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The Ruins of Otosan Uchi, Part 2
By Shawn Carman
Developmental Assistance & Editing by Fred Wan
The open plains north of Otosan Uchi were called the Plains of Fast
Trouble, and once it had been considered an act of treason to move any
force of armed men greater than a patrol through them. Obvious
exemptions existed, of course, such as the forces stationed at the
nearby Castle of the Emerald Champion, or the Imperial Legions that had
once marched through the region on their way to combat a Yobanjin
incursion in the Phoenix lands, but other than that no clan had dared
move their forces through this region without an explicit order from
their Emperor. It had been thus for over a thousand years, until the
city of Otosan Uchi burned.
Shinjo Shono pulled on the reins, bringing his horse to a stop as he
surveyed the village to the south. The horse’s breath was ragged, and
Shono could tell it was near exhaustion. He regretted that, but his
priority right now was something entirely different.
One of the riders following him pulled his horse up alongside. The
man was covered in the same non-descript robes as Shono and the others,
and there was no immediately obvious means of determining his identity.
“The horses are exhausted, Shono,” he said, mirroring Shono’s own
thoughts. “The men are not much better off.”
Shono did not turn to look. “We will be in the Northern Hub Village
soon. The horses can rest then.”
“And the men?” the other man pressed.
Shono turned with a baleful glare. “Each of them volunteered to
accompany us, Chen,” he hissed. “They knew what they were being asked to
do. If they want to rest, they can. I will not. Will you?”
Moto Chen shook his head. “Never,” he said. “Not until it’s done.”
Shono nodded and turned to the men following them. There were a
dozen, all volunteers. There had been many more, but taking more than a
dozen would have required a significant increase in their travel time,
and that was unacceptable. As it was, the trip had taken longer than
Shono would have liked, but it would have been impossible to move any
faster. “We will be within the village in less than an hour,” he said to
the men. “The horses will be able to rest. Najato, you must rest as
well.”
Iuchi Najato shook his head. “I stand with you, my lord.”
“No,” Shono said. “I may have need of your abilities again soon, and
if you are not rested, you will be of little use.”
“I will be ready regardless, Shono-sama.”
“No!” Shono’s tone was far harsher than he intended. He grimaced.
“Forgive me,” he said more quietly. “It is thanks to you and your
Baraunghar training that we have made it so far so quickly. You have my
thanks for that. Please do not question me on this.”
The obviously weary shugenja nodded. “Yes, my lord.”
Shono nodded as well. “Loruko, Xie, when we arrive I will need your
hunter’s eyes.”
“Yes, my lord,” both said instantly.
Shono turned back to the village. He said nothing for a moment,
struggling with his guilt and rage. He felt guilt for leaving his wife
and daughter behind when they clearly needed him. He felt rage for those
who had dared threaten his family. “Somewhere to the south are the ones
responsible for trying to murder my daughter,” he said. “If you are to
stand with me, then know this: I do not intend to permit them to see
another sunrise.” He turned to regard Chen and the others. “Who stands
with me?”
“They threatened my family as well,” Chen snarled. “I will burn what
is left of this city to the ground if I must, but someone will suffer
for their insolence.”
There was no response from the others. There was no need for one.
Their eyes were clear and certain, and they looked to Shono, awaiting
his orders.
“We ride,” Shono said.

Western Hub Village
Agasha Miyoshi stared about in wonder as she and her companions
passed one empty building after another. Many had sustained significant
damage, and although there were a few that showed signs of attempted
repair, they appeared to have been abandoned in the middle of the
process. Now, the elements had taken their toll on what little had been
done to repair the damage, and the result was row upon orderly row of
buildings that appeared to be in the process of collapsing in on
themselves. “Everyone simply left?”
“Not everyone.” Isawa Angai said. The former Scorpion was clad in
robes of brilliant orange, with a subtle pattern of crimson throughout.
Her mask, a bold statement of her refusal to abandon her heritage,
remained unchanged. “Many did depart after the Lion completed Otosan
Uchi’s destruction. Life as it had once been simply no longer existed.”
“There are people still here,” the Dragon samurai-ko at their side
said. “I can feel them watching us.”
“They are fearful,” Angai explained. “There are rarely visitors
anymore in West Hub Village. Those who do come here typically want
something from them, and they have little left to give.”
“Desperate people with little to lose,” the Dragon said. “We must be
careful.”
