#canon Lloyd
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amequeer · 3 months ago
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The absolute rizz he has
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he pulled not one, but TWO (2) non-human beings
nhlnh (non-human loving non-human)
Art requests and asks are open!
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thecatundertheladder · 6 months ago
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Lloyd: So you're an Oni. Which means you can shapeshift and look however you want, right? Mystake: Yes Lloyd: So why did you choose to look like a little old lady? Mystake: It's easier to get away with stuff. Lloyd: Like what? Mystake: Tax fraud.
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writer-room · 1 month ago
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Dragons Rising really is the best sequel series for diehard Lloyd enjoyers, cause, yes, we acknowledge that he has panic attacks, crappy mental health, and also he's the grandson of God, but you know what really gets me? Lloyd is tired.
He's plagued with migraines (the visions are also migraines don't @ me), he's bemoaning about never getting a good nights sleep, hes struggling so hard to be a good leader and clearly doesn't have all the answers, and he's just some 20yo who's been cursed with saving the world since he was younger than his own students.
That's the realest way Lloyd could've ever been written in a future-series. It's what he is. But he's not angry (usually), he's not telling everyone to deal with it themselves, and he's not giving up. I love when Lloyd has finally had enough, but the real, genuine Lloyd? He'd never stop caring. He cares so much it'd kill him. He's tired and by god does he refuse to quit. I love that kid. Please get him a warm blanket
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nightfall-cat · 7 months ago
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This is what happened in the game right?
Do NOT repost!
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anakinisvaderisanakin · 8 months ago
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Nothing like the best Star Wars character to celebrate May the 4th.
No, you can't change my mind.
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ninjautizm · 2 months ago
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SOME GARSAKO DOODLES!! Mostly pregnant Misako,, and garsako wearing (wedding) kimonos :D 💜🤎
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ghostcrackerrs · 10 months ago
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average lloyd and harumi conversation
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ninjagood4 · 1 month ago
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I would love to see more of them and explore this duo! Lloyd and Clancy are too underrated, and imagine if this serpentine could return to Dragons Rising, and let's say he and Lloyd get a joint mission. They could reminisce about their adventures and thus make "The Splinter in the Blind Man's Eye" a canon novel (which MAYBE a canon)‼️ But in general, I wouldn't mind seeing an animated version of this novel 🫠
Lloyd has tried so many times to make a serpentine friend, and finally found one who won't screw him over 🐍
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pineapple-guy228 · 7 months ago
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He's alive!
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withdenim · 1 year ago
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I may never finish this so before I forget to post it. Have my contribution to dragons rising.
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ninjagogifs · 24 days ago
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fist-of-vengeance · 7 months ago
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john locke is such an absolute nutjob and im obsessed with him. imagine having the world's most horrendous daddy issues and chosing to cope with this by forcibly adopting everyone you meet. even if they already have a father. john saw micheal's dysfunctional relationship with walt and went "okay, my son now." charlie's struggling with addiction? adoption time. oh claire's mad at him? i am her dad now and also im raising aaron. boone? my son. this random hitchhiker? my son. dude is collecting surrogate children like pokemon, and he's not even a good father figure. he frequently causes problems for the people in question. BUT BY GOD HE DOES NOT LET THAT STOP HIM
that cop eddie knew all he needed to do was get in john's car and trauma dump about his shitty father and john would immediately go "okay yeah you're my son now."
ben probably could've manipulated him twice as effectively if he used this strategy, but instead he was too busy projecting his own daddy issues by trying to make john kill his abusive dad like he did. meanwhile john is reliving the cycle getting conned by ben over and over again just like he trusted his father. they're competing in the daddy issues olympics and no one is winning
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sunflowercider · 2 months ago
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I adore the fact that Lloyd likes to read for entertainment. I also like thinking about Lloyd's inability to chill the fuck out. I think it's funny.
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lloydskywalkers · 2 months ago
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three sword style
Or, Lloyd and his evolving relationship with what it means to choose a weapon, as supervised by Kai. listen I know Wu technically gives them all their new weapons in season 11 according to some random book referenced in the ninjago wiki (or at least Lloyd’s sword) but you know who ACTUALLY has a degree in making weapons and canonically has made a golden sword SO. My canon now. (also spot the brain rot I infected myself with in the title) 
Lloyd grows up in a world of weaponry and at the speed of light. 
There are worse ways to grow up, maybe. There are also better ones — one where kids get to grow up instead blasting into teenager-hood in the span of seconds — but Lloyd doesn’t like to complain about where he’s ended up. 
Second to the speed of light thing, though, the weapons part is pretty big. 
Weapons determine the single biggest turning point in his life, after all. It’s the Golden Weapons that make him the Green Ninja, a title that’s a lot more important than Lloyd’s ever been. It’s also that particular title that makes Lloyd the weapon, so that’s fun. Ninjago’s prophesied emergency failsafe, the Green Ninja — that’s him. 
On a nicer note, it’s the Fangblade that gets him a big brother, and proves that there’s someone out there who cares about Lloyd over some stupid weapon, so hah. 
Getting back to the point, though—
Weapons. Lloyd’s been making do without one, and he’s been making pretty good do, thank you very much. He’s got his power, and he’s got himself. That’s all the weapon Lloyd needs. 
But no one else seems to agree, and since ninety percent of the time whatever prophecy-of-doom crops up this month involves cursed weaponry of some sort, they all figure it’s a good a reason as any to stick Lloyd with a reliable weapon. 
And while wielding all the elements is one thing, wielding every kind of weapon at once would be kind of difficult, even for his dad. 
So Lloyd finally gets an actual, for-real, decision that he gets to make all by himself. 
It’s a monumentous occasion — and yes, that is a word, Nya, Lloyd knows some stuff — so if Lloyd was smart he’d treasure it and take his time. 
With that in mind, it takes all of thirty seconds for Lloyd to choose. This is only mildly insulting to some parties. 
“Fine, sure, go with the most basic pick in the world,” Jay scoffs. “Swords. Boring.”
“Sounds like you’re just jealous,” Kai shoots back.
“Jealous of swords? Please. I just thought Lloyd was a little more creative than that.”
“I like swords,” Lloyd says, at a loss. 
“Jay is only relieved that no one will one-up his nunchuck expertise, now,” Zane smiles. 
Jay sputters indignantly. “No one’s one-upping me, I’m the best there is!” 
“Uh-huh,” Cole shakes his head. “Well, if that’s what Lloyd wants, that’s the end of it.” His mouth quirks. “Means more training time for Kai, anyways.” 
“More training to be better than you,” Kai retorts. 
“Like the rest of you, Lloyd will continue to work toward mastering at least the basics of any weapon,” Sensei Wu sighs. “A ninja confined to one weapon alone—”
“Is a dead ninja,” Jay nods.
Sensei Wu cuts his eyes at him. “That is not how I was going to finish.”
“The point stands though, right?”
