Subject: [FFML] [fanfic][Ranma] Relentless - Chapter 6
From: Thunderstruck
Date: 4/6/2005, 9:07 AM
CC: FFML
Reply-to:
thunderstruck_comic@comcast.net


Continuing with the reposts. As always, C&C is quite welcome. 

- Grayson Towler
http://www.talesfromthevault.com/relentless

               =========================
                      RELENTLESS
                A Ranma 1/2 Fan Fiction

                   By Grayson Towler
               =========================

-----------------------------------------------------------
                      CHAPTER SIX:
                      Hard Lessons
-----------------------------------------------------------

Saotome Ranma shuffled through the dark forest back towards 
the campfire, where Ukyou and Ryouga awaited.  The bulky sack 
he carried across his shoulder shifted and rustled as he 
adjusted it to a more comfortable position.  The young martial 
artist was deep in thought - the departure of Pantyhose Tarou 
had put him and his friends in a dangerous position.  Even if 
the weather stayed mild, they couldn't make very good time in 
this harsh and mountainous terrain.  The Reikoku was going to 
catch up to them, sooner or later.  And that meant that somebody 
had to fight it.

All three had beaten the monster once, and none of them were 
adequately prepared to defeat it a second time.  If they were 
going to stand a chance against it, they needed to train.

Ranma was least certain about how to handle his own training.  
He was quite confident that neither of his companions had much 
to teach him in the way of martial arts.  Ukyou's okonomiyaki-style 
technique was far too specialized and limited for his interests, 
and Ryouga's style of fighting drew upon physical strengths which 
were completely different from Ranma's own.   Ranma and Ryouga 
had pushed each others' limits in the past, honing their skills 
with their battles, but Ranma doubted he'd be able to learn much 
by training with the Lost Boy.  There was no way in hell he was 
going to try to emulate Ryouga's bakusai ten-ketsu training - 
only a total maniac would put himself through that.

He was going to have to innovate.  He'd have to come up with 
something new and powerful, something he could throw at the 
Reikoku that could shift the balance of the fight in his 
favor.  Right now, he had no idea where he'd begin... except 
for a vague notion based on something crazy his father had 
told him not too long ago.  He could scarcely credit the idea 
as having any merit, yet he couldn't banish it from his mind 
either.  Maybe, just maybe...

Ranma shook his head slightly, shelving the idea for the 
moment so he could concentrate on the task ahead.  Maybe Ukyou 
and Ryouga couldn't teach him much of anything about martial 
arts, but he had plenty he could show them.  He'd prefer to 
handle the Reikoku himself - after all, he was the Master of 
Anything-Goes Martial Arts, it was his problem - but he 
couldn't let them risk facing the creature unprepared again.  
Besides, training them was a good way to brush up on his own 
skills, and might give him some ideas about how he could 
train himself.

At least they were sufficiently advanced that he wouldn't 
have to sweat the basics.  They were ready for the high-level 
techniques.  He had considered starting with his father's 
Umisen-ken and Yamasen-ken styles (the "noisy thief" and 
"quiet thief" martial arts styles) - his father had said 
they were too dangerous to use, but since Ranma was the 
Master he could make his own judgments. If he knew the 
brute force-based Yamasen-ken, they might have been good
for Ryouga - but he hadn't actually trained in them, and
didn't want to waste time trying to figure them out just
from having observed them used by another. As for the 
Umisen-ken, those centered around masking one's presence 
from the enemy, and he doubted that would actually work to 
befuddle the unerring supernatural tracking of the Reikoku. 

No, they needed something more versatile, something that 
would help them increase their overall martial arts skill 
and power.  He had just the technique in mind.

Ranma entered the clearing.  Ryouga and Ukyou turned silently 
to face him as he approached the campfire and sat down, his 
visage serious and determined.  Ranma set the bulky sack and 
its rustling contents down in front of him, then gave them 
both a grave look.  He opened the bag.

"The Kachuu Tenshin Amaguriken," he announced.  "The Imperial 
Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire technique."

Ryouga eyed the contents of the bag.  "Those are acorns," 
he observed.

Ranma glared at him.  "I know that, stupid.  Just pretend 
they're chestnuts, okay?"

"I'm not eating acorns," Ryouga grumbled.

Ranma smacked him on the head irritably.  "We ain't here to 
eat!  We're here to train, you dolt!"

"What the hell are you talking about?" Ryouga snapped back.  
"Quit hitting me!"

"Hey," Ukyou piped up, "isn't that what you shout whenever you 
do that thing with all the punches?"

Ranma sighed.  "Yeah, that's right."

"So you're gonna teach us that?" Ukyou asked.  

"Yes and no," Ranma explained, trying to be patient.  "The 
Kachuu Tenshin Amaguriken ain't really a fast-punch trick.  
It's a training technique which improves your overall speed 
and coordination.  That's what I'm gonna to teach you.  The 
fast-punch attack is just one application of the training."

"It's a training technique?" Ukyou looked confused.  "Then 
how come you're always shouting about chestnuts in the middle 
of a fight?  I always thought that was kind of weird."

Ranma was thrown off stride.  "Uh... I don't know.  It just 
kinda made sense to me, okay?"

"So when I learn this," Ukyou continued, "I can say whatever 
I want in battle?  I don't have to yell about chestnuts?"

"Or acorns," Ryouga provided.

"Shut up!  Look," Ranma growled, "that stuff ain't important.  
Do you wanna learn this technique or not?"

Ukyou threw up her hands.  "Okay, okay!  Don't get all bent 
outta shape, Ranchan.  Show us the training, sugar."

Ranma grumbled irritably to himself a bit, then composed 
himself.  "It's better to show you than explain," he stated.  
"Watch closely."

As Ranma grabbed two handfuls of acorns and hurled them into 
the campfire, he felt a pang of unexpected nervousness.  It 
occurred to him for the first time that he had never actually 
done this.  Cologne had shown him the technique this way, but 
she'd also sabotaged his efforts to use the training by making 
him super-sensitive to heat.  He'd been forced to create 
alternative training methods of his own.  In all that, he 
never DID actually get around to doing the trick with the 
fire.

<Can't be that tough,> he assured himself.  <I got this 
technique down cold.  Okay, here goes...>

Ranma's hands disappeared into a blur of speed, streaking into 
the campfire with mind-boggling quickness and accuracy.  Each 
time he lashed out, he snatched an acorn from the searing 
blaze, moving too fast for the flames to catch him.  A few 
heartbeats later, he held two handfuls of acorns aloft, still 
steaming from their brief exposure to the open flame.

<There!> he thought, with a certain degree of relief.  <Nothin' 
to it.>

Ukyou and Ryouga looked suitably impressed.  Ranma favored 
them with a smug smile, and let the acorns clatter back into 
the pile.  

"The trick," he explained, "is to move so fast that you ain't 
burned, and to get all the chestnuts before they get too..."

"Acorns," Ryouga corrected.

"Shut up," Ranma snapped.  

"How long did it take you to learn this?" Ukyou asked.

"One night," Ranma answered, radiating self-satisfaction.  
At some level, he knew perfectly well that wasn't true - he 
realized that Cologne had been preparing him for the training 
in her own roundabout fashion while he had been working as a 
waitress in her cafe - but technically it had only required a 
very short period of actual training to master the technique 
once he figured out a proper substitute for the campfire method.  
The young Saotome was certainly not above putting a favorable 
spin on his own past.

