
Blood Dawn
By Rich WulfThe Plains Above Evil…
The swordsmith let his hammer fall across the anvil once more,
pounding out a steady rhythm that echoed into the night. His workshop, an
improvised smithy he had thrown together in a small cave, held no light
other than the light of the forge. The swordsmith scowled down at the hunk
of steel that lay before him, bending it into the form of a sword with his
boundless will as much as his skill with his tools. He lifted the hammer
another time, and pain shot through his body. The hammer fell from his
hand with a clang, his exhausted arms no longer able to bear it aloft. He
fell to his knees, breath coming in savage gasps, as his body began to
fail him. He pushed his lank, long white hair from his eyes and looked up
with a scowl. A thin stream of bright red blood trickled along the floor
and over his hand, runoff from the rain of blood that covered the
landscape beyond the cavern.
“Omoni, send another,” he whispered.
The small man huddled at the edge of the light nodded, and turned to
the two goblins that squatted beside him with a silent command. One showed
pointy white teeth in a fierce smile as they scampered away. Struggling to
his knees, the swordsmith removed the sturdy apron tied about his waist
and hung it on a hook riveted in the stone wall. He placed the hammer and
tongs carefully beside it. He lifted a white kimono from the floor and
pulled it over his exhausted shoulders. After a few moments, the sound of
terrified screams drew toward the swordsmith. A peasant in ragged garments
was forced into the edge of the forge light. He covered his eyes with both
hands as he wailed for mercy.
The swordsmith scowled at the peasant. “Look at me,” he commanded.
“No!” the peasant cried. “Not this! Not like the others!”
The swordsmith knelt carefully beside his anvil, folding his arms in
his sleeves. “Make him look at me,” the swordsmith said.
The creatures cackled gleefully. Each seized an arm and pulled them
away from his face. Omoni stood and seized his hair, forcing him to look
at the swordsmith’s eyes.
“Why?” the peasant cried. “Why me?”
The swordsmith paused for a moment, as if weighing whether an
explanation was necessary. “Because I am tired,” the swordsmith said with
a small frown. “This body can work no longer without rest, and I am on a
schedule. Sayonara.”
The scream that echoed through the cavern next was like nothing else,
louder than the sounds of the forge that had echoed only moments before,
louder than the thunder that crashed in the sky above. The swordsmith’s
body fell forward with a thud, dead. The peasant shook the two goblins
free with incredible strength and Omoni stepped away, releasing him. As
the peasant rose, he changed. His gangly limbs grew thick with muscle, his
shoulders broader. His close-cropped black hair grew long over his
shoulders, and faded to white. His eyes drained of color, changing from
dark brown to pale blue. He lifted a hot brand from the forge and held it
near a quenching barrel, studying his reflection in the surface of the
water.
“The chin is never quite right,” he said with a small frown. “I never
look like me.”
“I can fix that,” Omoni replied.
“Another time, Omoni-san,” the swordsmith replied. He shed his peasant
tunic and donned the blacksmith’s apron, taking up his hammer and tongs
again. “I shall not wear this body for long. It will tire like the others,
and a new one will be needed.”
Omoni sat on the floor beside his goblins, the forge light casting an
eerie pallor on his sallow features. One of the ferocious creatures shoved
the other away and curled itself on Omoni’s lap like a dog. He scratched
it behind one pointed ear as he studied the swordsmith silently.
“What happens to their souls?” he asked. “What happens to the people
when you take their bodies?”
“What do I care?” Yajinden replied, continuing his work.
Omoni frowned thoughtfully. “Someone comes,” he said without looking.
A tall man in silken black robes stepped into the cavern and pushed his
hood aside, revealing the pale, gaunt features and shaven head typical of
a Bloodspeaker tsukai. “Yajinden,” the man said in a mellow voice. “I have
come to monitor your progress.”
“I do my best work alone, Masaru,” Yajinden said, not turning from his
anvil, hammer falling in a steady rhythm.
“Yet you are not alone,” Masaru said, gesturing toward Omoni and his
goblins. “Surely my presence will not distract you any more than this
miserable wretch and his pets.”
“Omoni is a fellow artist; his presence does not disturb me,” Yajinden
replied, “but I cannot abide a fool’s eyes on my work.”
Omoni grinned. His goblins snarled at Masaru.
“I am sorry you feel that way,” Masaru said with a sigh, “but
Iuchiban was very specific in my instructions.” The tsukai stressed his
master’s name, hoping to impress Yajinden with its weight.
Yajinden’s hammer paused in midair. He looked over one shoulder
with a scowl. “Very well, then,” he said in a low voice. “If he requested
you monitor me then I have no choice but to permit your presence.” He
began hammering the sword again.
