Moriko gave Ryuu a questioning glance, and he shrugged to indicate he didn't know what was going on either. Moriko made her decision quickly, turning around to continue training.
Tenchi escorted Ryuu in silence, content to not provide any further clues. Ryuu followed suit, knowing any questions he had would not be answered. Soon they reached a hut right next to Tenchi's. Ryuu frowned. He had been to visit Tenchi several times, and every time, the small house next to his had been empty. Ryuu had never sensed anyone inside. But Tenchi motioned him in, and Ryuu followed without question. Tenchi did not come in with him.
Inside, the house was delightfully cool. It was dark, with all the windows and the door covered. There was a little light, but the shadows in the house were long, and Ryuu couldn't sense anyone inside the house. He wondered for a moment if this was another test of Tenchi's.
But then a familiar voice spoke out of the darkness, and Ryuu couldn't believe who he was hearing.
"Hello, Ryuu, it has been far too long."
Ryuu's heart leapt for joy. It was a voice he hadn’t expected to hear on the island, but one that made his day even better. "Rei! I didn't even know you were on the island. If I had, I would've come much sooner."
"I know. I have hidden my presence on this island ever since I returned. But I wanted to see you, and I suppose I owe you an explanation."
Ryuu shook his head. "You don't need to explain anything to me. I’m just glad you’re here. But why the secrecy?” Even as they spoke, Rei was cloaked in shadow and he couldn’t sense her.
"You will see soon enough, but first, I wanted to explain what happened to me and how I felt."
Ryuu nodded. His initial surge of excitement had been replaced by apprehension. When he last saw her, Rei had been crippled from a cut. But it had been over half a cycle since then, and apparently much had happened in her life. There was something in her voice he couldn't quite place. It was as though she had grown old in the past few moons.
"When we left this island together, I was so eager to see the Three Kingdoms. I wanted to see the land we came from, the land so many of us still call home. You warned me, but still I didn't believe. Then I saw with my own eyes. Yes, there is a tremendous amount of good in the Three Kingdoms, but they are also weak and scared of us, and I see that now. There is some strength left. Lord Akira is a worthy man. But there aren’t enough like him in the Three Kingdoms.”
Ryuu listened closely. He heard the change in her tone when she spoke of Akira, but he also heard a sadness that had never been present in her voice before. When they left the island, she had been the most optimistic person he had ever met. Now she had seen the true state of things, and Ryuu worried the Rei he had left with would never return again.
She continued. "When I was first brought back, I was grateful to be here. I wanted to run away, wanted to hide from everything happening. I am safe, and here my concerns are very limited. But while I've been back, I've been thinking about you. You see, you've grown up in the Kingdom, and you've experienced all that it has to offer. You’ve seen the good and the bad. Knowing everything, you still want to do all you can to save the people.”
“For the longest time I didn't understand. But now I think I do. Our error is the same as the Azarians. We think our strength makes us better than the people in the Kingdom. But it doesn’t, does it? Though we are stronger, we’re no different than any other citizen of the Kingdom. The blades need to remember that. They need to return to the Kingdom, they need to stop hiding. To that end, I will help you convince everyone to return."
Ryuu tried to follow her argument, but she was explaining it to herself, not to him. All that mattered to him was that she was alive and she would support him. She would be an influential voice in the debate, but he had to push that aside. He considered her a friend, and she was clearly still in pain. "Rei, I’m more grateful than you can imagine for your support, but right now I’m more worried about you. Are you okay?"
Rei didn't respond, but Ryuu could sense her as she began to allow her presence to escape. Like Moriko, she could hide from the sense. She wasn't nearly as good, but still good enough to escape casual detection. As Ryuu began to sense her, he realized something was off. They weren't alone. There was someone else in the room with them.
Then Rei stepped out of the shadows, and Ryuu understood everything. Her belly was large, and the energy he had felt was a life inside her.
He didn't know how to respond, but his feelings took over, politics aside. "Rei! Congratulations."
He rushed forward and embraced her tightly.
