The
constant drip of water was the only sound in the silence between us.
“I
guess not all heroes are born.” I tried weakly. A joke to cut the
weight of Arthur’s story. She didn’t laugh. “...He was born a
hero, was he not? His heart made him the perfect candidate.”
I
gave up trying to explain.
A familiar chirp echoed from the cave
entrance. The lady’s head tilted toward the sound. A small bird,
feathers the colour of rust and old blood, swooped in and landed on
my shoulder with the quiet, obedient precision of a trained thing.
“...Is
that thy beast?” she asked, her voice careful.
“His
name is Red. I found him in the Mistlands. He was..almost dead.” I
kept my voice flat. No point in dancing around it. “I used the
beast binding technique. He’s been scouring the areas.”
A
slow, understanding breath escape her. “...You know the risks of
using that technique. Especially with a creature born and soaking in
the Flo from a place like this?” It sounded like a question.
“I
didn’t have a choice.”
“Choices
are seldom given,” she said, her tone shifting into something
softer, almost..reminiscent. “ It reminds me of another. From the
Trials. She too didn’t have a choice. The Dancer of Qingzhou...She
and Arthur “**&^%$$”
[Unknown
interference jammed the rest of the conversation]
********************************************************************
In the land of Chimera, there was also a country located to the
south. Being the biggest in size and in people, it was also divided
into three parts. One part was known for its long deserts and hot
weather, the other for its temples and grassy mountains. The other,
however, was closed off. It had never been explored, and everyone who
dared had been silenced.
Mei-Mei was from the ‘Qingzhou Province’, the land with a
connection to Flo beasts and temples. She was born from a broken
promise. Her mother, Miyoko, had been the favourite mistress of a
nobleman, soothed with pretty lies of a future together every time
they had met in the brothel. She had fallen for him. But when she
told him she was expecting his child, his demeanour changed. It
turned out the man already had a family. From that day on, he never
came back.
Miyoko struggled with a terrible choice. She cried and cried,
wrestling with the thought of bringing a child into her world. How
would she face them when they got old enough to understand her job?
Would she even be alive in the distant future? She had been working
since she was sixteen, her own parents selling her off to settle a
debt. This was the only life she knew. What right did she have to
bring in a child when she could barely take care of herself?
Her answer came from a short old woman named Yen, who noticed her
absent-mindedness whilst she was on her way back from praying at a
temple. Yen radiated a warmth that made Miyoko break down and tell
her everything.
“A child,” Yen said, her voice soft as a blanket, “whether an
accident or not is a blessing not all receive. What you see as a
negative could be the blessing you need.”
Yen, who ran an orphanage, refused Miyoko’s offer to take the baby.
“You are a beautiful, kind woman. Your child will blossom under
your protection. No matter your circumstance.” A little brown and
green monkey with one small horn stood perched on Yen’s head
chittered and patted Miyoko’s hair, making them both laugh through
her tears. Before leaving, Yen laid a hand on Miyoko’s stomach and
said a prayer of protection. Miyoko, her mind made up, begged Yen to
let her child visit the orphanage. Yen just smiled and told her where
to find it.
Throughout her pregnancy, Miyoko didn’t return to the brothel. Yen
covered her bills, a luxury peasants never saw. The country was
impossibly hard and cruel to those they considered less than nobles.
When Mei-Mei was born, the midwives saw her heterochromia, one eye,
dark brown, the other eye a startling bright green. It was the mark
of a Pure Synchrite, like Lucius the Praised himself. For a glorious
moment, it seemed like destiny had saved them.
But by the age of nine, that hope was gone. Mei-Mei stood before
officials who asked her to manipulate Flo. She closed her eyes, she
strained, she prayed. Nothing happened .
“Huh. A fluke perhaps?” One grumbled. “Not a Synchrite.”
The walk home was the longest of her life. She saw the hope die in
her mother’s eyes, though Miyoko never said a word of reproach.
Instead, Mei-Mei would hear her mother’s silent, weary prayers in
the dead of night, each one a needle in her heart. She felt like a
failure.
Yet, life was not all bad. She had her mother’s fierce love. She
had Grandma Yen, and the orphanage was a raucous family of kids who
watched each other grow up.
Things turned when Mei-Mei turned fifteen. Her mother’s earnings
dwindled as her youth faded. They couldn’t rely on Yen, who already
supported an orphanage and a tavern. So, Mei-Mei and the older
orphans went to work.
Mei-Mei, who was eager to learn how to cook, started as a waitress,
navigating the leers of soldiers and nobles. When things got worse,
she begged Yen for a way to earn more.
Yen’s face grew solemn. “You can dance,” she said finally. “The
drunken men will pay for a glimpse of grace.”
Mei-Mei agreed without hesitation. She wouldn’t tell her mother.
She had grown up watching Miyoko’s elegant movements and had
practised in secret for years. This was a skill she owned, a destiny
she could forge for herself.
On her first night, hidden behind a simple white mask and a blue
kimono of Yen’s that was slightly too large, she listened to the
musician, Rei, draw a nostalgic tune from his erhu. She took a deep
breath, slid the silk curtain aside, and stepped into the spotlight.
