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 32 : That Which We Destroy They were in one of the enclosed gardens, near a stream that trickled down through a narrow channel formed by rocks to make a pool reflecting the blue of the early-morning sky. A single willow stretched wearily near the pool, casting the spot where they sat into shade. Two paths led out of the garden, laid out in flat stones that ran to a narrow wooden porch; beyond glass doors, the hallways that led between buildings in the Kenzan compound stretched. Konatsu turned his head and looked at Ukyou where she sat beside him on the stone bench. Her right knee was still twisted and puffy, and she had walked down the hallways with a limp. A red silk kimono, slightly too large and with contrasting black vines, was belted tight around her. "You were right," she said when she saw him looking, "the gardens are very beautiful." Her voice was soft, muted. Unbound hair hung down her back and shoulders in a silky wave. Stiff and sore upon the floor, he had awoken this morning to hear her in the shower. No sign of Hako or anyone else; the compound seemed deserted but for them. Konatsu was not that naive, however. He knew Hako better than that. The gardens, as Ukyou said, were beautiful, a contrast to the grief they'd had in the last few days and Hako's savagery. But the memory of it was never far away. In his pocket, the object the crow had given him the night before seemed too heavy. He wasn't sure what to do. Fuhaiko and Nenreiko were unknowns in this. He didn't even know what had made him keep the thing from Ukyou. Only an instinctual wariness, perhaps; somehow, he recognized that the tiny stick of carved bamboo would change everything. As things were, he was not truly happy, but Ukyou was safe, and with him. Perhaps that was what was best to hope for, for him at least. But what, something else in him said softly, for her? The warmth of her hand lain across his broke him from his thoughts. "What are you thinking about?" she asked softly. "The future," he answered quietly, looking up at a drifting cloud. The bright Okinawa sun came down in bars through the leaves of the willow and glistened on the pool and the chips of quartz crystal in the rocks, as if upon jewels. "What future?" Ukyou said, taking her hand away and cupping her chin dejectedly with it. "We're trapped here by these lunatics, and..." Konatsu listened to her trail away into silence before he spoke. "And what?" "And you're not willing to try and get away," she said after a moment's hesitation. "Konatsu, we're not even guarded. We could slip out the front gate, and--" "You still don't understand," he interrupted, an edge of frustration creeping into his voice. "Hako can find me no matter where I go." "Then we can run off and get help!" Ukyou persisted. "We can fight--" Again, he interrupted. "Hako does not fight as you or anyone else who could help us is used to fighting. You fought her yourself; you know what she is capable of." Ukyou winced. "But..." "And that is without even the full weight of Kenzan behind her." A sigh escaped her, and her shoulders slumped in seeming defeat. "Okay," she said wearily. "We'll just stay here until we die, or Hako decides to kill us." "Oh, she won't do that," Konatsu said, shaking his head. "She needs me. And she understands the consequences if she hurts you again." He glanced pointedly to the short sword on his belt. "Konatsu," Ukyou said with a troubled expression, "don't talk about that." She put her arm around his shoulders and shifted closer on the bench. "Promise me you won't hurt yourself if something happens to me." Konatsu sat in silence, though his heart raced at the closeness of her. "Promise me," she repeated. "No," he said finally. "I can't. Forgive me, Ukyou. I have to be willing to go through with my threats, or I have no power over her." Ukyou was silent for a long time, just holding her arm around his shoulders, and then she slipped it off and folded her hands in her lap. "You can't control her," she said. "She's barely human." "I can die if she hurts you," Konatsu said, forcing the threat of a tremble from his voice. "That's enough. She needs me." "Why?" Ukyou asked. Konatsu opened his mouth, and then shut it. "I don't know precisely why," he answered after a moment's thought. "Only that she does." The endless litany, from his mother, his father, his stepmother - one day, you shall be called upon to serve your clan in the way that only you can. "And when the time comes that she stops needing you? What happens to you then?" Konatsu didn't care. But the question that was unspoken weighed heavily upon him. Chances were, Hako would stop needing him. Perhaps soon. And what, then, would happen to Ukyou? "We have to get out of here, Konatsu." He nodded once, not even realizing he intended to until he did. With a quick motion, he drew out the stick of bamboo from one of his hidden pockets and held it up. "I don't know what this is," he said softly. "But I think it might be able to help." From end to end, the stick was carved with intertwined Chinese characters. He looked at Ukyou's face; the light of recognition was in her eyes. Her hand reached out and took it from him. "You know what it is, don't you?" he asked softly. He didn't, but he could see she did. Ukyou nodded. "What?" "Hope," she whispered, and, taking an end in each hand, she snapped the stick in half. Across an ocean, the snapping screamed like a klaxon in the head of an old man in a library. Neither Konatsu nor Ukyou was aware of this happening, but it was very important to what would later occur. Nor did they notice the three crows perched upon the roof of one building, motionless as they watched with yellow eyes. This, though not quite so important, also had something to do with what went on afterwards. ********** Hako walked. Hako walked in the darkness, through the labyrinth of caverns that stretched under the Kenzan compound. Ancient they were, the walls rough and jagged, but carved by human hands. Various entrances led into and out of the cramped warren of passages, all of them more-or-less concealed except for the cave mouth on the beach. Ahead of her, the shadows loomed, flickering in the yellow light of the torch she carried. A lantern, even an electric flashlight, would have been easier. But tradition broke hard; torches had been the only lights of this place when it was sliced out of the rock of the cliffs, so a torch lit her way now. And the sensory experience, the resinous smell of the smoke and the tang of oil upon the tongue, was something that no other source of light would give. Her steps were silent as she went, not even a shuffle of the soft slippers she wore audible. The uneven floor was dusty, and each step left her footprints behind her. She passed through the sepulchre, a narrow passage lined on either side with wide, deep niches. In each one, an iron casket held what remained of a leader of Kenzan. Not so many as one might have thought there should be; as she passed, a momentary spasm made her lose control of her left hand, and the flames of the torch whipped out behind the burning head as it dipped closer to one niche. Pulling it under control, she left the charnel place behind, and came after a few minutes more into the central room of the underground. This one held no roughness or unevenness in its construction; floor and walls and ceiling were glass-smooth, and four circular pillars were arranged in a diamond shape in the centre, rising up almost to the ceiling and narrowing to needle-sharp points at the top. Those were dark iron, almost indistinguishable from the rock around them, except when the light glistened on them and upon their tips. Four torch brackets were spaced equidistantly on each pillar. Hako breathed in. Here there was no dust on anything. She walked lightly to stand near one pillar, and carefully placed her torch into the only empty bracket upon it. She stepped back, and raised her hand. With slight pops as air was consumed, all the other torches upon the walls and the pillars sprang to life. This place lay under the central building of the compound; a focus of power. Now she came into the area bounded by the pillars. The reek of sulphur from the torches mingled with the cold tang of iron. She raised her hands, and peeled off her left-hand glove with a grimace. Freed from its confines, she flexed the fingers a few times, and then removed the right-hand glove as well. Lacing her fingers together, she stretched her arms over her head and let out a deep, throaty sigh of pleasure. Flesh slapped on cloth as she dropped her hands to her sides; turning a slow circle, she pushed out and found the ebb and flow of the energies. Then, with an action so long-practiced as to be nearly instinctual, she united herself with them. The power seared through her; she clenched her teeth at the suddenness of it, so vast a store of might. Upon the edges, the slumbering presence that was the source shifted at her brief contact with it. "My lord," she whispered reverently, resisting the urge to fall to her knees. The Circle, of which she was nominally a part, believed that specific ritual and ceremony were necessary. They knew nothing. Only the knowledge, the willingness to reach out and submit, to bend but not be broken; only those were necessary, and the Dark would touch you deep as any lover. She drew forth a glass vial from within the depths of her uniform, and uncorked it with a pop. With a flick of her wrist, she sent the powdery contents scattering around her to drift like snow to the floor. The