Chapter Six
They were somewhere over the Nomadic Sea when Sophia decided to approach Yasha. "Have... have I done something to offend Arkady?" the human asked the elf, trepidation in her voice. The dwarf was asleep in the back of the chamber atop Quiesh as they flew through the moonlight. "He's been... a little curt the past few days, and I'm worried I've said something to upset him, so I thought I might come to you, since you've been together so long."
"Mmm," Yasha said, sipping from her tea as she watched the murmur of the waves far beneath them as the two moons cast dueling paths across them. "It's not you, my dear. My husband has a somewhat conflicted relationship dealing with pixies, and your new companion, Moonweave, is a reminder of a particularly difficult time for him. I imagine it will pass in time, but neither you nor she should take this as a reflection upon either of you. When you have lived through as much history as my husband has, sometimes it can take a toll upon you in the most unexpected and unusual ways."
"I keep forgetting that even among your highly long-lived species, both you and your husband have remained extremely youthful through the aid of your magics."
"Threadbinders and Threatbinders are sizable investments in knowledge and power," Yasha said, "so that comes with the expectation that we will pay back that investment over the centuries, both in great ways and small."
"Can I ask what problems Arkady has with pixies?"
Yasha sighed, leaning her slender frame against the railing that circumnavigated the edge Quiesh's carriage. "Problem is perhaps a poor choice of words. Arkady fought alongside an entire battalion of pixies, but none of them survived, and during that time, he'd grown quite fond of them. Because of that, he came to associate their kind, completely unfairly I will confess, as harbingers of ill-omen, despair and death." Yasha placed a hand on Sophia's shoulder. "He
knows
it is silly, and that it is without merit, but that war still haunts him to this day, and he has yet to be able to fully shed its wear and tear upon his soul."
"Should I advise Moonweave to steer clear of him then?"
"No no," Yasha said, waving her hand. "I will not see your companion feeling rejection because my husband is still dealing with grief. Just caution her not to take Arkady's gruff demeanor personally, and assure her that he will, at some point, work through it. We've not had cause much to be around pixies over the centuries, so it's likely time that he begin the process of moving through the grief rather than stuffing it in the cupboards of his mind."
"Might I ask another question, m'lady?"
"Sophia, my dear, we're partners now, so I think that you should definitely drop the 'm'lady' unless absolutely necessary," Yasha scolded with a slight smile of amusement.
"Very well. Yasha, what the bloody hells is that?" Sophia said, pointing over to the left of their path where a ribbon of blueflame cut through the sky in a threatening volley, landing upon a field of soldiers off in the far distance.
The elf squinted her eyes to focus them on the far distance and she could see a familiar wrinkle she'd not laid eyes upon for centuries, a rounded insectoid shaped tank with a large cannon on the back of it, a piece of Zincolum magical technology that was thought long destroyed. They were known as Rackows, a sort of military tech now banned by polite society. Even at such sizable distance, she could make out the distinct lapis lazuli carapace, a sight she'd seen during the Cosmion Wars, and hoped never to see again. The six spindly legs looked as though they had been reconstructed, cobbled together from whatever materials could be found. A far cry from their hayday, this one looked to have been on its last legs several lifetimes ago, and yet, the very sight of it still instilled a sense of primal fear deep in the back of her skull, as she remembered seeing their cannons shredding through soldiers by the legion. If anything, she mostly found herself glad to be only seeing one of them, and not a full squadron of them on approach, even in its dilapidated state. Despite how long they'd been gone, she found the very sight of one causing her unrest.
"That, dear Sophia, is forbidden magic," Yasha said, a sliver of nervousness in her voice. "And something we, sadly, cannot just ignore. Go, wake Arkady and your new companion. We're going to need all hands on-deck, although this is far more my field than it is his."
"I'll get him."
A few minutes later, Quiesh had changed course and was drifting through the air currents over towards the battlefield, which looked as though it had quieted down, the battle having broken for a time, each side retreating to their lines, leaving the empty battlefield between them mostly scorched earth and untended corpses.
Both Arkady and Yasha had significant military experience, but they came at it from two entirely different angles, and in entirely different eras. Arkady had fought in old wars, before he was a mage, and before he was properly armed to deal with them, so he had the frontline battle experience. Yasha, by contrast, had developed all of her initial military knowledge while becoming a Threatbinder, and had spent centuries refining those skills, so she was far more equipped to think tactically.
The dwarf scowled, looking down at the Rackow with clear disdain in his eyes. "I thought the humans were supposed to know better than to go mucking about with that kind of dangerous thing," he grumbled. "They're just as like to blow themselves up as they are to damage the enemy. And wouldn't that just be a fine thing."
"Why were they banned, dear Arkady?" Sophia asked, leaning against him, resting her plush curves into his back. He recognized that she was trying to butter him up but chose to let the physical contact continue uncommented on.
"Blueflame scars in ways that fleshmenders cannot tend to," the dwarf said. "Its burns are irreparable, often fatal, but even the wounds that do not kill cause lingering pain that is near impossible to quell. I once saw a dwarf lop his own hand off at the wrist rather than endure the eternal singing of pain from half-functioning fingers. The fleshmender even complimented him on the willpower to follow through on the correct decision. Blueflame weapons were deigned... too cruel to be allowed for civilized usage. Most were said to be destroyed centuries ago, when the Accords were adopted, but I suppose the wreckage of some of them must've lain beneath the earth, simply waiting for some poor sap to dig them up."
"And what are we going to do about it?" Moonweave chirped in happily as she zipped on her tiny wings in the air before them. "Bend them over your lap and rap upon their bottoms until they learn how naughty they've been?"
"As amusing as that might be, little one, I somehow do not think they will be eager to engage in such ideas," the dwarf said, annoyance in his voice. "But we need not give them a choice in such matters. The accords are
quite
clear on what any mage who encounters a blueflame weapon is supposed to do with it. So, we don't really have any choices to be made, other than how, I suppose."