The details were unclear. That was how it was supposed to be, but it didn't make it any easier.
Kôsuka let out a long, slow breath, eyelids floating over her eyes just so.
The sound of water falling from the sky penetrated straight into the Samurai's mind. It soothed her. The sound echoed off the wide, sloping iron roof of the single-story, wall-less structure, filling the space below the oak rafters before being sucked into the thick, dry tatami mats of the floor. There were no birds around the tall hill, and there were no other Samurai, who could be more noisy than the birds at times.
What light there was had to reach from several dozen meters away, and it was hampered by rain clouds. Combined with the absence of artificial light, it made the space more like a cave, especially when one was in the center as she was. The wind sometimes swept through, depending on the weather, but today it was still, if cold. Occasionally a little gust would weave through the rafters on one side, then disperse on the opposite side, continuing on its journey without disturbing whoever was beneath the roof.
The four pillars holding the roof up were smooth, dark-stained oak, almost a meter thick. One at each corner. Painted on them in flawless white script were compass directions. Above Kôsuka's head, another compass, this one painted over the eight rafter beams that met in the center of the roof, about three meters above her when she stood. The beams were painted white in a way that they formed a circle about two meters wide, with black characters on each beam's "tip" to signify the directions. Except west, which was red.
Kôsuka brought air into her body and held it, letting the moist, clean cold seep into her insides. Artificial as they were, she liked having something so pure in her lungs. It calmed her mind when she had trouble concentrating.
She was in the place for it — simply called "Wide House," it was the highest structure inside Samurai House, the only one which peaked above the trees — something even the Iron Pagoda could not claim to do. Placed at the far southwest corner of the campus, it was a place to narrow one's mind, then free it.
The direction one faced while inside Wide House mattered, according to the Samurai. To seek guidance on a specific matter not solely having to do with one's self, one faced west, the direction travelers traditionally associated with Kyoto. For help with personal problems, north — where the ice lands would cool emotions and provide emptiness to contemplate an answer. To explore one's self, a Samurai would face east, where the harsh, varied terrain could test the spiritual self amist the wild.
Kôsuka faced south, toward Luna Bianca and Midori no Umi. It was the direction faced when one needed to explore beyond themselves. It could be other people or places or events — anything not solely grounded in the self.
Something happened on the Miharu, Kôsuka thought. Something important enough that I could not know about it. Something Irim did not know about.
Mopping up the agents Kôsuka killed was the easy part. What came after involved accusations of betrayal and cover-up, both mired in bitter anger. No one on either side expected it to be productive, but it openly saved face for both organizations. Quiet, reasoned negotiations came later. Those produced a predictable compromise — "We let go together, at the count of three." The matter disappeared.
Not every Samurai was happy about it, but all recognized it was the most prudent outcome. That included Kôsuka, even if she trusted Irim less than she initially had. She knew Irim would not let the matter go, but with her own memory of it gone, she was no longer a factor.
Her thoughts, her concentration, were on her daughter. She feared for her. Whatever Kôsuka had done, it had involved Kotori, and she had not heard from her in more than a year.
It was a clandestine assignment; that much she surmised. An assignment Irim must not know enough about. But could Kotori not at all contact her? Why was there nothing about the assignment anywhere? Not even in places she normally could rely on?
She pushed out the hot air from her body and drew in more cold. She bent her head a little.
Kôsuka did not hear the footsteps until they touched the tatami mat an arm's length away.
"Is Kei-san with you, sensei?" the Samurai asked, her eyelids rising to greet the grey-white light at the southern end of the temple. It was like looking at the end of a tunnel.
"At the base of the hill, jou-san," replied Chizuru Saya. "She did not want to disturb you, but I have no such inhibition."
The Samurai unfolded her legs, then stood up. She sucked down another mass of cold air. She turned and bowed, then rose.
Before her was one of the oldest Samurai actively serving in the clan. She stood 1.47 meters tall, with shiny blue hair pulled into a tight, small bun behind her head. Her brown eyes gleamed, even in the dim. Her button nose crinkled each time she smiled, which was often, with her small lips parting to reveal a mischievous grin. She had smile lines along her face, even when she didn't smile.
