Disclaimer: Sailor Moon does not belong to me.  It belongs to Naoko
Takeuchi and a great many wonderful people who, if they were so
inclined, could make things very unpleasant for me.  (However, they 
are all MUCH too generous and benevolent to do any such thing.)  This 
is a work of fiction and while the original idea does not belong to 
me, this story does.  Remember that, because if you don't, I'm 
sending the Senshi after you . . . .


                       Castles and Kingdoms

                                by Fushigi Kismet


Chapter Four
~A Twist of Fate~



   "SERENITY!" Raslym yelled again, running after the white phantom
that was her princess.  She heard the sound of the soldiers behind 
her and sped up.  Unfortunately, her foot caught on a bit of 
undergrowth and she tripped and fell . . .
   Only to be caught and hefted up in two strong arms.
   "Oh, by the gods!" Raslym said, her eyes wide as she saw the 
bloody and battle-hardened figure before her.

   Nephrayn kept up his pursuit of the mercenaries but soon found 
that he was falling behind.  Sheathing his sword, he leapt atop a 
wall and ran, surefooted, towards the castle.  The Mrrukians gave him 
not a glance as he ran past them.  He thanked the Goddess of Luck for 
being with him that night . . .  The nighttime clouds had covered the 
moon so he cast no shadow.
   Once he arrived at the castle far ahead of the mercenaries who 
were impeded in speed by their numbers, he noted another four pouring 
out of the building heading towards the woods.  "Dammit!  Too late!"  
He thought briefly of Zoyzer who had sacrificed himself so that 
Nephrayn could save the others and cursed under his breath.  He leapt 
atop the roof and made his way to a window.  Looking in, he saw the 
guests surrounded by another contingent of the mercenaries.  He also 
noted the bloody fallen bodies of the king and queen and several more 
unconscious forms.  A red-haired man seemed to be yelling something 
and his eyes narrowed as he saw that he was motioning with his sword 
at Immara who was slowly getting to her feet.  There was a darkening 
bruise on her face and tears in her green eyes.
    he thought, angrily.  He flipped back the 
window and jumped inside.

   Immara blinked as she slowly returned to consciousness.  Her face 
hurt where the man had struck her across the cheek.  Battling the 
tears that sprang to her eyes as she saw the unconscious bodies of 
her cousin and the others and the steadily growing pools of blood 
around the king and queen, she tried to get to her feet.
   But a sword thrust in front of her stayed her motion.
   The red-haired man waved it angrily.  "Stay where you are!"
   Immara held herself perfectly still.
   "See this?!" the man demanded of the other frightened guests of 
the ball.
   They made no motion, their eyes growing wide.  Immara noticed that 
Raslym and Serenity were not among them.   she wondered.  Her eyes lit upon the bloody bodies 
in the middle of the room again and she felt like she was about to be 
sick.
   The man turned back to Immara.  "Rest assured, your princess won't 
escape!"
   
   "We'll bring her back and I'll kill her myself."  He looked at her 
and his eyes narrowed to red slits.  "Maybe I should start with you?!  
An example of what happens to those who defy me?"
   He turned to the rest of the assembly again.  "What do you think?"
   His mercenaries snickered and his smile widened.  He waved his 
sword at her.  "Up, you!"
   Immara slowly began getting to her feet.
   It was then that Nephrayn leapt down from one of the windows and 
all hell broke loose.

   Jadyrn's blue eyes looked back at her as he set her on her feet.  
"Quiet, Lady."  He held her close to him, his hand over a mouth, his 
back pressed to the trunk of a tree.  The four mercenaries stormed 
by, yelling and making enough noise to make the dead.  Raslym was 
sure that Jadyrn could hear the frantic beating of her heart.  In 
fact, she was certain that the *mercenaries* could hear her heart.
   However, minutes later when Jadyrn was sure that they were safe, 
he let her go.  She moved away and glared at him.  "I can take care 
of myself!"
   "I'm sure thou canst, Lady," he said mildly, "but with the amount 
of noise thou wast making . . . thou wouldst be hard put to carry 
through."
   Raslym's anger ebbed and she looked away.  "I . . . apologize.  My 
thanks to thee for catching me."
   He studied her a moment longer before looking away.  "I take it I 
am too late?"
   She nodded.  "The King and Queen are dead.  I wast following 
Serenity . . . as are those mercenaries."
   "The others?  Are they in danger?"
   "I knowst not," she said in sudden dismay.  "I left them back 
there . . .  Oh, Goddess!  Immara's back there!  And Harmony, Odele, 
Simyra . . . they were unconscious . . ."
   "How many guards?" he demanded.
   "Fifty," she said.
   He winced.  "We are not enough to make a difference."
   She nodded slowly, reluctantly.
   "Come," he said, "we must find my prince . . . and thy princess."
   Raslym nodded and hiking up her skirts, made her way into the 
woods.  Jadyrn followed with a bemused expression on his face.

