Tag: Empresses

  • 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.

    *****

    yoshi2

  • Crown Prince Yoshi – 2

    The village Telia spoke of was in a deep valley surrounded by the Furian forest.  Yoshi had exchanged horses with her in case someone else recognized Senbon.  When they reached a path leading to a bridge, a girl appeared from the bushes with a black horse following her.

    Telia stopped Senbon and jumped to the dirt road.  Sando looked at him with a raised brow when Telia hurried to hug the girl.  The young girl had short spiky red hair, wore burgundy leggings that disappeared into soft leather boots and a warm red sweater that she tied at the waist with a black belt.

    Telia ruffled the girl’s short locks.  “Your Highness, I apologize for using the title, but I must to make this introduction.  My sister, Hinna, is going to be with us.”

    Yoshi met light-green smiling eyes, “Nice to meet you, Hinna.  I hope you weren’t waiting long.”

    “Is it a good idea to bring a child along?” Sando demanded of Telia.  “We’re in danger here.”

    “Hinna is a Furian,” Telia said as though that was the only explanation needed.  She nodded to Hinna who mounted her horse.  “We’ll follow her; she has found us a place to stay for the night.”

    Yoshi gave Sando a warning glance.

    They followed the two women along the dirt road into the village in the valley.  A cluster of houses filled the bottom of the gorge.  Tiered farming patches made up the land to the tree line.  He wondered if their harvest would last the villagers through the coming winter months.  The first buildings they passed were made of mud with thatched roofs.  Curtains covered the windows.  A girl dressed in a plain rough tunic and pants led an old ox into an adjoining barn.  She waved at them in greeting.  Hinna returned the gesture with a slight smile.

    “We’re staying at her grandmother’s house,” Hinna explained.

    Where he slept didn’t matter anymore.  Yoshi sighed, his thoughts centered on his mother and the assassins.  He glanced at Sando and wondered if his chamberlain could return to the palace unnoticed to tell his mother that he was alive.

    He’d be left alone with Telia…he bit his lip.

    Trust was important right now, and he didn’t know Telia.  She could be part of this treasonous plot.  How many in the palace were involved?  What of the Imperial Army?  If they hadn’t relieved Princess Naria in the north, where had they gone?  Who had the power to control the Imperial army?

    “Yoshi,” Sando called.

    He looked up to find they’d arrived at a modest compound.  The houses were made of mud bricks, the roofs tiled and the entrance was lighted with two lanterns.  An old woman stood there waiting for them.

    Telia, Hinna and Sando dismounted.  He sighed and got off Telia’s horse.  Sando took the reins out of habit.

    “Welcome, I was worried young Hinna got lost.  She told me she’d wait for you in the forest.”  The old woman smiled wide.  “The horses can stay in the barn.  The young serf can take care of them.  I don’t have anyone else working here.”

    Sando started reaching for the reins and the old woman frowned.  She gave Yoshi a hard disapproving glance.

    Yoshi glanced at his clothes and sighed.  He’d forgotten he was still in the clothes he’d borrowed from the serf.  With a pained frown, he bowed and called out to Sando.

    “Master Sando, I’ll take the horses.  Why don’t you go have a rest?”

    Sando froze in his tracks.  Yoshi hid a smile and nodded to the old woman.  Sando handed him the reins while Telia chuckled under her breath.

    “Brush them, check for injuries, and give them water,” Sando murmured.

    He smiled at Sando as he urged the horses toward the barn the woman indicated.  He was keenly aware of Hinna, Telia and Sando watching him as he disappeared into the barn.  An ox stared at him as he got the horses settled in their stalls on one side of the barn.  He found a brush on a worktable in the corner.

    He worked steadily for the next hour, brushing the horses, making sure there were no injuries or swelling joints.  He got fresh hay and water from a pump outside the barn.  It was dark out when he finally settled Senbon.  He stood in the stall petting Senbon’s mane, his thoughts on his mother at the palace.

    He’d be preparing to have dinner with his mother if he were at the palace.  He’d always thought it tedious to dress in the evening for a meal, but now he missed the routine.  Was his mother seated at the dining table worrying for him?

    “That is a magnificent horse,” an appreciative masculine voice interrupted his thoughts.

    He jerked his head up to stare at the tall dark figure standing right outside Senbon’s stall.  His hand moved to his waist, a curse escaped as he realized he didn’t have his sword.

    “I’m sorry.  I didn’t mean to startle you, serf.”  The stranger shifted at Senbon’s trough.  “Who is your master?  I must compliment him on such a magnificent creature.”

    Yoshi bit his lip and lowered his head reluctantly.  “My master is inside, my lord.”

    “What is your name?”

    “Yoshi,” he said, lowering his head farther in case the man took a closer look.

    “Your parents named you after the Prince.  How ambitious.  They must have wished you well.”

    He didn’t think the statement required a reply.  The man’s voice was deep, thrilling, and mysterious.

    The stranger walked into the stall moving closer to Senbon.  The white stallion shifted, nervous.  Yoshi laid a hand on the stallion’s mane to calm him.  The stranger smiled and reached out to touch Senbon’s mane too.

    “Tell your master to take care; I might want to buy his horse.”

    As if he’d ever allow that, he scoffed with a frown.  He couldn’t stomach the idea of selling Senbon.

