Dewdrop let me cleanse
In your brief sweet waters
These dark hands of life.
- Matsuo Basho
Human Samurai from Kozakura
Human Samurai from Kozakura
Miyamoto Musashi teaches us that the true Way of the Warrior is
The Way of Walking Alone. He tells us not to turn our backs on the ways
of the world, but also that we should not engage its vices. We should
have no desire for possessions now or in old age, nor hope to own a home.
We should deeply contemplate the world but spend little thought on ourselves.
We should live a self-sufficient life free from desire. Even the
Gods are to be respected but not count on. But above all, though you give
up life do not give up honor.
The words of Musashi are law. I know this. I believe
this. My soul recognizes their undeniable truth. But how do I
follow them?
I am Shimazu Yasuo, the Eldest Son of Shimazu Tsunataka of the
Kono Shidan, the Emperor's personal guard. I am 17, and it is my destiny
to serve The Chrysanthemum Throne. I have spent my whole life training
for it, from The Way of the Word to The Way of the Sword. I have poured
over the histories to better understand politics, I have studied the arts to
better understand people. I have learned the martial ways and tactics befitting
a Samurai, and delved into the philosophies of the great teachers.
But I am untested.
I live a pampered life on the palace grounds, with every need met
as befits a family of high status. Everywhere I walk the Shimazu name
precedes me, and I go unchallenged. I am proud of my family name, of my
father, and of my destiny. My father wears our ancestral sword that will
some day be mine. I yearn for it.
My mother ensures that only the daughters of advantageous nobles
are invited to sit with her, and often contrives to briefly require my
attendance for some small thing. I do not mind. She will pick the
best wife for me and ensure many children will carry on the family name and
traditions, here in our ancestral home. Life is good.
Why, then, am I unsatisfied?
For many days I sat beneath the great cedar tree overlooking a
secluded pond, my favorite place for such contemplation, and considered why I
was so restless. As time went by I found myself watching dragonflies skimming
the water, occasionally dipping into it and causing little ripples to cascade
across the water. The ripples were beautiful and hypnotic and I could not take
my eyes from them. Their unrelenting fluidity brought to mind the
movements of master swordsmen, and I wondered if this is what Murasama saw when
he was writing The Book of Five Rings.
The Book of Five Rings is a definitive text for Samurai, and is
required reading. It is a relatively short book, but one could study it
for a lifetime and never fully understand all of its secrets. Such was
the genius of Murasama, the greatest swordsman to have ever lived.
I began to repeat Murasama's wisdom out loud, and the words
traveled across the pond and echoed back to me, and I listened. There is
something about the sound a word makes that transcends its written form, and I
began to hear them as if for the first time. And I finally understood.
The Way of Walking Alone is not some esoteric riddle to be solved,
it is a literal and unforgiving way of life. You cannot truly understand
it or benefit from it without giving into it completely. I felt restless
because my warrior's soul was rebelling against the life I have lead, and the
mockery I was making of Murasama's instruction.
I sat there a while longer putting my thoughts in order and
deciding the best way to correct my wrongful thinking, and to atone for my
sins. I then went home to begin the readjustment. I spent the rest
of that day and most of the next preparing myself, and then settled in to wait
for my father.
When he got home he was surprised to find the outward
transformation. Gone from me were the embellishments of palace life, with
only the minimum required of my station remaining. I humbly explained
that I was on a new path, one that I hoped would lead me to better understand
the great teachings, that I had to do this to understand my proper place and to
be worthy of him and of the Chrysanthemum Throne.
My father listened quietly, without expression, as I explained all
of the things I had done and believed that I now knew were wrong, including
coveting our family sword. I left nothing out.
On and on I spoke, with the compassion and conviction of the
reborn, and still my father remained as a statue. When I finally had said
all that I had to say, and had given plans and reasons, he smiled and said that
he had been waiting a long time for this and had almost given up hope. He
explained that all of the pomp and ceremony, all of the embellishments, even
the ancestral sword meant nothing to him but were required by his position.
He had been worried that this had set a bad example for me, and indeed it
had, but now I saw my error.
"If you really want to follow The Way", he said,
"you must first learn to be self-reliant. You cannot do this at
home. You cannot do this anywhere the Shimazu name will be recognized,
and our name shouts from the very heavens. You will have to go far.
I will make arrangements for you to accompany a diplomatic mission that will
soon leave for Waterdeep. You should prepare yourself accordingly."
So here I sit watching the waves, listening to the sounds of the
ship as everything I have ever known slides over the horizon.
