I Enslaved The Goddess Who Summoned Me

Chapter 679: Kajiya-Hara Domain



Chapter 679: Kajiya-Hara Domain



They smelled it before they saw it.


The wind shifted somewhere in the last mile and brought it with it — smoke and hot metal and the specific sharpness of coal burning at sustained high temperature, layered together into something that sat in the back of the throat and stayed there. Nathan noticed it through the carriage window first as a change in the air’s character, the clean southern smell of trees and earth replaced gradually, then completely, by something industrial and relentless.


He looked up through the window toward the sky ahead.


Smoke. Not the thin wisps of ordinary cooking fires or the scattered columns of a town going about its business — thick, dark billowing columns rising from multiple points and spreading overhead into a permanent grey haze that sat above the treeline like a ceiling the territory had decided to install.


The servant girl noticed it too.


"Princess, you should avoid breathing too much of it," she said, her voice carrying the slightly muffled quality of someone already pressing their sleeve against their nose. "The smoke from metal forges is not gentle on the lungs."


Sakura had already raised her sleeve. Her nose wrinkled delicately, her pink eyes watering slightly from the sharpness of it. She said nothing but her expression said enough.


Through it all, even from this distance, Nathan could hear it.


The hammers.


Not one or two — dozens, striking in overlapping rhythms that never fully resolved into silence between blows, a continuous percussion that rose and fell in waves but never stopped. Metal on metal, the deep resonant impact of large hammers on hot steel, the sharper ring of finishing work, all of it woven together into a sound that pressed against the ears with the patient insistence of something that had been going on all day and would still be going when the sun went down.


The gate came into view ahead — large, reinforced, guarded by soldiers who straightened visibly as Takefusa rode to the front and exchanged words with them. A brief conversation, the guards nodding, and the gates swung open to admit the carriage.


Inside was worse.


The horses felt it immediately — their gait changing, their heads dropping slightly, their breathing audibly labored as the full concentration of smoke and heat and forge-smell closed around them. The driver made quiet sounds of reassurance that didn’t entirely work.


Nathan looked out the window.


The streets of Kajiya-Hara were wide enough for cart traffic and packed on both sides with open-fronted workshops that doubled as living quarters for the people inside them — Nathan could see sleeping mats rolled against back walls, cooking pots suspended over secondary fires, the entire lives of the workers organized around the primary work of the forge with everything else fitted into whatever space remained. Men labored topless in the heat, their skin dark with soot and glistening with sweat, their arms moving with the mechanical repetition of people who had been doing this specific motion for long enough that it no longer required thought.


The hammer sound was everywhere.


It came through the carriage walls, through the floor, through the wheels on the stone streets — a physical presence as much as an audible one, sitting in the chest with each impact.


Nathan watched it all pass through the window.


"So this is your future new home," he said. "Quite nice."


Sakura’s eyes shivered.


The words landed somewhere unguarded and she felt them there — because they were true, weren’t they. This was where she was going. This smoke and this heat and this endless hammer sound was going to become the backdrop of her daily existence, the smell that lived in her clothes and her hair, the sound that accompanied every morning she woke up for however many years followed this carriage ride.


She had known it abstractly. Hearing it stated plainly by someone who had no investment in softening it was a different thing.


The servant girl turned and shot Nathan a look that carried considerable feeling in it — the sharp, protective glare of someone who wanted very badly to say something and was restraining herself with visible effort. She held it for exactly two seconds, then looked away and turned to Sakura, her voice dropping to something gentle and quiet.


Sakura accepted it with the composure she had been raised to produce in exactly these moments. Her expression settled back into its managed position. Her duty was her duty — her father had told her what was needed, told her the people of their domain were threatened, told her this was what was required of her. She understood that. She had agreed to it.


She pressed her sleeve back to her nose and looked at her hands.


The carriage rolled on.


Half an hour through those streets — half an hour of smoke and hammer sound and heat pressing through the window while the road moved dust up around the wheels and the workers looked up briefly from their forges as the carriage passed and then looked back down again. Nathan felt the accumulation of it somewhere around the twenty-minute mark — not distress, not discomfort in any meaningful sense, but the specific low-grade irritation of a sustained unpleasant environment that had gone on long enough to register.


He watched the forges pass.


There were too many people working.


That was the thought that kept returning. Not a town producing weapons at its normal pace to supply its own territory — this was a town producing weapons at a pace that suggested a deadline. Every forge running at full capacity, every worker occupied, the streets between the workshops stacked with finished crates and bound bundles of blades waiting to be moved. The output here was not defensive. It was not the steady baseline production of a domain maintaining its armory.


This was preparation.


"Are they always working this much?" Nathan asked.


"I... I don’t know much. This is the first time I’ve come here," Sakura said hesitantly, her sleeve still raised, her eyes moving across the streets outside with an expression that was doing quiet work behind its composed surface.


"It’s strange indeed." The servant spoke up, her own sleeve pressed firmly to her nose. "When I came here a few years ago it wasn’t nearly this busy. Not like this at all."


Nathan narrowed his eyes.


