
To Change the World
By Rich Wulf"It is perfect," the first man said.
"No," the other replied, "but it will be."
I looked upon them both, my senses full of wonder and amazement at
this world into which I had come. Only moments from my birth, already I
had seen so much. I sat on a small table, in the center of a great
circle of kanji inscribed in white chalk and brown blood. At either side
stood two of my fathers, two of the many who had worked together to
bring me forth. Only two were here now. The others were away
fighting
someone called
Fu Leng?
My fathers eyes were full of pride and love, and I could not help
but return their joy. As I saw them, I knew them for who they were, for
I was created to understand. The second man who had spoken was the
greatest of my fathers. I could sense the exhaustion, the pain that
flowed through his spirit from the many months it had taken to weave the
spells that had created me. Even yet, I could sense a deeper strength
within him. He was Isawa, and though many have since carried his name,
never has there been another like him. The first man who had spoken was
called Sagoten, another of the many who created me. He bore the name of
his mother, Asako. The symbol on his chest was that of an open hand, the
fingers stained in blood, the symbol his father created to symbolize his
familys dedication to the magic Isawa taught them. That symbol has long
been forgotten. I wonder why?
My senses reached out, beyond my two fathers. I could sense others
watching me carefully - the kami. I found them in every stone, in every
flicker of every candle, in the air itself. Countless spirits greeted me
eagerly. I felt a kinship with them all: fire, water, air, earth, and
even void. I lifted my voice to greet them in return.
"No, little one," Isawa said. He reached out with both hands, lifting
me gently. "You cannot speak to them. Not alone. Let me help you."
He whispered then, in words I could not understand, and the room
flared into light. He added his magic to my own, and suddenly I could
see. I felt the power of the earth, the fickle energy of fire, the
subtlety of air, the supple strength of water, and the perfection that
was the void. I reached out to touch the spirits, but they shied away. I
heard the bricks whisper that they wanted to fly. It seemed like such a
small request, so I answered. One wall of the shrine turned into a
thousand butterflies and danced away on the morning breeze. I reached
out to touch one of the creatures, and all erupted in fire. How sad.
Sagoten shouted something then, and scrambled away from me. I did not
understand the terror in his voice, so I reached out to calm him. Isawa
cursed and quickly drew his hands away. Why did he do that? I only
wished to help my father.
"So powerful," Sagoten whispered, his voice shaking with terror. Why
was he so afraid? "I had no idea it would be so powerful."
"Nor did I, Isawa replied, stroking his chin thoughtfully.
What did I do wrong? I looked from one to the other.
Sagoten looked at me and laughed. "Its strange," he said. "It is
afraid, mortified that it somehow disappointed us. It seems so human."
Is that wrong? Why did he laugh at me?
"It seems human because it is human," Isawa said with a small smile.
"Did we not wish it to be so? It was the safest way to control its
power
to give it a conscience."
"So powerful," Sagoten said again, looking at the place where the
wall had once been. Why was he so surprised? Did he not hear the spirits
in the bricks wishing they could fly like the air kami? Did he not hear
the hearts of the butterflies wishing they could burn like the candles?
"We could use this construct against the Dark Lord, Isawa-sama. We could
turn the entire course of this war."
"No!" Isawa said, glaring at Sagoten harshly. "The Wish must not be
used for war. It must be used only for understanding, as a catalyst to
open communication with the kami."
Sagoten looked at me for a long moment, and turned to my father once
more. "With all due respect, Isawa-sama, I do not think we can afford to
make such distinctions. The Horde grows stronger with each passing day.
If we can complete this weapon"
"It is not a weapon," Isawa interrupted curtly. "It never will be."
I did not understand. If I could help my fathers by being a weapon,
why should I not be? I would gladly kill for them. It was such a little
thing to ask.
"You are as a child," Isawa whispered to me, looking upon me fondly.
"You know little of this world, though you understand things we will
never comprehend. You are intended to be a tool of understanding, not an
instrument of death."
Is there a difference?
"While you struggle to understand the world, our brothers are out
there dying in it," Sagoten replied sharply. I could see pain and anger
split throughout his soul, like the veins of silver in the earth beneath
us. I felt such pity for him.
