InuYasha Fan Fiction ❯ Forgotten ❯ The Lady of Fire and Wind ( Chapter 42 )
[ X - Adult: No readers under 18. Contains Graphic Adult Themes/Extreme violence. ]
Tenseiga’s loss was felt deepest by Sesshomaru, who, despite his snarl s, treasured
his father’s gift& nbsp;the most. The first step to restor ing it, though, will require a
potential ly dangerous summons.
148 years be fore the search for the jewel shards
Chapter 31: The Lady of Fire and Wind
Tenseiga, a useless sw ord. It cuts nothing on this world.&nbs p; How can one possibly
battle with  ;it? These were my thoughts when I  ;first obtained the sword. I yet here&n bsp;
I am wishing it were whole once  ;more to undo the horror that surrounds my failing
body now.
-Sesshomaru & nbsp;
Sesshomaru sat cross-legged on the veranda of the temple, watching the com ings
and goings of the clan. It&nb sp;had only been a year since his brothe r and seized control
and things were&nbs p;already much improved. The abandoned templ e had become their
permanent new home&nb sp;and additions were being added to the  ;grounds to make it
more comfortable. &n bsp;
The defections had made Norik o’s group the minority and now& nbsp;they were on the
defensive. This&n bsp;meant Sesshomaru’s group was no& nbsp;longer running from shelter to
shelter&n bsp;as they tried to stay ahead of her&n bsp;murderous followers. They had the
n umbers to protect themselves. The difference this made in the moral of the clan
was enormous. People talked and l aughed again while carrying out the necessary
chores that maintained their new home.& nbsp; It had been a long time since  ;anyone had
truly smiled. Any happiness before had been short-lived as reality had often
interceded to remind them of&n bsp;their dire straits.
Sesshomaru  ;was happy things had improved but sighed&nbs p;in self-disgust that he
couldnâ€&trad e;t be the one to bring it about. & nbsp;He was truly hopeless.
â&eur o;œIt’s a wonderful spring day , the cherry blossoms are in full bloom, everyone is
merry despite the ongoing&n bsp;war and you sigh in disappointment instea d of
contentment,†said his broth er, strolling toward him from the entrance&nb sp;to the
temple.
Sesshomaru turne d to glare then grimaced at the sight.&n bsp; His brother was wearing a
white&nbs p;kimono and blue hakama of the Shinto p riesthood. The same outfit he had
worn when he joined them a year ago.&nbs p; His silver hair was tied back in  ;the high
pony-tail like always but toda y he had a plain cloth tied around his head to keep
shorter strands out&nbs p;of his eyes. His huge sleeves were&nb sp;tied back and the bottom of
the hakama tied up. He held bamboo rod  ;in his hand with bits of cloth tied&nbs p;at the
end.
Kakiboufuu, the  ;reigning taisho of the inuyokai clan, had&nb sp;just come from dusting
the interior.
Sesshomaru twitched, his lips pressing& nbsp;into a thin line of disapproval. & acirc;€œIt’s none of
your concern,†he hissed and turned a way. Really? Why should he be ups et that
things were going so well j ust because it wasn’t happening  ;under his leadership?
He saw Kaki boufuu’s mouth split into a wid e grin of mischief as the hanyou leaned& nbsp;
forward. “Maybe if you&nb sp;got off your ass and did some house&n bsp;work you’d stop sulking
and starting smiling like everyone else. Y ou shouldn’t stew like this on& nbsp;such a
wonderfully pleasant day.â€
“I am sulking,â&eu ro; snarled Sesshomaru.
FWOOP, FWO OP, FWOOP, FWOOP.
Kakiboufuu whacked&nb sp;his brother’s face with the cloth of the duster. “Sure&nbs p;you’re
not,†he agreed cheerily.
He was fresh from dusting alright, clouds of the fine particles exploded in the dog
demonâ€&trade ;s face with every strike and he sneezed and coughed while striking out at the&n bsp;
offending cleaning aid. The hanyou was&nb sp;too quick to let his brother get a&nb sp;hold of the
duster and made a ga me of it for a full minute while hi s older brother struggled to
clear his&n bsp;nose and lungs. It ended when Sessh omaru fell off the veranda.