    The dark stranger stunk of sweat from days of not bathing.  He lowered his head, hoping to bury his nose into his tunic but the scent assaulted him as the stranger continued to pet Senbon.  His gaze fell on the black leather military boots the man wore.

    He frowned.

    The dark leather was stained with dark mud and splatters of…blood?

    His head came up fast, his frown deepening when he saw the sword sheath.  Red and gold tongues of fire decorated the carefully crafted wood.  The man was from Fier.

    “I came to ask you to look after my horse.  He’s in the next stall.  Be careful, Midnight is spirited.  You have to be gentle with him.”

    Yoshi bit back a groan before he bowed lower.  He froze when a callused hand caressed his jaw.

    “If you do a good job, you could make extra money later tonight.  I’ll look for you after dinner.”

    The hand dropped away and he breathed out in relief.

    The man left the barn in quick strides.  Yoshi straightened up wondering what that meant.

    Make extra money, how? He looked at Senbon.

    “What do you think he means?” he murmured to Senbon.

    Afraid the dark stranger might return, he rushed out and made short work of the large dark stallion.  He left the barn once he finished and was glad to see Sando waiting for him right outside the main house.

    “What took you so long?” Sando asked, a frown dancing on his forehead.

    “A rider from Fier wanted my help.  He also told me he’ll look for me later, if I want to make extra money.”

    Sando gasped and closed his eyes in anguish.  “If she finds out, she’ll have my head.  How dare he ask you such a thing?”

    Yoshi patted Sando’s shoulder.

    “Don’t worry, Sando.  I won’t tell if you don’t.  Besides, I doubt the rider will remember.  He didn’t see my face.”

    Sando scoffed.  “Have you seen your face?  Don’t forget you’re the only serf on the farm.  I need to find a better clothing solution for you.  I asked the old woman to bring food to our room.  There is a bathhouse near the river behind the main house.  I ordered hot water for you.  We must get you a change of clothes.  I won’t have others mistaking you for a serf.”

    “The Fier Officer, did he introduce himself?” Yoshi asked as Sando led him to the bathhouse.

    “He didn’t.” Sando opened the door into the simple large room built with wood.  Warm yellow light from the lanterns on the wall brightened the bathhouse.  “I will go find you new clothes while you bathe.  I’ll ask Telia to talk to the Fier Rider.”

    Sando led him to the middle of the room where a large copper bathtub stood filled with water.

    Yoshi pulled off the serf’s tunic and trousers eager to enter the heated water.  A soft appreciative moan escaped as he sunk into the moderately hot water.

    Sando reached for the turban on Yoshi’s head and removed it, undoing the braid he’d made in the coach earlier in the day.

    Yoshi’s long dark hair tumbled down his back and he sighed as the pressure from the tight braid eased.

    “I’ll be right back.” Sando patted his shoulder gently.  “You have a few minutes to yourself.”

    Yoshi murmured his thanks and ducked his head under the warm water.  The heat soothed his aching muscles.  Small stings on his arms reminded him of the scratches from branches in the forest.  When he couldn’t hold his breath anymore, he sat up wiping water from his eyes with his right palm.  He blinked a few drops out of his eyes and pushed his hair back pushing it to one side to squeeze out the water.

    A gasp filled the room and he turned fast to find the tall man he’d met in the stables standing behind him.  Panic brought him to his feet in the tub, his hair dripping water to the floor as he turned to face the intruder.

    “What are you doing here?”

    “I came to bathe, obviously, you’re no serf.  Why did you let me think you were?”

    Yoshi stared at the tall man, his gaze lingering on a flat defined chest, a washboard stomach.  Silk drawstring trousers tied low on slender hips.  Delicious body, he forced his gaze back to knowing dark eyes.

    “I didn’t let you think anything.  You assumed I was a serf on your own.”

    The man laughed.

    “The fire in your eyes certainly proves your point.  No serf would dare look at me as you do, Yoshi.  Will you tell me who you are?”

    The warm yellow light did nothing to soften the harsh chiseled jaw or the hard dark eyes studying him.   The stranger’s dark hair fell around his shoulders in wild disarray.  A white cloth was thrown over a broad shoulder in preparation for a bath.

    Yoshi found he couldn’t look away from the stranger’s lips delicately framed by a trimmed thin beard.  Hating the attraction, he scowled.

    “I don’t like being at a disadvantage.  Tell me your name, Fier Rider.”

    “How do you know I’m from Fier?”

    “The sheath of your sword, and your boots,” Yoshi said meeting amused dark eyes.

    The man nodded with a small smile, “My name is Midori.”

    Midori came closer and walked around the tub.  Yoshi started to turn with him, but a soft touch on his right shoulder stopped him.  He tensed as that hand pushed strands of his long dark hair over his shoulder.  Callused fingers traced gently over the curve of his neck, skimming down his spine, stopping at the small of his back.  He closed his eyes afraid those exploring fingers would stop.

    A finger caressed the small of his back.  He felt it trace over the jade vine that stopped at the curve of his buttocks.  Midori’s fingers skimmed up his back, drawing the vibrant red phoenix perched on the jade vine on his back.  He’d cried hours when he’d gotten the tattoo.  He’d been ten years old, lying on his stomach while his mother did the tattoo.

