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The War of Fire & Thunder, Part 3
By Shawn Carman
Editing & Assistance by Fred Wan
The Isawa coastline, early morning hours
An explosive clap of thunder and flash of lightning from the
clear morning sky would have seemed out of place anywhere but
the Isawa lands. The assembled Shiba forces did not find it
unusual, however, as they knew all too well that it signaled the
arrival of the Elemental Masters.
Isawa Nakamuro exhaled slowly, inwardly thanking the kami for
their indulgence in transporting him and his two fellow Masters
to the coastline. “They are nearby,” he said. “It will begin
shortly.”
“Just as we intended,” Isawa Sachi said firmly. “They have
come to the Isawa lands at last, and now we will end this war
once and for all.” The Master of Earth glanced at Nakamuro with
a knowing look. “You shall soon see the folly of your ways.”
“Will I?” Nakamuro said quietly, clenching his spear in his
fist. “Will the Mantis killed today somehow undo how many
Phoenix have died in this war?”
“Enough,” Isawa Ochiai said firmly. “This is hardly the
time.”
“Agreed,” Sachi said. He glanced around at the Shiba legions
with a slight frown and a tug of his beard. “Mirabu must possess
the gift of foresight,” he said. “How did he know the Mantis
would arrive at this location?”
“Asako Bairei,” Nakamuro said.
Despite the circumstances, Ochiai laughed brightly.
“Typical,” she said.
“We shall see if Mirabu values his counsel as much as you
do,” Sachi said smartly. “We must prepare ourselves for the
Storm Riders. The orochi that serve them will be a challenge,
even for us.”
Nakamuro said nothing, but only stared at the ships darkening
the seas.

Yoritomo Naizen, general of the Mantis armies, stood and
watched as dozens of Mantis ships disgorged hundreds of archers,
marines, and shugenja. His flagman signaled furiously to direct
the troops, and the invading army began to take shape.
Yoritomo Singh stood and watched the approaching Shiba
armies. “How did they arrive so quickly?” he asked.
“I do not know,” Naizen said. “They anticipated our strategy
perhaps, although I am not certain how. It does not matter. The
dice have been cast, and we shall see if Winds & Fortunes is the
result.”
Singh frowned at the gambling reference, uncertain what it
meant. “Kumiko-sama remains with the fleet?”
Naizen nodded. “We shall carve a path through the enemy
forces, so that she can confront their leaders.”
“The Shiba general?”
“No,” Naizen said with a smile. “That honor is mine.
Kumiko-sama hopes to face the Masters herself.”
Singh shook her head. “That seems… unwise.”
“The Daughter of Storms lives for danger and recklessness. I
have seen her face odds that no mortal should ever survive, and
yet she thrives.” He shook his head. “Anyone else eager to face
the Masters would be a fool. With Kumiko-sama, I only wonder how
many Masters will die.”
“You will not wonder long, I think,” Singh said. “The
Phoenix armies advance.”
Naizen nodded and turned to his flagmen. “Signal Chae and her
forces to open fire.”

Which army fired first was unclear and, ultimately,
unimportant. Archery fire exploded from both sides, with
thousands of arrows being loosed in a matter of seconds. Men and
women fell on both sides, their lives snuffed out in an instant
by wood or steel. The Yoritomo forces charged, remaining under
the cover of their Tsuruchi archers, trying to reach the Shiba
before the Phoenix archers and sporadic bursts of flame exacted
too great a toll upon them.
Phoenix shugenja hovered above the battle, buoyed by the kami
they loved so well. One, a student of Nakamuro’s named Isawa
Sueno, desperately tried to shield her kinsmen from the Tsuruchi.
Her winds turned aside hundreds of arrows, but could not stop
them all. One struck her in the shoulder, then another in the
leg, and a third in the stomach. She cried out in pain and tried
to summon the kami, but her concentration was shattered. Her
body plunged to the earth and was dashed on the shore.
A platoon of Yoritomo soldiers ran toward the Shiba ranks,
screaming their wild, feral cries all the way. A wave of earth
rose up before them and blocked their way, then washed over them
like the tide. They were buried to a man, with not a single limb
or weapon protruding from the earth to show where they had been.
Their comrades, enraged by the ignonimous death, charged over
their graves and collided with the Shiba like a hurricane on the
mainland.
Death was on all sides, gathering more souls like peasants at
the harvest.