Kakibo ufuu peered over the edge to make sure&n bsp;his brother hadn’t wounded
anything other than his pride in the fal l. In that regards, it had been sp ectacular.
Sesshomaru had landed right in the spot where everyone had been dump ing the
wash water from the interior&nbs p;cleaning. Globs of mud and soap bubbl es clung to his
white sleeves and h akama, silver hair and delicate hands.
& nbsp;
“Do want me to help g et that off, Aniue?†asked the ha nyou with full sincerity.
Teasing Sessh omaru was one thing but Kakiboufuu had a limit to how much
torment to infli ct on his older brother. He wanted  ;an ally not an enemy and
Sesshomaru&nbs p;was still sore from losing status and power.
“No, Iâ€&tra de;m perfectly fine,†replied Sesshomaru&nb sp;in a quiet voice. Dignity and pride& nbsp;
dripped as he rose to his feet  ;and marched to the river to clean up.&n bsp; His swirling
youki the only evidenc e of his fury.
It wasnâ&euro ;™t far to the waterfall where Kakibouf uu often meditated. Even though it
held a deep pool, its shore was steep&n bsp;and rocky. Further downstream the land&n bsp;
leveled out again and it was there&n bsp;the women were washing laundry and bathin g
children. The waterfall was empt y of anyone and its seclusion was what&n bsp;
Sesshomaru sought.
“I mmature pup,†he snarled as stepped&nb sp;beneath the tumbling water and let the&nbs p;cold
strip away his anger. His h ead clearing and the mud washing away, S esshomaru
reflected on his feelings. He really was feeling petty. Nothing had& nbsp;gone right since
his father died an d he had taken over. After the los s of the castle his people had
live d as vagabonds struggling to stay alive with Noriko hounding them on one side and local demon clans attacking when they& nbsp;strayed too close to their territories o n
the other. This stability was wh at he had wanted, wished for, long for&n bsp;during those
uncertain years. So wh y couldn’t he be happy that&nbs p;had finally happened?
Because he  ;hadn’t been responsible for it.&nbs p;
Kakiboufuu wasn’t even an adult but his clan’s judgmen t. Only at eighty was one
recogniz ed as an adult and it was the equiv alent of a human’s fifteen. &nb sp;His brother
barely had five decades b ehind him. Still he had been raised&nbs p;in the human tenko
clan where the  ;earlier maturation was expected. Kakiboufuu  ;could act as a mature
adult when n eeded, as his mother’s clan dem anded.
Sesshomaru closed his eyes as he remembered his brother the night h e ordered the
traitor family heads to&nb sp;commit seppuku. The coldness of his eyes that had watched
as they slit their own stomachs, their entrails spilling o n to the ground followed
soon by th eir heads. Then afterwards, when all fo rmalities were finished,
Kakiboufuu had come& nbsp;here and Sesshomaru had followed. Here& nbsp;he had seen his
brother show his&nb sp;strained emotional development. Here he h ad revealed his
vulnerable heart.
Kakiboufuu may have been born into the&n bsp;tenko clan but Sesshomaru had seen
c learly that his brother was following the&nbs p;development of the demon side. Whether&nbs p;
the hanyou wanted to or not. &nbs p;In fact he was far advanced for someon e his age,
leading the clan to beli eve he was older than he actually was.&n bsp;
Sesshomaru heaved a sigh as&n bsp;he stepped out of the falls. There& nbsp;was little point in
correcting them.&nbs p; If the elders realize the truth they& nbsp;would insist he step down until
he& nbsp;had matured. They never would have  ;permitted the ascension ceremony if they
had realized then his youth. They wou ld have let Sesshomaru remain unchallenged for three more decades before forcing the& nbsp;issue. His clan needed Kakiboufuu now&n bsp;
not three decades from now. This&nb sp;last year along had proven it.
The way things were going, he thought,&n bsp;we wouldn’t have survived anothe r three
decades.
