Yoshi, but the moment they stepped out of the tent, the men in the guard surrounded Yoshi like the cloak he wore.

    Midori stepped back as Yoshi kept walking ahead.

    “I told you,” Telia said, stepping up to him.  “The dark ghouls are in charge now.  No one gets close.”

    Midori frowned.  No one but him, but it seemed only in private.

    “’Tis for the best,” Telia said then.  “There are assassins among us.”

    Midori sighed and would have lingered with Telia but then Yoshi called out.

    “Are you coming, General?”

    Midori couldn’t help the smile when he hurried forward and the dark ghouls as Telia called them allowed him into the circle.  Suddenly he was walking right beside Yoshi, and the warmth that filled him was hard to describe.

    ***

  • Crown Prince Yoshi – 7

    Leaving Earith was hard.  Yoshi couldn’t stop worrying about Midori.  He wondered if Midori’s people had found safety.  Would they have moved into the Earith town he’d seen, or go deeper into the woods?

    Gripping Senbon’s reins, Yoshi dispelled those thoughts, and concentrated on the journey ahead.

    Midori could handle himself.  He’d trained in a battle-rich Quad.   The rebels wouldn’t kill him easily.

    Yoshi’s stomach rolled at the thought of Midori injured.

    “Your Highness,” Telia said, she rode up to his right.

    “Yes, Telia,” he said grateful for the distraction.

    “Leaving Earith this way….shouldn’t we stay and make sure they’re safe?” Telia asked.

    Yoshi didn’t answer her question.

    “How long ‘til we leave Earith?” he asked.

    “Another hour,” she said reluctantly.  “We should take caution crossing the Imperial Lands.  They are too open.  Namik’s army will find us easily.”

    “Very well,” Yoshi urged Senbon into a faster pace, indicating he didn’t want to talk anymore.

    ***

    “What’s gotten into him?” Telia asked Sando when he caught up to her.

    Yoshi was riding ahead, flanked by three Earith soldiers.

    “I don’t know.”  Sando frowned.  “What did you tell him?”

    “That I don’t think we should leave Earith,” Telia said.

    Sando sighed.  “I don’t think second-guessing him is helping us.”

    “Someone should ask questions,” Telia said, her gaze on the three Earith soldiers around the Prince.  “They’re too close.”

    “What?” Sando asked following her gaze.

    Before he could ask what she was talking about, Senbon veered off the road and broke into a gallop.

    Telia cursed under her breath and urged her horse after the Prince.

    ***

    Yoshi was glad for Senbon for the second time in his life.  The stallion was fast, enough to help him avoid his assailants.  The three men behind him dressed as Earith soldiers gave chase.  Their swords swung as they tried to skewer him.

    Yoshi reached for his sword, deflecting an attack from his right.  He guided Senbon off the dirt road and into the trees.  Senbon weaved through the trees.  Yoshi turned back in time to see Telia jump on to one of the horses.  Happy that he only had two to deal with, Yoshi reined in Senbon to a stop.  He jumped to the ground, just as the two remaining assailants rode fast toward him.  Gripping his sword tight, he ducked their swinging swords, and swiped his sword, cutting the man on his left.

    The man screamed and Yoshi turned in time to fight off the second assassin.  He had jumped off his horse, and came running at him.  Angry for the continued attempts on his life, Yoshi fought unrestrained, calling on his years of training, he didn’t stop until he sunk his blade into the bastard’s chest.

    Giving a harsh cry, Yoshi pulled out the blade and kicked the man to the ground.

    He turned to find Telia staring at him.  She held a blade to the third man’s throat, but he wasn’t dead.

    “Are you okay?” Telia asked.

    Yoshi ignored her question and stalked to her captive.

    “Who sent you?” he demanded of Telia’s captive.

    Telia dug her fingers into the man’s shaggy dark hair.

    “Answer him,” she ordered her tone low.

    The man’s eyes filled with hatred, quite visible in the bright morning.

    “Kill me,” the man hissed.

    Yoshi felt his own anger rise to match, and before he knew it, he drove his sword into the man’s chest, piercing the heart.

    Telia stepped back as Yoshi pulled his sword out.

    “We could have questioned him farther,” Telia complained.

    Yoshi stared at the three dead men scattered on the forest ground.

    “It wouldn’t have mattered.  We both know why they tried to kill me in broad daylight.”

    “The Imperial Lands are too open.  People will recognize you, word gets to the palace and that stops the state funeral.  We’re not that far from the border.”

    Yoshi shook his head.  “Find a place to camp.”

    “Your highness,” Telia started.

    “Do it,” Yoshi said giving her an order.

    “Your Highness, making decisions without—,”

    Yoshi reached for Senbon’s reins.

    “We don’t know how many more assassins are hiding in the ten thousand riding with us.”

    Telia watched him mount his horse with a worried gaze.

    “I don’t know about you, but I think we need a new strategy,” Yoshi said with a sigh.  “Give me thirty minutes alone.”

    “Prince Yoshi,” Telia said.

    Yoshi ignored her call.  He instead turned his horse and rode deeper into the trees.  He rode blindly, not caring where he was going.  Senbon weaved through trees, going fast.  They slowed down when the trees got too thick.  Clutching Senbon’s reins, Yoshi let out a deep sigh.

    His thoughts lingered on the past twenty years of his life.  He’d spent each minute dedicated to the well-being of the Empire.  He’d spent hours on tax laws, learning how to navigate the different political climates in each quad.  He’d sat in meetings with the Empress, to discuss state problems brought by the different Quad leaders, even helped solve those problems.  His mother preparing him to fill her place when it was time, yet now—

    Yes, he’d chafed against the weight of his duties, his birthright.  The responsibility was heavy, exhausting, so much expectation…yet—

    Wiping a hand down his face, he stopped Senbon.  A strong wind swept in, making the branches dance above him.  He tilted his head up to stare at the swinging branches, the leaves singing…how he wished he could be as carefree.

    Namik of Fier, he thought.

    Namik who wanted his power, the right to rule an Empire, so much so, he was ready to take it from Yoshi anyway possible.  Which would mean war, death, oppression for his people, Yoshi sighed.

    “Are you running away?” a soft voice asked and Yoshi dropped his head to stare at the man standing a few feet ahead.

    Yoshi’s right hand moved to the handle of his sword as the figure moved into a sliver of light.  Dressed all in black, a dark cloth hiding most of the figure’s face, Yoshi tensed as the man held up a red tassel.  A moment later, a round gold coin with a hole dangled from the tassel, and Yoshi let out a soft sigh.

    “Tai Migi,” Yoshi said in relief.  “You scared me.”

    “You shouldn’t be alone.  Where is Sando?”

    “Don’t start.” Yoshi looked around the forest, his gaze narrowed.  “You can tell Zia Sayu to come out.  I don’t like it when she lurks.”

    Yoshi waited for Tai’s twin sister to emerge with a small chuckle.  Tai and Zia were twins who’d grown up in the palace with him and Sando.  As the years passed, the twins turned into shadows who’d trained under the heavy veil of the Royal Investigative Bureau.  Yoshi hadn’t seen them since he turned seventeen.  He’d assumed his mother had sent them on missions.

    “Zia is not here.”

    Yoshi frowned.  The two rarely separated.

    “How did you find me?” he asked.

    “I’ll always find you, Prince Yoshi.  Are you running away?” Tai asked.

    Yoshi tightened his hold on Senbon’s reins.  The stallion shifted restlessly.

    “Why are you here?”  Yoshi asked.

    Tai moved too fast.  He placed the palm of his right hand on Senbon’s forehead, calming the restless horse.  With his left, Tai held out a small rolled scroll.

    Yoshi took the scroll.  Unrolling it, he glanced at Tai for a second, before his gaze fell on the read seal.  The scroll was from his mother.

    ‘Tai brings you the Black Guard, protect the Empire, the Phoenix needs allies.  You’re no longer a son, Your Royal Highness.’

    Yoshi read the last line and closed his eyes, his intentions so easily rebuked by his mother.  Almira did not want a rescue; she wanted an heir to her throne.  Yoshi glanced at Tai, his gaze slowly rising to the shadows emerging around him in the forest.  The men in midnight black armor, with yellow scarves on their left arms, his personal army.

    Yoshi stared up at the dancing trees one last time.

    ****

    A cut on his left upper arm throbbed; his jaw ached where one of the rebel soldiers had punched him.  Midori flexed his right arm, then taking his sword; he swung it hard slicing an enemy soldier running at him on the neck.  This was getting old.  Two days of fighting and he couldn’t see an end.

    Namik wanted Earith, so he kept diverting his troops to the valley separating the Furian forest and Earith.

    “My lord,” Lenoth called.  “They’re retreating for the night.”

    Midori let out a harsh breath, looking around the green valley littered with bodies from the two-hour battle.  Men from Earith, Fier, and the Imperial Army all lay dead, their blood soaking into the grass.  He turned back toward the Furian forest where Namik’s men stood watching him.  The sun was coming up on the second day of this battle.  Without rest, he wasn’t sure Earith’s men could keep the enemy at bay any longer.

    “Let them take their dead and injured,” Midori said.  “Have our men take defensive position, any suspicious activity and you must alert me.”

    “Yes, My lord,” Lenoth said, running off already issuing orders.

    Midori gripped his sword tight, his gaze moving over the bodies in the field.  He’d killed many these past two days, men from Fier, others from the Great Imperial Army.  Each man lying on this field was a senseless death.

    Did they even know why they followed Namik’s orders?  And if they did, what kind of change came through bloody battles?

    Midori let out a sigh, walking through the field, doing his best not to step on the fallen men.  His sword at his side, his dark cloak swept the ground, the bottom soaked in mud and blood.  Taking another step, he froze when a hand grabbed his boot.

    He brought his sword up, his gaze on the Furian soldier bleeding out in the grass.

    Midori gripped his sword tight for a moment; before he crouched down to take the hand holding his boot with his free one.

    “My Lord,” the man choked on blood.  “You…fight your kin ‘tis unheard of, a disgrace to the clan.”

    Midori swallowed hard refusing to judge the dying man.  His father, Namik, had a persuasive tongue.  The tales he must have told Fier’s armies…he shuddered just imagining them.

    “I-I wish I was stronger to have made a stand like you, my Lord, but my family, m-my family…” the man trailed off and Midori guessed Namik’s men had probably threatened them.  The hand holding his tightened, “Namik sends ten thousand more at dawn,” the soldier said.  “They come from the North, through Fier.  Without reinforcements, your defenses will fall.”

    The grip on his hand tightened and Midori gave the soldier a nod.  The soldier breathed out a sigh, and he was gone.  Midori stayed crouched beside the dead man wondering what would happen to the man’s family now.  Had they left with the villagers he’d saved, the ones he had traveling deeper into Earith for safety?

    “My Lord,” Lenoth said behind him.

    Midori let go of the dead soldier’s hand and rose to his feet.

    “Lord Janir is here.  He wishes to talk to you.”

    Midori closed his eyes. His resentment at Lord Janir’s support of Yoshi threatened to suffocate him.  Had the man backed him even for a moment, Yoshi would be here.  Their men would have hope, they’d have ten thousand troops more and their defenses would hold in the morning.

    “My Lord,” Lenoth prompted.

    “Take him to the General’s quarters.  I’ll find him when I can.”

    “But—,”

    “This is a battlefield, Lenoth.  Follow orders,” Midori said as he continued walking among the dead and dying.  Perhaps he’d find one they could save.

    Midori spent the night planning defenses.  The Earith Generals listened, but he could see their worry at the news of Fier’s additional ten thousand men.  They’d lost too many already.  Namik would have almost thirty thousand men coming at them in the morning, which was twice their army.  If they broke line, Namik would gain Earith’s Northern border.

    “Do you think the Prince has reached the palace?” Lord Janir asked when the strategy meeting ended late that night.  “He can convince the Empress to send reinforcements.”

    “I’d be surprised if he reached,” Midori said bitterly.

    Lord Janir gave him a frown before he left for the night.  Midori sat on the bench set before his table and let out a sigh.

    Oh Yoshi, he closed his eyes, remembering the feel of the Prince in his arms and their kiss that last night.

    “Please live,” he murmured, hoping Yoshi had made it to the Palace and no assassins had caught up to him.

    Dawn came too soon.  Midori sat on his horse, the reigns clenched tight as he stood at the front of his elite army.  Behind them Earith’s men were scattered in defensive position across the valley leading into Earith.  Their orders were to retreat into defensive position if his company of five thousand fell.

    Lenoth moved closer.  “They’re here, My Lord.”

    Light glinted off metal in the tree line ahead of them.

    Midori let out a sigh, his breath turning into a little cloud in the early morning cold.  Their enemy’s number increased with every breath he took.  Raising his sword into the air, he called an attack, and allowed Midnight his freedom.  As he approached the enemy line, Midori wished he’d gotten more time with Yoshi.

    His men fought hard.  Unrelenting in their attack against Namik’s men, but the enemy had more troops, more men.

    Men Midori loved fell on the battlefield.

    Lenoth at his back, Midori fought harder, wishing for a reprieve.  If they lost, Earith would fall to Namik.

