Forty Years Ago . . .
The wind was sweet over Togashi Mountain and the sun was bright,
but the newest member of the ise zumi saw none of it. His eyes
were shut tight as he knelt cross-legged in the lee of the tattoo
master's little hut.
"Open your eyes, little brother,"
the old tattoo master said in a gentle voice.
"I cannot," the ise zumi
replied.
"Why not?" the old man said
with a chuckle.
"I fear what I might see,"
he said.
"Then open your eyes, and never
fear again."
He opened his eyes. The world no longer
looked as he remembered it. Togashi Mountain had seemed a lifeless,
barren place before. Now everything was sparkling patterns of
heat and energy. He saw life and power in each stone, each wisp
of wind. He glanced down at his body. His flesh was now covered
in swirling patterns of dark grey and black. Within the patterns
he could see strange creatures. To his eye, they moved about
of their own accord. He could feel strength coursing through
his muscles, strength greater than any he had ever known.
"What do you see?" the tattoo
master said, but when the ise zumi looked toward the old man's
voice he saw a coiled dragon. Its eyes were depthless, inscrutable
pools.
The tattooed man looked at the dragon
with a surprised grin. "Don't you know what I see?"
he asked. "This power came from your tattoos."
"That isn't how this works,"
the dragon said, shaking its head. "The tattoos do not grant
power, they unlock what is already within you. As you grow in
strength, so will they."
"Is there any limit?" he
asked.
"Only those you place upon yourself,"
the dragon said. "Have you given any thought to a name?
Many ise zumi take new names after joining the order."
The tattooed man looked over the edge
of the great mountain, at the endless sea of clouds that surrounded
the lofty peak. He could see the kami as they danced and played
in the morning wind. As he studied them, something occurred to
him. He laughed, long and loud, then turned to face the tattoo
master.
"Call me Kokujin," the ise
zumi said. "That will be my name."
"An ominous name," the dragon
said.
"It suits me," Kokujin replied.
"As you wish," the dragon
said.
"You are Togashi," Kokujin
said. "The immortal."
The dragon's eyes widened, but only
for a moment.
"Is it true?" Kokujin pressed.
"Are you a god?"
"It is so," the dragon said.
"And these tattoos the ink is
your own blood."
"Yes."
"You have hidden on this mountain all this time as a mortal?"
the ise zumi asked.
"Even while your followers fought
and died in your name," Kokujin said. "Even while we
started wars on your behalf, while we bled and died for your
teachings. All along you could have stopped it. You could have
saved us."
"Yes," the dragon said.
"That is the way of the Dragon. We must act only when it
is time."
"Such is our right!" Kokujin
laughed. "The blood of immortals runs in our veins. Mortals
are beneath us. They live only for our amusement."
The dragon did not reply for a moment.
"No," Togashi said. "You fail to understand. That
is not why we wait, and you are not immortal."
"Is that what you tell the others?"
Kokujin asked with a grin.
"That is the truth,"
the dragon replied firmly.
"Truth," the ise zumi mused.
"To live a lie for the truth. What a wonderful life! Tell
me, Togashi-san, where does one become the other? When does the
lie end and the truth begin? Is there any difference, really?"
The ise zumi's voice was not angry or accusatory. His tone was
mild, curious, almost amused.
"You have seen too much, too
soon," Togashi said. "You must rest, give yourself
time to understand what you have gained. Sometimes there is madness
in enlightenment. Given time, it will pass."
"Why would I want it to pass?
" Kokujin replied, stepping to the edge of the precipice.
"The madness is the enlightenment! You say that I
have seen too much. I have not seen enough! What other secrets
are out there?"
Togashi opened his mouth to speak
again, either to offer warning, reason, or threats. Kokujin heard
none of it.
He had already leapt from the cliff.
"What have I created?" Togashi
whispered.
Perhaps he laughed then, but Kokujin
did not hear.
"You are the one they call Togashi
Kokujin," she said, her mellow voice echoing through the
massive chamber. "The madman."
"And you are Hitomi," Kokujin
replied, grinning at the small woman seated on the throne before
him. The spirits swirled about her in a seething maelstrom. Nameless,
faceless dark things ripped and tore at majestic silver dragons.
