The old man’s grip on his wrist was iron and perfectly still, and for a mont the two of them existed in that locked position — Nathan’s wrist caught, Kyoi arrested mid-arc, the forest holding its breath around them.
Then Nathan let the blade’s cursed power breathe.
It ca up slowly— the dark aura rising from Kyoi’s edge like heat from a forge, except cold rather than warm, filling the space between the trees with that particular wrongness that the blade carried in its core. The shadows around them shifted almost imperceptibly, bodies adjusting their weight, sothing moving through the assembled shinobis that wasn’t quite fear but was adjacent to it, the instinct of people who understood dangerous things recognizing one.
The old man released his wrist and stepped back. Smoothly, without conceding anything, but he stepped back.
Nathan lowered Kyoi and looked around.
They were everywhere. n and won both, every one of them dressed in the flat, light-absorbing black of people who had made a profession of not being seen, faces hidden, weapons present but undrawn. They ringed him in a complete circle with the spacing of people who had trained this configuration until it lived in their bodies — close enough to engage, far enough to react, no gap wide enough to exploit without drawing three responses.
"The next ti any of them attacks ," Nathan said, his voice carrying no particular volu but reaching every person in the circle regardless, "I will kill them. All of them."
He ant it the way he always ant things — plainly, without performance, as simple information offered to people who might find it useful.
The old man looked at him steadily. "Do you know where you are?"
"Does that matter?" Nathan said.
The old man said nothing. Just looked at him with those level, dark eyes, absorbing the response the way a stone absorbs water — without reaction, without rushing.
Then the forest above them exploded.
BADOOM!
The canopy on the eastern side of the clearing detonated in a column of white — ice and compressed snow launching outward in a concentrated burst that shook the trees at their roots and sent a cascading shower of frost and bark fragnts raining down across the clearing. The shinobis closest to it moved without sound, clearing the radius with the automatic efficiency of people for whom sudden violence is a familiar condition.
A cold gust rolled across the ground, fast and purposeful, gathering itself as it moved — the snow pulling inward like a tide reversing — and then Yukihi was simply there, standing at Nathan’s side as though she had always been standing there and the world had montarily forgotten to include her.
Her hood was gone. Her silver hair moved in the last of the cold wind she had ridden in on. Her face was fully visible and fully furious — not the dramatic anger of soone performing displeasure but the absolute, flat cold of soone who has been separated from the thing they value for approximately ninety seconds and has decided that is ninety seconds too long.
She looked at the assembled shinobis with the expression of soone reviewing targets.
"Ryo-sama." Her voice was composed and frightening. "Shall I kill everyone here?"
"It’s fine, Yukihi," Nathan said, without looking at her, his eyes still on the old man.
"There’s no need for any of this."
Aya erged from the treeline behind Genzo, moving without hurry, her composure entirely intact in the way it always was — as though chaos were simply a weather condition she had learned to dress for. She looked past Nathan and Yukihi to the old man, and sothing shifted in her expression — not softness exactly, but the particular quality of recognition between people who share a long and complicated history.
"Genzo-sama."
The old man’s attention moved to her. Sothing in the set of his shoulders changed — still guarded, still professional, but the absolute cold of it warming by a fraction.
He looked back at Nathan. Then at Yukihi, who was still regarding the assembled shinobis with the patient interest of soone who hasn’t entirely dismissed her first proposal.
"You’ve found yourself quite a soldier, Aya-sama," Genzo said.
"Ryo-sama," Yukihi said imdiately, the temperature around her dropping another degree, "is no one’s soldier."
She said it the way soone corrects a fundantal factual error — not with heat, just with the absolute certainty of soone who would prefer the record to reflect reality.
Genzo’s eyes moved back to Nathan. Sothing in them shifted — a slight recalibration, the look of a man who has just received a small piece of additional information and is incorporating it.
"Ryo," he said. "That is your na?"
"It doesn’t matter," Nathan said.
"You ca a considerable distance to ask sothing of ." Genzo crossed his arms, his posture settling into sothing that wasn’t hostile but was firmly unmoving. "Whatever you want — perhaps you should begin with so asure of respect."
"Genzo-sama—" Aya started.