torches flared blue. She spoke a single word, made a simple gesture with her hands, and they burned white. The iron pillars swam with shifting waves of torch-fire, almost pulsing. Over her head, the needle tip of each pillar began to glow, a firefly-sized spark as bright as the sun. Shafts of light shot off like spears, arcing along walls and floor and ceiling. Another word, and the shafts gathered, leapt from pillar to pillar until a diamond of almost blinding brightness glowed overhead. Hako tilted her head back, eyes open wide as they could go, and spoke a final phrase. Power surged; it struck like a hammer blow. She bit her lip until blood ran down her chin, and the coppery taste of it lingered on her tongue. Longingly, like a mother reaching for a child, Hako, the Lady of Kenzan, reached out for her servants and whispered to each of them but one word: Come. ********** Cold. That was what it had to be. Ukyou stared out at the ocean, and folded the sleeves of the blood-red kimono around her hands. There was no wind, and the sun was warm. Something else, then; something else was to blame for the tingles running erratically up and down her spine. Behind her, the buildings and walls of the Kenzan compound loomed, confining her. Before her, the sheer cliffs dropped down to the deserted beach. From up here, the white sand glistened, the minute crystals ground in with the fine powder trapping the sun. There had been nothing, no surge of power or flash of light or sign of anything else, when she had broken the stick; but when she had looked at the two broken pieces, the surfaces were smooth. Konatsu had not questioned her about it. He had simply seemed to accept it, or perhaps he had not even cared. The thought at the edge of her mind, no matter how much she disliked it, was that perhaps it was best Konatsu didn't know precisely what it was meant to do. He was terrified of Hako; not that she wasn't, but his fear was something deeper, a child's terror of the dark. She glanced down the cliffs, to the long stepped walkway that had been worn out over time by wind and rain. They could have simply walked away from the place; but the closest town she knew of was little more than a base of Clan Kenzan, and Konatsu had said that Hako could find him no matter where he went. Whether that was true or not, she could not convince him to leave. So there was only the waiting now then - the brief hope that help would come. Only she did not know if it would come, or come in time if it did. Another tingle ran through her, and she shook her head. The twisted knee on her right leg throbbed with a dull pain. Salt-sea breeze gusted off the endless roll of the Pacific, and made her nose twitch. There was the rattle of dishes on a tray; she turned her head - Konatsu approached with light steps upon the grass. He smiled, and bobbed his head in a small bow without saying anything. Ukyou shifted, wincing once as the motion sent pain through her injured knee, and arranged the folds of the kimono about her knees. Konatsu set the tray down between them and knelt on the other side of it. "A nice view, isn't it?" Ukyou nodded and picked up the steaming china teapot. A fragrant herbal smell mingled with the lingering aroma of the sea as she poured a cup for each of them. "I used to sit here all the time before you came," he continued softly, as Ukyou raised her cup to her mouth and sipped. "I'd stare out across the ocean, and think about what lay beyond..." "China," Ukyou answered flatly. Konatsu's smile slipped a little. Untouched on the tray, his teacup sent tendrils of twisting vapour into the air. "I know that," he said after a moment's silence, "but I mean... all the things that are out there. All the places to go, the new sights to see--" "All the places that aren't here," Ukyou interrupted. Konatsu nodded. His smile was tight and forced. Ukyou hesitated, then resigned herself to one last try. "We could get out here, you know," she half-whispered. "Go out the gate, or down along the beach. Naha's far, but not that far... there must be other towns along the way." "Your knee," Konatsu pointed out. "Well..." "Hako can find me, Ukyou," Konatsu said. "You still don't understand. It's not that she can track me down. She can sense me, exactly where I am if she's close enough, general direction if I'm far from her." Ukyou blinked. "How?" "Kenzan's arts are old," Konatsu answered. His voice bore little emotion, but there was something of fear in his eyes. "I am the one who comes but once a century." Out over the ocean, the white birds flew free. "We have to get out of here if we can, Konatsu. You realize that, don't you?" "If we can," Konatsu replied with a nod. "But we can only escape so far from what our lives intend us to be." He reached down and picked up his cup in both hands. As he raised it, there was a sharp snap, and it fell into two pieces. Konatsu made a soft sound of pain as scalding tea splashed his hands. Ukyou leaned forward, concerned. "Are you okay?" Silently, he picked up a linen napkin from the tray and wiped at his hands. "A few little burns," he said with a grimace; the palms of his hands were an angry red. "I'll be fine." The two broken halves of the cup lay upon the grass before him. Ukyou picked them up; the pieces were almost equal in size, and the lines of the break were clean and even. "Wonder how that happened?" she mused. Konatsu shrugged, and dabbed the last of the tea off the cuffs of his uniform. "The china is delicate," he replied as he wadded the sodden napkin into a ball and laid it down on the tray. "Perhaps I gripped it too hard." Ukyou frowned, then turned and tossed the two bone-white pieces of china over the side of the cliff. A glance over showed that they were lost amidst the glare of light upon the sand. "The waves will roll in," Konatsu said softly. "In and out, in and out. They will drag them in and grind them up, and in time, they too shall become sand." "That's rather poetic," Ukyou said with a slight grin. "Perhaps you'd have made a better Basho than a kunoichi." Konatsu laughed. "I do not think there is anything I could be better at than what I do." "No," a voice said, soft but forceful, from nearby. "There is not." Startled, the two of them jerked their heads away from the sight of white sand upon the beach. They had not even heard Hako approach. The tall woman gave them a cursory nod. "Konatsu, child, you must come with me now." Konatsu stood without a word. After a moment, Ukyou stood as well. Hako flicked a disdainful glance to her. "Not you, little girl." "I go where he goes," Ukyou said. "Where I go, she goes," Konatsu said. The words had been almost simultaneous. They looked at each other, then smiled, despite the fear they both felt. Moment of kinship. Hako laughed. There was no warmth in it, or humour. "How touching. Come, Konatsu. I swear no harm will come to her through the lack of your presence." "Your words mean nothing," Konatsu said quietly. Hako's stance shifted. "I had hoped you would be more cooperative," she said. "I am through with these games, Konatsu. Now you will obey." How hard she looks, Ukyou thought. How terribly hard. Like something broken again and again, reforged so many times that it can never again be broken. "I do not play games anymore," Konatsu said quietly, and before he finished speaking, his sword came free from the sheath; before he finished speaking, Hako was in motion. Konatsu cried out as she hit him; they wrestled for a moment, and then the sword flew, glittering in the sun, over the edge of the cliff. Ukyou reached down, biting back a cry of pain as the sudden motion made something shift in her knee. Her hands came up with the half-full teapot. Nearby, Konatsu and Hako grappled near the edge of the cliff. Ukyou stood, and Clan Kenzan rose, it seemed, from everywhere. A dozen, two dozen, three, she could not count. From behind trees and bushes, from lying flat in the grass, from out the air itself. On the ground, Hako held her hand over Konatsu's mouth as he struggled weakly. Someone hit her from behind, and the teapot fell from her hands and shattered. Hands grabbed her arms. A cloth clamped down over her nose and mouth, and a pungent scent burned into her brain for the few seconds of consciousness that remained. Then she crumpled, her last sight the white beach, glinting in the sun. The last sound, Hako's voice. "Oh my little pretty one," it said. "If only you knew..." ********** Nenreiko and Fuhaiko watched from the shadows cast by one of the walls as Hako and her clan took the two away. "So," Nenreiko said quietly. "It begins." "Oh, it began a long time ago," Fuhaiko answered. She glanced to the side, where Xande stood in human form. "And what do you think, little worm?" "What I am required to, Carrion-Mistress," he replied. The hate burned in his eyes, sunk so deep into his withered face that they seemed to gaze out from within caverns. "Tonight," Nenreiko said softly. "Tonight," Fuhaiko agreed. "Look out to sea," Nenreiko said, pointing. "Your pets are coming in, Fuhaiko." "I see," Fuhaiko said, watching dispassionately as shrieking black shapes fell with outstretched talons and slashing beaks upon the flock of white gulls. "I see." ********** Nabiki trudged home from school along the familiar streets, a frown on her face, schoolbag clenched tight in one hand. She had been hoping to talk to Kuno again, after their long conversation of that morning, but after the last class he had just seemed to vanish. The sky mirrored her mood, grey clouds that had only increased since the day began. Rain was coming, and