    “What does it mean?”  Midori’s fingers circled his neck gently.

    He felt mesmerized by those strong fingers on his skin.

    “It means nothing,” he managed when those exploring fingers rested on his shoulders.

    He shivered when Midori came around to stand in front of him and he decided it was because his bath water was getting cold.

    “Your hair is beautiful.”  Midori got closer, so close he could feel the brush of Midori’s chest against his.  With every breath, he took in Midori’s scent.  He swayed when Midori leaned in to whisper in his left ear.  “I want you.”

    “No.” Yoshi opened his eyes and stared at Midori’s golden skin.  “It’s forbidden.”

    A husky laugh had him tensing.  He looked into dark eyes in surprise when Midori’s hand ran down his stomach and slid lower to capture his hardening erection.

    “Your body doesn’t think so.”

    “Even if my body wants it,” he managed to say conscious of Midori’s heat, that hand stroking him slowly.  He bit his lip to keep from moaning.  “It’s still forbidden.”

    A sword appeared at Midori’s neck.  Midori let go of him slowly and raised his hands.  He turned to find Sando standing a few feet away a bundle of clothes and wooden sandals in one hand, the other holding the sword.

    “Get out of the water, Yoshi,” Sando ordered, his grip steady, the tip of the sword against Midori’s vital vein at his neck.

    “Sando, relax.”  Yoshi got out of the water.

    Sando held out a black robe, he took it and pulled it over his wet body.  Sando dropped the sandals on the floor for him and he jammed his feet into them.

    “You have a body guard?” Midori raised a brow when Sando growled a warning.  “You should have told me I needed permission to touch you, Yoshi.”

    “I warned you, you didn’t listen.”  Yoshi tied the belt on the long robe and smiled.  He gave the taller man a short bow.  “Have a good bath, my lord.”

    “I’ll see you around.”  Midori looked at Sando.  “Take him with you.  I like my privacy.”

    Yoshi left the bathhouse aware that Sando wouldn’t withdraw his sword until he was out of sight.  Sando caught up with him a few minutes later still carrying the bundle of clothing.

    “You have no sense of preservation.”  Sando admonished walking fast.  “I leave you alone for a minute, and you get yourself in trouble.”

    “It’s not my fault.  He came to bathe.  I can’t control what other’s think.  You looked very convincing with that sword.”

    “I was going to chop his head off, but you looked like you wanted his touch.”

    “Did I?”

    Sando led him into their room.  The room was large enough to hold two beds and a small sitting area.  Telia and Hinna sat at the small table talking.  When they saw him, they started to stand but he waved them down.  Sando closed the door behind him.

    “I have news,” Telia said as he sat on one of the beds by the wall.  “The army is headed for Fier.”

    “Are you sure?” Sando frowned dumping his load of clothing on the other bed.  “The Princess is not in Fier.  Who gave you this information?”

    “We have contacts in this village.” Hinna held up a yellow token.  “One of the merchants in the village was paid with this by a sentry.  The army is headed for Fier.”

    Yoshi closed his eyes in disappointment.

    Four Quads made up the Empire of Amana.  The Fier quad was to the north of the Empire.  Fier was vast with rich red soil that came from the volcanic mountains at the heart of the quad.  The Furian forest bordered Fier’s south side.  The Sanori clan had ruled Fier for millennia.  Namik Sanori was the current head of the clan, a son in his mid-twenties was to succeed him.

    Yoshi frowned; he couldn’t remember the name of the son.  His mother was always talking of Namik, it was difficult to remember he’d die one day and another heir would take over.  One thing he did know was that Namik was no friend of Almira Taimeng.  Namik hated the Empress.  Yoshi was sure Namik would love to see him dethroned, to spite Almira.

    “What are you thinking about?” Sando asked him.

    “Two weeks ago, Namik Sanori sent two of his officials to request the Empress’s presence in Fier.  He claimed concern of high tensions between the rebels and his soldiers.  He claimed the rebels were attacking the small villages surrounding Fier.  Namik suggested making a peace agreement with the rebels.  The Empress promised to make the trip in order to show stability to the people.”

    Yoshi looked at Sando, a frown dancing on his forehead.

    “It could have been a trap,” Telia said shifting in her seat to look at him.  “They must have known the Empress wouldn’t make it and would have to send you.”

    “What does Namik hope to gain from having my cousin on the throne?” Yoshi asked.  “If the Imperial Army is heading to Fier, Namik will be unstoppable.  He’ll raid all the lands around him, including the Furian forest and move on to the capital city.  He’ll destroy, leaving nothing to rule over.”

    Telia stood up and started pacing the length of the room.  “We have to find a way to make sure the army doesn’t get to Fier.”

    “The Chief General does not deviate from the orders given by the Imperial Diet.” Sando turned to Yoshi, “unless an order comes directly from a Prince or the Empress.”

    “No one can know he’s alive until we understand the situation.”  Telia protested shaking her head.  “It is better to let the army go to Fier.  We can head west.  We need allies, Your Highness, people loyal to the House of Taimeng.”

    “We can’t allow the army to reach Fier,” Yoshi said shaking his head.  He couldn’t imagine what Namik would do with the power of the Imperial Army.  “That‘s too much power.  The Princess Naria can’t handle three times the enemy no matter how good she is.”

