Waters Under Earth A Ranma 1/2 Fanfic by Alan Harnum -harnums@thekeep.org -harnums@hotmail.com (old/backup) All Ranma characters are the property of Rumiko Takahashi, first published by Shogakukan in Japan and brought over to North America by Viz Communications. Waters Under Earth at Transpacific Fanfiction: http://www.humbug.org.au/~wendigo/transp.html http://users.ev1.net/~adina/shrines2/fanfics.html Chapter 28 : Judgements Konatsu woke up to soft, weary darkness. Someone was holding his head in her lap, and there was a pain behind his eyes, a throbbing ache that splintered through his skull like shards of glass. He remembered shards; mirror glass, falling as he'd been hurled into the mirror by the great, invisible hand that had picked him up in mid-leap. "Hey." Ukyou smiled down at him from where she sat up against the headboard of the bed, her hair hanging loose and damp, glistening richly in the light from the lamp on the bedside table, the only light in the room. She had dressed in one of the kimonos Hako had given him, a rich dark red with white birds in flight across it. "Hey," he replied weakly. He didn't feel as bad as he should have, considering how hard he'd hit. "How long have I been out, Ukyou?" Ukyou ran her fingers through his hair lightly. "A few hours." "What happened?" A troubled expression vanquished her smile. "Fuhaiko did something to you when you went after Nenreiko. Threw you into the mirror. Hako wasn't happy. Nenreiko patched you up a little, and then they left." "What did they do to you?" Konatsu asked, feeling a now-familiar surge of anger. He had always considered himself a peaceful person before, but all that had been done to Ukyou since she'd arrived left him raw with rage at times. Ukyou shook her head. "Nothing. They just left. Nenreiko..." She drew a long, sighing breath. "I don't know what she did. It felt like having my mind torn open, all my deepest secrets, my thoughts..." She trailed away and fell silent. Her hands continued to cradle his aching head in her lap. Konatsu reached up and, almost hesitantly, touched his fingertips to hers. "Are you alright now?" She nodded. "As much as I can be. Had a bath while you slept. That made me feel a bit better. And whatever she did to me afterwards, she did fix me up before. My knee's still twisted, but other than that, I feel fine." "Are you sure?" There was a haunted look in her lovely eyes for a moment, and then it was hidden again. "Yeah. I'm okay." In spite of whatever pleasure he might have derived from staying as he was, Konatsu sat up, putting his feet on the floor and resting his hands back on the sheets of the bed that Ukyou sat on. "What about Hako?" To his shock, Ukyou laughed, not with much humour, but laughter all the same. "She looked like she was ready to cut Fuhaiko's throat. I think she would have if you'd been hurt much worse than you were. I don't know why, but she's awfully protective of you." "She needs me," Konatsu murmured darkly, standing up and glancing to where the broken mirror of the dressing table cast a fragmented image of the room. The air smelt faintly of a dozen different perfumes, and he could see shattered glass from the mirror and the bottles of perfume and makeup sprayed across the carpet before the vanity. "Why?" Ukyou asked. He took a moment before answering, standing with his back to her, staring around the room. "I... don't know." "She really thinks you're a girl, doesn't she?" He glanced back, shrugged. "I guess so." "What do you think?" Ukyou asked. There was a slight tremble to the words. "I don't know what I think," he answered, smiling thinly. "I'll think as I'm told to, I guess." "Konatsu," she said softly, "don't talk like that. It's not important what other people want you to be. Who do you want to be?" He turned his head away from her again, crossed the room to the dressing table. Kneeling down, he picked up a long, jagged shard of mirror glass and looked at his face in it. "I want to be Konatsu. That's all." "And is Konatsu a man or a woman?" He drew a long sigh at the question, stared at his dim reflection in the fragment of mirror. "What about you, Ukyou? Don't you dress as a man sometimes? Are you a man or a woman?" There was a long pause behind him, and when Ukyou finally spoke, there was a great deal of pain in her voice. "I'm a woman, Konatsu. I used to think I could stop being that, because it hurt so much to be a woman. And I tried, and tried, but I couldn't. I still dress like a man sometimes... I don't even know why. It makes me feel better, I guess. It helps keep the hurt away." He heard her feet touch the floor, the rustle of silk from the kimono as she walked. Still, he did not look back. "I was told by my father after my mother died that if I acted like a girl, things would be alright. But they weren't, and he died too. And then I only had my step-mother." She was right behind him now, her voice soft in the dim light. "That's not what you told us before." "No," Konatsu acknowledged, "it wasn't." In the shard of mirror, he could see her face behind his shoulder. Her eyes were sad. "I liked being a girl, Ukyou. I liked being beautiful. I liked wearing pretty clothes. Maybe I even came to think that I was a girl. I'm not, though. But if I'm a man, does that mean I have to stop being who I was before?" He saw her close her eyes, and then she took a step forward and embraced him from behind, linking her hands over his chest and pressing herself against his back. The mirror shard dropped from his suddenly limp fingers and bounced once to lie glittering on the carpet. "No," she whispered softly, leaning her chin against his shoulder, the sweet, damp fall of her hair brushing against his face and tickling his nose with the scent of flowered shampoo. "It doesn't mean that at all. You are who you are, Konatsu." He felt her body beneath the silk of the kimono, soft and warm against his back. Her breath was light against his face, like the wind's kiss as he ran. "Ukyou..." "Don't say anything," she whispered. "Please, don't say anything more. Just let me have this for a little while. Please." He opened his mouth to speak, and then simply closed it. With a soft sigh, and a longing so deep it transcended all else, he simply placed his hands over hers as she held herself against him, and stared at the glinting shard of their jagged reflection upon the ground at his feet. ********** Konatsu stared out the glass-fronted doors that led out from the hallway to the serene, lovely garden beyond, where night-blooming flowers grew pale in the darkness, and moonlight reflected on still ponds; it was one of the four that lay within the spaces defined by the halls and buildings of the Kenzan compound. Eventually, he turned and walked away, sighing deeply. The Kenzan compound was laid out with a single large three-story building in the centre, and four smaller buildings placed equidistantly at diagonals from the centre one. Eight long hallways connected them to the centre building and each other. The smaller buildings were living quarters and kitchens, all of them seemingly deserted except for the room he stayed in. He had not questioned that; one did not ask questions of Hako. He moved down the hallway towards one of those kitchens now. Ukyou had been unconscious for almost two days, rising fitfully out of her sleep to murmur words he did not understand before falling unconscious again. Hours ago, she had awakened, and had not fallen again to sleep. They had soon been interrupted in that short, delicious embrace they had shared by Ukyou's stomach growling. She had laughed off his offers of food at first, but he knew she would be starved after all her time asleep. He had been responsible for his own meals since he had arrived. Hako woke him in the mornings to train, allowed him a half-hour for lunch, another for dinner, and then let him slump into bed a few hours later, bone-weary and sore. Hako had not trained with him since Ukyou had come; he had spent all his time caring for her. The door that led into the kitchen lay next to the one that led into the long hallway connecting this smaller building to the central building of the compound. Konatsu wondered what lay beyond all the closed doors he'd seen, led through empty hallways by Hako before they'd climbed the stairs that led to the training hall that took up all of the third floor. Impulsively, he turned away from the kitchen door and stepped through. The emptiness of the Kenzan compound had always been oddly peaceful for him when he was alone, walking in those gardens that never needed tending, or staring out onto the white beach while sitting on the edge of the cliff. As he stepped into the inner building, though, he felt an oppressive weight settle over him, and though he told himself that the long banks of soft fluorescent lights in the ceiling that lit the hallways night and day were as bright here as they were elsewhere, somehow, it seemed darker. No peace here. Desolation, perhaps. The boards of the wooden floor creaked alarmingly beneath his feet at times as he walked. He shouldn't be here. He should be in the kitchen, getting food for Ukyou and then returning to her. Yet he walked on. He turned a corner, and again saw one of the gardens through a glass-fronted sliding door. A tall willow bent down with grief over a dark pond of water; paths of flat-topped stones wound amidst beds of pale, raked gravel and flowers bright in the moonlight and the glow of lights from inside. He would take Ukyou out into one of the gardens, he decided then. There was pain here, but there was also beauty. With that thought and the possibilities it might entail running through his head, he turned away and walked on. Voices paused him after a few steps, coming from behind