Sesshomaru drove& nbsp;his fist through a bolder, his temper&nb sp;rising again. How could I
have been so foolish? I should have given&nb sp;Chichiue my attention. I should have  ;
learned how to lead successfully. I&nb sp;should have…
He  ;stood on the shore dripping water, staring&n bsp;into the deep pool, his bedraggled
r eflection staring back. Bitter regret was&nb sp;dangerous to a demon; it could poison  ;
them for centuries, warping their views  ;and ultimately their personality. At first& nbsp;he
had denied his own feelings blam ing Izayoi and his brother for the loss& nbsp;of his father.
Now, unable to  ;hate Kakiboufuu, he had to face those r egrets and acknowledge it
was his fault. He had chosen to ignore his fathe r after his mother’s death. &nb sp;He had
chosen not to listen or l earn from him.
“All my fault,†Sesshomaru hissed. He  ;picked up a piece of the boulder he&nbs p;had
destroyed and hurled into the pool , shattering his reflection. “ Is it any wonder he
chose to have&n bsp;another child? He needed someone of  ;his bloodline to take over for
him  ;and it certainly wasn’t going to be me.â€
â€&oe lig;I didn’t think of that but& nbsp;you’re right, that was probably on the list of reasons for
having& nbsp;a child in his twilight even if he& nbsp;never voiced it,†said Kakiboufuu  ;from a
tree branch several feet above.& nbsp;
Sesshomaru revealed none of his&nb sp;surprise as he turned to regard his y ounger
brother. He was still in hi s Shinto priest outfit but it was no&nbs p;longer tied back and
the handkerchief had been removed from his head. The&nbs p;hanyou crouched on the
branch and look ed down on the older full demon.
&n bsp;
“What do you want?â€& nbsp;Sesshomaru snarled, embarrassed his voiced fe elings had been
overheard.
Kakibou fuu hopped down, landing next to his bro ther. Sesshomaru leveled a glare
but&nb sp;the hanyou was unperturbed. â€&oeli g;I can tell you’re upset that& nbsp;you couldn’t give
your peo ple this peace. You’re frustra ted that you weren’t able to&nb sp;prevent the whole
rebellion in the fi rst place. That you weren’t&nb sp;able to stop the destruction of the < br> Oyaji’s castle. That so ma ny of your loyal follower, his loyal fol lowers, died.â€
“Di d you come here just to rub my fail ing in my face?†snapped Sesshomaru.&n bsp;
“That was not my  ;intention,†replied Kakiboufuu with a  ;sniff. “You have a history&nb sp;
of not being able to face your p roblems. Blaming others for when things  ;go wrong.
Stewing in your own poi son when you can’t.†&nb sp;The hanyou’s indignant expression  ;
softened and his eyes turned inward. &n bsp;He stepped forward and knelt at the pool’s
edge. “Yo u’re failures eat at you, leavi ng you hollow inside and cold. You  ;either
hate anything that reminds you o f it, hate what you blame for it, o r hate yourself for
being so weak i n body and soul. If you canâ&euro ;™t figure out how to move forward  ;you end
up destroying yourself.† ;
Sesshomaru narrowed his eyes as&n bsp;his brother spoke. The rasp of regr et tinged
Kakiboufuu’s words an d his golden eyes were haunted. â €œAnd what are you running
from?&a circ;€ he whispered.
Kakiboufuuâ& euro;™s ear twitched at the words. &nbs p;He rose slowly and said in the softest of
voices, “Running is th e same as standing still; you arenâ&eur o;™t moving forward. You
cannot c hange what has happened, no matter how m uch you wish otherwise. You
cannot  ;raise the dead, no matter how much you& nbsp;cry over their graves. You cannot
get back the time you’ve l ost while longing for things that cannot  ;be reclaimed. All
you can do is&n bsp;move forward, to learn, to change in  ;a way that should fate present
such&nbs p;sorrows again you can do something to change the outcome.â€
Sesshomaru& nbsp;remained silent, waiting. His brother h adn’t answered his question
and Sesshomaru refused to be distracted from&nbs p;it. He’s speaking to himself as much
as to me. What regre ts make moving forward so painful, Otouto?&nb sp;
Kakiboufuu stood in silence for  ;several minutes as a breeze stirred the  ;air, teasing
the brothers’ lon g silver hair. Sesshomaru then glimpsed  ;a strange sight that
raised the hair&nb sp;on the back of his neck. Behind  ;Kakiboufuu’s right shoulder a
mostly transparent, disembodied hand appeared. &nb sp;The wrist was covered in a white
sleeve but the rest of the arm faded&nb sp;into nothingness. The fingers were delica te and
pale, the palm small, the ha nd of a woman. It reached toward t he silent hanyou but
disappeared before it could touch him.
