KACHIKO'S TALE - TIME OF THE VOID

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Kachiko walked down the ancient corridor, her footfalls making no sound, leaving no wake of disturbed dust behind her. When she reached the end of the hall, she stopped and stood still, her eyes closing, her fists clenched.

"If there are fewer than seven," she whispered, her words echoing around her in the small corridor, "All is lost."

The she turned left, to the stones of the wall. She counted three stones from the gate along the bottom and four stones up. She twisted and pulled until the latch gave way and the concealed panel slid aside. Then she pushed against the two heavy doors, amazed at how easily they opened for her. The night wind swept into the corridor, and for a moment, she was blinded by the swirling dust. When her vision cleared, she saw them and smiled.

"Welcome to Otosan Uchi," she said, her voice ringing in the air.

They rushed in, and she saw that one of them was covered with blood. Two Phoenix maidens gently put him on the floor as his blood spilled into the dust.

"What...?" Kachiko began.

"Be silent, mother of lies!" shouted the older maiden.

Kachiko's eyes grew narrow, but a warm hand fell on her shoulder. She turned and saw the ronin. "He clings to life by a thread. Take care."

She shook her head. "No. This is not right. It must be only us. Only the seven and..."

"...and Shinsei," whispered a cloaked figure from the shadow. Kachiko's eyes widened and his own gleamed in the darkness.

"...and Shinsei," she mumbled.

The hooded figure stepped forward. "She is right," he said to the two Phoenix maidens. "You must leave him. We must walk alone, or we violate our destiny."

"NO!" the older maiden screamed, tears running down her eyes, but the younger took her hand.

She cannot have seen more than ten seasons, Kachiko thought as she watched her gently pull the older maiden to her knees. "Tsukune, we must leave him now. Leave him with the Thunders."

"Leave him with her?!" Tsukune cried, pointing at Kachiko.

"We also leave him with Shinsei and the others. We all play our parts, Tsukune. We have played ours. Now it is their time. Let him go."

Tsukune nodded and stood, adjusting the swords in her obi. She let the girl turn her away, but she took one last look at the wounded Phoenix Thunder and then looked at Kachiko. "All of this is your fault, Scorpion. All of it. I swear, lady of lies, if you live and he dies, I will teach you about revenge."

Then the Thunders stood alone with Shinsei. Again.

There was a long stretch of silence as the Crane and the Crab lifted the shugenja to his feet. The jade of the Crab's hand lit the room as it came close to the corrupt Master, who winced from its light.

"Let me," said the Unicorn.

"No, let me." Kachiko took the weight of the wounded Phoenix onto her shoulders. He whispered from under his mask, "Do not listen to Tsukune. She is a samurai, a little too brash and a little too courageous."

"She is a woman in love, Tadaka-san," Kachiko replied. "I know precisely how dangerous she can be."

"So do I," said the Crane as he helped her hold up the wounded Phoenix. Kachiko's gaze dropped to the floor.

Shinsei walked before them in the dust-filled darkness. He turned to the entrance and smiled under his cowl. "Ah, I was wondering when you were going to arrive." The slick black flight of a crow flashed over the Thunders' heads and landed on Shinsei's shoulder.

"Now we are ready."

Shinsei and his crow, Kachiko thought, all the childhood stories of the two cunning tricksters coming back to her from the past. She looked around and saw their eyes and knew the others were thinking the same. Then her eyes fell on a hand of black glass, and her smile was lost.

I will pay for my crimes tonight, she thought. Then she felt the wet cough of the Phoenix, and shuddered. Perhaps we will all pay.

From ahead she heard a distant laughter. The all stopped. All but Shinsei. His stride never broke. His crow called to them from his shoulder, urging them on.

"I am not afraid," whispered the Unicorn.

"We are all afraid, battle maiden," the Lion whispered as he stepped forward, following Shinsei and his crow. "But so is the thing that waits for us."

The Thunders moved on, following Shinsei through the darkness. From up ahead, she heard the crow caw again.

The last time the Thunders walked with Shinsei, she thought, only the Scorpion returned.

She spoke aloud. "Not this time." All the Thunders looked at her, but she kept her eyes forward, following the man with the crow, as they walked deeper into the darkness.

LETTER - OBSIDIAN

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You know me.

I have stood with the armies of Rokugan and I have stood against the armies that reek of the stench of the grave. You have stood with me. You have stood against me. The Brotherhood has hidden me well, but now the time has come for all of us to stand in the sun.

Matsu Tsuko knew this when she spilled her own blood with the blade of her ancestors. She could not serve the creature that sits on the Emerald Throne, so she chose the only option her honor would allow her. It was an act of courage, not fear. We must learn what she hoped her act would teach us.

Those of us who will not serve the darkness must stand against it. We do not have to stand alone.

To the Crab, I offer this: Your choice is not as easy as it seems. You could chose the path of darkness. If you do, victory for our enemy will be all but complete. Look at your fallen Champion. There is your reward for fighting against this evil. Choose wisely.

To the Crane, I offer this: You began this war seeking peace. Now your army is one of the mightiest in Rokugan. Will you look past your besmirched honor and see what is required of you? Revenge is a powerful weapon, but it is still dull and impotent compared to duty and honor.

To the Lion, I offer this: If you listen, you can still hear Tsuko's words on the wind. Listen to them carefully. They were spoken a thousand years ago by another Lion.

To the Phoenix, I offer this: Nothing is certain, not even the rise of the fallen fire bird. Everything in this world must be earned. Sometimes, the price is blood.

To the Scorpion, I offer this: Your mistress knows her destiny. She knows what she must do. Do you?

To the Unicorn, I offer this: You have returned to a land that was never really your own and now you are the sole defenders of those who have sworn to serve you. Even so, if we are all standing in the light of a new dawn, a greater task lies ahead of you.

To the Dragon, I offer this: When the night departs and the sun rises, the seeds of darkness remain. If they are left to grow, the roots will find your heart and drink it dry. Become gardeners, my friends.

To the Alliance, I offer this: You are a new ally. They will not trust you. They do not trust each other. You have an opportunity. Your show of fraternity may prove to be the lesson the Great Clans must learn. Do not stray from your path. Your importance is yet to be realized.

And for Toturi, I offer this: Victory can be the greatest trap of all. I have traveled into the Shadowlands. I have learned much from my journies. It is time for me to pull back my hood and let you see my scars.

May the Seven Fortunes guide you,
Shinsei

KACHIKO'S TALE: OBSIDIAN

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For a thousand years, the capital city of Rokugan, Otosan Uchi, has been the home of the Hantei Dynasty.

Those days are over.

The shadows draped her like a comforting cloak, and she remained as close to them as her training would allow. The dead men that walked the halls would devour her if they could find her, but their minds were dull and she evaded them easily. She was commanded not to wander after nightfall, but Kachiko was a Bayushi after all, and the Bayushi were never very good at obeying orders.

She slipped by the wandering dead and slid aside a hidden panel that led into a pitch black room. she dared not light even a candle. It mattered little. She stood still for a moment, allowing the room's darkness to sink into her eyes. Then, she moved to the loose floorboard and moved it aside and lifted the silk package that lay within.

The sounds of the shambling creatures outside startled her for a moment, but only for a moment. She held her breath and waited for the shadows to move away. Even from here, she could smell their rotting flesh. She had to bite her lip when she saw a portion of the shadow drop away and heard the fleshy plop hit the wooden floor.

When she was certain she was alone again, she peeled away the silk wrapping, revealing to her fingers the cool, smooth surface of a black glass mirror. She set the silk aside and caressed its surface with her fingertips.

She brought it close to her lips and whispered, "It is I, daughter of secrets. Your mistress and servant."

As her words fell on the black glass, the mirror began to flow with a dark light. Kachiko looked about to make certain no one - or no thing - saw the growing dark aura.

The mirror whispered to her. She listened and obeyed, for there are times when even a Bayushi must obey. The short knife was hidden in the folds of her kimono. She ran the blade oh-so-delicately across her palm, biting her lop to keep herself from making a sound. Three drops of blood spilled into the mirror and they seemed to burn as they touched the obsidian, flashing in the darkness.

"I need to see the past," she whispered to the mirror.

The obsidian mirror's black color swirled into a kaleidoscope of colors and flashes a Kachiko wrapped her palm with the cotton she brought from her room, but her eyes never left the mirror's flashing images.

"All of this is my fault," she said softly. "It was my poison that made the Emperor weak. I allowed the Black Scrolls to be found. Now, the Dark One possesses his body and these foul things walk the corridors of the Imperial Palace. I need to see the beginning. There must be something that I have forgotten."

And in the matter of minutes, two years passed. Two years through the face of an obsidian mirror...

FIRELIGHT

Firelight

The broken man lay by the firelight, watching the shadows dance on the wall. A great sword lay by his side, one which his twisted arm could no longer lift. A suit of armor sat near the entrance, one which his shattered frame could no longer carry. He looked at them both with scar-dimmed eyes, the fire revealing the anger and bitterness in their depths. A sound at the mouth of the cave broke his contemplation. His head turned slowly, his breath hissing with effort.

"Yakamo?" The question was devoid of apprehension.

"It is me, father," Hida Yakamo spoke as he approached the fire and knelt beside the old man. His armor was polished and gleaming, whole where the old man's was broken. The metallic claw at the end of his hand creaked slightly as he flexed it back and forth.

"What of our forces in the Imperial city?" the old man asked, leaning forward.

"Scattered, but largely intact. Some sort of skirmish has broken out between the Lion defenders, which has allowed us to begin regrouping in some sort of peace."

"Your sister?"

"O-Ushi is holding the army together, but I hesitate to leave her in command for long. With the Hirumas pushing for blood, we may lose everything in a suicidal assault on the palace."

The old man's eye's squeezed shut as some imagined pain creased his forehead.

"And what of the palace, Yakamo? What of that... creature that attacked me?"

Yakamo's face broke into a cruel grin.

"I'm sorry, father, I made no arrangements to enter and ask. There are kinsmen, however, who are not so discerning as I. They have entered Otosan Uchi and sworn eternal fealty to the Emperor."

"Who?"

"Amoro... Yori... a few others. They claim to be the voice of the clan now that you and I have been killed."

The old man sighed, shifting his bulk back towards the fire. He sat there silently, lost in thought. Yakamo shifted uncomfortably where he knelt. Finally, after several minutes, he spoke again.

"Yokuni was here."

The old man shifted, the surprise apparent on his face.

"When?"

"While you slept. He brought us something..."

Yakamo unwrapped the object, which had been hidden behind the old man's armor. At first glance, it appeared to be a gauntlet, forged from a dull green metal. As Yakamo brought it out into the firelight, it began to glow softly, illuminating the frozen fingers like candles.

"The Jade Hand!" The old man whispered.
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"'You must cast off old fetters to forge new ones,' Yokuni told me. At least, I believe that is what he told me."

The claw creaked slightly as he brought it up to the light, comparing the two appendages like a merchant pricing wares.

"This claw... the 'gift' that Yori gave to me. It was from the oni, wasn't it?"

The old man nodded solemnly.

"The creature which bears your name required a link to you. We gave it your hand, and in return..." he gestured at the samurai's limb.

"I can sense the oni sometimes," Yakamo replied. "Where it is, what it is doing. It whispers things in my dreams, things I can never quite recall when I awake. It unsettles me, father."

In a flash, the samurai grabbed his metallic limb and gave it a mighty pull. The steel screamed like a wounded animal as it wrenched free, and Yakamo threw it to the cave floor with obvious disgust. The claw flopped and twitched like a thing alive. At the wrist stump, where metal met flesh, a strange black tentacle writhed back and forth, sand sticking to its clammy sides. The appendage continued to thrash for several more minutes, its motions becoming slower and more jerky before finally coming to a stop.

Yakamo drew himself to his full height, and placed the Jade Hand in the spot the claw had once occupied. With a brilliant flash, it connected to his severed forearm, stone tendrils fusing with muscles and veins. The hand glowed more brightly, and as the old man watched, Yakamo seemed to fill with strength and power. The Hand moved as fluidly as flesh, its digits forever unfrozen by contact with the samurai. Yakamo flexed its fingers and turned to the old man.

"I am ready to atone for our family's sins."

"Excellent," the old man replied. "Find Toturi. Offer him a truce in exchange for our assistance in the battle, and tell him that we must set our differences aside. Have your sister contact the Unicorn and see if any of them will join us. The time for divisiveness is over."

Yakamo nodded. "I will send for a regiment to bring you to our field headquarters, father."

"Do not concern yourself. I am not going with you."

The samurai started.

"You are right, Yakamo," the old man continued. "Our Clan has committed sins that demand correcting. When you leave, I will prepare the ritual and undergo seppuku in penance."

"Here? Alone?"

"It is proper that I do so. As daimyo, the Crab's shame rests on my shoulders. My blood will erase that shame and restore honor to our forces."

Yakamo's eyes narrowed as he stared at the old man. "If I lived as long as the stars themselves," he said at last, "I never thought I would see my father succumb to such cowardice."

The old man hissed through broken teeth. "You dare to accuse me..."

"I dare to accuse you of turning your back on our failings! We left that thing there, sitting on the Throne. Our actions helped place it there! Did I mention that Yori was seen within the palace gates? Did I mention that Amoro - your nephew, father - leads a legion of the Emperor's troops even as the flesh rots from his bones? That thrice-damned oni you have given my name has publicly proclaimed the Crab's support for the Emperor, that our army in the field is comprised of traitors. Our Clan swims in this evil, an evil we ourselves released. And now you would abandon us to fulfill your own selfish honor."

The old man was becoming angry. "Bushido demands that I atone for my mistake!"

"To the Shadowlands with bushido! Bushido is a puzzle box that the creature on the throne has twisted to its own ends! The Lion champion has already fallen to it. I cannot allow you to do the same. Commit seppuku here, now, in this dank little hole, and you give it victory, father!"

The old man's face cracked open, his voice no more than a whisper.

"But the cost! Sukune..."

"Sukune was a sacrifice on the altar of our vanity! His death means nothing if we do not learn from it! Don't throw yourself on the pyre as you threw him."

Yakamo fell silent, glaring at his father from across the fire.

"You are the daimyo of the Crab Clan, the Great Bear, the Defender of the Empire! You plotted a thousand different ways to seize the city. Every possible outcome, every conceivable turn, every hill and knoll on that battlefield, you understand like the back of your hand. There is no one in all of Rokugan who knows the plains of Otosan Uchi as well as you." He leaned in close, the Jade Hand clenching into a fist.

"Whatever this creature is, it cannot face us in open battle - not if you are with us. You have been strong enough to lead us to the threshold of victory. Are you strong enough to lead us further? Can you look your dishonor in the face, and shoulder this greatest burden?"

The old man stared at his son with unblinking eyes, burning a hole in the air around him. Finally, he nodded.

"Hai. For the Clan and the Empire, I will... live with my shame."

"Good. Then the time for talking has ended."

Yakamo rose and hoisted his tetsubo over his shoulder. The Jade Hand gleamed with a brightness all its own, the firelight dimming from its very presence.

"We have made a terrible mistake. The time has come to correct it."

THE DEATH OF MATSU TSUKO

The Death of Matsu Tsuko

Here is the death of Matsu Tsuko:

The wind's chilly fingers gripped at her throat, taking her voice away. She didn't mind. She had already said everything that needed to be said. Tsuko looked up, her eyes on Toturi's face, contorted by the shadows; but she knew better than to trust shadows.

Across the dark, Toturi looked down at the kneeling samurai-ko, glad that the night hid the tears swelling his eyes. He was her second and she needed to see his strength. He could not fail her. Not now.

Slowly, almost silently, he moved behind her, the toes of his feet just touching the tatami mat she knelt upon, resting his hand on his katana. Tsuko bowed her head and placed a piece of rice paper in her right hand. Then, she lifted the wakizashi and withdrew the blade from it's saya.

"It's my duty to protect the emperor," she whispered as the blade glistened in the dim light. "I cannot perform that duty. I cannot serve the thing that sits on the Emerald Throne. I have failed my family and my clan."

Toturi said nothing. He had heard these words from his own lips many years ago. He felt his tears rolling down his eyes, and licked his lips as he pulled hig katana into the night air.

"I do this now to save my family's honor, not my own."

Toturi only mouthed the word: "I know."

"With my death, there will be none to lead the Lion. They will be lost in the darkness." She paused, and for a moment, Toturi feared she would falter.

But she straightened her back, her shoulders wide and powerful. She was a Lion, even at the moment of her death.

"They need you, Toturi," she said, her words filled with sorrow. "I cannot help them... but you can."

Toturi almost spoke, but then he heard the first cut and his tongue turned as cold as snow.

"They need you..." she said again, her voice forcing it's way throught the pain. "...more than they need me."

Toturi heard the second cut and then the third, but Tsuko made no sound. Her body twitched once, her neck snapped up and Toturi did not hesitate. His sword struck, singing it's death song through the night air - the last song she would ever hear.

The winter is bleak
Shadows are long with despair
My eyes are the dawn

-Matsu Tsuko

KACHIKO'S TALE: CRIMSON AND JADE

Aramoro stepped into the still room from the night, cold rain dripping down into his armor against his skin. Across the room, a single figure stood, occasionally silhouetted in a flash of lightning as it streaked across the black sky. Thunder followed soon after, rumbling over the rafters of the ancient home of the Hantei family.

As soon as he saw the figure, he fell to his knees and placed his long, slender blade at his side with a single silent motion. "My Lady," he whispered, his breath hinting at the exhaustion that wracked his frozen muscles. "I bring you news."

Another flash descended, but the shadows clung to her, revealing nothing to him. He could smell the perfume of her hair drifting across the room, but he heard no sound from her, save for the single "Yes?" that hung in the air many moments after it was spoken.

"I followed Akiyoshi, as you commanded." She did not respond; he continued. "Your suspicions were correct. She has been to see the ronin."

"Where else would she go?"

Aramoro continued, feeling the bitterness of her words seep into his skin. "Much have I learned, my Lady. Yoritomo's ambassador was there, as well as a representative from the Brotherhood."

She nodded. "Junzo is looking for the descendants," she whispered. "That is why the Brotherhood is there. Yoritomo is there because he is as opportunistic as a crow spying a shiny bauble."

"There is no alliance between them, my Lady. The Clans refuse to acknowledge his claim. Yoritomo swears the Alliance will fight to prove their worth."

"And destroy the Empire in doing so." Again Kachiko shook her head. "It is just as Yokuni said. All of his prophecies are coming to pass."

"My Lady," Aramoro whispered. "There is more. The Lady Tsuko..."

Kachiko spun on her heel, her kimono whipping about her. "You have news?"

"Hai. She was at the ronin's camp."

She moved across the room as the lightning struck behind her. Aramoro fell completely prostrate, not certain if the chill in his bones was from the rain or his LadyÕs icy stare. "Tell me, ninja," she said.

"She was there, my Lady." Aramoro's eyes focused on the wood panels inches from his nose. "She begged him to return, to reclaim the mantle, but..."

The thunder crashed, the paper panels and wooden beams of the house shuddering as the ninja continued whispering to her. When he was done, he remained prostrate and silent. Kachiko paused for a moment, then turned back to the window. For a moment, she swore she saw a shadow there, but in the span of a breath, it was gone.

"It is all true," she whispered. "All true."

She turned back to the ninja, her face shifting in the shadows. All the darkness had left her eyes. When she lifted AramoroÕs chin with her fingertips, he could see them gleaming like the lightning in the window behind him. With her lips only a breath away from him, she said "My beloved husband's brother. You swore you would protect me and follow my every wish, my every command without question?"

Aramoro nodded. "Aye, my Lady. You know I did."

"Then I have only one command left to give you, my devoted Aramoro." She looked into his eyes, knowing his response perhaps even before he did. "I want you to leave me."

"...My Lady?"

"Without question, Aramoro. Remember? Leave me now. Join the others. Our army must be ready when the moment is right." She saw the confusion in his eyes and she smiled, and at that moment, she realized it was the first true smile since the war had begun. "I cannot have you standing between me and my destiny. Go. Now."
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Aramoro nodded and stood and she stood with him. She looked up at the ninja as his full height dwarfed her own. "May the Fortunes watch you, my Lady." As swiftly and silently as he had arrived, he was gone. Leaving her alone with the rain, the darkness and the thunder.

LETTERS - ANVIL OF DESPAIR

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We are fools.

We have been deceived from the beginning. Things are not in hand as we had originally believed. They are far, far worse.

I sailed with my father at the head of his great fleet. I strode by his side as he unleashed his armies on the Imperial city. The Lion army was waiting there for us, but they were as children before an angry wind. We crushed them beneath us, and took the city as our own. Kisada strode into the palace as if he had been born there. The chosen son of heaven ready to claim his right as Emperor. The Imperial Guard was nowhere to be seen; we should have known then that something was wrong, but we were too drunk on our own easy victory to notice it. We entered the Emperor's throne room ready to wrest the crown from him and end this conflict once and for all.

And then, it all fell apart.

The sickened body of Hantei stood there like a puppet, his eye glowing with an unholy green light. Strange magics twisted around his body as he picked up my father up and broke him between his hands like a twig. I stood there dumbfounded as he threw the Great Bear across the room with a strength no mortal man possesses, cackling in a voice like a thousand screams. I felt certain I was next, but before he could turn his attentions to me, he seemed to wilt, and collapsed into his bed-sheets unconscious. I suspect that the Lady Kachiko may have had some hand in this. Whatever the reason, that creature in the Emperor's guise wielded more raw power than I had ever seen before. I had no desire to see what else it could do. Kisada's body had been shattered, but the Great Bear still lived. I gathered him up and fled the palace, ordering out army to retreat and regroup to the south. The Imperial city has been left in the hands of that... thing in the palace.

You may hear rumors that the Great Bear has been killed. Do not believe them for an instant. I have personally seen to it that my father has reached safety and that he will be secure while he recovers. I cannot disclose his location for fear that this message will be intercepted.

Our alliance with the Shadowlands is a sham. They have tried to use us to their own ends and we have paid the price for their treachery. We must now teach them what it truly means to cross the Crab. Purge them from your ranks if you find them, and strike them down wherever they may appear. Do not waste precious resources squabbling with the other Clans, for they can only distract us from the true threat.

And wherever you go, spread the word that the Emperor is not to be trusted. He has been swallowed by something ancient and evil, and if we do not strike back, all of Rokugan will follow him. More than any of the others, we understand the Shadowlands, and are best equipped to destroy their evil. We must act against them now, or there will soon be no Empire left to claim.

Hida Yakamo
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My friends,

On the day of our greatest triumph comes the darkest news this war has yet to bring. First, the news of our victory at Asahina Temple should have reached you by now. We thought it would be our final stand against the army of madmen, but we were wrong. We had prepared the temple against attach, but our commander, Daidoji Uji, knew that we could not stand long. It was then that our Champion returned to us, along with a Dragon samurai and an army of shapeshifting Naga. Together, we stood against the Shadowlands, and on that day, we defeated them utterly.

Before the Shadowlands army's first charge, however, a shugenja from that festering horde called out our commander. Hoturi stepped forward to take the challenge, but the Phoenix samurai-maiden, Tsukune, begged him for the opportunity to face the necromancer. Hoturi permitted her, and the samurai-ko charged down into the open plain and cut down the necromancer with one mighty stroke from her naginata. The Shadowlands army then found themselves under a downpour as the Phoenix shugenja sent a thunderstorm of merciless power over them. The thing that claimed to be Doji Hoturi tried to keep his army together, but he could not. The Naga charged into his ranks, moving faster than any horsemen ever could. Their archers fired arrows into the air, landing only half a moment before the Naga hit the main body of Oni and madmen.

The battle was engaged. Our Lord Hoturi led Daidoji Uji's forces against the personal guard of the False Hoturi. For the first time our Lord faced the thing Kachiko had created and their duel began in the midst of the mighty clash of arms. Hoturi had to fight through three guards before he reached the False One, and their duel was mighty indeed. But in the end, our Lord crushed the false one, removing his head from his body with one single stroke. The army was routed, encircled and burned until it was nothing more than ashes and memories. We were victorious, my friend. We were victorious!