She returned his embrace and Ryuu felt as though he was going to tear up. All of a sudden the enormity of what was happening dawned on him. "Does he know?"
Rei shook her head. "When the dayblade came for me, not even I knew. He didn't tell me what he sensed until we were well on our way back. I haven't been sure what to do, so I’ve just been taking it one day at a time."
Ryuu shook his head. “Wait, do you even know everything?”
“What do you mean?”
“You said you’ve kept yourself isolated from events. Did you know Akira has reunited the kingdoms and become king? You’re carrying the heir to the entire Kingdom.”
“Yes. That thought has been first in my mind.”
Ryuu couldn’t help but be amazed by the turn of events. The more he thought about it, the funnier it became. He started to laugh, a slow chuckle that grew into uncontrollable laughter.
"I've seen it all. You are carrying the heir of the king as a nightblade. I don’t think that’s ever happened."
Rei frowned. “It hasn’t. In the time of the Kingdom, it was against the law for any blade to bed a royal family member. It was punishable by death.”
They looked at each other for a moment, and the absurdity of life was too much for them to handle. They both laughed until they cried.
A few nights later a full assembly of the island was held. They were in the same amphitheater where Ryuu had dueled Tenchi, a large depression in the surface of the island perfectly conducive to the mission of deciding what would be next for the blades.
Everyone Ryuu had become close to was sitting up front with him at a low table. Moriko, Rei, Tenchi, Shika, and several other members of the council were there. After the evening meal the amphitheater filled up quickly. The murmurs that filled the space were loud and intense, almost as though there was a hive of insects among them.
The excitement and nervousness were easy to feel, and Ryuu felt it most of all. Everything he was came down to this vote. By himself, he was strong, but not nearly strong enough to turn aside the Azarian invasion. Even if he managed to somehow kill Nameless, he wasn’t sure it would be enough. He needed more strength. He needed the nightblades.
In the time since he had come to the island, he had become convinced his purpose wasn’t to become the strongest fighter in the world. Swordsmanship was a skill, not a purpose. His purpose was to bring the nightblades back to the Kingdom. That was what he had been born to do, and it all came down to tonight.
When Tenchi was convinced everyone had entered the amphitheater, he stood up. The crowd, despite the energy crackling throughout, was silenced almost immediately. Tenchi’s voice was both soft and strong, carrying well throughout the space. Ryuu admired the sheer presence of the man.
“Everyone knows why we are here tonight. I won’t restate the obvious. I only ask this favor of you all. Make your best decision tonight. Listen to the arguments, and however you make your choices, make them well. We all know we aren’t simply speaking about the decision in front of us. The decision to return to the Kingdom or not will echo down for generations, and it is our responsibility to make sure those echoes ring truly in the hearts of our grandchildren.”
Tenchi paused to let his request sink in.
“We’ll get right to it. All of you know Ryuu. No one here can question either his strength or his integrity. You know his arguments, but here’s a last chance to hear what he has to say.”
Ryuu stood up and bowed towards Tenchi. He had thought for a long time about what he was going to say tonight. At one point, he had almost memorized a long, rambling speech. But as he stood here in front of all his peers, the words seemed empty and meaningless.
“This is not a time for words. I have argued for the return to the land, and I believe that time is now. The Kingdom is whole again, for the first time since we left the shores of Highgate in search of our new home. A king rules who would welcome us back. And most importantly, the people of the Kingdom face a threat from an enemy they do not have the strength to fight.”
“I understand Tenchi’s concern. He thinks of the safety of those on the island, as he rightfully should. And he’s right. I can’t stand before you today and tell you that every citizen of the Kingdom would welcome us back with open arms, even if we did come in and save them all. There are many who would still fear us.”
“But this is the question I would leave you with: If not now, when?”
Ryuu paused to catch his breath. “No, it is not the perfect time to return, and there are risks, but if we don’t return now, when will we? We have waited almost a thousand cycles, and we have never had an opportunity like this. If we don’t return now, we never will.”
Ryuu sat back down, his speech greeted by a deafening silence as the blades considered his words.
Rei stood up next.