Turbulent waters
Waves relentlessly pass
Carry my thoughts home
- Shimazu Yasuo
Anlow and Rosalyn
Targana were adventurers with the guild Protectors of the Faithful. A
small group, they roamed the land righting wrongs and doing their best to
protect the downtrodden. Anlow was a fighter, Rosalyn the cleric.
Normally they played defense, but often they arrived too late to prevent
needless deaths. Eventually the wizard of the group, Fenton Graylock,
decided they should instead venture into the Shadowfell and take on the
particular menace before it could venture above ground again. Fenton had
noticed it was the same evil entity, Corynax, that was directing the foot
soldiers on their trips above ground.
Davian Targana
Aasimar Sorcerer from the Shadowfell
So it was that the Protectors of
the Faithful ventured into the Shadowfell for what would be their last
trip. Rosalyn was 7 months pregnant at this point, but no matter what
Anlow said, how much he pleaded for her to stay behind, she would do no such
thing. After several days in the Shadowfell, they had found their way to
Corynax's lair. Fierce fighting ensued, but the enemy was too strong and
plentiful for the Protectors to overcome. The rest of the party were
slaughtered leaving only Anlow and Rosalyn, but soon Rosalyn was struck down by
Corynax himself. As she fell, Corynax reached a dark tendril into the
fetus, planting the seed of evil deep within. As emotions overcame Anlow,
he nearly made a fatal move toward Corynax, but was stopped by a blindingly
bright light that pierced the Shadowfell and the angel Mykiel descended,
standing over the corpse of the cleric.
As the sound of hissing and snarls surrounded them, Mykiel took out a dagger made of pure light and
pierced the belly of Rosalyn. He reached in, extracting the baby and
wrapping it in a cloth, then handed it to Anlow. Once this was done,
Mykiel pulled the baby, Anlow and the corpse of Rosalyn out of the Shadowfell
and back to the surface world. Anlow didn't see Mykiel leave, but he also
had a dead wife and a newborn, oddly healthy baby boy to contend with.
Anlow made camp, put his son Davian down to sleep, and buried his wife.
With this done, he studied his son and realized that he must be an Aasimar, and
as such, would not be safe around others. He hadn't seen an Aasimar before,
but he knew the legends and what a baby should look like, and considering the
way Davian was born, being an Aasimar made sense. Over time he also
noticed that Davian would go for days without blinking, which further cemented
the feeling.
For the next year,
food a baby could consume seemed to arrive in their campsite with
regularity. At the time that Davian could handle solid food, the
deliveries came to a halt. Anlow felt this must be due to the angel, but
he never saw the delivery occur, even when he stayed up late with the hope of
catching sight of it happening. For the next 5 years Anlow would watch over
his son at night and during the day hunt for their next meal. He then
started teaching Davian how to set simple snares, and Davian developed quite
the knack for catching smaller wildlife.
In the evenings, Anlow
would regale Davian with tales of his adventuring days, but discussing Rosalyn
was always difficult. Still, he wanted his son to know how brave and
strong his mother was, so many of the stories featured her prominently.
As Mykiel had hoped,
Anlow did his best to guide Davian down the path of good, teaching him morals
and compassion. He also did his best to prevent Davian from approaching
travellers, as Anlow couldn't take the chance that they might bring harm to
Davian. He knew he was being paranoid, but he couldn't shake the fear
that something bad would happen to Davian.
Around the time that
Davian was 15, they were moving camp to a new location and stumbled upon a dead
adventuring party. Davian, always the curious one, picked up a wand from
one of the piles of bones. Suddenly the area around him turned into
darkness; after a few moments light returned and Anlow could see pools of black
in his eyes. Though he was concerned and wanted to run, Anlow had a
strong parental urge to rush to forward, but as he tried to move, Davian locked
eyes with him and suddenly he was unable to move forward, and a horrible stench
of rotten eggs surrounded him. As Anlow slowly pushed forward, a beam of
light, similar to what he saw in the Shadowfell, struck the area around Davian
and a winged man decended. As he landed, his hand settled on Davian's
head, and he crumpled into a heap at the feet of the angel. Anlow tumbled
forward and rushed to his now limp son. A voice appeared in his head,
without the angel moving his mouth; the voice said "He has discovered his
powers. They are tainted by the Shadowfell. He can be a powerful
force for good, but he must be guided. I will continue watching, but you
must be there for him, continue showing him that good trumps evil."
With that, he ascended once again. After some time, Davian
returned. Anlow never explained what happened for fear that it might make
him look to the evil that lie within.
Over the next ten years,
they continued moving around as they had over the previous years. One
day, they were moving camp into an area they hadn't been to before.