It was then that a lone rider came out from the north, carrying a message for our Lord. I have never seen him before, but I am told that he was the masked ronin who saved Hoturi from the clutched of the Lady Kachiko. Our Lord turned to us and told us the news. The Emperor's soul no longer resides in the Emperor's body. Now, the mortal shell carried the sould of the Dark God that Shinsei and his Seven Thunders banished a thousand years ago: Fu Leng.

Lord Hoturi commanded me to write you as quickly as possible to tell you this news. We need to gather together with all speed and communicate this news to the rest of the Clans. They must know the truth. Open your coffers, my friend and bring to our ranks the ronin of Rokugan. Theirs is a force that has yet to be brought to bear. This is a lesson our Lord has taught us well. Bring ronin to your ranks. We must do more than unite. We must hire any samurai who would join our cause. It is time to use those riches we have built for the last thousand years. Be well, and may the Seven Fortunes be with you.

Doji Kuwanan
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My Brothers, our Champion has returned.

I have been directed by him to tell you of the dark times that have descended on our Empire. You have no doubt heard by now that a new army of Shadowlands creatures walks the land. Commanded by the undead shugenja, Yogo Junzo. What you may not know is that Junzo is connected somehow to another, far darker power - a power which has taken control of the Emperor himself.

The Great Fleet of Hida Kisada struck the Imperial City without warning. The Crab destroyed the Lion army stationed there and occupied the surrounding area, while Kisada and his son Yakomo stormed the palace with the intent of taking the throne. None yet know what occurred there, but scant hours later, the Crab army retreated from the city, scattering to the four winds. Rumor has it that The Great Bear was slain by the Emperor's hand, and that his son has been corrupted to the will of the Shadowlands. Tales of sprung up of the young Hantei weilding magics that the blackest shugenja will not touch, and throwingarmies about like a child's toys. Unfortunately we cannot confirm any of these ravings. None who have entered the Imperial Palace have thus far emerged alive.

As if this were not grim news enough, Junzo's horde had unleashed atrocities upon the Empire that would chill the blood of even the bravest samurai. We have not yet ascertained the exact connection between Junzo and Hantei but it is clear that the two are acting together. Even Yokuni, in his beneficient wisdom, could not have anticipated such darkness. With the Imperial City in shambles and an army of Shadowlands monstrosities walking the lands, we must take steps to ensure that this evil does not engulf us. If Hantei were to acquire the knowledge which we possess, he would be unstoppable.

I have ordered most of our forces back to our mountain strongholds in anticipation of an assault from either Junzo or the Imperial City. If they come for us, they will have to take us in a location of our choosing. Mirumoto Daini has been granted permission to remain with the Naga, while Togashi Mitsu and his legion is tattooed men continues to move with Toturi's rag-tag army. With the Crane victory at the Asahina Temples, perhaps these forces can join together in a common effort against Junzo and his allies.

And Hitomi? Hitomi is lost to us. She treads a path that none of us can follow, and we must abandon her to the destiny she has embraced.

The time has come to hold fast our couse. Hantei has been lost, and we must prepare to defend ourselves against the darkness which claimed him. If we stand strong, and Toturi is truly the man Yokuni claims he is, we may yet survive this night to see the coming of a new day. Courage, Brother.

Mirumoto Sukune
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There are traitors among us, my clansmen.

There are those who would deter us from our duty to the Emperor. Honeyed words and poisoned tongues have tried to cloud our vision and turn us from the path of our ancestors. We must not allow them to succeed.

The mystery of Hida Kisada's whereabouts has been solved. His fleet sailed north from the islands where it cowered, and attempted to take the Imperial City by surprise. You may have heard many wild rumors in these dark times, but I can assure you he did not succeed. Our armies scattered the Crab to the four winds, and the Great Bear himself was slaughtered like a dog as he tried to storm the palace. I personally saw his sone, Yakamo, fleeing the city with Kisada's corpse in his arms.

You have by now heard of the Crane victory at the Asahina temple. Thier pathetic forces will soon try to wreak some measure of revenge for the justice we have dealt out. They must be hunted down and destroyed like the dogs that they are. Some remnants of the Crab army have escaped and may try to regroup. Show them what it means to challenge the will of Heaven. And lest we forget, the traitor Toturi continues to defy us - marching a pitiful band of ronin towards the Imperial Palace in a vain effort to prevent the inevitable. Bring us his head as a gift to the Imperial Throne.

But most importantly, we must locate some sign of our Champion, Matsu Tsuko. She received a letter from the Emperor's wife just before the Crab landed and has since vanished. We need her to help restore order within our ranks, to once more lead the Lion towards our proud destiny. There are those in our ranks who have questioned the Emperor's will. There are Lions who whipser that Hantei has fallen, and that the old ways can no longer be followed. They must be shown the error of thier disloyalty before our enemies can exploit thier weakness. Find Tsuko, my clansmen. Find Tsuko, and we can finally reclaim our sacred place at the Emperor's side.

You know who sits on the Emerald Throne. You have heard his name. Now you must ask yourself a simple question: Shall I serve the Throne, as I have sworn to to, or shall I turn from my duty and betray my ancestors' memory? That is what you must consider. If you betray your duty, you have no right to call yourself a Lion. This is the promise you swore. You did not swear to serve the Throne when it suited you, you swore that you would serve the Emperor or die. Are you men of your word? If you are, then you will follow the Emperor's commands without question. If not, then you are no better than a lying Scorpion.

Do what you must and show the rest of the Clans what it means to be a samurai

Ikoma Ujiaki
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It is over

The time when we placed our pride before the welfare of the empire has passed, and we must now do what is necessary to ensure Rokugan's survival.

The Crab have taken the Imperial City, defeating our army there with a surprise attack from the sea. Our Champion, Matsu Tsuko, was ordered to stand aside while Hida Kisada marched his forces throughout the streets. The Lion forces attempted to fight them, but without Tsuko's leadership and tactical knowledge, they were no match for the Great Bear. He swept us aside and entered the Imperial Palace.

What happened next, I do not know. From what I have heard, Kisada engaged the Emperor in single combat and was slain. How a weak and sickly man could kill the likes of the Great Bear is beyond me, but a few hours later, the Crab army scattered, leaving the city in our hands. Then, we received an announcement from the palace - an announcement delivered by a hideous oni in the guise of Hida Yakamo. We were to take up arms again and march against the Emperor's foes. Joining us in this endeavor would be an army of Shadowlands abominations commanded by Yogo Junzo.

Now comes the time of our most painful choice. We have sworn fealty to the Emperor, whoever it is that sits on the Emerald Throne. We have failed in our duty to protect the Empire, and now we must decide how to serve the Throne: Do we serve the man who sits upon it, or do we fight to place a better man there? The decision is yours. I know it will be a painful decision, but is one that must be made.

You have heard news of the Crane victory at the Asahina Temples, Find them and join them if you can; our feud with the Crane is passed. The Unicorn are said to be holding order in the countryside, slaughtering bandits and destroying shadowlands creatures where they can be found. Help them in thier efforts. And yes, the ronin Toturi is on the march, with an army of samurai in opposition to Yogo Junzo. As painful as it is, we must ally with the traitor for the greater good of the Empire. His strength may be all that is keeping us from eternal darkness. Above all, we must find Matsu Tsuko. With her gone, our Clan is without leadership, and I fear that many will listen to the 'Emperor's' inhuman advisors in her stead.

If these words shock you, it is only because they are the truth. If you cannot swallow your pride, then Rokugan will surely be lost. We must strike against the evil now, or all that we claim to stand for is naught but dust in the wind. The threat is among us, my betheren, and it bears the Emperor's name. If we do not see it for what it is, then we are nothing more than puppets to its will. Let us teach it what it means to decieve a Lion.

Kitsu Motso
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My daughter,

You must have heard terrible news coming from the Imperial City, and feared for my safety. This letter is to assure you that I am well, and have been escorted out of the city by a sympathetic samurai from the Lion clan. I however, am one of the fortunate few. Our fears of the Dark Land have been realized, and the ruler of the human kingdom has been corrupted by the Evil One. He now moves as a puppet under sinister strings.

The clan of the Crane has won a great victory against the Dark Ones with the help of our forces. The human Daini has guided us true, and we arrived in time to help the Crane destroy the army that threatened them with annihilation. Alas, I fear that this victory is not enough to stem the tide. Now word comes that a second Shadowlands army, this one led by an undead human sorcerer, is stalking the land. Stories of the horrors they have inflicted upon the human lands are enough to chill the blood.

But the worst, my daughter, is yet to come. The Imperial City has fallen from within by an Evil as old as time. A fleet of ships from the Clan Crab launched a surprise attack, and human defenders of the city fell before them. The lord of the Crab entered the Imperial Palace, with the intent of seizing the throne. The Emperor crushed the life from his body and shattered his forces like a toy. Our people were forced to flee the city and have tried to regroup with our remaining forces in the Crane lands.

The humans have learned that the Evil we fight is greater than all of us. Only now do they turn from their petty bickering to face the darkness rising from the west. Alas, I fear it has come too late. They fumble around like a newborn fresh from its egg, lost and confused in the face of their folly. Only Toturi seems immune to their panic. He leads his army towards the fallen capital with a force and a will I could not have imagined before now. We must do all we can to support him, for I fear he is our last hope.

I do not know if you have felt it or not, beloved, but our people have of late become distracted by a strange fog in our minds. It is not unlike the Great Sleep of a thousand years ago, but has subtle differences I have not felt before. The cycle is coming to a close, my child, and I believe our time in the world is slowly fading. We must do all we can to see that the next Rebirth delivers a world of hope, instead of the terrifying Evil that I fear is now to strong to be defeated.

Dashmar
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We have a solution after long months of study and the sacrifice of far more than any would ask of us. We have found a way to defeat the Shadowlands. But that news must wait.

By now you know of the great victory of the Crane forces against the Shadowlands army at the Asahina Temples. Doji Hoturi met his doppelgŠnger on the field of battle and took his head, while a combination of Crane samurai and Naga troops shattered the power of his slavering madmen. Shiba Tsukune acquitted herself well in the battle, defeating an unholy necromancer in single combat while all looked on.

This victory, however, has been overshadowed by an even greater threat. A second Shadowlands army has emerged from the west, this one even larger and more terrifying than the first. They destroy without mercy, crushing everything in their path, and their troops do not bear even the semblance of humanity. To make matters worse, we have lost all contact with the Imperial City, just as an army of Crab troops arrived to lay claim to the throne. Rumors about that the Great Bear, Hida Kisada, has been killed and that the Emperor himself has been claimed by an evil spirit whose power is scarcely imaginable. This self-same darkness continues to extend its grip over our shugenja, taking one after the other as if toying with us. The Master of Fire, Isawa Tsuke, has now fallen prey to the siren call of the Black Scrolls, embracing their evil in order to better understand it. He has conjured the flames of hate and anger from his soul to create terrifying torrents of flame, and now roams far and wide across Rokugan to destroy the forces of the Shadowlands wherever he may find them. I do not know how long he can last before his power overwhelms him.

But as I said earlier, there is hope. Last night, Isawa Tadaka came to me with a proposal. In the blackest hours before the dawn, we gathered at the highest tower of the Temple and committed an unspeakable rite. I dare not describe the particulars of it to you, but suffice to say we were able to wrest a powerful oni from its den within the Shadowlands and bind it to our will. Tadaka gave the creature his own name, sacrificing all he has and is to enslave the creature thoroughly. Our shugenja can now draw upon its strength to assist us in our struggles, and tadaka assures me that the beast can tell us what has happened in the Imperial City, and who or what now sits on the throne.

We have seen the darkness rise to engulf our fair land. We have sacrificed our lives and souls and understand its mysteries. But I believe we have gained the power to stem the tide. We have paid the price for our questions, and it is time to see if the answers are enough to save us. Pray for the salvation of Rokugan, my friend. And pray that the Phoenix can rise from the ashes of this long night to the dawning of a new day.

Asako Yasu
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He is dead! What can I do? He is dead. He is dead...

No time. All is lost. He is dead! The great Bear is dead! I saw it with my own eyes! The blood and his scream and his eyes as he looked at me - reached out to me for help. But I could offer him nothing. I ran. Bishamon help me. I ran for my life. Even now I am in my private chamber. Hiding in the secret room I found when I first arrived. Writing as quickly as I can before the fear devours my reason.

My hand is calming. My scrawling mad notes are slowly forming into words and sentences. I must tell you as much as I can before the panic fills me once again.

Hida Kisada is dead. Do not believe otherwise. I saw it with my own eyes. In the throne room. I stood vigil while I waited for him to arrive so our plan of vengeance would be complete. The empty Emerald Throne would soon be filled with the Great Bear of the Crab Clan: a tired old man who would be easy to persuade. But it was not to be. For while I waited, a thin shadowy form stepped into the room and smiled at me with eyes of fire. I recognized the lips, the brow, all his features, but those damnable eys. It was the brat Emperor, up from his bed and walking! And his eyes burned with green fire that was older than his years, older than... older than...

Kisada strode in, covered in the blood of courageous Lions, expecting me and the throne. What he found was... was... oh. I cannot! The brutal battle that ensued... Kisada, he... the blood. The throne. The sword. I saw Yakamo carrying the bloodied corpse, running for his life.

Running... yes. Run! Run now! Flee to the lands north where the Unicorn have traveled. There is a desert there. A long, sweeping desert with barbarian nomads who may take you in. There is nothing left. All is lost. Do not let anyone see you. Use the old ways, my beloved. Even now, a shadow spreads across the capital. Something ancient has awakened here. I must remain behind, but I will not allow you to do so. I care not for Yokuni's talk of 'destiny' and 'duty,' but he is right. I have chosen this path. But I will not force any others to join me in my fate. Run. And may the Seven Fortunes follow you.

Go now.

Bayushi Kachiko
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Now, more than ever, we have been cut off from the rest of the Empire. Our armies who move inland have told us the other Clans have retreated to their lands and seem to be waiting. None will speak to us. Communication from the Imperial Palace has ceased. The Lady Kachiko, once our most trusted advisor, has disappeared. My friend, we are alone.

But this is nothing new to us. We who have wandered for generations in the vast wasteland to the north and west of Rokugan. We will survive as we have always survived: with our speed and with out wits.

I can tell you nothing of the news of the Empire. I can only tell you rumors. It is said that the Crab Kisada attempted to slay the Emperor and was himself slain in the attempt. We also know the Crane have won a victory against the Shadowlands army led by their traitor Champion. The snake Hoturi has been laid to rest, his body burned and his army destroyed, and we must celebrate with them now that they have seen the error of their ways in following such a man.

Shinjo Yasamura, in the meantime, has left behind Beiden Pass. He has a more pressing dury, a duty that they other clans seem to have forgotten. When we swore our fealty to the Emperor and became his "Samurai", we swore we would be the keepers of justice in Rokugan. Now, with all the samurai of the land engaged in this selfish battle for the throne, injustice runs rampant throughout the Empire. Bandits - peasant and ronin, human and shadowlands - run rampant through the villages, taking what they need and leaving behind only bloodshed and suffering. Others who should be performing this duty continue to be drawn further into this bloody conflict for the throne, leaving the people of Rokugan to die at the hands of criminals and oni.

We have seen this before. We shall see it no more.

Forget this foolish quest for the throne. Forget the fighting between selfish men and return to the duty we swore we would perform. Find those preying upon our green land, seek out the evil men and unholy creatures who would massacre helpless peasants, and destroy them. Teach them that there is still law in Rokugan. Protect those who cannot protect themselves, and assist them in rebuilding what they have lost. It is the people of Rokugan that will keep the soul of this nation alive. If we protect them from the folly of their would-be rulers and end the depredations against their homes and persons, then this nation will survive to see the dawning of a new day. This is our duty. This is our destiny. And we are the only ones who can perform it.

Otaku Kamoko
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My cousin,

There is little left to say and too much to do.

Our armies have finally arrived at Otosan Uchi. Even now I can look up from my writing and see Doji Hoturi, Kitsu Motso and Hida Yakamo preparing for their initial assault. Yokatsu-sama stands south of us, preparing our infantry.

I have seen the armies os the Ronin and not even their motley colors can compare with viewing our infantry for the first time. They are simple farmers armed with farming tools. Two monks stand with Yokatsu. Together, they have turned this mass of simple farmers with simple tools into an army of fighting men.

Our cavalry, on the other hand, is as ready as always. My battle-maidens prepare with deep meditations. Soon, we will ride, and our steeds will be like fire as we charge down into the mass of marching dead men.

I will answer you question for I know it is in your mind. My wound is doing well. The spear-tip was removed by a Phoenix shugenja named Tadaka. He has much knowledge of the Shadowlands and it's dark magic. The wound festered for only a short while. His spells cured me well. Moto Tsume and his brother will haunt the villages of our followers no longer.

Togashi Yokuni came to me last evening just after our armies arrived. I told him I did not believe any Unicorn had ever spoken to him before. He laughed under his masked helm, then lifted his hands and removed it.

"No," he said to me, "but I have spoken to a Ki-rin."

When I saw what lay under his helm, I knew his words were true. I cannot tell you what happened then, but I can tell you that my destiny is clear to me now, as is the destiny of all our clan.

A time of great trouble is almost over, but a time of greater trouble lies on the horizon. All depends on our actions. The fate of the Empire. The fate of all men and women. It is a burden I must bear, but I do not know if I am worthy to carry it.

When I told Yokuni that, he smiled and touched my shoulder.

"If you were not worthy, you would not have been chosen," he said to me.

Not I sit alone, waiting for the battle.

I watch as the others set their souls to rest, peaceful as the falling cherry blossoms.

I think of the coming battle, and all I can do is remember Yokuni's words.

"... you would not have been chosen." May the Fortunes forgive me, but I wish it was another.

Kamoko
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My friend, you must take care. There are dark forces moving in the empire. Darker than ever before. The Shadowlands army we fought against at Beiden Pass is nothing compared to the might of the army led by the insane Scorpion Shugenja, Yogo Junzo. It has crushed villages and homesteads all across Rokugan, and now, it moves with steady speed toward the home of our Emperor.

As I said, it moves toward the home of our Emperor. The last Hantei no longer resides in the palace of his ancestors. The soul of the last Hantei no longer resides in the body that Lady Kachiko has poisoned for the last year. That soul is no more. An ancient evil now resides in his body, an evil whose name I dare not speak lest I draw his attention to the men who follow me. It is the same evil that was banished a thousand years ago by Shinsei and his seven thunders. The same evil whose essence was trapped in twelve scrolls that were never to be opened again. Now they have been opened, and he has escaped into the weakened body of our emperor. All is lost. There will never again be a Hantei. The line to the Sun Goddess is broken and Rokugan must stand alone against the greatest evil Heaven and Earth has ever known.

Far to the East, the Crane clan has achieved a victory against the deceiver Hoturi with the aid of the Naga and the Phoenix. In the light of the news from the palace, it is a small victory, but it is one we must look to for inspiration. Binding together, they defeated the Shadowlands army. We must do the same. Only together will we be able to stand against the awful power the dark one can muster. Spread the word to all you see. Tell them to abandon this foolish quest for a throne that no longer exists and band together in the face of a common enemy. If we do not, I fear that Rokugan is doomed.

And yes, I have heard the rumors regarding my sensei, Kage-sama. I cannot believe such rumors. They must come from the Scorpion in the palace. I have known Akodo Kage for all my life, and I assure you, he would never betray us to the Scorpion Lady. Trust me in this my friend. If you have never trusted me in any other matter, trust me in this one.

This may be the last time I speak to you. As I write this, we are preparing to ride against Yogo Junzo's army, in the hopes that we can cut him off before he reaches the imperial city. If I fall to his forces, you must carry on in my stead. This is a harsh duty I place upon your shoulders, but I know that you are worthy of it. Take courage in these dark days, for courage it seems, is all we have left.

Toturi

THE TOMB OF WU YEH

The Tomb Of Wu Yeh

The road stretched out before the creaking wagon like a ribbon, weaving its way through the hills to the ocean. Taka let his oxen's reins hang loose, knowing they would find the right path as easily as he. Smiling a broad, covetous smile, he sat with his latest treasure in his hands. He studied the fine lines of the iron pot, determining within a fraction of a koku the rich price he could surely make from selling it. Traveling across the lands as a merchant was a hard life, but for Taka, nothing was more rewarding. And as long as the reward was in golden koku, Yasuki Taka would follow the roads of Rokugan.
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As the wagon swayed over the crest of the hill, the road began to plunge into a thin valley. The oxen walked more slowly through the blind curves, their sure feet finding purchase in the dirt and sod of the path. Suddenly, with a sharp jerk, the cart stopped and Taka was sent sprawling backwards into a heap of beautiful silken kimonos with a loud "Ooof!" Cursing under his breath, he clambered up from beneath the pile, pushing his straw hat over the back of his head. "Kisa! Moto!" he looked at his usually steady oxen, who were shuffling uneasily in their braces. Scrabbling up over the seat, he said angrily, "What do you think you're..." then his eyes darted to the clearing ahead, and his voice faded.

Lying in the dust of the road were four dead men, each wearing the insignia of the Unicorn house. The sun glinted dully from the dark blood that stained their rich purple tabards, and one of the dead samurai still had his sword clutched in his fist as if ready to battle again the foe that had slain him. Around his lifeless eyes the flies swarmed thickly, unafraid. "Wretched bandits." Taka thought out loud, staring at the corpses. After a moment of quick calculation, he carefully climbed down from the seat of his wagon. Glancing around nervously and rubbing his hands together, Taka crept toward the bodies. As he approached them, he noted the marks of vicious combat - smashed armor, pools of drying blood in the dirt, and the ruined mon of their house crushed into the bushes nearby. "I'll just check them, you see...," he said to no one in particular. "They may be still alive..." His eyes roamed over the four bodies, taking in the shining daggers at their belts. Stooping down, concern creasing his tanned forehead, he searched the dead men. Taking their purses and bright weapons, he sighed in elaborate regret. "You poor men," he lamented as he stripped them of their valuables. "If only I knew where you had come from, I might return all your wealth," he checked the weight of one purse as he cut it from its former owner's belt, and corrected himself, "Your scant wealth, that is, to your families." Ignoring the rich purple mon blazoned on their gi, Taka began to rise, but then his roguish brown eye was caught by something to one side of the road. "Oh dear," he murmured, "another poor victim." He pushed aside the bushes as he reached the path's edge.

Looking down at a thin trail of blood which led beneath a larger bush, Taka took a hesitant step forward. At the end of the trail lay a tiny booted foot. His eyes slowly traveled up the rather shapely female leg, past the finely sculptured knee, above the muscular thigh, to the hem of a short forest-green kimono. There, at the top of the leg, he saw the most beautiful thing in all the world. He released his breath in a joyful hiss as his eyes caressed the dangling leather purse, its seams nearly bursting with gold. Eagerly, he reached out to grasp it from the dead woman's body, murmuring in the proper tone of regret, "What a tragic thing... even the women were killed." Then, as his hand grasped the magnificent pouch, the dead body moved as swiftly as a striking snake, and a sharp knife was thrust against his throat.

"Wrong, trader-man." The woman hissed, her face inches from his. Although her jet-black hair clung to her shoulders and face, Taka's quick eye saw her wince in pain as she moved. Holding her dagger against his neck, the strange woman climbed unsteadily to her feet, pulling Taka with her. Taka noted the blood-soaked kimono that clung to her muscular torso, and heard her slight sharp intake of breath as she stood and pressed the knife against him.

"My dear lady..." Taka began, his voice trembling only slightly, "You seem to have been injured. I was just..." His hands fluttered uselessly in the air between them, as if he was trying to ward off an evil spirit.

"Shut up. Get in the wagon." She shoved him roughly, keeping her dagger pointed at his neck. "Don't try anything, trader-man," she said bitingly, "I'm not hurt so badly that I can't kill you."