“The point,” Sensei Wu pinches the bridge of his nose. “Is that while Lloyd will continue to train with all of you, focusing on swordsmanship will become the priority. So yes, in a way. More training for Kai.”
Lloyd rubs the back of his neck. “Sorry…?”
“Why are you sorry?” Kai beams, more proud than smug. “I finally get an official katana apprentice. We’re gonna be awesome.”
And that alone, Lloyd thinks, makes it worth all the complaining. 
“Great,” Jay throws his arms up. “Now we’re stuck with two slice ‘em dice ‘em ninjas.”
“Oh, c’mon,” Cole says. “It’s Kai, how dangerous can he be.”
“I resent that,” Kai says. “Just because you beat me once or twice—”
“Try thirteen times, and counting.”
“—it does not mean I’m not as dangerous as you,” Kai narrows his eyes. 
“Oh yeah? Wanna prove it?”
“Bring it on, rock man.”
“Not in the kitchen, for FSM’s sake—“
Whether or not Cole beats him (which he does, pretty badly, because Cole is kinda terrifying like that) Lloyd knows that to some degree, Kai is dangerous. Very dangerous, with or without his swords.
It’s hard to think of Kai like that, though. When Lloyd thinks of Kai, he thinks of warm arms wrapped tight around him in the Fire Temple. Thinks of the first hugs he’s gotten from someone other than his father that felt like home. Thinks of protection — thinks safe. Thinks family. 
He’s wanted to be like Kai for a while, now. So yeah. It’s an easy choice. 
Plus, swords are way cool.
______
Kai starts training him in Dareth’s dojo. It takes about a week for them to get banished to the roof of their apartment, which is mostly Lloyd’s fault — but Kai’s the one supposed to be teaching him, so he can take the blame this time. 
…well, maybe Lloyd’s the one who keeps losing his grip on the katana, but that’s not quite his fault, either.  
Kai is better than basically any swordsman on this side of Ninjago in years, if not all Ninjago. Lloyd knows this because Uncle Wu told him so, and because Kai wipes the floor with him the first, second, and twenty-ninth time they spar.
“The point is to keep your grip on the katana, you know,” Kai says, as Lloyd retrieves his sword from where it went flying (again). “What kind of hold it that supposed to be, butterfingers deluxe?”
“You said not to grip it too tight,” Lloyd complains. 
Kai rolls his eyes. “Yeah, ‘cause you had it in a death hold. I didn’t say, ‘let go and let it fly’.”
“I didn’t let it fly, you knocked it out of my hand!”
“Aha, so you’re admitting I won. Again.”
“N-no!” Lloyd protests. “I’m just warming up. I’ll show you this time.” 
But as Kai takes his stance again, his own katana held with a kind of grace Lloyd has zero idea how to ever accomplish, Lloyd thinks he might be a bit of a lost cause. 
It’s difficult, because every time he goes to swing his sword, his power thrums in his blood, in his hands, always ready to lash out. It’s quickly become a habit, to start every fight slinging green blasts around. Lloyd’s already grown fond of the little bell-like sounds his power makes, the steady pulse as bright green builds in his palms. 
Lloyd is the Green Ninja, after all. His power is what makes him, well, him. He’s his own best weapon — he’s the one the prophecy needs to make things right.
Kai keeps putting weapons in his hands, anyways. 
Training katanas, mostly. He got to hold the Sword of Fire once, before his dad took it. It was beautiful — Lloyd kinda gets why Kai’s so up in arms about it getting stolen.
That and the whole don’t-give-Garmadon-the-Golden-Weapons thing.
Kai seems confused that Lloyd remembers it, which is weird because the Golden Weapons are kind of a big deal, but Lloyd decides to chalk it up to all the other weirdness in his life. 
The first true katana Kai ever gives Lloyd is…not quite as cool as the Sword of Fire, and definitely not as beautiful, but in a way that Lloyd likes. 
“We’re kinda short on weapons,” Kai admits, rubbing the back of his neck. “And I don’t exactly have access to smithing equipment right now, which means you’re stuck with one of my old ones. Sorry.”
“Why are you sorry?” Lloyd adjusts his hands around the hilt, taking an experimental swing. “This is a great sword!”
“Yeah, okay, liar — and don’t swing it around like that, you look like you’re waving a pool noodle.” 
Kai grabs his hands, forcing Lloyd’s arms to hold steady.
“Like this, okay?” Kai says. “We’re gonna start by practicing single movements.” 
“Aw,” Lloyd visibly wilts. “More katas? I thought I was gonna get to learn some cool moves.”
“This is a cool move. If you’re good, you finish things in one hit,” Kai says. “One strike, and the fight’s over.”
“Like a headshot,” Lloyd nods.
“No,” Kai rolls his eyes. “This is not a video game. This is a real sword, and you’re going to learn to use it right.”
“And then we can do the cool moves?”
Kai narrows his eyes. “Do your katas or I’m firing you.”
Lloyd sticks his tongue out at him. “You can’t fire me. I’m the Green Ninja.”
“Yeah? I’ll demote you to Green Washer-of-Dishes for the rest of the month.”
“No! You can’t, Nya and I have a deal!” 
Jokes aside, Lloyd is sure to remind Kai, as he scrubs dishes and Kai dries them, that he does take training seriously.
He takes all his training seriously. It’s kind of his only job. 
Lloyd practices hits until his knuckles split and scab, masters high kicks with shins colored violent blues and purples, forms green starbursts in his hands until his fingers crack and bleed. 
When his palms blister from the sword hilt on top of it all, Kai makes him hold still until he’s wrapped the first-aid bandage around his hands at least five times, then shoves his old gloves on him when he starts to form calluses.
He wants to argue that he doesn’t need them, but Lloyd still wears the gloves everyday and tucks them away each night, storing them with the other few, treasured things he’s been gifted.
______
The longer he trains with swords, the more Lloyd gains calluses and nicked fingers and perpetually smells a little like cloves. 
That last part Lloyd enjoys, though he’ll never admit it. He’s not about to go and tell people he enjoys cleaning stuff, no thanks. 
But there’s something nice about helping Kai take care of the katanas, in a relaxing sort of way. The wood-smoke tang of cloves smells like home, which Lloyd treasures, because home isn’t something he’s very used to. 
Treasures is probably an understatement. Lloyd latches onto it like he’s starving. Part of it’s because this is something he gets to have with Kai, all by himself. He’s never had something like that before, either — a special thing that’s shared just with him. 
Well, maybe besides the green gi, but the Green Ninja is something that belongs to everyone. Whatever Lloyd does when he puts the green gi on is everyone’s business, since it determines the fate of the world or something like that, and it doesn’t really even feel like his. Not yet, at least. 
But sitting cross-legged in the weapons room while Kai teaches him how to clean katanas without damaging them — that belongs to Lloyd. 