“Someone will make an attempt soon,” Angai said. “But when the others
see the great Mirumoto Ryosaki, daughter of the legendary Doji Reju,
deal with the offender, we will have no further trouble.” She turned to
the small Phoenix shugenja with them. “Are you certain that this is the
correct place, Miyoshi?”
“Yes,” the priestess said without hesitation. “I cannot say how or
why, but this area… it is somehow linked to the carving at the Temple of
the Seven Dragons.”
“Excellent,” Angai said with a smile.
Ryosaki stared into the cup of tea before her with an extremely
doubtful expression. “This is not a teahouse,” Ryosaki said with a
sneer. “It is a cesspool.”
“Don’t be ridiculous,” Angai said, sipping her tea with a gruesome
expression. “I have been in many ‘cesspools,’ as you call them. This
establishment is a disgrace to their memory.”
“Why are we doing this?” Miyoshi asked, glancing around nervously.
“It seems unnecessarily dangerous.”
“On the contrary, it is necessarily dangerous,” Angai said. “We could
wander this village for days without any hint as to why we have been
drawn here. By allowing ourselves to be caught up in the waters of fate,
we will reach our destination all the quicker.”
“An odd viewpoint for a Scorpion,” Ryosaki mused.
“Of course,” Angai replied. “I am a Phoenix, after all.”
The three women sat in silence for a while, sipping their tea
occasionally and, at Angai’s insistence, appearing as non-threatening as
possible. The two Phoenix laughed and talked about every inconsequential
thing they could imagine, and Ryosaki concentrated on appearing somber
as opposed to actively hostile. After an hour, it became obvious that
her patience was waning. When the serving girl approached with fresh
tea, the three did not seem to pay any attention.
It was nearly a terrible mistake. As the girl raised her serving
platter, she bent down suddenly and blew. A cloud of white powder sprang
up and coated the two Phoenix. Miyoshi cried out in pain and brought her
hands to her eyes. Angai cursed and covered her face with the back of
her forearm.
Three men from different tables sprang up at once and rushed at
Ryosaki. The young Dragon leapt to her feat and kicked the heavy table
over at her attackers in one fluid motion. The wood struck one man in
the knees and brought him down with the sound of snapping bones. Another
leapt over the obstacle, but was not nimble enough. The short leg struck
him in the ankle and he fell to the ground in a tangle of limbs,
narrowly avoiding a grievous injury on his own blade.
The third attacker was far more adept than the first two. He attacked
with a pair of sai, pinning Ryosaki’s katana in one quick motion and
stabbing toward her stomach with the other. She blocked the attack with
her wakizashi and kicked the man to separate them. He rolled away from
the strike and adopted a defensive stance. If she had not been wielding
both her blades, she would have received a mortal wound. Her attacker
was not familiar with the Mirumoto style, and now he given her the
chance to establish the pace of their confrontation. He would not
survive to regret it.
“Idiots,” Angai snarled, ripping the mask from her face. “As if I
would bother with something purely ornamental.” Her eyes were red and
tear-filled, but she could see clearly. Her hand flashed inside her
kimono for a moment, and a tiny dagger suddenly sprouted from the second
attacker’s throat. He gurgled, his life’s blood gushing onto the filthy
teahouse floor, and then collapsed. “The one with the broken legs is
alive, Ryosaki,” she said. “We do not need your playmate.”
“As you wish,” Ryosaki said. She lunged for the man and saw a glimmer
of fear in his face. He moved to defend himself, falling completely for
her feint. She knocked both his sai away with a powerful blow of her
katana, than plunged her wakizashi through his ribs and deep into his
chest. He died instantly, and she kicked him off of her blade.
“Please retrieve some water from the kitchen,” Angai said. “I will
need it for Miyoshi. And if you see the serving girl, please express my
dissatisfaction with the service here.”
“Certainly,” Ryosaki said.
While the Dragon disappeared, Angai retrieved her dagger and
approached the man that lay moaning in the floor, clutching his
shattered leg. She knelt near him, careful to remove his weapon from
reach. “Many people would not find a priestess of the kami threatening,”
she said in a low voice. “Perhaps they would threaten you with the
Dragon. She certainly is formidable, isn’t she? But she is an honorable
woman, and she would find the idea of hurting you for information very
distasteful.” Angai leaned in closer so that the man could see the
redness in her eyes. “Unfortunately for you, I am a woman that
understands occasionally distasteful things must be done. I am going to
ask you questions, and you will answer them, or you will deeply regret
it. Do you understand?”
