Time Lady Katie
The Lily Girl
The best way to describe the following few minutes was utter chaos. Taidans all around the Tenth Division were almost constantly glowing, people were disappearing and reappearing in groups, deploying the most imposing figures in the Tenth Division with drawn zanpakutou all around. Everyone was in sets of two. In order to even enter the Tenth Division, detailed questions and security checks were in place, in most cases requiring not just identification but proof of mission. People scrambled, and with surprisingly few exceptions, responded to Adelaide’s call for defensive readiness with clarity and seriousness of purpose.
There was a shot, and a good one, that this frantic action was preparing for a follow-up from the Ninth that wasn’t coming, but she couldn’t be sure. And if it wasn’t, at least the Tenth would be prepared for reprisals for what was about to happen. It was time to plan the counterstrike. Teams of three began sweeping the Courtyard and the Headquarters, looking for any surveillance equipment the Ninth might have, again possibly a bit too paranoid, but it was impossible to tell what was coming next. This kind of action from one division against another was shocking and unpredictable. And the reaction had to assume more of the same.
“Well,” Adelaide remarked quietly to herself, materializing in the courtyard as an ordered chaos of her troops swirled around her, “bonds are forged in fire. At least we have that...”
That, and the kind of white-hot righteous fury that could melt steel.
Standing, without her haori but with her scythe, the Captain of the Mystics waited for her officers, and hoped that the clemency and mercies of the Departed Spirits would see her through, even if she and they didn’t see eye-to-eye. This was as much self-preservation for them as it was for her, she reasoned. And even if they disliked her, their accord with Lilith stood. For now, at least, she was sure she could rely on them.
There was a shot, and a good one, that this frantic action was preparing for a follow-up from the Ninth that wasn’t coming, but she couldn’t be sure. And if it wasn’t, at least the Tenth would be prepared for reprisals for what was about to happen. It was time to plan the counterstrike. Teams of three began sweeping the Courtyard and the Headquarters, looking for any surveillance equipment the Ninth might have, again possibly a bit too paranoid, but it was impossible to tell what was coming next. This kind of action from one division against another was shocking and unpredictable. And the reaction had to assume more of the same.
“Well,” Adelaide remarked quietly to herself, materializing in the courtyard as an ordered chaos of her troops swirled around her, “bonds are forged in fire. At least we have that...”
That, and the kind of white-hot righteous fury that could melt steel.
Standing, without her haori but with her scythe, the Captain of the Mystics waited for her officers, and hoped that the clemency and mercies of the Departed Spirits would see her through, even if she and they didn’t see eye-to-eye. This was as much self-preservation for them as it was for her, she reasoned. And even if they disliked her, their accord with Lilith stood. For now, at least, she was sure she could rely on them.
327 Words
327 Total
327 Total
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