    “She can handle herself.” Telia responded her eyes flashing a bright red that had Hinna running to her side.

    The Furian temper was always so close.  He watched her reign it under control a bit unnerved by her outburst.

    “We head to Earith in the morning,” Telia said, her tone rough.  “We need to start creating an army of our own.  If Earith’s army joins forces with the Princess Naria, we’ll be able to fight against Fier.”

    Yoshi narrowed his gaze, noting the moment Telia regained control.  “Very well, Earith’s army will help me save my mother.”

    “You must consider the possibility that your mother might already…” Telia stopped when he jumped off the bed his eyes blazing with anger.  She bowed her head quickly.  “Forgive me, Your Highness.  I pray for the Empress’s good health.  Please have a good night.”

    She and Hinna hurried out of the room and he was left standing with his fists clenched tight.  He had to believe his mother was alive.  He had no choice.

    ***

    Amana Palace

    Almira Taimeng ran a long finger over the delicate clear bowl, her gaze fixed on the golden tips on her fingers.  Her head hurt, the flower pins stuck into her hair felt tight.  The richly embroidered yellow robes felt hot, she wished she could rip them off.

    Yoshi would have teased her about her ceremonial clothing by now.  He hated formality always chafing against the palace rules.

    She pushed the bowl away, refusing to sip the water her chamberlain had poured for her.  Yoshi, she fought to keep a calm facade.  The room had eyes in the walls, watching, always watching.

    “Your Majesty,” a taunting tone said into the large dining hall.  “You must eat your dinner.  You must look after your health.”

    She held her tongue refusing to look at the man standing at the other end of the table.  It was difficult to think of him as her cousin.  She’d spent most of her fifty years searching for something to love insider her younger cousin.

    Her parents had been sage rulers of the Amana Empire.  As such, she’d gained the birthright to rule the Empire the moment she’d taken her first breath.  She was an only child and had spent her youth training to be the Empress.

    Her cousin however, she studied her dinner plate; he’d always chafed against their different statuses.  Tailen wanted the chance to take the crown from her, to the point of urging the Imperial Diet to change the rules so that only a man could inherit the throne.  Being an only child, had that rule passed, he’d have been next in-line for the throne.  The bill had fallen through but it was the first time she’d truly realized how much Tailen Meng hated her.  She should have known her cousin’s jealousies would only deepen with the years.

    She considered Tailen Meng evil.  It was a sad thing to think about a member of her family, but he’d committed too many atrocities in the past forty years for her to forgive him.  He enjoyed torturing people especially if he knew she would get hurt in the process.  Lately, his agenda to gain power had intensified and she now worried for her son’s safety.  He was unable to remove her from power but assassinating Yoshi would give him power by birthright.  The Imperial Diet’s rules stated Tailen’s son was next in line after Yoshi.  She fought her shudder.  Why hadn’t she forced Yoshi to get married sooner?  He’d have an heir to take his place….

    “Your Majesty,” Tailen said.

    She sat back in the large chair slowly and feigned indifference.

    “What brings you to my palace, Tailen?” she asked deliberately leaving out his title.  He hated it when she did that.  She noted the wince on his face immediately.  “Don’t you have a house of your own?”

    Tailen gave her a mock bow.  “I have news, Your Majesty.  There is a terrible rumor in Lexin city.  The Court Ministers won’t share it with you until they have proof, but I think you should know.”

    “Do share, dear cousin.  What is this rumor that I must hear?”

    “The Prince Yoshi is dead.”  Tailen gloated as he declared his news.

    Almira ruthlessly controlled her panic.  She held on to her calm façade not moving a single muscle.  Tailen never gloated without proof.  She wondered if her plan had failed.

    “Prince Tailen, thank you for your consideration.”

    “This is such a tragedy, isn’t it?” Tailen paced along the dining table coming toward her slowly.  “You were just about to formally declare him the successor to your throne.  Such a young age to die, twenty-one, perhaps you should have done it sooner.”

    She gritted her teeth and stiffened every muscle to keep from scratching his eyes out.  How dare he come to gloat?  Yoshi was alive.  Tailen stopped right before her and gave her another mocking bow.

    “I promise to be at your side, Your Majesty, through this difficult time.”

    “We shall remember your offer, Prince Tailen,” she said with a small dismissive nod.

    He scowled when she didn’t give him a larger reaction.  His gaze narrowed on her and then he turned and left without a backward glance.

    She watched him leave the dining hall.  Once the doors closed, she waited a few minutes before she stood up and left the hall through discrete doors behind her chair.  She headed to the inner palace, her only current sanctuary.  She’d needed to be at the dining hall for appearances.  Guards stood in intervals along the corridors; she schooled her steps, fighting the urge to run to her rooms.

    She entered her suite and waited until the doors closed before she allowed the trembling.  She held on to a flower stand and closed her eyes.

    Yoshi, she mourned.

    A soft knock on her door had her taking a deep harsh breath.  She moved around the flower stand to a bench and sat down.

    “Enter,” she ordered, her voice strong.

    The doors opened and her two trusted confidants entered her suite.   She braced for the truth.  They closed the doors and came to stand before her.  Zia Sayu and Tai Migi were twins she’d saved from a raided farm in the South of the Empire.