a wooden door. He should turn back, he realized, as he walked softly to the door and knelt, pressing his ear to it. "...saw her in the girl's memories. Very fresh." Nenreiko's voice. "Are you sure it was her?" That was Hako. "All her marks. An old blind woman who speaks of the future. She gave her the box." "Damn her. This goes no further. I will kill her myself." "And risk breaking the Circle asunder?" Fuhaiko's voice was sardonic, only slightly muffled by the door. "Do not be a fool, Hako." "Do not mock me, Fuhaiko," Hako answered. "I still have half a mind to cut your throat." "If I'd wanted to hurt your little pet, Hako, I would have." "Not a scratch," Hako snarled. "There can be not even a mark upon her." Nenreiko spoke then. "Are you sure leaving her with the other girl is a good idea, then? Not all marks need lie upon the flesh." Hako only laughed. "I know Konatsu. The child is an innocent. That makes it easier." "We diverge," Fuhaiko interjected. "That matter is beside the point. We cannot be seen in open rebellion. But if evidence can be brought forth that she attempted to move secretly against another member of the Circle..." As she trailed off, there was long silence in the room beyond. Konatsu strained to hear anything, his fingers resting lightly against the door as he knelt. "Yes," Hako said finally. "That would be useful." "Not time yet," Nenreiko said, her whispery voice carrying through the door to Konatsu's ear. "But soon." "Always soon," Hako said with a trace of bitterness in her voice. "Always soon." Konatsu realized suddenly that someone was watching him. He turned away from listening at the door and stared down the corridor. At the junction of this hallway and another, the old man who had been with the three women stood, his wrinkled hands gripping his walking stick heavily. As before, the tattered black shape of the crow perched on his shoulder. He said nothing, but slowly raised a withered finger to his lips in a gesture of silencing, smiled coldly, and walked away down the other hallway. ********** Konatsu swept the last shards of mirror glass and broken perfume bottles into the dustpan, and emptied them into the wastebasket by the dressing table with a soft rattle. He looked up from his completed work to where Ukyou sat on the bed, sipping a cup of jasmine tea. A delicate china teapot rested on a tray on the bedside table, a wispy tendril of steam rising from the spout in a lazy twist. An empty bowl, chopsticks leaning wearily askew within it, lay beside the pot. Ukyou had been very hungry. She nodded at him, saying nothing, and drank her tea, both hands lifting the cup to her mouth. Her legs lay under the covers of the bed, the toes of one foot poking almost teasingly out from beneath. "Are you tired, Ukyou?" he asked as he rose, the small lump on his head throbbing slightly with the motion. "A little," she said, and punctuated that with a yawn. She drained her cup and laid it down on the saucer with a clink. "What time is it?" Konatsu thought for a moment. There was no clock in his room. He walked over to the small window that looked out towards the huge double gate of the Kenzan compound's walls. "From the moon, I'd say about midnight." Ukyou yawned again, and he turned his head back to look at her, to see her yawn transform for him into a soft smile. "I think I'm going to try and get some sleep. We'll just see what happens, right? Not much else to do." Konatsu nodded, staring out the window into the night. "We'll see." He crossed the room to the light switch by the door, and flicked it off, again leaving the room only with the light of the lamp by the bed. As he turned back towards Ukyou, he heard the sound of the covers slipping to the floor. She had risen out of bed, and was reaching her hands behind her back to undo the bow of the light kimono she'd been wearing. There was a slight smile on her face. "Ukyou!" he gasped, bringing a hand up to his mouth. A shrug of her shoulders, and the kimono dropped from her body to pool in silky folds upon the carpet at her feet. He should have turned away, but something in her eyes would not let him. She wore a red chemise, another of the innumerable items of women's clothing Hako had given him. Long-sleeved, rather sheer in places. Slightly too large for her. "It's okay," she said quietly. "I mean, someone undressed me after I was unconscious, and I'm pretty sure it wasn't Hako." Konatsu felt his face turn crimson at the memory. "I didn't..." "Konatsu," Ukyou interrupted, "what happened to my spatula?" He tried desperately to make his embarrassment fade. "Hako cut it in half. I'm not sure what she did with the pieces after I left..." She shook her head. "It doesn't matter. Not now." She picked the covers up in one hand and slipped back into bed, pulling them up past her shoulders. Her back was turned to him; the fall of her rich hair lay spilling out across the pillow and the sheets. "Goodnight." Konatsu walked over to stand by the bed and stared down at her for a moment, at the shine of light in her hair, studying her profile. Then he turned off the lamp, and lay down on the hardwood floor beside the bed in the darkness. He found then that sleep came far easier than he had expected it to. Some time later, he was not sure when, he woke to that momentary absolute confusion of self and circumstance that sometimes occurs when sleepers awake. It passed in an instant, and he realized he had not woken this time to a nightmare, as he had in the time here before Ukyou had come, but to the sound of another weeping in the dark nearby. He stood up. "Ukyou?" he asked, staring at the dim bed. Beneath the sheets, he could see her shoulders shaking as she heaved with quiet sobs. "Just go back to sleep, Konatsu," she whispered, haltingly and through tears. "It's alright." "What's wrong?" "Thinking," she said softly. He ached to comfort her. "Thinking?" "About Ranma," she said. "About my life. About things that I've done, things that have happened to me. Just thinking too much." Hesitantly, he touched her shoulder through the sheets. "What can I do to help?" She turned her head to look at him, tears glittering in her eyes and on her cheeks, catching what little light entered the room through the window and the crack beneath the door. "I..." Now she seemed to hesitate. "What?" he asked. "Could you just hold me?" she whispered finally, closing her eyes as if in shame. There was a painful sadness in her voice, a very great loneliness that hurt for him to hear. He smiled in the darkness. "Is that all you would ask of me, Ukyou?" Ukyou said nothing. She drew the covers down to her waist, and shifted over in the bed. Disbelieving at first, feeling almost unable to control his body, he slid in next to her and she rolled over to face him. "Thank you," she said simply, and reached her arms around his waist, laid her head against his chest. The glossy darkness of her hair spread out across the red silk of his tunic. His eye was drawn to individual strands, held like a caged thing by the beauty of her. After a moment, she spoke again. "You're supposed to hold me back, you know." He put his hands on her shoulders, incapable of speech, and then cradled her against him. She shifted slightly, bringing her body closer to his. "Ranchan and I used to sleep like this when we were just little kids," she murmured softly, as if speaking from a dream. "Even though he thought I was another guy, it was still okay then, because we were just kids..." A heavy wave of longing, almost a grief, washed over him. He understood so little of all this, of what had been between Ranma and Ukyou, what might still be between, though Ranma had vanished. Ten years of desire, ten years of denial of herself, and then a new hope that would only be shattered anew. "But I wouldn't sleep most nights," she went on. Her body was warm against his, soft flesh and hard muscle beneath the shift she wore. "I'd just lie there next to him, listening to his heart beat, thinking about how he was mine, how he would be mine, and staring up at all the stars..." Long was the silence. He heard her sigh, felt the warmth of her breath against his chest. One of her fingers traced a tiny circle on the small of his back. "He told me the day before he vanished that he didn't love me. I still wasn't really speaking to him when he disappeared. And I... I didn't..." And now the tears came again from her, wracking sobs that seemed to tear free from somewhere deep within her, some dark and hidden place of the heart. A purging, of sorts, a cleansing of all last traces of desire and guilt and regret from her soul. Konatsu simply held her. A human touch, most ancient and instinctual of comforts. Eventually, she stopped, and it was, in a way, an ending. Perhaps a beginning. She raised her lovely, tear-stained face to gaze into his eyes. He had always seen well in the darkness, but he wished he could see what was in her gaze at that moment more than nearly anything. "Thank you," she said again, the second time that night, with an entirely different edge to the words now. She released her arms from around him, and propped herself up on one elbow, raising her head from his chest. Dishevelled, her hair clung to her neck and back. Sweat glistened on her skin in the thin light coming through the window. "Ukyou..." "Shh..." He felt the warmth of her body against him as she moved her face closer to his; a tracery of softness against his ribcage, an ankle brushing his for only a second. Almost by instinct, he took one of his hands from off her back and gently cupped her cheek. He felt the dampness of the tears she had shed upon it as he did. "Konatsu," she whispered. There came a heavy rapping on the glass of the window. The moment broke instantly. Konatsu