Chapter 729: Genzo’s story
Chapter 729: Genzo’s story
The training had wrung Nathan dry — muscles aching in that deep, bone-settled way that told him he’d pushed past the point of discipline and into something closer to punishment. Nathan had expected silence when he returned to the village. What he found instead was fire.
A massive campfire roared at the heart of the settlement, throwing amber waves across the faces of people gathered in loose, easy clusters around it. Music drifted through the warm night air — not the measured, formal kind, but something looser, sung by voices that cracked on the high notes and laughed it off. Children darted between the legs of adults, chasing each other through the firelight with a recklessness that belonged nowhere near people trained to kill. And yet here they were — Shinobis, sitting side by side with ordinary folk, cups in hand, shoulders unheld.
Nathan stood at the edge of it all and watched, brow furrowed. It was too loud. Too bright. Too alive for what this place was supposed to be.
"Ryo."
He turned. Genzo was settled on a log close to the fire, posture relaxed in the unhurried way of a man with nowhere else to be. He raised his chin toward the empty space beside him in quiet invitation.
Nathan had no particular reason to refuse. His body needed rest more than it needed solitude. He crossed the grass and lowered himself onto the log, the heat of the fire pressing against his face immediately.
Genzo took a slow sip from his cup before he spoke. "You find it strange, I imagine."
"You’re all being remarkably loud," Nathan said flatly, eyes tracking a pair of older Shinobis laughing over something spilled, "for people who make a living out of not being heard."
Genzo let out a short, genuine laugh — the kind that didn’t need an audience. "Fair enough." He turned his cup in his hands thoughtfully. "But even men like us deserve a little of this. Happiness. Normalcy. We are Shinobis, yes — but that’s not the whole of what we are." He gestured loosely toward the far end of the gathering, where a woman bounced a small child on her knee near the treeline. "Not everyone here carries a blade. Some of them just love someone who does."
Nathan’s gaze drifted to the children. There were more of them than he’d first noticed — some young enough that the fire probably looked like magic to them. "Why are they here, though? In the village?"
Genzo was quiet for a beat, as if deciding how much of an answer the question deserved. "Where else would they go?" he said finally. "The South is carved up between the Daimyos — corrupt to the root, not a safe corner of it left. And the North..." He paused. "The North doesn’t want us. Any of us."
"So you left the capital," Nathan said. "Five years ago."
"It was a long road." Genzo’s voice carried something old in it, the kind of weight that didn’t come from distance but from what you saw along the way. "Ayame-sama was the reason most of us are still breathing. She pushed for it when pushing meant risking herself. Because of that, she’ll always have a place here — however long she needs it."
Nathan glanced at him sideways coldly. "If your gratitude runs that deep, I shouldn’t have needed to get on my almost knees to convince you and your people to stand at her side."
Genzo didn’t argue. He stared into the fire for a moment instead, the warmth catching the lines of his face. "Perhaps not," he admitted quietly. "But leaving here — leaving them — to answer one person’s call while thousands of others have nothing and no one..." He shook his head slowly. "What kind of men would we be after that? Not much different from the King we ran from."
The name sat between them like something dropped rather than placed. Nathan didn’t push, but he didn’t look away either. The fire snapped and shifted, throwing a brief pulse of light across Genzo’s face, and Nathan caught the change in it — the way something closed behind his eyes.
"What happened?" Nathan asked.
The silence that followed wasn’t evasion. It was the particular kind of quiet a man uses to find the right door into a hard room.
Genzo was not by nature a man who opened these things up — certainly not to someone Nathan’s age, a boy by most measures, hardly worn enough for the weight of it. And yet there was something about Nathan that didn’t fit that measure. Something settled in him that didn’t belong to his years. An old stillness.
"My brother was Hattori Denzo," Genzo said at last. The name came out carefully, like something fragile that had survived a long time by being handled that way. "He was the head of the royal guard — responsible for the capital, for the royal family. For the Queen." He paused. "He knew Haruna-sama long before that King ever did."
Nathan didn’t need it spelled out. "They cared for each other."
Genzo nodded once. "But it could never be anything more than that. Haruna-sama carried royal blood — close enough to the throne that the distance between them might as well have been a wall. They both understood that. My brother accepted it. Buried it." He exhaled slowly. "He told himself that being near her was enough. Watching over her. That was how he loved her — quietly, from a step behind."
His hands tightened around the cup, the knuckles pressing pale against the skin.
