-------------------------------------------------- ^_- I L L M E T B Y S T A R L I G H T ^_- -------------------------------------------------- by Susan Doenime and Mike Loader Based on characters and situations created by Rumiko Takahashi, and used without knowledge or permission. We ask that you obtain permission from us before printing, posting, or storing this story in any form. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Chapter 11 - Heart of Darkness Such a muddy line between The things we want And the things we have to do - Sheryl Crow A boy, black school uniform spotless and impeccable, sat underneath a tree near Furinkan High School. He was, on the whole, very average looking; slender build, black hair, pleasant, slightly absent smile. Could have been anyone. But the eyes were chips of hot ice, and the gauze bandage on the side of his head was still fresh. He sat, and for a long time no-one came to disturb him. No-one even came near him. His part of the field was empty, and this was because it was, indeed, his part of the field. So when the footfalls sounded and a blue dress registered in his peripheral vision, he knew immediately who it was. "Well, Asa?" The girl in the blue school uniform fidgeted, and he noticed with forced dispassion that she seemed upset. "Tendo Nabiki is in the hospital, and they say she's going to die." His eyes hardened, and a slight frown replaced the smile. "And 'they' are?" "The hospital staff. I made like I was a candy striper, and the nurses fell all over themselves to show me how blunt and unfeeling they were." He nodded. "Good job. Do we know how it happened?" "A car accident, that's all I was able to find out." She paused. "Hikaru... what's going to happen now that Nabiki's..." He smiled slightly. "What did you just finish doing?" Asa blinked, her unhappy face wrinkling in confusion. "Huh? I just reported to you..." "And that's what you'll keep doing." She nodded, not surprised. Tasaki Hikaru was the logical one to take power, now that Nabiki was gone. There would be a few attempts to challenge his authority, but they would be swiftly and easily crushed. Hikaru was Nabiki's equal in a lot of ways... some had quietly whispered, in the past few weeks, that he was her better. But then, he hadn't had a psychopathic maniac living in his house. Hikaru stared at the distant schoolyard, idly plucked a blade of grass, twisted it. "Tell our people watching Saotome and the Hibikis to stop. That operation is over." Asa frowned slightly. "We put a lot of time and effort into that, Tasaki-san. Nabiki thought..." "Nabiki's dead, remember?" He slowly pulped the grass blade in his hand, still gazing at the school. "Saotome's too dangerous. And not profitable. Tendo-san didn't have any choice except to focus on him, because her safety was threatened. But I _do_ have a choice." She nodded, but didn't seem happy. "He killed her." "He might have killed her. It might have been an accident. Any number of people could have struck me on the head after I had entered my login and password. But I think Saotome did it all, and I don't want to give him a reason to kill me. Or you, or any of the rest of our little corporation, for that matter." "So Nabiki just goes unavenged?" Hikaru gave a short bark of laughter. "Don't be stupid, Asa. You sound like a fucking samurai. Revenge is only good when it serves a purpose, which we call an 'object lesson'. Saotome isn't a gang member or a hustler, he's a force of nature. As our fearless leader found out." Again she nodded, but she didn't seem satisfied. Hikaru glared at her, mentally wondering how Nabiki had managed to use the girl so effectively. "If you feel that strongly about it, go get a katana and try to hack his head off. I'll send a nice bunch of flowers to your funeral." "Can't we even..." "Even what? Ruin his glittering social life? He has no friends to estrange him from, no reputation to sully, no interests to sabotage, and his girlfriend wouldn't abandon him after Nabiki, _Nabiki_ for God's sake, tried to break them up for months. We're high school students, not Yakuza. The worst we can do is utterly ruin someone in the eyes of their peers, and Saotome Ranma happens to be the one person in the school who doesn't care if we do or not. Grow a brain, Asa." She nodded curtly. "I'll go tell the others." "Tell them that there will be a meeting at the usual place, 2 PM, Friday. We need to set up a new agenda." After she had gone, Hikaru took out the brown-wrapped package in his schoolbag, and hefted it appraisingly. He was going to miss her. Somehow he knew that he'd probably love running the show more than he'd grieve for Nabiki, but it hurt, right now. He had once actually considered asking her to the school prom for no reason at all, just to do it. Why? Who knew. Whim. Sentiment. The fact that they understood each other, which was next to unique for two people like them. The fact that each of them was capable and layered in ways that most of the sheep around them could never comprehend. But he hadn't asked, of course, and had instead invited someone who he felt he could easily maneuver into his bed, which he had done in under two days. He would never have tried that with Nabiki. He wouldn't have been sure who was maneuvering who. Asa was an idiot, but there was no way he was going to sit on the sidelines completely. Not when risk-free methods were available. Tendo-san had set things in motion, and it had killed her, but she had placed the motion above her survival. He didn't understand why, but he certainly wasn't about to halt any of her plans that he didn't need to. Idly, he turned the package over and over, a slight smile on his face. Nabiki was dead. Her arm still had great reach. ^_- The ride home from the hospital was quiet, with Ranma staring out the bus window as if in a daze. Ukyou tried to guess what he was thinking about, and was perturbed to discover that she didn't know where to begin. Akane had told her as much, the previous night. "I can't read him," the other girl had told her. "Not when he isn't upset, or happy. Sometimes not even then. I've gotten better at it, but he's still like a pitch-black room sometimes. You can't see anything." So she sat, and glanced at the passing scenery, and at the woman folding the paper duck, and at the other passengers, and waited for them to get to their stop. As they exited, she watched Ranma hop from the step to the pavement. He was favoring his left side, she could tell... but the way he would if it were badly bruised, not if his collarbone was broken. Either he was acting all tough and macho - which she doubted - or he really did heal at a greatly accelerated rate. How long would it be before he was back in peak condition? Judging the difference between his movements today and the day before, she guessed a week, maybe two weeks. She had heard of such regeneration before, but only in connection with the strongest masters of the Art. Just how good was Ranma? She supposed that she would probably find out the next time someone attacked him. Hopefully, that wouldn't happen any time soon. He wasn't as hurt as he should by rights be, but he still had a collarbone that was in more pieces than it was supposed to be in. They covered the distance from the bus stop to the dojo in wary silence, both seeming to understand the vulnerability of their position. When they arrived, Akane was sitting by the gate, waiting for them. "Shampoo's inside," she said tersely, not bothering with a greeting. "She says she wants to switch sides." Ukyou watched Ranma's expression move from surprise to worry to puzzlement, ending in a thoughtful frown. "Switch sides," he said, voice skeptical. "I dunno. Sounds like the beginning of a trap." Akane nodded. "That's what I thought too, but... she swore an oath not to hurt me or you, on her honor. And she strikes me as the kind who takes that sort of thing seriously." "They are," Ukyou said, remembering her talk with Tsen. He was bound by his honor to risk his life, to kill... things he would rather not do, unless he was the world's greatest actor. "If she has the same honor code as Tsen, I think she'd rather die than break that sort of oath." Ranma snorted, a disgusted look crossing his face. "Yeah, that's the Joketsuzoku. If honor demanded that they kill their children and fry them for breakfast, they'd do it without a second thought." He glanced at Akane. "I'm gonna want her to repeat that oath to me. She might have stuck some sort of loophole in it, and they're like lawyers when it comes to that sorta thing." Akane nodded. "She's waiting in the living room for us. I thought it was probably a good idea to explain things to you two, first." She glanced at his shoulder. "How's the collarbone?" "A lot better. Still broken. It'll mend." Ukyou pulled the combat spatula from its resting place, and turned to Akane. "How about you and me sit in between Ranchan and the Amazon? No sense in risking anything until we're sure." Nodding, Akane led them into the house. "Good idea. She's seemed docile enough, but I trust her about as far as I could throw the Tokyo Tower." They found her sitting in the living room, a cup