He learns a lot with it too, because Kai always starts rambling about ten minutes in — not the confident, cocky way he does sometimes in front of everyone else, but in an honest way that Lloyd isn’t entirely sure he even means to be. 
“—not the best oil, but it works when you’re in a pinch. S’what my parents left behind, at the shop, so it’s good enough.”
Lloyd looks up at him, curious. He keeps quiet — Kai and Nya don’t talk much about their parents, if at all. Lloyd gets it, of course, but it makes the little tidbits they share valuable. 
“I don’t remember a lot about my parents,” Kai continues. “But I remember some things. About my dad. He was a great smith, I know that much. Could make about anything. Swords were his favorite, though.” 
Uncle Wu’s candlelight casts Kai’s eyes with a glow that makes it seem like he’s on fire himself, flickering and fading. He looks very far away, all of the sudden, and Lloyd has the urge to grab for his arm and make him stay here. 
“Guess I latched onto that,” Kai smiles ruefully, and he’s back again. “Never could reach his level, but I learned how to make an okay sword.”
Lloyd chews on his lip. He knows all about latching on to your parents — wanting to be great at the things they are.
That maybe, if you’re good enough, they’ll be proud enough to come back. 
He doesn’t think that’s a happy thing to say, though, so he tells Kai instead, “I think your swords are great.”
Kai’s lips quirk. “Uh-huh. Then you better treat them like it.”
“I do,” Lloyd protests. He gestures at the katana across his lap. “See? I did it perfect this time.”
Kai nods his head at a spot Lloyd noticeably missed. He flushes.
“Almost perfect.”
“Practice, young student,” Kai says, in a gravely voice that’s probably supposed to sound like Uncle Wu. “A thousand hours of practice for you.”
“Ugh,” Lloyd groans. “All I do is practice. Practice practice practice, and then I’m still not enou—”
He cuts off. Oops. Maybe Kai’s honestly is a little too contagious. 
Kai goes quiet, hands stilling on the katana. There’s a deep furrow between his eyes as he stares at Lloyd, in a way that makes him feel a little like a bug under a microscope. Or that Kai can see right through him, which is bad, because all Lloyd’s got in him is a bunch of tangled thoughts and worries and nothing an actual ninja should have. 
“You know,” he says, carefully. “We probably need to stock up on the good oil. I’m kinda running low.”
Lloyd knows darn well Kai has enough choji oil to get them through an apocalypse. 
“Yeah?”
“Yeah,” Kai nods. “If we go now, we can probably hit the convenience store, too. Get a sugar boost before—”
“I’m in!” Lloyd shoots to his feet before he can stop himself, any protests forgotten. Training has included a healthy diet lately, so Lloyd doesn’t collapse and pass out because his blood’s eighty percent sugar — Zane’s words, not his. 
If he needs to get his blood sugar up, why can’t he just eat sugar all the time? It makes no sense. 
“Do not tell the others,” Kai hisses, as they make their way into the city. “Especially Cole, if you don’t wanna lose your sweets before you can take a bite. We’re just getting polish for katanas, as far as you know.”
“I know nothing,” Lloyd says obediently. “Hey, do you think we could use olive oil on the katanas?”
Kai’s stare could heat iron. “I’ll kill you.” 
“It was a joke! A joke, heh.”
______
For all that Lloyd’s life revolves around training to defeat anyone and everyone, the guys are still weirdly protective. Over anyone and everyone, including Lloyd himself. 
“C’mon, I can handle the cool attacks,” Lloyd complains, as Kai drags him into place.
“They’re not cool — okay, they’re kinda cool — but that’s not what we’re learning now,” Kai sighs. “You’re learning Aikido. Well, a form of it, technically. It’s focused on defending yourself, but in a way that lessens the chances of injuring your attacker.”  
Lloyd frowns. “Isn’t that counterintoo — counterintuitive?”
“Big words today,” Kai mutters. He shakes his head. “And it’s counterproductive, by the way, but — no,  because now that we’re training, half your attackers are us, and I’d like to leave practice with my arms intact.”
Lloyd grins. “So you’re admitting I’m better than you.” 
“Don’t put words in my mouth,” Kai says pointedly.
“Don’t need to. You’ve already admitted defeat.”
“And, brat—” Lloyd yelps as Kai digs his knuckles into his hair. “Defending yourself is incredibly important.”
As they settle back into position, Kai pauses, a muscle in his jaw working. He looks as if he’s having an internal argument with himself, before finally sighing. 
“The thing about any weapon, but especially swords,” he says, correcting Lloyd’s grip on the katana. “Is that they can be used a lot of ways. But the one thing you never, ever want to forget—”
And Kai’s tone grows serious, his jaw tensing again. “Is that they can kill.”
Lloyd looks down, to the sharp edges of the blade. It suddenly feels a bit heavier, and the room just a bit darker. 
“The way we’re training you, the way we were trained, we don’t always — we try to avoid it.” Kai’s voice wavers, and for a moment, Lloyd remembers that Kai isn’t all that much older than he is. 
Well, now, especially. 
“But sometimes, it’s…you don’t really…well.” He lets out a breath. “This is a sword. It can take a life really quick, if you aren’t careful. And sometimes, you don’t get the choice to be careful or not.”
Lloyd swallows. He hasn’t thought about it much — hasn’t wanted to, but it lives in his mind like a terrible itch he can’t get rid of. 
He’s no stranger to the idea of killing someone. Darkley’s was blunt as it was cold. But as a ninja, it’s suddenly realer than it ever was in school. 
As the Green Ninja, with his destiny drawn out in front of him, it’s pretty much unavoidable. 
He’s going to kill his father, or he’s going to die. 
Kai’s hands grab tight around his shoulders. “We’re gonna do everything we can to make sure you don’t end up in that situation, okay?” He gives Lloyd a small, strained smile. “Don’t ever feel like you have to change who you are, just ‘cause you’re a ninja now.”
How do you know who I am, Lloyd wants to ask. How do you know I’m not a murderer? How do you know I’m not awful? 
Kai’s eyes are impossibly kind and far, far too knowing. 
“But,” and his tone grows serious again. “If it’s your life or theirs.” 
Lloyd feels a bit like the oxygen’s been sucked out of the room. 
“Promise me. You have to promise — you will always, always choose your own.” 
Lloyd stares back. Kai gives him a little shake.
“You promise me?”
Finally, as if moved by puppet strings, Lloyd nods. 
“I promise,” he rasps. 
Kai looks relieved, but it’s not quite in a happy way. “As long as you come back alive, that’s what matters. I don’t care what else happens — you come back alive, and we’re good.” 
“Okay,” Lloyd says. His eyes feel wet. It’s strange, someone caring so much about something like that.  
“Which is why,” Kai says, finally stepping back as his tone lightens. “You’re gonna nail that block this time. Or I’m making you polish every weapon in the dojo again.”
“Oh, no,” Lloyd stares at him in horror. “I’ve been practicing that stupid move for hours!”