"Bah," Ryouga grumbled.  

"Really?" Ukyou's eyes were wide with admiration.  Ranma tried 
to look humble, and failed miserably.  

"Now it might take you guys a little longer," he said.  "After 
all, I'm..."

"I'll learn it in one night!" Ryouga shouted.  "Watch this!"

The lost boy scooped up two handfuls of acorns and hurled 
them into the campfire.  With a snarl of anger, he began 
thrusting his hands into the blaze.  He managed to snatch two 
acorns before he reared back with a howl of pain, clutching 
his hand.  A glowing ember tumbled forth from his palm and 
onto the ground.

"Way too slow," Ranma chided.  "And you gotta aim for the 
acorns, stupid. Grabbin' hot coals ain't gonna do you no 
good..."

"I know that!" Ryouga growled back.  "It's just hard to see 
them!"

Ranma shook his head sadly, then plucked the remaining acorns 
that Ryouga had left behind back out of the flames.  The lost 
boy glowered silently at the display, nursing his singed hand.  
"Man, I expected better.  Okay, Ucchan, give it a shot."

"Uh..." Ukyou regarded the campfire uncertainly.  It was quite 
a healthy blaze, she observed nervously - much hotter than 
she would have used for cooking, for instance.  The flames 
were over a meter high, she couldn't help but notice.  "Could 
we use a smaller fire, maybe?"

Ranma scowled.  "You don't get to be a powerful martial artist 
by bein' a sissy.  C'mon, Ucchan!  I thought you were tough!"

The okonomiyaki chef swallowed nervously, then scooped up some 
acorns.  She settled herself in front of the fire, already 
sweating from the heat.  The flames were so bright she could 
barely look directly at them.  She understood how Ryouga had 
lost track of the acorns in all that.  

"Here goes nothing," she muttered, and tossed the acorns in.

Ranma sighed and rolled his eyes the moment he saw how Ukyou 
was going after the acorns.  She was fast enough to pull them 
out of the heat one at a time, but she took a moment to orient 
on each one and make sure of her aim before she reached in.  
The pauses between each grab gave her hands a moment longer 
to cool off, but Ranma knew what the result of this approach 
was going to be.  With a screech, she dropped the last acorn 
she'd pulled from the flames and fell backwards.  Steam rose 
from the small nut as it rolled to a rest on the dirt.

"All wrong, all wrong," Ranma admonished.  "You don't peck 
'em out like a bird, one at a time.  That gives 'em time to 
get hot!  Here, let me show you again."

Ranma snatched the remaining acorns from the fire.  They'd 
already heated up to the point that he couldn't hold onto 
them for more than a split second, so he stacked them 
neatly into a pile as he pulled them free.  "See?" he said.  
"You gotta keep up the pace until you got 'em all."

"I... I don't know if..." Ukyou stammered.

"What's the matter, can't stand the heat?" Ranma taunted.  
Students needed a kick in the butt when they weren't trying 
their hardest.  "You guys are s'posed to be martial artists, 
last time I checked.  Can't you even..."

"SHUT UP!" Ryouga bellowed, his face practically glowing red 
with his anger.  Nothing irritated him more than Ranma's 
smugness.  "I'll show you who's a martial artist!"

The bandanna-clad youth hurled another bunch of acorns into 
the campfire and faced the blaze with fierce determination.  
His wrath had been stoked high by Ranma's egotistic superiority, 
and his battle aura flared to life around him.  With a 
thunderous war cry, he thrust his hands into the flames and 
began to snatch the acorns out of the fire one by one.  He 
sometimes scooped up some embers and coals along with his 
grabs, but he paid them no mind.  <I must be going too fast 
to feel them!> he thought.  He would show Ranma!

"There!" he shouted triumphantly, holding aloft two handfuls 
of acorns, mixed in with some glowing cinders.  "How'd you 
like..."

Much to Ryouga's astonishment, Ranma responded by throwing 
a blanket over his body and stomping on him.  The harsh 
metallic clangs told him that Ukyou was contributing a few 
whacks from her battle spatula as well.  He spluttered 
angrily and fought free of the woolen prison, flailing madly 
under the rain of blows until he finally emerged from 
beneath the blanket.

"What the hell was THAT for?" he howled indignantly as he 
struggled to his feet.  

"Look, you dope!" Ranma said, pointing to the ground around 
him.

Ryouga looked.  There was a charred, blackened patch of earth 
radiating out from where he had been sitting.  Several branches 
and twigs which had been lying around him were smoldering and 
singed.  

Ranma raised an eyebrow.  "That ain't exactly the point of the 
training, numbskull."

"What happened?" he asked with confusion.  

"You weren't goin' anywhere close to fast enough to get the 
acorns, dimwit.  You just got your battle aura so hot that 
you could withstand the flames.  You were gonna start a forest 
fire at that rate, buddy."  

"You didn't have to beat on me!" he snarled, rubbing his head 
irritably.

"Would you rather we'd doused you with cold water, P-Chan?"  
Ranma teased.

Ryouga spluttered incoherently, still fuming with anger but 
unable to conceive a proper response.  He finally settled on 
the reflexive one:  "Just shut up, Ranma!"

Ranma sniffed disapprovingly.  "I don't know if you're cut out 
for this technique, Ryouga.  Anything more subtle than wreckin' 
rocks is outta your league.  Maybe you ought to leave the 
fightin' to me from now on."

"Ranma..." Ryouga growled menacingly, clenching his fists.  

Ranma ignored him.  When you were a teacher, you didn't get 
anywhere by coddling your students.  You had to push them 
harder than they'd ever push themselves.  "And you, Ucchan.  
You gonna give it another shot?"

"I..." Ukyou shot a worried glance at the bonfire.   The burns 
on her hands still stung painfully.  "I don't know, Ranchan... 
maybe I..." 

Ranma rolled his eyes and made a disparaging noise.  "Never 
mind.  This was probably a waste of time."

Ukyou looked stricken.  Some part of Ranma regretted stepping 
on her feelings that way, but he reminded himself that he had 
to be hard if he wanted to be their teacher.  He steeled his 
resolve and his expression, leaving no room for sympathy in 
his visage and voice.

"Maybe I overestimated you guys," he announced.  "I'm gonna 
have to think about how to train down to your level."

Without waiting for a response, he rose to his feet and made 
his way over to his bedroll.  He paused a moment, considering... 
then picked his gear up and began to carry it off.

"Where are you going?" Ukyou said from behind him.  Her voice 
was tight and strained.  He didn't look back at her as he 
responded.

"I'm gonna sleep a little bit apart from you guys," he said.  
He didn't explain why.  He didn't know if his self-training 
idea had any chance of succeeding at all, but he figured it 
couldn't hurt to take a few precautions if it did.  "Get some 
rest.  We've got another hard day tomorrow."

Saotome Ranma left his companions by the campfire, and shuffled 
off to make his preparations for sleep.

- - - - - - 

Over an hour later, Ryouga was still staring into the flickering 
remains of the campfire.  He spared an occasional rueful glance 
towards the pile of acorns off to the side, but mostly he just 
stared and thought.  It was hard to cool down from being so mad 
at Ranma.  Did that guy practice at being obnoxious, or was it 
in the blood?  Even if he and Ranma hadn't shared all sorts of
painful history, he was pretty sure he'd find the pig-tailed 
boy just as infuriating.  

