[FIC] Luffa: The Legendary Super Saiyan (102/?)
Disclaimer: This story features characters and concepts based on Dragon Ball, which is a trademark of Bird Studio/Shueisha and Toei Animation. This is an unauthorized work, and no profit is being made on this work by me. This story is copyright of me. Download if you like, but please don’t archive it without my permission. Don’t be shy.
Continuity Note: About 1000 years before the events of Dragon Ball Z.
Previous Chapters conveniently available here.
[30 January, 233 Before Age. Planet Server’la.]
Over the next six weeks, Guwar had learned a great deal about his new partners, but very little about the object of their search.
Treekul, the only non-Saiyan in the group, was an alchemical historian. She knew a few techniques for preparing mystical elixirs and so on, but her main focus of study was the lore. Unlike the sciences of chemistry and biology, which made progress through rigorous documentation and peer review, alchemy was a secret discipline, with reclusive masters teaching on a select handful of students. When they recorded their work at all, it was always done in an esoteric style. Simple instructions were expressed as complex riddles. Ingredients were given symbolic codenames which would be meaningless to the uninitiated. Typically, an alchemical scroll promised much: immortality, mastery over living things, the power to transmute lead into gold. But once you actually sat down and read them, they delivered very little: Vague sermons, arcane philosophical tracts, and references to other works which were conveniently unavailable. Guwar had heard about this sort of thing, and always assumed it was an enormous bluff, no different from the way he would use the Saiyans' reputation to make himself seem more powerful than he actually was.
And yet, Treekul seemed to be able to make sense of it all, at least to a certain extent. She had shown him a few documents she had worked on in the past, and explained how she was able to filter the "important stuff" from the "crap", as she put it. Part of the alchemical tradition was to deliberately add a lot of pointless fluff to one's writings, in order to disguise the true wisdom and to trick the unworthy into dismissing their sacred knowledge as nonsense. "Once you've studied enough of their writings," she had told him, "you can start to decode it, and see what they were really talking about."
Treekul hailed from the Planet Clytemnestra, whose people had pale purple skin and dark green hair. Treekul preferred to keep her own hair as short as possible, as she said it helped her focus on her research. "Don't ask me why, but that extra quarter inch of growth on my head just makes me nuts," she had said one day while he saw her applying a trimmer to her scalp. As a result, Guwar noticed that she tended to leave tiny green clippings behind everywhere she went.
Endive, one of the Saiyans, was usually the one flying their ship. She was a smuggler by trade, though she liked to find a good battle between jobs, much the same way that Guwar did when his mathematics skills weren't needed. Like Guwar, she had been forced to scale back her recreational fighting ever since Luffa had begun cracking down on Saiyan activity.
"I tried getting as far from Federation space as I could," she once told him. "I found a nice little civil war on Rofos III. They had mechs, triffles, and all sorts of interesting weapons. I was in heaven... for all of two weeks, and then she showed up and ruined the whole thing. That was when I made up my mind. One way or another, I refuse to be pushed around again."
Endive never had much to say, but Guwar enjoyed hearing it, if only for the chance to admire her looks. She had woven the end of her black hair in to a short, thick braid, which hung between her shoulder blades like a piece of halyard rope from a sailing ship. The bridge of her nose was at a steep angle, which he found aesthetically pleasing, especially whenever she frowned. Luckily for him, she frowned quite often, since the ship's navigation system wasn't quite up to her personal standards. She and Treekul had recruited him into this group by tricking him into thinking he would get to sleep with one or both of them. Watching Endive handle the controls of the ship, he often wished that there was a way to take her up on it.
As for Lesseri, he had dealt with her in the past, though he had always known her to be a ruthless, indomitable warrior. For years he had envied her superior strength and financial success. For example, the ship they now traveled in was hardly luxurious, but it was fast and well-armed, and comfortably quartered six people, which made it far nicer than the broken down one-seater Guwar had left behind on Paxul's Planet. From afar, he had always thought Lesseri to be the model of what a Saiyan should be: a warrior who could go anywhere and do anything she pleased, because she had the might to enforce her own will.
