Usagi Tomoe wrote:Tomoe raised a hand to her lips as she held back a giggle when she saw him blush. She understood he had tried to do something to impress her, but ended up looking... well, rather cute instead.
At least she had offered him a graceful way out of it.
"It sounds like your family is blessed with a strong gift for the path of a priest then, to be an heir to such a long line of shugenja," she nodded. "I am still not sure how these meishodo work though. Are they perhaps a variation on a shugenja's ofuda, as sacred paper might've been difficult to come by in your travels?"
Now she was the one who blushed. "... Uhm, if you don't mind me asking, that is. I wouldn't want to intrude upon sacred secrets of your clan."
Instead, Dong-Ha felt the fires of shame burning in his chest, and while he tried to focus on the game at hand, his cheeks remained red, flustered as he was. "Well, my father's sensei was not my grandfather, so the lineage is more... scholastic." There was a slight disgraceful episode that had led to Dong-Ha's father's sensei into adopting Dong-Ha's father as his student, an incident that had never been fully explained to the young man.
"No, no, it's fine. I could toss you one of my amulets... and it would be just that, a trinket." he explained, waving his hadn as if to dispel the awkward moment. "Meishodo is the way of words of creation, words of power uttered at the moment of creation. Words so old that they have the power to make things be. To command the very elements that make up the world." His calloused fingers brushed each of his dangling charms as he spoke. "The art of imbuing the charms with the words requires the student to mediate on the desired effect... and to carve the ancient words.. in a language long dead on them, while making sure that the the charm itself is... suitable for the task."
Dong-Ha freed
an amber amulet from his shash, handing it to the Hare. "This here... will grant luck to the bearer, or anyone the bearer touches... for a brief moment once the right words have been spoken."