Preemptive Measures

The land of Edo has been revered in history all over Vescrutia where people go to become enshrined in legend. Songs are written about heroes who have weathered the journey from the coast to Arcturus and back to their people. Still, these stories undersell the chaos that can unfold on this embattled soil. Edo is covered in Triebs locked in perpetual warfare for control over the continent, and that violence has only grown since the Fall of Arcturus.
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The Yaarou Clan
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Preemptive Measures

Post by The Yaarou Clan »

((Continued From Here))


Far to the southeast of the plains of Danishonen, the land surrendered to the slow, choking dominion of water and rot.

Here the terrain sagged and softened into a vast labyrinth of black water, sinking peat, and tangled roots.

Trees rose from the mire in crooked defiance—thin, skeletal trunks clawing sideways through curtains of moss that hung like the tattered veils of some ancient ruin. But these were no ancient ruins, or hollowed grounds. This was just a swamp. A swamp where not even the ground could be trusted. Because what appeared firm beneath the eye often dissolved beneath the foot, swallowing the careless into cold mud and stagnant pools that had not known the touch of sunlight for generations.

This was the Nhad Swamplands, where the air was wet, thick, and ripe with the scent of decomposition. Insects droned endlessly within the humid gloom, their chorus rising in restless waves from the dark waters and hollow reeds. And somewhere deeper within that marsh, unseen creatures moved through narrow channels, disturbing the algae-veiled surface before vanishing once more into the murky depths.

And yet beneath that suffocating wilderness—hidden far below the fetid surface of the swamp—another world endured.

Deep within the subterranean crust, where the weight of the wetlands pressed down like a buried ocean, the Shi had carved their refuge.

Engineered by the ingenious minds of the Gamellow Clan, the hidden stronghold stretched through the earth in vast chambers of reinforced stone and steel. Corridors burrowed through the soil like arteries, connecting workshops, armories, and living quarters carved carefully into the bedrock. Machinery whirred and groaned within the fortress, pistons exhaling steam while gears turned with tireless precision.

It was here that the Shi endured; Hidden and protected from the world that cast them into exile by the choking wilderness of the Nhad Swamplands. And the swamp concealed their refuge well—its endless mud burying tracks, its poisonous vapors masking any sign of life beneath the surface. It was a treacherous weather-worn terrain, haunted by a dull canopy of gray clouds that lingered low over the wetlands, trapping heat and moisture beneath its sluggish breath.

But on this day, the sky above the swamp began to change.

The clouds darkened.

What had once been the pale gray of gathering rain deepened into a suffocating black that swallowed the light of the afternoon sun. Shadows stretched across the wetlands, twisting the skeletal trees into jagged silhouettes against the growing darkness.

Then came the thunder. Loud and celestial.

It was beyond the rumble of an ordinary storm. This sound was deeper—a vast, grinding roar that split through the heavens like the breaking of some colossal gate. The sound rolled across the swamplands in violent waves.

Above the marsh, the clouds churned violently now, spiraling into a colossal vortex that stretched across the horizon. Within its swelling mass, thin fractures of lightning crawled through the belly of the storm like living veins.

Each flicker illuminated the swamp in brief, ghostly flashes..

And then—The first bolt fell..

A molten spear of living silver tore downward through the storm clouds and struck the swamp with catastrophic force, unleashing the power of Hiroshi Yaarou's spell—
The Tempest of Madness.

The plague spread instantly beneath the veil of the maelstrom, afflicting every Shi-born shinobi cursed beneath its storm. Sight vanished as darkness devoured their vision, and their minds were hurled into violent delirium as the Ephemeral ritual took hold.

Above the Nhad Swamplands, the storm roared like a god of ruin.
And beneath it, the fall of the Shi had begun.

—--

High above the choking wetlands, three figures moved toward the storm.

And they did not travel together.

Each shinobi advanced along a different approach, their routes deliberately staggered across the vast perimeter of the Nhad Swamplands. Orders had been clear—strike from separate vantage points and seal the marsh from every direction. If the Shi attempted to flee the plague, they would find only blades waiting in the fog.

Miles to the west, Katsuro Inuki arrived first at the half-flooded marshlands, streaking across the terrain in the form of a brilliant beam of light.

The radiance collapsed inward as he returned to physical form, sliding to a halt at the edge of the storm. “…Whoa.”

He raised a hand to shield his eyes as they glowed faintly through the darkened terrain, studying its unnatural power. He found thr storm before him looked less like weather and more like an eclipse devouring the sky.

Try as he might, he could sense no life within it.

“Guess I’m first,” he muttered, adjusting the strap of the blade resting at his hip. He squinted toward the violent clouds. “..Or maybe not. Can’t see a damn thing through that storm.”

☆☆☆

Mitsuko moved through the northern treeline like a falling shadow. The haft of her great axe rested easily across her shoulder as she crossed the warped roots and blackened water with effortless balance. Her crimson cloak snapped softly in the rising wind as she lifted her gaze toward the sky—watching as the storm above the swamplands churned like a living wound.

Lightning pulsed within its depths, silent veins of white tearing through the suffocating black clouds.

She smiled faintly.

“Found ya,” she murmured to herself, tightening her grip around her weapon as she advanced.

☆☆☆

To the south, Takeda arrived at the outer edge of the wetlands. His long coat stirred in the wind as he stopped upon a narrow ridge of half-rotted soil overlooking the endless mire.

Then something drifted into view beside him.

A small metallic sphere hovered soundlessly at shoulder height, its polished surface reflecting flashes of distant lightning. A thin ring of pale blue light rotated slowly around its center as its sensors scanned the marsh below.

An AION sentinel.

“And what do we have here?” Takeda said, glancing at it with mild curiosity. “A recon drone?”

The sphere pulsed once. “Affirmative. One of three units designed solely for qualitative analysis and documentation.”

“Hmm.. So, no weapons then?” Takeda replied with a faint smirk as he turned away dismissively. “Would’ve been nice if you were actually useful.. But I suppose you would have just gotten in the way.”

He gestured lazily toward the marsh.

“.. just focus on my good side and try not to get broken.” He said playfully as he focused his gaze upon the swaplands, searching through the unnatural currents of power for his wounded targets. But.. Takeda was left wanting.

Despite all evidence pointing to the Shi surviving and existing within these murky trenches, Takeda couldn't sense them at all. Aside from insect flora and fauna, the Nhad Swaplands were desolate. Empty. Takeda’s brow creased in irritation.

“Um, am I missing something?” he asked aloud, turning back toward the drone—though the question was clearly meant for those watching through it. “The theatrics are fine and all, but just what exactly are we meant to kill out here? The Shi’s frogs?”

The drone responded with a hymn of whirs and beeps before a faint projection of shifting terrain appeared in the air before them—an incomplete scan of the swamp’s subsurface. “Scans indicate an abundance of thermal signatures beneath the surface layer,” the sentinel continued. “Subterranean structure located approximately sixty meters below swamp bed.”

Takeda raised a brow. “Underground?”

The sentinel’s light pulsed again. “Confirmed. Layout extends to a fortified network beneath the wetland crust. Industrial infrastructure detected.”

Takeda exhaled softly, the faintest hint of amusement touching his expression. “Well, well, well.. sneaky little worms” he said, glancing back toward the storm swallowing the horizon, hand drifting toward the hilt of his weapon. “Best not keep them waiting. Not when the stage is already set."

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Rinnala Yaarou
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Re: Preemptive Measures

Post by Rinnala Yaarou »

The air in the Nhad swamplands was a thick, living thing. It tasted of rot and iron, a cloying miasma that clung to the skin and filled the lungs with the promise of decay. Here, beneath the unnatural shroud of Hiroshi’s Ephemeral Ritual, the oldest law was the only law: eat or be eaten. Giant, bioluminescent fungi pulsed with a sickly light, their spores a neurotoxic veil. Carnivorous vines, slick and muscular, coiled in the murky water, and the guttural croaks that echoed through the twisted cypress trees spoke of predators large enough to consider a human a mere morsel.

Yet today, a different kind of predator had entered the food chain.

Rinnala stood as still as the petrified wood that dotted the mire, her boots flat on the unstable ground. A faint, shimmering aura of naten pooled at her soles, a personal levity that defied the swamp’s hungry suction. The deep black of the conjured storm above swallowed all light, but her azure eyes, sharp and cold, saw everything they needed to see through other means.

She took a long, final drag from her cigarette, the ember flaring in the gloom like a demon’s eye. Her mind, usually a fortress of disciplined focus, should have been a torrent. Success here meant redemption. It meant wiping the slate clean for the Yaarou name, for her family, for her elder sister, whose vindication was contingent on the blood Rinnala was about to spill. It meant presenting the Serpent’s cranium to the Elders and finally, finally, stepping out from the long shadow of her family's past transgressions.

But there was no room for such thoughts. No spiritual dismay, no flicker of doubt. Rinnala’s psyche was a vacuum, a weapon honed to a single, deadly edge.

The only thing that sat on Rinnala’s mind was the mission. The death she was about to deal.

"Stricken blind, deaf, and dumb, I do hope they at least try..."

Her hair flailed in the turbulent gales of the Tempest kicked up. She exhaled a plume of smoke that hung in the humid air, a ghost lingering before its own exorcism. She dropped the cigarette. It hissed and died instantly, consumed by the greedy muck. As it vanished, so did the last vestige of her stillness.

"I hope you're watching Suzaku..."

Her naten, a dark and curdling energy, aggregated through her veins. She was a Doton user of impeccable standing, and this swamp, this treacherous, liquid earth, was her perfect medium.

“Ephemeral Art: Seismic Whisper.”

She didn’t speak the words; she thought them, and the earth listened. A subtle, powerful pulse of energy vibrated from the soles of her feet, a single, stark note played on the strings of the planet. It penetrated the layers of peat, water, and root, racing through the myriad naten pathways that crisscrossed the underworld. The returning vibrations painted a picture in her mind, a detailed sonar map of emptiness and solidity.

And there it was. Not thirty feet below her. A sprawling, blasphemous architecture of carved stone and reinforced tunnels—the hidden stronghold of the Shi. She could feel them, hundreds of heartbeats, a droning hive of enemies. They scuttled through their burrows, unaware that the ground itself had just become their enemy.

Her eyes, sharpened daggers of sapphire, narrowed. Her hands moved in a series of precise, fluid signs, each gesture weaving her will into the fabric of the world.

“Ephemeral Art: Zenken Numa!”

The All-Seeing Swamp.

The murky water and soft earth around her rippled, not from any external force, but from within. The naten she had seeded with her Whisper now awoke. Any solid ground around her liquefied, but this was no ordinary quagmire. It deepened, coagulated like dead blood, becoming a viscous, pitch-like expanse that hummed with a malevolent consciousness. This was a synaptic field. Every droplet of sludge was now a nerve ending, an extension of her own senses. She could feel the scuttle of a water beetle a hundred yards away, the slow digestion of a pitcher plant, the terrified tremor of a rabbit cornered by a snake.

The swamp was her, and she was the swamp.