the clouds choked off the sunlight. Still her mind reeled from what Kuno had told her, half in terror, half in disbelief; she had been little more than an automaton all day, staring out the window in class, almost grateful when the teacher ordered her out into the hall with buckets, because it gave her a chance to think without so much distraction. Not so grateful now, though. She rubbed her aching arms while she waited at a pedestrian crossing. Cars rolled past, and she listened idly to the chatter of students behind her, their petty little concerns. Then the lights changed, she crossed the street, and turned the corner to walk what was almost the final stretch towards home. The canal lay nearby, water winding lazily in union with the streets. Clouds were grey, and sky was dark. Too dark for the close of summer and the fall of autumn, too dark by far. She kicked an empty soft-drink can out of her path, and it bounced off the chain links of the fence with a metallic rattle. "Well, good afternoon, Nabiki." She looked up from watching the path ahead. Tofu stood, broom in hand, outside the gate of his clinic. "Hey Doc." He nodded in greeting and swept the dust of his front walk to either side with broad motions of the broom. "We seem to keep running into each either like this." He laughed, though Nabiki didn't. "Yeah." She smiled weakly. Dealing with the doctor was not something she wanted to do right now. Then he asked the question she didn't want him to. "How's K... Kasumi?" "She's fine," Nabiki replied guardedly. He grinned, an unusual-looking smile that didn't seem to suit his face. "How about setting up another rendezvous for me?" He said it so casually, so without any of his normal nervousness around the topic of her older sister, that it disturbed her. Nabiki blinked. "Uh..." "I made it worth your while last time," he said quietly. "More than worth your while. I can do that again, or better." His eyes were intent upon her, and he had stopped sweeping. The broom leaned against the wall at a low angle. At last, Nabiki shook her head. "No can do, Doc." "Why not?" Tofu asked, a vague air of disappointment. She waved an admonishing finger at him. "We don't want to move too fast, do we?" Tofu looked unsure, and then nodded. "Did Kasumi enjoy the dinner last time?" Nabiki had never asked. "Sure she did," she told him reassuringly. "But you know how we women are sometimes. Kasumi's an old-fashioned girl; she wants to take things slowly." Tofu nodded, and beamed. "I like old-fashioned girls." "Great," Nabiki said. "I'll give you a call if anything comes up." "Wonderful," Tofu said. He reached into his pocket and extracted a wad of bills, presenting them to her with a manic glint in his eyes. Nabiki looked at the money. "What's that for?" "A future retainer," the doctor replied. She half-reached for the money, then pulled her hand back. "I don't take money for services I don't know if I will ever render." "Oh?" Tofu said, sounding surprised. "Not anymore, you mean?" A silence seemed to fall. She stared, and then realized she was being paranoid. He could not, did not know what he was talking of. Suddenly, she wanted nothing more than to be away from him. The sky threatened rain, she told herself, and she had to be indoors before that happened. "Gotta go," she said. "Looks like it's going to start coming down soon." Tofu glanced up, then shook his head. "No. I'd say there's a little longer to go." "Bye, Doc." She turned to walk away. "Bye, Nabiki." And as she left, something interposed itself before the ankle of one foot and behind the heel of the other. She fell heavily, crying out as she caught herself on her hands. Her right knee slammed into hard pavement with a crack, and tears came to her eyes. "I'm sorry, Nabiki," Tofu said in a concerned voice. "I shouldn't have left the broom there. Are you okay?" He knelt down by her, and put a hand on her shoulder. "Just a bit scraped up," she whispered. He helped her to her feet; her knee was bleeding heavily, staining the skirt of her dress, and her palms were badly skinned. Clumsy, she cursed herself; she hadn't been watching where she was going. Tripped over a broom. She had been sure it had been on the other side of the gate. Maybe Tofu had moved it - but that was ridiculous, why would he do that? "Come inside the clinic," he said gently, his hands still on her shoulders. "That knee needs to be bandaged up, and I'll have a look at your hands too." He led her inside to the small examination room, got her to sit on the clinic bed, then knelt and began to probe at her knee with his fingers. Nabiki started as his hands reached up under her dress, but reminded herself he was a doctor. There was nothing on his face but clinical detachment. After a few seconds of pressing with his fingers, the flow of blood from the cut slowed, and then stopped altogether. His hands lingered on her knee for a moment longer, doing what must have been a few more necessary adjustments, and then he stood up. "Better?" Nabiki nodded. He handed her a tissue from a box on the small table by the bed, and she dabbed at the few tears of pain on her face. "Thanks, Doc." "How are your hands?" he asked as he rooted through the supply cabinet. Nabiki looked at them and grimaced. The first few layers of flesh on her palms were ragged and bloody, and hurt with a dull, throbbing pain. "Not so good." A bottle and a white cloth in his hands, Tofu returned. An acrid, medicinal tang filled the air as he splashed liquid from the bottle on the cloth. "Hold out your hands." No reaction showed on his face when she winced at the sting of the iodine. He bandaged her hands, then indicated for her to raise her skirt above her knee with a motion of his fingers. Trying not to flush, Nabiki did so, and he cleaned and bandaged that wound as well. There was a satisfied expression on his face when he finished. "Better?" She nodded. "Better." She slipped off the bed and grabbed her schoolbag from the floor. "Thanks, Doc." "No problem," Tofu said with a smile. "You're not really used to injuries like Akane, are you?" The best she could give him back was a weak grin. "Guess not." "She used to come around here all the time," Tofu said with what might have been a sigh. "Kasumi, too. Then they both stopped visiting." "Uh-huh," Nabiki said as she took quick, though slightly limping, steps towards the clinic door. "Goodbye, Nabiki." Tofu turned away from her and began to pack away his medical supplies. "See you around, Doc." She walked out of the clinic and through the gate, glancing warily at the sky and hoping to make it home before the rain came. In the end, she did. ********** "It is not the why I am interested in. It is the how." Seated on the couch, Yamiko shrugged and hissed something in her grotesque parody of a human voice. Yoko frowned, thought for a moment, and then shook her head. "Possible, but unlikely." The thin wood of the chair creaked as she shifted her weight on its thin cushions. It was the latest style, and grotesquely flimsy in appearance, all curves and struts. Yamiko toyed at her braid with one black-nailed hand, then shrugged again. Then she leaned back and put her feet up on the glass top of the coffee table, only to remove them a moment later when she got a look at Yoko's face. Both women were tense, and the source of most of that tension lay on the table between them. The note was on clean white paper, unfolded, and had been on the shoe mat inside Yoko's apartment when the two of them had arrived. What was written there, in a neat and large hand, was this: I will set events in motion tomorrow here. By the morning of the day after, Ryugenzawa must be under your control. Do not fail in this. It was signed with an ornate English letter R. A moment after Yamiko took her feet off the table, Yoko picked it up and read it again. With an annoyed snort, she crumpled it and tossed it to bounce off the rain-streaked glass doors leading out to the balcony. "Well, how far are you capable of moving with that shadow-walking of yours before you get exhausted?" she asked, turning her head to glare at the wetly-chuckling Yamiko. Yamiko thought, then grated an answer. The chair creaked again as Yoko banged one arm with her clenched fist. "No. I can't believe he's that powerful, and he's male as well. It has to be some other explanation." A gurgling laugh was Yamiko's reply. The rain hammered on the windows and the balcony doors as Yoko stood and began to pace the room. "I suppose it is not important. If he says it, I believe it will be done. Fortunately, things are already in place there, and I have the property deeds in my hands." Yamiko's questioning hiss made her pause by a tall bronze floor lamp. "Yes, that is important, believe it or not. It is a form of contagion, one of the most fundamental laws in these things; you should know that." Yamiko, in fact, did, but was hoping to get more of an explanation. Yoko did not feel like giving it, however, and resumed her pacing. "I will tell them to begin preparations. In the meantime, we will obtain those of use to us." She paused again as Yamiko gave a low, inquisitive growl. "The strong are only as strong as the weakest thing they cherish, Yamiko dear." Yamiko rose from the couch and walked with flowing grace to stand in front of the balcony doors. Outside, a single bright arc of lightning cut across the sky, illuminating the tall office buildings of downtown Tokyo. Osaka was much nicer, in Yamiko's opinion. As if reading her thoughts, Yoko spoke. "Do you trust whoever you've left in charge at home?" Yamiko shook her head, and