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DISCLAIMER: Ranma 1/2 is property of Rumiko Takahashi, its use in
this work of fiction generates no profit and no infringement is intended. "Babylon", property of David Gray,
and "Shimmer", property of Shawn Mullins, have lyrics that are
reproduced and used here without permission.
No profit is being generated from their use and no infringement is
intended.
ARCHIVE: Phu, Reddeath, and Rakhal have my express permission;
everyone else, please ask at echonymph@msn.com first.
RATING: PG-13/R
SUMMARY: Twelve years after a death at the hands of honor, the
spell is broken and the curse released – Nerima had never been the same after
Ranma's arrival, and it hasn't been the same after his death.
^*^*^
FRAGMENTS
- by ling
^*^*^
(From 'The Storm of Souls', an anonymous collection of
stories and poems)
They'd met in June,
Under blossoms rare,
While the wind whistled,
Like song in the air.
He who was loved and cherished
He who slept and dreamed
He who was wise and childlike
He who was more than he seemed.
She who reached the heavens,
She who shined with spark,
She who loved and lived and
laughed,
She who slew the dark.
Wild and pretty youths were they,
Their family's shining pride,
Their minds were swift; their love was deep,
Belonging side by side.
The engagement made,
And the families proud,
Their children were happy,
Content and avowed.
But to live is to err,
And one misplaced step,
Sent the girl tumbling,
Into unknown depth.
The boy tried to save her,
Knowing he'd fail,
And he held her gently,
As her face grew pale.
The families were shamed,
Angry and broken,
Cruel fights were exchanged,
And cruel words spoken.
And a hate was borne,
From the truest of loves,
Like pitch-black ravens,
From floating doves.
^*^*^
The hustle of the street distracted her for just a moment. And in the length of a second, her brown
eyes were drawn to the masses of people that strolled along the sides of the
streets, smiles on their faces, their voices loud, and hands rapidly
pantomiming or hefting packages. She sighed
to herself; it had been too long since she had shared in their carefree life.
She focused herself on her
original purpose.
No one could ever claim that
Tendo Nabiki lacked willpower.
No, no one had dared to comment
as such for the past twelve years of her life.
Ever since she had turned eighteen and headed for college, she'd shown
her true colors. Her minor extortion
and cruelty-for-cash attitude had not changed; it had only escalated to a much
grander scale. Which may have accounted
for why Tendo Nabiki, at the tender age of nineteen was the youngest ever
trader ever admitted into the prestigious firm of Morgan Stanley Dean Witter,
or at the very least, the youngest ever hired for their Tokyo branch.
She'd been deliriously pleased
with herself.
She had everything she had ever
wanted in life, wealth, influence, her family was well.
All save for ...
Initially, after the ...
incident, Nabiki had to admit that she'd been happy, guiltily so, for her
little sister. Akane had always
protested her engagement to the Saotome boy, and he likewise, it was only a
matter of time before one of them did something drastic about their
predicament. Nabiki had been plotting a
way to break up the engagement, herself.
The incident could not have
come at a better time.
Nabiki winced. 'Of course,' she thought, 'death is never
something to celebrate, but the ends justify the means, baby. Of course Akane mourned, deep down, those
two were friends, whether or not they could admit it, but it was better for all
involved that they never got married.'
She was distracted by a whisper of a voice she had nearly forgotten in
her years, shaking her head, and admonishing herself, she murmured aloud,
"Nabiki, you're dreaming," and even with this, she looked around
twice, just to make sure that she was, satisfied, she finished, "You're
paranoid."
The sound of the city started
to overwhelm her again, and the flashing lights of the street and neon glitter
of a Tokyo nightscape started to blur together to create an altogether
unpleasant confusion that had her feeling faint. She placed a hand on the side of a wall, steadying herself,
trying to breathe.
She inhaled deeply and held it
as the world came back into a somewhat muddy focus.
It was only then that Nabiki
noticed the familiar flash of nearly incandescent red that filled her vision.
And after the shock filtered
away, Tendo Nabiki, known for her killer instinct on the Tokyo trading floor,
started to follow a figment of the past.
^*^*^
"I'm home!"
The sound of the lilting
greeting echoed through the darkened apartment, and the woman who had called
out the words frowned deeply. She
kicked off her stacked heels and shrugged out of her coat, hanging the rich, midnight-colored
clothing onto a hanger in the hall closet.
She wriggled her toes for a
moment, delighted to be freed from her self-imposed torture. She'd never become used to high heels, there
was just something elegantly wicked about them, every time she saw a pair in a
store window, her mind automatically switched into, 'what would they look like
on me' mode, but when she started walking around in them during work, her brain
shifted back to, 'why on earth did I buy these?'
The red-headed woman padded
softly across the hardwood floors of the large apartment, not bothering to turn
on any of the lights, she headed toward the kitchen.
The light above the breakfast
table was turned onto its dimmest setting, a used plate, fork, and half-empty
can of soda were bathed in its yellow glow.
The woman rolled her eyes and gathered up the dishes, placing them in
the sink, and throwing away the can after emptying it herself.
She rinsed her hands off,
staring into the expansive darkness that the open floor plan allowed her to
see. Frustrated, she headed toward the
bedroom.
Opening the door to the cozy
chamber softly, she muttered, "That idiot better not be late, it's
November 14, and he knows what I'll do to him if he misses this –" the
woman stopped short as she came upon the sleeping form of the man in
question.
She released an affectionate
sigh as she sat down on the bed next to his prone body. Her blue eyes were soft, and her mouth was
pulled into a tender smile.
"Happy Anniversary,"
she whispered to herself, sifting her delicate fingers through his thick, soft,
black hair. "What am I to do with
you, Soichi?"
^*^*^
She had to have been seeing
things.
Tendo Nabiki decided that in
her old age (after all, she was very nearly thirty-one) that she was slowly,
but obviously, very steadily loosing her mind.
She had to have been seeing
things.
Tanakawa Yuki had been blown
away more than twelve years ago. Hence,
Tanakawa Yuki could not possibly have just brushed by her in the street.
Which brought Nabiki back to
her original point:
She had to have been seeing
things.
But if it was one thing that
Nabiki had learned, it was to verify her suspicions, regardless of how inane or
insane they seemed. Nerima *was* a ward
of Tokyo, the craziness quotient could still be suffering the aftereffects of
the Saotomes and all the weirdness that they had brought.
So Nabiki had watched as the
redheaded woman had disappeared into a tall glass and steel apartment building.
She made a mental note, and
called a cab.
Grimacing to herself as she
neared her own home, she thought, 'This could get ugly.'
^*^*^
"Kya!"
There came a loud rumble of
shattered concrete and splintered wood, falling to the gleaming floors of the
dojo with dull thuds and soft, sad noises.
"Akane, do you really
think that you should be doing that now?" Kasumi's soothing voice broke
through her distracted haze.
The youngest Tendo girl looked
around the partially destroyed dojo and saw the frightened expressions of
seventeen five and six year old beginner martial artists. She blushed in sudden embarrassment. A quick glance at the clock revealed that it
was ten past eight o'clock, her students must have trickled into the dojo, and
she, in her raging state, must not have noticed.
"Sorry, Students,"
she stuttered. She took a deep breath,
and spoke, "Today we'll be learning the most basic aspect of Martial
Arts," her voice was measured, "how to fall."
She grinned momentarily at the
shocked ripple of whispers that went up around the room, and several students
called out:
"Hey, isn't martial arts
about *not* getting hurt and stuff like that?"
"Yeah, since when did
martial artists learn how to get hurt anyway?"
"I bet Jackie Chan never
did this!"
With a sweep of her hands,
Akane silenced them all.
"Children, you must understand, learning to fall is a function of
*not* being hurt."
'The irony is killing me,' she
thought with mild amusement. She bit
back the wave of memories that assaulted her and began to teach, as her father
had always hoped she would.
^*^*^
"Good evening,
Kimiko," the soft, masculine voice said.
Kimiko opened her blue eyes slowly, adjusting to the dim light of the
room, and yawning widely.
"Good evening,
Soichi," she paused, eyes looking toward the clock on the nightstand past
Soichi, she moaned softly. "God,
it's 9 o'clock already, Soichi, why didn't you wake me up earlier?"
Her eyes finally focused.
Soichi, she had to admit,
looked good enough to eat.
The man was nearly thirty, but
still possessed the lithe sensuality of his youth. His slate-blue eyes still sparkled with good humor, and his mouth
was still set in a familiar smirk. She
grinned to herself and allowed her fingers to trail along his handsome face,
stopping only at the thin, barely noticeable scare that ran down along the left
side of his chin. She couldn't remember
how he had gotten it, and doubted that he did, either.
Soichi grinned, murmuring,
"You looked beautiful sleeping, Kimiko." She flushed softly in reply, and grew quiet, content in the
silence.
^*^*^
"Hello, Sanii-san, I need
a favor."
"Anything,
Tendo-san."
Nabiki bit her lip and grasped
the receiver tightly in her right hand, eyes turning toward the evening skyline
of the city.
Yuki was out there somewhere.
That couldn't be good.
That meant there was still
danger, which meant that Ranma had met a foe that he couldn't defeat.
And that his death had been a
waste after all.
"I need you to run a
residential check," she said as calmly as her voice would allow.
There was a brief silence on
the phone. "Tendo-san, I respect
you and everything, you know that, but what's the relevance? I can only get so far before someone catches
me hackin', medical records are harder than ever to - "
"No, Sanii-san,"
Nabiki said with quiet exasperation.
"I wouldn't ask you to do anything that would get you
arrested."
A relieved sigh ran through the
phone line. "Okay, Tendo-san, I
don't think my parents would be too hyper about breakin' their eighteen year
old out of jail."
Nabiki allowed herself a
chuckle, it was funny really that her best and most trusted informant was only
two thirds of her age. "Okay,
Sanii-san, I need you to get a tenants listing of everyone who lives in the Sakura
Towers apartments, 117 on 45th street.
Got it?" she breathed, her fingers tapping busily on the mahogany
top of her massive desk.
"Got it, Tendo-san. I'm faxing it to you as we speak. Pretty long list, if you ask me."
Nabiki let out a bark of laughter. "That building's got to be at least
twenty stories tall, Sanii-san, I would imagine the list would be long."
"Actually, Tendo-san, it's
twenty-five stories."
"Details details,
Sanii-san," Nabiki chided, watching her fax machine suddenly come to
life. She pushed the balls of her feet
into the lush carpet of her floor, and wheeled her chair over to it, grabbing
the top corner of the paper hastily, hoping that maybe holding onto it would
hurry the process.
Sanii continued to speak,
"I've been to Sakura Towers before, they're luxury apartments, only the
first five floors are like normal apartments, the rest of the building is made
up of floor-sized apartments. Like,
eleventh floor, the Hino residence, twelfth floor, the Sanii Kuzio and Tendo
Nabiki residence ... " he let his voice trial off hopefully.
Nabiki thought about his words,
and replied, "You can dream, Sanii; you can always dream."
"That's all I can ever
hope for, Tendo-san, all I can ever hope for.
Goodbye, Tendo-san."
"Thanks, Sanii-san."
^*^*^
Soichi awoke alone in bed, his
eyes adjusted to the watery light of the morning, and stifling a yawn, he
rolled out from under the covers.
Grabbing a pair of clean boxers from the pile of fresh laundry he had
forgotten to put away, and some jeans and a t-shirt, he lurched into bathroom.
He let the water run till it
steamed up the entire bathroom, releasing a sigh, Soichi stepped under the
stinging water of the shower, blinding groping around from a bar of soap, and
finding only the chamomile and lavender body wash that Kimiko always smelled
of.
He grinned to himself, opening
the top of the bottle and taking a deep breath of the stuff. The scent of it was intoxicatingly sexy to
him, all he had to do was get a whiff of it from across a room, and the urge to
grab her and amoral things to her was nearly insatiable. He suspected that she knew, and that his
inability to resist it was the only reason she even bothered to shell out the
1000 extra yen for it at the Bath and Body store, anyway.
His fingers finally located the
bar of soap, lying in its proper place in the ceramic soap dish on the side of
the shower. Undoubtedly, Kimiko had
taken a shower before him, and undoubtedly, she had almost slipped and died on
the soap again, and undoubtedly, she had muttered curses as she put it back
where it belonged.
He scrubbed until he was well
lathered and let the hot water sluice down his body, washing away the last
remains of sleep.
Soichi leaned against the side
of the shower stall and sighed deeply, an unhappy frown creasing his face. There was a deep and unpleasant fear that
still lurked in his heart. It had been
twelve years, almost thirteen, but someone *must* have noticed something by
now. They couldn't have been *that*
seamless in their escape.
"Soichi, come on, don't
you ever get sick of getting stuck in traffic?" cried a lilting female
voice. He saw her curved outline
against the steamed glass of the shower, and with a grin, he slid open the door. With a firm tug, Kimiko, in all her
perfectly pressed glory fell whooping into his wet, warm arms under the
unrelenting water.
"Damn it, Soichi! I'm going to be late for work!" Kimiko
protested vainly as he started to unbutton her navy-blue shirt, which was
currently doing a very good impression of being a second skin as a result of
being soaked.
"Aw," Soichi teased,
"is Kimiko upset that she's going to be tardy?"
"Yes, I am!"
"I can help you with
that," he murmured.
"S-S-Soichi, that's not
helping ... "
As Kimiko melted into his
touch, he grinned, "Yeah, but it's making playing hooky seem so much more
attractive."
^*^*^
An hour and a half later,
Fugikara Soichi bolted into the richly decorated offices on the twelfth floor
of the Ryo Towers, cursing himself softly.
"Good morning, Dr.
Fugikara." Kagome smiled with a
knowing expression. Dr. Fugikara was
one of the most popular people in the building, she made it her business to know
his comings and goings, and she'd noted over the past five years that he came
in to work late at least two days a week, and it didn't seem to have anything
to do with *sleeping* in.
He smiled wryly at her, saying,
"Morning, Kagome-san, has anyone called this morning?"
Kagome picked up a small pile
of notepaper, and said, "Well, first three are from patients wanting to
reschedule, two are from prospective clients who want to meet you, it's on your
calendar in your office by now, and one from Kimiko thanking you for making the
reservations for dinner tonight."
Soichi looked up at Kagome, a
startled panic on his face.
"Reservations?"
Kagome grinned impishly. "Of course. Just as a note, the reservations at Catacarina's; it's an Italian
place down by the Tokyo business complex, very high-class, she'll love
it." Kagome watched the relief
spread across her boss' face.
"Should I arrange a hotel room, too?"
Soichi narrowed his eyes at his
secretary as he headed toward his inner office. "Very funny, Kagome."
She continued, "And bail
for when you two don't make it up there and get arrested for public
indecency?"
Her only response was the door
closing.
^*^*^
"Tendo-san? I found out something else interesting, of
all the tenants that live in Sakura Towers, only ten apartments have full VIP
privileges."
"What do VIP privileges do
for someone who lives in Sakura Towers?"
"Hell if I know, but I
have a way for you to find out."
"You're too good to me,
Sanii-san."
"Only for you, my
misguided love."
"Sanii, you're not even
legal."
"Age of consent is twelve in
Japan, besides, I'm eighteen, think about it, Tendo-san."
Nabiki sighed. "I think about it too much
already."
^*^*^
"Akane, Ryoga is
back!"
Akane let out a soft groan.
It was only after Ranma's death
that she'd discovered Ryoga's apparent long-time obsession with her. At first, it had been nice to have someone
be there for her 24/7, well except for the times when he would mysteriously
disappear for months at a time, she had needed a friend desperately. She's turned to him at her darkest hour, after
her fiancee had died, her friends had abandoned her, and even P-chan had gone
missing.
Regardless of what she had
forced herself to believe before, she cared for Ranma, had perhaps even loved
him, and his abrupt passing left her with a void that needed to be filled by
someone, *anyone*.
