
Yasha Goro: Ch.2 – “Empire’s Feast”
The Stain on the Abyss
The Abyssal Temple sulked.
Its black stone walls, once pulsing with eager hunger before the Ronin Rumble, now throbbed with a slower, irritated rhythm. Crimson runes crawled along the stone like veins that had cooled, their light dull and sullen. Chains dangled from the ceiling, not wild and rattling as before, but swaying in short, angry jerks, as if the temple itself was clenching its fists.
Smoke roamed the floor in restless circles before finally coiling around the massive figure kneeling at the center of the chamber. Yasha Gorō’s bulk dwarfed the altar stones; his ghost-white skin glowed faintly in the sour red light, muscles knotted and still. His fiery mane spilled over his shoulders, streaked with sweat and dried ash from the mortal world.
Before him stood the ancient mirror.
Its iron frame writhed with carved demons, mouths frozen open, claws sinking into the warped surface. The mirror itself did not ripple tonight. It glared. Dark, flat, reflective, like an eye that refused to blink.
Yasha’s huge hands dug into the stone, claws scoring grooves into the floor.
Yasha Gorō: Spirits… why do you sulk?
His voice rolled through the chamber like a landslide.
Yasha Gorō: Goro went to war. Goro crushed bodies. Goro gave you screams. The temple should be laughing.
The crimson runes flickered, then steadied.
When the whispers came, they did not sound pleased.
Spirits: Goro…
The voices slithered out from everywhere at once—chains, cracks, the mirror’s frame—layered, wet, accusing.
Spirits: You went to war… and you did not stand at the end.
Smoke climbed his back in thin, angry tendrils. The mirror’s surface twitched, then burst into motion, boiling with shadow and color until images clawed their way free.
Korakuen Hall appeared in the glass.
The Survivor Series main event played on the living mirror in jagged, feverish cuts: Saikō Sasori, painted and measured; Daichi Sasaki roaring as he planted bodies with Sentinel’s Judgment; Takeshi Nomura falling first, Nygma stacking him and grinning; Chuluun Bold smashing through people like a runaway train.
Yasha watched himself charge into the fray—each clothesline like a guillotine, each slam a minor earthquake. He watched men crumble under the Yasha Bomb, saw their souls flicker in the mirror as the abyss drank deep.
But the spirits weren’t interested in those moments.
The mirror leapt ahead, dragging him to the one they wanted.
LuLu Biggs stood on the top rope—enormous, ridiculous, arms spread to a howling crowd. Yasha saw his own body on the canvas below, rising to his knees, teeth bared, ready to meet the impact and turn it into another sacrifice.
He remembered the sound before the image even played it back: the thunder of Biggs’ body crashing down.
Super Pancake Flop.
The mirror showed it again. And again. A grotesque loop of flesh and impact.
Biggs fell from the sky like a meteor, crushing Yasha’s chest, driving the breath from his lungs. The referee’s hand slapped the mat—one, two, three—while the crowd erupted, shocked that the abyssal monster had been pinned at all.
Yasha’s claws bit deeper into the stone.
Yasha Gorō: That was team war. Not single combat. Goro still has no defeat in one-on-one.
The spirits hissed, unimpressed.
Spirits: Excuses. The mortal world saw you fall. They saw your shoulders on the mat. They saw the glutton from the other empire pin the beast of the abyss.
The image froze on the moment of impact: Biggs sprawled across him, tongue out, arms spread in ugly celebration, Yasha’s limbs twisted under the weight.
Spirits: They laughed, Goro.
The chains above rattled violently, the sound sharp and bitter.
Spirits: They called you mortal. They called you overrated. They said the monster bleeds like any other man.
The mirror shivered, the picture distorting so that Biggs’ grinning face loomed close, far larger than life, swollen with smug triumph.
Something in Yasha’s neck twitched.
Yasha Gorō: Goro… allowed that blow.
Smoke hissed against his skin, as if it had been burned.
Spirits: Lies.