Isawa only shrugged. "In either case, the point is moot," he said
with a small laugh. "We will have years before the construct can be
safely used, for any purpose. We have time to convince each other yet,
my friend."
"Indeed," Sagoten said with a nod. "I would hardly want to charge
into battle and find my right flank transformed into butterflies."
Did he not like butterflies?
I could feel another presence drawing closer, and was excited at the
prospect of meeting another person. I recognized her before she entered,
another of the many souls who had lent their magic to mine in the years
it had taken to create me. Her name was Akiko, and her soul sang with
beauty. As she entered, I could see that her shoulders were burdened by
troublesome news. Tears streaked her perfect face. Sagoten and Isawa
turned to regard her with concern.
"Daughter," Isawa said, quickly rising and moving toward her. Sagoten
was only a step behind.
"The forces of the Dark Lord have been forced out of the Shinomen,"
she said grimly. "The Castle of Murder has fallen."
"That is excellent news!" Sagoten said, not noticing the look of pain
that crossed her face. "My father has triumphed!"
"It was he who broke the enchantment upon the castle," she said. "He
was cursed."
What sort of curse?" Sagoten asked quickly. "Surely, together we
could undo whatever magic those pitiful sorcerers wove."
"He was cursed by Fu Leng himself," Akiko said. "Nothing can break
the curse."
Sagotens hands balled into fists. For a moment, he looked over his
shoulder to the place where I rested.
"No," Isawa said. "It is not ready yet. Not for this."
"The longer a curse lasts, the more difficult it is to break,"
Sagoten replied. "Would you abandon my father to the Dark Ones
damnation?"
"No," Isawa replied. "Nor would I hastily use an imperfect magic to
save him. Let me see to Yogo first. Perhaps I can still undo what the
Dark Lord has done."
Imperfect?
Sagoten said nothing. He simply glared at Isawa.
"Sagoten," Akiko said, grasping his hand in her own. "You know father
is right. He would not wish harm upon Yogo."
Sagoten looked into her eyes. The anger that welled within him was
instantly replaced with love for her. He smiled. "You are right," he
said. "Of course you are right, Akiko-chan."
"Then let us move swiftly," Isawa said, exiting the temple. Akiko and
Sagoten followed a step behind, the latter pausing only long enough to
look at me one last time.

A long time had passed. Many had come and gone. Some were kind. Some
spoke to me. Some merely came, chanted rituals to increase my strength
and awareness, and left. I had indeed grown stronger. I glowed with the
light of all the elements, and even those without the gift of the
shugenja could see me, though each saw me differently.
The Shiba guardsmen look at me in wonder. Most of the Phoenix seemed
afraid of me, even among my fathers and mothers. Even those who are
afraid are still kind, and the kindest among them is Isawa. He is never
afraid, or angry, or hurtful. Sometimes, he lifts me into the air and
together we change the world.
The second time he shared his magic with me, I raised a mountain from
a plain in a land far away. I had hoped he would be impressed, but Isawa
did not allow me to change the world again for a long time after that.
He said that the people who live there, the Lion, would be very upset at
what I did.
I thought it was a very nice mountain.
I have learned many things. I learned that the bricks that make a
wall are bricks for a reason, and if all were to become butterflies then
soon there would be no more shrine. I still did not understand why the
need for the shrine was more important than the need for the stone to
become butterflies, but I suppose that will come in time. The wall I
changed was replaced with a new wall. I suppose it is a good wall.
Sagoten is to be married to Akiko. Isawa says that their love will
mend the gap between their families, a gap that began with the tragedy
of Yogo. I miss Yogo. Though I never met him, I remember his presence
when the Phoenix were creating me. He was a good man. I have heard much
about Fu Leng, the terrible man who cursed Yogo, and who does so many
evil things in the south. The curse he placed on Yogo could not be
broken. Sagoten was deeply hurt by the news. I wish they would let me
try to fix Yogos curse. Isawa says that I do not have enough control
over my power for that just yet. He is probably right. I would not want
to make a mistake and hurt Yogo even more. Perhaps instead, I could use
my power to change Fu Leng, to make him into someone less terrible.
When I suggested such a thing, Isawa grew very quiet. "The world is
one of balance," he said. "Do you not remember the mountain? The day we
lifted the earth from nothing, an island was swallowed up by the sea. If
you wipe away the darkness that is Fu Leng, what will take his place?"