    “My Lord,” Lenoth touched his shoulder as he fought off two Fier soldiers, an hour later.  “We should retreat.  We can’t hold them off any longer.”

    Midori pushed a Fier soldier off his sword.

    “Signal the Earith men first, give them time to get into position.”

    “Yes, My Lord,” Lenoth said calling out the order.

    Midori hissed when a sword sliced his upper left arm.  With a harsh cry, he swung his own into his attacker’s chest and kicked him to the ground.  He ignored the sting on his arm, and kept fighting.

    Just as Lenoth signaled it was time to retreat, Midori heard a battle horn fill the air.  The sound of pounding hooves filled the morning, and he turned to find an army riding toward them from their rare.

    Midori’s men gave shouts of alarm as they turned to face their new enemy.

    This new army riding toward them wore black cloaks with yellow strips on their arms and rode fast.   They reached Midori’s men quickly.  His men gaped when the army rode past and instead joined forces attacking Namik’s men with full force.

    Midori exhaled.

    At the front of the new army, he caught one glimpse of a white stallion, the rider draped in a rich red and yellow cloak.  The gold helmet on the rider was assuring, relief flooded him when he saw the twenty thousand men Prince Yoshi had taken with him riding in behind the dark army.

    Midori threw himself into the battle with renewed energy.

    ***

    yoshi2

  • Crown Prince Yoshi – 6

    “We can’t afford the risk,” Heloth declared when Midori didn’t answer his question.  “We need proof you can’t offer.  I have to protect my people.  With the prince’s death, I have to take steps to protect our lands.”

    Midori held Yoshi’s gaze, willing him to step forward.  When he didn’t, he sighed.

    “What does the Prince’s death have to do with me?”

    “Prince Meng takes over, and you’re automatically on his side.  There is no telling the kind of damage you’ll do.”  Heloth scoffed and motioned for his soldiers.  “Take him; we must prepare to take on his men.”

    “Stop,” the word was authoritative.

    It made Heloth pause and turn.

    “Who said that?” Heloth’s son demanded staring at the crowd.  “We don’t have time for this—

    The crowd shifted and Yoshi stepped forward.  “I said it.”

    “And you are,” Heloth’s son asked with contempt.

    Yoshi met Midori’s gaze.

    For a split second, he read fear in Yoshi’s brown eyes.  The fear quickly replaced by a cold demeanor he’d yet to see on Yoshi’s face.  It turned Yoshi into the prince he was.  Yoshi removed the hat he’d taken to wearing to hide his identity.  His long hair dropped around him and the crowd gasped.  He removed his sword from his waist, and Midori frowned.  He hadn’t realized the sword’s handle was wrapped.  Yoshi removed the leather on the handle to reveal an elegant gold handle.

    Heloth clamped a hand over his son’s left shoulder and pushed him down to his knees.  The moment he did so, his people followed suit, including the soldiers holding him

    “Your Highness,” Heloth said dropping to his knee as well.  “We prayed for your good health.”

    Yoshi glanced at Midori, his expression hard, for a moment it felt like he was looking into a stranger’s eyes.

    “You hold the General of my guard captive, Lord Janir,” Yoshi said abruptly.

    Heloth looked up in surprise; he motioned for his men to undo Midori’s binds.

    Midori sighed in relief when his hands were free.  He got to his feet and bowed to Yoshi.  “Thank you.”

    Yoshi acknowledged the bow with a simple glance before his gaze returned to the leader of Earith.  ““Lord Janir, General Midori leads my guard.  Do we find sanctuary in Earith?”

    Heloth bowed.  “Yes, Your Highness, Earith serves you and the Empress Almira.”

    Yoshi looked at the crowd the slightest frown gracing his forehead.  If Midori hadn’t spent so much time studying that face, he might have missed the frown.  Following the prince’s gaze, he suddenly understood what the concern was.  The crowd wouldn’t rise until Prince Yoshi left the courtyard.

    “We shall speak in private,” Yoshi said turning to the tall round building the Janir clan had built through the years.  The Janir Rotunda had lasted generations.  The crowd rose when Yoshi started walking to the front entrance.  Heloth and his son started to follow the prince, but Sando stopped them.

    “Only My lord Janir,” Sando said as Midori passed him to follow Yoshi.  Sando blocked the way, refusing to let anyone else pass him.  “We have sensitive matters to discuss.

    “Why should the General follow then?” Heloth’s son asked in irritation.

    “The meeting includes General Midori,” Sando said, not moving.

    Heloth stayed his son.  “See that the General’s men are met with respect.  Accommodate them in the west side of the rotunda; make sure they have everything they need.”

    Heloth’s son scowled, but he did as asked.  Sando moved to let Heloth pass with a slight bow.

    ****

    “Your highness,” Midori started when they entered the large great room.

    Yoshi rounded on him.  “What’s wrong with you?  Was this your plan?  To get your symbol of hope, you’ve pushed me into a corner, General.  Why would you do this to me?”

    “I’m sorry, but it wasn’t my intention to get caught.  Earith has always been a peaceful land.  I didn’t expect them to—

    “Excuses,” Yoshi hissed when they heard footsteps coming toward the door.  “This isn’t over.  You and I are going to—

    “To what?” Midori closed the distance between them.  “You want us to talk?  What do you want to know?  Why I was captured?”

    Yoshi scowled when Midori touched his jaw with gentle fingers.

    “I was distracted,” Midori said, his voice so low as he leaned even closer.  Yoshi felt caught in the storm brewing in those dark eyes.  “Thinking about you, how crazy you drive me—

    Sando coughed at the entrance, and Yoshi stepped back from Midori.  He turned to walk to wide windows afraid Heloth Janir would see his arousal.  Gods, Midori was too much.  It was good they were parting.

    “Your Highness,” Heloth said, his voice cutting through Yoshi’s thoughts.  “You should have sent word.  It is dangerous for you to travel alone.”

    “It is dangerous for anyone not united with Namik.”  Yoshi cleared his throat and wiped a hand down his face.  “Your men have gotten cautious, Lord Janir.”

    He turned away from the window to find Heloth studying Midori.

    “Things are not as they seem, Your Highness.  It’s difficult to trust people,” Heloth said.

    Yoshi sat on the bench set by the windows.  “As you say, things are not as they seem, Lord Janir.  General Midori helped me cross the Furian forest.  He has kept me safe where others could not.  General Midori fights for this Empire.”

    Heloth blinked in surprise.  “We heard you were killed.”

    “I was,” Yoshi said dropping his gaze to the sword on his lap.  The gold handle on the sword was proof of his status in the Empire.  He always carried it with pride, but lately…“Someone wants to take my birthright.  They took an imposter’s body to my mother.  The Empire moans a serf.”

    “We must stop the state funeral,” Heloth said, his voice laced with horror.  “I’ll add my guard to yours and you can make it to Lexin City in a day if you ride hard.  The state funeral is day after tomorrow.  You’ll reach on time.”

    Yoshi looked at Midori then with a challenge.  “That has been my plan.  The sooner I get to the palace, the better for everyone.  If they dared try to kill me, that means they’ll try the Empress.  I’ll protect her.”

    Midori scowled at him.  “That’s a worthy plan, Your Highness.  However, Earith faces an army this evening or tomorrow.  We have no way of knowing when they’ll strike.  We need a strong front to keep Earith safe.”

    “Whose army comes?” Heloth demanded turning a suspicious gaze to Midori.  “Are you betraying us?”

    “Let’s get one thing straight, Lord Janir.  I, Midori Sanori, haven’t betrayed anyone.  You’ll face my sword the next time you accuse me of treason.”

    “It’s hard to believe you, General.  Not when your father is wrecking havoc across the Empire.” Heloth glared at him.  “How do we know you won’t join him?”

    “You don’t,” Midori said.  “You worry for your lands; I have forfeited my very life.  When my father learns of my decision to fight for the Prince and the Empire, he’ll have me killed.  I have more to lose than you do, Lord Janir.  Trust in that.”

    “Pretty words, youngling,” Heloth countered with a sneer, “but Namik remains your father.  I doubt he’ll kill you in cold blood.  He’ll offer you a position in his army if you offer him Prince Yoshi.  Your destiny is to betray us.”

    “And who are you to know what I will or not do?  You know nothing about me,” Midori said his eyes blazing with anger at the accusation.

    “Enough,” Yoshi ordered.  “I don’t have time to listen to you argue.  Lord Janir, how many men do you have?”

    Heloth turned to him a frown still on his forehead.  “Earith has thirty thousand men.  Ten thousand are spread across the different borders.  Twenty thousand are within the main city.  I can send ten thousand with Your Highness.  They’ll get you to Lexin City and the palace.”

    “What of Namik’s Army?” Midori demanded.

    “I’ll recall the ten thousand men on the borders to meet us on the Furian forest border.  Twenty thousand Earith men can hold against Namik’s men,” Heloth said with pride.  “We’ll give the prince time to reach the palace.”

    “This is a mistake,” Midori said turning to Yoshi.  “You should stay with us.  Running to the palace won’t help.  The Imperial Army is no longer under royal control.  How do you expect to protect the Empress Almira?”

    “Does that mean you’re not going with the Prince?” Heloth asked in surprise.  “Aren’t you his guard?”

    “Your men are sufficient to get me to Lexin City, Lord Janir.  General Midori’s men are skilled in battle.  They’ll help you fight off Namik’s army and secure your lands.”  Yoshi stood up.  “I’d like to leave early tomorrow.   If you’d make the arrangements needed.”

    “Right away, Your Highness,” Lord Janir said with a nod.  “For now, I’ll have someone show you to comfortable quarters.  You must be tired.  Please feel at home.”

    Yoshi nodded and watched Heloth leave the great room.  The moment the door closed, Midori cursed under his breath.

    “You know we can’t hold off that army.”  Midori shook his head.  “What have you decided here?  Do you want Namik and Prince Tailen to take over the Empire?  Do you think it’s something the Empress wants?”

    “I’m saving what matters to me,” Yoshi said.

    “And the people?” Midori asked.

    Yoshi held Midori’s dark gaze.  “The people have you, Midori Sanori.”

    ****

    Amana Palace

    The painful moans made her want to cry, but she couldn’t.  Almira stood in the shadows right outside the palace dining room watching a maid responsible for her food die.  The maid lay on the white stone floor, clutching her stomach, convulsing as she moaned.  The maids surrounding her cried along.

    “You don’t have to watch this, your Majesty.”  Sayuri touched her arm.  “Let’s go away from here.”

    “This is the third one this week.”  Almira clenched her fingers under her gown.  “There is no escaping this, summon Lord Hong to the dining room.”

    “Your Majesty,” Sayuri said, her voice tinged with worry.

    Almira ignored the worry and walked into the dining room.  The maids abruptly stopped their cries and moved to make a neat line along the wall.  The girl on the floor clutched her stomach, her fingers digging into the red and gold fabric of her dress.  The front of it was covered with dark blood.  Almira stood over the prone girl.  She fought the urge to look away from the gory sight.  The girl’s mouth was slightly open, blood still dripped out, as she whimpered.

    Almira crouched over the girl, taking her hand amid gasps, and Sayuri’s protests.  Cold fingers clutched hers.

    “I-I’m s-sorry, y-your majesty,” the girl on the floor gasped out.  “I-I w-was c-careless.”

    “Shh…” Almira placed a comforting hand on the girl’s brow.  “Rest, child, you did well.”

    The girl relaxed, holding Almira’s gaze.  The hand Almira held slackened, and the squeezing stopped.  Almira placed it on the girl’s stomach, and rose.

    “Clear the room,” she ordered.

    The girls moved to take the dying one.

    “Leave her,” she said moving to take her seat.  The bowl the dying girl had tasted still sat on the table.  She stared at it, anger brewing.  The serving ladies left, and she was left with Sayuri and two royal guards at the entrance

    Sayuri moved to move the bowl away.

    “Don’t touch it.”  Almira picked up the bowl and moved it closer to her.  “Have you called for Lord Hong?”

    “Yes, Your Majesty,” Sayuri said, a worried frown dancing on her forehead.

    “Don’t fear, Sayuri.  I don’t plan to end my life.”  She sat back in her seat as the doors opened and the head of the Royal Guards walked in followed by Lord Hong.

    “What has happened?” Lord Hong demanded when he saw the girl on the floor.  He rounded on Sayuri.  “How dare you let a servant lie dying before the Empress?  She is defiling the palace.”

    “Settle down, Lord Hong,” Almira commanded.  “Nothing happens in this palace without my permission.  The girl dies in my place.”

    “Your Majesty,” Lord Hong said in shock.

    She met his horrified gaze and pushed the bowl toward him.  “What is your duty, Lord Hong?”

    Lord Hong lowered his gaze, his fingers clenching to fists at his side.

    “To do as Your Majesty commands, to ensure you are safe, and ensure all is well in the palace,” Lord Hong recited.

    “The palace maid at your feet is dying, Lord Hong.  She has no understanding of what you mean.  Have you failed your duties?”

    Lord Hong’s fists tightened.  The head of the royal guards beside him lowered his gaze, panic crossing his features.

    “I’m sorry, Your Majesty,” Lord Hong said in a quiet tone.

