*** This will be my last post before Otakon (not that I post
much anyway). If you're at the panel, stop and say hi after.
Most of us don't bite very hard. Really.
*** This story may seem a little lacking in details. I wanted
to answer some of these questions in an epilogue, but at this
point I haven't written an epilogue. I simply haven't come up
with one I'm happy about. It'll come up later.
Blood Relations
by Lara Bartram
"Will it keep?"
"For as long as it needs to. I'll bring them in when they reach
18; that'll be a good point. Until that time, they'll live as normal
children." Midori looked with fondness at the two children. Her
children.
She kneeled down in front of the two, each of them looking at
her with wide-eyed innocence. Smiling at them, she took each of their
hands in hers. "I have to go, children. I'll miss you both. I love
you dearly and want you to know I wouldn't leave unless I absolutely
had to."
They looked at her and nodded, their facial expressions never
changing.
Midori looked back at Tamon, her expression changing from warmth
to extreme seriousness. "Things are not going well. I'm going to
concentrate on finding out the exact point of variance. Then I should
be able to apply it to these two."
Tamon nodded.
Midori gave him a small smiled and turned back to the children.
"Remember that I love you, and I will see you again." She kissed each
of them on the forehead, then stood, releasing their hands. "Be
good."
They nodded in unison.
"I wish I didn't have to leave them, but this won't wait. If I
put it off any longer, things will only get worse," she said to Tamon
again.
"I understand. They will too when they get older."
"No! Never tell them," Midori said angrily. "Only when the
controls are released will the situation be known. Only then. Before
that and their sanity could be in jeopardy."
"Understood then," Tamon said. "They'll miss their mother." He
took the hand of the younger child.
"Please don't make this any harder than it has to be. Do you
know just how hard it was to put the controls on them? Look at them
now. They barely even recognize me."
"They know you. Deep inside, they'll always know you. They'll
know the truth."
Midori sighed heavily and hugged Tamon. "I do grow weary of
this. Once this gets worked out, I think I'll turn project control
over to someone else. After this, I just can't do it again."
The two kissed, and with one last longing look back, Midori
left.
The children started to follow, but Tamon restrained them. "No,
children. She's gone."
[7 YEARS LATER]
There wasn't anything different about what had happened, but the
results could never have been predicted.
His head snapped back just before the rest of his body went
flying and impacted against a wall. He slid down to the ground and
laid there, unmoving.
"Kuno-chan, you're totally hopeless. I guess it's another well-
paid trip to the infirmary." She grabbed the back of his gi and began
dragging him toward the school.
In class, things seemed the same as always. Except for the
person sitting next to Nabiki. She didn't notice a thing, but this
was one of the trickier chapters of calculus and she was turning
almost her full attention to it. Besides, she knew there were certain
well-paying fools that would need help later. Glancing over at Kuno,
she saw that he wasn't taking any notes at all, and she mentally
marked him down.
Kuno stared at the blackboard as the teacher wrote the problem
down. He considered, for a moment, writing it down in his notebook,
but discovered, unlike previous class periods, that he didn't need to.
He already knew the information being presented, he already knew
the answer. And more, a lot more.
And he didn't know why.
Nabiki sauntered over to Kuno, expecting him to be drawing a
blank on the earlier problems. She was about to deliver her usual
greeting when she saw the sheet of paper on his desk in front of him.
It appeared to have all the homework problems finished on it.
They were written in a tiny, precise script that was completely unlike
Kuno's usual almost calligraphic writing.
Kuno himself was just staring at the paper, the pencil still
held in his hand. He had a rather stunned look on his face.
Instead of saying anything, Nabiki backed away, wondering where
Kuno had found help so quickly.
* * *
"Ey, Tatchi! I tink it's time fo' de monthly cut!" The rather more
than slightly deranged principal of Furinkan high school, a man the
two Kuno children refused to acknowledge as their father, advanced on
Tatewaki with his shears.
"Not today, Father. I have other business to attend to."
Grinning merrily, the principal rushed forward to give his son a
nice, close shave.
Faster than either was prepared for, Tatewaki grabbed his
father's wrist and twisted sharply to the left.
If he twisted another centimeter, bones would have snapped. As
it was, the sudden pain forced the older man's fingers to open, and
the shears fell to the floor.
Adjusting his grip, Tatewaki twisted just a little more and sent
the larger man spinning to the floor as well. With that done, he
walked off to his room.
Rising slowly, slight pain in his back, the principal stood and
collected his shears. He went to the phone and picked up the handset.
Before dialing, he listened to the house. When silence was the only
thing he heard, he dialed a series of numbers that correlated to no
known public number on record.
He listened to the phone on the other end buzz once, then the click as
it was picked up. "There's a problem?" a woman's voice asked. It was
the only reason the line would be used.
"I think... I think he broke through the controls."
There was silence for a moment. "Watch them both carefully. I
can't leave now, but I'll be over as soon as I can." She was silent
once again.