of tea in one hand. Her eye seemed to harden upon seeing Ranma, but she stayed seated as he casually dropped into the chair across from her. "So. Akane tells me you want to change sides. Why?" The Amazon shrugged slightly. "Is too far. No want death, yours, Tsen's, Akane's. I join you, others give up, go home." Ranma smiled thinly. "I've got a better idea. Why don't you just take Tsen and go back to China?" "Tsen not Shan Pu's to order. He want you dead for honor." Ukyou watched as a grim, slightly amused comprehension dawned on Ranma's face. "He your brother or your husband?" "We have same mother. Term not translate well." "Half brother?" Akane suggested. For some reason, Shan Pu seemed to find this funny. "Yes. Yes, half brother good term. Very good." "So," Ranma said lazily, staring at a point near Shan Pu's breastbone. "Why should I trust you? What's to keep you from killing me in my sleep? You'll understand, I'm sure, if I'm a little skeptical that all of a sudden you're willing to be my best buddy." Shan nodded. "I give oath as warrior: Shan Pu protect you to best of ability. Not harm you or Akane in any way, no matter what circumstance. Not give information to any enemy. Swear this on honor and on blood." His eyes lit up, and Ukyou felt an unpleasant chill run down her back. "You do, huh?" "Shan Pu swear." Almost faster than the eye could follow, Ranma sprang across the table, a Chinese knife seeming to magically sprout from one hand. His arm arched back as he did, and then sped forward, point stabbing towards Shan Pu's throat. Ukyou opened her mouth to scream. Across from her, she could hear Akane's indrawn breath. Shan Pu didn't move as the knife ripped into her throat. It stopped perhaps a millimeter past the skin. A single bead of blood formed on the razor edge, slowly slipped down towards the handle. Still, Shan Pu remained perfectly motionless. Ranma smiled at her. "Good. If you ever betray us, do both of us a favor and kill yourself quickly." Slowly, voice shaking slightly, the Amazon opened her mouth. "No can betray you. Have given word. Is binding." He stood, wincing as his shoulder flexed, and the knife vanished back into his sleeve. "Okay. Welcome to the show." Ukyou slowly shut her mouth, heart pounding in her chest. She had been sure he was going to kill Shan... she had been positive that he was going to... She felt Akane's hand squeeze hers, and glanced at the other girl. Akane seemed calm... a little shaken, but calm. Ranma slowly returned to his seat, gently easing himself down into it. It was hard to remind herself that he had a broken collarbone. He sure hadn't looked like it, leaping for Shan's throat like a panther, eyes glowing with the clear desire to kill... But he hadn't. "So," he said, keeping his gaze fixed on Shan. "Where are Tsen and the Hibikis hiding out, and what are they planning?" The Amazon shook her head. "No can say." "Are you trying to tell me you don't know?" She shook her head, not even bothering to wipe away the thin trickle of blood flowing down to her chest. "No can say. Gave oath not to. I help you not to die, I not help you attack. Is deal, take or leave it." Ranma actually seemed to relax slightly at this. "Good. Okay, I believe you. Nice to know you don't sell out your allies." He glanced over at Akane. "Can we put her up here, for a bit?" Akane frowned slightly. "I think so. I guess she..." Her expression turned miserable for a second, then moved back into place. "I guess she can stay in Nabiki's room." Ukyou watched Ranma's face. It looked, for a fraction of a second, like someone had hit him in the stomach. Then it changed to concerned sympathy. "How about we stick her in with Ukyou?" he suggested, smiling faintly. "You don't mind, do ya, Ucchan?" "Not at all," she replied, frantically trying to figure out his motivation. Did he just want someone to keep an eye on Shan? Did he know she was female, and so wouldn't mind bunking with a woman? Or did he think she was male, and was trying to fix the two of them up? Was he just trying to defuse the sensitive situation of someone staying in the room of Akane's dead - almost dead - sister? "That's fine. Plenty of room." Shan Pu looked slightly uncomfortable, but nodded. "Is fine." "Well. That's settled, then." He yawned suddenly, a look of fatigue moving over his face. "I'm gonna go take a nap. Didn't sleep well last night." "I go check out of hotel," Shan Pu stated tersely, turning to leave. "Back soon." Ranma shrugged. "Go ahead." Purposefully turning his back on her, he slowly trudged up the stairs. Shan watched him for a few seconds, her eyes narrowing, and then strode out the door. Ukyou let out the breath she hadn't realized she had been holding. "Fooled you, didn't he?" She glanced over at Akane. "Huh?" The other girl shrugged. "You were absolutely sure he was going to kill Shampoo. Shan Pu. Whatever. He was about to shove that knife through her throat, and you were surprised as anything when he didn't." Ukyou blinked, and stared at Akane. "Yeah. That's it exactly. He was gonna cut her throat..." Akane smiled, a bit sadly. "I thought so too, even though I knew better. He's done this before. We're reading him all wrong, and I don't know if he does it on purpose or not." She frowned. "He might not of killed her, but he did cut her." Akane turned away. "I don't think he enjoyed doing it. But he had to be sure she was telling the truth. And if she would keep her oath even as he slit her throat, then she can be trusted up to a point." Ukyou's frown turned troubled. "So do you think she really can be trusted?" Laughing sourly, Akane sat down on the sofa. "No. I don't. But I think we can trust her not to kill us while we sleep, or stab us the minute we look away." She mulled this over in her mind. "It'd be nice if she was telling the truth." "It would, wouldn't it?" Akane chuckled wryly. "Who knows, Ukyou, maybe you've started a trend by showing up and not wanting to kill him. As it is, this just leaves Tsen, Mariko, and her brother. Four of us, three of them. Much better odds." Ukyou nodded. "I'm gonna see if I can get Shan to set up a meeting between me and Tsen. With a bit of thought, maybe we can come up with an alternative to killing Ranma." Shuddering, Akane eyed her dubiously. "Much as I like the idea, I wouldn't want to be alone with Tsen." She blinked. "Actually, he kinda struck me as an okay guy. Mariko was the one who gave me the creeps." "Heh. You're frightened by the girl, and I get all nervous about the guy. I suppose that makes a twisted sort of sense." "Tsen seems to have a sense of honor," Ukyou pointed out. "It's there, even if it isn't pointing in the right direction at the moment. Mariko... Mariko just hates him, and she wants to kill him. Tsen's forced to by his culture's code of honor, but Mariko's going to enjoy doing it." Akane nodded, looking unhappy. "She really isn't that bad a person, you know. It's that hate... I thought I almost got through to her a couple of times, but then it all came boiling back up. It's like she's convinced herself that killing him will make everything okay again." And here was a question Ukyou had been turning over and over in her mind, and there was no easy way to ask. So she'd do it the blunt way. "Did he really kill her brother?" For several seconds, Akane said nothing; she just stared at the far wall. Finally, just as Ukyou was beginning to worry that the question had been a major mistake, she looked up. "Yes. He did." Ukyou slowly nodded. "Why?" "It was a fight. He... he was hurt very badly by the other boy, and he thought he was going to die, and he snapped." The other girl's agonized look made it clear just how often this had gone through her mind, what it meant about him. "By the time he came out of it, his opponent was dead. It's been tearing him up for the past few years." "Mariko made it sound like..." "Who knows?" Akane said, voice dull. "I don't know if Mariko was even there. And if she were, I'm sure her memory of the fight got more and more lopsided as time passed, and the hate grew and festered. I'm sure he wouldn't kill anyone in cold blood, not... not just kill them. I'm sure. That's not who he is." Ukyou nodded. She wasn't nearly as sure, not anymore. "There's something else, though, isn't there." Akane nodded. "Something happened in between the time he left you and met the Hibikis. I don't know what. He never mentions it, and his father was pretty tight-lipped about it. But I'm sure it's there." Should she tell Akane what Genma had told her? Ukyou quickly decided against it. It was something Ranma needed to tell her himself, and the mere fact that he could tell someone would be a positive sign. "Have you ever asked him about it?" she asked instead. "No. When the time comes, he'll tell me." She paused. "You don't mind sharing a room with Shamp... Shan Pu, right? I know he was trying to be nice, but it's pretty close quarters for a man and a woman..." Except she wasn't a man, and it was entirely possible that Ranma knew this. "I think maybe he wants someone to keep an eye on her. Besides," she said, trying to sound as testosterone-ridden as possible, "most guys'd kill for the