Before Sesshom aru could say anything Kakiboufuu sighed and& nbsp;said, “I had a wife.   ;
Yet I wasn’t able to prot ect her or our unborn child.â€
“Inuyasha?†said Sess homaru, slipping to his brother’s&nb sp;childhood name. The
hanyou turned bu t no anger was visible in his eyes for the slip. They were glassy
wit h unshed tears.
“I&n bsp;couldn’t control my power,â&eur o; Kakiboufuu whispered. “She was right there and I
couldnâ€&tra de;t save her.â€
Sesshomaru recalled the meeting from a year ago whe re his brother had said he had
been nearly killed by Kuromakaze twice. Was he not thinking of that incident when&n bsp;
that man turned himself into a hanyo u? Targeted? He said he had been& nbsp;targeted
but only described the second&n bsp;time. If he had been targeted that& nbsp;time why would
Kuromakaze not make certain to finish him instead of playing  ;that game of catch?
Masakaâ€&brv bar; Could he have…?
&nb sp;
“Otouto,†started Sesshoma ru as he placed his hand on Kakiboufuu&a circ;€™s shoulder.
The hanyou&nbs p;took a deep breath and let it out  ;as he straightened his back. â€& oelig;Sorry, I
shouldn’t burden  ;you with my problems.â€
&ac irc;€œYou shouldn’t take every thing on your own shoulders,†Sesshoma ru countered.
Kakiboufuu chuckled. &nbs p;“Sage advice and I should get to the point of why I’m&n bsp;here
now instead of drowning in past sorrows.â€
“Ah,&nb sp;a wise thought as well, but you shoul dn’t ignore your own problems b y tending
to others’ first,&aci rc;€ said Sesshomaru ignoring the hypocritica l nature of his remark.
His b rother did not. Glaring as Sesshomaru, Kakiboufuu said in a flat voice, â&euro ;œSays
the one who went centuries mourning what could not be changed while  ;sacrificing
what could. Now mourns the sacrifice instead of moving to save wha t’s left.â€
BO NK! Sesshomaru answered his little brother&a circ;€™s moment of immaturity with a&nb sp;
moment of his own. Kakiboufuu cringe d, gritting his teeth, as he held the&nb sp;top of his
head where his brother&nbs p;had hit him.
The hanyou thing&nb sp;growled and got nose to nose with the older demon. “Aniue, you  ;
just struck the clan head!â€
Expressionless, Sesshomaru replied, â&euro ;œYou’re right. Iâ€&tra de;m sorry. I should have had
bett er aim and struck the source of the  ;remark.†With a quick step and& nbsp;spin he
slammed a round house into& nbsp;Kakiboufuu’s back side sending his brother face first
into the dirt.&nb sp; “The smart ass,†he& nbsp;finished with a smirk.
â&eur o;œIf that’s how you want  ;to play…†said Kakiboufuu&n bsp;as he pulled his face form the
dirt. He then struck Sesshomaru with a& nbsp;flying tackle and they both tumbled into
the water. Once there a full  ;water fight erupted with lots of splashing&n bsp;and dunking.
It all came to&nb sp;an end when a third party joined them and succeeded in nearly
drowning the&nb sp;pair. Kakiboufuu clung to a rock nea r the edge of the pool where the water flowed onward gasping for air and&nb sp;looking very much like a drowned rat.  ;
Sesshomaru stayed in the center glarin g at the newcomer with his head exposed& nbsp;
only from the nose up. Air wa s a much higher priority for a hanyou&nb sp;then it was for
a taiyokai.
&nbs p;
Naomi grinned back at her father. &nbs p;She had not only offended their pride with her
intrusion on their childish fun ; she offended their sense of morality w ith the fact she
was naked to the&n bsp;waist in the presence of men, even t hey were related. She had
taken th e time to strip down to her under s kirt before jumping in.