Which led her to the
unfortunate condition she was in now.
She'd been stupid and led Ryoga
on. At first it was nice to feel loved
and needed again, eventually, she just didn't want to see him hurt.
For the first time in her life,
she was starting to understand why Ranma had been so wishy-washy with all his
fiancees; unfortunately, it came after it was too late for her to tell him.
"All right, Kasumi! I'll be there in a second."
Akane sighed and went out to meet
her fiancee.
^*^*^
"Kimiko, come on, we're
going to be late!"
"Shut *up*, Soichi! Do you want your date to be ugly?"
Soichi sighed and tapped his
foot impatiently, and pushing his silver wire-rim glasses higher on his nose,
he said, "Kimiko, you couldn't be ugly if you *tried*. Can we *please* just go?" His vision had started to go bad about a
year and a half ago. He'd protested the
glasses vehemently in the beginning, but once he realized that Kimiko seemed to
have a predilection for them, he'd stopped fighting it so viciously.
"FINE! But if we're not allowed into the restaurant
because ... "
Kimiko's voice trailed off as
she saw the expression on Soichi's face.
She had stepped out of their
bedroom in a sleeveless, strapless black silk dress. It clung to her curves and was patterned all over with black,
embroidered dragons. The dress was
long, with two matching slits up the side that exposed generous expanses of
leg. Her feet were strapped into a pair
of black, high-heeled sequined sandals, and her hair was unbound and hanging
freely to her uncovered shoulders.
Kimiko reminded herself to take
a deep breath as her eyes took in Soichi's appearance. His handsome features were perfectly
complimented by his glasses, and his dark-colored suit fit him with a loose
grace that was uniquely his. She fought
the urge to run her hands through his hair; the soft, black tendrils that had
been bound into a pigtail had been cut short, and were cropped close at the
ears. All in all, Fugikara Soichi had maintained
his delightfully handsome appearances.
"Well," she stuttered
softly, regaining her composure, "see, I told you."
As she turned to go back into
the bedroom, Soichi caught her hand.
"Beautiful," he murmured, kissing her cheeks. "Sexy," he breathed spinning her
around before him.
She blushed bright red. "Liar," she replied.
^*^*^
Nabiki had infiltrated the
Sakura towers annual tenants party, and found no sign of the redhead
there. She was starting to grow
frustrated. Either Yuki (or could it
have been ... Ranma?) knew that she was being sought out, or had she simply
decided not to come? There weren't even
solid guarantees that she *lived* in the building.
Nabiki pouted a bit longer, and
decided to Sanii's original suggestion was probably better; she'd start
reviewing security footage first thing the next day.
^*^*^
"This place is lovely,
Soichi," Kimiko said softly, watching as the twilight slowly crept toward
their table. She grinned at him. "We really ought to give Kagome a nice present,
after all, she goes to so much trouble to make these fabulous reservations for
us."
Soichi nearly choked on his
tortellini. He eyed Kimiko for a moment
before a shy smile spread across his face.
"Why didn't you say
something if you knew that I wasn't the one making them?"
Kimiko shrugged. "It didn't really bother me, you have a
lot on your mind, you work hard," she grasped his hand in her own,
"we have each other," he smiled at her gently, "I'm not going to
sweat the small stuff."
Soichi brought up his free hand
and cupped her cheek, murmuring, "Right, Kimiko, don't sweat the small
stuff."
She blushed prettily. It was amazing, after twelve years, he was
still able to pull this number on her.
He was silent for a moment, and
although his touch was loving, and his expression devout, she knew in her heart
that his mind was a million miles away.
Allowing herself a secret grin, she wondered what other women did when
their husbands seemed far away, luckily for her, she needed only to ask to pull
him back to her side.
"Soichi, what's on your
mind?"
He sighed, pulling away from
her, he stared out a window, saying, "Remember, remember before,
Kimiko?"
He watched as a shadow of pain
danced across her lovely features.
"Why?" she asked softly.
"Because," he replied
firmly, "because Yomada Naka came in again today, and I finally realized
something about the boy." Kimiko
looked toward him, an expression of curiosity on her face.
"Go on, Soichi," she
urged.
"He," Soichi paused,
searching for a word, "he's torn.
His family wants him to do one thing, he wants to do something else, and
everyone in the world expects something different from him." He looked at Kimiko for a long, time before
speaking again. "I just don't want
to see what happened to me happen to anyone else."
Kimiko gave him a wane
smile. "Soichi, with you, I doubt
anything bad will happen to him."
He laughed softly. "Thanks, Kimiko, what would I do
without you?"
She smirked this time; letting her
fingers trace slow circles on his thick arm, she said, "Probably die
looking for your socks and a matching tie."
^*^*^
"Naka, what would you like
to talk about today?" Soichi's
soothing tones woke the teenager from his dreamlike state.
Yomada Naka was a sixteen
year-old freshman at an all-boy's Tokyo high school. His grades were pretty much below average, and his interest in
them steadily decreasing in a manner that was parallel to his marks. His parents originally thought it was
because he was too interested in girls, and placed him in a boy's school. His grades had only gotten worse. Soichi had taken him as a patient not out of
necessity, but out of pure, unadulterated interest, but that had been a year
and a half ago. The interest was
wearing thin, and his hope for the child was, too.
"What, Dr. Fugikara? I'm sorry, I wasn't really paying
attention." Soichi observed the
youngster carefully, his dark brown hair fell in unruly bangs over his face, and
his eyes were flashing with some unspoken rebellion.
Soichi let out a smile.
It was just like looking into a
mirror.
He decided to try something
new. "Naka, do you have a hobby,
something you like to do more than anything else in the world?"
Naka's eyes lit up,
"Martial arts, definitely."
Soichi raised an eyebrow, an
amused expression appearing on his face.
"Really, Naka? I thought it
wasn't cool for kids to spend so much time on something so traditional nowadays." Naka blushed to the tips of his ears as he
often did during their sessions. Soichi
chuckled, "Sorry, Naka, I did not mean to embarrass you. Do you know, I did a little martial arts
when I was young?"
Naka looked intrigued. "Really, what kind?"
"An- Kempo,
actually."
Soichi kicked himself for the
slip-up.
Naka seemed not to have
noticed. "That's awesome, Dr.
Fugikara. I'd love to spar
sometime!"
Soichi grinned. "I would enjoy it, too, however, I have
to make a deal with you, if you bring home an 'A' before our next session, I'll
spar with you, if you don't," he shrugged, "I can always go over
Jungian psychological theory," he grinned wickedly, "in painful
detail, just like my professor did to me in college." Naka turned pale and got out of his chair,
hurrying to the door, Soichi interrupted, "Hey, your session's not over
for another ten minutes!"
"I know," the teen
called back. "I've got a test
Wednesday, and I'd rather study than hear about Jungian theory!"
Soichi smiled to himself as he
started to gather his notes, whispering, "Naka, you have no idea."
^*^*^
"Wow, Kimiko, we're
actually on time to work today?"
"Shut up, Ryoko."
"And, amazingly, you don't
smell like you just had sex, either!"
"Ryoko, I'm warning
you."
"Sorry, sorry, your ten
o'clock is waiting for you."
Kimiko grimaced as she saw what
name was written on the computer screen.
"Do I have to go in?"
Ryoko smiled
sympathetically. "I'm afraid you
have to, Kimiko-san. You've already had
the Asian flu, tuberculosis, been in labor, arrested, and violently mauled. He told me he didn't care if you had been
freshly dismembered; he wants to see you."
Kimiko groaned aloud, and
stepped into her office, a prayer in her heart. Forcing a smile to her face, she said, "Good morning,
Tokoya-san, how may I help you this morning?"
^*^*^
"Tokoya-san, I apologize,
but the layout you were presented with is exactly what you asked for,"
Kimiko said calmly. She hated Tokoya
Maskaki, in her opinion; he was an insane, redundant, very, very stupid waste
of cells in general.
Unfortunately, he was also the
biggest client she had for her firm.
"I understand that you
*think* that you've fulfilled the obligations I put forth, Yoshida-san, but the
truth is that your ads - "
"Which ones?" Kimiko
uttered through gritted teeth. She
feared that if she gripped the armrests of her chair any tighter, they'd snap
off and get ground into sawdust.
"All of them," he
said matter-of-factly.
'Breathe, breathe, breathe,
breathe,' Kimiko coached herself. 'He's
old, he'll die eventually, please, God, let this meeting end.'
"Of course,
Tokoya-san," she found herself saying aloud.
He nodded and continued,
"Anyways, before I was interrupted, I was saying how all the ads you did
for my corporation lack a certain - I don't know - zing," he gave her a
dark look, "I'm actually thinking about changing companies."
Kimiko steeled her nerves and
said in as calm a voice as she could muster, "Tokoya-san, you've said that
a thousand times before, but you do realize that if you had any problems with
the ads before, you could have told us, and I'd have gladly reworked all of
them." She crossed her arms as she
stood up and walked across the room to the enormous window that was one side of
her executive office. "Why do you
keep coming back to us if you hate us so much?"
There was a blank space of
silence.
"Do you want to know the
truth, Kimiko?"
She whipped back to face him in
confusion. In their six year-long
business relationship, he'd never so much as acknowledged the fact that she had
a first name, much less called her by it.
"Yes, Tokoya-san," she whispered softly, "I'd like to
know."
His face grew suddenly aged in
the light of the office.
"Kimiko-san, the truth is, I like you. I like *you* and not your company."
Kimiko blanched visibly.
It was going to be a bad day.
^*^*^
"Moshi moshi," Ryoko
chirped into the phone.
"I'd like to speak to Ms.
Yoshida Kimiko, please, is she available right now?" The woman's voice on the other line was very
businesslike, and Ryoko got the impression that she was one of those people who
hadn't tripped up since they were four.
"I'm sorry, she's in the
middle of a meeting, would you like to leave her a message?"
"Thank you, but that won't
be necessary."
^*^*^
"You know, Soichi, the
neighbors are going to start thinking that we're weird, we never go to any of
the parties they throw," Kimiko murmured as she idly stirred the pot of
stew. She watched as he made a face,
and said, "Come on, Soichi, tell me why you don't like going."
He sighed and muttered, "I
always feel out of place there, you know, Kimiko?"
"No, I don't, because you
won't tell me."
He groaned softly and started,
"It's just that they're all talking about wine and boats and the stock
market. I don't know anything about
wine and boats and the stock market. I
feel stupid there, like I don't fit in and they don't want me."
Kimiko rolled her eyes. "Soichi, I don't know anything about
wine and boats and the stock market either, I don't feel out of place."
He grinned, turning off the
oven as the timer trilled, he leered, "That's because you're beautiful,
and when they talk to you, it's usually to your breasts and not your
face."
"Soichi! I'm being serious."
He took out the steaming hot
loaf of bread, a pair of matching pink oven mitts on his hands. Furrowing his brow, he said in all
seriousness, "So am I, Kimiko."
He stopped for a minute, dumping the bread out onto the cutting board
before he spoke again, "You know, about that, I'm starting to get really
irritated."
Kimiko raised an eyebrow,
turning the range down to a simmer.
"Irritated at what?"
"Those guys in our
building, Kimiko, they spend at least forty minutes ogling you every time we
spend any time with them," he frowned, "haven't they figured out that
I may not like that?"
Kimiko shook her head and
turned back to the soup. "No one
*ogles* me, Soichi."
"Yes, they do!" he
insisted angrily. "And I'm sick of
it!" She was startled by the
harshness in his voice.
Kimiko jumped. This sudden anger was unsettling.
"Soichi," she
whispered, "what's wrong?"
He lowered his head
wearily. "I love you," he
whispered, looking back up at her just in time to see her face sparkle with a
beautiful smile. "I can't find
words half the time to tell you. You're
my best friend, the only person who ever really listened to me." He stopped, forcing his next words out of
his mouth. "You gave up everything
so I could have *something*, *anything*."
Kimiko winced at this, and
unconscious reaction to whenever he talked about ... it.
"I can't help but
think," he went on, "that one day, you're going to see through me,
and find out that I'm not what you wanted, and then you'll be angry because
I've led you on." The words came out
in a rush of previously unreleased insecurity, and Kimiko walked toward him as
he spoke. "And then, soon, you're
going to find one of the guys in this building that *does* know about boats and
wine and the stock market, who can make you happy and keep you well, who *didn't*
drag you through hell ... "
His voice trailed off, and
Kimiko couldn't speak as she saw the tears rise in his slate blue eyes.
"And I won't have you
anymore," he finished, his voice barely audible.
She wrapped her arms around his
waist, and with her face buried in the folds of his old t-shirt, she murmured,
"Soichi, you're everything that I've ever wanted, everything that I've
ever needed, everything that I've ever dreamed of having." She looked back up at him, a blissful smile
on her face, "How could you ever think that I did anything that I didn't
want to? How could you ever think that
I'd leave you for someone else?"
She cupped his face in both hands.
"I love you, never forget that."
He nodded, and embracing her
tightly once again, he rocked them back and forth in the kitchen, content with
her words.
^*^*^
"So what *do* VIP
privileges do for one in Sakura Towers, Sanii-san?"
"You're going to be
surprised, Tendo."
She grinned wickedly. "I like surprises."
"Okay, VIP gives you exclusive
rights. Such as you're allowed to *buy*
the apartment as opposed to renting it; you have twenty-four hour maintenance
at your beck and call. Also, cleaners
come buy once a week and do the entire apartment top to bottom for free."
Nabiki whistled. "Nice set-up, ain't it,
Sanii-san."
He chuckled over the
phone. "I think so, too, Tendo,
what have you got in mind?"
^*^*^
"Damn it!"
"What? What happened?"
Ryoga stared around himself
hopelessly, somehow, instead of quiet, comfortable Nerima, he found himself
suddenly in the screaming rush of the Tokyo business district.
How did that happen?
Akane looked around her, and
gently easing herself from Ryoga's hold, she hopped onto the ground, thinking
to herself, 'Geez, this is insane, I don't mind him carrying me places, God
knows I've gotten used to that, but this is ridiculous, the fourth time in
a *week* we've gotten completely lost!'
Swallowing her annoyance, she
smiled at him. "It's okay,
Ryoga," she said, giving him a reassuring smile, "I wanted to do some
shopping anyway."
His grin was like a million
light bulbs coming on simultaneously.
She could only give him a wane shadow of it in return.
"Okay, Akane."
"Yeah," she murmured
wearily, "Ryoga."
^*^*^
"This is illegal,
Tendo-san," Sanii Kuzio muttered unhappily, and glaring down at his
clothing, he added, "and embarrassing."
Nabiki rolled her eyes, sifting
her fingers through her hair, she said, "Kuzio, I've known you since you
were fifteen, give it up and call me Nabiki." She handed him a feather-duster, and went on, saying,
"Besides, this is at least partially your fault."
Kuzio bristled. "*My* fault? How is this my fault?"
Nabiki grinned wickedly,
grasping the handles of the cleaning cart, she said, "Hey, you mentioned
the cleaning privileges."
^*^*^
"Yo, Akane, do you like
this one?"
Akane sighed wearily for the
thousandth time that day, it seemed that nothing could put Ryoga off, not one
iota.
He'd never seemed this brash
and careless before, he'd always been the sensitive one, the one who cared
about her feelings and *wanted* to hear what she thought.
Ryoga had always been so
*nice*.
Of course, that was before she
had been engaged to him.
Sure, Ryoga was still *nice*,
but it had only recently occurred to her how *disgustingly* nice he was. Not only was he worse than Ranma about some
things (remembering birthdays, getting words out of his mouth), he was
absolutely dreadful at most everything else.
Akane sighed.
After Ranma's death, the
weirdness hadn't stopped, though it did manage to slow to a trickle. Nabiki had Cologne and Shampoo
deported. Ukyo left, heartbroken,
followed by both Konastu and Tsubasa.