    She’d brought them back to the palace and raised them along her son as royal guards.  These past three years, the twins had become her most trusted servants.

    “Tell me,” she ordered, her gaze fixed on Zia Sayu.

    Zia kept her hair in a tight bun on top of her head.  Her dark clothing hid her figure and the double swords she preferred.

    “He is safe for now,” Zia said, her tone low, wary of eavesdroppers.  “The Furian found him on time but there is a complication.”

    “Complication,” Almira frowned.  “If they don’t have him, they can’t force me to choose that stupid brat.  They must have proof to convince the Imperial Diet and the people.”

    “They have a body dressed in The Prince’s travel clothing and a ring.” Tai bowed lower.  “It is my fault.  I should have gotten to the carriage sooner.”

    “What do you mean?”  Her cousin’s excitement made sense.  If he had a body, gotten from the Prince’s carriage—

    She got to her feet.  “The moment I declare that body is not Yoshi they will send more assassins after him.  Prince Tailen wants his son, Saki Meng, on the throne.  He has planned for this.  I have no choice but to announce the death of my son in order to protect him.”

    “Then we must get the Prince back to the palace.”  Zia consoled her.  “Let us go and get him.”

    “He is safer out there.  If he returns to the palace, it will be easier for them to kill him.  We have spent the past month protecting him from assassins.  Opposition has strong allies in this palace and with the Imperial Diet.  I can’t watch my son poisoned.”  Almira stopped pacing.  “He must remain out of the palace until I find a solution.  I need to clean out the Imperial Diet.  I need to remove the ones Tailen has corrupted.”

    “Give us your orders,” Tai asked.

    She paced the length of the bench.

    The Princess Naria was fighting rebels to the North of the Furian forest.  Her son was lost in the Furian forest.  She suspected the Imperial Army was under her cousin’s command.  The way they’d left…she frowned.  She didn’t like it.  The House of Meng was controlling the Imperial Diet.  Tailen was pushing her into a corner, he wanted her to roll over and allow his son to inherit the throne.

    She hurried to a writing table a few feet away and pulled out a small box from a drawer.  She poured wax from a red candle on to blank rice paper and rolled it.  She tied the paper with a red ribbon from her desk, took the ring and walked back to Zia.

    “Take this to Terra in the south.”  She handed Zia the rolled letter and slipped the ring deftly into Zia’s palm.  She met Zia’s gaze.  “Be safe.”

    Almira turned to Tai.  “Find the Phoenix.  Guard him until he returns to the palace.”

    “What about you, Your Majesty?” Tai asked worried.

    “I have Sayuri.  I will be fine.  The Phoenix is more important, bring him back to me.”

    ****

    ←Chapter 1

    yoshi2

  • Crown Prince Yoshi – 1

    Yoshi Taimeng sat with his head leaned back, his eyes closed.  Two hours stifled in the royal coach was exhausting him.  He was bored, three more hours and he was going to get comatose.  He wished he were on his horse, riding hard.

    “Your highness,” a soft voice cut into his thoughts.

    He raised his head to look at the younger man seated across him.  Sando Kari, his chamberlain, held out a gold-coated bottle.  “Water, your highness, you must stay hydrated.”

    Yoshi took the bottle and sipped the water.  With his free hand, he reached out to pull back the yellow silk curtains to look out the window.  They were crossing the vast Imperial Lands headed for the Furian forest.  Long red grass covered the open fields, the wind teasing the long blades, their color bright in the mid-morning sun.  There was no civilization in sight; there were no rules or obligations in this place.  Yoshi’s lips twitched into a smile.  He dropped the curtain and turned to Sando.  He gave the bottle back and reached for the red silk belt at his waist.

    “I want to ride Senbon.”

    “Your Highness,” Sando gasped his eyes wide in protest.  “You mustn’t, if the Empress was to discover that-”

    “My mother is not here.  We’ll keep it between us and the royal guards won’t know.  I have a plan.”

    He pulled off the belt and removed the richly embroidered red silk tunic he wore.  Sando’s eyes were wide with shock.  Yoshi ignored the reaction and pounded on the top of the coach signaling for the convoy to stop.  A royal guard rode up to the window and asked quietly through the curtain.

    “Is Your Highness alright?”

    “Send me one of the serfs.”  Yoshi sat back in his seat and grinned at Sando who was ready to fall off his seat.  “Relax, no one will ever know.”

    “Please put your clothes back on, Your Highness.”  Sando picked up the red tunic and held it out.  “You don’t want the serf to carry tales.  Please stop undressing, Your Highness.”

    There was a soft knock on the coach door, and Sando sighed when Yoshi regally ordered him to open the door.  The large coach allowed for comfortable wide benches on each side.  There was a wide space between the benches.  Sando gave him a suffering glance before he ushered in a young man in beige robes made of linen and a matching wrap on his head.  The serf kept his head bowed low and didn’t speak as he stood before Yoshi.

    “Pay your respects,” Sando ordered him.  The young man gasped and as impossible as it seemed he bent his head even lower.  Sando closed the coach door and turned to Yoshi with a raised brow.

    Yoshi smiled at him before he ordered. “Strip, Serf.”