Yoko laughed. "Of course you don't. I won't trust whoever I leave in charge either. But none of that will matter once Jusenkyou is ours, Yamiko. None of that at all. If they unleash terror that makes the Aum Shinri Kyo look like children, it will not matter in the slightest." Suddenly thirsty, Yoko walked towards the kitchen, then paused again as Yamiko asked another question. "No. Not them this time. One does not easily capture kings with pawns, even unprotected kings. We shall send a knight instead." She stood silently for a moment. "We'll handle the mother ourselves. She deserves a certain delicacy. There is another, but I have not yet foreseen if she will be convenient." Rain left serpentine trails down the glass as Yamiko leaned back against the cool sliding doors of the balcony and snarled softly. Yoko nodded. "In the morning. We have other things we must do this night." A half-step into the kitchen she looked back, her hand on the frame of the open door. "Do you want something to drink?" In droll silence, Yamiko pointed to her mask. Yoko chucked softly. "Of course you don't. How silly of me." ********** Kuno sipped his tea and watched the rain falling on the green grass of the lawn through the large picture window of the sitting room. Steam from the blue-tinged china cup drifted in lazy spirals as he set it down upon the saucer atop the grand piano. Lightly, he drifted his fingers across the keyboard. Seldom had the hinged cover for them even been opened since his mother had died, but the tone was still perfect. "Do not lay this burden upon me, my dead," he said to no one. "I have not the strength to bear it." He had begun to regret his words to Nabiki Tendo this morning. Had he been able to save his sister? No. What good could he do her? He envisioned a serpent, a great and devouring beast, lurking under the surface of the earth for untold centuries. Consuming and turning lesser creatures into its own body, until it had so many thousands of heads that it could never be killed. Such was what his grandfather served. How could you fight something like that? What, he wondered, had they been behind? How many wars went back to them? How many mothers and daughters dead? How many children left alone, how many fathers driven mad? The monstrous size of it was almost too much to contemplate - it seemed unreal, something from a nightmare. Perhaps flight, then. But where? Where would be safe? "I cannot do this thing," he whispered, closing his eyes. "Entreat me not. Let it pass from me. Let it end. What does any of it matter, in the scope of things?" Something drew his body up from the piano bench, and he crossed to the large single pane of the window that overlooked the yard. Off in the distance, he saw his sister's greenhouse, the lights within illuminating row upon row of plants. He had given up trying to care for them himself, and they were slowly dying. The glass was cool under his palms, and against his forehead as he leaned forward and rested it there. Grief was too great in that moment, it seemed, to bear. "Sister mine, mother mine, do not ask these things of me." The masquerade was finished, long over. Nothing they could be done - he, Nabiki Tendo, all of them were dead. The foe was ancient and vast. Outside, the rain fell down gently. He stepped back to draw the curtains closed, and saw that the rain was falling up the window. Hypnotized, he stared. The drops beaded upon the glass, and each time a drop hit, it flowed up the glass rather than down. "I do not understand," he said, the curtains dropping limply from his grip, whispering softly against each other as they half-obscured the impossible sight beyond. "What does this signify?" He closed the curtains, and turned away. At the piano, he closed the keyboard cover, and then turned to leave the room. In the hallway where stairs led between first and second floor, he stopped. There was a tapping at the front door. Frowning, wondering who it could be, he went and threw it open. Rain fell down on the empty front stoop. "Who is there?" he called into the night. A gust of wind blew rain through the door and spattered a hundred wet droplets upon his face and hair. Next to the stone walkway that led to the front gates of the estate, a cement birdbath overflowed, and a steady trickle of a waterfall spilled over the sides. Upon it perched a dove. The plumage was white as snow, though dampened by rain. Kuno stared. Two images seemed to overlay. One, a small white dove. The other a larger bird, greater than an eagle, every feather pale as alabaster. The night wind and the rain were coming in through the door in almost solid sheets now, washing over him, but he cared not. Layers on layers - truths upon truths. The bird took wing, tiny, vast, into the sky. So huge the storm, so small that which flew. Wind battered it, rain hammered it, but upwards, ever upwards striving. He watched it go, felt as if it carried his heart with it. Up it travelled, up and up, until it seemed but a star against the night sky. West; to the west it flew. "I see," he said softly. "I see." ********** Morning, grey and dull. Alarm clock ringing on the desk. Stumble out of bed, then discover that your right leg doesn't work. Not the best way to wake up. "Kasumi!" The door opened, and Kasumi stepped in, a laundry basket tucked under one arm. "Oh, Nabiki. Why are you on the floor?" "For my health," Nabiki snapped with a gesture at her limp leg. Kasumi nodded. "All right, then." Humming cheerfully, she turned to go. "Kasumi!" "Did you want something, Nabiki?" Nabiki sighed and motioned with her hands. "There's something wrong with my leg, Kasumi." The alarm blared still upon her desk, until Kasumi stepped over and switched it off. "Oh my," she said as she knelt down. The laundry basket was laid aside, and she began to massage Nabiki's calf with her hands. "Do you feel anything?" Nabiki shook her head. "Nothing." Fingers travelled up along her leg, stopped when they reached the knee. Kasumi pursed her lips. "Did you fall yesterday, Nabiki?" "Yeah. Outside Tofu's clinic. He patched me up." The purse moved a fraction closer to a frown. "Oh." "You don't think that he's got something to do with this, do you?" Kasumi shook her head vehemently. "Oh, no, never. Never." Suppressing the urge to frown was difficult. In hindsight, Tofu had been acting strange yesterday. It just hadn't hit her at the time - Tofu was always so good-natured, except where Kasumi was concerned. But he wouldn't do something like that. It would go against everything she knew about him. Or maybe he'd done something to her knee by accident. Even if it hadn't been showing up in his behaviour as usual, Kasumi had undoubtedly been on his mind. "Well, you certainly can't go to school with this," Kasumi concluded, breaking Nabiki's train of thought. "Let's get you back into bed." With a little help from Kasumi, Nabiki returned to bed and propped herself up against the headboard. Kasumi fussily adjusted the sheets and fluffed the pillows, then stepped back with her hands on her hips. "There. Is there anything else you'd like?" Nabiki pointed. "My schoolbooks." Kasumi retrieved them from the shelf and put them on the bedside table, within easy reach. "I'll bring your breakfast up to you after I call the school." "Call Tofu as well," Nabiki said. "He should probably have a look at this." Even if the doctor was responsible, he could fix this easy, as long as he wasn't around Kasumi. Kasumi shook her head. "Oh, my, no. I wouldn't want to bother him for something this little." "Little? My leg doesn't work, Kasumi," Nabiki said with a sigh. "That's not little." She didn't feel like arguing with Kasumi right now - she had the feeling it would be futile. "I'll see what I can do later," Kasumi said evasively, picking up the laundry basket and stepping out into the hallway. "In the meantime, you rest up. Maybe it will get better on its own." Before Nabiki could respond, the door closed and Kasumi was gone. ********** Her pen ran dry after the first hour of writing. A scowl, a sigh, and a few shakes did nothing to bring forth any more ink. Resigned, Nabiki was preparing to hobble out of bed over to her desk when someone knocked on the door. "It's open." The door swung open and her father stepped in, his hands clasped nervously in front of them. "Not feeling so well, are you Nabiki?" Nabiki rolled her eyes, and indicated her bedridden, pyjama-clad state with a wave of her hand. "Whatever gave you that idea?" Looking vaguely hurt, Soun was silent for a moment. "I just wanted to see if you needed anything," he mumbled at last. Nabiki hid her usual disdain. A grown man, unable to talk coherently to his own daughter. "You could get me another pen while you're here," she directed. Soun stepped up beside the bed and looked down at her notes. "School work?" "Something like that," Nabiki replied, covering most of the writing with what looked like a casual movement of her arms. "Get me that pen, would you?" As her father stepped over to the desk, Nabiki put a blank page on top of the others. It was not school work; she was, rather, writing down everything Kuno had told her and any other conclusions she could draw from that. It would have gone faster by computer, but she preferred handwriting when she really needed to think things through. A pen was offered, and she accepted it. "Thanks, Dad." "You're welcome." He hesitated. "Can I sit down for a few minutes?" "Be my guest." Soun did not sit, but rather stood and fidgeted. "Has Akane called?" An exasperated sigh escaped her. "I'll tell you when and if she