As Taka backed hesitantly toward the wagon, he searched his memory, trying to determine where he had seen her sharp-featured face before. Something in the narrow, shifting brown eyes and her long, aquiline nose was strangely familiar. But, then, he had traveled many roads, to many places, and seen most of Rokugan. He sighed dramatically as she pulled herself into the back of the cart. "Drive." Her voice barked the word like an Imperial command.

He picked up the reins, feeling again the sharp poke of the knife in his back. "So, my dear," Taka began, "Where are we going?" He steered carefully around the dead bodies, as the oxen snorted and shied.

"South. Toward the great swamps. Just take the left-hand road ahead, and keep quiet." She withdrew the knife, and Taka winced in genuine pain as he heard her tearing his fine new silks into a bandage. At nearly seventy koku a yard, that bandage probably cost enough to buy the services of ten healers. He slapped the reins wearily against the oxen, and the cart lurched forward on its new journey.

They rode in silence after that, disturbed only by the rhythmic clop of hooves and the creak of the wagon. As the night drew near, Taka ventured, "It's getting late, and my oxen are tired. We need to stop soon." No reply sounded from the dark wagon behind him and he sighed melodramatically. Strangely enough, he thought, there had been no noise of a search. His carefully hidden koku were still safe, and the woman had not destroyed any of his prized wares... except the silks. He winced again at the memory. As he pulled the wagon to a halt, he heard her say sharply, "I didn't say we could stop." He climbed out of the seat and began to unhitch the oxen, who licked at his hands in gratitude and companionship.

"I'm sorry. Kisa and Moto can go no further tonight. They are tired. If you must continue, feel free to walk." Taka tried not to let his hands shake as he waited for the knife to sink into his back, but there was no further response. "It seems we are at an impasse. You need the wagon to get to the swamps, and I refuse to abandon my rather expensive wares." Getting supplies from a compartment beneath the driver's seat, Taka fed the oxen some sweet grain and honey and began to clean their hides with a stiff brush. "Shall we at least try to be civil to one another?" As he spoke, the woman lowered herself from the high wagon. She had taken one of the finer silks, Taka noticed mournfully, and had wrapped it about her waist to staunch the bleeding. As she landed, she let out a cry of pain and collapsed to the ground. Taka rushed to her side, "By all the thunders!" he exclaimed. "You're more wounded than I thought. We must get you to a chiurgeon."

"No!" Her sharp retort echoed in the falling dusk. She lowered her voice, reaching for the knife in her sash. "No," she repeated, clutching at its hilt for reassurance. "We are going to the Tomb of Yu Weh. You will take me there." She pulled herself to her feet, using the wagon's wheel as a support, and her hand fell on a package within the cart. "All right, all right," Taka said hastily, stepping back, "we'll go to the cave. Just don't... don't break anything." Anxiously, his eyes darted back and forth from her knife to the delicate china plates stacked in a soft leather bag under her hand. He caught his breath as he estimated the purchase value of her buttress point, trying not to let the pain he felt in his wallet show in his eyes.

"When you have taken me to the cave, merchant, then you can continue on your way." Taka nodded in relief as she removed her hand from the plates. "Until then, you can call me Tantoko."

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The next morning, Taka arose early, as was his tradition. Tantoko was sleeping, he noticed, in the pile of silks in the back of his wagon. Trying to avoid the pain of calculating the cost of such a bed, he studied her face as she slept. It still seemed familiar to him, and it annoyed him that he could not place it. Suddenly, she began to rouse, and he swiftly went back to hitching the oxen. "So, Tantoko," he began, trying to force some joviality into his voice, "Why are you going to this cave?" "Because I was told to go." She sat up amid the silken pile and pulled her hair away from her face, twisting it into a long silken rope. Her eyes remained fixed on his face impassively. For a moment, Taka felt like a bird under the gaze of a greensnake, and he shook his head to clear his thoughts.

"Can you give me just one straight answer?"

Tantoko stared at him from the wagon, and her dark brown eyes were unreadable pools of thought. "Very well." she said after some hesitation. "The Tomb of Yu Weh is a place of great riches, where a bandit, an ancient ronin formerly of the Scorpion clan, kept his finest treasures. Within the cave is a magnificent goblet, made entirely of the purest jade. Its powers of healing are said to be so great that any disease can be cured simply by drinking from the cup."

For a moment, Taka's brain refused to comprehend the sheer monetary value of such an item, but he quickly regained control of himself. "Where did you hear of this cave?" he breathed in wonder.

"That does not matter. What matters is that I find it, and that I bring the goblet back." She leaned forward, "Nothing else matters at all." Then her eyes closed as a sudden pain lanced through her wound. After the spasm had passed, Tantoko looked intently at Taka. "You must help me. I am growing weaker each day, and I may not be able to complete my mission. If you cooperate, you can have all the other riches of the cave. All I am interested in is the goblet."

"Riches?" Taka thought to himself. "Enough gold to buy a hundred wagons, and a thousand silks. If she is telling the truth, what a wonder this cave must be!" Taka nodded, and said aloud, "Obviously, this goblet would be a great asset to the Empire. How brave a mission! I could not honorably refuse your request, of course." His mouth rambled the words as his thoughts whirled in bursts of golden koku.
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For two days they rode toward the dark southern swamps on trails Taka had never seen before. Weaving through the mire at the edge of a great swamp, Tantoko called out directions unerringly, leading them away from quicksand and other dangers, until they stopped in a small grove within the wooded swamp. "We must leave the cart here," said Tantoko quietly to Taka. In the silence of the marsh, even her quiet whisper echoed loudly. Uncomfortable, Taka nodded and they climbed down from the sheltering wagon. The oxen shifted uneasily, and turned frightened eyes toward Taka as he helped Tantoko from the high seat.

"Which way is the Tomb?" hissed Taka, unwilling to break the heavy silence. Tantoko pointed at a small path to one side of the clearing, and leaned against the merchant. Keeping her arm wrapped tightly around his shoulder, he helped her across the clearing and down the thin forest trail.

For some time, they walked through the marsh together, and Taka was uncomfortably aware of Tantoko's lithe body pressed against his. He swallowed, and tried not to notice how pleasant she felt. "She's dangerous, Taka. There's absolutely no profit in it," he thought, reminding himself of his daydreams in which a rich Doji princess flung herself at him. Tantoko's hair, long and soft, brushed his cheek, and he shivered. "Keep your mind on the koku," he thought, and quickly buried his mind in the task of estimating the total purchase cost of the Ancestral Armor of the Crab Clan. Ahead, the forest grew darker, and a strange cold chilled Taka to the bone. Unconsciously, he pulled Tantoko closer. "Is that the cave?" he whispered, and his breath hung in pale strands on the cold afternoon air. Tantoko nodded, squinting through the trees.

As they approached the cave, Tantoko suddenly dropped to her knees, pulling Taka down beside her. Writhing forward under some covering brush, Tantoko squinted at the cave's dark mouth. Taka crawled toward her, despairing of ever getting his pants clean again, and pushed his way tentatively into the bush. After a few moments of watching her regard the cave with great intensity, Taka whispered "What is it?"

Tantoko clamped her hand over his mouth, a snarl corrupting her even features. Then, placing her mouth beside his ear, she whispered, "Do you see that thin beam of light within the cave?" Taka nodded, mutely, trying not to notice how pleasantly warm her breath was beside his face. The beam, a thin shaft of sunlight, pierced the darkness of the cave but was swallowed just beyond the opening. "Just behind that beam, there's movement... if you look carefully, you can see it." she whispered.

He squinted at the light, and tried to peer through the darkness of the cave. Then, just as he had given up, he saw a faint ghostly sheen within the cave, as if an ethereal helmet floated there.

"GMMM!" Taka hissed behind Tantoko's hand, bucking upright. She yanked him down swiftly, hiding behind the protective cover. He stared at her, terrified, and said more quietly, "Gmmm!" She nodded grimly, keeping her hand over his mouth. "A shadow-samurai." She peered toward the cave again.

Take pulled her hand from his mouth and hissed, "A shadow samurai?" He shook an agitated finger toward the opening. "We can't possibly get past that! That's a Shadowlands fre..." Her fingers tightened around his chin, and clamped his mouth shut again. She nodded.

"I may have been able to best it, before, but now... we must seek other ways." Tantoko stared into the gloom of the cave again, and said, "Shadow samurai are but ghosts of dead men, brought back to life by powerful magic." Releasing his face at last, Tantoko began to move backwards, out of the underbrush and away from the cave.

"Powerful... magic?" Taka's voice came out in a tiny squeak as he stared at the cave, appalled. "That means..." He tore his gaze away from the cave to gaze, glassy-eyed, at Tantoko. "Shugenja!" He backed out of the underbrush with all the speed he could muster. Once they were back at the clearing, Taka helped Tantoko lean against the wagon. "You never said anything about shugenja," Taka rushed, "I never agreed to deal with shugenja!"

Tantoko looked appraisingly at Taka, pressing her hand against her bandaged abdomen. "That's because I didn't know there was one here." She stared at Taka thoughtfully. "Don't be so worried, Taka. I can handle a shugenja." Taka started to sigh in relief when she continued, "It's the shadow samurai that concerns me." Taka slumped against the cart, his head in his hands, and moaned softly.

That evening, when the sun had left the sky, Tantoko and Taka once again were watching the cave, hiding in the shadows beneath the low brush. "How long are we going to wait?" Taka hissed, trying not to sneeze at the earthy smell of bugs and brush. "The shugenja has to be nearby. I'll bet he can't leave that shadow-samurai alone too long. The taint of the shadows makes that kind of guardian very unpredictable." Taka glanced uneasily at Tantoko, wondering how she knew so much about such things, when suddenly his attention was arrested by a faint scuffling in the brush on the far side of the clearing. As he watched, fearfully, a dark figure stepped out of the shadows and raised its hands toward the cave.

"That's him?" Taka said breathlessly, and Tantoko nodded silently, her movements almost invisible in the darkening twilight.

From the depths of the cave, a silent glowing figure came at the beckoning of the shugenja, kneeling at his master's side. After it had made a mild supplication, the shugenja walked past the ghostly samurai, and vanished into the cave. "All I need..." murmured Tantoko, "is one good shot." Tantoko pulled a thin, reedlike bow from her long kimono sleeve. She strung the tiny han-kyu, pulling a needle from a wooden box in her pouch and attaching it to a slender arrow shaft. Taka swallowed his objections with a whine as he saw movement at the cave's mouth.

"You can't possibly get a clear shot," Taka moaned despairingly, "that shadowlands fiend is between you and the shugenja!" Tantoko ignored him, and took careful aim with her assassin's bow.

As the shugenja passed them, a soft twang and a thunk rang in Taka's ears, and he saw the arrow lodge itself in the wizard's throat.

The wizard fell, choking, his body twisting slowly toward the bush. He clutched at the shaft protruding from his windpipe, a bloody bubble forming between his soundless lips. As he sank to his knees, he pointed an unsteady hand toward the bush, his eyes locking with Taka's. Taka froze, terrified, watching the ghastly samurai spin and unsheathe a gleaming sword that did not look at all ethereal. Although the shugenja fell lifeless and bleeding, his follower began to stride toward them with murderous purpose.

"Tantoko...!" Taka howled and flung himself backwards, scrabbling along the ground with the desperation of a rabbit who sees the wolf approaching. Tantoko drew her dagger in an instant, flinging it at the approaching specter with deadly aim. The deadly knife whirled through the air, blade gleaming in the moonlight, and sped into the face of the shadow samurai.

It bounced twice when it hit the ground on the far side of the clearing. Tantoko's lips pressed tightly together, as she considered her next action in the scant seconds before the shadow samurai arrived. Then, her movements sure and precise, she leapt into the clearing. Taka froze, staring numbly at the injured girl as she took a martial stance. "What are you doing?" He yelled as the samurai turned to face her. "You can't even touch him!"

As the wraith swung, Tantoko leapt in the air above the blade. "Run, trader man!" She said through teeth clenched in pain. "We can't both get out of here. I'll keep him busy." The samurai feinted, trying to draw Tantoko toward him, but she bounded back, clutching at her wounded side. "I'm too wounded to outrun him, and you can't carry me fast enough," she yelled, sidestepping the wicked blade again. "GO!"

Taka paused for a moment, unsure, but then scrambled to his feet, pushing his way out of the bush. The brush tugged at his pants and scratched his face as he tried to run. Then, a thick log embedded in the mire made his feet fumble and he fell, his breath gasping as the wind flew from his lungs. For a moment he stared at the log glassily. Looking behind him at the clearing, he saw the undead spirit swing at Tantoko again as she nimbly ducked beneath the blade. Her hands whirled uselessly in the air where the transparent specter stood, unable to make contact with anything solid. The samurai swung a third time, slicing into Tantoko's arm above the elbow. She staggered backwards, gripping her wound, and the specter seemed to grin with horrible glee. "Taka!" she screamed again, her voice resolute, "Run, you fool!" But Taka stared at the log that had tripped him, a wild idea blossoming in his fear-filled head. Stumbling to his feet, he picked up the log in both hands, barely lifting it off the ground. Turning toward the clearing, he staggered toward the battling pair, half-dragging, half-wielding the rotted log. The shadow samurai swung again at Tantoko, slamming the hilt of his katana against her cheek, and knocking her reeling to the ground at his feet.

"You honorless dog!" howled Taka from the clearing's edge. "Come and fight me!" The shadow samurai turned slowly away from the stunned Tantoko, focusing its empty gaze on the merchant. "That's it!" Taka yelled again, waving the log in front of him, "Ya! Ya! You aren't much of a warrior!" He shouted insultingly, "Look at you! You fight like a Crane!"

Whether the Shadowlands creature was insulted or not, it strode swiftly toward Taka with its sword upraised. Tantoko looked toward them, gasping for breath, and pulled herself to her feet. "Taka... no..." she murmured, dragging herself to her feet. But Taka swung his log at the ghost with a wild, launching swing. Smiling through its ghastly teeth, the samurai easily parried the log. As it did, the katana sunk into the rotten log, its gleaming blade buried in the wood. Losing its fetid smile, the shade yanked at the blade, preparing to jerk it free from the log in order to cleave Taka in two, when suddenly Tantoko was there.

Grabbing the end of the thick log, Tantoko gave it a swift spin, jerking the log and the ethereal katana momentarily free of the control of the spectre. As she did, the shade lurched toward her, impaling itself on the blade of its own sword. A fearsome howl ripped from its lips as the katana sank into its chest. Tantoko held the ends of the log, pushing forward and driving the katana farther into the spirit's heart. As the spectral samurai screamed in rage and frustration, a bright light leaped out of its eyes and mouth, dancing toward the starry sky. When the light vanished, the body of the ghost turned to dust and scattered upon the ground.

Tantoko sank to her knees, gripping her newly wounded shoulder, and hissed, "You could have left, trader-man." Her eyes sought his in anger and confusion, "You would have escaped."

"No, I couldn't." Taka said, tearing his pant cuffs into shreds to bind her arm. "You would've died." He looked into her dark eyes as he finished the bandage, and an unspoken thought passed between them. For a moment they froze, the trader and the ninja, silent in the aftermath of the battle.

"It doesn't matter." She said weakly, tearing her eyes from his. "I'm dead anyway." She held her stomach with her unwounded arm. I've torn open the other wound again. I think I'm bleeding from the inside."

Taka's face went white. "What can I do? How can I help?" His hands fluttered about the larger bandage, but she knocked them away. "I'm not going to leave you, Tantoko. You risked your life for me."

Tantoko grunted uncomfortably, as if Taka had reminded her of some breach of etiquette. She turned her attention to her wounds, pain showing in her every movement. "There's not much you can do, trader-man. Just get out of here. The swamp is too dangerous for you to stay, especially now. I'll bet..." she winced, "that shugenja had friends."

"The goblet." Taka said suddenly. "Could that heal you?"

Tantoko winced again, and her lips curled into a snarl. "Don't waste your time, Taka. You'll never get in and out of that cave alive." Quietly ignoring her advice, Taka stood resolutely and began to head for the cave. "Taka!" Tantoko shouted at him, but his bandy legs were carrying him toward the cavern's mouth. She stared at his back as he vanished into the darkness of the cave. "Crazy man," she muttered fiercely. "You'll only accomplish both our deaths." The silence of the marsh was all that answered her, and she completely ignored the tiny tear that vanished into her thick black hair.

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The cave was dark and stank of fetid waste. Taka crept along the cavernous wall, his hands finding the way where his eyes failed in the darkness. Thick, sticky strands of web clung to his fingers and palms, coating them and making his hands slip against the cold wall. The walls of the cave were covered in the thick, viscous stuff and layers of it were strung across the passage like a gigantic web. Taka grimaced, trying to scrape the substance off his hands on the rock. "Filthy place..." he murmured, "What idiot would ever keep a treasure in a disgusting cave like this?" He moved ahead into the cavern although his eyes could barely make out the passage before him. He winced as his hands touched the sticky walls.

Peering ahead and moving cautiously, Taka began to make out a faint, phosphorescent light ahead, and he moved toward it. "Light!" He thought, "Perhaps there's someone in this cave after all... someone I can bargain with, perhaps? Oh, kami of koku, don't let it be another of those Shadowlands freaks...."

Perhaps the kami wasn't listening, or perhaps Taka was behind in his payments, for when the cave widened and the light allowed, Taka found himself looking into a nightmare. The webbing that had so thickly coated the walls now stretched across a massive chasm in layers stickier and more complex than any monetary deal he had ever created. Taka's breath hissed out and he clutched at the wall, looking down into the massive pit below, lit by the faint greenly glowing moss that clung to the walls. "Oh, kami! Oh, my father's beard!" Taka whispered.

He reached out to touch the clinging strands, and they shivered into the distance from his fingertip's light brush. The web was a blanket that covered the ceiling, swaying in thin tendrils over a terrifying drop into darkness. He let his foot hover over a thicker strand of webbing and pressed lightly against it to see if it would hold his weight. A huge segment of the web shivered from the touch, but it held. Taka groaned aloud. "No, no... I'm not supposed to cross this, am I? Oh, no no no..." He backed from the web into the cave mouth again. "Not all the koku in the world, not all the fine silks or rich items can make me go into that!" He stopped well back from it, looking back at the chasm, and crossed his arms. "I simply refuse," he said into the soundless cavern. The darkness held its breath, pregnant and expectant. "Do you hear me, I refuse!" The silence continued to wait patiently, and Taka looked back over his shoulder at the faraway entrance. After a few moments, he muttered to the gloom, "She can't be worth all the koku in the world," but the silence hovered around him in silent disapproval. Finally Taka threw his hands up and cursed under his breath, reaching for a thick strand of the webbing and pulling himself tentatively out over the chasm. The web shivered and writhed beneath his fingers like a living creature as Taka crawled across the thickest strand he could reach. He hung on the cable, swaying dangerously above the pit and muttering prayers into the darkness with a thick tongue. Over each inch of forward progress, Taka clutched at his purse to see if it had fallen from his belt. "Oh, kami...oh," he winced, "... this is the most foolish thing I've ever done. Gentle kami, get me out of this mess and I swear I'll never overcharge Kisada-sama again..." Suddenly, his muttered prayers halted. The web beneath him had moved... but he had not.

Frozen in place, Taka looked up above him with wide eyes. A tremendous spider, apparently the denizen of the place, had stepped out from a crack in the ceiling, and was looking down at him. But worse, far worse than the venom on its fangs or the uncanny agility with which it navigated the webbing was the dark intelligence in its eyes. Taka's mouth started to open in a shrill scream, but the silence muffled him, and he was unable to make a sound. In his mind, a seductive voice rose from the ashes of his courage.

"Kumo..." It whispered into the depths of his thoughts, and its voice was rich and gentle. "I am Kumo... the spider spirit... You resist from fear." The spider moved, and its movements were a dance over the silken strands. "There is nothing to fear..." Its voice resounded deep within Taka's mind, and he felt his body begin to relax. "Do not resist... all you need do now is sleep. Rest so quietly...." The spider began to move across the massive web gently, its swift steps graceful where Taka's movements had been clumsy and encumbered by the clinging strands. "There is nothing left for you in this world... let me move you to a place of peace." Its mental suggestions were gentle and difficult to ignore, and Taka felt his eyelids lowering. "Sleep,... yes. Gentle sleep now. Kumo will show you the way."
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"Sleep..." thought Taka, his mind wandering the halls of thought and finding nothing of interest. "I haven't slept in a while. You're absolutely right, Kumo." He started to relax, and the spider crept forward, its fangs extended. As he relaxed, Taka felt his leg slip from the cable, dangling down toward the chasm. In his somnambulent state, he watched the drop sway pleasantly under him. Kumo lashed out then, poison glistening, but Taka's sudden shift caused the spider spirit to miss. Its lunging fangs tore into the pouch at the man's hip instead of biting deeply into Taka'a side. Taka watched the commotion through a peaceful haze, hardly realizing as golden koku spilled over his leg and vanished into the darkness below. "Koku...?" murmured Taka dreamily as he watched the coins shower into the chasm. Then, with sudden realization, his eyes flashed open. "Koku!" He reached out desperately to catch his coins, but only succeeded in tilting wildly on the cable as the giant spider hissed in frustration above him. "What?' Taka murmured, feeling the web sway under him and catching himself as he began to fall. He yelped in terror as he hung from the cable with one hand, the spider's evil spell broken. Confused, unable to scream or pray to his cherished kami, the trader looked up from the pit at the Shadowlands creature. Kumo's multifaceted eyes glistened, malevolent and hungry, only inches from his own. Then, as Kumo's mouth opened again in a hiss of fury, Taka found his missing scream. Hanging above a dark chasm hundreds of feet above the ground, Taka shrieked at the top of his lungs. Kumo hissed again and lunged toward him eagerly. "You cannot escape me this time!" It hissed hungrily. Taka swung out over the ravine, howling as he dangled helplessly far from either side of the massive pit. Faced with the spider spirit above him and his koku vanishing below, Taka's choice was easy. He let go.

The plunge was long, hundreds of minutes by Taka's standards, and the screaming hiss of the spider echoed in the fading light above his head. Taka yelped and tried to fumble in the darkness for his falling coins as he felt the wind rushing by him. Then - cold water immersed him, and he felt himself being swept along by a powerful current. Splashing and spluttering, Taka fought against the river's chill pull, desperately clutching at the walls of the river, finding sharp rocks and pulling himself back up to the air above. Taka gasped for breath, looking up at the far away speck of light. Hanging onto the slick stone walls, he shivered and cursed. "Ieee! What a fall!" Then he gasped again, as realization hit him. "OH! My koku!" he cried, and dove down into the depths of the water below.

Taka's hands clutched at mossy rock as he scrabbled along the depths of the pool. His fingers clawed at rock, grime and several small hard objects that may once have been bones. One cold koku clung to a dark rock, and Taka swept it up into a cold-numbed hand. The coin was half-smashed by a rock that had fallen upon it on its way down, and the sharp edge cut into Taka's palm as he clutched it tightly. As he turned to rise again, Taka saw what appeared to be a light shining off to one side. "It's the koku kami, come to take me away, I just know it." he thought to himself, peering through the murky water. "This journey has been doomed from the beginning... Oh, Taka, Taka! How foolish you are!" He rose to the surface, his lungs about to burst from lack of oxygen. As he swam in the cold pool, he looked up at he faint soft light above him, filtered through the web of the horrible spider. "However, unless I want to invite the spider to come and get me here, I suppose my only alternative," he winced, "is down. Oh, how I wish I had never come in this wretched place!" With a single shuddering breath, Taka dove again and swam toward the light like some strange kind of fish.

The waters broke above Taka's head as he surfaced, staring up at the light streaming through a thin crack in the ceiling far overhead. "A hidden cave!" he breathed, treading to stay afloat in the deep water. The cave was so small that the pool in which Taka was swimming took up most of the floor. Swimming to the far side, the trader pulled himself up onto a thin ledge of stone above the water. The light was coming from a hand-sized opening, and the bright moonlight glittered upon a cup of pure jade, seated in a depression in the wall. "Ahhh..." Taka breathed reverently, seeing dancing visions of golden koku shimmering in the pale light.