was on his feet and out of bed before he even realized it. He went to the window, sparing a single, regretful glance back to Ukyou where she sat up in bed, the sheets clutched to her chest, staring at him with a mixture of hurt and confusion. The rapping continued, incessant and ceaseless. Out in the night, beyond the glass, a winged shape perched upon the sill, glaring inside the room with baleful yellow eyes. It clutched something in its beak. Konatsu opened the window inwards, feeling a rush of cool night air enter into the hot room, and stared at the bird. He raised a hand to shoo it away, and then it spoke. "Use it well," the crow whispered, only to him, a sweet, clear woman's voice that he vaguely recognized but could not place. "When the time is right." It had dropped whatever it had held onto the sill when it spoke. A pale, slender thing, gleaming in the moonlight. Konatsu picked it up and stared at it. "When the time is right," the bird said again, and the eyes seemed as if they might swallow him up. He could smell the carrion scent of the thing now, entering the room on the wings of the night breeze. He stared at the bird, said nothing. It launched itself into the air, flying out of his sight in seconds. Konatsu stood by the open window, across the room from the bed, and let night air play across his face. "What was that?" He glanced back at Ukyou. "Just a bird at the window," he said softly, slipping the object surreptitiously into his pocket and letting no trouble show upon his face. Ukyou nodded. Konatsu did the same. A silent realization passed between them; the moment had been broken. It could not be reforged, not yet. He lay down on the floor beside the bed again, and, to his great surprise, found sleep as easily as he had before. ********** "I'll wait..." Akari stood before him, hands clasped demurely in front of her, a wide-brimmed hat shading her face atop her hair. Her smile was beautiful, her eyes, so much love in them, so much longing. Her eyes mirrored his own eyes, his own desires. "I'll wait for you..." He tried to take step forward. But something pulled him back, and into the shadows he went, away into a darkened sprawl of city streets, and her image followed him. He glimpsed her in the back of alleys, around the corners of buildings, standing across the street with her hand shading her eyes. The crowds passed them by, and every one of them had a face he knew. "I'll wait for you. For as long..." And the shadows grew, as if the sun were going down, and he saw Akari fall back into them, smiling still, longing in her eyes, whispering devotion. Ryoga woke up screaming her name, sweating and gasping out heaving breaths. Happosai looked up from where he sat cross-legged beneath the window of the guest room in Shampoo's house, pipe in hand. "Pleasant dreams?" Sunlight and shadow banded Ryoga's chest as he stood up from the bed laid out on the floor. "Nope." Happosai smiled slightly and blew a ring of smoke into the air. "Sunrise. We need to go downstairs and see Shampoo off." Ryoga nodded, stepping over the snoring form of Genma as he went to where his pack lay in the corner of the room, next to a beautifully-carved oaken table. He rummaged through it for a change of clothing, trying to brush aside the feelings that the dream had arisen in him. He missed Akari, certainly, wanted to see her again, but he had to put other things above that. Behind him as he dressed, he heard Genma's snoring cut off, and the loud thump of a kick. "Get up, you lazy fool. It's sunrise." Ryoga smiled briefly as Happosai woke Genma up with a combination of verbal berating and physical abuse, tugged a shirt on, ran his hands through his hair once, and then turned around. Genma was yawning and scratching himself as he sat up on his blankets, not a pleasant sight early in the morning. Ryoga stepped out the door and into the second-floor hallway of Shampoo's house, a high-ceilinged two-story dwelling that was at least a century old, but still stood sturdy and strong. It was built to last, with thick wooden beams criss-crossing the ceiling above his head, and floors of polished oak. He walked down a long, narrow flight of stairs into the large kitchen of the place. Shampoo's father turned around from where he stood at the stove, stirring a large pot. "Good morning," he greeted cheerfully. "The women are at the table already." Ryoga nodded his head. "Good morning." The slim, small man smiled at him and turned silently back to his cooking. He didn't speak much, from what Ryoga could tell, and didn't seem particularly concerned about his daughter's impending return to Jusenkyou. That kind of man seemed the rule rather than the exception among the Joketsuzoku, from what little Ryoga had seen. He walked into the living room, where Akane, Rouge and Shampoo sat on the floor at a large round table. In the centre of the table, a teapot wafted thin clouds of steam into the air. Akane looked up and nodded a greeting at him as he entered, and Rouge gave him a bright smile. Shampoo only stared glumly at the table, hair hiding her face. Ryoga settled down beside her, resting his forearm on the table edge and leaning over. "Good morning, Shampoo." She favoured him with a brief glance. "Morning. Is not good by any means." He winced. "Sorry." "Is alright," she said, turning back to staring at the table. "Nothing you do." "Would you like some tea, Ryoga?" he heard Rouge ask. Looking to her for a moment, he shook his head, and saw an odd, disappointed look pass across her face for a moment as she lowered the teapot. Happosai and Genma came in then, settled down at the table and poured themselves tea. Happosai gave Rouge a quick glance and grinned at her, eyes twinkling, and she blushed demurely and looked away. Ryoga sighed inwardly, trying not to let anything show on his face. "So..." Akane said, breaking the silence. "When is Lang Bei coming?" "Soon," Shampoo said with a grimace. The six of them stared rather uncomfortably around the table at each other. At that point, Shampoo's father entered with a tray full of bowls. "Breakfast," he said cheerfully. Shampoo looked up at her father, almost a glare. "Is too early for breakfast." "I'll have some," Genma said. Happosai added his voice to that. Ryoga declined, as did Akane and Rouge. Whistling, Shampoo's father returned to the kitchen with most of the food still on the tray. Ryoga tapped his fingers on the table and watched Genma and Happosai consume their breakfast with startling speed. He looked from Akane to Rouge to Shampoo, and back again. He glanced to the cold fireplace. "So..." Ryoga began. "Did everyone sleep well?" Rouge nodded. "Very well." "Like a log," Genma said, looking over the food bowl he was holding up near his mouth as his chopsticks moved in a blur. The sound of someone knocking on the door in the front hall broke the tension finally, and it was almost with relief that Ryoga greeted the tall, grey-haired woman who stepped into the room. "Ready?" Lang Bei asked, dark blue-grey eyes sweeping around the room as she held her staff loosely in one hand. Shampoo nodded and stood up, her hands hanging loosely at her sides, head bowed. She walked stiffly over to stand before Lang Bei. "Hold your head up, girl," Lang Bei said, though not unkindly. "Does a warrior go to face the judgement she has been given like a child who is to be punished for stealing sweets?" Ryoga saw a mild tremble run through Shampoo's back and shoulders, and she lifted her head to look straight at Lang Bei. "No, honoured elder." Lang Bei nodded briefly. "Who's coming with us? Have you chosen your two witnesses?" Shampoo glanced back. "Ryoga, you witness my judgement?" Ryoga blinked, then nodded. Reflecting back on things, he wasn't all that surprised. Shampoo turned her gaze away from him. "Rouge, you witness my judgement?" That was a surprise, though. Rouge looked shocked for a moment, then nodded vigorously. "I'd be honoured." Happening to glance to Akane, Ryoga was surprised to see an almost hurt expression on her face that she quickly hid. He stood up from the table, and joined Rouge in walking to stand with Shampoo before Lang Bei. "Come on, children," the elder said, turning with her grey braid sweeping about her shoulders and walking towards the door. Outside, Ryoga stood in the wide streets of the village, looking up at the sun rising in the distance. Shampoo stood on the short flight of steps leading up to the door of her house, closing the door behind her. She turned away and walked down, glanced back once at her home, and then walked off behind the striding figure of Lang Bei. Ryoga glanced over to Rouge, nodded silently, and the two of them began to follow, as they all went walking towards Jusenkyou. ********** "I can understand me. But why her?" Shampoo glanced back. "What?" Ryoga pointed up ahead, to where Rouge was talking animatedly to Lang Bei as the four of them walked to the west towards Jusenkyou. The land was rocky, cast in shadow by the mountains that loomed all around. "Why'd you ask Rouge to be a witness? Why not Akane?" "Not your business," Shampoo said shortly, and kept on walking. Ryoga quickened his pace to catch up with her. "Shampoo..." "Rouge need to get rid of curse, right?" she said. "This easiest way to go to Jusenkyou. You get cured as well, Ryoga." He was so stunned, he couldn't even speak for a long moment. He hadn't even considered this; hadn't even given it a thought when they'd planned to come to China. But he could be cured. Easily. No more P-chan. No more guilt, no more temptation. No more lies. They were a few miles from Jusenkyou. He was with people who could guide him to the right pool. "Ryoga?" He looked at Shampoo, his feet kicking up puffs of dust on the trail as they