
A Hero's Death, Part 1
By Rich Wulf and Shawn CarmanKyuden Miya - The Heart
"It is always an honor to serve you, Aunt Yumi-sama." Miya Shoin
bowed deeply from his kneeling position, his forehead very nearly
touching the floor. His hands were still dusty and aching from the
rigorous kyujutsu practice session that had been interrupted by his
summons to an audience with his daimyo. He wished that there had been
time to make himself more presentable, but it had been an urgent
summons.
The elderly woman sitting opposite him smiled warmly. "Shoin," she
chided, "you know that you do not have to be so formal with me. I have
known you since you were an infant, and your mother for nearly that
long. How is your mother?"
Shoin smiled. "She is well, Aunt Yumi-sama."
Yumi chuckled. "You call me 'aunt,' when it is I who should call you
'uncle.' Your father, Dosonu, was one of my greatest ancestors. That
makes you one of my grand-uncles, I believe"
"The War of Spirits has left many legacies," Shoin replied carefully.
"The strangest of which may be the struggle to undo the knots
spirit-mortal couplings left behind in our lineage. Perhaps I may
technically be your grand uncle a dozen generations hence, but it would
make me less confused if I could call you aunt, Yumi-sama."
Yumi chuckled. "Well said. So be it." Her warm smile remained in
place until she glanced to her left, where Shoin had set his belongings
after rushing in from the field. Her gaze lingered on the small bow he
carried, the yumi, her namesake. Her eyes became wistful, almost
sorrowful. She quickly glanced away to look at the door to the main
court chamber. That chamber had been sealed since the disastrous events
of the Winds' failed Winter Court some months previous. Finally, she
spoke again. "Your training with the Wasp Clan goes well?"
Shoin cleared his throat slightly, looking flushed. "The Mantis are
very gracious hosts, Aunt Yumi-sama, and yes, the Tsuruchi are excellent
teachers." The Wasp Clan, technically, were no more. Correcting Yumi
made him feel uncomfortable, but such was necessary to avoid dishonoring
his sensei.
There was another long pause from Yumi. "Do you often see Ashin-- I
mean Tsuruchi Ichiro? I understand he is very much involved in the
teaching of the students at Kyuden Ashinagabachi."
"Yes, Aunt Yumi-sama," Shoin said quietly. "I am honored to meet with
him twice weekly for instruction." He watched the faraway look in Yumi's
eyes with mild distress. It pained him to see her old wounds this way.
Finally, he could restrain himself no more, even if it did mean a slight
betrayal of trust. "He asks after you often. He has often recounted to
me the tales of his travels with you during the Clan War." He paused,
then added "And of course with Sanzo and the shugenja Koan as well."
Yumi lowered her gaze to the floor. It was several long minutes
before she raised her head again, and Shoin suspected she was fighting
tears. When at last she looked up, her smile had reappeared. A lifetime
in court had made her an expert at locking away her emotions. "Those
were different days," she said, her voice thick. "The world was falling
apart around us, and all that we could see was the adventure of it all.
Had we known what we were up against, I wonder if we would have gone
on."
"Of course, Aunt Yumi-sama," Shoin said. "You were heroes. You could
do no less."
Yumi smiled. "Heroes are a product of war," she replied. "The Miya do
not seek glory, only peace. So there are no Miya heroes. Did I not teach
you that?"
"Of course, Yumi-sama," Shoin said, bowing his head respectfully.
"Had things been different, had your sensei and I not both been
destined to lead our families..." Yumi paused again, then cleared her
throat quickly.
"Nephew, forgive an old woman her reminiscing. You were called here
to receive a summons from Otosan Uchi, and I have kept you waiting with
foolish stories." She withdrew a scroll from the folds of her kimono and
held it out for Shoin to take.
With trembling hands, Shoin accepted the scroll. The seal was
unmistakable. Shoin could imagine no possible reason for such a thing,
and thus was filled with a sort of nervous terror. He carefully broke
the seal and unfurled the scroll. Shoin read it in silence, then re-read
it. When at last he set it down, he looked up at Yumi incredulously.
"There are five more scrolls in this pouch," Yumi said, lifting a
small satchel from beside the low table and offering it to Shoin. "They
are to be distributed as per the instructions in your own scroll. All
arrangements have been made for your travels."
"I must prepare to leave at once, Aunt Yumi-sama. It seems I have a
long journey ahead."