Still, it wasn't an entirely wasted evening.  Ryouga picked 
up one of the blackened twigs from the ground beside him and 
regarded it thoughtfully.  The gears in his mind turned over 
slowly but inexorably.  

He was distracted by a rustling sound from beyond the dim sphere 
of illumination.  He looked up to see Ukyou approaching him, 
her blanket wrapped around her shoulders like a shawl.  

"You couldn't sleep either, sugar?" she muttered.

Ryouga grunted.  She seemed to take that as a "yes," and sat 
down beside him in front of the campfire.  A long moment of 
silence passed between them as they listened to the crackle 
of the remaining flames.

"Well," Ukyou said, "that didn't go too well, did it?"

"Ranma's a jerk," Ryouga grumbled.  "And he's a liar.  He 
didn't learn that technique in one night."

"How do you know?" 

He shrugged.  "I just do."

"It only took him three days to master that 'Heavenly Dragon 
Ascension' thing.  I was there," she reminded him.  "Didya 
ever consider that he might be telling the truth?"

"Feh," Ryouga huffed.  He refused to believe it.  Ranma was 
one of the most incorrigible liars he'd ever met.  Still, 
no point in arguing about it with Ukyou - she thought Saotome 
walked on water.  It boggled the mind.

"Anyway," she said, "I was thinking.  Maybe it'll just take 
longer for you and me, hmm?   Maybe Ranma just had a knack for 
this, and we have to work harder."

Ryouga shrugged.  "Maybe.  You think we should try again?"

Ukyou sighed heavily, massaging the burns on her hands.  "Yeah, 
I do.  I... just have to... to give it my all.  That's all 
there is to it."

Ryouga scowled.  He wasn't the most perceptive of people, but 
even he could tell what was behind this.  She didn't want to 
look bad in her 'Ranchan's' eyes.  She'd go so far as to burn 
her hands to a crisp to try to impress him.  What she saw in 
that guy was a complete mystery to him, but women never made 
much sense to Ryouga anyway.  

Still, he couldn't just sit back and let her hurt herself over 
that jerk.  "All right, look," he told her, "we'll give it 
another shot.  But we'll do it on this fire, okay?" he gestured 
at the mild flames.

"But Ranchan said..."

"Forget that!" Ryouga snapped, then moderated his tone.  "You 
said yourself that he probably had a knack for this, right?  
Well, you and me obviously don't have that kind of innate gift, 
so we're going to have to work our way up to the real thing.  
You have to walk before you can run."

A relieved smile lit up Ukyou's face.  Ryouga blushed a little 
bit at the grateful look in her eyes - he hoped it was too 
dark for her to tell.  "That sounds good to me, Ryouga!  Let's 
do it!"

"Tie your hair back," he advised her.  "And let's get a bucket 
of water to dunk our hands in if we burn ourselves."

"Do we need to warm it up for you?  You know, so you don't... 
uh...you know."

He shrugged.  "I won't change if I just get my hands a little 
wet."

She nodded.  "I'll be right back, sugar."

Ukyou hurried off, and Ryouga stared thoughtfully at the fire.  
He checked the kindling to make sure they had enough to keep 
the fire burning at this level for a while, then gathered the 
acorns in front of himself.  He decided that they should 
probably start with fewer acorns at a time as well, just so 
they could get used to the motion.  Ranma was right about 
Ukyou's "hunt and peck" style - he'd have to figure out how 
to teach her to get over that instinct.  Maybe if she took a 
moment to visualize pulling the acorns out of the flames first, 
so she knew where they all were and in what order she'd grab 
them, she could get them all without having to pick her targets 
first.  And he'd have to work on not grabbing big handfuls when 
he went for an acorn...  

"I got the water," Ukyou announced.  

"Good," he said.  She settled herself down beside him on her 
knees, facing the fire.  He gave her an encouraging nod - not 
a smile, but with eyes full of determination.  She returned 
the nod and mustered her concentration.

"Okay," he began, picking up a small handful of acorns.  "Here's 
what I want you to try first..."

- - - - - - 

Dr. Tofu looked on with concern as Akane strained to adjust the 
boulder in its harness.  She was clearly struggling with the 
bulk of the great stone and the awkwardness of the dangling rope 
contraption which supported it.  "Are you sure you don't want 
a hand, Akane-chan?" he called.

"I'm fine!" she grunted back.  "I just >whuff< need a few more 
minutes!"

He sighed.  It was probably for the best - she needed to do 
everything she could to build up her strength.  Still, he was 
pretty certain this effort was pointless.  She had decided 
today that it might be easier to find the breaking point if 
the boulder were at a different angle, so she was struggling 
with the tedious task of adjusting its position. 

Dr. Tofu didn't have a complete understanding of the technique, 
but he was mostly sure that the position of the rock didn't 
make any difference.  Still, he didn't know if he should tell 
Akane that or not.  The Amazons had refined this training 
technique for centuries, from what he understood.  He wasn't 
confident enough of his own knowledge that he wanted to 
interfere with their method.  Cologne had said:  "Look for 
the breaking point with your mind's eye."  If shifting the 
boulder around in its harness helped Akane focus her mind's 
eye, then perhaps it would help her towards mastering the 
technique.  He didn't know, so he kept his silence.

"Okay!" Akane shouted as she worked her way into her own 
harness.  "I'm ready!"

"Very good, Akane-chan!"

"I have a good feeling about this!" she exclaimed cheerfully.  
"I really think I'm gonna do it this time!"

"Do your best, Akane-chan!" Tofu called back, forcing a smile.

"Growf!" added the panda beside him, as he held up a sign - 
[Try not to let yourself get smashed to a pulp!]  

Dr. Tofu sighed.  He was glad that Akane was too far away to 
read that.  

The youngest Tendou girl turned her attention to the boulder 
before her, focusing her concentration.  Tofu could see her 
battle aura flaring to life around her - a bright, scintillating 
blue.  She was really concentrating this time.  Could it be 
possible that she was on the verge of a breakthrough?  Tofu 
realized he was holding his breath.

Akane jerked the release cord, setting herself and the boulder 
on a collision course.  She let fly with a battle cry which 
echoed through the trees as she hurtled towards the speeding 
mass of stone, her finger extended before her like a lance, 
her battle aura leaving an ephemeral blue trail in her wake.  
With a sickening thud, she slammed into the rock.  Her battle 
aura failed instantly as she went unconscious.  The rock 
continued along its trajectory, its momentum hardly altered 
at all by the insignificant impact of the young martial artist.

Tofu cringed at the sight.  It was always painful to watch.

"Okay, Saotome-san," he instructed.  "Let's get her down and 
back to the clinic."

Dr. Tofu desperately wished he'd been able to see the bakusai 
ten-ketsu technique in action, at least once.  It might have 
helped him confirm some of his theories about how it worked, 
and how he might help Akane with her training.  All he really 
knew was what Cologne had done to teach it to Ryouga.  

That was fine, but Ryouga had been phenomenally strong even 
before he was exposed to the training.  Tofu was certain that 
the bakusai ten-ketsu demanded a certain degree of physical 
strength and stamina before you could expect to execute it, 
but he didn't know how far away Akane was from reaching that 
level.  Certainly, she had a long way to go.  

