Fusanosuke sat alone in a classroom reading a book. It was late afternoon, classes having ended about an hour before. The room was quiet save for the window dampened noise of children laughing and sparring in the training grounds outside. Academy students commonly congregated on the grounds after class on days with minimal physical training. Instructors saw it as valuable time for students to create bonds and informally practice technique. Fusanosuke preferred to get ahead on his reading.
The boy did not consider himself an outcast. It wasn't something he thought about at all, his relationship to the other students. He didn't define himself as being in a group or by being alone. He defined himself by his work. The book was titled "Lessons of the Clan Wars Vol 1" and it had many contributing authors who took turns recounting stories of battles and what could be learned from the outcomes. The book was strictly non-political, and acted as a general field guide and teaching tool for students to learn about strategy and tactics.
It was among the more intersting books assigned for class, but Fusanosuke found it to be overly curated, the lessons a little too perfect. For example, the first chapter contains an account of a battle where a small unit of Shinobi prevails over a much larger force. The writer's name is Yada Yukinari who commands a unit of 3 other shinobi. They faced a force of nearly 40, it's reported. To win, the unit of 4 backed into a narrow mountain pass that was easily defensible. The commander specialized in barriers and took the brunt of the attack while another from his unit climbed the pass and snuck around the opposing forces. Once behind, he summoned a giant bear and rushed the enemy from behind, creating a pincer attack aimed at the bulk of the enemies forces. At the same time, Commander Yukinari turned offensive, creating a second surprise. Several enemies died instantly, and the opposing force was unable to reorganize and retreated with great losses.
So what's the lesson? It seemed to Fusanosuke that there could be several. The lesson could be to use terrain to your advantage. It could be to come at your enemy on multiple sides. It could be that you simply need to be stronger than who you're fighting. The small unit seemed stronger to Fusanosuke, noting that the commander could sustain a large number of enemy attacks and that the enemy had no response to a summoned creature. In the last paragraph, however, the commander explained the lesson. "Never give up."
That seemed dull, but the boy noted it regardless. He needed to get the answer right on the test after all.
[mft]
[wc: 452]
The boy did not consider himself an outcast. It wasn't something he thought about at all, his relationship to the other students. He didn't define himself as being in a group or by being alone. He defined himself by his work. The book was titled "Lessons of the Clan Wars Vol 1" and it had many contributing authors who took turns recounting stories of battles and what could be learned from the outcomes. The book was strictly non-political, and acted as a general field guide and teaching tool for students to learn about strategy and tactics.
It was among the more intersting books assigned for class, but Fusanosuke found it to be overly curated, the lessons a little too perfect. For example, the first chapter contains an account of a battle where a small unit of Shinobi prevails over a much larger force. The writer's name is Yada Yukinari who commands a unit of 3 other shinobi. They faced a force of nearly 40, it's reported. To win, the unit of 4 backed into a narrow mountain pass that was easily defensible. The commander specialized in barriers and took the brunt of the attack while another from his unit climbed the pass and snuck around the opposing forces. Once behind, he summoned a giant bear and rushed the enemy from behind, creating a pincer attack aimed at the bulk of the enemies forces. At the same time, Commander Yukinari turned offensive, creating a second surprise. Several enemies died instantly, and the opposing force was unable to reorganize and retreated with great losses.
So what's the lesson? It seemed to Fusanosuke that there could be several. The lesson could be to use terrain to your advantage. It could be to come at your enemy on multiple sides. It could be that you simply need to be stronger than who you're fighting. The small unit seemed stronger to Fusanosuke, noting that the commander could sustain a large number of enemy attacks and that the enemy had no response to a summoned creature. In the last paragraph, however, the commander explained the lesson. "Never give up."
That seemed dull, but the boy noted it regardless. He needed to get the answer right on the test after all.
[mft]
[wc: 452]
Last edited: