EL-HAZARD : MORTAL ENGINES by Alan Harnum Chapter Eight - Miroirs El-Hazard is a copyright of AIC/Pioneer LDC. This story, however, belongs to me, and I request that you don't publicly post or archive it without my permission. This copy of the story is from my centralized fanfiction archive at http://www.thekeep.org/~harnums/fanfic. I can be reached by e-mail at harnums@thekeep.org * * * "Thank you." Ifurita accepted the steaming bowl of... something... from the hands of the wide-eyed child, and tried to convey with her smile what she was obviously failing to do with her words. The little girl's eyes grew even wider, and hurried back to her place in the circle, beside a Phantom Tribe woman. Ifurita presumed it to be her mother. Ruddy flames shifted on the cold white stone of the low-ceilinged cavern, a place that served as a meeting hall, if the hundreds of sitting mats of knotted grasses were any indication. Forty-three members of the Phantom Tribe sat in the circle, with her at the centre. Some of them were members of the hunting party that had brought her back here, down sculpted tunnels lit at intervals by torches, to this great cavern below one of the icy mountains. They had stopped trying to speak to her on the journey back, after they realized she had no knowledge of their flowing language. All the words seemed to be very long, and they spoke them very fast. Their mood, once they'd decided she wasn't a threat, had become welcoming; almost reverent, oddly enough, but with a hint of fear. The woman who had led the hunting party was not present; she and some of her companions had apparently gone to gather more of their tribe. Every few minutes, a half-dozen or so Phantom Tribe, generally in what appeared to be a family unit, would arrive and join the circle. The gem-studded bows and spears lay near at hand for the warriors, but they didn't seem to have any inclination to use them. Perhaps she should stop thinking of them as the Phantom Tribe. This was obviously no longer El-Hazard, after all; the Eye of God had thrown her here, into what seemed to be the originating dimension of the Phantom Tribe. In Makoto's memories--hard, sometimes, to differentiate them from her own-- she recalled Gallus atop the Eye of God, bitterly recounting the story of the Phantom Tribe's origins. But she didn't really have any other name to call them. They whispered back and forth to each other in their quick language, and watched her. It made her feel rather uncomfortable, almost embarrassed; she wondered what they wanted her to do. Her language centres were having great difficulty assimilating their tongue, as it had no relation that she could find to any of the languages she already knew. Oh yes. The food. Meals were often given to guests as a means of welcome, and to not eat was rude. She took a spoonful of dark grey mash and swallowed it. Bland, grain-based. Very nourishing, but uninteresting. A sense of taste, far more refined than any humans, was a basic part of her construction. Not that she'd had much chance to test it out in the past. Her eating of the food seemed to relax them, and their voices gradually rose above whispers. Ifurita listened and tried to figure out the basic structure, but it didn't seem to have one; words seemed to be placed almost randomly, sometimes repeated four or five times in a row. Two or three words would often alternate in a series for up to a minute between speakers. She waited, and ate more of the food, as more and more of the people entered through the numerous side passages. The circle around her grew increasingly larger as time passed, but she'd begun to grow used to the curious stares and the rapid music of their conversation. Better, some darker part of her thought, than fearful gazes and terrified screams. Patience was not hard for her. Eventually, something would happen--perhaps something that would come closer to bringing her to Makoto's world, where she would wait to transport him to El-Hazard. Again, an image rose from his memories, the memories he had given to her: herself, barefoot and tattered, staggering out of the chamber, falling against him, barely able to stand... A shudder ran through her body. She had not known she was capable of shuddering, perfect artificial being that she was. Makoto had no idea what had happened to her--her future self, that was--after she had sent him to El-Hazard. And neither did she. The idea of time paradox was not easy for Ifurita to handle. There had been no need to program her with such a thing. What little understanding she had came from Makoto's memories, and whatever as-of-yet untested abilities she'd acquired through the Eye of God. But she had to somehow get to