Was there some other way to teach this?  He didn't know.  The 
Amazons might have had all sorts of different training methods 
for those who needed to work up to learning the breaking point, 
but all Akane had to work with was this brutal and punishing 
regimen.  The only problem was that it took so much out of her 
that she ignored all her other training.  She simply didn't 
have the energy to keep up with her normal routines and 
exercises.  Tofu was worried that she wasn't going to make 
much headway at this pace, and afraid that she would really 
damage herself one of these times.

At least she was wearing the pads.  At least she was facing 
the rock with authority without panicking.  Perhaps it wasn't 
a totally hopeless cause.

Dr. Tofu gently inspected the inert Akane for any wounds which 
would require immediate attention.  Once again, she had managed 
to survive the impact without serious injury.  Maybe that was 
a sign for optimism, after all.

"And maybe she's just lucky, eh, Saotome-san?" he muttered 
aloud.  

"Mrrf," the panda commented unhelpfully.

- - - - - -

Ranma was starting to get worried about how slow they were 
going.  Every delay they faced brought the Reikoku that much 
closer to them, but he didn't know what else they could do.  
The days were shorter this late in the year, the weather was 
always a threat.  Even exceptional athletes and martial artists 
had to respect the elements and the terrain.  

It was taking too long to get out of the mountains.  

"One more!"  

"You sure about that, sugar?"

"Let's do it!"

Ranma glanced back over his shoulder and rolled his eyes.  Ukyou 
and Ryouga didn't seem to be as worried about their pace.  
Maybe they were just too thick to understand the danger, he 
thought sourly.  At least they'd found a way to distract 
themselves, as pointless as it was.  

They called it training, though Ranma certainly wouldn't dignify 
it as such.  It was more like little games that they thought 
up on the fly.  Today, for instance, they were juggling Ukyou's 
throwing spatulas.  They'd started out doing it individually, 
but now they'd moved on to tossing the little weapons between 
them in the air.  Ranma had tried to pick up the pace to throw 
them off (even though he knew they wouldn't go any farther 
than the base of the next cliff face today, no matter how fast 
they traveled), but that just seemed to encourage them.  
Juggling on the run was more of a challenge.  Now they followed 
Ranma at a walking pace, orbiting one another in a sort of 
brisk dance as they kept the gleaming spatulas flying in the 
air.

"Ouch!"  

clatter<

"You okay, Ryouga?"

"Yeah... just nicked myself. "

"You gotta catch 'em by the handle, sugar."

"It's trickier than juggling rocks.  Let's keep going."

Ranma didn't break stride as the two paused to retrieve the 
dropped weapons from the ground.  They'd just have to catch 
up to him if they wanted to keep fooling around while they 
traveled. 

They'd been doing this sort of thing the past few days, and 
it was really starting to get on Ranma's nerves.  They called 
it agility training, claiming that they were trying to work 
up to the Kachuu Tenshin Amaguriken technique.  Every night, 
they would pluck a few acorns out of a dinky little campfire 
and congratulate themselves on their progress.  

What a waste of time!  This was an elite technique they were 
talking about, not some sort stupid circus trick.  You didn't 
master stuff like the Amaguriken unless you pushed yourself.  
The training had to be dangerous and demanding, and you had 
to expect to feel some pain along the way... certainly more 
pain than a little cut on the hand from a spatula.  He was 
especially disgusted with Ryouga - this was a guy who'd gone 
through that insane bakusai ten-ketsu training.  He, of all 
people, should know better.  

Ranma ran his fingers through his bangs and grumbled irritably 
to himself.  He wasn't sleeping very well these days.  His 
own training hadn't been going as he'd hoped - all he was 
doing was giving himself nightmares.  He'd always considered 
"dream visualization" training sort of hokey and useless, but 
maybe if he found some way to focus the subject of the 
nightmares...

He sniffed and glanced back over his shoulder again.  They 
were at it again. 

A distant buzzing noise caught Ranma's attention.  He turned 
and spied something in the trees.  He smiled to himself as he 
realized what it was.  He'd show these clowns a real training 
technique...

"Heads up, guys!"

Ryouga and Ukyou turned towards Ranma's voice, catching the 
spatulas they'd been juggling before they fell.  Ranma was 
cloaked in his sleeping blanket, holding a long branch with 
a rounded object dangling on the end.  

"If ya can stun all the bees before they sting you," Ranma 
announced, swinging the beehive on the end of the branch, 
"then you've got some speed!"

Ukyou screamed in terror as Ranma hurled the beehive towards 
them.  Ryouga was startled by the extremity of her reaction, 
but didn't have much time to think about it before the angry 
swarm was upon them.  Ukyou immediately took to her heels and 
ran like the hounds of hell were after her.  Ryouga tried a 
few swipes at the buzzing mass before he realized the futility 
of the exercise.  He drew out his umbrella and tried to hide 
underneath it.

Ukyou continued to scream and run around like she was on fire, 
a part of the swarm chasing her.  Ranma shook his head sadly - 
she wasn't even trying to hit the bees.  Girls were such wimps 
about bugs and stuff.   She blew by him at a full sprint, 
shrieking uncontrollably, and he decided that was enough.  

"Watch this, Ucchan!" he announced.  Ranma set into the living 
cloud like a whirlwind, striking out with astonishing speed 
and precision at the angry bees, ducking and dodging as they 
swarmed around him.  The insects fell from the air like 
raindrops as he continued his high-speed assault.  

Seconds later, Ranma pulled back and regarded his handiwork 
proudly.  His pop was a moron most of the time, but he did 
come up with some great training exercises.  "Now," he said, 
turning back towards Ukyou, "that's the sorta thing you 
gotta..."

An immense spatula pounded him flat with a resounding "clang."

"Ranchan you IDIOT!"  Ukyou howled.  She drew back, trembling 
and panting, flushed with anger and adrenaline.  "How could 
you DO that to me?"

Ranma peeled himself off the ground and rubbed his head.  
"What the heck was that for?"

"I'm allergic to bee stings, you jackass!"  Ukyou still 
remembered the time she was eight years old and she'd been 
stung.  She'd stopped breathing twice - if there hadn't been 
a doctor close by, she'd surely have died.  Her arm had 
been swollen up like a watermelon for almost a week.  The 
thought of being in the middle of a swarm like that filled 
her with cold terror.

Ranma looked at her like she'd gone nuts.  Allergic to bee 
stings?  Who ever heard of something like that?  What, did 
that means she got a runny nose when she got stung?  "Ucchan, 
if you ain't willin' to put yourself on the line for your 
trainin', you're never gonna be a real martial artist."

Ukyou simply gaped in disbelief.  She simply couldn't believe 
he was suggesting that she should... that she should...

"RANMA!!"

The young Saotome dodged an instant before Ryouga's umbrella 
hit.  The Lost Boy staggered towards the two of them.  His 
face and arms were swollen with angry red welts where the 
bees had found their mark.  He wobbled unsteadily on his 
feet.

"Ryouga..." Ukyou gasped.  She rushed towards the bandanna-clad 
boy and offered her shoulder for support.  "Oh boy, you're 
a mess!"

"I'm going to count these stings, Saotome Ranma," Ryouga 
snarled.  "And I'll pay you back tenfold for each one!"

"Yeah, yeah," Ranma scoffed.  That was the sort of thing 
Ryouga always said.  "If you'd been fast enough, you wouldn't 
have been stung so much."

"Shut up!  Even you couldn't have avoided so many!"