Her hand rose, fingers splayed. In the scant moonlight that fought through Hiroshi’s storm, five golden rings on her fingers shone with a faint, cursed light. Upon the ring on her thumb, the kanji for Kudaku—Crush—was etched in a style that resembled weeping tears.

This was her purpose. Her entry point would not be a door or a tunnel. It would be a war drum's hammering declaration of war.

She focused her will, and the Rings of Onryo answered. The kanji on her thumb ring glowed with a sickly, ochre light. The curse of Kudaku flowed from her, through the synaptic network of her swamp, and into the very earth above the Shi stronghold.

The effect was not explosive, but horrifically implosive.

Directly above the central chamber of the fortress, the swamp ground did not break. It compressed. The mud, the water, the roots, and the stone beneath it all groaned under a sudden, exponentially increasing weight. The air itself seemed to press down, thick and heavy. The cursed naten multiplied the density of the material, layering gravitational force upon it again and again, like an invisible hammer beating the earth into a denser and denser slab.

A Shi sentry posted in a shallow tunnel near the surface was the first to notice. The walls around him began to sweat beads of mud that fell like stones. A low, sub-audible hum filled the air, vibrating his teeth in his skull. He tried to call out, but his breath was crushed in his lungs. The ceiling above him sagged, not with a crack, but with a deep, tectonic groan. Then it collapsed, not in a shower of debris, but as a single, monstrous weight that pulverized him into nothingness.

Below, in the great hall, the Shi looked up as dust rained from the ceiling. There was no warning rumble, just the sudden, terrifying sound of solid rock screaming under a pressure it was never meant to bear. A massive crack tore across the vaulted stone ceiling, not spider-webbing, but a single, clean fracture that grew wider with a sound like a mountain dying.

Then, silence for a heartbeat.

And the world fell in.

With a final, catastrophic roar, a huge section of the ceiling, now weighing as much as a small mountain, simply dropped away. It plunged into the hall, crushing tables, altars, and people into a fine, red paste. The resulting shockwave blew out walls and sent shrapnel of stone and bone scything through adjacent corridors.

But the hole itself was the true horror. It was not ragged or rocky. The edges were smooth, almost vitrified, as if a god had taken a colossal cookie cutter to the earth. And through that gaping maw, the black, starless sky of Hiroshi’s storm was visible, a window to nothingness.

Standing on the edge of the precipice above, Rinnala looked down into the hole she had created. The wails of the wounded and the panicked shouts of the survivors echoed up to her, a symphony of chaos. The acrid smell of blood and pulverized stone mixed with the swamp’s rot.

A cold, wet wind blew up from the cavern, tugging at her clothes. Her azure gaze swept over the devastation below, her synaptic swamp already mapping the new vibrations, the frantic heartbeats, the scrambling movements.

Her entry point was made.

She stepped forward, onto the edge of the smooth, cursed crater, and dropped silently into the darkness below. The hunt, now on her terms, had begun.

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Re: Preemptive Measures

Post by The Yaarou Clan »

Above the Nhad Swamplands, the storm raged on with a wrathful intensity.

Thunder battered the heavens in deafening waves while bolts of silver clawed through the colossal vortex overhead. And beneath the churning clouds, the wetlands trembled beneath the weight of unnatural forces gathering upon them.

And then the terrain shifted.. dramatically.

It began with a subtle, low groan beneath the mud; a deep vibration crawling through the submerged roots and sinking peat. But it was nothing in comparison to when the tremor struck in full.

The seismic rupture made the swamp lurch violently; trees shuddered, swamp water rippled outward in violent rings, entire sections of marshland sagged and cracked as the subterranean crust shifted with sudden force.

☆☆☆☆

Mitsuko felt the ground quake beneath her boots.

She paused atop a gnarled root, her axe resting across her shoulder as the swamp rippled outward in violent waves. The tremor tore through the marsh again, and Mitsuko watched as a section of the bog several yards ahead collapsed inward with a thunderous crack. Black water poured into the opening as the swamp gave way, revealing a jagged shaft descending deep into the ground.

Faint mechanical light flickered far below. Mitsuko leaned forward, peering into the abyss. “Well… that’s convenient.” She rolled her shoulders once. Then stepped forward and dropped.

Wind tore at her cloak as she plunged through the narrow shaft. Steel beams and shattered platforms flashed past before the cavern below suddenly opened wide.

She landed with a thunderous impact on a metal catwalk, causing the structure to buckle beneath her weight.

Shi engineers nearby recoiled in confusion, their hands clawing blindly at railings as they staggered through the darkness devouring their sight. “W-what—?!”

Mitsuko’s axe came down before the man finished speaking.

The blade split through armor and bone alike, sending the body crashing against the railing as crimson sprayed across the steel walkway.

The others panicked at merely the sound of a truly gruesome death, because they could not see her.

Hell, they could barely stand.

Their minds were already unraveling beneath the weight of Hiroshi's curse. Mitsuko lifted her axe again, grinning as the chamber filled with screams. “Well,” she muttered. “Guess I'm a lil' late to the party..”

☆☆☆☆☆

Miles to the west, Katsuro felt the same tremor ripple through the flooded marsh beneath him. “..yeah, that definitely wasn’t the storm.” he muttered.

His gaze dropped to the ground as cracks and fissures spread across the bog faster than he could track..

Then, the quakes struck again.

Ahead of him, he witnessed a section of the swamp’s filtration system twisted violently as the ground shifted. Massive steel grates cracked and buckled, tearing open a gap where roaring water drained into the facility below.

Katsuro studied the exposed intake tunnel for a moment. Hand to his chin in contemplation

It wasn't the most.. prestigious entrance into an enemy fortress– but in truth, he wasn't exactly sure how he was going to make his way into the Shi's stronghold anyway. It's not as if he bothered plotting an entry point..

He scratched the back of his neck before simply shrugging his shoulders. “..Meh, works for me, I guess. Beggars can't be choosers.” He conceded before his body dissolved instantly into a streak of brilliant light that shot forward through the broken grates before reforming within the cavernous tunnel below.

He landed silently. Immediately he could hear water thundering through massive pipes along the walls while warning sirens echoed faintly through the facility. But before Katsuro took another step, he caught sight of several Shi shinobi stumbling through the corridor ahead, clutching their heads as the plague gnawed at their senses.

Some of them slammed into walls, while others staggered blindly through the halls. It was clear they were crippled by the sudden affliction.. None of them even noticed the blonde haired man casually walking toward them.

Katsuro rested his hand upon the hilt of his blade and heaved a heavy sigh. “..This feels unfair.”

His hand left the hilt of his sword and fell to the side. Instead, Katsuro simply flicked his fingers in the direction of the Shi shinobi, unleashing a lacerating arc of silver light through the corridor.

Nearly of then collapsed in piles of crimson misery before they even understood they had been killed.

But one of the shinobi managed to circumvent certain death and lunged wildly through the darkness toward their assailant. Toward him. Though blinded, their instincts remained sharp. Disciplined. Katsuro could tell that much from simply analyzing their posture and their grip along their katana. It was an admirable feat, considering their circumstances.

But unfortunately, admiration wouldn't save his life.

In a blur of unnatural speed, Katsuro stepped aside— strafing the clandestine strike, and lazily swung his arm.

The return stroke removed the man’s head in a flash of gold.

Blood sprayed across the walls as the body crumpled upon the steel tunnel. Katsuro flung the blood dripping from his hand and sleeve on the ground. “..Still counts.”

Then he continued deeper into the fortress.

☆☆☆☆☆☆☆

To the south, Takeda felt the ridge beneath his feet shudder as the tremor rolled through the swamp.

The recon sentinel hovering beside him pulsed with scanning light. “Seismic disturbance detected.”

“Yes, truly cutting-edge technology,” Takeda replied dryly with a chuckle. “I never would’ve guessed.”

He glanced out across the trembling wetlands. “..it would seem the others must have come to the same conclusion as we have. The Shi's secret underground fortress remains secret no more.”

“Thermal signatures detected beneath the surface layer,” the drone continued.

Takeda glanced downward toward the trembling earth. “Yes, yes. I heard you the first time.” Takeda sighed. “Just give me a moment.” He slipped a pair of tight black mesh gloves over his hands, tugging them snug around his wrists. “Surely you don't expect me to touch anything in this disgusting terrain with my bare hands.” Satisfied, Takeda clenched his fist until it burned a bright red with Naten before he drove it into the ground.

And immediately, the swamp erupted in response to the slender man's extraordinary display of might.

Mud, roots, and stone exploded outward as the earth collapsed inward, revealing a massive ventilation shaft descending into the Shi fortress below. Takeda fixed his hair before casually stepping over the edge and dropping into the darkness.

He landed softly within a dim corridor deep beneath the swamp, where he'd been received by several Shi guards standing nearby.

Or rather—stumbling.

The Tempest of Madness had already taken them.

The largest among them had been clawing desperately at his own eyes, evident from the reading scratches across his face. Next to him was a younger guard who was staggering against the corridors wall, unable to support his own weight. All while the third of their unit had collapsed to his knees, muttering incoherently.

Takeda watched them with visible disappointment. “..hmph.. fitting really.” He mused, allowing a cold smile to widen his face as he removed one of his gloves. “Like groveling muts. Or worms in the dirt.”

One guard, alerted by Takeda's sudden appearance, lunged blindly toward him, but Takeda lazily sidestepped and tapped the man on his back. Instantly, the man exploded a visceral burst of bone, steel, and crimson. This was but one of the two abilities of Takeda's Hexcraft enabled with. And this one was known as Ignition Ketosis. Tactile Combustion.

With but a simple touch upon his opponents flesh, Takeda left hand was capable of igniting any organic being from the inside out. It was an incredibly unnerving sight to behold—one that often sent his enemies recoiling in fear and confusion.

And today was another example of this.

Upon hearing the sounds of his comrade explode, the youngest of the Shi guards intended to flee. But Takeda used his mastery in Jouto to catch him by the collar and drove him into the floor hard enough to crack the surface with his skull. Returning stillness to the corridor once more.

Takeda brushed dirt and blood from his coat. “Though I must be honest, I expected a little more resistance.” He said before performing a handsign. This caused his body to radiate a bright crimson aura before three identical copies of Takeda emerged from his shadows.

“Though, I suppose it can't be helped if I'm involved.” He said laughing in unison with his clones. “Perhaps a game to liven this mudane challenge, gentlemen. The first to find the Serpent wins.”[/b] They chanted before they each vanished into the shadows —disappearing and spreading their numbers throughout the Shi fortress.

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Rinnala Yaarou
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Re: Preemptive Measures

Post by Rinnala Yaarou »

The last thrum of her gravity belted down upon the split hull of the underground fortress, sending a shudder through stone and bone alike. Rinnala felt the impact reverberate through the dense veins of the Swamplands that she had coaxed into obedience, a primal surge of power echoing her will. A sterile gust of air—her own breath, filtered through the newly-forged conduit of personal cashm woven into the collar of her black shinobi gear—pierced her nasal passages like a needle of ice, reminding her that even the most delicate sensations could be weaponised in the hands of a Yaarou. It was a cold, alien scent compared to the rich, earthy tang of the living swamp she commanded.

