Another one? Mt. Hakurei collapsed and disappeared overnight, and we're just barely over THAT. With all the geological features vanishing left and right, I'm surprised there are any left for Kagome's modern day Tokyo. Does she ever get confused about that? I'm a very landmark-oriented navigator of my environment, so if it were me, I would probably be baffled by seeing a whole host of actual MOUNTAINS on the horizon that don't exist at all in a time that's supposed to be the future.
At the very least, I would have QUESTIONS. That no one could answer, of course, but that seems to be my perpetual condition anyway, so...
No matter how big a bug is, infestations are a slog to get rid of, it seems. Kagura complains about how there always seems to be more despite how many she's already killed, and I can empathize - I recently had to call pest control for a little bug issue of my own. Thankfully it wasn't advanced, but it was still pretty frustrating.
Kagura hums a plume of smoke in the trees she sees some distance away, and when she arrives at the fire, it's consuming a tree on which a cluster of the insects all around the trunk. Kohaku is standing before it, mask on, clearly the one who set the bugs alight. Kagura asks him conversationally if he's found a nest, and what the insects even are. He readily informs her that these are Yadori Sanagi, and how strange it is that these parasites that normally infest large youkai would have nests out in the open like this. Kagura remarks upon how much he knows about these things, seeming almost contemplative.
Later, as they're flying over the landscape on her feather, Kagura's questions get a LOT less casual. She asks if he knows anything, and when he responds with confusion, she tells him not to play dumb. More specifically she wants him to tell her why Naraku ordered them out to play pest control, and kill all the Yadori Sanagi they see. Kohaku haltingly says he doesn't know, but she's unconvinced, asking if he's heard anything, since he's far more trusted than her. He remains quiet.
I feel like... trees shouldn't have motion blur applied to them.
Kagura and Kohaku stared, both alarmed that the mountain seemed to MOVE. Then Kagura notices a saimyoushou wasp hovering over her shoulder, and interprets its buzzing at them as a message to return, which she is quick to obey. Kohaku rides along in his habitual silence, convinced he wasn't imagining the mountain moving just then. Yeah, that's probably not something it would occur to me to imagine either.
A narrow sky transition panel takes us to where Inuyasha and company stand at the sheer edge of a rocky cliff, Kagome uttering a reaction of amazement.
Did I say cliff? I meant CRATER.
With a curious Shippou peeking over his shoulder, Miroku wonders aloud if the rumor among the villagers is true. The "rumor" that Sango repeats is that the mountain that was here vanished overnight seven days before, is that really the proper word for it? I'd think the locals would have a pretty good idea of where their local landmarks are and if they're STILL THERE.
Kagome, on the other hand, says she's wondering if this has a connection to the Yadori Sanagi flying around all over the place. Inuyasha remains quiet, until he can say that there's still a very faint trace of Naraku's smell lingering around the place. This seems to strike the rest of the group with a stony, serious attitude, while Inuyasha adds that there's the smell of another youkai pervading the area, which suggests it's been there for quite a while. Miroku asks if Inuyasha can follow that smell, and Inuyasha indignantly answers that he can, saying they should get going.
In another part of the wooded hills at dusk (presumably), in that precarious little hut on the side of a steep cliff area, Kohaku sits at the open window looking out over the landscape. He thinks about the Yadori Sanagi and the moving mountain, how the parasites had lost their home, unable to stay in the large youkai anymore. He reflects on Naraku ordering his minions to kill the bugs, which he is sure to make sure others don't find out about them and why they were suddenly swarming around. It's not difficult for him to put the pieces together; the mountain was probably the giant youkai that the Yadori Sanagi were driven from.
Hakudoushi emerges from deeper in the hut, complaining that it's a bad habit of Kagura's to go out on her own. A common issue that misogynists who hate women with autonomy have, it seems. With a smirk, he rhetorically asks what could make Naraku keep such an untrustworthy woman alive. Kohaku glares, but it's a silent glare.
Meanwhile, Kagura is thinking of only one thing - that it's certain the mountain was alive. She wonders what that jerk Naraku is up to now, but she'll have a time figuring it out from her position no doubt.
Good thing Naraku isn't particularly good at hiding his tracks.
Inuyasha announces that the youkai he smelled is close when Kagome draws his attention to some movement in their direct path, trees and earth heaving in front of them. She stutters about the mountain, and I don't think she's concerned about a localized earthquake.
Looks like something they'd make a movie about devastating Tokyo in the future.