“And you’ll be cleaning weapons for hours if you don’t get it.” 
“You suck,” Lloyd grumbles. “Worst teacher of all time.” 
“Uh-huh,” Kai claps him on the back, and Lloyd lets out his own sigh of relief at the lightened atmosphere. “You’re the one that picked swords, buddy.”
______
Kai’s a hypocrite, though, and Lloyd could hate him for it, because as they slide down the snowy mountain-side, Lloyd’s body clashing against his family in ways he’d never, ever let it if he had control, he has to watch as Kai — again — chooses a life other than his own. 
Because Kai doesn’t have the experience Morro does, but he’s better with a sword, he’s better than anyone Lloyd knows, and he loses. And Lloyd’s arm drags the Sword of Sanctuary up and Kai is a stupid, stupid, stupid hypocrite—
Lloyd’s angry enough that tearing control back from Morro is easy. 
He knows a thing or two about swords himself, and Morro’s holding it wrong, anyways. 
______
Training had already taken a hit after they lose Zane, for obvious reasons. Everything had taken a hit after they lost Zane, and between the tournament and Morro and everything else Lloyd’s pointedly ignoring, it’s suddenly been ages since he’s had a proper sword lesson. 
Kai decides to make up for it by finally teaching him the fun stuff. 
“Don’t — call it that in front of Cole,” Kai grunts over the loud screech of metal on metal. His knee bends, just the slightest tell—
Lloyd falls back, dancing away from Kai’s returning strike. He knows now, just how dangerous Kai can be — he’d like to forget it, but it’d be doing him a disservice. 
Besides, Lloyd’s had his body dragged left and right over Ninjago, used as the worst kind of weapon to hurt the people he loves, and they still trust him. Being on the dangerous end of Chen’s stupid staff is nothing to being on the dangerous end of a katana Kai’s made himself, and Lloyd’s determined to hold onto the faith he’s had since that day in the volcano. 
Kai won’t hurt him. 
He’ll kick his ass in training, though, so Lloyd had better get back with the show. 
He retaliates with a feint to the right — too obvious for Kai, but enough to steal his attention for Lloyd to land a high kick to his side.
“Watch that,” Kai scolds, forced two steps backs. 
“Why?” Lloyd grins over the edge of Kai’s blade as he catches his blow dead-on. “Scared I’m gonna beat you too soon?”
Kai snorts. “You aren’t beating me at all, shortstack—”
“Not short—”
“And,” Kai’s katana moves so fast Lloyd barely manages to dodge, rolling into a somersault before surging back up to meet his backstrike. “You’re advertising your weak point.”
Lloyd frowns. “S’not a weak point.”
Kai’s katana flashes — Lloyd moves right just before he realizes it’s a feint, cursing himself — then the hilt of his katana is smacking hard against a bone in his right ankle. 
There’s a hot flash of pain as his body completely betrays him, his ankle buckling and sending him stumbling with a yelp.
Kai’s expression isn’t gloating, at least. On the downside, he has that sad kind of look that usually means he’s feeling guilty. 
“It’s not usually that bad,” he tries, even as his cheeks flare hot. 
“It doesn’t matter,” Kai shakes his head. “You need to protect that. Make sure no one knows it’s a weak point but you. Putting it in reach of your opponent is a bad way to do that.” 
Lloyd grits his teeth, but he knows Kai’s right. He’ll never regret pushing himself the way he did, clambering up the tower steps on a broken ankle. The fate of Ninjago was a lot heavier on his shoulders than any thoughts of consequences. 
It still sucks, that it’ll never heal quite right. 
But it isn’t like he’s the only one with an old wound turned weak spot, he reminds himself, as he wraps his aching ankle once again. Jay’s got zig-zagging lightning scars all down his arms that ache during heavy rain. Nya can only rotate her arm so far before her shoulder goes numb, a souvenir from a broken arm. Cole’s the worst, maybe, with how he’s strained himself lifting impossibly heavy weights, fractured fingers and broken bones that throb in the cold. 
Kai’s got his own share of weaknesses, though he works hard to hide them. Lloyd’s managed to pick out most — some of them he’s helped treat himself.
He doesn’t like to think about those times, though.
“So I’ve got an idea for a move,” Kai grins at him, once Lloyd’s ankle is stable. “It’s gonna take some timing, but since I don’t have a weak spot there — you’re gonna run and launch.”
Lloyd tilts his head. “Launch off your right ankle?”
“No,” Kai rolls his eyes. “I’m gonna go down for a handspring. When my legs are low, you’re gonna jump on, so when I shoot up—”
“Ooh, I go flying,” Lloyd concludes. 
“Exactly.” 
“Let’s do it! I’m gonna look so cool—”
“Okay, but we’re gonna look stupid as it gets if we don’t get the — timing, timing!” 
It takes about five tries to get it right. That’s all they agree on admitting to — the less said about the forgotten sixth and seventh tries, the better. 
But on try eight, Lloyd finally feels his left and right foot connect with Kai’s just as he hits the lowest point of the handspring — and this time, he remembers to bend his own knees and launch up, and with a sudden weightlessness, he’s flying. 
“Slash, slash, don’t forget to slash!”
 Years of training are the only reason Lloyd’s able to get his arms to obey him fast enough, the wind-up pulling on his shoulders before he sweeps the katana down, slashing out—
“Yes!” Kai’s cheer abruptly turns to a yelp as he loses his balance, crumpling to the floor. Lloyd’s already sprawled across the training mats, since landing was a whole lot harder than he’d planned for — but the training dummy is cut in half. One perfect hit. 
“Now, if we can just manage that in an actual fight, we’ll look awesome,” Kai grins.
Lloyd glances at him. “Are you gonna fall flat on your face then, too?”
Red stains his cheeks. “No,” Kai sputters. “That was — you didn’t see that.”
“Uh-huh,” Lloyd snorts. He tilts his head, considering the unfortunate training dummy. “Y’know, I bet I can manage a flip in there,” he mutters. 
Kai shrugs. “Yeah, probably.” He lips quirk up. “It’d look pretty cool. Y’know what, let’s go for it. I wanna see the look on Jay’s face when you flip down on him during sparring.”
______
It takes Kai all of ten minutes into the next fight to start regretting that one. 
“Got a runner!” Jay calls, as one of the thugs they’ve been rounding up breaks loose from where Zane’s kindly explaining the terms of surrender and Cole’s standing with his lava punch ready to show them what happens if they don’t agree. 
“I got ‘im!” Lloyd calls, darting after the masked man. 
He tugs his katana free from its sheathe, mind already racing. The time spent on his own, guarding his own back, gave Lloyd the rare opportunity to learn things in ways the guys probably would’ve had his head for.
With the lessons Kai’s drilled into him, the steady form of swordsmanship driven into his nerves, Lloyd’s found a creativity in tweaking things to match his style. 
