The Battle of Dragon's Bay
Caeruthir I
WARNING: This story contains scenes of a nonconsensual nature
From the upper levels of the sprawling Imperial Palace, Princess Daiyu watched her father's armies return from the war. The heralds insisted that they returned victorious, but the ragged state of their clothing and battered armor told another tale. Rank after rank of exhausted, beaten soldiers passed beneath her window while people in the street cheered and spread flower petals across their path. Daiyu did not share their joy.
"Most Exalted Highness," said a voice from behind her, and she slowly turned away from the window, slatted to prevent any mere commoner from peering into the hallowed halls of power. In the hall behind her, before her dozen maids, stood a palace eunuch. The man kept to the shadows, peering suspiciously around the corner. Daiyu did not fear, for this man was one of her creatures. "The barbarian emissary is with your father," the eunuch whispered before disappearing down the hall.
"Princess," said her chief handmaid, Zhi. Behind her, the others nodded their agreement. "We should listen in."
Daiyu sighed. The dreaded day had come at last. For weeks, they had listened to what reports of the war had filtered into the women's quarters of the palace, desperate for any good news. The war against the southern barbarians had dragged on for ten years now, and for the last two years they had sensed its end drawing close. A stalemate had persisted in the south, absorbing ever more of the imperial state's men, money, and attention. The new fleet her father had built sat idly at anchor, for the men conscripted to row it had instead been given spears and sent south to the border, where most of them died of disease.
At last, her father had agreed to terms. Where ten years ago, he spoke of smashing the southern barbarians and executing the tyrant by a thousand cuts, he was now settling for tribute and recognition of captured territory.
"We should," she said at last. She straightened her silk robes, adjusted her headdress, and strode quickly through the halls of the palace to her father's smaller audience chamber, her beaded tassels clacking all the way. The great throne room lay empty most of these days, for the pomp and splendor it deserved had become too expensive during the long war. Her father preferred to do business in the more intimate chamber anyway, with just himself and the serpent he called First Minister.
The princess emerged into the upper gallery of the audience chamber, again shielded from view from below, and could hear voices already. In the room below, she saw only her father, seated on his throne, the first minister, a southern barbarian, and a mere four palace guards. Through the fine silk screen that shielded her from view, the room looked gloomy, and the expressions on the men's faces matched.
"...million taels of silver, and a resumption of the regular spice tribute," her father's minister was saying. The southern barbarian nodded.
"Agreed. Does His Imperial Majesty agree to my master's terms?"
"Your terms are steep," the first minister replied cooly, consulting a scroll in his hand. "Two border fortress, the Axis of the Heavens, and an imperial princess' hand." Daiyu tensed at the last term. She was the last of her father's children to be married. Her eunuchs had told her that the emperor was saving her to marry whomever he made viceroy of Indica after the tyrant's defeat, but that option was now eliminated. The first minister tapped his pen against his lips in thought. "Dorhacin must return the sacred idols he stole during his southern campaign. And release all prisoners of rank, without ransom."
The barbarian considered a moment, then nodded. "And we agree to no further exchanges of territory?"
"Your master's control of the southeastern wilds is recognized, contingent on his suppression of the pirates who plague the region. If he cannot contain them, the imperial state will take control of the region itself."
"My lord is master of Indica," the barbarian boasted. "Pirates will cause him no trouble at all."
"Hmm," the first minister demurred. He looked down at his tablet again in thought.
"My agents," the emperor spoke suddenly in a hoarse voice, breaking the silence. "must have access to the Alchemists' Cities. The alchemists are close," he wheezed, "close to the secret of eternal life. I must have it."
"Of course," the barbarian soothed. "My lord Dorhacin's chief alchemist assured him that they were merely months away from unlocking the secret, and that was before I left on this embassy. They might have discovered it even now, as we speak!"
Daiyu's mouth twisted in a sneer. Five of the tyrant's previous chief alchemists had made the same promise, if the rumors were to be believed. All five of them had lost their heads shortly thereafter when the promised elixir failed. Dorhacin was a harsh, cruel man, who executed servants, alchemists, ministers, generals, and -- her greatest concern -- wives.
"My agents will learn the truth," the emperor said. "And I will have it once it is done."
"Of course, of course. Is there anything else to settle?"
"No," answered the first minister. "This audience is at an end."
The barbarian bowed low and departed, leaving the emperor and first minister alone with the guards. Daiyu watched from above, biting her lip with worry.
The first minister turned to his master, and they put their heads together in quiet conversation. Daiyu decided to wait no longer. She swept down the stairs with her maids in tow and emerged into the audience chamber from the back. Her father looked up with a slow start and frowned.
"Dearest daughter," he gasped, trying unsuccessfully to rise from his seat.
"You want me to marry the southern barbarian tyrant?" she demanded. The emperor sighed heavily, and the first minister folded his hands over the tablet before him.
"It is necessary to secure the peace," her father's minister said patiently.
"He's a brute," Daiyu protested. "I hear he has killed a dozen wives already."
"Concubines," the minister corrected gently, "Women of low status. He would not dare touch a daughter of the imperial blood."
"How can I be so sure?" Daiyu demanded. "It will be my head on the block if you are wrong."
The first minister sighed. Daiyu scowled at him from behind the beaded tassels of her headdress. How she hated this man! Always so smug and patronizing, scheming and plotting to aggrandize himself as her father wilted under the pressures of running an empire.
"Princess," the minister began slowly, as if talking to an imbecile. "These are matters of state that do not concern you. They are best left to men with experience in these matters."
"It will not be you who pays the price if you are wrong," Daiyu retorted hotly. "Father, please. I--"
Her father raised an aged hand, but did not meet her eyes. "This a matter of state. I will not hear dissent on it. Do as you are commanded."
"If your armies had done has commanded," Daiyu shot back with tears welling in her eyes, "we would not be subjected to this indignity. If your ministers," she jabbed a furious finger at the one present, "had done as commanded..."
"Enough!" her father roared, suddenly on his feet. He glowered down at her from atop the throne, for a moment looking the image of the mighty sovereign she remembered from her youth. But it was only an instant. "Enough," he repeated, this time wheezing for breath. "This is necessary to secure the peace. You are dismissed."
"It will be a short peace," Daiyu hissed defiantly.
She turned and stormed out amid a clacking of beads, anger quickly giving way to the black cloud of despair hanging over her. Long deprived of the alchemists' indigo spice, her father was old and weak. Like the state he ruled, he had sunk into decrepitude and indolence. Her many brothers plotted against each other from their government posts and provincial estates. The succession would be bloody, and Dorhacin, this southern tyrant, would never tire of war. Would he renew his invasions during the time of civil war, or would he think to claim the entire state for himself, through her?
Perhaps her bloodline would protect her, as the first minister said. Or perhaps she would fail to give him a son, and end up another of his dead wives.
---
That night, in the wide bath in her chambers, Daiyu felt the grip of despair catch up to her at last. Her maids sat in the bath with her, some shoulder deep in the water and others sitting on the rim of the great marble tub, all naked. They washed themselves and her together, pulling her long, dark hair into a lustrous black train behind her, soaping it and combing it as they sang. Zhi poured a basin of hot water over the princess' shoulders and ran a cloth along her naked shoulder blades.