"How are they?" she asked suddenly. "How are my children?"
The silence was an unfortunate answer.
"I see you couldn't even handle two children, Tamon. I will be
there as soon as possible."
The phone clicked loudly in his ear as Midori hung up. Sighing,
Tamon hung up and went to check on his daughter. With any luck, her
controls would still be in place.
* * *
Tatewaki looked at the blade in his hands. It wasn't just a
blade, but it wasn't any sort of extension of his body either. The
blade was a tool, and he knew it was a deadly tool.
A hundred places on the human body to place it and cause death
flashed through his mind. No desire to ever do such a thing, just the
simple knowledge.
Resheathing the tanto and putting it back in its place, Tatewaki
picked up his bokken and began his regular workout.
It was difficult. Hi body wanted to rebel, do things that
weren't part of his practice. Lots of running, leaping, rolling and
non-standard slashes... He fought the impulses to perform these
moves. Barely.
Stopping and throwing his bokken down in disgust, unable to find
any peace in the repetitive movements, Tatewaki kneeled down and
picked up the tanto again.
There was something about the bare steel that hypnotized him.
He turned it over in his hands and slowly removed the blade from the
sheath.
Blade fully bared, he laid it against his skin, observing the
contrast between the two.
Metal. It was so much more pleasant to look at and feel than
plain wood of a bokken. It felt so much more real, especially the way
the edge bit so delicately into his skin. Its sharpness was unrivaled
and he knew that it could slice him to the bone as easily as it could
cut water.
"Ey, Tatchi!"
The sound of his worthless father's voice drew his attention
away from the tanto. Snarling and glaring as the intrusion, Tatewaki
prepared to use the weapon. "What do you want?"
"Tatchi, dis be fo' yo' own good!"
"I sincerely doubt that."
His father's voice changed radically in that moment. "But it
is. Don't you want to know about everything you're feeling?"
Tatewaki stared at his father. "How... do you know?" he asked
in complete stunned amazement.
"Tatchi, get changed into something appropriate. There's
someone you need to meet."
It was almost an hour later. Tatewaki had first attempted to
dress in his usual outfit, but he had felt downright foolish in it.
Instead, he managed to find some more normal clothing that had been
stowed far in the back of his closet.
So he was in a pair of loose gray pants and an ivory, button-
down shirt. There hadn't been any suitable shoes to go with the rest
of the outfit so he went without.
Heading downstairs after freshening up somewhat, he looked for
his father. "Father?" he called out. "Father, if this is some sort
of joke..." Stepping into the sitting room, the words died on
Tatewaki's lips. He had located his father.
"Tatewaki, do you remember me?"
"Mother?" He took one hesitant step forward.
"It's me, Tatewaki." Midori smiled at him and held her arms
out.
Tatewaki took one more hesitant step forward before suddenly
running and taking her in a fierce hug. "Mother, I thought you were
dead!"
Hugging him back, Midori kissed the side of Tatewaki's head. "I
know you did, Tatewaki, but I'm here now."
"Kodachi will be so glad to see you!"
"No, Tatewaki. She can't yet. Things aren't finished yet; I
still have work to do. She's too young." She kissed him again. "Do
you understand, Tatewaki? You mustn't tell her."
"She'll be so disappointed."
"Don't worry. We'll all be reunited soon enough. But right
now, I here you're having some problems. I think I can help you with
them."
When Tatewaki pulled out of her arms, it nearly broke her heart.
This had happened before, and she had been gone for seven years. She
didn't want that to happen, but she knew she would have to leave
again. "You're a smart boy, Tatewaki, and you know that I can't
answer all your questions, but I'll do the best I can."
Midori sat down on the couch and watched Tatewaki try to voice
his troubles as he sat next to her.
"Mother, I... I'm not who I was. I know things I didn't know
before. It... it scares me," Tatewaki said. He held his mother's
hand like he was still a small child.
"That's because you know more than you should at this age,
Tatewaki. Your sister does too, but she doesn't remember it yet.
"It's because of me, Tatewaki. I've... I've done some things
I'm not proud of, things I wish I never did. But I can't take those
things back now." Midori looked into his eyes.
"You and Kodachi were the first subjects of an experiment in
learning through applied gene and hormonal therapy." She looked away
at that point, ashamed.
"What? Mother, I don't understand."
"You do, Tatewaki, but I don't blame you for not wanting to."
She rubbed his back and tried to think of a way to explain things.
"Tatewaki, I... I can't explain why I did certain things because I
don't know myself. I wish I hadn't robbed you of your chance at
leading a normal life... Just don't hate me for what I've done.
"You _are_ my son and I love you." A single tear ran down her
cheek.
"Mother... what am I? Why... why can't I have a normal life?"
Tatewaki looked at her closely, trying to memorize every detail of her
face so he wouldn't forget again.
"Nothing so dramatic, Tatewaki. You'll get to live your life as
you see fit. It just won't be normal." She sighed. "You'll have to
learn self-control, something I can help you with when it's time, and
then..." She smiled at her son. "You can do anything you want.
