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A Forgotten Saga, Part 3
By Shawn Carman
Editing & Assistance by Fred Wan
The Shinomen Mori, year 1154
The water of the small pond boiled and pitched like the ocean
during a terrible storm. Everything around it was still, and yet
the water seethed like it was alive. The surface twisted and stretched,
then leapt upward. It wound through the air, a serpent of purest
water, first one and then another, then a dozen, then a hundred.
They wound together into a massive shape, one so great it surely
contained more water than the meager pond. Two great orbs of light
appeared, spaced widely within the water.
An inarticulate noise of fear escaped Kaneka’s mouth as he realized
they were eyes. The young ronin had returned here, to the most remote
reaches of the vast Shinomen Mori where he had lived with his mother
as a child, in hopes of finding some trace of his father’s identify.
Now, he had found only his death.
It is not your time, Akodo Kaneka, a voice said in his
mind. It was like the rushing roar of a might river, and the ronin
placed a hand to his head at the sound. Your destiny is not yet
fulfilled.
“What,” he rasped. “What are…” his voice trailed off suddenly,
his hand falling away from his head. “Akodo?”
The name that is yours by right, the voice said. The
name of your father.
“My father,” Kaneka said softly. “My father was a Lion?”
You father is a great many things. A Lion was but one of them.
Something soared in Kaneka’s chest. “My father is still alive?”
he asked. “Does… does he know that I exist?”
He does not. He believed that your mother died. He searched
for her, but she concealed herself, so that he would not know of
your impending birth.
“Why?” Kaneka implored. “Why would she do that?”
She knew, as I did, that your father’s enemies would have
used you against him. She sought to save him from vengeful assassins.
The voice seemed to find the idea humorous. She had no notion
of the destiny your father would achieve. She had no notion of the
true threat you represented.
“Threat?” Kaneka said. “You speak in riddles! Tell me my father’s
name, I beg you! Why was I a threat to him?”
Your father's destiny was nothing less than the salvation
of mankind. There was a great imbalance, and he helped to restore
it. This was his destiny, and the destiny of others like him. Had
he known of your existence, he would have forsaken all esel to protect
you. And so I hid you away, that the Clan War might unfold as it
was meant to.
“Concealed?” Kaneka scowled. “What do you mean, the Clan War?
That was decades ago. If you are here to play games, then find another
partner.” The ronin rose as if to leave. “I want no part of it.”
Brazen. Bold. There is much of Fire in you as well. The
voice seemed pleased. It is your strength that drew me to you.
You will have need of it. The mortal realm will have need of it,
when your time comes. You alone are strong enough to do that which
must be done.
“Who are you?” Kaneka demanded.
I am the Dragon of Water, the voice returned. I am
your patron, of sorts. You were born in the years before the Clan
War, and when it became apparent that you were a danger to the natural
order of things, I removed you. I held you and your mother sleeping
in my realm. Time passed in the mortal realm, but you remained an
infant. When the danger was well and truly passed, I returned you
to this place.
“That… that is insane,” Kaneka whispered. “It makes no sense
at all. My mother said nothing!”
I removed her memories, the Dragon replied. She remembered
very little. She could not have told you about your father even
if she desired to do so. I wished you to be prepared before the
time came for your destiny.
Kaneka was silent for several minutes. “You are a monster,” he
whispered.
I am not constrained by mortal concepts of kindness or consideration.
Make no mistake, my motives are not for one such as you to judge.
I have waited the fraction of a moment that it has taken you to
age to adulthood and become ready. The voice paused, and there
was a hint of pride in its voice. You are now ready, Akodo Kaneka.
“Ready for what?” the ronin asked, intrigued despite himself.
You shall know in time, the Dragon said. Again, the surface
of the pond boiled, and something rose from its depths. It gleamed
like the stars, the sunlight reflecting off the polished steel.
Kaneka reached out with shaking hands and reverently accepted
the blade. “It is magnificent,” he whispered.
It is sufficient, the Dragon said. It is merely an
object, but it shall serve as a reflection of its bearer. It shall
not endure indefinitely, but by the time you break it in the throne
of darkness, you will be ready for a new blade. Now, you may ask
me the question I know burns in your heart.
Kaneka licked his lips nervously. “Please,” he whispered. “Tell
me my father’s name.”
