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The Maitsaro

The Corpse

The Corpse

Oct 12, 2025


Footsteps thundered on the corridor jolting Linh Tang awake. Someone banged on her door and a muffled voice yelled her name. 

“What in the…” She shot out of bed and fumbled for her wrap in the dimness. No natural light seeped in through the window yet.

The banging resumed, this time with even more force. She threw on the wrap and flung the door open.
Tama Lao, first son of Chief Siha and her bosom friend stood there, a lantern in his hand.  She squinted, wincing at the glare. His usual jovial face was clouded and grim. There was no twinkle in his dark eyes and half of the long hair that he kept tied back strangled about his face as if he had rushed like the wind.

“Tama?”

“Come quick,” he said. Already he was turning away, retracing his steps in a hurry.

An emergency. That had to be it. She grabbed her liniment satchel and ran to keep up with his long strides.

“What’s happened?” She gasped trying to catch her breath, as she tied her long hair in a loose bun and cinched her wrap close. 

“They found….a corpse on the beach.” 

“But….this isn’t Maitsaro business.”  She almost stopped in her tracks but Tama pulled her along.

“We still need you.”

He wouldn’t say anything else but just hurried her towards the entrance. Linh tightened her hold on her satchel and held her tongue. Maitsaro dealt with mortals and their exchanges with the eldritch world. There was nothing Maitsaro could do for the dead.  Except maybe to ensure that their essence was properly released so their souls could rejoin the Circle. But you didn’t really need a Maitsaro for that. 

They crossed the quiet dimly lit courtyard. Tama’s boots clomped on the clay pavement and crunched on  the graveled walk. Pebbles poked through the thin soles of Linh’s slippers. But she didn’t complain. It was the least of her worries right now. Her thoughts flew about. Tama said a corpse. It was possible the victim had drowned. Some poor fisher folk perhaps.

Nothing stirred. Out through the wooden gates, a couple men on horseback waited with Tama’s mount. Spittle flecked the horses’ mouths and their nostrils flared and quivered. They’d already ridden somewhere with their riders. Unlike her, they were alert and ready as if they’d been awake all night. 

Tama mounted first then helped her scramble up behind him. She almost fell off when he immediately set off at gallop.

Clutching his waist tightly, she asked, “Did you notify the authorities?” 

“They’re already there. We’re just waiting for you.” He said and urged his horse to speed up. 

What they hoped she could do for the dead, she didn’t know. It was a short ride but it seemed forever to Linh who was unaccustomed to horseback riding.

When they arrived, she thankfully slid off to land on shaky legs. They had ridden towards the beach. The tide had risen and the water lapped further up on the beach than was usual. Torchlight illuminated an area close to the water’s edge where a group had gathered about. She frowned. If they had to pull the victim higher up to avoid the rising water then that meant the victim was not where it was found.

“They better not have touched anything,” Linh said. She pushed forward through the group till she stood in the illuminated space. It was as Tama had said. A man laid out on his back. A very dead one.

“Don’t touch anything,” she ordered, her voice ringing clear and strong. “Let the authorities deal with it.” 

“We have,” a deep authoritative voice said.  “Who might you be?”

In her haste, she hadn’t noted the group of people gathered about. She had assumed there were all from Tama’s clan. But the owner of the voice  was not Hivean.

The man detached himself from the group. He was a large man in a dark tunic. He was easily the tallest man she had ever seen , even taller than Tama and Tama was tall for a Hivean. Dangling from the strange man’s neck was a heavy medallion with three golden bands that intertwined.

She swallowed hard, her stomach a hard mass of rocks. An Imperial. One who had attained the status of Maigida. But this one appeared far too young to hold the position. Whatever, he was still an Imperial. Had they come to enforce the Imperial edict concerning her marriage contract? Her chest constricted. No, it didn’t make any sense for them to be here in the dead of the night just for that.

Beside him, two others dressed in similar garb stood close. They were both young, in dark robes and not much older than herself. A male and female. Both wore silver medallions with two bands. More Imperials. 

“This is the Maitsaro, Maigida Xun.” Tama said with a respectful bow.

She bowed with her arms held over face. She was right. This was a Maigida. What were they doing here?  

“You? The Maitsaro?” Disbelief and doubt crept into the Maigida’s tone. He looked her up and down and raised his brows at Tama. “Am I missing something or is this a joke?”

Linh stiffened her back. She should have been used to the reactions of unbelief by others upon knowing who she really was but it still rankled all the same. 

Tama bowed again. “It’s the truth sir. This is Maitsaro Linh Tang.”

“The Maitsaro had a daughter, Maigida.” The Imperial female confirmed. Her features were thin, and sharp as if her face was made of sharp angles. Her hair glowing white in the torchlight was tied up in a tight bun. On her cheek the blue mark of her power trailed down.