Standing apart from the battle, but ever so close by, a dark
woman smiled wryly. “They are so eager to kill one another. So
eager to do my work for me.” She turned to her first mate. “Are
you certain they cannot detect us?”
The little man at her side nodded. “Even if they were not so
distracted, even if there were not so much elemental magic
distracting them from my spells, it would be difficult. I
enslaved spirits of Sakkaku to conceal us. Only the Orochi could
detect us easily, and they are too caught up in their
bloodlust.” He paused. “Do you wish us to remain concealed until
the battle is over?”
“No, Mogai,” Yoritomo Kitao said. “I will not risk another
taking the lives of those I am destined to kill.” She smiled
cruelly. “And besides, if we did not reveal ourselves, how could
we test my beloved’s most gracious gift?”
At her words, the hulking beasts lurking on the deck
skittered anxiously. They looked something like great insects,
but much more so like the cannons that gaijin forces had used
against the Empire at the Battle of White Stag. The beasts were
alive, and their gaping maws clicked hungrily at the promise of
battle. “We have sufficient ammunition?”
“Oh yes, my lady,” Mogai said, gesturing to the crewmen
behind him. They held at least a dozen captives, Yobanjin taken
from the northern coast, all bound and terrified of the hulking
creatures that clearly hungered for their flesh. “Enough for our
needs.”
“Signal the other ships to load their weapons,” Kitao
ordered. “It begins now.”

The war raged on all sides.
Archery fire from both sides rained down on the armies, but
it was far worse from the Mantis. Their archers were greater in
number, and far faster and more accurate. The toll they took on
the Shiba ranks was tremendous.
The ranks of infantry told a different story. The Phoenix
soldiers were better trained and armed. They stood their ground
and executed precise maneuvers that changed in a second’s time,
gradually overcoming the more violent and boisterous Yoritomo
soldiers. The Phoenix could only press the Mantis so far,
however, for when they drew closer to the sea, the Storm Riders
erupted in a savage display of magic that extinguished the lives
of dozens of Phoenix with each attack. The Orochi reared up and
swallowed entire squadrons near the coast, and the Phoenix would
fall back. This pattern repeated itself time and time again,
with the skies full of fire and storms as the shugenja aiding
both sides executed their will against one another.
At one point a new force of Phoenix emerged from the
wilderness to the north. They were twisted and Tainted, remnants
from the Bloodspeaker conflict of previous months. Their leader,
a madman named Shiba Hayama, directed his forces in a ruthless
assault that crippled a flanking maneuver by one Yoritomo
legion, but were undone almost immediately when one Orochi
vomited a lake’s worth of scalding ocean water upon them,
cooking them alive.
The battle raged, and so it was that no one noticed with the
air around the sea north of the Mantis fleet seethed and
shimmered, then suddenly parted. A dozen vessels emerged,
followed by nearly three times that many more. The ships were
battered and scarred, but the flag they flew was unmistakable.
It was the flag of Yoritomo Kitao, scourge of the northern
seas, mistress of the Dark Wave.
“Fire,” Kitao said with a smile.
The unholy living cannons that adorned the decks of Kitao’s
vessels belched forth their shrieking payload, blasts of
explosive black fire that destroyed everything it touched. The
first volley struck the Mantis fleet and destroyed over a dozen
ships in a single blow. The second obliterated a Phoenix legion
near the coastline. The third dissolved the hide of an Orochi.
Its death screams echoed for miles.
Above it all, Yoritomo Kitao laughed.