The Dragon spoke the name of his father.
Kaneka wept with joy.
Kaneka awoke with a start. For a moment, he stared at the ceiling
of the crude hut he had once shared with his mother, his mind racing.
He reached out suddenly, groping about in the dim lighting until
his hand came to rest on the saya of his new blade. The young ronin
relaxed then, exhaling shakily as he ran one finger along the length
of the blade. For a brief moment, he feared that it had all been
a dream. It so easily could have been, after all. Even now that
he knew the truth, and he did believe it to be the truth, it was
not as if he could tell anyone what he had learned. Who would believe
him?
There was a rustling sound from somewhere outside the hut. Kaneka
was on his feet in seconds, his new blade in his hand. It felt so
perfect that he could have shouted with joy, but instead cocked
his head to the side and listened. Had it been such a noise that
awoke him in the first place? He had been so distracted with the
sword that he wasn’t sure. He sneered in disgust and moved silently
to the hut’s doorway.
Kaneka crouched unmoving and listened intently. He was accustomed
to the sounds of the forest from his childhood, and after only a
moment the normal background noises fell away and he began to picture
everything outside the hut as if he were there. The breeze was blowing
from the northwest. There was a bird, perhaps two, bathing at the
edge of the pond. It was just beginning to creep toward sunset and
the locusts were beginning the evening song. Then the sound came
again, and he could picture it. Something large was moving through
the dry leaves on the hut’s west side. Kaneka darted outside and
rushed to face it.
As Kaneka rounded the corner of the hut, he expected to face
a predator of some sort. Perhaps a boar, or even a bear. Perhaps,
if he were fortunate, it might be a bandit or thief against which
to test his mettle, or even a traveler like Kazumasa. Whatever it
was, he could not risk the chance that it was dangerous, and thus
he rushed to meet it with his blade drawn. When he saw what awaited
him, he stopped instantly and began to back peddle furiously, stumbling
over his own feet and nearly losing his blade in the process.
Kaneka’s first thought was that the dragon had returned. But
this was no dragon, serpentine though it might be. He suddenly and
vividly remembered the tales his mother had told him of the monsters
that lived within the forest, hideous snake men with fangs and claws
that loved to consume children who wandered too far from home. The
childlike terror bursting in his chest screamed for escape, but
he would not run. He was Akodo Kaneka, and he did not know how to
flee. He scrambled to his feet and hefted his blade.
“Greetings,” the thing said. Its speech was halting and clumsy,
but intelligible.
Kaneka halted, his blade at the ready. He opened his mouth to
speak, but was not certain what to say.
“Can you speak?” the thing asked.
“Yes,” he said dully. “Yes, I can speak.”
“Good,” the thing said. “I did not mean to disturb your strange
dance.” It pointed to the dirt where Kaneka had been scrambling
away from it. “I felt something I did not understand, and I wished
to discover it. I will go if I am disturbing you.”
The creature turned to leave, slithering quickly toward the trees.
“Wait,” Kaneka called weakly. “Wait a moment.”
The thing turned back and regarded him curiously, emitting a
low hissing sound. “How long is a moment?” it asked.
“I mean… just wait.” He lowered his sword cautiously. “What is
it that you sensed?”
“I do not know,” the creature said. “I am Qelsaurth, Naga jakla
and student of the Akasha.”
“I am Kaneka,” he replied. “I… I did not understand anything
you just said.”
The Naga made another hissing sound, this one louder and longer.
Kaneka’s grip tightened on his sword until he realized the creature
was laughing at him. He smirked and returned the katana to its saya.
“I know what the Naga are,” he said. “My mother told me stories
about you as a child, although apparently they were not entirely
correct. What is a jakla?”
“Jakla are scholars and artificers,” Qelsaurth said. “We explore
the secrets of pearl magic, and many other phenomenon.”
“You are priests, then,” Kaneka said. “Like shugenja.”
“I have heard of your shoo-gen-ja,” Qelsaurth answered. “We are
similar, but not priests. We Naga do not pray to the elements as
you do, although we can sense and control them.” It gestured to
its chest as it spoke. “That is my duty for my people, to speak
to the elements and control them. Today, I heard them speak back.”