Kokujin had sensed her power from across the Empire. She might
be greater than Togashi one day. He looked into her eyes, and
he understood her.
"You do not kneel as the others
do," she said, gesturing to the other tattooed men, her
kikage zumi.
"Why should I?" Kokujin
shrugged. "If you are truly greater than me, then you do
not need my fawning obeisance to prove it." He looked at
the nearest tattooed man, reached out, rested one massive hand
gently upon the young man's bald head. "Is it true that
you created them?" he asked. "That you can unlock the
power in others, as Togashi once did?"
"Yes," she said. "Is it true that you carry the
Taint?"
"I carry Fu Leng's blessings
as well Togashi's," Kokujin said with a nod, "I would
collect the blessings of the other Kami as well, but they feared
me so much they fled the mortal realm."
"And yet you murder your fellow
Dragons," she said. "Such are the deeds of a corrupted
soul."
Kokujin laughed. "One need not
serve Fu Leng to relish murder. Neither heaven or hell rule me.
I kill because it pleases me to do so. I am my own master."
"Teach me," she said.
"To kill?" Kokujin asked.
"No," Hitomi said sharply.
"Teach me to find the balance, as you have. To rule corruption
and not be ruled by it." She looked down at her right hand,
encased in a faceted network of obsidian shards.
"You cannot be serious, Lady Hitomi," said one of the
small kikage zumi kneeling beside the throne. He was small, wiry.
His luminous green eyes glared at Kokujin with hatred. "Your
will is strong. You can find the path on your own."
"Silence, Kobai," Hitomi commanded. "We need him."
"The Lady has spoken," said
a burly tattooed man to the other side of the throne. "If
she believes that she can command Kokujin's loyalty then who
are we to doubt her?"
"He is a murderer, Akuai,"
Kobai snarled. "A slave to the Taint."
A sharp crack echoed through the chamber. Kokujin had turned
his hand sharply, snapping the neck of the young kikage zumi
beside him. The boy slumped dead to the floor. "I am no
slave, Hitomi Kobai," Kokujin said with a smile. "Can
you say the same?" The other kikage zumi continued to kneel,
making no move to escape or defend themselves without Hitomi's
permission. Kokujin sneered at them all.
"This insult cannot be endured, my Lady," Kobai snarled,
luminous green eyes gleaming furiously. "Let me slay him
now!"
"I think not," Hitomi said.
"There is much that I need to learn from Kokujin. "A
madman he may be, but only Kokujin. understands the burden I
bear. Light and darkness war within his soul, and yet he retains
control. His madness is irrelevant. Only he can help me. What
say you, Kokujin. Will you take my name and swear to restrain
your madness? There are benefits in serving me."
"Why not?" Kokujin said.
"One name is as good as another."
"The Lady has spoken!" Akuai
boomed. "Hitomi Kokujin is welcome here."
"He will destroy us all, my Lady,"
Kobai warned.
"And if I leave," Kokujin
said, "Hitomi will fall to the whispers of that blackened
claw and destroy the Empire. Is it not so, my Lady? Is this not
what you fear?"
Hitomi was silent for a long moment.
Finally, she nodded. "It is so," she said.
"Then I am welcome in Togashi
Mountain?" he asked.
"You are welcome in Kyuden Hitomi,"
she corrected, "but kill another of my kikage zumi and that
will change."
"Understood," Kokujin said
with a smirk. "It is no matter. There will be plenty of
killing soon enough." The dark ise zumi's mirthless laughter
filled Hitomi's audience chamber.
Twenty-seven Years Ago
At a small shrine in the craggy foothills of the Great Climb
knelt a single monk. He wore only a simple pair of tattered hakama
despite the frigid winds. His body was painted with brilliant
tattoos, images of blazing dragons in flight. His arms and chest
were covered with the scars of many battles. A well worn bo staff
lay on the ground, near at hand.
The ise zumi opened his eyes. He had
covered his tracks well. Even yet, they had found him. He peered
back over one shoulder. There were six. All bore the dark, swirling
tattoos of the kikage zumi, Hitomi's tattooed men. The leader
was smaller than the others. His eyes were a strange brilliant
green. Mitsu recognized him as Kobai, one of the first who had
sworn himself to Hitomi's order, one of the killers who had slaughtered
his family at Hitomi's whim.