Davian was practicing a new spell that came to mind, and just as his father was
beginning to tell him to be careful, Anlow dropped out of sight. As
Davian rushed to the pit, he found his father impaled on sharpened
sticks. No matter what Davian tried, he could not reach his father in
time. He strung a rope around a nearby tree and quickly lowered himself
into the pit, just in time to hear his father's dying words "Make your
mother proud, stay on the path of the light". Darkness crept in, and
he glimpsed a being in his peripheral vision. He could hear a sinister
voice say "Doooon't worrrrry Daaaavian, Iiiii'll stilllll be heeeeere,
Iiiii'll beee heeeere untilllll the ennnnnnd". While it made his
skin crawl, it was oddly comforting during this time. The light quickly
returned, and after grieving for a moment he composed himself and worked to bring
his father to the surface.
After burying his
father and spending several days feeling lost, Davian decided to seek out the
Protectors of the Faithful. He wasn't sure if they were even still a
group, but he was clinging to the one thing he had remaining and he wanted to
do his best to fulfill his father's dying words. In his father's stories,
he knew that they had at one time resided in Waterdeep, so he started
travelling.
Thia Liadon
Elven Wizard from Candlekeep
Thia Liadon was born into a distinguished family, one
of both money and prestige.
Theren, her father, lived a childhood deprived
of most things that others took for granted. Food was scarce, and toys
were sticks and rocks. However, Theren loved
to devour books, anything he could get his hands on, and as such he became the
best student in school. Word spread, and soon the university reached out
to him, extending an offer that included tuition, supplies, room and
board. The offer hadn’t even been fully uttered before Theren jumped in with “I accept”. While at the university,
he further impressed those in charge, and upon graduation he was given the
chance to teach. He excelled at this, with the students attending his
classes far exceeding the abilities of those in other classes. A few
years before Thia’s birth, her father was granted the title and office of High
Mage. In the course of his duties, a member of the Emerald Enclave came
to town, bearing a particularly old tome of lore. He had long been
interested in such tomes, and so he met her personally to help with the translation.
This meeting would lead to other meetings, to courtship, and finally to
marriage and children.
Thia’s mother, Ielenia, led an interesting life before this
fateful encounter. The daughter of an Emerald Enclave member, she lived
her life in preparation to fight at her father’s side. Every spare moment
of her childhood was devoted to training, and after a decade of this she was
given a chance to go with some members of the Enclave on a quest to retrieve an
item of power. She excelled, as everyone had expected she would, and even
distinguished herself while in the heat of combat. After five more years
of adventuring, she was finally ready to go on the most important
missions. A further two years passed when a group she was with came upon
a set of books, one of which no one in the Enclave could read. Sensing
great power within this tome, she set out to the nearby city of Candlekeep and
the school of magic therein. She left with a translation, and a request
by the translator to see her again. Something about him left her wanting
to learn more, and spend more time with him, so she returned, as she would
multiple times in the coming months.
Initially, this union of high elf (father) and wood elf (mother)
was viewed negatively by a segment of the community. However, between the
station that Theren held and the respect that the citizens
had for the Emerald Enclave, those who were
skeptical and opposed to it softened over time, and all was eventually
forgotten.
As
much as Ielenia loved the adventuring life, she also felt
the tug of motherhood. After marriage but before children arrived, Ielenia would continue adventuring. While Theren was opposed to it at some level, he also smiled at the
thought of his beloved chopping her way through dungeons, conquering foes he
had only read about. However, once the first child was born, Ielenia left that life behind. She still felt the tug, but she
often felt the literal tug of her children and thought she might be able to
instill that same sense of adventure in them. In Thia, it seemed that she
had.
Thia grew up listening to stories her
mother would tell, and occasionally glimpse her father smiling at these
stories. She loved the idea of walking in her mother’s shoes, but she
also had a very studious side, which her father tried to foster. So it
was that she studied during the day and went on “adventures” until dark.
While this sometimes presented issues for her parents, they loved seeing Thia
grow to embrace both of their personalities.
Continuing in her father’s footsteps, she enrolled in the
University. Thia thrived in this environment, yet she also had a constant
struggle in that she wanted to take every class and read every book in the
library. This was fueled both by her curiosity and by the stories her
mother told. She knew that the monsters her mother described in her fun
adventure stories were a persistent threat, and as she grew older she become
more intent on using the knowledge and skills she was learning to protect her
family and her people.
Midway through her time at the University, her encyclopedic
knowledge of the books in the library helped her secure a position as a
librarian. While not as impressive as the nearby Candlekeep Library, the
University library was still an impressive collection of tomes. Thia was
practically doing backflips as she got the news, she would now have complete
access to the library, and she took advantage of this in the years that
followed.
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