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A Legion Reborn
by Nancy Sauer
Edited by Fred Wan
It was a well-known fact among his retainers and vassals that
Shinjo Shono disliked holding court in the throne room at Shiro
Shinjo. There were various explanations for this, but Shinjo Natsume
had always held with the one that said that it was the memory of
his father that Shono was avoiding. Shinjo Yokatsu had ruled from
here for years, presenting an honorable face while spinning plots
that cut at the heart of the Empire. The thought lent an importance
to Shono’s presence in court now.
"And you have nothing to say to these accusations? No witnesses
to offer testimony on your behalf?" Shinjo Shono's voice was tightly
controlled, with just a hint of anger to edge the words.
Natsume had known this was coming, had braced himself for the
moment, and still he felt his heart clench up. "I am innocent, my
lord," he said. "Please, you must believe me." He was kneeling in
the center of Shono's court, head lowered, and from this position
he could just see the three samurai who had accused him. Shinjo
Yoshifusa, Shinjo Hoitsu, and Shinjo Kyuwa. Natsume despised them
all. He could take all of them together in a fight, and not one
of them was intelligent enough to realize that they were being played
as a cat’s paw.
"That is all? You cannot call a single samurai to testify on
your behalf?" Shono's real eye was blazing almost as much as his
nemurani one. Beside him stood his sister Haruko, wearing the blank
face of a courtier and idly fanning herself with a paper fan. Natsume
closed his eyes and waited, silent.
"You disgust me," Shono said. "Get out of my house, ronin. By
tomorrow sunset I want you out of my lands."
"Your will, Lord Shinjo," Natsume said quietly.

The sensei of the Thousand Leaves Dojo had never been a pretty
woman, and the years had not improved her any. But her broken nose
and scarred face spoke of battles hard-fought, and her eyes missed
very little of what went on around her. She glanced over Natsume
as he walked across the sake house towards her and then turned her
attention back to her sake, gesturing for her younger son to pour
her another cup.
Natsume stopped at her table and bowed low. "Excuse me," he said.
"You are Ginkgo of the Thousand Leaves, yes?"
Ginkgo picked up her cup and drank it down, leaving her older
son to deal with the interruption of her evening. "Examinations
for prospective students are held on the first day of the week,
starting at the hour of the serpent," he said. "Fees for instruction
are monthly and to be paid in advance."
"Apologies," Natsume said, "I am not seeking a teacher. I merely
wish to speak with Ginkgo-sensei."
"My mother does not…" the man started, and then Natsume smoothly
placed a bottle of sake on the table. "A show of my respect for
the sensei," he said.
The older son started to speak again, but Ginkgo cut him off
with a wave of her hand. She picked up the bottle and studied it
for a moment. "Friendly Traveler sake," she said, and opened it
up. "When it is gone, you will leave."
Natsume bowed again and seated himself. "Of course, Gingko-sensei.
I am called Natsume."
Ginkgo poured herself a cup. "You already know my name. These
are my sons, Azusa," she nodded towards one, "and Hoonoki," she
nodded towards the other.
Natsume bowed politely to the two men. Azusa was a tall, thin man
with pinched brows that gave him a perpetually worried look. Hoonoki
was shorter and more powerfully built than his brother. He also
seemed to be much younger; Natsume guessed him to be only a few
years past his gempukku.
"So, what is your business with me?" Ginkgo asked.
Natsume hesitated a moment, considering how to best approach
the topic. Ginkgo appeared to be a steady drinker, so he decided
to be direct. "I wish to speak to you about the Legion of Two Thousand,"
he said.
"Hrumph. Why speak of them?"
"You are a member of the Legion. A gunso, in fact."
"Was a gunso," Ginkgo said. She jerked her head toward Azusa.
"Until him." She tossed back her sake and signaled for another cup.
"You are still listed as such in the Legion's pay records," Natsume
said.
Ginkgo looked at him over the rim of her cup, eyes cool and measuring.
"You seem well-informed on the Legion already," she said. "One wonders
why you needed to speak to me at all." She drank her sake, but her
gaze never wavered.
Natsume nodded slightly, acknowledging her point. "I need to
speak to you because I intend to see the Legion reformed, and you
are the person most likely to know the whereabouts of the other
officers."
"And why would the Unicorn wish to see the Legion reformed?"
Natsume had known that his accent would mark him and had prepared
an answer for the question. "I do not act for the Unicorn in this,"
he said. He gestured towards the brown kimono he wore and his mon-less
shoulders. "My lord cast me out, saying that I was without honor.
But I am an honorable man and I will prove it by my service to the
Emperor himself."
Ginkgo snorted. "I'd find a better plan, Natsume-san." She set
down the cup and watched as Hoonoki refilled it. "The Emperor does
not care about the Legion of Two Thousand. No one does. We fragmented
while the Winds fought over the Throne, and no one came to gather
us up again." She picked her cup and drank it down, but not before
Natsume glimpsed the bleakness in her eyes. He wondered what she
saw in his.
"Gingko-sensei, the Legion must reform itself. The Empire needs
it." As he spoke, Natsume noticed that Hoonoki was leaning slightly
forward.
"The Emperor doesn’t," Ginkgo said bitterly. "Not once has he
turned his attention to us."
"And perhaps he was wise in that," Natsume said. "We have seen
that not all the members of his court were loyal servants. Had he
drawn attention to it, some might have argued to disband it, or
absorb it into the Imperial Legions. By apparently neglecting you,
the Righteous Emperor preserved the Legion's existence and left
it free to act in his name. Is that not a good thing?"
"Yes!" Hoonoki exclaimed. "Once again the Legion must rise to
defend the Emperor's people!"
"You need to stop drinking," Azusa said. "You have no head for
it and it's making you say foolish things."
"How, foolish? Our fathers were in the Legion. They died in its
service! We must do this to honor them."
"We have a dojo full of students, all of whom have paid through
the end of the month. We need you to teach, not chase after some
Shinjo ronin with dreams of glory."
"We wouldn't be able to do anything before the end of the month
anyway," Ginkgo said. "It'll take at least that long for me to get
letters out and back."
"Mother!" Azusa said, aghast.
"Your father was a good man," Ginkgo said. She looked over at
Hoonoki. "They were both good men. If we can bring back the Legion
for them..." her voice trailed off.
"But the dojo, the students…" Azusa began.
"End of the month we'll offer them a place in the Legion. That's
why I started the dojo, back when I was carrying you. I'd train
up the new recruits, so the officers knew what they were getting."
Azusa drew in a breath, paused, and then bowed his head slightly.
"Yes, Mother. But where will we get the money to maintain it? Food,
clothing, arrows--even a small legion is expensive to run."
"I have some funds to start with," Natsume said.
"Do you now," Gingko said thoughtfully. She closed up the bottle
of sake and rose to her feet. "The first class meets at the hour
of the hare. Don't be late. We'll discuss this further at breakfast."
Natsume felt the tightness in his heart ease up for the first
time since Shono had disavowed him. "Yes, Gingko-sensei," he said.