    “Should I have you drink this?” she asked looking at the bowl of poisoned water.

    Lord Hong gasped and fell to his knees.  “I’ll do as you command.”

    “Will you now,” Almira chuckled.  “What about you, Chief Royal Guard?  Do you understand your job?”

    He started to recite his duties, but she stopped him.

    “I don’t think either of you understand your jobs very well.  So, I’ll help you.  Lord Hong, you are responsible for this girl’s life.”  Almira stated.  “You will bring her family into your care.”

    She didn’t miss the quick urge to protest such an insult.  The girl lying on the floor was a servant.  Both Lord Hong and the Chief Royal Guard came from noble families.  She ignored it.

    “This will happen every time a servant girl dies.”  She declared.  “Each one that dies, Lord Hong, Chief Royal Guard, you will both take the responsibility of their families.”

    “Your Majesty,” Lord Hong said, ready to protest.

    “Failure to do so, and I’ll have you drink from this bowl,” she ordered.  “Choose one or the other.”

    She stood and they both bowed lower.  She glanced at the dying girl.  There was nothing to do for the servant.  Death would find her soon.  She sighed and turned to the two men kneeling a few feet away.

    “Get me a list of all guards working this afternoon,” she said.  “Bring it to my chambers.  Imprison the entire kitchen staff.  No one sleeps this night until I find out how this happened.”

    ****

    “You have to eat,” Sando said pushing the bowl of beef stew closer.

    Yoshi stared into the mixture, his stomach rejecting the idea of food.  He couldn’t get Midori’s accusing gaze out of his head.  He rubbed his forehead and picked up the long spoon Sando had placed beside the bowl.  He scooped a small portion of the soup and brought t to his mouth.  The food was good, the perfect temperature.  He chewed slowly not quite sure he wanted to swallow.

    Sando placed a small cup of water beside the bowl.  “I can’t wait to get you home.  Your mother can take up the scolding.  I don’t like pushing you to eat.  You’re stubborn, My Lord.  Do you know you ignore everything I say?  If you’re not ignoring it, you do the opposite.  It’s quite exhausting you know.”

    Yoshi took the cup of water and took a healthy gulp.  He pushed his chair back and got up.

    “I’m going out for a walk,” he said heading to the door.

    “See, you didn’t eat enough,” Sando complained behind him.

    Yoshi opened the door, pausing to flash him a smile.  “If I listened to you, you’d have nothing to complain about, Sando.  Don’t worry so much.  I’ll eat when I’m hungry.”

    Sando sighed and he escaped the room before the man got into another tirade.

    He walked along the wide corridor to the stairs.  Guards lined the hallway, Heloth’s men.  The man had turned the west side of his house into a security fortress.  It reminded him too much of the palace.

    Yoshi went down the steps and was happy when he reached the bottom and found himself outside.  The sun was sliding down in the horizon signaling the end of another day.  He took in fresh air.

    Walking a long a cobbled path, it led him to a well-tended flower garden.  The branches of trees growing around the garden shifted.  Their leaves rustling and singing to the wind, he looked up at the blue sky, reveling for a moment in the quiet peace.  Surrounded by such beauty, it was easy to forget why he was here.

    He kept walking along the path, and soon found himself on a slope leading him to a village.  Stopping on the first step down the slope, he took in the Earith village.  The people built their homes to match the Janir Rotunda.  Round buildings graced the developing village below.  They came in different sizes, each one boasting a chimney tower with smoke drifting into the air.  No doubt the mothers were busy making dinner, while the kids waited anxiously for their evening meal.

    “It’s quiet, isn’t it?” Midori said to his left.

    He should have known Midori would follow him.

    “Peaceful,” Midori said.

    “I came out here for a quiet walk.  I don’t want to talk.”

    Midori let out a soft sigh.  “I’m sorry, Your Highness.”

    “You don’t need to call me that.” Yoshi turned to glare at the taller man.  “I don’t like how you say it.”

    Midori looked at him.  “And how do I say it?”

    “Like you’re insulting me,” Yoshi said hating that his tone sounded petulant.  Gods, this man was annoying.  “Go back to your duties.  I can find my way around.”

    “No.”  Midori shook his head and took Yoshi’s left hand.  His strong fingers made a strong but gentle cuff around Yoshi’s wrist.  “Come with me.”

    “No.” Yoshi tugged on his hand.  “Let go of me, you don’t have permission to touch me.”

    “Yes, as you’ve told me before,” Midori flashed him a small smile.  “Please come with me, Your Highness.”

    Yoshi started to protest, but Midori didn’t wait for permission.  He tugged Yoshi into motion.  Instead of going down the steps to the village below, Midori led them off the cobbled path to the left.  They walked on grass, cutting through trees and brush.

    “Where are we going?” Yoshi asked again, tugging on his arm.

    “Be patient,” Midori said in a gentling tone.

    A few minutes later, Midori stopped in a small clearing and whistled.  His black stallion came running and Yoshi sighed.

    “If you’re going to show off your horse, I’ve already met him,” Yoshi said in bored tone.

    Midori turned then and swung him up on to Midnight’s back in one swift motion.  Yoshi didn’t have time to think.  Midori mounted Midnight behind him.  Strong arms slipped around his waist.  Midori moved closer until his chest was imprinted on Yoshi’s back, his strong thighs hugging Yoshi’s hips.

    Yoshi closed his eyes when he felt Midori’s breath against his right ear.

    “Hold on,” Midori said in a low rough tone.

    Yoshi cursed under his breath when Midnight took off racing through the woods.  Yoshi held stiff for the first mile or so, but then Midnight was strong and he ate up the distance in long powerful strides.  Yoshi couldn’t help enjoying the beauty of the ride, and he ended up relaxing against Midori’s chest.

    “Where are we going?” he asked again when they came to an open field with yellow flowers growing.

    Midori didn’t answer him.  Midnight slowed down and after a moment, Yoshi didn’t need to ask.  Kids running towards them answered his question.  Midori controlled Midnight’s pace as the children met them and started running with them.  Yoshi smiled when a small boy moved his hands as Midnight’s mane moved.  They were adorable.  Midori stopped the horse on a small hill and Yoshi gasped softly at the sight of the tents put up in a small green valley.

    This was different site from the one he’d seen of the Earith Village.

    “Who are they?” Yoshi asked.  “Why do they live in tents?”

    Midori jumped down, and reached up to help him dismount.  Midori held Midnight’s reins and rubbed the stallion’s forehead.  Yoshi adjusted his black tunic, and pants as the kids reached them.

    “They are my people,” Midori answered.  “They’ve become people without homes thanks to my father.  They ran to Earith when my father started executing those who went against him.”

    Yoshi turned to find Midori staring at the small settlement.  His shoulders slumped, heavy with a burden his father had placed on his shoulders.

    A small tug on his finger had him turning to find the excited children surrounding him.  He frowned as one little girl tugged on his right index finger.  Crouching low, she grinned, showing off two missing front teeth, her small hand grabbed the thick braid of hair down his back and he laughed.

    “She likes you.”  Midori teased placing his hand on the girl’s head.  “She has good taste.”

    Yoshi kissed the little girl’s cheek.  He wrapped his arms around her and lifted her as he stood.  They walked down to the settlement together, the kids asking questions excitedly.

    “Why is your hair so long?” the girl he held asked as she played with the string tying the thick braid.

    “Because he’s afraid of someone cutting it,” Midori answered beside him.

    Yoshi glared at him.

    “You shouldn’t be afraid,” the girl advised.  Yoshi met her bright eyes in the fading sunlight.  She was scrawny, her hair an untidy mess.  Yet her eyes…she was happy.  “I let my mother trim my hair so it can grow neat and tidy.  Do you think my hair will grow long like yours?”

    Yoshi touched her button nose.

    “Of course it will,” he said.  “It will grow longer than mine; you’ll be the most beautiful girl in the land.”

    “Do you know when we can go home to Fier?” she asked.

    The question was innocent enough, but the answer, there was no easy one.  It could be years before the girl returned home.

    “I don’t know when,” he said softly.  “I’m sorry.”

    “That’s okay,” the little girl grinned.  “Our General, he is strong.  He will make sure we get home.”

    Yoshi glanced at Midori.  “Yes, your General is strong.”

    Midori held his gaze for a moment, before he had to give his attention to the children again.  Midori led them into the settlement, heading to the center.  Men called out to greet Midori warmly, and women offered to give him warm meals.

    They ended up in a circle the community had created in the middle of the settlement.  There was a large fire in the middle of the circle, children played near it’s warmth.  Their parents, some of the elders and parents sat on rocks and logs set around the fire.  Yoshi let the girl down when she squirmed.  She rushed off to meet a woman holding a bowl of food and a serving spoon.

    “Sit,” Midori said touching his shoulder.

    Yoshi settled on one of the large logs.  Midori settled beside him.

    “I know why you’ve brought me here,” Yoshi said his gaze on a small band of musicians seated on the other side of the circle.  Their music filled the evening air with a sense of abandon.  One could easily forget they were in the open air.

    “Why, Your Highness, I just wanted you to meet my people.”  Midori thanked a woman who brought them warm cups of rice wine.  “Maybe enjoy some food and music before you leave us tomorrow.”

    “They don’t know who I am,” Yoshi said taking the rice wine.

    “They suspect,” Midori said, “but they won’t ask.  They can only hope.”

    Yoshi sipped the rice wine.  Hope, that word was taking on a life of its own.  He had none right now, and these people seemed to have it in abundance.  He watched girls in their teens giggle and laugh as they Midori admiring glances.  Yoshi grinned when they gasped because he’d caught them looking.

    He turned to look at Midori only to find him staring.

    “Will you dance with me later?” Midori asked.

    “I think I’ll have fierce competition,” Yoshi said nodding to the group of giggling girls.

    Midori smiled.  “I don’t think you have anything to worry about.”

    “And why do you say that?” Yoshi asked with a little laugh.

    “Because,” Midori said and leaned closer to murmur in his ear.  “You’re the one I dream of.”

    White-hot heat flooded his cheeks and Yoshi was glad the sun was descending, casting shadows.

    Midori grinned and stood.  He went to talk to the giggling girls, and Yoshi couldn’t help scowling when they pulled Midori to sit down in the middle of their little group.

    “Flirtatious bastard,” Yoshi murmured under his breath.  He sipped his rice wine, his gaze unable to escape from Midori.

    ****

    On their ride home later that night, Yoshi felt warm nestled against Midori’s hard chest.  The night air was warm, and moonlit.  He allowed his thoughts to linger over their evening among Midori’s people.  He hadn’t been bored for a second.  Not one second, Yoshi thought fondly.

    He’d listened to tales from the older men who’d wanted to share Fier’s past with him.  He’d watched women dance around the fire.  The men had joined in and turned the dances into a merry mass.  One of the women had dragged him up and demanded he join them.  He smiled at the memory of trying to mimic their movements.  He’d done poorly, they’d laughed at him, but they’d still made him feel like one of them.

    Midori guided Midnight around trees, and he stared at the strong hands holding the rains.  He’d danced with Midori too.  Perhaps it was the rice wine, he couldn’t tell, but he’d been unable to look away from Midori’s dark eyes.  His body throbbed even now with every touch.

    As if sensing his mood, Midori slowed Midnight down to a walk.

    “Yoshi,” Midori said against his ear.  Yoshi closed his eyes as Midori’s rough tone sent thrills racing down his back.  He settled back against Midori.

    “What?” he asked.

    “I wish we’d met before this,” Midori said, and then holding the reins with his right hand, he brought his left to wrap around Yoshi’s waist.  “I wish so much, Yoshi.”

    “What would it have changed?” Yoshi asked bringing his left hand over Midori’s on his stomach.  “Your father would have only waged war sooner.”

    “Let’s not talk of my father,” Midori said quietly.  “The loss I mourn for not knowing you sooner is that I would have had more time with you.  Gotten to know you, maybe kissed you—

    Yoshi’s eyes flew open.  “You may kiss me now.”

    “Can I?” Midori asked his tone skeptical.

    Yoshi shifted so that he could turn and look at Midori.  Midori’s larger frame helped him keep his balance on the moving horse.  He touched Midori’s jaw, his fingers tracing over the dark shadow on Midori’s chin.  He stared at parted lips, and shifted again so that he could lean closer for the kiss Midori wished.

    The first touch was soft, feather light.  Midori moaned and Yoshi kissed him again, this time wanting more.  Midori reacted by pulling him closer, and leaning his head down so that their lips fit fully.  Their kiss was soft at first.  Soft and unsure, but that changed when Midori’s tongue swept Yoshi’s lips.  Yoshi moaned, allowing the softness of Midori’s tongue to explore his mouth.  Need slammed through him, burning heat that left him trembling, he clung to Midori’s dark tunic as Midori took control of the kiss.

    It was heaven.  It was torture.

    Yoshi clung to Midori afraid of stopping.  Afraid if they stopped nothing would be the same.  When Midori broke away, Yoshi gave a cry of protest.  He wasn’t willing to lose the heat.

    “My sweet prince,” Midori whispered against his lips.