The sudden explosions and gouts of black fire stunned
Nakamuro for a moment. He watched in horror as the strange magic
tore through the Shiba ranks, killing dozens with each volley.
“What is this?” he whispered.
“Treachery!” Sachi snarled. “An ambush!”
“No,” Ochiai said. “Look.”
The two elder Masters followed her pointing hand to where
thick columns of smoke rose from the Mantis fleet. The newcomers
had opened fire indiscriminately, and many Mantis ships were
burning. The others turned desperately in an attempt to engage
the new ships before being put to the torch. As the Masters
watched, the Mantis vessels rushed into their new foe, clogging
the coastal waters with a snarled mass of ships attempting to
destroy one another. “They are attacking the Mantis as well,”
Sachi said flatly.
“Not as well,” Nakamuro said. “They fire on us only as a
means of keeping us at bay. It is the Mantis they seek.” He ran
his hand through his hair. “This is all a lie. It has all been a
lie.”
Sachi stood, unmoving. His eyes fixed upon the dark fleet.
Nakamuro took up his spear, the one that the Fortune Bishamon
had given him at the Battle of Gisei Toshi. “I will not stand
idly by and watch a slaughter,” he said, “even if those who are
slaughtered are my enemies.” He turned to Ochiai. “Little
sister, be sure…”
Nakamuro dropped to the ground suddenly, his world spinning
madly, clutching his head where he had been struck. “You are too
young,” Sachi said, taking up Nakamuro’s spear. “This is a
fool’s mission, and there has been no greater fool than I.”
“Sachi,” Nakamuro said weakly, struggling to rise.
“No,” Sachi said. “I have been wrong. Every decision I have
made since I joined the Council has been a terrible mistake. The
war, Akiko…” his voice trailed off for a moment. He leaned down.
“I was wrong about the war, as were you. Ochiai was wrong as
well, but at least she held true to the principles of our
people. War and death is never the way. Remember that when I am
gone.” He paused for a moment, his eyes growing wet. “I never
had children. You have been the only son I ever knew, Nakamuro.
Be strong now.” Sachi rose and held Bishamon’s spear, all trace
of emotion gone from his face. “I will spare you this
obscenity.”
Nakamuro struggled to his feet, Ochiai helping him as he
rose. There was a great rumbling sound, and a column of earth
erupted from the ground, buoying Sachi atop it and carrying him
toward the see.
“Sachi!” Nakamuro shouted. “Sachi, don’t do this!”
The Master of Earth showed no signs of hearing his former
pupil, as the wave of earth carried him from the mainland and
into the shallow waters near the coast.

“Kaigen!” Yoritomo Kumiko screamed. “Kaigen, what is it?”
“The Dark Wave!” the old sensei roared. “They have stolen
upon us!”
Another blast of the strange energy erupted near Kumiko’s
vessel, utterly destroying one of the ships sailing alongside
her. “What is this weapon? Is it magic?”
“I do not know!” Kaigen roared. “They have struck down one of
my Orochi! I must tend to the others!”
“Go!” Kumiko shouted. She brandished her kama and snarled in
frustration. If the Dark Wave had arrived, then somewhere, her
nemesis was nearby, and she would spare no effort in ending her
threat once and for all.
The deck beneath her bucked wildly as a volley of fire from
the Dark Wave ships struck the Third Kama squarely along its
length. Kumiko scrambled to keep her feet, but soon gave up. The
ship lurched and tipped, sinking quickly beneath the waves.
Kumiko leapt across the divide to another of her vessels,
sinking her blade into the throat of a Dark Wave crewman who had
boarded.
“Kitao!” she shrieked. “Kitao! I’m coming for you!”

The Master of Earth stood atop a massive column of stone
jutting up from the sea, looking over the pitched naval battle.
Periodically he would raise his fist and clench it tightly, and
a massive spike of earth would erupt from the sea an puncture
the hull of a ship, breaking it apart before disappearing back
into the water from whence it came. Each crippling blow brought
a victorious smile to the old man’s weathered face.
There was a sudden torrent of wind, and Sachi had to brace
himself to keep from losing his balance. A green glad form borne
aloft by the wind appeared nearby. “Fool!” the man shouted.
“That was a Mantis vessel you just sank! Do you wish to free the
Dark Wave to attack your precious coastline!”
Sachi snarled. “I cannot tell the difference!” he cursed at
Kaigen. “I know nothing of ships, only how to sink them!”
“Then watch me, you old fool!” Kaigen shouted. He cast out
his hand and a bolt of lightning struck one vessel, which Sachi
then promptly crushed between two columns of stone. The two
repeated the process again and again, Sachi grimacing furiously
as he did so, and the Mantis shugenja laughing in joy. So
engrossed in their war were they that Sachi did not notice the
ships lining up for a shot at them until it was too late.
“Watch out!” Sachi howled.
Kaigen saw and summoned a great wind to carry them away, but
he did not have enough time. The insidious creatures that served
as the Dark Wave’s primary firepower launched a volley of their
black fire at them. Sachi was struck full on and Kaigen suffered
a glancing blow. The Mantis’s howl of pain cut off his prayer,
and the spell surged wildly out of control.
The winds carried the two smoldering shugenja up and away
from the battle, sending them spiraling downward toward the
islands in the distance.