Now that he had lived with her for a while, and seen her ship from the inside, he realized they had more in common than either of them probably cared to admit. Lesseri thought of herself as a weakling compared to other Saiyans, just as he saw himself. This surprised Guwar at first, but the more he thought about it, the more sense it made. There was always a bigger fish in the pond. He had always thought Lesseri retreated from untenable situations because she was so cold and calculating, but the truth was that she was afraid of dying, just like everyone else. She was farther ahead of him in the search for greater power, but the gap between them was insignificant compared to how far they each had to go. In spite of their past enmity, Guwar was beginning to like her. When their quest led to searching a tomb on an abandoned planet, he was happy to join her.
"I killed my mother," Lesseri told him as she punched her way through the wall that surrounded the necropolis. They had been talking about family, and this was where the conversation had led.
"Why?" Guwar asked.
"You know those procedures where you can have your embryos removed from your womb and gestated outside of your body?"
"No, I had no idea you could do that," Guwar said. He had no interest in procreation, and since he lacked a uterus, he cared very little what others did with theirs.
Lesseri shook her head. "Men," she groaned. "A lot of Saiyan women do it when they get pregnant. Back when Planet Saiya was still up and running, they practically ordered people to do it."
"Okay," Guwar said. "What about it?"
"My mother did it through a private company, only she never came back to get me when it was time. Growing up, it kind of pissed me off. My sister, she used to make excuses. She thought mom must have died in battle, or she couldn't pay the bills or something. When I got older, I tracked her down. Wasn't even that hard. She wasn't even trying to hide."
"Must have been a hell of a fight," Guwar said as he doubled checked their coordinates.
"Nah, I checked her out first before I confronted her. She was too close to me in power. I might have won, but there was no guarantee, and I wanted a guarantee. That was how we both ended up training with Luffa."
Guwar nearly dropped his scanning device. "You trained with Luffa?" he asked.
"If you can call it that," Lesseri said. "Mostly it was Luffa and her alien wife scolding us like we were naughty children. The leader of the group, guy named Zaperc, he tried to start this 'movement' where we'd learn to become Super Saiyans ourselves. My mother joined on, and so did I. Didn't want to risk her learning anything that might make her stronger and protect her from my revenge. Anyway, Luffa found out about Zaperc's group and took over the whole thing. Not that there was much to take over, but I guess she didn't like the idea of trash like us taking her name in vain. Anyway, I waited until the right moment, then I rigged a bomb on my mother's ship. As soon as things went pear-shaped, I knew she'd try to run for it, and sure enough--"
Lesseri clapped her hands together for effect. "Boom. Luffa didn't like it, but she didn't care much for my mother either, so she just sort of stood there while I left."
"What did your sister think?" Guwar asked.
"Beats me," Lesseri said. "I haven't seen her in years. She might be dead. Hold on, I think this is it."
Near the center of the necropolis was a large mausoleum that looked like a great stone chrysalis. There were small alien creatures clinging to its surface, and the glossy surface of their chitinous shells made the entire structure seem almost alive.
"Yeah, I think this is the one we want. Let me take some readings before we smash our way in. Wouldn't want to break anything important."
"So what happened after that?" Guwar asked.
"After what?" Lesseri replied.
"After you killed your mother," Guwar said. "I've never gotten revenge for anything before. I wondered what it was like."
"To be honest, it felt kind of empty," Lesseri said. "I didn't regret it, but I'd spent my whole life on that one goal, and then it was over. Mostly, it stuck in my craw that I wasn't strong enough to kill the old bag directly. Luffa had no business giving me her opinion on it, but she was right. It would have been more satisfying to fight her instead of blowing her up. Mom didn't deserve the honor, but at least if I'd beaten her fairly, I would have had something to be proud of."
"I suppose so," Guwar said.
"That was when I started looking for ways to get stronger. I've had enough of people pushing me around like I'm some bystander. Being a Saiyan used to mean something, but lately it just feels like it makes you a patsy for King Rehval, or Luffa, or anyone else who happens to hit the genetic lottery. I wanted to make my own opportunity."
"And that was how you met Treekul?" Guwar asked.
"Exactly," Lesseri said. "I've heard rumors about Saiyans using a technique called 'Jindan' to increase their power. I know we haven't told you much about it, Guwar, but that's only because we don't know much more than you do. It's not easy finding a Saiyan these days, so if there's anything to the rumors, these jacked up Saiyans are staying out of sight."
"If that's true," Guwar reasoned, "then maybe this Jindan thing isn't all it's cracked up to be. The Saiyans who use Jindan still have to hide from Luffa just like the rest of us."
