Subject: [FFML] [fic][GT Project]Closing the Chapter - Original
From: "TimeRunner" <keiichi@i-manila.com.ph>
Date: 5/3/2000, 10:22 AM
To: "FFML" <ffml@fanfic.com>

Closing the Chapter

story by TimeRunner
GT Project Repost

-----

      Ryoga stared at the unopened envelope in his hand. Finely 
written and meticulously detailed calligraphy on the back ironically 
told him the whole story in stark clarity.
      'From Saotome Ranma and Tendo Akane'.
      With trembling hands he carefully opened the envelope and read 
the card inside.

      Afterwards, he replaced the card into the envelope, closed it 
slowly, and set it down on his bed. He turned around and picked up his 
backpack, which he slung over his back. "One month," he finally said. 
"One month to clear my mind. One month to be alone with my thoughts." 
He took the torn photo-wallet that lay on his dresser, illuminated by 
a lamp which he turned off before he left his room. He stared at it 
for a moment before placing it in his pocket.
      As he crossed through the front doorway of his house, he laughed 
to himself softly. "Here I go again," he said, "running away from my 
pain. Heh, although I do prefer the term, 'going on a journey to clear 
my mind'."
      He wasn't sure where he was going, but then again, he never was.

      A car passed him by as he walked along the highway going 
to...wherever it was going, it was away from the city. Its headlights 
shone on him as it passed him by.
      A thought, a single name flashed in his mind, and it left him 
standing still on the side of the road. Silently, he bowed his head, 
weeping.

      In the darkness of the tunnel, he walked on.
      Blinking back tears, he tightly grasped the straps of his 
backpack, nails digging into his palm...He clutched onto the physical 
pain, desperately using it to block out the emotional pain he could 
not bear...
      Blood stained his nails and dripped onto the road.

      Emerging from the tunnel, fresh air and sunlight greeted him, in 
contrast to the dark sky and city lights he had left behind. Amid the 
rice paddies and fields, he continued onward, head bowed. Birds 
chirped, leaves rustled in the summer breeze, and the sun shone on a 
particularly beautiful day.

      Shoes dusty from the dirt road he found himself on, he strove to 
walk on...
      In the shade of an old tree, near the edge of a waterfall, Ryoga 
took off his backpack and dropped it on the ground. He choked back a 
sob, and fell to his knees, weeping bitterly.
      He desperately searched his mind for the reason why he loved 
Akane so much... He clutched at everything his mind could grasp at... 
her face... her eyes... her kindness... her courage... the way she 
spoke... the way she walked... the way she laughed... the way she 
understood him when no one else did...
      ...In an effort to rip it out of his soul, to amputate it, to 
end the pain...
      ...But he could not put a name to his love. He could not cut it 
off from himself, because it WAS himself, and to name his love would 
cheapen it...would limit it to the point of farce, of cliche...
      
      In the shade of an old tree, near the edge of a waterfall, Ryoga 
found the elusive feeling that poets sought after in order to capture 
in words and set syllables, the emotion that songs attempted to convey 
in notes and lyrics...
      He had found it, and he was at a loss for words.

      The setting sun and the rising moon were witness to a young man, 
camped on a cliff overlooking the cold northern sea, waves crashing 
onto the rocks below. He was silent, tracing the horizon with his 
eyes...He stared into the sun, and stretched out his hand, as if to 
touch it...He shook his head as he drew his hand back, and he turned 
back...

      Having passed through another tunnel (or was it the same one?) 
and having walked for...an indeterminate period, he found himself 
crossing forests and bamboo groves, and finally...
      He was staring into the lone mountain that broke the horizon.
      Fuji-san.

      It has been said that a man could find enlightenment by climbing 
to the top of this mountain once, and so, Ryoga strove to do just 
that.
      The summer weather had been kind, and Ryoga found he had less to 
contend with the cold of the snows covering the peak and more with the 
loose handholds and footholds the melting snows had created.