    Yoshi moaned when Midori sipped his lips.  Midori’s left arm tightened around Yoshi.  One moment Yoshi was facing forward, the next he sat facing Midori, his legs over Midori’s strong thighs.  Midori’s strong hands stroked his back, their lips fused, coming together in hot needy kisses.  Yoshi forgot they were in the middle of the woods, his thoughts filled instead with Midori’s touch.  Arms wrapped tight around Midori’s shoulders, he gave himself up to the wild, intoxicating kiss.

    *****

    “Will you not stop him?” Lenoth asked Midori the next morning as they watched the Earith Army match away from the Janir Rotunda.  Prince Yoshi rode at the head of the army, his trusted chamberlain Sando beside him, followed by the two Furian women.

    Midori touched a hand to his lips.  Closing his eyes, he remembered the kiss the night before.  Yoshi on his lap, his slender strong body vibrating with need, gods that kiss…he hadn’t thought of anything else all night.

    “He’s the Prince,” Midori said quietly, opening his eyes to watch a man he could love ride away.  “We might never see the Empire stay the same.”

    Lenoth sighed beside him.  “Our scouts have reported back.  Namik is five hours away.”

    Midori watched Yoshi ride away.  “Gather Earith’s men; see if they know anything about real battle, not just what they’ve learned in training.  We have five hours to move the settlement.  If Namik’s men find them, they’ll kill them all.”

    “Very well,” Lenoth said.

    “We ride at the front,” Midori said as Lenoth turned to go.  “We might not make it—

    Lenoth placed a hand on his right shoulder.  “I’m with you to the end, General.”

    Midori swallowed hard his gaze on Yoshi’s retreating guard.  “Yes, well, I’d hoped someone else would join us.”

    Lenoth squeezed his shoulder and kept walking.  There wasn’t any need to mention whom.

    Midori leaned on the wall beside the window.

    “I hope we meet again, sweet prince,” he murmured.

    ****

    yoshi2

  • Crown Prince Yoshi – 5

    “Your Majesty, matters of state can wait,” Hong Ma, Head of the Royal Investigative Bureau, said as he stood before Almira two days into her son’s disappearance.

    The sun had barely risen, she’d barely gotten any sleep but that was usual these days.  She accepted the cup of hot green tea Sayuri handed her and took a healthy sip.

    “You are busy planning The Prince Yoshi’s funeral.”  Hong Ma bowed low.  “Please forgive my intrusion.”

    “Continue with business, Lord Hong,” Almira ordered.  “Why do you come to the palace at this hour?”

    Hong raised his head and held out a scroll.  “The Imperial Army did not reach The Princess Naria.  She faces the rebels alone.”

    Almira placed her cup on the stool on the side of her chair and took the scroll from Sayuri.  She preferred meeting Hong in her chambers, mostly to keep prying eyes out of her private business.  Opening the scroll, she read it with a frown.

    “The Imperial Army is with Namik of Fier, as expected,” she murmured then placed the scroll on the stool beside her.

    She couldn’t make obvious moves, Tailen would notice immediately.  The Royal Guard had ten thousand men, not enough to go to war, but enough to protect those who mattered.  Her brother’s determination would force a war, but he needed access to the Palace to control her.  She needed to make that impossible for him.

    “Lord Hong, the Royal Investigative Bureau now controls the Royal Guard.  Root out the traitors within your office, and the Royal Guard Service.  Trust no one affiliated with the House of Meng or the Fier Quad.  Watch the Minister of Defense, and the Chief Chancellor discretely, I want to know every move they make.”

    “What of the Princess Naria?” Hong asked.  “She needs relief in the North.”

    “We can’t risk a message to her, trust in Tai Migi.  His mission helps the Furian Princess.”

    Hong bowed.  “Your Majesty.”

    “Lord Hong,” Almira said her tone grave.  “Trust no one; treason can bend anyone’s will, even yours.  We are at War.”

    “Yes, Your Majesty.”

    She watched Hong leave her chambers with a thoughtful gaze.

    “Do you trust him?” Sayuri asked moving to take the scroll Hong had given her.

    Almira watched Sayuri carry the scroll to an open fireplace and burn it.

    “I trust his anger.  He won’t join Prince Tailen.  They have a sour past.”

    Almira stood from her chair and adjusted the belt that cinched the white silk dress she wore at the waist.  Her hair was thankfully free of a heavy headdress, and instead Sayuri had tied it back with gold pins.  She was to play a grieving monarch.  White robes and plain hair would make her look vulnerable.  She’d wear white until she gained control of the palace.

    First thing to do, she thought as she headed out of her chambers was order a formal investigation into her so-called son’s murder.  She’d act as though she didn’t know that her cousin The Prince Tailen plotted treason, and hope that Yoshi was making progress.

    “Sayuri, summon the Inspector General to the Court and make sure Chief Censor Zanna is there.  We must give him reason to complain.”

    ***

    Yoshi crouched deeper into the mud, his fingers clenching weeds to keep from sliding further down the valley.  He was cold, wet, and covered in mud.  His heartbeat thudded in his chest as he watched the Fier Army match a few feet away.  One wrong move and he’d give himself away.

    They’d spent the last two days and nights crossing the Furian forest.  They were almost at the Earith border.  Namik’s army was thorough on its march into the Imperial Lands.  Namik’s army scoured the forest for stragglers, destroying villages if the residents refused to join their cause.  Last night, they’d come upon a village protected by the Furian sisters and found it burning.  Yoshi had fought alongside Midori’s men and the villagers through the night trying to put out the fires.  He’d saved a small boy only to have him die in his arms from severe burns.  It made him wonder what kind of empire his uncle wanted.  Why bring pain to the people for power?

    They had a few more hours to go before they reached Earith.  Midori was sure the Earith army would help him return to Lexin City and the palace.  He closed his eyes and prayed to the gods.

    He stared at the riders passing in front of him, their numbers in the thousands.  Not to forget the thousands of riders who’d already crossed the forest in the last two nights.  They’d reach the capital tonight, which meant the possibility of getting to the palace first with the Earith Army was nil.

    He jerked when a strong arm slid over his shoulders.  Turning to his left, he scowled when he found Midori leaning too close.

    “Found you,” Midori whispered into his ear, his lips skimming his ear.

    His scowl deepened when his body reacted, every cell in his body rising to rejoice Midori’s presence.  This inane attraction to Midori, the son of a treasonous man, annoyed him.  He had no time for it and still he couldn’t stop…wanting.

    “Let’s go,” Midori said.

    When he refused to let go of the weeds, Midori tightened his hold on Yoshi’s shoulders and pulled him off his perch.  They slid down the valley into long wet grass.  Visions of snakes slithering into his boots kept Yoshi following Midori without hesitation.

    Midori led him through the grass until they reached thick bamboo trees.  Yoshi let a relieved sigh escape when they stepped on dry ground.

    “Why do you insist on protecting your chamberlain instead of yourself?” Midori demanded in a harsh tone.  “Those soldiers will kill you at first sight.  They know your face; they have orders to murder you on sight.  You have to know that.”

    Yoshi ignored Midori’s anger and kept walking.  Namik’s men had caught them unawares.  He and Sando had been collecting wood when the soldiers emerged.  They’d run, and when he’d seen two riders chasing after Sando, he’d acted as bait giving his chamberlain time to escape.

    “I knew Sando would find you,” Yoshi said dismissively.  “Stop worrying about me and start thinking of how we can get to Earith before this day ends.  Your father’s army arrives in Lexin City tonight.  We have no time to lose.”

    “Your High-” Midori stopped before he could complete the title.  “I’m sorry, gods, you’re exasperating.”

    “We need to get to Earith.”  Yoshi kept walking only to have Midori grab his arm and lead him in the opposite direction.

    “This way,” Midori said in annoyance.

    Yoshi bit his inner lip to keep from laughing when Midori held on to his left arm.  His shoes squished from the water and the mud.  He’d kill for a bath, but that was a luxury in their current state.  His gaze dropped to Midori’s boots, and his dark clothes.  Midori looked tall and forbidding, untouched by the mud and wet clothes.  Yoshi envied him his confidence.

    Midori led him into a quiet camp five minutes later.  Sando came running to meet him.

    “Oh thank the gods,” Sando said with relief.  “I wanted to come after you, but this one wouldn’t let me.”

    “He needs to change into dry clothes, and get him off the supplies roster.” Midori let go of Yoshi and started toward his tent.

    “Thanks,” Yoshi called after him.

    Midori gave him a short glance before he continued to walk away.

    “You got in trouble again.” Sando teased leading him to a small tent in the middle of the temporary camp.  “We need to stop pushing him.  He might change his mind and join his father.”

    Yoshi sighed as they entered their tent.  “Has Telia come back?”

    “No.”  Sando helped him out of the green tunic.  “They suspect she’s waiting out Namik’s army.  I managed to get some warm water for you.  These clothes are ruined.  Let me see what I can find.”

    Sando left the tent in a dash, leaving Yoshi to his cleanup.  Tired, and defeated, Yoshi bent over the bowl of warm water grateful for Sando’s ingenuity.  In the state they were in, the man had managed to get him warm water for a bath.  Midori had no idea just how valuable Sando was to him.

    He stripped off his breeches, washing the mud off his chest and stomach.  The tent flaps let in a breeze of cool air and he sighed.

    “How long do you think it will take Namik’s men to pass?’ he asked.  “I’m eager to get to Earith.”

    “We count one more group of soldiers passing,” Midori replied making Yoshi straighten in surprise.  “They’ll be gone before the sun has fully risen.  The Furian will find us soon after.”

    “Her name is Telia,” Yoshi said continuing his short bath.

    He froze when he felt Midori touch his naked back.  He closed his eyes when his body filled out, need slamming through him, a raging inferno.

    “The welts look healed,” Midori said, slowly tracing over the dark bruises on his back.  “The discoloration takes longer to fade away.”

    Yoshi shivered when Midori traced his back.

    “Do they hurt?”

    Yoshi shook his head.  “No, though pain is welcome at this moment.”

    “Why would you say that?” Midori asked his hand dropping away.  “I brought you clothes.  They’re larger than you, it’s difficult finding your fit, but they will keep you warm.”

    Yoshi frowned when Midori placed a black tunic, black breeches and a long over coat on a small stool.  He ignored Midori’s warmth and instead finished his quick bath.  Grabbing a cotton sheet Sando had placed beside the bowl of water, he wiped himself dry keenly aware of Midori behind him.

    “I’m sorry for earlier,” Midori said into the silence.

    Yoshi picked up the black trousers and pulled them on.  He drew the string at his waist tight to hold them up.  He reached for the black tunic only to stop when Midori placed a hand on his shoulder.  Yoshi closed his eyes when Midori picked up the white cloth he’d used to wipe off water and used it on his back.  His motions were slow, the cloth touching Yoshi’s back in gentle motions.

    “I worried,” Midori said, letting the cloth drop to the grass.  Midori tugged the hem off the tunic into place when Yoshi pulled it over his head.  “We can’t lose you.”

    Yoshi sighed and moved away from Midori.  “Your concern is useless if we can’t get to Earith on time.”

    “We won’t reach on time,” Midori confirmed.  “It will take time to amass Earith’s army; The Empress will face Namik’s Army first.  We need to rethink this—

    “I can’t think about anything else, General.  I don’t care what you do after I have an army to head back to the palace.  I don’t want to think of anything else.”

    “Is that your choice?” Midori asked, his dark eyes narrowed, “After what you saw last night, do you still want to concentrate on saving the Empress alone?”

    Yoshi held Midori’s dark gaze hating the judgment he read there.  What could he do?  Without the Imperial Army, he didn’t have any power.  He couldn’t see how he could stop the impeding war.  The best he could do was ensuring the Empress survived this.  Without her, the Empire would crumble.  He would crumble.

    “The Empress is all I have,” Yoshi looked away, “my only blood.  I can’t abandon her now. As long as she’s safe, the Empire lives.”

    Midori sighed then walked out of the tent as fast as he’d walked in.

    Sando came in soon after carrying a fresh batch of clothes and boots.  He stopped at the tent entrance with a scowl.

    “Well if he was going to bring you clothes he could have let me know.”

    Yoshi sat on the stool beside the bowl and held out his right hand for the boots.

    “Did you two have a fight again?”  Sando gave him the boots and moved to stow away the white tunic and the matching trousers in to their baggage.  “I’m getting whiplash from that man’s attitude.  Does he like you or hate you?  Why does he scowl every time he walks away from you?”

    The tent flap opened before Yoshi could answer.  Telia walked in followed by Hinna.

    “About time,” Yoshi said getting up.  “What did you find?”

    “We head into Earith now,” Telia said firmly moving to sink her fingers in the water he’d used.  She washed her face with a sigh.  “Namik’s Army is unrelenting.  I suspect they’re about to deploy to various locations.  We need to cross into Earith before they head that way.”

    “Great,” Sando mumbled in the corner.

    Yoshi ignored him and grabbed up the black overcoat Midori had brought him.  “Just as well, we’re running out of time.”

    ****

    Hours later, Yoshi cursed the fates blocking his mission.  His muscles burned as he gripped the handle of his sword tighter, and braced against the force pressing him into the mud.  Three days and nights of little to no sleep made him sluggish, enough to almost miss the dagger coming at him from below.  He used his feet to kick his assailant’s knees, throwing the Fier solider off-balance.  He rolled away and scrambled to his feet.

