With a heave, the sweating eta shoved the dead Oni's body from the wall,
watching it fall to a sickening thud on the rocks below. On the ground,
others gathered to lift the corpse, carrying it away to be destroyed.
Smiling in slow satisfaction, Benin knelt on the thick parapet again,
pushing his brush back and forth over the blood-covered rocks. It had
been a busy day. Goblin blood, Oni blood, samurai blood. The Wall was
filled with it, and the samurai rested below, safe in their dinner
halls.
His brush was heavy, with large bristles to grind the flesh out from
the crevices. That was good, because the Wall had to be constantly
cleaned. If the Crab samurai touched dead flesh, they were dishonored,
and Benin knew that was a bad thing. With greasy fingers, he pulled at a
stubborn lump of gristle wedged beneath a forsaken sword-blade that had
been thrust into the rock. With a strong yank, it twisted and a piece
came away as blood ran down Benin's hand. Lifting it idly, Benin looked
at the clod of hair that hung from it, still attached.
"Goblin." He smiled, showing twisted teeth that any ogre would have
been proud to claim. "All green." Benin raised the back of his hand to
his forehead, wiping away the sweat and grit of the morning's labors.
Peering about, he dragged the corpse of a minor Oni closer to the Wall,
and used it as a makeshift chair so that he could reach the rest of the
stubborn mass. The dead body beneath him sagged and bled from his
weight, but Benin paid it no attention. He would clean it up, too.
The sword was a masterpiece, shining beneath the caked blood in the
midmorning light, its blade half-buried in the rock wall. the laces of
the handle were a rough gray, worn and stained from hours of use. Its
samurai must have been a proud man. Benin looked around at the corpses
nearby, but saw no samurai among them who seemed wealthy enough to have
claimed the weapon. "Eaten," the eta thought aloud. "Too bad."
Around him, other eta scurried past, carrying buckets of clean water
and more bristled brushes. Benin's fingers worked against the delicate
steel of the katana, bleeding as he pulled away more flesh and shards of
granite. Though trapped between two massive boulders, the blade seemed
whole. Bits of bone and bloodily unidentifiable chunks of matter fell
away from the cut in the wall as the eta worked to release the sword.
Eager to see the katana freed in one piece, Benin worked painstakingly,
sweat and blood mingling on his hands and running in rivulets down his
fat, greasy face. He knew better than to draw the sword from the wall -
that was samurai's work. Even to touch the blade meant dishonorable
death for an eta.
"The main body of the attack was here, my Lady, on the South River
Wall." without turning around, Benin fell to his face against the stone.
Squeezing his eyes shut, he tried not to notice the rotten eyeball
rolling out of the dead Oni's skull onto his cheek. Booted feet stepped
near him, their marching pace muffled by the floor's grimy coating.
Peering up through lowered lids, Benin saw two men dressed in Crab
armor, their bright helmets shining in the sunlight. Their cleanly
callused hands pointed out toward the Shadowlands with an air of
arrogance. "The Oni came over that rise, and brought with them a
thousand goblin marauders. We were lucky to hold the position." A pause,
and the man's voice turned more gruff. "We lost many brave men."
"I understand your position, Tadashiro-san." The speaker was outside
of Benin's view, but her voice sang like the Fortunes. "We need to
reinforce this unit as soon as possible."
"Forgive me, Lady Champion," the other man spoke, stepping over the
eta. Benin began to grovel, moving himself into a position where he
could see all three. None of the samurai seemed to notice him amid the
corpses on the floor, and he scuttled sideways with a well-practiced
mutter. "But we don't have the men," the samurai continued, "and we
can't afford to take troops away from the other parts of the Wall."
Now, Benin could see her. Leaning on the freshly-scrubbed parapet,
her black hair waving like the movement of the clouds in the wind, she
looked down at the Crab scouts patrolling the battlefield below. She was
beautiful, pure and fine as nothing he had ever been allowed to touch,
her skin untainted by blood or grease. Benin shuddered against the cold
rock, feeling thick and gross.
"We have to find the men. The attacks are increasing each day. They
are testing our strength"
"and finding it lacking, my Champion." A bass rumble from the silent
warrior beside her. Interrupted, O-Ushi turned toward the second
samurai.
"You think so, Uncle?" her chin thrust out like a petulant child, and
her hand reached for the handle of her hammer. "And do you think my
brother could have done better? Are you questioning my judgment, Tsuru-san?"