So when the thug sprints past a number of abandoned boxes, scrabbling as he narrowly avoids stumbling on the concrete, Lloyd’s already got the perfect move in mind. 
Step, step, jump — tuck in tight, so there’s enough momentum to rotate at least twice — and bam, it’s like a wind-up toy. The more spins he gets in, the harder his landing is, disarming the guy with a perfect slash while kicking his teeth in. 
Neat and effective, in Lloyd’s opinion.
Sadly, his opinion is not shared. 
Kai sputters. “What was that?”
“Cool as heck, that’s what it was,” Lloyd grins. 
Kai is supremely unimpressed. “What did I say about wasting movements?”
Lloyd shuffles. “Don’t…do it?”
“Then why, exactly, did you feel the need to flip three — not one but three — times before striking?”
“Because,” Lloyd says. “It was cool. As heck.”
Kai pinches the bridge of his nose between his fingers. Lloyd valiantly bites back any comments about him taking after Sensei Wu. 
“There’s a difference between adding your own flare,” he finally says. “And squandering your energy like a spinning top.”
“Squandering — spinning top—” Lloyd sputters. “Hey, I got the guy just fine, didn’t I? I didn’t squander anything.”
“And what’re you gonna do if someone wises up and snipes you mid-flip?”
“Who’s gonna snipe me, there are no snipers around, dummy—”
“There could be, hypothetically!”
“Hypothetically, please. You’re just jealous ‘cause you can only do two flips—”
“I can do sixteen if I want, I’m just smarter—”
Despite his arguments, Lloyd does resolve to try for restraint. Unfortunately, Lloyd’s also got the memory of a goldfish, so Kai should really know better. 
He just can’t help it. The next time they clash with a run-of-the-mill villain who’s stealing secret plans for bombs or whatever ridiculous thing it is that week, Lloyd finds himself on one building with the criminal on the next. 
The solution is obvious. Kai doesn’t agree. 
“FIVE FLIPS?! THAT WAS A THREE-FOOT DISTANCE!”
Lloyd carefully places the now-unconscious criminal on the rooftop, stands back up, and wisely back-flips the heck outta there. 
______
As his sword movements grow more complicated and the green power take a near-constant presence in his veins, the gentle pulse of energy as familiar as a friend, Lloyd grows stronger, too.
This kickstarts an entirely new problem, because Lloyd can’t go five steps without ruining something, it seems. 
In his defense, he doesn’t start breaking swords at a criminal rate until after Morro, so Lloyd’s gonna blame it all on him.
He stares blankly at the katana in his hands — or the remains of it, to be exact. Half the blade is somewhere across the street, where it went skidding after Lloyd’s final hit snapped it clean in two. 
Kai stares just as blankly when Lloyd wordlessly offers the pieces up. 
“Okay,” he finally says. “Maybe I went wrong with the balance, or something? This was probably just a fluke.”
He turns it over, frowning. “Wouldn’t hurt to reinforce the next one, I guess…”
Reinforcements or not, it takes the third shattered sword for Kai to wise on. 
“I’m so sorry,” Lloyd warbles tearfully, the remains of Kai’s careful metalwork cradled in his arms. “I don’t know what happened, I was just swinging it, and it went — it went—”
“It went in six different directions, apparently,” Kai mutters. 
Lloyd slumps. “It was only four this time,” he mutters. 
“I guess this is what we get for training you as well as we did,” Kai says. “Cole and his super strength, I’ll never be free of it.”
“Didn’t he beat you by tripping you flat on your face?”
“I don’t wanna hear it from you, oh cruel destroyer of my swords,” Kai scowls. 
“I didn’t mean to!” Lloyd protests. “I tried really hard this time, but the last guy had this giant bat, and I thought I could cut it in half, but I swung so hard I screwed up my strike and went…in six…different directions…”
Kai scrubs a hand over his face. He glances at Lloyd, eyes searching. 
“But you beat him?”
“Duh,” Lloyd says. The faith people have in him.
“And you didn’t get hit yourself?”
Lloyd shakes his head. “Not a scratch.” It’s not even a lie this time.
“Then I guess it was a noble sacrifice,” Kai sighs. “I can live with that.”
The katana’s sad remnants join the equally sad — and steadily growing — pile of scrap metal made by Lloyd’s awful sword skills. They have a pretty fun time melting it all down though, watching the metal bubble as Kai starts drafting the next run of layered steel he’ll shape into a katana. 
“I’m gonna be a master katana maker at this rate,” he huffs, wiping at his forehead. Lloyd, who’s hanging over the forge to watch the different colors the liquid metal makes, taps lazily at his knee with his foot. The forge flares brighter as Kai’s fire does, and he mumbles a distracted thanks. 
“A master hothead,” Lloyd says. Kai rolls his eyes. “If I ever figure out how to be a master swordsman, maybe you can take a break and figure out how to make other weapons.”
“Hey, I’m great at making other weapons.”
“Yeah, like ‘block of metal’ and ‘triangle of metal’ and ‘weird rectangle of metal’, and—”
“You’re gonna get a stick for next battle if you keep that up,” Kai growls, but his lips are twitching.
“Hypotenuse of metal,” Lloyd whispers.
“The heck, that’s not even a shape—” 
The forge grows steadily hotter as Kai works, bright sparks popping and steam hissing up in little curling wisps. It doesn’t bother Lloyd too much — ever since that day in the volcano, the press of heat is more like a second skin. He’s nowhere near as durable as Kai, of course, who could probably hop in the forge and come out with only a sunburn, but it’s enough to feel cozy instead of sweaty and dizzy. 
“Y’know, you don’t have to use a sword,” Kai says hesitantly, as he inspects a hammer. “There are a lot of other weapons that would fit your style. If you ever wanna try out a spear like Nya, that might suit you pretty well.”
“No!” Lloyd says sharply. Biting his tongue, he amends, “I’ve already been training with swords for forever. I don’t wanna change my whole style for something else.”
Kai eyes him shrewdly, but his lips finally twitch up in amusement. “If you say so,” he says. “But I swear, break my sword again and you will get a stick for your next weapon. Or chopsticks. A butter knife—”
______
Lloyd gets a new sword, of course. And another one. He might grouse and complain, but Kai doesn’t truly get angry about the swords. He does, however, get very angry over Lloyd’s total idiocy with what happens to said shattered swords. 
His first mistake is the usual one — Lloyd swings a bit too hard at a sloppy angle and there’s a high-pitched screech as the sword dies a sad death, splitting in two. 
Lloyd stares blankly at the now much-shorter katana in his hands, which is his second mistake. The delay costs him, and he scrambles to duck the thief’s vicious punch, their own sword having been knocked away in the scuffle. Their boot comes up, swinging for his head, and Lloyd springs back, landing palms-first on the floor and launching himself out of range. 
He also, unthinking, drops the broken katana — mistake number three. 
His fourth mistake is the worst one possible, because Lloyd brings his hand up to block what he’s sure will be another punch, only to get slashed by the jagged end of the katana he just dropped.