      He reached the peak.
      And, in the loneliness at the top of Fuji-san, he saw the land 
in all its splendor, all its glory, awash in the light of the full 
moon. And instead of the magnitude of it all showing him the 
insignificance of himself, he felt...alive. More alive than he had 
ever felt in his entire life. And he realized the meaning of his pain.
      For long moments, he stood, arms outstretched, on the top of 
Fuji-san, staring at the sky, at the deep all-encompassing blueness...
      He wept silently as he did this, and he realized that the pain 
meant what he thought it did, all along...
      "The measure of one's love," he said to himself, repeating 
something he had once heard but could never really understand before, 
"is in the sorrow of its passing. If one is afraid of sorrow, one can 
never fully love..."
      In the span of a moment, as long as the full height of the moon 
to the rising of the sun, Ryoga drank in the bittersweetness of his 
pain...and remembered...
            
---

      ...The photo wallet!
      He had grasped one end, and Ranma grasped the other. Ranma was 
going to fall unless he held on!
      He felt it give! He felt it being torn down the middle by 
Ranma's weight!
      With a resounding final rip, Ranma fell, one end still clutched 
in his hand... Ryoga could only watch as Ranma plummeted to whatever 
awaited him below...
      Ryoga opened his hand and stared at the end he grasped. The end 
he had chosen to hold on to.

---

      In the light of the morning sun, Ryoga stared at his torn photo 
wallet. At the picture of Akari.
      "I knew," said Ryoga to himself. "I knew all along. I chose 
Akari because I knew. I chose Akari because I had already realized 
it...and I was only lying to myself because I was..."
      Ryoga shut his eyes as he forced the words out. "...Because I 
was afraid to let go. And yet I knew..." He shook his head violently, 
trying to rid his mind of the thought...
      "No." That last was a whisper, which grew into a shout, a scream 
erupting from within his chest..."NO! I CANNOT BELIEVE IT! IT'S NOT 
TRUE! IT'S A LIE!!!"

      A pillar of light streaked from the top of Fuji-san, briefly 
illuminating the night sky. 

      Ryoga bowed his head, the blast falling over and around him, the 
blinding light hiding his tears from whomever might be watching. And 
with that, Ryoga abandoned his enlightenment, the truth he had 
discovered on the lonely peak of Fuji-san.


      Ryoga made his way down the slope and started back to Nerima, 
wherever that was...
      I will not let go, vowed Ryoga. I will not succumb to...the 
nothingness...to the lack of feeling that lurks at the edge of my 
pain...the numbness that threatens to engulf me if I let go. I will 
not let go. I will not.

      Ryoga never believed that the eyes were the windows of the soul, 
because of the mere fact that no one he met could read his emotions. 
Not Ranma, not his father, not Kasumi, not Mr. Tendo, not even Akane. 
Everyone seemed oblivious to the way he felt, and the place seemed 
blanketed by the happiness of the occasion.
      Ryoga found this oppressive.
      Strangely enough, he was the first guest to arrive, and he 
waited inside the living room. His kimono felt unusually stifling, and 
he refused the green tea offered to him.
      Why did I even come here? thought Ryoga. Why did I even bother 
to dignify this occasion by coming here?
      He heard Kasumi's voice from somewhere upstairs..."Oh, Akane, 
you look beautiful in your kimono!"
      "Oh, you're just saying that..."
      She is the reason. She is the reason for everything.