He said nothing further.


He would find out soon enough what was being prepared for and who it was being prepared against. The shape of it was already forming — the shinobis attacking Norihiro, Norihiro arming himself through his daughter’s marriage, the forgery domain running at a war footing — but he wanted the full picture before he decided what to do with it.


The small castle appeared at the end of the road.


Stone walls, a gate flanked by armed guards in formation, the whole structure carrying the functional, undecorated quality of a building whose architect had prioritized defensibility over appearance. The gates opened slowly as the carriage approached, revealing a courtyard beyond — and in the courtyard, men in armor standing in reception, and at their center a figure who stepped forward as the carriage slowed.


Tall. Young — Nathan’s age or close to it. Brown hair worn back, a clean kimono in dark colors, a posture that was accustomed to being looked at. He wore a sword at his hip.


He was smiling.


"Prince Yasumasa." Takefusa dismounted and inclined his head. "It is an honor."


"You must be the envoy." Yasumasa’s voice was smooth and warm. He moved toward the carriage door with unhurried certainty and reached out, taking the handle, swinging it open himself.


His eyes found Sakura.


He had clearly been told she was beautiful. Whatever he had been told, the reality appeared to exceed it — his smile widened in a way that was genuine rather than performed, his expression doing the thing expressions do when expectation is surpassed.


"I had heard tales," he said, extending his hand toward her. "But this is quite beyond them. Please, Princess."


Sakura lowered her sleeve from her nose. The managed composure returned fully and she smiled back — gracious, warm, exactly what the moment required — and placed her hand in his, stepping down from the carriage.


Nathan stepped out directly after her.


Not after the servant. Not after a pause. Directly after Sakura, before anyone had arranged themselves into the reception formation, dropping from the carriage step to the courtyard stone.


He straightened and looked around the courtyard once — the armed men, the castle walls, the stacked crates visible through an open side door that someone had not thought to close before the guests arrived.


Yasumasa’s eyes moved from Sakura to Nathan.


The warm smile remained in place, but something behind it had shifted — the minor recalibration of someone who had not been told about an additional guest and was now assessing what category this additional guest belonged to.


His eyes went to Kyōmei at Nathan’s hip. Stayed there for a brief moment.


Then back up.


Yasumasa’s eyes stayed on Nathan for exactly long enough to make a reading.


The sword. The posture. The complete absence of any deference in the way the stranger had stepped out of the carriage behind the Princess without invitation or announcement. A ronin — Yasumasa had been around enough of them to recognize the particular quality of someone who had no lord and had stopped apologizing for it. He could smell it the way you smelled rain before it arrived.


Sakura felt the shift in the air immediately.


"Yasumasa-sama." She stepped in smoothly. "This is Ryo-sama — a gentleman retained to guard us on the road. I hope his presence is acceptable."


She added the last part with a slight tilt of her head.


Yasumasa’s smile returned to its full warmth without a pause.


"Of course. Please." He turned back to her and extended his arm, the ronin behind her already filed somewhere less important, and led her toward the castle entrance.


He didn’t give Nathan another look.


Takefusa appeared at Nathan’s side as the group began moving, falling into step close enough to be heard at low volume.


"Act respectfully while you are here," he said under his breath, his jaw tight, his eyes forward. "This is a daimyo’s house. Whatever you do outside on the road is your business. In here it is mine."


Nathan looked around the courtyard as they walked — the guard positions, the side doors, the stacked crates visible through an opening in the wall to the left that someone had not thought to close before guests arrived. Finished blades, bound in cloth and stacked in organized rows, enough of them to supply a small army with sidearms and still have surplus.


He glanced briefly at Takefusa.


Then back to the crates.


Said nothing.


They moved inside.


The contrast was immediate — the forge smell didn’t disappear entirely but receded to a background note as the castle’s interior closed around them, the wooden floors clean and well-maintained, the walls hung with banners in the domain’s colors, servants appearing at the entrance to bow and receive the guests. The hammer sounds came through the walls at a remove, reduced to a low persistent vibration rather than a direct assault.


Sakura’s sandals clicked against the wooden planks as she walked beside Yasumasa, her posture correct and composed, her smile in place.


"What do you think of the place, Sakura?" Yasumasa asked.


"It is wonderful, Yasumasa-sama." She looked around at the interior with genuine effort, finding the things worth complimenting and complimenting them. The craftsmanship of the interior was genuinely good — the joinery clean, the proportions considered, the wood quality a step above what the exterior of the domain had suggested was coming.


"I am glad you think so," Yasumasa said.


His hand moved to her back as they walked.


Guiding, nominally — the gesture of a host directing a guest. But it didn’t stay there. It moved across her shoulders as he indicated something on the wall worth looking at, dropped briefly to the small of her back when the corridor turned, and when they passed through a narrow doorway it settled somewhere it had no reason to settle and no one had given it permission to go.


From Nathan’s position two steps behind, the whole sequence was completely visible.


Sakura’s composure held. Her expression didn’t break — it simply acquired a subtle strain around the edges, the specific tightness of someone managing a reaction they had decided not to show, her smile staying in place through an act of will rather than comfort.