Benin winced, waiting for another body to scrub up from the rocks.
"I'm questioning nothing. I'm telling the truth, as I told it to your
father. Leave your die-tsuchi where it is, girl, and listen. In ten
days, another strike will hit this wall, mark my words."
Benin shuddered again, thinking of the blood which slowly stained the
samurai's boot. Perhaps he could just reach his brush, to clean it
Tsuru continued, "After that, in another ten, another strike. Our
defenses have never been so low, even when the Horde passed us by, in
your father's time."
Suddenly, Benin froze, his hand on the thick bristles of the wet
brush. The Oni had moved. Peering intently, Benin reached forward and
thrust his finger against the Oni's nose. Nothing. It rolled gently from
Benin's shove, but otherwise lay silent.
"After that," the samurai argued, rocking back on his heels, his eyes
locked with the girl's. "Another, and another. And then, the Lion will
arrive."
"We don't know that they are coming to attack" she began. The Oni's
eye winked, and Benin flinched back against the wall.
"It doesn't matter. By the time they arrive, we will be too weak to
hold against the Shadowlands." Beside Tsuru, Tadashiro nodded gravely.
"Even if they had come to help us, they will surely change their minds
when they see the strength of our forces. We cannot hold."
"We must hold the Wall."
"Your father knew when to fight, and when to fall back" Tadashiro
began.
"NO!" O-Ushi roared. "I will not allow the Wall to fall. No matter
what the price."
The Oni moved, twitched, and bared its fangs. Benin whimpered, his
hand clenched around the brush, fumbling desperately for some weapon
against the beast. The brush would never hurt it, never be enough to
turn its eyes away from the Crab Champion's throat. The beast slowly
moved away from the eta, looking up toward the stalwart maiden with
clenched fists who stood upon the Wall. The samurai, engrossed in their
argument and used to ignoring the subtle motions of eta at their feet,
ignored it.
"in less than one hundred days, the Lion will be here. We cannot
fight them. We will die trying." Tsuru's shout rose above O-Ushi's, and
he stepped toward her. The Oni's muscles tensed, and a killing blade
sprang from its small hand, covered in ichor and foulness. Benin
whimpered, his hand moving, only to find the twisted laces of the handle
of the katana imbedded in the stone.
"In one hundred days, we may all be dead anyway!" Her anger moved the
world.
The Oni leaped.
Benin tore the sword from the Wall and with a clumsy thrust, shoved
it hilt-deep into the Oni's black heart. Two swords flashed, and a
hammer fell seconds later, crushing the Oni into rubble. More blood on
the Kaiu Wall. Kneeling over the dead creature, Benin felt a sudden
surge of fear. The sword had broken as it came away from the rock, and a
jutting spike of metal tore out the Oni's back. Frantic, the eta looked
up into the eyes of the Crab samurai above him, falling into a cowering
ball at their feet when he realized what he had done.
He had not only touched a samurai's sword, he had broken it.
Tsuru's sword moved into the sunlight to slice the eta trash's head
from its body, but O-Ushi's arm slammed into his. "Uncle, put that
away," She snarled, raising her hammer, "Or I'll forget we are kin."
"He is an eta!" Tsuru howled.
"Who saved my life." A pause. "Put your sword down." Their eyes
locked, and Tsuru froze in a silent contest of wills. Groveling beneath
them, Benin did not see the elder samurai flush and look away. The blood
from the dead washed into Benin's face, and the rock beneath him scraped
his torn hands.
"He touched a samurai's sword! It is against all tradition. He must
die." Tadashiro's voice was firm, but regretful.
"He will die." O-Ushi thundered at the Crab. "He will die, as the
rest of his kinsmen die. On the Wall, in battle, against an opponent we
cannot hope to defeat.
"He will die in one hundred days." With that, O-Ushi looked down at
the eta, her face angry and bitter. "Clean up this mess."
"Hie!" As the three samurai walked away from the parapet, Benin
gathered his brush and the spilled bucket of greasy water close to his
chest. He did not understand what the samurai had meant, but he knew his
life had been spared. Wonderingly, he looked around at the sky, the
retreating forms of the samurai, the other eta working to scrape the
blood and bodies from the Wall. Looking down at the dead Oni near him,
Benin saw that another gobbet of flesh lay wedged between the stones.
Raising his thick bristled brush and whimpering softly, he began once
more to scrub.