Masaru watched silently for long minutes, trying to ignore the shabby
goblin-man that stared at him from the shadows. Yajinden lifted the sword
and studied its red-hot surface with a satisfied grunt. He plunged the
blade into a barrel with a whisper of forbidden magic. Steam rose in a
white cloud, then swirled with black mists that poured from Yajinden’s
lips. Wicked spirits crawled into the heated blade as it drank the
quenching water, granting the steel a mild blood-red hue. Yajinden ran one
finger along the blade and set it on a rack beside many other katana,
wakizashi, spears, and axes.
“You do fine work,” Masaru said, extending one hand toward the nearest
spear.
“By all means, touch it,” Yajinden said tonelessly. “I would enjoy
seeing what happens to you.”
Masaru carefully withdrew his hand and folded his arms in his
robes.
“Tell Iuchiban his arsenal is nearly complete,” Yajinden said.
“They are weaker than true Bloodswords by far, but such is unavoidable
given the materials, tools at hand, and time allotted. But these, combined
with tonight’s storm, should turn a fair number to your master’s cause.”
“Our master,” Maseru corrected. “We all serve him.”
Yajinden took a deep breath and began working on a new scrap of steel.
“I have known Iuchiban since before there was a such word as Bloodspeaker.
I knew him when he was Jama, the Imperial Prince. Together we unlocked the
secrets of immortality. I crafted his Bloodswords and the Anvil of
Despair. I discovered the soul-shifting magic that allowed him to escape
his Tomb the first time. I helped perfect the ritual that created the rain
of blood that darkens Rokugan’s skies even now. Yes, I serve the First
Bloodspeaker. It seems every aspect of my genius serves to build his
legend, while I am forgotten.”
“Such words are arrogant,” Masaru replied, backing away from Yajinden
slowly. “I will tell Iuchiban you have said these things.”
“Arrogance is the luxury of the worthy,” Yajinden said with a chuckle.
“Tell Iuchiban what you wish. Perhaps he shall strike me down for my
arrogance.” He looked up at Masaru. “Perhaps he will kill you out of hand
for denouncing his most valuable ally.”
Masaru blinked. In the shadows, Omoni gave a sharp, animal laugh.
“Laugh at me if you will, but at least Iuchiban trusts me,” Masaru
replied. “You have served him for centuries and he still sends servants
such as myself to monitor you.”
“Trust?” Yajinden replied. His face creased in a slow smile as he
turned to face the tsukai. “Iuchiban does not trust you. He controls you.
Only the weak find salvation in the shadow of trust. You know nothing of
what the Bloodspeakers stand for. We are beings of raw power. We bend
others to our will, or destroy them. A Bloodspeaker serves no master - he
simply works with others when it serves his own purposes to do so. We need
no trust. Power insures obedience. Trust is a word the weak use to console
themselves as they cower before someone who has ‘trusted’ them.”
“So you serve only out of fear?” Masaru asked with disdain.
“Fear and power are the only constants, the only true motivations,”
Yajinden replied. “I fear Iuchiban’s power, for to do so keeps me alive. I
will obey his commands so long as his power is greater than mine, and his
goals match mine, for to do so increases my own power, leading others to
fear me in turn. When the day comes he is no longer needed, I will destroy
him with no regrets. I believed my strength was greater than his once, and
my folly only won me a place in his Tomb. Until I am truly more powerful,
Iuchiban need never fear me, and may rely upon me. That is what it truly
means to be a Bloodspeaker - to balance power and fear, accepting both
without emotion. You wear our name but you are not one of us. You are
merely a tool, like this hammer.” Yajinden held the heavy metal implement
before the tsukai’s face. “So tell Iuchiban what you will about me, but
know this. It will only serve to diminish your worth in his eyes. One day,
Iuchiban will have no need for you, and he will no longer protect you… and
I have a long memory.” He raised the hammer easily in one hand, as if
preparing to strike Masaru.
“I… am sorry, Yajinden-sama,” Maseru said in a terrified voice. He fell
to his knees before the swordsmith, eyes fixed on the floor.
Yajinden smiled. “Now you begin to understand,” Yajinden replied.
“Leave my forge, Masaru, and disturb me no more. Tell Iuchiban my work
proceeds as well as can be expected.”
Masaru nodded rapidly and withdrew into the shadows as quickly as he
was able.
Yajinden returned to his forge.
“As well as can be expected?” Omoni asked quietly. “These weapons are
among the most powerful cursed artifacts I have seen, and I have seen
many. You belittle masterpieces, Yajinden-sama.”