At first, she was a ghost. But as she moved, flowing with the music,
a hush fell. One man turned. Then another. Soon, the whole tavern was
watching, captivated. The silence broke into cheers, fuelling her.
She twirled faster, Rei’s music rising to meet her, the crowd
beating on tables in rhythm. Up on that stage, she had never felt
more alive. She liked being looked at. She liked being admired.
After the performance, it was already gradually becoming late at
night. Although she didn’t get any tips on her first performance,
Yen told her it would take some time for the crowd to warm up to her.
She could hardly still control herself. The buzz was still all around
her. The sensation felt like she was levitating, floating on the
sound of the cheers.
That feeling carried her all the way home. She pushed the door open,
a faint, silly smile still on her face from the night’s high.
And then she saw her.
Her mother, Miyoko, was hunched in a corner. Her face was turned
away, but Mei-Mei saw the fresh, ugly purple of a bruise blooming on
her left arm. Her mother was quietly dabbing at it with a damp cloth,
her movements slow and heavy with a weariness that went deeper than
bone.
Support creative writers by reading their stories on Royal Road, not stolen versions.
The scene was a bucket of ice water. It snatched the joy completely
from Mei-Mei and dumped her back into their harsh, cold reality. It
wasn’t the first time.
As soon as the door creaked, her mother flinched. She quickly pulled
her sleeve down and wiped at her eyes, standing up abruptly and
trying to force her smile.
“Mei-Mei..” her mother started, her voice too bright, too fake.
But Mei-Mei shut her down immediately. She couldn’t hold it back
any more. The frustration, the anger, the sheer unfairness of it all
boiled over.
“What..what did you do to deserve all of this mama?” The words
tore out of her. “Why do these things keep happening to you..”
Mei-Mei could barely keep the tears from falling now.
Her mother, who had just been hiding her own tears, now gave a soft,
kind smile. It was the saddest thing Mei-Mei had ever seen. She
reached over and caressed the side of her daughter’s cheek, her
thumb gentle on her skin.
“If I had not passed through all of this…” Miyoko said, her
voice barely a whisper, “would I still have you, child?”
The words completely disarmed Mei-Mei, leaving only a profound,
aching sadness where her anger had been. She cursed the thought of
ever going down the same path, before going to the other room, unable
to look at her mother’s brave, broken face.
In the weeks that followed, a small but loyal following blossomed for
the tavern’s mysterious dancer. Mei-Mei perfected the art of the
double life. By day, she was a waitress, loved by the regulars. But
when her shift ended, she would vanish behind the great stage curtain
and step into her kimono, tying the mask securely in place. In that
moment, the servant disappeared, and the artist took her place.
The thrill of the mystery was a constant hum under her skin. However
the thrill only turned to ice when her performance was interrupted by
the clatter of a single, large gold coin skidding across the stage
floor. “Show us something!” a slurred voice bellowed from the
crowd. The demand ripped through the music. The supportive cheers of
her admirers twisted into a unified, hungry chant. In that moment,
she didn’t feel like the artist dancer she thought she was, she
felt like her mother.
Mei-Mei’s feet faltered. She couldn’t hear Rei’s music anymore,
only the pounding of her own heart. She saw Chen, the tall,
dark-skinned orphan who worked as the tavern’s cook, moving through
the crowd. He was more than a cook and his title meant he earned good
pay. His food was also what kept many customers coming back. He put a
hand on one man’s shoulder seemingly trying to tell him something
but he just brushed him off. Another orphan tried to block the view
of the most rowdy table, but it was no use.
Panicked, and with Yen absent, Mei-Mei made a choice. Heart hammering
with shame, she lifted the hem of her kimono, just high enough to
show off the stockings she wore beneath.
The tavern erupted. The roar was deafening. More coins landed on the
stage, skittering around her feet like dirty payment.
She finished the dance, her face burning, and collected the coins in
silence after the performance. They screamed for an encore, but she
just walked away. Her mind was a mix of anger at herself and shame
for what she would do for money.
Chen and the Musician, Rei, were already outside in the cool night
air, a shared tobacco roll passing between them.
“You okay, Mei?” Chen asked, his voice low with concern. He
passed the lit roll to her and she took a puff, the smoke doing
little to calm the tremor in her hands.
“Nothing I can’t
handle...besides, you wouldn’t have let anything happen to me.
Right?”
“Of course not,” he said, but his eyes were serious. He looked
back at the tavern, then at her. “But you know the chants will get
worse. What will you do then?”
Mei-Mei’s silence was her answer.
He sighed. “Is the money really worth it?”
“Yes,” she replied, the word immediate and sharp, like a reflex.
It had to be. He just looked at Rei and sighed ,taking the roll back
from her, bidding her a goodnight.
On
the way back home, something felt uneasy . Her ears were buzzing, it
would happen every time she got really into dancing. But this time,
the buzzing was louder. It spooked her. She thought it was a side
effect of the tobacco tube. She quickened her pace when she
remembered the day her mother came back with a beating. The memory
still stung her. To painful to remember, to painful to forget.