Kagome yelps in alarm, Sango remarking in horrified disbelief that this is the very youkai they've been looking for. It must have some damn good hearing, because it turns bulging eyes and jagged protruding stone teeth on their TINY group, and, well...
"NO WITNESSES!"
Inuyasha demands to know what the fuck this thing is doing so suddenly over his shoulder, adding a paranoid question on whether the mountain youkai is an underling of Naraku. Through the snapping of the trees growing in his face as he moves in ways they didn't grow to withstand, he asks if Inuyasha just mentioned Naraku. It tells the group that this is the name of the douchbag who entered his body and disturbed his sleep. Like those mythical spiders that crawl in your mouth at night apparently. Inuyasha appears in awe that Naraku went spelunking in this giant youkai's guts.
At a distance, Kagura is hovering in the air watching the mountain youkai. Now that she's confirmed it's 100% real, she can't help but wonder just WHAT is going on here. Meanwhile, the mountain youkai complains about Naraku releasing all this NASTY miasma into him, waking him from his 200-year-long sleep. Well, I guess it makes sense that he woke up in a bad mood, but it seems like 200 years is a bit long for a nap.
My judgment aside, the mountain youkai says that Naraku stole his "protecting stone" and escaped, the term evoking a little confusion in Inuyasha and Miroku, as well as myself.
My guy, you're just hangry. Have some BREAKFAST or something.
Again, while he carries Kagome away from the raging fist of the raging beast, Inuyasha yells at the stupid bastard that THEY'RE also going after Naraku. He has to dodge another stone limb swinging for him though. Once he's landed and deposited Kagome on the ground, he draws Tessaiga, prepared for a fight. But Miroku calls for him not to kill the mountain youkai, because he wants to talk to him. The infuriated thing seems quite BEYOND talking, and I'm not the only one who thinks so.
Because Inuyasha yells that he KNOWS not to kill the mountain youkai.
Good fucking luck, is all I can say.So, what did I think of this chapter overall? I do absolutely LOVE the giant mountain monster's design. The bulging eyes, massive stone fangs, and trees growing all over its body really drive home how terrifyingly LARGE this creature is. It also utilizes this animist concept that EVERYTHING has a spirit, which stretches the limits of what can be possessed of an identity and life. Do all the trees snapping in half on his body have individual spirits, crying out in pain over his rapid movements? Do the adjacent mountains also have spirits of their own, and Naraku just took his pick of the lot? Does the whole island, or even the planet, have their unique spirits and the ability to potentially animate? What a horrifying prospect!
BTW: If you haven't seen the series "The Moon Woke Up" on Youtube, please go and give it a watch - it's VERY entertaining, and appropriate for spooky season with its theme of cosmic horror.
Unfortunately, with how cool and terrifying this is, it also begs some pretty important questions almost immediately. How is this mountain youkai MOVING for him to not create earthquakes with every step? The villagers apparently just said that the mountain vanished, not that there were massive disturbances accompanying the disappearance, and that just doesn't seem possible. There should also be a VISIBLE trail of destruction caused by the movement of something that huge, and Inuyasha wouldn't have to use his nose at all. Unless this big guy floats or teleports here to there, I just don't see how this would be anything other than a kaiju absolutely WRECKING everything in his path like good ol' Godzilla.
Other than that, Hakudoushi's comments on Kagura and her place in Naraku's "family" of incarnations and servants raised my hackles. They're very reminiscent of a traditionalist patriarchal view of suspicion on spirited young women who act independently as opposed to in the interests of their male relatives. Kagura's situation has become a somewhat stereotypical one; she is a girl who has ambitions to go out and be the architect of her own destiny, but has been roped into a situation where she is the unwilling caregiver for the offspring of a cruel man, both of whom absolutely LOATHE her and her ungovernable being. The tension between Kagura's almost "traditionally feminine" role that Naraku and the rest of them are trying to force her into, and Kagura's unabashed individuality and sense of identity that is SEPARATE from that is really highlighted with Hakudoushi's comment about her having the "bad habit" of going off on her own. It's untrustworthy behavior not just because she could be out there working against the widely hated Naraku, but also because she should be actively hovering around Hakudoushi, taking care of HIM and HIS NEEDS.
Profoundly infuriating stuff, especially when there are certain patriarchal factions increasingly trying to minimize women and our autonomy at large. I've always loved Kagura and her representation of a wild and free woman fighting against her bonds wherever she can. She is iconic, she is beautiful, and in a world full of tradwife influencers, I'll always prefer to be a wind witch.