Kannex
TNPer
The man found himself lost in the clouds, miles above an endless sea. The ocean below was an infinite carpet of deep blue-green, upon which a giant as tall as the clouds could walk his way beyond the golden, sunlit horizon and into the darkening azure sky, all the way to the pearly gates of heaven where stars and angels slept. He once heard a story -- probably from his superstitious Han nanny -- that heaven and earth were once joined together within one giant cosmic egg, that angels once lived among mortal men and mortals could climb their way to God's heavenly throne. But then God saw that men were wicked and monstrous, and saw it fit to crack the cosmos in twain, forever separating the heaven from the --
"Earth to Franz! Is the Emperor of Kannex still with us?"
Franz blinked. He found himself back in the air-pressurized cabin of the imperial airplane, his head resting on an open palm on a seat near the window. Ten kilometers above the West Sea, en route to Pataliputra. "Yes, yes, I'm quite awake." Kaiser Franz was nearing fifty years old, the lush black hair of his youth beginning to gray. Wrinkles formed around sunken, almond-brown eyes. Like most members of the Niemza dynasty, the Kaiser was of mixed Han and white descent, serving as a living emblem of the multi-ethnic Empire.
He beheld his wife of thirty years, Linda. She was sitting across from him, a hardcover copy of War and Peace in her lap and a tender but teasing smile on her face. She was three years older than her husband, but managed to hide her age well with makeup and a cheerful expression. "Tell me what's on your mind, Franz." You know very well you can't tell anyone else were the words that came implicitly. She was his closest adviser, his confidante, his lover.
Franz sighed, then gazed out the thick glass window of the airplane. A blanket of clouds hung above the open blue ocean. "It's been eighteen years, hasn't it? It's been eighteen years since I flew over this very ocean, only I was headed the other direction. I was nothing more than an exile. They called me a usurper back then, a foreigner to his own country who couldn't even speak proper Mandarin." His dark, tired eyes sparked to life as he turned to his empress. "Now they call me Emperor."
As the imperial airplane descended, Emperor Franz checked himself in the mirror. A host of silver medals hung from the breast of his navy-blue military uniform. Golden epaulettes adorned his shoulders; a peaked cap with a red band and the imperial eagle insignia attached in front sat squarely on his combed hair; a sword in a sheath decorated by a golden, Han-style serpent-dragon hung at his belt. An assistant tapped the sides of his face with a brush, applying cosmetics that would subtract ten years from his appearance. Franz looked to his wife, who was dressed in a simple white mandarin gown, with a thick bun of hair tied in the back of her head and jade earrings.
Without so much as a thud, the wheels of the plane made contact with the ground, slowing on the Pataliputra International Airport runway. Two painted red stripes stripes ran across the length of the fuselage to represent the Kannexan flag; a gold-yellow star marked the rudder of the aircraft. In addition, above the red stripes and line of windows on the fuselage stood the large bold-letter markings, "KAISERREICH KANNEX ?????".
"Are you ready to meet our benefactor?" Franz asked his empress, half-smirking. Empress Linda leaned forward to give him a quick kiss, as if to remind him to put on a camera-ready smile. Then the hatch door burst open, bathing the Kannexan emperor and the inside of the plane cabin in white, bright sunlight. Emperor Franz took a step onto the hatch staircase, breathing the fresh Syrixian air.
"Earth to Franz! Is the Emperor of Kannex still with us?"
Franz blinked. He found himself back in the air-pressurized cabin of the imperial airplane, his head resting on an open palm on a seat near the window. Ten kilometers above the West Sea, en route to Pataliputra. "Yes, yes, I'm quite awake." Kaiser Franz was nearing fifty years old, the lush black hair of his youth beginning to gray. Wrinkles formed around sunken, almond-brown eyes. Like most members of the Niemza dynasty, the Kaiser was of mixed Han and white descent, serving as a living emblem of the multi-ethnic Empire.
He beheld his wife of thirty years, Linda. She was sitting across from him, a hardcover copy of War and Peace in her lap and a tender but teasing smile on her face. She was three years older than her husband, but managed to hide her age well with makeup and a cheerful expression. "Tell me what's on your mind, Franz." You know very well you can't tell anyone else were the words that came implicitly. She was his closest adviser, his confidante, his lover.
Franz sighed, then gazed out the thick glass window of the airplane. A blanket of clouds hung above the open blue ocean. "It's been eighteen years, hasn't it? It's been eighteen years since I flew over this very ocean, only I was headed the other direction. I was nothing more than an exile. They called me a usurper back then, a foreigner to his own country who couldn't even speak proper Mandarin." His dark, tired eyes sparked to life as he turned to his empress. "Now they call me Emperor."
As the imperial airplane descended, Emperor Franz checked himself in the mirror. A host of silver medals hung from the breast of his navy-blue military uniform. Golden epaulettes adorned his shoulders; a peaked cap with a red band and the imperial eagle insignia attached in front sat squarely on his combed hair; a sword in a sheath decorated by a golden, Han-style serpent-dragon hung at his belt. An assistant tapped the sides of his face with a brush, applying cosmetics that would subtract ten years from his appearance. Franz looked to his wife, who was dressed in a simple white mandarin gown, with a thick bun of hair tied in the back of her head and jade earrings.
Without so much as a thud, the wheels of the plane made contact with the ground, slowing on the Pataliputra International Airport runway. Two painted red stripes stripes ran across the length of the fuselage to represent the Kannexan flag; a gold-yellow star marked the rudder of the aircraft. In addition, above the red stripes and line of windows on the fuselage stood the large bold-letter markings, "KAISERREICH KANNEX ?????".
"Are you ready to meet our benefactor?" Franz asked his empress, half-smirking. Empress Linda leaned forward to give him a quick kiss, as if to remind him to put on a camera-ready smile. Then the hatch door burst open, bathing the Kannexan emperor and the inside of the plane cabin in white, bright sunlight. Emperor Franz took a step onto the hatch staircase, breathing the fresh Syrixian air.