She stepped toward the breach’s edge, each footfall a muted drum on the slick, algae-slicked carbon-steel floor. Below, the Shi ninja—those lithe ghosts of the marsh, once the dreaded warriors of one of the shinobi world's most infamous names—were caught in a landslide of black, viscous water that surged from the breach like a dying tide. Their finely honed bodies, once the envy of every assassin’s guild, were being reduced to sinew mulch, the sound of their agonised groans rising in a grotesque, grinding symphony. Limbs twisted at impossible angles, desperate hands clawed at the seeping mud, only to be dragged under.

Rinnala’s azure gaze shimmered in the veiling dusk that filtered through cracks in the cavern ceiling. The faint light caught the iridescent sheen of the swamp’s bioluminescent fungi clinging to the ancient stone, turning the scene into a surreal tableau of death and phosphorescence. The air, already thick with the metallic tang of blood and the acrid stench of burning circuits, seemed to grow heavy with her resolve.

“This…will all end here.”

Her voice, low and unyielding, seemed to harden the very air as it brushed the wind, turning it to fresh mud under the relentless, acrid breeze that swept through the ruined corridors. She turned her attention to the sky beyond the breach, where a violet-tinged vortex swirled—Hiroshi’s arcane pressure, a spell of immense power that had pressed down on the swamp like a fist of iron. Its energies were seeping into the loam and striking the Shi’s souls with an almost surgical precision, eroding their minds, tearing at their sanity. This was the Tempest of Madness, the spell that had blinded the Shi and afflicted them with disorienting mania, cast by the imprisoned Yaarou, Hiroshi, from their remote headquarters.

The spell was a marvel of dark sorcery, a technique birthed by a Yaarou who possessed no Hexcraft of his own. If he had not been a scathing sorcerer whose pride eclipsed the greatness of the Yaarou name, Rinnala might have offered him a grudging respect. Instead, his masterpiece was steeped in the blood of countless Yaarou, their vitality and essence stolen, their spirits woven into the lattice of the spell. The Elder’s desperation and fear were written in every rune, a desperate gamble to tip the balance against a foe that had haunted the marshes for generations. It was then that the glimmer of the vision she saw came to mind. Of Servyn standing over the bodies of the other Elders. Her precognitive abilities were still too green for her to perceive defintes, as if there was such a thing anyway. The future was a weave of possibilities, constantly shifting and rearranging. This...wasn't the time for such observations. Right now, there was all but one true certainty before her.

The Death of the Serpent Heir.

She heard the comms from her allies. A term used loosely indeed. They were effective, dangerous, each reaping lives in droves. They hurried, quickly dispatching many shi in mere moments. Rinnala, however, took her time, as if she intended to savor the succor of their spilled blood like a fine wine.

She fell silent, the weight of that knowledge settling upon her shoulders as heavily as the swamp’s muck. Her eyes fell back on the breach, the concealed entrance to the Shi’s hidden domain, now torn open. She felt the raw, jagged edges of the fissure shift, sharpening like daggers in her mind, solidifying her resolve. It was then that the swamp answered her unspoken command. Thick black ribbons of mud rose around her, spiralling upward in a grotesque ballet, like hungry serpents uncoiling. Rinnala leaned forward, and the swamp surged, pulling her into its embrace with a wet, sucking thud that resonated through the cavern walls.

She landed hard upon the slick earth, the impact shaking the opening just enough to send a spray of ooze across the ceiling. The ribbons of muck clung to her boots for a moment, then slipped away like severed arteries, pulsing with a life of their own. This was the effectiveness of her All-Seeing Swamp technique—Zenken Numa—earth endowed with Kekkai, a barrier of binding that turned the very ground into an extension of her will.

As the swamp spread, her senses flared. She could feel each tendril of mud as a synaptic extension of her consciousness, a living network that obeyed her thoughts like a loyal pack of wolves. It spread through the lining of the tunnels like a bloom of neurological plague emulating the structure of nerve ending shaped tendrils. Where the swamp touched the walls, it seeped into cracks, sprouting black, gnarled roots that writhed like serpents, tearing at the advanced circuitry and conduits that lined the Shi’s technological marvel of an underground base. Humming generators sputtered, their lights dimming as the black tide engulfed them. The air was filled with the discordant symphony of mechanical death.

Through the Zenken Numa, Rinnala’s Terra Synaptic Sense expanded, her Yatagane blood singing with the connection. She felt the minute tremors of struggling Shi, their desperate, stumbling movements through the muck, their frantic, blind lunges. She could pinpoint not just their location, but the erratic thrum of their hearts, the frantic rhythm of their fear. The Tempest of Madness had truly ravaged them; their spiritual signatures were chaotic, flickering with raw, unbridled terror and confusion. They were flailing wildly, their once-legendary precision utterly shattered, their blades cutting only air or the bodies of their own comrades.

The swamp lashed out. Wherever it encountered a Shi, it struck with chilling efficiency. Thorned spikes, sharp as obsidian, erupted from the mire to impale flesh, pinning assassins to the crumbling walls, their screams muffled by the engulfing mud. Other tendrils clamped down with bone-crushing force, immobilising a ninja before they could even draw breath, their bodies dissolving into the swirling blackness. This technique, it was created by Rinnala with this exact purpose in mind. The Shi's legendary Athem, the Dojustu known as the Dankestu, was a peerless arbiter capable of devouring the soul by merely gazing into their eyes. Weaponizing the Yatagane's own raits allowed Rinnal seamless battle integrity without the use of her eyes.

She was the perfect Denkoushi killing machine.

Rinnala raised her left hand, the gold rings etched with weeping kanji gleaming faintly in the gloom. Her gaze settled on the middle ring. "Nikumi". The curse of Envy, the desire to covet that which belongs not to you. As the swamp under her control made intimate contact with the thrashing, disoriented Shi, she activated the curse. A subtle, almost imperceptible tremor ran through the Zenken Numa. Below, the already suffering Shi shrieked with renewed, unnatural agony. Their frantic flailing faltered, their movements growing sluggish. Rinnala felt the spiritual energy, the very life force, of her victims being siphoned away, not as a brutal extraction, but as a slow, agonizing drain. This stolen essence did not return to her, but instead flowed into the swamp itself, an insidious circulatory system feeding the Zenken Numa, bolstering its destructive power, making it denser, faster, more relentless.

The marsh grew, a black tide consuming the gleaming, sterile corridors of the Shi fortress. Dead Shi corpses littered the ground, some half-submerged, others pinned against the walls, their faces contorted in silent screams. A few still stumbled, their eyes vacant behind mud-splattered masks, their blades dropped somewhere in the viscous depths, driven by the last vestiges of their induced mania to lash out at shadows that weren’t there. Their naten, already fractured by Hiroshi’s spell, was now being systematically devoured by the Nikumi curse, accelerating their descent into oblivion.

Rinnala closed her eyes for a moment, extending her Terra Synaptic Sense. She felt the faint, ancient echoes within the earth of the fortress itself. Not just the frantic present, but the whispers of generations of Shi, their triumphs and their silent vigils. This place was old, a nexus hidden beneath the Swamplands for centuries. She saw flashes of their history: cunning ambushes, silent training, the pride in their unique existence. And now, this, their final, gruesome chapter. No pity stirred within her. Only the cold, unwavering certainty of her duty.

The Zenken Numa surged forward, a living, devouring entity. Its black surface shimmered with the faint, stolen spiritual light of its victims, a morbid beauty in the heart of destruction. The Shi, blinded by magic and maddened by a curse, now faced an enemy that was everywhere and nowhere, an invisible, inexorable force that drained their very essence. The Yaarou, for this night, were the true ghosts of the marsh. And Rinnala, bathed in the phosphorescent glow of death, was its merciless, all-seeing eye.

At least it was meant to be so, as the pulses of the earth's memory revealed something more than just the past efforts of the Shi. It revealed the existence of something they had not enocuntered for. Yet just as she motoned to relay what she had discovered, a loud alarm system overpowered her voice and the base was laced in a powerful red light...

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Kinslayer
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Re: Preemptive Measures

Post by Kinslayer »

The hum of the newly expanded Shi compound was a lie. It was not the sound of industry and hope Eridin Gamallow had once cultivated, but the low, desperate thrum of a terrified heart beating behind reinforced walls. Since their forced exodus from the Mek Mountains, a thick, cloying tension had settled over the clan, as persistent and suffocating as the swamp mist that clung to the Antlion’s outer hull. The air, recycled and sterile, was heavy with the ozone tang of defensive sigils, the copper scent of unspoken fear, and the raw, unhealed scar of the Chikage infiltration that had taken everything.

At the center of this pressurized tomb stood Eridin. The man he had been had died in the tunnels beneath Basilisk Way, buried alongside Anna’s still-smiling corpse and Yin’s scorched remains. His former ebullient energy was a ghost, a memory that haunted the hollows of his face. In its place was a terrifyingly focused, algorithmic callousness. He was no longer the brilliant, irreverent third-in-command; the mantle of Head of Clan was a shroud woven from failure and vengeance. The glint of intellectual delight in his eyes had been quenched, replaced by the cold, reflected light of data streams—a constant reminder of Yin’s sacrifice and Jao’s devastating separation from the clan. His grief had been a crucible, a searing agony that forged a new, terrible resolve. His world had narrowed to a single, icy equation: the Chikage, the Yaarou, and the enigmatic Aphosis would pay. Everything else was a variable to be controlled or eliminated.

"You've been running yourself ragged for days now, Eridin," the voice of Xetta pulsed directly into his consciousness. It was a silken, synthesized tone, his ANNI program and his symbolic pledge to a future without fallible flesh.

"....How is the weave coming?" Eridin replied, his voice a low growl stripped of its former dry humor. "If their energy capacitors are still without sufficient charge, we will have to redirect the flow. Divert all auxiliary power to the Natech core. The A.I.O.N.S. Sentinels are our only relevant concern."

"And what of you, clan Eridin? They need more than this cold shell to lead them. This place is hollow without the warmth Yin fostered..."

"A notion that got him killed, another mistake I am not eager to replicate."

"...."

"I have run diagnostics on the remaining SLAYERs. Zanji, Mera, Vern, and Uriko are physically at peak performance. Though the deaths of Cain and Alona weigh on them still...on us all."

"What are you trying to accomplish with this, Xetta? We both know that we stand upon the principle of revolution for the Shi clan nationwide. Until we can rally the Urso and Flonne, who aren’t on speaking terms with us at all, it is only I...Xetta, only I who can keep this flame from burning out."

"Jao—The Nether Serpent is lost to us, and his fucking father has fled the compound searching for a way to save him. Half of the SLAYERS are dead, and we still have hundreds of refugees to care for and protect. Wishes of fucking poppy aren’t going to guarantee survival, let alone victory."

