Chapter 7

The roar outside wasn't the measured anger of soldiers or the calculated threat of shinobi, it was the ragged, high-pitched sound of collective panic, a primal scream against the encroaching darkness represented by Kiri's brutal display. It was the sound of fear needing a victim, and Ryuu knew, with chilling certainty, who they had chosen.

"Move, Ryuu!" Kasumi's voice was sharp, cutting through his frozen observation. She yanked him towards the back of the room, her movements economical despite the tremor that still shook her frame. 

The memory of Jūzō Biwa's casual brutality, the sight of Takeda's mangled body, had clearly shaken her to the core, but the immediate threat of the approaching mob triggered her ingrained survival instincts.

She kicked the worn mat aside, revealing the slightly uneven floorboard. Even as she fumbled with the hidden latch mechanism – her fingers clumsy with haste and adrenaline – the first heavy blows began to rain down on their flimsy front door.

THUD!

"Cursed ones! Show yourselves!"

CRACK! Wood splintered.

"Get out! Leave Shiosai!"

Kasumi finally wrenched the floorboard free, revealing the dark, earthy maw of the crawlspace beneath. The air that wafted up was cool, damp, smelling of packed dirt and stored roots. "In!" she commanded, practically shoving Ryuu towards the opening.

He scrambled down without hesitation, landing awkwardly on the uneven ground below. It was barely high enough to crouch in, the rough-hewn foundation beams pressing close overhead. Darkness enveloped him instantly, thick and disorienting.

He was horrified, scared for his life. Things had gone out of hand. 

Above, he heard Kasumi move with blurring speed. The soft puff puff of the smoke pellets hitting the floor, followed immediately by choked coughs and panicked shouts from the villagers who had presumably just broken through the door.

"Smoke!"

"Where'd they go?"

"Can't see!"

Then Kasumi dropped lightly into the crawlspace beside him, pulling the floorboard almost shut, leaving only a tiny crack for minimal light. The sounds from above were muffled now, confused, angry.

"Grab my belt," Kasumi whispered urgently in the near-blackness. Her voice was strained but controlled. "Stay low. Don't make a sound."

Ryuu fumbled blindly for a moment before his small fingers closed around the sturdy fabric of her sash. She immediately began moving, surprisingly fast in the cramped space, navigating by touch and memory. Ryuu stumbled after her, trying desperately to keep up, his knees scraping against unseen rocks, the damp earth clinging to his clothes. T

he smell was cloying, suffocating. His heart hammered against his ribs, each beat echoing the muffled thuds and shouts still audible from the house above.

He strained his ears, trying to piece together what was happening. He heard crashing sounds – furniture being overturned? Possessions being smashed? The villagers' fear had clearly boiled over into destructive rage. Would they set fire to the house? The thought sent a fresh wave of panic through him.

Kasumi didn't falter. She moved with unwavering purpose through the oppressive darkness, pulling him along relentlessly. This escape route wasn't just a hiding place, it was clearly planned, practiced. How long had she anticipated something like this? How long had she lived with the knowledge that the people around her could turn hostile at any moment? 

The depth of her long-term fear, her constant preparedness, struck him with new force. She wasn't just paranoid, she was a survivor who understood the brutal calculus of her situation far better than he had initially credited.

His own manipulations felt childishly crude in the face of this grim reality. He had poked at her fears, yes, but the villagers' betrayal, fueled by Kiri's terror tactics, was the true catalyst.

He had merely nudged events along a path they were already tilted towards. The guilt was a dull ache beneath the immediate fear for survival, but the cold, analytical part of his mind registered that the outcome, however terrifying, served his ultimate purpose. They had to leave.

After what felt like an age of blind scrambling, Kasumi slowed, then stopped. He bumped into her softly in the darkness. He heard a faint scraping sound, then felt a slight draft of cooler, fresher air. A section of the outer foundation, concealed by thick, thorny bushes on the outside, swung inwards silently.

"Quickly," Kasumi whispered, pushing him gently towards the opening.

He crawled out into the grey, misty twilight, blinking as his eyes adjusted. They were behind their former home, hidden from the main village path by the structure itself and a dense wall of coastal vegetation. The shouts from the front of the house seemed slightly more distant now, muffled by the walls and the damp air.

Kasumi emerged swiftly behind him, immediately pulling the hidden door shut and scanning their surroundings with rapid, assessing glances. Her face was smudged with dirt, her breathing still slightly ragged, but her eyes were sharp, alert, missing nothing. Her shinobi self was fully present now, the frightened mother submerged beneath layers of training and necessity.

"This way," she commanded, grabbing his hand again. "Stay low. Keep to the rocks."

She led him away from the village, not towards the sea, but inland, scrambling up the steep, rocky incline that bordered Shiosai. The terrain was treacherous – loose scree, slick moss-covered boulders, thorny bushes that snagged at their clothes. 

Kasumi moved like a mountain goat, finding footholds where Ryuu saw none, her balance impeccable despite the urgency. She hauled him up inclines, steadied him across narrow ledges, her strength seemingly inexhaustible, fueled by adrenaline and fierce determination.

Ryuu struggled to keep pace. His small body screamed in protest. His muscles burned, his lungs felt raw, his scraped hands stung. The layers of clothing, meant for sun protection, were now soaked with sweat and drizzle, clinging heavily. The umbrella was long gone, abandoned in the chaos. 

He focused on placing one foot in front of the other, mimicking Kasumi's movements as best he could, his analytical mind noting their route, the landmarks, the way she used the terrain for cover.

They climbed higher, away from the immediate sounds of the village, the mist swirling around them, sometimes offering concealment, sometimes revealing terrifying drops just feet away. 