"I wish you good fortune. Be cautious, nephew. These are dangerous
times. May your father's spirit protect you in your journey."

Shiro Utaku - The Hunter
Spirits.
Why did everything in her life revolve around the dead?
The day she was born was the same day that the Iron Chrysanthemum
began his attack upon the Empire. The day she was apprenticed to her
older sister to begin her training as a Battle Maiden was the same day
that she learned her father had died in combat with the spirit armies of
the Moto.
The day she was to be given her gempukku, Bayushi Tozasu and his
spirit minions arrived in her village, taking revenge upon the
descendants of the Unicorn who had killed them at White Shore Plain.
They slew every Unicorn samurai they found, including her mother, her
brother, and her three sisters. Had she taken her gempukku a day
earlier, she would have been slain as well. She often wished that she
had been.
It seemed as if every important event in her short life had involved
the dead.
And now this.
The battle maiden paused, bokken clutched in both hands as she stared
silently across the practice dojo. A thin young man with a pale face
stood at the entrance. His skin glowed faintly in the dim light. He
smoothed a wicker cloak over one shoulder as he glanced about the
chamber.
"You are Utaku Yu-Pan?" the man asked, glancing down at an unfurled
scroll in his left hand and then looking at her. His tone was swift,
precise, as if he was already certain of the answer and was simply
informing her of his conclusion.
"I am Yu-Pan," she sneered, holding the practice blade defensively.
She did not move from where she stood, nor did she lower her weapon or
grant any sort of respectful acknowledgment.
"Ah," the man replied. A look of discomfort flitted across his face.
"My name is Miya Shoin. I am a messenger from Otosan Uchi. I apologize
for disturbing you at this late hour, but I only just arrived and my
message is quite urgent. Lady Xieng Chi told me that I could find you
here if I needed-"
"What do you want?" Yu-Pan demanded.
Shoin frowned. "As I was saying, I have a message for you," he said.
He drew a rolled scroll from a pouch at his hip and displayed it in both
hands. A pale red wax seal gleamed in the candle light.
"Leave it there," Yu-Pan said, pointing at the floor with the tip of
her blade. "I will read it when I am finished."
"I... see," he replied. He bowed briefly and set the scroll gingerly
upon the floor, then took several steps back. Shoin folded his arms in
his sleeves, and peered at Yu-Pan with curiosity. "Is it not somewhat
late at night to be training?" he asked.
Yu-Pan stepped forward, saying nothing, watching the man carefully as
she snatched the scroll from the floor. "You are young, for a spirit,"
she said. "Did you crawl through Oblivion's Gate?"
"I am only half-spirit," Shoin replied. "It is unusual for one such
as myself to carry the glow of the Spirit Realms so late in age, and I
must confess it is something of a wonder. It is only visible in the
darkness, or when I am taken by emotion. It has been theorized that
perhaps my spirit father-"
"Your spirit father should have stayed dead," Yu-Pan interrupted,
tucking the scroll beneath her arm. "You have accomplished your task,
shisha. You are finished here. Go."
Shoin's brow furrowed. "Utaku-san, there is no reason to be so rude."
"Isn't there?" she hefted the bokken in her hand again. "Did you take
offense? Perhaps you would like to instruct me in etiquette, shisha?"
She would kill him. If he made any move, any gesture, she would kill
him. The spirits had given her nothing but pain and death. Why should
she show them anything in return?
Shoin gave her a long, careful glance. "I believe that I shall take
my leave now, Utaku-san," he replied. "Now that I have fulfilled my
duties here." Yu Pan said nothing, but watched him as he left. As he
passed into the darkness, she could see the pale glow surround him once
more. She listened to his receding footsteps for several moments, then
broke the seal on the scroll.
A look of confusion crossed Yu-Pan's features.
"An invitation to the Imperial City from the esteemed Otomo Kakasu?"

The Izaku Libraries - The Fire
"Who in Jigoku is Otomo Kakasu?" Agasha Chieh asked, her tone
brittle. She pushed the scroll aside on the low table and gazed down her
hawk-like nose at Miya Shoin. Chieh had the sharp, aquiline features of
a Phoenix, but the thin, long-limbed frame of a Dragon. Her shaven head
shone in the light of the sun, only adding to her exotic appearance.
Several of the monks tending the garden where Miya Shoin and Agasha
Chieh met glanced up at Chieh's curse, but when they saw the source they
quickly returned to their meditations. They knew better than to risk her
wrath.