"The Fortunes favor us," Ginkgo announced.
"How so?" said Natsume.
Ginkgo indicated the scroll sitting on her desk. "One of my students,
Tokaji, has written to say that he can't rejoin us because he has
taken a position protecting a small village in the Scorpion lands."
"Why is that good?"
"The village he is trying to protect is being harassed by bandits,"
said Ginkgo. She grinned fiercely. "Tomorrow is the last day of
the month. The day after that, the Legion moves out."

Tokaji was waiting for them when they arrived at Doko Maru. He
was standing outside of the small tea house in the center of the
village, with two other ronin standing slightly behind him. "The
start of the new Legion, Sensei?" he asked.
Ginkgo nodded. "Ten of my students, me and the boys, and him."
She jerked her head towards Natsume.
Tokaji smiled. "A good beginning," he said. "I told Washi, who
runs the tea house here, that you'd be taking over his place. Utagawa-san
and Tamago-san," he indicated the ronin with him, "are here on business
of their own, but they have agreed to aid us."
Ginkgo looked them over. "You're fine," she told Tamago. "You'll
do," she said to Utagawa. "Natsume, start organizing patrols. I
want everyone to have a feel for what the surrounding territory
is like." She disappeared into the tea house, shouting for Washi.
"I'll do?" Utagawa said.
"A compliment, from her," Tokaji said. "That's the Thousand-Leaved
Ginkgo."
Utagawa lifted an eyebrow. "Her? Really? I'd always thought she
would be taller."
"When she has a naginata," Tokaji said, "she's ten feet tall
and has four arms. You'll see for yourself if it comes to a fight."

"Do you think it will come to a fight?" Hoonoki asked later that
evening. He sounded hopeful.
"I don't know what to think," Tokaji said. He looked around the
table where he sat with Natsume, Utagawa, Tamago, Ginkgo, and her
sons. "There's really no reason for bandits to be here at all. The
people of this village barely grow enough to pay their taxes and
feed themselves with what's left over. All the roads in the area
go to villages just as poor, so there's not enough trade or travelers
to make banditry profitable. In an area like this you expect them
to hit a few farms for supplies and keep on moving, but according
to Utagawa and Tamago they're settling in."
Utagawa nodded. "There was an unusually vicious bandit leader,
Kokei, who we tracked from the Dragon lands to the province west
of here. We intended to protect the villagers from him, but they
are joining him." She sounded slightly bewildered by this. "Why
would anyone destroy their life like that?"
"You would be amazed," Tamago said dryly. Utagawa frowned briefly
at him and then looked away. Natsume watched the exchange, wondering.
The ronin woman was hard to place, but Tamago's speech had a clear
Lion accent and that made the Shinjo nervous. Tamago presented himself
as just a ronin, but then, so did Natsume. "Regardless of why, they
are a danger to us. We will have to hunt to find them, but if we
stay as a group they will just move around us and if we divide up
to search they will destroy us a unit at a time."
"So we will give them a reason to come to us," Natsume said.
"Even peculiar bandits need supplies to maintain themselves, and
if the area they are in can't support them they'll need funds to
buy supplies with. So we'll let it be known that Doko Maru has gotten
nervous about the unrest and are sending their taxes in early, in
cash. That should draw them."
"But this village is too poor to have that kind of money," Tokaji
objected.
"It doesn't have to be true," Natsume said, "just plausible.
Over the years they might have scraped up enough savings to cover
a bad year. Would Kokei really pass up the opportunity to take it?"
"No," Utagawa said. "But how do we let them know about it? This
is the kind of thing that we would want to be kept a secret."
"I know how to do it," Azusa said, a rare smile on his face.
"I've seen it all the time, out drinking with Mother--bored, irritated
samurai getting drunk and complaining loudly about their life to
anyone who would listen. The next time I'm supposed to be on a patrol
I'll show up at one of the western villages instead and plant our
story. Within a day everyone in the province will know."
"We'll do it," Ginkgo said. "Natsume-san, while Azusa is setting
them up you will scout our route and find the best places for an
ambush. The rest of us will carry on as usual."