Ranma just smiled and gestured towards the inert bees which 
littered the ground around him.  Most of them had been 
squashed flat by Ukyou's spatula assault.

Ryouga glared unsteadily at the carnage of insects.  "You're 
such a bastard," he snarled.  

"Come on, P-Chan," Ranma teased.  "Don't think I'm gonna 
slow down just for you.  We've still got a lot of ground to 
cover today."  He turned and jogged off into the woods.

"You gonna make it?" Ukyou asked gently.  She had to look 
away - the sight of so many bee stings set her shuddering 
uncontrollably.

"Yeah, I'm fine," Ryouga growled.  He was stiff and sore, 
but the pain wasn't unbearable.  He'd had worse in his time.  
He wasn't going to give Ranma the satisfaction of seeing him 
struggle.  "Let's get moving."

- - - - - -

The guards never even saw what hit them.  With a pair of 
lightning-quick, perfectly accurate strikes, Pantyhose Tarou 
rendered them both unconscious.  He grabbed hold of each of 
their collars as they went limp, lowering them gently to the 
floor so their armor wouldn't make much noise.  

He paused to grin at his handiwork.  He'd like to see Hibiki 
or fem-boy pull THAT off.  

He didn't have much time to spare, though.  He crept soundlessly 
down the hallway, blending into the shadows.  He had a job to 
do here - speed and stealth were of the essence.  If everything 
kept going smoothly, he'd have his prize and be long gone 
before anyone in the Musk Dynasty knew he'd been there.

He knew he could have tried to force his way in.  The elite 
fighters of this ancient clan had reputations which even he 
respected, but he doubted they'd be a match for his powerful 
cursed form.  He could have just barreled through their 
defenses and taken what he wanted.  

But this way was better - this way was smarter.  Tarou would 
have liked to test his strength against some of the great 
warriors here, but now was not the time for such indulgences.  
He had to stay focused on his plan.  So long as the Reikoku 
was out there, it was his top priority.  

He chuckled to himself as he slipped past another defense post.  
The guards were oblivious to his presence - he moved amongst 
them like a ghost.  This was a brilliant plan.  If he could 
pull this off, he'd not only defeat the Reikoku, but he would 
become all but invincible.  He just needed to keep his cool, 
maintain his focus, and stick to his plan.

His revenge would come in due time.

- - - - - -

The first thing Ukyou noticed when she woke up was that the 
winds had shifted.  She leaned up on her elbow, feeling the 
breeze on her skin to make sure she wasn't mistaken.  For 
two days, they'd been camped out at the base of this mountain, 
unable to take a shot at the treacherous path across because 
of the intensity of the winds above them.  The villagers nearby 
had warned them in no uncertain terms that trying to cross the 
pass while the winds raged was suicide.  But for the prey of 
the Reikoku, staying still was suicide in another guise.  

If the winds had shifted, then maybe the pass would be clear.  
Ukyou scrambled out from under the covers, stood up, and...

She was nearly floored by the odor which the breeze had carried 
to her nostrils.  There was only one thing in the world that 
made a smell like that - rotting carp. Ukyou was a little 
surprised to realize that the foul stench was coming from 
Ranma's direction.

For the past week or so, Ranma had been setting up camp a 
good distance away from the two of them.  He'd warned them 
both that he was doing some sort of meditative training, and 
that they shouldn't interrupt him.  He refused to elaborate 
further on the matter, but Ukyou had heard him making all 
sorts of noises before he went to bed, clanking around with 
buckets and branches over in his private encampment.  She 
hadn't the foggiest notion of what he could be doing, but 
why did his sleeping area smell so terrible?

"Hey Ranchan!" she shouted.  "Wake up!"

Ryouga rose blearily from slumber a few paces away.  He 
blinked around drowsily for a few moments, but his eyes bugged 
out wide the moment he caught wind of the odor.  He stared 
around wildly for the source of the smell.

"Ranchan!" Ukyou shouted.  "Is something wrong?"

Ryouga held his nose and glared in Ranma's direction.  "What 
the hell?"

Ukyou caught sight of some movement from Ranma's bed.  The 
pig-tailed martial artist was a heavy sleeper usually, but 
she knew he hadn't been resting very well since he started 
this weird training of his.  He was always surly and cranky 
in the mornings now.  "Whaddya want?" he called back.

"It smells like you slept with a dead fish, Saotome!" Ryouga 
snapped.

Ranma sniffed the air, winced, and waved reassuringly to 
them.  "It aint' a big deal.  I'm gonna go clean up before 
breakfast."

"The wind changed, Ranchan!" Ukyou exclaimed.

"Great," he grunted back.  She had hoped he'd be a little 
more enthusiastic - he was the one who was always pushing 
for them to make better time - but it was a little too much 
to expect this early in the morning.  Well, she thought, the 
only place to bathe was a nearby river that came out of the 
mountains.  If the icy water didn't wake him up, nothing 
would.

Breakfast was all but ready by the time the shivering 
Ranma-chan returned from the river.  She scrambled up as 
close to the campfire as humanly possible, twisting to try 
to get as much of her body into the warmth as she could 
manage.  "P... put some more wood on, Ucchan," she begged 
through chattering teeth.

"Just a sec, Ranchan.  I don't wanna burn the breakfast."

Ryouga regarded the red-headed girl dubiously.  "What were 
you doing?  What was with that smell?"

"S...shut up," she snapped.  Ranma-chan dug into her breakfast 
like a starving wolf the moment Ukyou set it in front of her.  

"Really, Ranchan," Ukyou said between bites of her own 
breakfast.  "Why don't you tell us what you're up to?"

Ranma-chan grunted and washed down a mouthful with a swig 
of coffee.  "Don't you guys worry about it.  I think I almost 
got the hang of it now."

"Of what?" Ryouga asked.

"Somethin' that won't do you guys no good, believe me."

"It's just..." Ukyou tried to put the right mixture of 
nonchalance and suggestiveness into her tone, "I was hoping 
you wouldn't be sleeping so far away from me... us, I mean..."

Ranma-chan gave her that blank stare with which she'd become 
all too familiar.  Ukyou sighed.  They didn't come much more 
clueless than her fiancee.

"Feh," Ryouga snorted.  "The farther the better, as far as 
I'm concerned."

Ranma-chan gave him a black look.  "Oh, is that so, P-Chan?"

"Don't call me that!"

Ranma-chan got a sly, malicious look on her face.  "Maybe you 
just want me away so you can try snugglin' up in another 
girl's bed at night, eh piggy?"

Ukyou just about gagged.  Ryouga bolted to his feet, his 
face flushing red with anger and embarrassment.  "Shut up, 
Ranma!"

Ranma-chan pretended not to notice either of their shocked 
reactions.  "Listen, Ucchan, if Ryouga turns into the 
wonder-pig and tries to put the moves on you, just whack him 
with the spatula."

"How DARE you!" Ryouga snarled.  He took a wild swipe at 
Ranma-chan's head, which she ducked easily.  His own momentum 
sent him stumbling away.  

"Ranchan..." Ukyou gasped.

Ranma-chan adopted a lazy stance, keeping her eyes on the 
enraged Ryouga.  She was feeling a bit vicious this morning, 
and it was fun to tease this big lunk.  "Oh sure, P-Chan, now 
you get all mad.  But you can't deny it, can you?  You never 
miss a chance to go crawlin' into Akane's bed, do you?"