"Could be," Lesseri said, "but it could also mean that they don't want the competition finding out about their secret. If everyone could use it--whatever 'it' is--then we'd all be right back where we started. And even if it doesn't make you as strong as a Super Saiyan, it could still be a big gain. I don't know about you, but I'll take whatever I can get."
"I'm picking up some unusual readings," Guwar said. "But nothing Saiyan."
Lesseri checked her own scanner and then compared her results to his. "Yeah, Treekul was afraid of something like this. We'll have to take a few precautions before we break into this thing. Give me a hand, will you?"
*******
Thousands of years ago, a brilliant scholar was interred in a mausoleum. Over time, his students were buried nearby, and as the scholar's wisdom of the natural world grew into legend, a superstition arose that those who were buried near his tomb would pass on a blessing to their descendants. Centuries passed, and the scholar came to be revered as a god, whose worshipers believed would one day rise from the dead and rule over the planet. It was said that those buried in the necropolis that surrounded his tomb would be revived as his holy servants.
Before the planet's intelligent life forms vanished, their history included several wars fought over this sacred ground. Conquerors thought that by controlling the necropolis, they could convince others of their supremacy. New religions attempted to assimilate the necropolis's mythical status into their own theologies. During more enlightened times, scientists would attempt to study the graves to learn the truth behind the legends. But the scholar's mausoleum was never successfully breached, for when the ancient one was having it built, he planned to take his greatest secrets with him into the hereafter. To ensure that graverobbers would not plunder his great writings, he treated the interior of his tomb with a concoction of his own making. It would make the stone heal itself when broken. In case this was not enough to dissuade intruders, he prepared a guardian, an unliving creature that would become active when fresh air entered the tomb. Its creator had named it Qursss, and it drew strength from the very earth surrounding the mausoleum. Once unleashed, it would not rest until it had destroyed all living things in the vicinity. When its grisly task was finished, it would lumber back into the tomb, which would then reseal itself.
And so, when the first breeze of fresh air entered the tomb in over fifteen centuries, Qursss stirred and reawakened to its strange un-life. A blue flame ignited from a pile of ashes, and then it grew, transmuting into a vaguely humanoid form cast in minerals and the bones of its past victims. Without hesitation, it rushed towards the source of the air current, and wailed its fearsome warning to any who could hear.
"Woe betide you, graverobbers! Know that you have summoned Qursss the Unquenchable, and for daring to defile my master's resting place, you must pay with your lives!"
It saw light from the fissure in the stone, and then the crack exploded into an opening large enough for a person to enter.
"Yeah, I see it now," Guwar said as he peeked inside to look at Qursss. "We'd better lure the thing outside before we proceed."
Qursss roared as it chased after Guwar. "Mortal fool!" it shouted. "You have sealed your doom this day! Qursss shall pursue you to the ends of the--"
It paused at the threshhold of the hole in the mausoleum. Guwar stood just outside, waiting patiently for Qursss to follow him. The only thing missing from this scene was the ground. Guwar was standing in midair.
"Looks like you were right," Guwar said. "This creature's immortal, but it doesn't seem to be able to fly."
Beneath them, Qursss could hear a second intruder, and its primitive intellect slowly realized that she was carrying the entire mausoleum in her arms. "Aw, well, if he’s too shy to step outside," Lesseri said, "I guess I'll have to give him some encouragement!"
The whole structure began to shake, and Qursss lost its balance. Unable to react in time, it tumbled forward, and as it fell, it realized that it was thousands of feet in the air.
It wanted to threaten its enemies, to warn them that such trickery would avail them nothing, since Qursss would follow them and destroy them for as long as it took to restore its master's tomb. But it had already noticed the ocean below, and Qursss knew that its master had designed it to sleep in the absence of fresh air. No, there could be no reprisal. Qursss would sink like a stone once it hit the water, and Qursss would fall dormant for a very long time. Perhaps one day, when the oceans themselves boiled away, Qursss would stir once more, but that would not be for a very long time. There was absolutely nothing it could do. The enemy had won.
Its final thought, as its monstrous body shattered upon the water's surface, was to wonder why its master had never thought to give it wings.
*******
[31 January, 233 Before Age. Interstellar Space.]
"What I don't understand," Guwar asked Treekul, "is how you found that planet in the first place. It was uncharted, and it looked like no one had been there in centuries."
"Geomantic extrapolation," Treekul replied as she ran her finger over the text of the parchment the Saiyans had removed from the mausoleum. "You're sure this was the only scroll you found in the tomb, right?"