Voices overlapped, rising in pitch.
Spirits: The glutton fell from the sky and the ring shook and you did not rise before three. The abyss did not eat his soul that night. The abyss watched him leave. The stain remains.
The mirror jumped ahead again: Daichi hurling Biggs off the turnbuckles with an avalanche powerbomb; Biggs crashing down and staying down; the referee’s hand slapping three while Daichi knelt over him like an executioner.
Spirits: Another had to clean what you failed to finish.
The vision shifted once more, dragging forward to the end: Daichi gone, Nygma and Sasori left alone. Sasori coiled and snapped, La Magistral blooming out of nowhere, Nygma’s shoulders trapped, the three-count crashing down. The Scorpion King rose alone, composed, eyes like polished obsidian.
Sasori: …
The spirits echoed the image.
Spirits: One stood at the end. Not you.
Yasha’s breath burned in his throat. His claws tore a chunk of stone free.
Yasha Gorō: The Scorpion King did well. The abyss is pleased with his offering.
Spirits: The abyss is not offended by Sasori.
The mirror went dark for a heartbeat, then flared, washing the chamber in a brighter, uglier light.
Spirits: The abyss is offended by this.
The Empire’s End graphic exploded across the mirror—logos, titles, the phrase TITLE FOR TITLE flashing like a warning bell. Match after match flickered by until the mirror settled on the one the abyss clearly cared about now:
AAPW STABLE CHAMPIONSHIP – AAPW vs ULTIMATE WRESTLING
Yasha saw himself beside Ryota Arakawa, Naoko Mori, and Yuriko Tanaka, all four of them surrounding the gilded dragon plates of the Stable belts.
Across from them: Kenny Volcano, face painted with manic fire; Elizabeth Devereaux O’Rourke, cold and composed; Riko Matsumoto, sharp-eyed and ready.
And LuLu Biggs—front and center, belly barely contained, grin obscene, hand raised as if he was already telling the world the same joke again:
“I pinned the monster.”
The runes flared until the whole chamber glowed blood-red.
Spirits: Four souls from the other empire march toward you, Goro. Four offerings. One carries the taste of your failure on his flesh.
Smoke swarmed over the mirror, reshaping Biggs’ picture into something grosser—its outlines bloated, his cheeks swelling, eyes bulging with gluttony.
Spirits: The glutton fell upon you like a dying star… and lived. This must be corrected.
The chains jerked hard enough that rust rained down.
Yasha rose to his full height, the robe falling away from his shoulders as if afraid of him. His silhouette swallowed the mirror, only his crimson eyes visible in the red gloom.
Yasha Gorō: Goro remembers the weight.
His hand slammed into his own chest, right where Biggs had landed.
Yasha Gorō: Rib cracked. Breath gone. World black for three heartbeats. Goro woke to hear fools cheering.
He leaned toward the mirror until his breath fogged the surface.
Yasha Gorō: Goro has thought of nothing else.
The spirits quieted, listening.
Yasha Gorō: At Empire’s End, the abyss gets what it is owed. The glutton is first.
The mirror flickered, showing brief flashes of what he promised:
Biggs caught by the throat in Demon’s Grasp, feet kicking above the mat, eyes bulging…
Biggs driven down by Fiery Retribution, spine folding wrong…
Biggs hoisted into the sky, hanging there an impossible second before the ring exploded under a Yasha Bomb.
Yasha’s lips peeled back from his teeth.
Yasha Gorō: Goro will not just pin him. Goro will break him. Goro will crush the breath from his chest, twist his bones until they scream, and then drop him on his neck in front of both empires. Every camera will see. Every fool who laughed will watch his light go out.
The runes pulsed faster.
Spirits: And the others?
The mirror obligingly reshaped the challengers, one by one.
Kenny Volcano, painted and loud, fire and aerosol cans and wild eyes.
Elizabeth, clinical and composed, her arms folded like a judge.
Riko, calm but burning, fists clenched.