Earth, or she would never send Makoto to El-Hazard, and then he'd never synchronize with her so that she became free, and she would never enter the internal mechanics of the Eye of God, and... Yet somehow, she had to go from here to Earth, and she didn't yet understand all the new concepts floating around within her well enough to safely approach piercing the dimensional walls. So, the her of the future--or the past, it was all very confusing--had somehow learned. Or gotten very lucky. And it might be that the answer lay here. A hush had fallen over the circle now, and Ifurita looked up, scanning the faces as she did. There were over a hundred people gathered in the circle now, in three rows. She sat at the centre, like the axle of a wheel. From one of the side passages, the leader of the hunting party--tall, almost gaunt, face still painted with grey camouflage--entered, followed by a dozen of the other hunters. As the hunters joined the circle, the woman walked through it, threading her way carefully through the people, and entered the ring created by their bodies. Ifurita watched her calmly. The leader dropped into a squat in front of Ifurita, hands on the smooth white stone of the floor, balancing on the balls of her feet as through about to spring. Smoothly, Ifurita matched her posture. Face revealing no emotions, the Phantom Tribe woman reached out and touched Ifurita's hair, drawing two pinched fingers down the length of one white strand. Tribal greeting customs, Ifurita thought. And she did the same, running a considerably shorter strand of blue-black hair between her own fingers. The woman sat back and crossed her legs. Ifurita did the same. They stared at each other in silence. After a moment, the woman touched her own hair. "Nasalasalanasala." "Ifurita." She indicated herself. Nasalasalanasala pursed her lips, as if trying to wrap them around the unfamiliar word. "Ifurita." Then she raised her voice, addressing the entire circle in her own language. Ifurita heard her name mentioned perhaps a half-dozen times in the rapid- fire stream of Nasalasalanasala's speech. Nasalasalanasala's name was mentioned about the same amount, usually at the beginning of the sentence--although it was hard to tell if there were sentences at all, the language was spoken so quickly. It seemed that they had no pronoun for the first person, if what her analysis of the language was telling her was correct. A small, hunched figure in a dark cloak was brought forth from within the circle, supported by two tall members of the tribe. Ifurita thought at first that it was an old man or woman, but then she caught a glimpse of the face. A small male child, no older than ten. Slim features, but with a sense of slackness to them; a thin trickle of drool escaped his mouth as he approached, and one of his attendants wiped it away with a white cloth in an instant. Ifurita felt a stab of pity--the child was obviously mentally retarded. His posture was caused by a deformity upon his left side, a large hunchback hidden beneath the cloak. Nasalasalanasala stood up and moved aside, and the attendants gently eased the boy down, a reverential tremble in their hands as they touched him. Other than the cloak and a pair of trousers, he was naked, his body lean and muscular. He would have been beautiful, except for the hump and the blank look upon his face. The boy slumped down where he sat, head almost touching his chest. Some sort of seer? There had been tribes in El-Hazard who had placed special value on the prophetic abilities of the insane. This might not be all that different. The attendants drew the cloak away from the boy. Revealed to the light, the handsome, bearded head growing out of his left shoulder and back blinked its eyes, and then focused on her. "Hello, Ifurita," it said. *** Something on the dark horizon told him even before he pushed his way through the Bugrom crowded at the railing--some prophetic angle of the clouds, or was it that oracular blood was cast into them by the setting of the sun? He recognized this place, though how one blank stretch of sea could be distinct from another escaped him. And I will question not, he thought, I shall merely know what I know; trust that it is true. His sister followed him, and last came the faceless god. "Mister Jinnai? Mister Jinnai?" Deva's voice interposed itself between him and the haze. He found himself at the railing, not quite sure how he had got there. "Yes, Queen Deva?" "What are we going to do about this?" This: Nahato, arms unbound, floating in the ocean, as bereft of animation as any shipwreck fragment. The waves rolled him back and forth, back and forth, a cradle for a lost child. Blank and depthless, his