"You called me 'Togashi,'"
Mitsu said, turning as he rose. He plucked his staff from where
it rested against a nearby tree, held it ready in both hands.
"I thought your Lady had purged that name. Or have you come
to mock me before you murder me as your kind murdered Mikoto,
Yama, Rinjin, and old Gaijutsu?"
"I come to apologize, Mitsu,"
Kobai said. "The Lady has seen the error of her ways, as
I prayed that she would. Kokujin is no longer welcome in Kyuden
Hitomi. The surviving Togashi are free to return to their home.
Your name has been restored. It was the Lady's final wish before
she ascended to the heavens."
"I see," Mitsu said, never relaxing his stance, "and
it took six of you to tell me this?"
"We need your help, Mitsu," Kobai said. "There
are too few kikage zumi after the Battle of Oblivion's Gate.
Too few by far. We need you to help us hunt Kokujin."
"Why do you hunt him?" Mitsu
asked warily.
"Vengeance," Kobai said.
"Vengeance for what he nearly did to the Lady, for what
he did to the Dragon Clan. She hoped to learn balance from him,
but she became his slave. We became a clan of killers because
of him."
"I never became a killer,"
Mitsu said. "The choice to let another man make your own
decisions was always yours. Let the consequences be on your head,
Kobai. Do not blame Kokujin."
Kobai scowled at Mitsu, then slowly
frowned. He bowed his head, closed his eyes in shame. "You
are right, Mitsu-sama," he said in a soft voice. "For
what my family has done to yours, there can be no apology. We
were fools. Even yet, Kokujin must be stopped."
"For vengeance," Mitsu said
with a sigh.
"And he has stolen Togashi's
swords," Kobai said. "They must be returned."
"For vengeance and trinkets,"
Mitsu corrected. He dropped his staff, letting it clatter on
the stony ground. "You have learned nothing, Kobai."
"These are not trinkets! These
are the blades of our founder," Kobai said urgently. "They
are powerful, sacred. They cannot be left in the hands of a madman."
"Togashi does not need them anymore,"
Mitsu said. "Togashi is dead. Your Lady killed him."
Kobai blinked. "You will not
help us? The Order of Hoshi have already agreed. Wayan himself
stands ready to aid us."
"Then I wish Wayan well,"
Mitsu said, "but I have fought Kokujin before. I will not
face him again until I am ready. I warn you not to do this, Kobai.
Return to your mountain. Wait until you are strong enough. Do
you not see the trap that awaits you? Kokujin took the blades
because he knows that you and the other kikage are impulsive,
reckless where the honor of your family is concerned. He wants
you to chase him."
"He is only one man," Kobai
said. The kikage zumi turned and walked away. The others followed.
Mitsu wondered if he would ever see
any of them again.
The road to Shinden Hoshi was rough,
untamed. Like most of the roads in Dragon lands it was not made
for ease of travel, but rather to give a general notion of which
way to go. The wounded monk grunted in pain as he staggered across
the uneven ground. Leaning heavily against a boulder, he adjusted
the bandages that crisscrossed his barrel chest. Gathering his
strength he forged on, leaning on the shaft of his axe for support.
The sohei guards cried out as he neared
the gates of the small temple. The wounded monk recognized their
faces, but not their names. He had never cared much to learn
their names. One opened the doors and ran inside. The other ran
toward him, extending one hand to offer aid. The wounded monk
waved him away impatiently.
"I need to see Wayan," he
growled fiercely.
"Of course," the guard nodded
quickly, "but let me help you!"
"I don't need your help,"
the wounded monk snapped.
The guard nodded and backed away.
The monk sat down on a large stone, both hands gripping the haft
of his axe tightly as he concentrated on remaining conscious.
The weapon was covered with dried blood and gore. He watched
the guard suspiciously, one eye hidden beneath the thick bandage
that crossed his scalp.
"I remember you," the guard
said.
The wounded monk said nothing, only
stared angrily.
"You are one of the ones they
sent to hunt the madman," the guard said again. "What
happened to you?"
"I found him," the monk
whispered with a scowl.
The guard looked away, frightened
by his gaze.
