Your men suspect something suspicious. They've notice this is too easy when they've landed on the coasts. They have found a village near the coast. All the Nipa Huts seems to be empty. There is no signs of people there. A day has passed for the Katipunan couriers. Luckily, they haven't meet with the Shigori to be halted.
With no resistance the Shigori armies were able to loot, pillage, and raze the country, seizing weapons and home owned wares. A small contingent of the general's horse were sent to Manila on a mission of diplomacy, demanding complete surrender.
The signals has been raised. The battles has been started. The Katipuneros have came out of their bushes, attacking the Shigori. Some battles were lost due to the fact that some places weren't good for guerilla warfare or there were too many men condensed into one area. The general has escape but loss a lot of his men. The Shigori that lost their battles has regroup to where they originally left. The Shigori who've won their battles have move on to their campaign against the Katipunan
After days of minor skirmishes the Shigori were worn down, but so were the Katipunan. They had been hunted down and slain in the Philippine jungles, yet the Shigori weren't warmongers. Thousands of graves had been dug for the fatalities of both sides, and there was only way the conflict could be ended, if Katipunan surrendered and lay down arms. The troop of cavalry bound along the beaches toward the capital of Manila on a diplomatic mission demanding total surrender of the Katipunan, and just that evening they arrived at the gates, and their translator, Maricel, requested permission to deal out terms of surrender to the holder of power within the town's walls.