eyes stared up at the onrushing night and stars as though with mute horror at their vastness. "Do?" He licked his dry lips. "Leave him. He won't survive long." "No!" Nanami reached for his shoulder; Lethiaphan's gleaming hand, mask of flesh long-vanished in the currents of the ocean, caught her wrist. She cried out. The sound brought him back further. I have touched something greater than myself, he thought, as time stood still and the stars winked out above. He was axis mundi, he was... "Let her go." Was there some reticence in Lethiaphan as it released his sister's wrist from its steel-hard grip? No, of course not; it was a machine, and it had no face to show reticence with. "Katsuhiko, you can't just leave him to die." Nanami seized him the lapels of his school uniform, a desperate pleading in her eyes. "What kind of monster are you?" "Monster!" he snapped back. "I'm not the monster! Makoto, and those damn priestesses, they're the monsters... getting in my way, opposing me at every turn, never letting me be!" Nanami shrank back before his tirade. "Why can't they just leave me alone? All these weak, unworthy people, holding me back..." "Oh, Katsuhiko," Nanami said, something like pity in her voice, "you're weaker than Makoto will ever be." He almost struck her; barely stopped himself. The sight of Nahato--who he had intended to die and who had not died--had stolen his control from him. One, two, three times he drew the deep, calming breaths; and then took from his pocket the comb, and ran it through his hair before speaking again. "Lethiaphan," he said, speaking as slowly as he dared, "bring the boy aboard. I want to discover how he was freed." Pausing, he turned a frowning gaze upon Deva. "Unless your threads aren't so strong as they appeared." "No child could break my threads," Deva said. "Nor adult, either." "Then how?" Deva shrugged. "I know not how. You are the messenger from God; the inexplicable is your dominion, not mine." Lethiaphan took one long step to the railings; the Bugrom shrank back before it. It clenched its fist, and the water around Nahato clenched like a fist in synch; raised its arm, and the sea's hand deposited the boy, salt-soaked and staring-eyed, upon the deck. "You did the right thing, Katsuhiko," Nanami muttered. "I didn't know you had it in you." "Talk!" he shouted, ignoring his sister as he bent and grabbed the blue-skinned boy by the wet collar of his shirt. Scattered bloodspots indiscriminately freckled his clothing. "How were you freed? Who did it?" Nahato's head lolled like that of a rag doll, shifted by Jinnai's grip. His eyes blinked rapidly, closed; snapped open again, moon-blank. "TALK!" "Look at him, Katsuhiko," Nanami said, kneeling down beside him. He saw the motion to touch him with her hand rise and die in a second--Lethiaphan stood too near, faceless sentinel. "He's catatonic. Something obviously happened after you... tossed him over." Weary, Jinnai released the boy's collar. Nahato's head flopped back and struck the deck with a thud. "Take him below," he ordered the Bugrom. "Take them both below." "Hey! Just a--" Nanami's protest was cut off as she was urged belowdecks by the Bugrom, one of whom paused to scoop Nahato up under its arm before following. Jinnai was left alone on deck with Deva and Lethiaphan. "Your sister bears small resemblance to you." "Few siblings do." "I have had many mothers, grandmothers, great-grandmothers," Deva said, "all those who came before me and were queen. And I have many children. But I have never had, and will never have, a brother or a sister." Lost in thought, Jinnai chuckled, hardly having heard her at all. "Edmund and Edgar." "What?" The Shakespeare Society of Shinanome. He remembered the past, and hated the remembering. In memory lay all defeats, every casual dismissal of his abilities by Makoto Mizuhara. Hateful, hateful foe; see how he defeats me without even seeming to intend to... It had been long seconds since Deva had spoken. Her stare was fixed oddly upon him. Doubt in that gaze? Could not be, he thought; she could not doubt him, he was God's messenger. "Now that we may speak privately, Queen Deva..." The pointed glance switched from him to Lethiaphan, and he felt a strange relief, one which he tried to conceal. "Privately?" she said, edged words of equal sharpness to that pointed glance. "It's only a machine." And so are you, he added silently, but a more human machine. Thus, you are more of a threat to my power. "It won't repeat anything." "Unless it is turned from our side, as Ifurita was." The words cut him nearly to the very bone, and humiliating laughter-- the laughter he knew to be behind Makoto's eyes, never voiced-- sang in his