"Then she married that man." The warmth had left his voice entirely. "And my brother stayed. Because she was still there, and she still needed protecting — perhaps more than ever. He was the only real comfort she had inside those walls. A familiar face in a place that had turned cold." Genzo’s jaw tightened. "The King noticed. Men like that always notice the things they didn’t give you and resent you for having them."
He set the cup down on the log beside him. The fire popped loudly in the silence.
"Haruna-sama was never strong in body. Everyone who knew her knew that. But that man — he pushed her anyway. Hunting trips in the cold, late banquets that ran until she could barely stand, demands that had nothing to do with her wellbeing and everything to do with reminding her who she belonged to." His voice had gone very flat now, the way a blade goes flat when it’s been drawn too many times. "She died of it. Not one blow, not one moment — just the slow, grinding weight of a man who saw her fragility and treated it as an inconvenience."
Nathan said nothing for a long moment. He turned the information over quietly, the way you turn something sharp in your hands — carefully, with full awareness of what it could do.
Calling it murder wouldn’t have been an exaggeration. The King had simply taken longer about it than most killers do.
"So you killed him then," Nathan said.
"Not exactly," Genzo replied, his tone neither proud nor regretful — just honest.
Before Nathan could follow that thread, a voice came from across the fire.
"I killed him."
Nathan lifted his gaze. Hanzo sat on a separate log a few feet away, forearms resting on his knees, eyes fixed on the flames as though he hadn’t moved or spoken at all. The firelight carved deep shadows into his face.
The father’s executioner, killed by the son. There was a brutal completeness to it — the kind of ending that didn’t feel like closure so much as a debt finally settled in blood.
"Ayame helped you get inside," Nathan said. It wasn’t really a question. After the Queen’s chief guardian was publicly executed, no King with half a brain would leave Shinobis anywhere near his walls. Getting to him would have required something more subtle. Something clever.
"Indeed," Genzo confirmed with a single nod.
Nathan exhaled through his nose, something faintly like amusement crossing his face. "She carries herself like a noblewoman at a tea ceremony," he muttered, almost to himself, "but she’s quite the cunning creature underneath all that, isn’t she."
"Ara." The voice came from behind him, light and unhurried. "That’s quite rude, you know."
Nathan didn’t startle — he simply turned his head. Ayame approached from the edge of the firelight, her smile the particular kind that suggested she’d heard more than just the last sentence. She moved with that same easy grace she always carried, as though the ground arranged itself politely beneath her feet.
"What are you doing here?" Nathan asked.
She tilted her head, one delicate brow arching upward. "Is that a problem?"
He didn’t answer. She smiled wider at the silence, clearly unbothered, and turned toward the open space beside him on the log.
"May I—"
She didn’t finish. A pale shape slipped in from nowhere — Yukihime, settling herself neatly into the space beside Nathan. The cold radiated off her in soft waves, and against the heavy warmth of the fire it was — surprisingly pleasant. Nathan felt the corner of his mouth pull upward without quite meaning it.
Ayame blinked once at the occupied spot, then let out a small, genuine laugh and redirected herself gracefully toward the log beside Hanzo instead. She sat with her hands folded in her lap, no trace of offense anywhere on her face.
"It’s been a while, Hanzo," she said warmly, turning toward him.
"A while, Ayame-sama," he replied. His voice was quiet, measured — but not cold. There was an old familiarity in it, the kind worn smooth over years.
Ayame let the quiet sit for a moment before glancing across at Nathan, who was staring absently into the middle distance, whatever he was thinking kept entirely to himself.
"What do you make of him?" she asked Hanzo, her tone carrying a thread of something playful beneath the genuine curiosity. "I’ve brought quite a capable man with me, haven’t I?"
Hanzo studied Nathan for a moment. The boy — if you could still call him that — sat still with the kind of stillness that wasn’t emptiness.
"Do you know him well?" Hanzo asked probing maybe his real identity.
Ayame’s smile softened into something quieter, more private. "I do," she said simply. Then, after a beat, as though the words were entirely ordinary: "He is my husband to be."
The sentence landed like a stone dropped into still water.
A stunned silence rippled outward across the small gathering. Even the crackling of the fire seemed to pause — and then, in the next breath, it did more than pause.
The cold came without warning.
It rolled outward from Yukihime in a sharp, furious wave — the kind of cold that had nothing to do with weather and everything to do with feeling. The campfire, enormous as it was, guttered violently and died in an instant, plunging the immediate circle into sudden darkness broken only by the distant flames of the rest of the feast.
The air bit hard. Frost crept silently along the edges of the log beneath Nathan’s hands.
"Yukihime."
Nathan had to stop her as expected.
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