Probably more than you imagined."
"And Kodachi?"
"Kodachi too."
They sat in silence, simply enjoying the chance to be together
again in seven years.
"I don't want you to go," Tatewaki said suddenly.
Midori shook her head. "I knew this would happen. I have to
go. It's for your own good."
"If you're going, I want to go with you. I don't want to be
left here again. I want to be with you."
Midori hugged Tatewaki tightly. "We'll all be together again
soon enough. When you turn 18 and your schooling is complete, you can
come with me and wait for Kodachi. How does that sound?"
"I don't have a choice, do I?"
"I'm afraid not. If I could stay, I would. If I could take you
with me, I would. But..." She looked apologetically at her son.
"It's time for you to go back to sleep." He put her hand on his cheek
and felt him tremble. "Go back to sleep, Tatewaki, and when you wake
up, I'll be there."
They hugged once more, each of them crying now.
Tatewaki clutched his mother tightly as the needle slid into his
arm and the powerful sedative was administered.
The whole process of "controlling" her children was mentally
draining to her. Each time she did it, she felt like a little piece
of her soul was being ripped away from her. Or maybe she was readily
giving it away. To make her son disappear beneath a personality that
was not his own hurt.
Doing it the first time was painful. Doing it the second time
was pure hell.
Midori watched him sleep for a few moments, his face untroubled
and innocent-looking. She and her ex-husband had removed the clothes
he had been wearing and put on his yukata then put him to bed.
There was an ache in her heart from seeing his room. Everything
in it reminded her that she was forcing him to live a lie. Not a day
went by that she didn't regret what she had done to her children.
"Kodachi is well?" she asked, still watching her son sleep.
"As well as can be expected. Everything is stable with her,
though she misses you terribly. She thinks no one hears, but I hear.
She cries for you, she calls out for you in her sleep..."
Midori hung her head and nodded. "If it's sooner, to hell with
school. They don't need it. This... this is too much."
Tatewaki awoke a few hours later with a splitting headache. He
wasn't sure what had happened, but... but it must have been that cur
Saotome's fault!
* * *
"Ey, Tatchi! I go'n give ya da special birthday cut!"
"My birthday is not for another three months, 'Father', and even
then, I will not allow you!"
The elder Kuno took a playful swipe with his shears at his son,
smiling the entire time.
Tatewaki hopped back instinctually and quickly thought of
something better he had to do as far away from his father as possible.
It was the only smart thing to do since his father seemed quite
prepared to shave his head in celebration of his approaching manhood.
"Three months, Tatchi. Only three months more."
* * *
Security wasn't tight. It wasn't any top secret government
installation; it was just a lab. So when one of the experiments
suddenly went wild, went on a bloody rampage, there wasn't much to be
done.
The thick security door opened slowly, showing dimensions that
looked more appropriate on a bank vault.
"Coast is clear. He's gone."
A small group of determined-looking men and women emerged from
the room behind the door.
After staring for a few moments at the destruction caused in
their lab, looking, with grim faces, at the scattered bodies, they
began to move slowly. Some still stared at the dead bodies, unable to
comprehend the reality of death in such a way.
Even though the deaths were not particularly violent, most
consisting of broken necks, shattered noses and crushed windpipes, it
was still horrible to see their coworkers that had been too slow to
escape.
They had all died rather cleanly and with military precision,
bringing a grim smile to one woman's lips.
"Doctor, what do we do?" a slim man wearing broken glasses
asked.
"We start looking for him. I have a pretty good idea where
he'll be going." She looked around. "And clean this place up."
"Yes, Dr. Kuno."
Midori went to an overturned phone and tested it. Hearing a
dialtone, she dialed the number to the house in Nerima.
"I can't talk about this over the phone. I'm coming over right
away."
"But... the children."
"This is more important. Their lives, and ours, are in extreme
danger."
"You mean..."
"Yes. I'm leaving in two minutes."
"Shit."
"You can say that again." Midori hung up and quickly exited the
lab. Things were getting messy.
The door opened before she had even rung the bell. It was,
technically, her home, but she visited so infrequently, she always
felt like a stranger.
"Where are they? she asked as she walked inside.
"At school, where I should be. What's going on?"
"Kyoji's escaped. I think he'll come here. To deal with the
rest of his family." The grim look on her face was all Toman needed
to know that she wasn't kidding. Not that she ever kidded.
"So how do we deal with him?"
She looked at him evenly. "We activate our two best
developmental agents. It's the only way."
He shook his head. "You're kidding. You can't be serious about
this."
"I am. If any of us want to live to see next year, next month,
then this is what we have to do."
"No! Call the police, or the Americans! Let them deal with it!
Not Tatewaki and Kodachi!"
Shaking her head slowly, Midori spoke softly, "No, that's not an
option. The violence that would accompany such an action would surely
be far worse than what would happen if we fail here. If we fail, then
the five of us will die. If they come in here, guns blazing, who can
say how many will die?"