Her two swords were the opposite of Kôsuka's — instead of simple wrappings around the hilt, the Samurai's were golden fabric, with ivory hilts and twinkling jasper embedded in the tsuba. Their ornate nature made them stand out wherever she went.
They also obscured the fact the blades were transparent zesuaium, gifted to her from Yui-sama herself, many years ago.
She wore her two swords differently than Kôsuka — one on either side of her body in the tachi style. She was the only Samurai to do so. It was the set-up that led her to develop the first two-sword form of Sora-Mai, which Kôsuka later adopted. Even the Samurai's obi was unusual, being gold and patternless. Even Kosuka's had a pattern on it ... even if it was more of a random tie-dye look.
What truly separated Chizuru Saya from others, however, was her name. The Chizuru clan was no more, absorbed into the Kitsurugi long ago, but Saya kept her surname.
"Have you solved your daughter's mystery?" the Samurai asked.
Kôsuka shook her head. "I recall talking to Sylvester-san, but after that, the restoration ends. He told me Kotori's original 22M body survived, and that Kotori's current 29S body is abnormal. How, though, I don't know."
"The answer will come with time," Saya said. "I believe tea will help. Black, with cream and sugar."
Kôsuka tried not to wince. Saya's black tea was brewed to wake the dead. The cream and sugar just took the edge off of it. Their NH-27 bodies did not respond to the caffeine, but the taste alone made Kôsuka stand at attention.
"Oh, stop that," Saya said, already walking away. Kôsuka hung just behind. "My life is long because my tea is black. That grassy stuff the rest of Yamatai drinks is no better than Neko blood. The Nepleslians, for all their flaws, got tea right."
Kôsuka kept silent as she floated with Saya over the edge of the temple and down the 10 or so meters of solid, vertical granite foundation and to the start of the hill. Kei stood out like a beacon, platinum blond hair atop like the tip of the crest, with her royal blue hakama the base. She bowed as much as a 1.72-meter tall Neko could without bumping her head against someone.
"Sensei," she said to Kôsuka. "Sensei-dono," she said to Saya.
"Kei-san," Saya replied, touching down with a toothy smile. "Show your teacher what you earned today."
"What?" Kôsuka said.
Kei's cheeks were red as she turned just so to the side. Her obi had been replaced. Instead of the royal blue it was supposed to be, it was a flat, patternless red.
"You passed?!" Kôsuka was caught off-guard. She quickly queried the House's KAMI and confirmed it. Just to be sure.
"I administered her test, of course," Saya proudly said. "Her score came close to yours, jou-san! I believe you have nurtured another challenger to your rule!"
Kôsuka glanced sideways at Saya, whose teeth were showing. She pointedly ignored the old Samurai and formally bowed to Kei. "Welcome to Sora-Mai, Kei-san."
Kei did not rise from her bow. "Thank you, Sensei," she quietly said.
"Rise," Kôsuka said. "I will seek your daisho today, and call Rosenthal's — Kei, control yourself!"
The Neko sniffled, revealing her tearing face. "B-but, Sensei! It is — it is very meaningful to me!"
"To me as well, Kei," Kôsuka said as calmly as she could, trying to ignore how irritated she was becoming with Saya, whose smile could not be contained. "I knew you would succeed, but to approach the top score is more than I imagined you could do. You make me very proud, Kei."
At that, Kei's face started to crumble, and she bit her bottom lip in vain before the tears came down and she bowed deeply again. "T-THANK YOU, SENSEI!" she unintentionally shouted back.
Saya was snickering to herself.
"Sensei, please," Kôsuka asked.
"It is unavoidable," Saya said through her grin. "Especially considering your student is withholding the truth."
Kôsuka looked at Saya, not understanding what she meant. She looked at her pupil. "Kei?"
The journeywoman kept her bow, not looking up. She was sniffling, but stiff. Like a child caught in a lie.
"Kei-san," Kôsuka said, becoming more formal. "Rise. Face your mistake with integrity. We can — "
"Kôsuka-sensei, always so serious!" Saya approached Kei and placed a frail-looking hand on her shoulder. "Come, Kei-san. Join your sensei and I for some tea, and we will review your performance."
Kei sniffed very loudly, then rose. She steeled herself. "Hai, Sensei-dono."