It was a large goblet, carved from a single tremendous piece of jade and studded with emeralds the size of a man's eye. As he stared at it, it occurred to Taka had never seen anything so beautiful. "Even if the healing powers of the goblet are but a myth - that is a rare and magnificent piece of art!" he chortled. "Worth thousands - no, Taka, with your unmatchable bartering skills - millions of koku!" He crawled across the small ledge carefully, moving toward the niche in the cavern that held the goblet.

"Truly stunning," he murmured, holding the delicate goblet in his hands and trying to determine its exact worth. "Stunning." As he grasped the goblet, he frowned. "But now that I've got it, how do I get out again?" He peered around the small cave, and found no escape. There was simply no way the goblet would fit out the small hole above him, much less Taka himself. As his hands caressed the smooth jade sides of the goblet, Taka slowly began to smile. "What was I saying earlier? Invite the spider down? Hmm,..." he paused, deep in thought. "Ah...I have it now...Perfect." He shoved the goblet gently under his vest and lowered himself back into the chilly water. "Taka, my dear, you are a genius," he said to himself, immediately responding, "Oh, no no no, I'm sure it was your idea, Taka!" Chuckling, he took a deep breath in order to dive under the water again. "I always think better when I'm a millionaire," he sighed, and then grinned as he dove back under the water to the other side of the cave.

"Oh, Kumo?" Taka's voice echoed eerily up through the darkness of the long chasm a few minutes later. "It seems that I've quite escaped you!" His tone was pleasant and bright despite the surroundings, and he heard the furious hissing of the spider spirit from above. "How funny...and to think, I was rather frightened of you when I first arrived. But," Taka made a loud yawn, "I suppose I have nothing to fear from you, after all." As he spoke, Taka reclined on the thin ledge above the water, pulling his hat low over his eyes as he heard the hissing approaching down the long shaft above him. Soon, he heard the spider's all too familiar mental commands, "Ahhh... Little man... I will have you now..." Kumo whispered, but Taka simply lay still upon the ledge, unconcerned. With a devastatingly swift strike, Kumo dropped the last few feet on a thin line of silk, driving its fangs deep into Taka's shoulder and discharging its deadly poison. Taka barely had time to swallow, as he felt unconsciousness grip his mind, plunging him into darkness.

He awoke some time later, completely wrapped in the spider's silk, his body shuddering with the faint remnants of the poison. "Oh, kami!" Taka breathed, "Thank goodness that the legend was true!" He smiled as he remembered taking a gulp from the cup as the spider approached, and swallowing after he had been bitten. "The magic of the cup neutralized the spirit's poison," Taka chuckled to himself, "And I am halfway to freedom!"

Writhing slightly, Taka freed the small coin from his vest pocket, checking to be sure that the jade goblet was still safely in his possession. Then, with small but swift strokes, he began cutting the delicate silken strands until he had freed his arm, then his chest, then his face. He was hanging face down above the chasm, and there was no sign of Kumo anywhere. Hurriedly he cut the thin, sticky strands, clutching at the web around him to keep himself from falling back into the chasm. With a twist and much swinging between the thick cords, Taka lowered himself to the mouth of the cave. Seeing the moonlight shining through the cave mouth down the corridor, Taka grinned widely. "Kumo! Catch me now!" he said.

"Perhaps I shall..." suddenly hissed a voice from the web behind Taka. Taka yelped, spinning around and nearly dropping the precious goblet in his fright. He fell to the floor, clutching the relic to his chest and trying desperately to scrabble backwards across the cold stone floor. Kumo saw the jade goblet Taka held, and its eyes whirled strange glistening colors. Its dripping mandibles spread in a grimace of shock, and it yelped back.

The goblet was glowing. Its soft golden light radiated outward toward the spider-spirit, and the dark spider recoiled in terror and pain. Taka froze for a moment, his mouth gaping open, then he scrambled to his feet. Kumo recoiled back across the shivering web, its forelegs scraping at its eyes, blinded by the radiance of the goblet. With a squealing leap, Kumo began sawing the upper cables of the web free, letting silken strands parachute down the chasm below in huge wafting chunks. Taka slid down the corridor on hands and knees, feeling the slick fungi below his fingers as he held the fragile goblet in a death grip. "Cutting the webs?" he thought. "Why on earth is that creature destroying his home?" He crawled farther down the cave, retreating fromt he injured Kumo until he could no longer hear the scuttling noises of the tremendous beast. As he climbed to his feet, Taka felt the smooth sides of the goblet in his hands. He grinned down at the still-glowing chalice, seeing his reflection shining back at him from between the huge emeralds. "Not a smudge on it. Beautiful." He smiled covetously down at it, slowly making his way toward the opening, all thoughts of the spider-spirit vanished from his head like koku through Kisada's blockade.

Suddenly Taka heard a strange noise coming from the outer cave. It was a grinding, stone against stone, echoing down the long damp cave. "Taka!" Tantoko's voice screamed from outside the cave, "the cave . . . it's closing!" "Closing. Yes, of course." Taka murmured happily, staring at the rich gemstones which made up the goblet in his hands. It was so lovely, so expensive, so wonderfully... "CLOSING?!??!"

In a terrified burst of speed, Taka dashed toward the cave mouth. Sliding on the fecund floor, his boots slipping and desperately seeking purchase, he could see the pale moonlight at the entrance growing fainter. With one last leap, he threw himself out, under the grinding rock slab that slammed behind him, the goblet flying from his hands. With an anguished howl, he rolled forward, straining every nerve to catch the chalice before it smashed against the ground. Pulling off his hat, he flung it with desperation at the falling chalice. Whether it was the accuracy of a master or the blind luck of the Sun Goddess, Taka never knew, but at the last moment the hat landed just beneath the goblet, its soft straw and felt cushioning the relic's fall.

No birds sang in the dark still night of the swamp. The silence hung in the air like the silken strands of Kumo's web. Taka was still sprawled at the mouth of the cave, the cuff of his pants trapped beneath the crushing slab of stone. Barely visible in the darkness, Tantoko smiled. She was leaning against the tree where Taka had left her, blood now oozing from the bandage around her waist. Finally, she broke the still night air with a soft whisper. "Good throw." she chuckled, and smiled weakly.

"Of course." Taka said, trying to recover his dignity even when the world stood on its head around him. Composing his face into a sober merchant's attitude, he said, "It's worth a lot of koku."

After Taka freed himself from the cave, he walked toward Tantoko, picking up the hat and goblet along the way. He unstrapped his small skin of water from his belt and poured some into the bowl of the cup. Gingerly, he knelt beside Tantoko in his ragged, mud-encrusted pants, his sleeves torn from the brambles and brush and still dripping from the pool's water. With a courtly bow he offered her the chalice. "Thirsty, honorable Tantoko-san?" He tilted the goblet to Tantoko's lips, and she drank. For a moment, nothing happened. Then, just as Taka's hopes were fading, Tantoko gasped, a long shuddering intake of breath, and her eyes flew open wide. Color began to return to her pale face, and her body grew rigid. She clutched at Taka's hand, and her grip was strong and firm. Within minutes, she sat upright, and stared at him, stunned. "Its true... I'm completely healed!" With a glad cry she pulled the bandage from her arm. Where her wound had been there was now only smooth, unmarred flesh. Tantoko stood carefully, testing her balance before yanking the silk winding from her waist. The rend in her short kimono now showed only her muscular stomach, with a very faint scar near the navel. Tantoko looked at Taka, then grinned fiercely, leaping backwards into a flip and a series of handstands. "I didn't believe it, but it's true! The goblet has amazing healing powers!" She continued her acrobatics in the clearing for a few moments, exulting in the lack of pain.

Her catlike grace and swift leaping movements suddenly struck a chord in Taka's memory. "Now I know where I've seen you before," he said with realization. "You were an acrobat in the Doji court, weren't you?" His eyes widened as the implications grew. "Were you a spy?"

Tantoko faced Taka, all her playfulness vanishing like sand in the tide. "Mind your business, trader man," she said dangerously, "and keep your memories to yourself." Scooping up the goblet, Tantoko retrieved her dagger and moved soundlessly toward the waiting wagon.

The wagon ride through the swamps at night was much slower than by day, but neither Taka nor his companion were willing to spend the rest of that night near the cave. The silence hung heavy and tense between them, broken only by the creaks of the wagon as it swayed behind the faithful oxen. As the rising sun crested in the eastern sky, Tantoko grabbed the reins and halted the wagon. "Here's where I get off, merchant."

"Now, wait just a moment there!" Taka said, disgruntled. "I saved your life, remember?"

"And I thank you."

Taka shook his finger in front of her nose. "I don't want thanks. I want koku. That little trinket we picked up is at least half mine, and I want my share."

Tantoko's eyes narrowed. "I don't have any money to give you."

"I know. But I'll wager a fine iron pot that whoever you're taking that goblet to has plenty." Seeing her hesitate further, Taka grinned evilly and said, "If you don't pay me to keep quiet, I know many who would pay me to talk."

"I could kill you now, and leave your body for the crows, trader-man." Her voice was cool and smooth, but Taka was not cowed.

"You owe me your life."

"I owe you nothing."

"Your life."

She stared into his dark brown eyes, but all she saw there was a merchant's determination. Tantoko cursed under her breath. "You won't like where we're going." Knowing he had won, Taka urged the oxen back into their shambling walk. "Don't worry, Tantoko. I know all the roads of Rokugan. With Yasuki Taka as your guide, all paths are open." He smiled a victorious smile. "Which road shall we take? South, to the gates of Hida Castle? Perhaps to the distant Lion strongholds? Shall we try to catch up with the wandering ronin armies of Toturi the Black?"

Tantoko shook her head resolutely. In a low voice she murmured, "To the Imperial Palace of Hantei, trader-man. As fast as you can go."
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Of all the splendors of Rokugan, from the bursting magic displays over the Isawa woodlands to the dark, brooding seas of the southern coasts, it can be said that nothing is more stunningly beautiful than a simple rain over the plains of Otosan Uchi. The Imperial Palace of the Hantei has been standing on those plains for countless generations, its crystal and marble spires rising in majestic tumult over the waving fields of flowers. Its gardens are unmatchable, boasting rare and unique plants from all parts of Rokugan. It is common legend that one of the ancient Emperors said he wanted a garden to be built that would show him all the things that his people saw each day, so he might know their world as well as his own.

Within those ornate and fantastic gardens there are simple pools of sand, raked elegantly into spreading ripples around smooth granite and marble stones carved from the mountains of the enigmatic Dragon Clan. The fourth Hantei is said to have personally chosen each stone for its patterning, the grain of the marble and the subtle veining of sand within the massive blocks. Each area is maintained by the gentle, invisible gardeners who circulate like bees throughout the garden, keeping order and harmony. But even such earnest and deliberate care cannot always defeat the plague of serpents that long to infect such a rare and wonderous garden, and it is certain that order and harmony are no match for deception and guile.

It was night, and the darkness surrounded them like a fog over the shores of the Crab, hiding their true intention and movements from all eyes. With careful footsteps they approached a curve in the outer wall of the palace, and with a faint, secret knock they found the opening to the gardens. They were two hooded figures, moving with stealth and swiftness through the sweetly scented night. With no sound, the two figures passed into the palace as though they had never been, and only a single marred footprint against the sand of the pool left witness to their passing. It the morning, with the dew and the rhythm of the gardener's tools, it too would be gone.

Yasuki Taka made it a rule never to question a customer about a fair price for an item. If the customer was not willing to pay, Taka would simply move onward, selling it to the next man down the road. But in this case, he thought to himself, he was going to make an exception. "Free?" he hissed at Tantoko as she handed the goblet away. "What do you mean, we'll part with it for free?" Her elbow found its way between his ribs, and Taka suddenly stopped complaining.

"Of course, Aramoro-sama," Tantoko bowed, "I have completed my mission successfully and have returned with the goblet as I was instructed."

Bayushi Aramoro was a tall man, with breadth and width through his shoulders, and eyes like a captive hawk. "Well done, young one, well done." his hands caressed the jade sides of the relic, and a faint moan escaped from Taka's lips as he saw his hopes of koku slide away. "The trader..." his gaze lit upon Taka with malicious intent, but Tantoko spoke swiftly.

"...can be trusted, Aramoro-sama. You have my assurances." After a moment, Aramoro nodded in agreement, and she continued, "He was very useful to me in my mission, and I have told him that something could... be arranged."

"Koku?" Taka whispered the word as no more than a faint prayer to his devoted kami, and thought he saw a flicker of scorn and understanding within the black depths of Aramoro's eyes.

"If koku is your price, trader, koku you will have, and be gone." Aramoro turned then, his long black gi swirling in the dim light of the tunnel beneath the Imperial Palace. "Stay here, merchant, and you will be compensated." Tantoko remained only a moment before following her Master into the darkness, her face speaking nothing to Taka's searching eyes.

"Koku?" Taka said again, although this time there was no one to hear him. "Oh, blessed kami, if they give me even an eighth - no, a fourth! - of what that goblet is worth, I'll have enough money to buy out the entire Mantis Clan!" He chortled to himself in the dim torch light. "What a wonderful stroke of luck! I bet... oh dear." He looked around suddenly, as if noticing for the first time that he was alone. "What if they don't realize how much such a piece of art is worth?"

Taka pondered for a moment. "I'll bet they intend to cheat me of the true value of the piece. They think I'm some ignorant merchant who doesn't know his koku from headed down the dark corridor. "Even Kisada learned - you don't try to cheat a cheater!" With a low chuckle, he slid into the darkness that had swallowed Aramoro and the young ninja girl.

The darkness of the palace cleared as Taka climbed up a thin ladder to a darkly paneled hallway. Sensing no guards about, Taka moved into the corridor and began to pad quietly down the hall. Having never been inside the Imperial Palace before, Taka smiled, and murmured to himself, "What a marvelous opportunity this is! If I am captured by the Emperor's guard, I can tell them about the ninja, and I'll be a hero! And if not..." Seemingly unknown to Taka, the small jeweled statue which had ornamented a decorative alcove slid silently into his pocket, and he continued blithely down the hallway.

The palace's interior was dark and bare, the soft wood of the floors gleaming from use and polish, and the thin rice doors to either side glowing with the reflection of tallowed candles. Each corner held a thin table on which flowers, art, or steel weapons gleamed. Soft conversations rose and fell, masking the movements of Taka's padded feet as he investigated every turn and hall of the massive building. Finally, within one room, he heard a familiar voice.

"... and you say the Unicorns tried to stop you?" It was Aramoro, the steel in his speech chilling Taka to the bone. The trader froze in a shadowed corner near the rice walls of the room, quickly darting into the next chamber and closing the door. The rice paper made a quiet sshhh in the night, as if it too held a secret, and Taka listened raptly. "Hie." It was Tantoko. "I believe they found out that I was going to attack the Emperor," Taka's jaw dropped, "and they intended to stop me."

Clamping a hand over his mouth to stop any noise, Taka slid into a crouch by the door. "Attack the Emperor?" he thought, panicked. The conversation continued.

"Nothing else?"

"No, sama. They knew nothing else, and none of them survived the encounter." Tantoko's soft sounds did not soothe Taka's fears. His ears burned, and his head whirled. "Kill the Emperor?" the thought ripped through his mind again. "And are you prepared to fulfill the rest of your task, little one?" Aramoro asked, and the only answer was a swift assent from Tantoko. "Then take your weapon, and may the spirits of our ancestors be with you." Taka heard the door of the other room open, and then there was only silence.

"Kill the Emperor?" Taka's confused and stunned mind could hardly grasp the concept. "But... if they kill the Emperor, the Clans will be in complete war! There will be no trade at all, and that means..." A faint yelp left his lips, and he muffled it rapidly. "The entire economy might collapse!" Scrambling to his feet, Taka threw open the door between himself and the other room, but there was nothing to be seen.

"Oh blessed kami!" Taka breathed, "Now I know why I have been guided here! To save Rokugan! Oh, my pots and silks!" He almost sank to the floor again in terror, but his bandy legs were already carrying him back out into the corridor. "I have to stop Tantoko!"

The shadows at the heart of the palace seemed to guide Taka, encouraging him in his search for the ninja girl and her deadly mission. Although he could hear the shouts and laughter of the Imperial guard, he saw none of them in the hallways. All was dark and quiet, and Taka was more alone than he has ever been in his life. "Tantoko, I have to stop Tantoko!" he repeated again and again, but the shadows only swallowed his protests and led him ever onward, toward the dark heart of the Empire's master.

He finally found her within a stunning bedroom, covered in silks and luxuries that he had no time to price, and he hissed as he entered, "Tantoko, you have to sto..." but his own dagger was at his throat and her hand was over his mouth.

"I have no time to argue with you, trader-man. There is more here than you think. The Empress has..."

A soft footfall outside the door was the only warning they had. With a mighty swing, Tantoko threw Taka through the small stone door in the outer wall of the room, pushing him back into the tunnel system's secret embrace. The door swung shut with the faintest of clicks, and Tantoko was swallowed by the darkness of the room.

Taka was not a hero. Further, he had no idea how to open the massive door. All he could do was stare through the small crack in the wall, and mutter hurried prayers to his kami. Fickle thing that it was, his kami did not answer, and his fears killed the sounds before they could leave his tightened throat. Then the door opened, and Taka could see a man's figure silhouetted by the light of the corridor. The Emperor. For a moment, Taka's mind drew the pictures that he expected to see. A strong man, youthful and noble, in the silks of the Imperial Dynasty stood in the darkened doorway. But the pictures began to change as the man entered the room. The silks were rotted, and fouled with the stench of the grave, and the Emperor was no longer young. In the growing glow of golden light, Taka's eyes showed him a vision of unimaginable horror. Maggots writhing in reddened eyesockets, hands made of bone covered by barely-clinging flesh, and a darkness that was almost palpitable hovering above the shoulders of the slowly moving figure. What had once been the Emperor was now something else. Something... evil.

Tantoko's howling chi yell split the room, and she raised the goblet made of jade above her head while the thing in the Emperor's robes recoiled. Taka found a voice to give the scream that had been stifled, but again it was killed in its birth. A single soft hand, velvet skin over steel courage, held the scream within his lungs. He turned from the battle in the room to find himself face to face with Bayushi Kachiko, Empress of Rokugan.

How she had come to be there, Taka was not sure - perhaps some secret aperture within this closet in the wall, or some magic he did not understand, but her presence did not reassure him. Her eyes, dark fire and pools of mystery, turned from his wizened face to glance through the crack in the wall.

Tantoko's blow had missed its first strike, but the beast that was Emperor of Rokugan was blinded by the light of the goblet, and it howled in fury and immortal strength. Its rage shook the halls of the palace itself, but the curious, peaceful look on Kachiko's shadow shrouded face never wavered.

With a tremendous blow, Tantoko leapt to the side of the beastlike man, her sword passing harmlessly across its bones and flesh. It rallied, and struck a massive blow across Tantoko's chest that knocked her sailing across the room, the flowers of the alcove raining down like lies from a serpent's tongue. With an acrobatic roll, she managed to evade the thing's next crushing blow, missing her only by a hair's breadth as she rolled to her feet again.

Taka stood, paralyzed, unable to help Tantoko and unable to stop his eyes from flickering back and forth from the combat to the Empress's face. Although there was no reason, no glimmer of emotion in her eyes or pale reflection of anticipation in her face, Taka knew. He knew that she had planned this battle, and that it was her orders that had made Tantoko go to her death fighting the man-thing that ruled Rokugan. And worse, he knew that it was the right choice.

With a desperate thrust of her blade, Tantoko parried the arm which clutched blindly for her throat, the golden light of the goblet keeping the Emperor at bay. She rolled and twisted, keeping the goblet between herself and it, and using countless stabs and slices to try to find the weakness in its armor. As if without thought, the creature gripped the blade of her ninja-to and snapped it like a child breaks a toy. With a hollow, bone-chilling laugh, the thing's voice bubbled up from within the pit of its being. "Now you will die, mortal." The voice was stone and steel, echoing within the cold shadows that haunt the dark of the night, and all the things which should have never been spawned on this earth or any other. For the rest of his life, that sound would haunt Taka's dreams, and torture his nightmares, and he wept for the pain of his soul. Finally, in exhaustion, Tantoko lifted the goblet from the floor and leapt toward the beast. Her body sped across the room like a golden inferno, and as the cup touched the Emperor's body he shrieked in pain and terror. For a single, golden moment, the light flashed and the goblet burst into a rainbow of glorious color, more brilliant than all the flowers of the gardens combined. A shattering sound, glass torn against the fabric of the universe, ripped apart the jade goblet, scattering the chips of jade into stunning rays of light that blinded them all. Within that epiphany of brilliance, Taka heard one last voice. Quiet and soft, with agony and noble spirit, it came from the cowering body of the madman on the floor. From within the heart of the evil, a whisper of lost nobility arose.

"Please..." Blue eyes looked up and locked onto Tantoko's brown ones, shining out from where there had only been evil shadows of despair, and the last Hantei whispered, "kill... me..."

Pulling Taka's dagger from her sleeve, Tantoko struck.

Too late, and the red eyes of the beast clutched hers again, in a mad spiral of hatred. The dagger spun from her wrist, and the sound of breaking bone rang in Taka's ears. He turned his eyes from the battle, unable to watch the final, inevitable strike. Kachiko's hand slid from his lips as snow melting from a furnace, and she whispered one cold word as she vanished into the darkness. "Stay." The awful crunch of a massive fist against a frail skull punctuated her leaving with a chilling, ghastly sound. Taka did not see her leave, but he felt the chill of her presence vanish like a shadow into a dark room.

"Kachiko, my dear..." the Emperor-thing looked up at the figure entering from the hallway, her movements silken in the night. Behind her, the Imperial Guard filled the hall, their gibbering, mad faces contorting as they strained for a glimpse of what had occurred. "You don't know anything about this, of course?" The voice was hollow, devoid of life and filled with sickness and loathing. It began to leave the room, striding with purpose toward the heallway, but when it reached Kachiko's side, it paused. The blow rang through the room like a clap of thunder.

When they were gone, Aramoro released the hidden catch on the stone closet, and Taka fell to the side of his Tantoko. No life echoed in the body of the ninja girl, and her eyes, once bright and clever, were now cold and dead. His dagger lay on the floor beside her, and a thin trickle of dark blood corroded its fine edge. By his side stood the Empress, a dark bruise growing over her perfect cheekbone like a thundercloud in a clear sky. Yasuki Taka looked into Tantoko's face, remembering where he had first seen her. Not on the road, among the Unicorn, but at a party in the Crane palaces, performing the tragic heroine Doji Konishiko to a record audience. Her eyes had been bright that day, and full of joy, and her fan had danced in the breeze among the flowers and the waving kites, and he had loved her without knowing her. Now, Taka looked up at the Mistress of the Scorpion Clan. In his eyes were no questions, no words of hate or anguish. Tantoko had died in a desperate attempt to break the power of the Shadowlands over the Emperor himself, and she had failed. Kachiko herself had sent the ninja, and they had both been defeated.

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"We all must play our part, Tsukune-san," Taka said to the young samurai-ko many months later as he handed her a fine sword made of rare crystal. She tested the blade, and nodded.

"But why give it away, merchant? Surely there are many who would pay for such a fine item?" she asked.

"There are many who have already paid, Phoenix-sama." Taka's eyes were distant, and he looked as the falling sun sank beneath the Isawa woodlands. "We all must play our part. No matter what the cost."

Shiba Tsukune nodded, pleased, and stepped away from the caravan as Kisa and Moto started their ponderous path again, headed for the mountains of the Dragon clan. "We all play a part, you see," Taka hummed to himself, counting the rich koku he had already plundered from the coffers of the Phoenix. Above his head, a windchime made of delicate jade chips swung on strands of woven black hair, keeping him company on his long journey through Rokugan. "And some parts are larger, and some are small. But all parts must be performed before the play ends, eh, Moto?" The ox ignored him, as many things did, and the road stretched ever on.