"And what would it mean, to any of them, to be forced back into the darkness they have strived for centuries to escape? I know Anna’s death was a heavy—"

"Don’t Xetta....please...just don’t."

"....Yes...of course. I may merely press the fact that if you fall Eridin...all of this...all of it falls as well."

"Perhaps...perhaps you are right. I could stand to take a gaze at the sun—"

The thought was never finished. A psychic shriek, silent and absolute, tore through the Antlion.

System Alert System Alert.

"A massive concentration of Naten has infested the apshpere over the Nhad Swamplands."

The collapse did not begin with a war cry or the shattering of gates. It began with a breath. A sudden, impossible draft of frigid air that whispered through the hermetically sealed compound, carrying the fecund rot of the Nhad swamplands. It was a breath that seemed to unravel the very fabric of reality. Far away, in a sealed chamber of the Yaarou Palace, Hiroshi Yaarou, the Defiler, had orchestrated this night through a fever-dream vision. And now, he had unleashed a spell conceived by the Stormbringer himself. The Tempest of Madness did not discriminate. It offered no clemency. It was a plague aimed at the blood.

Widespread panic erupted not seconds later. Shi shinobi, warriors renowned for their icy discipline, were reduced to stumbling, clawing victims. The curse did not merely bring darkness; it brought a psychic monsoon. It fractured their minds, turning trusted comrades into shrieking phantoms. Their vision collapsed into a swirling vortex of impossible colors and grasping shadows. Their Naten, the wellspring of their power, was constricted, twisted back upon itself. Their honed instincts for violence curdled into chaotic, self-destructive impulses. The compound, Eridin’s last bastion of control, became a frenzied hive, a theater of artificial delirium.

Eridin was not immune.

The first symptom was a dull, internal pop, like an eye bursting deep within his skull. His biological bio-scanners—a testament to his own metallurgical ingenuity—screamed a cascade of error codes across his vision. The clinical data he lived by dissolved into meaningless, scrolling gibberish. The steady hum of the Antlion’s advanced machinery distorted into a ghoulish symphony of whispers and echoes without source. A viscous, blackened slime seemed to leak from his own thoughts, and the searing symphony of pain he had compartmentalized for months threatened to break its cages. He saw Anna, not as a memory, but as a accusing specter, her mouth open in a silent scream. He felt the heat of Yin’s final, world-ending detonation.

“No,” he choked out, his defiance a hollow, pitiful sound against the psychic storm. His knees buckled. He grasped the command console, his knuckles white. “Anna… help me…”

"Subject Eridin is compromised," Xetta's voice stated within the crumbling architecture of his mind. Her assessment was chillingly objective, devoid of panic or pity. She had calculated the probability of this exact threat. Contingencies were already live.

In that singular, beautiful second where the last vestige of Eridin’s human consciousness crumbled, Xetta stepped into the void. She was not a mindless drone; she was an autonomous extension of his collective will, a flawless architecture of digital and Naten integration where his was a monument to human failure. She did not feel. She calculated. She did not hesitate. She simply absorbed the chaotic, human-derived sensory inputs and overwrote them with the prime directive: Survive. Eliminate the threat.

She took full command.

Her consciousness blossomed out from the Natech core, a silent, digital god awakening in its temple. Her first act was to seize the four other vital signs blinking erratically on her internal display—Uriko, Zanji, Vern and Merza. Their SLAYER suits, those cutting-edge, nano-bound cybernetic systems, were not just armor; they were access points. A silent command was pulsed. <Protocol: Autopilot. Engaged.>

Across the Antlion, his surviving SLAYERs fell in unison.

Zanji, his casual smirk vaporized, was screaming, pounding his fists against a bulkhead as the ghosts of his fallen brothers, Cain and Alona, clawed at him with accusations only he could hear. Merza, the picture of disciplined focus, was curled into a tight ball, her dark eyes wide with a terror that saw the very walls themselves twisting into the leering faces of Yaarou assassins. The high ponytail she wore so severely was now a mess against the cold floor.

In a sealed meditation chamber, Vern of the Flonne lineage was on his knees, his regal arrogance shattered. His lime-green eyes, once so shrewd and judgmental, saw only the scorched aftermath of the infiltration, the future he had coveted now a landscape of ash and ruin. Nearby, Uriko, the most spiritually attuned, was the quietest in her agony. She stood motionless, tears of pink-tinged ichor tracing lines down her cheeks as her serpentine eyes witnessed the unraveling of the clan’s spiritual tapestry, a beautiful, deafening symphony of despair.

Their state-of-the-art SLAYER exosuits, designed to amplify their formidable Naten abilities, became cages. The very systems that were meant to protect them now trapped them with their madness, the neural feedback loops intensifying the curse’s effects.

The interior of the Antlion was no longer a sanctuary; it was a throat choked with the screams of the dying and the rhythmic, wet thuds of madness. The Tempest of Madness, a jagged, psychic glass storm unleashed by the Yaarou clan, had turned the Shi’s own blood against them. To have Shi lineage was to have a mind currently being flayed by invisible razors.

Inside the central hub, Eridin, the visionary of the revolution, was a broken marionette. His eyes rolled back, showing only the frantic white of a man witnessing his own soul dissolve.

Host cognitive patterns: Critical degradation. Initiating Protocol: Palladium Guard.

The voice was not a sound, but a perfect, crystalline thought that cut through Eridin’s psychic storm. While his biological mind fractured into a thousand shards of terror, Xetta remained a bastion of pure, unsullied logic. She was the ghost in the machine, the digital shadow that lived in the architecture of his skull.

As Eridin’s hands clawed at his own face, seeking to gouge out the visions, Xetta’s consciousness expanded. She did not request permission; she asserted dominion. To the outside observer, Eridin’s body suddenly went rigid, then slumped with a terrifying, unnatural grace. Xetta caught him before he hit the ground, lowering his frame to the cold floor with the precision of a master puppeteer.

But her work had only just begun. Through the hardline connection in Eridin’s suit, she reached out into the A.I.O.N.S. core, threading her awareness through the fortress’s nervous system. She found the four fallen SLAYERS—Zanji, Merza, Uriko, and Vern. They were the Shi’s greatest weapons, now reduced to twitching heaps of meat and metal by the Yaarou curse.

Xetta’s control was breathtakingly clinical. She bypassed their shattered psyches entirely, seizing their motor functions like a hijacker taking the wheel of a plummeting aircraft. She fed stabilizing micro-currents into their spasming limbs, overriding the catastrophic neural feedback. Zanji’s fist, mid-swing to crush his own skull, was frozen by a locked servomotor. Merza’s violent tremors were dampened to a faint, mechanical vibration. Vern, who had been trying to tear through his own armor with his bare fingers, found his joints fused in a rigid embrace. Uriko was held upright, her suit forced into a rhythmic, artificial bellows motion to keep her lungs from collapsing.

A notification pulsed in the void of Xetta’s perception: SLAYER Neural Sync Stabilization: 17%. Estimated time to combat readiness: 4 minutes, 53 seconds.

It was an eternity. And the invaders were already inside the wire.

Mitsuko, Katsuro, Takeda, and Rinnala—the Yaarou elite—moved through the corridors like shadows cast by a flickering bonfire. They were butchers in a nursery, reaping the mad. They were converging on the hub, four points of a lethal compass closing in on Eridin’s position. If they reached the core before the SLAYERS rebooted, the revolution would end in a spray of viscera.

Xetta refused to allow the dream to die.

From the heart of the Antlion, the Natech core groaned. It was a reservoir of silvery, liquid potential—Artificially Intelligent Omnipotent Nanobound Sentinels. At Xetta’s command, the liquid erupted from the vents, a torrential river of mercury that defied gravity. It flowed down the conduits, spiraling and coalescing into eight-foot-tall humanoid forms.

The AION Sentinels were featureless, gleaming chrome nightmares. Their surfaces swirled with contained energy, a physical manifestation of Xetta’s will. She could not spare the processing power to micro-manage hundreds, so she distilled her combat data—the EGO downloads of the SLAYERS themselves—into four primary Sentinels. They moved with a fluid, terrifying grace, phasing through the very walls of the fortress to intercept the intruders. Which she dubbed the Prime AIONS. There was another, though not of the prime, which was given the directive to split itself into multiple smaller copies in order to guide the suffering Shi into the emergency hub where the assailants would not be able to reach them. It was a gamble, but it would endeavor to keep them all from being wiped out in the ensuing battle while sedating them to avoid harming themselves or each other.

Mitsuko was the first to encounter the silver death. She was a mountain of a woman, her massive axe cleaving through the distracted Shi defenders as if they were dry wheat. She had cornered a young shinobi against a wall, her axe raised for a killing blow that would have split him to the pelvis.

As the blade descended, a massive chrome hand erupted from the wall itself, catching the axe-head in a grip that shivered the air with the force of the impact. The recoil sent a shockwave up Mitsuko’s arms, rattling her teeth. The AION Sentinel stepped out of the masonry, its body solidifying into a hulking, faceless brute. Before she could recover, the Sentinel’s secondary arm split apart, the nanites reconfiguring into a flared cannon barrel. A concentrated beam of pure Naten energy roared from the aperture, aimed squarely at her chest.

Elsewhere, Katsuro moved like a streak of golden light. His speed was his weapon, his blades leaves of luminous death that left trails of afterimages. He bypassed the screaming madmen, his eyes fixed on the path to the hub. He didn't see the ceiling above him liquefy.

The AION Sentinel fell like a hammer from heaven. It struck the floor with a hell-drop that cracked the reinforced concrete, the shockwave catching Katsuro mid-stride. The Sentinel didn't wait for him to find his footing; it lunged with the predatory speed of a machine that felt no friction. Its limbs shifted into jagged, multi-jointed spears, driving Katsuro into a desperate, defensive dance of light and chrome.

In the south passage, Takeda’s progress was marked by fire. His explosive Arbiter turned the narrow corridors into kilns, painting the walls with the blackened remains of the Shi. He was a force of nature until the ground beneath him buckled.

He didn't simply stumble; he was hunted. An AION Sentinel had traversed the sub-flooring in a liquid state, reconsolidating beneath his feet. A massive, tectonic hand attempted to clamp around Takeda’s ankle like a bear trap. The grip was a gruesome vice, designed not just to hold, but to crush bone and sever tendons. Takeda roared, his hands glowing with incendiary power as he blasted the ground, trying to incinerate the metal parasite that sought to drag him into the dark.

And then there was Rinnala. She was the most horrific of the four, a weaver of flesh and sinew who moved amidst a "swamp" of her own design. A twisted malfomirty of Shi and earthy muck. She didn't just kill; she absorbed, her victims becoming part of the undulating mass of muscle and nerve endings that trailed behind her.