The Daughter of Storms ran recklessly through the snarled
mass of ships, her clothes dripping with salt water. She
ruthlessly cut down enemy after enemy, leaping from one deck to
the next without pause. She took a convoluted path, desperately
looking for the enemy flagship. She was certain she would know
it. The Bitter Flower. After what seemed like an
eternity, she spied it and reached the deck of the ship
adjoining it, panting from the colossal exertion.
“Kitao!” she screamed, standing with both kama held aloft.
“Show yourself!”
A blast from one of the strange weapons erupted along the
port side of the kobune on which she stood, destroying the
railing and several feet worth of deck. The ship lurched
precariously, but Kumiko did not lose her footing. “Do not be so
impatient for your death!” a voice roared. “It comes soon
enough!”
A hideous creature that might once have been a woman leapt
nimbly across the divide between her ship and Kumiko’s. She was
taller than Kumiko remembered, and her body bore little
resemblance to the last time the two women had met. The eyes did
not lie, however. This foul creature had once been Yoritomo
Kitao. “I see your body now matches your soul,” Kumiko said with
a snarl. “Twisted and diseased!”
“Be silent, harlot,” Kitao snarled. A half dozen warriors
fanned out behind her. “I have come to take back what was stolen
from me.”
“It was never yours,” Kumiko insisted. “And it never shall
be.”
“Kill her,” Kitao snarled, waving her men forward. “If you
survive, imposter, then perhaps you will be blessed to face me
personally. I rather doubt it, though. These are my finest
warriors, and you are outnumbered.”
Kumiko’s face split into a broad grin as the warriors
approached. “Fool. Don’t you know? Your men are outnumbered,
twenty to six.”
The Daughter of Storms leapt at her foes with a fierce,
bloodthirsty shriek.

In the confusion on the mainland, the two armies had collided
with one another and intermingled, their attention and
aggression squarely focused on the new threat in the seas.
Perhaps by virtue of terrain advantage, or perhaps by divine
intervention, the two generals found themselves standing nearly
side-by-side.
“Yoritomo Naizen,” the Phoenix Champion said, his grip on his
blade tightening. “Is this some manner of trick? Some deception
to marshal your allies?”
“Don’t be a fool, Mirabu,” the Mantis general answered.
“There is no force in the Empire that the Mantis hate more than
the Phoenix, save for the Dark Wave.”
Mirabu studied his opponent for a moment, then nodded. He
turned to his officers. “Tell your men to open fire on the new
ships,” he ordered. “Do not fire on the Mantis unless otherwise
ordered.”
“Kill the traitors,” Naizen hissed to his flagmen. “None must
escape, no matter the cost.”
The two enemies stood side-by-side, their mutual hatred
temporarily forgotten as they watched the heavens darken with
arrows raining down upon their mutual foes, each prepared to
kill the other in a moment if treachery reared its head.