   Two mercenaries lifted Zoyzer's body up flung him next to a pile 
of other corpses of people they had caught and killed while fleeing 
in the first few minutes of resistance.  The only difference was . . 
. Zoyzer wasn't dead.
   "Goddess," Marayr whispered from her hiding place behind one of 
the large ornamental bushes planted in the courtyard.
   "What d'we do w'im?" one of the Mrrukians asked the other.  "He 
ain't dead."
   "Ornery thing.  He's close enough t'dead.  Leave him.  He'll die 
soon enough.  Ain't gonna be walkin' any time soon, anyways."
   The first one grunted in reply and they left the courtyard.
   Marayr crept forward, pushing back the bile that rose in her 
throat as she saw all of the mutilated bodies.  She knelt down next 
to him, cradling his head onto her lap, her hand feeling his throat 
for a pulse.  There it was . . . faint, but there.  He was alive.
   She stared at him.  There was a large gash on his forehead which 
bled profusely and several smaller cuts which were caked with his 
dried blood.  His armour had been dented and pierced in several 
areas.  His blood was everywhere.
   "Goddess," she murmured, stroking his hair matted with blood away 
from the cut on his forehead.
   He coughed and his eyes fluttered open.  "Mar . . . ayr?"
   She nodded.  "Yes," she said quickly as she realized that she was 
out of his line of sight.  "'Tis me."
   "H . . . ow didst thou-?"
   "'Tis a long story," she whispered.  "Canst thou walk?"
   He made an effort to rise then shook his head.  Then, as though 
that little motion had been too much for him he said, "Get out of 
here, Marayr.  I'm for the dogs."
   "Thou knowst so little," she said, frowning.  "Thou art coming 
with me.  Monica, Aros!" she called softly.
   The two appeared in the shadows.
   "Can he walk?" Monica asked.
   "No."
   "Leave him," Aros said impatiently.  "We cannot allow ourselves to 
be slowed down . . ."
   "I wilt not leave without him!" Marayr hissed.  "Now, help me move 
him!"
   They moved forward to assist her.

   As Nephrayn leapt down, the red-haired man whirled about to face 
him, his senses alerting him to the danger.  The other mercenaries 
moved forward to attack.  As they moved away the guests began a mad 
dash to the doors which were still wide open from Serenity and 
Raslym's run to safety.
   The red-haired man began to issue some commands to his men to 
secure the people when Immara hit him in the back of the head with an 
ornamental vase she had found in a niche in the wall.  She and 
Nephrayn exchanged a look before he smiled simply and turned towards 
the rest of their attackers.
   It was then that the peal of breaking glass made them all look up.
   Reinforcements had arrived . . .

   "I can't believe that we lost the princess!" Raslym fumed, 
storming through the forest, beyond caring about the amount of noise 
that she was making or the fact that "she" had been the one to lose 
sight of the princess.
   "Calm down, Lady," Jadyrn said calmly from where he followed a few 
feet behind her.  "We'll find her, and my prince.  There is nothing 
to fear."
   "Dost thou ever get upset?" she demanded.
   "Of course."
   "Thou soundst like a damned Flevner."
   "And thou, Lady, shouldst not swear so."
   "Quit calling me "Lady."  Thou shouldst not."
   "Why should I not?" he asked, surprised.
   "Because I . . . say so!"
   "I shall stop when thou hast a good reason, Lady."  He smiled a 
little.
   Raslym squared her jaw, and looked at him with a great deal of 
irritation.  "I was wrong.  Thou art not a Flevner, thou art a 
Crayzen."
   He made a great show of bowing.  "I am flattered."
   She looked back at him and threw her hands up in the air.  "I give 
up!"  She ran right smack into a heavily armored body.  A flash of 
fear went through her as she saw Jadyrn's eyes widen in apprehension.  
Turning slowly about, her tongue feeling like lead in her mouth, she 
said, "I don't suppose that thou art Prince Endymion?"
   The Mrrukian leered down at her.  "No."  His heavily armored 
comrades snickered.
   Raslym turned around to shot an accusing look at Jadyrn, just as 
he was seized by two more men.  "So much for what thou wast saying."
   "About what?"
   "Having nothing to fear."