Linh bristled. The female had said ‘had.’ Her father had been missing for over a year and everyone already presumed he was dead. There was nothing she could about it, except continue the search for him on her own.

The other male scratched his cheek. “But I thought she would be much older somehow.” His short-cropped hair was laid out like spikes and his wide mouth twitched as he looked at Linh. On his neck the dark green mark of his power unfurled.  “Isn’t the Maitsaro’s daughter older?” He hesitated. “Beg pardon, Miss, you just look so young.”

Linh’s face flamed. It didn’t help that she wasn’t dressed properly and still in her sleepwear. She probably looked like someone’s lost child.

 “I am of age,” she said through gritted teeth.  She pushed her anger down and withdrew her Maitsaro medallion for them to see.  “How may I be of use?”

The Maigida pointed not at the corpse but at someone else lying on the ground in the shadows. Beside the prone figure Tama stood with two of his men. She rushed over. It was a youth and one she recognized.

“Diwa?” she asked, her alarm mounting. Diwa was Tama’s oldest sister’s son. 

“He was one of the sentries who discovered the body,” Tama muttered, clenching his fists. “I should never have let him go on patrol with the others. I should have known he was too young.”

Diwa’s eyes had rolled back into his head and she could only see the whites of his eyes. His breathing was shallow, and he wheezed as if his lungs fought against something.

She hurried to the corpse to examine it and ignored the Imperials. The corpse was that of a middle-aged, neatly bearded man, dressed sensibly but not as a fisher folk. He was not from the area.

“When was he found?” she asked.

“This evening,” someone said in response. 

This evening, but this man had died some days before. The way his body appeared said as much. She took a pair of scissors from her satchel and cut away the clothing on the corpse’s chest. There would be more evidence on the upper torso. She stripped the cloth away and as she thought, the chest was severely discolored.

 Someone came up next to her. “When do you estimate that he died?”

“At least three or four days ago,” she replied without thinking, then recoiled. Maigida Xun had asked the question and like an idiot she had just given him the answer without thinking. She edged away from him.

“How do you know that?” he asked watching her closely.

Now she’d done it. She should have just kept her mouth shut around the Imperials but it was too late now. 

“Speak freely,” Maigida Xun said when she hesitated. If that was meant to make her feel more at ease it did the exact opposite. But the Imperial had asked.

She took a deep breath then elaborated. “You can tell by the corpse’ discoloration on the surface veins.” She pointed towards the mottled coloring on the limbs and the huge purplish-green patches on the chest. “These are from decomposition that occurs within three to four days. However, there’s something unusual.” 

She dropped her voice. “There’s no bloating anywhere on the body, no buildup of gases that indicate his internal organs disintegrated. And there should be fluid seeping from the eyes, nose and mouth. However, as you can see, there’s no fluid seeping from any of its orifices.” 

Leaning forward she sniffed hard. “Not even a strong, unpleasant smell that should be emanating from a rotting body.” She stared at the corpse. “He looks as if he’s just laying there for a quick nap and someone thought it would be humorous to paint on him.” Something else didn’t make sense. There was the fact that they didn’t know for sure what killed him in the first place. The body would need a more thorough investigation for them to conclude that drowning was the cause of death. But that was neither here nor there. 

Her observation completed she came to herself and bowed to the Maigida. “That’s what I’ve observed.”

What he was thinking, she didn’t know for his face showed nothing of what he thought. But he gave a nod.

“But the young boy, Diwa they called him,” the Imperial with the spiky hair joined in the conversation. “What does he have to do with the corpse?”

It was the next question on her mind and she returned to Diwa and examined his extremities especially his hands. A strange red scratch extended from one palm to his wrist. She traced the scar with a finger and a red angry glow pulsated then stopped. Her breath caught. 

“Did Diwa touch the corpse?” she asked searching the faces of the grim-faced men about her. “Did he?”

“He did miss,” one of the warriors spoke up. “He said the tide was coming in so he pulled the body up before the tide could take it away.”

 If she was right—no she couldn’t be right. She hurried to the corpse and held her palm over its mouth. At first there was nothing. But after a few seconds, a faint red haze slowly rose  then dissipated. Lead settled into the pit of her stomach. There it was. Solid, unadulterated proof. There was only one thing to do now if Diwa must be saved. 

“Stupid, so stupid,” she muttered under her breath.

“What?” Tama asked.  He had moved to her side as did the Imperials. “What did you find?”

She gestured toward the bearded man.  “That's not a corpse,” she said.

Kai_chibi
Kai_chibi

Creator

Linh Tang is woken up in the dead of the night and taken to see a corpse. She discovers the Imperials are there as well in the middle of the mystery and that there is something sinister lurking about the corpse. Is it a corpse or is it not a corpse?

#mystery #slowburn #romance #supernatural #Alpha

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The Corpse

The Corpse

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