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Fires of the Hidden City
Part Four
By Rich Wulf
In the forests near the Vigilant Keep of the Monkey, there was a
waterfall. It was not a particularly large waterfall, and thus most people
did were not unduly impressed by it, with the exception of one man. One
man found this a place of peace, for the spirit that dwelled in the
waterfall was a curious, friendly sort, eager to share stories of what the
water had seen. Today that man sat on a stone in the center of the pool as
water thrummed upon his shoulders, eyes closed as the his tormented soul
sought balance.
His eyes opened suddenly. He sensed a powerful presence seething in the
air around him, greater than the minor spirit that lived in the falls. He
recognized it immediately, though the new arrival’s power had grown since
their last meeting. A young man stood at the edge of the pool, arms folded
across his bare chest. His head was shaven in the manner of a monk.
Brilliant tattoos were painted over his arms and torso.
“Togashi Satsu,” he said in his deep, steady voice. “When last we met,
I warned you of a dark future for your clan… a future you have now
prevented. You have some measure of your grandfather’s strength, it
seems.”
The Dragon Champion bowed. “I need your help, Grand Master,” he said.
“Iuchiban rises, in Phoenix lands, but I know not where. I need your
wisdom again.”
“Iuchiban?” Naka Tokei said.
“My own soldiers face the Bloodspeaker,” Satsu said. “I do not know
where he is, or what he plans, but I believe together we could find him.”
“Yet you wonder if we should,” Tokei said. “Iuchiban has awakened the
Sleeper. Surely you have sensed this as well.”
Satsu nodded gravely. “The Kusatte Iru marches toward Kyuden Isawa,
obviously intended to distract us while the Bloodspeaker carries out his
true plans.”
“That it is a distraction makes the demon no less dangerous,” Tokei
said. “The Kusatte Iru must be returned to its sleep, for the world’s sake
and for its own.”
“For its own?” Satsu asked, surprised.
“All things must serve their purpose, even a demon,” Tokei answered.
“One day this world must die, and the Kusatte Iru must be there to kill
it. That day is not today. What Iuchiban has done must be undone.”
Satsu bowed his head in solemn acknowledgment. “Yet whatever he
undertakes himself is surely as great a danger. I am faced with two evils,
yet can only fight one. What must I do?”
“Do you trust your soldiers, Satsu?” Tokei asked. “The ones that you
say face the Bloodspeaker now?”
“They are among the finest samurai I have ever known,” he replied
without hesitation.
“Then trust them,” the Grand Master replied. “While we fight the threat
we can see.”

Mirumoto Kenzo stood with a sword in each hand, staring out at the
shattered heap of rubble that only minutes before had been the north wall
of Gisei Toshi. A look of resigned anger was etched upon his face as a
cloud of white dust rolled over him.
Since his arrival, the red light that shone from the city walls had
disturbed him. There was something primal and violent about it, something
that stirred caution in every fiber of his being in the same manner as
black storm clouds or a large predator. Though still wary, he had become
used to the light. The Isawa claimed it was a sort of magic that hailed
from before the Empire, a style of wards that they had long since set
aside but still protected the ancient city. Kenzo had promised himself
that he would investigate the manner more thoroughly once the city was
safe. With the glowing walls serving as the only true protection against
the Bloodspeaker armies, he allowed himself to set aside his inherent
suspicion toward unfamiliar magics somewhat.
Now he hated himself for the compromise. The Bloodspeaker armies had
withdrawn from the north wall shortly after Nakamuro vanished. The wall
shone an angry red, a deeper color than Kenzo had seen before even during
the most intense assaults, and tore itself apart from within. The
Bloodspeakers had known it would happen. They had turned Gisei Toshi’s
magic to their own advantage. Three dozen samurai, Shiba archers as well
as his own Mirumoto troops, had guarded that portion of the wall. Now all
had been devoured by the crumbling rubble. Now it was only a matter of
time before the city was overwhelmed.
“Defenders of Gisei Toshi, to me!” Kenzo said, scrambling atop the heap
of fallen stones. “Guard the breach!”
A few of the city defenders looked at Kenzo in surprise, unwilling or
unready to obey the orders of a Dragon. Most others quickly set aside
their doubt. Phoenix, Dragon, and Imperial Legionnaire filled the breach,
swords and bows held at the ready. They waited for the attack to come, for
the ranks of shambling undead and mad blood sorcerers to charge the broken
walls.
The smoke rolled aside, revealing orderly ranks of Bloodspeaker zombies
patiently waiting beyond. Their bloodstained war banners snapped on the
mountain wind, carrying the smell of the rotting dead toward them. A cold
sensation spread through Kenzo’s body as he recognized one of the defaced
standards.