    “Your Highness,” Sando said in alarm.  It was forbidden for any clothing other than the robes made at the palace to touch the prince’s body.  For him to think of exchanging clothes with a serf—

    Sando shuddered.  “What are you doing?”

    The serf did as asked no doubt worried he might lose his head if he disobeyed.  Yoshi was glad for it.  He grabbed his tunic from the bench where Sando had left it and gave it to the serf.

    “Wear it and hand me your clothes.”

    Sando moved fast and took the beige uniform hostage a horrified expression on his face.  He shook his head when Yoshi glared at him.

    “You can’t wear these clothes, Your Highness.  It is forbidden.  Please, wear your own.  I will get Senbon for you.  I can take the Empress’s punishment.”

    Yoshi gave a long exasperated sigh and reached for Sando’s royal blue robes.  He smiled into the younger man’s eyes, distracting him.  Sando blushed and his grip on the serf’s clothing slackened.  Yoshi took them and quickly ducked his head under the tunic.  In minutes, he was dressed as the serf while the serf uncomfortably wore his rich clothing.

    Yoshi pulled off the gold clip that held his hair up on his head.  The long black strands fell around his shoulders tumbling down his back.  He ran fingers through his scalp to ease the pressure on his head with a small moan.  Once finished, he turned his back to Sando who braided his hair neatly.  Sando twisted his hair into a knot in the back of his head and then tied the turban the serf had used.

    “Sando, ask for Senbon.  Tell the royal guard that I’ve ordered the serf to ride the horse for exercise.”

    “Yes, Your Highness.”  Sando left the coach and he turned to the serf.

    “What’s your name?” he asked of the man now seated in his place his head held down.

    “Ting, Your Highness,” the serf replied in a low hesitant tone.

    “Ting,” Yoshi repeated quietly.  “I will take your place for a while.”

    He reached for a small onyx box from a bag on the floor and pulled out a fake gold ring that he handed to the serf. “Take this, Ting.  The Royal Guards get curious.  It should protect you until I’ve had my ride.  I will be back before you know it.”

    “Yes, Your Highness.”  The serf took the ring and placed it on his right index finger.  It was common knowledge which finger he wore his ring.  As a result, his mother had taken other measures in case she needed to identify him.  He smiled at the thought; it was their secret, only Sando knew the truth of the phoenix on his back.  Sando knocked on the door and Yoshi left the coach without a backward glance at the serf.

    “Follow me,” Sando said once he stepped out of the coach.

    Yoshi hid a smile as he lowered his head so that none of the royal guards would know who he was.  The brown trousers he wore were long.  He was glad for it, as he realized that he’d forgotten to change his fine black boots.  Sando suddenly stopped and nodded to a white stallion.

    “This is Senbon, His Highness’s stallion.  Ride him well, be kind to him.”  Sando was certainly playing his part very well.  Yoshi bowed slightly to Sando as was expected.  He took the horse’s reins.  The stallion shifted and he murmured a few words to keep him calm.  Senbon relaxed and he smiled.  He couldn’t fool the horse, the magnificent animal was well aware of whom his master was.

    The moment he was on the saddle, he urged the horse forward.  He turned to see Sando order the head Royal guard to start the convoy again.  Satisfied that his temporary escape seemed successful, Yoshi crouched low over Senbon and murmured.  “Run, Senbon.”

    The great white stallion responded, galloping in swift strides across the open plains of the Imperial Lands.  Senbon quickly ate up the distance, his hooves cutting a path through the long red grass.  He rushed towards the Furian forest.  The wind on his face, Yoshi felt free, ready to face anything.  His heart thundered in his chest, his body flowed into Senbon’s movements.  He lost himself in the exhilarating ride.  It was hard to get a chance like this at home.  There were so many rules guarding his life at the palace, he never got to really live.

    Senbon suddenly swerved to the left, the movement hard and jerky.  A loud whipping sound filled the air and Yoshi ducked lower over the horse just as an object whizzed by his ear.  He gripped Senbon’s reins securely, forcing him to slow down.  He looked over his shoulder in time to see Sando riding toward him.

    Sando waved his arms at him, and he frowned.  His chamberlain was going to ruin his plan if he kept that up.  If Sando panicked, the royal guards would too.  He brought the stallion to a stop and frowned as something glinted in the sky.  The stallion shifted and he gasped as he realized it was an arrow.

    Senbon moved just as the powerful iron-tipped arrow sank into the ground where he’d stood. Yoshi urged Senbon into motion.  They had to get to the edge of the forest.  Senbon could make the distance, but Sando—

    He turned to make sure that Sando was still behind him.  The chestnut Sando was using wasn’t fast enough.  The arrows were too close.

    Yoshi turned Senbon around and raced toward his chamberlain.  Sando started yelling his voice inaudible.  When he reached Sando, Yoshi held out his hand to the younger man.

    “You’re crazy, your highness.  We’re under attack, you must get away.”  Sando was hysterical as he reached for Yoshi’s hand.

    “Let the chestnut go,” he ordered.

    He gave Sando a powerful tag that had him tumbling off his horse.  Sando gripped his right shoulder and managed to get on Senbon.  Yoshi urged the stallion into a hard gallop toward the forest.  The chestnut tried to keep up, but couldn’t.