flesh and rose the rage. He choked it back, wondered: does silent laughter lurk behind your eyes too, oh Queen? "Take a swim, Lethiaphan. Don't go too far, though." "What is too far?" Hard to tell it was a question, that voice was so empty of inflection. "Just be back in five minutes." It left the deck in a flash, and soon was lost to sight. When its speeding shape was gone, Jinnai turned again to Deva, and took two steps to bring him close. "Deva," he asked, "why did you not inform me earlier that what I saw were not God's angels, but the Phantom Tribe?" The tiniest pink tip of her tongue--so human a motion, oh, those that had built her built her well--moistened her lips. "I thought that perhaps you knew, and only spoke in metaphor to make the concept better understandable to me. The Bugrom hold no more love for the Phantom Tribe than they do for the Roshtarians. Perhaps they inadvertently served our purposes, and to reveal them to you would cause our endeavour, whatever its end may be, to fail. They did bring us safe down the Holy River, after all." She fell silently, but with unsaid words hanging in the air. Jinnai prompted. "Why else?" "Nothing." She shook her head. "Why else?" He put an edge upon his voice, one that he knew he could make cut her like her edge, cut her to the bone as she cut him before. Remind her of her station and his, lay her low-- leave her weeping on the deck, however it was a machine might weep, as he had made her weep before. "I feared your anger if you were contradicted," she said. "You are like a mighty juggernaut in what you do; you will sweep me along, or you will crush me. I do not wish to be crushed." The answer he'd expected and wanted. He smiled benignly. "Queen Deva, do not hestitate next time. While I am far wise beyond my years, I am but new to this world, whereas you are not." It burned him to say it, true though it might be to some eyes--even hers, and that was why he said it. And yet some part of him longed to say the rest, to pour out all his fears that he might be wrong; if the Phantom Tribe could deceive him once, could they not do it again? Have done it before? Were not even dreams safe from their illusions? Had this journey been in vain, was their destination something of no use to them? No, no, no, he repeated mantralike. There was still Lethiaphan. Something had sent that to him, passed the ownership to his hand; surely that was proof that not all of this was lies? "I am glad to hear you say such things, Katsuhiko Jinnai." A supple gloved hand touched his face; beneath it, he could almost feel the pulse of life, not machine-cold, but human-warm. How human these Ancients made their machines, he thought--surely they were workers of wonder. Human, and with the human weaknesses brought on by their emotions. So easily manipulated. Better like Lethiaphan, he thought, than like her, so long as I remain my own master. A distant spot of sea churned with the motion's of that faceless one's immiment return. There would be no more conversation now. *** It was the night of the school talent show. He was fourteen. Mom and Dad were in the third row, next to Katsuhiko and Nanami's mother. Sawdust was flaking off from the top of the hole they'd cut in the crate, itching as it fell onto his neck. He wanted to scratch it, but his arms--all of his body except his head and his feet, actually--were in the crate. The stage lights made his face feel hot and flushed. Steely gleams raced along the surface of the saw, and died upon the jagged teeth. A patina of dark red rust lay upon the blade. He hoped it was rust. "And now, for my next trick, I, the Fabulous Jinnai, will saw my valiant assistant IN HALF!" The audience cheered, but it was an empty cheering, canned like the laugh-track on a bad sitcom. Katsuhiko lowered the saw and began to raspily cut into the wood of the crate. "Katsuhiko, what do I do? I don't remember." A switch? Some lever he had to pull? How did he escape being sawn in half? "Quiet," Katsuhiko hissed. "You'll spoil the illusion." His tongue, covered in facets like the eyes of a fly and obscenely long, flicked out of his mouth. Makoto closed his eyes and tried to think. There was some way to get out of this... He could feel sawdust falling onto his abdomen and chest. Katsuhiko had sawn through the wood at the top now. There seemed to be a hungry note in the rasp of the saw, but that was impossible. Nanami ran onto the stage, still in her leotard, tap shoes, and top hat. "You've got to stop this!" she yelled to the audience. "It's all a trick!" "Of _course_ it's a trick, Nanami." Katsuhiko smiled, and something faceless and awful dragged Nanami back into the wings. Her tap shoes rang like