“Yes,” the man sputtered.
“Very good,” Angai said. She held the man’s blade up with one hand.
The craftsmanship was exquisite. “You will begin by telling me how a man
of your low character acquired such a magnificent blade. And please, be
very specific.” She smiled a cruel, unpleasant smile. “We Phoenix
despise ambiguity.”

Northern Hub Village
“What have you found?” Shono said quietly.
Shinjo Xie looked uncomfortable at the question, and looked down. “We
are not quite certain yet, Shono-sama,” he said. “But we think it may be
related.”
“Explain,” he said curtly.
Xie nodded. “Chen-sama went into a sake house and began asking
questions about hired killers and the like,” he explained. “He was very…
vigorous in his questioning. A number of patrons fled, most in a state
of near panic. One, however, was very careful to make sure no one was
following him. He did not seem overly concerned about the sake house.
His movements were deliberate.”
“And you were able to follow him?”
“Of course,” Xie said. “Loruko and I followed him to a larger
building, the only one in an entire block that was inhabited. Chen-sama
followed and entered before we were able to stop him.”
Shono grimaced, but nodded. “He has every right to be as angry as I
am.”
“There were nearly a dozen men inside,” Xie continued. “We defeated
them easily. Several were alive and relatively uninjured, but they do
not appear to have been involved in the attempt on your family.”
“How can we be sure?” Shono demanded.
Xie licked his lips nervously. “Chen-sama was extremely enthusiastic
in his questioning of the captured men. I feel confident that one would
have broken if they had any knowledge, but we have detained them in the
event that you wish to speak with them yourself.”
“Perhaps later,” Shono said. “What did you find?”
“This.” Xie held out a tattered scroll. It was a hand-drawn map of
the Northern Hub Village, with several areas circled and others marked
out. “It appears to be a record of some sort of search the men were
conducting throughout the village.”
“Searching?” Shono took the map. “Searching for what?”
“We do not know,” Xie said. “There is no indication on the map. But
Loruko believes she has found something of note nonetheless.”
“Take me there,” Shono ordered.

The alley was tiny and cramped, and set so far back from the main
roads that it was a wonder it was ever discovered at all. Debris
partially blocked the only entrance, further discouraging its discovery.
If that was not sufficient, then surely the stench of death would have
kept even the overly curious away. Shono wiped his mouth with the back
of his hand at the smell, but grimaced and stepped through the rubble to
reach the back regardless. “Loruko?”
“Here, my lord,” the scout called from around the corner. Shono
stepped around the corner and stopped in his tracks, suddenly confronted
with a vista of gruesome death. There were five dead men in the alley,
and by the stench they had been dead for some time. Four were clad in
the same flat brown robes, and the fifth in a mixture of browns and
greens. Shinjo Loruko was kneeling above one of the four and gesturing
to its exposed wrist.
“Tattoos,” she said. “All four have the same one. A skull, I think.
It is not a very good likeness.”
“The men from the building where we found the map all share the same
tattoo,” Xie said.
“Some sort of bandit group, then,” Shono said. “Or some other fools
who thought perhaps it would make them more fearsome.”
“Most likely successful,” Chen grunted, his tone agitated. “The
people in this village are cowed. Someone has been dominating them, and
I would wager it was this sad bunch of fools.” He pointed to the dead
men.
“These incompetents?” Xie said.
“With no one left to protect them,” Shono said, “even these bandits
would seem threatening to innocent peasants.” He gestured to the last
dead body. “What of that one?”
“Their target,” Loruko said. She gestured to a cluster of three
arrows jutting from the man’s shoulder, and numerous blade wounds all
across his torso. “He did not go quietly. His blade has some sort of
residue on it, and several of the wounds these men suffered were not
fatal.”
“Poison,” Shono said.
“A harsh one,” Xie agreed. “This man was a Tortoise, from his mon.”
“Why would four men attack a Tortoise samurai in this miserable
alley?” Shono mused. “It makes no sense, unless he had whatever it was
they had been searching for.”
“Or if he was guarding it,” Chen said.
At Shono’s questioning glance, Xie cleared his throat. “There appears
to be a trapdoor of sorts underneath the Tortoise’s body,” he said.