"Kakasu is a minor functionary in Otosan Uchi," Shoin replied. "He
simply asked that I deliver that message. I know nothing of its
contents."
"Of course," Chieh said. She pulled one foot closer to her body,
resting her elbow on that knee. The kimono fell away from her leg with
the gesture, showing a rather scandalous amount of flesh. Shoin politely
glanced the other way, but not before noting a triumphant gleam in
Chieh's eyes. That piercing gaze was entirely Kitsuki, despite the fact
that her fiery orange kimono was emblazoned with the mon of the Phoenix.
Chieh knuckled her chin thoughtfully. "I, an experienced Emerald
Magistrate and guardian of the Izaku Libraries, have never heard of this
Kakasu, and yet he is important enough to dispatch a shisha to Phoenix
territory, through the lines of the war between Phoenix and Dragon, to
procure me. How curious. Perhaps I have simply been away from the court
for too long?"
"Perhaps," Shoin said. He felt a strange tickle at the back of his
mind.
Chieh smiled. "I commend you, Miya," she said. "Your face, your
gesture, your body all conceal your lies from my eye, but you cannot
fool the kami. They see into your very heart, and they favor me. I know
the truth."
Shoin blinked. "Apologies, Chieh-san," he bowed deeply from where he
sat. "I did not mean to offend. However, if you will simply hear me
out--"
"Explanations are unnecessary," she said with a dismissive wave. "I
see deception in your heart, but that is all I see. There is no harmful
intent. However, I am disappointed by the fact that you know nothing
more than I do..."
"I know that there is no Otomo Kakasu," Shoin replied. "I know only
that someone important among the Emerald Magistrates wished to see us
both, as well as four others, in the Imperial City."
"Hm," Chieh gave a bemused smile. "Any idea why?"
"I believe it has something to do with our fathers," he replied.
"Mine and yours. As for the others... well, I haven't figured those out
yet."
"I see," Chieh replied. "Then return to Otosan Uchi. Tell your Kakasu
that I will arrive presently."
Shoin gave a relieved sigh. "I will do that," he replied with a nod.
A look of sudden concern spread across his pale features. "But tell
me... are you not at all offended that I concealed the truth from you?"
Chieh laughed. "If the best this Kakasu could do to hide the truth
from me was hide it in your mind, then I am neither concerned nor
insulted. I am merely curious. Tell Lord Kakasu that he has my
attention." She smiled slowly. Her lips were painted the color of fresh
blood. Shoin found her exotic appearance unsettling, but not wholly
unappealing.
"I will tell him, Chieh-san," he said. "Though I will be there at the
meeting as well. You can tell him yourself."
"Excellent," she replied, "I look forward to that. But while you are
here, I don't suppose you could tell me who else this Kakasu has
summoned?"
Shoin frowned uncomfortably. "It would be outside my duties to reveal
such privileged secrets."
"Privileged?" Chieh chuckled. "If Kakasu does not exist, he can take
no offense if you share information. Besides, I am an Emerald
Magistrate. Our bones are duty and our blood is honor. You can trust
me."
Shoin rose an eyebrow. "My aunt always tells me to never trust the
ones who say 'trust me.'"
"Your aunt is correct," she replied. "Now are you going to tell me
who else you're seeking? I promise to look surprised, for you must know
I have already taken the information from your mind."
"So why ask at all?" Shoin replied.
"Etiquette," she answered. "Much like one still appreciates being
given a gift, even when you already know what it will be."
Shoin laughed out loud. "Very well, then, Chieh-san," he said. "I
will tell you. First, while I am here in the northern mountains I have
been told to seek a certain Ox..."

Shiro Morito - The Rock
"A summons for Kijuro, eh? Hah!" Kijuro snatched the scroll from Miya
Shoin. He patted his broad belly with his free hand in a proud and
expansive gesture as he turned to grin at the other Ox bushi lingering
in the courtyard. "Perhaps Morito-sama has finally noticed the great
treasure lying unused in his own lands!" Several of the others laughed
heartily at Kijuro's joke.
The Ox were boisterous, hearty men accustomed to the hardships of
being samurai in a Minor Clan. Positioned between the warring Phoenix
and Dragon, the Ox Clan had been in a constant state of readiness for
months.
Patrols were maintained along the borders for days on end, and
extended scouting trips to investigate the position of the two Great
Clans' armies were not uncommon. It was vital that the Ox Clan be aware
of what was going on around them. Ignorance meant extinction in times of
war; the Dragonfly Clan had already learned that lesson.