Knowing she was right and hating the logic, Toman nodded. "I'll
pull them from school now."
"Excellent. We'll need as much time as possible to prep them."
"Father, I demand to know why we..."
"Quiet! Listen!"
That got the Kuno siblings to quiet down and stare at their
father in shock.
"Look and listen. Do nothing else." He turned on the
television, which happened to be showing a baseball game at the
moment.
"Children, it's time to wake up and come back to us," Midori
said from behind the two. It was the only signal that would restore
their repressed knowledge, the only way they could act as themselves.
With alarming suddenness, both their eyes glazed over and they
swayed in their chairs, ready to topple over. But as quickly as it
had come, that look disappeared, to be replaced by cold, calculating
intelligence.
Opening up the small bag she had brought, Midori pulled out two
bundles of black cloth. Standing in front of her children, she
greeted them warmly, but professionally. "Children, we have a
problem."
They looked at her, but showed no emotion at all.
"Kyoji has decided that he shall kill us." She began to unroll
the bundle son the floor in front of the two. "You are our only
chances of survival."
Each bundle was revealed to be carrying a large assortment of
knives, daggers and short swords. The metal of each blade gleamed in
the afternoon sun, casting reflections all about the room.
Midori stepped back from the weapons. "Take care of your
brother, as quickly as possible. We wish no further harm to come to
people."
Tatewaki and Kodachi both fell to their knees on the floor and
began examining the assortment of weapons.
"Arm yourselves as you see fit. You know Kyoji's capabilities;
they are your own. He is unarmed, but his strength is greater than
the two of you combined. The unpredictable aspect is his insanity,"
Midori said, sounding like she had made similar speeches before.
Tatewaki picked up each blade and examined it carefully, but did
not commit himself to any one. "I need to change," he said simply,
then stood and left.
"Anything you require, Kodachi?"
"No, Mother. I think this shall be adequate. Do you know when
our brother shall be arriving?"
"Shortly, I'm afraid. I awakened you as soon as I could."
Kodachi nodded. "He'll have to die?"
"Only if you think he should. If you somehow manage to subdue
him, we'll take him back and try again. If not, then there will be
little grieving."
Again, Kodachi nodded. "I do hope I'm not the only sibling left
after this. Dearest Brother is so foolishly brave and noble," Kodachi
said, strapping a small knife to her calf.
"I don't want to see any harm come to either of you. I'm afraid
it's too late for Kyoji." Midori watched her daughter strap a knife
to her side, under her shirt, then choose a brutal-looking Bowie knife
as her main weapon.
"That's all you're taking?"
"Anything more and I think I shan't have the time to use them."
"Excellent point, Kodachi. You've learned well."
Kodachi looked up at her mother, smiling. "You taught me,.
Mother."
Tatewaki returned then, dressed in a suit that fit him
perfectly. "Excellent choice, Mother. When did you get my
measurements?"
Midori smiled at how handsome he looked. "Did you know you had
an incident a few months ago?"
Tatewaki blinked in surprise. "No, I wasn't aware."
"Ah, well, I had to make sure you were all right. It was then,
as I knew I would be bringing you back soon."
"It is most appreciated."
Tatewaki tested the spring-loaded knife in his shirt sleeve,
then pushed it back into place. He was ready for his older brother.
There would not be a group of sheep awaiting his slaughter.
* * *
Kyoji Kuno lumbered down the street. He had business with his
family for leaving him to be the subject of a bunch of experiments.
He refused to be used as any sort of guinea pig, refused to be used as
some sort of government weapon.
The house was in his sight now. He would make them pay for what
they did to him, just like all those people in the lab had paid.
He was Kyoji. Kuno was not his family name, for he had no
family. He was Kyoji, and he was unstoppable.
"I recommend a double assault. I shall occupy him face to face
and you can finish him from behind."
"Foolish brother. Do you really think he'll fall for something
so simplistic? He is insane, not stupid."
"Perhaps, but I do believe we need to coordinate this together.
He may be too difficult for us individually."
"Agreed, but..."
"Children! No time, he's here!"
"Mother, take Father and hide in the basement," Tatewaki
instructed, getting to his feet and drawing the long, slender blade he
planned on using.
"Take care, children," she said before heading out of the room.
"Sister, do not grow sentimental at the fate of our brother. It
will not prevent any of us from being harmed by him."
"I hear you, Brother. My loyalties are firmly entrenched with
the rest of the family, if that's what you're concerned about."
"Never, Sister."
The sound of the door crashing in halted their conversation.
Without further words, they headed in separate directions to find
their brother.
Kyoji stormed through the house like a tornado, destroying
everything his hands cam into contact with. He didn't plan on being
even that kind to his mother or father. His siblings would be nothing
more than a paste.
If only he could find the,. He growled in frustration and put
his fist through a door. "Come out and face me, cowards!" he yelled
down the empty hallway.