“Well concealed, but not invisible, not to a trained scout.”
“Shall I find an eta?” Loruko asked.
Shono snarled. “We don’t have time for this. The assassins could be
fleeing even as we speak.” He stormed across the alley and grabbed the
dead man by his kimono, tossing him aside and ignoring the gasp from
Loruko. “Open it,” he said.
Loruko nodded and stepped forward, taking a moment to inspect the
door for traps. Apparently finding none, she wrenched it open and
lowered a lantern down into the hole to peer around. “By the Fortunes!”
she swore.
Shono dropped to his knees and peered downward, catching a glimpse of
glinting metal as he did so. His night crystal eye did not need to
adjust to the darkness, and he saw at once what had shocked Loruko.
“Chen,” he called. “You need to see this.”

Southern Hub Village
In a region with a reputation for being cursed, the arrival of the
Jade Legion galvanized the populace. Some rushed into the streets to
stare in awe. A few intrepid souls cheered at the sight of one hundred
heavily armed and armored samurai clad in brilliant green armor and
bearing the Imperial chrysanthemum. Others disappeared into the maze of
rubble-strewn alleys, fleeing before their many indiscretions were
discovered by a higher authority.
Doji Reju shifted uncomfortably atop his horse and looked around and
the dilapidated surroundings. “This is not the manner of entrance I had
envisioned.”
Asahina Sekawa, radiant in his Jade Champion’s mantle, raised an
eyebrow curiously. “You disapprove?”
Reju frowned. “We march into an unknown situation against an unknown
enemy, and we do so with tremendous fanfare and aplomb. I do find it
somewhat inadvisable, yes.”
Sekawa nodded. “I trust you remember how Matsu Nimuro seized Toshi
Ranbo years ago?”
“Which time?” Reju muttered.
Sekawa smiled at the comment. “Nimuro sent a letter to the Crane
general, declaring exactly when and how he would attack the city. He
detailed his entire attack plan in every detail, and then followed
through on it to the letter. Despite that they knew exactly what he was
going to do and how he was going to do it, the Crane commanders at Toshi
Ranbo were unable to stop him.”
“You hope to play mind games with out enemy?”
“We are showing them that we have come, and that we have no fear of
them,” Sekawa said. “If we are fortunate, they will become anxious and
make a mistake, and then we can exploit it to our advantage.”
“And if we are unfortunate,” Reju said, “they will think we are fools
and we will be killed.
“Death,” Sekawa mused. “That would be an enlightening experience, I’m
sure.”
“Wonderful,” Reju muttered.
“Jade Champion!” someone shouted from the crowd.
Reju had his blade half-drawn in an instant, scanning the crowd for
potential enemies and moving his horse between Sekawa and the direction
from which the shout had come. “Be easy, friend,” Sekawa said softly.
“Who seeks an audience with the Jade Champion?” he called out.
“I do.” A woman stepped from the ranks. She bore a daisho on her hip,
and although she did not bear the mark of a clan, her armor was of
higher quality than any ronin Sekawa had seen before, and it bore a
formal chop. “I would speak with you in private, if I may.”
“The Jade Champion is on a matter of considerable urgency,” Reju
said. “He has little time for private audiences.”
“The rumor is that you have arrived to push forward into Otosan Uchi
itself,” the ronin said. “As it is your duty to expunge corruption from
the Empire, I can only surmise what your purpose within the city of
ruins is, and I can be of assistance if you would have it.”
Reju frowned, but Sekawa silenced him with a gesture. “What is your
name?”
“Yotsu Seou,” the woman said. “Daimyo of the Yotsu and master of the
Yotsu Dojo.”
Sekawa smiled. “August company indeed. Let us adjourn to somewhere
more private, Seou-san, and we shall discuss your offer.”

“There is something terribly wrong in Otosan Uchi,” Seou said as the
three stood in what had doubtless once been an extravagant home.
“Can you be more specific?” Sekawa asked.
“I do not believe I can,” she said with a grimace. “The first few
months were the worst, of course. There was little left in the city but
scoundrels, Nezumi, and a handful of Bloodspeakers and their ilk hidden
in the ruins. We fought with them for a time, but they withdrew to avoid
attracting attention, and we were unable to hunt them to ground. There
are simply too many places to hide. I could have my men search a single
quarter for months and never find all the places that one could hide.”