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

KACHIKO'S TALE - TIME OF THE VOID

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Kachiko walked down the ancient corridor, her footfalls making no sound, leaving no wake of disturbed dust behind her. When she reached the end of the hall, she stopped and stood still, her eyes closing, her fists clenched.

"If there are fewer than seven," she whispered, her words echoing around her in the small corridor, "All is lost."

The she turned left, to the stones of the wall. She counted three stones from the gate along the bottom and four stones up. She twisted and pulled until the latch gave way and the concealed panel slid aside. Then she pushed against the two heavy doors, amazed at how easily they opened for her. The night wind swept into the corridor, and for a moment, she was blinded by the swirling dust. When her vision cleared, she saw them and smiled.

"Welcome to Otosan Uchi," she said, her voice ringing in the air.

They rushed in, and she saw that one of them was covered with blood. Two Phoenix maidens gently put him on the floor as his blood spilled into the dust.

"What...?" Kachiko began.

"Be silent, mother of lies!" shouted the older maiden.

Kachiko's eyes grew narrow, but a warm hand fell on her shoulder. She turned and saw the ronin. "He clings to life by a thread. Take care."

She shook her head. "No. This is not right. It must be only us. Only the seven and..."

"...and Shinsei," whispered a cloaked figure from the shadow. Kachiko's eyes widened and his own gleamed in the darkness.

"...and Shinsei," she mumbled.

The hooded figure stepped forward. "She is right," he said to the two Phoenix maidens. "You must leave him. We must walk alone, or we violate our destiny."

"NO!" the older maiden screamed, tears running down her eyes, but the younger took her hand.

She cannot have seen more than ten seasons, Kachiko thought as she watched her gently pull the older maiden to her knees. "Tsukune, we must leave him now. Leave him with the Thunders."

"Leave him with her?!" Tsukune cried, pointing at Kachiko.

"We also leave him with Shinsei and the others. We all play our parts, Tsukune. We have played ours. Now it is their time. Let him go."

Tsukune nodded and stood, adjusting the swords in her obi. She let the girl turn her away, but she took one last look at the wounded Phoenix Thunder and then looked at Kachiko. "All of this is your fault, Scorpion. All of it. I swear, lady of lies, if you live and he dies, I will teach you about revenge."

Then the Thunders stood alone with Shinsei. Again.

There was a long stretch of silence as the Crane and the Crab lifted the shugenja to his feet. The jade of the Crab's hand lit the room as it came close to the corrupt Master, who winced from its light.

"Let me," said the Unicorn.

"No, let me." Kachiko took the weight of the wounded Phoenix onto her shoulders. He whispered from under his mask, "Do not listen to Tsukune. She is a samurai, a little too brash and a little too courageous."

"She is a woman in love, Tadaka-san," Kachiko replied. "I know precisely how dangerous she can be."

"So do I," said the Crane as he helped her hold up the wounded Phoenix. Kachiko's gaze dropped to the floor.

Shinsei walked before them in the dust-filled darkness. He turned to the entrance and smiled under his cowl. "Ah, I was wondering when you were going to arrive." The slick black flight of a crow flashed over the Thunders' heads and landed on Shinsei's shoulder.

"Now we are ready."

Shinsei and his crow, Kachiko thought, all the childhood stories of the two cunning tricksters coming back to her from the past. She looked around and saw their eyes and knew the others were thinking the same. Then her eyes fell on a hand of black glass, and her smile was lost.

I will pay for my crimes tonight, she thought. Then she felt the wet cough of the Phoenix, and shuddered. Perhaps we will all pay.

From ahead she heard a distant laughter. The all stopped. All but Shinsei. His stride never broke. His crow called to them from his shoulder, urging them on.

"I am not afraid," whispered the Unicorn.

"We are all afraid, battle maiden," the Lion whispered as he stepped forward, following Shinsei and his crow. "But so is the thing that waits for us."

The Thunders moved on, following Shinsei through the darkness. From up ahead, she heard the crow caw again.

The last time the Thunders walked with Shinsei, she thought, only the Scorpion returned.

She spoke aloud. "Not this time." All the Thunders looked at her, but she kept her eyes forward, following the man with the crow, as they walked deeper into the darkness.

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

LETTER - OBSIDIAN

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You know me.

I have stood with the armies of Rokugan and I have stood against the armies that reek of the stench of the grave. You have stood with me. You have stood against me. The Brotherhood has hidden me well, but now the time has come for all of us to stand in the sun.

Matsu Tsuko knew this when she spilled her own blood with the blade of her ancestors. She could not serve the creature that sits on the Emerald Throne, so she chose the only option her honor would allow her. It was an act of courage, not fear. We must learn what she hoped her act would teach us.

Those of us who will not serve the darkness must stand against it. We do not have to stand alone.

To the Crab, I offer this: Your choice is not as easy as it seems. You could chose the path of darkness. If you do, victory for our enemy will be all but complete. Look at your fallen Champion. There is your reward for fighting against this evil. Choose wisely.

To the Crane, I offer this: You began this war seeking peace. Now your army is one of the mightiest in Rokugan. Will you look past your besmirched honor and see what is required of you? Revenge is a powerful weapon, but it is still dull and impotent compared to duty and honor.

To the Lion, I offer this: If you listen, you can still hear Tsuko's words on the wind. Listen to them carefully. They were spoken a thousand years ago by another Lion.

To the Phoenix, I offer this: Nothing is certain, not even the rise of the fallen fire bird. Everything in this world must be earned. Sometimes, the price is blood.

To the Scorpion, I offer this: Your mistress knows her destiny. She knows what she must do. Do you?

To the Unicorn, I offer this: You have returned to a land that was never really your own and now you are the sole defenders of those who have sworn to serve you. Even so, if we are all standing in the light of a new dawn, a greater task lies ahead of you.

To the Dragon, I offer this: When the night departs and the sun rises, the seeds of darkness remain. If they are left to grow, the roots will find your heart and drink it dry. Become gardeners, my friends.

To the Alliance, I offer this: You are a new ally. They will not trust you. They do not trust each other. You have an opportunity. Your show of fraternity may prove to be the lesson the Great Clans must learn. Do not stray from your path. Your importance is yet to be realized.

And for Toturi, I offer this: Victory can be the greatest trap of all. I have traveled into the Shadowlands. I have learned much from my journies. It is time for me to pull back my hood and let you see my scars.

May the Seven Fortunes guide you,
Shinsei

Monday, February 26, 2007

KACHIKO'S TALE: OBSIDIAN

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For a thousand years, the capital city of Rokugan, Otosan Uchi, has been the home of the Hantei Dynasty.

Those days are over.

The shadows draped her like a comforting cloak, and she remained as close to them as her training would allow. The dead men that walked the halls would devour her if they could find her, but their minds were dull and she evaded them easily. She was commanded not to wander after nightfall, but Kachiko was a Bayushi after all, and the Bayushi were never very good at obeying orders.

She slipped by the wandering dead and slid aside a hidden panel that led into a pitch black room. she dared not light even a candle. It mattered little. She stood still for a moment, allowing the room's darkness to sink into her eyes. Then, she moved to the loose floorboard and moved it aside and lifted the silk package that lay within.

The sounds of the shambling creatures outside startled her for a moment, but only for a moment. She held her breath and waited for the shadows to move away. Even from here, she could smell their rotting flesh. She had to bite her lip when she saw a portion of the shadow drop away and heard the fleshy plop hit the wooden floor.

When she was certain she was alone again, she peeled away the silk wrapping, revealing to her fingers the cool, smooth surface of a black glass mirror. She set the silk aside and caressed its surface with her fingertips.

She brought it close to her lips and whispered, "It is I, daughter of secrets. Your mistress and servant."

As her words fell on the black glass, the mirror began to flow with a dark light. Kachiko looked about to make certain no one - or no thing - saw the growing dark aura.

The mirror whispered to her. She listened and obeyed, for there are times when even a Bayushi must obey. The short knife was hidden in the folds of her kimono. She ran the blade oh-so-delicately across her palm, biting her lop to keep herself from making a sound. Three drops of blood spilled into the mirror and they seemed to burn as they touched the obsidian, flashing in the darkness.

"I need to see the past," she whispered to the mirror.

The obsidian mirror's black color swirled into a kaleidoscope of colors and flashes a Kachiko wrapped her palm with the cotton she brought from her room, but her eyes never left the mirror's flashing images.

"All of this is my fault," she said softly. "It was my poison that made the Emperor weak. I allowed the Black Scrolls to be found. Now, the Dark One possesses his body and these foul things walk the corridors of the Imperial Palace. I need to see the beginning. There must be something that I have forgotten."

And in the matter of minutes, two years passed. Two years through the face of an obsidian mirror...

Sunday, February 25, 2007

FIRELIGHT

Firelight

The broken man lay by the firelight, watching the shadows dance on the wall. A great sword lay by his side, one which his twisted arm could no longer lift. A suit of armor sat near the entrance, one which his shattered frame could no longer carry. He looked at them both with scar-dimmed eyes, the fire revealing the anger and bitterness in their depths. A sound at the mouth of the cave broke his contemplation. His head turned slowly, his breath hissing with effort.

"Yakamo?" The question was devoid of apprehension.

"It is me, father," Hida Yakamo spoke as he approached the fire and knelt beside the old man. His armor was polished and gleaming, whole where the old man's was broken. The metallic claw at the end of his hand creaked slightly as he flexed it back and forth.

"What of our forces in the Imperial city?" the old man asked, leaning forward.

"Scattered, but largely intact. Some sort of skirmish has broken out between the Lion defenders, which has allowed us to begin regrouping in some sort of peace."

"Your sister?"

"O-Ushi is holding the army together, but I hesitate to leave her in command for long. With the Hirumas pushing for blood, we may lose everything in a suicidal assault on the palace."

The old man's eye's squeezed shut as some imagined pain creased his forehead.

"And what of the palace, Yakamo? What of that... creature that attacked me?"

Yakamo's face broke into a cruel grin.

"I'm sorry, father, I made no arrangements to enter and ask. There are kinsmen, however, who are not so discerning as I. They have entered Otosan Uchi and sworn eternal fealty to the Emperor."

"Who?"

"Amoro... Yori... a few others. They claim to be the voice of the clan now that you and I have been killed."

The old man sighed, shifting his bulk back towards the fire. He sat there silently, lost in thought. Yakamo shifted uncomfortably where he knelt. Finally, after several minutes, he spoke again.

"Yokuni was here."

The old man shifted, the surprise apparent on his face.

"When?"

"While you slept. He brought us something..."

Yakamo unwrapped the object, which had been hidden behind the old man's armor. At first glance, it appeared to be a gauntlet, forged from a dull green metal. As Yakamo brought it out into the firelight, it began to glow softly, illuminating the frozen fingers like candles.

"The Jade Hand!" The old man whispered.
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"'You must cast off old fetters to forge new ones,' Yokuni told me. At least, I believe that is what he told me."

The claw creaked slightly as he brought it up to the light, comparing the two appendages like a merchant pricing wares.

"This claw... the 'gift' that Yori gave to me. It was from the oni, wasn't it?"

The old man nodded solemnly.

"The creature which bears your name required a link to you. We gave it your hand, and in return..." he gestured at the samurai's limb.

"I can sense the oni sometimes," Yakamo replied. "Where it is, what it is doing. It whispers things in my dreams, things I can never quite recall when I awake. It unsettles me, father."

In a flash, the samurai grabbed his metallic limb and gave it a mighty pull. The steel screamed like a wounded animal as it wrenched free, and Yakamo threw it to the cave floor with obvious disgust. The claw flopped and twitched like a thing alive. At the wrist stump, where metal met flesh, a strange black tentacle writhed back and forth, sand sticking to its clammy sides. The appendage continued to thrash for several more minutes, its motions becoming slower and more jerky before finally coming to a stop.

Yakamo drew himself to his full height, and placed the Jade Hand in the spot the claw had once occupied. With a brilliant flash, it connected to his severed forearm, stone tendrils fusing with muscles and veins. The hand glowed more brightly, and as the old man watched, Yakamo seemed to fill with strength and power. The Hand moved as fluidly as flesh, its digits forever unfrozen by contact with the samurai. Yakamo flexed its fingers and turned to the old man.

"I am ready to atone for our family's sins."

"Excellent," the old man replied. "Find Toturi. Offer him a truce in exchange for our assistance in the battle, and tell him that we must set our differences aside. Have your sister contact the Unicorn and see if any of them will join us. The time for divisiveness is over."

Yakamo nodded. "I will send for a regiment to bring you to our field headquarters, father."

"Do not concern yourself. I am not going with you."

The samurai started.

"You are right, Yakamo," the old man continued. "Our Clan has committed sins that demand correcting. When you leave, I will prepare the ritual and undergo seppuku in penance."

"Here? Alone?"

"It is proper that I do so. As daimyo, the Crab's shame rests on my shoulders. My blood will erase that shame and restore honor to our forces."

Yakamo's eyes narrowed as he stared at the old man. "If I lived as long as the stars themselves," he said at last, "I never thought I would see my father succumb to such cowardice."

The old man hissed through broken teeth. "You dare to accuse me..."

"I dare to accuse you of turning your back on our failings! We left that thing there, sitting on the Throne. Our actions helped place it there! Did I mention that Yori was seen within the palace gates? Did I mention that Amoro - your nephew, father - leads a legion of the Emperor's troops even as the flesh rots from his bones? That thrice-damned oni you have given my name has publicly proclaimed the Crab's support for the Emperor, that our army in the field is comprised of traitors. Our Clan swims in this evil, an evil we ourselves released. And now you would abandon us to fulfill your own selfish honor."

The old man was becoming angry. "Bushido demands that I atone for my mistake!"

"To the Shadowlands with bushido! Bushido is a puzzle box that the creature on the throne has twisted to its own ends! The Lion champion has already fallen to it. I cannot allow you to do the same. Commit seppuku here, now, in this dank little hole, and you give it victory, father!"

The old man's face cracked open, his voice no more than a whisper.

"But the cost! Sukune..."

"Sukune was a sacrifice on the altar of our vanity! His death means nothing if we do not learn from it! Don't throw yourself on the pyre as you threw him."

Yakamo fell silent, glaring at his father from across the fire.

"You are the daimyo of the Crab Clan, the Great Bear, the Defender of the Empire! You plotted a thousand different ways to seize the city. Every possible outcome, every conceivable turn, every hill and knoll on that battlefield, you understand like the back of your hand. There is no one in all of Rokugan who knows the plains of Otosan Uchi as well as you." He leaned in close, the Jade Hand clenching into a fist.

"Whatever this creature is, it cannot face us in open battle - not if you are with us. You have been strong enough to lead us to the threshold of victory. Are you strong enough to lead us further? Can you look your dishonor in the face, and shoulder this greatest burden?"

The old man stared at his son with unblinking eyes, burning a hole in the air around him. Finally, he nodded.

"Hai. For the Clan and the Empire, I will... live with my shame."

"Good. Then the time for talking has ended."

Yakamo rose and hoisted his tetsubo over his shoulder. The Jade Hand gleamed with a brightness all its own, the firelight dimming from its very presence.

"We have made a terrible mistake. The time has come to correct it."

Saturday, February 24, 2007

THE DEATH OF MATSU TSUKO

The Death of Matsu Tsuko

Here is the death of Matsu Tsuko:

The wind's chilly fingers gripped at her throat, taking her voice away. She didn't mind. She had already said everything that needed to be said. Tsuko looked up, her eyes on Toturi's face, contorted by the shadows; but she knew better than to trust shadows.

Across the dark, Toturi looked down at the kneeling samurai-ko, glad that the night hid the tears swelling his eyes. He was her second and she needed to see his strength. He could not fail her. Not now.

Slowly, almost silently, he moved behind her, the toes of his feet just touching the tatami mat she knelt upon, resting his hand on his katana. Tsuko bowed her head and placed a piece of rice paper in her right hand. Then, she lifted the wakizashi and withdrew the blade from it's saya.

"It's my duty to protect the emperor," she whispered as the blade glistened in the dim light. "I cannot perform that duty. I cannot serve the thing that sits on the Emerald Throne. I have failed my family and my clan."

Toturi said nothing. He had heard these words from his own lips many years ago. He felt his tears rolling down his eyes, and licked his lips as he pulled hig katana into the night air.

"I do this now to save my family's honor, not my own."

Toturi only mouthed the word: "I know."

"With my death, there will be none to lead the Lion. They will be lost in the darkness." She paused, and for a moment, Toturi feared she would falter.

But she straightened her back, her shoulders wide and powerful. She was a Lion, even at the moment of her death.

"They need you, Toturi," she said, her words filled with sorrow. "I cannot help them... but you can."

Toturi almost spoke, but then he heard the first cut and his tongue turned as cold as snow.

"They need you..." she said again, her voice forcing it's way throught the pain. "...more than they need me."

Toturi heard the second cut and then the third, but Tsuko made no sound. Her body twitched once, her neck snapped up and Toturi did not hesitate. His sword struck, singing it's death song through the night air - the last song she would ever hear.

The winter is bleak
Shadows are long with despair
My eyes are the dawn

-Matsu Tsuko

Friday, February 23, 2007

KACHIKO'S TALE: CRIMSON AND JADE

Aramoro stepped into the still room from the night, cold rain dripping down into his armor against his skin. Across the room, a single figure stood, occasionally silhouetted in a flash of lightning as it streaked across the black sky. Thunder followed soon after, rumbling over the rafters of the ancient home of the Hantei family.

As soon as he saw the figure, he fell to his knees and placed his long, slender blade at his side with a single silent motion. "My Lady," he whispered, his breath hinting at the exhaustion that wracked his frozen muscles. "I bring you news."

Another flash descended, but the shadows clung to her, revealing nothing to him. He could smell the perfume of her hair drifting across the room, but he heard no sound from her, save for the single "Yes?" that hung in the air many moments after it was spoken.

"I followed Akiyoshi, as you commanded." She did not respond; he continued. "Your suspicions were correct. She has been to see the ronin."

"Where else would she go?"

Aramoro continued, feeling the bitterness of her words seep into his skin. "Much have I learned, my Lady. Yoritomo's ambassador was there, as well as a representative from the Brotherhood."

She nodded. "Junzo is looking for the descendants," she whispered. "That is why the Brotherhood is there. Yoritomo is there because he is as opportunistic as a crow spying a shiny bauble."

"There is no alliance between them, my Lady. The Clans refuse to acknowledge his claim. Yoritomo swears the Alliance will fight to prove their worth."

"And destroy the Empire in doing so." Again Kachiko shook her head. "It is just as Yokuni said. All of his prophecies are coming to pass."

"My Lady," Aramoro whispered. "There is more. The Lady Tsuko..."

Kachiko spun on her heel, her kimono whipping about her. "You have news?"

"Hai. She was at the ronin's camp."

She moved across the room as the lightning struck behind her. Aramoro fell completely prostrate, not certain if the chill in his bones was from the rain or his LadyÕs icy stare. "Tell me, ninja," she said.

"She was there, my Lady." Aramoro's eyes focused on the wood panels inches from his nose. "She begged him to return, to reclaim the mantle, but..."

The thunder crashed, the paper panels and wooden beams of the house shuddering as the ninja continued whispering to her. When he was done, he remained prostrate and silent. Kachiko paused for a moment, then turned back to the window. For a moment, she swore she saw a shadow there, but in the span of a breath, it was gone.

"It is all true," she whispered. "All true."

She turned back to the ninja, her face shifting in the shadows. All the darkness had left her eyes. When she lifted AramoroÕs chin with her fingertips, he could see them gleaming like the lightning in the window behind him. With her lips only a breath away from him, she said "My beloved husband's brother. You swore you would protect me and follow my every wish, my every command without question?"

Aramoro nodded. "Aye, my Lady. You know I did."

"Then I have only one command left to give you, my devoted Aramoro." She looked into his eyes, knowing his response perhaps even before he did. "I want you to leave me."

"...My Lady?"

"Without question, Aramoro. Remember? Leave me now. Join the others. Our army must be ready when the moment is right." She saw the confusion in his eyes and she smiled, and at that moment, she realized it was the first true smile since the war had begun. "I cannot have you standing between me and my destiny. Go. Now."
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Aramoro nodded and stood and she stood with him. She looked up at the ninja as his full height dwarfed her own. "May the Fortunes watch you, my Lady." As swiftly and silently as he had arrived, he was gone. Leaving her alone with the rain, the darkness and the thunder.

Thursday, February 22, 2007

LETTERS - ANVIL OF DESPAIR

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We are fools.

We have been deceived from the beginning. Things are not in hand as we had originally believed. They are far, far worse.

I sailed with my father at the head of his great fleet. I strode by his side as he unleashed his armies on the Imperial city. The Lion army was waiting there for us, but they were as children before an angry wind. We crushed them beneath us, and took the city as our own. Kisada strode into the palace as if he had been born there. The chosen son of heaven ready to claim his right as Emperor. The Imperial Guard was nowhere to be seen; we should have known then that something was wrong, but we were too drunk on our own easy victory to notice it. We entered the Emperor's throne room ready to wrest the crown from him and end this conflict once and for all.

And then, it all fell apart.

The sickened body of Hantei stood there like a puppet, his eye glowing with an unholy green light. Strange magics twisted around his body as he picked up my father up and broke him between his hands like a twig. I stood there dumbfounded as he threw the Great Bear across the room with a strength no mortal man possesses, cackling in a voice like a thousand screams. I felt certain I was next, but before he could turn his attentions to me, he seemed to wilt, and collapsed into his bed-sheets unconscious. I suspect that the Lady Kachiko may have had some hand in this. Whatever the reason, that creature in the Emperor's guise wielded more raw power than I had ever seen before. I had no desire to see what else it could do. Kisada's body had been shattered, but the Great Bear still lived. I gathered him up and fled the palace, ordering out army to retreat and regroup to the south. The Imperial city has been left in the hands of that... thing in the palace.

You may hear rumors that the Great Bear has been killed. Do not believe them for an instant. I have personally seen to it that my father has reached safety and that he will be secure while he recovers. I cannot disclose his location for fear that this message will be intercepted.

Our alliance with the Shadowlands is a sham. They have tried to use us to their own ends and we have paid the price for their treachery. We must now teach them what it truly means to cross the Crab. Purge them from your ranks if you find them, and strike them down wherever they may appear. Do not waste precious resources squabbling with the other Clans, for they can only distract us from the true threat.

And wherever you go, spread the word that the Emperor is not to be trusted. He has been swallowed by something ancient and evil, and if we do not strike back, all of Rokugan will follow him. More than any of the others, we understand the Shadowlands, and are best equipped to destroy their evil. We must act against them now, or there will soon be no Empire left to claim.

Hida Yakamo
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My friends,

On the day of our greatest triumph comes the darkest news this war has yet to bring. First, the news of our victory at Asahina Temple should have reached you by now. We thought it would be our final stand against the army of madmen, but we were wrong. We had prepared the temple against attach, but our commander, Daidoji Uji, knew that we could not stand long. It was then that our Champion returned to us, along with a Dragon samurai and an army of shapeshifting Naga. Together, we stood against the Shadowlands, and on that day, we defeated them utterly.

Before the Shadowlands army's first charge, however, a shugenja from that festering horde called out our commander. Hoturi stepped forward to take the challenge, but the Phoenix samurai-maiden, Tsukune, begged him for the opportunity to face the necromancer. Hoturi permitted her, and the samurai-ko charged down into the open plain and cut down the necromancer with one mighty stroke from her naginata. The Shadowlands army then found themselves under a downpour as the Phoenix shugenja sent a thunderstorm of merciless power over them. The thing that claimed to be Doji Hoturi tried to keep his army together, but he could not. The Naga charged into his ranks, moving faster than any horsemen ever could. Their archers fired arrows into the air, landing only half a moment before the Naga hit the main body of Oni and madmen.

The battle was engaged. Our Lord Hoturi led Daidoji Uji's forces against the personal guard of the False Hoturi. For the first time our Lord faced the thing Kachiko had created and their duel began in the midst of the mighty clash of arms. Hoturi had to fight through three guards before he reached the False One, and their duel was mighty indeed. But in the end, our Lord crushed the false one, removing his head from his body with one single stroke. The army was routed, encircled and burned until it was nothing more than ashes and memories. We were victorious, my friend. We were victorious!