"That's not true!" Ryouga howled, his voice sounding strangled 
and tight.  His next flurry of blows all missed their mark.

"Don't be shy!"  Ranma-chan chided.  "You're her widdle P-Chan!  
I think you like it better that way!"

"Is... is that true?"  Ukyou asked.

Ryouga broke off his attack, paralyzed by his intense shame.  
He stared at her with horrified eyes, his mouth working 
silently around words he couldn't bring himself to speak.

Ukyou had known that P-Chan was Akane's pet, but nobody had 
ever told her that he slept in the same bed as the Tendou 
girl.  She and Akane weren't exactly the best of friends, 
but Ukyou tried to imagine how she'd feel if something like 
that were happening to her.  If a guy took advantage of her 
like that, she'd... she'd...

"How come you haven't told her?" she snapped at Ranma-chan.

The smug look of triumph disappeared from Ranma-chan's 
features.  She was expecting Ryouga to get the sharp end of 
Ukyou's tongue (and probably a few good whacks from the 
battle spatula).  She hadn't expected to be on the defensive 
all of a sudden.

"She... I..." Ranma-chan stuttered.  Then she crossed her 
arms and looked defiant.  "It ain't like I haven't tried, you 
know!  Akane's just about the thickest girl in the world!  
Is it my fault the she's too stupid to figure it out?"

"She's stupid all right," Ukyou muttered, seething with 
anger.  "She's stupid to EVER trust a pair of jackasses like 
you!"

Ranma-chan was taken aback, but Ryouga was positively crushed.  
He howled inarticulately, buried his tear-streaked face in his 
hands, and sprinted off into the thicket of evergreens.  

"Ryouga!" Ranma-chan called after the sobbing martial artist.  
She glared back at Ukyou.  "Now look what ya did!"

"What I did? Don't blame ME for this!"

"If he gets lost, it could take forever to find him!" 
Ranma-chan exclaimed.  "We gotta get movin' before the winds 
change again, damn it!"

"All right, all right!" Ukyou threw up her hands in disgust.  
"Let's split up and find the moron."

Without waiting for a response, Ukyou whirled and stalked 
off into the woods, battle-spatula firmly in her grip.  
Ranma-chan watched her leave, a perplexed look on her 
face.  

<Stupid enough to trust me, is it?> Ranma-chan thought 
irritably.  <What does SHE know?  Akane ain't never trusted 
me once in her miserable life.  Besides, it ain't my fault 
she's too big an idiot to figure out the truth for herself.  
Maybe if she DID ever trust me for a single second, I'd... 
I'd...>

The thought trailed off.  Ranma-chan glared at the woods 
sullenly, angry at both Ukyou and Ryouga.  It's not like 
it was Ukyou's business, anyway.  She wished she'd never 
brought it up in the first place.  Still, she didn't have 
time to stand around and mope about it - they needed to 
find Ryouga, or they'd all be in a world of trouble.  
Ranma-chan chose a direction at random and began her 
search.

Ukyou stomped through the forest, grinding her teeth and 
flexing her grip on her spatula.  She couldn't decide which 
one of those two jerks had her more pissed off.  Part of her 
wanted to take heart from the whole thing - if Ranchan treated 
Akane that way, he couldn't possibly be serious about her as 
a fiancee.  That's how she wanted to see it, anyway.  But she 
couldn't help but think that if the positions were switched, 
and if she was the one who was unknowingly inviting a disguised 
boy into her bed every night instead of Akane, that Ranma 
wouldn't react any differently.  Not for the first time on 
this whole trip, she wondered what kind of jerk she was engaged 
to.  

And as for Ryouga... boy, she was going to give that guy an 
earful when she found him.  She'd thought he was a relatively 
nice, harmless, dim guy.  She'd actually gotten to like him a 
bit on this trip.  Who would have thought he'd turn out to be 
a pervert of the first order?  When she thought of him sneaking 
into Akane's room, watching her dress, leering at her while 
she slept... 

Ukyou perked up as she heard a soft, distant sound.  She 
strained to listen... it sounded like somebody crying.  That 
had to be Ryouga.  She hefted her spatula grimly and headed 
towards the noise.  She'd give him something to cry about...

He was sitting at the edge of a ravine, leaning against a 
tree and weeping.  Ukyou opened her mouth to shout at him, 
then closed it again as she watched.  He wasn't just crying 
a little bit.  His whole body convulsed with each body-wracking 
sob.  His voice sounded raw and hoarse.  She'd never seen a 
man cry his heart out like that.

"Oh Akane..." he gasped between his sobs.  "I'm so... I'm 
sorr..."

Ukyou lowered her spatula, her anger seeping away as she 
watched the Lost Boy weep.  It was hard to think about hurting 
a guy who was torturing himself so thoroughly on his own.  She 
couldn't stay mad at someone who was so clearly in such pain, 
even if he was a pervert.  

She wasn't sure how long the crying went on.  She wanted to 
turn and leave him be, feeling embarrassed at intruding upon 
him in a moment like this, but she couldn't afford to lose 
track of him.  Uncertain of what to do, she simply waited 
silently behind him and watched as he twisted in a storm of 
his own anguish.  

Finally, his sobbing tapered off.  He was running out of 
energy - Ukyou had spent a few nights bawling herself to 
sleep, and she knew that it took a lot out of you.  Even a 
guy like Ryouga couldn't keep it up forever.  

"Go ahead," he said.  "Hit me."

Ukyou nearly jumped out of her skin.  How long had he known 
she was there?

"I deserve it," he muttered in a dead tone.  "I deserve it 
all."

Ukyou caught her breath, and took a deep sigh.  She moved to 
sit down beside him, facing at an angle away from him.  It 
was too intense a situation to sit facing him, at least right 
now.  "I ain't gonna hit you, sugar," she heard herself say.  
Part of her still wanted to smack him one, but the urge wasn't 
strong now.  

"Why not?" he whispered.  

She shrugged.  "How come you keep doin' it, if you know it's 
wrong?"

"I don't... I don't do it on purpose," he said.

"That's not what Ranchan says," she observed.

He spat.  "What the hell does HE know?  He doesn't know what 
it's like.  He probably thinks I get some sort of cheap 
thrill out of it.  That's about the limit of his 
understanding."

"Don't blame Ranma for this," Ukyou admonished.  "He's not 
the one who sneaks into her room, watches her get dressed, 
and..."

"I don't do that!" he protested.  His reaction was 
instantaneous, and he sounded genuinely mortified.  "I 
could never... I wouldn't even THINK of..."

"But you do sleep with her, right?"

"..."

Ukyou let the silence hang between them for a little while 
before she spoke up again.  "You should stop it."

"You don't think I've tried?" he moaned.  "I've tried and 
TRIED to leave her behind forever, dozens of times.  But every 
time I always seem to end up going back, and I always end up 
getting splashed..."

"If you wanted to, you could stop."

"I've... I've promised myself so many times," he explained in 
a mournful voice.  "I've vowed never to be P-Chan again.  
But when I get splashed... it's like I lose all my resolve.  
She calls to me, and I forget all the promises I made as a 
man.  All I can think of is how much I miss her, how warm I 
feel when she holds me.  I love her so much... I can't stay 
away."

"Ryouga..."

"It's pathetic," he spat angrily, wiping his face with the 
back of his hand.  "It's a pitiful mockery of human love, but 
it's all I've got.  You can't know what it's like to be so 
wretched and lonely.  You're so cute and friendly, and 
everybody likes you."

