In the subterranean silence of the Root Vault, a hollow peace was brokered. To save his people from a two-front war, Lord Veridian made a choice that tasted like ash. He agreed to hand Kaito over to the joint custody of the Flame and Aqua clans.
"The boy is a guest, not a prisoner," Veridian had said firmly. "But if his presence threatens the Great Balance, he must be judged by the High Council."
But when the elite guards of the three clans marched up to the guest quarters, they found nothing but an empty mat and a single, cold hearth. Kaito was gone.
"You played us!" General Pyrois roared, his fists erupting in orange sparks. "You let the Unifier slip away while we debated in the dirt!"
"I gave no such order," Veridian countered, though his heart sank. "If he has fled, it is because he knew the 'justice' you offered was a death sentence."
A scout rushed into the chamber, breathless. "My Lord! The border sentries report a shadow crossing into the Grey Wastes last night. The boy has left the Leaf Clan."
The hunt was no longer a secret. The Three Clans mobilized, their scouts fanning out like a net across the lawless neutral territories.
The Ghost Village
Kaito moved through the ruins of a nameless hamlet. The air here didn't smell of forest or forge; it smelled of decay. Buildings were charred shells, and the silent forms of those who couldn't run lay scattered in the dirt. It was a place where the law of the Five Clans didn't reach—a playground for scavengers.
From beneath a collapsed storefront, a sharp sob broke the silence. Kaito knelt, pulling away a heavy beam to find a small boy, his face smeared with soot and tears.
"They... they took everyone," the child whimpered. "The men with the red eyes. They took the gold... they took my mother..."
Before Kaito could comfort him, a heavy boot slammed into his back.
The Magic Coil
Kaito spun, but he was already surrounded. Five men—mercenaries with jagged scars and cruel smiles—stood over him. One of them, a sorcerer with yellowed teeth, flicked a wrist. A glowing, purple Magic Coil—a rope designed to suppress spiritual energy—whipped around Kaito, binding his arms to his sides.
Kaito tried to call on Kage, but the coil bit into his skin, hissing. It felt like his veins were being filled with lead.
"Look at this one," the leader laughed, kicking Kaito in the ribs. "Thinks he's a hero. Can't even flicker a spark now, can you, boy?"
Kaito collapsed into the dirt, struggling against the glowing rope. "Leave the kid alone," he rasped.
"The kid? He's a witness," the leader said, drawing a rusted blade. "And witnesses don't pay the bills."
The Flash of Silver
The mercenary stepped toward the crying boy. He raised his sword—and then his head simply slid off his shoulders.
There was no sound. No warning.
The other four mercenaries froze. Thud. A second man fell, his throat opened by a strike so fast the blood didn't spray until he hit the ground.
"What is this?! Who's there?!" the sorcerer screamed, frantically trying to cast a shield.
A streak of silver light blurred through the air. The third and fourth men dropped like puppets with their strings cut. Kaito watched, wide-eyed, unable to see the attacker—only the terrifying, beautiful trail of a blade moving at the speed of a heartbeat.
The sorcerer, now alone, fell to his knees. "Please! I have gold! I have—"
A figure materialized from the shadows directly in front of him.
Mizuki Shin
She wore a suit of matte-black silk that seemed to absorb the dim light. Her hair was like a spill of ink, and her eyes were colder than the Aqua Clan's deepest ice. She held a single-edged sword, the steel so polished it looked like a sliver of the moon.
"I am Mizuki Shin," she said, her voice a flat, melodic chill that sent shivers down Kaito's spine. "And I am your death."
With a flick of her wrist, the sorcerer's life was extinguished.
She didn't look at the boy she had saved. She turned slowly toward Kaito. She moved with a terrifying, predatory attitude, her boots silent on the blood-soaked earth. She stopped inches from him, the tip of her red-stained sword rising until it rested right under Kaito's chin.
She looked down at him with utter contempt, sensing the dark, coiled power of the Ring beneath his skin.
"The shadow-bearer," she whispered.
The blade pressed closer, drawing a single bead of blood from Kaito's neck.