bells as she struggled, and then the sound faded into nothing. No one in the audience moved. Their eyes stared like blank marbles. A beautiful girl with white hair watched him with infinite sadness in her eyes. The saw bit flesh, and Makoto screamed. Katsuhiko laughed shrilly, and then the laughter began to change, becoming deeper, crueller. Pale blue suffused his face like a dye, and it grew broader, more powerful. His hair lengthened, then turned white. The rusty blade scraped across bone. "Do you like my illusions?" the blue-skinned man said. "Are they not more wonderful than reality?" And then there was a sound like a thousand tongues of thunder, and blood spilled from his mouth as he fell back, but the saw kept on moving, tearing him apart-- He woke with a scream, the Power-Key Staff clutched to his chest as thought it were his only hope of salvation. Cold sweat ran down his face tiny beads. It seemed he could still hear the saw biting wood, over and over... With a shaky laugh, he glanced over to where Fujisawa-sensei snored, arms and legs askew all over the floor of the tiny cabin. Afura had been given the sole bed--the cutter really wasn't designed for long-range sea use, but they'd had no other option-- and her body was an almost fetal ball beneath the sheets, only her head visible. Ura was curled up at her feet, a round, nearly shapeless ball of fur. Shayla slept with her back against one wall; sometime in the night, Alielle had made her way over and gone to sleep with her head in Shayla's lap. It would not, Makoto decided, be fortuitous to be awake when Shayla awoke. And there was no way he was going back to sleep after a dream like that. Quickly and somewhat self-consciously, he changed into some fresh clothes behind the curtain they'd rigged up in one corner to create a small dressing area. Moving quietly--though if his screams hadn't woken anyone else up, his footsteps probably wouldn't either--he made his way up on deck. Out on the deck, the new day's sun, just barely risen, gave the scattered clouds a rosy tinge. Miz was at the helm, guiding the cutter as it skimmed through the Sea of Tears, riding almost atop the waves at times. One day, Makoto decided, after he figured out how to bring Ifurita back, he was going to explore the other technology that El-Hazard had to offer. "Good morning, Makoto," Miz greeted pleasantly as he approached. "Did you get enough sleep?" "Yeah." He decided not to mention the nightmare. "How about you?" The priestess nodded. "I grabbed some sleep before Alielle woke me. She had the middle shift; that's the toughest." She glanced back at him as he sat down on the short flight of stairs leading up to the helm. "We're still on course, right? I know I was supposed to wake you every hour to check, but you needed your sleep, and the sea can give me a sense of what vessels have passed recently..." He nodded. "They haven't changed their position at all. They're heading in a straight line; we're following that line." Miz's lips pursed, as though in disapproval. "This cutter is much faster than their boat. And they didn't have too much of a head start. So why haven't we caught them yet?" "Well..." Makoto rubbed his chin as he thought. "Lethiaphan has control over water. Maybe it's somehow making them faster?" "I suppose that makes sense." Miz admitted, although it sounded somewhat grudging. "It is extremely powerful. I don't think we saw its upper limits." "No," Makoto murmured to himself, "I don't think we did either." "Is Masamichi sleeping well?" Miz asked with false casualness. "He seemed to be." "I'm a little worried about him, you know." There was still that fake lightness in her voice, a failed attempt to disguise the real depths of her concern. "Ever since the fight with Lethiaphan, he's been different... no, even before that." "Well, his powers are changing," Makoto said. "More than anyone's. I don't blame him for being worried." "But he's only getting stronger, more powerful," Miz said, not seeming able to comprehend why a thing like that could upset someone. "Even more of a man." The last sentence was said with a throaty purr. Makoto coughed. "Umm... I'm sure he'll adjust to the changes." "He'd better," Miz muttered. Then her voice turned sprightly again. "Anyway, I think I've figured out where Jinnai's heading." "What? How?" "Well, I am a water priestess, after all," Miz said in slightly miffed tones. "I wouldn't be a very good one if I didn't know oceanic geography. From the readings on the compass, and the charts, I'd say we're heading towards Turanga." "What's that?" "An island," Miz explained. "Volcanically formed. It's the main home for the Lilaian sect..." Suddenly, she frowned. "Oh