When she got back, the door was slightly ajar, dimly lit by a single
candle. A cold dread, colder than the air, gripped Mei-Mei’s heart
before she even stepped inside.
She looked in.
The scene was a frozen picture of grief. Yen was there, her face a
mask of sorrow. So was the big, buff man from the orphanage, his
presence like a dark shadow. Two women from the brothel, one with
straight black hair, the other blonde, stood by the bed, one weeping,
the other looking away in shame.
They all turned
to her as she entered.
“Mei-Mei.”
Yen’s voice was soft but heavy. “I’m sorry.”
Mei-Mei’s eyes
followed their gaze to the bed .
There lay her
mother.
Miyoko’s eyes
were closed. Her face was a mess of bruises and dried blood. She
wasn’t moving.
Mei-Mei’s whole
world shattered. The floor seemed to fall away. Her knees buckled,
hitting the wooden floor with a jarring thud. She couldn’t breathe.
Her mind was a roaring static of terrible thoughts, but one kept
reoccurring. She’s gone
It was only the
sound of Yen calling her name, over and over, that she finally looked
up, her vision blurred with tears she hadn’t even felt falling.
“Your mother is
not dead.”
The words didn’t
make sense. They were just sounds. Then, they sank in. Not dead..
A choked, ragged gasp tore from
her throat.
“You didn’t let me finish, girl,” Yen said gently. “She is,
however, in a terrible condition. She appears to be in a coma.”
The news was a fresh wave of pain, but the relief was so much
stronger. Her mother was alive. She whispered a prayer of thanks, her
body trembling. Then, the relief hardened into something cold and
sharp. “What happened?” she demanded, her voice louder than she
anticipated.
Yen began. “Your mother had encountered the man a while ago, though
that time he was with another hostess.” She indicated the younger
woman with the straight black hair and tear-stained white kimono.
Mei-Mei remembered how badly her mother had looked after that day.
“The
customer came back, requesting Miyoko. And since your mother has been
getting fewer clients recently, she took it.” Yen’s voice grew
grim. “It wasn’t until wailing and crashing and screams could be
heard coming from their room after a while.” She then pointed to
the other woman, the one with dark brown hair in a purple kimono.
“Suzie was the one who heard the commotion and screamed for help.”
Mei-Mei’s
gaze then shifted to the big man. She realised what he was there for.
Yen
turned and place a hand on Miyoko’s face. “Poor girl. When they
entered the room, they saw him beating on her with pure rage and
anger. At that point, she wasn’t even moving...yet he wouldn’t
stop.”
Mei-Mei
seethed with a rage so pure she couldn’t stop shaking. Her breaths
became shallow. “Who was he?” she whispered.
“He
was a noble,” Suzie answered. “He frequents the brothel multiple
times a week.” Yen added that the same guy was also a regular at
the tavern. “He would always make a show of his distaste for women,
but he wasn’t as brutal up until recently . It changed when your
mother tried to de-escalate a situation with Sumi.” The black
haired girl, Sumi, looked down, averting eye contact and rubbing one
of her arms. “Something in his eyes changed...like he snapped. He
left muttering to himself with eyes that were too wide for anyone.”
Mei-Mei
asked what happened to him, and they all pointed at the big guy. She
hadn’t noticed at first, but on closer inspection, she saw the
specs of red on his knuckles and his garment. She prayed that bastard
was more than dead.
After
gaining the courage, she walked to the bedside and looked down at her
mother’s broken form. She gently took her limp hand.
“Will
she ever recover?” Mei-Mei asked, her voice small.
“Her
body can heal,” Yen said, her tone turning practical. “But it
requires a skilled healer, and that requires money we don’t have. A
peasant is low on their list. A woman of her profession?” Yen shook
her head. “They wouldn’t even let her through the door.”
The
injustice of it was a final, crushing weight. They were trapped.
“What
we need,” Yen said, her voice dropping to a determined whisper, “is
status. We have no patron, so we will make one.” She turned her
gaze to Mei-Mei. “You are going to participate in the Chimera Cross
Trials for Synchrites.”
Mei-Mei
stared, bewildered. The whiplash was too much. “...I’m not a
Synchrite?”
Yen’s
smile was thin, filled with a fierce certainty.
“Yes,
“Yen said, her voice leaving no room for argument. “You are.”
Yen simply just smiled at her. “Yes. you are.”
**********************************************************************
I
Sat forward, the recorder forgotten. “And was she? Who was Madam
Yen truly? Did she acquire a Flo beast?” The questions tumbled out.
A long, deliberate silence stretched out. Then, her voice, flat and
final. “...I think I will stop there for now.”
It
felt like a punch to the gut. “What? Why?”
“Do
you wish to hear more?” she asked, her head tilting. “Or do you
wish to survive”
She
was right. I wanted to do nothing but listen. But wanting wouldn’t
keep me alive. I let out a frustrated breath. “...Please Train me.”
“Very
well,” she said, and I could have sworn I heard the faintest hint
of approval in her voice.