The doors of the temple opened once
more. Wayan, leader of the Order of Hoshi, stepped out onto the
rocky path. The wiry old monk wore the battle dress of a sohei,
minus the long scarf that usually covered his face. Complex tattoos
covered his face and arms, the mystic legacy of Hoshi, son of
Togashi. When Wayan saw the wounded monk his face became grave.
"Kaelung," Wayan said, bowing
to the wounded monk. "You have returned. Where are Maseru
and the others?"
"Forty sohei?" Wayan asked
sharply.
Kaelung nodded. "We found Kokujin
on the Plains Above Evil. He was waiting for us with two hundred
bakemono. He had carved his designs upon them, the tattoos he
uses to control the weak."
Wayan shook his head. "The tattoos
Kokujin uses to control others are temporary. He must use his
own blood to scribe them. There is no way he could control so
many."
"I saw what I saw," Kaelung
snapped.
"I believe you, Kaelung,"
Wayan said. He looked intently to the south, as if he hoped to
see Kokujin. "I just find it disturbing. The madman killed
all of your comrades?"
"Not all," Kaelung said.
"Some of them were carried away. Toward the Shadowlands.
I followed them until Kokujin saw me. I fought him until I realized
I could not win. I barely survived."
"Return to the temple, Kaelung," Wayan said. "Tell
the others what you have seen. Once your wounds are healed, we
will hunt the madman again. Next time, we will be prepared."
"Have you heard nothing I said?"
Kaelung said, looking at Wayan incredulously. "We were
prepared. We had taken every precaution. It amounted to nothing.
Kokujin was ready. This is a game to him, and so long as we follow
the rules he makes we cannot win. We need help. We should turn
to the Hida, the Hiruma, the Daidoji. We must find allies who
know how to battle the Taint. If we continue fighting alone out
of stubborn pride he will continue to destroy us."
"Kaelung return to the temple," Wayan said. "I
order it."
Kaelung rose unsteadily, his face
grim. "You are a fool, Wayan," he said. "You command
me no longer."
Kaelung made his way slowly back down
the path. The sohei guard stepped forward with an angry look,
but Wayan waved him back. "No," the old monk said.
"Perhaps he is right. He must find his own path."
Kaelung continued down the rough trail.
Pain surged through him; his injuries were grave. He slumped
to the ground, gasping for breath, clutching the bleeding bandages
at his right hip. For a moment, he considered returning to the
temple. The monks there could treat him. He could always leave
later.
"No," said a voice. "That
is no longer your place. You know that."
Kaelung looked up. A tall figure in
black robes stood before him. His face was a featureless golden
mask with a gleaming jade stone set in the forehead.
"You again," Kaelung said.
"The one who saved me on the plains."
"You did not mention me to your
master," he said.
"He did not ask," Kaelung
answered.
"I thought surely you would have
stopped to recover in one of the villages along the way,"
the strange figure replied. "You are as strong as you are
stubborn."
"Who are you?" Kaelung demanded.
"I lost my name long ago,"
the man said. "I am called Master Jade, of the Kolat."
"Kolat?" Kaelung said with
a snarl. He rose to his feet, hefted his axe. "I have heard
of you. Yours is a dark order, bent on dominating the Empire.
You would make all others like yourself, pawns without the will
to think."
"Strange," Master Jade said.
"I have heard the same said of the Dragon Clan, in the past.
And yet you changed, didn't you?"
"Why did you save me and not
the others?" Kaelung asked, rising with a pained grunt.
"Random chance," Master
Jade said with a shrug.
Kaelung looked at the Kolat Master
suspiciously.
"I am sorry," Master Jade laughed. "Were you hoping
for something more? Did you secretly dream that it was your great
destiny to face and defeat Kokujin? I am sorry, Kaelung, but
I do not believe that the future is constructed in such a manner.
I do not believe in destiny."
"Neither do I," Kaelung said. "The future is what
we make it."
"Then perhaps we can come to
an agreement," Master Jade said. "I, like you, would
wish to see Kokujin and his minions destroyed for my own reasons."
"And you want me to help you?"
Kaelung asked.
"No," Master Jade said.
"You are not the sort of man who would offer help or accept
it. I wish only to fight by your side."
"I'm listening," Kaelung
said.
