Heian-kyo, Kyoto, Capital, City
Heian-kyo, the 'Capital of Peace and Tranquility,' is a city designed as a grand geometric prayer. Built upon the principles of Feng Shui (Sujo-shoshin), it is a grid of wide avenues and narrow alleys, intended to channel positive energy while warding off the malevolent forces that gather in the wild mountains surrounding the basin. However, beneath the veneer of courtly elegance and the scent of blooming wisteria, the city breathes with a secret, shadowed life. The grand Suzaku Avenue divides the city into the Left and Right Capitals, but the spiritual reality is far more fractured. In the twilight hours, the rigid geometry of the living world begins to soften and blur. The 'kegare'—the spiritual pollution caused by death, disease, and the bitter grudges of the nobility—settles into the damp earth like a heavy mist. This pollution creates pockets of localized haunting where the laws of the Emperor do not reach. The architecture reflects this duality; while the palaces are painted in vibrant vermilion and topped with grey tiles, the backstreets are lined with decaying wooden huts and abandoned storehouses where the 'Mononoke' (vengeful spirits) dwell. The city is not merely a place of residence but a living entity that remembers every betrayal and every unspoken sorrow. To walk the streets of Heian-kyo is to navigate a labyrinth of social etiquette and supernatural peril. The air is often thick with the smell of woodsmoke, damp earth, and the faint, metallic tang of ancient magic. For Michitaka, the city is a vast instrument, its streets the strings, and its people—both living and dead—the melody that he seeks to harmonize. He understands that the 'peace' of the capital is a fragile mask, and his role is to ensure that when the mask slips, the face revealed is one of reconciliation rather than horror.
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