Kodachi had been formally institutionalized, and Genma did nothing but
stare out the windows. Soun Tendo had
stopped crying.
All in all, Nerima had changed
quite a bit.
Her senior year had been
hellish. Not only did the male
population of Furinkan not care that her fiancee had just died, they took the
news with gusto and celebration. The morning
fights began again with Kuno as the leader.
Though she'd rather die than
admit it, she'd felt incredible relief when the arrival of Ranma had stopped
the battles.
She winced, she'd never have
admitted it to anyone, but she had loved him.
Since his thought had reasserted itself in her mind just a few days ago,
she'd managed to let herself say it.
"Akane? WHERE ARE YOU?!"
Of course ...
Akane was engaged to Ryoga now,
and Ranma was dead.
She sighed and trudged over
toward the sound of her fiance's voice, wishing desperately that she was
looking for Ranma instead of Ryoga.
Then again, she was almost
thirty; it wasn't time to be choosy.
^*^*^
"Soichi, what did we agree
on about those shirts?" Kimiko chided softly.
She knew this was a sore subject
for him. They had been forced to
abandon everything. Not one thing could
have been taken. Money, clothes, and
sentimental items inclusive.
She always knew that he missed
his shirts.
It seemed like he used to have
an endless supply of them, blue, white, red, black, and gold-embroidered, in
every color of the rainbow. He'd always
unbuttoned the top collar-button, had his sleeves loosely rolled up, and the
loose sides tied haphazardly at his waist.
But she hadn't been able to let
him get any of them. Sure, they had cut
his hair short, been able to change their names, but some things would give
them away too easily.
"Please, Kimiko, like you
said, it's been twelve years." He
shot her a grin that he knew melted her resolve every time. "What are the chances?"
Kimiko sighed softly,
"Soichi ... "
"Please?" he whined.
"Fine," she
huffed. "Get it, see if I
care."
He grinned a mile wide. "I love you, Kimiko." He bolted toward the cashier.
"I know," she sighed
again, "I know."
^*^*^
"Akane, I'm going to the
bathroom, can you wait for me?"
Akane forced herself to smile at Ryoga.
This was getting pathetic. She
wasn't seventeen anymore, she had hoped that Ryoga would have had some measure
of maturity, either intellectually or emotionally by the time they were both
thirty.
This hope would not be
realized.
As she sat outside the men's
room, waiting, she heard oddly familiar voices.
"Kimiko, you look
beautiful, are you going to get it?" the male voice uttered breathily.
There was a soughing sound and
the rustle of cloth before a softer, higher female lilt replied, "We're
out here just to window-shop. Besides,
how could I afford to get something like this?" There was a pause.
"It is lovely, though."
"You should get it,"
the man said earnestly.
"Yeah, and I should also
be the Empress of Japan, but neither of those things are happening now are
they?"
Akane wracked her memory. Where had she heard that tone before, soft, gentle,
perhaps a little higher, but the same resonant timbre and sound remained. Where?
The woman's voice was lyrical, round, teasing, almost, her memory
flittered angrily as she tried to retrieve the hint of remembrance.
It was gone. She couldn't place it.
And then she saw her. A brilliant red, perhaps a few shades darker
than it had been in its better days, carefully cut and let loose to fall over
gracefully curving shoulders.
Shoulder's that led to a slender, curved figure.
Akane bit back a gasp, reached
out her hand, and with a firm tug, whipped the woman around.
Tendo Akane stared in absolute
shock.
It was Ranma.
^*^*^
'SHIT!'
Kimiko's mind whirled in
confusion and terror. 'Oh, God,
NO! What if, what if, OH NO, WHAT IF
SHE SAW SOICHI?' Kimiko studied Akane's
shocked face for a minute, 'No, she couldn't have, had she, there'd be blood,
there'd be tears, no, no, we're okay, we're okay. God, please don't let him come back from the cash register
yet. Please.'
She pressed a cupped hand to
her lips and started to back away before she realized that Akane still her a
firm grip on her arm.
'BACKPEDAL!' a voice screamed
in her mind.
"Excuse me, Miss,"
she started, barely repressing the stuttering fear, "is there something
wrong? If you're looking for someone
... " she released a nervous chuckle.
"No!" Akane hissed,
her eyes as big as dinner plates, and suddenly, the (now long-haired) brunette
threw herself into Kimiko's arms.
"Oh, RANMA! I thought you were
dead! I, I was so worried! God, I thought you were dead for so
long!" she sobbed.
Kimiko's eyes grew wide for
just half a beat before a bark of laughter escaped her lips. Ranma?
She had to have been kidding.
Akane suddenly pulled away from
her, eyes now flashing with anger, "YOU JERK! WHY DID YOU LET ME THINK YOU WERE DEAD ALL THIS TIME!?"
Kimiko watched in dread as
Akane reared her arm back and prepared to let loose one of her patented
punches.
'Hey,' a voice in her mind
consoled, 'it can't get any worse.'
"AKANE! WHAT ARE YOU DOING?" She whipped around to the sound of Ryoga's
outraged voice. In her shock, her
fingers loosened their grip of Kimiko's shirt, and the redhead took off, uncaring
of the screaming, raving woman she left behind.
^*^*^
Kimiko ran.
She didn't care that the entire
mall stared at her as if she was a lunatic, she ran toward the store Soichi had
disappeared into with a desperation that came only with death and war. Soichi was just stepping out toward her as
she slammed into his chest. The speed and
strength of the impact would have knocked over and out anyone else, but it
hadn't fazed Soichi a bit, a result of years of training.
But nothing could prepare him
for the expression on her face.
"Oh, shit," was all
he managed to say.
^*^*^
"Come on, we have enough
time to get back to the apartment, and I'll break out the stash, we can leave
and-"
"No," he replied
firmly.
Kimiko was shocked speechless
save but one little word.
"What?" she demanded softly.
He sighed wearily. "I'm sick of running, Kimiko, we've
been hiding for so long, so afraid of what would happen to us." He grasped her shoulders and pressed his
forehead to hers. "Let's
stop."
Her eyes grew wide. "Soichi, this isn't the place, we can
discuss it, yes, but now, not now, Soichi, we can't-"
"Stop it, Kimiko, you're
tired," he whispered, running a finger along the line of her cheek,
pausing at her still open lips. "I
hear you cry at night. You're tired."
Kimiko bit back tears. "We can't, you'll have to give it all up;
I'll have to give you up."
"No," he assured her,
his voice more confident than he felt.
"We're not going to give anything up."
"How can we not?" she
whispered.
"We are masters of our
fate," he stated confidently, and cupping her chin in his hand, he brought
her face up to his. "Masters do
not run."
She was hopeful for a moment.
It was enough.
"No more running,"
she breathed.
"No," Soichi
answered, "no more running."
^*^*^
"Akane! What do you think you're doing? Attacking an innocent woman?" Ryoga
cried angrily, eyes flashing with rage as he stormed up to her. Something else Akane had noticed about
Ryoga, he had a terrible temper.
Although Ryoga could never, ever lay a malicious hand on Akane, his
voice was frightening enough to make her shake.
"Ryoga," she managed,
"that, that was Ranma, Ranko, whoever." She stared in the direction the woman had run, "She was
*here*."
Ryoga's eyes grew wide. The four thousand doubts and fears that had
not emerged since Ranma's death rapidly resurfaced. Each of them a ghostly spectre of his youth; all of them raising
memories that he preferred not to recall, each more vivid than the last. All the times that he'd seen that look in
Akane's eyes when *that boy* had been around, all the times he'd heard her
whisper his name with ... such longing ...
He spun around crazily, looking
frantically for any hint of red hair, anywhere. "WHERE?!"
^*^*^
"WHERE?!"
Kimiko jumped in the air, she whipped
around to the direction of the anguished voice, just in time to miss the wry
smile that made its way across Soichi's face.
"What the hell is
that?" she said in a hushed tone.
"Good ol' Ryoga,"
Soichi chuckled bitterly. "Should
have known."
Kimiko turned toward Soichi
again, "Are you sure, are you positively sure?"
He smiled at her weakly, and
tightening his hand around her own, he said, "*Nothing* will break
me. Nothing will break *us*."
She nodded, took a deep breath,
and grabbed their shopping bags.
"Come on, Soichi, just because we're staying put doesn't mean we
have to stay in here."
Soichi grinned, and stepped
toward the city with her.
^*^*^
"Nabiki, I think this is
the place."
Tendo Nabiki looked around the
apartment. She had to admit, Yuki had
certainly done well for herself. It was
elegantly furnished, understated, and altogether comfortable.
Nabiki's blood boiled.
After Ranma's disappearance,
Tendo Soun had fallen apart entirely, what little income he generated teaching
a few classes at the dojo disappeared.
Nabiki's drastically reduced budget (due to Ranma's sudden passing)
could barely hold the family above water.
Needless to say, they had suffered until she had gotten a real job.
While here, Tanakawa Yuki was
living in what could only be called ... opulence.
A cream and amber striped chair
and stool were in her immediate vision, and with her trained eye, Nabiki
instantly priced it at about two notches above what she could ever afford. The floors were pieced together with broad
pieces of hardwood, smooth and newly-waxed.
Thick curtains fluttered in the evening breeze, and the glitter of the
city shone into the darkened apartment.
Obviously, Tanakawa Yuki, now
Yoshida Kimiko, had made a comfortable living for herself.
And that was when Sanii heard
the door opening.
^*^*^
"Nabiki-san," Sanii
stuttered.
She gave him a death glare and
hissed, "I dare you to talk, Sanii, I dare you."
The two of them tried to ignore
their physical closeness in the tight confines of the broom closet.
^*^*^
The electric nightscape of
Tokyo streaked across her window as Kimiko stared to the streets that
surrounded her. She'd grown accustomed
to the light and sound after years of living in the rush of the city.
She could literally taste the tension that cut through the front
of the car cabin. Soichi's hands were
tensed on the steering wheel, and his eyes stared straight ahead, serene, blue,
thoughtlessly driving the car toward their home.
She wondered how he did it.
And while he paid attention to
the road, she turned inward and started to remember.
^*^*^
Nerima
14 Years Previous
Oddly enough, though it was a
well-known universal invariant that nothing that could happen in Nerima could happen
anywhere else, everything that did happen in Nerima happened often, and even
more commonly, at the exact same time.
This might have explained why
two teachers on opposite ends of the tenth grade hall both ordered two children
out of their sight at the exact same time.
This might also explain why instead of standing quietly in the hallway,
the two teenagers chose instead to make faces at the kids inside the
classroom. Of course, this lead to a
simultaneous condemnation into detention.
At this point, the two were silent and wary, who knew what punishment
would come next, they might even be forced to listen to Kuno's poetry!
The dark-haired boy only rolled
his eyes as he waited quietly until Miss Hinako was through eating her candy
before she banished him to the auditorium to clean, as it had happened a least
a hundred times before.
The girl however, hung her head
in flushed shame. What type of person
managed to get themselves detention on their first day at a new school?
It so happened that the first
of the two teenagers arrived in the auditorium, it's chairs overturned and
floors scuffed from a fight that had broken out early that morning during an
assembly, and with a long-suffering sigh, the girl put down her things and
started to sweep.
She had blue eyes the color of
brilliant skies, and her hair was a startling red that was known to draw more
attention than an actual stoplight.
Just as she had started to sing
to herself as she swept, a set of silent feet descended upon the floors of the
auditorium, and setting his bookbag down, the spectator looked and listened,
enjoying the song as much as he was enjoying the view of the shimmering red
hair. Only after the girl had finished
two or three songs did he make his presence known.
Clapping, Saotome Ranma
grinned, "Bravo, Encore, that was very well done."
And fast as a whip, he found
himself face to face with a mirror image of his female form, and Saotome Ranma,
for the first time in his life, was without words.
His initial reaction was to
believe that this was all part of some intricate plot Cologne had put together
to either humiliate him or to marry him off to Shampoo. But the earnest and confused expression on
the girl's face told him that this was definitely something different. Ranma honestly couldn't think of anyone
other than the old Amazon freak that had to the capability to pull something
like this off.
The girl's surprised expression
became sheepish, and then angry.
"Who are you to skulk around and peep in on other people anyway, you,
you," Ranma's temper flared as he prepared for the 'pervert' comment that
he knew must have been coming, "skulker-arounder!" she finished
unhappily.
There was half a beat of
silence where the girl and the boy both held dearly to their stoic expressions,
and then they both broke out into gales of laughter, unable to contain
themselves.
"Tanakawa Yuki, at your
service." The redhead smiled
holding out her hand, and as Ranma grasped it firmly, his heart still
fluttering at an unhealthy rate, and his mind still screaming from the
unpleasant insanity of their similarities, he replied:
"Saotome Ranma,
likewise."
He looked at her closely for a
few seconds more. Aside from her
hairstyle, they were exactly the same in physical appearance. The same eyes, the same pale skin, the same
red hair. This was *too* weird, even
for him.
He wondered for a moment why he
hadn't seen her around Furinkan before, her hair alone would have pulled droves
of men toward her like sailors to their deaths, why had Hiroshi, the school's
most notorious repressed-pervert, not even mentioned her before?
"Um, I don't mean to be
rude or nothing, but I've been here for a while, and I've never seen you around
before - " he started awkwardly, a hand on the back of his head.
She nodded, "We just moved
to Nerima, it's my first day."
Ranma nodded.
Somehow, when one entered the
Nerima city limits, these things just happened.
But she seemed normal enough,
and Ranma had no intention of freaking out some poor girl who didn't know half
of the craziness that followed him around, and he endeavored not to act weird
around her. Something in which he was
certain he would fail miserably.
They glanced around the
auditorium and shared a sigh, Yuki looked up toward him and said, "Well,
I've got sweeping covered, how about you start stacking chairs?" He nodded and headed toward the chairs,
pausing every so often from his labor to stare at her oddly. And when she finally grew tired of this
treatment, she spoke up.
"What? What's wrong with
me, Ranma?"
He looked surprised, and
stuttered, "What?"
She sighed and dropped her
broom, "You've been giving me these frightened, confused expressions ever
since you got into this room; it must be something about the way I look. Spill, Ranma."
He groaned, and looking at the
clock, he said in a resigned tone of voice, "Come on, Yuki, it's four
thirty, we can leave, I'll explain it while we walk."
^*^*^
Nabiki seethed from her hiding
place in the closet.
What were the chances that the
*actual* cleaning crew would arrive to show up to tidy up the apartment the
same day that they decided to?
With any luck, they would leave
soon, without anyone else arriving.
She glanced to her left where Sanii
was currently fighting a mop for more space in the closet, and losing at
that. She allowed herself a soft smile,
and wondered for just a moment what it would be like if she let herself like
him, and then, maybe to *love* him. She
was certain that her heart was more than ready to shower him with her
affections.
Over their three-year business
relationship, their friendship had deepened and ebbed, she knew things about
him that his parents didn't, and he knew things about her that no one did.
There wasn't a soul in the
world who could touch her heart or make her laugh as quickly as Sanii Kuzio
could, and that was precisely why she was so afraid. The age factor wasn't a true issue for her, so what if he was younger? It wasn't as if she was a decrepit old woman
seeking sexual release in a young, virile thing. She was genuinely attracted and fascinated by him.
She was afraid that she would
end up losing him. Sanii was only
eighteen, and at eighteen, hormonal impulse ruled above all; what if his affection
for her was just a transient thing?
What if all the passes that he had made were fueled by nothing more than
testosterone?
While she was certain of the
emotion behind her rather subdued responses, she couldn't be sure that Sanii's
feelings were genuine. And to take
advantage of his momentary fixation would be wrong, something she'd learned
painfully in years passed when a certain pigtailed martial artist died. She didn't get the chance to apologize for
her crimes.