walked. "Yeah?" "You want to get cured, right?" He slowly nodded. "But..." "Akane not yours, Ryoga," Shampoo said. There was a touch of something almost like regret in her voice. Again, he nodded. "I know. But..." What a relief it would be. No more terror of cold water. No more fear that Akane would discover his secret and despise him. And yet... "I'm just being stupid," he murmured. Shampoo sniffed. "No big change." He laughed. They had left the village behind ten minutes ago, following the trail through the hilly, craggy land that lay nestled in the mountains. Jusenkyou was not far from the village of the Joketsuzoku, but it was avoided. It was no legend among them; it was a fact, dangerous and real. "I've always hated this curse," he said after a few seconds of silence. "Always. I could pretend I didn't sometimes, but I've always wanted to be free of it." And now, finally, it seemed he would be, and he did not understand why he felt so strange. As if a part of him did not desire to lose the curse. And about then, they crested the slow rise of the hill that they had been walking on, and joined Rouge and Lang Bei as they looked down upon Jusenkyou spreading out below them. The rising sun spilled down across the dip in the land, cradled in the arms of the mountains, and the pools shone like mirrors in the light. There was mist rising off them, hanging low about the water and the land, and twining about the bamboo poles as they rose up into the air, obscuring some of the finer detail. Jusenkyou had recovered well from the flooding of weeks before. The pools were as Ryoga remembered them, so many of them, glittering in the sun like jewels. Jusenkyou in the early morning would have been a beautiful place to someone who did not know the terrible history of it, and the horrors it could inflict upon those who were touched by it. To one who did know, like him, it was beautiful still, beautiful in the way a blade might be, or a woman you knew could not ever be yours. The four of them stood looking upon it for a few moments, taking in the sight. Much later, after many things had happened, Ryoga would summon that memory of Jusenkyou to his mind, the morning beauty of the place as he had first come to it that day. It would give him a certain comfort. They were torn from their staring by the sound of a voice. "Elder Lang Bei." Bai Ling, who had challenged Shampoo's strength when the other Joketsuzoku had returned, stood a dozen feet away, her arms folded across her chest. Behind her, the small hut of the Jusenkyou Guide stood, the door open. "Good morning, Bai Ling," Lang Bei said, turning away from the sight of Jusenkyou. "Where is your great-grandmother?" Bai Ling smiled slightly. Her dark eyes flashed. "Inside. You need see what there as well." Then she turned away and walked into the hut. "Insolent girl," Lang Bei muttered, walking towards the hut. Ryoga followed, leaving Shampoo and Rouge looking down at Jusenkyou, where it lay a hundred feet down the gentle slope of the hill the Guide's hut was built upon. As Lang Bei walked through the open door of the hut, Ryoga saw her stiffen and stop; her hand tightened on the staff she bore. Moving up behind her, Ryoga looked by into the cramped confines of the hut. Fang Shi, Bai Ling and the Guide stood around a small bed in the corner; Plum sat in one corner of the hut, bouncing a ball against the dirt floor; a middle-aged woman in Chinese robes that Ryoga vaguely recognized as part of the Joketsuzoku Council leaned against the wall near the door, trimming her nails with a knife. On the bed, covers pulled up to his neck, was Mousse. The woman near the door put her knife away and said something to Lang Bei in a snide tone, speaking in Chinese. Lang Bei stepped by her without a word and stood by the bed, beginning a rapid conversation in Chinese with the Guide and Fang Shi. The woman turned her attention to Ryoga. She had a hard, unfriendly face, in which youthful beauty could still be traced though it had begun to fade some time ago. "Outsider." She spat into the dust near Ryoga's feet and pushed by him, as she left the hut, muttering under her breath in Chinese. "Ignore her," Shampoo said quietly, standing behind him. "Bi Shou. Not surprised Fang Shi choose her as other witness." Ryoga glanced to the gathering around the bed for a moment, then turned away and went to kneel down by Plum. "Hey Plum." The young girl looked up, letting her ball stop bouncing to roll away into another corner of the hut. "Hello, Ryoga." She held out her arms to him, and he gave her a quick embrace, smiling as she wrapped her small arms around his neck. He liked the independent child who'd come all the way to Japan by herself, seeking to save Jusenkyou from destruction. Shampoo's voice was in the conversation taking place behind them now. No one sounded happy, particularly Lang Bei. "How did Mousse come here?" he asked, settling back to sit on the floor. Sitting against the wall, Plum tugged on one of her pigtails in a nervous gesture. "We found him late last night. By the pools. Father was going to go into the Joketsuzoku village later this morning, but then the two elders arrived at sunrise and told him to wait." She stood up and offered her hand. "I'll show you." Ryoga followed her out of the crowded hut, her hand in his, and let her lead him down the slope towards Jusenkyou. Glancing back, he saw Bi Shou looking at him balefully from under the shadow of a copse of trees, her arms crossed. Plum took him along the winding, spongy earthen pathways that led amidst the pools, and finally paused by one near the centre, indicating it with a finger. "Here." Ryoga looked around. Off to the north, he saw a trail leading along the high slope of one of the mountains, overhanging some of the further pools. Some time ago, he had been an angry young man, wandering along that trail, almost ready to give up his pursuit of vengeance and try to find his way home. Jusenkyou had changed all that. Had changed everything. Somehow, it all came back to here, back to this place. Jusenkyou. He stared at the mist rising from the pools and thinning out as the sun rose higher. It clung damply to his hands and face, made the Guide's house a dim and obscured shape and the mountains looming and dark. "Which pool is this?" he asked quietly. "Nannichuan," Plum answered. Ryoga fell to his knees beside the pool, staring at the reflection of his face. It seemed impossibly deep; he could not see the bottom. The earth was damp, vital and fresh beneath his hands as he pressed them to it. "Nannichuan," he said dully. Plum took a few steps back. She looked worried. "I shouldn't be out here by myself. Father says..." Ryoga sighed. "Go back to the others, Plum. I've got to... think for a little." Plum nodded and scampered away down the twisting paths of Jusenkyou. Ryoga gazed into the pool, looking for answers. "What are you waiting for?" he asked himself softly, watching as the reflection opened his mouth and spoke. "This is what you've always wanted." It lay in front of him, not fake or impermanent or drained. A few steps, an immersion, and he would be rid of his curse. Why could he not take them, then? Does the prisoner, on the day of freedom, long for the walls of stone and bars of iron, and fear the brightness of the sun? "Ryoga?" He gazed at himself in the pool. "Just give me a minute, Shampoo." "Don't be idiot, for once." Someone grabbed him firmly by the belt and tossed him headfirst into the pool. He gave a strangled yell, cut off by the water closing over his head and entering his mouth. He rose, feet finding purchase on the muddy bottom, soaking wet, human, and vaguely astonished. Shampoo stood a few steps back, the closest thing she'd had to a smile all morning on her face. "Men always so indecisive." Ryoga hauled himself out of the pool, dripping wet, and glared at her. "I would have done that eventually." "Not have time," Shampoo said shortly. "Judgement is starting. You come now." Cold and damp in the morning air, wet clothes clinging to his body, Ryoga followed her as she walked off through the slowly-vanishing mists of Jusenkyou. They met the others at the edge, where the pools began. The two groups were quite clearly split; Lang Bei, Rouge, the Guide and Plum on one side, Fang Shi, Bai Ling and Bi Shou on the other. Fang Shi and Lang Bei were staring intently at each other; the hostility between the two elders was an almost physical presence in the air. Fang Shi flicked a glance to Shampoo and Ryoga as they approached, and shifted the long polearm leaning against her shoulder. "Shall we get this over with?" Bi Shou leaned over and said something quietly to the older woman, too softly for Ryoga to hear. But he saw her gesture at him, and Fang Shi gave a single, sharp burst of laughter. "Yes," she said, staring at Ryoga. "He does rather look like one in that wet clothing, doesn't he?" "If you are done amusing yourselves," Lang Bei said tightly. "I would have thought it beneath the elders of the Council to mock those who come among us as welcomed guests, but, as has occurred before, you have proven me wrong." Fang Shi turned in silence, ancient body moving with scuttling grace beneath the shapeless blue robes she wore, and leapt with astonishing ease to stand atop one of the poles, her great weapon held easily and loosely in both hands. She shouted something to Shampoo in Chinese. Shampoo glanced at Ryoga for a quick second, a determined look in her eyes. Then, with a cry, she vaulted to balance on one foot on a pole a dozen feet away from the elder, her other leg drawn up to her chest and arms raised in a combat position. "What are they doing?" Ryoga asked, moving to stand with Lang Bei and the others. "They're going to fight," Lang Bei