chance to share a room with a body like that, right?" Akane smirked. "Behave, you." No worries there, Akane dear. "I'll try to control myself." Laughing, forcibly shoving away the problems and griefs and fears, the two moved outside. The sun was bright, and the house was too oppressive for such a fine day. ^_- Shan Pu hopped nimbly across the stepping stones of the lake, feet barely touching the surface. A thin trickle of blood still wound its crimson way down her neck, vanishing between her breasts like a river cutting into deep hills. She paid it no mind. Her mission had succeeded. For a few terrible seconds, she had been sure she was going to die. So had everyone else; as Ranma's knife had driven toward her throat she had dimly glimpsed Ukyou's horrified face, a scream about to well up from it. Akane's had held surprise, apprehension... perhaps regret. She was his creature. But it had been a test, which was lucky. Because her word was her bond, and she was held by honor to it. Even if that meant letting him gut her like a fish. She cleared the stones, pushed aside the island's light trees, and trudged into the camp. The Hibikis sat there, expectant looks on their faces. On Koji's face, anyway. Mariko looked more sour than anything else. Striding over to the cooking equipment, she poured a glass of cool water and doused herself. Tsen straightened, and smiled. "Was success. Shan go to them, give oath not to hurt or give you information. They test, Shan pass." Smiling, Koji leaned back in his seat on the log. "Excellent. Can you sketch a plan of the house interior?" "Can do that. Also, is good news. Ranma hurt, bad shoulder. Think is broken." "One second, here," Mariko interrupted, glaring slightly at Tsen. "I thought you said you promised not to give us any information? Not that I object; promises like that are made to be broken, but I thought you were one of those 'Honor is life' freaks, like Koji here?" Tsen grinned. "Shan Pu give her word; Shan keep it. Tsen Wu, however, he promise nothing. Under Amazon law, Tsen different person. Promise Shan make bind Tsen to nothing, no more than promise you make bind Koji." Mariko considered this for a second. "You have a great future ahead of you as a tax lawyer." He shrugged. "Good honor not mean Tsen have to be stupid. Rules are for following, loopholes for taking." "Listen to the aquatranssexual, brother mine. You might learn something." Koji sighed, the sound holding equal measures of frustration and amusement. "Different sort of honor, Marichan." "Yeah," Mariko said, smiling slightly. "His is more intelligent." "His is the one that says he can't hurt Ranma when he's a girl, remember?" She chuckled. "Point. So he's hurt, eh?" "Is not bad as would like, but he hurt. Strong blow to left shoulder very painful to him, possibly immobilizing. Tsen not sure how long this true." Koji nodded. "If we know where he and the others sleep, we can launch a raid on the house, kill him while they slumber. If he's got a broken shoulderblade, Marichan and I can take him down with ease, especially if he's wrapped in blankets and half asleep." Tsen nodded. "Shan see you, she honor-bound stop you. Is oath." "So we arrange for you to be asleep while it happens. We go in, break his neck, and run like hell. And the world is a better place." Koji smiled like a shark. "I can just picture the expression on his face when he wakes up to find a hand crushing his windpipe. It's a fun sort of mental image." Mariko smirked, clearly enjoying the picture as well. "Don't count your chickens before they're strangled." She frowned slightly. "Tsen, how many people are in that house?" "Is Shan, Ukyou, Akane, Ranma, older sister, father. Sister not warrior. Father is." "That's six, brother mine. Hope you've watched a lot of ninja movies, because sneaking in without being noticed isn't gonna be easy." Koji rubbed his chin thoughtfully. "Hmm. Can you sketch me a quick map of the house? There's ink and paper in my knapsack." Tsen gave a short nod, and Koji rummaged through his pack, finally pulling out a calligraphy brush, inkpot, and a sheet of typing paper. Mariko raised an eyebrow. "You do brushwork?" He looked slightly embarrassed. "Hey, everyone needs a hobby. It's relaxing." Impatiently, Tsen grabbed the brush and began to draw with swift, precise strokes. The result, after several minutes of waiting, could almost be called artistic. The three stared at it in silence for several seconds. Mariko spoke first. "There. Nabiki's room." Her brother nodded agreement. "Perfect. Right down the hall from Ranma's room, empty, on the second floor of the house. We won't even have to set foot on the same floor as Shan, Ukyou, and the father." Tsen frowned slightly. "Is also next door Akane and other sister. You loud, they hear, wonder what noise in dead sister room is." "We'll just have to be quiet as churchmice, then," Mariko said, smiling unpleasantly. "I'd hate to disturb Akane's beauty sleep." The smile vanished, and a brooding look took its place. "Mebbe we can get this over with tonight." Koji frowned slightly. "I want it done as soon as possible too, Mari, but Ranma's likely to sleep a little lighter the first night he has Shan under his roof. Tomorrow night or the night after that will be soon enough." She nodded reluctantly. "I guess you're right. So what now? Just wait?" Tsen stood. "You wait. Shan go back Tendo house, make friend with Akane and Ukyou. Drop hint, work turn them." He smiled slightly. "They not bad people." "Yeah. They aren't," Mariko said glumly. "I wish I'd never met them." Koji hesitantly glanced over at the Amazon, an oddly helpless look on his face. "Listen, Tsen... do you know when Nabiki's funeral is going to be? I'd... I'd rather not hold the raid that day." Tsen shrugged. "She not dead yet." Koji sprang to his feet, eyes widening in shock and hope. "What! But you... you said she was..." "She good as dead. In hospital. They wait her to die. Tonight, tomorrow. Is dead with warm corpse." "I see." Heavily, he slumped back down onto the log, the spark of hope fading from his face. "God. What a hell of a way to die. He couldn't even make it a clean death, could he?" "Clean? Him? Don't be silly." Mariko spat into the campfire, the flames behind her eyes mirroring the dying embers. "He doesn't know how to do anything except destroy. Even whatever building he does is so that there'll be more to fall when he kicks out the supports." "He seem to like Akane," Tsen said. "Like to point of love." "I had a doll once, when I was little," Mariko said, her tone distant and slightly bitter. "Loved it a lot. My very favorite toy. And then one day, when I was really upset, I twisted its head off. I felt sorry later on, but I still had a doll with no head, and the fact was that the most intense feeling I ever had for the thing was at the moment I snapped its little neck." She glared at Tsen. "Akane's his favorite doll. I think he likes to break his toys." "I not think Akane break easy." Mariko sighed, suddenly looking very tired. "I hope she doesn't. I wish I could be sure. She's going to get hurt by him either way; if we kill him, she'll be fucking heartbroken and mourn her 'lost love'. That right on top of her sister's death, yeah, that's just gonna be great for her. Of course, if we don't, well... maybe she'll die quickly and painlessly. Knowing him, though, I doubt it." Tsen stared at her, somewhat bemused. "You her friend, or her enemy?" She chuckled, the worn look increasing. "Both. I'm her worst enemy and her best friend. I'll sacrifice my life to save her, and I'll kill her if it needs to be done. I see about a fifty/fifty chance of each, at the moment." "My, aren't we melodramatic today," Koji dryly commented. Mariko looked startled, then sheepish, then poked him hard in the side. "Meanie," he accused, poking her back. Several friendly - well, fairly friendly - umbrella swipes followed, delivered by both sides with great enthusiasm. Tsen rolled his eyes, poured a kettle of hot water over himself, and quietly left. ^_- It was early afternoon when Akane quietly made her way into Ranma's room, slowly pushing aside the door. He lay curled on the futon, half covered by a blanket, his face oddly clear and untroubled. Almost peaceful. He looked strangely vulnerable like that, she thought tenderly. For almost a minute she just squatted by the futon and watched him, occasionally sending an absent glance at the few furnishings in the room. A chair. A wardrobe. A low table, upon which sat the vase of cherry twigs and the picture of the woman in its silver frame. His mother? She could see an echo of his face in the woman's features, and a determined look she knew very well seemed to be hidden just beneath the surface of the smile she gave the camera. Ranma, she suddenly realized with a rush of excitement, had never so much as mentioned his mother. Why? Was she dead? Could that be...? No. She knew what it was like to have your mother die. It was horrible, and it changed you forever, but it didn't drive you to snap and kill your friend. Accidentally kill. Still, it was significant that he had never spoken of her, she felt. She was clearly important