The maid walking directly beside Nathan had gone rigid. She was staring at the hand with the fixed expression of someone burning a hole in something with their eyes, her jaw set, her own hands clasped white-knuckled in front of her. She had just met this man and he was already — they had only just arrived and he was already—


She couldn’t say anything.


She knew she couldn’t say anything.


Takefusa had the same look from his position slightly ahead — the careful controlled expression of a veteran who understood exactly what he was watching and exactly how little he could do about it. An engagement between a daimyo’s son and a daimyo’s daughter. A political alliance with real stakes on both sides. The line between inappropriate and acceptable blurred deliberately by someone who knew the people around him couldn’t call it.


Nathan looked at the hand.


Then looked away.


They were engaged. That was their arrangement and not his. He had no investment in Sakura’s comfort beyond the practical observation that she was a useful connection to maintain, and her discomfort in her own future home was not his problem to solve.


He looked at the walls instead.


The interior of the castle told a different story from the exterior. The weapons mounted decoratively along the corridor walls were exceptional — the craftsmanship of the blades visible even in their mounted state, the metalwork on the scabbards refined in a way that spoke to genuine skill rather than simply volume production. Whatever Sadamasa’s forgery domain was producing in bulk outside, the people doing it were capable of considerably better when the brief was quality rather than quantity.


That distinction was interesting.


The main hall doors came into view — large, reinforced, flanked by guards in full armor who straightened as the group approached. The doors swung open.


The hall beyond was built for exactly one purpose — the immediate establishment of where power sat in any conversation that took place inside it. The ceiling was high, the room wide, the floor a single expanse of polished wood that carried every footstep to the far end where the chair waited on its raised platform.


The man in the chair was large.


Not in the way of someone who had simply grown large — in the way of someone who had been large from the beginning and had spent decades adding to it deliberately. Broad through the shoulders, thick through the neck, brown hair worn simply, brown eyes that were currently doing the specific thing powerful men’s eyes did when something unexpected had entered their hall and they were deciding what category to put it in.


Daimyo Sadamasa.


"Daimyo-sama." Takefusa’s incline was immediate and practiced. Around him the soldiers followed, the maids followed, Sakura inclined with graceful precision.


Nathan stood behind them and looked at the room.


The silence that followed had texture.


Sadamasa’s eyes had found him — the one figure in the assembled group who was doing something different from everyone else.


Takefusa felt it. He turned and moved to Nathan’s side, his intention visible before he reached him — the veteran’s hand moving toward Nathan’s shoulder to apply the necessary pressure.


Nathan’s hand came up and closed around Takefusa’s wrist.


Not hard. Just present — a simple, complete stop, accompanied by a cold sideways look that communicated everything relevant without requiring words.


Takefusa went still.


The attention in the room doubled.


Yasumasa’s warm expression had been replaced by something with sharper edges — the look of someone recalibrating a situation that had just changed character.


Sakura moved.


She stepped forward and bowed again, deeper this time.


"Daimyo-sama. I sincerely apologize — this is Ryo-sama, he has come from the north to protect me at my father’s request." A brief pause, perfectly weighted. "He is unfamiliar with the customs here. Please forgive him."


Sadamasa’s eyes moved from Nathan to Sakura.


When she mentioned the north, something crossed his expression — a hardening that arrived and settled, the involuntary response of someone for whom that direction carried specific associations. But understanding followed it, working its way through the harder feeling.


Norihiro’s man. Arrogant northern daimyo sending his personal guard south and not bothering to teach him manners — that was entirely consistent with what Sadamasa knew about Norihiro. Unpleasant but unsurprising.


"It is fine," Sadamasa said, raising one large hand. "Though I am surprised Norihiro-sama sent a ronin to guard his daughter."


The word ronin carried a specific weight in how he applied it — not quite dismissal, but the careful placement of something in a category below the threshold where it required serious attention.


Sakura produced an awkward smile and said nothing further, which was the correct response.


Nathan had not missed what she had done. The quick construction of a cover that protected him from the immediate consequence of his behavior, delivered naturally enough that it landed without suspicion. She had just met him on a road where he had removed a man’s arm, and she had lied to a daimyo on his behalf.


"I hope the road was not too difficult, Princess?" Sadamasa asked, his attention moving fully to Sakura now, the business of the hall resuming.


"It was perfectly comfortable, Daimyo-sama. Thank you."


"Good." He looked at his son. "Yasumasa. Show the Princess the estate. She will stay the night."


"With pleasure, Father." Yasumasa turned with a smile, his hand already moving back toward Sakura’s shoulder.


The group turned.


Sakura turned with them, and as she did she looked back — the natural glance of someone checking the formation behind her.


Nathan was not there.


She blinked.


She looked left. Right. Back at the door they had entered through. The space where he had been standing a moment ago was simply empty — no movement, no sound, no indication of when or how the transition had occurred. The guards at the door were looking straight ahead. The servants near the wall showed no reaction.


Nathan wasn’t there anymore.



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