Blood from a half dozen wounds ran down Kumiko’s limbs and
pooled on the deck, where it was lost in the sea of blood from
Kitao’s men. The lot of them lay broken and torn on the deck,
dead to the last man. Despite the pain and the injuries,
Kumiko’s face was split in a wide grin. “Outnumbered,” she said,
her breath ragged. “As I told you before.”
Kitao sneered as she drew her blade. “We were evenly matched
before, and you would not draw on your own corruption to save
you. Now you have lost that edge, and I have embraced it. You
stand no chance against me.” She grinned. “The Mantis are about
more than inheriting your position.”
Kumiko’s grin vanished. “Yes,” she said. “Yes we are.” Quick
as a flash, she hurled one kama at her hated enemy.
Kitao batted the weapon aside with her blade, catching it
around the tsuba and then flicking it over the railing into the
sea. She started to laugh, but the second kama buried itself to
the hilt in her chest while she had been making a show of
tossing away Yoritomo’s weapon. Kumiko was on top of her in an
instant, tearing the kama free and inflicting terrible damage in
the process. “You were never my equal,” she hissed. “The Taint
was a weakness, and one I have overcome. Now, you are nothing.”
Kitao stabbed Kumiko through the stomach with her blade. “We
both die,” she hissed, “but death will not stop me. I will rise
again.”
“No,” Kumiko said, blood bubbling form her lips. “No, your
soul is doomed to Jigoku forever, even if I must take it there
myself.”
With a massive heave, Kumiko hurled both herself and her
enemy from the ship’s deck, carrying them the short few feet to
land on the Bitter Flower’s deck. Kitao raged at the pain
from her wound, and Kumiko gasped in agony as the blade bit
deeper into her abdomen, but she did not release her rival.
“Release me, harridan!” Kitao shrieked.
“Not just yet,” Kumiko croaked, hurling all her weight onto
Kitao and throwing them both directly in front of one of Kitao’s
cannon-beasts.
“No!” Kitao screamed. “Stop!”
The beast fired.
The Bitter Flower was consumed in black fire.

Isawa Sachi stirred, then immediately came awake as searing
pain tore through his entire body. He clenched his teeth at the
sheer agony of it, but did not cry out. “Kaigen,” he croaked.
“Can you hear me? Are you still breathing?”
“So it seems,” the wheezing response came. Kaigen attempted
to climb to his feet, but hissed in pain. Sachi could see the
jagged end of a bone jutting from the Mantis sensei’s shoulder,
and marveled that his arm was still attached. “You?”
“My legs are useless,” Sachi said. “I am all but finished.”
“I may be able to heal you,” Kaigen said. “Just let me… catch
my breath.”
“Don’t be a fool,” Sachi said. “Do not waste your energy on
me. We have a job to do yet, and I will see it done before I
die.”
“Your wounds,” Kaigen said with a grimace. “They are quit
severe. Are you able to finish this?”
Sachi laughed. “Watch and see.”
“We cannot reach the Dark Wave,” Kaigen said, “and if we
could, we are in no condition to face them.”
“Do not reach them, then!” Sachi shouted. “Bring them to us!”
The Master of Earth closed his eyes and put aside his pain,
digging both hands into the rocky soil. He reached out with all
his might, summoning every remaining ounce of his will for one
last spell.
The ground beneath their feet rumbled and shook. There was a
sensation of lurching, and then massive spires of rock began
erupting from the ground. The island began growing in size as
more and more rock burst from the sea, adding to its diameter on
all sides. The sea all around the island protested, churning and
sending massive waves in every direction. The island grew and
transformed, changing into a massive, spiked region that would
have looked more at home in the Shadowlands than the Phoenix
seas. “I am giving you the anvil,” Sachi gasped, clearly
exhausted. “You must be the hammer.”
“Yes,” Kaigen hissed, smiling with delight. He, too, summoned
his energies, drawing upon the waves created by Sachi’s upheaval
and turning them to his might. In the distance, massive walls of
water exploded upward, carrying Dark Wave ships atop them like
leaves in a stream. Kaigen drew his hand toward his chest, and
the waves answered, surging toward the island as if beckoned.
The Mantis ships were tossed about by the aftermath, but
remained afloat.
The massive waves that carried the majority of the Dark Wave
loomed toward the island, bearing them down toward rocky death
with incredible speed. As they grew closer, the panicked cries
of the men aboard those infernal vessels could be heard even
above the roaring waves. As the sky darkened, the two battered
shugenja on the ground rejoiced in their victory. Death loomed,
and each spoke a single word.
“Victory!” screamed Kaigen, a wild, manic grin on his face.
Sachi smiled and closed his eyes. “Taeruko,” he whispered.
The sea crashed down upon the island, destroying the
corrupted vessels and shattering rock with the force of its
impact.