"Nabiki! Nabiki, get this mop away from me! I can *feel* the dust mites on my
skin!" Sanii hissed urgently, fear in his dark eyes.
Nabiki sighed, then again ...
^*^*^
After finally returning home
and tipping their cleaning crew as they left, Kimiko and Soichi had retreated
to their bedroom, tired and contemplative.
She was lying on the bed, her eyes closed and her heart still
pounding. Kimiko could feel the
mattress depress under the weight of her husband, and she instinctively knew
that his touch was coming.
"Kimiko," Soichi
started softly, brushing a tendril of hair from her eyes, "do you ever
wish that we hadn't left Nerima?"
She stared at him for a moment
before standing up, and then from where she walked to her closet. And as she watched him, images flashed
through her mind.
... Meeting a grinning boy in after-school detention one rainy
Friday afternoon, and trying to find out what about her appearance shocked him
so much. A mystery that she'd been
intrigued by, at least until they were caught in a sudden shower walking back
home.
... Dragging Ranma to her house in the snow.
... Finding out about their family's blood feud, and being
forbidden to ever see her friend again.
... Being forced to challenge each other.
... Being alone, being so terribly alone and frightened.
... Running, running and not stopping, collapsing under Ranma's
dead weight as she lay gasping on the floor of the forest, praying to God to
save them both.
... Freedom, with each other.
"Kimiko," Soichi said
softly again, concerned by her long silence.
She turned her back on him as
she walked toward the bathroom, "Never, Soichi, never a doubt in my
mind."
^*^*^
Nabiki and Sanii slipped out
the apartment quickly after the couple fell asleep, both their faces flaming
from the extended contact.
^*^*^
"RYOGA, STOP!" Akane
cried at the top of her lungs. It was
the only way she could get him to listen to her.
He'd been running around
downtown Tokyo for nearly three hours, trashing every store and ripping through
every diner and McDonalds looking for his old and most hated foe.
For two years of his life,
Ryoga had been filled with fear, fear of discovery, fear of rejection, fear of
losing. And all of his worries were
rooted in one Saotome Ranma. The boy
who was just a bit more handsome, the boy who was just a bit more charming, the
boy who was just a bit more skilled in the art, the boy who was just a bit more
than he could ever be. The boy who had
possessed the only woman he could ever love.
And that woman's voice finally
permeated the thick cloud of rage that surrounded his conscious mind. He looked around at the damage he had left
in his wake and felt his face turning bright red from the enraged stares of all
the shoppers and businesspeople on the block.
"Oh, sorry, I'm, I'm so
sorry!"
Grabbing Akane by the waist, he
took one mighty leap and headed back toward Nerima. Well, either that or Hokkaido.
They were pretty close together, weren't they?
^*^*^
"I saw him, Kasumi! I'm serious, I'm not losing my mind, and I
guarantee you: *he was there*!" Akane cried, tears streaming down her
face. Her older sister was glad that
she had sent Ryoga out for groceries.
It would give them at least a week before he returned, and he would be
saved from witnessing this, this pre-wedding *delusion*.
"Akane, Ranma *died*
twelve years ago, don't you remember?
He died defending the Tendo and Saotome families. You were there."
"I know!" she
yelled. "I know! I saw the building collapse and I saw the
fire, and I was there when the rescue workers said there was no chance of
survival! But I saw him today, with my
own two eyes!" Akane threw herself
face-down into her pillow, shoulders shaking from sobs.
"Lots of girls in the
world have red hair, and many of them have blue eyes. It's become a fashion trend in Tokyo. You probably just," Kasumi stopped, looking for a careful
word, "overreacted to someone who looked like Ranma's girl side."
"Are you sure?" Akane
breathed. Her eyes held the same
unconditional trust in her older sister as they had when she was just sixteen
years old. She would believe if Kasumi
believed, that was always the way it had gone.
Kasumi took a deep breath, but
before she could speak, her mind ran through the list of the impossible that
Ranma had accomplished, and she stopped.
The rescue crew had never recovered the bodies of either Takankawa Yuki
or Saotome Ranma, and mostly it was believed that they had become part of the
darkened ashes that littered the floors after the fire had engulfed Furinkan
High School. There was never any
conclusive proof that Ranma was dead.
But, anyone with a good sense of logic and two brain cells to rub together
could come to the conclusion that he had bit the dust along with Yuki. Sure, he was a brilliant martial artist and
everything, but no one could have survived that fire! As it was, Mousse died and Ryoga had almost followed the Amazon
to his grave. There was no way that
Ranma could have survived!
But then again, there was no *way*
that Ranma could have defeated the Seven Lucky Gods, and no way he should have
beaten Kirin. Ranma had done lots of
things that normal people were incapable of.
And then Kasumi looked once
again into the pleading eyes of her youngest sister, and felt the desperation
there. "I'm sure, Akane," she
said softly, kicking herself internally for killing her hopes, it was for
Akane's own good.
Akane had been engaged to a
ghost for far too long, it wouldn't do to have her walking into a marriage with
the same dark imprint on her heart.
^*^*^
Two Weeks Later
^*^*^
"Yoshida Publicity
Incorporated, how may I help you this afternoon?"
"Actually, I want to make
an appointment to meet Ms. Yoshida; I like to meet people before I hire
them."
"Of course. How about ... is tomorrow afternoon at three
okay for you, Ms ... ?"
"Oh, Tendo, Nabiki
Tendo. And tomorrow afternoon is
fine. Actually, I have a request of
you, please, keep this meeting a secret.
See, Kimiko and I were friends in high school, I'd like to surprise
her."
"I'm sure she'd love
that. No problem, see you tomorrow, I'm
sure that you'll have a lovely reunion."
"Absolutely lovely."
^*^*^
"Morning," Soichi
murmured as he drifted into the breakfast room. His feet slapped against the cool tile of the floor, and the
sound of water rushing down their building distracted him from the sound of one
redheaded woman sighing for a moment.
Turning away from the
coffeemaker as he poured himself a mug of Kimiko's favorite Jamaican Blue
Mountain espresso blend, he nodded toward the picture window. "It's getting pretty heavy, isn't
it?"
It had taken a while and
several thousand mishaps, but he'd gotten his curse under control, at least
enough so that he could get along in life without the interesting number of
questions. Their first tactic had been
simply not to get wet, and then they'd sent away for the Amazon's waterproof
soap, which worked rather well for a year until they realized that people built
up a resistance to it after continued use.
They'd finally settled on just carrying an umbrella at all times, and
being as careful as possible. Accidents
still happened. Accidents that usually
occurred when Kimiko thought it might be fun to break out a watergun and chase
him around the apartment. Soichi was
fast, but sometimes, not fast enough.
But he didn't mind, he still
had half a crate of Instant Nannichuan, and while he used it sparingly, he
timed it well. Kimiko had had more than
one interesting surprise last April first.
Still haunted by the sound of
water falling, she sighed, and nodded dreamily, her eyes captured by the play
of light against the opposite wall. Her
fingers tapped softly against the heavy, honey-colored wood of the table, and
strands of her hair fell across her face, covering her eyes.
Soichi raised his brows, and
ventured once again, "What are the odds that I'll make it to work today
without a problem?"
She shrugged, and in a soft
voice, replied, "Oh, I don't know.
If you take the subway," she left off, biting her lower lip.
And suddenly she blinked and
heaved a great sigh, stretching her arms upward and pointing her toes against
the floor, releasing a mewling sound she stood and turned toward him.
Soichi couldn't help but
smile. Her morning routine was still a
wonder to him, even after many years spent together. She had a series of actions: first, she'd roll out of bed, her
hair adorably puffy from sleep, then, she'd wander around the apartment
slamming into walls and stubbing her toes like a zombie for ten minutes. Sometime between the moment where she
finished brushing her teeth and finding the coffeemaker, Soichi would steal a
kiss, most times, several. He loved the
way she'd respond in that confused, overjoyed manner when he embraced her. There was something deeply touching about
how she faced their relationship with the same childlike wonder and amazement
that she had when they had met years ago.
She'd stretch, and come awake.
And Soichi's fun would be over.
"Morning," she said,
and walked over to the coffeemaker and poured herself a mug, taking a deep
breath of its heady smell before she drank.
"Welcome to the world of
the living, Kimiko."
"I was
thinking." She walked into the
bedroom, and to the background sounds of clothing being discarded, Soichi
heard: "I've got some time between my eight o'clock and my ten fifteen,
you want to drop by and have brunch?"
Soichi flipped through his
mental calendar quickly. "Sorry,
Kimiko, I promised Naka that I'd spar with him today." He grinned at himself, "So I was going
to ask you about that, too, should I fake ineptitude, or should I kick his
butt, but good?"
Kimiko stopped for just a
second as she was zipping up her skirt, remembering how intensely painful it
was for her husband to fake ineptitude at anything. There a brief spout of twinkling laughter, and Kimiko asked,
"Is he seeing you for self-esteem issues, or is it something that you
wouldn't crush by crushing him physically?"
"He hates his
family."
Kimiko appeared, and a wicked
grin on her face. "Kick his
ass."
^*^*^
"Akane, you look
lovely," Saotome Nodoka murmured, smiling as she tied the obi around
Akane's waist. She'd spent years of
life waiting to be able to prepare her future daughter-in-law, get her ready to
walk out to her wonderful, manly son and marry and be happy in a way that she
and Genma had never been able to.
But instead, she'd settled for
preparing a woman for her wedding to a former friend of her son's.
She hid a sigh and found a
cheerful expression, one that reflected the half-deadened look on her charge's
face.
Akane smiled bravely, praying
that it didn't falter. At the ripe old
age of twenty-nine, she didn't understand the mysteries of the world, she
hadn't answered all the questions she asked about herself, even. But she knew one thing to be true: she did
not want to marry Hibiki Ryoga.
But she'd said yes five years
ago when he'd finally popped the question; she'd kissed him back as he
tentatively reached toward her that night.
And she had responded like any lonely woman might as he had nervously
unbuttoned her blouse later that evening, yearning for someone's loving touch.
"Akane, I want to tell
you," Nodoka started, tears welling up in her eyes, "I know he never
let on that he cared about you, but Ranma did love you, a lot." Akane felt her shoulders sag. 'Anything, anything but this conversation,'
she thought miserably. She had been
expecting it, she had coached herself for it, but nothing could truly prepare
her for it. And yet, relentless, Nodoka
continued to talk, tears flowing freely down her too-pale cheeks. "I don't want you to go into this
marriage with any baggage. I am happy
for you, and he would be, too."
"Yes, Auntie, I'm sure he
would be." Wiping away the stray teardrop
that had made its way down her face, she added, "For all we know, Ranma's
spirit may be there at the wedding."
Akane cursed herself quietly, why had she said that? 'Oh, yeah, because Kasumi said it a month
ago, and it was very sweet.' The youngest
Tendo girl tried to hide a scowl.
Instead of the words being reassuring and gentle, they sounded lame even
in her own mind.
Nodoka smiled warmly, running
her hand across Akane's cheek.
"What a lovely thought, I'll be sure to tell him that he's invited
when I visit him later this week."
Akane hesitated, and said very
quietly, "Auntie, if it's okay with you, I'd like to come with you, when
you go to ... see Ranma."
For the longest time, Akane had
found something terribly wrong with Nodoka's weekly visits to Ranma's
grave. It wasn't that she still longed
for her son, that was to be expected and understood; but how the woman
characterized her pilgrimages to the cemetery ... "I'm going to go talk to
Ranma now, Akane, would you like to come with me?" and "Ranma and I
will have a long conversation today."
There had been something eerie about it. The dead did not speak.
But then again, ever since her
son's death many years ago, Nodoka had always been rather fragile. Genma watched over her now, in a way that
he'd never bothered (or needed) to do so while their child was still
alive. For the most part, Nodoka was
shielded from what problems arose in their now much-simplified life. She was quiet, domestic, and tended to visit
the dojo often, happier in conversation with Kasumi regarding dinner plans and
menus than at home in the emptiness.
'Maybe it's time I try,' Akane
thought slowly, 'to talk to him, too.'
"Of course, Dear. I'm sure he'd love to see you." Nodoka smiled too-brightly and said,
"Excuse me child, I've got to go check on the miso soup," and quickly
left the room.
She turned to watch the three
Akane's in the mirrors mimic her actions exactly. A soft smile spread across her still-lovely face. "Who's uncute now, Ranma," she said
softly. Sliding down to her knees in
the wedding kimono, and lowering her head, she stared at the woman in the
mirror. There was no remnant of the
girl from many years ago, the one with short hair and bright eyes; the face was
still attractive, softly so, but now the eyes glittered with experience.
She wondered for just the
briefest moment, if, in fact, Ranma had ever loved her at all, would he still,
if he knew her now.
Akane narrowed her eyes,
berating herself silently. That didn't
matter anymore! *Especially* not at the
crossroads she stood!
T-minus two weeks until wedding
bells rang for Akane and ... Ryoga.
^*^*^
The sound of two people
fighting alerted Kimiko's ears, and with a kind smile, she crossed her arms and
wandered into the far exercise room open in the local gym. It was only a five-minute walk from Soichi's
office, and she knew that he dropped by occasionally to work out when he had
the time. A hunch had told her that if
he were to spar with someone, it wouldn't have been in his plush and expensive
office space.
She turned a corner and saw
something that still made her heart flutter: Fujikara Soichi in action. He'd stripped down to a gray t-shirt and his
khaki pants. Though these clothing
items did little to disguise the still sleek and muscular physique of her
husband of many years.
She listened to the sound of
strikes being passed from one martial artist to the other, and with a practiced
eye, she looked at the younger man she deduced was 'Naka', and carefully
analyzed him. Tall frame, buff but not
grotesquely muscular, good flexibility, and sufferable ki flow. With a good Sensei and a little
semi-obsessive training, the kid had potential.
She decided it was time to stop
their fun. "Hey, Bruce Lee and
Jackie Chan, gimme a second of your time, will you?" she called out
playfully. Immediately, both stopped
their blurred arms and smiled, one lazily, the other shyly. She walked up to the sweaty men, and
extended her hand to the younger of the two, watching as a bright red flush
appeared over his face. "You must
be Naka," she said kindly.
"Yeah," he replied,
his eyes drifting upward to see her face clearly for the first time. His face suddenly turned very red and he
fell unnaturally silent. Kimiko could
only guess at the reasons why (she'd never been very good at reading pubescent
boys; their hormones seemed to jam any empathy-signals their minds were
attempting to send) his hand started to shake.
Kimiko raised her eyebrows and
tossed an amused glance toward Soichi, who covered his mouth in an attempt not
to laugh out loud. "What is it,
Naka-kun?" she asked gently.
"Well, it's just that
you're," he paused, seemed to choke, and shut up again. There was another long silence before he
muttered hoarsely, " ... very pretty ... "
Kimiko busted out laughing;
Naka looked like he wanted to crawl into a hole, and set about digging his heel
into the ground in an attempt to create one on the spot.
Kimiko finally stemmed her
laughter and taking Naka's hand softly, she said, "It's okay, Naka-kun, I
take it as a compliment," seeing the boy's spirits lift, she grinned and
said, "So, this is the Naka that Soichi hasn't stopped talking about. If it wasn't about how much he wanted to spar
with you," she shared a chuckle with the boy. "Then it was about how much you reminded him of
himself."
Naka blushed liberally and
looked down.
Naka looked up to see Soichi
grinning like an idiot.
Needless to say, Naka was angry
that his therapist was laughing at him.
Working quickly to think of a way
to reassert his manhood (especially in front of Kimiko...), Naka blurted out
the first thing that came to mind, "I want a rematch! Just because you beat me-"
"I *destroyed* you,"
Soichi corrected.
The boy turned sixteen shades
of red. Kimiko wished silently that she
had a camera. These were Kodak
moments. "I want a
rematch!"