“A tactical nightmare,” Reju agreed. “Why did you remain?”
“We are Yotsu,” Seou said proudly. “We swore to defend those who had
no one. There were many from the Hub Villages who were left penniless by
the Lion’s scourge. Those who could not afford to leave were forced to
scavenge in the city for survival, and there were many predators
remaining after Daigotsu fled. We could not abandon them.”
“How many of your family have been lost?” Sekawa asked quietly.
“Too many,” she said in a hoarse whisper. “Far too many. We have
existed on the slimmest of margins. We must post a watch every night, we
have to search for food daily. Much of the water within the city has
been contaminated by dead bodies. It is a wretched existence.”
“And yet you stayed,” Reju grunted, clearly impressed.
“Until recently,” Seou said bitterly. “There is something within the
city that rules the night. Something that cannot be seen in the light of
day, and that cannot be killed with simple steel. It preys not on the
flesh but on the mind. I have had several good men, experienced
soldiers, that have gone mad while standing guard over the rest of us as
we slept. I could no longer keep my people within the city. If we were
to die, who would watch over those in the villages?”
“Why have you not sought assistance?” Sekawa asked.
Seou laughed. “From whom? It is not as if the city’s state is unknown
to the clans. Did not Kisada and Sezaru march upon it to destroy the
Bloodspeaker? No one believes the city’s evil simply evaporated with his
death. It is not that no one knows, Jade Champion. It is that no one
cares.”
“I care,” Sekawa said. He rose suddenly. “I am shamed by your
actions, Yotsu Seou. You and your people have defended the Emperor’s
weakest citizens from a darkness you cannot even see, much less
understand. You have lain down your lives against an enemy that cannot
be defeated, and you have done so with no hope of success simply because
no one else would do it.” He met her eyes. “You have done that which I
should have done long ago, and I ask your forgiveness for my failure.”
He bowed deeply before the ronin.
Seou’s eyes widened and the gesture, and she hastily returned it. “I
do not seek restitution,” she insisted. “That is not our purpose.”
“You do not seek it,” Sekawa said, “but you shall have it all the
same. I shall speak to my lady Doji Domotai, and I shall see to it that
your people are granted lands in the Crane provinces. From there, if you
wish, you can continue your mission in any way you see fit.”
“Domotai-sama will agree,” Reju said. “She is too much like her
father not to.”
“Kurohito-sama,” Seou said. “A great man. A true warrior and samurai,
to the very end.”
“All this I will arrange for you without condition,” Sekawa said.
“There are no strings attached to my offer. Yet, if I might be so
arrogant as to ask you for a favor…”
“I will lead you into the city,” she said. “We shall go together.”
“Yes,” Sekawa said. “Together.”

Deep inside Otosan Uchi
The creature that had once been Chochu folded its hands into the
sleeves of its robe. It was not truly a robe, of course, no more than
Chochu was truly human. It was simply another habit that had persisted
from the days when he was mortal, and it seemed to put its vassals at
ease. “My enemies are arrayed against me, it seems,” it said into the
darkness.
“Your path is chosen,” a voice answered. “You turned away from the
Shadow Dragon. You and yours chose another path in search of power. Your
ambition has undone all you desired.”
“That remains to be seen,” Chochu said. “Our goal is not yet out of
reach.”
“You failed to take the girl,” the voice continued, seemingly
unconcerned with Chochu’s objection. “You cannot stand against Satsu.
Your only viable target is the Shadow Dragon, and you fear it far too
much to attempt to steal that which you desire.”
“I do not fear the Shadow Dragon,” Chochu answered. “I respect that
which it has achieved and desire the same for the Ninube.”
“Divinity cannot be seized so simply,” the voice said. “It has been
done before, and the consequences are always dire.”
“Consuming the power of a divine being requires that we adopt their
responsibilities and restrictions,” Chochu said. “But consuming the
divinity instilled within a mortal? A far less binding prospect.”
“You delude yourself.”
“No,” Chochu said. “My enemies come for me, but the Ninube shall turn
them away. And when we have, we shall seize the reincarnated Shinjo and
the soul of Togashi, and we shall drink their power like wine. Their
identities and power shall flow into us like life into the shadows, and
we shall reign supreme in Ningen-do as the Shadow Dragon failed to do in
the Realm of Thwarted Destiny.”
“We shall see,” the voice answered.
TO BE CONCLUDED

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