A sharp, burning pain explodes across his hand, and Lloyd stifles a shriek. 
Stupid, stupid, stupid move. 
The thief comes in for round two, Lloyd’s own snapped katana glinting in the fluorescent building lights, and Lloyd freezes. It occurs to him that he should probably just go ahead and hit the thief with an burst of green, but that’s also when Kai mows them down with a viciousness that reminds Lloyd — Kai always goes easy on him in training. 
“I had him handled,” he still protests, after the thief’s been hauled off to prison (or the hospital, possibly).
Kai ignores him, sheathing his katana and storming his way. 
He grabs Lloyd’s hand before he can protest, pulling back the torn fabric of his glove and slapping his own hood against the gash on his hand to stem the bleeding. 
“What did I say,” Kai says angrily. 
Lloyd flinches at the stinging pain in his hand, and tries to glare back. 
Kai’s having none of it. “Your sword is supposed to take the hits,” he snaps. “Not you!” 
“It did take the hit,” Lloyd finally throws back. “I just broke it, and — I was fine!”
“You hand’s bleeding all over my hood, that is not fine!”
“Then take your hood off and it won’t get blood on it!”
“My hood isn’t what I’m worried about!”
By the time Zane’s stitched Lloyd’s hand up, wincing barely kept at a minimum, Kai’s cooled down.
Somewhat. 
“It was an accident, okay?” Lloyd says, for the billionth time. “I didn’t realize he had a weapon. I wasn’t trying to sacrifice my hand, or whatever.”
“Oh yeah? ‘Cause that sounds a lot like something you’d do.”
“Coming from you, that’s somewhat hypocritical,” Zane murmurs. 
Lloyd snickers. Kai turns to Zane in utter betrayal. 
Of course, this means that Lloyd’s next lesson is how to treat sword wounds in emergency situations, in painstaking and excruciating detail. His hand stings every time he grasps the katana handle for solid week, though, so Lloyd takes equally careful notes.
______
Lloyd goes and breaks another three katanas after that. At this point, he kinda thinks Kai should just give up and let him go into battle weapon-less again. You don’t need weapons to do Spinjitzu. The green power won’t break, and Lloyd certainly won’t split into six pieces.
(He hopes.)
Kai keeps putting swords in his hands anyways. 
Lloyd could always just say no — he’s supposed to be leader or something, he can make his own decisions.
But he thinks of sparring sessions and smelling like cloves every other evening, thinks of the tiny dragons Kai still takes the time to carve into his katana handles, and throwing all that away would feel as great as sawing off his own arm. 
So he picks the katana up, does his stupid katas, and promises to do better this time.
That doesn’t magically fix things, of course. 
“How,” Kai says blankly, staring at the katana that now lies in a record eight pieces. 
“Um.” Lloyd twists his fingers together. “I definitely didn’t use it to prop open a door like you said never to do.”
Kai gives him a smile that shows exactly all of his teeth. 
“You have five seconds to run.”
______
All that training on treating sword wounds pays off. Possibly more than learning how to fight with a sword in the first place, when Kai drops in the middle of battle with a wicked slash across his lower thigh. 
“Of all the — stupid, embarrassing—”
“Shut up,” Lloyd says tightly. He’s already focusing half his energy on not throwing up at the amount of blood soaking between his fingers where they’re pressed tightly over Kai’s leg. “Stop moving, I gotta see if it — if it hit an artery.”
“It better not have,” Kai pants, wincing as Lloyd presses down harder. “If it hit an artery I’m screwed.”
“Shut up.” 
Lloyd’s heartbeat is a thunderstorm in his ears, panic welling up in his throat as Kai’s blood swims in his vision. 
“Hey, hey,” Kai’s hand falters, then clasps Lloyd’s own. “M’gonna be fine. Takes a lot more than a stupid leg wound to take me out.” 
“That’d be so lame,” Lloyd breathes, somewhat hysterically. He’s torn his own belt off for a tourniquet, which is step one, he thinks — hood can go around the actual wound, and if he steals Kai’s belt, then he can double reinforce it— 
“I can always cauterize,” Kai says shakily, sounding like he’d rather do anything else in the world. “It’ll be — move!”
Lloyd manages to roll them both out of the way as the assassin who nailed Kai comes in to finish the job, sword scraping sparks across the rooftop. Lloyd flashes a furious glare over his shoulder, mind racing as he holds himself in front of Kai. 
“Here.” The familiar hilt of Kai’s katana slaps against Lloyd’s open hand — the other is quick to follow suit. “Remember, double wielding — better for defense.”
Lloyd nods on instinct. He adjusts his grip on both swords, the blood on his fingers making the hilts tacky and sticky. It’s going to be a pain to clean later, a vague part of his mind notes. 
Of course Lloyd remembers dual wielding. It is better for defending, but you lose power on striking and reach — he can deal with that. Kai does. 
And it’s exactly what he needs, right now. The assassin won’t even get close to Kai.
One spin, then another. The katanas’ weight is familiar, balanced in the slightly-weird way Lloyd likes best, the way Kai makes all his swords. He finds his footing, finds the stance, and moves.
When Kai fights, he fights like the first flash of flame from a match strike — quick and bursting, fast enough it all but blinds the enemy. 
When Lloyd fights, it feels like dancing — slower to start, picking steps deliberately, building to that bursting strike faster and faster. 
It only takes one strike, after all. And Lloyd’s got two swords. 
Silver flashes across the rooftop, a piercing screech as one of his katana meets the assassin’s broader blade, forcing it back—
The assassin drops with a cry before falling silent, the shattered pieces of a katana scattered around him. 
“Saw that…one coming,” Kai moans. 
Still breathing heavily, Lloyd tries not to cringe.
“I’m so sorry,” he repeats, after Kai’s securely in a hospital bed and enduring Nya’s forty-five minute lecture about the many ways your arteries can kill you. 
Kai waves his hand, slightly cross-eyed and loopy from medication. “Y’know what? I wanted a new sword anyways. You saved me, so…skip the lecture and we’ll call it square?”
Lloyd lets a small smirk crawl up his face. 
“You know, I feel like there’s something very important you should keep in mind, about your weapons taking the hit, instead of you—” 
“When I get out of here, you’re toast.”
______
“I think I know where I’m going wrong,” Kai says. 
He’s spent the weekend with his father, the two of them either shut up in the forge or buzzing and forth about blacksmithing. It leaves Lloyd feeling a little weird — some mix between happy for Kai and achingly jealous, which then leaves him mostly just sad, which sucks. Lloyd sucks — it’s terrible to feel that way. Everyone was happy when Lloyd got both his parents back after that first battle, and even if he’s lost that — the least he can do is be happy for Kai and Nya. 
It ends up working out pretty great in the end, because Kai looks a little like he’s unraveled the mysteries of the universe right now. 
