The six canoes drifted sluggishly in the kegare creek. The famished young warriors were having a late
breakfast- rice balls and boiled eggs. The warrior code of Karasuma was very particular about nutrition.
It prescribed two conservative meals a day- one for energy and protein (eggs, fish, meat, along with
rice) and the other to fulfil essential nutrients (nuts, vegetables, fruits).
Canoe 2: Shigeo (M,15), Akako (F, 16), Kento (M, 16)
Canoe 3: Hajime (M, 20), Megumin (F, 19), Yuuta (M, 20)
Canoe 4: Daigo (M, 20), Kafu (M, 19), Chiyo (F, 17)
Canoe 5: Nadeko (F, 15), Illumi (M, 15), Masaki (M, 15)
The waterborne vessels of the aspirants, ingrained with sailing kitsu, had been made to float abreast
each other so that the group could commune with ease. The Preceptors’ canoe was coasting ahead,
while Yorokobi’s vessel was trailing behind, both divorced from the rest. They had doggedly decided
not to let the events of the morning be repeated.
The setting of nature and natural sounds was soothing- a motley of birds chirping away, insects
buzzing in and out, frogs croaking to their mates, all in the backdrop of the babbling creek water. The
young ones found a bunch of low-hanging berries. Daigo sacrificed one of his petty knives to drop a
dense bunch from a vine.
During times of war, however, the warrior code was eased. The present circumstances were
undoubtedly not war-like, but the danger they had escaped from, an hour back, at the least, entitled
them to a late breakfast, with sweet forest berries for dessert. The only other edible things within reach
were mushrooms of different colours, growing on tree trunks or rocks, on either bank. But it was difficult
to tell the palatable ones from the poisonous ones. Only Kafu, being a Shibai Sharin priest, refrained
from food, as he was fasting for the day. Instead, he drank from a flask, which reeked of wild saffron
and bush-lilac.
Nadeko: “Did you figure it out?“
Masaki: “Figure out what?”
Illumi: “How Keiji sensei ran on water, of course, you airhead!”
The three youngest in the group were also the most vulnerable. The recent events had put the fear of
the goddess in them. Nadeko was a petite, round-faced girl who resembled a doll. Illumi was a curious,
lean teenager, always brimming with energy. Masaki was an artistic but brooding kid who kept to
himself most of the time. The latter was weaving a miniature basket from leaves when Nadeko
disturbed him. All three of them had been strong-armed by their ambitious parents to become
aspirants.
The Legacy trials had been announced suddenly, almost two years in advance, which caught many
senior aspirant-warriors unawares. During the trials-recess (the gap between two consecutive trials) of
three years, aspirants made productive use of their time- explored employment opportunities with
wealthy clients of other villages (especially Karasuki)- as bodyguards, or became training instructors, or
accepted village sanctioned long-term missions. They planned it so that they returned, just before the
trials- experienced, seasoned and flush with gold. In the absence of the serious aspirants, influential
parents from all kin had made efforts to volunteer their children to appear.
Nadeko: “Tell me. Tell me!”
Masaki: “It was kitsu. What else could it be?”
Megumin: “Perhaps he cast pellets of kitsu into the water and tiptoed on them?”
Megumin was a nineteen-year-old girl who frequently said ridiculous things without realising it. Hajime
and Yuuta sniggered. Since school, the three had been friends. They were referred to as the bulwark-
trio- due to their unbeaten record in mock-battles as a team. But Megumin was not very sharp for her
age. The boys left no stone unturned, making fun of her dullness. Megumin was a robust girl, as tall as,
and beefier than, the boys, who were about five feet ten tall. In her formidable strength lay her gifts.
Hajime and Yuuta were both champions of kitsu. The bulwark-trio regretted not participating in the
rescue earlier. But there is little that one could do in the middle of the raging Mizusashi river.
Daigo: “Does he wear any rarefied shoes that displace his weight; perhaps some rare artefact?”
Kafu: “That is not likely, Daigo-dono. The way he moved on water, it was as if he was gliding. Or more
accurately, as if there was no water.”