   Marayr rested a cool cloth on Zoyzer's forehead as they listened 
to the sounds of fighting in the distance.  She, Monica, and Zoyzer 
were hidden in a small shelter in the woods that had been built years 
ago and left in disrepair.
   "H . . . How didst thee escape?" Zoyzer asked weakly.
   Her blue eyes looked back at him and she smiled briefly.  It was 
fleeting like the flicker of a flame.  "We haven't yet.  'Twas all 
Aros, actually."
   Monica hmmphed and looked away, eyes unseeing.
   "Aros?"
   Marayr nodded.  "When thou didst leave . . .  I couldst not but 
feel that something was amiss.  I made as though to follow thee but 
Aros stayed me . . ."
   And she wove her tale for him . . .

   Some few of Endymion's retinue who had managed to escape burst 
through the skylights located in the center of the roof of the 
ballroom.  They numbered twelve in all but as they burst through, 
several of the men who had been engaged in dancing at the time of the 
invasion and whose weapons had been confiscated took advantage of the 
chaos to wrestle with their guards and relieve them of their weapons 
in turn.  Armed, with their guards more or less disabled, they leapt 
into the fray.
   Aros appeared soon after the rest of the soldiers and hustled the 
remaining non-combatants, mostly ladies, through the doors that were 
no longer being guarded, into the relative safety of the woods.  
Several servants picked up the bodies of Harmony, Odele, and Simyra, 
and took them along.  Immara paused to glance that way, but then 
returned her focus to the battle, striking hard with a staff she had 
managed to pick up, adrenaline rushing through her veins.  Nephrayn 
fought back to back with her.
   Soon, though, it was obvious that the mercenaries' numbers were 
too great and they made a break for it, running after the last of the 
fleeing crowd.  As they ran into the night, Immara could not help but 
notice that Nephrayn was holding her hand quite tightly . . . as 
though afraid to lose her.  In the darkness, despite the terror she 
felt from the night's events, her cheeks burned.

   They were roughly thrown, bound around the hands and feet but not 
gagged, into the Mrrukian camp.  Raslym had been complaining the 
whole way.  "And another thing, who the hell dost thou think that 
thou art?!  I am a Lady of the Queen's court!"
   "Ah, so now thee admits it," Jadyrn said, dryly.
   "Do shut up."
   Kunzyn sighed while Artana rolled her eyes.  "They got thee, too, 
huh?" Artana commented.
   "Damn right!"
   "Since when didst thou develop such a dirty mouth, Raslym?" Artana 
asked with a brief spark of curiosity.  "If the Queen had ever heard 
you, she would have had the servants wash thy mouth out with soap."
   "This is NOT the time to be genteel, Artana!  The King and Queen 
are dead, the castle is burning, the kingdom is being overrun by 
those maggots from Estvia, and the princess is STILL missing!"
   "Thank the goddess for that."
   "What meanst thou?"
   "Hath it ever occurred to thee that the princess is better off 
wherever she is now than with us?"
   Raslym was silent for a moment as the situation that they were in 
sunk in.  When she finally got her voice back, she said very softly, 
her eyes wide and shining with newfound fear, "What . . . what wilt 
they do to us?"
   Artana shut her eyes and turned her head away.  "If we're lucky, 
they'll just sell us as slaves overseas . . . if we're not . . ." she 
let the statement trail away unsaid.
   Raslym bit back a sob and stared at the flickering embers of the 
fire.  "Oh, Goddess . . ."
   Jadyrn was silent as he stared at her.  She had been so brash but 
an instant before and now the facade was gone, burnt away by the 
harshness of the truth.  Now, she looked so innocent and vulnerable, 
and so very, very young . . .  He pushed down the emotions rushing to 
the surface.    Only the protective 
feeling he felt towards her, did he allow to remain.
   He spoke up, his voice falling clearly in the stillness of the 
evening, with nothing but the crackle of the fire and the far off 
sound of clanging armor to mute the words that he spoke with a quiet 
conviction and a barely hidden undercurrent of strength.  "Lady . . 
."
   Raslym turned to look at him, tears springing to her eyes, the 
firelight glinting on her wild dark hair.
   "Lady . . .  I will not let them lay a hand on you.  If they 
should harm you in any way, I swear that I will kill them all, every 
man of them."
   Looking at him, she believed him, and she said the only thing that 
she could.  "Thank thee, and don't call me Lady."