in his life... considering Ranma's spartan lifestyle, a color photograph in a plain but expensive frame was the equivalent of an ornate shrine. "Hey," she softly called, knowing better than to shake him. "Wake up, you." Slowly, his eyes opened, and he smiled slightly. "Hey, Akane. Naptime over?" "Yup. Up and at em." He casually flipped into a sitting position, still smiling. "Shan Pu back yet?" "I think so." She frowned slightly, a question coming to mind. "Why did you stick her in with Ukyou?" His eyes flicked downward. "It's still Nabiki's room," he said quietly. "For a little while, at least." Akane nodded silently, a single tear slipping down one cheek. The fact that her sister was living dead lurked in the back of her mind like a cobra, just waiting for a word, an object, a memory... anything that reminded her of how important Nabiki really was to her, how it was too late to make it clear to her clever, untrustworthy sister that she loved her. Now and then it struck, and after so many bites all she could feel was a sick sort of numbness. They sat for a while in silence, and then Ranma smiled faintly. "Besides, it's not as much of a problem as you think." She raised an eyebrow. "Oh?" "Ukyou ever hit on you?" She blushed a deep scarlet. "What? No! Of course not!" "What, no flirting? No hidden sexual tension?" His tone was amused and sardonic. She shook her head, baffled by the turn in the conversation, and a little uneasy at it. "None. Not a bit. He treats me just like one of the guys, really." "Bishonen, ain't he?" "Yes, he's..." What Ranma was getting at suddenly dawned on her. "Oh. Oh my. You think Ukyou-kun's..." "...gayer than a tree full of monkeys, yup." He smirked. "I knew there was something off, but I didn't realize what until I offered to fix him up with a date. You shoulda seen him look awkward, fumble... yeah, he definitely prefers men." Akane nodded, certain mannerisms and behaviors suddenly making more sense. "That... you're not uncomfortable with that, are you?" "Nah. If he were straight, he could be attracted to my girl-body, ya know? It's not like he's gonna come on to me or anything. What he does in bed is his own business." He winked at her. "Besides, he knows the competition's too much for him." She blushed. "Well, I guess rooming with Shan won't be a problem for him, then." The crooked smile came out. "Yeah, well, I also want someone I can trust looking over her shoulder. She'll keep her oath, I think, but still..." "She's the enemy," Akane finished. "Yeah. I think she'd still like to kill me, if she could." Akane frowned slightly, an absent question rising to the top of her mind. "Ranma, doesn't Tsen have one of those eyepatches too?" He nodded. "Sympathy wound. I've seen it before." She blinked, confused. "A what?" "Sympathy wound." The crooked smile grew broader, amused. "In some places, when someone very important to you is scarred or hurt, you do the same thing to yourself as a measure of devotion and understanding. So that someone else can know what it's like, and comfort them." Aghast, Akane stared at him, a queasy feeling in her stomach. "But... but that eyepatch probably means she lost an eye... one of them put out their own eye? For no reason?" He shook his head. "There's a reason. Shared pain. Deeper understanding. Proof of love. It sounds weird, but it makes a lot of sense to them." She shuddered. "Yeah, but to put out your own eye..." A picture of Tsen or Shan raising a knife to their own eyesocket rose, and she felt slightly ill. Ranma shrugged. "It was his choice. No-one made him do it. Although I'm sure he'll be wondering if it was worth it when he found out how she's betrayed him." "She's trying to save his life, I think," Akane said gently. "So? Whatever the reason, she's selling him out to his enemies. That bit about not telling me anything or helping attack, that's just to make her feel better about it. The simple fact of the matter is that all she's done is increase the chance that he's gonna get killed, because he's still gonna come to get me. That damn Joketsuzoku honor." She knew he was right. Tsen wouldn't stop just because the odds were against him. Neither would the Hibikis. They'd keep coming, and coming, and coming, and it wouldn't stop until they were all dead, until they were all like Nabiki who she had screamed at and told to die... Only after Ranma wrapped his arms around her did she realize that she had been crying. "I'm sorry... I'm sorry..." "Shh," he whispered, running a hand gently through her hair. "It'll end. It will. Soon." "If I just hadn't been so mad at her..." He was silent for a moment, and then hugged her with renewed force. "Shh. Shh." Comfort and jagged pain warred within her, and finally she simply rested her head on his shoulder and wept. She had never felt quite this safe, or quite as helpless and shattered. ^_- "So. How we handle dressing?" Ukyou shrugged. "I'll change in the bathroom, and sleep in my clothes." She hesitated, and finally decided to take the plunge with a half truth. "You don't need to worry. I, uh, prefer men." Shan Pu raised an eyebrow. "Aiyah." "Yeah, aiyah. So it's not as bad as it could be. You don't really have anything I'm interested in." Thank heaven. She had worried about that, when she was younger... for a time, terribly confused about her gender identity, she had tried to like girls. No go. Whether it was hardwired into her, or if it was just a part of her personality, she liked men and found nothing sexually desirable about women. So which was she? Perhaps a bit of both? Thanks a bunch, Dad, she thought bitterly. She was prolly gonna have psychological problems up the wazoo from all this. Shan shrugged noncommitally. "Matter not. Japanese too modest anyway." Ukyou shrugged. "Suits us." She paused, then plunged ahead. "Listen, Shan... could you set up a meeting with Tsen for me? I think maybe I can cut a deal of some sort with him." The Amazon frowned. "Can manage meeting. Cut deal not likely. He kill Ranma, no room negotiate there." "Yeah, well, maybe not. But I'd like to make an effort, anyway. And the two sides shouldn't be totally cut off from each other, and I make a logical go-between." "Makes sense. Okay. Shan Pu set up meeting." The other girl stood. "You come." Ukyou blinked, surprised. "What, right now?" "What you want, engraved invitation?" Shan asked impatiently. "I know where he, we go now." For a second she hesitated, then shrugged. If it could be done now, why not? "Lead the way." They headed out the door, Ukyou pausing briefly to leave Ranma and Akane a note. It wouldn't do, after all, for them to think Shan had kidnapped her or something. Nerima was busy; hordes of people flocking along the streets and byways. She quickly sensed that Shan didn't like this, was set on edge by the crowds. When they passed under the trestle of an elevated train, the nervousness seemed to increase. The girl obviously wasn't a citydweller. They passed out of the shopping districts, and into the areas by the docks. The language grew rougher, the faces more sullen, the looks more guarded. Now Ukyou was the uncomfortable one; Japan was a safe place, but this area looked like a crime zone if ever Tokyo had one. The voices now spoke in Chinese and Korean, with other, stranger accents mixing in. She was out of place here, and knew it. Shan Pu strode down the street like she owned it. From the respectful berth she was being given, perhaps she did. Somehow sensing her line of thought, the Amazon turned and smirked. "They know Joketsuzoku, know we sent Kuomintang running, Triads smashed. They know. Not worry. Our vengance that of gods, but so much more reliable." "I believe you," Ukyou replied, and did. They stopped before a dingy boarding house, the air around it reeking of fish and tar. "You wait. Shan get Tsen for you." "Right," Ukyou replied, unshipping the combat spatula from it's place on her back. She put her back to the wall and leaned against her weapon, watching Shan climb the rickety outer stairs to the second floor and vanish through a door. After a few minutes, Tsen Wu stepped out. Smiling, she waved to him. "Hey, Tsen." He nodded politely, straightening the high collar of his shirt. "Shan Pu hear you have deal to make me." "Yeah." Ukyou glanced around, almost feeling the eyes staring at her from a hundred corners and windows. "How bout we go inside and talk?" Tsen shook his head. "Is not nice room. We walk along sea wall, yes?" She nodded, the idea striking her fancy. "Okay. Do you know the way?" He nodded. "You follow." They walked for a time, moving out of the squalor of the slums and into the fishing docks, along the wharves and quays and nets and boats, and finally up a stair of concrete steps to the top of a cement battlement built to shelter the harbor from the waves and storm. They strolled in silence for a few seconds, inhaling the salt air, and then Ukyou glanced at him. "I want to end this feud with Ranma," she said. Always best to start simple. He smiled, seeming amused. "Honor demands Tsen kill Ranma, and need follow honor. Want meet need, need win." "I understand that," she said truthfully. "But there are ways around it, there