    Rain poured hard, turning the green field into a mud pit.  He stood in the middle of a raging battle, swords clashed, painful grunts and screams filled his ears.  Smoke lingered above them as some men fought with fire.  He let out a shaky breath, recognizing the sight of the Empire sliding into civil war.

    “Watch out!” a rough tone roared and he ducked in time to miss the swinging sword going for his neck.  In a blur of motion, Midori slay the soldier attacking him.  Midori grabbed his left elbow tight.  “We must get you to safety.”

    “No.” Yoshi shook his head, looking around him.

    Blood covered patches of grass.  In the morning light, he could see Telia’s red skirts as she fought the rebel soldiers.  Her sister, Hinna, watched her back.  Together they fought in an unstoppable team.  Lenoth, Midori’s right officer, killed the leader of the rebel army and a call for retreat rang from the rebels.

    Yoshi watched them run toward the forest and he let out a ragged sigh.

    “My lord,” Midori said, his voice heavy with concern.

    “Go, General,” Yoshi dug his sword into the mud and used it to steady his weary body.  “Go see to your men, don’t mind me.”

    Midori gave him another worried glance before he rushed off to Lenoth.

    “Are you hurt?” Sando appeared at his side.

    “A few scrapes,” Yoshi said, allowing his weariness to color his voice.

    “I was afraid we’d die,’ Sando said placing a steadying hand around Yoshi’s waist.  “They came out of nowhere.  One minute we were riding peacefully, the next—

    Sando shuddered.

    “The General’s men are very skilled.”  Sando observed.  “We were lucky.  This would have turned into a massacre.”

    Yoshi’s gaze lingered on Telia who wiped her blades on her skirt.  Hinna stood tying a wound on Telia’s left arm.

    “We’re in trouble, Sando.”

    “My Lord?” Sando asked.

    “I’ve been a fool,” Yoshi continued, his gaze sliding to the dead and injured men littering the green field, their blood soaking into the ground.  “Foolish me, worrying about my mother in the palace like a spoiled child.  I should have understood this is a fight for the Empire.”

    “Yoshi,” Sando said softly.

    “These people want a new leader.  They’re willing to die for it.”

    “They’re ordered.” Sando countered.  “Namik is a cruel leader.”

    “Regardless,” Yoshi pointed to Midori.  “He has made his choice.  His men follow him, defying their Quad leader.”

    He pointed to the dead men on the ground.  “These men, their sacrifice is clear.  They don’t want me as their future Emperor.”

    Sando squeezed his waist.  “You’re tired.  You need rest and a hot meal.  Come on, this place is not too far from a river.  We should be safe for now.”

    “Sando—

    “You are Crown Prince of this Empire,” Sando said quietly.  “It’s my duty to take care of you.  The General will work easier if you’re not in this field.  Come on, I can’t believe how muddy you are.  To think you changed hours ago.  She’d kill me if she saw you.”

    Yoshi allowed Sando to lead him away only because Midori kept looking back at him.

    An hour later, he sat on a mat in a simple tent.  His feet crossed as he stared at the map Midori carried with him.  Dressed in a simple cotton tunic and matching trousers, his feet bare, he stared at the increasing number of red dots on the map.

    Namik’s main army of fifty thousand men had crossed the Furian Forest in to the Imperial Lands headed to Lexin city.  Twenty thousand men matched north to meet the Furian Princess.  They’d probably reached her by now.

    Twenty thousand more headed south to Terra.

    The five thousand men who’d attacked them this morning wanted Earith.

    Yoshi sighed, impressed by Midori’s ability to gain so much information with little resources.  Touching the red dots on the map, he frowned.  They’d won the short battle this morning, but that meant Namik would send reinforcements by the end of the day.  Earith was going to face an Imperial Army very soon.

    His hopes for an army to save his mother dwindled with each second.  The tent flap shifted and he lifted his head fast to find Midori standing at the entrance into the tent.

    “I-I wanted to make sure you’re okay,” Midori said into the silence that followed.

    Yoshi stared into dark eyes.  His breath coming faster than it should.  He marveled at the idea of attraction considering their current circumstances.

    Though no one could blame him, he mused.

    Midori Sanori was a man made for sin.  From his rippling muscles, harsh dark features, and those eyes that saw deep inside him, he was helpless.  They were right when they called him the dark rider.  Midori tempted innocence into dark passions.

    Breaking their gaze, Yoshi reached for the warm tea at his elbow.

    “I’ve asked you not to worry for me, General,” Yoshi said taking a small sip.  “We should head into Earith.  Word of a battle at their borders will have reached the Janir Rotunda.  They’ll want more information.”

    Midori grabbed a rolled mat from the luggage Sando had in a corner and brought it to sit across Yoshi.  Yoshi watched him sit gracefully, careful to keep his attraction hidden.

    A tough endeavor considering the dark tunic Midori wore framed his shoulders and torso to perfection.  His slacks trousers were made of soft leather.  They hugged powerful thighs before disappearing into black boots.  Midori wore his shoulder long dark hair back in a haphazard knot that left tendrils falling around Midori’s face.

    Yoshi clenched his fingers afraid of the powerful urge to reach out and push those strands away from Midori’s eyes.  He dropped his gaze to the map between them.

    “I’ve sent Lenoth ahead,” Midori said.  “He’ll let Janir know what’s happening.”

    Yoshi nodded.

    “There is something else we need to discuss,” Midori said.  “Your mission…”

    Yoshi glanced up as thoughts of Almira filled his head.  He couldn’t imagine what she was going through at the palace.  She had the weight of an impeding war on her slender shoulders and the truth that her own family plotted treason.  Not to mention an imposter’s funeral, he winced and shook his head.

    “I need an army, that hasn’t changed,” Yoshi said.

    “The Empire is imploding.” Midori countered.  “The people need a symbol of hope.”

    Yoshi closed his eyes not ready to give up on his decision to return to Lexin City.  He’d thought about it this past hour.  Thought about fighting the rebels out here, but—

    “I can’t leave my mother alone.”

    “She’s the Empress,” Midori said, his tone cajoling.  “They don’t call her Almira the Great for nothing.  She understands what’s at stake.  If you take part of Earith’s Army and run to the palace, you’ll leave Earith open to Namik’s Army.  What then?”

    “The longer Namik believes I’m dead, the less trouble the people will face.  The moment he realizes I’m alive, he’ll direct his forces to me.  No one will be safe,” Yoshi said.

    “Your death allows them to fracture the Empire,” Midori said.  “Without hope, the people will choose to join Namik to stay safe.  The Empire needs you.  Show the people there is another way.”

    Yoshi shook his head.  “What you’re talking of brings more trouble.  No, I must keep to my mission.  The Empress’s life is more important—

    “You frustrate me!” Midori snapped, his dark eyes flashing with anger.  “What type of Crown Prince are you?  Your first goal is to save the people, yet you’re more concerned with the Empress.  I don’t understand you.  Perhaps you’re as spoilt as they said you were.”

    “Does that mean you’re as evil as your father?” Yoshi countered.  “That’s what people say about you too, you know.  You’re as black hearted as Namik.  Is that true?”

    “My truth is not in question here,” Midori scowled.  “You represent the future of the Empire.  Take responsibility.”

    “Why?”

    “What?”

    “Why should I take responsibility?” Yoshi asked again.  “The people your father leads, they want a new leader.  They’ve killed, plundered and fought for it.  Why shouldn’t I give it to them?”

    “You’re joking with me,” Midori said, his eyes wide with shock.  “You can’t ask such questions; you’re a prince of the Empire, the future Emperor.”

    Yoshi sighed.

    Of course, Midori would react this way.  Duty was important to the man.  The Empire was important.

    To him, Yoshi frowned.  Duty was a burden.  One fate shoved at him the moment he took his first breath.  There were weeks he’d wished to escape from the palace, to escape from the Empire.  Gods, truthfully a small part of him wished Namik succeeded.

    How could he tell Midori this and not sound selfish?

    The only thing that mattered to him was keeping his mother alive.  Yet she too lived as Midori did.  She held on to duty with her every breath.  She lived for it.  She’d berated him for even imagining an idea of giving up power.

    ‘The Empire depends on you Yoshi.  You’re a symbol to the people.  You can’t take that lightly.’

    The people first, personal issues last, he sighed.

    “My lord,” Midori said interrupting his self-pity party.

    “Stop,” Yoshi said, shaking his head.  “The only thing I want to do is protect my mother.  That’s the only decision that is clear right now.”

    Midori shook his head in disappointment.

    “Fine, do what you want.  Take your time, why don’t you?  Such a sage Prince,” Midori scoffed as he got up.  “Can’t you think beyond your concerns?  Think about the children who’re losing their parents in this war.  Who’ll save their mothers if you take the army off to Lexin City?  Think about that, Your Highness.”

    Midori left the tent as he had all other times, with a huff, his boots stomping on the grass.  Yoshi stared at the map on the grass.  He hadn’t liked it the way Midori had called him ‘Your Highness’.  It had sounded too much like an insult.

    Sando came running in to the tent.

    “We’re to head to Earith at once.”  Sando grabbed the mat Midori had left and rolled it.  “The General’s temper is getting short.  I’ll be glad to part ways with him.”

    Yoshi reached for his boots loath to tell Sando he was the reason for Midori’s short temper.  He sighed and pulled on his shoes.  Maybe he was being selfish, but what could he do?  Who in their right mind abandoned their mother?

    ****

    Midori rode ahead.  He allowed Midnight’s wide stride creating distance between him and his small army fast.  The wind was good against his face.  The feel of it shortly wiped off his stress and worry.  He’d thought the war impeding, but he should have realized the war had started.

    He couldn’t wipe the memory of a rebel soldier moving to chop the Prince’s head.  One second too late, and their future would have ended in that moment.

    He couldn’t stop thinking about Prince Yoshi.  The young handsome prince set him ablaze with one look.  His fingers ached to touch Prince Yoshi’s back, skate over the phoenix with his fingers.  The motion quickly followed with his lips, pressing kisses along that strong back.

    When he slept, he dreamt of Yoshi under him, his eyes half-closed, his color high, and his body trembling with arousal.  He wondered what it would be like to be deep inside Yoshi.  He dreamt of it, thought of it in the most unexpected places.

    Midnight slowed and he let him.  Holding on to the reins, he looked back to find he’d left the army.  Earith was ahead, two great moss covered pillars stood in the distance.  The pillars marked the entrance into the fertile land.

    He was sure sentries would have spotted them by now.  No doubt, the quad’s army would be waiting to find out what a Fier Army wanted in the peaceful Earith lands.

    Fier, his frown deepened at the thought of his home.  His father had turned his people into villains.  It was no wonder the prince refused to discuss the future with him, the son of a traitor.  It couldn’t be easy to trust a man like him.

    Nevertheless, Prince Yoshi surprised him.

    Midori smiled thinking about the handsome man.  Prince Yoshi was stubborn.  He hadn’t heard a word of complaint through their grueling ride through the Furian forest, not even when Lenoth placed him on the roster to get firewood.  Prince Yoshi had gone ahead and done it without a single word.  It had taken everything in him not to berate Lenoth for placing the prince on the roster.

    His father had called the prince a spoiled brat once.  Namik had called Almira’s obvious affection for her son coddling.  Perhaps it was, Midori thought now.

    Almira’s motherly love was strong enough to make a Prince ignore his claim to power, and only think of rescuing her.  Prince Yoshi was no fool.  He understood what Namik was doing here.  He understood the battle they were facing was for the empire.  Therefore, choosing to save his mother meant the Prince was making a conscious choice to let his power go.

    Midori stopped his horse.  If Yoshi gave up—

    He stared at the lush green lands of Earith and imagined them under his father’s rule.  A dark ugly cloud settled in the pit of his stomach.

    One second he was staring at the lush green of the plains beyond the large pillars.  The next, a tight rope went around his torso, tightening and jerking him off his horse.

    ****

    “Why is an army from Fier riding into our lands?” Heloth Janir demanded of Midori.  “Do you think to hand us over to your father?”

    Midori knelt on cobbled stone, his mouth bound with a tight strip of leather.  His arms tied back.  Beside him, two burly Earith soldiers guarded him.  Their swords rested on his shoulders.  Lowering his gaze, he hoped Heloth hadn’t changed since they’d last met.  The man was just; Heloth never treated his people with cruelty.

    “Untie his mouth,” Heloth said with irritation.  “How is he to speak if he’s bound?”

    “But father,” one of the men standing beside him protested.

    “We’re not barbarians,” Heloth said.  “I want to hear his explanations.  The man sent earlier spoke of a battle at our border.  He seemed sincere, but we can’t be sure.  Nothing is as it seems now; even the Imperial Army is rogue.”

    One of the soldiers guarding him undid the leather strip from his mouth.

    “Thank you,” Midori said moving his jaw to ease the slight ache from the tight strip.

    “Don’t thank me,” Heloth said his tone hard.  It boomed in the afternoon sun.  The people of Earith had come to see the spectacle in the Janir courtyard.  There were farmers, mixed among the nobles of the quad.  Midori knew each one was curious to know why the heir to the Fier quad knelt before their leader.