"My, he seems upset," Kodachi whispered to Tatewaki. They each
knew the house like the backs of their hands; even though they had
taken different paths, they had ended up in the same spot.
"Agreed. Shall I?"
"No unnecessary risks. I would like to keep the sane brother in
the family." She smiled and touched his hand.
"Thank you, Sister. Back me up." He moved off silently, his
suit looking completely inappropriate for the situation.
After counting to ten, Kodachi followed, her wicked looking
knife drawn and ready for action.
Tatewaki had his blade drawn and was looking at Kyoji's back.
Again, the list of possibilities where he could place his blade in his
brother's back ran through his mind.
It was simply a matter of placing said blade into said brother.
He had to admit, assassination was not really his specialty. He just
didn't have that special touch for stealth, infiltration, charm and
murder like Kodachi did.
Tatewaki suddenly moved without thought, weapon raised, ready to
taste Kuno blood. Unfortunately, his lack of stealth caught up with
him, and before he could plunge his knife into Kyoji, his older
brother spun around.
"Aha!" Kyoji exclaimed and swung his arm impossibly quick.
Tatewaki was suddenly hit with what felt like a sledgehammer.
The knife flew out of his hand and his wrist went numb.
Stumbling back, he tried to grab his other knife, but his hand
simply refused to cooperate.
"I didn't know you were the one that did the assassination
attempts, Brother. I hope you aren't because that was just pathetic."
Kyoji smiled revealing teeth whiter than white. "Tell me where the
others are, Brother, and I'll kill you quickly. All I want is
revenge."
"Why?" Tatewaki asked, trying to buy time for himself. He
stumbled back again.
"Because my family left me to rot in a lab, as a tool, as an
instrument... My family didn't give a damn about me except as a
weapon." Kyoji smiled again. "The weapon is home and doesn't take
kindly to being abandoned."
For the barest moment, Tatewaki sympathized with his brother.
He paid for it.
"So die!" Kyoji yelled, rushing forward and striking Tatewaki
squarely in the chest with his fist.
Tatewaki was suddenly flying backward and couldn't breathe very
well. He slammed against a wall and fell bonelessly to the floor.
"Since you didn't want to cooperate, Brother, I guess you'll get
the same treatment as the others." Kyoji stalked toward the
motionless Kuno at the end of the hall.
"Oh Brother," a soft, seductive voice called out.
Kyoji turned. "My little sister..." But when his eyes met
hers, she was ready.
Kodachi struck with the speed of a cobra. She hadn't been able
to get close enough for the kill, so she settled with a long, thin cut
across Kyoji's chest. This would at least turn his attention away
from Tatewaki.
She hoped he was all right, as when she spared a glance at him,
he still wasn't moving. "Come along, Brother! I do enjoy a good game
of tag!" she said gleefully and bounded away.
"Little Sister wants to play? I'll play for a little while, but
it won't change the fact that I'll kill you when I catch you." He
walked down the hall the way Kodachi had gone, leaving Tatewaki
collapsed on the floor.
Kodachi skipped lightly through the mansion. She felt excited
and nervous and scared, like she really was playing a deadly game of
tag.
The weight of the knife in her hand was comforting, and the red
of Kyoji's blood on it made her feel giddy. Now to just stay away
from Kyoji so she could set him up for a most delicious ambush.
Moving in an almost random pattern through the house, Kodachi
wondered where it would be best to lie in wait. She needed some place
she would have plenty of room to move, but that restricted Kyoji's
movement, his retreat.
There was that little area in the cellar, down by the family's
wine casks. That would do just perfectly. Laughing lightly, she
called out, "Brother! Where are you? I seem to have lost you
somewhere in the house! Now I'll have no one to play with in the
basement!"
"Don't worry about me, Little Sister, I'm close enough," Kodachi
heard him reply.
He _was_ close. Much closer than she had expected, but she
hadn't been considering his training, and that could prove to be a
fatal mistake in the future. But no, she was Kodachi Kuno and she
would not be defeated by her insane brother.
Tatewaki lifted his head, his body aching all over with the pain
especially concentrated in his chest. Kyoji must have gotten an extra
helping of steroids or something with the power behind that blow.
The pain itself was bearable, but when he heard Kodachi taunting
Kyoji, leading him to the basement... Tatewaki tried to call out,
tell her not to go down there, but he couldn't force enough air out of
his lungs.
Gods, if his new suit was ruined, he'd be really mad. Somehow
he managed to get himself to his feet.
Kodachi flowed down the hallways of the basement. It was
perfect. She could hide atop the immense cask, nestled in the
comforting darkness, then suddenly leap out and use her weapon.
"Kodachi!!"
Stopping, Kodachi looked to where the whisper had come from. In
a tiny alcove decorated by cobwebs, she found both her parents hiding.
"Mother, what are you doing here?" Surely there were better places in
the basement they could have hid.
"Kodachi, you need to..." Midori started to say.
"Little Sister, where have you gone? I'm still willing to play
if you'll just come out from your hiding spot."