â€&o elig;What’s with the glare? I& acirc;€™m not allowed to enjoy your&nbs p;puppy games?†she asked,
batting&nbs p;her violet eyes at Sesshomaru. Red cr ept into Sesshomaru cheeks and sank
lower into the water. “Though it was a vast improvement to the p ity party you were
throwing each other&n bsp;a few minutes earlier,†she added.
“Do you not have&nb sp;any concept of private discussions?â€&nbs p;demanded Kakiboufuu, still
looking crazed f rom his near drowning.
â€&oe lig;Nope,†she replied, her lips sprea ding into a huge grin. Kakiboufuu didn& acirc;€™t know
how to respond to&n bsp;her honesty.
Sesshomaru climbed&nb sp;out of the water, crouched on the sho re and shook himself dry
like the d og he was. With only his family ar ound the quick if undignified manner
was preferred. As he righted himself he&nb sp;addressed his daughter, “Why are& nbsp;you
here, Naomi?â€
Kaki boufuu climbed out of the pool and wrung out his ling hair. The rest of&nb sp;him
was already drying fast, much to& nbsp;his brother’s annoyance. Fire& nbsp;users, Sesshomaru
thought with a growl.& nbsp; Naomi seemed reluctantly to get out&nbs p;of the water and
continued to splash&n bsp;around in the pool.
â€&o elig;Naomi,†prompted Sesshomaru when his&n bsp;daughter failed to answer his question. < br>
“Ask him,†she  ;said pointing to her uncle before diving&nbs p;beneath the surface.
Sesshomaru turne d his attention to his brother who sighe d. “The real reason I
came to see you was that I heard from Naomi about Tenseiga.â€
“What about it?â€
“I think I know way to&nbs p;repair it, but I need to see it f irst.â€
Sesshomaru stared at his brother a moment then looked away.& nbsp; “It shattered into a
hundred small fragments. Not even Totosai&n bsp;would be able to repair it.â€
“It is a blade of&nb sp;the other world which is why it canno t harm anything of this world,†< br> said Kakiboufuu. “I donâ& euro;™t believe that a sword like that& nbsp;can be irreversibly damaged
by anything& nbsp;of this world.â€
â&eur o;œWell I don’t have it a nymore,†Sesshomaru said with heat. &n bsp;“So it doesn’t mat ter.â€
A deluge of water cra shed into him and he was once again  ;soaked to the bone.
Sesshomaru turned& nbsp;murderous eyes against his daughter, the  ;culprit. She stood in
the shallows,&nb sp;unperturbed, and pointed to the place wher e she left her clothes.
â&eu ro;œThat’s why I’m&nb sp;here. After the ascension ceremony, I&nbs p;went back to where we had
fought Noriko and collected all the pieces of t he sword. A dragon’s nose  ;is superior
to a dog’s in finding things.†Sesshomaruâ€& trade;s eye twitched at her comment but she
ignored and kept talking. â&e uro;œThe purse holding the fragments is  ;among my clothes.â€
She then&nbs p;turned around, jumped up into the air,  ;tucked her knees to her chin and
d isappeared beneath the surface again. Water& nbsp;flew in all directions from her splash&n bsp;
down and waves climbed the pebbled s hore.
Sesshomaru gave a world wear y sigh.
“Now which s ide of the bloodline does she get that&n bsp;bubbly personality from?†asked
Ka kiboufuu as he walked over to her discar ded garments and sought the purse
holdin g the fragments.
“I have no idea,†said Sesshomaru. He shook himself dry again then strode o ver to
his brother, who was clearing&nbs p;a spot on the ground to align the  ;fragments. The
older demon stared with out saying a word for several minutes as the hanyou pieced
the sword back t ogether. Sesshomaru, while saddened by the&n bsp;sight of the shattered
blade, was&nb sp;impressed that his daughter was able to&nb sp;find all the bits of metal. Some&nbs p;
were tiny slivers the size of a s owing needle. He was equally impressed by his
brother’s ability to&nbs p;reconstruct the sword from those same tiny& nbsp;pieces. It still didn’t < br> change the fact that sword was beyond&nbs p;repair. The only part of the sword&nb sp;still
intact was by the hilt, none&nb sp;of the remaining bits were larger than&nbs p;his pinky.