Evil cannot be changed into good? Strange. It seemed so easy for Fu
Leng to change Yogo, to turn him from a good man into a tortured shadow
full of anger and hatred. Nothing good came to replace Yogo. Where was
the balance?
Does that mean that evil is stronger than good?
"No," Isawa said suddenly, and he was angry. I had never seen him
angry before. "It is my wish that you will be the herald of a new age of
peace, not a tool of destruction."
I cannot be both?
"No," Isawa said, and he seemed even more upset.
I am sorry I made you angry, father.
Isawa smiled then, and I was happy. Akiko stepped through the
entrance of the shrine, her face grave. Isawa turned to her with a
questioning glance.
"Father," she said. "Shinsei waits for you at the base of the
mountain."
"Then let us attend to the little prophet immediately," he said.
Favoring me with a final smile, he rose and exited the temple with his
daughter.
I still had so much to learn, but was happy that Isawa would always
be there to teach me.

"What is it?" the man called Hantei Genji asked, looking at me with
narrowed eyes. He was the tallest man Id ever seen, with very long hair
and sharp features like a hawk. I did not like him much. He was
surrounded on all sides by large men in armor of brown and gold. They
wore the symbol of a great open flower. All of them seemed angry, though
I did not know why. Everyone seemed so angry, ever since Isawa left to
talk to Shinsei.
"It was my fathers greatest creation," Akiko replied, standing to
the left side of Hantei Genji.
"This?" Hantei Genji demanded with a harsh laugh. "A glowing ball?"
"It is a construct of incredible potential," Sagoten said, standing
to the right side of the Emperor.
Hantei Genji reached for me.
"Your Majesty, I would not suggest" Akiko said quickly.
Genji lifted me in his hands. I saw into his spirit, then. There was
great strength deep within him, and deep sadness. Hantei Genji had been
a good man, once, but the world had changed him. To make the Empire
safe, he had done many terrible things. I felt sorry for him. I wanted
to help him, but I could not.
"It is quite harmless, Akiko-chan," Sagoten said quickly. "The
construct is not yet usable by non-shugenja. It should be quite safe for
His Majesty to handle."
Hantei Genjis eyes widened as he looked upon me. "It has changed
from a sphere to a chrysanthemum," he said in awe. Hantei Genji sounded
like a man unaccustomed to being in awe of anything. All the others
seemed in awe of him. I wondered who he was that he was so important.
"The construct is very reactive," Sagoten said. "It takes a form most
appropriate to it wielder."
"What does it do?" Hantei Genji asked.
Akiko answered. "We call it Isawas Last Wish. It allows a shugenja
to communicate directly with the kami, on a level which a mortal
shugenja would never be capable. It can even alter the kami themselves,
transforming an earth kami to an air kami, for example. However, it is
incomplete. Its power is difficult to control, and often unfocused.
Without Isawa to monitor the rituals, it will take us many years to
finish it."
What happened to Isawa?
Hantei Genji frowned. "I know little of magic, but from my limited
experience this construct sounds very dangerous," he said. "It feels
like
raw power. Rumor tells that Lookout Mountain erupted from the
earth because of this thing, and the Coral Palace sank. Why would Isawa
create such a thing?"
I am not a thing!
Hantei Genji looked at me. "It spoke to me," he said, arching an
eyebrow as he set me carefully on the table once more.
"My father created it to foster understanding of magic," Akiko said.
"He gave it awareness so that it would be responsible for its own
actions."
"And perhaps were Isawa still alive I would trust the Phoenix to use
it to just ends," Hantei Genji said, "but now I have seen Isawas last
creation for myself, and it becomes clear why the Isawa and Asako fight
over it so."
Isawa
father was dead?
"Feud as you will, arrogant children, but I will not have you risk
the safety of the Empire over control of such a dangerous artifact,"
Hantei Genji said. He turned to the armored men. "If it's unsafe as is
in this incomplete form, if it were completed it would be too powerful
for mortal hands to wield. Do not finish it. Destroy it."
Destroy me?
"No," Sagoten replied sharply, and Hantei Genji gave him a withering
look. Sagoten went pale and bowed so deeply his forehead touched the
floor. "I mean no disrespect, Lord Hantei, but Isawas gift cannot be
destroyed, no more than the void itself can be destroyed. To even
attempt its destruction would be dangerous."
