1 Dawn's Reckoning [Closed] Tue Aug 27, 2013 7:10 am
Utau
D-rank
Dawn had always been Utau’s favorite time of day. It was peaceful, calm, silent. And yet the sky was the color of blood. Since she was a child, Utau had always taken it as a sign that spilt blood brought about peace, that there could be no harmony without war. It was a necessity – used to thin out the numbers of the people who were weak and no longer needed. It left the world with its bare essentials and it left the people behind with a new appreciation for the lack of violence. The woman smiled her always peaceful and warm smile and continued west. She adjusted the cloak on her back to further cover her face. She ran swiftly, under the cover of the landscape.
Utau had been tracking this same group for about a week now, though she had only started travelling a day ago. Those were the advantages of being able to spread her presence across the continent by only simply meditating. This group had been crawling around Shichiouza territory for a while now, getting in the way of the organization’s plans. It would be a simple task, meant only for her to stretch her legs and train with someone that wasn’t within the organization. She had decided it would be a stealth mission. She would sneak into the camp and take out the sentinels first before they could alert anyone of her presence. A genjutsu would be enough of a distraction. That would make things much too easy, but anything for the sake of efficiency. Besides, it was best not to underestimate these people, despite how small of a threat they posed.
She came into view of the camp. It was a simplistic setting – no visible barriers and a simple layout of tents. Utau hid in silence, activating her implanted byakugan to get a closer look at the task ahead. Several traps were sealed into the ground. She would be sure to avoid them. Five guards lay scattered about the borders, two within the camp itself. She would have to time this properly if she wanted to keep herself from being seen or suspected. This was another reason why she loved dawn: the natural mist kept her own genjutsu triggers hidden. She smiled, drawing her hands together for the appropriate signs and breathing a thin layer of mist from her mouth. It was one of her signature techniques, which allowed her full sensory control of whoever came into contact with the mist.
Utau waited for it to settle in and spread throughout the cam. She would make the sentinels deaf to her footsteps and blind to her presence. She drew a small dagger from her weapon’s cloak. She went one by one, slicing open their throats before they could even notice that she was there. In less than a minute, all guards lay dead and scattered around the camp. Now it was time to take care of the rest. Utau moved slowly across the camp, taking her time to paint the walls of the tents with the blood of the fallen. This would serve as a warning for those who thought they could invade the Shichiouza’s territory. She would leave the tents up and the bodies scattered – maybe a few heads on pikes – for that same purpose.
Utau smiled at the thought and let out a small giggle. On the surface, it was warm and innocent, but there was an eerie undertone to it – one that spoke of cruelty and deceit but was only sensed by the most experienced of shinobi. But no one could hear her now. She would kill everyone and be gone before anyone knew that she had ever been there.
Utau had been tracking this same group for about a week now, though she had only started travelling a day ago. Those were the advantages of being able to spread her presence across the continent by only simply meditating. This group had been crawling around Shichiouza territory for a while now, getting in the way of the organization’s plans. It would be a simple task, meant only for her to stretch her legs and train with someone that wasn’t within the organization. She had decided it would be a stealth mission. She would sneak into the camp and take out the sentinels first before they could alert anyone of her presence. A genjutsu would be enough of a distraction. That would make things much too easy, but anything for the sake of efficiency. Besides, it was best not to underestimate these people, despite how small of a threat they posed.
She came into view of the camp. It was a simplistic setting – no visible barriers and a simple layout of tents. Utau hid in silence, activating her implanted byakugan to get a closer look at the task ahead. Several traps were sealed into the ground. She would be sure to avoid them. Five guards lay scattered about the borders, two within the camp itself. She would have to time this properly if she wanted to keep herself from being seen or suspected. This was another reason why she loved dawn: the natural mist kept her own genjutsu triggers hidden. She smiled, drawing her hands together for the appropriate signs and breathing a thin layer of mist from her mouth. It was one of her signature techniques, which allowed her full sensory control of whoever came into contact with the mist.
Utau waited for it to settle in and spread throughout the cam. She would make the sentinels deaf to her footsteps and blind to her presence. She drew a small dagger from her weapon’s cloak. She went one by one, slicing open their throats before they could even notice that she was there. In less than a minute, all guards lay dead and scattered around the camp. Now it was time to take care of the rest. Utau moved slowly across the camp, taking her time to paint the walls of the tents with the blood of the fallen. This would serve as a warning for those who thought they could invade the Shichiouza’s territory. She would leave the tents up and the bodies scattered – maybe a few heads on pikes – for that same purpose.
Utau smiled at the thought and let out a small giggle. On the surface, it was warm and innocent, but there was an eerie undertone to it – one that spoke of cruelty and deceit but was only sensed by the most experienced of shinobi. But no one could hear her now. She would kill everyone and be gone before anyone knew that she had ever been there.