    “Sir,” he started.

    “Your house plots treason against the Empress,” Heloth said not giving him a chance to speak.  “It’s my right to send you to the gallows.  We don’t take kindly to treason in this quad.”

    “My father plots treason,” Midori said.  “Those men your people see riding into your lands are my men.  I’m here to form an alliance with you.”

    Heloth chuckled, sending the crowd into fits of laughter.

    Midori held Heloth’s gaze, conscious of the sword tips on his neck.  Their owners were twitchy.  One wrong move, and they’d cut his neck.

    Heloth raised his hand to stop the laughter and shook his head.  “I’m sure you understand our skepticism.  No one trusts a man from Fier, son.  You’re the heir to Fier.  Your alliances must lie with your father.  He has killed the Prince Yoshi.  How do we know you’re not plotting to make an alliance with us, and then hand us over to him?”

    “I—

    He stopped because protesting would mean admitting the prince wasn’t dead.  He stared at Heloth in a quandary. On one hand, he’d sworn his allegiance to the prince.  If he spoke up now, that would mean betraying a prince who wished to continue anonymously.  There was no way of knowing who stood in the crowd.  One mention of the prince could mean a horde of assassins descending on Earith.

    He sighed.

    This was as good as a trial.  If he didn’t prove his good intentions, Earith’s army would kill his men, and send his head to his father.  He knew it.  Treason was a heavy accusation.  His life was forfeit if they deemed him guilty.  Heloth would kill him to protect the Empress.  The only person to save him now would be the prince.  He glanced in the crowd behind Heloth and froze when he met brown eyes.

    ****

    Yoshi stood behind a group of farmers watching Midori kneel before Heloth Janir.  The Earith Leader was fiercely tall, his soldiers brawny.  They meant to kill Midori.  He knew it.

    “What do I do?” Yoshi asked Sando beside him.

    They’d ridden ahead as well hoping to catch up to Midori.  He’d wanted to talk to Midori about meeting with Heloth in secret.  He didn’t want too many people knowing about his being alive.

    “You have to make a choice,” Telia said on his right.  “Hesitate longer, and Heloth will arrest him.  If he does so, Midori won’t live long.  We don’t take kindly to treason up here.”

    Sando touched his shoulder.  “Listen to Telia.”

    Yoshi glanced at Midori and froze when he met dark eyes.  The challenge in those eyes, he scowled.  Midori knew if he decided to step forward, he’d have to take on a role he didn’t want.

    “My lord,” Sando said his tone urgent when Heloth’s men moved closer to Midori intent on arresting him.  “What are we going to do?”

    ****

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    yoshi2

  • Crown Prince Yoshi – 4

    Midori carried Yoshi, who had passed out on the ride through the forest, into his tent.  No doubt, the adrenaline had disappeared leaving the pain from the lashes Yoshi had received from the rebels.  Laying him carefully on his bed, Midori untied the overcoat Yoshi wore.  He pulled off the pale green tunic and turned Yoshi on to his stomach.

    He cursed under his breath when he saw the red welts over the phoenix on Yoshi’s back.  Midori touched the bruised skin with the tip of his finger.  He winced at the thought of the pain Yoshi was feeling.  Adjusting Yoshi’s head on the pillow, he covered him with a sheet and hurried out to find the healer.

    ****

    Telia cursed when she realized the dark rider was from Fier.  Shadowing him to the middle of the camp, her gaze hardened when she saw the dark rider enter the General’s tent.

    “What now?” Hinna whispered behind her.  “The noisy one is captured; the Prince is with the General.  They escape and hell breaks loose.”

    “We’ll steal them away at night,” Telia said.  “Come on, let’s find Sando and the Prince’s horse.”

    Looking up at the sky, Telia counted three hours before she could steal into the General’s tent, get the Prince and get them on to the road to Earith.

    ***

    Sando shifted his legs on the hard ground and bit back a groan when pins and needles raced through his numb right leg.

    Gods, what had happened to the Prince?

    He’d heard whispers about a rebel attack in the village.  The bastards holding him didn’t want to share information.  He was going crazy sitting on the hard ground in a wooden makeshift holding cell thinking about the Prince.

    He let out a sigh and stared at the dark sky.  He couldn’t believe their luck these past two days.  Assassins, rebels, Fier soldiers, they should never have left the palace!

    “You,” Hinna’s voice interrupted his thoughts.  “Why are you so occupied with the sky?  Pay attention.”

    “Shh…do you want to wake the whole camp?” Telia chastised in a whisper.  “Sando, let’s go.”

    He grinned so happy to see the two women he could have kissed them.  Crawling over to the corner of the wooden shed, he looked at the solid wood and frowned.

    “In case you didn’t notice, I can’t pass through wood,” Sando complained.

    “Idiot,” Telia said and waved a hand under the wooden fence.

    They’d dug a sizable hole under the wooden fence big enough for him to crawl.  However, because the bastards holding him had tied his hands behind him, Sando had to wedge his upper body into the hole, making Hinna and Telia work to pull him out.  Five minutes later, he was out of the makeshift shed and Hinna was cutting the ropes around his chest and his arms.

    “Where is the Prince?” he asked worried.  “I left him at the tea house, we should—

    “He’s in the General’s tent,” Telia answered dragging him to his feet.  “We get him and head to the west.  Our horses are waiting in a clearing just inside the forest.  We’ll ride for Earith through the night, no stopping.”

    Sando grabbed Telia’s shoulder when she turned away from him.

    “That General is Midori Sanori,” Sando whispered.

    “All the more reason to get out of this camp without being caught,” she advised.  “Let’s go.”

    ****

    Midori sat at the table in his tent watching Yoshi in the firelight.  The shadows dancing over Yoshi’s handsome face, the thick braid of hair falling over the bed almost to the floor.  The phoenix on his back was intriguing; the red color vibrant in the light, Midori wished he could trace the tattoo to his heart’s content.  He dared not, with the red welts on Yoshi’s back.  The healer had applied a numbing salve to ease the pain, but Yoshi hadn’t moved since he’d laid him on the bed.

    He could still taste the fear he’d felt when he’d reached the inn and found Yoshi captured.  Hot anger had boiled through him when those rebels had lashed the younger man.  Had he been ten minutes late, those men would have abused Yoshi mercilessly.  The rebels his father nurtured were black hearted and reveled in degradation.  He hated to imagine what Yoshi would have suffered this night.

    Glad that he’d saved the handsome man, he returned his gaze back to the map on the table.  The detail on the parchment gave him a clear picture of where they were.  Hidden in the Furian forest, a day away from Fier and three days away from Earith, he touched the red button to the north of the forest.  Red for the Furian Princess and her army, surrounded with black pins that represented the rebel army.  She was holding her ground, but not for long.  He picked up the yellow wooden coin with the Imperial Army mark and placed it in the middle of Fier.  His father had joined his forces with the Imperial Army and split them into three.  The spy he’d left in his father’s ranks had sent him a message this evening.

    One group would match to the west to fight the Princess Naria and take control of Earith.  The second group would head back to Lexin city and the palace.  The last group would head for Terra.

    Midori rubbed his forehead staring at the map on the table.  His father’s thoughts so clear to him it was terrifying.  If Namik gained control of Terra, the Empress would lose a large chunk of her control making Prince Tailen more powerful.

    Shaking his head, he dropped the yellow coin and picked up the piece of yellow embroidered fabric his men had gotten from the Prince’s carriage.  His trackers had claimed that a set of horses had raced into the forest.  Midori hoped the Prince had escaped.  If they could only find the riders who’d gone into the forest—

    He felt the whisper of fabric before he saw the Furian.

    She moved fast, her dagger pressing against his neck before he could blink let alone reach for his sword.  She kicked his right hand, shoved the table away, and straddled him.

    “Don’t move,” she warned her eyes a dangerous red.

    He’d grown up with stories of the Furian women.  He’d heard of their angry red eyes and sharp daggers that could gut a man with one swipe.  He swallowed hard when her dagger dug deeper, her face so close he could see the pores on her smooth skin.

    “What do you want?” he asked tightly conscious of the sharp blade at his neck.

    “I’ve come for him.”  She nodded to Yoshi on the bed.

    “I have safe passage through your forest,” Midori said quietly hating the thought of divulging his true mission.

    He couldn’t let the Furian take Yoshi away.  The Princess Naria had promised no interference but, she’d also warned him should he meet with a Furian sister, truth was best.

    “I don’t care,” this one said with a growl.

    “Get him up,” she ordered sharply, her words directed to someone in the shadows.

    He tried to dislodge her but her dagger dug deeper into his skin.  He winced when she nicked his skin, drawing blood.

    “I’ll not warn you again,” she said in a low menacing tone.

    A young girl and the man they’d captured in the forest earlier hurried to the bed.  Between them, they sat Yoshi up on the bed and helped him into the green tunic he’d left at the foot of the bed.  Yoshi groaned and Midori strained against the dagger.

    “Hush,” the Furian warned.

    “Sando,” Yoshi groaned when the man tried to settle him on his back.  “What’s going on?”

    “I’m sorry,” Sando said and stood up with Yoshi on his back.

    Midori brought his left hand up and hit the Furian under her right shoulder.  She shifted just enough to ease the pressure of her dagger against his neck.  Midori moved fast pushing the Furian to the ground and lunged toward Yoshi.

    The Furian kicked the back of his left knee and he stumbled enough for her to jump on his back.  Her dagger raised high; she brought it down with force just as Yoshi ordered.

    “Telia stop!  He saved my life.”

    “My lord!” Telia exclaimed her dagger inches away from his vital vein.  He could feel the strain she used as she fought the momentum.

    “Stop,” Yoshi ordered again.  “I’m indebted to him.”

    The Furian on his back gave an angry growl and jumped off.  Midori sighed in relief and rubbed his neck.  He glared at her when he saw blood on his palm.

    Yoshi tapped Sando’s back.  “Put me down.”

    “My lord—

    “I said put me down,” Yoshi ordered with an irritated tone.

    Midori frowned when Sando let him go.  The speed in which they complied with Yoshi’s orders made him pause.

    Yoshi sighed and sat on the bed.

    “I’m sorry,” he said looking at Midori.  “I must have passed out on the way from the village.  Please excuse—

    “Don’t apologize for us,” Telia cut in quickly.  “He’s holding you here and Sando was his prisoner.  We must leave this camp.”

    Sando nodded in agreement turning to look at Yoshi.  “We must leave, my lord.”

    “I saved his life,” Midori said, confused by the thanks he was getting.  “We’re not rebels; you have nothing to fear here.”

    “Tell that to someone who hasn’t seen your holding cells,” Sando said bitterly.  “Your men are mean.”

    “They’re meant to be, especially to nosy intruders,” Midori retorted.  “You’re never going to make it out of this camp.”

    “We’ll make it if we threaten you,” Telia said placing herself between him and Yoshi.

    “My men will hunt you down.”

    Yoshi stood and shook his head.  “Both of you stop this.  Midori will let us leave.  Telia stop threatening a man who saved my life.”

    Telia grumbled under her breath.

    “I can’t let you leave,” Midori said fascinated by Telia’s strange attitude.  She was a Furian.  They never took orders from anyone but their Princess.

    “Midori, what do you mean by that?” Yoshi demanded imperiously.

    “It’s deep in the night, and there are rebels crawling through the forest.  This is your safest place.  I’ll see that you’re comfortable.”

    Sando leaned close to Yoshi and whispered into his ear.

    The dark expression that filled Yoshi’s eyes was surprising.  Midori felt a sharp sting on his neck that made him slap his hand against the painful spot.  He gasped when his hand came away with a needle-thin thorn.  Pulling it out, he turned to see the young girl hold up a thin flute before the world faded into darkness.

    ****

    “Is he dead?” Yoshi asked his gaze on Midori.

    Telia and Sando had found ropes in one of the wooden chests along the walls of the tent.  They’d tied Midori and put him on the bed.

    “We wouldn’t tie him if he was dead,” Telia said.  “You should have let me kill him.”

    “What a blood thirsty wench.  I can’t believe you’re making me agree with her.  We should leave,” Sando complained.  “Staying here makes us vulnerable.  Someone is bound to come looking for him.”

    “Aren’t you curious?” Yoshi asked his gaze still on Midori.

    Dark hair spread out on the bed, his skin brown from the sun, long dark lashes, Yoshi smiled.  This Midori Sanori was handsome.

    The son of Namik, he thought.

    “Why is the Fier Quad heir hiding in the Furian forest and helping innocent villagers?  Don’t you think he would be by his father’s side?”

    “That question should have you out of this tent,” Telia said quietly.  She grabbed the map on the table and stuffed it into a bag she carried on her back.  “The faster we get on the road, the easier it will be to escape his soldiers.  We’re running out of time.”

    “We’re not leaving,” Yoshi said intrigued by Midori.

    “What?”  Sando gasped his eyes wide.  “You’ve gone mad, haven’t you?  Those rebels lashed you too hard and it damaged your thinking.”  Sando grabbed his left arm and shook him.  “This man’s father plots treason and wants you dead.  You shouldn’t be anywhere near him.”