murmured distantly. Her eyes were on the hut on the hill. "Fang Shi is going to try and knock Shampoo into one of the pools, and Shampoo's going to try not to get knocked off." "How long does that go on?" She spared him a brief glance. "Until one of them gets knocked off the poles." Fang Shi shifted her position slightly, pointed with her crescent-bladed polearm at Shampoo. The wicked edge glinted in the sunlight. Ryoga stared, aghast. "She's going to cut Shampoo to pieces." "No," Lang Bei said, her eyes returning to the hut that held her grandson. "She said she would not. It is on her head if she draws blood with that weapon." That did little to quell Ryoga's fear, but he fell into silence as he looked from Shampoo, poised and ready, to the old woman perched across from her. "I hope she'll be okay," Rouge said, staring at the ground. "What a horrible punishment..." "It has been one of our laws for thousands of years," Lang Bei said quietly. "We allow the waters their judgement at times." Fang Shi moved almost imperceptibly. Shampoo gave a tiny shift in response. They stared at each other across the empty space, and then Fang Shi darted forward, skipping from pole to pole towards Shampoo. Shampoo leapt away, pursued by the elder, unable to even attempt a counter-attack because of the length of Fang Shi's weapon. The ancient woman thrust and swung with almost blinding speed, driving Shampoo further and further back into the centre of Jusenkyou. A heavy silence hung over the watchers of the judgement on either side. Plum was clinging to her father's legs; the short man rested a plump hand on her back, his expression grave. Whirling her blade overhead as she leapt, Fang Shi lashed out yet again at Shampoo, a long, circular cut that carried the weapon out in front of her in a wide arc. It was slow and almost comically easy for the agile girl to avoid, but the purpose became clear a moment later, as the bamboo poles for dozens of feet beyond the arc of the elder's swing were chopped down as if by invisible swords, some nearly to the base. "Some sort of air blade attack..." Ryoga murmured. He began to realize then that Shampoo had no chance here; Fang Shi was very good. All she was doing was delaying the inevitable. The knowledge of that left a sick feeling in his heart. Shampoo danced atop one of the cut poles for a moment, hovering less than a foot above the sparkling surface of a pool before springing away to one that had been only half-cut. Fang Shi was close behind her. Too close, Ryoga saw, and he resisted the urge to shut his eyes as the elder swung at Shampoo's head with her weapon, seeming not to care for whatever earlier promises she had made. The blade flashed, and one of the long tails of hair Shampoo wore at the sides of her face fell away, splashing down into the pool below. Shampoo, off-balance, leapt to the side, twisting her body as she flew to present a harder target. It didn't matter. Fang Shi followed up, reversing her swing, and cut off nearly half of Shampoo's hair at the back. Ryoga heard Rouge gasp, but he could not look back, not turn his eyes away from the scene being played out. Shampoo half-stumbled as she touched down on the next pole, with Fang Shi right behind her. The elder lashed out, a straight thrust with the blunt end of her polearm. Shampoo leapt up and over the thrust, touching her feet down on the shaft of the weapon for a moment before she leapt for Fang Shi, her foot out for a kick. Against a foe less wily or skilled, it might have worked, but Fang Shi was too fast and too good. Angling her blow up, she tangled Shampoo's legs, hooked the shaft of her weapon behind one of the girl's knees, and flung her away towards one of the pools. Ryoga heard her, faintly, laugh. Shampoo stretched out a desperate hand as she tumbled, and snagged the upper part of a bamboo pole. It swayed slightly, but held as she clung to it, feet only inches above the pool it thrust out of. Ryoga saw her begin to haul herself up with one arm, saw Fang Shi leaping from pole to pole towards her in a blur of motion, and, seeing those two things, realized it was too late. Fang Shi swung her weapon. The part of the pole Shampoo gripped was sliced away, and she plunged down into the pool, sinking below the surface with a strangled scream. Ryoga was running then, praying he wouldn't slip and fall into a pool, praying he wouldn't lose his way in the mists and go in the wrong direction. The others were behind him; Fang Shi stood by the pool Shampoo had fallen into, resting the shaft of her polearm on the soft earth nearby. "Judgement is passed," Fang Shi said quietly, and with a great deal of cold triumph, as they approached. "You should not have cut her hair," Lang Bei said just as quietly. "That is a form of public humiliation in the lawbooks, and was not required." "It was a battle," Fang Shi answered. "These things happen." A few bubbles rose from the depths of the pool. Below the murky surface, Ryoga could see a dark shape, struggling. It seemed impossibly far down. He reached down and grabbed Fang Shi by the collar. "Why isn't she coming up?" he snarled. The elder looked surprised for a moment, and then slammed him crushingly to the ground with ease. "In the old days, an outsider could have his hands cut off for laying them upon a Council member," Bi Shou said from where she stood behind them. "It is unfortunate they are past." "Be quiet," Lang Bei snapped. She turned to the Guide, as Ryoga rose to his feet and dusted himself off. "What pool is that?" The Guide opened his mouth to answer, but before he could, Shampoo rose out of the water, gasping for breath. What remained of her hair clung damply to her face and shoulders as she tread water in the pool. "Is Nyannichuan," she said wonderingly, holding up her hands in front of her and staring at them disbelievingly as she waded to shore. "I... cured." Lang Bei looked at the shocked face of Fang Shi. "It appears indeed that judgement has been passed, elder Fang Shi. Shall we return to the village and inform them of it?" Then, as if it had been ordained some time in the far, far distant past, the last of the mists boiled away in the rising heat of the day, and the light of the sun struck fully down upon Jusenkyou for the first time that morning, and each pool gathered the light unto itself, until each of them shone like a diamond, like a crystal with a burning heart of flame. ********** Nabiki surveyed the early-morning schoolyard, totally deserted over an hour before classes started. The sun was still rising, muted by grey clouds that streamed across the sky in a long, dark cape. A wind blew across her, and she shivered and hunched her shoulders, gripping her bag tightly in both hands. The morning was cold; summer was fading to autumn, slowly, and the leaves of the trees near the gate of the school were turning with the passing of seasons, the transition of green to all the colours of flame, and eventually towards the fall, the drift from branch to ground, to be gathered then into pyres and burned. She never came so early. But she knew that he did, some days. Not often, but often enough that she held some vague hope he would be here, and she might surprise him. That would give her a slight advantage; better than arranging a meeting or showing up at his house. She walked across the athletic field until she was behind the school, out by the equipment sheds that stored yard tools and sports equipment. It was there she found him, a tall shape standing on the grass nearby, defined in the light of the morning sun, blue and darker blue, and the wooden blade moving gracefully, and the shadow mirroring all motion on the ground. "Kuno," she called. Not Kuno-baby, she wouldn't call him that now. Give him a bit of respect; find out what he actually knew. And don't let it show that she was scared. He turned and let his blade drop. The point bounced once on the grass and then came to rest, as he held the weapon loosely in one hand. "Nabiki Tendo." She willed herself to drop the bag she held across her body like a shield and approached him, letting it swing casually in one hand. "Sorry I ran out on you last night." Make a joke of it, that was the way to go. Don't show any fear. "A certain modesty on your part is rather becoming," he mused. He smiled thinly. The mask was down, like it had been in the park. "For once." She bit down whatever retort she might have had. "Can we talk? I came early to talk to you." He nodded. The wind gusted his hakama about his long legs as he turned and walked to stand next to the wall of one of the equipment sheds. He sat down on the cold concrete as if it did not bother him and laid his bokken over his crossed legs, resting his back against the wall of the shed. Nabiki settled down across from him, trying to arrange her dress in such a way that it would protect her bare legs from the chill ground. Kuno tracked her with his eyes as she sat. "So," she said, composing herself. "What do you know?" For once, perhaps, the direct approach would work best. He regarded her with a level gaze, the thin smile still on his mouth. "I know that you have been selling information on Ranma and his friends to certain people that in hindsight, it was probably best not to get involved with in the first place." "Do you think I had a choice?" Nabiki murmured, staring back at him. He nodded once. "There is always a choice." "Yeah," Nabiki said, and laughed ruefully. "There was another choice. Not much of one, but I guess I could have made it." For a moment, she saw a flicker of something in his eyes that might have been compassion. "Nabiki Tendo..." She changed the subject abruptly. "How did you know?" His eyes went hard again. "The man whom you report to reports to my grandfather." This