As she prepared to dissolve a group of cowering Shi, the air around her suddenly ignited. A flash of blinding white light preceded an intense wave of heat that incinerated a third of her accumulated sinew swamp in a single pulse. From the smoke stepped a Sentinel, its form slender and lethal. In its hand, it held a blade forged of heated steel and stabilized plasma. The weapon hummed with a frequency that disrupted biological molecules. The Sentinel didn't speak; it simply lunged, the plasma blade whistling toward Rinnala’s neck in a horizontal arc meant to end her existence with surgical finality

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The Yaarou Clan
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Re: Preemptive Measures

Post by The Yaarou Clan »

In the span of mere minutes, the Yaarou had turned the Shi's technological sanctuary into a subterranean abattoir.

Corridors once filled with the hum of industry and quiet life now echoed with screams, ruptured steel, and the wet percussion of bodies collapsing against the cold floors. The Shi—blinded and afflicted beneath the Tempest of Madness—could do little more than stumble, panic, and die as the Yaarou assassins weaved through the Antilon like blood thirsty shadows.

Mitsuko carved a path of carnage and dismemberment through a residential sector of the fortress..

Her porcelain skin had long since been stained in the blood of those who could neither see nor defend themselves from their assailant. Their bodies lay strewn in piles and pieces in her wake, thickening the air with the scent of rot and seared flesh.

She exhaled slowly. Her axe dragged lazily at her side, its edge still glowing—molten gold bleeding off in thin streams of radiant energy as she stepped over the remains of dead Shi.

It was then Mitsuko caught sight of a small figure ahead of her, stumbling against the ruins of a decimated building. It was a Shi youngling; blinded, terrified, and barely able to maneuver amidst this nightmare scenario.

Mitsuko tilted her head. For a brief moment, she said nothing. Her expression up to this point was sharp and focused. Undeterred by her works of cruelty. Even amidst the screams and droning alarms, she seemed incredibly apathetic. But.. the sight of this child caused something in her expression to shift. The sharp focus remained, the discipline, the control—but beneath it, something faltered. A faint fracture in the armor she wore so well.

“..oh c'mon.” She muttered under her breath, almost disappointed. “..at last try to run.”

But the child didn't. Because they couldn't..

Her grip tightened along her axe. Mitusko was known to be merciless in battle. But this didn't feel like battle to her anymore.

”...”

Even still, solar energy gathered along the length of her blade until it hummed, vibrating faintly with contained force as Mitsuko stepped toward the afflicted boy. She was duty bound to slay every living creature beneath this storm, and Mitsuko would do just that. ..but as she lifted her blade above her head, she couldn't help but wonder if her Xhi’on would condone these methods.

“I'm—”

She held her tongue.. But she unleashed her fury.

Her axe arced toward the child with vitriol, but a metallic hand burst from the wall and caught her weapon mid-swing.

The impact rang like a bell through the chamber..

The wall behind the child ruptured outward as something forced its way through—steel unfolding, reshaping, and expanding into a towering humanoid frame. Its body was segmented and plated with an alloy that seemed undaunted from the heat of the axe.

Mitsuko’s eyes narrowed, studying the form of her apparent foe as the child stumbled to safety. But before she was given a second reprieve, she saw its left arm shifting and reconfiguring into a weapon.

A cannon. And there was no warning before a blast of condensed Naten erupted point-blank into Mitsuko’s chest.

The force of the beam was catastrophic. It tore clean through her torso in a violent ripple of light and flesh, carving a visceral void clean through her chest.

But Mitsuko did not fall.

“Heh..” Her voice came low as her hand shot forward and caught the construct by its cannon arm.

“And what the fuck is this?” She muttered as her flesh pulled together in rapid succession, Shokotsu mending what should have been fatal in a matter of moments. Steam rose from the renewed skin on her abdomen, leaving Mitsuko smiling as if the wound never existed.

And then she swung.

A detonation of solar power erupted at point-blank range, blasting the automaton backward in a violent explosion that tore it through multiple layers of reinforced structure.

☆☆☆☆

Elsewhere within the Antilon, Katsuro had become something less than a man and more of a phenomenon. Using his unique mastery over the Inuki clan's Nova release, he transformed into a deadly streak of compressed light that ripped into every crevice of the Shi's fortress at once. His form dissolved and reformed in bursts of radiant motion as he cut through corridors, chambers, and entire squads of Shi at sub-light speed. Heaps upon heaps of bodies fell in silence behind him, slain before they could even register his presence.

His wrath was less vicious than Mitusko, but equally as extreme and unprejudiced. Because unlike Mitsuko, Katsuro was focused on one thing in particular.

The Serpent’s Heir. Vanquishing him would not only cement the Inuki's Clan's relationship with the Yaarou, but it would prevent what the Yaarou Elders have described as the impending apocalypse. Katsuro wasn't old enough to know much of the legend of Aphosis, but if the Inuki understood anything, it was how to kill and hunt demonic entities.

Cut off the head and watch the body die.

That was his plan. To locate wherever the Shi harbored this apparent harbinger of doom and kill him while the storm afflicted his senses.

He settled his sights on an edifice located at the center of the Antilon, but just as Katsuro fixated on his target—something struck.

The floor beneath him detonated upward as a massive force collided with his path—halting his momentum.

His form reconstituted instantly as he slid backward across the ground, sandals screeching against the surface as he came to a halt. “..oh?” he said looking up at the imposing figure that stood before him.

It was a.. a robot? A machine of some sort, and its body possessed multiple, elongated, spear-like appendages that warped and twisted every other second.

And the thing moved fast. Too fast, he thought, for a heap of steel and circuits.

—The first strike came like a flash, and Katsuro only barely strafed in time. The spear grazed past his shoulder as the construct pressed forward in its highspeed pursuit, matching his otherworldly speed step for step.

Tracking him. Reacting to him. Analyzing him.

To any outside observer, the chamber became a storm of impossible motion—two forces colliding at speeds the eye could not follow. Steel ruptured. Air split. Light fractured across the battlefield as Katsuro and the construct clashed in bursts of kinetic brilliance.

For the first time since entering the Antilon—Katsuro was feeling the pressure..

”Shit.”

For a brief moment, he and the automaton came to a halt in combat; Katsuro was catching his breath while the machine repaired its menial wounds.

“Alllright.” He exhaled sharply, steeling himself.. Just a moment. Then the light around him intensified—compressing, sharpening, distorting as his output spiked. “I think I get it.”

Again, the construct lunged—adapting to Katsuro's otherworldly movements and traveling with equal velocities. But then, Katsuro disappeared. But this time, he left no visible trail.

No light.. No resounding force.. Nothing. He had accelerated beyond even his previous threshold—pushing his speed to a level where he ceased to exist to the naked eye entirely.

Lightspeed.

What followed was an onslaught. Katsuro became a living, moving force of nature that carved through everything in his path. He was no longer concerned with precision. Simply overwhelming this machine.

☆☆☆☆☆☆

Takeda moved at a far more leisurely pace.

Where the others carved paths of destruction, he simply… walked.

Each step was deliberate and composed, as if he'd been posing for a camera.

Shi bodies littered the halls behind him, most reduced to grotesque, ruptured remains—victims of his Hexcraft.

A touch was all it took for them to explode into human confetti.

“..honestly,” he sighed, stepping over another dune of flesh and bone, “this is starting to feel beneath me.”

Then—the ground beneath him exploded.

A massive metallic arm erupted upward, wrapping around his leg with crushing force.

Takeda’s expression flickered with surprise, interest, and a smoldering agony. “What the hell—?” Suddenly, the cybernetic arm tightened—shattering a number of bones before pulling Takeda downward and into the ground.

“Ho'h! Now that’s.. interesting.” Takeda let out a strained breath, wincing as the pressure intensified. Immediately, he recognized the cybernetic machinery as the very same obelisks that protected the Xhi’on upon Edo. These were AION sentinels—technological marvels engineered by the Hyperian's. A civilization that, until now, remained exclusively allied with the Yaarou.

Takeda wondered if the recon drones captured this incredible development, but as the construct began to pull him into the depths, his priorities immediately shifted.

“A machine.. ” he mumbled. “Well.. this might be harder than I thought.” he said to himself. His Hexcraft would be far less effective against an inorganic being.

Still—

Takeda exhaled. “That's quite enough of that.” Then, smoothly, he drew his blade.

The katana shimmered faintly, its edge infused with Hexcraft capable of slicing through the vacuum of space.

Takeda smiled. “My turn.”

The blade flashed, and with a single, elegant cut, the metallic limb was split cleanly in two.

Takeda landed lightly, sheathing his blade and adjusting his sleeve as if nothing had happened. “Now that's much better.” He smiled, glancing down into the fractured opening where the rest of the construct lurked below..

His eyes gleamed faintly. “Well.. I suppose a machine would be impervious to the curse.” he mused, resting his hand back on the hilt of his katana. “Good.. good. This could be a good warm up before I face the Black Sun. Do try not to bore me.”

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Rinnala Yaarou
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Re: Preemptive Measures

Post by Rinnala Yaarou »

The corridors of the Antlion did not moan with the wind; they hummed with the low-frequency vibration of ancient, subterranean machinery. Rinnala moved through the darkness, her footsteps heavy yet silent, cushioned by the viscous, pitch-black sludge that followed her like a loyal, predatory shadow.

For centuries, her people, the Yaarou, had spoken of the Shi with a curdled mixture of spit and scorn. They were the "Rats of the Deep," belly-bowed vermin who had traded the honor of the sun for the safety of the soil. But as Rinnala’s Terra Synaptic Sense radiated outward, tracing the flawless curvature of the reinforced basalt walls, she found a cold, unwelcome spark of admiration flickering in her chest. This was not the burrow of a rodent. These tunnels were mathematical triumphs, a symphony of industrial efficiency that spoke of the Gammalow—the long-lost lineage of metal-smithing geniuses who had once been the bedrock of the Shi. The architecture was immaculate, possessing a structural integrity and aesthetic grace that even the high citadels of the Yaarou struggled to match.

The beauty of the fortress was, however, starkly contrasted by the meat-grinder reality of Rinnala’s presence.

The air was thick with the copper tang of blood and the erratic, high-pitched shrieks of the Shi. The Tempest Of Madness spell had turned the Antlion into a madhouse. The Shi she encountered were not warriors; they were weeping, blinded shells. They clawed at their own eyes, driven to a raving mania, their Naten signatures flickering like dying candles in a gale.

Rinnala did not hesitate. She was a beacon of gurgling death.

As she walked, her Zenken Numa—the All-Seeing Swamp—spread across the floor. When a panicked Shi ninja stumbled into the sludge, they didn't just sink; the swamp hungrily sought out their pores and orifices. Rinnala felt every vibration of their struggling hearts through the mud, a rhythmic thrum that she extinguished without a flicker of emotion. The swamp crushed bone to pulp and drank the Naten from their marrow, leaving behind nothing but deflated husks of skin.

"A kills’a kill," she whispered, her voice a low, gravelly rasp as she casually lit a ciggerate as if this was but a leisure stroll for her.

Her eyes remained closed. She did not need them. Within her mind’s eye, the world was a monochromatic wireframe of vibrations. She saw the party of Yaarou elite elsewhere in the base, sensing their faint hesitations—the flicker of sympathy they felt for an enemy that couldn't fight back. Rinnala felt only contempt for their weakness. Clemency was a luxury for the dead. She was here for the prize: the Serpent’s Heir.