always are. We just need to look." Tsen was silent for a few seconds. "Tsen look, not find anything." "You're at the heart of the situation," she replied. "Lots of times that can blind you to options. Why don't you tell me exactly why you need to kill him?" He fixed her with a penetrating gaze, and she felt a tiny thrill run through her. "I tell you, you swear tell no-one? Not Ranma, not Akane, not Buddha himself?" When she hesitated, his face hardened slightly. "You promise, or is no more to say." Reluctantly, she nodded. "I won't tell. I promise on my honor." A satisfied nod. "He defeat Shan Pu in combat. By law of Joketsuzoku, she must marry him." Ukyou stared at him. "You're kidding." "No. Must marry. Honor demands it. She rather die than do it. He dead, obligation to marry dead too." She shook her head, floored by the sheer unlikeliness of the situation. "Ranma's head over heels for Akane, Tsen. Even if she wanted to, she couldn't marry him." "I not sure of that," Tsen replied grimly. "Law requires she do all possible to convince him. All. If offering her body work, she do that. If fight for him, she do that too. You honestly tell me, hundred positive, that Ranma turn down Shan Pu's bed if she come and ask?" Ukyou looked out at the waves crashing against the seawall and sighed. Men were pigs, sometimes. "He wouldn't marry her. He might very well sleep with her." "Is rape, Ukyou-san. Is rape by her honor." And he wouldn't let that happened to his half-sister, she saw. Not when he could simply kill Ranma, who's fault he percieved it as being. "How can the law's obligation end, Tsen? I'm sure not every Joketsuzoku who's run afoul of this has had to marry or kill..." He shrugged. "Joketsuzoku women very desirable wife; smart, beautiful, much spirit. Marriage usually common." "What if the man's already married?" "Is failure, then. Great loss of face, warrior return home with much bad honor for failure." "But it's better than dying, ne? Or marrying Ranma?" "Is moot. Ranma not married." Ukyou smiled. "Ah, but what if he were?" Tsen stared at her, eye crinkling in amusement. "You want set up Ranma and Akane, marry them." "Why not? They're practically drooling over each other. Probably have been sneaking into each others' rooms at night for weeks now." She could see that the idea clearly intrigued him. "Is interesting plan," he said cautiously. "But they no marry at drop of hat. Take some weeks. Also..." He sighed. "Also not know if want to do that to Akane." Ukyou nodded. "You don't think he's a very nice person." "That understatement. I think he rabid animal. Hyena on two legs." He shuddered. "Shan Pu think same." "He has problems," she admitted. "But beneath all of it, I think he's a nice guy, and I'm sure he really loves Akane a great deal. If half the world weren't trying to kill him, and if he had a few years to just be happy with Akane... I think there'd be an enormous improvement." "Is possible. Tsen doubt." He shrugged eloquently. "I hope you right, for Akane sake." "You know, I'm sure if they knew that they could get rid of you by marrying each other, they'd do it in a flash," Ukyou said quietly. A seagull cried, the sound stark and lonely. "No," Tsen said regretfully. "Not yet. Not until other way hopeless. Is too much risk, too much chance that Ranma take advantage. You see? He have power over her, if he know. He say, 'Shan Pu, be my whore and maybe I marry you,' she have no choice. Is last resort." She sighed. "If I can get them married without telling them about the law..." "You do that without hinting at law, we grateful." Ukyou nodded. "It might be easier than you think. Then there's just the Hibikis." She stared moodily at the sea, watched the blue-green waves roll. Awkwardly, he put a hand on her shoulder. "It good of you to do this. To understand honor, work inside it. Too many people, they just laugh, say 'stupid Chinese'." "Honor hurts," she replied. "But what else does a man really have?" She turned, then, and the way his eyes met hers sent a wonderful ripple through her. Too wonderful. There was an awkwardly comfortable hearbeat of seconds, and then he removed his hand. "Shan waiting." She nodded, and they walked back along the wall, the gulls screaming at them above the roar of the waves. At the base of the steps, he smiled at her. "Was a good ground laid here. We talk again." "I'd like that," she said. And she would, damn it. Why the hell did she have to look like a man? Turning, they walked back into the dark part of the city, the smell of the sea trailing faintly after them. ^_- Kasumi arrived home at six, and once again Akane's heart curled into a ball the second her sister walked through the door. Giving her a tired smile and a short shake of the head, Kasumi deposited her handbag on a table and walked upstairs. Somewhat awkwardly, Akane trailed along. "Oneechan?" Kasumi paused at the door to her room. "Yes, Akane?" "How is she?" Her sister didn't look at her. "She's dying, Akane." She would not cry. She wouldn't. "I thought... it's been almost two whole days, and she hasn't..." "I know. One of the doctors told me that it was awful, that it was absolutely horrible that she had lasted so long." "What?" Kasumi stared at the wall. "Because it means that she doesn't want to go, and she's fighting very hard to live. And she doesn't know that she can't win. There's just too much damage." Her voice trembled a little. "I'll be down in a few minutes to make dinner, Akane. How many people tonight?" "Is daddy going to be..." "Father's staying at the hospital." The tone in her voice told Akane that her sister was not pleased at this. "Then five people, counting you and me." "All right. I'll be down in a few minutes." Mechanically, she opened her door and vanished inside. Akane sighed. She was worried about Kasumi; her older sister had always been so... untouchable. Panics would come and go, disasters would strike, life would deliver its petty insults, and through it all Kasumi would wade with an oblivious smile, seemingly secure in the knowledge that everything would be okay. Until now. She dimly remembered a time when Kasumi had been a reckless, snide girl with a wicked sense of humor and a fondness for slipping rubber snakes in the beds of her two little sisters. That was before Mother died. After that... After that, her memories of Kasumi and Mother started to blur together, because it was hard to tell where the one began and the other left off. In fact, she realized, she didn't know what Kasumi wanted out of life. She didn't know if Kasumi liked anything besides cooking. She didn't know if Kasumi had ever been upset or happy or sad or disappointed or had even felt anything at all in the last ten years. She didn't know anything about Kasumi, except that she cooked and cleaned and tidied and was nice to her. The old Kasumi, before mother died, liked playing cards and insects and was the world champion at junken pow and thought 'Hello Kitty' was stupid. The old Kasumi had opinions and feelings and emotions, and had more personality than the 19-year-old housewife who had been her surrogate mother. It's our fault, she thought guiltily, trudging down the stairs. The new Kasumi had been so much easier, so convenient, so easy to call when you needed her and ignore when you didn't. So easy to assume that she really was happy and normal, when in fact she was probably a more than a little disturbed from so many years of repressing herself behind that mask. All the little things - the compulsive quirks (she'd stare at someone eating for hours), the 'accidental cuts' (like Kasumi would ever be careless enough to cut her arm with a pairing knife, always the same arm, always the same size cut), the 'afternoon naps' (but she wasn't sleeping, because you could hear her pacing and throwing things), and above all the smiling, content, placid, happy face (the car ran the light and missed Kasumi by maybe an inch, and even when it looked like it couldn't possibly miss she just kept smiling, and didn't bat an eye as it almost killed her just like mother)... But she seemed happy, and was such a help, and it had been so easy to tell themselves that she was fine, and that they were lucky to have her, and that everyone has a few quirks. She had told Akane that no, she wasn't all right, and Akane somehow felt that that was the best thing in the world that she could have said. After this was over, she was going to have Kasumi see a doctor. This wasn't good for her, wasn't healthy. Dinner that night was quiet and subdued. Ukyou and Ranma and her exchanged idle conversation. Shan Pu ate. Kasumi smiled vaguely at nothing, and stared at the walls. After the food was gone, Kasumi brightly informed Ranma and Ukyou that they could help her with the dishes. They, of course, replied that they would be delighted to help, and the three of them vanished into the kitchen. Akane stared across the table at Shan Pu, and forced a smile. "Er, hi." The Amazon nodded, watching Akane with interest. "Um. Thanks for helping me. Back in that, uh, building." Real smooth, she told herself sourly. Next ask her about the weather, or baseball. Shan Pu shrugged. "Was nothing." A gleam