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Consumed
By Shawn Carman
A decade ago...
It seemed almost unthinkable. Gaijin had not entered Rokugan
in any significant numbers since they were driven out during
the Battle at White Stag and the subsequent series of naval skirmishes.
Now, however, Yabanjin raiders had descended from the mountains
north of the Phoenix lands to plague the northern coasts of Rokugan.
The Emperor Toturi had dispatched his own daughter, the renowned
Toturi Tsudao, to lead the Emerald Legions against them.
The notion of sending a spoiled aristocrat to do the work of
a true warrior disgusted the young Mirumoto Junnosuke. He had
been with the Legion nearly six months now, and was convinced
that the entire organization was led exclusively by the weakest
members of the Imperial court; they were riffraff that Toturi
did not want cluttering his chambers during diplomatic functions.
He had wondered if incompetence was a prerequisite for a ranking
position within the Legion.
Glancing sidelong at his commanding officer, Junnosuke corrected
himself. Incompetence was definitely a requirement. The doddering
old Scorpion had single-handedly dispelled every notion the young
Dragon had ever had about the so-called clan of secrets.
Kitagi and his officers sat atop their powerful steeds, surveying
the foothills surrounding them. Tsudao had dispatched their force
to maneuver into a flanking position should the bulk of the raiders
attempt to move away from the coast inward toward the center
of the Phoenix lands. Between Kitagi's forces and the considerable
Phoenix army massed against the raiders, it seemed an unlikely
prospect. Meaning that Junnosuke would be denied the glory of
combat once again.
A grunt from his commanding officer broke the Dragon's concentration.
The old man had fixed upon a narrow column of smoke on the horizon.
"A small fire, likely a single building. Perhaps the target
of a small raiding party, or one of several." Kitagi stroked
his chin, deep in thought. He turned to face the men assembled
at the bottom of the hill, and his eyes settled upon Junnosuke.
"Junnosuke! Take a patrol and investigate. If there are
raiders, put an end to their miserable existence."
Junnosuke was stunned. Kitagi had barely acknowledged him in
the past, and when he did it was usually in the form of thinly
veiled hostility. To be placed in command of a scouting mission
was quite a shock. "What?" he blurted out before he
could stop himself.
Kitagi raised a single eyebrow. "You think yourself unequal
to the task, little Dragon?" There was a chuckle from somewhere
behind Junnosuke. "I shall send Kitsu Dejiko with you. If
you find yourself paralyzed with fear, we shall let the young
lioness take command in your stead." Now there were several
men laughing in the ranks behind him. Junnosuke fumed, gritting
his teeth and remaining silent. He glanced over to Dejiko, the
young Lion warrior who had only joined their force very recently.
She was looking at him with unabashed anger and distaste. It
seems Kitagi's comments had not found favor with her either.
"As you command, Kitagi-sama," Junnosuke forced himself
to say without too much detectable malice. He turned to the men
and signaled the fourth patrol, men from his barracks that he
knew and trusted. With a hateful glance in Dejiko's direction,
he spurred his horse forward toward the distant column of smoke.
After a full two days of chasing the Yabanjin outriders,
Junnosuke was on the edge of a furious rage. The other men had
long since stopped speaking unless spoken to; it simply was not
worth risking Junnosuke's explosive outbursts to ask questions
or offer suggestions. Only Dejiko had the temerity to question
his decisions or offer dissenting advice, something she took
every opportunity to do. It was maddening.
"If all your clan talks this much, woman," he had
said at one point, "then it is no wonder the Lion have so
many victories to their credit. I know I would surrender before
I endured your mindless prattling any further." One of the
men had laughed, and Dejiko had looked at both of them with barely
concealed hatred. To her credit, she said nothing, respecting
Junnosuke's command even if she did not respect him.
On the third day, Junnosuke knew they were close. They had seen
the dust from the raiders' horses on one or two occasions. It
seemed their prey knew they were following them. Near mid-day,
the patrol came to a place where the trail split, with one branch
leading into a valley and the other disappearing into the northern
mountains. Junnosuke deliberated for some time before finally
choosing the valley.
"Junnosuke-sama," Dejiko protested, the respectful
term of address sounding forced. "Do you not believe the
raiders would attempt to take advantage of the higher ground?
I believe they would have taken to the mountains."
The Dragon officer only laughed. "Face an unknown foe on
unknown territory? After having been chased for three days? I
think not, Kitsu." He turned to gesture toward the valley.
"No, there is a village within that valley. They are heading
there to refresh themselves before attempting to ambush us."