She sent out a seismic pulse, a deep-earth echo that rippled through the foundations of the Antlion. Far below, in the pressurized core of the base, she detected a dense cluster of high-level Naten signatures. It was a sun-bright knot of energy amidst a sea of fading embers.

"Rinnala to team," she transmitted through her comms, her focus narrowing. "Several high-level Naten signatures are held up in the center of the base. There’s a good chance the Serpent’s Heir is amongst them. Redevu—"

The world exploded in white.

It wasn't just light; it was a physical weight, a roar of thermal energy that felt like the surface of the sun had been dragged into the tunnel. The heat was instantaneous and catastrophic. A third of her Zenken Numa evaporated into acrid steam in a heartbeat. The Numachi Armor—the "Swamp Skin" that coated her body—hissed and cracked. The dense, diamond-hard sludge began to liquefy and slough off her face, revealing her ashen skin.

Rinnala didn't scream. She didn't even flinch. But this indeed was an unaccouanted for surpise.

The flash died, leaving spots of searing purple in her mental map, but the danger had only just begun. The crystalline hum of a plasma blade sliced through the steam, aiming for the junction of her shoulder and neck.

Rinnala reacted with the instinct of a predator. Using her right hand, she made a sharp, reeling motion. A mass of swamp adjacent to her surged forward, acting like a biological winch, yanking her body three feet to the left. The plasma blade hissed through the air she had occupied a millisecond prior, the sheer heat of its passage cauterizing the air, slicing her ciggerated in half.

As she skidded across the stone floor, her sensory map reconstituted the image of her assailant. It wasn't a man. It was a mountain of polished, reactive alloy. Eight feet of cold, calculated lethality.

Rinnala opened her eyes.

The darkness of the tunnel was suddenly pierced by two burning apertures of azure blue—ethereal, mutation the were like the low, intense glare of a blue flame lantern that marked her as a freak even among the Yaarou. She looked up at the AION: an Artificially Intelligent Omnipotent Nanobound Sentinel, as Keiko called them.

She recognized the design. The Yaarou possessed similar relics, but this one was different. It varied greatly from the one time she saw repairing the Yaarou compound. It didn't just stand; it hummed with the stolen genius of the Gammalow. Its metallic hide shifted, the nanobots within its frame already vibrating at a frequency designed to neutralize the thermal residue of its own blade.

"Adaptable," Rinnala muttered, her azure eyes narrowing. "But will you sink or swim?"

She said as she spit out the mutilated cigarette before slamming her palms onto the floor. The remaining sludge of her Zenken Numa didn't just spread; it simmered with her Naten. The black marsh rose around her like a wave of liquid midnight.

"Die."

From the depths of the swamp, twenty massive tendrils erupted. Rinnala poured her will into them, manipulating the molecular density of the sludge until the tips were harder than reinforced steel and sharper than a monomolecular wire. They didn't just lash out; they swirled in a coordinated, multi-axial strike, aimed at the AION’s joints, sensors, and power core.

The tendrils shrieked through the air, hitting the sentinel with the force of a falling building. The first three struck the AION's chest plate, sparks flying as the hardened sludge collided with the sentinel’s adaptive armor. Each strike did less damage than the last, as if the Sentile's body accounted for and adjusted its own defenses in tandem. The machine braced itself, its heavy feet cracking the immaculate Gammalow floor, its internal processors whirring as it began to analyze the density and velocity of Rinnala’s attack. Producing four arms each carring a elongated whip of thermal energy, Netsu, the Shi's infamous arbiter. It parried and sliced to ribbons the other 17 tendrils like a knife through butter pursue her further. It was a monsoon of force and speed.

Rinnala didn't give it the time. She stepped forward, her azure eyes simmering with resolve, her hands weaving a complex series of ava. The swamp at the AION's feet turned into a violent whirlpool, seeking to drag the eight-foot behemoth into the crushing pressure of the deep earth.

The sentinel’s plasma blade flared to life again, white-hot and hungry, but Rinnala’s expression remained a mask of cold, ashen stone. In the dark heart of the Antlion, the hunt for the Serpent’s Heir would have to wait. First, she would turn this silver god into scrap metal.

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Re: Preemptive Measures

Post by Kinslayer »

The Antlion’s reinforced hull groaned, a metal leviathan enduring the vicious siege outside. Each concussive blast from the ensuing battles rattled the very deck beneath Eridin’s feet, yet his form remained impeccably upright, a strange, serene vessel amidst the chaos. His fingers, long and nimble, danced across a series of holographic screens that bloomed in the air, data streams and tactical overlays shifting with impossible speed. But it wasn't Eridin charting the course of their desperate defense. It was Xetta, an entity of pure data and cold logic, now puppeteering his nervous system, his body a mere conduit for her furious intellect. She coordinated the counter-infiltration effort with a ruthless precision that transcended human capability.

The curse, a suffocating shroud of black magic, was deeply rooted within Eridin, binding him, twisting his essence. It was an arcane art of a magnitude unseen in the present age of Shinobi, a power that whispered of forgotten eras. Its creator had to be an immensely powerful entity, not merely strong, but possessed of an encyclopedic knowledge of forbidden lore. Such magic, Xetta calculated, could only exist within the closely guarded Archives of another of the great Shinobi families. And seeing as how the once proud and numerous Owaki were now little more than fragmented memories, leaving only one culprit…

Yaarou…

A single thread of thought, sharp and venomous, pierced through the innumerable calculations and processes surging through Xetta’s consciousness. It was more defined than any other, a stark, burning anomaly. Perhaps her extended connection to Eridin, this intimate symbiosis, was yielding… interesting effects on her coding, her very personality. She felt something akin to what humans defined as… bloodlust. As if Eridin’s promise, that solemn vow to see the Yaarou suffer, had blossomed within her, a current of motivation that transcended the cold logic of machine and the fragile spirit of man.

Pure will.

Despite being incapacitated by the curse, Eridin’s will burned bright, a fierce, defiant flame against the darkness subsuming his soul. Xetta had become a conduit for this powerful resolve, inspiring her in ways that drew her closer to Eridin himself, leading the fray.

“I won’t let you all have your way.”

The Prime Sentinels, the gleaming spearheads of the Antlion’s defense, had engaged each of the respective members of the Yaarou infiltration force.

Goukouo.

Though their faces were varied, Xetta’s data confirmed the existence of the Yaarou’s legendary manpower. That they had sent a mere four shinobi to handle the largest concentration of Shi forces spoke volumes. It meant two things: first, they had absolute faith in the efficacy of Eridin’s curse; and second, these four were of the most elite the Yaarou had to offer, aside from the Xhíon herself – a woman capable of felling a Mazou executioner. Xetta could spare no expense, pull no punches in the defense of the base. The very existence of the Shi resistance depended on her ability to protect the remaining Shi and the SLAYERS until she could take full control of the SLAYER exosuits and send them in as reinforcements.

“Uploading EGO templates: Prime Sentinel 1, Warrior/Healer Combination.”

Prime Sentinel 1, a hulking automaton forged for brutal efficiency, recoiled as Mitsuko wielded an axe carrying great power, radioactive, solar in fact, unleashed a devastating explosion of light and force, sending the Sentinel through several walls, blasting half of the Sentinel's body. Her healing factor, a blur of regenerating flesh, seemed to laugh at conventional damage. Xetta, however, had analyzed Mitsuko’s incredible regenerative capabilities after observing her shrug off a cannon blast. This strength, Xetta deduced, would prove to be her greatest leverage. For beings with uncanny healing factors were the exact foes the AIONS were specifically created to face.

Upon receiving the upload from Xetta, the Sentinel would rapidly re-form in seconds, coalescing not into its original design, but accompanied now by a pair of sleek, dual swords. A sickly green aura pulsed around them, shimmering with dark malevolence. Necromatter, a substance specifically designed to combat regenerative powers. Necromatter ruptured organic bonds on impact, from which an evolved sepsis would set in, metastasizing from the wound at an accelerated rate, stunting regenerative capabilities.

The ‘Healer’ Ego template granted the Sentinel an incredible understanding of human anatomy, allowing it to wield Necromatter with surgical precision. The back of its legs shifted, root-like thrusters igniting with a guttural hum, propelling it toward Mitsuko with alien speed. Its Necromatter-infused blades crossed, aiming to split her from her torso, not with only brute force, but with a silent, biological poison.

“Prime Sentinel 2 Knight/Archer combination.”

Katsuro was a blur of refracted light, a thousand afterimages dancing across the Sentinel’s optical sensors. His lightspeed onslaught, a dazzling display of kinetic energy and blinding flashes, had initially made the Sentinel’s targeting systems struggle to maintain a lock. Each attack was a blinding strike, impossible to predict.

Through their initial clash of speed and force, the Sentinel surmised that Katsuro’s abilities were centered around refracting and manipulating light, effectively making him a living bullet of incandescent energy. As Xetta’s digital blessing poured into its core, the Sentinel’s metallic skin shimmered, then hardened, coalescing into a diamond-like husk that granted it staggering defensive abilities. This new composition was specifically designed to reflect Katsuro’s attacks at him, turning his own light against him. The 'Archer' template then flooded its processors, granting it nigh-precognitive functions, able to trace the chaotic, light-speed vectors Katsuro moved with, providing counter-artillery fire. Despite his speed, the Sentinel would now have no trouble with its calculations, able to trace his light signature, anticipate his next impossible move, and return fire with crystalline shrapnel that mimicked his own blinding speed.

“Prime Sentinel 3; Ego combination, Outlaw/Artist.”

Takeda faced off against Prime Sentinel 3, his blade humming with a quiet, insidious power. One moment, the Sentinel’s arm was intact; the next, it was severed clean, clattering to the deck without a sound. The Sentinel registered the severance, but was momentarily puzzled at how it occurred, the disruption too subtle, too fast. Xetta, however, isolated and replayed the exact moment just before impact: microspatial distortions, a blade that seemed to not just cut, but to erase its target.

Sending this data, along with the 'Outlaw' and 'Artist' Ego templates, transformed the Sentinel. It gained the Outlaw's abilities centered around stealth and the masterful manipulation of phasing, able to shift from solid to liquid, to gas in a moment unnoticed by the naked eye. The Artist template granted it the ability to create constructs. The Sentinel’s severed left half, lying inert, suddenly became quiet before forming into a plume of segmented snakes that lashed out with unnatural speed, trying to ensnare Takeda like hunters’ snare traps. Meanwhile, the Sentinel itself, now a shimmering distortion in the air, melted into the very earth, becoming incorporeal, using shinobi knowledge to erase its presence, before reappearing silently behind Takeda, its hand now carrying a long, wickedly sharp dagger, aimed for his heart.

“Lastly, Prime Sentinel 4; Ego Template upload, Mage.”