“Is there&nb sp;a point to this?†asked Sesshomaru& nbsp;as Kakiboufuu placed the final sliver of
metal. Tenseiga answered instead with& nbsp;a flash and steady glow, but the sp lintered
pieces remained disconnected.
The hanyou pursed his lips as Sesshomaru knelt down. “That sword of Noriko’s is
something else,& acirc;€ Kakiboufuu muttered, fingers drumming  ;on his arms. “It seems < br> Tenseiga can’t repair itself wit hout assistance, but it’s hardly&nbs p;dead.â€
Sesshomaru grunted then muttered, “Still, Totosai wouldn&ac irc;€™t be able to repair it.â&eu ro;
“Right, since the&nbs p;sword is of the other world, it must&n bsp;require someone from there to
work i t,†agreed Kakiboufuu.
â&e uro;œWhy did you even think it could&nb sp;repair itself?†asked Sesshomaru.
& nbsp;
Kakiboufuu shrugged and gave an evasive& nbsp;reply, “Just thought the rules& nbsp;for a spirit
blade would be differe nt than a physical blade.†Sessh omaru narrowed his eyes but
his brother& nbsp;rose to his feet and started gathering&n bsp;branches from the trees and the
grou nd.
“What are you do ing?†asked Sesshomaru after a minute& nbsp;of watching his brother’s
inexplicable behavior.
“I ’m collecting wood for a fire,& acirc;€ replied Kakiboufuu. “W e’ll need a big one if we& nbsp;are
going to summon the lady of&nbs p;fire and wind.â€
â€& oelig;Nani?!†gasped Sesshomaru in shock&nb sp;and horror. “Eternal! You& nbsp;want to summon
her?!â€
Eternal, the most powerful spirit of fir e and wind that often took the form  ;of a great
blue phoenix. Her othe r form was that of a winged woman, that wore the bird head
of what she change into like a headdress with the&n bsp;beak shielding her eyes. From
what& nbsp;Sesshomaru had been told as a child,&nbs p;she was once an enzeru, a member of&nb sp;the
ancient race that legend held had created both humans and demons and rule d over
them with cruelty and disdain.&nb sp; Eternal was said to be one of t en that had turned
against her people&nb sp;in favor of the humans and demons in& nbsp;the long ago war that
destroyed the enzeru. She, like the others, recreate d their identity in the new world
t hat emerged.
Ally or not, Sesshoma ru, like all those who had been reared&n bsp;on the stories of the
ancient times, was leery of calling on such a bei ng. His brother, however, shared
none&n bsp;of his concerns as he continued to g ather wood for the bon fire he was creating.
“Is this really necessary?†asked Sesshomaru, trying to find an excuse to halt his
broth er’s plans.
â€&oeli g;The phoenix she represents exist in both&nb sp;world simultaneously. That’s how they
are able to be born again&nbs p;from their own ashes when they die. &n bsp;They also can carry
souls between wo rlds. They can carry the dead to t he afterlife and the
reincarnating soul to its new life.â€
&aci rc;€œSince when are the fire birds  ;involved with dead souls?†demanded S esshomaru.
He had never heard of t his later part and wondered if his broth er was stringing him
along.
& acirc;€œThey can, they will take the&nb sp;reborn to their new forms,†replied Kakiboufuu
without breaking stride. &a circ;€œThough, admittedly they donâ€&t rade;t handle the dead’s journey&nbs p;
all that much. It seems they pre fer the rebirth part of the cycle.â&eur o;
“So you believe E ternal can fix the sword since a phoenix prefers to give life than
take it& nbsp;away?†Sesshomaru wasn’ t certain if Kakiboufuu was following his&nbs p;own
logic. If the fire birds wer e part of the cycle of life and dea th wouldn’t they be
offended&nb sp;by a sword that interfered with that cycle?
However, time had run out&n bsp;to halt Kakiboufuu’s plans. &nbs p;During the conversation,
the hanyou had&nbs p;finished gathering the wood he needed. &nbs p;He turned toward the
waterfall and cal led, “Naomi, you have to come&n bsp;out now. Eternal’s element  ;is fire.