does. Western Qinghai is not exactly the most developed area in China." Flippant she might be, but the lack of contact from Akane was worrying her. The last they'd heard had been a quick call from Xining, and then nothing. That had been days ago. "Oh." Soun's face was downcast. "Is that it?" Nabiki asked. "Err... no." She sighed again. "What else?" The wheels of the desk chair squeaked as Soun pulled it over to the bed and sat down. "Do you think Kasumi's all right, Nabiki?" Nabiki touched the end of the pen to her lips, unable to write anything as long as her father was here, and annoyed by that fact. "Yeah, as much as she ever is." Soun frowned. "And what does that mean?" "Oh, come on," Nabiki responded. "A grown woman whose ambition in life is to be a housewife for her father?" Her father looked as if she'd just slapped him across the face. "But... but..." Nabiki winced inwardly - she'd hit a nerve she hadn't been aware existed, apparently. "Sorry, Dad. I didn't mean it that way. But you've got to admit, it's a bit weird." Her father mumbled something, so faint she couldn't make it out. "What's that, Dad?" "Nothing," he said, shaking his head. "What about Tofu? She's interested in him, isn't she?" "I don't even know any more," Nabiki said. "She seems really hesitant, but..." She tapped the pen against her lips. "If I didn't know Kasumi, I'd think something happened between them, around the time she stopped visiting." Perplexed did not even begin to describe her father's expression. "What do you mean?" Nabiki arched her eyebrows. "What do _you_ think I mean, Dad?" Soun laughed weakly. "Ridiculous. Kasumi's a good girl." Suddenly, Nabiki wished she hadn't mentioned it. "Yeah. You're right." A pause. "Daddy, I'd really like to do this work, okay?" Soun nodded. "Sorry for taking up your time," he said morosely. "It's okay," Nabiki said dismissively. "You want to do me a favour?" Eagerly, her father nodded. "Bring me up the papers?" "Certainly." Outside the window that framed Soun as he stood from the chair, drops of the night's rain clung to the glass. The day was drear and grey, promising more rain soon. He looks so old, Nabiki thought suddenly, and dismissed the thought almost as quickly. "Thanks, Dad." "Anything for my little girl." The words were sincere, as sincere as her father ever was, but sounded so silly that Nabiki had to fight back the urge to laugh out loud. "Whatever." After he left, Nabiki waited until she heard the stairs creak under his footsteps, and then resumed her work. Outside, thick dark clouds began to drift across the face of the sun. ********** The floor tile was cool under Soun's bare feet as he stepped into the kitchen. It was slightly damp as well, and glistened in the muted sunlight coming through the window over the sink, obviously recently washed. Water ran from the faucet and into the sink, and Kasumi stood, back to him and sleeves rolled up to her elbows, before it. Soun noted that, oddly, there were no dishes - clean or dirty - by the sink. "Oh. Hello, father." Kasumi turned and picked up a dishtowel to dry her hands. "Would you like something?" Soun scratched his head. "I can't seem to find the papers." Kasumi rolled up her sleeves and hung the towel back up on the rack by the sink. "Oh dear, I already put them out in the bins. Did you want them?" Soun shook his head. "Not me. Nabiki wanted them, but I can just go dig them out." To his shock, he saw that Kasumi was hanging her head, a shamed expression on her face. "Kasumi, what's wrong?" "I'm sorry, father. I should have thought Nabiki would want the papers. She always reads them. And I just threw them out like that." Soun started to laugh, then cut it off when he saw the shame deepen on his eldest daughter's face. "Don't be ridiculous," he said soothingly. "It's okay." That drew no response, and he stepped over and put an arm around his daughter's shoulders. "Kasumi, no one can be perfect. Not even you." "But I have to try," Kasumi murmured, twisting her hands in the yellow fabric of her apron. "I have to try." Something about her hands caught his eye, and he reached out to take one of her wrists. Kasumi's arm was limp in his grip as he drew her hand away from pulling at the cloth of the apron. Her fingertips were red and the skin looked too dry. She must have realized what he was looking at. "I've just been washing my hands a lot lately. Sometimes it has that effect on my skin." Soun studied his daughter quizzically. "Kasumi, are you feeling all right these days?" A vehement nod. "Of course." "Maybe you should go see Doctor Tofu. I don't think..." "Father, it's okay." "I was thinking of calling him about Nabiki's knee anyway, and it wouldn't be too much trouble for him too..." Kasumi tugged her wrist free of his grip, so fast she stumbled back and almost lost her balance. "Father, I said no!" Soun blinked. This was hardly normal behaviour from Kasumi. "Now listen, Kasumi. I'm your father, and I believe that Tofu really should do a private examination of--" "NO!" And then, of all things, she was trying to run by him. He moved in front of the door to stop her, and gaped as she shrank back, holding her arms up defensively before her face as if she feared she would be struck. What he saw in her eyes shocked him to his core; a mad fear, the look of an animal caged. If there was one thing Soun would have said in his own favour, it was that he knew, to some extent, his own weaknesses. One was his inability to control his emotions; another was the fact that he was not the quickest at picking up on subtle things. When he did, however, they often struck him all at once. As slowly and carefully as he could, he reached out and touched Kasumi's shoulder. She shook like a leaf in strong wind under his hand. "What is it about Tofu, Kasumi?" he asked softly. "Why are you so frightened of him now?" "I have to clean the bathroom," Kasumi said mechanically, shrugging free of his hand. The control in her voice was brittle, like ice about to crack. Soun took her by the shoulders. Not too hard, but firmly enough she couldn't escape. "Kasumi, tell me." Her eyes were wide and frightened. "Please, father," she whispered disconsolately. "Please. I have to clean the bathroom." Let her go, something whispered in him. You don't want to know this thing. So do not. Let her go. "Tell me." He made his voice as demanding as he could without being too harsh. The reflection of the kitchen lights swam in the tiles of the kitchen floor. Head bowed, Kasumi would not meet his eyes. She wasn't trembling any more; now she was tense as the string of a violin. And then, as Soun listened, the horror came out in a few short words. Like a dam cracking. "He touched me for the first time when I was sixteen." "What?" Soun asked in a whisper, blood draining from his face. All of a sudden, he couldn't seem to keep his body upright. His hands slipped bonelessly from Kasumi's shoulders and fell to his sides. "He said he loved me," Kasumi said. The dullness and flatness in her voice were painful to hear. Still she would not meet his eyes. "He said we'd get married when I was older. But he lied, Daddy. He lied." Soun could not speak. Somehow, he managed. "Kasumi..." "After Ranma came, I told him that... that it would have to stop. That he'd have to marry me or I'd stop letting him touch me. You know what he said, Daddy?" She stared at him almost accusingly, as if he somehow might. "You know what he said?" A dry desert, his mouth. Oceans roared in his ears. "There's always Akane. That's what he said." Some things are so against everything that we have known and believed that we do not want to believe them, Soun thought. But this was his daughter, his beloved Kasumi, who was telling him this. Now speech truly was beyond him, and he could only stand and listen as horror after horror spilled from her mouth as if from some dark oracle. "So I let him keep on touching me, even though I didn't want him to. I let him keep up his little game, so that we could be alone more often. And then when Akane stopped going to see him, and she started liking Ranma, I went and told him it was over. And you know what he did then?" There was silence, empty of the sound as the cold void of space, between them. For a time, it seemed as if they might stand there forever, frozen in time like statues. "He _made_ me," Kasumi wailed, voice suddenly breaking from dead calm to hysteria, like clear sky to storm or still sea to maelstrom. "He made me and I tried to stop him but he was too strong and he hurt me and he wouldn't let me go and finally he did and he said no one would believe me and if I told anyone--" "I'll kill him," Soun said. No heat in it, none of the usual fire of his frequent rages. Absolute and deadly conviction. He turned, and now it was Kasumi who held him back, as he had held her. "No, father, no, please..." A twist of his body broke his shoulders free from her hands, and he walked out of the kitchen, Kasumi following, pleading for him to stop. He did not listen. Out the back doors and heading for the equipment shed. The swords, the weapons, he pictured their locations in his mind. Sickness; his throat was filled with bile. That any man would do this to one of his daughters... But it was beyond that. It was a man he'd trusted, who he'd entertained notions might join the family some day. A man who'd bandaged his youngest daughter's injuries and sat down at his table for dinner and had done... this _thing_, this violation. Oh, he would kill him all right. Kasumi had her arms around his waist now, saying words he couldn't hear. The grass was damp and