It shook its head as if to clear it. “I had never heard such a thing
before. It awoke me from the Great Sleep, and I could not return
until I understood what had happened.”
Kaneka frowned, then nodded slowly. “There was an… entity here.
Earlier today, I mean. It was very powerful.” His frown deepened.
“It is the spirit that all spirits of water serve. Does that make
any sense?”
Qelsaurth turned its head to the side and peered at him strangely.
“No,” it admitted. “If such an entity existed, why would it come
here?”
“Because of me,” Kaneka said. “It came for me.”
The creature’s eyes widened. “Did you confront this entity? How
did you survive?”
“No,” Kaneka explained. “It wasn’t like that. It came to… to
teach me. To tell me things about myself.”
The jakla twitched excitedly. “What did it teach you, Student-of-Water?”
“I don’t know yet,” Kaneka said. “I am trying to understand.”
The Naga drew itself up and reclined on its coils. “I would hear
your tale, if I could, Student-of-Water. Perhaps I could help you.”
Kaneka looked blankly at the coiled Naga. Before this morning,
this would easily have been the strangest thing that had ever happened
to him. Now, however, he thought that his life would have to take
an odd turn indeed for him to be surprised at even the most bizarre
events. “I think I would like that,” he said.

Ryoko Owari Toshi, one year later
Kaneka stared idly at the almost completely full bottle and
wondered, not for the first time, if perhaps he spent too much of
his life hiding away in dingy sake houses across the Empire. Good
things occasionally happened in such locations. He had met Etsushi
and Uchito in one, for instance, but as often as not it led only
to misery and possibly violence. Perhaps the time had come for him
to find some more responsible means of passing the time.
The door opened briefly, allowing a moment of brilliant sunshine
to pierce the hazy gloom of the sake house’s interior. Kaneka risked
a glance over his shoulder and cursed. Two Scorpion had just entered
and taken a table near the door. That would not be so unusual in
a city like Ryoko Owari, of course, save that they were the same
two Scorpion that seemed to have been following him for the past
two days. He had seen them at the inn where he was staying, the
dojo where his scant pennies had purchased some valuable training
time, even the marketplace where he had purchased an obi to replace
his threadbare one. To say that they were making him a bit paranoid
was a gross understatement. He had awakened three times the previous
night, certain each time that an assassin was mere inches from his
throat.
Kaneka wiped his mouth with the sleeve of his kimono and considered
his options. They were right next to the door, and there was no
chance he could get away from them that way. Perhaps if he darted
through the kitchen, he might be able to get out the back and disappear
before they caught up with him. He would have to leave the city
at once, of course, but luckily he was carrying virtually everything
he owned with him. There was nothing at the inn he could not afford
to lose.
A stranger in a drab kimono sat down suddenly across from him.
Kaneka had been so caught up in his thoughts that he had not seen
him approach. “Hello, old friend!” the man said warmly. “I did not
know that you were in the city! Good to see you!”
Kaneka’s eyes narrowed. “I do not know you,” he growled in a
low voice.
“No, of course you don’t,” the man said in an equally low voice,
the smile still on his face. “But now fewer people are staring at
you. It seemed for a moment that you were about to explode into
violence. It is no wonder the Scorpion are making such a show of
following you.”
Kaneka glanced left and right. He steadied his nerves by taking
a long draught of sake. “Who are you?”
The stranger removed his jingasa, which Kaneka noticed was adorned
with tassels much like those worn by duelists to represent their
defeated foes, although he noted that the stranger was not carrying
a katana. “I am Naoharu,” he said. “I make arrangements for people.”
“Arrangements? Of what kind?”
“Oh, all kinds,” Naoharu said with a wink. “Mostly, however,
I arrange for matters of a sensitive nature to be resolved quickly
and quietly. You might say it is my comfortable niche in an otherwise
uncomfortable Empire.”
Kaneka frowned. “What do you know about the Scorpion?” he asked
as he offered the bottle to Naoharu.
The stranger held up his hand and smiled. “Oh no, my young friend.
I never drink anything unless I open the seal myself, and I never
drink anything when I’m in Ryoko Owari. It’s simply too dangerous.”