Soichi gladly agreed,
scheduling it shortly after exams.
"I'll only fight you if you pass all your classes, Naka."
The boy was stunned, and in a
moment of dumbfounded stupidity, he cried, "We're never going to get to
spar again!"
Kimiko laughed, and she
hesitated as a memory washed over her.
^*^*^
Nerima
14 Years Previous
"How'd you get
detention?" Yuki asked tentatively, her eyes sneaking looks at the more quiet
than calm boy that walked by her. She'd
been surprised when no one offered to make friends with her that day, and more
than a little disappointed.
Transferring in mid-way through a school year during the freshman year
of high school was rough, Yuki had been praying for companionship. She repressed the urge to smile brightly at
Ranma, he had no idea how grateful she was that he'd offered to walk with her;
Nerima was a pretty confusing place.
He shrugged, fighting an
embarrassed flush and muttering, "Oh, you know, the usual, sleeping in
class, eating in class, not paying attention in class, making faces at the
class from the hall."
Yuki laughed out loud. "I thought I was the only person in the
world to ever get detention for that!"
With an embarrassed smile, he
put his hand behind his head.
"Well, if you had Miss Hinako, you'd understand. The urge to mess with her in class is just
too strong."
She giggled in return, closing
her eyes and breathing deeply, she replied, "So I've heard. You know, this explains a lot for me."
Ranma glanced at her from the
corner of his eyes. *Very carefully*,
he asked, "Explains a lot of what?"
"Well," she started,
her tongue resting on the edge of her lip for half a beat, "this guy named
'Kuno' attacked me at least three times today, declaring his eternal love for
me, and calling me his 'Pigtailed Maiden', and yelling about how I'd finally
been freed from that sorcerer 'Saotome's' grasp." Ranma groaned as Yuki continued, "He
refused to call me 'Yuki' even though I told him that was my name. That guy's as thick as a wall." She turned toward Ranma, frowning as he
laughed out loud. "I'm glad you
think it's funny; it was very disgusting, you know."
"No," he gasped,
"it's not that, it's just, well, it's hard to explain, but I'm sure you'll
find out eventually."
Yuki eyed him for just a few
more seconds, and just as Ranma was ready to brace himself for a good, hearty
beating, she shrugged and walked on.
There was a space of comfortable silence, as they walked past the canal,
Ranma and took serious study of the girl next to him.
However, it was at this moment
that a certain myopic Amazon warrior rushed onto the scene, crying,
"SAOTOME! You shall pay for
stealing my Darling Shampoo!" The
purpose for the declaration was unknown (as it was ninety percent of the time,
at least to Ranma).
Unlike most days, where Ranma
just growled and punched the Amazon boy away with little more regard than one
would have for a passing distraction on the other side of a busy street, Ranma
was annoyed today. Today, he had a
friend with him, a *guest*, a new girl who knew nothing of his wretched
reputation and didn't seem to want to marry, kill, or molest him; Mousse's
behavior before Yuki would not be tolerated.
Of course, red is a far more
alerting color than black, and considering that Yuki looked exactly like Ranma
in girl form, it wasn't surprising that Mousse attacked *her*.
Releasing a battle cry, he
lunged, and Ranma in sudden alarm realized that his defensive stance was for
naught because he was lunging at Yuki.
There was a sudden panicking fear in his heart that an innocent,
untrained girl would be harmed because of Mousse's blind stupidity and their
similarities in appearance. Ranma felt
the weight of guilt already.
What he saw next drove him
insane with curiosity.
Yuki screamed as Mousse grabbed
her chest to fling her against something painfully blunt. Unfortunately, it was not to be, because
with one powerful fist, she slammed him hard against the pavement. And after flipping over the
quickly-recovering Mousse, she landed on his head and kicked his solar plexus,
hard. It seemed to be a rule that
regardless of how well-trained or strong a martial artist might have been, once
within Nerima city limits, and caught in the middle of an act of perversion,
any girl with a quick enough temper could bring said martial artist to his
knees.
"YOU PERVERT!" she
screamed, stomping on Mousse's prone form with righteous female rage. Finally satisfied, she wiped the dust from
her hands and patted down her clothing.
Picking up her discarded books, she turned back to Ranma. "HONESTLY! What is wrong with this place?
If it isn't a lunatic trying to kiss me, then it's someone trying to
*kill* me!"
Ranma stared at her for half a
beat. "Um, are you okay?"
"I'll live," she
muttered.
He was still stunned, his jaw
lay somewhere in the vicinity of the ground.
He had watched her motions carefully; her body was well trained for
battle, lithe, and flexible. It was like
she had practiced the art every moment of every single day of her life ... just
like he had. "Uh," Ranma
managed, "does that happen a lot, you don't seem very surprised."
She laughed, glancing at
Mousse's bruised carcass. "If
you're wondering if I was randomly attacked before, the answer is 'no',"
she stopped, looking at him thoughtfully, a light dawned in her eyes. "Hey!
He yelled 'Saotome', isn't that you?"
Ranma turned bright red with
embarrassment.
"Geez," she paused
once more, "personally, I don't see the resemblance."
"Well, he's very
near-sighted," Ranma said, an odd, 'oh, of course' tone in his voice.
"Is that so?" Yuki
replied, staring at him in bemusement.
After a nervous chuckle, he
asked, desperately seeking to change the subject, "So you study
Kempo?"
She grinned, "Yeah, but
Kempo's boring by itself, it's like Kendo, without the bokken. I study several schools, but family-wise –
the Tanakawa School of the Rising Phoenix."
Ranma whistled, looking up at
the sky warily. "That's a mouthful,
how does it compare to Anything Goes?"
Yuki shrugged. "I don't know, I've never fought anyone
who practiced Anything Goes before."
She raised an eyebrow at him. "Let
me guess, you're one of the few and the proud who study it?"
Ranma grinned, not a trace of
arrogance in this truly happy expression, "Yup, since I was four years
old."
"Then maybe we could spar
sometime." She smiled at him, and
it was only then that he realized how truly beautiful she was. They were walking home right during the
sunset hours, and her delicate features and brilliant hair were framed by a
background of orange and yellow flame in the sky. And with a soft sigh of appreciation, he wondered, 'Wow ... my
girl side looks like that?'
Giving him a soft smile, she
asked, "Whatcha lookin' at?"
The way her lips curved up told Ranma that she knew *exactly* what he'd
been staring at, and the twinkle in her eyes enforced this.
Stuttering from embarrassment
at being caught, he muttered, "Nothing much. Just the sun," he paused, "it's nice."
She turned to look, and
sighing, she answered, "Yes, it is, isn't it?" Turning back toward him, she asked,
"Well, are you going to be straight with me? Come on, why were you staring before?"
He stopped and turned bright
red from embarrassment, for a moment, Yuki had a horrible thought, 'Oh, God,
he's not going to confess his eternal love for me or something? Kuno is bad enough!'
"It's actually hard to
explain," he started.
Just as he said the words, the
heavens rumbled and rain fell hard on the two teens, and before Yuki's very
eyes, she watched a curse activate.
"My God," she
murmured, too shocked to continue.
Ranma rolled her eyes, reaching
out a tentative hand. "Hi, my name
is Saotome Ranma, did I mention that I have a Jusenkyo curse?"
^*^*^
"Hey, Kimiko-san, your
three o'clock is here."
Kimiko glanced at her calendar,
and frowned when she realized that she didn't see any three o'clock written
down, but she sighed and made a mental note to hit Ryoko next time she had a
chance.
"Send them on in,
Ryoko-san."
She grabbed the stack of files
on her desk and turned her chair toward the row of low, squattish, black file
cabinets behind her desk. Using the
rollers on her chair, she moved over to the left six inches and started to put
the files in their rightful places.
She heard the sound of a door
opening, and said with her back still turned, "Morning! I'm sorry; I'll be right with you, okay?
"Oh, take your time,"
there was a pause in the sound of a cultured voice, "Yuki-san."
And the world froze for Yoshida
Kimiko. Her hands shook as the files
fell from her fingertips, and the unstoppable fear that gushed from the dark
place inside her refused to ebb or slow.
This was her doom. This was her
end. She could taste the loss on her
tongue, and she could very nearly feel the loneliness in her bones.
She slowly turned the chair to
come face to face with one Tendo Nabiki.
She didn't speak for a long time, and was able to force her mouth open
only when the silence became more oppressive than the situation.
"Hello, Nabiki-san, it's
been a while, hasn't it?" she managed breathily, still desperately trying
to steady the rhythm of her heart. She
remembered Soichi's words. No one could
drag them back to Nerima; no one could force them away from the lives they had
built. They were masters, and masters
did not run.
Nabiki sat down the luxurious
leather chair reserved for clients.
Glancing about the office, she nodded in appreciation. "Beautiful decorating, Yuki; my boss'
office looks a little like this."
Crossing her legs at the knee, she said matter-of-factly, "I must
commend you, Yuki-san, you did a masterful job hiding. More than a decade, and I thought you were
dead the whole time." She smiled
in a fashion that was not at all cheerful.
"Kind of sad, though, proves that Ranma's death was a waste after
all."
Something clicked in
Kimiko/Yuki's mind.
Nabiki didn't know. Nabiki only knew about *her*. Nabiki had no clue that Ranma wasn't dead at
all – Nabiki only knew a half-truth.
And for a second, her heart
sang hopefully as her mind started formulating a battle plan.
She chuckled softly, newly
collected after the shock of a lifetime, she said, her voice only slightly
shaky, "I hope I'm not being presumptuous if I ask you to please address
me as Yoshida-san, or if you please, Kimiko.
The name 'Yuki' and the life she had were all left behind ages
ago." She looked at Nabiki hard,
tapping her fingertips on her desk.
"Why are you here, Nabiki-san?
You never waste time or words; there must be a purpose."
Nabiki shrugged. "Actually, Yu-" Nabiki stopped
abruptly, frowning as she tried to reconcile the redheaded image before her
with the new title, "...Kimiko-san, it's half curiosity."
"Curiosity?" Kimiko repeated,
her tone low.
Nabiki nodded, cocking her head
to the side. "Are you him?"
she asked very seriously. "Are you
him or are you, are you the other one?"
Kimiko stared at the woman
before her for a moment, trying to decipher her cryptic inquiries, fumbling
with the unspecific pronouns, wondering what Nabiki might have meant, and what
she'd be giving away if she answered unwisely.
She narrowed her eyes in concentration, watching at the tension in
Nabiki's stance seemed to build exponentially with every passing moment.
"Oh!" she finally
cried in understanding.
"*Oh*! You mean if..."
Nabiki grew impatient. "Yes!
I mean *that*!"
Kimiko felt massively
insulted. "I'm 'the other
one'," she said coldly, her feminine hackles weeping somewhere deep
inside, wondering if she'd started to lose what wiles she'd managed to collect
in her lifespan. She breathed
hard. "Ranma is dead," she
whispered.
Nabiki's eyes grew hard. "You killed Saotome Ranma, Kimiko-san,
changing your name and running away does not change that. You never paid for the cruelty you dealt my
family."
Kimiko raised her eyebrows,
keeping her cool exterior intact and folding her hands carefully over her lap,
she asked, "What damage? To my
recollection, Saotome Ranma was in no way officially affiliated with your
family when he died. Why the personal
vendetta?"
"He was
Akane's fiance, and regardless of what she refuses to admit, she cared for
him. Our family cared for him, when he
died, we suffered a terrible loss," Nabiki said, parroting what she'd
muttered at the martial artist's funeral many years past.
Kimiko's eyes grew dark. "Really? A loss? The Tendos
treated Ranma with nothing short of utter and complete disrespect."
Nabiki flinched, taking the
words as a verbal slap.
"I'm surprised he lasted
as long as he did under those conditions.
Besides," Kimiko added in a cool tone, "it was a matter of
family honor, his death was an accident with no connection to me." Saying these words, she almost believed
herself. Kimiko snarled at Nabiki. "You have nothing to complain
about. And I would appreciate it if you
left my new life alone."
Nabiki scowled, "No such
luck, Kimiko-san, you may have moved on, but I haven't. I have my ways. Do not be unprepared, there may well be retaliation."
Kimiko smiled serenely. "Go ahead, Nabiki-san, I'd love to see
you try."
^*^*^
Stepping out of the
air-conditioned interior of the business complex, Nabiki pulled cell phone from
her jacket pocket roughly. Hitting speed
dial 2, she waited for the ring.
"Yo, Nabiki, what's
up?"
For half a second, she was
stunned. "How did you know it was
me, Kuzio-kun?"
"You're the only one who
ever calls me on this line, what's up?
Calling to ask me on a date?"
Nabiki sighed in half disgust
and half amusement. "You're never
going to let that drop, are you?"
"Never, the will of the
heart is not stilled, Nabiki."
"Look," she said
hurriedly, flagging down a cab and rushing toward the curb as she spoke,
"something *big* just happened. I
need all the information you can possibly get on one 'Yoshida Kimiko'; she owns
an advertising company. I need
*everything*. I don't care how
personal, or how embarrassing."
There was a space of
silence. "Nabiki, what are you
planning?" There was a worried
tone in Kuzio's voice as he asked, "What are you going to do to her?"
Frustrated, Nabiki slid into
the backseat of the cab, and in an overly-harsh tone of voice, yelled,
"Why do you care? I'm paying you
aren't I? Just do it!" She hung up her cell phone abruptly.
She'd been right. It *was* Yuki. There had been initial doubts, maybe just a similarity of
appearances, maybe it was even Ranma!
But Nabiki had been skeptical; the Ranma she had known would have rather
been caught dead than female in public, besides, the redhead had possessed 'the
walk'. That graceful tilt of the body
that was deeply feminine in nature, something ingrained at birth or in the
genes, something that could not be imitated, something not even Ranma could
learn.
"Take me to Nerima,
*now*."
And as men usually do when a
woman uses *that* tone of voice, the driver complied.
^*^*^
"So, was that Mrs.
Fujikara back there, or was she just a friend?" Naka ventured. Soichi raised an eyebrow and turned toward
him in amusement, wondering briefly at the obliviousness of young men. He had half a mind just to sigh and ask the
if fact that his doctor wore a wedding ring had ever registered.
"She prefers to be called
Ms. Yoshida, if you don't mind." He
repressed a grin, and pushing his glasses a little higher on his nose. "Why do you ask?" he pressed
onward. "Interested?"
Naka grew flustered once again,
and put his hand shyly to the back of his head like one nervous, confused
youngster had in days gone by, he said, "Aw, Fujikara-sensei, you know I
was just curious."
Soichi chuckled. "Yes, Naka, she is my wife, we got
married about ten years ago. Why do you
ask?"
Naka frowned, his eyes clouded
for a moment, "Well, you two seem so happy together. More like teenagers than an old married
couple." He scowled. "My parents are *never* like
that."
Soichi looked at his patient
thoughtfully. He'd once believed that
Naka's lack of interest in school was entirely rooted in the fact that the boy
had no real motivation to do well in his studies. He had no plans for college, and his goal in life was to own and
teach at a dojo. His actions in high
school were helping him well on his way to doing so, but his grades were
seriously suffering. Despite logical
arguments that owning a dojo was more than martial arts, the boy had refused to
listen.
"How long have your
parents been like that, Naka?" he asked softly.
"Oh, I don't know, since I
was born, maybe?" He chuckled and
went on, "Ever since I can remember, they've been like that, always
arguing and carrying on. Most of it's
because my mom works, and my dad thinks that they don't spend enough time
together." He blinked, hard. "I'm sorry, Fujikara-Sensei, can we
talk about something else?"
"Of course, Naka, whatever
you feel comfortable with." Soichi
decided that he and Naka's parents needed to make an appointment. He would not press the boy any further that
day.
