Shindera Mori
The roots must be destroyed for the rot to die
groupMissing-Nin
age 27 years old
birthday 15 September 996
rank A-Rank
occupation Bandit
Mori took to preparing the campsite with practised ease, leaf-litter and twigs were cleared away, his humble bedding, little more than well-tanned animal skin, was placed over it, before he made a small tent using other such leather. The result was a tent in name only, but it was warm, it would keep him dry, and when wrapped in furs and his travelling poncho then he needn’t worry about the chill. The actions took little time, and with it sorted, he took to preparing the firepit, his attention torn between the movement of his hands and his companion.
She was enamoured with nature, that much had become clear. On more than a few occasions, he had caught her glancing at flowers or the insects that adorned them. A curious trait. Mori had a quiet appreciation for the beauty of the natural world, but his interests were always far more anthropological. Thoughts, concerns, observations, each was always turned toward his fellow man rather than the world that they inhabited. So it was that he noticed this peculiarity, and he filed it away.
"Personal curiosity,” He responded simply, placing a series of rocks in a make-shift firebreak around where he intended to create the little campfire that would allow for the softening of travel tack and the brewing of tea, "It was something of an intellectual awakening, or I suppose you could say it challenged me philosophically, having lived through it.” It was all but an admission of his nation of origin.
Mori’s eyes turned away from his task, and toward Yukari. She was fair, but there was something about her that set parts of Mori on edge. Her tone of voice, he reasoned after a moment. Each word was measured, the tone carried a careful neutrality, that of an observer describing what she witnessed with dispassionate ease. Ah, that was the approach. She cared for nature, she was an intellectual, the cards that he had been dealt became clearer in his mind.
"I find that when people are challenged, put under pressure, they reveal their true nature,” He spoke pleasantly, "I believe that is the rationale behind the chunin exams, as silly as they are to think back on. But the plague, well, that provided a similar situation for an entire system. Nations are made up of people, each individual serving as a cell of the organism… And Kumogakure failed in response to the plague, its immune system buckled.”
"A failure in how the organism was built, a flaw created where evolution was not allowed to take place. The artificiality of the village rendered it vulnerable to the most humble of living things, a bacteria.” |
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bonobo
has written 42 posts
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