"Positive," Guwar said. "What was that you said a second ago?"
She sat up from her bunk and finally looked at him. "Geomancy," she said. "In my line of work, you can't rely on the people who write these things to actually help you by citing sources. Sometimes you have to use other methods to connect the dots. That planet you and Lesseri went to, I don't know what it's called, or the name of the guy who wrote this scroll, but it's written in the same language as the last four scrolls I studied, and uses symbols and notations he would have learned from an older master known as 'Server'. Not his real name, by the way. None of these guys ever used their real name."
"You... you really haven't answered my question," Guwar said.
She pointed to a disc-shaped object hanging from the opposite wall of her cabin. It appeared to be made of wood, and hundreds of tiny characters and sigils were written upon its surface. "That's a geomantic compass," she said. "Normally you use it for aligning ki energies with planetary fields, but a specialist can use it to locate objects bound by special connections. Server's other disciples had most of the information I needed, but not all of it, so I calibrated my compass with information from the scrolls I had, and used that to point me in the general direction of the one that I didn't. It's taken a lot of course corrections to narrow it down, but considering how long the planet's been lost, I think ten days was a pretty decent turnaround."
Guwar was beginning to understand how some of his clients felt whenever he explained the more complicated aspects of probability theory. "Look," he said, "I just want to understand how this gets us any closer to Jindan. Does that scroll mention it? Does that mean it was invented thousands of years ago?"
"No, of course not," Treekul said. "You have to understand how this works, Guwar. All we really know about Jindan-- and I'm using the word 'know' very loosely-- is that it makes Saiyans stronger somehow, and it just happens to share the name of one of the terms used for the golden elixir, a central concept of alchemical thought. Until we find out more, our best chance is to dig through old writings, and hopefully find scrolls and records that were used to invent this particular Jindan. We do that, and we'll have something resembling a lead to what you three are after."
He made a long sigh when he heard this. "It all sounds pretty hopeless," he said.
She smiled and lay back down on her bunk. "Trust me, Guwar, I've been digging up old secrets my whole career. If there's something to be found, I'll find it. It just takes time. And the occasional defiling of an ancient burial ground, but you and Lesseri didn't seem to have much trouble with that at all. Even if it takes us a year to hit paydirt, wouldn't you say it was worth it?"
Guwar supposed he couldn't argue with that. "I guess I'll leave you to your work then," he said as he rose from her chair and headed for the door. "I could use something to eat anyway."
"Hey, drop by anytime," she said. "It's good to bounce ideas off of you. Oh, could you toss me my trimmer before you go? My scalp's getting a little itchy."
*******
[9 February, 233 Before Age. Thalos I.]
Days later, with nowhere in particular to go, the Saiyans decided to land on a planet to indulge in some hunting and gathering. Guwar preferred gathering, as it made more sense from an efficiency standpoint. The ship's sensors could tell him where to go to find abundant supplies of edible plants, and he could collect those much more quickly than he could chase down a comparable mass of wild animals. Most Saiyans didn't look at it that way, and so when Lesseri and Endive chose to hunt large reptiles on the western continent, he wasn't surprised.
What did surprise him was when Endive approached him later, while he was bundling his first batch of roots and berries for the cargo hold. They weren't supposed to meet up for another hour.
"I thought you were hunting," he said.
"I decided to see if you needed any help," she said. "Lesseri has things well in hand."
"She usually does," Guwar said. "But I think I've covered my end pretty well."
"What do you think of our little band so far, Guwar?" she asked.
He finished weaving a simple rope and began wrapping it around a stack of starchy plants he had found in a marsh. "I'm used to working alone," he said, "but so far I'm impressed with the operation. All of you are professional, sensible. Treekul's a bit flaky, but she's an alien, so I won't hold it against her."
"Have you considered what will happen when we succeed, Guwar?" Endive asked. She took a seat on one of the cargo crates and put her palms on her knees.
"We'll all get stronger," he said. "Much stronger, with any luck. I, for one, plan to be able to write my own ticket."
"And what about Lesseri?" she asked. "She's stronger than both of us right now. It stands to reason that if our quest succeeds, she stands to become even stronger still."
"That makes sense to me," Guwar said slowly. "What's your point, Endive?"