Half his right eyebrow is also scorched off, but Lloyd decides not to mention it for now. It’ll be funny to see the look on his face, when he notices. 
“I was talking with my dad, who’s got a lot more experience with this stuff, and he suggested something,” Kai continues. He fiddles with whatever he’s got hidden behind his back, and Lloyd has to stifle the urge to dart around him and see. 
“No more katana,” Kai says. “You’re good with ‘em, but I think we need a change-up.”
“You mean good at breaking them,” Lloyd mutters.
“If the sword breaks on you, it’s my fault,” Kai says. “I’m not exactly the world’s best blacksmith. Y’know, you should really think about getting someone else to—”
“No.” Lloyd bites his tongue immediately, aware of how bratty he sounds. 
And selfish. It’s not like Kai has tons of time to just make Lloyd swords all the time. 
As if reading his thoughts, Kai scuffs his hair. “Stop that. I like making swords.” The small edge of a smile pulls at his lips. “I worked pretty hard to become a blacksmith. So it feels kinda good, that someone appreciates the work for once.”
He shakes his head. “Anyways! Meet your new battle buddy. This is called a dao sword.” 
Lloyd stares at the curved, silvery blade Kai’s handed to him. It’s thicker than the katana he’s used to, the blade growing broader at the end before tapering off. 
“Historically, it’s better suited for quick slashing, but it’s fairly versatile,” Kai continues. 
Lloyd carefully lifts the sword, his eyes widening just a bit. 
“And heavier,” Kai grins. “Which means it’s gonna be at least a little more difficult for you to shatter.”
His hands fit easily around the handle — there’s plenty of room for a two-handed grip, and enough balance if he wants to switch back to one. 
“The guard’s a bit better with protection, and it’s got this tassel here you can wrap around your hand — yeah, like that — to help keep it steady. Or just look fancy.”
Stepping back, Lloyd adjust his hold. Normally he’d do something silly, or needlessly complicated, just to make Kai roll his eyes, but something about this one feels heavier — he doesn’t want to mess it up. He takes a single, experimental swing instead. 
“Oh,” Lloyd blinks. “It’s sharp.”
“I’d hope so. What do you think I am, a half-rate blacksmith — don’t answer that, by the way.”
Lloyd simply grins, taking a few more swings. It is heavier than the katana he’s used to, broader and chunkier — but it feels at home in his hands. 
“It’s incredible,” Lloyd says, turning back to Kai. “Thank you.”
Kai colors, just a bit. “You don’t have to lie.”
“I’m not lying! I love it. It’s perfect.”
“Well, as long as it holds up, that’s good enough for me,” Kai says, rubbing the back of his head. “Wanna give it a test drive?”
“Yeah,” Lloyd says. “I bet I can do even more flips with it.”
“And stab yourself in the leg in the process, but sure, go ahead, squander my gift—”
______
Lloyd’s careful, more so than ever, with the dao sword. When they all split across Ninjago, Lloyd clings to the piece of his family and tries to remember Kai’s instructions, making sure his hands are firmly wrapped and his right ankle always stays low. 
So when it breaks on the river with Harumi, Lloyd wants to cry.
He wants to cry for a lot of other reasons, but it still hurts — another thing he cares for that Harumi’s managed to break so easily. It hurts that they all work so hard, time and again, and it always ends up shattering around them anyways. Hurts that they pour themselves out for this city again and again and it’s still not enough. 
(Hurts that he’s never, ever going to outrun that worthless little kid in the snow.)
He learns, later — he’s got much more to lose to her than just a sword. 
It hurts all the same.
But the sword’s broken and Lloyd’s on a one-way collision course with his father, and it’s much too late to turn back now. 
Lloyd enters Kryptarium Prison with nothing but himself and his power. It was enough the first time, it’s got to be enough this one as well. 
Lloyd was enough the first time — if he isn’t enough now—
If he isn’t—
______
He isn’t.
He throws himself against his father and shatters his heart with every hit. Then the rest of him goes and shatters too, ribs cracking and skin splitting as he’s battered through walls and bruised against stone. His power sparks and screams as it tries to save him, pushed to its limits.
A part of Lloyd finds it funny — he can’t even keep his power together. He wonders if he’ll snap into six pieces and fly everywhere, just like Kai’s poor katanas, with nothing left but broken pieces of Lloyd to melt down for scrap. 
Kai doesn’t find it funny in the slightest. Not the muffled voice Lloyd hears breaking as his family tries to put him back together, not the filthy embrace Lloyd gets when it���s finally over, not the multiple hour-long lectures Lloyd’s forced to sit through even three months out. 
“I don’t care how many swords you break,” he hisses, giving Lloyd a shake that’s forceful enough his teeth almost rattle. “I don’t care if you shatter a thousand. They’re supposed to protect you. You’re supposed to choose yourself. Don’t you ever, ever, put yourself out there to break again.” 
Lloyd must’ve broken a hundred promises by now. He can’t seem to do anything right, truly — not being the Green Ninja, not being a good brother, not being Garmadon’s son.
But, as he nods and makes another promise, he can try. 
For Kai, he’ll try. 
______
Things are different, after his father, but it’s the same way things are always different after their family escapes by the skin of their teeth. Each new threat leaves another lingering wound, but Lloyd likes to think it stitches them closer in the aftermath. 
With everyone’s attention so laser-focused on Lloyd after everything, it makes it easier for him to spot the others’ bad days. 
It only takes him five minutes to track down Kai this time. Lloyd carefully lowers himself cross-legged next to him on the floor, katana laid across his lap.
Kai tenses, as if preparing for another speech. 
Please. Lloyd’s methods are way sneakier — and better — these days. 
“So,” he starts, as he dips the edge of a rag in Kai’s choji oil. “I was patrolling today, and I saw like, a demon cat, I think? I mean, it was definitely a cat. It looked kind of like the one Zane used to feed when we lived at the apartment, all stripey and stuff. I was gonna try and pet it, ‘cause patrol was pretty boring and what was I supposed to do, ignore it? So I did the whole pspsps thing, and it was not a fan — and I swear, it hissed at me, and it looked just like my dad. When he's all Oni, y’know? Which is rude, cats are supposed to be comforting, not traumatic—”
Lloyd’s rambling grows more and more nonsensical as he goes, jumping from topic to topic as he works on the katana. He can feel the tension seeping out of Kai where he sits beside him though, bit by bit until Kai’s finally leaning against his shoulder. 
“Missed a spot,” he speaks up suddenly, his voice only cracking a little.
Lloyd squints at the sword. “Where?”
Kai taps a bandaged finger on the blade. 
“Oh,” Lloyd blinks. He adjusts the rag. “Thanks.”
 Kai speaks up again, after a minute, “You’ve gotten good at this.”
“Had a good teacher.”
There’s a faint snort. “Debatable.”
“With who?” Lloyd says. “I’m your number one sword student. And your only one. I win automatically.” 