      The wedding was to be held in the Tendo dojo, in the traditional 
Shinto manner. Akane had not quite arrived yet, and Ranma shifted 
around, looking uncomfortable. Ryoga had to admit to himself, Ranma 
looked almost...regal in his formal kimono, although he still managed 
to retain that boyish arrogance in his expression.
      Shampoo was obviously restraining herself from disrupting the 
ceremonies like last time. Ryoga wasn't quite sure about the details, 
only that she was bound by some code of honor not to interfere. She 
bit her lower lip as she looked at Ranma, and sighed. Mousse put a 
hand to hers, looked at her and shook his head slowly, and she 
abruptly turned to look at him, appearing to strike...But she simply 
sighed and turned away, although she clasped Mousse's hand all the 
more tightly.
      Kodachi's face was unreadable. Actually, Ryoga thought, it 
seemed unnaturally calm... calm perhaps to the point of... madness? 
Had she snapped? Or had she finally come to her senses? Whatever it 
that was keeping her to her seat was working, and she showed as little 
sign as Shampoo showed as to disrupting the wedding.
      Kuno. Now here was something strange. He had challenged Ranma to 
some duel to the death, which Ranma promptly won. Ranma then spared 
his life, which left Kuno indebted by honor to Ranma. Ranma told him 
never to bother Akane again. Apparently, Kuno WAS a man of his word 
after all, and kept his promise. Kuno was now muttering something 
about his pig-tailed goddess, whom, if Ranma had his way, he would 
never, EVER, see again.
      And then his eyes turned to Ukyo.
      Her smile, her eyes...they spoke volumes to Ryoga, the way he 
never thought his own eyes would. It was love that shone in her eyes, 
pure and unconditional love...all the more tragic because it was 
unrequited, like his own...

      Ranma will never know how much you love him, Ukyo. He doesn't 
realize now, and he never will. He thinks he does, because you've told 
him about it, and still he chose Akane. But you see...your words could 
never possibly convey how deeply you feel for him. The only way he 
would possibly be able to know is if he loved you, and he doesn't...at 
least, not the way you want, not the way he should...

      He suddenly saw something in Ukyo's eyes that...disturbed him. 
It was an emotion, no, a decision, that he feared. She somehow 
seemed...at peace...because of whatever it was, and yet he knew - he 
vowed - he would never make that decision. And yet, he envied her, he 
envied the peace she had found...

      And then Akane arrived.
      For a moment, the world around Ryoga stopped, and all he was 
aware of was her...
      She was beautiful...breathtaking in her wedding kimono...Her 
face was alight with happiness, complemented by the jewels she wore, 
partly hidden by the veil...her hair arranged as such...
      Her eyes...Her eyes sparkled with...life. That was the only word 
Ryoga could find to call it. Akane was fully alive, and her joy 
brought mixed tears into Ryoga's eyes, tears of happiness for Akane 
mixed with bitter tears for himself...

      Through a haze of detachment, Ryoga witnessed the ceremony as it 
unfolded around him. From outside the void within himself, he saw and 
felt every detail...the shy smile on Akane's face as she looked at 
Ranma...the rustle of cloth as Ranma shifted around nervously in his 
kimono...the bittersweet tears welling up in Ukyo's eyes... 
      He heard the priest intone the traditional prayers... He saw the 
texture of the bread as it was being shared by Akane and Ranma...the 
awkwardness of Ranma's chewing and the delicateness of Akane's... 
      He saw Ranma nearly spill his sake in his nervousness...he saw 
Akane's hidden smile as she pretended not to notice while keeping her 
eyes to the floor... 
      He felt the apprentice hand the cup of sake over to him, and 
tasted the quality of the rice wine on his tongue...he felt the burn 
of the sake as it passed down his throat...
      All these details would be lost from his memory forever, all 
that transpired would be as a blur to him, and he would not be able to 
recall a single detail in retrospect...simply because he had detached 
himself, in an effort to keep his sanity.

      The haze shattered in a moment of intense clarity.
      Ranma was kissing Akane.
      Ryoga bit his lip as he tried to shut the image out...he tasted 
blood...
      He reached into his pocket and tightly clasped the half of the 
photo wallet that contained Akari's photo...
      ...His fingers traced the torn edge, and he was suddenly 
reminded of his decision... of the half that Ranma had taken with 
him...

      Ryoga absently picked at his food, hardly noticing how much 
Akane and Ranma's parents must have spent on it. He was listening to 
Mr. Tendo's attempted speech for the newlyweds, which was interspersed 
with sobs every two words. 
Mr. Saotome was helping him out and was patting his friend on 
the back. His arm was around Mrs. Saotome, who was beaming in pride 
for her son and wiping tears from the corners of her eyes.
      He tried to drown these images and sounds out in sake and his 
own thoughts.