“These are nothing, Omoni,” Yajinden replied with a smirk. “Shadows of
true Bloodswords. At the risk of sounding nostalgic, I have begun to yearn
for the days of old, for my Anvil of Despair… but it has long been
destroyed.”
Yajinden continued to work for several minutes before Omoni spoke
again.
“No,” Omoni said. “It has not been destroyed.”
Yajinden stopped his work immediately, eyes intent on the goblin-man.
“Do not toy with me Omoni. Have you seen my Anvil?”
Omoni nodded back at Yajinden. On his lap, the goblin twisted so that
Omoni could scratch its fat stomach. “My friend Kokujin used it to forge
swords of shame. My bakemono were there. They saw it fall into the earth,
along with Kokujin.”
Yajinden let the hammer and tongs fall from his hands, ignoring them as
they clattered to the stone floor. He advanced toward Omoni. The other
goblin growled at the swordsmith, but he ignored the beast and laid one
hand on the goblin-man’s shoulder. Thunder shook the cave as the storm
continued outside. “Tell me where it was lost, my friend, and I will craft
you the finest weapon ever forged.”
“I do not need weapons,” Omoni replied. “I have my bakemono.”
“A favor then,” Yajinden said. “For a kindred spirit, a fellow crafter.
Help me find the Anvil of Despair, and I shall grant you any favor within
my power.”
“Very well, Yajinden-sama,” Omoni replied.

Iuchiban stood beside the stone altar in the heart of the Plains
Above Evil. His once white robes were now drenched red with blood. His
long black hair was plastered across his back. He stood with arms
outstretched, face raised to the sky, laughing like a delighted child as
the storm of blood raged on. The corpse of the Ki-Rin lay discarded on the
earth beside him, its life drained away by Iuchiban’s mad spell. As he
watched the blood fall upon the people of the Empire, he could feel the
servants of the Emperor as they became consumed by madness. His eyes and
ears now stretched across the Empire, carried by the power of his storm,
but he kept his focus here. He spoke aloud to his assembled followers.
“For centuries the Bloodspeakers have remained hidden in the
darkness,” he said in the loud, clear voice of a courtier. “Now the Empire
knows that we have returned. After tonight, there shall be no doubt. This
rain of blood will seep into the souls of the weak. Those who are consumed
by fear, desire, or regret will be unable to resist my call. They will
fall to the power of corruption, and become willing allies of the
Bloodspeakers.”
A riotous cry erupted from the cultists. Like their master, they
were soaked in blood from the magical storm. Young and old, man and woman
stood among their ranks. They were unified only by the fervor they
displayed for their master, and the madness that lurked behind their eyes.
“Until today many of you were ordinary folk,” Iuchiban continued.
“Minor samurai, peasants, or even eta living the lives of little note. You
worshipped me in secret, continuing the blood rites and secret rituals
their parents had passed down for generations. You waited patiently for my
return, while your hate boiled inside. The day has come for you to cast
aside your old roles. Wield your hate against the Empire. Strike down
those too weak to grasp the pure power of blood as you have done. Today is
our call to arms. Cells of Bloodspeakers hidden throughout the Empire
assemble tonight as we do here, preparing to join with those who have
succumbed to the rain’s unholy power.”
The cultists cheered again, and the thunder echoed their cry.
“Each of you, in your way, helped to engineer my escape, for each of
you know the promise of conquest that I bring,” he continued. “But you
have also heard the legends. You have heard the Empire slander the name of
the Bloodspeakers. As we march against the Empire you will hear them
slander us again. They will tell you that we cannot triumph, that I have
already tried and failed to conquer the Empire twice before. Yet for all
their power… for all their efforts to destroy me… I am here. I am eternal,
and I will not be denied!”
The crowd echoed their master’s speech with more riotous cheering. Many
waved weapons in the air, wicked knives or curved swords from the
Bloodspeaker forges.
“Jama Suru awaits you, my children,” Iuchiban said, lifting his hands
and cupping the blood rain as it fell. “He will lead you to conquest!
March forth, and soak the earth with samurai blood so deeply that this
storm is put to shame!” Iuchiban drew the sword slung across his back,
drawing another roar from the cultists as the golden blade erupted in
black flame.
The riotous cheering continued for several minutes, until Jama Suru’s
barked commands began to dispatch the crowd in organized packs. Iuchiban
remained where he was, watching his armies with a cold, calculating eye.
He already knew which of them would die, which would return with greater
strength and experience, and which would perhaps do both thanks to Suru’s
magic. He tilted his head slightly to one side after some time, sensing
Yajinden’s arrival even before the shadows parted to deposit him there.
“I saw some of the cultists carrying your handiwork,” Iuchiban said
simply.