He looked at her as if expected a protest, but Dejiko merely
turned away, her attention absorbed by the report of a young
Scorpion scout.
"Now," growled Junnosuke, "let us show these
gaijin devils what it means to face the Legion." With a
great shout, he spurred his horse forward toward the village,
his men following suit.
The raiders had not been found within the village. Enraged
beyond measure, Junnosuke turned his wrath upon the villagers.
"No, Mirumoto-sama, we have seen no one!" The village
headman seemed on the verge of a panic, his face white with terror
where he looked up from the ground. "We... we would never
disgrace our lady Shiba Tsukune by consorting with filthy gaijin!"
All around the village, the same terrified look was on the face
of any villager who dared show themselves before Junnosuke's
men.
The young Dragon found himself torn between two possible courses
of action. There was the possibility that the villagers were
telling the truth. The raiders could have circumvented the village,
or even allowed the patrol to ride past them before doubling
back the way they came. Junnosuke's patrol had moved through
the valley so quickly that there was a possibility, however remote,
he had overlooked his quarry.
However, the villagers might be lying. Peasants were stupid
and superstitious, particularly in the Phoenix lands. They would
be easily intimidated by the fearsome Yabanjin, perhaps even
enough to commit the unpardonable sin of lying to a member of
the Imperial Legions. Fear for one's life and home could lead
to the justification of nearly any act, even one of treason.
Junnosuke wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. He was
exhausted, having slept only a few hours in the past three days.
There was a constant buzzing sound in his head, and a tinge of
red had begun to cloud his vision. He needed rest and sleep,
and he needed it soon. How could he make such a decision in this
condition? How could he risk resting in a village that could
be a haven for enemy troops?
In that instant, Junnosuke knew what he must do.
Leaping down from his horse, he gave a great shout and kicked
the headman away from him with his armored boot. "Run, old
man!" he shouted. "Run and tell the other villages
what happens when you side with barbarians against the Imperial
Legions! Tell them that they can die heroes fighting the raiders,
or be executed like the cowards they are!" As the heavyset
man scrambled away from the raging Dragon, Junnosuke turned to
his men.
"The Yabanjin are here," he rasped. "Destroy
the village. Burn everything. Leave nothing." With another
great shout, Junnosuke turned and charged the line of ashigaru
who had been watching his confrontation with the headman.
One week later...
The quarters in which he had been left seemed infinitely
smaller than his former barracks. Junnosuke paced angrily, nearly
climbing the walls in his frustration. The officers discussing
his situation had left him here to await their decision. He was
not being held against his will, of course, yet it would be a
huge dishonor to leave the room in which they had left him.
How could this have happened? He had completed the task assigned
him in a manner that left no room for doubt. And yet he faced
punishment? Outrageous! It was surely that little Lion whore.
She had somehow convinced Kitagi to turn against him. Perhaps
she had even seduced the old man...
The Dragon's reverie was broken by the brisk sound of the shoji
sliding open. Yogo Kitagi stepped easily into the room and closed
the door behind him. Despite that his mouth was covered by a
mask, his eyes were smiling. It was not a kind smile.
"Junnosuke-san," the old Scorpion said mildly, his
voice full of mock sorrow. "We are certainly in a bit of
a predicament here." Kitagi walked around the edges of the
small office, his eyes never leaving Junnosuke. "We have
sworn testimony from three witnesses that you led an assault
on a village with no real indication that the raiders you sought
were even there."
"They were there," the young soldier snarled. "We
attacked when they were unprepared. We cornered them in the Temple
of the Jurojin."
"Which you proceeded to burn," Kitagi nodded, looking
at him pointedly. "Well, we certainly cannot be sure of
that your testimony is reliable, can we? Anyone who could tell
us for certain is dead now, thanks to your exemplary leadership."
"But the gaijin weapons, their armor," Junnosuke said.
"Surely that was proof enough..."
"Dejiko's scouting party found nothing more than bones,"
Kitagi said, leaning in close, his eyes no longer smiling. "You
are finished here, Junnosuke. When I am done, you will be the
most disgraced ronin this empire has ever seen." The Scorpion
leaned back, obviously enjoying himself. Junnosuke slowly raised
his head and locked eyes with his superior.
"I would not lie," Junnosuke said hoarsely. "My
testimony is my life..."
"And it means just as little to me," Kitagi said with
a smug grin.
Junnosuke paused for several moments. "I have the scroll,"
he finally said.