dear. I never even thought of that. This might be awkward..." "What?" "Well, we'll deal with that if and when it happens." Miz's voice was dismissive, leaving no room for him to ask further questions. "The Lilaian's are a religious sect. They're complete pacifists--won't even kill animals for their meat." Makoto felt as if he'd just swallowed a ball of ashes. "They won't even resist Jinnai, then. What's on that island that he could want?" "Nothing, to my knowledge," Miz said with puzzlement. "Its got fertile soils and a good climate in the low-lying areas, and a bunch of large, impressive, and extremely inhospitable mountains. The Lilaians settled it about five hundred years ago, after fleeing the... persecutions." She said the last word with a touch of shame. "It's one of the stains on the history of the Muldoon sect, but we were one of the leaders of that." She sighed. "Why's Jinnai going there, though?" "He's had a religious experience and wants to convert? I don't know. If it's got something to do with the Lilaians, there's plenty of enclaves of them on the mainland." "Is there something about them that's really different? Do they have some kind of knowledge he might want?" Miz frowned. "I don't know enough about their doctrine to say. You might ask Shayla, although..." "Shayla?" She nodded. "She used to be one. When she was very young." "Shayla?" Being a member of a pacifist sect, even a former one, didn't fit with any mental image Makoto had of Shayla. "Yes." Miz nodded again, looking back at him for a moment rather than at the sea surging before the boat. Her eyes were sad. "That's why things might become awkward." *** Come on, Nanami, it's not so high. It's too high, Katsuhiko. You won't fall. I promise. She didn't fall, but he did. Broke his leg. God, did he ever scream. It was autumn, and she always thought of her brother screaming every time she smelt leaves burning after that. How old had they been? Not very old. Maybe she was eight. When had they had that treehouse, again? Can you dream just a smell? I dream burning leaves; what does it mean? Burning, burning, burning. Nanami opened her eyes. The phosphorescence given off by the walls and ceiling of the Bugrom ship had dimmed, giving the small cabin a twilight look. Her mouth tasted sour, and her head still hurt. Not much chance of getting a toothbrush or an aspirin from her captors, though. At least they'd let her have the bed. Or, more precisely, she'd taken it by default, after they'd left her down here with the catatonic Nahato. He didn't make for very good converstation. And even if she'd had something to talk to him about anyway, he seemed more interested in staring off into space and occasionally drooling. Her headache had been getting worse, so she'd finally just lain down and let herself go to sleep and uneasy dreams. The cabin was almost entirely filled up with sleeping Bugrom, legs tucked into their shells. Her brother was sprawled asleep, back and head resting on the shell of one, one leg thrown up upon another. It didn't look very comfortable. Nahato was still in the corner, hands and feet bound. He looked to be sleeping too. In another corner, Lethiaphan stood like a statue. Its blank features made it impossible to say whether it was dormant or not. Gingerly, she got out of bed. Her clothes weren't too fresh either. Maybe Deva had something she could borrow, she thought vaguely, and almost giggled. Then they could talk about boys. Her whole life had turned into some weird surreal nightmare. She was probably in a coma somewhere, dreaming all of this. The thought appealed to her; it meant she could wake up. Stepping between the closely-bunched shapes of the Bugrom as though through a colourful minefield, Nanami made her way towards the stairs. A few feet away from them she tread down, hard, on a spindly limb, and froze. A purple head emerged from within the shell and stared at her with unblinking yellow eyes. Antenna twitched, and then it squeaked something at her that sounded like a greeting. And went back to sleep. Nanami sighed with relief, and went out on deck. A new day, with a new sun, but not with any new hope. Deva was at the wheel of the ship, guiding it through the calm morning sea. She didn't even look back as Nanami stepped out on deck. "You are Nanami Jinnai." "Yeah. And you're Queen Deva." "Yes." "I'd say I'm pleased to meet you, but I'm not." "Somehow, I am not surprised. You have, no doubt, heard all that the Roshtarians have to say of me and my children," the Bugrom Queen said acerbically. "I doubt you have heard anything of what was done to us." "I never really did get a chance to hear the Bugrom perspective," Nanami said coldly. "Maybe because