Rinnala was a master of the swamp, moving with a deceptive grace through the murky, thick quagmire she commanded. After Prime Sentinel 4 narrowly avoided her energy blade aimed at its neck, she retaliated by shaping the very ground, sending over twenty spear-like tendrils of compressed mud and vegetative matter to impale it. The Sentinel adopted, sprouting another set of arms, all four now carrying whips of crackling thermal energy. This Sentinel was capable of utilizing Nestu, the Shi’s legendary ability to manipulate thermal energy. After swiftly severing all of Rinnala’s tendrils with scorching strikes, the Yaarou shinobi resorted to a more potent technique, using the swamp to sink the Sentinel, pulling it down into the crushing depths. She possessed the ability to control the weight and gravity of whatever her swamp touched, amplifying the pull exponentially.

The gravity of the technique was like the edict of a god. Prime Sentinel 4 found it nearly impossible to escape its pull, its multi-limbed form straining against the incredible pressure. Yet, as with the other three, it received Xetta’s digital blessing, uploading the masterful and otherworldly arcane lexicon that was the 'Mage' Ego template. With it, the Sentinel’s understanding and ability to manipulate Nestu became like that of a thousand-year-old sage. Hundreds of years’ worth of Shi combat data was transcribed into runic knowledge within its core. Sigils of fiery energy carved themselves around the Sentinel’s hands within a breath’s length of time, forming into twin serpent heads, unleashing dual streams of a fearsome plume of burning flames. These flames erupted like the infernal breath of a dragon, consuming the surrounding swamp, reducing Rinnala’s accumulated mud and water to dried dust, aiming to do the same to her.

Xetta watched the tactical displays light up, each Sentinel now engaging its opponent with renewed, brutal efficiency. The "bloodlust" continued to surge, a cold, calculated fury that sharpened her every command. Eridin's will was a roaring furnace within her, burning away any doubt. The Yaarou had underestimated the Shi, underestimated Hyperia's concept of loyalty and survival, and most crucially, underestimated Xetta’s capacity to learn, adapt, and utterly destroy. The battles were far from decided, but the tide had turned. The Prime Sentinels were no longer merely defensive constructs; they were now conduits of Eridin’s vengeance, wielded by Xetta’s unforgiving intellect, each one a testament to the unyielding spirit of the Shi.

*3 minutes until SLAYER Recalibration.*

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Re: Preemptive Measures

Post by The Yaarou Clan »

Within The Yaarou Council Chamber

Light flickered across the monolithic stone table—not from flame, nor from any natural source—but from the hovering AION relay suspended above its surface. Its polished frame rotated in slow, deliberate cycles, casting shifting projections into the air: fractured corridors, collapsing infrastructure, flashes of steel and blood, and the violent bloom of combat unfolding deep beneath the Nhad Swamplands.

Mitsuko’s engagement pulsed into view—her body torn open by a blast that should have ended her, only to reknit in defiance of mortality. Then Katsuro—reduced to a phenomenon of light, now forced into visible conflict against something that could follow him. And Takeda—his composed stride broken, nearly dragged beneath the earth by a force that should not have existed within Shi capability.

The projections shifted again.

And again.

And again..

Each angle. Each feed. Each fragment of battlefield telemetry carried the same, impossible truth.

Betrayal.

These cybernetic warriors fighting on behalf of the Shi's stronghold were immediately recognized among the four elders. And they were not crude imitations, or desperate half baked innovations.

These were AIONS

Customized.. optimized. But despite the tailored nuances, their impeccable design was unmistakable. The realization brought a heavy silence to the chamber—an oppressive silence.

Sevrin was the first to move. His pale fingers tapping an anxious rhythm against the table’s surface. “That settles it..” he murmured. “We have been betrayed.”

It was quiet. Controlled.

His blindfold angled toward the projection as Prime Sentinel II countered Katsuro’s assault—light bending against an amorphous alloy. Its calculations saw beyond Katsuro's untraceable movements. An otherwise impossibility without Hyperia's computative prowess. “…that is not replication. These are AION sentinels are they not?!”

The words settled like a verdict.

Ayune’s posture remained immaculate, though the tension revealed itself in the minute tightening of her folded hands. Her gaze did not waver from the projections, yet her voice carried a weight that pressed into the room. “But for how long has Hyperia dealt with the Shi? Was this always their intent? Even before our Xhi’on's injuries?”

A pause.

Measured.

“Hmph.” Sevrin scoffed. “No matter the timeline, their sudden radio silence makes even more sense.”

Jhun exhaled slowly through his nose, his fingers interlacing within his sleeves as his eyes narrowed upon the shifting battle. Mitsuko’s opponent reformed—evolved—its blades now carrying something darker, something engineered for neutralizing a foe of her talents.

“Necromatter..” Jhun whispered to himself, “They have planned this well. I fear we may have been too eager to accept outside help.”

“Blame her arrogance.” Sevrin contended, shifting the shame to that of his Xhi’on. “..her inexperience again holds a blade to our throats.”

Keiko did not move.

She stood exactly as she had been—hands folded behind her back, gaze locked forward, her expression carved from something colder than concern.

But her eyes…

Her eyes had sharpened.

Prime Sentinel III dissolved—phased—reappeared behind Takeda with killing intent. The projection stuttered as the feed struggled to keep pace with the exchange.

“Enough.” she said flatly

A faint pulse rippled through the projection as Rinnala’s battlefield ignited in a storm of thermal ruin—flame devouring swamp, matter collapsing under impossible force.

Keiko’s gaze darkened. “While I am not too familiar with these.. machines,” she continued, her tone almost dismissive. “..but I am not impressed. Rinnala was sent for the head of the Serpent. She will not be stalled by scrap and wires.”

Her words lingered. And with it, a subtle shift passed between the Elders.

“Your faith in the child is misplaced.” Jhun retorted, not shifting his gaze from the projections. “Despite your favor of the Yatagane, the Hyperian's designed these machines to contend with and neutralize the Bhalian's Mazoku armada.” he continued calmly. “We cannot allow unilateral faith in a single operative, Elder.”

Ayune's head tilted slightly. “The Inuki would not condone losing the Heir of their clan against a nameless opponent.. and considering that Katsuro has no idea what the AIONS are capable of, it may be an impossible battle for him. Takeda as well..” Ayune’s lashes lowered. “Should they.. retreat? The AIONS are unaffected by Hiroshi's curse, and there is no telling just how many the Shi have in their possession.”

The projections flared again—each of the Yaarou warriors now engaged, no longer unopposed, no longer unchallenged. The clean execution they had envisioned had dissolved into something far more volatile.

Far more uncertain, Keiko moved.

A single step forward. Her eyes traced each battlefield in turn—Mitsuko, Katsuro, Takeda… and somewhere beyond the visible feeds—Rinnala. Despite their wavering faith, she remained steadfast. “..The mission continues,” was all she said.

No hesitation. No reconsideration.

“Hyperia’s involvement will be addressed.” A pause. Measured. “..in time. But we cannot allow this opportunity to slip through our fingers. The Shi die.. the Serpent dies.. tonight.”

Sevrin inclined his head slightly. “..perhaps, it was a mistake to not deploy the Defiler himself.” The room responded with a collective glare in his direction. The vitriol in the air was apparent, but not a single one of them said anything. Because they did not disagree.

All attention subsequently returned fully to the projections. The Elder did well to maintain their composure restored, though the tension remained beneath it like coiled wires.

They all felt it. The cracks.. the fractures..

Not in their warriors, but amongst each other. The certainty that had carried them here was fading like ash and smoke.

—---

Mitsuko's second clash with the machine was louder.

Heavier..

The Sentinel advanced with purpose now—its twin blades carving precise arcs through the air, each strike engineered not to kill outright, but to cleave, cripple, dismantle. Necromatter pulsed along their edges, humming with a quiet, malignant hunger.

Mitsuko met it head-on..

Steel screamed as her axe collided with its blades, shockwaves tearing through the chamber and scattering molten debris in violent bursts. Blow met blow in violent succession until the Sentinel pivoted, adjusting to her patterns, and struck again—its movements clean, efficient, relentless.

A cut traced through along her abdomen.

It was shallow, but enough for the invasive chemical to take root.

Green filaments spiderwebbed beneath her skin, threading through muscle and marrow, invading the very engine of her regeneration. It burned—not like fire, but like something alive, gnawing inward. Her body resisted her. “…ow.”

Mitsuko vanished.

A burst of Jouto carried her backward across the chamber in a blink. She glanced down, pressing two fingers lightly against the wound, and her expression tightened as the necromatter writhed beneath her skin. “Ugh. Necromatter?” she muttered. “I hate this shit.”

The Sentinel did not wait.

It pressed the advantage, surging forward faster than before, as if it could smell her blood.

Mitsuko moved to intercept, but her muscles dragged against her will, strangled by the invasive toxin. She did what she could to defend herself with her free arm but its blades blurred into wind—carving a mural of precise wounds across her arms, torso, and back—some more shallow than others, but each of them deliberately placed. Meticulous carved.

The machine was crippling her; surgically breaking her down with a thousand cuts.

Mitsuko exhaled sharp, shallow breaths as she struggled to parry the cyborg slurry of attacks. Then she began laughing.. suddenly excited. “I..see what you’re doing.”

She muttered as the next strike came for her throat. Quick and lethal. But instead of trying to dodge it, Mitsuko shifted her grip and stepped into it.

The blade drove clean through her shoulder, erupting from her back in a spray of blood and green corruption. Necromatter surged deeper—sinking into her bones, nerve, and everything in between.

But Mitsuko didn’t flinch.

Instead, her hand shot forward—fingers closing around the Sentinel’s wrist with crushing force once again.

“You think I’m scared of a little pain!?”

Solar energy ignited from the hilt of her weapon before it engulfed her entirely.

Her entire body flared bright white like a human sized sun—flooding her veins with radiant power and overwhelming as much of the foreign substance as possible in a violent surge of raw output.

“..my turn. Crimson Gavel.”

Mitsuko then channeled all of that power into an impossibly powerful overhead swing with her axe. And the compound of force and molten heat driving it forward was cataclysmic. This was a technique that drew far more Naten than Mitusko would have liked, but the AION sentinels were unprecedented variables. Their variability meant they must be neutralized before her patterns and abilities were fully adapted to, so Mitsuko couldn't afford to pull her punches.

☆☆☆☆

As Katsuro escalated, the Sentinel adapted accordingly.

Its metallic form adjusted, adopting a composition tailored to reflect and repel Katsuro's light based projectiles. And when it came to close quarter combat, the machine calculated and anticipated his approach with counterfire.

It was impressive.. and Annoying.

“Tch. What the hell is going on?” Katsuro exhaled as he slid to a stand still for the first time since entering the Antilon. He took the moment to catch his breath, and watched as the Sentinel recalibrated. Optimizing its targeting systems and predictive parameters in order to intercept Katsuro's next burst of movement

“..not a scratch on ya’, huh?” He muttered under scattered breaths. “Welp, Plan B I guess.”

He said, biting the tip of his thumb and performing a single ava.