“The others use swords. Sometimes.”
“Yeah, and Jay still whines every time the super special weapon-of-the-week to defeat evil ends up being a sword again,” Lloyd says. 
“S’cause Jay’s better with nunchucks. Totally different concept.”
“But he isn’t better with a sword.”
“Definitely not better than me.”
“I’m your best student,” Lloyd says. “Jay can’t be better than me. That’s illegal.”
“If the Green Ninja declares it,” Kai says, but there’s an edge of laughter in his voice, a thawing out of the numb blankness he’d worn earlier. He slumps, just a bit heavier, against Lloyd.
“Wanna talk about it?”
“Not really,” Kai mutters. 
“‘Kay.” Lloyd turns the sword over, squinting at his reflection. “Sometime, though?”
“If you can manage not to break anymore katanas before I finish your new weapon, maybe.”
“You guys won’t even let me out to fight,” Lloyd grouses. “It’s not as if I’ll have a chance to.”
Kai makes a huffing noise. “Maybe if you’d sit still long enough to heal—”
“I don’t wanna hear it from you,” Lloyd scowls. “Look, I know I messed up with — with her, but—”
“That’s not what this is about,” Kai says sharply. “It’s about you being okay.”
Normally, Lloyd would protest. Should protest — he doesn’t deserve to get off that easy. But Kai’s gone tense again, so he lets it go, just this once. 
“Sorry,” he murmurs anyways. 
“No, don’t. You’re doin’ good,” Kai sighs, and he sounds so very, very tired. “Just…take it easy, okay? ’Til I get your sword done.” 
“Sorry for breaking the old one, too,” Lloyd says. “I really did try to keep it safe.” 
“I’ll make you a hundred swords,” Kai says. “A thousand, if I have to. Just keep using them, okay? Swords are your weapon.”
Like Lloyd’s ever going to forget that, at this point.
______
It’s only after the Oni are more a memory and Lloyd has been subjected to an unholy amount of recuperation that Kai allows him to even see the sword he’s made this time.
It’s well worth the wait, though.
“It’s gold,” Lloyd murmurs, reverently holding the new dao blade. 
“Yeah, well,” Kai shrugs, a little bashful. “I thought you should match us, at some point.”
Lloyd has to try very hard not to pretend that doesn’t make a small, lingering part of him want to tear up.
“Is this jade?” he says instead, carefully tracing a finger over the single panel of green that decorates the blade. 
“Technically it’s jadeite, and no, you don’t wanna know where I got it,” Kai corrects. 
“I don’t care,” Lloyd says. “I love it. It’s the best sword ever. I — thank you, so much—”
“Okay, okay, that’s enough,” Kai says quickly. “You’re welcome, or whatever, just — you’ll use it, right?”
Lloyd gives him a long, flat look. 
“You’ll have to pry it from my cold, dead hands.”
“You are not allowed to joke about that—!”
______
The golden dao sword never breaks. 
It takes Lloyd several fights with it to stop holding back, but once he realizes this sword won’t shatter to pieces in his hands, he lets himself get creative.
And the sword holds, again and again. 
Against Aspheera’s burning soldiers, against the bitter chill of the Never Realm, against the Skull Sorcerer’s monsters in the depths of Shintaro, against the heavy weight of water and cold crystal — the dao blade holds.
Kai tells him it’s because Lloyd’s finally learned how to stop using his weapon as a glorified baseball bat. Lloyd thinks it’s because Kai knows blacksmithing for ninja better than anyone else in the world.
His powers grow, too — along with his options, which he’d really have preferred to just…avoid. 
Real fun that it wasn’t the many years of pent-up anger issues, but crippling traumatic grief, that’s the key to unlocking his shapeshifting abilities. Hilarious. 
It still stings, a bit, that no one ever bothered to tell him he was walking around with the blood of two mythical beings just chilling in his veins, Would’ve been nice to know, maybe, before he got stuck having a whole crisis about it smack in the middle of another world-ending crisis. 
Oni, dragon, Green Ninja. Like he needs another title.
In the end, it doesn’t matter much what he thinks. Everyone moves on and Lloyd is a multi-bred freak of nature, or something. 
His father thinks he should hone his Oni powers. Sensei Wu thinks he should listen to his father but also remember his dragon side. His mother thinks he should read the eight-hundred page historical brick of a book about all known history of the Oni and the dragon. He doesn’t have a clue what his great-grandparents think of him, except that a family reunion would be world-ending levels of terrible. 
Lloyd, who’s grown attached to looking like himself and happens to like being human, keeps reaching for his dao blade first. 
Swordsmanship is something he’s proud of. He’s worked hard for it, through blisters and bruises and blood. It’s something that belongs to him and Kai, something shared and freely given. Something passed onto him, something taught and earned, something treasured.
Lloyd doesn’t have a lot of things like that, so he treasures it all the more himself. 
Treasures the humanity of his family, and how lucky he is to be part of that.
Treasures the things he’s learned from them like family heirlooms he’s never had.
Treasures the fact that they’re there—
Treasures the—
______
The monastery is so quiet, Lloyd’s starting to understand how people lose their minds.
Not really. He hasn’t started talking to himself yet, so that’s a good sign, right? It doesn’t count, if you’re yelling for other people. Doesn’t count if you’re screaming curses at your stupid grandfather who let your whole world split apart and tore away the only people that were yours. 
“It doesn’t count,” he whispers to the sword in his lap. 
Lloyd stares dully at his reflection in the dao sword, marred by the splotchy wear and ugly chipping at the blade’s edges. It’s in miserable shape, worn down and neglected.
A lot like himself, maybe. 
He shudders, drawing in a breath. Sulking won’t sharpen swords. And when Kai gets back — which he will — he’ll be so disappointed that Lloyd’s gone and treated his sword like dirt. 
The smell of choji oil makes his eyes sting, but the familiar sound the rag makes across the blade soothes it. 
He’s glad he took the time to sharpen it up, too, when he visits the city. More than glad when he finds himself atop the train, his missing hood leaving him distinctly uncomfortable as he prepares to fight. 
Lloyd’s hands have warped and twisted, burst in purple and grown claws sharp enough to slice. If he can make them his own again, after that, he can make them hold steady now. 
The handle of the dao blade is worn and familiar, the fraying tassel the same bright green where it brushes the back of his hands, and Kai’s voice yells in his head as loud as ever as he swings it once—
One flip this time, he decides. One flip, one strike.
Swords are his weapon, after all. It’s important for him to remember that.  
And even if he doesn’t—
______
Lloyd’s grown up in a world of weapons, and far faster than he probably should. 
But with every sword swing, every familiar callous carved into his hand, Kai’s there to remind him that his sword is the weapon.
And Lloyd, power or no power, is just Lloyd. 
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spadepie · 6 months ago
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From Lego China official
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al-luviec · 4 months ago
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sensei morro ref (is it really an au if it's part of your personal canon)
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