Yasha Gorō: Fire bug. Purity doll. Little striker.
He sounded bored.
Yasha Gorō: They are garnish on the plate. Goro will eat them too.
The spirits seemed almost satisfied, their tones lowering.
Spirits: Remember, Goro. The mortal world questions you now. They whisper that LuLu Biggs proved you can fall. They say you are just a big man with paint and stories.
Whispers crawled down the chains and across the floor, nipping at his ankles.
Spirits: They have forgotten what you are.
His stare hardened.
Yasha Gorō: Then Empire’s End will be a reminder.
He spread his arms wide. Smoke leapt up to cloak him, clinging to his frame like armor. The mirror’s surface boiled again, projecting a final image: the Stable belts still in AAPW hands, Biggs sprawled motionless, Kenny’s paint smeared, Elizabeth clutching her ribs, Riko staring up from the mat in dazed disbelief.
Spirits: The abyss demands correction. The stain must be washed in bone and blood.
Yasha Gorō: Good.
His voice dropped to a rumble that shook dust from the ceiling.
Yasha Gorō: Goro is hungry.
He turned from the mirror, smoke trailing from his shoulders. Each step toward the temple doors boomed like a drum. The chains whipped once more, now in approval.
At the threshold, he paused, looking back over his shoulder. The mirror reflected him not as flesh, but as a towering oni of shadow and fire.
Yasha Gorō: Tell the glutton this, spirits.
The runes brightened in answer.
Yasha Gorō: The last time he fell from the sky, he left Goro on his back.
His grin was terrible.
Yasha Gorō: This time… he leaves on a stretcher. If he leaves at all.
He pushed the doors open. Cold, colorless night rushed in, no stars visible—just a yawning, hungry dark.
The Abyssal Temple exhaled as he stepped out.
Empire’s End waited.
So did LuLu Biggs’ broken body.
The Mortal War & The Glutton’s Sentence
The warehouse smelled like metal and rain.
Isamu Endo’s private training hall sat on the edge of Tokyo’s industrial belt, tucked between shipping yards and forgotten factories. Corrugated steel walls trapped the damp air, and the only light came from hanging bulbs that buzzed and flickered like nervous ghosts. A single ring stood in the center of the concrete floor, its ropes frayed, its turnbuckles stained with old rust and older blood.
Yasha Gorō stood in the ring, bare-chested, his white skin almost luminous under the sick yellow light. Every muscle in his massive frame looked carved from stone, cords standing out along his neck and shoulders as he rolled them slowly. Each breath came out as a low rumble.
Isamu Endo watched from ringside, hands folded over the head of his cane. His suit was immaculate, not a wrinkle in sight, tie pinned with a small, unblinking oni mask. Behind his glasses, his eyes traveled over Yasha like a man inspecting a weapon he had forged himself.
Endo: You feel it, don’t you?
Yasha turned his head slightly, crimson hair brushing his jaw.
Yasha Gorō: The abyss is loud.
Endo stepped closer, cane tapping the worn mats as he walked along the apron.
Endo: The abyss is never quiet, Goro. I’m asking if you feel them. The mortals. The way they talk about you now. The way they laughed when LuLu Biggs fell on you and the referee counted three.
The words hung there, heavy and sour.
Yasha’s jaw flexed. His hand snapped out suddenly, grabbing the top rope. The cable groaned under his grip.
Yasha Gorō: Goro hears them. Little voices. Little jokes. They say the monster fell. They say the glutton proved Goro is just flesh.
Endo smiled without warmth.
Endo: Good. Let them talk. Let them doubt. Doubt makes fear taste better when it’s corrected.
He lifted his cane, pointing to the far wall. A projector hummed to life, throwing the Empire’s End graphic across the steel—title versus title, belts lined in rows, the AAPW and Ultimate Wrestling logos colliding.
Endo: But understand this. Empire’s End is not the Rumble. It is not even the Survivor match. This time, Goro, every belt is on the line. If Ultimate Wrestling steals enough gold, they steal our leverage. Our deals. Our fear. The empire weakens.