The effect of his words was impressive. Kitagi's eyes narrowed
for the briefest of moments, as if confused by the younger man's
words. Then they widened suddenly in recognition. He started
badly, knocking a delicate statuette from the desk behind him
into the floor where it shattered. "Oh yes," Junnosuke
continued. "I believe you know the one I speak of. The one
my sensei took from you years ago." Now it was his turn
to lean in closely. "The one in which you order the murder
of Moto Gaheris' son. You had instructed your assassin to destroy
the message, of course, but my sensei never gave him the chance.
Out of respect for the alliance between Scorpion and Dragon my
sensei never revealed the truth, but I have no such love for
your clan. Tell me Kitagi, is Moto Chagatai a forgiving sort?"
"I... I don't... " Kitagi sputtered, "I don't
know what... "
"Spare me, you fool," Junnosuke said with a clearly
disgusted look on his face. "I sincerely hope the other
members of your clan are more successful at deception than you.
Otherwise the vaunted tales of the Scorpion are little more than
children's stories. A shame, really." Junnosuke glanced
down to the floor. He moved his foot to crush the head of the
shattered figurine. "It was perhaps the wisest decision
my sensei ever made, keeping that scroll a secret. It placed
you under his thumb for decades." He grinned. "And
now under mine."
The old man shook his head in disbelief. "I was certain
that damnable scroll died with Mirumoto Reikan." He looked
at Junnosuke curiously. "Why have you not used it before
now? You are clearly an ambitious man. Why not use it to advance
your station within the Legion?"
A fleeting look of contempt crossed Junnosuke's face. "I
did not need that. Your position would have been mine within
a matter of months, perhaps a year at most. I need nothing so
crude as blackmail when my own talents are such as they are."
Junnosuke bared his teeth in frustration. "But I had not
imagined that your troops would conceal the Yabanjin weapons
and armor after I had departed the village, or that you would
use Kitsu Dejiko as your pawn, delaying her arrival until they
could see that the Yabanjin were 'just peasants.' I must give
you this much, the gambit was well planned. With my testimony
in conflict with what Dejiko believed she saw, surely Tsudao-sama
would favor a Lion - a member of her father's own clan - over
me. You made your move. Now I have made mine."
"What do you want?" hissed Kitagi.
"So quick to negotiate!" Junnosuke clearly enjoyed
his power over the aging commander. "If you had left well
enough alone, Kitagi, all would have been well. But no, you had
to attempt to destroy my career as you destroyed my sensei. It
is very simple. Even you should have no questions. I want to
remain within the Legion."
Kitagi shook his head. "That is impossible. Too many people
know that something happened in the village. If you remain, they
will ask questions. Eventually, someone will come looking for
the truth. Have you forgotten who our commander is? The Emperor's
daughter would be painted the fool for this scandal. However
this ends, both of us would die."
Gritting his teeth, Junnosuke slammed his fist into the wall.
The Legion had been his dream since childhood. To lose it for
something so simple as doing his job effectively was unthinkable.
"If I am to be cast out for my sins," he whispered
hoarsely, "so too shall you, old man."
"There is no way for you to remain," Kitagi said.
Seeing the rage boiling inside Junnosuke, he hastily added, "However,
we can control the circumstances of your departure to spare you
dishonor. Allow you to return to your clan as a revered veteran
of the Emerald Legion, rather than..." Kitagi allowed himself
a small smile, "... a disgraced outcast."
Junnosuke was numb. That he was discussing the circumstances
by which he would return to the mountains of the Dragon Clan...
it hardly seemed real. "I could simply tell them the kami
appeared to me and bade me return to my duties at home,"
he heard himself say as if from a distance. "Those meditating
simpletons are always going on about things like that."
"Perhaps an illness in your family," Kitagi began.
Junnosuke cut him short with a rough laugh. "A sick relative?
Is that the best you can do? By the Fortunes, how you ever achieved
a post of this caliber is beyond me." He shook his head
in disbelief.
Yogo Kitagi had grown very still and silent. A cold, deadly
rage was clearly visible in his hate-filled stare. "I assure
you, Mirumoto Junnosuke," he said quietly, "I am quite
capable of dealing with such details. Make your preparations
and say good-bye to your comrades, if one such as yourself can
call any man a comrade. I will arrange everything. Be ready to
leave in the morning." Without another word, the older man
slid silently through the shoji screens and disappeared, leaving
Junnosuke to brood.
Four days later, Junnosuke met a messenger coming to meet
him on his way to the Dragon lands. His mother, it seemed, had
taken very suddenly ill and had died at the monastery where she
had lived these past few years. The brother monks had no explanation
for her sudden death.
Somehow, Junnosuke was not surprised in the least.
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