"Then Isawas notes will be destroyed," Hantei Genji said sharply.
"If Isawas Last Wish cannot be used safely in its current form, then it
will never be completed. It will fall to the Shiba to guard it, since
neither of your families can be trusted with the responsibility."
Sagoten looked up once more, opening his mouth to reply. Akiko looked
anxious, as well.
"So declares the Son of Heaven," Hantei Genji said forcefully, his
voice echoing through the chamber. "Further, the marriage between Isawa
and Asako shall not be. I will not place my blessing upon a false peace,
not between two families that would shed anothers blood for
" he
gestured toward me, "a magical toy. Isawa would be ashamed of you all."
Hantei Genji turned and left the room. Some of the soldiers followed
him.

The temple fell dark after that. I was alone, and very sad for no one
would tell me how my father died. I wanted to hate Fu Leng for what he
did to Isawa and Yogo. I wanted to hate that Shinsei person for taking
Isawa away. I wanted to hate Hantei Genji for leaving me alone here. I
wanted to, but I could not. Isawa had taught me not to hate, and if I
turned my back on that then somehow father really would be dead
Light entered the temple, and I was filled with joy. My loneliness
was at an end! When I saw the face of the man looking down at me, my joy
was numbed. It was Sagoten, but something had happened to him. His skin
was wrinkled like paper. His eyes were sunken. That was the first time I
had ever seen someone grow old. His age, however, was not what ended my
joy. It was his scowl. Sagoten was filled with rage, and it made me sad
to see him like that.
"Wish," he said simply. "Can you hear me?"
I can hear you!
"Good," Sagoten said. He reached for me. "Are you ready to help me
fix what has gone wrong?"
Yes!
I became a curved dagger in his hand, blade stained with blood.
"Isawa is dead. My father serves Bayushi, and favors the children of
his new Scorpion wife. Mother is dying for her love of him, but he has
betrayed us. Isawas arrogant servants now rule the Phoenix, disdaining
my family because we will not share with them the secret Shiba reserved
only for us. Akiko is to take a new husband; she has forgotten her love
for me. The world has become a place in which I no longer want to live
"
Then we shall change it!
"Yes," Sagoten said with a smile. "We will change it."
I do not know what went wrong. I was swept away by Sagotens anger,
lost sight of what we were doing. The next I knew, I was sitting in the
midst of a great, blackened field. A single crooked guard tower stood at
the edge of the field, like the remnant of a once great castle. What had
happened to the rest of the castle? Did I do that? White stones peppered
the smoking field. Not stones
bones
Where had Akiko and Sagoten gone?
I could not sense them anywhere
I only wanted to help.
Soon a man in fiery armor, a Shiba, found me. He had tears in his
eyes. I was returned to the temple and sat alone in darkness for a very
long time.

Sometimes people would come for me.
It always turned out badly.
Sometimes they would ask me to destroy people for them. Sometimes
they wanted me to make them into Emperors. Sometimes, they wanted me to
do strange things, like turn the air kami into gold. Always, they wanted
something for themselves. They wanted the world to bend around them. It
always ended in ashes. I never understood why; I only wanted to help. It
was so lonely in the temple. Why did they leave me there all alone? Why
was everyone so afraid? I could sense the kami all around me, but I
could not speak to them, not without help.
With no one else to teach me, I taught myself. Each time someone
would try to use me, I would learn a little more about what I was. I
grew and developed. I became more whole. If the Phoenix could not finish
me, I would finish myself. Isawa would be proud. My power grew more
focused; no longer could I create a mountain from nothing, but at least
what I created would be where I wanted it to be.
After many, many years, light came to the temple again. When I saw
the face of the man who had come to visit me, I could not believe it.
Sagoten.
Alive again.
Young again.
How?
"A long story, little one," Sagoten chuckled as he stepped into the
shrine. I saw that he bore no lantern or candle. The light that filled
the temple radiated from his own skin.
Where have you been?
"That is complicated," he said sadly. "But I have had much time to
think upon what I did, what I made you do."
I am sorry I turned you into ash and killed Akiko.
Sagoten frowned. "It was my own fault," he said. "I did not
understand, though Isawa tried to tell me. Even magic has rules,
especially magic as powerful as yourself."