      I should be happy. I mean, I'm happy with Akari. She cares for 
me deeply and I care for her...She gives me this warm feeling inside 
whenever I think of her. I should be content. I think I am 
content...but is contentment what I want?
      It's not your fault, Akari...I'm just a fool. I know how much 
you care for me, and I truly am happy that you do. I truly 
am...happy...
      He looked up from his cup and saw Akane's smiling face, radiant 
as she gazed into her husband's eyes...he read the joy in her eyes and 
it pierced him to the core.

      Ryoga choked back the tears as he screamed inside himself.
      DAMN IT!!! I love her! I'm supposed to feel happy for her, I'm 
supposed to share in her happiness... BUT I CAN'T! WHY?! Why can't I 
find it inside my self to do so? Am I truly that shallow? Is my love 
for her real? DO I REALLY LOVE HER?!
      Ryoga suddenly laughed bitterly to himself, the edge of his 
laughter pointing inward at himself. Maybe I really am unworthy for 
her, after all, he thought. I mean, I can't even be happy for her, so 
what's there that I have that can possibly justify my love for her?
      "Hey."
      He found himself looking into Ukyo's eyes. She was smiling, 
although her eyes expressed an emotion other than happiness. And 
that... thing... was still in her eyes.
      "Ukyo?"
      She turned away for a moment, and said in a voice loud enough 
for everyone to hear, "Boy, this sake's strong. I think I need some 
fresh air to clear my head." She turned back to him and asked him, "Do 
you want to come along? I could sure use some company."

      Ryoga and Ukyo sat on the porch, facing the fishpond. Long 
moments of silence passed between both of them, as sounds of laughter 
came from inside the dojo. 
      Finally, Ryoga asked Ukyo, "Are you happy for Ranma?"
      "Huh? Oh. Yes, I am..." Ukyo sighed. "No, not exactly. I AM 
happy for him because he's happy, and yet..."
      Ryoga said, as he pitched a pebble into the fish pond, "And yet 
you feel sad, because you know that he's happy not because he loves 
you, but because he loves Akane."

      For a long moment, Ukyo was silent. Ryoga immediately regretted 
his words, and said, "Um...I'm sorry, I didn't mean to..."
      Ukyo shook her head. "It... It's okay, Ryoga. You're right. But 
then again, who am I to stop him from having his happiness with 
another person?"
      "Who are you? You're the one who loves him, that's who you are!"
      "THAT DOESN'T MATTER ANYMORE, DOES IT?!" snapped Ukyo. Her 
expression softened, though, and she added, "I'm sorry...it's just 
that..."
      "I understand," Ryoga said, nodding slowly. 'I understand'. Why 
did I say that? I hate that phrase! he thought. It sounds so 
patronizing, no matter whom it comes from. Even if Akane told it to 
me. No, especially if she told it to me. That's the last thing I want 
to hear from her. So why did I say it? I said it because... I didn't 
know what else to say. Nothing else seemed right. 
      He bowed his head in sudden realization. He kept his head bowed 
for a long, agonizing moment, fighting back waves of shame and guilt; 
then he shook his head and turned to face Ukyo.
      Ukyo turned back to look at the pond, but it was obvious to 
Ryoga that she was fighting back her tears. "...It's just that...if he 
knew how much I loved him, and he still chose her...who am I to tell 
him otherwise?"
      No, he doesn't know how much you love him, thought Ryoga, and he 
never will. "You've...you've accepted this," he said instead. It was 
not a question.
      Ukyo sighed. "Yes. What CAN I do but accept?"
      "But," Ryoga asked, "aren't you afraid that once you forget him, 
you'll find that whatever it was that made your senses so much clearer 
will be gone? That you'd go numb?"
      Ukyo's expression hardened, her jaw set. "No."
      "But..."
      She shook her head, firmly this time. "I'm not afraid of that, 
Ryoga. Do you want to know why?"
      Ryoga nodded slowly.
      Ukyo sighed, and said, "It's because I know - I KNOW - that I 
will never forget him, no matter what. Not even if I end up with 
someone else. The thought of him will always linger somewhere in the 
back of my mind, and it will always be there." At Ryoga's silent 
assent, she continued. "It's painful to think about, I know. But you 
see, that's what makes everything so clear. That the meaning of my 
pain is that I am alive, and that I am truly capable of loving. I know 
now that no one can accuse me of being shallow, because I know I have 
truly felt love for another. Whether or not the love was returned 
really makes no difference. I have loved. That's all that matters." 

