Nayto: It had been a week since the last straw, the moment known only as "Day Three," one that would go down into Cizok's history as legendary. The Shogunate government, lead by the Shogun Gardini Almaster IV, a man who had subordinated the Emporer himself into a state of namelessness, had damaged the integrity and honor of their nation with his warm acceptance of foreign influences upon their economy. Jobs were lost, income was damaged, and as soon as foreign investors began to buy property to rent to native Cizokians, it had been enough for they who saw the ills of the "glorious" Shogunate--not to mention the warmongering state he was in, fighting wars in multiple countries at once, not for territory, but for something as small as an overreaction to an insult.
A man by the name of Maguro, a fishing guru of the current capital city of Cizok, Akinai, stood in defiance to their Shogun, and spoke out to any that would hear; he didn't command revolution, but for the public to be informed. He hadn't expected to be the central celebrity image of revolutionary ideals, to be concealed by them not for his best interests, but theirs. It started with one gathering to hear Maguro speak, a day known to many as the "Sensou," whereupon Gardini sent a force to subdue and contain the crowd--and a riot ensued. People were hurt, but the very few that died only died of their injuries later on, not that day. Then, when a foreign merchant ripped off a Cizokian horribly, amongst so many others, a small riot lead to him drawing a pistol and shooting a young man to death--followed soon after by his own death at the hands of an even larger riot.
And then, finally, Day Three came upon them: the two prior riots lead to an even larger one, and at the first scene of anarchy--foreign stores robbed and burned to the ground--Gardini reacted with his soldiers once again, spillt into the city of Akinai to apprehend as many as they could, masked in preparation--as Gardini had simultaneously ordered his airships to flood carbon dioxide into the city, a reaction which had been lethal to many. Although this had been restricted to only half of the city, he had devoted as many of his fleet as he could to the cause, for during the Sensou, one ship had been devoted to monitoring the situation, and it was rumored that only a single man in the crowd had brought it down--and even if the rumors were untrue, that ship had been brought down. Likewise, as Akinai was slowly reduced to flames (upon Gardini's realization that he had made a mistake and frantic attempt to counter-act his own flooding of poison--effectively fueling the fires), single individuals began to reduce the airship fleet's numbers, but not all of them.
Inevitably, many that lived managed to escape Akinai, but Gardini's soldiers, with the aid of his elite force--the Kensai, managed to apprehend many. Some had been released, some would never be seen again. All that remained now was the ideal: revolution. There was no direction left for them. Fight--for themselves or their families--or die. Their organization was scarce, makeshift villages scattered throughout a vast series of forests which constituted central Cizok, safe houses, and camps that had to be moved regularly, or else risk discovery by Shogunate forces--much like the camp of Maguro himself, although he and the others managed to escape, mainly unharmed. Attempts for organization were being made, however--in these camps, villages, and safe houses, there were men who dared assert themselves as some sort of representative of their groups, to establish communication with others, and create some sort of order amongst them.
It was their only chance for survival, now . . .
Carlos: Jin Kazamika was a warrior first, and a human being second. Before he had learned the contours of a woman, he had versed himself with the delicate curves of a sword; before he had learned to smile, he had learned to swing. His unbridled ferocity in battle mixed well with his natural inclination towards swordsmanship, and he made a name for himself quickly among the ranks of the Shogunate's elite forces; a name painted in blood and gilded with gunsteel. If Jin Kazamika was a warrior first, and a human being second, then he was a monster third and last. And only a monster could have seen events unfold the way they did on that day, Day Three, and remained stoic.
Warriors killed warriors, that was the business that Jin Kazamika had signed up for, not to take hold of his sword and cut down man after man after man like stalks of wheat. There was too much blood, even for Jin Kazamika, and there were far too many screams. Too many women, too many children; too many bodies. He left that day, before the last drop of blood spiraled to taint the ground, and was never seen by the Kensai ever again. And they never would, not as Jin. They next time they saw him…he vowed nothing less than absolute destruction.
The days following Day Three were a crisp fog; clear and vivid, gritty even, while he passed through them but a dim and hazy memory now that he tried to think back. No matter. The facts were plain. He was a revolutionary now, he was in the heart of a camp, and together they would show the government why it should properly harbor a healthy fear of its people. He sat by himself, on a tree trunk that seemed out of place near the center of the camp, and was gently sliding a sharpening stone across the edge of his gleaming katana. Before him was a sheet. Atop the sheet was a bowl filled halfway with a putrid green bile and beside it a handful of shurikens. His eyes, though as black as all the other eyes belonging to all the other men, were abysmal. They held a promise there, an unreadable phrase, but one that sung of revolution. He wanted to find Maguro, he wanted to fight alongside that man. Maybe this was the camp he was looking for.~
Nayto: It was only natural for others to find a lack of faith in Jin Kazamika, a Kensai who decided to desert--one of very, very few who had, up to this point, Kensai, conscripts, and general army alike. Amongst the few thousand rumored to be scattered throughout the expansive forest of central Cizok, perhaps less than a dozen of Gardini's men were amongst them. They could have been spies, ordered to detect, follow, and pretend to be amongst the ranks of these escaped citizens who so violently, for themselves or their families, revolted during the events of Day Three. The distance that they all put between themselves and Jin and but to be expected.
This was, unfortunately, not the camp that contained Maguro Hito, the charismatic speaker that sought more than anyone else to establish contact between these stray camps and makeshift villages. It was, however, a fairly large camp, one of the more organized ones, lead by two men: Chujutsu Raikou and Hisoka Antoshima. He was a fortunate man, though, namely because of the former "commander." Chujutsu Raikou was, at first, not a trusted man amongst this large group of refugees, if only because of his lineage. He was only half-Cizokian. His father was from a far distant, foreign city-state--Sythinia, a man he never once saw in his life.
Because of this man, Jin Kazamika had not been denied from this camp. He knew and understood the difficulty of an austere lack of faith, and if it weren't for the camp's faith in Hisoka and Chujutsu's status as one of the reclusive, silent, travel-lustful Hisoka's very few friends in the world, he'd be nothing but another face in this camp. Prior to that day, the former Kensai and Chujutsu Raikou had never met each other before. Before that moment, the only sound in the former Kensai's vicinity had been the sharpening of his own blade, but soon enough, there were footsteps in his general direction.
A man of awkward fashion stopped eight feet before him--a man of foreign tastes, but truly native at heart. His short, thin form was hugged not by clothing traditional amongst their culture, but a pair of dark slacks somewhat tight upon his legs, but not his hips, and a New Xexorian casual jacket--a suit jacket--tattered and torn, atop an equally tattered and torn white, button up undershirt, and then, amongst everything else, his face was vaguely feminine in structure, and his hair, shoulder length as it was and currently parted in the middle, was such that it could barely be considered natural: white with a blue tint? blue with a white tint? silver attacked by both ivory and azure? The kind faced, gentle hearted, soft spoken man was known only as Chujutsu Raikou.
"Kazamika Jin, correct?" he asked, his voice far from gruff, light on the ears, pleasant, even.
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