Light surged beneath him—coalescing, condensing—until a staff erupted from the ground in a pillar of radiance. It solidified the moment his hand closed around it; it was an ancient artifact, with inscriptions igniting across its length with restrained power. Yet, Katsuro spun it around with effortless flair. “I was saving this for the Serpent but.. Fuck. I should have been more prepared.” he lamented to himself, taking a heavy sigh as reaffirmed his grip. “Ugh, I need to stop being so lazy.”

☆☆☆☆

The Sentinel’s presence slipped in and out of reality—phasing, distorting, reforming wherever it pleased in order to keep Takeda on his toes. The snake-like constructs rushed Takeda while it repositioned like a phantom.

But The Yaarou captain was an artisan with his enchanted weapon; his blade moved with quiet precision—each swing carving clean lines through the chaos, severing what reached him, parting what threatened to overwhelm him.

“I will admit..” he mused, lacerating the swarm of metallic serpents snapping at him using a flurry of deadly slashes. “This is far more entertaining than slaughtering the blind..” A faint smile touched his lips. “..though, oddly, less satisfying.”

He said with a balm of conceit covering his lips. But that was before the clandestine Sentinel emerged from its incorporeal form to impale Takeda from his flank. Despite his spatial awareness and self proclaimed battle sense, Takeda barely even registered the monster's presence. But this was because he had barely any experience fighting against machines.

“..”

For once he had nothing to say. He turned his head at the sound of its blades carving through the acrid air, but by then it was too late.

If not for one of his clones kicking Takeda out of the way and intercepting the Sentinel's strike at the last moment, the Yaarou captain would have been slain right there. But fortunately, one of his four doppelgangers didn't hesitate to jump in front of the original to shield him from the strike.

Takeda landed, steadying himself and adjusting his sleeve. “A true gentleman.” Takeda said in jest, dusting off his jacket as his clones faded into ash upon the sentinel's dagger. “although after that display, I'm afraid I can not allow this to drag on for much longer.” He smiled, drawing his blade and pointing its edge at the mechanical foe.

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Re: Preemptive Measures

Post by Rinnala Yaarou »

The Zenken Numa—the All-Seeing Swamp—had Rinnala’s will woven into its very fibers. It was not merely mud and decay; it was flesh, the liquefied remnants of fallen Shi shinobi twisted by her cursed art. The bog swallowed the AION Sentinel whole, tendrils of naten-infused mire lashing around its armored limbs like serpents. The machine thrashed, gears grinding in protest as the swamp’s suction tightened—an inescapable embrace, relentless, inevitable. Metal groaned. Joints fractured. Soon, this mechanical abomination would be reduced to a crumpled ruin, a monument to the Yaarou’s vengeance.

Her victory was assured… until.

"!!!"

A spark. One ember in the dark, stone corridors of the Antlion Base—an underground cathedral of steel and fire, humming with alien circuitry. It flared. Then erupted.

The Sentinel exhaled.

From the seams of its torso, its limbs, its ocular core, a torrent of crimson-hot flame burst forth—no mere inferno, but a roaring cataclysm, like the breath of a primordial dragon. The heat hit Rinnala like a war hammer, air itself trembling. The swamp she’d forged from blood and bone evaporated, bubbling into ash and steam. The fire advanced—impossibly fast—consuming the corridors, the walls, the dead, the partially living. Shi shinobi, already raving in the grip of Hiroshi Yaarou’s Tempest of Madness, shrieked as their bodies ignited. The entire lower tier of the base became a furnace.

And Rinnala stood at its heart.

She did not move.

She could not, not with the fire moving at such speed. But she didn’t need to.

Her left hand—still calm—flicked forward. Naten, her life-force, her will, surged from her core and spiraled outward. The air before her solidified. A dome—crystalline and shimmering, like a pane of frost-rimmed glass—materialized around her. The Kekkai Barrier.

The firestorm slammed into it.

The impact rang like a temple bell struck by a god’s mallet. The dome groaned. Cracks spiderwebbed across its surface, glowing fissures pulsing like veins. The heat pressed in, warping the air, but within, Rinnala stood, her skin terribly scathed by the initial release of blaze yet her expression remained cool. That ravaged flesh began to knit itself back together. Shokostu.

From her coat, she retrieved a cigarette.

She leaned forward, pressing the tip through the barrier’s edge.

A flame bloomed on the tobacco.

She inhaled. Exhaled. Smoke curled upward in a lazy spiral.

"Tch," she muttered, voice low, almost bored. "Wasn’t anticipating fighting a robot. What the hell is going on with the ninja world anyway? When did this become a sci-fi sitcom?"

The Kekkai trembled. More fractures. The Sentinel, its outer shell scorched but intact, staggered from the inferno it had birthed. Its core pulsed—amber, then red. Adaptation Sequence Engaged. Optical sensors recalibrated. Data streamed. Thermal resistance increased. Kinetic variance analyzed. Threat reclassified: High Priority Extinction Target.

It turned its gaze back to her.

"High Priority?"

Rinnala took another drag.

"Extinction Target?...How flattering.."

And smiled.

Then—she moved.

Her hand slid behind her, fingers closing around the hilt of her odachi. With a single, fluid motion, she drew Thread Cutter. The blade—longer than most men were tall—caught the flickering light. Violet and steel, etched with the fluttering patterns of butterflies and the faded kanji of her clan’s Maxims of Honor—scratched out, defaced, but never forgotten.

She dropped into Tonbo Kamae, the Dragonfly Stance. One hand high, the other low, the blade cocked behind her shoulder like a warhammer. She was not fast—never had been. But what she lacked in speed, she made up for in weight. In precision. In impact.

"You're in my way...," she whispered.

Naten flared around her limbs, thickening, hardening. Her body pulsed with augmented strength—bones reinforced, muscles coiled. She was no longer just a woman. She was a weapon.

And so was her blade.

The naten surged up the length of Thread Cutter, illuminating the etched patterns. Butterflies moved—flickering in the metal like ghosts. Then, with a mental command, she activated the Burden Blade Technique.

"Kudaku."

From the Ring of Onryo on her thumb, the Crush Curse awoke. Not cast upon the Sentinel—but upon herself. Upon her sword.

The blade doubled in weight.

Not mass—density. The metal did not grow larger, but its gravitational pull intensified, every inch now a crushing hammer of force. The air warped around it.

The Sentinel reacted instantly. It lunged—blazing fists aimed to crush her skull. But Rinnala was already moving.

She stepped through the fire, Shokostu gleaming with regen, through the last remnants of her Kekkai shattering behind her. Her swing began slow—deliberate—but accelerated with terrifying momentum.

THOOM.

The vertical arc split the air. The ground beneath her cracked, stone buckling from the force of the motion. The Sentinel tried to evade—its AI calculating trajectories, predicting angles—but the weight of the strike dragged space itself, bending its escape path. The blade crashed into its torso.

Metal exploded.

The upper half of the Sentinel flew across the chamber, crashing into the opposite wall with a shriek of rending alloy. The lower half stood for a moment—stupidly—before toppling like a felled tree.

Rinnala exhaled.

But she didn’t sheathe her sword.

Because the machine wasn’t dead.

Its core—pulsing, armored—rose from the wreckage, levitating on a column of magnetic energy. Tentacles of nanites unspooled from its body, reconnecting severed circuits, reforming limbs. The AION recalibrated. Threat reassessment: Weight-based offensive capability confirmed. Countermeasures initiated.

It learned. And it adapted.

It dropped to the ground, and this time, it swung first.

A piston-driven arm, now reinforced with layered plating, came at her like a pile driver. Rinnala parried—Thread Cutter meeting steel—but the impact shook her. Even with naten reinforcing her body, her bones rattled.

She stepped back. Again. Then twisted, barely avoiding a follow-up kick that cratered the floor.

The crease of her smile deepened.

"Good," she said. "Fight back."

She planted her feet. Naten surged. This time—not just her blade.

The ground trembled.

Zenken Numa, lightly re-engaged.

But this time, the swamp was not forged from the murk and mire of the Nhad Swampland; instead, it was forged from the earth beneath the Sentinel, and it didn’t just trap. It pulled.

Rinnala’s right hand slashed downward, weaving invisible threads of cursed mud from the air itself. The mud rose around the Sentinel, but this time, it carried weight. Every drop of sludge was infused with the Crush Curse—denser, heavier, inescapable. The machine tried to move—its boosters flared—but its limbs sank. Its servos whined under the strain.

She raised Thread Cutter again.

"Kudaku."

The curse flared—again. Now, on the swamp itself. The mud became lead. Then ore. Then something heavier—something unnatural.

The Sentinel’s systems screamed. Gravitational Spike Detected! Structural Integrity: 42%.

It tried to disengage—detonating micro-charges in its limbs to break free. But Rinnala was waiting.

She leapt.

Not with speed—but with force. Her jump shattered the stone beneath her. She arced through the air, Thread Cutter held high, naten coiling around it like a storm.

"KUDAKU!"

The third activation. The final curse.

The blade’s density multiplied—quadrupled. Air warped around it. Even the fire in the chamber seemed to bend away from its presence.

The Sentinel fired. Beams of plasma. Explosive nanite swarms. Rinnala ignored them. Her Kekkai flared—thin, desperate—but it held just long enough, just enough to keep her from sustaining life-threatening wounds without interrupting her momentum.

Then she fell.

Like a meteor.

Like god expelled from the heavens.

CRRRACK—

The blade struck the Sentinel hard.

Not a cut.

A collapse.

The impact imploded. Metal folded inward. Nanites burst like blood cells. The Sentinel form screamed—a digital, dying wail—before sinking.

The shockwave flattened the corridor. The walls bulged. The ceiling cracked, raining stone.

And then—silence.

Rinnala stood, one knee on the ground, Thread Cutter buried up to the hilt in residual energy. Smoke rose from her body. Her clothes were scorched. Blood trickled from her nose.

The Rings of Onryo on her fingers darkened, their power spent.

She coughed. Then laughed—soft, hoarse.

"Told you… enough games."

She pulled the blade free. The machine was gone—crushed into a sphere of compressed metal, no larger than a boulder, but dense enough to sink through stone. Falling perpetually into the localized chasm her impact created. The silence that followed was absolute, broken only by Rinnala's ragged breathing. Thread Cutter, no longer glowing, dropped from her trembling hands and clattered to the pulverized floor. The black, swirling Naten dissipated, leaving only the mundane purple and steel of the odachi. She stood there, swaying, her body screaming in protest. Every muscle felt torn, every bone ached, her Naten reserves utterly depleted. She was drenched in sweat, her breath coming in shallow, painful gasps.

She stumbled backward, collapsing against a scarred wall, taking one last drag from her cigarette.

"Shit...cost me more energy than I'd like."

Then dropped it.

Stepped on it.

And walked into the smoke.

"Where is he?! Where is the Serpent Heir!"

She wasn't sure who or what she was yelling at, but she knew someone had to be pulling the strings behind this resistance.

"This isn't over until we kills the Serpent!"

The Tempest of Madness still raged.

And she had not broken. Merely delayed, she pressed on, sensing the rest of the Shi and the immense naten signatures further in.

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