   Endymion stomped about, blowing on his hands to keep warm.  He 
stopped before Serenity.  "My apologies, but I fear that starting a 
fire would attract more attention than we need right now."
   "Of course."  She looked up at him, tear tracks marring cheeks 
shining silver in the faint light of the moon and the stars.
   Endymion stared at her, longing to go to her and hold her as he 
had before.  But this was not the time.  She had awoken in his arms 
and had immediately pushed him away.  He sat down on a fallen log 
across from her, seated in such a way that she could only see his 
profile.
   Serenity sat with her back against a tree stump, her legs drawn up 
against her chest with her arms wrapped around them and her chin 
resting atop her knees.  She shivered a little from the cold.  
Glancing at her fingers, she noticed a faint blue tinge.
   Pretending not to be watching her from the corner of his eye, 
Endymion unhooked his cloak and tossed it to her.  She caught it and 
shot him a grateful look, wrapping it about herself.  It was silent 
but for the sounds of nocturnal creatures as they moved about and 
stalked their prey.
   After an eternity seemed to pass, Serenity spoke.  "My thanks to 
thee."
   "For what?" Endymion asked absently, staring off into the 
distance, his eyes narrowed and his ears open for any movement in 
their direction.
   "For the cloak . . . and the fact that thou'rt here."
   He turned his head to look at her.  "Where would I be but at thy 
side?"
   She touched the bracelet self-consciously.  "I had forgotten."
   He let a smile touch and linger on his lips.  "Did I not swear 
myself to thee?"
   "Yes, with the bracelet thou hast done so."
   "Nay, my pledge was made long before the giving of that gift."
   The moonlight reflected off of her charm as she slowly began to 
speak, "Thou speakst as though we had met ere 'fore . . . but I have 
no recollection of such an encounter.  Prithee, tell me what it is 
that I have forgotten."
   "To tell the tale would be to spoil the memory."  His eyes flashed 
dark blue as he turned away again, looking off into the distance.
   She bit her lip, feeling that she had offended him.  "I am sorry."
   He remained silent.
   "I am sorry . . . for not loving thee," she whispered, a sob 
catching in her throat.  "It seems that thou must suffer my presence 
'til such a time as we can part ways."
   "Dost thou think so little of thyself, princess?  Any parting with 
thee would be too soon.  As for loving me . . . I am still hopeful 
that time wilt be gentle with me and ease the pain of my heart . . . 
or else, speed the change of thy heart towards mine."
   "Art thou cold?" she asked suddenly.
   "Nay.  My armor wilt keep me warm.  But thou art more than 
chilled.  Had I any covering to give thee, I would gladly part with 
it.  As it is, I wilt start a fire soon."
   "No," she said sharply. "They must not find us.  We wilt travel, 
and the movement shall keep my blood flowing."
   He turned to face her, taking her hand and rubbing it between his, 
blowing on it with his warm breath.  She recoiled slightly, but then 
repented and allowed him to administer to the other hand as well.  
When he had finished she smiled ruefully.  "Thy hands art too cold to 
do much good, lord prince."
   She stood and sat down next to him, leaning against him with a 
sigh.  He awkwardly draped his arm over her shoulders and held her 
gently.
   "My parents are dead . . .  My kingdom is lost to me.  Tell me, 
lord prince, where wilt we go?"
   "North," he answered immediately.  "To my kingdom.  To Dalayne.  
Thou wilt have sanctuary there until such a time as thy kingdom 
returns to thy rule."
   "But Estvia's allies lie between here and Dalayne . . .  We wilt 
meet no one but enemies."
   "It is possible to safely pass through their borders.  Possible, 
but difficult.  There is no alternative but to try."
   She smiled briefly.  "There is no alternative but to succeed."
   Their eyes met, hers filled with determination, his with painful 
love.
   "Aye," he said with difficulty.  "We wilt succeed."