He clicked again. The image shifted to the Stable Championship match—Ryota Arakawa, Naoko Mori, Yuriko Tanaka, and Yasha Gorō facing Kenny Volcano, LuLu Biggs, Elizabeth, and Riko Matsumoto.
Endo: You see your place there?
Yasha snorted.
Yasha Gorō: Goro sees four souls that think they are hunters. The fire bug. The purity doll. The striker. The glutton.
Endo: And I see something else. I see AAPW’s monsters gathered in one ring. Ryota. Naoko. Yuriko. You. You are not simply defending belts. You are defending my investment. Haruki’s influence. Kenjiro’s legacy. Sasori’s leverage after he embarrassed Nygma in that Survivor match.
He leaned on the apron, eyes narrowing.
Endo: If Drake Nygma takes the Unified belt at Empire’s End, that will hurt. But if, on the same night, Ultimate walks out with the Stable belts as well? That tells the world our monsters aren’t monsters anymore. That they can be tamed. Pinned. Shipped overseas for ratings.
He tapped the cane against the mat.
Endo: I will not allow that. And neither will the abyss. So I’m going to ask you only once.
He met Yasha’s burning gaze.
Endo: Are you going to fix what Biggs started?
Yasha didn’t answer at once. He turned away from Endo, staring out at the empty seats that ringed the warehouse, as if seeing a different crowd superimposed on them—Korakuen’s faces twisting, half in awe, half in cruel joy, when the giant foreigner flattened him with that obscene splash.
His fingers flexed.
Yasha Gorō: Goro felt the ring break under that fall. Goro felt ribs scream. For three heartbeats, Goro’s vision went black and the glutton’s stink filled his lungs.
He tilted his head back, eyes half-lidded, as if listening to something only he could hear.
Yasha Gorō: The abyss has replayed that moment a thousand times. It whispers that Goro allowed it. That Goro forgot what he is.
He dropped his head, eyes snapping back to Endo.
Yasha Gorō: Goro is done listening.
Endo’s lips curved.
Endo: Good. Then the message is simple. At Empire’s End, you don’t just pin LuLu Biggs.
He raised a finger.
Endo: You erase him.
He stepped back, gesturing toward the far corner.
Endo: Cameras are ready. The promo will be cut in with Yuriko’s little declaration and Sasori’s sendoff. Say what you want to him. To all of them. But make it very clear the monster is not a joke.
He nodded to the crew in the shadows. A red light blinked on at the top of a single, hulking camera, its lens focused squarely on Yasha in the ring.
Endo: Whenever you’re ready, Goro.
The buzzing lights overhead seemed to fade. The distant hum of the city outside dissolved. All that remained was the red eye of the camera and Yasha’s breathing.
He stepped into the center of the ring.
For a long moment, he said nothing.
Then his lips pulled back in a slow, terrible grin.
Yasha Gorō: LuLu Biggs.
His voice rolled low, the name coming out like a bad taste.
Yasha Gorō: You remember the feeling, don’t you? Climbing. Standing on the top rope. The mortals below screaming your name. The ring small under your feet. The monster on the mat.
His hand rose, miming the wobbling balance of a big man on the turnbuckles.
Yasha Gorō: You fell from the sky like a fat star. You crashed on Goro’s chest. For three counts, the world went dark.
He tapped his own sternum, hard enough that the thump echoed.
Yasha Gorō: The referee’s hand hit the mat. One. Two. Three. And you laughed. You told the cameras you “flattened the demon.” You told your empire that monsters can be pinned.
He leaned toward the lens, red eyes burning.
Yasha Gorō: Goro heard every word.
His voice dropped even lower.
Yasha Gorō: At Empire’s End, you climb again. You always do. You are too stupid not to. You will want the same moment. The same splash. The same joke.
His fingers curled into a claw.
Yasha Gorō: This time… Goro is standing.