She might take exception  ;to you being in the water so close  ;to where she is
appearing.â€
“Hai!†Naomi called&nb sp;back and she climbed out of the water and gathered her clothes.
Sesshom aru growled and confronted his daughter. &nbs p;“You knew he was planning to& nbsp;
summon Eternal?â€
â&eu ro;œYes,†she replied with a smi le. She kissed his cheek when he s puttered in shock.
“Donâ €™t worry, Chichiue,†she said&n bsp;as she pulled on her lavender kimono.&nbs p; “We’re all
ten yokai. And furthermore, you and uncle& nbsp;are Ojii-sama’s sons. Weren&ac irc;€™t he and
Eternal comrades du ring the war?â€
â&euro ;œThat was then,†snarled Sesshomaru. “Things change and a gre at deal of time has
passed since th ey fought alongside one another. She ma y not take kindly to our
summoning her here just to fix my sword.â€&n bsp;
“You are surprisingly  ;anxious, Sesshomaru-chan,†said a sooth&nb sp;contralto behind
him.
The taiyo kai stiffened then turned around slowly. &nbs p;Kakiboufuu knelt before the
nine-foot tall& nbsp;female tengu. An enzeru she may ha ve once been, but in becoming the
p hoenix her appearance had altered and now&nbs p;she resembled one of the tengu
instead . Enzeru had large sea green eyes with dark blue slits that filled their f aces.
Their ears, while on the sid es of their head like a human or hu manoid demon, were
long like rabbits. &n bsp;They stood on the toes of their drag on feet and had long tails.
White& nbsp;wings, longer than they were tall, sprea d from their backs. Or so the lege nd
went. Her appearance was that o f a human woman with blue iris and slit pupils.
Her ears were small w ith points like his. Her wings were&nbs p;bright blue along with her
bird headdr ess. On the whole far less intimidating .
She gazed at him amused rat her than vexed. Sesshomaru then noticed  ;Naomi, fully
dressed, was also kneeling  ;on the ground with her gaze lowered. &n bsp;He then suddenly
remembered his manners&n bsp;and lowered himself to the ground, flushe d with
embarrassment. He wasnâ€&t rade;t used to submitting to anyone, but  ;after the fuss he put
up, he shoul d have been the first one to show t he powerful fire spirit respect.
& acirc;€œPlease come over here, Sesshomaru-ch an,†she said, waving her long fi ngers in a
beckoning gesture. â&e uro;œKneel by your brother so I can&nbs p;address you two properly.†She  ;
said nothing to Naomi but he suspected& nbsp;it was due to her being a sea dragon. Just
as Suzaku and Seiryu of the mainland didn’t get alon g neither did sea dragons or
firebirds.& nbsp; Her lack of courtesy to Naomi wasn ’t anything personal it was jus t how
things were.
Naomi  ;didn’t move from her place or& nbsp;comment, remaining as still as if she&nb sp;had
become stone. Sesshomaru recovered&nb sp;some pride in her good manners. He&n bsp;was
certain the girl’s moth er wouldn’t have displayed a fr action of the calm and
restraint Naomi&n bsp;was.
After the dog demon had&n bsp;positioned himself the way the fire tengu wanted him, she
spoke again. &aci rc;€œWhat reason has brought you to&nbs p;call me here, Lucifer no waka?† ;
Rushifaa? Sesshomaru wondered. Only Xeno had ever addressed his father by that
title before. Now Eternal referred to him in the same manner. &nbs p;I thought “Rushifaaâ€
w as a title, a word, from the far we st where Xeno came from. For her, Chichiue’s
equal, to refer to&n bsp;him by it… It must n ot be a word from Xeno’s h omeland.
He banished the distracting&nb sp;thoughts from his mind and focused it  ;on the present.
There would be ti me enough later to wonder about his fath er.
-------
The name Lu cifer pops up as a tease throughout the& nbsp;story. Not only does Xeno use
it to indentify Kenhoshi, the Inu no Ta isho, many older beings like Eternal do as
well. However, one has to remem ber that no one is speaking English or&n bsp;any
European language in this story.  ; As such both Xeno and Eternal, who&nbs p;speak
Japanese as a second language, a re saying the name Lucifer correctly. T his is why
it is spelled correctly when they say it. What I emphasized&nbs p;with Sesshomaru’s
thoughts is  ;how a Japanese person would hear and pr onounce it. If any native
Japanese,&nbs p;unfamiliar with the real name were to say it, I would indicate it with the&nbs p;
Japanese pronunciation Rushifaa.