Kôsuka let out a long, slow breath, eyelids floating over her eyes just so.
The sound of water falling from the sky penetrated straight into the Samurai's mind. It soothed her. The sound echoed off the wide, sloping iron roof of the single-story, wall-less structure, filling the space below the oak rafters before being sucked into the thick, dry tatami mats of the floor. There were no birds around the tall hill, and there were no other Samurai, who could be more noisy than the birds at times.
What light there was had to reach from several dozen meters away, and it was hampered by rain clouds. Combined with the absence of artificial light, it made the space more like a cave, especially when one was in the center as she was. The wind sometimes swept through, depending on the weather, but today it was still, if cold. Occasionally a little gust would weave through the rafters on one side, then disperse on the opposite side, continuing on its journey without disturbing whoever was beneath the roof.
The four pillars holding the roof up were smooth, dark-stained oak, almost a meter thick. One at each corner. Painted on them in flawless white script were compass directions. Above Kôsuka's head, another compass, this one painted over the eight rafter beams that met in the center of the roof, about three meters above her when she stood. The beams were painted white in a way that they formed a circle about two meters wide, with black characters on each beam's "tip" to signify the directions. Except west, which was red.
Kôsuka brought air into her body and held it, letting the moist, clean cold seep into her insides. Artificial as they were, she liked having something so pure in her lungs. It calmed her mind when she had trouble concentrating.
She was in the place for it — simply called "Wide House," it was the highest structure inside Samurai House, the only one which peaked above the trees — something even the Iron Pagoda could not claim to do. Placed at the far southwest corner of the campus, it was a place to narrow one's mind, then free it.
The direction one faced while inside Wide House mattered, according to the Samurai. To seek guidance on a specific matter not solely having to do with one's self, one faced west, the direction travelers traditionally associated with Kyoto. For help with personal problems, north — where the ice lands would cool emotions and provide emptiness to contemplate an answer. To explore one's self, a Samurai would face east, where the harsh, varied terrain could test the spiritual self amist the wild.
Kôsuka faced south, toward Luna Bianca and Midori no Umi. It was the direction faced when one needed to explore beyond themselves. It could be other people or places or events — anything not solely grounded in the self.
Something happened on the Miharu, Kôsuka thought. Something important enough that I could not know about it. Something Irim did not know about.
Mopping up the agents Kôsuka killed was the easy part. What came after involved accusations of betrayal and cover-up, both mired in bitter anger. No one on either side expected it to be productive, but it openly saved face for both organizations. Quiet, reasoned negotiations came later. Those produced a predictable compromise — "We let go together, at the count of three." The matter disappeared.
Not every Samurai was happy about it, but all recognized it was the most prudent outcome. That included Kôsuka, even if she trusted Irim less than she initially had. She knew Irim would not let the matter go, but with her own memory of it gone, she was no longer a factor.
Her thoughts, her concentration, were on her daughter. She feared for her. Whatever Kôsuka had done, it had involved Kotori, and she had not heard from her in more than a year.
It was a clandestine assignment; that much she surmised. An assignment Irim must not know enough about. But could Kotori not at all contact her? Why was there nothing about the assignment anywhere? Not even in places she normally could rely on?
She pushed out the hot air from her body and drew in more cold. She bent her head a little.
Kôsuka did not hear the footsteps until they touched the tatami mat an arm's length away.
"Is Kei-san with you, sensei?" the Samurai asked, her eyelids rising to greet the grey-white light at the southern end of the temple. It was like looking at the end of a tunnel.
"At the base of the hill, jou-san," replied Chizuru Saya. "She did not want to disturb you, but I have no such inhibition."
The Samurai unfolded her legs, then stood up. She sucked down another mass of cold air. She turned and bowed, then rose.
Before her was one of the oldest Samurai actively serving in the clan. She stood 1.47 meters tall, with shiny blue hair pulled into a tight, small bun behind her head. Her brown eyes gleamed, even in the dim. Her button nose crinkled each time she smiled, which was often, with her small lips parting to reveal a mischievous grin. She had smile lines along her face, even when she didn't smile.