Many of the Ox bushi wore the rough fur cloaks and strange leather
clothing of their Unicorn forebears, or carried strange gaijin weapons
the likes of which Shoin had never seen. The young herald simply stood
among them, shivered uncomfortably, and waited for one of them to invite
him inside so he could find a fire to restore feeling to his fingers and
toes. Even though it was summertime, Shoin found the cold of the Ox
Clan's mountains intolerable. Now he knew why Agasha Chieh had just
traveled on ahead to Otosan Uchi instead of accompanying him here. For
their part, the Ox bushi seemed naturally immune, strolling about the
freezing courtyard in light leather clothing or piecemeal armor.
"Well, my friends," Kijuro said as he paced the courtyard, "clearly a
hero is needed if they are sending for me." He gestured with the rolled
scroll as he spoke, as if it were a grand scepter of some sort. "I
suppose I must go and save the Empire once again!"
"You'll save the Empire only if it is under attack by sake and women,
Kijuro!" called one of the others. The room burst into laughter, and no
one laughed harder than Kijuro.
Kijuro was a stocky man, some might even say portly as his heavy
build denoted a love of rich Unicorn-style cuisine. His features were
blocky and wide-set, more gaijin in appearance than most. His skin was
darker as well. Shoin guessed that he must have strong Moto ancestry.
"What say you and I go get a drink?" Kijuro asked, grinning broadly
at Shoin. "The first round is mine. It is my custom."
"Inside?" Shoin stuttered.
"Of course, Miya-sama," Kijuro replied, gesturing at the small sake
house at the edge of the court yard.
"I would b-b-b-be m-most honored," Shoin replied, putting on a stern
expression. "However, we must not dally long. You must be prepared to
leave within the hour."
Kijuro arched his eyebrows in surprise. "That gives me precious
little time to make arrangements with my lord. Command of my patrols
must be designated to others in my absence. I must see to my children's
welfare. I must feed and saddle Koji. And I had hoped to pray at my
family's shrine for good fortune in my journey as well. Is such haste
truly necessary, Miya-sama?"
"You will do as your are ordered, Ox," Shoin said, momentarily giving
in to the stress and pain of his long journey. "I have traveled many
miles to find you and have many more to go before this mission is
complete. I will not have my word - the word of a Miya shisha -
challenged by a samurai of a Minor Clan."
Kijuro's perpetual grin disappeared. In its place, a vicious snarl
formed. The Ox took a single step forward and placed his hand upon the
hilt of his strange curved sword. Shoin noticed many wide rings mounted
along the back of the blade. He wondered vaguely what they were for.
Realizing his situation, the herald took two quick steps backward
with a look of utter horror. Imperial Herald he may be, but he was in Ox
territory now, alone. Kijuro seemed to sense Shoin's shame and fear, and
quickly regained his poise as best he could, removing his hand from the
hilt of his sword.
"Miya-sama," he forced through clenched teeth, "may I ask your name?"
"Shoin," answered the herald quickly. "Miya Shoin, son of Miya Dosonu,
herald of Hantei the 27th."
"Shoin?" asked Kijuro, chewing his lower lip thoughtfully. "Oh my. An
unfortunate name in these parts, Miya-sama. There was an Ox samurai
named Shoin. He was a foolish young man. Well-intentioned, to be sure,
but unable to control his wagging tongue. Always saying the wrong thing
to the wrong person, Shoin was. One day, he insulted a ronin, just
because he thought the man beneath him. The thing is, Shoin never
realized the simple truth. We're all the same, when we're alone. That
ronin just cut Shoin down like a dog in the street and fled." Kijuro
gestured with one hand, making a vertical cut in the air, pointing at
Shoin's head as he did so. "So we have a saying here among the Ox."
Kijuro leaned toward Shoin for emphasis. "A knife in the back knows no
oath of fealty."
"Is that a th-threat?" Shoin replied, not knowing whether the stutter
was brought on by the cold.
Kijuro looked aghast, then smiled quickly. "Of course not! It is
simply a story that I remembered upon hearing the honorable herald's
name. How long did I have again before we needed to leave, Miya-sama?"
"Three hours," Shoin answered with a faint grin.
"I shall be ready, Miya-sama," Kijuro grinned, bowing stiffly from
the waist. "It is my honor to serve you. As I promised, the first drink
is on me."