    “Who is it?” he demanded when Sando clutched his waist tightly.

    “They are wearing red hoods over their heads all I could see were very dark eyes.  They are in black clothing and very skilled with their swords.  We didn’t see them coming, one minute we were traveling slowly, the next they were upon us.  They went straight for the serf in the coach, Your Highness.  I took off the moment the royal guards started losing the fight.  We have to get you to safety.”

    “Did they ask questions?”

    Five minutes to the forest line, he glanced over his shoulder and saw two riders coming at them.  They were fast, eating up the distance.  He urged Senbon into a faster pace, the stallion responded even with Sando’s extra weight.  It wouldn’t last long enough though.

    “They didn’t,” Sando said.

    Yoshi fought fear and concentrated on the forest line.  He had no idea what they were going to do once they got there.  All he knew was that they had to get to the forest.  No questions meant assassins.  Assassins with orders not to leave anyone standing, he shuddered.

    “We must make it to the forest.”

    He felt Sando shift behind him.

    “They’re getting closer, Your Highness.  Senbon is getting tired.  You’ll make it alone if you let me get off.”

    “We’ll make it.”  Yoshi snapped his eyes focused on the tree line.

    These assassins had murdered the serf thinking it was the Prince.

    An assassination attempt on his life, he frowned.

    His mother’s paranoia lately started making sense.  She’d sent him away from the palace saying he was safer with the royal guards. His mother—

    Panic seized him.

    “We have to go back to the palace.”

    “We need to get away from the riders who are coming toward us first.”  Sando pointed out, as the tree line finally got close enough.  “We will seek help from the Furian clan before we even think of returning to Lexin city.”

    Yoshi looked back this time to check the progress of the riders.  Senbon was slowing down; he caught a glimpse of dark red fabric flapping not too far behind them.  The riders caught up just as they reached the forest.  He guided Senbon into a non-existent path in the overgrown forest.

    Sando dragged a sword from the sheath tied to his waist and deflected an arrow.  Yoshi frowned and guided the stallion through thick bushes.

    It had been a long while since he’d been in the Furian forest.  He’d come when he’d been ten years old.  His mother had brought him along on her visit to the Furian leader, Princess Naria of the Furian. The clan sisters had met them at the entrance to the forest.  This time, he was entering their forest uninvited.

    “Your Highness,” Sando gasped behind him.  “We must find a place to hide, they’re relentless.”

    “I’m hoping the clan sisters have sensed our presence,” Yoshi said, looking around the forest.  “The sisters might attack us as well, but at least they always take their trespassers alive.”

    “Watch out!” Sando gripped his arm tight just as a figure in deep red skirts appeared riding on a black horse.  She rode toward them her silver sword pointed at Yoshi’s heart.

    Senbon swerved hard, and Yoshi gripped his reins as they veered into a steep grassy patch.  Behind him, the sound of arrows launching into the air filled his ears.  He gasped when Senbon jerked to an abrupt stop to keep from falling down a rocky ridge.  His heart pounding, Yoshi turned to find the figure in deep red skirts, face covered with black fabric standing over the two assassin riders her sword dripping with blood.  The arrows were in pieces around the assassin bodies, their horses paced behind her.

    Sando handed him the sword he held.  Yoshi gripped the familiar gold handle and focused on the woman.  She looked like she was waiting for him to get ready for her attack.  He blew out a shaky breath and watched as that bloody sword rose.  He loosened his grip on his sword, keeping his body relaxed ready to counter the attack but it never came.

    The woman dropped to one knee, the black cloth over her face came off to reveal a beautiful young face with short red hair and lime-colored eyes.  She bowed her head and lay her sword down on the green grass.

    “I declare my allegiance to you, Prince Yoshi of Amana, heir to the throne,” she said with a hard tone.

    He blinked when he realized he wasn’t going to be fighting.  He turned to look at Sando and shrugged when his chamberlain looked as confused as he was.

    “Who are you?” Yoshi asked remaining on Senbon.  The stallion shifted under him and moved away from the edge of the rocky ridge.

    “I am Telia of Furian.  The Princess sent me to guard you on your journey.  I’m sorry I’m late.”

    “She sent you to guard me?” Yoshi frowned.

    Sando jumped off the horse and rubbed his backside.  Yoshi hid his amusement at the little gesture and decided Sando needed more practice riding horses.

    “She’s on our side.  We should be happy, Your Highness.  This one is dangerous with her sword,” Sando said pointing to the two dead men.

    “Check those two, find out who they are.” Yoshi ordered his gaze on the Furian clan sister still kneeling on the ground.  “Why would your Princess send you to guard me?”

    “The House of Meng plots treason against the ruling Empress and her heir.” Telia looked up to meet his gaze.  “I’m to protect you until you are declared Crown Prince.”

    “What?” Sando gasped staring at Telia in shock.

    Yoshi got off Senbon, his grip on his sword getting tighter at the thought of his mother in the palace.  If they had tried to kill him, they were definitely trying to murder the Empress.  “I must get back to the palace, now.”

    “If she’s right, then you’re not safe at the palace.  We must find a place to stay while we gather more information.”  Sando countered.  “They are planned and we’re not.  We need allies.”

    “But my mother,” Yoshi said his voice laced with worry he couldn’t hide.  “She’s alone at the palace.”