    “Yes, but,” Yoshi leaned closer to look at Midori.  “He saved me in the village.  He had no reason to do that, but he did.”

    “I’m losing my mind,” Sando said letting go of his arm.  “Of course he saved you, he wants you.  I’m very sure he thought you would become his new lover.  You’re driving me crazy.”

    “Calm down,” Yoshi said irritated, not wanting to think that Sando might be right.  “By the way, you’re always yelling at me for getting in trouble.  What happened to you today?”

    Sando sighed.  “Don’t try to change the subject.  We need to leave.”

    Yoshi started to protest, only to have Midori open his eyes.  He jerked away from the bed, and Telia shifted so that she was once again standing between them.  She smiled down at Midori, a cold tug of her lips that sent a chill down his spine.

    “No struggling, be still and listen, traitor,” she warned.  “I have no qualms killing you, Midori Sanori.  Your kind is waging war against my sisters and innocent people in the North.  If it weren’t for him, I’d end your existence.”

    Yoshi met Midori’s alarmed gaze.

    “She gets excited easily,” he said nodding to Telia.  “Don’t test her patience.  She’s had to hold back because of me and her temper is short.  Do you understand?”

    Midori nodded and held his gaze.  Yoshi frowned, gauging the man who’d gone out of his way to save him.  He removed the gag on Midori’s mouth and helped him sit on the side of the bed.

    “Who are you?  Why does she treat you like her master?” Midori asked keeping a wary gaze on Telia.

    “He’s not my master,” Telia protested with a growl.

    “Then what is he?” Midori asked turning a probing gaze to him.  “Who are you?”

    “Someone who has to get to Earith in the next two days,” Yoshi said.

    “You won’t make it through this forest alone,” Midori said abruptly.

    “We’re four, two of us are natives,” Telia said.  “We’ll make it.”

    “You don’t understand.  My father has been building an army.  The moment they attacked the Crown Prince, my father deployed his army to Lexin city.  They’ll be crossing the Furian forest tonight and tomorrow.  If you want to reach Earith, your best bet is with me.”

    “Why are you going to Earith?” Yoshi asked with a frown.

    “The Quads need to unite, that’s the only way to defeat my father’s army,” Midori said quietly.  “Even if the Empress stays a declaration of her successor, Fier’s army will be at her doors, ready to take control of the palace and force her hand.  Without the Imperial Army, she’s defenseless.”

    Sando placed a hand on Yoshi’s shoulder and squeezed.  Yoshi took in a deep breath and tried not to panic.

    How had this happened?  How could the opposition have amassed so much power to leave Almira defenseless in her palace?

    “My lord,” Telia said looking at Yoshi.  “What do we do?”

    Yoshi met Midori’s gaze.  “I need your help.”

    Midori narrowed his gaze and asked, “Who are you?”

    Yoshi took Telia’s dagger from her and cut the ropes wrapped around Midori’s upper body and his legs.  He gave back the dagger and looked at Midori.

    “Your house plots treason against mine,” he said in a low voice.  “Do you understand me?”

    Midori’s eyes widened and he fell to the floor on one knee as Telia had done when they first met.

    Midori lowered his head and said, “I declare my allegiance to you, Prince Yoshi Taimeng of Amana, heir to the throne.  I am your servant.”

    Yoshi sighed in relief, only to gasp when Telia moved behind Midori, her fingers digging into his hair.  She brought her dagger to Midori’s neck and leaned close.

    “If you betray him, I’m going to cut out your tongue, gut you alive and watch you die a slow death.  Do you understand?”

    Midori nodded holding still under her sharp blade.

    “Good.”  Telia let him go and walked around to face him.  She held out her hand to Midori.

    Midori hesitated for a moment before he took her hand and she pulled him up.

    “Now that it’s all cleared up, shall we get started?  We must plan how we’re going to make it to Ear”

    ****

    Yoshi sat on the bench in Midori’s tent that morning while the healer applied salve on the welts on his back.  He gritted his teeth and closed his eyes when the young man touched a particularly painful part on his left side.

    “Be careful,” Midori ordered gruffly.

    Yoshi buried his face in his hands to hide his expressions.  Midori kept chastising the young healer every time he winced.  He was glad when the ordeal was over because the welts on his back had only gotten more painful through the night.

    “I’ll come back this evening,” the healer told him.

    Yoshi nodded and reached for the black tunic Midori had found for him.  The healer left the tent and Midori stood to help him put the tunic on.

    “You should let me do it this evening,” Midori said quietly.  “He caused you pain.”

    “Nothing should change.  A General would never tend a merchant’s wounds.  You can’t act different toward me,” Yoshi said, happy when Midori made sure the fabric didn’t touch his back.

    “He didn’t have to hurt you,” Midori complained as he held out a steaming cup of green tea.

    Yoshi took the cup and sipped the hot liquid gratefully.  Midori sat across him on the table.

    “Who put that phoenix on your back?”

    “Why do you ask?”

    “You’d have been in a lot of pain for many days.”

    “Pain builds strong character,” Yoshi told him with a small smile.  “Don’t wear that pained expression.  I’m sure you went through worse training under your father.”

    Midori dropped his gaze to the table.

    “Why didn’t you tell me who you were at the baths?”

    Yoshi shrugged.

    “I’m on the run.  You are a soldier who thought me a serf.  Why didn’t you tell me who you were?”

    Midori laughed and he glanced up.

    “I suppose for the same reasons why you didn’t tell me the truth.  I’ve always wanted to meet you.  We never got a chance.”

    “Your father isn’t very hospitable.”  Yoshi sipped his tea.  “Namik Sanori has never liked me or my mother.”

    Thinking of his mother, Yoshi stared into his green tea with a frown.  The palace was probably busy planning his funeral, that couldn’t be easy to endure even for his stoic mother.

    ****

    Amana Palace

    Almira walked into the small dark hall where they had laid the pretender.  The chamberlains working in her son’s suite had dressed him in Yoshi’s finest clothes.  Red silk embroidered with a yellow phoenix.  She stopped before the body and looked around the room.  Sayuri was making sure there were no prying eyes.  Biting her lip hard, she touched the cold stiff arm wearing her son’s ring.  She fought the urge to recoil from this gory task, but she had to make sure.  It took her a few tries, but she finally turned the man to his side so that she could check his back.  Few knew about her son’s tattoo.  She’d made sure to keep it that way in case this very situation happened.

    A relieved sigh escaped when she found a clean back.  Thanking the gods, she righted the pretender’s clothes and left the dark hall without a backward glance.  She would prolong the imposter’s mourning period for as long as she could.  She hoped that would give Yoshi time to return to the city.

    She prayed she’d taught him enough to know he’d need to raise an army like no other.  Otherwise, they were both dead.

    ****

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    yoshi2

  • Crown Prince Yoshi – 3

    Yoshi walked along the main street in the small village.  His head covered with a cotton hat, his clothes those of a merchant.  His sword hidden at his waist by a gray overcoat that Sando had gotten along with the merchant clothes.

    “Wait for me in the teahouse,” Sando urged leading the way to the building set in the middle of town.  “You’ll be safe, and no one will bother you until I return.”

    There were so many shops and people; no one knew who he was.  He relished the adventure of walking unnoticed in a crowd.  They passed different shops that were selling fabric, herbs, grain and steamed buns.

    “Keep up,” Sando touched his elbow.  “If we’re going to make it to Earith, we need to leave soon.”

    “Telia said we should travel at night.”

    “In a forest full of wild animals,” Sando scoffed.  “That woman thinks she’s invincible.”

    “She’s a warrior.”  Yoshi folded his hands behind him as they came up to the teahouse.  “She also has a small sister to protect.  I trust her judgment.”

    “Whatever you say,” Sando said with a short bow nodding to the veranda surrounding the teahouse.  “Please wait here, I’ll be back as soon as I can.”

    Yoshi watched Sando run off to get supplies for their long journey to Earith.  He hoped Telia and Hinna were right and that they’d make it there in two days.  Walking up the steps of the teahouse, he looked around the veranda happy to see it was still too early to be packed with customers.  Apart from two women and their children seated at two tables to his right, the rest of the tables were empty.  Choosing one with a view of the street and the front entrance into the teahouse, he sat down careful to pull his hat low over his face.

    A young woman brought him a tray and as she poured green tea into his cup, he remembered another trip to a teahouse.

    He’d been nine years old, right before his father’s death.  Prince Toshi, his father, had sneaked him out of the palace and taken him on a short trip to Terra, in the south of Amana.  Terra was a beautiful quad, built close to the ocean; they fished for a living and protected the Terran culture fiercely.  He liked visiting Terra.  He and his father had stopped at a teahouse along the way and his father had allowed him to pour tea.  He missed that carefree feeling he’d enjoyed then.  Traveling with his father, not caring about rules and obligations, his father had insisted on adventure.

    The young woman walked away and he stared at the hot liquid in his cup.

    Sadly, adventure had eventually killed his father, the Prince Consort.  On a hunting trip to the forests surrounding Earith, his father had fallen off his horse and hit his head on bedrock.  Yoshi had cried for days, hating the stiff protocols the palace followed during the funeral, hating his mother for forcing him to hide his pain.

    Yoshi gave a short sigh and looked at the two women seated a few tables away.  They giggled as they talked, sipping their tea, their gazes on their children.  He’d never seen his mother look like they did.

    The Empress, Almira Taimeng, never gossiped.  She sat regally, and she definitely never giggled.

    One of the girls spilled tea on the table and her mother cautioned with a stern voice.  He smiled.  That was familiar, although his mother never spoke any words.  She’d always given him a look that made him freeze in his tracks even now at the age of twenty-one.  Strange, but he missed that sharp gaze she used to chastise him.

    The village market was coming to life, farmers bringing produce on large carts pulled by horses.  He watched a group of boys in a wild rush duck between two horses carrying kites.  Yoshi envied their carefree spirit.  When he’d been a boy, his mother hadn’t allowed him to run free playing with kites.  He’d spent his hours in the royal library learning the languages spoken by the different quads of Amana.

    You cannot rule an empire you don’t understand, Almira the Great would say when he enticed Sando into escaping his lessons.

    His punishments after an escape included an hour reciting taxation laws with the Finance Minister.  What a boring childhood, hardly like the boys racing down the streets to adventure.  He rarely left the palace without an escort.  Riding Senbon in the grounds behind the palace was his only freedom.

    He lifted the cup to sip his tea only to pause when thundering hooves filled the languid morning atmosphere.  Pedestrians on the main road moved aside quickly, dragging children and merchandise out of the way.  A piercing scream ripped through the shouts of panic, and Yoshi put his cup down.

    More shouts and screams filled the morning and he stood, catching sight of a group of dark riders racing along the street swinging swords, their black metallic masks painted red.  They wore black armor, with dark cloaks flying at their backs.  The women pulled their children closer and he pointed to the front entrance of the teahouse.  They obeyed his silent order, dragging their panic-stricken children into the safety of the teahouse.  He was sure there had to be a back door, so the women would be safe.

    The riders were riding straight to the teahouse; he needed to find Sando at the market.  The veranda wrapped around the teahouse.  He ran to the back intent on escape.  They had to leave this village now.

    ****

    Sando made an impatient noise as he watched the woman bagging rice linger over the scale.  He didn’t like to leave Yoshi alone too long, his charge was prone to mischief and they couldn’t afford trouble.  Dear heavens help them, what the Empress would say if she saw her only son now.  The Crown Prince of the Empire lost in the woods with a pair of headstrong women not a royal guard in sight.

    He shuddered.

    “Anything else, Mister?” the unhurried woman asked smiling at him.

    Her brown teeth made him cringe.  He took the bag of rice she held out and made a note to wash it with hot water before he cooked.

    “Do you have apricots?” he asked of the woman.

    Yoshi liked fruits and they hadn’t eaten any last night.  If they took to the road tonight, they might not see any fruits until they reached Earith.  He’d buy a few for their journey however long it took.

    “Try the next stall,” the woman said helpfully bestowing on him her appalling smile.

    Sando forced a smile for her and hauled his loot to the next stall in the unpopulated market.  He rarely got a chance to visit the market at Lexin city, but when he did, it always felt like a wrestling match.  People in every corner, merchants screaming out prices, promising cheap deals, he liked the energy.  He’d promised to take Yoshi on one of his jaunts in to the market a few weeks ago.  He couldn’t have imagined they’d end up in the Furian forest hiding out because of treason.

    Treason, he shook his head.

    What was Prince Saki thinking?  The Phoenix Throne was destined for Yoshi Taimeng.  A war would breakout before Almira the Great allowed that weasel to sit on her throne.

    Sweat beads broke on his forehead at the thought of war.  He’d have to fight beside Yoshi.  That was if they ever made it back to Lexin city and the palace.

    Bastards, why plot treason?

    The Empire was peaceful to a point; there were always the unhappy rebels wanting more than they could get.

    He found fruits in a stall hidden between a fabric stand and another grain merchant.  He was busy choosing apricots when he heard hushed voices.  He lifted his head, old eavesdropping habits hard to control, and froze when he saw the tall man from the night before.  Sando shifted, using the fabric on his left as a shield, he took a closer look.