Ukyou blinked in surprise at that.  

"It's different for me," he went on.  "I... I'm so lonely.  
So lonely all the time.  And fate keeps bringing me back to 
her, as her pet pig.  Is that my destiny, to have only that 
feeble excuse for love?  There have been times... that I've 
been willing to give up being human altogether.  To live the 
rest of my life as her little P-Chan... just so I could be 
close to her."

Ukyou pivoted to stare at him, rendered speechless by the 
way he'd bared his soul to her.  Something he'd said struck 
her as particularly chilling - he spoke of his resolve fading 
when he turned into a pig.  Ukyou had wondered about Ranma in 
the past, about how his curse affected his mind.  It often 
seemed to her that his whole personality changed when his body 
did.  He was certainly willing to do all sorts of things that 
he'd never dream of doing as a boy.  He'd even wear dresses 
and flirt with other guys.  She'd even seen him go so far as 
to pretend to be Ryouga's fiancee.

It had never occurred to her to wonder what the curse did to 
the people who turned into animals.  Did it affect their minds 
as well?  It sounded like maybe it did, from what Ryouga said.  
A little piglet didn't have much room in its head for things 
like promises and vows.  All it knew was that it was small and 
helpless, and that it wanted somebody to love and protect it.  
Maybe when Ryouga changed, he became more like a piglet than 
even he understood.

It occurred to her to wonder what happened to Tarou's mind 
when he became that monster.  She shuddered and refused to 
think about the implications of that.

"Hey sugar," she said, "don't beat yourself up too much about 
it, okay?"  Right now, he didn't seem like such a pervert to 
her anymore.  "Believe me, I have some idea of how hard it is 
to be in love with someone that you can't get close to."

He turned to look at her.  "You... you understand?"

She shrugged.  "I still don't think it's right, but I can't 
blame you too much.  I mean, I have to be honest with myself.  
If I could turn into a puppy or something and snuggle up to 
Ranchan, could I really stop myself?  I really don't know."

Ryouga got a glazed look on his face and stared off into the 
distance.  "A... puppy."

"Ryouga?"

"Why... why couldn't I turn into a puppy?" he said, not really 
addressing her directly.  "That wouldn't be so bad.  Everybody 
likes puppies.  Everybody wants to help a lost puppy.  Nobody 
takes a look at a puppy and says:  'Hey!  I think I'll have 
that for dinner!'"

Ukyou bit back a giggle.  He whirled on her and looked 
irritated.

"You think I'm kidding?  Do you know how many times people 
have tried to cook me as P-Chan?  Do you?  Neither do I!  
It's happened so often that I've actually LOST TRACK!"

"Oh come on..."

"You're a cook!  Don't tell me you never looked at P-Chan 
and thought about making me into a pork okonomiyaki!"

"Ryouga, I..."  

"All cooks do!" he ranted.  "Do you know what it's like to 
turn into a potential breakfast every time it rains?  Do you 
know what it's like to be hung up by your legs in a kitchen 
and watching a chef prepare a stew for you?  NO!  Of course 
you don't!   A puppy... God, what I wouldn't GIVE to turn into 
a puppy!  Why do I have to turn into an edible little pig?  
Why do I have to be so scrumptious?"

Ukyou couldn't contain herself anymore.  Laughter erupted 
from her in great waves.  She rolled on the ground, clutching 
her sides as she convulsed with mirth.

Ryouga glared at her angrily.  "It isn't funny!  This is my 
life we're talking about."

She tried to bring herself under control and apologize, but 
one look at his irate expression sent her back into a fit of 
giggling and laughing.  "S... scrum... scrumptious!" she managed 
to gasp, then howled with hilarity.

Ryouga shook his head and found himself battling a grin of his 
own.  Laughing fits were infectious, and even Ryouga wasn't 
immune.  The whole situation was so absurd that it was, in a 
way, funny.  "Oh shut up," he grumbled, but he couldn't put 
much force behind it.  

Ukyou desperately tried to compose herself, but snickers 
and giggles still escaped her unbidden.  She made a show of 
bowing formally before him.  "I'm sorry... I'm sorry..."

Ryouga chuckled.  "'Crouch of the Wild Tiger' technique, 
eh?"

She looked up at him and batted her eyes winningly.  "I'm 
really sorry, sugar.  Please forgive me!"

Ryouga's heart took a few bounces around his ribcage, and he 
quickly turned away to hide his sudden embarrassment.  "D... 
don't do that.  I forgive you.  Geez."

She clapped him on the shoulder, then ruffled his hair.  It 
was a gesture she did without thinking, but it felt right 
somehow.  She hauled herself to her feet and offered her hand 
to him.  "Come on, Ryouga.  Let's head back to camp.  We've 
gotta get through that pass before the winds get bad again."

Ryouga nodded wordlessly, then took a hold of her hand.  He 
stared at the back of her head as she led him through the 
trees, his mind swirling through a muddy stew of emotions and 
thoughts.  <What a strange trip this has been,> he told 
himself.  That much, at least, was beyond dispute.

- - - - - - 

"Nabiki?  What's the matter, you look terrible!"

Tendou Nabiki turned to face her elder sister.  She supposed 
that she did look terrible.  She didn't even really recall 
making the trip from Ucchan's Okonomiyaki back to the Tendou 
Dojo - it was all kind of a blur.  She was in shock, she 
realized.  There was a time when she wouldn't have dreamed 
of allowing herself to be seen in public looking rattled or 
disheveled, but the past weeks had worn her composure down 
to the barest of threads.  

"Are you all right, Nabiki?"  Kasumi sounded genuinely 
concerned.  

Nabiki stared at her with a stricken look.  "Konatsu's 
sick," she announced in a leaden tone.  "He... he can't 
work."

"Oh dear, that's too bad," Kasumi said.  "Are you hungry?  
You look so tired."

"He's sick," she repeated numbly.  "He passed out from 
exhaustion.  I... I worked him into the ground."

"Well I'm sure he'll get better with some rest," Kasumi 
assured her.  

Nabiki shook her head slowly.  It all felt like a terrible 
dream.  "You don't understand.  We're... we're on the edge 
right now.  If we miss even a day of business... the 
restaurant will go under.  We can't afford... to close 
down."

Nabiki hardly noticed that her sister had gently herded her 
into the dining room and sat her down at the table.  Her 
body was on autopilot while her brain turned her unsolvable 
dilemma over and over.  

"Would you like some tea and a snack?"  Kasumi asked.

"We're doomed," Nabiki said with certainty.

"Now, now.  That's no way to talk.  I'm sure you'll think of 
something," Kasumi insisted.  She bustled her way off to the 
kitchen, humming to herself as she worked to prepare Nabiki's 
food.

Nabiki had never experienced such acute failure in her life.  
All her confidence had been eroded down to nothing since she'd 
taken on management of Ucchan's.  She, Tendou Nabiki, Nerima's 
brightest business protege, had driven a well-established and 
respected restaurant straight into the ground.  It hadn't even 
taken her a month to achieve this ignominious feat.  Part of 
her mind desperately cast about for something or somebody to 
blame, but there was no denying it.  She had made all the 
mistakes.  It was all her doing.