slick under his feet. He was, he realized, dragging her. She would not let go, would not be quiet. "Why?" he snarled. He pulled free, spun, and grabbed her by the shoulders. "Why should he live when he has done this?" Kasumi opened her mouth. No sound came out. Not even realizing it, he began to shake her. "Why?" Kasumi said nothing. "WHY?" Her head snapped back and forth as he shook her. The fear, the terror in her eyes, was awful. After long seconds, he realized it was of him. Fear and self-loathing burning in him, he let her go and stumbled back. There were tears in Kasumi's eyes; she sank to her knees before him, head bowed, weeping into her hands. Shame had replaced the rage. Soun knelt on the wet grass; nearby, the pond lay. Raindrops caught in the leaves of overhanging trees glistened like jewels, and fell every few seconds, disturbing the glassy calm of the water. "Oh, Kasumi," he said softly, such an agony in his heart that he was not sure he could bear it. "Why didn't you tell anyone?" "Because I liked it, father," she whispered, raising her head from her hands to look at him. "At the start, I liked it." Soun reached out. Wordlessly, he gathered his daughter into his embrace. His Kasumi - the one he'd always secretly thought was the most beautiful of his three beautiful girls, even though a father wasn't really supposed to make a choice like that. He held her, stroked her hair, murmured words that meant nothing in any human tongue. Whenever she'd had nightmares as a little girl; she'd always come to him. Never to her mother, whom she went to for everything else. To him. And he'd made the nightmares go away. Failure, he realized. When it had really mattered, he had failed. "Touching." In disbelief, Soun looked up. All the rage came back in a rush. In the shadow of a tree, Tofu idly scratched his heel with the toes of one bare foot. He grinned, eyes bright and merry behind his glasses. "It's time to go now, Kasumi," he said softly. Kasumi said nothing, eyes squeezed tightly shut. Soun rose, left his eldest daughter kneeling on the ground. His hands balled into fists at his side, he stalked towards Tofu. "Get out," he growled. Tofu shook his head. "Kasumi and I have business." In a rush, Soun came. Silver glinted in Tofu's hands. Before Soun even came within striking range, he felt the strength go from his limbs. A numb feeling in his shoulder made him glance to the side, to see the glinting head of an acupuncture needle driven into his flesh. His legs crumpled. Desperately, he tried to fight, but his blood had turned to ice. Movement was impossible. Face down in the grass, he inhaled the scent of rain and wet earth, and cursed himself in every way he knew. Fool, he thought. Failure. Can't protect your daughter. Can't protect anyone. Useless. Someone turned him over with a foot; he didn't even feel it - his body was a prison now, not a servant. He looked up into Tofu's grinning face. Behind his glasses, the doctor's eyes seemed not to be those of a man. There was a coldness in them, a hunger that chilled Soun to see. Footsteps, light on the grass. Kasumi weeping, no words in her voice. Men stood behind Tofu now; a half-dozen of them, perhaps. Soun could not see their faces. Tofu reached down and put his fingers to Soun's neck. "Take the old man inside," he said. "I'll handle the women." "Honoured mother of the night did not say--" one of the men began. His voice was oddly high and musical. "The honoured mother the night is not here," Tofu cut off. "Nor is the honoured mother of the shadows. I am, however, and I am ko-daimyo. Do you defy me, child?" "No, lord." "Good." Tofu pressed down on a certain point on Soun's neck. Forgive me, daughter, he thought, and then there was nothing. ********** The arms of the clock on the classroom wall ticked slowly down the day. Bored almost beyond reason, Kuno listened to the teacher drone on and on. School taught him nothing now, and never had before. White bird, flying alone, through the storm. He thought he knew what it meant, but was not sure. Moreover, he had been occupied this morning in consideration of Nabiki Tendo's situation. Now the first class of the day was half over, and she still had not appeared. It was unlike her to be late. From his desk near the classroom window, he could see out into the front yard of the school. Shrubbery and trees, dampened by rain, hung low and heavy. Rain was coming again, though he couldn't guess when. Could it be that Nabiki was unwell this morning? No. The sudden conviction came over him that something was very wrong. It had begun; he should have seen the signs last night. He cursed himself silently for a fool. The teacher recited interminably from the textbook. Kuno sprang to his feet. "Enough, varlet! Teach us not of these petty, womanish things! Let us hear a history of Musashi, or of the campaigns of Nobunaga!" "Well," the teacher replied icily, adjusting his glasses, "if you don't want to learn about the socio-economic factors behind the Meiji restoration, you're welcome to stand in the hall. In fact, I insist upon it. With buckets, if you please." Stiffly, Kuno walked out of the classroom, enduring the snickers of his peers as he always did. Fools mock that which they cannot comprehend. Once he reached the hallway, however, he began to run as quickly as he could. ********** Footsteps, coming up the stairs. You learned to recognize the tread of your own family upon the stairs after a while, or at least Nabiki had. Kasumi's steps, but there was something odd about them. Nabiki closed her notebook with a snap and laid it down on the bedside table. The footsteps stopped outside her room, and she called out. "Kasumi?" Without a word, the door swung open. Tofu stood in the hallway, hand on the doorknob. Kasumi was behind him. Her older sister's hands were clasped tightly in front of her, and she stared fixatedly at the ground. "Have you ever heard of knocking, Doc?" Nabiki asked, annoyed. Tofu stepped in in silence, and Nabiki saw he almost seemed to glide across the floor, he walked so lightly. That was why she hadn't heard his steps. "Doctor Tofu?" she asked hesitantly. He didn't even seem to register her voice, but rather glanced back to Kasumi. "Stay, Kasumi. Don't go." A nod from Kasumi raised her head slightly, and Nabiki saw that her face was tear-stained, yet expressionless as if carved from stone. Before that thought entirely registered, Tofu closed the door of her room with a finalistic click, and glided over to the bed. He was smiling. "Nabiki dear," he greeted jovially. "You've been an awfully bad girl, haven't you?" "What?" "Selling out your family," he continued. "Selling out everyone. I wonder, is there anything you would not sell if the price was enough?" Trying to think of words to use was futile. Words had always been her weapons, but Tofu's had disarmed her. All she could do was stare. A vague itch at the base of her spine, cold and sharp as an icicle, began. As she looked into Tofu's eyes, it speared through her entire body. Suddenly, she realized how vulnerable, how horribly vulnerable she was. Lying in bed, in pyjamas, the sheets covering only her legs. And one leg didn't work. So this was Tofu, she realized vaguely. Another mask. Another disguise. Was nothing she had believed true, true? A finger traced the line of her collarbone. Fast; he had moved so fast she had seen no motion. His smile was all teeth. Then he moved the hand to rest upon her breasts, and the physical reaction was almost automatic. He caught the hand before she could slap his face, shook his head slightly, and then bent her wrist almost to the breaking point. A ragged scream burst from her. The pain was almost unimaginable; she could feel bones shifting, ready to pop if she moved her arm even fractionally. Tofu slapped her, hard enough to rock her head back, and dropped her arm. Sobbing, she cradled it in her other hand. "No one who can help can hear," Tofu said softly. He leaned over the bed, resting his hands on the wall behind her head, until his face was only inches from hers. "Whatever I want, I may do." "You son of a bitch," Nabiki growled, finding words amidst the pain. "Kasumi's already run off and called the police." Tofu laughed, his breath coming hot against her face. "You do not know your sister very well, do you?" He seized her face under the chin and tilted her head back to examine her intently. "Bastard." She would fight, she vowed. Whatever he tried to do, she would fight. The startling horror of the situation was only slowly hitting her - Tofu knew, which meant he was connected somehow. Yakuza, or worse. He slapped her again, this time so hard her lip cut against her teeth. "Watch your mouth, Nabiki. That's not proper language for a young lady." The words came forth before she could even think of stopping them. "Fuck you." A hand grabbed her wrist in a grip like iron. There was a pop, and the pain leapt straight up her arm and knifed into her heart. She screamed. Couldn't help it. Hurt too much. "That's a dislocation," Tofu explained in a clinical voice. "I can pop that back in easily, and do it so it won't hurt for more than a few hours. Speak to me like _that_ again, and I'll break it. That won't heal so easily, and if I splinter the bone through the skin, believe me that the pain you have right now will seem a pleasant memory." Her wrist was already bruising, and the limp angle it hung at was not anything even approaching normal. Even the soft feel of the bedcovers it lay upon was like needles stabbing the skin. Screaming won't help, she thought vaguely. Be