Daigo was a burly, broad-shouldered guy with a booming voice, while Kafu was gangly, spoke in a low
voice, and addressed everyone with reverence and honorifics. Daigo’s apprenticeship in the smithery,
and Kafu’s exposure to the pedagogy of Shibai Sharin temple, both had moulded their personalities
accordingly.
Chiyo was a pretty, voluptuous girl who had recently come of age. She was feminine and athletic, with
straight, silky hair and amaranthine-blue eyes. Even though the Mikashita boys were trained to endure,
it was challenging not to pause for a moment and admire her beauty.
Chiyo: “I am very sure that it was kitsu.”
Most of the guys nodded and agreed with her. But it had little to do with her reasoning. It was also
challenging to disagree with someone as attractive as Chiyo.
Kafu: “Perhaps he is blessed by the Goddess.”
Most of the guys shook their heads. It was reasonably easy to disagree with a gangly, fasting priest,
who drank saffron-lilac water and had spent most of his early years inside an ancient, cryptic temple.
From the other canoe, Shigeo tch-tch-ed in dismissal.
All the clueless eyes turned to him. Realising he was the centre of attention then, Shigeo proceeded to
grin ominously and prick his spectacles up his nose bridge.
Kento: “Enough grand-standing. Out with it.”
Shigeo was very dedicated to Kento and had never refused him anything. It did not have anything to do
with Kento being the de-facto leader of the under-age warriors. Kento had always protected him from
bullying, by the older Mikashita cousins, through his family clout, intellect, and occasionally, fighting
ability.
Shigeo: “Very well. But I will scrutinize Keiji sensei’s feat later. First, let me unravel Yuuki-sensei’s
attack. It was a high-level kitsu-manipulation called synthesis. There is an advanced book in the citadel
library titled- Material-synthesis-kitsu, which covers this topic. Synthesis is very different from our usual
manipulation. When Kafu hatches fire-shrews through kitsu- er- Kafu, could you make one, for my
demonstration?”
Kafu put out his right hand and muttered a few words. A singular fire-shrew sprung from his palm; he
carefully planted it into a clay bowl and handed over the bowl to Shigeo. The girls fawned over the cute,
little, flaming creature. The shrew’s heat started baking the insides of the bowl.
Shigeo: “You can see- it weighs almost nothing. The fire-shrews have one-third the weight and strength
of a live shrew. Because here, we have only fire-attribute. Yuuki-sensei’s kitsu lance was through
synthesis- in which he fabricated physical matter, by mixing all elemental attributes. The lance was as
strong as wood or metal. And as heavy.”
Everyone else, holding their breath, exhaled, thrilled by the new revelation.
Akako: “Are you suggesting that he was wielding a thirty feet wooden lance? That would weigh thirty
stones at the least! More than four times my weight!”
Hajime: “And two times Megumin’s weight.”
Both Hajime and Yuuta chortled again. Daigo and Kafu frowned at them.
Megumin: “I don’t weigh that much!”
Kento: “My father, or any other kin-lord could lift that heavy a burden with ease, and then some more.”
Shigeo: “Yes, of course. And his kitsu-manipulation, even though uncommon, is second to a kin-lord’s.
Do not let our minds be blown with Yuuki-sensei’s feat.”
Akako punched Shigeo on the arm.
Akako: “You- who spends most of his time in the library, can barely make a taekkyon stance, and who
hid under the stern seat when the lamia attacked, are asking us to not appreciate Yuuki sensei’s
extraordinary skills?”
Shigeo was acquainted with Akako’s disdain. But she had clearly misunderstood his inflexion.
Shigeo: “Oh, no. The best of us are small potatoes compared to him. Our group has people who can’t
even use kitsu, like Kento; Or those my age- who haven’t been trained in it properly.”
Nadeko, Illumi and Masaki nodded in agreement, less out of shame, and more because they wanted
Shigeo to come to the point.
Shigeo: “The reason I asked you to overlook Yuuki-sensei’s ability, is because what I am going to tell
you about Keiji-sensei, will actually blow your mind.”
62fb1bb41dcb31934bd49bda