He snapped his arm out, seizing the air in front of him, hand closing like a trap.
Yasha Gorō: This time, Goro’s hand is around your throat. Demon’s Grasp. Your feet kick above the mat. The crowd screams, not in laughter, but in fear. Then down you go. All three hundred pounds and all that stolen pride.
He slammed an invisible body into the canvas with enough force that the ring rattled.
Yasha Gorō: Bang.
He straightened slowly.
Yasha Gorō: And that is not the end. No. That is the start. Goro will keep picking you up. Keep throwing you down. Fiery Retribution. Yasha’s Fury. Again and again until your body forgets how to stand.
He rolled his shoulders, imagining the weight.
Yasha Gorō: When Goro grows bored, he will lift you higher than you have ever been lifted. Higher than any top rope. Higher than any joke.
His hands rose above his head, fingers spread.
Yasha Gorō: The Yasha Bomb.
He dropped his arms as if slamming the entire sky.
Yasha Gorō: When you hit, the ring will jump. The ropes will shake. And every mortal watching will understand: the first fall was an accident. The second is the truth.
He let the words sink in before he turned, pacing toward the ropes, eyes never leaving the camera.
Yasha Gorō: Kenny Volcano.
He jerked his chin.
Yasha Gorō: Bring your fire. Spray your colors. Run as fast as you can. When you hit Goro, you will bounce. When Goro hits you, you will stay down.
He moved to the other side of the ring.
Yasha Gorō: Elizabeth. You like to wrestle clean, yes? All sharp lines and pretty technique. Good. Goro likes clean things.
He bared his teeth.
Yasha Gorō: They stain better.
He shifted again.
Yasha Gorō: Riko Matsumoto.
The way he said her name held a sliver of respect.
Yasha Gorō: You strike with purpose. You do not run your mouth like the glutton and the fire bug. You are a warrior. When Goro crushes you, it will be with both hands. No tricks. No jokes. Just power.
He spread his arms, encompassing something larger than the ring.
Yasha Gorō: You four walk into Empire’s End thinking you fight for your company. You think you fight for your pride. For belts.
He shook his head slowly.
Yasha Gorō: You fight for the right to leave.
His voice became a growl that seemed to vibrate in the ropes.
Yasha Gorō: AAPW will not lose these belts. Ryota’s rage will not allow it. Naoko’s cold fury will not allow it. Yuriko’s bloodlust will not allow it.
He thumped a fist against his chest again.
Yasha Gorō: And Goro’s hunger will never allow it.
He stepped closer to the camera until his face filled the frame—white skin, red eyes, teeth like broken stone.
Yasha Gorō: The abyss watched you pin Goro once, LuLu Biggs. It did not forget. It did not forgive.
His eyes narrowed to burning slits.
Yasha Gorō: At Empire’s End, the abyss counts with the referee.
He lifted his hand and chopped it through the air three times, each one sharp.
Yasha Gorō: One… for the laugh you took. Two… for the doubt you gave them.
His grin widened, monstrous.
Yasha Gorō: Three… for your soul.
He held the stare another heartbeat, then turned away, the promo ending not with a catchphrase, but with the sight of his massive back as he walked to the ropes and stepped out of the ring like the camera no longer mattered.
The red light clicked off.
Endo watched him descend to the floor, the projector shutting down behind them. The Empire’s End logo faded from the steel wall, swallowed by shadows.
Endo: That will do.
Yasha paused beside him.
Yasha Gorō: It is not enough yet.
Endo arched a brow.
Endo: No?
Yasha looked toward the warehouse doors, where the world beyond waited—Tokyo, the arenas, the lights, the doubters.
Yasha Gorō: It will be enough… when the glutton does not get back up.
He pushed the door open, cold night air sliding over his skin like a promise. The city lights glowed in the distance, tiny and fragile.
Yasha stepped out.
The mortal world would see LuLu Biggs’ joke corrected soon enough.
The abyss would feast.