strong, Nabiki, be brave. Don't let him know you're scared. Fat chance of that. Stupid, stupid, why didn't you see, why didn't you see what he was? "Do you want me to fix that wrist of yours?" he asked politely. The urge to shake her head, to defy, was consumed by the awesome pain she was in. Tearfully, she nodded. How easy it was, to rid herself of pride in the face of this. Tofu grabbed and twisted. There was another pop, and the agony of before was like pleasure next to this. The coppery taste of blood filled her mouth, and she realized she'd bitten her tongue to stop herself from crying out. It took her long seconds to descend from the towering apex of her pain, until the fire in her arm was but a dull throbbing in her tender wrist. "You love Kasumi, don't you?" she asked in a pained whisper. One last try, one desperate grasping for salvation. Even if, from what she saw in Tofu's eyes, love was not even a part of his being. Tofu looked, of all things, surprised. "Of course I do." "Then let us go." Half-pleading, the sound of her own voice shamed her. "Let us all go." He shook his head, still smiling. "But don't you see? I love her so much I can't let her go. She's mine, Nabiki. She'll always be mine." He reached out and seemed to brush his fingers against a point on her neck. All the strength flowed out of her body below the shoulders. "I had her. I could have had Akane. But I never even thought of having you." He bent down until his mouth was next to her ear. "But I'll make you a deal," he whispered, pushing a few locks of her hair out the way with gentle fingers. "Let me have you right now, instead of Kasumi, and I won't touch her if you're good enough. How's that sound? Is it a deal?" Oh, god, Nabiki thought, oh god, the loathsome bastard. Tears of remorse began to mingle with the ones of pain upon her face. She couldn't do it, oh, forgive her, she couldn't. It was beyond her. She was nothing, nothing here, against this nightmare, this monster in flesh. "I didn't think so." Tofu silently crossed the floor of her room. The door opened, and he was gone. Paralysed, she wept silently, unable to give voice to screams or anything else. Footsteps in the hall outside, and then the sound of a door opening and closing. Let it end, Nabiki thought desperately. Let me pass out from pain, or faint, or anything. Do not make me hear this. But that was denied. ********** Tofu closed the door to her room, and she was trapped. He was in the house now, he was a guest, you couldn't be rude to guests, no matter where they touched you, no matter what they did to you, because home was the place where you were safe and people loved you and no one could hurt you in the home as long as it was a good home and he promised he wouldn't hurt Nabiki if she didn't run and-- His hands, reaching up to undo the ribbon from her hair. She saw her face in the mirror on her table, saw it was a mask of skin, and could not cry although she wanted to. So go away someone whispered. Go to where you don't need to cry, where no one can hurt you, where it's safe. Not the house anymore - not even here. Not the body. The body hurts, the body is wounded. Not safe here. He undid the ties of her apron and slid it slowly from her body. The body whimpered like an animal, and she heard it as she went away. His hands touched the hips, slid up to cup the breasts. The body screamed, the body couldn't help it, the body was scared. Flesh was weak. The buttons on the back of the dress popped one by one under his fingers. A hand stroked the back, pebbled the skin with goosebumps. So cold, so cold. A deep place. No more running. No more need to run. Nothing to run from. The body trembled, wept, screamed. He was silent. He had always been silent, never making a sound during this. That had not been right, she knew. But he'd said he loved her, that she was his forever. And the body was, the body was, he could take that, he could have it, she hated it, it was weak, it had liked it at the start. Oh god, oh any god that can hear me, oh god. The body was naked now, and his hands touched it, dipped and soared across the curves and contours. The deepest darkest coldest safest pit there ever was. The body screamed again as it was hurled face-first upon the bed and his hands grabbed the shoulders and pressed down and oh god, oh, merciful god the body prayed in the silence of the dead. But Kasumi was safe. Kasumi didn't hurt. She was in a dark place, a lonely place, but not a place that hurt. ********** There were four of them in the yard. Warriors all, he could have told that by stance alone. Their dress was strange, two of them in flowing tunics and blousy pants of dark grey sashed with black, two of them in tight-fitting and featureless black from head to toe. The men in grey had sheathed swords, of a make he could not tell from this distance - the eye seemed to slide off if not carefully kept upon them. The ones in black were even worse; he had not even noticed them at first from his vantage-point across the street, until he had seen the way their shadows fell upon the grass beyond the gate. Seeing the shadows before the men that cast them was not something he liked. Thoughtfully, he ran a finger across the edge of one of his bokken. There had been no time to go home and get the swords, but had not Musashi himself given up all blades but those of wood in his later years? People passed by on the street outside the house constantly, but given the odd displacement of vision the men seemed to induce and the isolation provided by the high white walls, it was not strange that no one had noticed anything. Tucking the two bokken into the cloth belt of his hakama, he took a roundabout route to the back of the Tendo compound and hopped atop the wall there. He might not be able to equal Ranma's prodigious leaps, but such acrobatics as that were not a function of his Art. What he was capable of sufficed. Crouching low, hands upon the hilts of his weapons, he scuttled along the top of the wall. There were four more of them, scattered around the back of the house, hidden behind bushes or trees. Finding the most isolated, one of the black-clad ones, he dropped behind him and landed in silence upon the grass. Two quick steps, and one bokken flashed out at a blinding speed. The man dropped from a blow to the base of the skull, where neck met spine, making no sound but for the soft impact of his body with the earth. Though that, it seemed, was enough. He heard them, running through the grass, coming around from the front of the house, and drew his other wooden blade. Flicking them out to the sides and dropping their points low to the ground, he paced back as they came, close to the wall so they couldn't surround him from all sides. The men in grey had knotted their black sashes over their eyes, for some reason, but moved as if they could see all the same. Seven of them. The swords of the men in grey were straight and uncurved, about the same length as his bokken. The ones in black held a hooked knife in each hand. Their faces were hard and brutal without exception. Killers - they had the same deadness of the eyes as the men whose faces he had memorized, the ones who had killed his mother and then been let go. Justice had been served, though. He had made sure of that. Too young he had been, he had thought later. But he'd done it all the same. And he'd kept it inside - kept the killer in, buried under so many guises and layers that it couldn't ever come out. And now it seemed the time had come to let it forth again. The men smiled. One of the grey-clad said something that he did not hear. Blood roared in his ears. The men came at him in a concerted wave. Seven. Too little. Kuno brought his blades up, and began to kill them. Turned upon the living, a wooden blade that cleaves through stone and wood as easily as it does through air is a horribly effective weapon. ********** Footsteps, coming up the stairs. A single tread. The screaming had stopped a while ago. Now, only the occasional pained moan came from beyond the door, and there had not been one of those for some time. Not once had she heard Tofu's voice - only Kasumi's. Somehow, that frightened her more than nearly anything else had. She wanted to believe he wasn't human, but knew that he was. You read about people like Tofu, or saw them in movies; you didn't meet them in real life. She had given up trying to move, given up trying to reach the phone upon the desk. Not a muscle could she work; it took effort to breathe, to blink her eyes. The footsteps weren't her father's; too light, and too fast. She wondered what Tofu had done to her father. The thought brought unwelcome others, and she pushed it away. The footsteps paused outside her door. Now Kasumi had gone silent, and the click of someone turning the handle of her door seemed the only sound in all the world. Slowly, the door swung open. When she saw it was Kuno, she tried to let out a sigh of relief. It came out as a hiss. Kuno strode to the bedside. "Nabiki Tendo, your father lies insensate below. Where is your elder sister?" She stared. Spots. Spots of blood, all over his clothing. His face - she would not forget the look of his face until the day she died. Empty was the only word - empty of everything, and his eyes looked like those of a man who had seen all the horrors the world had to offer, that no more might ever touch him. Through the cloth belt at his waist, two bokken were thrust - the edges were red-stained. Kasumi, she tried to say. But there was no voice. A thin squeak. Kuno leaned down, put his ear to her mouth. "Who has done