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Unfinished Business
This is the storyline results from Archon 24...
In the mountains, time mattered little. The wanderer
had remained here for months without descending from the highest
peaks. The temperature, the seclusion, the lengthy fasting,
all of it allowed him to reach the state of mind necessary to
make contact with his benefactor. Even now, deep in meditation,
he could sense the great creature's spirit reaching out to answer
him.
"Greetings, little one." It was a rich, melodious
voice that echoed through his mind. No doubt it sounded differently
to any who heard it. One might hear a beautiful piece of music,
while another the mighty drums of war. To Mitsu, however, it
simply was. "How does the day find you?"
"Well, great one." Despite that it was a spiritual
communication, the wanderer was troubled, and spoke his thoughts
aloud. "But my destiny weighs heavily upon me."
The voice chuffed in what might pass for laughter among
the Great Dragons. "You would prefer to be ignorant of
your fate, little one? Then you cannot be the one who approached
me during the creation of the crater. That human was full of
determination and curiosity."
"It is not that, my liege," the wanderer replied
after a moment. "I do not fear death, nor even the consequences
for myself should I fail. But I do not wish my kinsmen to suffer
if I prove unable to accomplish the fate you have shown me."
The man sat in silence for several minutes. "Each day,"
he confessed, "I grow older, one step closer to my death.
And each day, he becomes stronger, darker, more powerful."
"Embrace your destiny," the voice said simply.
"Trust in the fate that was chosen for you long before
you were born."
Before he was able to respond, the wanderer's meditation
was disrupted. His eyes fluttered open and he sensed the spirit
of his patron recede from the mortal realm. Curious, he focused
his senses to determine what had disturbed him.
There. Very faint, almost imperceptible. From below, in
the mountain pass, there came the sounds of battle. Nodding
to himself, the old man rose gracefully to his feet from the
lotus position. The time for reflection was over.
Somewhere below him, his destiny was beginning.
The Lion had appeared from nowhere. Perhaps the whistling
mountain winds had masked their approach, or perhaps they relied
on their magic. Regardless of how they how they had done it,
the Lion had caught the Dragon patrol completely unaware.
Rosanjin watched in horror as the young and untested soldiers
in his command fell beneath the blades of the more seasoned Lion
one by one. Those who fell died like samurai, and those who
remained betrayed no fear or sorrow. Even in this darkest of
moments, they made Rosanjin proud. Truly, they were Dragon.
"Mirumoto Rosanjin!" The commander of the Lion
force had freed himself from the combat to seek out Rosanjin.
The two locked eyes. Their men, recognizing a formal challenge
was about to take place, parted before them. "I am Matsu
Tejin. It was I who defeated Mirumoto Ukira upon the Dragon
Heart Plain. As he was allowed to retreat, so too shall you
be. No more of your men need die. Simply withdraw your men
and allow these lands to be claimed by their rightful owners,
the Lion."
Rosanjin ground his teeth at the thought. Ukira had withdrawn
to bring vital intelligence back to Mirumoto Uso. Rosanjin had
no such obligation. His duty was clear. He assumed a kenjutsu
stance and saluted Tejin with his blade.
"No," he said simply.
Tejin nodded grimly. "Then you and your men will die.
I would that it might be otherwise." He also took on a
battle stance and prepared to charge his enemy.
From the cliff above the battle a hearty, robust laughter
rang throughout the mountain pass. Rosanjin and Tejin both halted
at the sound, as did their men. Rosanjin scanned the entire
pass for the source of the laughter, but found nothing.
"I see little has changed since I was last involved
in the ways of war." The voice came from above. Rosanjin
gazed along the cliff walls before finally finding the source:
a lone figure, casually crouched atop the cliff. The stranger
seemed to be glad in the trappings of an ascetic, but it was
difficult to tell for certain at this distance. "The color
of your armor is different, but the actions are the same. Bluster
and bravado, but no sense whatsoever." The mysterious figure
shook his head and laughed again. "I had hoped the Empire
might have found wisdom during my absence." Even in the
shadows, Rosanjin could make out the man's grin. "But if
not, then perhaps an old man like myself might still have value."
Now it was Matsu Tejin who gnashed his teeth. Pointing
to the mysterious figure with his blade, he shouted "I will
not suffer dishonor from a coward who hides among the rocks!
Face me or be gone, like the beast you are!"
Rosanjin remained silent. The man's words from the cliff
had sparked a memory within him, a forgotten tale of heroes from
his childhood. Keeping a wary eye on the Lion, he stood his
ground wordlessly. His men followed suit.
Tejin was not so patient. With a curt nod from their commander,
half a dozen bushi quickly readied their bows and fired. Each
shot was true.
But the target was no longer there. The man sprang upward
from his crouch, allowing the arrows to fly through the space
he had been occupying and shatter on the rock face behind it.