      No one said anything for a long while after that. The two of 
them just sat there, staring at the koi pond, Ryoga pitching pebbles 
into it every so often.
      Ukyo seemed to laugh at some secret joke only she knew. She 
chuckled softly to herself, then the chuckle faded, leaving a strange, 
wistful expression on her face that Ryoga could not figure out. Then 
he knew what it was.
      She was holding back her tears.
      An ache filled Ryoga, and he had to turn away. He stared at the 
pebble in his hand for a moment before throwing it, and he watched it 
lazily arc before falling into the pond. He had no idea what to say, 
he had no idea what to feel at the moment. He couldn't even listen, 
because nothing was being said. He couldn't bring himself to look at 
the expression on Ukyo's face, because it made him feel so helpless to 
do anything to comfort her.
      Comfort her. What an odd thought. Comfort Ukyo. The thought, the 
feeling had never crossed his mind before. It had never occurred to 
him to do something like that for her. Was it because they both gave 
the impression that each hated the other's guts? No, that wasn't it. 
It was because... It was because she had never dropped her guard like 
this before. It was because she always had this air of having it all 
together. It was because he had always thought she didn't need it. And 
now that she did, he didn't know what to do. Or how to do it. It 
always seemed so inappropriate for him to do anything for Ukyo. He 
tried to speak, tried to say something to comfort her, to ease her 
pain, but his mouth seemed to dry up, and before he could put it into 
words, he felt the moment pass, and so he said nothing.
      
      "What about you, Ryoga?" Ukyo finally asked, breaking the 
silence.
      For a moment, Ryoga was silent, then he said, "I feel the way 
you feel, to a point. That the pain is what tells me I'm alive, that 
having loved is what matters and not whether it's returned or 
not...but," he added, "I can't let go. I can't."
      "Why?"
      Ryoga swallowed hard, and finally said, "Because I'm afraid, 
Ukyo. I'm afraid that once I let go, I'll go numb... That I'll lose 
whatever it is that tells me that I'm alive."
      Ukyo shrugged. "I was afraid, too."
      Ryoga frowned, slightly. "I know that."
      "Let her go, Ryoga. If you love Akane, let her go. If you don't, 
do you truly love her?"
      Ryoga scowled at this and stood up, pointing a finger at Ukyo. 
"Don't you DARE tell me whether I love Akane or not! Don't you DARE 
make me prove my love for her! What would YOU know about it, anyway?!"
      Ukyo sighed and said, "I'm sorry, I shouldn't have..."
      But Ryoga would have none of it. "I'M the one who defended her 
when she needed me, I'M the one who watched over her sleep when she 
ran away from home, I'M the one who left when I thought I wasn't noble 
enough for her, and I'M the one who spent countless nights crying 
myself to sleep thinking about her! So don't you DARE tell me what I 
should and should not do to prove that I love her!"
      Ukyo simply shook her head, eyes not leaving the pond. "I see 
your point, but... I wouldn't be saying these things if I didn't 
believe they were true."
      "I...." She's right, Ryoga realized. "I...I know."
      Ukyo suddenly stared at Ryoga, wide-eyed. "R... Ryoga..."
      "I..." Ryoga took out his photo wallet. He handed it to Ukyo. "I 
realize now. I had already chosen, long ago. I've known it for a long 
time, and I knew it when I chose to save Akari's photo instead of 
Akane's. I was just lying to myself the whole time, thinking I would 
win her over from Ranma...But I'm afraid to let go, Ukyo."
      Ukyo handed the photo wallet back to Ryoga, and silently stared 
at him, nodding softly.
      Ryoga chuckled to himself and continued, "You know, I've been 
thinking of getting rid of this photo wallet. You know, getting a new 
one to put Akari's photo in?"
      He traced the torn edge with his finger. "It reminds me too much 
of Akane, which really isn't fair to Akari. But I can't seem to bring 
myself to get rid of it, because I'm afraid that if I do, I'd be 
letting go of a part of myself that I don't want to let go of, that 
I'd be ending a part of my life that I don't want to end."
      Ukyo closed her eyes and shook her head. "This part of your life 
has to end, Ryoga. It already has ended for Akane. Why insist on 
prolonging a chapter that no one else is a part of anymore?"
      "Excuse me," said Kasumi as she arrived from the dojo, "but 
Ranma and Akane want you to say a few words, Ryoga."
      Ukyo looked at Ryoga, then said, "He'll be right there," to 
Kasumi, then turned back to Ryoga. "Well?"
      Ryoga sighed. "I...I'll be there in a minute, Kasumi." 
      After Kasumi had left, Ukyo turned to Ryoga and said, "Well, 
they're waiting for us."
      "I can't, Ukyo," Ryoga pleaded. "You know that..."
      "No, I don't know it, Ryoga," Ukyo said, arms crossed in front 
of her. "And if you have any love for Akane at all...you'll at least 
say something nice to her and... and Ranma."
      Ryoga simply stared down at the ground, caught in indecision...
      "Well?" said Ukyo. "Are you coming or not?" 
      


