arbus
Member
"If I asked you to teach that technique to one of my clansmen", he said, after listening to the exchange between Hikaku, Yakumi and the Hatake, "what would it cost me?" Madara himself was not any good at fuinjutsu -- his fingers lacked the dexterity most seals demanded, and he the patience to conduct one delicate brushstroke after another. But there were some talented seal experts in his extended family, and to gain the means to transport their dead would mean everything, could change the way they went to war, the way they prayed to their ancestors. He thought of his brothers. Four of them dead, and only one buried in a proper grave.
Hikaku's face had taken on a look of intent. With the tender age of sixteen, he already displayed a penchant for tactical thinking. He was quiet, far removed from the temper of his cousins, empathetic, and proved himself to be a talented, rational leader. He knew, as well as Madara did, what such a seal could mean to their community, to their clan. He had lost his father and older brother in the fight against other clans, and like many of his clan, had not gotten a chance to bury them, to bid them goodbye.
Strange, Madara mused, his need to bury the dead as if it rooted them like trees into the homeland. As if their rotting corpses were not one with the earth already, but they were not home, would never be home again. He stirred his thoughts away from the loss, directed them ahead to the tasks to come. There was no use in crying over days gone by, or lamenting misgivings that could not be changed. The past was a permanent thing, immovable and eternal like the mountains, like the fire sprites they said danced in the air when the sun set.
"In the ancient times", Yakumi said, as if all of their thoughts had somehow been moved into the same direction. The wind shifted, a freezing, cold hand in their backs, pushing them forward along the trees. They were shadows, moving soundlessly in the treetops. "They put their dead on barques and burned them with a special katon jutsu. Its flames were said to never extinguish, not until they ate everything in the caster's vision. My grandmother has told me about it."
They descended onto the ground as the woods thinned out. The last stretch to the small harbor was on plain land, across fields and shallow mounds. From their position, they could see the small array of wooden houses, the windows gleaming invitingly in the darkness of the night. Madara undid the clasp around his neck, heeding the mutt's advice, and rolled up the cloak to store it with the rest of his belongings in storage scroll, mid-run. It was one thing to waken the man he wanted to do business with in the middle of the night; another to do so drenched in blood.
Hikaku's face had taken on a look of intent. With the tender age of sixteen, he already displayed a penchant for tactical thinking. He was quiet, far removed from the temper of his cousins, empathetic, and proved himself to be a talented, rational leader. He knew, as well as Madara did, what such a seal could mean to their community, to their clan. He had lost his father and older brother in the fight against other clans, and like many of his clan, had not gotten a chance to bury them, to bid them goodbye.
Strange, Madara mused, his need to bury the dead as if it rooted them like trees into the homeland. As if their rotting corpses were not one with the earth already, but they were not home, would never be home again. He stirred his thoughts away from the loss, directed them ahead to the tasks to come. There was no use in crying over days gone by, or lamenting misgivings that could not be changed. The past was a permanent thing, immovable and eternal like the mountains, like the fire sprites they said danced in the air when the sun set.
"In the ancient times", Yakumi said, as if all of their thoughts had somehow been moved into the same direction. The wind shifted, a freezing, cold hand in their backs, pushing them forward along the trees. They were shadows, moving soundlessly in the treetops. "They put their dead on barques and burned them with a special katon jutsu. Its flames were said to never extinguish, not until they ate everything in the caster's vision. My grandmother has told me about it."
They descended onto the ground as the woods thinned out. The last stretch to the small harbor was on plain land, across fields and shallow mounds. From their position, they could see the small array of wooden houses, the windows gleaming invitingly in the darkness of the night. Madara undid the clasp around his neck, heeding the mutt's advice, and rolled up the cloak to store it with the rest of his belongings in storage scroll, mid-run. It was one thing to waken the man he wanted to do business with in the middle of the night; another to do so drenched in blood.