It seemed sometimes as if there were
countless monasteries in the mountains of the Dragon Clan. Togashi
Matsuo had certainly seen his share of them, following his sensei.
Old Mitsu seemed to have a sense for them. The most secluded
shrine, the most well-hidden temple, stood out like a beacon.
The priests never seemed surprised to see Mitsu walking up the
path, and he was always welcome.
"Centipede," Mitsu whispered.
Matsuo nodded. He focused on the image
of a celestial centipede in his mind, the thought of many legs
moving swiftly as one. He thought of the creature's speed and
agility. He imagined that speed within himself. He felt a burning
fire in his chest; the tattoos that spread across his body took
the shape of the mighty centipede, stretching from Matsuo's right
wrist to his left.
"Good," Mitsu said. "Wolf."
Matsuo nodded. He imagined a powerful
wolf spirit, surging through the snow-covered forest in pursuit
of a hare. The scent of his prey was strong in his nostrils.
The sound of its furry feet scampering across the powdered earth
was like thunder in his ears. The centipede tattoo faded to be
replaced with a howling wolf.
"Excellent," Mitsu said.
"Dragon."
Matsuo grinned. The image came easily,
a great crystal dragon soaring through the clouds. Its breath
was the north wind; its beard was hoar frost. Its claws were
as sharp as icicles. As it passed through the sky it left swirling
snowflakes in its wake. A chill passed through Matsuo's body
and when he looked down the snow dragon had taken its familiar
place on his chest.
"That one is my favorite,"
Matsuo said.
"How many is that now?"
Mitsu asked.
"Seven," Matsuo replied.
"The tattoo takes seven different forms now."
"Wonderful," the old sensei
said with a pleased grin. "That is an incredible power,
especially for one so young. I have never seen anything like
it, Matsuo. And coming from me, that's saying quite a bit."
"I know," Matsuo said. He
was fond of his sensei's tales. Mitsu's adventures were countless.
The foes he had defeated were incredible. The things he had seen
were unimaginable. If Matsuo had not had the opportunity to accompany
his master on a few of his latest adventures, he might not have
believed any of them were true.
"I think I am ready to try an
eighth form," Matsuo said eagerly. "Perhaps a flaming
sword? That might be useful."
"Do not push yourself, Matsuo,"
Mitsu said with a chuckle. "Let your power develop naturally.
And flaming swords are somewhat overrated. They're quite difficult
to wield without burning oneself."
Matsuo looked at his master curiously.
No doubt there was a story behind that statement, but before
he could ask the temple doors burst open. The acolytes gasped
as a large tattooed man staggered in, covered in blood and scars.
His clothing was torn and muddy. He moved purposefully toward
the ise zumi, his golden eyes blazing with urgency.
"Lord Satsu," Mitsu said,
helping the injured ise zumi stead himself. Mitsu did not look
surprised to see the grandson of the Kami Togashi stagger half-dead
into a remote temple, but then Mitsu rarely ever looked surprised.
"What happened?"
"Mitsu," Togashi Satsu said,
looking at the older man triumphantly. "Matsuo," he
added, looking to his student. "Come with me. I know where
Kokujin hides."
"Explain," Mitsu said tersely.
I have heard your challenge, and
I am prepared to meet it.
Pick seven of your best, and send
them to me.
Send two from the Togashi, the
family whose name I once carried.
Send two from the Hitomi, the family
that I helped to create and that understands me best.
Send one from the order of Hoshi,
the children who have dedicated themselves to my death.
Send one from the Mirumoto; let
him test his swords against mine.
And send one from the Tamori. Why
not?
Send any less and I will kill them.
Send any more and I will not appear.
I am waiting, and I promise enlightenment
to those who would face me.
Find me in the Twilight Mountains.
- Kokujin.
"A strange letter," Mirumoto Rosanjin
said, handing it back to Akuai. The handsome samurai glanced
about the jagged landscape with an uneasy frown. "Very choppy
and abrupt."
"Kokujin may be many things,
but he is no poet," Tamori Chieko replied with a small laugh.
The little shugenja hugged her arms to her body for warmth.
"It is getting late," Matsuo
said, looking at the full moon above. He wondered if Hitomi was
watching over them. "We should light a fire."
