The Hunt Begins
The dying sun cast long fingers of amber light through the ancient pines as the lacquered carriage wound its way down the mountain path, wheels creaking a steady rhythm against weathered stone. Four matched bay horses pulled the ornate conveyance—a thing of gold leaf and crimson silk that spoke of wealth built on others' suffering. The Takeshi clan crest gleamed on its doors like a badge of shame.
High on the driver's box, the coachman hunched against the evening chill, his companion footman swaying with each turn of the narrow road. Neither man knew they carried death in their wake—or that death was already waiting for them in the shadows ahead.
Within the carriage's plush interior, Lord Takeshi Mamoru shifted restlessly against silk cushions, his soft features twisted in perpetual dissatisfaction. Across from him sat his shadow—Kuroda the Butcher, a mountain of scarred flesh and barely contained violence. The bodyguard's massive frame filled the opposite bench, his brutal battleaxe resting across his knees like a sleeping predator. Even in stillness, he radiated the kind of menace that made grown men cross streets and mothers pull their children close.
They had reason to be nervous. Lord Takeshi's
'tax collection' methods had left a trail of broken families and unmarked graves across three provinces. His bodyguard's reputation was written in blood—thirty-seven confirmed kills, each more savage than the last. The bounty on their heads had grown fat enough to buy a small estate.
But gold meant nothing to the figure crouched motionless in the high branches of a grandfather oak, forty feet above the forest path.
XX—————>>
Akari had been waiting for three hours, her body locked in perfect stillness, breathing controlled to near invisibility. The great daikyu bow rested ready in her hands—not the simple weapon of common archers, but a work of art spanning nearly six feet from tip to tip. It's laminated bamboo and horn construction was wound with silk and blessed by mountain shrine keepers. In her quiver, arrows waited like patient serpents, their steel points sharp enough to part silk in midair.
The approaching hoofbeats drummed against her heightened senses. Almost time.
As the carriage rounded the bend below, Akari's fingers found the first arrow's nock with practiced precision. The elven arrow—her grandfather's final gift—remained at her hip, too precious for common prey. Tonight called for efficiency, not sentiment.
She drew and released in one fluid motion, the bowstring's whisper lost in the wind. The driver jerked once as the steel point found its mark between his shoulder blades, then toppled forward without a sound. A second arrow was already in flight before the first body hit the footboard, catching the footman as he turned toward his falling companion.
Two heartbeats. Two kills. Silent as falling leaves.
Akari dropped from her perch with feline grace, landing astride her waiting mount—Ikazuchi, a stallion as black as midnight and twice as swift. The horse's eyes gleamed with intelligence as his mistress settled into the saddle, her movements economical and deadly calm.
"Iku zo," she whispered, and they were flying.
The runaway carriage careened down the mountainside, its driverless team spooked by the scent of blood. Inside, Lord Takeshi's shrill voice rose in panic as he discovered his predicament, the soft nobleman clawing his way toward the driver's bench with surprising desperation.
"Kuroda!" he shrieked, his cultured accent cracking.
"Find them! Kill whoever—"
His words died as a small ceramic sphere arced through the open door, shattering against the carriage floor with a soft crack. Smoke billowed up in pale green clouds, carrying the sweet scent of lotus petals and something far more sinister. Lord Takeshi managed one more strangled curse before the sleeping draught claimed him, his body going limp against the silk cushions.
The carriage struck the ancient cedar with a sound like thunder, splintering wood and screaming metal filling the forest air. The impact threw Kuroda forward, but the giant absorbed the blow like stone weathering a storm. With a roar that shook leaves from nearby branches, he exploded through the carriage door, ripping it from its hinges with his bare hands.
The terrified horses broke free and stampeded into the underbrush, their wild flight marking the end of any hope of escape.
XX—————>>
Kuroda rose to his full height—nearly seven feet of muscle and malice—his scarred face twisted in savage anticipation. The great battleaxe came up in a two-handed grip, its steel head gleaming dully in the fading light. He had been hoping for a fight worthy of his skills.
"Come then, shadow!" he bellowed into the darkening forest.
"Face Kuroda the Butcher like a warrior, not a skulking rat!"
His answer came as twin streaks of silver light, arrows that crackled with eldritch energy as they flew. Lightning danced along their shafts—a technique Akari had perfected through years of study and countless battles. The first arrow struck Kuroda's left shoulder, sending arcs of blue fire across his body. The second took him in the chest, the impact driving him to his knees as electricity coursed through his massive frame.
Akari emerged from the tree line astride Ikazuchi, her bow still singing with residual energy. She dismounted with fluid grace, another arrow already nocked and drawn as she approached her prey.
But Kuroda was not so easily finished. With a bellow of rage, he surged back to his feet, and hellfire erupted around him like a corona of damnation. Flames wreathed his battleaxe, and his eyes burned with more than mortal fury. The scent of sulfur filled the air as he brought otherworldly power to bear.
"You think your parlor tricks frighten me, witch?" He spat blood and lightning.
"I have bathed in the fires of the underworld!"
The battle that followed was a dance of death in the gathering dusk. Kuroda's flaming axe carved burning arcs through the air, each swing powerful enough to split a boulder. But Akari moved like quicksilver, her arrows finding their marks with supernatural precision. Lightning and hellfire painted the forest in stark relief, shadows leaping and writhing with each exchange.
The end came suddenly. As Kuroda raised his weapon for a killing blow, Akari slipped inside his guard, her silvered katana appearing in her hand like liquid moonlight. The blade took his head with a single perfect cut, the hellfire dying with its wielder.
Silence settled over the forest like a burial shroud.
XX—————>>
Akari cleaned her blade with mechanical precision before sheathing it, then methodically collected her trophies—the heads that would prove her success to those who paid for justice. The bounty gold would keep her comfortable for months, but wealth had never been her true motivation.
She was securing the grisly prizes to Ikazuchi's saddle when the sound reached her ears—the creak of wooden wheels on stone, accompanied by the patient plodding of an ox. A simple farmer's cart emerged from the evening mist, pulled by a beast that had seen better decades.
The man who climbed down from the cart was ancient and worn, his back bent by years of honest labor. His clothes were simple homespun, his face lined with the deep furrows of someone who had known both sorrow and endurance. When he approached Akari, he moved with the careful dignity of the very old.
He bowed low—deeper than her station demanded, deeper than simple courtesy required.
"Honored one," he said, his voice carrying the weight of desperate hope,
"I am Yamamoto Jizo, of the village of Kibamura. I have traveled many days to find you, following whispers and rumors of the Silent Arrow of Death."
The words hit Akari like a physical blow. Kibamura. Her grandfather's village. The place where everything had begun eighty years ago, when the Oni last walked the earth in blood and shadow.
"I know this request is beyond presumption," the old man continued, his voice trembling with urgency,
"but our need is dire. The signs are clear—the cycle turns, and the darkness stirs once more. We have nowhere else to turn, few champions left to call upon."
Akari's hand moved unconsciously to her hip, where her grandfather's gift rested in its place of honor. The ancient wood felt warm beneath her fingers, as if recognizing the moment it had been crafted for.
"When a stranger comes to you speaking of this tale—this exact tale—you must go. Promise me."
Her grandfather's dying words echoed across the decades, binding her to a destiny she had carried without understanding. The promise made by a frightened child was about to be claimed by the woman she had become.
The Silent Arrow of Death looked into the old man's weathered face and saw the reflection of her own past—and perhaps, her future.
XX—————>>
"Tell me," she said quietly, her voice carrying across the darkening forest like a blade drawn from its sheath,
"tell me about the Oni..."
Last edited August 2, 2025 10:52 am