Those gathered on the shore watched in amazement as the sea
carried the Dark Wave away to the twisting, shifting island and
dashed it upon the jagged spires. The force of the impact shook
the earth beneath their feet, even from more than a mile away.
In the moments following, a great silence fell across the
battlefield. There was only the keening wail of the orochi, who
somehow sensed the death of their friend and ally, to break the
stillness.
Nakamuro turned to face Naizen. “Your man Kaigen was noble
indeed,” he said quietly.
“As was Isawa Sachi,” Naizen added.
“Not all the Dark Wave is destroyed,” Nakamuro said, pointing
to the much smaller number of ships retreating from the Mantis
at full speed. “They are attempting to escape.”
“The Storm Riders will deal with them,” Naizen answered.
“They will seek blood for their sensei’s death.”
“And you?” Nakamuro asked. “What of you?”
Naizen’s eyes were cold and even. “I have business with the
Phoenix,” he said. “Nothing has changed.”
The Master of Air stood, mouth agape. “You cannot be
serious,” he insisted. “This matter began with the Dark Wave,
and has ended with them. There is no more reason to fight.”
“There is every reason,” Naizen said. “You and yours have
accused the Mantis of using a Black Scroll. I will not suffer
such dishonor for my clan.”
“Who are you to speak for the Mantis?” Nakamuro demanded.
“Your lady Kumiko lies dead, in all likelihood.”
“We shall see,” Naizen said. “And in any event, her orders
would remain the same. The Mantis have suffered greatly at the
Phoenix’s hands, and we will not turn aside from your insult.”
He turned and nodded to his flagmen. “I am prepared to continue
until only one clan remains. If the Mantis must perish, then let
the Empire know that our light was extinguished in defense of
our honor.”
Nakamuro stood dumbfounded. He looked around at the battered
Shiba legions, and met the eyes of Shiba Mirabu. Mirabu nodded
once, slowly, in assent. Only give the word, his gaze said, and
we shall drive them into the sea. But Nakamuro could not give
that order. “No,” he said, “No more.”
“What?” Naizen asked, his brow furrowed. “What did you say?”
“No more,” Nakamuro said loudly. “Too many have died already,
and for what? Nothing. I will not see more of my brothers dead
because the Isawa are too proud.” He shook his head. “The
Phoenix will recant our claim of maho use. Your name will be
cleared in the courts.”
“That is no longer sufficient,” Naizen said coldly.
Nakamuro closed his eyes. “What is it you wish?”
“The islands,” Naizen said. “They will remain with the
Mantis. We will construct a city, a city of broken waves, on the
island your Master of Earth created, and through it we will
control the trade through these seas.”
“Preposterous,” Shiba Mirabu said. “We will never allow such
a crippling economic blow. Unleash my legions, Nakamuro-sama.
Let us finish the Mantis once and for all”
“It is alright, Mirabu,” Nakamuro said. “If it will spare the
lives of your men, and let us put an end to the death, then it
will be worthwhile.” He turned to Naizen. “The petition in the
courts will not be retracted,” he warned.
“It does not matter,” Naizen said. “Should our status as a
Great Clan be revoked, you will be bound by Imperial decree from
waging war against us, and the islands will remain ours
regardless.”
Nakamuro bowed his head and said nothing for several moments.
“Very well,” he finally said. He knelt before Yoritomo Naizen.
“For the good of all, and in the cause of life, the Phoenix
surrender.”
“The Mantis accept your surrender,” Naizen said. “The war,
then, is at an end.”