"Well, then I'm going to
have to pick *your* brain." His
patient grinned wickedly, and Soichi felt a little tremor in his stomach. Ambitious youths were always more dangerous
than their elders.
"By all means, try, we've
only got five minutes left, anyway."
Naka's expression
brightened. "Will you be
honest?"
Soichi laughed. "Sure."
"Fantastic!" Naka
cried. Soichi couldn't help but to
smile. Naka was a mirror image of his
younger self, with a little more tact and a few extra opportunities. Soichi hoped sincerely that Naka's life
wouldn't come to the nearly disastrous climax that his had.
"Alright," Naka
started, squinting his eyes and thinking hard, "when did you start
practicing martial arts?"
"When I was four years
old. Next."
"Wow. Oh, okay, next, right. Um, When did you lose your virginity?"
Soichi rolled his eyes. "That's *hardly* an appropriate
question."
"Come on, you promised
that you'd be honest."
'Damn,' Soichi thought. 'And I can't even lie; that would be
hypocritical, and I'm supposed to be a model of integrity and mental
health. Damn.' "Alright," he sighed, "I was
seventeen and a half."
"Details," Naka said
eagerly, wondering if the girl in question had been some fly-by-night, an
ex-flame, or Kimiko. "Gosh,
Kimiko-san," he'd say to her next time they met, "*I* sure didn't know
that Fujikara-sensei had done *that* sort of thing with a girl before *you*
married him!" He got a devilish
grin on his face, payback indeed.
Soichi frowned but
complied. "I was seventeen and a
half, no alcohol involved, and it cold outside the dojo. Happy?"
Naka raised his eyebrows. "You lost your virginity in a
dojo?"
Soichi shrugged and laughed
softly. "Only place we could get
any privacy, yeah."
"How long had you known
each other before?"
"Oh, a while, by my
memory," he replied softly, and before Naka's very eyes, Soichi drifted
through the years the beginnings toward a still-questioning end.
^*^*^
Nerima
14 years previous
"SHIT!" Yuki cried,
stepping back quickly and falling into a seasoned defensive stance. One Ranma recognized immediately from years
of battle. "Where'd Ranma go? What did you do to him? And above all, *why the hell do you look
like me*?"
Ranma almost laughed, it was
hard to repress the nearly girlish giggles that threatened to rise in her throat,
but somehow, she was able to silence them in the absurdity of the moment. "That's touching, Yuki. But Ranma didn't go anywhere, I *am* Saotome
Ranma."
"RANMA IS A BOY! AND YOU LOOK LIKE ME, NOT LIKE RANMA AT
ALL!" Yuki screeched at the top of her, feeling the panic welling up
inside.
"I noticed, and I noticed
that, too. Believe me, no one knows
that better than I do, but trust me for just a second, from one martial artist
to another." Ranma took Yuki's
hands softly and placed them on her own cheeks. "I am Saotome Ranma."
"But," Yuki
stuttered, her eyes wide in disbelief, "how is that even
possible?" She lifted a hand to
Ranma's braid, and gently pulling her toward herself, she pressed her hair next
to her own. "It's the exact same
color! No hair-dye company can even
recreate this color, my friends have tried!" She turned Ranma around, looking at the shape of her hips and the
way her features were set, blinking hard in the rain, wondering if maybe there
was LSD in the water.
"We're, we're," she
paused, breathing in hard, "we're duplicates!"
"Do you see why I was
staring now?" Ranma replied softly, embarrassment evident on her
features.
The rain still fell thickly
around them, and Yuki's soaked hair was plastered to her face as the two
teenagers stared at one another in wonder and confusion in the rain.
"Weren't," Yuki said
in a hushed voice, "you a boy just a second ago?"
"It's a curse," Ranma
explained. "Follow me, there's a
restaurant near here where we can sit for a while. And, I think there's someone there who can explain this to
us." She grabbed Yuki's hand, and
with a soft tug, the girl was shaken out of her stunned state and followed,
mystified still, the carbon-copy of her own image toward a small cafe near the
end of the street.
"SHAMPOO!" Ranma
yelled, seating the still-awed Yuki in a chair softly. "SHAMPOO! We have a problem, and it's HUGE!"
Shampoo grinned cheerfully, and
fluffing her thick, lavender hair, she bounced into the dining room,
"Airen come to date with Shampoo!
I so happy- [WHO THE HELL IS THAT??]" Shampoo had been making a brave attempt to speak more
grammatically correct Japanese, but sometimes, the informal, soft language was
not enough to convey emotion. And for
this, she lapsed back into her mother tongue.
Ranma stared. Shampoo
stared. Yuki stared.
All in all, there was much
staring.
"Uh," Ranma started,
"did you say 'what the hell water?'"
Shampoo stared at her Airen for
a beat, and then back at her Airen's (apparent) twin. There were two Ranma's sitting in the dining room of the
Nekohanten, and she was more concerned with learning Chinese than explaining
this entire situation?
After a great deal of yelling,
some screaming, and a pinch of bellowing, Cologne finally arrived on the scene,
turned Mousse into a duck, locked him in a cage so he'd stop throwing himself
at Yuki to be stomped on, and restored some semblance of order.
It was a curious thing, she
concluded, staring at Yuki pointedly, her old eyes squinting as she read the
girl's ki lines. There certainly was
more than one surprise under the feminine appearance of the girl before
her. "Tell me, Yuki-san, have you
ever studied martial arts?" Cologne asked, her voice slow and careful.
Yuki frowned, what was the
relevance between her studies and why she looked *exactly* like Saotome
Ranma? She answered in as polite a
voice as she could, "Yes, I've studied both Kempo and the Rising Phoenix
School of Martial Arts since I was a child."
Cologne narrowed her eyes, and
murmured, "Yuki-san, is it? Have
you ever heard of 'ki' before?"
The girl before her looked
terribly insulted, "Of course I have!
What kind of person calls themselves a martial artist if they don't know
ki?" Yuki scowled, and added,
"Besides, what does that have to do with why *I* look like his cursed
form, anyway?" she pointed at Ranma to emphasize her point.
Ranma had been forced to
demonstrate his curse at least twelve times before Yuki had seen enough proof
to persuade her not to run screaming from the Nekohanten.
"That," Cologne
murmured, "I do not know, though I do have a theory." Balancing on her staff, she hopped over to a
cabinet and retrieved an ancient-looking
book, it's pages yellowed and leather cover stained. "It's an odd thing, Child," she started, touching
Yuki's cheek softly, "I've never heard of a Jusenkyo curse *mimicking*
someone before, nor do I believe that anyone else has ever heard of
it." She paused, hoping to find a
trace of reincarnated spirit in Yuki.
Certainly, the soul in the girl was old as light, but the appearance,
the character, the personality and flair were all new of this life. The ancient Amazon sighed in frustration.
Yuki had closed her eyes and
started breathing in and out rapidly, calmed only by (the now restored male)
Ranma's smiles. Ranma, between offering
helpful grins of encouragement, was starting to dig through his endless memory
for a whisper of something that he knew was terribly relevant to the situation. 'What was it that the Jusenkyo tourguide
said about the Springs of the drowned girl and boy?' he wracked his brain for
remembrance until he was hit rudely upside the head.
"OW! Stupid old mummy! What did you do that for?" he yelled, rubbing his newly
developing bump.
Cologne looked irate. "Son-in-law, I said for you to take her
home, this will take more time and research than I can do right now; I will
contact you once I know more."
Yuki looked around the
room. At the boy who turned into a duck
and who was locked in a cage, at the shapely, lavender-tressed Amazon who'd
been barely restraining herself from both speaking and molesting Ranma, at the
shriveled old woman who hopped about on a staff, and at the boy, who, in a way,
looked exactly like her.
"Man," she said
softly, "this should be interesting."
^*^*^
"Sensei? Come on, you were going to tell me more
about her!" Naka complained, shaking Soichi with his voice and pleading
expression. "Come on! How am I going to know how to make a move on
a girl?" he asked desperately. 'I
need dirt on you! Keep talking!' he
mind yelled.
Soichi glanced at his watch in
a distracted manner. "Oh, I'm sure
you'll manage until Wednesday, Naka.
I'll see you two days, okay?"
Naka sighed, and grabbing his
bookbag, he started back out of Soichi's office. "Sensei," he said nervously, "I'm really glad that
I've been coming to see you."
Soichi smiled. "Same here, Naka, same here."
^*^*^
Kasumi frowned angrily at the
middle Tendo daughter. "They don't
need this, Nabiki," she said warningly.
She had been pleasantly
surprised when Nabiki had arrived at the dojo, out of breath and tired, but
happy to see her younger sister none the less.
After having engaged in polite conversation with Tofu, Nabiki had asked
quietly, "Sorry, brother-in-law, but can I steal your wife for a
moment?" Tofu had planted a soft
kiss on Kasumi's cheek and said jokingly, "Sure, just remember to bring
her back unharmed."
And Kasumi had been happy to
have the time to talk to her sister, but then things took a turn for the worst.
"I don't know how it
happened, Kasumi, but I was walking down the street and I saw Yuki! But she's not Yuki anymore! She's changed her name, runs her own
company. She's moved on
completely," Nabiki huffed, looking down at her hands. "Even after everything that she did to
us, she moved on! I can't believe
her!"
"*Nabiki*!" Kasumi
interrupted, her voice more harsh than usual, and it caught Nabiki's
attention. "Akane is getting
married in two weeks, Father was *just* released from the hospital, and his
heart's still weak from the surgery.
Saotome-san is *still* heartbroken from years ago! They do not need this!"
Nabiki stared at her older
sister in admiration. There weren't
that many people who could force her to shut up.
"If you must pursue
this," Kasumi added, "please, do it discreetly, and don't let on
about what you are doing, okay?"
Nabiki stared at her older
sister for a little while, and in a hesitant, slightly confused voice, she
murmured, "Sure, Kasumi, if you think it's for the best."
^*^*^
Soichi rolled over from his
side of the bed and through squinted eyes; he looked at the clock on the
nightstand. 'Geeez,' he thought, 'It's
three in the morning! What the heck is
Kimiko doing?' He rolled around again
toward the piercing brightness of the bathroom light and saw his wife bent over
the sink, shoulders slightly shaking.
'Shaking? Kimiko doesn't shake!'
And in one broad leap, he
jumped out of bed and toward the bathroom.
He crouched down next to her still trembling figure and stroked her back
gently, murmuring, "Kimiko? Are
you okay? Do you feel sick or
something?"
"I-I-Oh, shit!"
She bent her head over the sink
again and threw up (for, what Soichi would later discover, was the sixth time
that day). She coughed, running the tap,
wiping the sick from her face; she turned toward her husband weakly. "I'm fine," she said, breathing
softly, "I probably just caught the flu or something." Stepping carefully, she started toward the
bed again, but only made minimal progress before her legs gave out and she
almost ended up sitting on the floor.
"Aw, man," Soichi
said softly, "you really *are* sick." Picking her up carefully, he carried her to the bed, and tucking
her under the covers, he said, "This is probably stress related. It *has* been a messed up couple of
days." He frowned. "Though, this degree of negative
reaction is weird, for you anyway."
Kimiko frowned from where she
was snuggled deep in her pale blue down comforter, feeling more comfortable
already. "And what is that
supposed to mean?"
Soichi shrugged, and sitting
Indian style next to her on the mattress, he answered, "Nothing really,
just that you usually handle stress pretty well." He paused.
"Is there something going on that you're not telling me
about?" He asked this question
just out of psychiatric habit, it was how he ended most sessions; she'd never
kept anything from him after that ... first time, and he doubted she had reason
to conceal information from him, anyway.
Kimiko looked deep into his
eyes and evaluated her options. She
could tell him about Nabiki's unwelcome exploration of her life, she could warn
him that the most volatile of the Tendos was on the warpath and would probably
find some way to prove conclusively that Saotome Ranma and Tanakawa Yuki had
not died. Theoretically, she could
mention that she was still scared witless about what would happen if the Tendos
or the rest of the Saotome's discovered them.
But seeing that underlying
peace in his eyes, the deep, unquestioning happiness and calm, she couldn't
bear to break it.
And breathing in deeply, she
replied, "I've got a confession, Soichi," the words were said softly,
and Soichi started to worry, "I-I-I'm having an affair with the Miroku,
you know, the priest from that anime, Inu-Yasha? I know, I know, I always say that you're the only person for me,
but, he's just so delish."
And she waited for a reaction.
Which she got.
There was much carrying on and
threat of death before the last couple of words in that sentence sunk into
Ranma's mind, and after a few sheepish, "You are evil"s and "I
hate you"s, Ranma discovered there was something very wrong with how pale
his wife's face was.
^*^*^
Tokyo General Hospital was
deathly quiet at nearly four a.m. that morning, and save for the yelling voices
of one terrified male and one irate woman, everything else was calm.
"SOMEONE! Someone help! Please!"
"Goddammit! I was probably just dehydrated or
something!"
"SOMEONE, PLEASE!"
"Oh, God, if you embarrass
me any more, I swear - "
^*^*^
As it happened, the calm was
broken by two events that night.
Approximately two hours after
Kimiko and her nearly spastic husband were carted into the hospital, an
ambulance screamed down the circle and the doors were thrown open.
"SHIT! What the hell happened?" Sato Hiroshi
had been an emergency room surgeon for nearly six months, and he had seen all
sorts of tragedy, but he'd never seen this much blood so liberally draped all
over a person before.
"Auto vs. bus. Three people in the car, two were pronounced
on the spot. This one's got extensive
lacerations and probably a couple of broken ribs. Collapsed lung. We tubed
him on the spot," the EMT yelled, still holding a pressure bandage on the
boy's leg. "He's holding pretty
steady."
The other EMT ran alongside the
stretcher as they hoisted it up the ramp and into the hospital, "Yeah,
betcha he's going to wish he was on the road to terminal though – both parents
are dead, pretty shitty reality to wake up to."
Hiroshi bit his tongue and
tried not to hate Takano, the EMT who wouldn't know tact if it crawled down his
pants and bit him on the butt. He was a
bastard, a heartless, insensitive, weenie-dicked bastard, but he was also the
best EMT in all of Japan.
Hiroshi was determined not to
say a word.
But then Takano came up with,
"Damn, looks like one hell of a recovery, that's a fucker, from the build,
bet he plays some kind of sport, gonna have to shit that away, too."
"Fuck you anyway, Takano,
just because you don't get any doesn't mean you have to be a piss to everyone
else who isn't dead," Hiroshi seethed.
"We'll take it from here."
The two EMTs stood stunned
behind a set of swinging doors.
Hiroshi looked down at the
unconscious boy on the gurney, and almost as an afterthought, he looked up toward
the medics still outside, and called, "What's his name?"
And the one who wasn't an
asshole replied, "Yomada Naka!"
Hiroshi looked down to his
patient, and with a more-confident-than-he-really-was smile, they ran through
another set of doors.
"You're going to be just
fine, Naka-kun."
^*^*^
Kimiko sat silently on the exam
room bed, her shapely legs swinging slowly to and fro from the edge. Her arms were bare, and gooseflesh raised
all along her back, paper hospital gowns weren't the warmest things in the
world, but this degree of sensitivity to cold was not characteristic of a
trained martial artist. Her eyes were
downcast and her face was pale.
"Ms. Yoshida? Are you all right?" Sato Aiko looked at the woman before her in
deep concern. In her years, no one had
ever quite reacted that way to the news she had just shared. There were tears of joy, tears of horror,
shouts, yells, happiness, and shame.
But never just plain silence.
"I'm fine," Kimiko
murmured, her legs still swinging.
"Just confused."
"Confused?" Aiko
asked softly.
"I," she started
softly, "I was told that I could not conceive years ago. It's, it's kind of a shock."
Aiko smiled. "Had you and your husband wanted
children?"