"Here?" said a sharp voice,
followed by a mocking laugh. Hitomi Hogai swaggered back toward
the group, a broad sneer painted on his ugly features. "Don't
be foolish, boy."
Matsuo shrugged. His tattoo shifted,
becoming the snow dragon once more. He sat down next to Chieko,
wrapped one arm around her shoulders to pool their warmth. He
wished, not for the first time, that Mitsu had come with them.
It seemed strange that he would stay behind; he hated Kokujin
more than any of them.
"Hogai speaks true," said
Akuai, the old kikage zumi. "Kokujin will see the smoke
and come for us."
"Kokujin?" Hogai said with
a chuckle. "This deep in the Twilight Mountains he's just
one of our worries. There are many things to fear here, old one.
The First Oni died here. His blood cursed these mountains. All
matter of evil beasts make their home in this place."
"Then we are fortunate to have
your expertise, Hogai-san," Hoshi Wayan answered. The old
monk was perched on the top of a nearby boulder, searching the
area carefully.
"You were once a Hida, weren't
you?" Rosanjin asked.
Hogai nodded quietly, not looking at Rosanjin.
"Why did you leave them?" Rosanjin pressed. "Was
the armor too heavy?"
"He is a Dragon now, and that
is all that matters," Togashi Satsu said sharply as he walked
back into the camp. "Is that understood, Rosanjin?"
Satsu glared at the samurai purposefully.
"Hai, sama," the samurai
said, bowing quickly to their leader.
"Do you hear that?" Matsuo
asked, looking up intently. His tattoo had taken its wolf form.
"I hear nothing," Wayan
said, "but your ears are sharper than ours."
"It sounded like a drum"
Matsuo said, "except that it was like metal. Steel on steel
More like a blacksmith's hammer. it is gone now."
"There are many spirits in these
mountains with many songs," Hogai said. "That was no
doubt one of them."
"It may have been important,"
Matsuo said.
"No doubt of that," Hogai
replied, "but no sense in worrying about it unless it comes
back."
"I found tracks outside the camp,"
Satsu said, looking up at Hogai. "Bakemono tracks. Hogai,
I would have you look at them but by my eye they seemed fresh.
If they lead us true, we should find Kokujin by tomorrow."
"And then what?" Chieko
asked.
"Then he dies," Akuai said.
"Then we wipe away our shame and take back what is ours."
"I look forward to that,"
Rosanjin replied boldly, hand tightening on the hilt of his katana.
"I will show this madman that it takes more than two swords
to be a Dra-"
"Shush!" Matsuo said, rising
suddenly.
Rosanjin looked at the young ise zumi
curiously. "Matsuo?"
"Quiet!" he whispered. "I
hear something"
"Hammering again?" Hogai
asked, peering about at the shadows.
"No" Matsuo said. "This
is different this is" Matsuo's eyes widened. He turned to
Satsu. "My lord, run!"
The Dragon moved as one, none doubting
Matsuo's words. Rosanjin's blades were in his hand just as Wayan
leapt to the ground, staff ready. A glowing sword forged of pure
jade formed in Chieko's slim hand at her summons. Matsuo led
the way back down the trail the way they had come.
The path was blocked. Dozens of small,
spindly creatures stood in the pass. Bakemono - goblins. They
held sharp knives and clubs or simple stones. Normally, such
creatures held little threat but there was something strange
about these. Each one had strange patterns traced across its
body in dark red. Each stood ready for combat. Matsuo recognized
their stance in horror - it was Kaze-do, the secret martial form
of the Dragon Clan.
"These are Kokujin's bakemono,"
Hoshi Wayan whispered. "We are surrounded."
"I am not afraid of goblins,"
Hogai growled.
"Perhaps you should be,"
said a smooth voice. The goblins parted. Several larger figures
stepped forward, human figures. Like the goblins, their bodies
were covered in swirling tattoos. Like the goblins, their stance
was that of the Dragon. Two green pinpoints shone in their midst,
the glowing eyes of their leader. He was a small man. Matsuo
did not recognize him, but Wayan and Akuai gasped at the sight
of him. He smiled and bowed to them all.
"I am Kobai," the tattooed
man said. "Kokujin Kobai. Greetings, Satsu, son of Hoshi.
My master welcomes you to his home."