The Nirukti Ruins - The Phantom
"Are you prepared to serve, Toritaka Akemi?" said a voice from the
darkness.
Akemi did not bother to open her eyes. In the shadowy temple,
attempting to see would do more harm than simply not seeing at all. It
had been among her first lessons. She could sense the presence several
feet away from her, a large, looming figure. Her sensei. She sensed him
moving from left to right, searching for her in the darkness.
"Toritaka Akemi," the voice said again, more impatient this time.
"Hai," she said, and could feel him turn in reaction to the sound.
"Akemi," her sensei said. "Your time has come. Are you ready?"
"Hai," she said without hesitation. What other answer could there be?
"The path will be dangerous," he said. "Already three have perished
in the quest you will be given. Are you prepared to die?"
"Hai," she said.
"Are you prepared for fates worse than death?" he asked. "For those
await you as well, should you fail."
"Hai," she said.
"Are you prepared for the most terrible fate of all?" he asked.
"Hai," she said. "I am prepared to find that which I seek." There was
a long pause, as if her sensei were gauging the sincerity of her
comment.
"Very well, then, Toritaka Akemi," he said. "You will go to Otosan
Uchi. There, a man named Otomo Kakasu has need of a Phantom Hunter."
"Hai," she said.
"There will be others," he said. "They will be foolish. They will
seek that which they are not prepared to find. You must protect them
from what they will find, but you must protect them from themselves as
well. Are you prepared? Will you meet with the Miya now?"
"Hai," she said.
"Have you any questions before you depart?" he asked.
"Only one, sensei," she said.

The Cliffs Near Kyuden Gotei - The Witness
"Why me?" Moshi Kakau asked. Waving a chunk of driftwood as he spoke.
He knocked another bit of wood loose with his whittling knife and
watched it tumble down the face of the cliff.
"I am uncertain, Moshi-san," Miya Shoin replied, standing several
feet safely away from the edge. "I am only a messenger, and a tired one,
at that. Had I known the voyage across Umi Amaterasu would be so
difficult, perhaps I would have sent a pigeon." Kakau chuckled, turning
his face to the salty breeze.
"I'm not very eager about the idea of making that voyage again,
either," he said. "The air here isn't like the air in the city. It's
strong, pure. The Yoritomo believe that if you face the wind long
enough, it will cleanse your soul of all impurities."
"Is that true?" Shoin asked.
"Dunno," Kakau shrugged. "If it is, I think I'll need to sit on this
cliff a while longer." Kakau's tone was humorous, but he did not smile.
The young Mantis' weathered face did not look as if it smiled often.
"I realize this is abrupt, Moshi-san," Shoin said, stiffening
somewhat from Kakau's informal tone, "but the summons of the Otomo--"
"I know my duty, Miya," Kakau said firmly. "All Mantis know their
duty. I will be there. I will meet you at the harbor. Arrangements will
be made." Miya Shoin nodded, bowed, and quickly walked away, leaving
Kakau to his whittling.
Kakau frowned into the wind again. Legend had it that decades ago,
Yoritomo's father hurled himself into the sea from this very cliff to
protect his son from the machinations of gaijin assassins. Yoritomo
later risked his life and honor to demand recognition as a Great Clan
from Toturi the First. Yoritomo's gambit during the Clan War could just
as easily have destroyed the Mantis and their allies, had the Great
Clans taken offense.
The Mantis were a clan that accomplished nothing without risk,
without sacrifice. Ultimately, the paths of all Mantis heroes ended in
death, from the first Mantis to the last. Glorious death was still death
all the same.
It was a difficult lesson, but Kakau was learning it.
Kakau shook himself from his reverie. It would do no good to
constantly relive the events of that fateful night. Whether the assassin
had survived or not, no one could say. Yet Kakau felt strangely
unfulfilled, as if the matter was not yet closed. The arrival of the
Miya had proven it.
Perhaps there was still a chance that justice might be found...
Kakau sighed. Perhaps the lengthy voyage to Rokugan would give him
the time he needed to put his thoughts in order.

Otosan Uchi - The Meeting
Miya Shoin pushed the shoji screen to one side and found a very
small, very crowded room. Moshi Kakau stood beside the shisha, looking
at those waiting within carefully.
"Who are these people?" Kakau asked.
"They are here for the same reason we are," Shoin replied.
"What is that?" Kakau asked.
"We shall find out," he replied, stepping into the room.