In the story, Sesshomaru has heard the name repeated many times by Xeno, but thought it was a title from the Middl e East where Xeno came from. Like “masterâ€
or â€&oel ig;lord†in Xeno’s native&nbs p;language. With Eternal, who predates any&n bsp;present day
languages by many millennia&n bsp;and hasn’t associated with his&n bsp;father for almost as
long, using it, he suddenly realizes that the name isn& acirc;€™t an Arabic title but possibly& nbsp;
his father’s ancient name.  ;
This is a detail that  ;will have little consequence in the current& nbsp;story, but if I do
write the s equel, and that is a very big â&eu ro;œif†at this point, it will&n bsp;be of great
importance then.
< br>
Chapter 32: The Sword’s&nb sp;Shattered Spirit
With the Tenseiga&n bsp;in need of repair, they call upon Et ernal, a former enzeru and
now most  ;powerful fire spirit in the world. She can arrange the recovery of the
sw ord but the risks are high.
G lossary
Translations:
Tsuchi: earth
Hi:& nbsp;fire
Mizu: water
Ki: wood
Kane : metal
Kaze: wind
Himizu: as disco rdant as fire and water
Hikaze: fire&nbs p;wind
Tenki: weather
Enzeru: angel
Hanyou: half-demon
Obi: the sash that&n bsp;is wrapped around a woman’s  ;waist to hold her kimono closed.
Matte: wait!
Shoji: sliding door.
Engawa:  ;veranda, walkway running along the outside o f the buildings.
Temee: you, derogatory term, very insulting.
Kisama: you, derogatory term, more vulgar than temee
Ano: uh
Hai: Yes
Aniyome: elder brotherâ ;€™s wife; sister-in-law
Hime: Princess
Waka: Young lord, used for the son of a noble.
Otouto: Little brother.&nbs p;
Onii-(__): Big brother, general. Honorific added on to end, determining level of&n bsp;
respect of love. (Can also be used when addressing a young man.)
Aniue : Big brother, formal.
Imouto: Little si ster.
Onee-(__): Big sister, general. H onorific added on to end, determining level&n bsp;of
respect of love. (Can also be used when addressing a young woman.)
Aneue: Big sister, formal.
Ojii-(__): Gr andfather, general. Honorific added on to&nb sp;end, determining level of
respect of love. (Can also be used when addressing an elderly man.)
Obaa-(__): Grandmother,&nbs p;general. Honorific added on to end, d etermining level of
respect of love. &nb sp;(Can also be used when addressing an elderly woman.)
Oji-(__): Uncle, general. &nb sp;Honorific added on to end, determining lev el of respect of
love. (Can also&n bsp;be used when addressing a middle-aged man .)
Oba-(__): Aunt, general. Honorific a dded on to end, determining level of res pect of
love. (Can also be used&nb sp;when addressing a middle-aged woman.)
Mina wa ookii aho desu: Everyoneâ€&tr ade;s a big idiot.
Sumimasen: Excuse me.
Oyaji: Father, informal masculine.
Otou-(__): Father, general. Honorific added  ;on to end, determining level of respect  ;
or love.
Chichiue: Father, formal.
Ofukuro: Mother, informal masculine.
Okaa-(__):&n bsp;Mother, general. Honorific added on to&n bsp;end, determining level of respect
or  ;love.
Hahaue: Mother, formal
Otaa-sama:  ;Mother, said by children of court nobles&nbs p;to their mothers.
XX-(blank): Intimate or&n bsp;rude address depending on usage.
XX-kun:& nbsp;Male honorific, friendly
XX-chan: Female  ;or young boy honorific, friendly
XX-san:&nbs p;general honorific, polite, (Mr. or Ms.)
XX-sama: formal or very polite honorific, u sed for those of superior status or to&n bsp;show
great respect. (Lord or Lady) < br> XX-dono: more formal honorific, more respectfu l than XX-sama. Derived from tono
= lord.