“I don’t have much to say that hasn’t already been said. I have been to the Kingdom, and Ryuu speaks truly. I would only add this: Back when we lived in the Kingdom, nightblades took an oath to serve and protect the people of the Kingdom. We don’t say that oath anymore, but I think that perhaps we should. They may not deserve our help, but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t give it to them.”
Finally, Tenchi stood up to speak.
“I also don’t have much to say. You’ve heard my arguments before, and neither Ryuu nor Rei have sought to deceive any of us. They have the truth of it. You know I’ve spoken of my concern about what will happen if we return. I worry that the persecution and the hunts will begin again. But I’m not just worried about how they will react to us. I’m worried about how we will react to them. We have gotten used to a certain way of life, and even this question has threatened to tear us in two. Renzo, one of our best, betrayed our location to try to kill Ryuu. I wonder if perhaps we aren’t ready to return. Perhaps we haven’t reached the necessary maturity our powers demand. We are strong. Strong enough to take life and strong enough to change the course of history. But we have heard what comes of strength. We know it from our own histories and we hear it happening now in the Kingdom. Strength corrupts, and those who are weaker suffer. How will we act when we are placed in a position of power over another? Will we uphold our oaths to protect life? Or will we be all too willing to take it? I don’t know the answers to these questions. I only know the questions need to be asked.”
Tenchi allowed his words to sink in. He would be the last to speak.
They had each spoken at length regarding the procedure for conducting the vote. The question that had been most on people’s minds had been whether or not to make the votes public. A private vote would prevent bias, but Tenchi had argued for a public vote. He argued that this decision wasn’t one to be made privately, but in front of all.
They had talked as a council and in small groups around the island, and the final decision was that the vote would be public, a show of hands. They would do it at a glance, and if the vote seemed close, they would argue some more.
All of Ryuu’s work came down to this moment. Tenchi looked throughout the crowd and called the vote. “All who wish that the blades return to the Kingdom, please raise their hands.”
For a moment, no one stirred. No one wanted to be the first to voice their opinion, to vote for a course of action they couldn’t return from. The time for talk had passed. Ryuu’s breath caught in his throat. Perhaps all of it had been for nothing.
But then a single hand rose above the crowd. Ryuu tried to see who it was, but their face was lost among a sea of people. One by one, hands started to rise, and soon hands were going up throughout the crowd. It was more hands than Ryuu had ever seen in one place, but as he looked around, he wasn’t sure it was enough. It wasn’t a decisive vote.
Tenchi waited patiently, the silence in the amphitheater deafening. When it looked like no further hands were going to rise, he glanced back at Ryuu. Ryuu took a mental image of the hands in the air and nodded. He couldn’t tell for sure, but it appeared as though they didn’t have a decisive majority.
His fears were realized when Tenchi called for the votes to remain on the island. This time, there was no delay. Hands began to rise throughout the crowd, and Ryuu felt his stomach and his hopes drop. There were just as many hands in the air as before. From just a glance, Ryuu couldn’t tell which side had more votes.
Tenchi looked at Ryuu with a frown on his face. Of all the possible outcomes, this was the one they had feared the most. They had wanted a decisive mandate from the people, but the people were almost evenly split. Tenchi motioned for the people to put their hands down and turned to Ryuu, his voice low. “Our people are split.”
Ryuu was at a loss. “Do we ask for more debate?”
Tenchi shook his head. “It would be insulting. You know as well as I they have had plenty of time to think about their vote. Further arguing only makes us look weak.”
Ryuu’s mind was spinning. All this time he had felt that he were driven by a larger purpose. For the past few moons, he thought he had found it. He would be the one to lead the nightblades back to the Kingdom. But with a single vote that dream had been crushed. He didn’t know what to do next.
Behind them, he heard a rustle of robes. He turned around to see Shika standing up. Ryuu raised his eyes in hope as he looked at her. When she stood, she drew all eyes to her. She was a natural born leader, a skill Ryuu had never possessed. When she stood up, all the murmurs and conversation stopped, and she had the full attention of everyone present.