   The next morning found the four companions at the coast after a 
forced march and ride all night.  They marched.  The mercenaries 
rode.  They were all exhausted.  Artana and Raslym were the closest 
to collapse, but the head mercenary of their little group had noticed 
that they were lagging and had allowed them a horse for the last half 
of the march.
   And so . . . they arrived at a seaport.
   Jadyrn had discerned early on that the band of Mrrukians that had 
taken them captive did not seem to be part of the main invasion force 
. . . rather, they seemed to be independent workers, taking what they 
could get from the invasion and making their own tidy profit from it.  
He didn't suppose that skimming the profits was anything new.
   They were delivered to another group of Mrrukians . . . sailors.  
In other words . . . slave-traders.  Their captors had been paid with 
gold and then had departed, no doubt to caught up with the rest of 
their army before they were too long missed.
   The slave-traders had lined them up along the pier and the 
"Captain" was inspecting them in turn.  He paused before Artana and 
took her face in his hands, sparing a glance for Raslym who stood 
resolutely next to her.  "Ah, any man'd give his eyeteeth to bed one 
of you two lovelies!"
   Artana struggled and turned her face, trying both to get as far 
away from him as possible and to avoid inhaling his foul breath.  
Raslym, who was not so restrained, lashed out with her right foot and 
kicked her captor squarely in the stomach when he moved on to inspect 
her.
   He doubled over and let go of her, but as she turned to run she 
was faced with another Mrrukian.  "Yes, we'll have fun with this 
one," he growled, advancing on her.
   "No, thou wilt not!" Jadyrn's voice rang out.
   "And what're you gonna do about it, pretty boy?" the Mrrukian 
spat.
   Jadyrn held his temper and laughed contemptuously.  "Don't think 
that I don't know what thou planst to do with the four of us.  We're 
far too valuable for use as thy *own* galley slaves - thou wouldst 
fetch a better price selling us to slavers on the mainland . . . say 
in Estvia?  The women are ladies . . . untouched.  Ten times as much 
would be due thee now, without any . . . unpleasantness.  I can see 
that thou art businessmen, and thou knowst just as well as I, how 
much more thou wouldst get were the ladies to remain . . . pure."
   The Mrrukian paused, then spat again and turned away.  "Enough, 
worm.  Ye're too smart fer yer own good.  Nobody touches the wenches.  
Chain 'em up!  Not the two men t'gether . . . I don't want 'em tryin' 
t'make any plans t'escape.  Chain the men and the wenches up
t'gether."
   "But how'll we know that they ain't gonna do nothing?!" one of the 
crew protested.
   The head Mrrukian spat again.  "Don't ye know *nothing*?!  Them's 
gennelmun.  Won't never harm a lady . . .  An' if they *do* . . . I 
ain't got no scruples 'bout offing the two a them.  Men ain't worth 
half so much as two fine wenches.  Now, git goin'!"

   In the hold the Mrrukians proceeded to chain the four of them up.  
Artana to Kunzyn and Raslym to Jadyrn.  They were chained to opposite 
sides of the hold, the chain firmly attached to a ring embedded in 
the floor.  When the Mrrukians had left and they were left alone, 
Artana began pulling on her chain.  "Oh, great," she chatted as she 
pulled harder, the muscles in her arms straining.  "We have been 
captured by pirates and if that was not the worst of it, I am chained 
up to *thee*."  She made a face.
   "Don't sound so happy about it."  Kunzyn looked over at her and 
before they knew it both of them had burst into slightly hysterical 
laughter.

   Across the hold, Raslym and Jadyrn eyed each other, she warily, he 
with a surface calm that belied his true emotions.  "This cannot bode 
well," Raslym said, looking away at last.
   Jadyrn raised his hand debating whether or not to place it on her 
arm . . . but decided against it.  Instead, he turned away as well.  
"Aye, Lady.  But perhaps 'tis a good omen . . .  The choice of 
pairs?"
   She looked over at him, her eyes surprised.  That was the last 
thing she would have suspected him to say.  She wondered at the 
words.  


   Monica and Aros.

   Artana and Kunzyn.

   Raslym and Jadyrn.

   Immara and Nephrayn.

   Marayr and Zoyzer.

   Serenity and Endymion.

   The Journey has just begun . . .


To be continued . . .

Um, sorry, I meant to write more about the rest of the pairs but I 
had to cut it off!  I'll explain exactly what happened to Marayr, 
Monica, and Aros next time!  And, we'll see how everyone else is 
doing.  Okay?  I'll be in California until the end of August . . . so 
no new parts until I'm back!  Gomen!  Ja ne!  I love you all, minna!

Oh, and if you go to my webpage:

you'll find a character guide with background info for "C&K."  Ha!  
That's *one* way of getting you to visit!  Bai bai!

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