“You move like a man who’s forgotten how to die.”
“You don’t believe in luck.”
Not the copper tang of blood—though that was everywhere, splashed across the tatami mats and soaking into the wooden pillars of the Ittō-ryū dojo. Not the sharper stench of fear, either, even though the men he’d just carved through had pissed themselves before they died. No. It was the smell of rain on hot asphalt. Of cheap sake and iron filings. Of a body that had stopped pretending to be alive two centuries ago. Blade of the Immortal -Dub-
Rin met his gaze. The rain outside began to fall harder, drumming on the dojo’s tiled roof. In the silence between them, Manji heard what she wasn’t saying: How many more? How many until I feel clean? How many until my parents’ ghosts stop screaming? “You move like a man who’s forgotten how to die
He stood in the wreckage, wiping a clot of gore from his kama chain with his thumb. Around him, the corpses of the sword school’s finest twitched in their death throes. His own haori hung in ribbons, revealing a chest mapped with scar tissue—each mark a story he didn’t owe anyone. He’d stopped counting after the first fifty years. It was the smell of rain on hot asphalt