"Miya-sama!" Kijuro looked up with a grin, stood, and bowed. "It is
about time you arrived! Though truth be told, I could have waited a bit
longer. The ladies have been excellent company."
Utaku Yu-Pan, Toritaka Akemi, and Agasha Chieh also sat at the table.
As Shoin entered, Chieh and Akemi rose and bowed as well.
"Kijuro-san has been entertaining us with his stories," Chieh said.
"He is a most intriguing character." The Phoenix was dressed in robes of
deep emerald, emblazoned with the mon of the Emerald Magistrates. Her
eyelids and lips had been painted with a dark green pigment, giving her
a strangely reptilian look.
Shoin returned the bow gracefully. "Kijuro's tales are indeed most
entertaining," he agreed. "I should share the tale of the unfortunate
Ox, Shoin, sometime. May I introduce Moshi Kakau, of the Mantis Clan?"
"Kakau-san," Chieh nodded at him. He bowed quickly, awkwardly.
"Everyone sit," Shoin said. "I am certain our mysterious host will
not be long now that we are all gathered here."
"He can take all the time he needs," Kijuro said, sipping deeply from
the cup before him. "The sake our host has here is excellent, and I for
one wouldn't mind hanging around and drinking more of it. I could stay
here and drink till New Year's Day. What do you say to that, Akemi?" he
asked, toasting her with his cup.
The Falcon simply sat quietly at the other end of the table and
watched everyone with haunted eyes. "Pretty and quiet! Just the sort of
woman I like!" Kijuro laughed and drained his cup. "If she could cook, I
would not let the Emperor himself bar my path. Can you cook, Akemi?"
The Falcon said nothing.
"Did any of you have any trouble in your travels?" Shoin asked,
quickly changing the subject. "I heard rumors of Tsuno activity in the
provinces of--"
"Enough," Utaku Yu-Pan snarled, pounding one fist on the table. "You
have us all here, half-spirit. Just like you wanted. Now where is Otomo
Kakasu?"
"There is no Otomo Kakasu," Agasha Chieh said, sipping from her cup.
"He is a fabrication. The Miya lied to us all."
Kakau coughed on his sake. Kijuro peered from Chieh to Shoin and
back, his wide face slightly comical in its curiosity. Akemi continued
to stare intently, and a low growl rose in Yu-Pan's throat.
"Chieh," Shoin said, casting the magistrate a betrayed look.
"What?" Chieh replied. "Your falsehood served its purpose. It
gathered us here as you wished. I see no further purpose in the lie so I
have discarded it. I told you that you could trust me, and I have proven
it by showing exquisite judgment."
"You lied to me, spirit?" Yu-Pan snarled angrily.
"Tell me why you tricked us all into coming here or by my
grandmother's blade-"
"It was not my wish to bring you here, I was merely following the
command I was given," Shoin snapped back at the Battle Maiden. "I know
only that each one of us were selected specifically."
"Why?" Yu-Pan snarled. "By whom?"
"Clearly some connection that we all have," Chieh commented. "Some
connection that another wishes to exploit. The only question that
remains is what that connection may be."
"Connection?" Shoin asked, his tone thoughtful.
"There is no connection," Yu Pan snapped. "I have never met any of
you before."
"Death," Akemi said suddenly, her low voice immediately drawing their
attention. "We are all connected by a web of death, the web of the
Spirit Realms. We are connected by murder..."
"Murder?" Shoin asked, looking at the Falcon. "Whose murder?"
"Whose indeed?" asked a voice from the hall as the shoji screen slid
open. "That, good ladies and gentlemen, is exactly what we are here to
discuss." A thin man in green robes stepped into the room, accompanied
by a massive yojimbo with a deep scar across his face. Miya Shoin's eyes
widened in recognition. He rose and bowed deeply. Chieh did the same.
The others simply stared.
"Is this our host, the fictitious Otomo Kakasu?" Yu-Pan asked with a
chuckle, neither rising nor bowing.
"I think not," the man replied, stepping further into the light. He
had a thin, angular face and a dark black patch over his right eye. "My
name is Hantei Naseru. Perhaps you have heard of me." He made the remark
a simple statement of fact rather than a question.
"The son of Emperor Toturi?" Utaku Yu-Pan said, rising and bowing,
her face flushing with shame.
"The same," Naseru said, pleased by her show of respect, or by her
discomfort, or perhaps both. "Now be seated, all of you, and be silent.
I have precious little time to waste."

Continued in Part 2 |