they were too busy trying to kill us and destroy Roshtaria." Deva's head turned, and she fixed Nanami with a cold, bitter gaze. "Little girl," she snarled, "I wish I could show you the memories that are in my head of the Holy Wars, and what the Bugrom were used as by your kind." "That was a long time ago, no matter what happened." "Justice denied is not justice fulfilled." Deva turned away. There was an almost fanatic edge to her voice. "We were slain by the hundreds of thousands, driven out of all fertile lands, forced to gather in the wastelands... and now they have turned the Eye of God upon our home, and we are wanderers upon this earth again." "You were the ones who invaded Roshtaria," Nanami said, vaguely wondering at the safety of arguing with Deva. She was too angry to care, though. "They just fought back. You used Ifurita to destroy an entire city before the Eye of God was even unsealed." "Your brother was my war leader. I did not make the decision to awake Ifurita, or to use her in the manner he did." Though the day was warm, Nanami suddenly felt cold. It was really just the confirmation of her fears, but somehow... somehow she'd wanted to hope that it hadn't really been her brother who had ordered that city destroyed. So many thousands dead... "And how could we ever be safe, with a weapon like the Eye of God in the hands of our oldest foes? All it would take is one ruler deciding once and for all to purge the Bugrom from El- Hazard. How could we not take the chance to remove Roshtaria as a threat, when they had such a weapon?" Deva's words didn't seem to fully penetrate for a few seconds. When they did, Nanami just shook her head. "No one ever fights a war thinking they're wrong," she murmured. She felt sick. "No one does," Deva agreed. She paused. "But it doesn't mean they aren't. And this is not like a war between two nations. This is for the life of my race." But aside from a few insectile markings on her face, Deva looked human. Acted human, too--spoke the language, displayed emotions, reasoned like a human. It was hard to reconcile the beautiful queen with her inhuman subjects. Nanami decided not to raise the point. Instead, she stepped closer, and sat down on the edge of the raised platform that held the boat's wheel, near Deva's feet. "Where are we going?" "I don't know," Deva said. "I'm just going where he told me to." "My brother?" The delay in answering was just a little too long, as though she were unsure. "Yes." Nanami craned her head and hunched up on her knees to peer off at the horizon. "Are we heading for land? I think I can see something. Just a speck, but..." Deva's eyes narrowed. "You're right. You have very good eyesight, for a human." As they watched, not speaking, the speck became a line, and then resolved into a long sandy coast. In the distance, forests could be seen; beyond them, the tall, cloud-girded mountains reminded Nanami of the mountains of Japan. It gave her a pang of homesickness so sharp it was actually painful. "Look," Nanami said. "There's a boat." It was small and neat in appearance, riding smoothly over the waves. From the direction, it had been launched from the shore to meet them. There were two occupants, a heavyset man with a thick beard who piloted, and a figure of indeterminate gender in a hooded cloak. Deva's face twisted into a frown. Nanami didn't see her touch any controls, but the boat stopped in the water. They waited. As the small boat neared, the man removed his hands from the controls and cupped them together to shout through. "Greetings in God's name, strangers. Your ship is unfamiliar, but you are welcome on Turanga, whoever you are." Nanami stood up to get a better look. The man's head turned to look at her, and shock came onto his face. His hands dropped to his sides, and he stopped talking. "So what are you going to do now?" Nanami asked Deva. The queen didn't reply; more than anything, she looked confused. The man began to pilot the boat closer, face pale, hands trembling on the controls. Deva said, "I remember that I do not remember this place for some reason which I cannot say." "Huh?" The figure in the back of the boat stood up and pulled the hood down, revealing itself as female. "What wonders have you sent to us, oh Lord?" she said. Though it was a whisper, Nanami heard it like a shout. She stared. The other girl stared back. Her face was darker, tanned; her hair was much longer, done up in a bun at the back of her head. Other than that, they were identical. This must have been how Makoto felt meeting Fatora, Nanami thought. My own face, looking into my own face--my own eyes into own eyes. "Well," Deva said slowly. "This is interesting." END OF CHAPTER EIGHT