this to you?" Tofu. Damned bastard Tofu. The words wouldn't come forth. She tried to force them, but could not. Beyond Kuno, she saw the door edging slowly open, so as to make no sound. Behind you. No - no, speech was denied. Blink and breathe, that was all she could do. Kuno leaned closer. "Nabiki Tendo, speak." His voice was so dead of everything, of all emotion. The door opened fully, without a sound. Tofu stood beyond, something long and glinting in one hand. From the room next door, a whimper that must have been Kasumi came through the wall, so faint it almost could not be heard. Kuno whirled at the sound, as Tofu lunged on cat-quiet feet into the room. A wooden blade, anointed with blood, whirled up so fast it was only a blur and a scream of sound. Silver flew from Tofu's hand, and the bokken clattered on the floor as Kuno's right arm went limp. Then the two were only blurs of speed, so fast Nabiki could hardly keep track. Kuno began to draw his second blade with his other hand, and then Tofu hit him, low punches, one, two, driving the air from him. In silence they grappled for a moment - enmeshed, seeming perhaps one single creature - but Tofu was the better in hand to hand combat and Kuno fought with the nerves of one arm dead. A vase of dried flowers fell from Nabiki's desk and shattered on the floor in a spray of colour, as Tofu swung Kuno round and slammed him into the wooden edge. Kuno groaned as the small of his back hit, and Tofu seized his neck and squeezed with one hand. Kuno's body went fluid as water, and dropped to the floor. Nabiki despaired in silence as she watched him fall. Tofu turned to her. "That was a close one," he said. His glasses had fallen off during the short fight, and he reached down and picked them back up from near one of Kuno's weapons. Putting them back on and pushing them a fractional distance up his nose, he walked over to her and leaned down. "You almost made it, Nabiki. But that's not the way these things work." He reached out and tapped her nose with one long finger, almost affectionately. "You shall reap what you have sown, Nabiki. Ever hear that?" He waited as if for an answer, than sighed when he didn't get one. "Oh yes. Nearly forgot." His fingers pressed a half-dozen points on her body in a blur of speed, and the feeling came back to her limbs in a rush. "Well? What do you think?" "Maybe I'm just getting what I deserve," Nabiki murmured weakly, half believing it herself. "But Kasumi doesn't deserve any of this, you sick bastard." Tofu straightened up. "The destiny of innocents is to lose their innocence." He pointed his finger at the open door of her room. "Go and get your sister ready to go. Please don't try to run, or I'll be forced to chase you down and make sure you can't run again." "Where are we going?" Nabiki asked as she stood up. "You'll see when we get there," Tofu replied, kneeling down next to Kuno and rolling him over onto his back. He began to carefully extract a long, thin needle from Kuno's shoulder. Somehow, she no longer felt afraid. Perhaps she was beyond it now - whatever horrors might happen in the future, how could they even compare to what she had just heard going on in the room next door? Or maybe she was in shock; she'd read of that, when the part of the mind that was scared just shut down so you would not go mad. She hoped that wasn't it; she'd always thought she had more will, more control than that. When she walked into Kasumi's room, her pace slow and measured and automatic as a machine, she saw that the lights were off. Only the dim sun from the grey day outside illuminated the huddled shape lying nude under a single thin sheet upon the bed. Hesitant, she touched Kasumi's bare shoulder through the sheet, her hand still sore from yesterday's fall - which now seemed to have taken place centuries ago. Her sister flinched back from the touch, whimpering. "Kasumi?" Nabiki whispered softly, kneeling down by the bed. "Kasumi, it's me. It's okay. It's over now. But we've got to go, or I'm worried he'll do worse things." The words sounded ludicrous even as they left her mouth - what, what could possibly be worse than this? Kasumi said nothing. Nabiki touched her again, and felt how she shook. With her other hand, she drew down the sheet from Kasumi's naked face. The eyes, which had once been bright, were dull and unfocused. They looked back at her, but Kasumi didn't. "Oh, Kasumi," Nabiki said, pushing away the hair that clung damply to the pallid forehead. The air of the bedroom was hot and musky, smelling of things she did not want to think of. "Oh, god, I'm sorry. I should have let him, I should have, but I wasn't strong enough. It should have been me; I'm the one who sold the family out, I'm the one who..." Anything would be better than this silence. Cry - oh, how much she wanted to cry. But somehow, she couldn't. "Can't do it, can you? Useless." She turned. Tofu stood in the doorway; the glare of light from the hallway turned his eyes into blank circles of glass. "Your would-be rescuer killed eight men down there." It came as no surprise, no shock at all. Too much already to register another fact so great - file and store for later reference. "I'll just have to do it myself." Something shone in Tofu's hands. A glint in the air. A stabbing pain in her shoulder. Blackness. ********** The phone rang three times, and the monster stopped his work and picked it up. "Hello? Dad? Nabiki? Kasumi?" The monster breathed slowly into the phone, and considered speaking. But things had already gone badly enough on this operation - four Eyeless and as many Voiceless dead because of a random factor whose strength had been grossly underestimated - that he would not risk it, entertaining though it might have been. Honoured mother of the night would not be pleased at the deaths, nor would honoured mother of the shadows. They would know of the dead now - they could sense the extinguishment of men who had given up a part of themselves in sacrifice for the power they granted in return. The monster did not relish explaining where he had been at the time. The monster hung up the phone and resumed his work. Almost immediately after, it rang again. He did not answer this time, only continued his work until it stopped, but the next time he passed the phone, he took it off the hook so it wouldn't disturb him any more. He finished a few minutes later - his work was quick and efficient. The targets had been taken away hours ago by other operatives, in a plain blue van, to the rendezvous point. He had been forced to wait for night before he could finish the job here. Once he was done, almost the last traces of Ranma Saotome would be gone from Nerima. The bodies - or pieces of bodies, as had been the case with most of them - of the dead men he had strewn throughout the house. Let the authorities wonder at that. A light rain began to fall as he walked out the front door. Overhead, the night sky was rather pretty, the monster thought. The air smelt of damp earth and fresh water, though the unpleasant odour coming from the house spoiled it slightly. The monster walked down the carefully-laid stones of the front path, out through the gate in the tall white walls, beneath the peaked roof that sheltered him from the rain for a moment. Outside on the sidewalk, he stood in the pattering caress of the raindrops for a few seconds. Two children, a boy and a girl, ran past, their feet splashing through puddles. "Hurry home, kids," he called to them. "It's really going to start coming down soon." The children laughed and waved to him, then ran away into the night. The monster watched them turn the corner, then glanced to his watch as it ticked down the seconds. "Three..." Far in the distance, he heard sirens. "Two..." A night-bird called, off in the darkness. "One..." There came a muffled boom from within the house, rending apart the gentle, soft tapestry of sound that was the night. The central section fell in upon itself in a great roar of flames. Windows blew out, spraying glass through the air, as the gasoline ignited. The grass caught almost instantly despite the dampness, and the trees lit like torches moments later. In a long line, the flames rushed along the walkway that bridged house and dojo, and the training hall too went up in a blossoming rose of fire. The monster smiled. Yellow flame reflected in his glasses. The people on the street began to scream. The monster walked away from the inferno through the gently-falling rain. How easy it is to destroy what takes so long to create, he thought, as behind him flames clawed apart the night and reached hungrily towards the stars. No one noticed the monster walking away, for, like many other monsters, he wore a human skin. Hungry as time or desire, fueled by gasoline and the old dry wood, the blaze swept through the house where six generations of Tendos had lived. It consumed photographs, clothing, books. Treasured heirlooms that had been passed down from one hand to the next over the years were destroyed in an instant. In the dojo, the family altar fell for the last time in ashen ruin. Carefully-cultivated greenery blacked and twisted to ash in the yard. As the firefighters fought to extinguish, or at least contain, the stubborn blaze, the house slowly collapsed into its own foundations. When they finally probed through the ashes and skeletal framework that remained after the flames at last burned out, they found fragments - teeth, bones, little more than that - that seemed to indicate that several people had died within the inferno. And that was the fall of the House of Tendo.