And then, there was Konatsu.  Guilt was not an emotion with 
which Nabiki was familiar, but she felt terrible about what 
she'd done to the young ninja.  Konatsu had given her his 
complete loyalty from the first day on.  At first, she'd been 
amused by and even a little bit contemptuous of the servile 
cross-dresser, dismissing him as nothing more than a 
natural-born lackey with no will of his own.  After time, 
she'd discovered that it was hard to maintain such an 
attitude towards a guy who worked his heart out for you 
every waking hour.  

But what had she done with that loyalty?  She'd used it and 
abused it.  She'd taxed Konatsu to his limit in the restaurant 
with her ambitious schemes and plans, and then she'd piled 
even more duties on him.  She'd kept Ucchan's open for longer
hours, trying to overcome the loss of profit, and he'd shouldered
the burden without a word of protest.  She'd used the brilliant 
ninja for her scams and plots, sending him out into the night 
after work to spy on people and gather dirt on her classmates.  
When she'd gotten desperate with the take-out service, she'd 
pushed him even harder to find more blackmail victims for to 
act as delivery workers.  And she'd expected him to be up 
bright and early the next day, to have the restaurant ready 
for the breakfast crowd.  

He'd never complained once.  Had she really thought he was 
spineless?  Konatsu had given everything he had to that 
restaurant, and he'd never once lost his good temper or friendly 
smile.  Even as his health had deteriorated, he'd kept on going 
with all his might.  When he collapsed from exhaustion today, 
he hadn't been concerned about himself.  All that mattered to 
him was that he thought he'd failed her.  

Konatsu possessed a kind of courage which Nabiki had never 
before understood or appreciated.  She had been the one who 
failed him.  That, she realized, was even worse than her shame 
at ruining the business.  He'd given her loyalty and devotion 
that she'd done nothing to deserve, and she'd ground him into the
dust for it.

Tendou Nabiki had never felt so low.

"Here's some tea, Nabiki," Kasumi said as she set the cup down 
in front of her sister.  "And here are some bean buns I made."

"Th... thanks."  

Kasumi settled herself primly down at the table and smiled at 
her.  "That should make you feel better.  Have you thought of 
anything?"

"There's... what can I do?" she moaned.  "We don't have a 
cook.  We can't run the restaurant without a cook."

"Well, then perhaps you could hire one," Kasumi suggested.  
"Until Konatsu gets better, that is."

"We can't afford it," Nabiki said, shaking her head.  "Nobody 
would work for the sort of salary that Konatsu makes."

"Perhaps you can find a friend to do it, then?" Kasumi 
offered.

Nabiki wondered if there was anybody at Furinkan who qualified 
as a friend anymore.  Her recent blackmail blitz had not won 
her any popularity points, and she'd never been the best-liked 
girl in school to begin with. There'd been a time when she'd 
have been able to blackmail or con somebody into doing the 
job, but she didn't have the leverage left to pull it off.  
"There's... nobody," she whispered bleakly.

"Maybe you could get someone, and promise to pay them back 
later?" 

Nabiki sighed and hung her head.  "Nobody will be stupid 
enough to do that.  Sis, it's hopeless.  I have to find someone 
who can run the shop, cook the meals, and who will do it for 
free.  I have until tomorrow.  There's... there's no way."

Kasumi patted her reassuringly on the shoulder and smiled.  
"It sounds difficult, but there's always a way.  Maybe we 
can talk some more after I make dinner, okay?"  The eldest 
Tendou daughter rose from her place and shuffled back into 
the kitchen.  

Nabiki stared at the kitchen door, the wheels in her mind 
turning.  Her inner swindler offered up a solution which she 
hadn't considered.  She needed a cook, and she needed someone 
who'd do it for free.  Who else fit the bill... but her big 
sister?

Kasumi could do it, she realized.  Kasumi could cook just 
about anything, and she had a nice friendly manner that 
customers would love.  And Kasumi would cheerfully cut her 
own hand off if someone in her family asked her to do it.  
She'd agree in a heartbeat.  It would only be for a few 
days, after all, until Konatsu got better.   It was the perfect 
solution.

Except...

Except it meant crossing a line that Nabiki had drawn for 
herself years ago, when she'd first discovered how much fun 
it was to scam money from the suckers of the world.  She'd 
always told herself that anybody who let themselves get 
swindled got what they deserved.  Her schoolmates, her friends, 
and even her family were all fair game... everybody except 
Kasumi.

Kasumi was the perfect sucker - it would be child's play to 
con her into doing just about anything you wanted.  She was 
sweet-tempered, trusting, and gullible.  And she'd always been 
the only person who Nabiki would never consider drawing into 
one of her scams.  Kasumi was like Nabiki's sacred ground - 
the last piece of her own innocence, a bit of her own soul 
that had never been for sale.

<It's not so bad,> a voice within her whispered.  <It's not 
even really a con.  You're just asking for her help, that's 
all.  It's only for a few days.>

But she knew that was all rationalization.  Tendou Nabiki knew 
a fast one when she heard it, even when it came from inside 
herself.  She had a choice now.  Either she could let the 
restaurant fail completely, or she could take advantage of 
the one person in the world she'd sworn she'd never touch.  

Nabiki rose slowly from the table.  Her legs felt like they 
were a thousand miles away, but they carried her all the 
same towards the kitchen door.  She watched her beloved 
sister bustling about the kitchen, preparing another 
gourmet-quality dinner with her usual understated brilliance.  
Nabiki's mouth felt dry as a desert in midsummer.  

"Hey sis?" she rasped.

Kasumi paused and turned to face her, a bright and open smile 
on her face.  "Yes, Nabiki?"

"I... I need your help with something."

- - - - - -


                    end of chapter six



-----------------------------------------------------------
                      AUTHOR'S NOTES
-----------------------------------------------------------

UMIKEN-SEN and YAMASEN-KEN: These are styles created by 
Saotome Genma, of all people. The Yamasen-ken, or "Mountain
1000 Fist," is the "noisy robber" style, based on some really
powerful brute force attacks. It was used by a fighter called
Kumon Ryu, who wanted to learn the Umisen-ken ("Ocean 1000
Fist") counterpart to restore his family dojo. He ended up
Fighting Ranma, who was using the stealth-based Umisen-ken
to counteract him.

It was an entertaining story arc, and Kumon Ryu was a good 
one-shot character, but I have to say that this is one of the
stories where I didn't really get it. For some reason, 
everyone thought these techniques needed to be sealed away
and never used again. The only explanation for this was that
they were really meant to be used for thievery instead of 
martial arts... but so what? No need to waste a bunch of
perfectly good techniques. Oh well.


I wrote a bit about the nature of the Jusenkyou curse in this
chapter and how it affects the minds of its victims.  I'm aware
that this is a topic that gets debated now and then with a 
certain fervor, and I'm not out to start another argument.  

COMING SOON:  Will all the training pay off when the Reikoku
catches up to Ranma and his friends?  Can Akane's rise above her
hardships?  Can her father actually help?  What will Nabiki's
decision be?  And what is Pantyhose Tarou up to, anyway?     

REVISION NOTES: A few important continuity fixes about the 
Umisen-ken and Yamasen-ken styles. 

COPYRIGHT STUFF:  All the Ranma characters belong to Takahashi Rumiko,
and are licensed in America by Viz Communications.    

GRT - November 1998
MODIFIED - April 2005
thunderstruck_comic@comcast.net

All existing chapters of this story may be found at:
http://www.talesfromthevault.com/relentless





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