"I’ll hear him, Aya-sama." A slight lift of his hand, and she fell quiet, glancing at Nathan.
Nathan looked at Genzo for a mont. The man’s history was known to him — younger brother of the shinobi leader the previous King had executed on false grounds, the assassination of that King the final answer to that injustice, and then the long silence of the south and the years of exile from the capital that followed. A man carrying the weight of a brother wrongfully killed and an institution scattered, standing now in his forest with his people around him, looking at a stranger who had walked through his defenses and refused to be impressed by any of it.
Nathan took one step forward.
"I need you and your shinobis to return to the capital," he said. "Aya will sit the regent’s throne until the rightful heir cos of age. She will need protection she can trust — protection the court factions cannot buy or pressure into looking the other way." He held the old man’s gaze. "That is what I am here to ask."
The forest was quiet.
Genzo looked at him for a long ti without speaking.
"The throne."
Genzo said the word the way people say the nas of places where sothing terrible happened to them — not loudly, not with visible emotion. His eyes moved to Aya.
She gave him the full account cleanly and without softening it — Haruka’s child, Takehiko’s move against the infant, Kaguya’s position and the fragility of everything that held the capital together in the absence of a regent. She spoke the way she always spoke, without decoration, the facts arranged in the order that made their logic most visible.
Genzo listened. His face gave nothing away.
When she finished, the silence held for a mont.
"And I suppose," he said, "that you made it your condition — that whoever you were willing to follow to the capital first convince us to return." He glanced at Nathan, then back to Aya. "That was your arrangent with him."
"Yes," Aya said, without any attempt to dress it differently.
Genzo looked at the trees for a mont. Then he turned away entirely, his back to both of them, shoulders carrying the particular set of a decision already made and not open for discussion.
"Then you’ve co all this way for nothing," he said. "I refuse."
He had taken one step when Nathan’s voice ca from behind him.
"Kaguya told a great deal about the shinobis," Nathan said. "Their discipline. Their history. Their pride." A pause, brief and deliberate. "She forgot to ntion the cowardice."
The clearing went electric.
Every shinobi present stiffened simultaneously — the sharp, collective reaction of people who have heard sothing that cannot go unanswered, the anger moving through the group in a single visible wave. Several voices broke loose at once, low and furious, so in words and so in sounds that didn’t bother with words. Hands moved toward weapons.
Nathan didn’t look at any of them. His eyes stayed on Genzo’s back.
Genzo stopped walking.
He didn’t turn. Not yet.
"Do you understand what that word ans, boy?"
"I recognize it when I see it," Nathan said. The contempt in his voice was clean and specific, not perford rage but sothing colder and more considered. "Your previous leader was killed by a corrupt king on false grounds. So you answered it by putting a blade in that king. Then you tucked yourselves away down here behind the Daimyos’ walls and called it exile." He let that sit for exactly one second. "Running after you avenge yourself is still running. That’s the definition you were asking for."
The silence that followed was absolute.
Aya stood with her mouth very slightly open, shocked. The previous leader’s death was not a subject that existed in the category of things one brought up to a room full of shinobis. It was a wound that had never closed, a grief and a fury and a sha all knotted together into sothing the entire community had silently agreed to treat as sacred and untouchable.
Nathan had just touched it. Directly, and without apology.
Beside him, Yukihi raised one pale hand to her lips, a small, genuinely delighted sound escaping her, her dark eyes bright with the particular pleasure of soone watching sothing unfold exactly as sharply as promised. The shinobis nearest her transferred a portion of their anger in her direction. She appeared not to notice.
Genzo turned around.
The pleasantness was gone from his face — not replaced by rage, which would have been simpler, but by sothing darker and more controlled/
He looked at Nathan with those level, dark eyes and the full weight of everything behind them.
"You were looking for this, boy," he said.
"Co, then," Nathan said.
The cold smirk that crossed his face was real but strained at its edges — the burning at his neck had climbed again during the exchange, Yorimasa’s venom pressing its patient claim against the inside of his blood, stronger now than it had been an hour ago, the fever sitting just beneath his skin like a coal that hadn’t finished with him yet. His left hand was entirely steady. The right, at his side, had closed into a fist without him deciding to close it.
He held his ground and waited.
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