time, her laughter was genuine, albeit tinged with bitterness. "It all makes sense. That's why you can afford to live the way you do. You're yakuza." "No!" Kuno interjected sharply. "I am not. The business of my father's companies are legitimate. On my mother's side..." His face darkened. "I had not spoken to my grandfather willingly until recently." "What changed?" "My sister died," Kuno replied bluntly. For a moment, Nabiki could not speak. "I'm sorry," she finally managed. So many more question, but there was no way to ask them of him. The fact sunk in, was stored for future reference, but made no impression at the time. Too much else to worry about. "Are you truly?" Kuno asked sardonically. There was a very vast grief behind his eyes. "Yes," Nabiki snapped. "Do you think I've got no heart at all?" A long silence. At last, he shook his head. "You realize what danger you have put yourself and your family in?" "Of course I do," Nabiki whispered. "Bad enough I'm probably going to end up..." She trailed away, and fixed her eyes on the ground. Tears threatened to blur her vision. "That's one of the reasons I came here," she said after a moment to regain control. "I thought that if you knew about all that, you might know how I could..." A sudden hope filled her. She looked up. "Yoshiyuki reports to your grandfather, right? Can't he..." And now Kuno laughed, and such an awful depth of bitterness echoed in his laugh. "Were it in his power, he would free you from whatever debt his organization holds over you. But it is not. He reports to another." "Shit," Nabiki said softly, closing her eyes. The yakuza were as bad as the government for bureaucracy. Kuno seemed to sense her thoughts somehow. "Not yakuza. Worse." Her head snapped up. "What?" "You have so many questions, Nabiki Tendo," he said quietly. "Answer one of mine. How did you come to be involved with such as them? I would think you more intelligent than that." "I would have as well, once," Nabiki murmured. "I'm starting to see that I'm not quite as smart as I used to think." "How?" Kuno prompted. She paused for a moment in thought, staring at him as she did, studying the lines of his face and the cast of his eyes. How much more damage could it really do, she realized finally. He might even already know. He might simply want to hear it from her mouth. "Mom died when I was ten," she began quietly, and was surprised at how much buried pain the words brought forth. "Everyone took it hard. Dad cut back on his teaching, and finally stopped altogether. He tried not to let it show, but I knew enough about numbers to see that we were in trouble. He used to let me look at the bank statements; I guess he didn't think I could understand them at that age. We were going through our savings really fast. There was the mortgage to pay off, and the hospital bills. Too many debts, too little money." Always too little money. "When I was twelve, a man came to visit Dad. Dad told Kasumi and Akane and me to stay in our rooms, but I snuck out and listened to them after a while. The man was offering to pay off all our debts, but Dad was angry at him, yelled at him, threw him out of the house." She drew a shuddering breath. Kuno was listening in total silence. "I didn't understand why. I heard Dad crying in the kitchen, and I snuck downstairs and went outside to follow the man. I caught up with him at the corner, and..." She paused and looked at Kuno. "I think he must have been your grandfather. The age would be about right, and..." Now that she knew the connection, she was sure. Kuno's eyes were like the older man's had been on that day five years ago, staring down at the girl who'd grabbed onto the sleeve of his expensive suit at the corner. The image of the man was still firmly fixed in her mind after all the years; she compared him to Kuno, found traces of the same features. "I told him I'd do anything if he gave us the money, but he explained that dad didn't want to take money from him." She laughed, suddenly, because it was either that she laugh or start crying. "I told him I had a plan. It was such a good plan; Dad never suspected a thing." "What was the plan?" Kuno asked. Again, she laughed. "He took me out for coffee. He was so nice; I didn't even realize what he was. I made up a rich, distant relative of my mother's who'd been the middle of three daughters. She would die and send me a lot of money in her will, because I was the middle child too." She shrugged. "A kid's plan. He made it work, though. He had the resources to do it, to make it all look legit, look real. And I gave the money to Daddy, and he was so grateful, I remember..." She remembered her father crying, sweeping her up into a hug as she showed him the fake letter and the cheque, and told him about what she wanted to do with the money. It had made her feel smarter than everyone else. It had made her feel important, even though it was Kasumi who cooked all the meals and kept the house, even though it was Akane who was learning the Art in the dojo whenever their father was willing to teach her. "He was really happy," she said. "God, I was so dumb then. The man said he'd call me if he ever needed me to do something for him. When Ranma showed up, he did. I understood by then what I'd done, but a deal's a deal. And it wasn't like I could actually refuse. And they said they would pay me." She smiled shakily. "I guess you know the rest, huh?" Kuno tapped his fingers idly on the sun-scarred wood of his bokken and said nothing. "What I want to know," she said musingly, "is how they knew all those years back that Ranma would be showing up." "From what my grandfather has told me," Kuno said quietly, "those to whom he reports to have been watching Ranma for a long, long time." "So now that I've answered your question," Nabiki said, "answer mine. Who are they?" "Grandfather said little of them," he answered. "They are all women, I know that. They don't age. They are very hard to kill." His voice was very quiet, and his eyes were sad. "And beginning twelve years ago, they systematically butchered the families of key yakuza members until all the oyabuns and their organizations submitted to their will." And now his voice dropped to a bare whisper, a vein of grief running through it like gold through stone. "And I defied one of them, and for that she caused my sister's death. She made it appear an accident." Nabiki stared at him in silence for a moment. She had thought last night that he was mad; that who he had pretended to be had only disguised a dark, dangerous core. And perhaps it did, she realized, looking at his eyes. But there was a dangerous sanity in how he spoke, a sense that he, at least, had no doubts of what he said. It sounded mad, of course; women who did not age, who could bring the vast might of the yakuza to heel, who could kill and not be detected. Any madder, some inner voice whispered, than people who changed shape with water, or a land of cursed springs, or a winged race whose king was a child with a god's power? She had seen the first, heard of the other two from her younger sister. And Akane had told her what had happened on the mountain. Women who controlled shadows, who made lightning come from clear sky. They had wanted Ranma; they had been ready to kill all the rest of them to get him. Puzzle pieces began to fall into place, dozens of sections of disparate information connecting to each other in a few quick seconds, as automatic to her as breathing. "Oh god," she whispered heavily as she began to realize. "Ranma. It was always Ranma. They wanted to know what he was doing, where he had been, who he had fought, how it had happened..." Fear was nothing. Fear was a word for what she had felt before, when she had been entrapped in something she could understand, something she could reconcile with the world of numbers and dealings that occupied most of her time. Fear was not adequate; terror, perhaps, as if she had lit a candle in some deep, dark pit only to see that all around lay all the bones of all the dead. She was shaking. One of Kuno's hands was on her shoulder, a human touch, mildest of comforts. She should have pushed it away, but did not. A sick, numb ache was growing in the pit of her stomach. "Ranma is the key," Kuno said quietly. His hand squeezed her shoulder gently. "Everything centres upon him." "What?" Nabiki asked, confused, trying to stop shaking but unable. "I had a dream," he replied. "A week before he came. A creature both male and female who burned as bright as the sun, and the people gathered to his light. And those who came too close to him burned, as moths burn drawn to candles." "Why'd you do it, Tatewaki?" she asked, too conscious of his hand upon her shoulder to be comfortable. "Even before Ranma came, all those years... my sister..." There was a long silence between them. He took his hand from her shoulder, and in his eyes there was a very deep sadness, one that she did not think she could ever understand. "I was an actor upon a stage, Nabiki Tendo," he said finally. "I played my part, believing I did what was best for my ends." Pausing, he lifted his bokken slightly in both hands, as if weighing it. "I think now that I was wrong. But what is done is done." Nabiki looked at him for a moment, aghast. "What ends? What could possibly be worth pretending to be something you're not?" He lowered his bokken to rest it upon his knees again, and slowly met her eyes. From beyond the shelter of the equipment sheds, she could hear the sounds of other students arriving now, and realized she had been here, talking with him, for a very long time. "If they cannot touch you, they cannot hurt you." His voice was very soft, and a gust of wind blew a few scattered leaves, green and torn from the trees too