Rules?
"Rules, and consequences should those rules be violated," Sagoten
said. "You are a tool that reshapes reality. A lever is also a tool, a
tool that requires a fulcrum to rest against; should the fulcrum be
weak, the lever will not function, or may even damage that which you
wish to move. You are the same. Mortal will moves you, but should the
motives from which that will stems be too weak, only tragedy can follow.
Those who have tried to use you
myself included
were weak and selfish.
We weighed all of reality against our own selfish desire. How could we
expect anything other than our own destruction? No
to commune with the
Last Wish requires purer motive
Isawa knew that."
Why did you come here?
"To apologize," Sagoten said, and lifted me in his hands again. In
his hands, I took the form of a hammer and chisel. This time, when the
world changed, it changed for the better. Sagoten did not use me to
smite down his enemies, to create a mountain of gold, or to turn back
the hands of time. No. This time, he merely reached out to the nearby
void kami. The spirits danced and played, and changed. When the game was
done, they resembled tiny floating samurai, as beautiful as a summers
day.
What are they?
"Call them the Children of the Last Wish," Sagoten said. "They will
remain with you, little one. You need not be lonely anymore."
Will you not stay here with me?
"I will not," Sagoten said, a deep sadness in his voice. "The army of
Hantei XVI follows me. They know that I helped create you. They know
that I can wield your power safely." Sagoten drew a short sword from his
belt and knelt upon the floor. "I will not give you to that tyrant. If
his own shugenja try to take you, the Children will deal with them.
Good-bye, little one. Remember what Isawa taught you."
Good-bye, Sagoten. I will remember.
Sagoten mumbled an oath to someone called "Toturi" and drew the blade
across his stomach three times. The temple became quiet again after
that, for a little while.
Soon, more shugenja came, bearing a mon that looked like Hantei
Genjis. They were fierce and angry. My new friends, the children,
became angry as well. Then there was fire and all was quiet again.
But I was no longer alone.

It was much better with someone to talk to. I taught the Children
what I knew about the world. Sometimes they would fly out into the
Empire, and return to tell me what they saw. I liked that. The world was
such an interesting place, and the shrine was so very small. The time
passed less painfully with friends. I grew more swiftly with others to
help, encourage, and instruct. Soon, I was fairly certain that I could
use my power in communion with any mortal, not just a shugenja. Of
course, not any mortal would do, Sagoten had taught me that.
I learned much about the world. I learned that the Phoenix were only
one of many groups of humans, called "clans." I learned that the Lion
(the ones with the mountain) were another. There seemed to be so many
clans, but none were as great as the Phoenix, for they had the greatest
magic. All envied the Phoenix, especially the Dragon, a clan so weak it
could not even feed its people. I felt bad for the Dragon, I wanted to
help them, but when I heard they were attacking the Phoenix I wanted to
hate them.
Wanted to, but could not. Isawa would not want that.
The Children brought me more news, in time. Toturi, the one who led
the Empire, the one for whom Sagoten had died, had been slain. The news
was saddening; though I never met Toturi he must have been a good man if
Sagoten had honored him so. With Toturis death, war broke out all
across the Empire.
Even in the peaceful lands of the Phoenix, there was turmoil. The
leader of the Phoenix, the one that bore the soul of Isawas friend
Shiba, had left the Empire to become a Fortune. The Elemental Masters,
the ones who had taken Isawas place as leader (for surely it would take
five to replace one as great as my father) had vanished, leaving the
clan with no leaders to direct them against the Dragon.
I felt very bad. I wanted to help those who had created me, even
though they had forgotten me.
I sent the Children out into the Empire again. I asked them to find
someone with the strength to wield me. The Children searched, but could
find no one. That was maddening, for I knew there was one out there with
the strength to wield me. I could sense him.
Then he found me.
I was uncertain. There was great strength within him; that reminded
me of Isawa, but there was also great rage; that reminded me of Sagoten.
Looking deeper, I saw great pain in his soul. He had been given infinite
potential, but had been cast aside by everyone.
We were the same.
Either we would save the Phoenix, or we would destroy them.
Aikune lifted me from the table; I took the form of a great fiery
katana in his hand.
Together we would change the world.
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