
Usan prepared to kill the criminal, but Kusho intervened, ordering Jhin to be imprisoned instead. Eventually, they managed to catch the Golden Demon, revealed to be a stagehand named Khada Jhin. His new name is one of status and means "the strength of compassion" and is explained to him through tears that "it is the word for the pillar that bears the heaviest load".Īs Usan and Shen investigated the Golden Demon's killings, the trauma of seeing the gruesome crime scenes shook the two to their core. After the ordeal, Kusho sits beside his apprentice to give him the Amulet of the Eye of Twilight, as well as the name Usan. Govos heals and aids the wounded and through the traumatizing experience of letting some die, to save others, he learns a Kinkou lesson known as "The Lesson of the Scales". Govos is left to aid with healing and surgery, as he is less hesitant to make judgement calls. Kusho calls for them to aid Kotha Village's survivors. At the end of the cliffside, they see smoke and mutilated bodies for the first time. Pulling their supply cart, Govos and Shen discussed their childhood friend and Shen's now-future-fiancée, Yevnai. Govos' new family would nurse him back to health from the hours of sparring that occurred that day and Master Kusho would take Zed on as his student.Ġ9 November 2009 Getting the name Usan of Kéthé Īt the age of around 15, Govos, Shen, and Master Kusho disguised themselves as merchants and journeyed to track down the Golden Demon. On the last chance he had, Shen purposefully let Govos hit him. Govos did not do well at first, but he continued to spar over and over again. Kusho ordered his son to spar with the servant child. The opportunity finally came to him when Master Kusho and his son Shen walked up to Govos. It was his hope that if he showed his determination, that Kusho wouldn't walk out on Govos the way his father had.

As a child, it was his dream to become a Kinkou warrior. A servant boy whose duties included washing floors and cleaning dishes, he only had spare time to train in the evenings after all his work was done. For two years, nobody from the Kinkou would claim him as their neophyte and apprentice. Born as a Northern peasant child, Govos was a servant at the Thaanjul monastery at around age 10. When he was young, Govos saw his father walk out on their family.