The man's enormous leap brought him down upon the cliff face,
where he sprang effortlessly from ledge to ledge, each one lower
to the ground until he finally landed gracefully on the rock
floor of the pass itself.
Rosanjin's spirit soared. The man's age was difficult to
determine because of his shaved head and his muscular, athletic
form. Tattoos covered nearly his entire torso, twining around
his chest and arms, the most prominent of which was a great dragon.
The man's eyes twinkled, somehow conveying both wisdom and cheer
at the same time. The lopsided grin remained on his face.
"Togashi Mitsu-sama," Rosanjin murmured.
Tejin scoffed. "There is no such person. He is merely
a legend for weak-minded Dragon children. I will prove it."
He turned to his men. "Kill him," Tejin snarled.
Two Matsu bushi leapt at Mitsu instantly, both prepared
to cut him down at their gunso's command. Mitsu side-stepped
the first easily, catching the flat of the blade between his
open hands. A casual twist of his arms and the katana was torn
from the soldier's grasp, its hilt striking him squarely in the
jaw before being casually tossed over Mitsu's shoulder to clatter
upon the rocks well behind him. The second soldier launched
a blindingly fast strike at the much older monk, only to find
himself flying through the air as Mitsu caught his sword arm
and threw him over his shoulder after the other soldier's blade.
The Lion were stunned by this new development. Rosanjin
knew opportunity when he encountered it. "For the Dragon!"
he shouted, charging the disoriented Matsu. His steel tasted
the blood of two Lion before the shock of Mitsu's arrival wore
off. The samurai under his command answered his cry, galvanized
as they were by Mitsu's sudden appearance. Within seconds, the
pass was filled with the sounds of battle and gasps of the dying.
The Dragon's advantage was short-lived. These Matsu were
soldiers, each the veteran of a dozen skirmishes. The Mirumoto,
however, were young, barely past their gempukku. Although well-trained,
they could not stand for long against Tejin and his men. The
Lion quickly retook control of the fighting as the young Dragon
soldiers began to fall like wheat before the scythe.
"The lives of the young should not be squandered in
battle," Rosanjin heard Mitsu say. The aged monk stood
for a brief moment, assessing the skirmish, then moved like a
wind across the pass. With each step, he disarmed or disabled
a Lion warrior, yet never claimed their lives. Tejin, freeing
his blade from between the armored plates of a dead Dragon soldier,
saw the monk coming through the ranks and charge to meet him.
He hefted his blade, prepared for the strike that would end
Mitsu's life.
Mitsu's arm flashed out, impossibly fast, the tips of two
fingers slipping easily between the plates of Tejin's armor and
lightly touching the flesh beneath. Tejin's face twisted in
pain as if he had been burned. His katana fell to the ground,
clattering upon the stones as his arm dropped limply to his side.
Tejin's off-hand darted to the hilt of his wakizashi, but a
second strike from Mitsu knocked that blade away as well, sending
it spinning lazily across the rocks.
Eyes ablaze with fury, Tejin fixed his gaze upon Mitsu.
"Finish it," he snarled.
The old man shook his head. "You may not suffer a
fool to live, but I will not consign a fool to death who has
not first learned wisdom." He bowed slightly to the Lion
warrior. "Go in peace, Tejin. We shall meet again."
Tejin glanced at the chaos of the pass, knowing that he
could not overcome the Dragon now. "Pray we do not, old
man." Wordlessly, he gathered his blades and led his men
to the edge of the pass. At the last moment, he turned back
as if to say something further. Seeing Mirumoto Rosanjin and
Togashi Mitsu standing shoulder to shoulder with the few remaining
bushi at the ready, he thought better of it. The battered Lion
patrol and their crippled gunso left the pass as quietly as they
had entered it.
Kneeling, Rosanjin bowed his head to Mitsu. "I am
forever in your debt, great Mitsu-sama. I learned of your heroism
as a child, and now you have us to victory."
For the first time since his sudden appearance, Mitsu's
grin faded. "I would hardly call this a victory, Rosanjin."
The monk gestured at the many fallen Dragon about the pass.
"Whenever life is lost, there can be no victor. We have
lost here, as surely as have the Lion. There is never victory
in death."
Rosanjin sat silently, regarding the remaining men in his
command. So few faces now, so many that he had trained since
their gempukku lay dead on the ground. The enormity of the short
conflict settled upon his soul heavily. "You speak the
truth, Mitsu-sama. Often in war, wisdom is forgotten in favor
of anger. It is necessary to be reminded of such things."
Mitsu nodded. "Death comes for each of us in turn,
Rosanjin. To hasten its journey is madness. There is but a
single soul in this world that is deserving of an early death."
Mitsu gazed to the south. "And I shall see that it comes
swiftly, else all Dragon pay the price."
Rosanjin furrowed his brow, following Mitsu's gaze to the
lands beyond the Dragon mountains. "Who is this soul, Mitsu-sama?"
But Mitsu would say no more.
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