"Merely that we should be considering our own separate interests at this stage of the partnership," she replied. "Our working theory is that there are already Saiyans out there using Jindan in secret. They will not be pleased to see three more added to their number. For every Saiyan that learns the secret, it depreciates in value."
"And if we were talking about treasure," Guwar surmised, "sooner or later we'd have to decide if it would be better to split it two ways instead of three."
"I see this as no different, Guwar," Endive said. "The other Saiyans may try to stop us from reaching our goal. But they may find two Saiyans easier to accept into their domain than three. And if they happen to be fairly weak Saiyans--like you and me-- well, we'd hardly be much of a threat to their plans, now would we?"
"What exactly are you suggesting, Endive?" he asked. He tried to keep his tone neutral, hoping not to tip his hand. At the moment, he saw no compelling reason to turn against Lesseri, but he didn't want to appear to reject the idea, just in case she was on to something.
"For the moment, nothing at all," she said briskly. "I simply wanted to share my appraisal of the situation. When the time comes to make a decision, there may not be a chance to confer privately, Guwar. So I thought we should discuss certain... contingencies in advance."
He was about to ask her what contingencies she had in mind, when the communicators on their wrists began to chirp. It was Treekul. She had found something.
*******
The closest thing Lesseri's ship had to a meeting area was the mess hall situated between the cabins and the cockpit. Treekul presented her findings on a small display screen normally used for entertainment purposes. Guwar found her delivery surprisingly polished and scholarly, considering that she was giving it in her pajamas, which bore flecks of green hair clippings from the last three times she trimmed her scalp.
"I know a lot of what I just said went over your heads," she said as she finished explaining how she arrived at her conclusions. "I just want to give you a bird's eye view of what I've done, so you won't think this I just pulled all of this out of my ear.
"We've trusted you this far, Treekul," Lesseri said. "And I think we get the general idea."
Lesseri had put her feet up on the table and crossed her ankles. Endive was busy eating some raw meat from her hunting, while Guwar sat on the table itself. He had some question about Treekul's data, but he decided to save them for when he could speak with her in private. He suspected that the others would do the same.
"All right, then here's the bottom line," Treekul said as she tapped the screen to advance to the next image. The good news is that my theory was correct, and we've been on the right track. We've established a line of spagyrist masters who studied techniques for increasing physical attributes. We're talking about simple stuff, like healing minor injuries, or improving concentration, but each record we've found states that the masters were looking ahead to a refinement of the research. A 'golden elixir', or a perfection of what they had begun to explore. They called that ideal experiment 'jindan', which means whoever invented what we're looking for must have based his research upon their earlier work."
"But the scroll we just found was never used by anyone," Lesseri said. "That tomb hadn't been touched in centuries, and the wax seal on the scroll itself was unbroken."
"Right, but it did give me more information to plug into my calculations," Treekul said. That means my geomantic measurements will be more precise from here on out, and there's a lot less guesswork about where to look next." She tapped the star chart on the monitor, causing it to zoom in on a single star system. "Turns out we'll have to go to the Quadzityz System after all," she said.
"That whole sector is a war zone," Endive said.
"Fine by me," Lesseri said with a smile. "With all the fighting, we can slip in, take what we need, and no one will notice we were there. We might even score some plunder if we have time."
"Yes, that does sound quite pleasant," Endive replied, "but that isn't my point. A stray bombardment could destroy our objective before we even have a chance to reach it."
"Not to mention the mercenaries working that sector," Guwar added. "Saiyans or not, some of them are bound to be stronger than us. If we're not careful, we could find ourselves outmatched. Then we'd be the ones getting plundered."
"It's worse than you think," Treekul said. "I monitored the war reports from that sector, just to get some idea of what we'd be getting into. Turns out the fighting has escalated even more than we knew. Someone brought slorgs into the conflict."
"Slorgs!" Endive said with a gasp. "Then it's only a matter of time before Luffa gets involved! She'd never tolerate a slorg infestation anywhere near the Federation border."
"And that brings me to the 'Bad News' part of my presentation," Treekul said with a sigh. She tapped the screen one more time, bringing up an image from a news periodical. The photo accompanying the article showed a Saiyan with glowing yellow hair and tail, holding a Quadzity armored troop transport over her head. Terrified soldiers were fleeing from her as she smashed the vehicle into a large boulder.
"Luffa's not just going to get involved on Quadziityz," Treekul said. "She's already there."
NEXT: The War Against War