      "And so, Ranma," said Ryoga to the appreciative audience, "even 
though we always haven't been on the best of terms for the long time 
that we've known each other, I wish you and Akane a good life 
together."
      "Hey, thanks man! You're not all bad after all!" said Ranma, 
smiling at him and kissing Akane on the cheek.
      "To your life together!" said Ukyo as she raised her cup in a 
toast. The others immediately followed suit, adding their own toasts.
      Shampoo said as she raised her own cup, "To Ranma and Akane."
      "To brides and brides-to-be!" This from Mousse, which drew a 
questioning but amused glance from Shampoo.
      "To me!" This drew uncomfortable glances at Kodachi, who started 
drinking like there was no tomorrow.
      "To Akane Tendo, may you be blessed by the gods." Kuno raised 
his own cup. "You will be needing it, married to that fiend..." he 
added under his breath.
      "To the honeymoon!" At this little joke by Happosai, the entire 
group punched the old lecher through the roof.
      Genma and Nodoka said in unison as they looked at each other, 
"To love and marriage."
      Soun sobbed, "To my late wife's spirit. Dear, I know you're 
watching right now. You must be as proud as I am." Everyone nodded, 
took a moment of silence, then renewed their toasts to the happy 
couple.
      Everyone turned to face Ryoga expectantly...

      Ryoga looked at Ukyo.
      Why can't you understand? he thought, pleading with her 
silently. Don't you see how painful for me this is? Don't you see how 
much pride I have to swallow to do this? To say this thing that is not 
coming from my heart at all?
      Ukyo turned to Ryoga and looked directly into his eyes. She 
simply nodded at him, but the look in her eyes told him she understood 
his pain, and that it showed in his own...
      It showed in his eyes.
      For one, painful moment, Ryoga shut his eyes...He fought it 
back, that terrible urge, but he felt it rising within himself, and he 
could no longer hold it back...
      With a raise of his glass and a conviction in his voice that was 
stronger than anything he had ever felt in his life, he turned to 
Ranma and Akane, and spoke... the emotion, the decision, that 
translated into the painful words that somehow came from the bottom of 
his heart... the words that would end this chapter of his life 
forever...

      "So that we may we all share in it always...To your happiness."

      
      
      TimeRunner, August 24, 1997




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