Yajinden shrugged. “No one of importance,” he replied. “The curses
shall strengthen them for a time, and when they die it shall be surrounded
by the corpses of our enemies. With luck, some foolish samurai will find
their weapons and take them for their own.”
Iuchiban nodded. “Your creations have never failed to cause the Empire
misery.” The First Bloodspeaker gave Yajinden a thoughtful look. “Except
once, of course.”
Yajinden shrugged. “I know the sword of which you speak but I
disagree,” he replied. “Yashin caused the Hantei Dynasty’s downfall. A
pity you missed it.”
Iuchiban’s expression did not change, refusing to respond to Yajinden’s
subtle insult. “Have you found the rakshasa?” he asked simply.
“Not yet, Iuchiban,” Yajinden replied. “I have been quite busy of late
forging your blood weapons.”
“Assign such duties to an apprentice,” Iuchiban replied.
“None are as skilled as I,” Yajinden said.
“All the more reason not to waste your time with such insignificant
work,” Iuchiban replied. “Adisabah must be recaptured. He knows a great
deal that could bring us harm. You know I am the only one I can rely on in
this, for you have just as much to lose.”
Yajinden frowned. “He will not be easily found,” he said.
“Since when were you daunted by the impossible, Asahina?” Iuchiban
retorted.
Yajinden winced, annoyed by the mention of his lost family name. “I
shall do my best Iuchiban, but I think you overestimate the danger the
creature poses. His kind rarely acts directly. He will not take advantage
of what he knows. More likely he will hide in the shadows, wearing a
thousand different faces, hiding in terror.”
“I do not fear Adisabah,” Iuchiban replied. “I fear others will learn
what he knows. Begin with the Unicorn, the one who escaped us in the Tomb.
Perhaps Jin has learned something from his brother’s soul…”
•
The Burning Sands…
“Where are we?” Iuchi Katamari asked. The young magistrate stood
at the mouth of a large cavern, staring out at the blasted desert
landscape that surrounded them. The sun sat hot in the sky, blazing down
with an angry fire. Somehow it did not look like the sun that Katamari
knew. Even the air tasted different.
“Meat concerns itself too much with trivialities,” the rakshasa’s voice
echoed from within the cave. “One place is like another, this place is as
good as any. Better. Further from the jailer it is, the safer it feels.”
“This is not Rokugan,” Katamari said, looking back into the cavern.
“This is not my home.”
The rakshasa looked up in surprise. It had been kneeling over a small
bowl of herbs, mixing them and smashing them diligently with a pestle. Its
tiger face split in a grin, showing sharp white fangs. It dumped the herbs
into its pipe and hung the pipe in its mouth. “Meat is closer to home than
you think,” Adisabah said. “This place, it calls to you. Like it calls to
Adisabah. There is much to learn here. We must stay here till the tale is
told.”
“Tale?” Katamari asked. “What tale do you mean?”
“The tale of the jailer,” he said. “Your tale, meat.” Adisabah
pointed at Katamari with his pipe.
“My tale?”
“Even the manipulator is not beyond being manipulated,” the rakshasa
said, chewing on his pipe with an amused smile. “Even the immortal are not
beyond kharma. Even a Bloodspeaker cannot defy the bonds of blood.”
“Kharma?” Katamari asked. “Blood? What does any of that have to do with
anything?”
“Curious,” Adisabah said. “Meat still does not wonder why?”
“What are you talking about?” Katamari asked.
The rakshasa chuckled and held one finger in the air. A small green
flame leapt from the tip of its claw, and it lit its pipe. “Your brother
Kuma and his wife Sui both died in the Tomb of Iuchiban. Both were
manipulated by forces beyond their control - Shahai knew that Sui and Kuma
together could lead her through the jailer’s tomb… but why were you
there?”
“I stood beside my brother,” Katamari replied.
“That is what you think, meat, but there is a greater reason still,”
Adisabah said. “The jailer pretends the power that he wields is new, that
it is a thing of his creation, but in these lands immortals are nothing
new. There are those who have learned to fight them. Those who have
learned to kill them. You were drawn to the jailer’s prison because you
are one of their line, the protectors of magic, the gatherers of winds.”
Adisabah reached into his robes and drew out a heavy iron mask. The
front was featureless, split only by a thin horizontal opening for the
eyes.
“That is Iuchi Karasu’s mask,” Katamari said with a faint sense of
wonder. All Iuchi recognized the mask once worn by their family’s greatest
hero.
“No,” Adisabah said. “This is your mask. The time has come for you to
learn the truth. The time has come for you to become the Doomseeker.”
To be continued…
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