#No Heart — When Freedom Becomes Irresponsibility
Contents
No Heart can hold on to nothing. The dark-side No Heart takes responsibility for nothing.
#Opening Fragment — The Empty Ledger
The Zakkasho closed his ledger. That day he had sold three swords, two vials of medicine, four talismans, and one person's name.
"A man died because of that name," the ronin said.
The Zakkasho shrugged. "A name is cheaper than a blade, but far more useful."
"Does it not trouble you at all?"
"If it troubled me, I should have charged more."
The ronin gripped his sword's hilt. The Zakkasho was not afraid. Even looking into the ronin's eyes, he made no effort to recall the dead man's name.
Only profit and loss remained in the ledger. What lay outside profit and loss had never been recorded at all.
#The Core Question of the Dark-Side No Heart
No Heart can mean a path not yet fixed, or a state withdrawn from attachment. Zen No Heart can become the deep language of practice for setting down fear and attachment.
But the dark-side No Heart is different.
"If I believe in nothing, must I take responsibility for nothing?"
The dark-side No Heart is not the absence of conviction, but a state that sees conviction only as a cost. When needed, it buys loyalty, sells mercy, borrows nature, and denies all of it in the next scene.
#What Seeps In More Easily Than Demon, Because It Is More Realistic
Demon looks easily like a monster. No Heart does not. The No Heart villain is usually rational, open to bargaining, and at times courteous. So people grow wary of him too late.
The Demon villain seeks prey. The No Heart villain seeks a position where he loses nothing. Yet the result can be similar. Someone is discarded, sold, left out of the record.
There are three reasons the dark-side No Heart is truly frightening.
| Fear | Description |
|---|---|
| The Fear of Ordinariness | He looks not like a madman but like a realistic person. |
| The Fear of the Void | He hands a person over without love or hatred. With no feeling, there is no point at which he stops. |
| The Fear of Replaceability | Anyone can be swapped out by price, role, or condition. |
The No Heart villain need not rule the world. It is enough to take no side at the decisive moment, or to open the door for whoever pays more.
#The Sentences the Dark-Side No Heart Speaks
| Sentence | Hidden Meaning |
|---|---|
| "This is not my affair." | I know the outcome but will not be responsible for it. |
| "Name your price." | What has no price has no meaning. |
| "I am on no one's side." | I will wait until a more advantageous side appears. |
| "I am free because I believe in nothing." | I will be bound to no one. |
| "Everyone moves by their own interest anyway." | So I may as well do the same. |
The dark-side No Heart looks like composure, but is often an evasion that cannot bear relationships.
#Scene Signs of the Dark-Side No Heart
- He asks the price before the name.
- He does not break a promise. But he looks for the gaps in the promise first.
- He says he can change friend, lord, faith, and homeland alike, "depending on the situation."
- Even after saving someone, he says, "I will put it on the tab as a debt."
- Rather than deny guilt, he refuses to form the very relationship from which guilt would arise.
The dark-side No Heart can look like the most realistic villain. That is exactly why it seeps into the table more easily.
#Types of the No Heart Villain
#The Broker
He connects weapons, information, people, apologies, and betrayals. He does not kill directly. He merely brings together the one who will kill and the one who wishes someone killed.
How to run him:
- Make both sides need him.
- Without him the war stops, but only with him is a prisoner exchange possible.
- Prepare the void that opens when the PCs cut him down.
#The Survivor
She severed every relationship in order to survive. At first it is understandable. But even after surviving she moves only in the same way. Now survival is not a reason but an identity.
How to run her:
- Show a past betrayal or disaster to make her coldness intelligible.
- Insert a scene where she abandons someone even after she is safe.
- Reveal the difference between "it was necessary then" and "it is still comfortable now."
#The Accountant
He sees the whole world as a ledger. War, faith, family, vengeance, and honor all become line items. He explains brutal decisions in very clean numbers.
How to run him:
- Let the numbers themselves be correct.
- Let the PCs find the name left out of those numbers.
- The Accountant is better at omission than at lying.
#The Wandering Blade
He says he belongs to no side. Yet he keeps appearing in whichever fight is more advantageous. Because it is true that he has no conviction, he is hard to persuade.
How to run him:
- At first, let him fight usefully on the PCs' side.
- Next, let him stand with the enemy by the very same logic.
- At the end, ask whether he can make, just once, a choice with no price attached.
#The Pressures of a No Heart Campaign
To use a No Heart villain, create a void in relationships rather than an outburst of emotion.
| Pressure | Question |
|---|---|
| Tradability | What in this world cannot be sold? |
| Omission | Who was left out of the ledger, the map, the roster? |
| The Result of Neutrality | Whom did "I took no side" actually help? |
| The Small Promise | Is there even one relationship he can never put a price on? |
In a No Heart campaign, neglect matters more than betrayal. Someone did not open the door. Someone did not testify. Someone said, "This is not my affair." That single sentence can bring down a village.
#Telling Demon and No Heart Apart
| Demon | No Heart |
|---|---|
| Desire and instinct drive it. | Profit, loss, and evasion drive it. |
| It sees the weak as prey. | It sees the weak as a cost. |
| It has many strong senses and impulses. | Its senses and impulses dwindle. |
| Its traces are predation and defilement. | Its traces are blank spaces, contracts, and neglect. |
Do not think No Heart is weaker than Demon. Demon lunges, but No Heart locks the door and leaves.
#Fitting Fiend Connections
| Fiend Class | Point of Contact with No Heart |
|---|---|
| Zakkasho | Turns everything into merchandise. |
| Tesshin | Treats feeling and responsibility as defects. |
| Yorijin | Erases the line between subject and research material. |
| itako | Manages the wills of the living and the dead as her own roster. |
This connection is a recommended interpretation. The actual class data follows each source text.
#The Hero Mirror
The mirror of the dark-side No Heart is a promise not yet named.
The moment a No Heart ronin remembers a single child's name, he is no longer entirely free. That binding can also save a life.
Good mirror NPCs:
- A ronin who forces nothing, yet keeps just one promise of his own.
- A child who has become the new owner of something the Zakkasho sold off.
- A merchant who acts out of kindness rather than trade.
- An artisan who calls out an old name to a Tesshin who had lived like a machine.
#The Stopping Scene
The moment the dark-side No Heart can stop is when he sees that a relationship he abandoned still remembers him.
Scene props:
- A small gift he never put a price on.
- A person who has come to repay a debt not in the ledger.
- A child who remembers, in another's place, the name of one who died because of information he sold.
- The words, "I knew you would come anyway."
For the dark-side No Heart to return, the question must narrow from "I am on no one's side" to "This one name, at least, I will not abandon."
#How the GM Uses This
When handling the dark-side No Heart, shake his convenient neutrality. Show who suffered as a result of his choosing neutrality. The claim of taking no side often turns out to have helped the stronger side.
Do not force conviction onto a No Heart PC. Give a small relationship instead — a name, a debt, an object, a recurring encounter. No Heart wavers at small promises rather than at grand ideas.
The dark-side No Heart's ledger is clean — because it never wrote down a person's name in the first place.