It was then that a lone rider came out from the north, carrying a message for our Lord. I have never seen him before, but I am told that he was the masked ronin who saved Hoturi from the clutched of the Lady Kachiko. Our Lord turned to us and told us the news. The Emperor's soul no longer resides in the Emperor's body. Now, the mortal shell carried the sould of the Dark God that Shinsei and his Seven Thunders banished a thousand years ago: Fu Leng.

Lord Hoturi commanded me to write you as quickly as possible to tell you this news. We need to gather together with all speed and communicate this news to the rest of the Clans. They must know the truth. Open your coffers, my friend and bring to our ranks the ronin of Rokugan. Theirs is a force that has yet to be brought to bear. This is a lesson our Lord has taught us well. Bring ronin to your ranks. We must do more than unite. We must hire any samurai who would join our cause. It is time to use those riches we have built for the last thousand years. Be well, and may the Seven Fortunes be with you.

Doji Kuwanan
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My Brothers, our Champion has returned.

I have been directed by him to tell you of the dark times that have descended on our Empire. You have no doubt heard by now that a new army of Shadowlands creatures walks the land. Commanded by the undead shugenja, Yogo Junzo. What you may not know is that Junzo is connected somehow to another, far darker power - a power which has taken control of the Emperor himself.

The Great Fleet of Hida Kisada struck the Imperial City without warning. The Crab destroyed the Lion army stationed there and occupied the surrounding area, while Kisada and his son Yakomo stormed the palace with the intent of taking the throne. None yet know what occurred there, but scant hours later, the Crab army retreated from the city, scattering to the four winds. Rumor has it that The Great Bear was slain by the Emperor's hand, and that his son has been corrupted to the will of the Shadowlands. Tales of sprung up of the young Hantei weilding magics that the blackest shugenja will not touch, and throwingarmies about like a child's toys. Unfortunately we cannot confirm any of these ravings. None who have entered the Imperial Palace have thus far emerged alive.

As if this were not grim news enough, Junzo's horde had unleashed atrocities upon the Empire that would chill the blood of even the bravest samurai. We have not yet ascertained the exact connection between Junzo and Hantei but it is clear that the two are acting together. Even Yokuni, in his beneficient wisdom, could not have anticipated such darkness. With the Imperial City in shambles and an army of Shadowlands monstrosities walking the lands, we must take steps to ensure that this evil does not engulf us. If Hantei were to acquire the knowledge which we possess, he would be unstoppable.

I have ordered most of our forces back to our mountain strongholds in anticipation of an assault from either Junzo or the Imperial City. If they come for us, they will have to take us in a location of our choosing. Mirumoto Daini has been granted permission to remain with the Naga, while Togashi Mitsu and his legion is tattooed men continues to move with Toturi's rag-tag army. With the Crane victory at the Asahina Temples, perhaps these forces can join together in a common effort against Junzo and his allies.

And Hitomi? Hitomi is lost to us. She treads a path that none of us can follow, and we must abandon her to the destiny she has embraced.

The time has come to hold fast our couse. Hantei has been lost, and we must prepare to defend ourselves against the darkness which claimed him. If we stand strong, and Toturi is truly the man Yokuni claims he is, we may yet survive this night to see the coming of a new day. Courage, Brother.

Mirumoto Sukune
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There are traitors among us, my clansmen.

There are those who would deter us from our duty to the Emperor. Honeyed words and poisoned tongues have tried to cloud our vision and turn us from the path of our ancestors. We must not allow them to succeed.

The mystery of Hida Kisada's whereabouts has been solved. His fleet sailed north from the islands where it cowered, and attempted to take the Imperial City by surprise. You may have heard many wild rumors in these dark times, but I can assure you he did not succeed. Our armies scattered the Crab to the four winds, and the Great Bear himself was slaughtered like a dog as he tried to storm the palace. I personally saw his sone, Yakamo, fleeing the city with Kisada's corpse in his arms.

You have by now heard of the Crane victory at the Asahina temple. Thier pathetic forces will soon try to wreak some measure of revenge for the justice we have dealt out. They must be hunted down and destroyed like the dogs that they are. Some remnants of the Crab army have escaped and may try to regroup. Show them what it means to challenge the will of Heaven. And lest we forget, the traitor Toturi continues to defy us - marching a pitiful band of ronin towards the Imperial Palace in a vain effort to prevent the inevitable. Bring us his head as a gift to the Imperial Throne.

But most importantly, we must locate some sign of our Champion, Matsu Tsuko. She received a letter from the Emperor's wife just before the Crab landed and has since vanished. We need her to help restore order within our ranks, to once more lead the Lion towards our proud destiny. There are those in our ranks who have questioned the Emperor's will. There are Lions who whipser that Hantei has fallen, and that the old ways can no longer be followed. They must be shown the error of thier disloyalty before our enemies can exploit thier weakness. Find Tsuko, my clansmen. Find Tsuko, and we can finally reclaim our sacred place at the Emperor's side.

You know who sits on the Emerald Throne. You have heard his name. Now you must ask yourself a simple question: Shall I serve the Throne, as I have sworn to to, or shall I turn from my duty and betray my ancestors' memory? That is what you must consider. If you betray your duty, you have no right to call yourself a Lion. This is the promise you swore. You did not swear to serve the Throne when it suited you, you swore that you would serve the Emperor or die. Are you men of your word? If you are, then you will follow the Emperor's commands without question. If not, then you are no better than a lying Scorpion.

Do what you must and show the rest of the Clans what it means to be a samurai

Ikoma Ujiaki
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It is over

The time when we placed our pride before the welfare of the empire has passed, and we must now do what is necessary to ensure Rokugan's survival.

The Crab have taken the Imperial City, defeating our army there with a surprise attack from the sea. Our Champion, Matsu Tsuko, was ordered to stand aside while Hida Kisada marched his forces throughout the streets. The Lion forces attempted to fight them, but without Tsuko's leadership and tactical knowledge, they were no match for the Great Bear. He swept us aside and entered the Imperial Palace.

What happened next, I do not know. From what I have heard, Kisada engaged the Emperor in single combat and was slain. How a weak and sickly man could kill the likes of the Great Bear is beyond me, but a few hours later, the Crab army scattered, leaving the city in our hands. Then, we received an announcement from the palace - an announcement delivered by a hideous oni in the guise of Hida Yakamo. We were to take up arms again and march against the Emperor's foes. Joining us in this endeavor would be an army of Shadowlands abominations commanded by Yogo Junzo.

Now comes the time of our most painful choice. We have sworn fealty to the Emperor, whoever it is that sits on the Emerald Throne. We have failed in our duty to protect the Empire, and now we must decide how to serve the Throne: Do we serve the man who sits upon it, or do we fight to place a better man there? The decision is yours. I know it will be a painful decision, but is one that must be made.

You have heard news of the Crane victory at the Asahina Temples, Find them and join them if you can; our feud with the Crane is passed. The Unicorn are said to be holding order in the countryside, slaughtering bandits and destroying shadowlands creatures where they can be found. Help them in thier efforts. And yes, the ronin Toturi is on the march, with an army of samurai in opposition to Yogo Junzo. As painful as it is, we must ally with the traitor for the greater good of the Empire. His strength may be all that is keeping us from eternal darkness. Above all, we must find Matsu Tsuko. With her gone, our Clan is without leadership, and I fear that many will listen to the 'Emperor's' inhuman advisors in her stead.

If these words shock you, it is only because they are the truth. If you cannot swallow your pride, then Rokugan will surely be lost. We must strike against the evil now, or all that we claim to stand for is naught but dust in the wind. The threat is among us, my betheren, and it bears the Emperor's name. If we do not see it for what it is, then we are nothing more than puppets to its will. Let us teach it what it means to decieve a Lion.

Kitsu Motso
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My daughter,

You must have heard terrible news coming from the Imperial City, and feared for my safety. This letter is to assure you that I am well, and have been escorted out of the city by a sympathetic samurai from the Lion clan. I however, am one of the fortunate few. Our fears of the Dark Land have been realized, and the ruler of the human kingdom has been corrupted by the Evil One. He now moves as a puppet under sinister strings.

The clan of the Crane has won a great victory against the Dark Ones with the help of our forces. The human Daini has guided us true, and we arrived in time to help the Crane destroy the army that threatened them with annihilation. Alas, I fear that this victory is not enough to stem the tide. Now word comes that a second Shadowlands army, this one led by an undead human sorcerer, is stalking the land. Stories of the horrors they have inflicted upon the human lands are enough to chill the blood.

But the worst, my daughter, is yet to come. The Imperial City has fallen from within by an Evil as old as time. A fleet of ships from the Clan Crab launched a surprise attack, and human defenders of the city fell before them. The lord of the Crab entered the Imperial Palace, with the intent of seizing the throne. The Emperor crushed the life from his body and shattered his forces like a toy. Our people were forced to flee the city and have tried to regroup with our remaining forces in the Crane lands.

The humans have learned that the Evil we fight is greater than all of us. Only now do they turn from their petty bickering to face the darkness rising from the west. Alas, I fear it has come too late. They fumble around like a newborn fresh from its egg, lost and confused in the face of their folly. Only Toturi seems immune to their panic. He leads his army towards the fallen capital with a force and a will I could not have imagined before now. We must do all we can to support him, for I fear he is our last hope.

I do not know if you have felt it or not, beloved, but our people have of late become distracted by a strange fog in our minds. It is not unlike the Great Sleep of a thousand years ago, but has subtle differences I have not felt before. The cycle is coming to a close, my child, and I believe our time in the world is slowly fading. We must do all we can to see that the next Rebirth delivers a world of hope, instead of the terrifying Evil that I fear is now to strong to be defeated.

Dashmar
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We have a solution after long months of study and the sacrifice of far more than any would ask of us. We have found a way to defeat the Shadowlands. But that news must wait.

By now you know of the great victory of the Crane forces against the Shadowlands army at the Asahina Temples. Doji Hoturi met his doppelgŠnger on the field of battle and took his head, while a combination of Crane samurai and Naga troops shattered the power of his slavering madmen. Shiba Tsukune acquitted herself well in the battle, defeating an unholy necromancer in single combat while all looked on.

This victory, however, has been overshadowed by an even greater threat. A second Shadowlands army has emerged from the west, this one even larger and more terrifying than the first. They destroy without mercy, crushing everything in their path, and their troops do not bear even the semblance of humanity. To make matters worse, we have lost all contact with the Imperial City, just as an army of Crab troops arrived to lay claim to the throne. Rumors about that the Great Bear, Hida Kisada, has been killed and that the Emperor himself has been claimed by an evil spirit whose power is scarcely imaginable. This self-same darkness continues to extend its grip over our shugenja, taking one after the other as if toying with us. The Master of Fire, Isawa Tsuke, has now fallen prey to the siren call of the Black Scrolls, embracing their evil in order to better understand it. He has conjured the flames of hate and anger from his soul to create terrifying torrents of flame, and now roams far and wide across Rokugan to destroy the forces of the Shadowlands wherever he may find them. I do not know how long he can last before his power overwhelms him.

But as I said earlier, there is hope. Last night, Isawa Tadaka came to me with a proposal. In the blackest hours before the dawn, we gathered at the highest tower of the Temple and committed an unspeakable rite. I dare not describe the particulars of it to you, but suffice to say we were able to wrest a powerful oni from its den within the Shadowlands and bind it to our will. Tadaka gave the creature his own name, sacrificing all he has and is to enslave the creature thoroughly. Our shugenja can now draw upon its strength to assist us in our struggles, and tadaka assures me that the beast can tell us what has happened in the Imperial City, and who or what now sits on the throne.

We have seen the darkness rise to engulf our fair land. We have sacrificed our lives and souls and understand its mysteries. But I believe we have gained the power to stem the tide. We have paid the price for our questions, and it is time to see if the answers are enough to save us. Pray for the salvation of Rokugan, my friend. And pray that the Phoenix can rise from the ashes of this long night to the dawning of a new day.

Asako Yasu
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He is dead! What can I do? He is dead. He is dead...

No time. All is lost. He is dead! The great Bear is dead! I saw it with my own eyes! The blood and his scream and his eyes as he looked at me - reached out to me for help. But I could offer him nothing. I ran. Bishamon help me. I ran for my life. Even now I am in my private chamber. Hiding in the secret room I found when I first arrived. Writing as quickly as I can before the fear devours my reason.

My hand is calming. My scrawling mad notes are slowly forming into words and sentences. I must tell you as much as I can before the panic fills me once again.

Hida Kisada is dead. Do not believe otherwise. I saw it with my own eyes. In the throne room. I stood vigil while I waited for him to arrive so our plan of vengeance would be complete. The empty Emerald Throne would soon be filled with the Great Bear of the Crab Clan: a tired old man who would be easy to persuade. But it was not to be. For while I waited, a thin shadowy form stepped into the room and smiled at me with eyes of fire. I recognized the lips, the brow, all his features, but those damnable eys. It was the brat Emperor, up from his bed and walking! And his eyes burned with green fire that was older than his years, older than... older than...

Kisada strode in, covered in the blood of courageous Lions, expecting me and the throne. What he found was... was... oh. I cannot! The brutal battle that ensued... Kisada, he... the blood. The throne. The sword. I saw Yakamo carrying the bloodied corpse, running for his life.

Running... yes. Run! Run now! Flee to the lands north where the Unicorn have traveled. There is a desert there. A long, sweeping desert with barbarian nomads who may take you in. There is nothing left. All is lost. Do not let anyone see you. Use the old ways, my beloved. Even now, a shadow spreads across the capital. Something ancient has awakened here. I must remain behind, but I will not allow you to do so. I care not for Yokuni's talk of 'destiny' and 'duty,' but he is right. I have chosen this path. But I will not force any others to join me in my fate. Run. And may the Seven Fortunes follow you.

Go now.

Bayushi Kachiko
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Now, more than ever, we have been cut off from the rest of the Empire. Our armies who move inland have told us the other Clans have retreated to their lands and seem to be waiting. None will speak to us. Communication from the Imperial Palace has ceased. The Lady Kachiko, once our most trusted advisor, has disappeared. My friend, we are alone.

But this is nothing new to us. We who have wandered for generations in the vast wasteland to the north and west of Rokugan. We will survive as we have always survived: with our speed and with out wits.

I can tell you nothing of the news of the Empire. I can only tell you rumors. It is said that the Crab Kisada attempted to slay the Emperor and was himself slain in the attempt. We also know the Crane have won a victory against the Shadowlands army led by their traitor Champion. The snake Hoturi has been laid to rest, his body burned and his army destroyed, and we must celebrate with them now that they have seen the error of their ways in following such a man.

Shinjo Yasamura, in the meantime, has left behind Beiden Pass. He has a more pressing dury, a duty that they other clans seem to have forgotten. When we swore our fealty to the Emperor and became his "Samurai", we swore we would be the keepers of justice in Rokugan. Now, with all the samurai of the land engaged in this selfish battle for the throne, injustice runs rampant throughout the Empire. Bandits - peasant and ronin, human and shadowlands - run rampant through the villages, taking what they need and leaving behind only bloodshed and suffering. Others who should be performing this duty continue to be drawn further into this bloody conflict for the throne, leaving the people of Rokugan to die at the hands of criminals and oni.

We have seen this before. We shall see it no more.

Forget this foolish quest for the throne. Forget the fighting between selfish men and return to the duty we swore we would perform. Find those preying upon our green land, seek out the evil men and unholy creatures who would massacre helpless peasants, and destroy them. Teach them that there is still law in Rokugan. Protect those who cannot protect themselves, and assist them in rebuilding what they have lost. It is the people of Rokugan that will keep the soul of this nation alive. If we protect them from the folly of their would-be rulers and end the depredations against their homes and persons, then this nation will survive to see the dawning of a new day. This is our duty. This is our destiny. And we are the only ones who can perform it.

Otaku Kamoko
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My cousin,

There is little left to say and too much to do.

Our armies have finally arrived at Otosan Uchi. Even now I can look up from my writing and see Doji Hoturi, Kitsu Motso and Hida Yakamo preparing for their initial assault. Yokatsu-sama stands south of us, preparing our infantry.

I have seen the armies os the Ronin and not even their motley colors can compare with viewing our infantry for the first time. They are simple farmers armed with farming tools. Two monks stand with Yokatsu. Together, they have turned this mass of simple farmers with simple tools into an army of fighting men.

Our cavalry, on the other hand, is as ready as always. My battle-maidens prepare with deep meditations. Soon, we will ride, and our steeds will be like fire as we charge down into the mass of marching dead men.

I will answer you question for I know it is in your mind. My wound is doing well. The spear-tip was removed by a Phoenix shugenja named Tadaka. He has much knowledge of the Shadowlands and it's dark magic. The wound festered for only a short while. His spells cured me well. Moto Tsume and his brother will haunt the villages of our followers no longer.

Togashi Yokuni came to me last evening just after our armies arrived. I told him I did not believe any Unicorn had ever spoken to him before. He laughed under his masked helm, then lifted his hands and removed it.

"No," he said to me, "but I have spoken to a Ki-rin."

When I saw what lay under his helm, I knew his words were true. I cannot tell you what happened then, but I can tell you that my destiny is clear to me now, as is the destiny of all our clan.

A time of great trouble is almost over, but a time of greater trouble lies on the horizon. All depends on our actions. The fate of the Empire. The fate of all men and women. It is a burden I must bear, but I do not know if I am worthy to carry it.

When I told Yokuni that, he smiled and touched my shoulder.

"If you were not worthy, you would not have been chosen," he said to me.

Not I sit alone, waiting for the battle.

I watch as the others set their souls to rest, peaceful as the falling cherry blossoms.

I think of the coming battle, and all I can do is remember Yokuni's words.

"... you would not have been chosen." May the Fortunes forgive me, but I wish it was another.

Kamoko
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My friend, you must take care. There are dark forces moving in the empire. Darker than ever before. The Shadowlands army we fought against at Beiden Pass is nothing compared to the might of the army led by the insane Scorpion Shugenja, Yogo Junzo. It has crushed villages and homesteads all across Rokugan, and now, it moves with steady speed toward the home of our Emperor.

As I said, it moves toward the home of our Emperor. The last Hantei no longer resides in the palace of his ancestors. The soul of the last Hantei no longer resides in the body that Lady Kachiko has poisoned for the last year. That soul is no more. An ancient evil now resides in his body, an evil whose name I dare not speak lest I draw his attention to the men who follow me. It is the same evil that was banished a thousand years ago by Shinsei and his seven thunders. The same evil whose essence was trapped in twelve scrolls that were never to be opened again. Now they have been opened, and he has escaped into the weakened body of our emperor. All is lost. There will never again be a Hantei. The line to the Sun Goddess is broken and Rokugan must stand alone against the greatest evil Heaven and Earth has ever known.

Far to the East, the Crane clan has achieved a victory against the deceiver Hoturi with the aid of the Naga and the Phoenix. In the light of the news from the palace, it is a small victory, but it is one we must look to for inspiration. Binding together, they defeated the Shadowlands army. We must do the same. Only together will we be able to stand against the awful power the dark one can muster. Spread the word to all you see. Tell them to abandon this foolish quest for a throne that no longer exists and band together in the face of a common enemy. If we do not, I fear that Rokugan is doomed.

And yes, I have heard the rumors regarding my sensei, Kage-sama. I cannot believe such rumors. They must come from the Scorpion in the palace. I have known Akodo Kage for all my life, and I assure you, he would never betray us to the Scorpion Lady. Trust me in this my friend. If you have never trusted me in any other matter, trust me in this one.

This may be the last time I speak to you. As I write this, we are preparing to ride against Yogo Junzo's army, in the hopes that we can cut him off before he reaches the imperial city. If I fall to his forces, you must carry on in my stead. This is a harsh duty I place upon your shoulders, but I know that you are worthy of it. Take courage in these dark days, for courage it seems, is all we have left.

Toturi

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

THE TOMB OF WU YEH

The Tomb Of Wu Yeh

The road stretched out before the creaking wagon like a ribbon, weaving its way through the hills to the ocean. Taka let his oxen's reins hang loose, knowing they would find the right path as easily as he. Smiling a broad, covetous smile, he sat with his latest treasure in his hands. He studied the fine lines of the iron pot, determining within a fraction of a koku the rich price he could surely make from selling it. Traveling across the lands as a merchant was a hard life, but for Taka, nothing was more rewarding. And as long as the reward was in golden koku, Yasuki Taka would follow the roads of Rokugan.
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As the wagon swayed over the crest of the hill, the road began to plunge into a thin valley. The oxen walked more slowly through the blind curves, their sure feet finding purchase in the dirt and sod of the path. Suddenly, with a sharp jerk, the cart stopped and Taka was sent sprawling backwards into a heap of beautiful silken kimonos with a loud "Ooof!" Cursing under his breath, he clambered up from beneath the pile, pushing his straw hat over the back of his head. "Kisa! Moto!" he looked at his usually steady oxen, who were shuffling uneasily in their braces. Scrabbling up over the seat, he said angrily, "What do you think you're..." then his eyes darted to the clearing ahead, and his voice faded.

Lying in the dust of the road were four dead men, each wearing the insignia of the Unicorn house. The sun glinted dully from the dark blood that stained their rich purple tabards, and one of the dead samurai still had his sword clutched in his fist as if ready to battle again the foe that had slain him. Around his lifeless eyes the flies swarmed thickly, unafraid. "Wretched bandits." Taka thought out loud, staring at the corpses. After a moment of quick calculation, he carefully climbed down from the seat of his wagon. Glancing around nervously and rubbing his hands together, Taka crept toward the bodies. As he approached them, he noted the marks of vicious combat - smashed armor, pools of drying blood in the dirt, and the ruined mon of their house crushed into the bushes nearby. "I'll just check them, you see...," he said to no one in particular. "They may be still alive..." His eyes roamed over the four bodies, taking in the shining daggers at their belts. Stooping down, concern creasing his tanned forehead, he searched the dead men. Taking their purses and bright weapons, he sighed in elaborate regret. "You poor men," he lamented as he stripped them of their valuables. "If only I knew where you had come from, I might return all your wealth," he checked the weight of one purse as he cut it from its former owner's belt, and corrected himself, "Your scant wealth, that is, to your families." Ignoring the rich purple mon blazoned on their gi, Taka began to rise, but then his roguish brown eye was caught by something to one side of the road. "Oh dear," he murmured, "another poor victim." He pushed aside the bushes as he reached the path's edge.

Looking down at a thin trail of blood which led beneath a larger bush, Taka took a hesitant step forward. At the end of the trail lay a tiny booted foot. His eyes slowly traveled up the rather shapely female leg, past the finely sculptured knee, above the muscular thigh, to the hem of a short forest-green kimono. There, at the top of the leg, he saw the most beautiful thing in all the world. He released his breath in a joyful hiss as his eyes caressed the dangling leather purse, its seams nearly bursting with gold. Eagerly, he reached out to grasp it from the dead woman's body, murmuring in the proper tone of regret, "What a tragic thing... even the women were killed." Then, as his hand grasped the magnificent pouch, the dead body moved as swiftly as a striking snake, and a sharp knife was thrust against his throat.

"Wrong, trader-man." The woman hissed, her face inches from his. Although her jet-black hair clung to her shoulders and face, Taka's quick eye saw her wince in pain as she moved. Holding her dagger against his neck, the strange woman climbed unsteadily to her feet, pulling Taka with her. Taka noted the blood-soaked kimono that clung to her muscular torso, and heard her slight sharp intake of breath as she stood and pressed the knife against him.

"My dear lady..." Taka began, his voice trembling only slightly, "You seem to have been injured. I was just..." His hands fluttered uselessly in the air between them, as if he was trying to ward off an evil spirit.

"Shut up. Get in the wagon." She shoved him roughly, keeping her dagger pointed at his neck. "Don't try anything, trader-man," she said bitingly, "I'm not hurt so badly that I can't kill you."