"He's close, Mother. I can hold him off. I'm perfectly capable
of..."
"No, Kodachi. With us here, we'll be his first targets. He'll
try to weaken your resolve. I know you're quite capable of killing
him, but don't let him use us to defeat you. I couldn't bare to know
I've hurt you further."
Kodachi considered her mother's words for a moment and nodded.
"You're right, of course. I'll..."
She cried out as Kyoji slammed his fist into her ribs, breaking
several. She gave a short scream before she crumpled to the ground,
five feet away.
Pushing his wife behind him, Tamon faced his wayward son.
"Kyoji, don't do this. Don't be a fool."
Kyoji glared at him. "Shut up, old man! You've never done
anything for me! I should kill you right now for not being a father."
"Then you do that. You do that, Kyoji. Kill me and see what
that accomplishes." He was making a very noble effort to dissuade his
son, but he knew that it would be in vain.
"As you request." Kyoji, instead of making it quick, snapped
his arm forward, fingers extended, and drove them into his father's
chest, just over the heart.
With the sudden and powerful shock, Tamon's heart just stopped,
like a toy with batteries... it was just dead.
Tamon clutched his chest, eyes wide with surprise, and made a
choking noise. Time seemed to slow as he sank to his knees before
Kyoji. For a moment, his mouth moved and a gurgling noise emerged.
Midori watched with horror as he fell to the floor, eyes glazing
over, lifeless. "You... you..."
"Yes, I killed him. He deserved it. And now you, Mother." Kyoji's
wild eyes focused on hers, drinking in her fear and horror. And, oh
my, was that outrage? He couldn't help but laugh. "Goodbye, Mother.
I blame you for all of this. I hope this makes you feel better about
what you've done."
Kyoji drew his hand back to deliver the blow that would crush
his mother's windpipe.
Without any previously typical insane laugh or cry of attack,
Kodachi thrust her knife between Kyoji's two lower ribs to the hilt.
Kyoji yelped in surprise and pain, jerking away. He hit the
opposite wall and clawed at the spear of fire that was invading his
side.
Kodachi, clutching her ribs, trying not to let the pain cloud
her mind totally, took her mother's arm and pulled her away from the
struggling maniac.
The two hurried from the basement as quickly as they could
manage, waiting to hear the sounds of Kyoji following them. Kodachi
was barely concentrating on her stumbling footsteps, being supported
by her mother, because every movement made her feel the broken
splinters of ribs, digging into parts they shouldn't be.
"Just need... a little room... I slowed him down," Kodachi
said, dragging herself along.
"No, Kodachi. I'll call up the authorities and they'll take
care of Kyoji. He'll..."
"I can do it, Mother. Let me do it," Kodachi pleaded.
"You're too severely injured. We need to get you out of here
now and to a hospital." The two were slowly making it to the door.
Escape was beginning to look like a very real possibility.
Kodachi started to protest, but hard coughs stopped her. Flecks
of blood decorated her lips.
"No, Kodachi... I think you have a punctured lung. I can't let
you fight Kyoji," Midori said worriedly. "We have to hurry."
They were as far as the open front foyer now, moving as fast as
Kodachi's ribs would allow. "We're almost there," her mother assured.
"Just a little farther." Getting out of the house was only the first
step though, because Kyoji wouldn't have any problem with killing them
out in the open. And what had happened to Tatewaki? Surely he
wasn't... dead.
The door was thrown open at that moment, barely hanging on its
hinges from Kyoji's original entry, and once again, he darkened the
doorway. The wound on his side was bleeding heavily, staining his
clothing all up and down his side.
"You two aren't going any further than this room. No more
surprises, Little Sister. No more games. Now you die." He stared at
them coldly, the grin on his face not matching his eyes at all. "I've
already taken care of Little Brother," he said, walking toward the two
women slowly. "You two are all that's left."
He left behind bloody footprints as his bare feet crunched over
a half shattered vase.
"Hello? Is anyone here?" a voice came from the doorway. A
person in a Furinkan girl's uniform appeared.
Everyone seemed to freeze at this new presence, but only for a
moment. Kodachi was first to react. "Nabiki Tendo, run!" she yelled.
Unfortunately, Nabiki was not nearly as fast as Kodachi, or
Kyoji, to react. He spun around, just a few feet from the door, and
was about to deliver a blow that would practically knock her head off.
A flash of silver in the air and precise timing managed to knock
Kyoji's hand to the side, sending a spray of crimson blood to hit
Nabiki in the face.
She jerked back from the sudden warm dampness and the man
howling in pain in front of her. "I just..." she started to say.
Kyoji yanked the small dagger from his hand and threw it aside,
embedding it in the door frame next to Nabiki's head. He turned
around and looked at Kodachi and his mother backing away slowly.
Emerging from a side hall, one hand clutched to his chest, the
other still poised in the position of throwing, came Tatewaki. "You
haven't finished me off yet, Brother."
"Brother?" Nabiki blurted out and instantly regretted it.