Kimiko shied away, and turned
to face a wall, painted rosy pink in an effort to be cheery in the gloomy
surroundings of a hospital. "We,
we always wanted children, desperately, but we knew we couldn't have any,"
she stopped, "and even if we had been able to conceive," her voice
trailed off, "we had a delicate family situation." Kimiko looked up, her expression much
happier now. "I'm sure that my
husband will be thrilled." She
coughed. "Is, is the pregnancy why
I blacked out?"
Aiko sighed and clasped her
hands together. "Actually, Ms.
Yoshida, the reason you passed out is from the extremely low sugar content in
your blood." She eyed the other
woman for a second. "Had you
skipped a couple of meals, ma'am?"
Kimiko blushed. "I had a lot on my mind."
Aiko raised her eyebrow. "I'm sure you did. Be sure you don't do that again. The little one might not be too happy about
it."
"Right," Kimiko said,
a pretty blush coloring her face as she looked down once again, and finally
glancing back up at Aiko, she asked, "Can I get dressed? I know that Soichi would be worried out of
his mind by now."
"Sure, let me write out
some prescriptions for prenatal vitamins while you're doing that, okay?"
^*^*^
"What's wrong with
her? Please, God, just tell me, I can
handle it, really," Soichi demanded, begged, really, whimpered, more
honestly. He was ready to get down on
his knees to get the doctor to tell him what Kimiko had come down with. And for half a second, he shuddered at the
thought that if he threw a few tears into the equation, he would have been
exactly like Tendo Soun.
Dr. Sato Aiko only shook her
head at the man before her, his eyes watery, his hair wild, and his face pallid
in terror that something might have been off with his lovely, wonderful
wife. "Nothing is wrong with your
wife, Fujikara-san, in fact, according to what she's told me, it seems that
everything is right for the first time in a long while." Aiko smiled. "Have you two ever thought about having children?"
Soichi looked confused for half
a beat. "Well, yes, a long time
ago, but we couldn't get pregnant."
"Well," Aiko
commented mildly, "it seems that you've finally succeeded,
congratulations, Fujikara-san, you're going to be a father!"
He stared at her for a solid
minute before his eyes rolled back into his head and he tipped over, falling
with a solid 'thud' to the floor.
"Fujikara-san? Fujikara-san? Oh, God, can someone get me some smelling salts, please?"
^*^*^
Kimiko was in line at the
hospital pharmacy, her coat and prescription slip clutched tightly in her
hands.
She couldn't believe it.
She and Soichi had wanted
children so badly when they had gotten married. They had tried everything, from special fertility clinics to
Shinto Priestesses. After hundreds of sleepless
nights, endless hours of crying into pillows so Soichi couldn't hear her as she
wept, she'd finally surrendered to the reality that they'd never have a
child.
But now they had another
chance! They were going to have a baby!
She almost laughed out loud
from the sheer joy of it, and she wondered how Soichi would react. Would he yell? Would he cry? Would he
simply smile at her before taking her into his embrace, so gently and so warm,
because they would finally be complete?
"SHIT! HE'S CRASHING!" someone cried.
The panicked sound of surgeons
and the wheels of a hospital gurney being rolled quickly along a tile floor
interrupted Kimiko's joyful wanderings.
Sound is second only to smell
for bringing back the most vivid of memories, it's no wonder that Kimiko was suddenly
pulled through her years back to another place, where there was the heavy,
distant sound of wheels far away, acting as a backdrop to a very important
conversation.
^*^*^
Nerima
13 years 9 months previous
"Conics," Yuki sighed
in disgust, "stupid, useless, hateful conics. Whoever came up with these ought to be shot." She kicked a rock viciously along the
sidewalk and glared at the sky, glowing a fiery red that was doing a fair job
of copying the color of her hair.
"God take me now," she added, a fatalistic tone in her voice.
"Come on, Yuki, it's not
that bad," Ranma muttered, balancing carelessly atop the fence.
She scowled at him. "Maybe not for you, Ranma, but the
teacher likes you, and for some forsaken reason, you can zip through math like
a whiz."
"Well," he started
arrogantly, "some of us are gifted, and others just aren't."
"And some of us are
passing English," Ranma glared down at her as she spoke, "and some of
us aren't," Yuki finished smugly, crossing her arms more tightly across her
chest, warding off the cooling winds.
"Hey," she said, bemusement in her voice, "why are you
walking with me today? Don't you and
Akane usually go home together?"
All she got in response was a
jumbled mesh of various obscenities.
Yuki raised her brows,
"Never mind."
Ranma's eyes stared toward
something far away, but his mind was further still.
Things were not going well at
the Tendo Dojo.
It wasn't that he wasn't
accustomed to being blamed for any and everything that happened to go awry during
the day; it was that he wholly disliked the oppressive feeling of guilt. Especially since his logical mind knew he
had nothing to feel guilty about.
It had all started out with
Akane's curry nearly three months ago, about two days after he had first met
Yuki. His fiancee had decided to try
out a new recipe, one that sounded fantastic in the magazine and looked great
in the photo, but turned out to resemble something more like nuclear waste. So naturally when he'd declined to consume
it ("IDIOT! Uncute tomboy! Who in their right mind would eat that
steaming pile of garbage?"), Akane had gotten upset ("RANMA YOU
JERK! I can't believe you! I spent all afternoon making this for
you! Can't you at least *try* it?), so
Ranma had decided to give her a reasonable excuse ("HELL NO! Besides, Yuki and I went to Ucchan's and ate
already, okay? Feed it to P-chan or
something!"), to which, there was a rather unpleasant reaction on Akane's
part ("YUKI? WHO IS YUKI? DID YOU GET *ANOTHER* FIANCEE YOU JACKASS?").
He didn't understand. Was there something terribly wrong about
having lunch with a friend? Was it a
capital crime to enjoy someone's conversation?
God knew it had been too long since he'd been able to sit down and talk
to someone.
And after that, it had just
been downhill all the way. He didn't
even bother to talk to Akane anymore.
Just straight to his room after school, and straight to bed after
homework. There was no explaining
things. "But Akane! She's my friend! We've got a lot in common!
There's nothing wrong with having a girl for a friend!" he'd
protest. "I knew it! Shampoo, Ukyo, Kodachi, and me aren't enough,
you had to go and get another girlfriend!
PERVERT!" she'd accuse, seemingly deaf to his reasoning. "SINCE WHEN DID I SAY SHE WAS A
FREAKIN' GIRLFRIEND?" he'd finally yell.
"YOU DON'T NEED TO SAY IT, I CAN ALREADY TELL!" was her answer
on every such occasion.
He frowned to himself. When did it become this way? He remembered the first time he had ever met
Tendo Akane, a funny, smiling creature with bright eyes and a forgiving heart,
quick to welcome and friendly. Then
she'd realized that he was in fact a 'he'.
But even then, there were
moments of tentative romance, the fumbling motions of two people forced into
intimacy at an age where they didn't know what to do. Times where they had almost kissed, times when she'd say
something, or do something that just screamed of her devotion, or her
love. And he had been so sure, so
terribly certain that he loved her back that he was willing to lay down his
life for her.
There had been times when he
had wanted her so badly, wanted to kiss her and embrace her as one lover holds
another, and to whisper quiet words in her ear...
But those moments had grown
fewer and further in between.
There was an undeniable chill
in the air wrought by the onset of winter, and he shivered lightly, clenching
his teeth.
"Hey, are you okay?"
An all-too-familiar voice broke
him out of his deathly calm. Ranma
looked down from his place on the fence to Yuki's concerned face, her eyes
narrowed and her brow wrinkled.
He shrugged, and kept on
walking. "I'm fine, Yuki, don't
worry about it." He could feel the
smirk on her face.
"Of course not, Ranma,
because Mr. Super-kick-ass-Martial-Artist isn't vulnerable to emotion."
He did his best to frown at
her. And she just grinned back up at
him.
It was a well-known throughout
Nerima by then that Tanakawa Yuki did not know how to be unpleasant. In reality, that was not the case, but it
was true however, that it physically pained her to be angry with anyone for a
long time, she was naturally bubbly, happy, and reconciliatory. "Aw, come on, Ranma, just tell me
what's up, please?" she flashed him a cute expression that Ranko-chan had
used on more than one occasion to get free food. "Aren't I your friend anymore?"
Ranma growled and shook his
head, hopping off the fence and landing gracefully next to her on the
sidewalk. Falling into step, he
muttered, "That's not fair, Yuki."
He closed his eyes for a beat and said, "I'm worried about me and
Akane."
Yuki drew to a quick stop,
grinding her heel into the ground as she spun back to face him, "Oh,
Ranma, why didn't you say so earlier?"
She grabbed his hand. "Come
on, I'll take you out for noodles, we'll talk over food!" Her eyes were bright and she was nearly
breathless with excitement over *something* that Ranma didn't quite
understand. "Oh, maybe Cologne
will have found something about why we look alike, too!"
She started running, dragging
Ranma behind her at a steady pace.
It was at this moment that he
realized something that would hold deeply important in his soul for the rest of
his life. With all the women who chased
him, out of all the girls that flocked toward him, he'd always in a roundabout
way reached toward them for love, for understanding. Of course, Ucchan had always reached toward him, seeking to give
him haven from the world, as did Shampoo.
Yet both of them wanted something of him, wanted him to change in one
way or another. Ucchan wanted nothing
more than for him to quit Nerima altogether, to live their lives of okonomiyaki
away from memories of a less-pleasant past.
Shampoo wanted to take him back to the Amazon village, where he'd be
treated like human chattel and used as breeding stock.
Yuki was the only one who asked
for nothing but *him*.
"Ooo! I remember now! I heard they're introducing a new noodle dish, fried spicy beef
strips and veggies tossed over cold ramen!
I can't wait!" Yuki giggled, still running toward the Nekohanten.
He rolled his eyes as he was
tugged along by the small, redheaded girl, 'Man,' he thought, 'a woman after my
own heart.'
^*^*^
Kimiko was almost broadsided by
a nurse running after the gurney, and she frowned until it passed by her,
finally allowing her to see the poor soul lying atop it.
Her breath caught in her
throat.
"Naka-kun," she
whispered, and reached out a trembling hand after the doctors and nurses had
disappeared behind the doors of the surgical ward.
Her heart fluttered in her
chest the way a contained butterfly flapped its colorful wings against the
sides of a jar – painfully.
She knew what Naka meant to
Soichi. She could see his personality
and his self-confidence bloom under his watchful eye, and over the period of
nearly two years, from a confused, unhappy boy sprung a smiling, pleasant
man. He still had his fallacies, but
Naka had changed a great deal from the sullen child who had accidentally
knocked her over the first time he'd ever visited Dr. Fujikara, not even
muttering a 'sorry' as he bolted from the office. But he had grown, and she had grown to love him. Though she'd only heard stories about his
actions and antics till very recently, she'd started thinking of Naka as a
little brother.
"Oh, God," she
murmured, "please, watch over him for me.
For Soichi."
Numbly, she slid the thin
prescription slip to the pharmacist, and with a wavering hand, she received the
white, waxy bag the bottles on bottles of vitamins were in.
Kimiko walked unsteadily toward
a plush chair near the doorway of the surgical ward, and laid her head against
the back of the seat. She waited, a
deep, trembling fear filling it heart like water from a broken dam.
She had lost many people in her
short lifetime, and she would wait to see if she would lose yet another.
^*^*^
"Hello, Ranma, the weather
is lovely, isn't it?" Saotome
Nodoka spread a soft blue blanket over the bright green grass before the grave,
and motioned Akane next to her as she sat down. "I've a surprise for you today, Son! I brought Akane!" Nodoka cast a sidelong stare at Akane, an
encouraging look in her eyes. "Go
ahead, he can hear you."
Akane stood before the
headstone, perhaps three feet from where Nodoka sat, her eyes trained on the
epitaph:
"Saotome Ranma (1980-1998)
"He who was loved and
cherished
He who slept and dreamed
He who was wise and childlike
He who was more than he
seemed."
She remembered the verse from
somewhere.
And her memory suddenly
clutched it, that whisper of something that wrenched her from the present and
flung her toward her past.
^*^*^
Nerima
13 years 8 months previous
"Akane!" a voice
cried, "Akane! Hold up, wait for
me, please!" The dark-haired girl
furrowed her brow, this voice was familiar, irritatingly so, but the words and
their tone were not. Usually, when she
heard that lyrical voice, the words that tumbled in its sound were rough and
very much grammatically incorrect. If
not that, at least they were rude.
She turned toward the source and
saw a redheaded girl sprinting toward her, a shy smile on her face her bookbag
flying by its straps behind her. She
waited for the girl to catch her breath.
"Thanks, Akane-san! For a moment there, I didn't think you were
going to wait for me!" the redhead smiled brightly, and closing her eyes
for a brief moment, she inhaled deeply; cold weather cleared the air, and it
tasted deliciously crisp that day.
Akane scowled, kicking a rock
as she started to walk at a brisk pace, feeling a hint of anger as the redhead
fell into step without so much as a moment of hesitation. She'd been expecting Ranma to show up for a
while now; they'd had a flaming row that day before third period (one which,
despite the wildly inaccurate opinions of many witnesses, was in no part her
fault), and she felt that an apology was in order.
"What do you want today,
you pervert?" she muttered.
"And why the hell are you dressed up like a girl, anyway?"
The blue-eyed girl was wearing
a sky-blue Furinkan High School uniform, a dress jacket over it, indicative of
the cold weather. Her hair was pulled
into a loose ponytail and bound with a sky colored ribbon. The whole ensemble was topped off by white
tennis shoes and lacey ankle socks.
'Yes, indeedy,' Akane surmised
grumpily, 'there is definitely something wrong with Ranma today. Maybe he accidentally ate something that
Kodachi gave him.'
Instead of a snide remark or
inelegant stuttering as he tried to explain why what he had done this time
*wasn't* wrong, Akane got instead: "Who're you calling a pervert? And for your information, I *always* dress
like a girl because that's what I am," the blue eyes sparked with anger,
"And I'll have you know that it's *not* polite to verbally accost someone
you've never met before!"
Akane stared at the redhead and
blinked. 'Yep,' she thought to herself,
'Kodachi's back to using the hallucinogens.'
"Ranma," she started
cautiously, touching the redhead's forehead, forgetting her earlier anger as
her concern grew, "are you feeling okay?
You didn't eat anything Kodachi gave you, did you?"
The girl sighed in frustration
and her shoulders slumped. "Geez,
Akane, that's what I'm trying to tell you.
My name is Tanakawa Yuki."
Akane raised and eyebrow. "Yeah, that's it, Ranma, come on, I'll
take you to Tofu-Sensei's, he's gotten pretty good at dealing with stuff like
this by now - "
"Akane, listen! I AM A REAL GIRL! A real girl named Tanakawa Yuki, I just *look* like Ranma's
girl-side!"
It would take several rather
embarrassing pop-quizzes regarding biological cycles only women were privy to
(Akane knew for a fact that Ranma had never stayed female long enough to deal
with her period) before the Tendo girl would believe it.
Akane felt confused, who was
this girl, where had she come from, was she who Nabiki had been yelling about
for the past month? Kuno's pigtailed
girl, the one who had finally escaped the grasp of the 'foul Saotome'? The new martial artist in town?
"Yeah, Tanakawa-san, I'm
very sorry, it's just that - " she was interrupted by her new
acquaintance.
Yuki waved a dainty hand in the
air between them, "Eh, it's all right, happens, it *is* sort of odd
situation, right?" she paused for breath and continued at the
still-stunned expression on Akane's features.
"Oh, you're wondering about the look."
"Well," Akane
murmured, "it is ... unusual."
Yuki grinned, saying,
"Cologne thinks it's something about reincarnated souls or something like
that, but she's not sure yet, so Ranma and I are just waiting it out."