As Taka backed hesitantly toward the wagon, he searched his memory, trying to determine where he had seen her sharp-featured face before. Something in the narrow, shifting brown eyes and her long, aquiline nose was strangely familiar. But, then, he had traveled many roads, to many places, and seen most of Rokugan. He sighed dramatically as she pulled herself into the back of the cart. "Drive." Her voice barked the word like an Imperial command.

He picked up the reins, feeling again the sharp poke of the knife in his back. "So, my dear," Taka began, "Where are we going?" He steered carefully around the dead bodies, as the oxen snorted and shied.

"South. Toward the great swamps. Just take the left-hand road ahead, and keep quiet." She withdrew the knife, and Taka winced in genuine pain as he heard her tearing his fine new silks into a bandage. At nearly seventy koku a yard, that bandage probably cost enough to buy the services of ten healers. He slapped the reins wearily against the oxen, and the cart lurched forward on its new journey.

They rode in silence after that, disturbed only by the rhythmic clop of hooves and the creak of the wagon. As the night drew near, Taka ventured, "It's getting late, and my oxen are tired. We need to stop soon." No reply sounded from the dark wagon behind him and he sighed melodramatically. Strangely enough, he thought, there had been no noise of a search. His carefully hidden koku were still safe, and the woman had not destroyed any of his prized wares... except the silks. He winced again at the memory. As he pulled the wagon to a halt, he heard her say sharply, "I didn't say we could stop." He climbed out of the seat and began to unhitch the oxen, who licked at his hands in gratitude and companionship.

"I'm sorry. Kisa and Moto can go no further tonight. They are tired. If you must continue, feel free to walk." Taka tried not to let his hands shake as he waited for the knife to sink into his back, but there was no further response. "It seems we are at an impasse. You need the wagon to get to the swamps, and I refuse to abandon my rather expensive wares." Getting supplies from a compartment beneath the driver's seat, Taka fed the oxen some sweet grain and honey and began to clean their hides with a stiff brush. "Shall we at least try to be civil to one another?" As he spoke, the woman lowered herself from the high wagon. She had taken one of the finer silks, Taka noticed mournfully, and had wrapped it about her waist to staunch the bleeding. As she landed, she let out a cry of pain and collapsed to the ground. Taka rushed to her side, "By all the thunders!" he exclaimed. "You're more wounded than I thought. We must get you to a chiurgeon."

"No!" Her sharp retort echoed in the falling dusk. She lowered her voice, reaching for the knife in her sash. "No," she repeated, clutching at its hilt for reassurance. "We are going to the Tomb of Yu Weh. You will take me there." She pulled herself to her feet, using the wagon's wheel as a support, and her hand fell on a package within the cart. "All right, all right," Taka said hastily, stepping back, "we'll go to the cave. Just don't... don't break anything." Anxiously, his eyes darted back and forth from her knife to the delicate china plates stacked in a soft leather bag under her hand. He caught his breath as he estimated the purchase value of her buttress point, trying not to let the pain he felt in his wallet show in his eyes.

"When you have taken me to the cave, merchant, then you can continue on your way." Taka nodded in relief as she removed her hand from the plates. "Until then, you can call me Tantoko."

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The next morning, Taka arose early, as was his tradition. Tantoko was sleeping, he noticed, in the pile of silks in the back of his wagon. Trying to avoid the pain of calculating the cost of such a bed, he studied her face as she slept. It still seemed familiar to him, and it annoyed him that he could not place it. Suddenly, she began to rouse, and he swiftly went back to hitching the oxen. "So, Tantoko," he began, trying to force some joviality into his voice, "Why are you going to this cave?" "Because I was told to go." She sat up amid the silken pile and pulled her hair away from her face, twisting it into a long silken rope. Her eyes remained fixed on his face impassively. For a moment, Taka felt like a bird under the gaze of a greensnake, and he shook his head to clear his thoughts.

"Can you give me just one straight answer?"

Tantoko stared at him from the wagon, and her dark brown eyes were unreadable pools of thought. "Very well." she said after some hesitation. "The Tomb of Yu Weh is a place of great riches, where a bandit, an ancient ronin formerly of the Scorpion clan, kept his finest treasures. Within the cave is a magnificent goblet, made entirely of the purest jade. Its powers of healing are said to be so great that any disease can be cured simply by drinking from the cup."

For a moment, Taka's brain refused to comprehend the sheer monetary value of such an item, but he quickly regained control of himself. "Where did you hear of this cave?" he breathed in wonder.

"That does not matter. What matters is that I find it, and that I bring the goblet back." She leaned forward, "Nothing else matters at all." Then her eyes closed as a sudden pain lanced through her wound. After the spasm had passed, Tantoko looked intently at Taka. "You must help me. I am growing weaker each day, and I may not be able to complete my mission. If you cooperate, you can have all the other riches of the cave. All I am interested in is the goblet."

"Riches?" Taka thought to himself. "Enough gold to buy a hundred wagons, and a thousand silks. If she is telling the truth, what a wonder this cave must be!" Taka nodded, and said aloud, "Obviously, this goblet would be a great asset to the Empire. How brave a mission! I could not honorably refuse your request, of course." His mouth rambled the words as his thoughts whirled in bursts of golden koku.
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For two days they rode toward the dark southern swamps on trails Taka had never seen before. Weaving through the mire at the edge of a great swamp, Tantoko called out directions unerringly, leading them away from quicksand and other dangers, until they stopped in a small grove within the wooded swamp. "We must leave the cart here," said Tantoko quietly to Taka. In the silence of the marsh, even her quiet whisper echoed loudly. Uncomfortable, Taka nodded and they climbed down from the sheltering wagon. The oxen shifted uneasily, and turned frightened eyes toward Taka as he helped Tantoko from the high seat.

"Which way is the Tomb?" hissed Taka, unwilling to break the heavy silence. Tantoko pointed at a small path to one side of the clearing, and leaned against the merchant. Keeping her arm wrapped tightly around his shoulder, he helped her across the clearing and down the thin forest trail.

For some time, they walked through the marsh together, and Taka was uncomfortably aware of Tantoko's lithe body pressed against his. He swallowed, and tried not to notice how pleasant she felt. "She's dangerous, Taka. There's absolutely no profit in it," he thought, reminding himself of his daydreams in which a rich Doji princess flung herself at him. Tantoko's hair, long and soft, brushed his cheek, and he shivered. "Keep your mind on the koku," he thought, and quickly buried his mind in the task of estimating the total purchase cost of the Ancestral Armor of the Crab Clan. Ahead, the forest grew darker, and a strange cold chilled Taka to the bone. Unconsciously, he pulled Tantoko closer. "Is that the cave?" he whispered, and his breath hung in pale strands on the cold afternoon air. Tantoko nodded, squinting through the trees.

As they approached the cave, Tantoko suddenly dropped to her knees, pulling Taka down beside her. Writhing forward under some covering brush, Tantoko squinted at the cave's dark mouth. Taka crawled toward her, despairing of ever getting his pants clean again, and pushed his way tentatively into the bush. After a few moments of watching her regard the cave with great intensity, Taka whispered "What is it?"

Tantoko clamped her hand over his mouth, a snarl corrupting her even features. Then, placing her mouth beside his ear, she whispered, "Do you see that thin beam of light within the cave?" Taka nodded, mutely, trying not to notice how pleasantly warm her breath was beside his face. The beam, a thin shaft of sunlight, pierced the darkness of the cave but was swallowed just beyond the opening. "Just behind that beam, there's movement... if you look carefully, you can see it." she whispered.

He squinted at the light, and tried to peer through the darkness of the cave. Then, just as he had given up, he saw a faint ghostly sheen within the cave, as if an ethereal helmet floated there.

"GMMM!" Taka hissed behind Tantoko's hand, bucking upright. She yanked him down swiftly, hiding behind the protective cover. He stared at her, terrified, and said more quietly, "Gmmm!" She nodded grimly, keeping her hand over his mouth. "A shadow-samurai." She peered toward the cave again.

Take pulled her hand from his mouth and hissed, "A shadow samurai?" He shook an agitated finger toward the opening. "We can't possibly get past that! That's a Shadowlands fre..." Her fingers tightened around his chin, and clamped his mouth shut again. She nodded.

"I may have been able to best it, before, but now... we must seek other ways." Tantoko stared into the gloom of the cave again, and said, "Shadow samurai are but ghosts of dead men, brought back to life by powerful magic." Releasing his face at last, Tantoko began to move backwards, out of the underbrush and away from the cave.

"Powerful... magic?" Taka's voice came out in a tiny squeak as he stared at the cave, appalled. "That means..." He tore his gaze away from the cave to gaze, glassy-eyed, at Tantoko. "Shugenja!" He backed out of the underbrush with all the speed he could muster. Once they were back at the clearing, Taka helped Tantoko lean against the wagon. "You never said anything about shugenja," Taka rushed, "I never agreed to deal with shugenja!"

Tantoko looked appraisingly at Taka, pressing her hand against her bandaged abdomen. "That's because I didn't know there was one here." She stared at Taka thoughtfully. "Don't be so worried, Taka. I can handle a shugenja." Taka started to sigh in relief when she continued, "It's the shadow samurai that concerns me." Taka slumped against the cart, his head in his hands, and moaned softly.

That evening, when the sun had left the sky, Tantoko and Taka once again were watching the cave, hiding in the shadows beneath the low brush. "How long are we going to wait?" Taka hissed, trying not to sneeze at the earthy smell of bugs and brush. "The shugenja has to be nearby. I'll bet he can't leave that shadow-samurai alone too long. The taint of the shadows makes that kind of guardian very unpredictable." Taka glanced uneasily at Tantoko, wondering how she knew so much about such things, when suddenly his attention was arrested by a faint scuffling in the brush on the far side of the clearing. As he watched, fearfully, a dark figure stepped out of the shadows and raised its hands toward the cave.

"That's him?" Taka said breathlessly, and Tantoko nodded silently, her movements almost invisible in the darkening twilight.

From the depths of the cave, a silent glowing figure came at the beckoning of the shugenja, kneeling at his master's side. After it had made a mild supplication, the shugenja walked past the ghostly samurai, and vanished into the cave. "All I need..." murmured Tantoko, "is one good shot." Tantoko pulled a thin, reedlike bow from her long kimono sleeve. She strung the tiny han-kyu, pulling a needle from a wooden box in her pouch and attaching it to a slender arrow shaft. Taka swallowed his objections with a whine as he saw movement at the cave's mouth.

"You can't possibly get a clear shot," Taka moaned despairingly, "that shadowlands fiend is between you and the shugenja!" Tantoko ignored him, and took careful aim with her assassin's bow.

As the shugenja passed them, a soft twang and a thunk rang in Taka's ears, and he saw the arrow lodge itself in the wizard's throat.

The wizard fell, choking, his body twisting slowly toward the bush. He clutched at the shaft protruding from his windpipe, a bloody bubble forming between his soundless lips. As he sank to his knees, he pointed an unsteady hand toward the bush, his eyes locking with Taka's. Taka froze, terrified, watching the ghastly samurai spin and unsheathe a gleaming sword that did not look at all ethereal. Although the shugenja fell lifeless and bleeding, his follower began to stride toward them with murderous purpose.

"Tantoko...!" Taka howled and flung himself backwards, scrabbling along the ground with the desperation of a rabbit who sees the wolf approaching. Tantoko drew her dagger in an instant, flinging it at the approaching specter with deadly aim. The deadly knife whirled through the air, blade gleaming in the moonlight, and sped into the face of the shadow samurai.

It bounced twice when it hit the ground on the far side of the clearing. Tantoko's lips pressed tightly together, as she considered her next action in the scant seconds before the shadow samurai arrived. Then, her movements sure and precise, she leapt into the clearing. Taka froze, staring numbly at the injured girl as she took a martial stance. "What are you doing?" He yelled as the samurai turned to face her. "You can't even touch him!"

As the wraith swung, Tantoko leapt in the air above the blade. "Run, trader man!" She said through teeth clenched in pain. "We can't both get out of here. I'll keep him busy." The samurai feinted, trying to draw Tantoko toward him, but she bounded back, clutching at her wounded side. "I'm too wounded to outrun him, and you can't carry me fast enough," she yelled, sidestepping the wicked blade again. "GO!"

Taka paused for a moment, unsure, but then scrambled to his feet, pushing his way out of the bush. The brush tugged at his pants and scratched his face as he tried to run. Then, a thick log embedded in the mire made his feet fumble and he fell, his breath gasping as the wind flew from his lungs. For a moment he stared at the log glassily. Looking behind him at the clearing, he saw the undead spirit swing at Tantoko again as she nimbly ducked beneath the blade. Her hands whirled uselessly in the air where the transparent specter stood, unable to make contact with anything solid. The samurai swung a third time, slicing into Tantoko's arm above the elbow. She staggered backwards, gripping her wound, and the specter seemed to grin with horrible glee. "Taka!" she screamed again, her voice resolute, "Run, you fool!" But Taka stared at the log that had tripped him, a wild idea blossoming in his fear-filled head. Stumbling to his feet, he picked up the log in both hands, barely lifting it off the ground. Turning toward the clearing, he staggered toward the battling pair, half-dragging, half-wielding the rotted log. The shadow samurai swung again at Tantoko, slamming the hilt of his katana against her cheek, and knocking her reeling to the ground at his feet.

"You honorless dog!" howled Taka from the clearing's edge. "Come and fight me!" The shadow samurai turned slowly away from the stunned Tantoko, focusing its empty gaze on the merchant. "That's it!" Taka yelled again, waving the log in front of him, "Ya! Ya! You aren't much of a warrior!" He shouted insultingly, "Look at you! You fight like a Crane!"

Whether the Shadowlands creature was insulted or not, it strode swiftly toward Taka with its sword upraised. Tantoko looked toward them, gasping for breath, and pulled herself to her feet. "Taka... no..." she murmured, dragging herself to her feet. But Taka swung his log at the ghost with a wild, launching swing. Smiling through its ghastly teeth, the samurai easily parried the log. As it did, the katana sunk into the rotten log, its gleaming blade buried in the wood. Losing its fetid smile, the shade yanked at the blade, preparing to jerk it free from the log in order to cleave Taka in two, when suddenly Tantoko was there.

Grabbing the end of the thick log, Tantoko gave it a swift spin, jerking the log and the ethereal katana momentarily free of the control of the spectre. As she did, the shade lurched toward her, impaling itself on the blade of its own sword. A fearsome howl ripped from its lips as the katana sank into its chest. Tantoko held the ends of the log, pushing forward and driving the katana farther into the spirit's heart. As the spectral samurai screamed in rage and frustration, a bright light leaped out of its eyes and mouth, dancing toward the starry sky. When the light vanished, the body of the ghost turned to dust and scattered upon the ground.

Tantoko sank to her knees, gripping her newly wounded shoulder, and hissed, "You could have left, trader-man." Her eyes sought his in anger and confusion, "You would have escaped."

"No, I couldn't." Taka said, tearing his pant cuffs into shreds to bind her arm. "You would've died." He looked into her dark eyes as he finished the bandage, and an unspoken thought passed between them. For a moment they froze, the trader and the ninja, silent in the aftermath of the battle.

"It doesn't matter." She said weakly, tearing her eyes from his. "I'm dead anyway." She held her stomach with her unwounded arm. I've torn open the other wound again. I think I'm bleeding from the inside."

Taka's face went white. "What can I do? How can I help?" His hands fluttered about the larger bandage, but she knocked them away. "I'm not going to leave you, Tantoko. You risked your life for me."

Tantoko grunted uncomfortably, as if Taka had reminded her of some breach of etiquette. She turned her attention to her wounds, pain showing in her every movement. "There's not much you can do, trader-man. Just get out of here. The swamp is too dangerous for you to stay, especially now. I'll bet..." she winced, "that shugenja had friends."

"The goblet." Taka said suddenly. "Could that heal you?"

Tantoko winced again, and her lips curled into a snarl. "Don't waste your time, Taka. You'll never get in and out of that cave alive." Quietly ignoring her advice, Taka stood resolutely and began to head for the cave. "Taka!" Tantoko shouted at him, but his bandy legs were carrying him toward the cavern's mouth. She stared at his back as he vanished into the darkness of the cave. "Crazy man," she muttered fiercely. "You'll only accomplish both our deaths." The silence of the marsh was all that answered her, and she completely ignored the tiny tear that vanished into her thick black hair.

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The cave was dark and stank of fetid waste. Taka crept along the cavernous wall, his hands finding the way where his eyes failed in the darkness. Thick, sticky strands of web clung to his fingers and palms, coating them and making his hands slip against the cold wall. The walls of the cave were covered in the thick, viscous stuff and layers of it were strung across the passage like a gigantic web. Taka grimaced, trying to scrape the substance off his hands on the rock. "Filthy place..." he murmured, "What idiot would ever keep a treasure in a disgusting cave like this?" He moved ahead into the cavern although his eyes could barely make out the passage before him. He winced as his hands touched the sticky walls.

Peering ahead and moving cautiously, Taka began to make out a faint, phosphorescent light ahead, and he moved toward it. "Light!" He thought, "Perhaps there's someone in this cave after all... someone I can bargain with, perhaps? Oh, kami of koku, don't let it be another of those Shadowlands freaks...."

Perhaps the kami wasn't listening, or perhaps Taka was behind in his payments, for when the cave widened and the light allowed, Taka found himself looking into a nightmare. The webbing that had so thickly coated the walls now stretched across a massive chasm in layers stickier and more complex than any monetary deal he had ever created. Taka's breath hissed out and he clutched at the wall, looking down into the massive pit below, lit by the faint greenly glowing moss that clung to the walls. "Oh, kami! Oh, my father's beard!" Taka whispered.

He reached out to touch the clinging strands, and they shivered into the distance from his fingertip's light brush. The web was a blanket that covered the ceiling, swaying in thin tendrils over a terrifying drop into darkness. He let his foot hover over a thicker strand of webbing and pressed lightly against it to see if it would hold his weight. A huge segment of the web shivered from the touch, but it held. Taka groaned aloud. "No, no... I'm not supposed to cross this, am I? Oh, no no no..." He backed from the web into the cave mouth again. "Not all the koku in the world, not all the fine silks or rich items can make me go into that!" He stopped well back from it, looking back at the chasm, and crossed his arms. "I simply refuse," he said into the soundless cavern. The darkness held its breath, pregnant and expectant. "Do you hear me, I refuse!" The silence continued to wait patiently, and Taka looked back over his shoulder at the faraway entrance. After a few moments, he muttered to the gloom, "She can't be worth all the koku in the world," but the silence hovered around him in silent disapproval. Finally Taka threw his hands up and cursed under his breath, reaching for a thick strand of the webbing and pulling himself tentatively out over the chasm. The web shivered and writhed beneath his fingers like a living creature as Taka crawled across the thickest strand he could reach. He hung on the cable, swaying dangerously above the pit and muttering prayers into the darkness with a thick tongue. Over each inch of forward progress, Taka clutched at his purse to see if it had fallen from his belt. "Oh, kami...oh," he winced, "... this is the most foolish thing I've ever done. Gentle kami, get me out of this mess and I swear I'll never overcharge Kisada-sama again..." Suddenly, his muttered prayers halted. The web beneath him had moved... but he had not.

Frozen in place, Taka looked up above him with wide eyes. A tremendous spider, apparently the denizen of the place, had stepped out from a crack in the ceiling, and was looking down at him. But worse, far worse than the venom on its fangs or the uncanny agility with which it navigated the webbing was the dark intelligence in its eyes. Taka's mouth started to open in a shrill scream, but the silence muffled him, and he was unable to make a sound. In his mind, a seductive voice rose from the ashes of his courage.

"Kumo..." It whispered into the depths of his thoughts, and its voice was rich and gentle. "I am Kumo... the spider spirit... You resist from fear." The spider moved, and its movements were a dance over the silken strands. "There is nothing to fear..." Its voice resounded deep within Taka's mind, and he felt his body begin to relax. "Do not resist... all you need do now is sleep. Rest so quietly...." The spider began to move across the massive web gently, its swift steps graceful where Taka's movements had been clumsy and encumbered by the clinging strands. "There is nothing left for you in this world... let me move you to a place of peace." Its mental suggestions were gentle and difficult to ignore, and Taka felt his eyelids lowering. "Sleep,... yes. Gentle sleep now. Kumo will show you the way."
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"Sleep..." thought Taka, his mind wandering the halls of thought and finding nothing of interest. "I haven't slept in a while. You're absolutely right, Kumo." He started to relax, and the spider crept forward, its fangs extended. As he relaxed, Taka felt his leg slip from the cable, dangling down toward the chasm. In his somnambulent state, he watched the drop sway pleasantly under him. Kumo lashed out then, poison glistening, but Taka's sudden shift caused the spider spirit to miss. Its lunging fangs tore into the pouch at the man's hip instead of biting deeply into Taka'a side. Taka watched the commotion through a peaceful haze, hardly realizing as golden koku spilled over his leg and vanished into the darkness below. "Koku...?" murmured Taka dreamily as he watched the coins shower into the chasm. Then, with sudden realization, his eyes flashed open. "Koku!" He reached out desperately to catch his coins, but only succeeded in tilting wildly on the cable as the giant spider hissed in frustration above him. "What?' Taka murmured, feeling the web sway under him and catching himself as he began to fall. He yelped in terror as he hung from the cable with one hand, the spider's evil spell broken. Confused, unable to scream or pray to his cherished kami, the trader looked up from the pit at the Shadowlands creature. Kumo's multifaceted eyes glistened, malevolent and hungry, only inches from his own. Then, as Kumo's mouth opened again in a hiss of fury, Taka found his missing scream. Hanging above a dark chasm hundreds of feet above the ground, Taka shrieked at the top of his lungs. Kumo hissed again and lunged toward him eagerly. "You cannot escape me this time!" It hissed hungrily. Taka swung out over the ravine, howling as he dangled helplessly far from either side of the massive pit. Faced with the spider spirit above him and his koku vanishing below, Taka's choice was easy. He let go.

The plunge was long, hundreds of minutes by Taka's standards, and the screaming hiss of the spider echoed in the fading light above his head. Taka yelped and tried to fumble in the darkness for his falling coins as he felt the wind rushing by him. Then - cold water immersed him, and he felt himself being swept along by a powerful current. Splashing and spluttering, Taka fought against the river's chill pull, desperately clutching at the walls of the river, finding sharp rocks and pulling himself back up to the air above. Taka gasped for breath, looking up at the far away speck of light. Hanging onto the slick stone walls, he shivered and cursed. "Ieee! What a fall!" Then he gasped again, as realization hit him. "OH! My koku!" he cried, and dove down into the depths of the water below.

Taka's hands clutched at mossy rock as he scrabbled along the depths of the pool. His fingers clawed at rock, grime and several small hard objects that may once have been bones. One cold koku clung to a dark rock, and Taka swept it up into a cold-numbed hand. The coin was half-smashed by a rock that had fallen upon it on its way down, and the sharp edge cut into Taka's palm as he clutched it tightly. As he turned to rise again, Taka saw what appeared to be a light shining off to one side. "It's the koku kami, come to take me away, I just know it." he thought to himself, peering through the murky water. "This journey has been doomed from the beginning... Oh, Taka, Taka! How foolish you are!" He rose to the surface, his lungs about to burst from lack of oxygen. As he swam in the cold pool, he looked up at he faint soft light above him, filtered through the web of the horrible spider. "However, unless I want to invite the spider to come and get me here, I suppose my only alternative," he winced, "is down. Oh, how I wish I had never come in this wretched place!" With a single shuddering breath, Taka dove again and swam toward the light like some strange kind of fish.

The waters broke above Taka's head as he surfaced, staring up at the light streaming through a thin crack in the ceiling far overhead. "A hidden cave!" he breathed, treading to stay afloat in the deep water. The cave was so small that the pool in which Taka was swimming took up most of the floor. Swimming to the far side, the trader pulled himself up onto a thin ledge of stone above the water. The light was coming from a hand-sized opening, and the bright moonlight glittered upon a cup of pure jade, seated in a depression in the wall. "Ahhh..." Taka breathed reverently, seeing dancing visions of golden koku shimmering in the pale light.

