Samurai
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:52:00
Please, never tell anyone.
Not even Sir Niiro.

:52:03
Do you understand?
:52:06
Yes, sir. I'm not Okiku of Sagamiya
for nothing... I know that much.

:52:11
The blood of a samurai family
runs in Sir Niiro's veins.

:52:16
I cannot reveal their name, but they are
of exceptional legacy and status.

:52:22
Sir?
:52:22
Sir?
But, he is the son of a concubine...

:52:25
...or rather, I should say, adolescent
mistakes resulted in his birth.

:52:34
The woman... gave birth to him
back in her home town.

:52:39
There was a reason
for that.

:52:41
It was not possible for the son to
be recognized by the father.

:52:44
It so happens that the woman's father
and I were very close friends...

:52:50
...so, recognizing how sad
the situation was...

:52:53
...I chose to take young Niiro
and his mother with me...

:52:57
...and we proceeded
to a certain place.

:52:59
It was the house of a physician, who
worked for a major Daimyo.

:53:02
We went there so that the
child could be adopted.

:53:05
Instead of growing up in a merchant's
house like mine, it would be better...

:53:08
...for him to be raised in the house of a
physician with samurai connections.

:53:13
That was what we... the child's
mother and I... concluded.

:53:19
But, when young Niiro turned
13, the physician was...

:53:23
...transferred to a country fief
within his Lord's domain...

:53:26
...where, later, he contracted
an illness and died.

:53:30
That happened when
Sir Niiro was 22.

:53:34
However, he had no desire to succeed
his physician "father."

:53:39
Together with his mother, he
left for Edo, in search of me.

:53:44
He said that he had no intention
of becoming a physician...

:53:47
...but instead wanted to become
a samurai of rank.

:53:50
I myself believe that nothing is
impossible, at least in spirit...

:53:54
...so, after discussing
it with his mother...

:53:56
...we let him study at a dojo
in Ichigaya Yarai, under...

:53:59
...Sir Todo Tatewaki, a master
of the Jigen-lchi Style.


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