Kyoji turned to her. "Yes, brother. They've kept their secrets
well, haven't they?" He grabbed Nabiki's arm and yanked her into the
house. "And you can be the witness to the end of this pathetic excuse
for a family."
Nabiki stumbled forward as Kyoji pushed her and tripped over a
shattered table. She fell to the floor and stayed there. No one made
any move to help her, and she seemed to realize the advantage to
staying down out of the direct line of sight.
"Now that we're all here..." Kyoji strode forward quickly and
grasped Kodachi's neck in his injured hand, blood drooling from the
wound. "You, you little snot, stuck that knife in me. I think I'll
kill you last." He struck his mother sharply in the stomach, sending
her to the floor gasping for breath.
"But first, I'll take care of Little Brother," Kyoji explained,
dragging Kodachi along as he approached Tatewaki. He was in no better
shape to resist than Kodachi had been, and soon he was gasping for
breath with his brother's hand on his windpipe.
"Look, Mother, at what you've done," Kyoji commanded, facing
her. "Look what I'm forced to do." He shook each of his siblings
slightly. Kodachi's face was already pale and it was obvious she
wouldn't be conscious for too much longer.
She was having a hard time keeping her head upright and her
vision kept fading in and out. Kyoji's grip on her neck was like a
vise and her legs were too weak to kick out, but she had one last
trick.
Kodachi glanced over at her brother, equally snared in Kyoji's
powerful grip. Whatever had happened to him, he looked to be of no
use at all.
Reaching down, attempting to be subtle, she tried to pull the
knife out from under her shirt, and was just able to get her fingers
on the grip. She thought that Kyoji was still talking, and that would
distract him, but she couldn't hear very well. There was only the
sound of her labored breathing and her blood rushing through her head.
In what was meant to be a quick strike to Kyoji's stomach just
below the diaphragm, Kodachi's hand emerged with the knife held barely
between her fingers at slightly more than a snail's pace.
Kyoji laughed at her feeble attempt. "Little Sister, still
playing games, I see." He shook her violently for five seconds, the
knife falling to the floor and Kodachi entering the realm of
unconsciousness.
"Anything from you, Little Brother?" Kyoji asked, eyeing
Tatewaki. When he received no response, he began speaking to his
mother again. "I don't understand why it had to be me. Why would you
use your own children?"
"Because," Midori answered, coughing slightly, "if it wasn't me,
no one would have agreed to providing lab space, materials and money.
Without some sort of guarantee that the project would continue
forward..."
"So for your precious experiment, you sacrificed me. You made
me your science whore because everyone else was smart enough to not
want to give up their children! But not you! Not the great genius
Kuno... Your science was more important than your family!" he
screamed at her. "And look what it's done. Your science has killed
us all finally."
Tatewaki wasn't listening. He was doing his best to appear
mostly unconscious. It seemed that very soon, he wouldn't need to
pretend. Whatever had happened earlier, possibly a collapsed lung,
and with Kyoji's hand choking him, he wasn't getting enough air. He
needed to act fast.
"And you," Kyoji said, directing his attention to Nabiki, "I
don't know why you're here or why Little Brother bothered to save you
when he had the perfect chance to take me out... Maybe Little
Brother's gone soft... not that he was ever much to begin with."
Nabiki looked at Kyoji, met his gaze, and tried very hard to
hide just how fearful she was. She got the distinct feeling that
attempting to talk her way out of the situation would do very little
good.
"I'm not sure if I want to kill you or not..."
A detestable thought entered Nabiki's mind, which Kyoji seemed
to read.
"He snorted at her. "I'm not interested in little girls. If I
let you live it would be so you could tell everyone about how the
great Kuno family treats its children!"
Nabiki shrunk back from the outburst. The whole situation was
worse than she could have ever imagined a hostage situation. This
wasn't any of her business, it had just been... She just wished she
hadn't been so greedy and tried to drop off Kuno's homework (for a
modest fee).
Tatewaki felt cold as ice. He wasn't sure if it was from his
injuries, Kyoji's hold on him, or the determination that he felt. He
would finish this.
He tested his arm subtly and found that he still had strength. That
was all he needed. With his other arm, he began to fight against
Kyoji's grip, trying to pry his fingers off.
Kyoji laughed at the effort with true amusement. "What's wrong,
Little Brother? Air supply getting low?" he asked, now seemingly in
high spirits.
Tatewaki increased his struggles, now kicking his feet and using
his other hand. He squeezed Kyoji's arm just below the elbow, digging
his fingertips into the soft flesh there.
Kyoji continued to laugh, finding the whole situation to be a
great joke. "Keep it up. Struggle until all your strength is gone,
Little Brother."
Tatewaki moved his hands up to Kyoji's bicep.
"Little Brother, you are so entertaining!" Kyoji said with glee.
"You would think that, wouldn't you?" Tatewaki said, his eyes
opening to glare at his brother.
Kyoji's laughter stopped and he looked at Tatewaki with
surprise. "You're not..."
