The Kazekage transverse the dead lands with an odd sort of tiredness. He was taking the fight to the Daimyo and his human slavery movements. Sometimes there was success, and sometimes there was not. A certain weariness gripped him whole. Dealing with Jashinists was repetitive. Most of them were fanatics, and morally insane ones at that. Each time Sousuke took the fight to the Daimyo he was changing his appearance. He did have a large armoury of metallic suits and armours he wore. This one was rather plain looking. A simple grey colour, with white plasma cores working about. He wore a dark cloak of sorts that hid some of the finer features of his technology. He was putting a dent in something, human trafficking was already a terrible and repulsive thing to have present. It was something he was going to put out. This concept did not have a place in his Sungakure, which he worked and worked at. Yet in his odd tiredness, something was in his mind. Why were so many slave caravans? He was dismantling them one at a time, but then the game was elevated with trick caravans. The Daimyo was not a stupid man, he was the father of Shouki and Susumu. Both of them were smart young men, and it was a possibility both of them were smarter in Sousuke. The Kazekage was not jealous of this fact, it was the fact that Shouki used his intelligence to harm others. Sousuke was on the opposite end of it. He used his intellect for the betterment of Sungakure.
The metallic man continued his journey homeward. He was not in the best of shape, but he certainly was not in the worst shape either. He wore signs of battle upon him, and not to his own joy the blood of a Jashinist who was trying to curse him. There was something unsettling about being the greatest heretic of that religion. Sousuke did not believe in Jashinism, but he was once thought by others to be a follower. No. Sousuke was a follower of the Mother Suna, until it was revealed to him that his patron goddess was ... uncaring for most of humanity. She cursed the Sunahoshi, she did not empower them. Sousuke believed in the one thing that his former patron goddess wanted to see gone - Primus. She believed him to be a villain, but to Sousuke Primus was the man who enabled the age of men in Wind Country. His descendants traced down through the age and Sousuke's family served them faithfully.
In his travels, the Kazekage would stop for a moment. He felt something upon him. If asked is the land alive? He would answer 'very much so, watch where you step'. Parts of the desert were blistering hot and were home to demons, other parts home to men or women of unsavory motives.
The metallic man continued his journey homeward. He was not in the best of shape, but he certainly was not in the worst shape either. He wore signs of battle upon him, and not to his own joy the blood of a Jashinist who was trying to curse him. There was something unsettling about being the greatest heretic of that religion. Sousuke did not believe in Jashinism, but he was once thought by others to be a follower. No. Sousuke was a follower of the Mother Suna, until it was revealed to him that his patron goddess was ... uncaring for most of humanity. She cursed the Sunahoshi, she did not empower them. Sousuke believed in the one thing that his former patron goddess wanted to see gone - Primus. She believed him to be a villain, but to Sousuke Primus was the man who enabled the age of men in Wind Country. His descendants traced down through the age and Sousuke's family served them faithfully.
In his travels, the Kazekage would stop for a moment. He felt something upon him. If asked is the land alive? He would answer 'very much so, watch where you step'. Parts of the desert were blistering hot and were home to demons, other parts home to men or women of unsavory motives.