    The dark rider who’d taken an interest in Yoshi last night at the baths was talking to a shorter man.  Their voices were urgent; their expressions dark, something critical worried the dark rider.  A finger tapped his arm and he turned to the stall owner.

    “Pay first before you take those fruits.”

    Village merchants, he scowled counting the apricots he’d set aside, he handed over the money and put the fruits in the leather bag he’d gotten from the old woman at the inn.

    The two talking in hushed tones had started walking.  They headed in the opposite direction of the teahouse.  He scowled, undecided, Telia and Hinna had gone to find the village prefect to get information about the Imperial Army.  They would take longer to return to the teahouse.  Sando opted to follow the dark rider.

    He knitted through fruit, fabric and grain stands, keeping to the shadows, out of sight as he kept up with the two walking to the edge of the village.  Soon, they left the market behind and Sando had to allow a wider distance in case they saw him.  Half an hour later, they were in the forest and Sando used the trees and thick bushes as cover to close the distance.  His steps light on the forest ground, Sando got close enough to hear the two talking as they walked.

    “The rebels attack the villages close to the Furian forest.  The Furian Princess is holding them back at the North but her army is not strong enough to hold them all.  She’ll have to retreat if the attacks continue in order to safeguard her boundaries.”

    “What of Earith?” the dark rider asked. “Don’t they have enough men to relieve the Princess?”

    “No one wants to believe a war is imminent.  Earith is cautious, if rebels dare to fight the Furian Princess, you can imagine they’re guarding their borders.  I believe they are waiting for relief from the Imperial Army.”

    “Fier is controlling the Imperial Army, Naro.  Assassins attacked the Prince’s convoy to Fier yesterday.  He’s dead.  The Imperial Diet will force Almira’s hand after the Prince’s funeral.”

    “The House of Meng takes leadership, and your father will command the Imperial Army.”  Naro shuddered.

    Sando clutched the bark of a tree in shock.  Red tents with golden tongues of fire embroidered on the edges stood in a clearing ahead.

    It was a Fier army camp.

    “My father is a savage who doesn’t want diplomacy or peace.”  The dark rider’s tone filled with bitterness.  “He has allowed Prince Tailen, the Empress’s cousin, to poison him with the promise of power.”

    Sando’s fingers dug into the bark of the tree, ashamed of the fear slowly taking over his limbs as he realized that the dark rider was Namik Sanori’s son, Midori.  Yoshi wasn’t safe here they had to leave now.  He turned to run back to the village but stopped cold when he felt the sting of a sharp blade against his neck.

    “Leaving so soon?” a cold voice said into his ear.  “Don’t you want to find out more about the camp?”

    Sando closed his eyes and stood still.  The blade against his neck was sharp, one wrong move and he’d be bleeding out.

    “Bring him,” the harsh order came from the dark rider.  “No one can know we’re here.  I saw him at the inn last night; find out who he is, Naro.”

    Sando sighed when Naro tied his hands back with a rope.  He prayed for Yoshi’s safety when Naro dragged him to the Fier camp in the clearing.

    ****

    Midori Sanori paced the length of his tent, his thoughts on the Crown Prince.  Imperial Army Soldiers and the Royal Guard were taking the Prince’s body back to Lexin city and the palace.  He didn’t need to imagine how Almira the Great was going to react at the sight of her dead son.  Every soul in Amana knew how much the Empress loved her only child.

    Yoshi’s mourning would be long; Midori sighed, but not long enough.

    Prince Saki would take over the position of Crown Prince.  Saki would be the Imperial Diet’s puppet, the real power would lay with his father, Namik of Fier and Saki’s father, Prince Tailen.  Their thirst for power meant there would be no peace in Amana until they controlled all the quads.

    The Empire was doomed.

    “My lord,” Lenoth, his second in command, called outside the tent.

    “Come in, Lenoth.”

    Lenoth walked in carrying his helmet, his dark cloak skating the edges of his boots.  He had his hair held back in a tight knot, and his black leather armor defined his lean body.

    “The rebels have invaded the village.  What are your orders?” Lenoth asked.

    “Head back to the village, take two dozen men with you.  Save those you can.”

    Lenoth hurried out and Midori stood in the middle of his tent thinking about the young man he’d met last night.  The one he’d mistook for a serf, the tattoo on the younger man’s back disturbed him.  A vibrant phoenix standing on a twisted vine, the artwork intricate and precise, if the rebels got a hold of him they were going to destroy him.

    He left his tent in a mad dash, running to the makeshift stable they’d erected for the horses.  He took his black stallion, ignoring Naro’s call of surprise, and galloped toward the village.

    ****

    The rebels were taking over the village.

    Yoshi helped the two women from the teahouse run through a small alley behind the teahouse and led them to a deserted back road.  He urged them to head straight to their houses.

    He ran back to the market intent on finding Sando, only to find that the rebels had overrun the market.  The rebels took whatever they wanted from the stalls, killing any man who stood up to them.  He gritted his teeth when one of them held a sword to a woman selling grain.  She raised her hands in fear and allowed them to take her stock.

    Yoshi pressed against the wall of a wooden stall and ran through his options.  Sando wasn’t in the market, which meant he’d probably gone to the teahouse to check on him.  Since the rebels had taken over the teahouse first, Sando would assume he’d returned to the inn.

    Taking a deep breath, he turned back the way he’d come, picking his way through a muddy path between wooden stalls.  He ducked falling thatch and gritted his teeth when he slipped on a rock and got mud on half his boot.  The path led him to a wider road in the back of the market.  Happy to see no rebels, he turned right and started running, headed for the old granny’s house.

    The rhythm of his footsteps filled his ears as he ran along the dirt road; he ignored screams and clashing swords in the distance.  He hoped Telia and Hinna had gotten to the inn.  Rebels in this town meant his would-be assassins weren’t far behind.  Heart pounding from his effort, elation swept through him when he caught sight of the inn’s roof.

    Five more minutes, he counted.

    A shout filled the air and he turned to see who was behind him.  The motion slowed him down and he gasped when he saw a group of rebels riding toward him.  Ice filled his veins and he increased his speed, his relief disappearing.  He was dressed as a merchant.  Since he didn’t actually have merchandise to trade, the odds weren’t in his favor.  He kept running because when they caught him, they were going to kill him.

    Their horses were fast; they caught up with him right at the inn’s gates.  He gave a harsh gasp when a whip cracked and pain exploded across his back.  He stumbled and fell on his stomach on the ground.  He skinned his palms, ignoring the pain; he dug his fingers into the dirt and grabbed handfuls.  The whip cracked again, but he rolled on his left to escape the man wielding the deadly leather cord.  He got to his knees, and with his right hand, threw dirt at the whip wielding man.

    The man cursed and turned his horse away to clear his vision, giving Yoshi the space to escape the circle the three horsemen had created.

    “Capture him,” the man with the whip ordered, his tone filled with irritation.  “He’s got spirit.  I want to play with him.”

    Yoshi tried to run into the homestead but one of the horses reared up, and struck his left side.  He stumbled to the ground again, and before he could get his balance, a sharp sword pressed against his neck.  Yoshi closed his eyes and hoped Sando, Telia and Hinna had managed to escape the village.

    “We caught ourselves a pretty one,” one of the men said as he squatted down to touch Yoshi’s jaw.  “Are you sure you want him dead?”

    “No survivors,” the whip wielding man said in a gruff tone.  “We can’t ignore our orders.  I’ll let you whip him after I’m done.”

    “He’ll be close to dead, where’s the fun in that?” the man touching his face complained.

    Yoshi closed his eyes, gritting his teeth when the sword at his neck pressed into his skin.  If he struggled, the sharp blade was going to cut into him.  Strong hands took his hands and forced them to his back.

    “Do we have to go back to the market?” the man holding the sword against his neck asked his companions.  “Those bastards won’t be done until tomorrow.”

    “We can stay here, find out what the pretty one was running to protect.”  The whip wielding man started toward the inn.  “Bring him.”

    The sword disappeared and he started struggling, the two men hauled him up to his feet and rewarded his fight with a punch to his stomach.  He gasped and doubled over, before he could catch his breath, the tight grips on his upper arms disappeared and he fell on his knees.

    When he looked up, the black horse he’d brushed the night before stood a few feet away, its rider wielding a long sword dripping with blood.

    Midori.

    Relief flooded him at the sight of the dark, tall stranger from last night, and the three rebels dead on the ground.

    “Can you stand?” Midori asked.

    He struggled to his feet with a nod.  Midori used his sword to cut the leather cords tying his hands together.  Once he was free, Midori held out a hand to him.

    “Let’s go,” Midori said.

    “Not yet,” Yoshi said.  “There are people waiting for me.  I have to—

    “More rebels will be coming,” Midori said in a severe tone.  “We have to go now.”

    “Not yet,” Yoshi said starting toward the main house.  He needed Sando, Telia and Hinna.  He couldn’t leave them behind and his horse too.

    “Hey,” Midori called behind him but he didn’t wait.  He ran into the inn in search of Sando.

    The inn was deserted; he imagined the old granny had gone off to hide with her family.  Rushing to the room he’d shared with Sando, he was disappointed to find it empty.  He collected his sword and the simple bag Sando had packed in the morning for their trip to Earith.  Across the hall, he knocked on the room Telia and Hinna had shared.  When there was no response, he peeked in and was disappointed to find it empty too.  They had yet to return.

    Leaving the main house, he ran to the stables and sighed in relief when he found his horse Senbon waiting patiently.  Telia and Hinna’s horses were gone, but Sando’s was still in the stall.

    He saddled both horses quickly and mounted Senbon just as Midori appeared at the door.

    “We have to go.”  Midori pointed to the hill where a group of riders had appeared.  “Those are more rebels; we’ll have to ride through the trees to get to the forest.”

    Yoshi hoped Telia and Hinna had come to the same conclusion as he followed Midori behind the barn headed to the property line and the trees that led into the main forest.

    ****

    Amana Palace

    Eight black horses pulled a black lacquered carriage with gold and red trimmings on the edges.  Black curtains trimmed with gold and red embroidery covered the windows.  Royal guards walked beside the carriage, followed by a twelve-man unit of Imperial Army guards.

    The streets of Lexin city filled with mourners and curious bystanders who watched their beloved Prince Yoshi take his last ride home to the Amana palace.

    Almira stayed in her chambers as long as she could when the procession reached the inner palace.  When Sayuri, her most trusted chambermaid, walked in, she met her gaze.

    “Did you check?” Almira asked.

    Sayuri bowed her head in apology.  “Forgive me, Your Majesty.  The defense minister won’t let me get close.  Your cousin, Prince Tailen insists you must be the one to identify the body.”

    Almira closed her eyes and invoked the spirits to protect her son.  “Very well, let’s get this over with.”

    Sayuri nodded and hurried over to check her skirts.  Almira allowed Sayuri to adjust a few pins in her hair before she headed for the door.  She found the courtyard outside the inner palace filled with people.  The black carriage stood at the bottom of the stairs, with eight royal guards guarding the body.

    Sayuri walked behind her as they went down the stairs to the carriage.  Her hands clenched tight under her sleeves, she cursed her cousin for this.  The hate he must carry to make her go through this so publicly, she gritted her teeth.

    The royal guards dropped their heads when she got to them.  One of them opened the carriage door and when she gave a nod, he jumped into the carriage and stood over the body.  Sayuri took a step closer to her, probably afraid she was going to fall in shock.

    Almira turned her head to her right to see Prince Tailen watching her.  His expression was full of amusement.  The royal guard in the carriage pulled the red silk sheet covering the body to reveal a pale face ruined by sword slashes from eye to jaw.  She couldn’t tell who he was.  His slight build was similar to Yoshi.  She could see why Tailen had thought this would work.

    The royal guard lifted the body’s right hand to show her the ring that would identify Yoshi.  Those hands made her pause, slender, and clean.  She reached for Sayuri’s hand and prayed for strength.  The gods help her but this stranger in her son’s clothing looked just like the prince.

    The royal guard stepped out of the carriage and bowed low before her.

    “We mourn for The Prince Yoshi’s death, and your loss, Your Majesty.”

    Almira nodded and turned to go up the stairs.  The crowd of people in her courtyard bowed their heads and repeated the condolence words said by the royal guard.  She concentrated on not tripping on the stairs.  She found her cousin Prince Tailen and the chief chancellor waiting at the entrance into the palace.

    “Your Majesty, with your permission, we shall prepare for the funeral and set a two-week mourning period across the empire,” the Chief Chancellor said.

    Swallowing hard, she held her composure and shook her head.  “The Prince Yoshi was my only son.  I insist on a month to mourn his death.”

    “Your Majesty,” Prince Tailen said ready to protest.

    Almira turned to the court ministers on her left.

    “He was a good Prince to you, to this Empire and he was also my only son.”  Leveling her gaze on the Minister of Defense she asked, “Would you have the people forget him so easily?”

    Silence filled the courtyard and when no one protested, the Chief Chancellor bowed.

    “We shall mourn the Prince Yoshi for a month, Your Majesty.”

    Almira ignored her cousin’s glare and stormed into the palace.  She hoped she’d bought enough time to get Yoshi back to Lexin city and the palace alive.

    *****

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