early, by them across the cold concrete. "If they do not know you, they cannot betray you." "Who can't betray you?" He smiled thinly. "Everyone. Everyone, Nabiki Tendo." She stared into his eyes. "What about me?" He laughed, harshly. "We are on equal footing now, Nabiki. Each of us knows something of the other that we do not desire others to know, yes?" She nodded, and said nothing. Her legs had grown stiff with pins and needles from having sat on the ground so long. "Tell me one more thing." "What?" "Why'd you go after my sister?" He ran a hand through his hair. "Because I was sure that she would reject me." Abruptly, he stood to his feet, stretching and rotating his shoulders. His bokken dangled loosely from one hand. "We should part, Nabiki Tendo. Classes will begin soon." He leaned down and offered her his free hand. To her own surprise, perhaps to his, she took it and allowed him to pull her to her feet. "Thanks." She stood there for a moment, her hand in his, letting the blood flow back into her cold, numb legs and looking at his stoic face. His eyes were bright and hard, intelligent. He was an actor, she realized, a superb one; he had fooled them all, even her. And he was quite possibly insane, though not in a way she had ever imagined someone could be insane. "We are both in a great deal of danger," he said at last, as if it were something they both did not already know. "You even more now because of what I have told you, and what you have told me. But hear me out, Nabiki Tendo." He let go of her hand and seemed to gather himself. He was, she realized, going to make a speech, of sorts, if she recognized the signs correctly. "If I believed in any gods any more," he began, "I would swear by them. But now I can swear only by myself, and what honour one whose existence has been for the most part a lie could be said to possess. I will do all that I can to help you and yours, Nabiki Tendo. I swear it." "Thank you," Nabiki said, genuinely grateful to another person for the first time she could remember in a very long time. For the offer of help, the sharing of his own secrets, and also, she realized, for listening to the sharing of hers. She was still terrified. The guilt, however, at how far she had allowed herself to fall, was less. She felt cleansed, as if washed in water, and felt a thin spar of hope for the first time. Thin, insubstantial, but hope all the same. "We're in this together, then?" she asked quietly, holding out her hand. He took it in both of his and shook it formally. "It is a deal," he answered. "Together." In the distance, all the bells of the school began to ring, shattering the peace of the moment, summoning them away. ********* The light went out. A thin knife of laughter cut from the darkness. "Can you see in the dark, children?" "Stay together," Wiyeed's voice said, clearly and almost frighteningly calm. "Ranma, Herb, give me your hands." Ranma reached out and found her in the darkness, slipped his hand into hers. "What are you doing?" Out from somewhere in the dark, the World-Hater laughed again. There was a sound like a great wind howling down a mountain pass, a roaring scream that seemed to build and build and build. "Get in close," Wiyeed said. "Quickly, now." Footsteps. Mint, Lime, Kima. Herb had been next to Wiyeed when the light had gone out. The piercing scream grew higher and sharper, until Ranma felt as if his ears would explode. Wiyeed's hand gripped his tightly. Ranma felt a slight touch upon his mind, a feather-light probing. The screaming grew, as if all the winds of the world gathered howling around them. He heard laughter again, drowned out by that vast screaming. Then it stopped. Totally and completely. Silence reigned, dead and heavy, over everything. "Now," Wiyeed said desperately. "Let me use your power." It was easy enough. He realized the touch upon his mind was her, showing him how. They had done something like this before, the three of them in a circle, to make light in the darkness when one alone had not been enough. Ranma opened himself, and let his ki flow out of him and into her, through the contact of their hands. Then there was a screaming as of wind again, deafeningly loud, gigantic even compared to the first howling. He felt the ground beneath his feet rock, and a dome of light flared around them, centred on Wiyeed. He saw, in the brief second of illumination, the stone floor to either side of them being furrowed and ripped away as if by some great plow, rock shattering as a scum of ice formed across it and it crystallized and exploded, debris pattering off the shield. He heard the wind screaming past them, and saw frost crystals forming in the air as it went by and then falling to shatter on the ground. Dozens of feet away, he saw the Ravager, left hand raised, silver hair whipping around his face. The ground before him was torn and rent like an arctic wound, a long swathe of icy destruction that split at the dome of light into two lines, diverging around the barrier in a fork. Then the light went out again, and all was still; the air was freezing cold around them, like the heart of winter. Wiyeed's grip was so tight as to be painful. Ranma felt drained and tired; something was stirring wearily in the back of his mind, that vast and ancient force of ice and fire. He forced it back down. "Very impressive," the Ravager said from the darkness. "How long can you keep that up, little one?" "As long as I must," Wiyeed answered. "Wiyeed--" Herb began. "Shut up, Herb," she hissed. "Get in closer. Close as possible. That makes it easier." "Master Herb--" two voices said in unison. "Mint, Lime, get over here and be quiet." Footsteps again. Ranma felt a hand fall upon his shoulder. "Ranma?" He reached up with his free hand and laid it across the almost-human talon of Kima's. Said nothing. Tried to ignore the trembling in his legs, the great weariness. There was a roaring sound, and the air was filled with flames. The dome of light flared again, showing the six of them huddled tightly together, showing the world consumed by fire. Wiyeed's teeth were gritted, her eyes closed. Sweat beaded her face, making her hair cling damply to her forehead. "Lady protect us," she whispered softly. "He's so strong." The inferno of heat rolled around them, red-orange tongues of flame stroking across the barrier. Ranma heard stone exploding beyond the dome, detonating at the impossibly great heat. Then it stopped. The flames died away, revealing for a moment before Wiyeed let the dome of light fall a wasteland of blackened and melted stone, filled with huge clouds of steam from the ice that had boiled away. Ranma saw no walls or ceiling in this place; only the endless floor, stretching out in all directions, and then the light was gone. The heat of the flames had not died yet; he felt the heavy caress of heat across his face. "Wiyeed," Ranma asked softly, "are you okay?" "I'm alright," she answered wearily back. "I can't keep this up for long, though. We have to get out of here." "How, precisely?" Herb demanded. "We don't even know how we got here." There was a click, and a pale light shining from the carved ivory box in Kima's hand. It was almost shocking, to see that tiny, bright light when before the only illumination had been the flaring of Wiyeed's shield or the annihilating glow of the heat of the flames. "Ranma, remember when we came through from Ryugenzawa to Jusenkyou?" Ranma glanced back to her where she stood behind him, her hand still on his shoulder. "Yeah." She looked silently to where his hand covered hers, and he took it away, embarrassed. "Remember what it was like between?" (...vast darkness, all-consuming absence of light...) He nodded slowly. "Dark." (...the invisible cold of the spaces between the stars, places where the light has never reached...) "I think he was waiting there," Kima concluded. She looked to Wiyeed, as if for confirmation. "Well, sorceress? Does the hypothesis hold?" "That is not a title I like," Wiyeed murmured, her eyes half-closed, still holding hands with Herb and Ranma. "But I believe you are correct." "All well and good," Herb, his face harshly defined by the light Kima held. "But where is he now?" There was a light chuckle from somewhere high above them. Wiyeed almost got the shield up again in time, but the black-armoured shape, plunging like a stooping falcon, crashed into her with both feet, smashing her to the ground and ripping her hands free from Herb and Ranma. Checked by the shield, the Ravager had resorted to purely physical force. A blade of light rushed up Herb's arm, and he sliced sideways at the Ravager's neck, as the silver-haired man landed lightly on his feet near the fallen body of Wiyeed. The World-Hater dodged with ease, and casually backhanded Herb across the face, snapping his head sideways and driving him staggering back. Lime swung at him, snarling ferally, and the Ravager grabbed his wrist, spun, and tossed the huge boy crushingly to the floor. He knelt and seized Wiyeed by the throat with a seven-fingered silver hand, the gems upon it sparkling in the light; bright rubies, liquid emeralds, pearls like tears, a single triangular diamond on the back the size of a man's eye. "She dies if another of you makes a move towards me." Ranma backed away, and saw Mint, his curved sword drawn and held nervously in his hands, do the same. "You'll kill her anyway," Herb said coldly, wiping a hand across a lip split by the Ravager's blow. "You're going to kill all of us in the end." The Ravager lifted the weakly-struggling girl by the neck, dangling her loosely off the ground. "True enough." He turned his eyes to Ranma. They were simply fire in the sockets. "A deal, perhaps, Lord of Waters?" Ranma glared back at him. There was a pounding in