appeared in her one good eye, and she smiled slightly. "You martial artist, yes?" "Yes. I'm the heir to the Tendo-ryuu," she replied. Months ago, she would have been very proud of that. She still was, but now she knew just how far she had to go. The smile grew. "You spar with Shan Pu?" Oh ho. "Sure," Akane agreed, apprehension and eagerness mixing in her soul. Shan Pu was undoubtably a fine martial artist, probably at least her equal... but Akane was sure that she'd learn more about the Amazon's style than Shan would learn about hers. Anything-Goes was an analyst's nightmare of conflicting patterns, tendencies, and forms; its main strength was that it constantly shifted, changed, and incorporated new material. "I'd be glad to. Shall we take this to the dojo?" The Amazon nodded, and Akane led the way to the connector hall. "Right down there. I'm going to go throw on a gi; I'll be right with you." On the way back down from her room, she stopped in at the kitchen, and leaned over the spot where Ranma was drying a pan. "Hey. I'm going to be sparring with Shan Pu. Just so you know." He glanced up from the pan and nodded, eyes unreadable. "Okay. Just don't pick up any bad habits. We're going to resume training in a day or two." Then he smiled slightly. "Beat the crap outta her." She gave him a fierce grin, and dashed off to the dojo. Shan Pu had used the time to go through a series of warmup stretches; she now stood casually in the middle of the fighting hall. Akane moved into the spot opposite, and bowed. Shan returned it. She moved into her new favorite fighting stance, one she had developed following a training session with Ranma after considering some of his fighting principles. It looked for all the world like she wasn't paying attention, like she was absently lost in thought. Actually, it offered her a large range of motion and a rapid lead-in to several defensive forms. It wasn't much for offensive motion, but she wanted Shan to make the first move. The Amazon did. Perhaps knowing full well that the pose was a concealed form, but not caring, Shan leapt to the attack, foot spinning towards Akane in a blinding arc. She had been expecting the attack, yet it almost connected. Akane instantly abandoned her idea of deceptive blocking and launched into a random pattern of blocks and sweeps, darting to one side as she did. Shan was fast, Akane thought clinically. Very fast, possibly even faster than Ranma. Her attack pattern was an offshoot of some form of Wing Chun, probably Yuen Kay Shan, and she was more comfortable fighting with a weapon than unarmed. The Amazon jumped forward, spinning at her in a terrifying whirlwind circle of arms and feet. Instantly realizing she would not be able to avoid it, Akane stood her ground and flowed into the circle, lashing out into its center with rapid, fast punches, trying to ride the pattern like a boat in a whirlpool. She landed against the far wall with a crash, and felt the boards break slightly. Leaping to her feet, she jumped at the recovering Amazon, who was still slightly off balance. Her mind ran through and stored the information, as Ranma had taught her: Shan really is faster than Ranma, but oddly has less control over that speed, lessening its effectiveness. Shan is strong, but I am stronger, and she prefers the standard Yuen Kay Shan Wing Chun pattern of circles and lines, keeping her opponent away from her center. Combine this with preference for weapons, and this means her grappling skills are weak, and if I close and hold her in a lock, I can win. As Akane descended, Shan launched a vicious upwards kick, taking her in the stomach with awful power. Forcing herself to ignore the pain - she had taken worse in Ranma's sparring sessions - Akane grabbed the Amazon's leg, lifted her, and threw her into the ceiling with enough force to shatter the beams. Every muscle in her right side screamed at her in protest, and she stumbled back as Shan plummeted into the dojo floor amidst a shower of broken wood and fittings. That had been easier than she had expected... Shan Pu stood up, and slowly yawned. Oh shit, Akane thought. ^_- Ukyou carefully closed the door to the changing room, and gratefully stripped off her clothing. She had forgotten how grimy dishwashing could be, and the dirt of the city was still on her. Off came the shirt and pants, then the tight bandage she wore wrapped around her chest. It was always a relief to take that off, although slightly painful. The first year she had worn it had been agonizing. Now, well... her breasts were slightly flattened, and would probably stay that way. Not unattractive, she supposed. She hoped. Picking up the small washcloth, she entered the furo room. Fairly standard; a sunken tub, a shelf with a faucet for pouring the cold water, and a bucket and stool. She had never really enjoyed the cleaning process, but the soak afterwards... ah, that was the true pleasure of the bath. Filling the bucket, Ukyou squatted on the low stool and doused herself, shivering slightly at the temperature. Icy, she thought critically, scrubbing with the washcloth. The Tendos must like to freeze themselves before they entered the hot tub. She had decided that she liked Kasumi, and was hurting for the poor girl. It must be hard to maintain that kind of polite decorum with her little sister dead. And she had also noticed that Ranma was very polite to Kasumi, respectful. Odd, that. Respect for anyone wasn't a part of his makeup. Who knew? Maybe Kasumi reminded him of his mother. Maybe he just liked her, or felt comfortable around her. Idly, she wondered how Akane's match was going. It would be nice if the girl could win, but somehow she didn't think that was going to happen. Akane struck her as sturdy and competent, but Shan Pu was as sharp and dangerous as the Chinese knife Ranma had pierced her throat with. Still, you could always... A hand brushed lightly through her hair, almost inperceivably. Instantly she leapt to her feet and spun, in the process crashing into the person standing behind her. She tottered for a second, almost falling, and then hands firmly reached out to seize her upper arms in a tight grip. Ranma smiled slightly. "Boy, Ucchan. You've filled out. Too many upper body exercises?" He was nude, her mind noted in shock. "I... I was..." "Shouldn't have bent your arms like that, washing the dishes. Guys' elbows are hinged all different from women. You learn these things." She stared at him, transfixed by the light burning in his eyes, boring into her. "So, my old friend turns out to be a rather attractive girl. How about that." Dear God, she thought dazedly, I'm right against him and that thing pressed against my stomach is... The stare blinded her, sucked her in, and she knew that even without the grip on her arm she wouldn't move. Didn't want to move. A fingertip danced lightly along her breast. "Who ever would have thought it." The hardness pressing into her stomach seemed to be burning into her skin, molten... She wanted this, she suddenly realized, she had wanted this ever since he had cast her aside all those years ago, had wanted this even as she had hated him for leaving her. All that hurt, all that rejection, she needed him to be hers and hers and to love her, and the reason she had come as a boy was because she had been scared to death of this very moment, which she wanted so badly... Leaning forward, she kissed him savagely, pushed into him, felt her breasts press into his chest as his length slid against the smooth skin of her lower body... And then he shoved her, sending her sprawling on her backside upon the smooth tiles. "Do you try to screw all your best friends, Ucchan?" His voice was sardonic, slightly amused, and suddenly she felt filthy. "Bastard," she spat, struggling to a sitting position, ignoring the dull pain in her buttocks. "You're my fiancee, asshole. You don't know how much I wish you weren't." She had the slight satisfaction of seeing shock move over his face. "What the hell are you talk..." "You father engaged us," she snarled, furious with him, furious with herself, feeling sick and dirty and used. "Why'd you think I was so upset that you left? You asshole! You destroyed me, ruined my reputation, and my nutcase of a father made me his 'son'! Eight years of this, eight fucking years, and you have the gall to... to..." Fury choked the words off. Shaking, desperately trying to avoid crying, she stumbled to her feet. The sardonic expression vanished. "I didn't know that." He did look... no. He looked awkward, stiff, like someone who'd just done something terrible in front of a crowd of witnesses. "So?" she choked bitterly. "You still... you came in here, and you touched... you were supposed to take me with you..." "I thought it was all another part of the game," he said slowly. "Part of the net they have for me, all of them, and you lied to me..." "Asshole!" she screamed, enraged. "You enjoyed that! You enjoyed it!" He sat down, heavily, and his face contorted. "Yes." Ukyou stared at him, pity and disgust warring in her. "I should leave. I should get the hell out of Tokyo and just go back to Kansai, but I'm not, for three reasons. One, because