Her two swords were the opposite of Kôsuka's — instead of simple wrappings around the hilt, the Samurai's were golden fabric, with ivory hilts and twinkling jasper embedded in the tsuba. Their ornate nature made them stand out wherever she went.
They also obscured the fact the blades were transparent zesuaium, gifted to her from Yui-sama herself, many years ago.
She wore her two swords differently than Kôsuka — one on either side of her body in the tachi style. She was the only Samurai to do so. It was the set-up that led her to develop the first two-sword form of Sora-Mai, which Kôsuka later adopted. Even the Samurai's obi was unusual, being gold and patternless. Even Kosuka's had a pattern on it ... even if it was more of a random tie-dye look.
What truly separated Chizuru Saya from others, however, was her name. The Chizuru clan was no more, absorbed into the Kitsurugi long ago, but Saya kept her surname.
"Have you solved your daughter's mystery?" the Samurai asked.
Kôsuka shook her head. "I recall talking to Sylvester-san, but after that, the restoration ends. He told me Kotori's original 22M body survived, and that Kotori's current 29S body is abnormal. How, though, I don't know."
"The answer will come with time," Saya said. "I believe tea will help. Black, with cream and sugar."
Kôsuka tried not to wince. Saya's black tea was brewed to wake the dead. The cream and sugar just took the edge off of it. Their NH-27 bodies did not respond to the caffeine, but the taste alone made Kôsuka stand at attention.
"Oh, stop that," Saya said, already walking away. Kôsuka hung just behind. "My life is long because my tea is black. That grassy stuff the rest of Yamatai drinks is no better than Neko blood. The Nepleslians, for all their flaws, got tea right."
Kôsuka kept silent as she floated with Saya over the edge of the temple and down the 10 or so meters of solid, vertical granite foundation and to the start of the hill. Kei stood out like a beacon, platinum blond hair atop like the tip of the crest, with her royal blue hakama the base. She bowed as much as a 1.72-meter tall Neko could without bumping her head against someone.
"Sensei," she said to Kôsuka. "Sensei-dono," she said to Saya.
"Kei-san," Saya replied, touching down with a toothy smile. "Show your teacher what you earned today."
"What?" Kôsuka said.
Kei's cheeks were red as she turned just so to the side. Her obi had been replaced. Instead of the royal blue it was supposed to be, it was a flat, patternless red.
"You passed?!" Kôsuka was caught off-guard. She quickly queried the House's KAMI and confirmed it. Just to be sure.
"I administered her test, of course," Saya proudly said. "Her score came close to yours, jou-san! I believe you have nurtured another challenger to your rule!"
Kôsuka glanced sideways at Saya, whose teeth were showing. She pointedly ignored the old Samurai and formally bowed to Kei. "Welcome to Sora-Mai, Kei-san."
Kei did not rise from her bow. "Thank you, Sensei," she quietly said.
"Rise," Kôsuka said. "I will seek your daisho today, and call Rosenthal's — Kei, control yourself!"
The Neko sniffled, revealing her tearing face. "B-but, Sensei! It is — it is very meaningful to me!"
"To me as well, Kei," Kôsuka said as calmly as she could, trying to ignore how irritated she was becoming with Saya, whose smile could not be contained. "I knew you would succeed, but to approach the top score is more than I imagined you could do. You make me very proud, Kei."
At that, Kei's face started to crumble, and she bit her bottom lip in vain before the tears came down and she bowed deeply again. "T-THANK YOU, SENSEI!" she unintentionally shouted back.
Saya was snickering to herself.
"Sensei, please," Kôsuka asked.
"It is unavoidable," Saya said through her grin. "Especially considering your student is withholding the truth."
Kôsuka looked at Saya, not understanding what she meant. She looked at her pupil. "Kei?"
The journeywoman kept her bow, not looking up. She was sniffling, but stiff. Like a child caught in a lie.
"Kei-san," Kôsuka said, becoming more formal. "Rise. Face your mistake with integrity. We can — "
"Kôsuka-sensei, always so serious!" Saya approached Kei and placed a frail-looking hand on her shoulder. "Come, Kei-san. Join your sensei and I for some tea, and we will review your performance."
Kei sniffed very loudly, then rose. She steeled herself. "Hai, Sensei-dono."