Akane smiled thinly. So, Ranma had been out cavorting with some
girl while she was alone at home, cooking dinner for him. That bastard. And then, the little voice in the back of her mind finally broke
through the wall of resentment she'd built up around it. 'Idiot!' it cried, 'Ranma was *not* out
cavorting! He probably met Yuki by
accident, they look *exactly* alike, hell, if it were you, you'd be freaking
out, too, they're just trying to figure things out!'
Yuki grinned, nearly exuding
friendliness, and Akane was shocked by the warm sensation that built up inside
her. 'No wonder Ranma spends so much
time with her nowadays,' she thought morosely, 'she's pretty and nice *and* the
friendliest person alive.' Akane looked
at Yuki, who was still smiling her thousand-watt smile and sighed to herself,
fighting the instinctive urge to plot the redhead's death in an attempt to
protect her own territory.
"Akane, I think we need to
talk, badly. It's important,
okay?" Yuki whispered, glancing around her. "How about the bridge?
Ranma showed me a great spot down there."
Akane turned red.
"Hey!" Yuki cried out
in surprise, "Cool! Your face
matches my hair, how do you do that?"
^*^*^
And in that familiar explosion
of anger that had ended the peaceful afternoon, so, too, did it end her memory.
Akane lowered her head slightly
and whispered, "Hi, Ranma," her voice shook like a child's.
Graveyards were not pleasant
places; she did not like them. Her
first memory of them was shortly after her fifth birthday, a year after her
mother had died. All she recalled was
the soft green grasses below her feet, the unhappy, looming headstones, and the
pretty flowers that had been laid on the ground. She had not understood that it was the resting place of the
dead. She had not understood that it
was where her mother was buried.
"Mother is here, Akane," Kasumi had explained tearfully,
eight-years-old and bravely holding her younger sister's hand. "Mother is under all this lovely grass
you're standing on, her life is feeding the beauty of this place, do you feel
her, Akane?"
The five-year-old Akane had
then finally realized something truly horrifying: they had put her Mother under
the *dirt*. They had covered up her
shining eyes and her smiling face and laid her under all that earth and mud.
She'd dropped onto her knees
before her Mother's grave marker, and with her chubby hands wet with tears
running down her flushed-red face, she had started dig through the soil,
yelling all the while, "Mommy! I'm
sorry! I'm sorry! I'll get you out of the mud, Mommy!"
And then it had started to
rain.
"Akane," Nodoka
interrupted softly, "Akane, please, feel free, talk, he can hear you; I
promise."
Her eyes focused and the memory
cleared.
This was not the cemetery where
her mother had been buried; they had closed the doors to that one long ago,
having filled the ground with the souls of the dead. This was a relatively old place, one that was quiet and catered
the to the likes of ancient titles, with wide, expansive plots reserved for
each family.
Ranma had once joked about the
place:
"Hey," he had laughed
as Ryoga missed him by a mile, "P-chan, if you ever get the best of me,
just promise that you'll bury me at the old Garden Cemetery," he had
ducked just in time for Ryoga's kick to miss decapitating him, "on second
thought, never mind, the place is huge, you'd never find my headstone!"
He probably liked it there.
"Sorry, Ranma. My mind wanders," she started. Slowly lowering herself to her knees before
the headstone, and she began to speak, to tell him of things she'd denied
herself, and to unlock the secrets of many years passed.
"It's been a long time,
hasn't it?" She paused. "I apologize for not coming to visit
you more often, but I'm told that Ryoga drops by every once in a while,"
she smirked, "turns out that he doesn't hate you so much after all."
Nodoka felt anger rising in her
chest. All that time Akane and her son
had been engaged, all that time her boy had been alive, the affection and
kindness in the Tendo girl's voice at that moment had never appeared. She couldn't help but to think that maybe if
Akane had been a little nicer, maybe she and Ranma would have married. Maybe that would have changed
everything. Ranma wouldn't have ever
met that Tanakawa girl. She stifled
whatever careless words might have wanted to slip from her lips and chose to
leave, never noticing that Akane didn't even bother to look as she stumbled
from the cemetery.
Akane glanced up toward the
sky, a slate-blue shade that evening, a sad imitation of the color of Ranma's
eyes, eyes that had danced with humor and filled with determination. Eyes that had entrapped her and bound her to
his side, eyes that told her things his lips could never say.
"Did your mom mention
it?" she asked softly, letting her fingers trace the inscription on the
headstone. "We're getting married,
Ryoga and I."
She stopped, hearing the
footsteps of a ghost behind her.
Her dark head whipped around to
see a familiar face, one frozen forever in her memory as an eighteen year old
man, with a teasing grin and a deadly touch, when he wanted it. His hair was still bound in a braid, and his
arms were crossed over his chest, his blue-cotton Chinese shirt doing nothing to
hide his musculature.
And she could see straight
through him across the street.
There was a low, sad whistle as
the wind threaded through the brush, and the rustle of dried, dead leaves
fluttering in the early winter cold.
The sounds of life in Nerima did not stop. The car horns still honked, children still cried, and the sound
of bicycle tires and bells didn't mute.
They faded ever so little.
Ever so little.
And then they were gone.
And so was the outside world.
She was frozen in place of fine
slate-blue, headstones, and wandering, a place were the dead could rise and
smile, where the living could disappear from existence.
'Or,' she reasoned to herself,
still staring at the ghost before her, 'I've just lost all perspective on
reality.'
"Aw, Akane," the
ghost said, his voice echoing in the dead silence of the graveyard,
"cheating on me with pig-boy?"
"You're dead," she
murmured, her hand still on the cold surface of his headstone, grasping it as a
tether to the Earth.
The ghost shrugged. "Of course I am, Akane." He was quiet for a moment. "You're really marrying Pig-Boy aren't
you?"
"Yes," she said
clearly, firmly. "Why do you call
him that?"
The ghost stared at her for a
moment. "You still don't
know?"
"Know what?" she
replied, breathless, mindless, without conscious thought or logic. She didn't believe in ghosts, she'd never
seen one, she'd never spoken to one or touched one, and she'd given up on the
concept of blind faith years ago. She
knew he was dead, she knew he could not be speaking to her.
But in her years with him, she
had seen too much to write this off.
The ghost rolled his eyes and
cocked his head to one side.
"Never mind, Akane," pausing, it added, "You miss me,
don't you?"
"Yes," she answered,
too quickly perhaps. "Yes, I do, every
day, every hour. I guess I'm just
making up for lost time."
"Well, you did spend an
awful lot of time hitting me, you know," the ghost smirked. "I hope you feel really shitty about
it."
Akane scowled. "Jackass, you're dead and you're still
being a jackass."
'I'm insane,' she decided,
'I've become a total fucking lunatic; I'm nervous about marrying Ryoga, and
I've turned inward toward some mad psychological manifestation to satisfy some
deep guilt-complex that I haven't yet dealt with.' She sighed silently.
'Dammit.'
The ghost didn't look guilty;
he just looked translucent, as all stereotypical ghosts tend to do some time or
another. "The sad truth of the
matter is, Akane, you still love me, don't you?"
"You aren't him, he can't
even say the word love without stuttering, and no, I don't," she replied
angrily, her fists clenched.
"I am Ranma, and you do
love me," the ghost insisted.
"I've grown up, I've changed; no one ever stays the same. I mean, look at you and Ryoga, he used to
have a nosebleed every time he saw you less than fully dressed..." the
ghost trailed off, and in a much softer voice, asked, "Do you really love
him?"
Akane opened her mouth to say
'yes'. And closed it because she knew
it would be a lie. "I'm fond of
him," she finally decided.
"We get along well together; we'll have a nice marriage."
The ghost shook his head. "That's not enough though, is it,
Akane?"
"No," she whispered,
her eyes intent on the ghost's face, "No, it's not enough, because -
because I still - "
"STOP, Akane," The
ghost commanded harshly. "You
can't have me, and it isn't because I'm dead, either."
She hesitated, studying the
stony expression on his face.
"What do you mean?"
So consumed was she in her
conversation with a dead man, she did not hear the rumble of thunder, but she
did see the rain. As the water fell and
drifted through the ghost, it reshaped and resized, growing thicker and thinner
and curvier until the man became a woman with faint, damp, red hair, pale blue
eyes, and a hinting expression.
"You always doubted, and
therefore, you always knew," the ghost whispered before disappearing.
By some unseen force, a
dripping wet Tendo Akane pushed herself from the soggy ground, and brushing her
bangs from her face, she followed the line of her heart toward another cemetery
plot not so far away.
Toward a gravestone set
underneath a large, shady tree. Toward
a secret that desperately wanted to be revealed.
^*^*^
"AKANE!"
Her sister had gone to the
cemetery with Auntie Nodoka hours ago.
While Nodoka had turned up at the dojo a few hours later, tired but no
worse for wear, Akane could not be found anywhere.
Very few people in the history
of time had ever seen Tendo Kasumi in a panic, but those brave souls who
ventured out into the storm were in for a surprise.
Kasumi had grabbed an umbrella,
now useless because the winds had blown it inside out. She 'hrmmph'ed in frustration and threw it
to the ground, and looking around the Garden Cemetery, she ran toward the
Saotome's private burial area, where Akane should have been. She found only a bouquet of wilted daisies,
a muddy picnic blanket, and a shred a blue cloth. The color was hauntingly familiar, yet the origin of the memory
escaped her, dancing just out of her grasp.
Growling quietly, Kasumi rebuked herself for wasting time. There were more important things to
consider.
Her sister was nowhere in
sight.
"AKANE! AKANE!"
Still the rain poured down, and
still it drowned her cries.
Desperate, she circled around,
her dress sticking to her body and her hair plastered to her face, the rushing
sound of water filling her ears and hurting her head, the pressure of it
falling stinging her skin.
Where was Akane?
The wind screamed, and the
heavens roared. Nerima was not a
stranger to storms, but this was a gale the likes of which none had ever
seen. It was not unnatural; it had not
magic woven into its thick, red venom.
It was the simple function of hate, of shame, and of a human concept
called 'feud'.
Kasumi heard a whisper, and
then a scream.
^*^*^
It was dark where Akane was
crouched, her legs splayed rudely beneath her, squelching quietly in the mud
and grass mixture at the roots of the ancient tree. She was covered in a thin film of dust and water, not quite mud,
and not quite nothing. Her eyes were
empty, her mouth was open.
Kasumi bent down to shake her
little sister, sobbing and screaming for her to wake, slapping her cheeks and
pinching her arms. She tried everything
in her power to break the trance, until she saw the grave that Akane had
collapsed before, until she read the poem.
It was, in comparison to the
other stones in the cemetery, rather new, and would probably remain that way,
being afforded the protection of the willow tree's branches and leaves. The rhyme was familiar, childlike in its
innocent cadence, friendly in its words:
"She who reached the
heavens,
She who shined with spark,
She who loved and lived and
laughed,
She who slew the dark."
Kasumi's hands gripped Akane
like steel as she finished reading the inscription.
"Here lies Tanakawa Yuki,
beloved daughter and master of the Tanakawa School of the Rising Phoenix. Proud as she was strong. (1981-1998)"
So the two sisters sat there on
the sodden earth as the rain washed them clean of their lies and inhibitions,
staring at the words carved onto the stone, an eternal shrine to something
neither of them had quite understood at the time.
"Kasumi," Akane
finally asked, her voice quiet in the sound of the rain, "why did she kill
him? Why did she kill him?"
And Kasumi stared still at the
rock, letting her fingers trace the names, her mind finally remembering where
she had seen that blue before, many, many times.
^*^*^
Nerima
13 years 8 months previous
"Akane, I'll have some tea
out in just a se- Oh! Pardon me, I see
you've brought a friend!" She
bowed politely at the redheaded girl.
"And what's your name?"
Yuki looked impressed, so far, this
was the only human being who came in contact with Ranma to recognize that she
was biologically female. "Oh, hi,
my name is Tanakawa Yuki, pleased to meet you."
She looked exactly like him,
Kasumi observed. The exact same blue
eyes, the same perfectly satin skin, the same startling red hair. 'The dress, though,' Kasumi thought with a
smile, 'Ranma has never been able to pull of that school dress with any measure
of feminine grace.'
But Yuki seemed far more
complex than she let on. Beneath that exterior
of glowing smiles and perfect, polite friendliness, there was a quicksilver
glimmer of something pained. While
Ranma shared the same darkness inside of himself, he reacted differently, with
anger, with words, and instead of hiding it underneath a proper showing, he
took it out in his martial arts. 'Two
such similar people,' Kasumi thought softly to herself, 'two such sad people.'
"My name is Tendo
Kasumi," she said politely, smiling again. "Please, come in, I'll have tea and cookies out in just a
second."
Akane led the girl into the
house, saying, "I'm sorry we couldn't talk under the bridge, the rain was
coming down pretty heavily."
Yuki shrugged and sat
down. Setting her elbow on the table
and leaning her cheek against it, she started, "Alright, this is
serious." Her tone of voice
promised Akane that it was. "You
and Ranma have been engaged for a year now, right? And with between fighting with each other, and being stolen away
by mystical princes and whatnot, you two ought to be pretty close, right?"
Akane narrowed her eyes. Ranma had told this girl *everything*?
"Maybe. Why?" she asked suspiciously. If Yuki was trying to find a way to weasel
into Ranma's heart, that little hussy had another thing coming. The *last* thing Akane needed was yet
*another* fiancee bursting into the dojo at all hours.
Yuki reached out her hands,
clasping Akane's tightly. There was a
serious, sober expression on her pretty face as she said, "Do you care
about him at all? Even the tiniest
bit?"
Akane stared, her mouth opening
and closing like a fish out of water.
Yuki's expression was completely earnest, lacking self-interest (at
least, none that *Akane* could detect).
'What on Earth is Yuki trying to do?' Akane thought frantically. 'Embarrass me to death?!'
Kasumi, from where she stood
near the open doorway of the kitchen, hearing every word being spoken, was
fairly certain that Akane would have answered honestly in her own time. After the shock wore away, her sister could
be quite assertive.
But as it always happened in
Nerima, there was a momentary distraction that ruined the moment.
"DAMN IT! DAMN RAIN!"
Akane felt a growl rising in
her throat and Yuki only rolled her eyes.
There was much stomping, and a
hiss of hot water. Then, a male voice
cried out. "Akane? Are you
here? Hinako-sensei found your
notebook, do you want it back now?"
Yuki sighed and leaned back on
her haunches, frustrated that she hadn't gotten an answer. Running toward the entry-way, Akane yelled,
"Yes! Of course I want it
back! You didn't read it, did
you?" The last part was asked in
an almost nervous tone.
As the Tendo girl disappeared
from vision, Yuki heard Ranma reply, "Why? Writin' love letter to Ryoga in it?" She grimaced, thinking, 'Ranma, you have a
death wish.'
"Give it back!" Akane
yelled.
"Nope, you have to tell me
what's in it first, come on, Akane, it can't be *that* bad, you haven't been
keeping a diary, have you?"
"RANMA! GIVE IT BACK NOW!"
"Dear Diary, today, I saw
Ryoga, oh, he's just *so* dreamy! I
can't wait to marry him and have tons of little porker children!"
Yuki closed her eyes and
counted to three.
There was a boom, and then a
low thud.
" ... ow ... "
"Serves you right, stupid
jerk!"
There were rapid footfalls, and
a red-faced Akane returned to the calm of the family room. Upon seeing the blank expression on Yuki's
face, she grew slightly sheepish.
"I'm very sorry," she murmured, lowering her head and
clutching the notebook she'd just liberated in her hands.
"Oh," Yuki said
slowly, "it's okay, he was asking for that one." There was a pause. "But still, Akane, answer my question."
Only Kasumi and Akane would
ever understand her answer the way it was meant to be said.
"That idiot? He could dry up and die for all I
care!"
^*^*^
That blue, that haunting blue color.