"No, I'm not," Tatewaki said, moving his arm ever so slightly.
"Good night, Brother," he said and released the spring clip. The
blade jumped into his hand, then willingly slid into Kyoji's neck.
Kyoji maintained the look of surprise on his face even as a gout
of blood jetted out of his neck and splattered on Tatewaki's arm.
Tatewaki felt Kyoji's hand spasming on his neck, then loosen and fall
away. He fell to the floor and gasped desperately for breath.
The same happened to Kodachi as the only thing holding her up
released her. She crashed hard to the floor and laid still on the
floor. Her chest was barely moving as she breathed in.
Tatewaki stared at Kyoji as he toppled backward, the weapon
still stuck in his neck. "Where's Father?" he asked, staring at the
still twitching body of his brother.
"Kyoji... got to him," his mother answered. She looked at
Kodachi, feeling a little stunned at the events that had just
happened. She should have been ready for it all and found that she
wasn't in the least. Just sitting on the floor, she realized there
were people she needed to call, things to be taken care of.
Crawling over to a phone that had been sitting on a busted
table, she dialed an emergency number as relief began to creep into
her.
She licked her lips and took deep even breaths before she
started speaking. "Yes, he's dead. Send a pair of ambulances. Both
my children are seriously hurt." She paused for a moment and closed
her eyes. "He's... dead too." Hanging up the phone, she watched
Tatewaki hover protectively over Kodachi and wondered how things would
have been if this work hadn't motivated her so.
"Wha... what's going on here?" Nabiki finally got the nerve to
ask.
"Things you were never meant to see... Are you injured?" Midori
answered.
"No, I think I'm fine."
"That's good to hear. Do you know my children?"
"Uh... yeah." Nabiki looked at Tatewaki in his suit, kneeling
by Kodachi. "I think so."
"Oh. Well, they'll be... leaving home for a while. I hope you
don't miss them too much. And please inform their friends; I wouldn't
want anyone to be too worried."
"I, uh... sure."
In an impossibly short amount of time, two ambulances arrived,
driving across the lawn to sit outside the door. A black van and a
large, black sedan also pulled up. A team of paramedics burst through
the door and rushed to Tatewaki and Kodachi to tend to them.
A smaller group of men, some armed with handguns, followed and
dragged Kyoji's body away. Nabiki couldn't help but stare at the red
streak left behind.
Two men in suits entered the house after the body had been
removed and approached Midori. "Doctor, are you sure you're not
injured?" one asked.
"No, I'm fine."
"Shall we reset the controls on your children?"
Midori shook her head, looking at the paramedics surrounding
Tatewaki and Kodachi. "No, they're awake now. This is as good a time
as any. But they won't be interned for government service when the
work is completed," she said sternly. "If that's what they want, I'll
give up the research, but not my children."
Watching with eyes both sad and pleased, she spoke wistfully as
Kodachi was wheeled away on one stretcher. "I must speak with my son
now. I told him that I would be there when he awoke," she said and
headed over to him.
"Doctor, what about..." The man motioned to Nabiki, still on
the floor.
"Oh, well..." What was she to do? "I don't really know what to
tell you, young lady," Midori said, speaking to Nabiki. "The best I
can do is offer you monetary compensation and recommend a good
therapist."
Nabiki just looked up at her, stunned.
"I know." Midori held out her hand to the men, who quickly gave
her a pen and a small pad of paper. "When you truly want answers,
call this number," she said, writing it down on the paper. She handed
it to Nabiki. Speaking to the men again, she said, "Gentlemen, please
give the young lady a ride home."
"Doctor, won't you be..."
"No, I'm going in the ambulance with my son. We have some
catching up to do. The family will be staying together from now on."
She dismissed the men and walked over to Tatewaki.
The paramedics were attempting to strap him to the stretcher so
they could move him, but he was resisting their attempts. They had
gotten him to remove his jacket and were trying to get his vital
signs; he wasn't cooperating.
Midori smiled and slipped her hand into his. "I'm here,
Tatewaki," she said, and he immediately settled down.
He looked at his mother with adoration and allowed himself to be
strapped down and attended to.
The two men helped Nabiki to her feet. "Let's get you home,
miss," one said to her.
She looked at them, then back at the stretcher that was just
being wheeled away. "Kuno-chan?" she called out tentatively.
He showed no sign that he had heard her.
"Kuno-chan?" she called out louder this time. For some reason,
she wanted him to acknowledge her. She needed to know that it hadn't
all been some dream and that everyone was who they appeared to be.
She needed to know... "Who are you?" she yelled.
Midori looked back at her, still holding Tatewaki's hand. She
held her own hand, pinky and thumb extended, next to her head, then
pointed at Nabiki's hands.
Nabiki looked down at the paper, then at the people all getting
into the back of the ambulance. The doors closed, shutting them out
of her view, and the vehicles roared away, lights flashing.
That was the last Nerima saw of the Kuno family.
[EPILOGUE]
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