He withdrew a small bottle from his kimono as Kaneka stared blankly
at the bottle in his hand. “What I know about the Scorpion is that
they are making quite a show of following you,” Naoharu continued
after a short drink. “Which means that they are either trying to
frighten you into doing something foolish, or perhaps they are trying
to draw out others that might be working with you on whatever it
is you’re doing that has concerned them.”
“I am not doing anything!” Kaneka insisted. “I don’t know why
they are following me!”
“Surely you must have a secret or two?” Naoharu said with a gleam
in his eye. Seeing Kaneka’s surly look, he nodded. “You know what
they call the Scorpion. ‘The Clan of Secrets.’ If there is something
you do not wish them to know, chances are they know it. Is there
anyone else, anyone at all, who knows your secret?”
“A few,” Kaneka admitted quietly. It was ludicrous to assume
that the Scorpion could have gained access to Qelsaurth, but could
they have a contact in Shoan’s orphanage? Would someone there have
spoken to them? He did not know.
“A few,” Naoharu repeated. “Therein lies the source of your problem,
my young friend. You trusted someone. That is almost always a mistake.”
“Almost always?” Kaneka asked.
“Well… exceptions are possible,” Naoharu admitted. “The question
is, what will you do now that the Scorpion know whatever it is you
do not wish them to know? Are you in danger?”
Kaneka thought for a moment. “Possibly,” he admitted. “They may
think I am a danger to… to someone important. If so, they might
very will kill me. Assuming they know at all, which I do not think
is a safe assumption.”
“Think that all you like,” Naoharu advised. “The important thing
is to assume the worse. Then, at least, you will always be prepared.”
Kaneka risked a glance at the Scorpion by the door. “What would
you do?”
Naoharu considered the question. “What I would do is a bit complex
for someone such as yourself. No offense intended.” He gave Kaneka
a scrutinizing once-over, then nodded. “Given what little I know
about you, I am going to venture a guess that intrigue is not a
game you win often, if you even know how to play. With that in mind,
your best bet might be to stop the game altogether.”
“And how would I do that?”
“Approach the Scorpion,” Naoharu said. “Ask to speak to their
commander. They will laugh, of course, but they will eventually
take you. When you meet their commander, act disgusted and insist
that you meant their real lord, not some puppet.”
“Isn’t that dangerous?” Kaneka asked.
“Yes,” Naoharu admitted. “The important thing is that if he does
not kill you, you will know that you have gained some measure of
control. Then they will, presumably, take your still-living presence
to their lord, and you can begin by telling him the secret you believe
they already know. By doing so, you demonstrate that you are not
afraid to reveal it, and that robs them of whatever hold they have
over you.”
“What will happen then?”
Naoharu smiled. “That depends on you, my friend.”
“Kaneka,” he said. “My name is Kaneka.”
“Then that depends on you, Kaneka,” Naoharu said, taking another
drink.
Kaneka stared at the older man intently. “Aren’t you curious?”
“Not really,” Naoharu said. “What secret could you have that
could be of interest to me?”
“You might be surprised,” Kaneka muttered. He finished the last
of his drink and then rose and strode across the sake house to speak
to the Scorpion near the door.
Toshi Ranbo, the present
Rikako walked through the halls of the former barracks, ignoring
the stares that many levied against her. Some stared at her because,
she was told by many, she was beautiful. Others because she was
clearly a ronin, and the sight of a ronin walking about in an Imperial
barracks was unusual, to say the least. Even if those barracks had
been converted to serve as the Shogun’s forces’ headquarters in
the Imperial City.
As she approached the chamber she sought, two guards stepped
forward to bar her way. One was a Phoenix, the other a Lion. “The
Shogun’s advisors are meeting within,” the Lion said. “They may
not be disturbed.”
Rikako said nothing, but continued walking. Just as the two guards
levied their weapons against her, she whispered something under
her breath, and disappeared in a puff of flame, reappearing on the
other side of the door. There, she found three men standing over
a table of scrolls, all regarding her curiously. One she recognized
at once as Shiba Danjuro, the Shogun’s lieutenant. The others were
a Scorpion and an old monk. “You see,” the Scorpion said irritably.
“This is exactly the sort of thing I was talking about before. This
location is not secure. We should relocate into the Palace.”