I like what you and Akane have, and I don't want to see it die with one of you. Two, because you're my friend. I should have my damn head examined, but you're my friend." He stared at the floor, hands twisting. "What's reason three?" "Your father told me what happened when you were eight." Ranma looked up at her, fear and shock and terror running through his eyes. "You don't know. You can't. He doesn't know all of it... I chose to do it... he asked me and I CHOSE..." His voice was a ragged snarl, hysteria running through it like an electric current, and Ukyou almost drew back in sudden fear. "You need to tell Akane, Ranchan." "No... no, I can't, never, I chose... I can't get out, Ucchan, I've tried..." "She can help, Ranchan." All the anger and shame ran out of her, replaced by pity and horror at what she was seeing. "You've got to. It's the only..." "NO!" he screamed, jumping to his feet, violence seeming to suddenly surround him like a cloud. For a second he stood there, hands balled into fists, fear and rage and horror and fury written across his face. And then, shaking, he turned and left. Ukyou sat back down on the stool. I should have killed Genma, she thought wearily. What he's done. It was all up to Ranma, now. Him and Akane. Poor bastards. She needed a bath. She still felt filthy. ^_- Akane slammed into the wall face first, blinked, and passed out. Panting, Shan Pu slumped to the ground. That had not been as easy as she had expected. Nowhere near as easy. If the training her great-grandmother had given her in the Bakusai Ten-Ketsu hadn't boosted her stamina to superhuman levels, Akane might well have won. Useful technique, that. The Kashuu Tenshin Amaguriken wasn't proving nearly as helpful. Oh, her speed was now better, and she could do the clever multiple punch trick... but it was like driving a fast car with bad steering. She couldn't control the movement at top speed, and she slowed down just enough when male so that the Amaguriken punch wouldn't work. Still... she was faster, more durable, and more skilled than Akane, which was a great comfort. Because the other girl attacked like a force of nature, sheer, relentless destructive power in human form, and it was terrifying to think of what she'd be like with more speed, endurance, or skill. The ancestors help her, if Akane had also been trained in the Bakusai Ten-Ketsu... Hmm. Akane groaned slightly, and Shan walked over, an idea germinating in her mind. "You fight good." The other girl blinked dazedly at her, eyes slightly unfocused. "Thanks. You fight better." "Great-grandmother train. She best teacher." Taking Akane by the arm, she helped the other girl up. "Akane train with father?" "With Daddy and with Ranma, yes." Akane smiled, a certain hard edge behind it. "I still have a long way to go, I'm afraid." Shan Pu made her decision. "Is secret technique of Joketsuzoku. Shan teach you, you interested." As she expected, the other girl eyed her suspiciously. "What sort of technique?" Smiling, she walked over to a stack of cinder blocks in one corner. "You see brick? Shan Pu shatter it." "I can already break bricks, thanks," Akane replied, looking slightly irritated. "Bakusai Ten-Ketsu." The brick exploded in a shower of concrete fragments. Shan smiled slightly as Akane gaped at the single extended finger that had done the strike. "Is secret technique, passed down to generations. Shan Pu teach, on condition you not teach to Ranma. Is deal?" Akane swallowed, still staring at her finger. "Does... does Tsen know this..." "Some. He not know version that work on humans. Shan know full version, teach you. You agree?" For five seconds, nothing was said. "I agree." Shan Pu smiled warmly. "Is good. Shan Pu teach you tomorrow. Now, am tired, go to sleep." Akane nodded, swaying slightly. "Same here. I'll see you in the morning." They filed out of the dojo, and Shan Pu had to fight down her laughter. Oh ko, Great-Grandmother's favorite ploy! She would teach Akane the Bakusai Ten-Ketsu and thus gain a twofold advantage... the Tendo girl would be a hidden danger to Ranma, for with the blasting point training her endurance would be at levels matching or exceeding his, and so when the time came to turn her against him they would have surprise on their side. Second, and this was Koh Lon's cunning, she would believe wholeheartedly that she would be able to kill by striking a person's breaking point with her finger. Nonsense, of course. But should things go awry and Akane attempt to kill her or her allies, she would be very surprised for the few seconds she had left to live. And finally, as an extra bonus, teaching Akane such a valuable thing would raise her trust in Shan. All the better to subvert her. She smiled, and quietly slipped into the room she shared with Ukyou. He lay stretched on his futon, asleep, a slight frown on his face. A soft sigh escaped her lips. She wondered if she had done the right thing. "Your brother's cute," he had told her, then chuckled. "But don't tell him I said that. Don't want to scare him." "Oh," she had said, heart pounding, "no worry. He like men too." Ukyou had stared at her, and she thought she had seen either dismay or hope there. Why the hell had she told him that? Did she really want him flirting with Tsen? She wanted him flirting with her, she told herself stubbornly. She liked him. A lot. But then what? He liked men. She wasn't a man. Well, she was, sort of, but... Shan wasn't. The whole thing gave her a headache. Still, no harm in a little innocent flirting, right? Sighing, she took one last look at his sleeping form and curled up on her futon. Silently she damned Ranma, and drifted off into sleep. ^_- Kasumi was gone when the rest of the house awoke. The day had opened with rain and mist, and she had vanished into it. Akane and Shan left early as well, leaving a note that they would be down at a nature park, training. Ranma frowned slightly upon reading it, and his eyes narrowed. But he said nothing. And so his day was spent with Ukyou, a flurry of shogi and idle conversation that made it clear that last night had never happened. Shortly after noon, he vanished into his room to begin his ki therapy. Shortly before dinner Akane and Shan returned home, wet and weary and begrimed, and Ukyou was shocked at the bruises and battering that Akane seemed to have taken. She ate a quick dinner, excused herself, and went up to her room to sleep. Ranma came down for dinner, and he coldly interrogated Shan as Kasumi stared at the walls and Ukyou fidgeted. "Remember your oath, Joketsuzoku. You protect us from harm, on your honor. Me and Akane." "Training not 'harm'. Or need Shan protect her from you, then?" He had smiled at her. "I don't want to have to break her of your bad habits." And then the day was over. ^_- They sped over the rooftops like wraiths, the fog lashing around their ankles as they raced onward. Mariko's heart howled as she jumped, vaulting over the drops and tiles. Adrenaline sung in her veins. Here was the payoff, the reward from a day and a half of tying those damn red ribbons in the rain around chimmey pots so that they wouldn't get lost. Koji would have gotten lost anyway, but she could follow a trail if it was marked out in no uncertain terms. As this one was. So she ran and leaped, slashing through the fog, and her brother ran beside her, face obscured in the swirling mist. For a fanciful moment she imagined that she was dashing along a cloud, high above the earth. The last ribbon, border edged with black, loomed out of the fog around a chimney. Below was the yard next to the Tendo household. She stopped, and peered down at the large dog tethered in it. Her brother looked, nodded, and made an unmistakable sign with one hand. Without hesitating, she jumped. The dog whirled, startled, and then Koji fell upon it like a thunderbolt from above. It didn't even have time to bark. Silently, they scaled the wall to the Tendo household, and slipped through the shadows of the garden. No lights were on within, and Mariko allowed herself a slight smile. The wall of the house was almost sheer, but they had been prepared. Rapidly they swarmed up the side, slamming pitons into the plaster with muffled thumps. Within five seconds, they were at Nabiki's window. Within seven, they were inside the enemy stronghold. Out came the map, and a pocket flashlight. After memorizing a short segment of it, Mariko led the way into the hall. Her hand explored the wall outside, and soon found the push-pin tacked into the plaster. Removing it, and taking her brother's hand, she slowly, silently proceeded down the corridor until she found the next one. And the next one. And finally, on a door, a push-pin with the very tip sliced off. She signaled to her brother and he nodded, bracing himself. Quietly, slowly, they opened the door and slipped inside, closing it after them. The dim light inside illuminated a sleeping figure in a corner futon, curled slightly, a thin sheet covering it. Koji motioned to her, flashing three fingers. Plan three. On his mark. One finger was lowered. Another. She tensed. The last finger flicked down and they sprang. Koji's left hand clamped down over the sleeper's