the back of his head, a rising and falling like the waves hitting the cliffs. "I won't make deals with you." "But we both have something to offer," the Ravager said chidingly. "I am forbidden to slay you, Lord of Waters. And yet you may oppose me, and make my vengeance difficult upon these five." He gestured with his free hand at the others. "And I hold their lives in my hands. Literally, in the case of this one." He spared a glance to Wiyeed as he held her a foot off the floor with one hand. Her eyes were narrowed with hate as she looked at him, both hands gripping his arm to keep from being choked. "Cursed be your name till the end of time," she said. There was blood in her hair from where her head had struck the floor as she fell. "May the Lady never guide you down that last river, and may your dark soul find no peace anywhere in all the worlds." The Ravager struck her across the face with his free hand. "Empty threats, little one. What I serve is older than your Lady by far, and the Dark loves those who do its will." "Do not touch her again," Herb said. His voice was very cold. "Mark my words. Mark them well." "The bloodline has not changed in all these years," the Ravager said, turning blazing eyes to Herb. "You are still blindingly arrogant, all of you." He glanced to Wiyeed. "And your whores are still most fair. Would your body give me pleasure, I wonder, young one? Would you learn to scream my name, in time?" Wiyeed glared coldly at him. "I would sooner die." He grinned savagely. "The choice is not yours to make." "Leave her alone," Ranma said, clenching his fists and taking a step forward. "I'll talk. What do you want?" The Ravager lowered his arm slightly, almost letting Wiyeed's feet touch the floor. "Choose two of them." "What?" "Choose two of them," the World-Hater repeated. "I will let them and yourself leave this place. The other three will stay with me." Herb turned his head to look at Ranma. "Take the women and go, Saotome. We of the Musk shall deal with this." Standing behind Ranma, Kima made a disgusted sound. "How typical. Let the poor, helpless females flee, while the men stay here and get nobly torn limb from limb." Herb glanced at her dismissively. "Would you stay in my place, then?" he asked. "You can do nothing here. You cannot even fly any longer." Stunned, Ranma watched as Kima stared at Herb, her face blank, a mask. "Stay here and die then, childkiller," she said at last, a coldness like ice in her voice. "I, for one, shall not mourn the loss." Ranma looked from one to the other, unable to speak. There had been no cruelty in Herb's voice. He could read nothing in the other man's eyes. He looked to Kima, saw only a fierce, steady, wounded pain in hers. She turned away, shoulders slumped and head bowed. The Ravager laughed. "Delightful. Utterly delightful. I hope you let me keep those two, Lord of Waters. I'll just force the two of them to remain in each other's company." "Shut up," Ranma snarled, whirling and stabbing a finger through the air. "You're not keeping anyone." "Then we have no deal?" the silver-haired man asked with mock sadness. Ranma hesitated for a moment, and then saw Wiyeed's nod, almost unnoticeable. "I'll negotiate," he said quietly. "Let me stay here. Let the rest of them go." The World-Hater shook his head. "That I cannot do." "Let me stay, then," Herb said, the first words he had spoken since that casual, impossibly cruel thing he had said to Kima. "Let the others go. I am sure I will provide you with amusement enough." A little of Ranma's rage at the Musk prince lessened at the sincerity in those words. A little, but not all. Once they were out of here, he decided, he and Herb were going to have a discussion. "Too little for me in that deal," the World-Hater said, laughing. "Too little, dear prince." Ranma frowned. "This is going nowhere." He glanced to Wiyeed. She nodded again. All the Ravager's attention was on him and Herb now. Mint and Lime stood in silence, confused and not knowing what to do. The thin circle of light Kima held was barely enough to contain the scene playing itself out upon the stone floor. "Let me take three," Ranma said. The Ravager paused to consider it. "If I may choose one of those who stays." "Who?" "Only if you agree first." Ranma shook his head. "No can do." Wiyeed moved then, very quickly. The hand she'd slowly crept down while keeping a grip on the Ravager's arm with the other seized the dagger from her belt, drew it forth, and stabbed it into the Ravager's eye. He screamed. A blinding flare of light exploded from the curved blade, buried to the hilt in his face, a shining, pulsating glow like a star. He staggered back, dropping Wiyeed, and clutched both his hands to the slim dagger. Herb caught his sister as she nearly collapsed to the ground and leapt back with her, as the Ravager pulled the blade free with a terrible wet sound and cast it to the ground. He looked at brother and sister. His right eye blazed with hate, the fire brighter than ever before, and his left was a ruined, gaping socket of blood and worse, dripping down the smooth, beautiful lines of his face. A few weak tongues of fire licked about within the terrible wound, rimmed with black at their edges. "I owe a hand and an eye now to the cursed weapons of the first ones," he hissed, holding up his flesh hand to cover the ragged hole in his face. "I have made my choice. You two will stay. I give you no choice in this, Lord of Waters. Are we agreed?" "No," Ranma said, and struck. He remembered Galm, held in a world he should never have existed in by those black chains that he had unbound. It was Kima who had given him the idea, the understanding he had needed, and Wiyeed who had given him the time. That, and the Ravager's staggering arrogance, his childish desire to play with what he had captured. This was the place between the waters, a place of the Dark, obedient to the Ravager's will. And they did not belong here; he had trapped them and held them, against their desires, against the will of the waters. He was Lord of Waters, then, and this was against his will. He looked with his eyes - call them eyes, perhaps - at the weave and flow of this place. There was a vast darkness, and something burning black at the centre, and six faint lights bound to that black burning like moths to the flame, with chains forged of hate and vengeance. It was astonishingly easy. If the Ravager had been expecting it, it would not have been, but he was taken by surprise as Ranma began slicing, with a bright blade of purest will, at the weave and wind of his trap. The World-Hater tried; he sent his own vast will lashing back like the binding threads of a spider's web, seeking again to trap, to pull them back. Ranma fought back, unbinding his efforts, slowly pulling them free of the trap. A last cutting, a last act of will, and the darkness became as light, and the stone became as water. Again, now, they were falling, down into a depth of the ocean, with waters closing in over their head, and a blinding, beautiful light at the end, welcoming them home. And in the darkness behind, a voice shrieking hatred and vengeance denied. ********** The part of the Dark that had once been called the Ravager screamed in fury as his prey escaped. He raged in his lightless dominion, like a spoiled child denied a toy. As he had so many times before, he hammered with his vast hate against the confines of this place, as he had for four thousand years, and as always before, he could not break free from the mindless embrace of the Dark that held and loved him, smothering him like an over-protective mother and keeping him away from the light and hope of the world he had been born into to destroy. As he had so many times before, he gathered the tortured, fragmented soul of the woman who had sacrificed herself to send him here, and made it whole, and inflicted agonies upon her that would have broken the strongest will. She broke, of course. She always did, in the end. But such a thing gave him little pleasure after so much time confined, and he casually threw the essence of her being into the lightless space, as he had so many times before. The Dark took her gladly; it was not often it could claim one such as her. He was patient, though. He would wait. It was hard - very hard - for him to observe the world beyond his prison, but he could sense the greatest disturbances in the weave and skein of time. The Serpent walked in the Valley of the Waters now, and the Lord of Waters went now towards his final meeting with the third and last. Across the ocean, the forces of his servants gathered, a vast and mighty corruption seething like a cancer beneath the surface of the land. What remained of the Ravager - who could only recollect with effort the name he had been given at his birth - sat and brooded for a moment, his silver hand cupping his chin. Even after four millennia, the habits of physical existence had not disappeared completely from him. He crafted a replacement eye from the malleable stuff of this place, of purest hammered gold and many shining gems, and its beauty pleased him. Beauty still could, if only because he could render it ugly so easily. In time, though, he heard the voice of his master calling - like him, only a part of a part, though a far greater part than he - and he left, returning to mingle with the Dark like a river comes in time to merge with the sea. His essence unbound from the physical shape he had crafted, and what remained of him fell into something like a sleep, again to wait. Soon, the true day of judgement would come, a final judgement for those who had defied he and his master's will... ...for the land that they lived in... ...for the powers that had cradled and protected them... ...for everything.