The door swung open behind Rikako and the Lion guard darted forward,
his katana held high for a killing blow. Danjuro crossed the room
in an instant, blocking the lethal strike with his blade. “Stand
down,” he ordered the guards. “Your vigilance is commendable, but
this woman is an ally.”
“Of course, commander,” the guard said, although his words did
nothing to alleviate the hateful glare he levied at Rikako. He and
his companion disappeared back through the doorway as quickly as
they had appeared.
“An ally?” the monk said. “Who is this?”
“Rikako,” Danjuro answered. “She was the Shogun’s advisor during
his years in the Phoenix lands. I thought she was still overseeing
his holdings there.”
“Kaneka sought out a ronin shugenja as an advisor after joining
the Phoenix?” the Scorpion said incredulously. “That makes no sense
whatsoever.”
The monk chuckled. “He wanted an objective opinion, Higatsuku.
Surely you of all people understand the value in that. Personally,
I never understand half the things those priests say.”
The Shosuro frowned. “Perhaps, Heigai, but it seems odd to say
the least. I would think the Isawa would be greatly insulted that
Kaneka had an independent counsel to help him understand their works.”
“They did not know,” Danjuro said flatly. “Kaneka did not wish
to insult them, merely to understand them. Why are you here, Rikako?
Has something happened?”
“Yes,” she answered, holding forth a scroll. “I received this
two days ago. It is from Kaneka.”
The three men looked at one another uneasily as Danjuro took
the scroll. “He is not here, Rikako. He is… indisposed.”
“I know where he is,” she said curtly. “Please read the scroll.”
Rikako,
I deeply regret that so long has passed since we last spoke,
but the knowledge that you have protected my interests in the Phoenix
provinces has been a great comfort to me these past years during
my time on the Great Kaiu Wall and during the so-called Blood Hunt.
Now, I must ask more of you.
For reasons that I cannot divulge, I have left my forces behind
and set out into the Empire. I am searching for something, although
honestly I cannot say what. I will know if I find it. What I know
for certain, however, is what I have seen during my time in the
Empire. It has been decades since I walked alone on the back roads.
I had forgotten so much. I had forgotten how the common man is not
privy to the inner workings of the Empire. They see me as usurper.
They believe I seek power for myself, when all I desire is to see
it protected from those who would abuse it, and to see it used for
the good of all Rokugan. And yet this very thing will be beyond
me if I cannot convince others of my intentions.
There are few that I trust in this world, Rikako. You are
one. Danjuro and my advisors are among the few others. You and I
have spoken at length about some of those who serve me, men and
women of exceptional talent who are without family or clan. This
has made them useful to me in the past, although I have struggled
not to use them as pawns, for that is the folly of my brother.
Gather my counselors, Rikako. You alone know who they all
are, and you alone will they trust. Take this to Danjuro. Tell him
that it is my wish for a proclamation to go out to the clans, and
that any who support my protection of the Imperial City will receive,
as my personal favor to them, the fealty of one of my advisors.
These are men and woman of exceptional character and ability, like
yourself, and I know that you will each serve my allies well. I
need allies now more than ever, although I will beg no man for aid.
Those clans that accept my offer, I will know are my allies.
Those that refuse, I will know stand against me.
I hope so long a time does not pass again before we speak.
Your friend from Shoan-sama’s temple
Danjuro handed the scroll to Heigai and looked at Rikako for
several moments. “This thing he asks,” he said in a low voice, “are
you prepared to do it?”
“Without hesitation,” she answered.
“You know, then, that should you be fostered to clan, your loyalty
can never fully be to the Shogun again.” Danjuro frowned. “It is
a great burden you accept.”
“It is mine to bear,” she said.
Danjuro nodded. “You have gathered these others he speaks of?
Those like Kazumasa?”
“I have,” she answered. “They all stand ready to serve the Shogun,
albeit not always for the most honorable of reasons.”
“Good,” grunted Higatsuku as he read the scroll. “They, at least,
we can anticipate. Altruism is a bit more difficult.”
“I will prepare the proclamation,” Danjuro said. “Rikako, will
you accompany me in court to announce it? There will be questions,
and you will be better equipped to answer them than I.”
“Of course,” she answered. “I will be delighted to inform the
court of this gift the shogun has offered.”
Danjuro smiled weakly. “Let us hope they are as eager to accept
it as you are to offer it.”

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