It was a large goblet, carved from a single tremendous piece of jade and studded with emeralds the size of a man's eye. As he stared at it, it occurred to Taka had never seen anything so beautiful. "Even if the healing powers of the goblet are but a myth - that is a rare and magnificent piece of art!" he chortled. "Worth thousands - no, Taka, with your unmatchable bartering skills - millions of koku!" He crawled across the small ledge carefully, moving toward the niche in the cavern that held the goblet.

"Truly stunning," he murmured, holding the delicate goblet in his hands and trying to determine its exact worth. "Stunning." As he grasped the goblet, he frowned. "But now that I've got it, how do I get out again?" He peered around the small cave, and found no escape. There was simply no way the goblet would fit out the small hole above him, much less Taka himself. As his hands caressed the smooth jade sides of the goblet, Taka slowly began to smile. "What was I saying earlier? Invite the spider down? Hmm,..." he paused, deep in thought. "Ah...I have it now...Perfect." He shoved the goblet gently under his vest and lowered himself back into the chilly water. "Taka, my dear, you are a genius," he said to himself, immediately responding, "Oh, no no no, I'm sure it was your idea, Taka!" Chuckling, he took a deep breath in order to dive under the water again. "I always think better when I'm a millionaire," he sighed, and then grinned as he dove back under the water to the other side of the cave.

"Oh, Kumo?" Taka's voice echoed eerily up through the darkness of the long chasm a few minutes later. "It seems that I've quite escaped you!" His tone was pleasant and bright despite the surroundings, and he heard the furious hissing of the spider spirit from above. "How funny...and to think, I was rather frightened of you when I first arrived. But," Taka made a loud yawn, "I suppose I have nothing to fear from you, after all." As he spoke, Taka reclined on the thin ledge above the water, pulling his hat low over his eyes as he heard the hissing approaching down the long shaft above him. Soon, he heard the spider's all too familiar mental commands, "Ahhh... Little man... I will have you now..." Kumo whispered, but Taka simply lay still upon the ledge, unconcerned. With a devastatingly swift strike, Kumo dropped the last few feet on a thin line of silk, driving its fangs deep into Taka's shoulder and discharging its deadly poison. Taka barely had time to swallow, as he felt unconsciousness grip his mind, plunging him into darkness.

He awoke some time later, completely wrapped in the spider's silk, his body shuddering with the faint remnants of the poison. "Oh, kami!" Taka breathed, "Thank goodness that the legend was true!" He smiled as he remembered taking a gulp from the cup as the spider approached, and swallowing after he had been bitten. "The magic of the cup neutralized the spirit's poison," Taka chuckled to himself, "And I am halfway to freedom!"

Writhing slightly, Taka freed the small coin from his vest pocket, checking to be sure that the jade goblet was still safely in his possession. Then, with small but swift strokes, he began cutting the delicate silken strands until he had freed his arm, then his chest, then his face. He was hanging face down above the chasm, and there was no sign of Kumo anywhere. Hurriedly he cut the thin, sticky strands, clutching at the web around him to keep himself from falling back into the chasm. With a twist and much swinging between the thick cords, Taka lowered himself to the mouth of the cave. Seeing the moonlight shining through the cave mouth down the corridor, Taka grinned widely. "Kumo! Catch me now!" he said.

"Perhaps I shall..." suddenly hissed a voice from the web behind Taka. Taka yelped, spinning around and nearly dropping the precious goblet in his fright. He fell to the floor, clutching the relic to his chest and trying desperately to scrabble backwards across the cold stone floor. Kumo saw the jade goblet Taka held, and its eyes whirled strange glistening colors. Its dripping mandibles spread in a grimace of shock, and it yelped back.

The goblet was glowing. Its soft golden light radiated outward toward the spider-spirit, and the dark spider recoiled in terror and pain. Taka froze for a moment, his mouth gaping open, then he scrambled to his feet. Kumo recoiled back across the shivering web, its forelegs scraping at its eyes, blinded by the radiance of the goblet. With a squealing leap, Kumo began sawing the upper cables of the web free, letting silken strands parachute down the chasm below in huge wafting chunks. Taka slid down the corridor on hands and knees, feeling the slick fungi below his fingers as he held the fragile goblet in a death grip. "Cutting the webs?" he thought. "Why on earth is that creature destroying his home?" He crawled farther down the cave, retreating fromt he injured Kumo until he could no longer hear the scuttling noises of the tremendous beast. As he climbed to his feet, Taka felt the smooth sides of the goblet in his hands. He grinned down at the still-glowing chalice, seeing his reflection shining back at him from between the huge emeralds. "Not a smudge on it. Beautiful." He smiled covetously down at it, slowly making his way toward the opening, all thoughts of the spider-spirit vanished from his head like koku through Kisada's blockade.

Suddenly Taka heard a strange noise coming from the outer cave. It was a grinding, stone against stone, echoing down the long damp cave. "Taka!" Tantoko's voice screamed from outside the cave, "the cave . . . it's closing!" "Closing. Yes, of course." Taka murmured happily, staring at the rich gemstones which made up the goblet in his hands. It was so lovely, so expensive, so wonderfully... "CLOSING?!??!"

In a terrified burst of speed, Taka dashed toward the cave mouth. Sliding on the fecund floor, his boots slipping and desperately seeking purchase, he could see the pale moonlight at the entrance growing fainter. With one last leap, he threw himself out, under the grinding rock slab that slammed behind him, the goblet flying from his hands. With an anguished howl, he rolled forward, straining every nerve to catch the chalice before it smashed against the ground. Pulling off his hat, he flung it with desperation at the falling chalice. Whether it was the accuracy of a master or the blind luck of the Sun Goddess, Taka never knew, but at the last moment the hat landed just beneath the goblet, its soft straw and felt cushioning the relic's fall.

No birds sang in the dark still night of the swamp. The silence hung in the air like the silken strands of Kumo's web. Taka was still sprawled at the mouth of the cave, the cuff of his pants trapped beneath the crushing slab of stone. Barely visible in the darkness, Tantoko smiled. She was leaning against the tree where Taka had left her, blood now oozing from the bandage around her waist. Finally, she broke the still night air with a soft whisper. "Good throw." she chuckled, and smiled weakly.

"Of course." Taka said, trying to recover his dignity even when the world stood on its head around him. Composing his face into a sober merchant's attitude, he said, "It's worth a lot of koku."

After Taka freed himself from the cave, he walked toward Tantoko, picking up the hat and goblet along the way. He unstrapped his small skin of water from his belt and poured some into the bowl of the cup. Gingerly, he knelt beside Tantoko in his ragged, mud-encrusted pants, his sleeves torn from the brambles and brush and still dripping from the pool's water. With a courtly bow he offered her the chalice. "Thirsty, honorable Tantoko-san?" He tilted the goblet to Tantoko's lips, and she drank. For a moment, nothing happened. Then, just as Taka's hopes were fading, Tantoko gasped, a long shuddering intake of breath, and her eyes flew open wide. Color began to return to her pale face, and her body grew rigid. She clutched at Taka's hand, and her grip was strong and firm. Within minutes, she sat upright, and stared at him, stunned. "Its true... I'm completely healed!" With a glad cry she pulled the bandage from her arm. Where her wound had been there was now only smooth, unmarred flesh. Tantoko stood carefully, testing her balance before yanking the silk winding from her waist. The rend in her short kimono now showed only her muscular stomach, with a very faint scar near the navel. Tantoko looked at Taka, then grinned fiercely, leaping backwards into a flip and a series of handstands. "I didn't believe it, but it's true! The goblet has amazing healing powers!" She continued her acrobatics in the clearing for a few moments, exulting in the lack of pain.

Her catlike grace and swift leaping movements suddenly struck a chord in Taka's memory. "Now I know where I've seen you before," he said with realization. "You were an acrobat in the Doji court, weren't you?" His eyes widened as the implications grew. "Were you a spy?"

Tantoko faced Taka, all her playfulness vanishing like sand in the tide. "Mind your business, trader man," she said dangerously, "and keep your memories to yourself." Scooping up the goblet, Tantoko retrieved her dagger and moved soundlessly toward the waiting wagon.

The wagon ride through the swamps at night was much slower than by day, but neither Taka nor his companion were willing to spend the rest of that night near the cave. The silence hung heavy and tense between them, broken only by the creaks of the wagon as it swayed behind the faithful oxen. As the rising sun crested in the eastern sky, Tantoko grabbed the reins and halted the wagon. "Here's where I get off, merchant."

"Now, wait just a moment there!" Taka said, disgruntled. "I saved your life, remember?"

"And I thank you."

Taka shook his finger in front of her nose. "I don't want thanks. I want koku. That little trinket we picked up is at least half mine, and I want my share."

Tantoko's eyes narrowed. "I don't have any money to give you."

"I know. But I'll wager a fine iron pot that whoever you're taking that goblet to has plenty." Seeing her hesitate further, Taka grinned evilly and said, "If you don't pay me to keep quiet, I know many who would pay me to talk."

"I could kill you now, and leave your body for the crows, trader-man." Her voice was cool and smooth, but Taka was not cowed.

"You owe me your life."

"I owe you nothing."

"Your life."

She stared into his dark brown eyes, but all she saw there was a merchant's determination. Tantoko cursed under her breath. "You won't like where we're going." Knowing he had won, Taka urged the oxen back into their shambling walk. "Don't worry, Tantoko. I know all the roads of Rokugan. With Yasuki Taka as your guide, all paths are open." He smiled a victorious smile. "Which road shall we take? South, to the gates of Hida Castle? Perhaps to the distant Lion strongholds? Shall we try to catch up with the wandering ronin armies of Toturi the Black?"

Tantoko shook her head resolutely. In a low voice she murmured, "To the Imperial Palace of Hantei, trader-man. As fast as you can go."
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Of all the splendors of Rokugan, from the bursting magic displays over the Isawa woodlands to the dark, brooding seas of the southern coasts, it can be said that nothing is more stunningly beautiful than a simple rain over the plains of Otosan Uchi. The Imperial Palace of the Hantei has been standing on those plains for countless generations, its crystal and marble spires rising in majestic tumult over the waving fields of flowers. Its gardens are unmatchable, boasting rare and unique plants from all parts of Rokugan. It is common legend that one of the ancient Emperors said he wanted a garden to be built that would show him all the things that his people saw each day, so he might know their world as well as his own.

Within those ornate and fantastic gardens there are simple pools of sand, raked elegantly into spreading ripples around smooth granite and marble stones carved from the mountains of the enigmatic Dragon Clan. The fourth Hantei is said to have personally chosen each stone for its patterning, the grain of the marble and the subtle veining of sand within the massive blocks. Each area is maintained by the gentle, invisible gardeners who circulate like bees throughout the garden, keeping order and harmony. But even such earnest and deliberate care cannot always defeat the plague of serpents that long to infect such a rare and wonderous garden, and it is certain that order and harmony are no match for deception and guile.

It was night, and the darkness surrounded them like a fog over the shores of the Crab, hiding their true intention and movements from all eyes. With careful footsteps they approached a curve in the outer wall of the palace, and with a faint, secret knock they found the opening to the gardens. They were two hooded figures, moving with stealth and swiftness through the sweetly scented night. With no sound, the two figures passed into the palace as though they had never been, and only a single marred footprint against the sand of the pool left witness to their passing. It the morning, with the dew and the rhythm of the gardener's tools, it too would be gone.

Yasuki Taka made it a rule never to question a customer about a fair price for an item. If the customer was not willing to pay, Taka would simply move onward, selling it to the next man down the road. But in this case, he thought to himself, he was going to make an exception. "Free?" he hissed at Tantoko as she handed the goblet away. "What do you mean, we'll part with it for free?" Her elbow found its way between his ribs, and Taka suddenly stopped complaining.

"Of course, Aramoro-sama," Tantoko bowed, "I have completed my mission successfully and have returned with the goblet as I was instructed."

Bayushi Aramoro was a tall man, with breadth and width through his shoulders, and eyes like a captive hawk. "Well done, young one, well done." his hands caressed the jade sides of the relic, and a faint moan escaped from Taka's lips as he saw his hopes of koku slide away. "The trader..." his gaze lit upon Taka with malicious intent, but Tantoko spoke swiftly.

"...can be trusted, Aramoro-sama. You have my assurances." After a moment, Aramoro nodded in agreement, and she continued, "He was very useful to me in my mission, and I have told him that something could... be arranged."

"Koku?" Taka whispered the word as no more than a faint prayer to his devoted kami, and thought he saw a flicker of scorn and understanding within the black depths of Aramoro's eyes.

"If koku is your price, trader, koku you will have, and be gone." Aramoro turned then, his long black gi swirling in the dim light of the tunnel beneath the Imperial Palace. "Stay here, merchant, and you will be compensated." Tantoko remained only a moment before following her Master into the darkness, her face speaking nothing to Taka's searching eyes.

"Koku?" Taka said again, although this time there was no one to hear him. "Oh, blessed kami, if they give me even an eighth - no, a fourth! - of what that goblet is worth, I'll have enough money to buy out the entire Mantis Clan!" He chortled to himself in the dim torch light. "What a wonderful stroke of luck! I bet... oh dear." He looked around suddenly, as if noticing for the first time that he was alone. "What if they don't realize how much such a piece of art is worth?"

Taka pondered for a moment. "I'll bet they intend to cheat me of the true value of the piece. They think I'm some ignorant merchant who doesn't know his koku from headed down the dark corridor. "Even Kisada learned - you don't try to cheat a cheater!" With a low chuckle, he slid into the darkness that had swallowed Aramoro and the young ninja girl.

The darkness of the palace cleared as Taka climbed up a thin ladder to a darkly paneled hallway. Sensing no guards about, Taka moved into the corridor and began to pad quietly down the hall. Having never been inside the Imperial Palace before, Taka smiled, and murmured to himself, "What a marvelous opportunity this is! If I am captured by the Emperor's guard, I can tell them about the ninja, and I'll be a hero! And if not..." Seemingly unknown to Taka, the small jeweled statue which had ornamented a decorative alcove slid silently into his pocket, and he continued blithely down the hallway.

The palace's interior was dark and bare, the soft wood of the floors gleaming from use and polish, and the thin rice doors to either side glowing with the reflection of tallowed candles. Each corner held a thin table on which flowers, art, or steel weapons gleamed. Soft conversations rose and fell, masking the movements of Taka's padded feet as he investigated every turn and hall of the massive building. Finally, within one room, he heard a familiar voice.

"... and you say the Unicorns tried to stop you?" It was Aramoro, the steel in his speech chilling Taka to the bone. The trader froze in a shadowed corner near the rice walls of the room, quickly darting into the next chamber and closing the door. The rice paper made a quiet sshhh in the night, as if it too held a secret, and Taka listened raptly. "Hie." It was Tantoko. "I believe they found out that I was going to attack the Emperor," Taka's jaw dropped, "and they intended to stop me."

Clamping a hand over his mouth to stop any noise, Taka slid into a crouch by the door. "Attack the Emperor?" he thought, panicked. The conversation continued.

"Nothing else?"

"No, sama. They knew nothing else, and none of them survived the encounter." Tantoko's soft sounds did not soothe Taka's fears. His ears burned, and his head whirled. "Kill the Emperor?" the thought ripped through his mind again. "And are you prepared to fulfill the rest of your task, little one?" Aramoro asked, and the only answer was a swift assent from Tantoko. "Then take your weapon, and may the spirits of our ancestors be with you." Taka heard the door of the other room open, and then there was only silence.

"Kill the Emperor?" Taka's confused and stunned mind could hardly grasp the concept. "But... if they kill the Emperor, the Clans will be in complete war! There will be no trade at all, and that means..." A faint yelp left his lips, and he muffled it rapidly. "The entire economy might collapse!" Scrambling to his feet, Taka threw open the door between himself and the other room, but there was nothing to be seen.

"Oh blessed kami!" Taka breathed, "Now I know why I have been guided here! To save Rokugan! Oh, my pots and silks!" He almost sank to the floor again in terror, but his bandy legs were already carrying him back out into the corridor. "I have to stop Tantoko!"

The shadows at the heart of the palace seemed to guide Taka, encouraging him in his search for the ninja girl and her deadly mission. Although he could hear the shouts and laughter of the Imperial guard, he saw none of them in the hallways. All was dark and quiet, and Taka was more alone than he has ever been in his life. "Tantoko, I have to stop Tantoko!" he repeated again and again, but the shadows only swallowed his protests and led him ever onward, toward the dark heart of the Empire's master.

He finally found her within a stunning bedroom, covered in silks and luxuries that he had no time to price, and he hissed as he entered, "Tantoko, you have to sto..." but his own dagger was at his throat and her hand was over his mouth.

"I have no time to argue with you, trader-man. There is more here than you think. The Empress has..."

A soft footfall outside the door was the only warning they had. With a mighty swing, Tantoko threw Taka through the small stone door in the outer wall of the room, pushing him back into the tunnel system's secret embrace. The door swung shut with the faintest of clicks, and Tantoko was swallowed by the darkness of the room.

Taka was not a hero. Further, he had no idea how to open the massive door. All he could do was stare through the small crack in the wall, and mutter hurried prayers to his kami. Fickle thing that it was, his kami did not answer, and his fears killed the sounds before they could leave his tightened throat. Then the door opened, and Taka could see a man's figure silhouetted by the light of the corridor. The Emperor. For a moment, Taka's mind drew the pictures that he expected to see. A strong man, youthful and noble, in the silks of the Imperial Dynasty stood in the darkened doorway. But the pictures began to change as the man entered the room. The silks were rotted, and fouled with the stench of the grave, and the Emperor was no longer young. In the growing glow of golden light, Taka's eyes showed him a vision of unimaginable horror. Maggots writhing in reddened eyesockets, hands made of bone covered by barely-clinging flesh, and a darkness that was almost palpitable hovering above the shoulders of the slowly moving figure. What had once been the Emperor was now something else. Something... evil.

Tantoko's howling chi yell split the room, and she raised the goblet made of jade above her head while the thing in the Emperor's robes recoiled. Taka found a voice to give the scream that had been stifled, but again it was killed in its birth. A single soft hand, velvet skin over steel courage, held the scream within his lungs. He turned from the battle in the room to find himself face to face with Bayushi Kachiko, Empress of Rokugan.

How she had come to be there, Taka was not sure - perhaps some secret aperture within this closet in the wall, or some magic he did not understand, but her presence did not reassure him. Her eyes, dark fire and pools of mystery, turned from his wizened face to glance through the crack in the wall.

Tantoko's blow had missed its first strike, but the beast that was Emperor of Rokugan was blinded by the light of the goblet, and it howled in fury and immortal strength. Its rage shook the halls of the palace itself, but the curious, peaceful look on Kachiko's shadow shrouded face never wavered.

With a tremendous blow, Tantoko leapt to the side of the beastlike man, her sword passing harmlessly across its bones and flesh. It rallied, and struck a massive blow across Tantoko's chest that knocked her sailing across the room, the flowers of the alcove raining down like lies from a serpent's tongue. With an acrobatic roll, she managed to evade the thing's next crushing blow, missing her only by a hair's breadth as she rolled to her feet again.

Taka stood, paralyzed, unable to help Tantoko and unable to stop his eyes from flickering back and forth from the combat to the Empress's face. Although there was no reason, no glimmer of emotion in her eyes or pale reflection of anticipation in her face, Taka knew. He knew that she had planned this battle, and that it was her orders that had made Tantoko go to her death fighting the man-thing that ruled Rokugan. And worse, he knew that it was the right choice.

With a desperate thrust of her blade, Tantoko parried the arm which clutched blindly for her throat, the golden light of the goblet keeping the Emperor at bay. She rolled and twisted, keeping the goblet between herself and it, and using countless stabs and slices to try to find the weakness in its armor. As if without thought, the creature gripped the blade of her ninja-to and snapped it like a child breaks a toy. With a hollow, bone-chilling laugh, the thing's voice bubbled up from within the pit of its being. "Now you will die, mortal." The voice was stone and steel, echoing within the cold shadows that haunt the dark of the night, and all the things which should have never been spawned on this earth or any other. For the rest of his life, that sound would haunt Taka's dreams, and torture his nightmares, and he wept for the pain of his soul. Finally, in exhaustion, Tantoko lifted the goblet from the floor and leapt toward the beast. Her body sped across the room like a golden inferno, and as the cup touched the Emperor's body he shrieked in pain and terror. For a single, golden moment, the light flashed and the goblet burst into a rainbow of glorious color, more brilliant than all the flowers of the gardens combined. A shattering sound, glass torn against the fabric of the universe, ripped apart the jade goblet, scattering the chips of jade into stunning rays of light that blinded them all. Within that epiphany of brilliance, Taka heard one last voice. Quiet and soft, with agony and noble spirit, it came from the cowering body of the madman on the floor. From within the heart of the evil, a whisper of lost nobility arose.

"Please..." Blue eyes looked up and locked onto Tantoko's brown ones, shining out from where there had only been evil shadows of despair, and the last Hantei whispered, "kill... me..."

Pulling Taka's dagger from her sleeve, Tantoko struck.

Too late, and the red eyes of the beast clutched hers again, in a mad spiral of hatred. The dagger spun from her wrist, and the sound of breaking bone rang in Taka's ears. He turned his eyes from the battle, unable to watch the final, inevitable strike. Kachiko's hand slid from his lips as snow melting from a furnace, and she whispered one cold word as she vanished into the darkness. "Stay." The awful crunch of a massive fist against a frail skull punctuated her leaving with a chilling, ghastly sound. Taka did not see her leave, but he felt the chill of her presence vanish like a shadow into a dark room.

"Kachiko, my dear..." the Emperor-thing looked up at the figure entering from the hallway, her movements silken in the night. Behind her, the Imperial Guard filled the hall, their gibbering, mad faces contorting as they strained for a glimpse of what had occurred. "You don't know anything about this, of course?" The voice was hollow, devoid of life and filled with sickness and loathing. It began to leave the room, striding with purpose toward the heallway, but when it reached Kachiko's side, it paused. The blow rang through the room like a clap of thunder.

When they were gone, Aramoro released the hidden catch on the stone closet, and Taka fell to the side of his Tantoko. No life echoed in the body of the ninja girl, and her eyes, once bright and clever, were now cold and dead. His dagger lay on the floor beside her, and a thin trickle of dark blood corroded its fine edge. By his side stood the Empress, a dark bruise growing over her perfect cheekbone like a thundercloud in a clear sky. Yasuki Taka looked into Tantoko's face, remembering where he had first seen her. Not on the road, among the Unicorn, but at a party in the Crane palaces, performing the tragic heroine Doji Konishiko to a record audience. Her eyes had been bright that day, and full of joy, and her fan had danced in the breeze among the flowers and the waving kites, and he had loved her without knowing her. Now, Taka looked up at the Mistress of the Scorpion Clan. In his eyes were no questions, no words of hate or anguish. Tantoko had died in a desperate attempt to break the power of the Shadowlands over the Emperor himself, and she had failed. Kachiko herself had sent the ninja, and they had both been defeated.

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"We all must play our part, Tsukune-san," Taka said to the young samurai-ko many months later as he handed her a fine sword made of rare crystal. She tested the blade, and nodded.

"But why give it away, merchant? Surely there are many who would pay for such a fine item?" she asked.

"There are many who have already paid, Phoenix-sama." Taka's eyes were distant, and he looked as the falling sun sank beneath the Isawa woodlands. "We all must play our part. No matter what the cost."

Shiba Tsukune nodded, pleased, and stepped away from the caravan as Kisa and Moto started their ponderous path again, headed for the mountains of the Dragon clan. "We all play a part, you see," Taka hummed to himself, counting the rich koku he had already plundered from the coffers of the Phoenix. Above his head, a windchime made of delicate jade chips swung on strands of woven black hair, keeping him company on his long journey through Rokugan. "And some parts are larger, and some are small. But all parts must be performed before the play ends, eh, Moto?" The ox ignored him, as many things did, and the road stretched ever on.