“Why don’t they attack?” Mareshi asked, standing beside Kenzo. “Why do
they wait?”
“Their general is more clever than that,” Kenzo said. “He has our fear
now. He will use that.”
Kenzo said no more, only held his swords steady and watched the enemy
army with a bleak expression. A single figure stepped forward from the
ranks, a pale man in a flowing black robe, carrying no weapons. His face
was gaunt, and etched with scars in strange patterns. His eyes were
bloodshot and slightly yellowed. He looked up at Kenzo with an eager
expression, pausing a short distance from the foot of the broken wall.
“Defenders of Gisei Toshi,” the man said, holding out his hands to show
that he was unarmed. “I come to you in the name of General Akodo Tadenori,
who once was one of you. He applauds your valor in resisting us thus far,
and your cleverness in removing Yajinden. I have come to offer you a
chance to surrender without shame, and relinquish the secrets of Gisei
Toshi to us!”
“Are they mad?” Mareshi whispered under his breath.
Kenzo looked at Mareshi.
“Foolish question, I suppose,” Mareshi said soberly, turning back to
down at the Bloodspeaker army.
“We are not without mercy,” the man said, smiling as he slowly walked
toward the city. “All of you who bow before Iuchiban shall be offered a
place among us, once the measure of your loyalty has been determined. You
have proven yourselves to be worthy foes. We would not deny you the
opportunity to join us as allies. Let your strength combine with ours, and
in that union…”
The man cut off shortly, an arrow lodged in his chest. He fell to one
knee, looking down at the bleeding wound in puzzlement. Kenzo scowled,
glancing over the ranks to determine who had fired without his order.
Blood spilled over the Bloodspeaker emissary’s white robes. “So this is
your answer,” the man said with a chuckle. “Here is Iuchiban’s reply!” The
Bloodspeaker seized the arrow and tore it free of his body. As he did so,
he fell backwards, his body suddenly exploding from the inside. A cloud of
boiling blood washed forward, more blood than could possibly be contained
within a single man, carried on the wind. Kenzo swore and covered his
face, but could feel the heat wash over him, heard the startled cries of
his fellow samurai.
Then the creak of armor and the hiss of steel followed, as the
Bloodspeakers charged into the bloody steam.

The caverns beneath Gisei Toshi were dark now, illuminated only by the
red flames that enveloped Shiba Aikune’s brilliant orange armor, the light
of Isawa’s Last Wish. Iuchiban held his curved dagger in one hand,
watching Aikune with a patient, knowing smile. Isawa Nakamuro lay
collapsed in the corner, unconscious from the pain of Iuchiban’s attack.
Aikune was surprised that Nakamuro had stood up to the Bloodspeaker at
all; he had thought the man a coward. Ironic that he had misjudged his old
friend just as so many had misjudged him in the years since the War of
Spirits.
“Why do you hesitate to strike me?” Iuchiban asked, circling around
Aikune as he slowly advanced. “I am Iuchiban, leader of the Bloodspeakers.
I have defiled your City of Sacrifice. You have come all this way to
destroy me. Why pause now?”
-Kill him, Aikune.-
The Last Wish sounded angry, eager to strike down the Bloodspeaker.
Aikune found himself hesitating. This smelled of a trap. He stepped away,
one hand moving to his sword. “You knew that I was coming,” he said,
watching Iuchiban carefully. “How?”
“Why should I bother to explain?” Iuchiban replied. “Have you not come
to fight?”
The Bloodspeaker lunged forward with his knife. Aikune stepped backward
drawing his katana just as a brilliant plume of red energy suffused the
weapon. He parried Iuchiban’s attack, melting the dagger in a blinding
flash. A second stroke slashed the Bloodspeaker across the chest, sending
him flying against the wall, robes crackling in flame. Iuchiban lay flat
on his back only for a moment before rising to his feet once more, face
devoid of expression. His wounds were already healed, save the slash
across his chest.
-Kill him!-
“Nothing has changed, Aikune,” Iuchiban said, looking at the deep wound
in his chest. “You have power in abundance, but you lack understanding of
that power.” With a sneer, he reached into the gaping hole in his chest
with a soft tearing sound. His hand tore free again, streaming with his
own blood. The blood fell free for a moment then suspended in midair,
forming into the shape of a katana. As the weapon formed, Iuchiban’s wound
healed.
“You know nothing about me,” Aikune replied.