One week later…
Isawa Nakamuro sat meditating in his private chambers. He had
spent much of the past week engaged in such activities, mourning
for the many that had died and praying for guidance for those
that had lived. Mostly, however, he prayed for himself. He
feared now that he had lost his way utterly. He had actually
championed the cause of war. How could he have fallen so far
from his ideals? His younger sister had shamed him with her
strict adherence to the principles on which the Phoenix Clan had
been created.
“Master Nakamuro.”
The quiet voice from the doorway startled him. One
disadvantage of teaching the acolytes of air was that they were
incredibly quiet, and Nakamuro had been so engrossed in his
philosophical musings that he had not sensed the young man
enter. “I do not wish to be disturbed,” he said quietly. “I
believe I made that clear.”
“Of course, Master,” the boy said. “I believe you will wish
to make an exception.”
Nakamuro turned with a frown. “What is it?”
“A woman is here to see you,” the boy said. “A Dragon.”
Nakamuro felt a distant stirring in his chest. “Of course.
Thank you. Admit her, please.”
The boy nodded and withdrew. A moment later, a radiantly
beautiful shugenja entered, clad in green and gold robes that
left a considerable amount of flesh exposed. “Nakamuro,” she
said in a relieved voice. “I had feared the worst. The reports
of the battle…”
“Could not compare to the experience,” Nakamuro said.
“Shaitung…” words failed him, and he looked down at the floor.
“I am glad to see you,” he whispered, “but what are you doing
here? When we last spoke…”
“I was being foolish,” she interrupted. “My apprentice Emina
helped me to see that.”
Nakamuro frowned. “Emina must be quite persuasive.”
“She can be,” Shaitung admitted. “In fact, she is the
official reason for my visit to the Phoenix lands.”
“Official reason?”
“I wish to consult your new Master of Water regarding
manifestations of the Fortunes,” Shaitung said. “I understand he
is something of an expert on… well, on everything.”
Impossibly, Nakamuro smiled. “Bairei is quite impressive, to
be sure. But why do you seek his counsel regarding the
Fortunes?”
“Something most unusual has happened,” Shaitung confessed. “A
manifestation of the Fortune Benten appeared to Emina and
blessed her. For what reason, I do not know, but I cannot deny
that it occurred.”
“You witnessed it?” Nakamuro asked.
“No, but Emina is… changed. She understood that I was
somewhat skeptical, and shared with me a fraction of the
blessing Benten bestowed upon her.” She drew closer and caressed
the side of Nakamuro’s face. “It has changed me as well,” she
said softly. “I see things differently now.”
“What are you saying?” Nakamuro asked.
“I am saying,” Shaitung whispered, “that you should ask again
the question that drove us apart when we last spoke.”
“Shaitung,” Nakamuro said, “will you be my wife?”
The Dragon daimyo shook her head slowly. “No,” she said with
a smile, “but you can certainly be my husband.”

Yoritomo Naizen and Yoritomo Singh stood on the rocky beach
and watched as wounded soldiers walked the area, retrieving what
could be salvaged from the debris washed up on shore. “So many
ships were lost,” Singh said sadly. “So many lives.”
“Too many,” Naizen agreed. “But their sacrifice will make us
stronger. We shall recover from this.”
“It will take time,” Singh said.
“Not so much as you think,” Naizen said. “Kumiko had been
stockpiling resources for months. She ordered dozens of new
ships constructed before she left the islands. The fleet will
not be weakened for long, and when the ships are finished they
will bring what remains of the resources here, for our new
city.”
“You were speaking the truth, then,” Singh said. “I have
difficulty sometimes in discerning truth from boasting. Your
culture and mine differ somewhat in definition of those terms.”
“I lead the Yoritomo now,” Naizen said. “Deceit ill becomes
such a position.”
Singh nodded. “What will you order built first? The port?”
“No,” the general said. “The first building shall be Kyuden
Kumiko, that neither the Phoenix nor the Mantis will ever forget
her valor.”
“She was a great leader,” Singh said quietly. “I mourn her
loss.”
“Do not mourn for her. She stands in the company of her
father and brother. There could be no greater reward.” Naizen
smiled. “Pray only for her guidance, that we may live by the
example she set for us.”
“Agreed,” Singh said. He watched as a lone sailor broke away
from the pack patrolling the beach and walked toward the two
men. Others followed him.
“Naizen-sama,” the man said with a bow. “We have found
something.”
“What is it?” Naizen asked.
The sailor held forth a cloth wrapped bundle. Naizen took it
and unwrapped it, revealing a blade wrapped in seaweed and
battered from its immersion in the choppy salt water. “Kumiko’s
blade,” Naizen said with reverence. “The Celestial Blade of the
Mantis.”
“A sign,” Singh said. He drew his blade and held it aloft.
“All hail Yoritomo Naizen!” he shouted. “Yoritomo!”
“Yoritomo!” The fierce cry echoed across the newly formed
islands, and the revelry continued for hours.

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