The residential district felt wrong. Sunagakure was breathing through its surface vents again as the village stationed itself above ground for the seasonal rotation and Goro hated every second of the transition. To him the open sky was a threat. It was a vast and empty weight that offered no ceiling and no comfort. He much preferred the deepest tunnels where the air was stagnant and the walls were close enough to touch. Down there he was just another shadow in the Tsuchigumo hive but up here the sunlight caught the odd angles of his poncho and made him feel like a freak on display for the world to see.
He walked with his shoulders hunched and his primary hands buried deep in his pockets. Under his tunic the bone bracer Shinda had given him sat heavy against his sternum. He had been training until his muscles spasmed because he was trying to find that shinobi feeling again but the peace of the tunnels eluded him today. The village was crawling with a strange and jagged energy. Surface rotations always brought out the weirdest travelers who were people who didn't mind the heat and the grit if it meant selling their oddities to bored genin.
Goro pushed through a cluster of gossiping merchants and stopped.
In the center of the plaza a woman had set up a stage draped in magenta silks that looked like they had been dragged through a dozen different countries. She wasn't a kunoichi or at least she didn't look like one but she had a crowd of tough guys and curious kids gathered around her. She was talking about the mind and the unseen weight everyone carried. She claimed she could peel back the layers of a person's soul if they were willing to let her in.
"I cannot force a warrior to see what they do not wish to see." she said while her voice carried a strange and melodic hum. "You must accept the descent. You must choose to let go of the handles."
Goro watched her and felt a weird magnetic pull in his gut. He was tired of the physical grind and he was tired of feeling like he was just a collection of extra arms and bruised knuckles. He wanted to know if there was anything else under all the labor and the silk. Before he could talk himself out of it he stepped forward. The crowd parted as they looked at his six arms and his red eyes. They whispered the usual things but Goro didn't care. He stepped up onto the wood of the stage while the boards creaked under his weight. He looked at the woman without offering a name or a greeting. He just gave her a short and sharp nod.
I'm ready, he thought. Show me what's actually in there.
The woman stepped into his personal space and she was close enough that he could smell something like burnt ozone and old paper. She tilted his head up and forced him to lock eyes with her.
"Don't fight it, little spider." she whispered.
For a split second her eyes did something impossible. The pupils didn't just dilate because they shifted and bled into a crimson pattern that spun like a slow motion hurricane. It was the last thing Goro saw before the plaza and the sand and the sun were snuffed out like a candle in a gale.
[MFT: 573]
He walked with his shoulders hunched and his primary hands buried deep in his pockets. Under his tunic the bone bracer Shinda had given him sat heavy against his sternum. He had been training until his muscles spasmed because he was trying to find that shinobi feeling again but the peace of the tunnels eluded him today. The village was crawling with a strange and jagged energy. Surface rotations always brought out the weirdest travelers who were people who didn't mind the heat and the grit if it meant selling their oddities to bored genin.
Goro pushed through a cluster of gossiping merchants and stopped.
In the center of the plaza a woman had set up a stage draped in magenta silks that looked like they had been dragged through a dozen different countries. She wasn't a kunoichi or at least she didn't look like one but she had a crowd of tough guys and curious kids gathered around her. She was talking about the mind and the unseen weight everyone carried. She claimed she could peel back the layers of a person's soul if they were willing to let her in.
"I cannot force a warrior to see what they do not wish to see." she said while her voice carried a strange and melodic hum. "You must accept the descent. You must choose to let go of the handles."
Goro watched her and felt a weird magnetic pull in his gut. He was tired of the physical grind and he was tired of feeling like he was just a collection of extra arms and bruised knuckles. He wanted to know if there was anything else under all the labor and the silk. Before he could talk himself out of it he stepped forward. The crowd parted as they looked at his six arms and his red eyes. They whispered the usual things but Goro didn't care. He stepped up onto the wood of the stage while the boards creaked under his weight. He looked at the woman without offering a name or a greeting. He just gave her a short and sharp nod.
I'm ready, he thought. Show me what's actually in there.
The woman stepped into his personal space and she was close enough that he could smell something like burnt ozone and old paper. She tilted his head up and forced him to lock eyes with her.
"Don't fight it, little spider." she whispered.
For a split second her eyes did something impossible. The pupils didn't just dilate because they shifted and bled into a crimson pattern that spun like a slow motion hurricane. It was the last thing Goro saw before the plaza and the sand and the sun were snuffed out like a candle in a gale.
[MFT: 573]