“You stand in the shadow of the mountain and wonder why you cannot
see,” Iuchiban replied. “I stand atop the mountain. I see that you are
nothing, son of Shiba Kanjiro. You dance like a puppet on my strings.”
-KILL HIM!-
Aikune resisted the Wish’s urgings no longer. He pointed his blade at
the Bloodspeaker and unleashed a torrent of raw power, blazing in a white
column toward Iuchiban. Solid stone burned turned to ash before the Wish’s
onslaught. When the light died away, Iuchiban was gone.
Startled by the ease of his victory, Aikune kept his sword ready. He
glanced about the cavern, painted as it was in dancing red shadows cast by
the Wish’s light. He could see nothing, though he sensed that the
Bloodspeaker had not been banished from this place.
“That,” Iuchiban’s voice echoed from all directions at once, “is true
power. Every bit as impressive as I expected. Yet, once again, no true
wisdom directs it.”
“How do you know about the Wish?” he asked. “How do you know my
father’s name?”
“Many years ago, there was a mortal who admired the gods so much that
he sought to create a gift for them,” Iuchiban’s voice said. “Some might
have called him arrogant, but his goal was only to understand that which
he loved so greatly. His last wish was to bridge the gap between mortal
and immortal, to create a means by which men could understand the gods.
How did that story end, Wish? What happened to your father?”
-Why is he talking about my father?-
“Show yourself, Bloodspeaker!” Aikune demanded.
“The gods that your father loved so much sent Isawa to die, didn’t
they, Wish?” Iuchiban said, “He fought Fu Leng while they hid in their
palaces, and he perished! Then the Emperor, the son of a god, hid you so
that you would be forgotten. That is how the gods reward those who would
seek to understand them.”
-Why is he saying these things, Aikune?-
“Ignore him,” Aikune snarled, still glaring in all directions for any
sign of Iuchiban.
“Yes ignore me, as they all ignored you,” Iuchiban said. “Do not seek
to understand me. Why should you? Perhaps you might find that we are more
alike than you know. Despised by the Empire. Imprisoned for centuries
where our greater power and intellect would not bring harm to those too
foolish to understand, or too lazy to try. We are more alike than Aikune
would have you believe, Wish, but why should you care? Power is greater
than wisdom, is it not? Is that now what Aikune would have you believe? Is
it not better to control a worthless pawn like him than to stand beside an
equal?”
-You are killing father’s people! Why should I believe anything you
say?-
The Wish now spoke directly to Iuchiban, its voice seething with anger.
Aikune’s eyes widened; the Wish had never communicated in such a way
before.
“The same people who imprisoned us both,” Iuchiban answered. His voice
no longer held its mocking tone, but seemed urgent and sincere. “Besides,
why should creatures like the two of us care about matters such as life
and death? We are beyond such concerns. If you wish to be with your father
again we can find a way to return him! Consider this, Wish. Your destiny
was to help ungrateful mortals understand unworthy gods. Why not use the
power they have given you to find your own destiny?”
-How?-
Aikune concentrated upon the Wish’s power, tried to fill the caverns
with magical fire in hopes of driving Iuchiban’s disembodied spirit away.
Nothing happened. He met true resistance; the Wish was unwilling to
comply. The Wish was listening to Iuchiban.
“Begin by questioning, as you have done, Wish,” Iuchiban said. “Do not
follow blindly, as Aikune would have you do. He obeys the Phoenix without
consideration for how they treat him. Is that the fate you desire? Did he
not force you back into solitude, after you had found a path to freedom?”
“Silence, Bloodspeaker!” Aikune demanded.
“Did he not only return you to your father’s Empire so that he could
destroy me, a soul whose fate thus far has been so similar to your own?”
Iuchiban continued, his voice now heated with righteous anger. “Separate
yourself from this pawn, and I will help you gain the strength to find
your true path.”
Aikune sensed hesitation, uncertainty. Isawa’s Last Wish was a
construct of raw power, but it years of solitude had seeded it with deep
loneliness, a longing to be a part of the Empire that had always returned
its innocent curiosity with hatred and fear. The atrocities Iuchiban
practiced on humanity were obvious – but the Wish was not human. It only
truly knew death as the force that had taken its father away.
-I want to understand. I want to bring father back. Can he really help
me?-
The Wish spoke only to Aikune now.
-Aikune what should I do? Everything is always so clear to you.-
The sincerity of the comment surprised him. Aikune’s life had never
been anything but clear. He had lost his first love to a war he did not
understand. He lost his best friend to a brash argument thereafter. His
father had died pursuing a duty he never knew. His mother left to fulfill
an obligation to the immortal soul that had founded their clan. The
ancestors ignored him. His clan spurned him as an unworthy successor to a
noble line. Even now, he alone stood against Iuchiban though he was exiled
from his clan. He had every reason to doubt his faith in an Empire that
cared little for him, his loyalty to a clan that had only ever valued him
for the power the Last Wish brought. Why should he fight?
Honor?
“Decide for yourself, Wish,” Aikune said. “Do you think this is what
Isawa would have wanted?”
-I have made my decision, Iuchiban.-
Aikune felt the Wish’s doubt fade, replaced with a silent anger.
And with that, Iuchiban reappeared from the darkness.
-KILL HIM AIKUNE!-
Aikune extended one hand, releasing a plume of fire toward the
Bloodspeaker. Iuchiban parried the flame with his sword of blood as if it
were a solid object, still connected to Aikune’s hand. He seized plume of
fire in his free hand and pulled hard. Pain seared through Aikune’s body,
a sensation more intense than any he had felt before. The Wish echoed that
pain, screaming in frightened agony. The aura of flame around Aikune’s
armor flickered uncertainly.
“I don’t care what either of you decided, really,” Iuchiban replied.
“I’ve spent centuries of imprisonment seeking a way that I might turn the
Wish to my whim. All I required was a moment to study it firsthand, to see
if what I suspected was true.” He twisted the plume of fire in his hand.
Aikune and the Wish screamed again. “You are a unique creation, Wish, and
I confess I do not begin to comprehend how Isawa made you… but I
understand enough. Like this city, you were founded on blood magic. Like
Gisei Toshi, you are mine.”
Aikune struggled through the pain, gathered some measure of the Last
Wish’s Power. Iuchiban seemed to sense his struggle and sneered. “Idiot
Phoenix, cease resisting me,” he said. “I am immortal, and the Last Wish
draws upon the same power that makes me so. Fighting will gain nothing.
You will drown the ocean before you ever harm me.”
-He is right, Aikune. We cannot kill him!- The Last Wish was terrified.
“We can do more than kill,” Aikune whispered.
A suspicious look crossed Iuchiban’s features. He looked over his
shoulder as Isawa Nakamuro, now fully healed, hurled Bishamon’s spear at
the Bloodspeaker’s chest. The weapon landed solidly, impaling Iuchiban to
half its length. Iuchiban fell backwards, snarling in pain, his
concentration broken.
It was not much, but it was enough. Aikune staggered away from the
Bloodspeaker. Nakamuro seized Aikune by the arm and launched himself
straight up through the tunnel leading to the surface, carrying his former
friend and the Last Wish away from Gisei Toshi as swiftly as he could.

Shiba Tsukimi reined in her horse at the mouth of the pass, staring in
shock at the sight that lay before her. She had not expected the city to
be so large. She had also not expected it to find it so overrun by the
Bloodspeaker armies. The entire northern wall had crumbled to nothing.
Undead troops and Bloodspeaker soldiers had swarmed the city.
“We are too late,” Gyukudo said. “The city has been overrun.”
“No,” Tsukimi said, scowling. “I refuse to believe the Phoenix have
fallen. There.” She pointed at the rear of the Shadowlands army. A
bloodstained Akodo mon snapped upon the breeze.
“The command staff,” Gyukudo replied. “What of them?”
“They have left themselves exposed,” Tsukimi replied. “We have a
relatively small unit. A swift attack, and we might eliminate the
Bloodspeaker officers.”
“That will not end the attack,” Gyukudo said.
“No,” Tsukimi replied, “but we might gain some small degree of
vengeance for what they have done. Soun, can you summon some sort of smoke
or fog to conceal us until we draw close?”
Soun looked at her, surprised. “The risk will be great,” he said. “If
we do not strike and withdraw swiftly, the army will take notice.”
“Yes or no, Soun?” she asked.
“Yes,” he replied, taking a scroll from the pouch at his hip.
“What will we do if Iuchiban is among them?” Gyukudo asked.
“As much damage as we can, before we die,” she replied. “If Gisei Toshi
falls today, the Bloodspeakers will suffer as well.”
Her troops regarded her in silence, but none argued. They were loyal
men, one and all. Tsukimi had hoped she would never be forced to ask them to die
for her, but that day had come.
With the soft words of a shugenja’s prayer, a dense fog rolled over the
Phoenix troops. They charged into the valley, the magical cover following
them, the sounds of battle covering their approach. With the Bloodspeaker
general’s tent in sight, Tsukimi drew her sword and announced their
arrival with a defiant cry as they crashed into the rear of the attacking
army.
“My life for the Phoenix!”

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