The wind picked up here, whipping strands of Kasumi's dark hair across her face, carrying the salty tang of the sea and the faint, chilling scent of pine from the sparse trees clinging to the higher slopes.

As true darkness began to fall, rendering the treacherous terrain almost impassable, Kasumi finally found shelter. It wasn't much – a shallow cleft in the rock face, partially screened by a cluster of stunted, wind-battered pines. It offered minimal protection from the elements but provided concealment from below.

Kasumi sank down onto the cold stone, pulling Ryuu close against her side for warmth, her body finally succumbing to exhaustion. She produced the oilcloth bundle – the dried fish and seaweed – and forced herself, then him, to eat. The salty, chewy food tasted like ashes in Ryuu's mouth, but he knew they needed the energy.

He huddled against her, shivering, listening to the wind howl around their meagre shelter. The adrenaline was fading, leaving behind bone-deep weariness and the raw edge of fear.

The image of Takeda's mangled body, the sound of the mob's rage, Kasumi's terrified face when his ice manifested – it all swirled in his mind. This world was relentlessly brutal. There were no safe corners, no guarantees. Power was everything. Control was everything.

Kasumi hadn't spoken since their escape, her gaze fixed on the misty darkness below, listening, always listening. The silence stretched, amplifying the sounds of the night.

Ryuu knew this was the moment. Her defenses were down, her carefully constructed world shattered. He had to guide her fear, shape her desperation towards the only viable path he saw. He took a shaky breath, letting the cold reality of their situation fuel the performance.

"Kaa-san..." His voice was small, trembling genuinely this time. He pressed closer, seeking warmth and projecting vulnerability. "...are they... gone? The villagers?"

Kasumi's arm tightened around him almost reflexively. "They won't follow us up here," she murmured, her voice rough. "Not in this terrain. Not in the dark. They are fishermen, not trackers."

"But... Kiri..." he whispered, letting the name hang there. "Takeda-san... they killed him. Just like that." He shuddered again, burying his face against her side. "Will they come back? For us?"

He felt her subtle flinch. "They might," she admitted quietly, the truth too stark to deny now. "If someone talks... if they suspect..."

"We can't go back there," Ryuu stated, letting tears – surprisingly easy to summon when recalling Jūzō's casual cruelty, the gore, the hatred – well up in his eyes. "They hate us now. Everyone hates us." He looked up at her, his large red eyes wide and swimming. "Where can we go, Kaa-san? Where is safe?"

Kasumi stared out into the darkness, her expression bleak. The calculation was visible on her face now – the weighing of impossible options. Stay in the Land of Water, risking Kiri patrols and hostile villages? Flee to another minor nation, equally vulnerable, potentially hostile?

"I heard... I heard the fishermen talk sometimes," Ryuu began hesitantly, planting the seed as planned. "About other lands. Far away. Places... bigger than here?" He kept his voice uncertain, childishly hopeful.

Kasumi remained silent.

"Is there... a place... strong enough?" Ryuu pressed gently. "Strong enough to... stop the Mist boats? A place with... a strong leader?" He paused, then added the name, making it sound like a half-remembered rumour. "Like... Konoha?"

He watched her profile intently. Her jaw tightened. He saw the conflict in the slight furrow of her brow. Konoha. The Leaf. A major power, one of the Five Great Shinobi Villages. A place with its own complex history, its own dangers. A potential enemy of Kiri, but also potentially bound by treaties or indifference. A place where a hidden Yuki might be just as vulnerable, if discovered.

But compared to the immediate, proven danger here? Compared to the certainty of persecution in the Land of Water?

"Konoha..." Kasumi breathed the name, the sound barely audible above the wind. It wasn't acceptance, not yet. It was the sound of someone contemplating a desperate, terrifying leap into the unknown.

Ryuu held his breath, sensing the shift. He had presented the option, framed it as a desperate child's plea for safety rooted in overheard whispers. He had leveraged the Kiri attack, the village betrayal, her own exhaustion and fear. Now, the decision rested with her.

She looked down at him, her gaze searching his face in the gloom. He met her eyes, forcing himself to maintain the look of fragile hope, of dependence. He was small, weak, burdened with a dangerous power he couldn't control, entirely reliant on her. That, at least, was partly true.

A long, shuddering sigh escaped her lips, carrying away some of the tension, replaced by grim resolve. "Konoha is... a possibility," she conceded, the words costing her dearly. "A dangerous one. But perhaps... perhaps less dangerous than remaining here."

She pulled her worn cloak tighter around them both. "It's across the sea. A long journey through potentially hostile territory. We would need passage, supplies, a believable story... extreme caution." The practicalities, the risks, were already flooding her mind.

"But..." She looked down at him again, a fierce, protective light entering her eyes. "We cannot stay. You were right. Shiosai is no longer safe. Kiri... they will escalate. The villagers... they will not forget."

She made the decision. "Alright, Ryuu. We rest until first light is stronger. Then we move inland, away from the coast. We find a way to cross the sea. We head towards the Land of Fire."

Her voice was low, firm, tinged with the metallic taste of fear but underpinned by the unyielding strength of a survivor pushed to the absolute limit.

Ryuu leaned against her, a wave of profound relief washing over him, so potent it left him dizzy. 

He closed his eyes, the cold stone pressing against his back, the wind howling outside their meager shelter. He had done it. He had steered their course. 

The path ahead was terrifying, uncertain, filled with dangers he knew intimately from his past life's reading. But it was a path leading away from the immediate death sentence of the Land of Water, a path leading towards the epicenter of the world he needed to navigate, the place where he might, just might, find the means to forge his own survival against the coming storm. 

The first, most dangerous step had been taken.