    “The Empress has her guards.  They will protect her.”  Sando turned to Telia.  “Where can we find safety?”

    “You find safety.”  Yoshi turned toward Senbon.  “I’m going back to the city to help my mother.”

    “Your Highness,” Sando said in frustration.

    “You’re of no use to her dead,” Telia called out to him with a challenging tone.  “The only way you can help the Empress is to gain as many allies as you can to help you regain power.”

    “Who are you to speak to me like that?”  Yoshi turned to glare at her.  “Your kind only knows how to murder.  You know nothing of a bond between a son and his mother.”

    Telia picked up her sword and pointed it at him.  She remained kneeling, obviously still waiting for his acceptance of her allegiance.

    “You are dressed as a serf.  I can only imagine you had a double take your place.  I assume they killed the man and took the identification ring he was wearing.  They will take that to the Empress as evidence that you’re dead.  If you return to the palace, Your Highness, you’ll find everyone mourning you.  You’ll be considered an impostor.”

    Yoshi glared at her.  She was deliberately trying to annoy him.  This was a delaying tactic.  Maybe she was working with the assassins.  No one would believe that serf was the true prince.  His mother would know him.  One look at that serf and she would know he was alive.  The ring was also fake he didn’t see how their claim would work.  He paced to Senbon and grabbed the reins.  He had to return to the palace to keep his mother was safe.

    “They will not let her identify you.  A body dressed in the Prince’s clothes and also wearing your identification ring, that’s all they want.  They will hand her the ring, and declare you dead.  They’ll force the Empress into declaring the heir to the House of Meng as the Crown Prince or her life is forfeit.  No one will object.”  Telia called to him as she dropped her sword and shrugged.  “The way I see it, if you’re returning to the palace, you’re going to need more than that stallion and a chamberlain who can’t fight.”

    Sando, who’d been uncovering the assassin’s faces, gasped.  “Your Highness, these are royal guards.  I recognize them.”

    He frowned and let go of Senbon’s reins.  He hurried to Sando and stared at the familiar faces of the Imperial royal guard.

    “They take care of my uncle’s family.  Both of them belong to Saki Meng’s guard.”

    “You can’t go back.”  Sando straightened up shaking his head.  “We need help.  Treason doesn’t even begin to cover this.  The Empire is in danger.”

    “This is why I have to go back.”  Yoshi kicked one of the dead assassins and headed for his horse.  “That idiot, Saki, he can’t even tie his belt without help.  What are they thinking?”

    “If you leave the Furian Forest, you’ll be dead by midnight,” Telia informed him in a quite tone.  “You must believe me, Your Highness.”

    “Prince Yoshi.”  Sando moved away from the assassins and came to stop him from mounting Senbon.  “Please, listen to her.  Let’s wait until we get more information.  Your mother has time.  It will take them at least a week to declare the new heir.  They have to keep the Empress alive that long because she’s the only who can declare a Crown Prince.

    Yoshi leaned his head on Senbon and fought the urge to ride him back out to the Imperial Lands headed for the city.  The thought of his mother looking at that fake ring and thinking him dead…it killed him.

    “If Saki is the reason why they’re doing this, I’ll abdicate the throne, and demand my mother’s life.”

    “I know a safe place.”  Telia called to them.  “There’s a small village close to Fier where we can stay.  It will take us a couple hours to get there.”

    “Let’s go with this woman, Telia.” Sando urged him.  “She’s a good fighter, and if we can convince the Princess to send you an army full of fighters like her, rescuing your mother should be easy.”

    “What about the convoy and the trip to Fier?” Yoshi rubbed his eyes.  “If I don’t arrive there on time, the rebellion will keep going.”

    “Your Highness,” Sando said his tone gentle.  “We left the peace agreement documents in the coach.  I’m very sure they were destroyed in the attack.”

    Yoshi lifted his head from Senbon and turned to look at Telia.  “I want an audience with the Princess of your clan.”

    “She’s at battle, defending the villages on the north side of the forest.  The rebels have been attacking innocent villagers for four days now.  An audience with her is impossible.  Not with your life in danger, Your Highness.”

    “I thought the Imperial Army was sent to help her two days ago?” Yoshi frowned.  He’d been in that meeting.  “She should have relief by now.”

    “They hadn’t arrived when I left for this mission yesterday.”  Telia’s forehead creased with worry.

    Fear swept through Yoshi as he suddenly realized he didn’t know what was going on.  What would delay the Imperial Army?  They’d had explicit orders to head straight to the North of the Furian forest.

    He frowned at Telia.  “Quit that kneeling.  Call me Yoshi from now on.  We’ll go with you to this village.  I need more information on the rebels, and the missing army.  I have a feeling the answers are connected to the assassins.”

    Sando breathed in relief and headed for the two horses munching on grass near the assassins.  He got on one and grabbed the reins to the other.  Yoshi got on Senbon and they waited for Telia to mount her horse.

    She led the way out of the clearing.

    “How did you know who I was?” Yoshi asked as they picked their way through the forest.

    “Your horse,” Telia said quietly.  She turned and flashed him her first genuine smile.  “I was there when you visited with your mother eleven years ago.  My mother gave Senbon to you.  Senbon’s mother was my horse.”

    ****

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