mouth, pinning the head to the futon and muffling any shouts, and his right slammed into the chest to hold him to the mattress. As the sleeper burst into struggle, Mariko savagely thrust her umbrella down to crush the monster's skull... "No, don't!" Her umbrella continued down, and she wondered what Koji meant, and then his hand flicked away from the sleeper's chest to knock her weapon off line. She stared at him in shock. "It's not Ranma!" "Wha... bullshit!" She stared down at the figure, seeing the ponytail dimly through the black. "Are you nuts? Of course it's..." The sheet fell away, revealing a bare and very female chest. Mariko gaped. "What the...?" The girl had stopped struggling, and now stared up at them, her eyes wide with terror. "I'm going to remove my hand," Koji said, his voice still a low whisper. "We're not here to hurt you, but if you scream... Do you understand?" The girl nodded, shaking slightly. Slowly, Koji removed his hand from her mouth, and the girl shrank back against the wall, panic in her eyes. She was smaller than Ranma, Mariko noticed absently, and barely fit those boxers she was wearing... who the hell was she, and what in the name of the Christian Jesus was she doing in Saotome Fucking Ranma's goddamn room? "Please don't hurt me," the girl whimpered. "I won't be bad. Don't hurt me. Did he send you?" "We aren't going to hurt you," Koji said soothingly. "Who are you?" "I'm... I'm Saotome Miyabi. Please don't hurt me, I'll be good, really I will, please...." "You're his sister?" Koji said, incredulous. "You're Ranma's sister?" Mariko just stared. Miyabi flushed, and huddled into a ball, turning her face away. "I didn't want to," she mumbled wretchedly. "I didn't want to. He made me." "Made you?" The girl whimpered, and seemed to try to press herself through the wall. "I was 11. He told me he would kill me if I didn't do what he told me, and then he took off my... it hurt... I washed all day but it didn't help, and then he did it again, and again... and then he gave me to his friends... are you his friends?" She looked up at them, eyes dull and empty, and reluctantly began to undo the drawstring waistband of the boxers. "I won't fight, honest. I'll be good. Don't beat me." "Oh my God," Koji breathed, a sick look of horror moving to cover his face. "Oh God, that... he..." Mariko just stared at the shivering, pathetic girl in the corner, and fought down the urge to throw up. "Miyabi? We aren't going to hurt you, and, uh, you can keep the shorts on. We aren't gonna hurt you like that, either. We just wanna know where Ranma is." The girl stopped her clumsy fumbling, and looked up, eyes sharp and fearful. "Don't tell on me, please, don't tell him I was bad..." She could hear Koji choke back something, either a curse or a sob, and silently agreed. That... God, how could something like him exist? "We're going to get rid of him, Miyabi. So he can't hurt anyone again." An impossible hope bloomed in the girl's eyes, and she scrambled across the futon to clutch Koji's sleeve. "You... you mean it? You... I won't have to anymore? Please?" He nodded, a tear glistening in the dim moonlight. "Where is he?" "He's... he's in Akane's room... I wanted to warn her, but he'd punish me, I'm punished when I'm bad... I tried to kill myself, but he made me throw up the pills and then he...." She clung to his shirt, shaking uncontrollably. "Please don't hurt me..." Aghast, Koji gingerly patted her on the shoulder, and turned to Mariko. "Akane... oh God, we'd better hurry before he..." Mariko watched the girl wince in pain at the light pat. 'Ranma hurt, bad shoulder. Think is broken,' Shan Pu whispered in her mind. A picture. River water splashing over Tsen, his form shrinking, breasts appearing, but the eye still covered by the patch, oh my God... "KILL HER, IT'S RANMA!" she screamed, leaping for the girl. Koji hesitated for a split-second, eyes widening. "Surprise," purred Miyabi, and brought her knee up into his groin as her fist slammed into his stomach. She dived to one side, Mariko's thrust clipping her as she did, and came up in a spinning kick that sent the Hibiki girl staggering. Gasping, Koji staggered backwards, folding at the waist. Mariko howled, and swung her umbrella in a vicious arc at Ranma's legs. It missed, but as Saotome leapt, a thrown stool hurled through the air to crash into his injured shoulder, bringing a snarl of agony. Koji grinned through the pain, still bent double, and looked for something else to heave. Mariko's next few attacks slammed past Ranma, but the smaller girl was obviously in trouble. The dodges were slow and jerky, the shoulder wound clearly crippling her. Mariko gave a fierce grin, snarled, and pressed the attack. He was dead. It ended tonight, she would end it here and now... The door exploded inward in a sudden shower of wood shrapnel. With a howl of rage, Akane burst through the shattered portal and leapt for Mariko's throat like a jaguar. She barely had time to bring her umbrella up before Akane crashed into her, ignoring the first few defensive blows Mariko threw at her. In desperation, panicked, Mariko left herself open to a punch and slammed her umbrella full-force into Akane's stomach. Both girls staggered back, reeling, pain flooding them. "That's enough!" Mariko turned toward Ranma's voice, and went numb. The pig-tailed girl stood behind a still-dazed Koji, an arm wrapped around his throat. A knife glittered at the end of it. "Give up, or I'll..." A shape appeared in the doorway. "Oh dear, is..." Driven by instinct, Mariko dived for the speaker, a powerful arm wrapping itself around the slender throat. Whipping her other arm around, the tip of her umbrella shot up to position itself against an ear. "Kasumi!" Akane shrieked, fury and fright streaking through her voice. "Damn you, let her go!" The sister, the older sister. Not a fighter. Still... "Sure, Akane," she said calmly. "Just have the bitch there let Koji go, and we'll be off." Ranma smiled coldly. "I don't think so." With a flick of her thumb she clicked off the safety, and the metallic sound seemed to echo through the room. "Let him go or I'll blow her brains all over the ceiling." Kasumi whimpered slightly, and struggled a bit. Growling, Mariko tightened her hold warningly, hating herself for it. The struggling stopped. "You do, and your brother's going to need a new throat. Let Kasumi go, now." "I'd say we have a standoff, then." Kasumi shuddered slightly, and a slight sob escaped. Ranma shook his head. "Akane, go get Ukyou and Shan. We'll wait her out, or even better, call the cops..." No. She couldn't let that happen, something had to be done, something... She swallowed, silently asked for forgiveness, and seized Kasumi's trembling hand. And tightened her grip. Kasumi wailed, then screamed, then shrieked, and then a nauseating snap echoed through the room like a gunshot. "That's finger one," Mariko said, forcing her voice to stay hard and cold, speaking loudly above Kasumi's shrieks of pain. "Nine more. Then we get to start on the ribs. Let him go, or you're going to get back a heap of broken bones." Koji made a strangled noise, a sick look in his eyes. She met his gaze, and then glared at Ranma. "Thirty seconds til finger two." Ranma glared at her, the stare calculating and full of hate. Then she glanced at Akane, standing to one side, face pale and furious. The arm around Koji's throat vanished, and he stumbled forward. Mariko slowly retreated out the door, arm still clamped around her sobbing hostage. "C'mon, Koji." Ranma and Akane began to follow, and she came to a stop. "You two stay here. We'll let her go as soon as we're out." Akane glared coldly at her, and the amount of hate in that dreadful look hurt but did not surprise. "You're going to pay for what you've done. I swear to God you will." "My sentiments exactly, Akane. We all have to pay for what we do. Seeya later, everyone." Koji behind her, she backed down the stairs, through the lower floor. It took a while to find the door, and several seconds to reach the gate of the yard. Kasumi's sobs had stopped; she just stared at her captor, quivering and wide-eyed, like a rabbit caught in the headlights. Mariko winced. "I'm really sorry, Tendo-san..." To her horror and surprise, Kasumi weakly tried to rip away, crying. "No.... no, don't kill me..." "I'm letting you go now! I just said I was sorry, really!" The girl was clearly terrified. She didn't blame her; if a psychopath with a shotgun had tortured her and put a gun to her head... "They always say sorry before they kill them... in the movies.. that's always what happens... please, don't kill me..." Sick at heart, Mariko let go of her. "I hope you can manage to forgive me some day, Kasumi-san. God only knows how." Then she darted into the fog, and ran, and ran, and ran, knowing with a horrible despair that the thing she was fleeing from was running just as fast as she was and would always keep pace with her. Koji followed, his face expressionless except for the tears, and then the mists swallowed them up. And all that was left was a sobbing figure kneeling by a gate, weeping in pain and terror. -< End of Chapter 11 >-