Niijima Izumi
Character
When he spoke about confidence being a choice, she didn’t answer right away. Her gaze followed him as he set the bottle and cup aside, the movement casual but deliberate. He stepped closer then, closing the distance until he stood within arm’s reach. The shift was subtle, but impossible to ignore.
Izumi watched him pull the glove free with his teeth, the casual motion revealing a brief glimpse of bare skin before the leather fell aside onto the table. There was something unguarded in that small act. Something human.
When his hand lifted toward her face, she did not step back.
His fingers were rough when they touched her chin, calloused in a way that spoke of weapons and long years of use. The warmth of his hand contrasted with the cool stillness she carried, guiding her gaze upward until it met the dark visor directly.
The question lingered between them, quiet and deliberate. Before she could answer, the visor split apart with a soft mechanical hiss. The metal folded away, revealing the man behind it and for a moment Izumi said nothing.
Her eyes moved across his face slowly, taking in the sharp line of his features, the dark intensity in his gaze, and finally the scar that cut down along his cheek. She studied it the way one might read the final line of a novella;. There was an unspoken understanding that it had been earned. Up close, the alcohol that had softened his voice earlier seemed to have vanished from him entirely. What remained was focus. Watchfulness. The kind of presence that did not disappear simply because the night had grown quiet.
Her gaze returned to his eyes. For a brief moment she lifted her hand, not pushing him away, not breaking the touch at her chin. Instead her fingers moved upward, brushing lightly along the edge of the scar on his cheek. The contact was slow, deliberate, as if committing the detail to memory the same way he had with her. “You carry your battles on your face,” she murmured. “Most men would rather hide them.”
Her hand lingered there only a moment before lowering again, though she didn’t step away.
The distance between them remained small enough that she could feel the warmth of him now, steady and unmistakably real. The soft lantern light caught along the folds of her black and red silk kimono, the fabric shifting faintly as she breathed. Dark strands of her hair had loosened slightly from their pins over the course of the evening, though the delicate ornaments still held most of it in place, glinting faintly when she turned her head.
“You asked how interested I am,” she continued quietly, her gaze holding his without wavering. A faint smile appeared then, subtle but genuine. “Interested enough that I followed you here.”
For a moment the room held its breath around them. The bottle remained untouched on the table, the quiet of the inn settling like a veil over the night. Then Izumi’s eyes flicked briefly toward the sake bottle before returning to him again. “Where I come from,” she said softly, “a warrior who invites someone into a quiet room shares more than drink. It is a sign of trust… or of something greater.”
Her fingers rose slowly to one of the slender hairpins nestled in her dark hair. With a smooth, practiced motion she slid it free, letting a few more strands fall loose along her shoulder. The metal pin rested lightly between her fingers for a moment before she set it beside the bottle. She wondered if this was the right choice; if this was too bold a move for someone who was not seasoned at making such. Izumi was a samurai, and with the identity, she had learned to make bold moves at the forefront of spars and battles. But this was different....
This was a different kind of battlefield.
“So tell me, Drystan,” she said quietly, the faintest warmth touching her voice now, “which one was it meant to be tonight?” She held his eyes, composed and patient, though the subtle curve of her lips suggested she already intended to find out.
Izumi watched him pull the glove free with his teeth, the casual motion revealing a brief glimpse of bare skin before the leather fell aside onto the table. There was something unguarded in that small act. Something human.
When his hand lifted toward her face, she did not step back.
His fingers were rough when they touched her chin, calloused in a way that spoke of weapons and long years of use. The warmth of his hand contrasted with the cool stillness she carried, guiding her gaze upward until it met the dark visor directly.
"That depends, how interested are you?"
The question lingered between them, quiet and deliberate. Before she could answer, the visor split apart with a soft mechanical hiss. The metal folded away, revealing the man behind it and for a moment Izumi said nothing.
Her eyes moved across his face slowly, taking in the sharp line of his features, the dark intensity in his gaze, and finally the scar that cut down along his cheek. She studied it the way one might read the final line of a novella;. There was an unspoken understanding that it had been earned. Up close, the alcohol that had softened his voice earlier seemed to have vanished from him entirely. What remained was focus. Watchfulness. The kind of presence that did not disappear simply because the night had grown quiet.
Her gaze returned to his eyes. For a brief moment she lifted her hand, not pushing him away, not breaking the touch at her chin. Instead her fingers moved upward, brushing lightly along the edge of the scar on his cheek. The contact was slow, deliberate, as if committing the detail to memory the same way he had with her. “You carry your battles on your face,” she murmured. “Most men would rather hide them.”
Her hand lingered there only a moment before lowering again, though she didn’t step away.
The distance between them remained small enough that she could feel the warmth of him now, steady and unmistakably real. The soft lantern light caught along the folds of her black and red silk kimono, the fabric shifting faintly as she breathed. Dark strands of her hair had loosened slightly from their pins over the course of the evening, though the delicate ornaments still held most of it in place, glinting faintly when she turned her head.
“You asked how interested I am,” she continued quietly, her gaze holding his without wavering. A faint smile appeared then, subtle but genuine. “Interested enough that I followed you here.”
For a moment the room held its breath around them. The bottle remained untouched on the table, the quiet of the inn settling like a veil over the night. Then Izumi’s eyes flicked briefly toward the sake bottle before returning to him again. “Where I come from,” she said softly, “a warrior who invites someone into a quiet room shares more than drink. It is a sign of trust… or of something greater.”
Her fingers rose slowly to one of the slender hairpins nestled in her dark hair. With a smooth, practiced motion she slid it free, letting a few more strands fall loose along her shoulder. The metal pin rested lightly between her fingers for a moment before she set it beside the bottle. She wondered if this was the right choice; if this was too bold a move for someone who was not seasoned at making such. Izumi was a samurai, and with the identity, she had learned to make bold moves at the forefront of spars and battles. But this was different....
This was a different kind of battlefield.
“So tell me, Drystan,” she said quietly, the faintest warmth touching her voice now, “which one was it meant to be tonight?” She held his eyes, composed and patient, though the subtle curve of her lips suggested she already intended to find out.
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