Natsume rode easily, trying to breathe around his nervousness
and wishing he had a weapon in his hand. The group was coming up
on an ambush point, and something in the back of his head insisted
that this would be the one. After a moment he looked behind to ask
Ginkgo a meaningless question and check on their formation. Ginkgo,
Utagawa and Tamago looked utterly relaxed. All the others looked
alert and slightly tense except for Hoonoki, who was obviously jittery,
and Azusa, who was obviously disapproving of Hoonoki. Ginkgo gave
a meaningless reply and Natsume started to turn back around. As
he did so, Tamago caught his eye and nodded very, very slightly.
Nastume's mouth went dry and the tightness around his heart got
a little worse.
The road dipped down to cross the remains of a dried-out riverbed.
Natsume was at the point where it started to rise back up again
when he caught a flash of movement on the upstream side. He reacted
without thought, turning his horse towards the motion and drawing
his katana. As he raced through the bandits rushing down towards
the group he slashed and cut, drawing screams and blood as he went.
Then he was past the crowd and his horse was scrambling up the bank.
When they gained the top Natsume reigned around and surveyed the
battle below. What he saw shocked him. The plan had been for Natsume's
counter-charge to frighten and confuse the attackers, but that hadn't
happened--the surviving bandits had ignored his charge completely
and were now fighting with a ferocity that Natsume usually associated
with the Matsu and Moto. Worse still, there seemed to be twice as
many as they had planned. Despite that, the Legion samurai were
holding their ground. Tamago was carving through his opponents with
no thought of his own defense, and Utagawa and Azusa had placed
themselves on his flanks to catch anyone who tried to take advantage
of that. Gingko had moved off a little to get room for her naginata,
and as she wheeled and spun Natsume decided that four arms was a
low estimate. The remainder of the group was arranged around the
pony-cart that held the alleged tax money. The pony itself was dead,
the bandits' first victim.
Natsume was about to send his horse back into the battle when
he saw another dozen bandits silently racing up the downstream side.
His cry of warning died on his lips as he saw Ginkgo drop the man
she was fighting, turn about, and run out to meet them alone. As
the new bandits fanned out to surround her, Natsume spurred his
horse down the bank.

Natsume ran a hand through his hair, bone-weary and heart-tired.
The bandits had stood their ground and fought to the end, with one
exception: a tall, powerfully built man covered with tattoos, who
had carved his way out of the Legion's line while laughing joyously.
Eventually the Legion's samurai had won, but they had lost half
of their own.
Slowly Natsume walked over to where Gingko's remains were sprawled.
Hoonoki was kneeling next her, weeping loudly into his hands. Azusa
stood next to him, silent, with tears running down his face.
"Twelve feet tall," Natsume said, "six arms." Azusa smiled through
his tears.

Natsume paused outside the practice room, listening. He had appointed
Hoonoki as the dojo's senior instructor, and the young man had shown
such zeal for it that the students had started calling him the Hundred-Leaved
Hoonoki when they thought he couldn't hear them. After a moment
he continued down the hall to the office. His office, now--Gingko's
sons had insisted that she would have wanted Natsume to assume command
of the Legion, and the others had supported them.
Once inside the office Natsume knelt at the desk and pulled a
blank scroll out of his sleeve. Azusa was off laying a one-man siege
of the Imperial Magistrate's office, trying to get them to acknowledge
the Legion's pay vouchers, so there would be no interruptions of
his work. As he prepared the ink and brush Natsume mentally reviewed
the cipher he had been taught. When all was ready he methodically
wrote out a report of all he had done, concluding with a delicately
worded request for more operating funds. Azusa would probably succeed,
but it never hurt to have a few extra koku for emergencies. As he
rolled up the scroll and sealed it in a case Natsume felt the tightness
around his heart dissolve away, and he started to smile. "Your will,
Lord Shinjo," he whispered.

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