This is the last chapter! I hope you all like the ending. The HTML version
can be found at my web site:
http://homepage.mac.com/dgoldsmith/writing.html
Note that Steve Pardue has removed "Genma's Daughter" from his web site and
now points people to mine, so if you have a link to "Genma's Daughter",
could you please change the URL to the one above? Thanks! (And thank you,
Steve, for hosting me until I could get my HTML act together, and for
providing the idea for "Genma's Daughter" in the first place.)
As always, all rights to Ranma 1/2 belong to Rumiko Takahashi and
Shougakukan
Equal Halves
By Deborah Goldsmith <dgoldsmith@mac.com>
Chapter 6: There's No Place Like Home
*****
Nodoka closed her eyes and sighed. "Ranma."
Ranma looked up at his mother tentatively. "Yeah, Mom?" He and Ranko
were kneeling in the dojo, facing their mother with an air of subdued
contrition. They'd swapped clothes again, and Ranma had availed himself
of some hot water afterwards.
"Your hair..." She gestured faintly with one hand.
Ranma looked confused. "My hair?..." He reached up to feel it, and
blushed. "Oops." He removed the hair ornament and handed it to Ranko,
then set about rebraiding his pigtail. Ranko bit her lip and started
undoing hers, the hair ornament waiting in her lap. They were both done
in a minute.
Nodoka sighed once more and looked between the two of them. "Whose idea
was this?"
Ranma and Ranko looked sheepishly at each other. "We kinda thought it up
together, Mom."
"And what was the purpose?"
The two of them exchanged glances again. Ranko answered hesitantly,
"Well... we wanted to help Akane feel like Ranma could be her friend,
not just her fiance. So they would get along better, and so... and so
she wouldn't miss me quite as much." Ranko's face tightened; the fact
that she would be seeing her own Akane very soon didn't make her feel
any less guilty about leaving this one behind. Not to mention her
mother.
Nodoka nodded, though she still looked confused. "And?..."
Ranma smiled faintly. "I think it mighta worked. We talked. Actually
talked. We ain't never done that before. She nearly flattened me when
she found out it was me, but she was happy I wanted to try bein' more
like friends." His smile broadened slightly. "I hope we can be."
Nodoka smiled. "I'm glad for that Dear; it's long overdue. But why did
you need to be a girl?"
"Well... Akane and me, we kinda fight outta habit, Mom. Since she
thought I was Ranko, she didn't wanna fight, and I was too nervous she
was gonna find out and kill me."
Nodoka tilted her head. "You're sure there isn't anything else?" Her
look said she knew there was.
Ranko and Ranma exchanged guilty glances. Ranma stared at the floor for
a minute, then mumbled something.
"What was that, Dear? I couldn't hear you."
"I said, it's... it's... it's easier for me to do stuff like that as a
girl."
Nodoka sighed. "I was afraid that might be the case. Ranma, that isn't
very manly. I'm not happy about you learning the violin as a girl,
either. Do you like being a girl?" She unconsciously fiddled with her
katana.
Ranma swallowed, and fears he had thought laid to rest resurfaced.
"N-no! No way!"
She seemed to read his mind. "Dear, your father's promise was to raise
you to be manly. He did--though more by luck then anything else, it
seems. Seppuku was his idea, not mine. I only wanted to see that honor
was satisfied. It has been." Ranma sagged in relief.
"However," Ranma looked up, "I'm concerned about the influence your
curse seems to be having on you. You seem to spend more time in your
girl form than water accidents can account for. Do you want to become a
girl for real, the way Ranko did?"
Ranma looked down, abashed. "N-no, Mom."
"Then you should behave in a more manly fashion."
Ranko was shaking her head. "Mother... I... I don't understand. Do you
think Ranma is dishonorable, or a coward?"
Nodoka was taken aback. "No, of course not! He's very honorable and
brave. More than any mother could hope for."
"Then if he finds his girl form useful, what's wrong with that? It
sounds like it really helped him and Akane."
Nodoka shook her head. "I'm sorry. He's a man. He shouldn't be doing
things like that. It is simply not appropriate."
"Why not? If it helps him, what's wrong with it?"
"Because it isn't /right/. I understand what you are saying, Dear, but I
cannot accept it. It is a matter of how I was raised. And how I wish to
raise /my/ children."
Ranma wasn't sure if his mother realized that she'd said "children," but
Ranko certainly didn't miss it. Her eyes flashed, and there was steel in
both their gazes to rival Nodoka's blade. Ranma swallowed nervously; he
had the uncanny feeling that this family discussion was turning into a
duel of some kind. That, or World War III. If he'd had any doubts that
Ranko was a woman, the way she and his mother coolly regarded one
another erased them.
"Do you know what my mother told me when she found out I was living as a
boy?"
Nodoka blinked. It had slipped her mind that it was another version of
herself who was Ranko's mother. "I imagine I wasn't happy about it."
Ranko nodded. "You weren't. It hurt you terribly. I wouldn't even
believe you were my mother to start with; I just couldn't accept that I
was a girl. I rejected you, and I clung to being Ranma--not because I
wanted to, but because I was too afraid and ashamed to consider anything
else. I hurt you, and I still feel guilty about that.
"But you told me that if I needed to stay a boy, if that was what would
make me happy, then you'd accept that. I could tell you hated the idea,
but you never tried to push me." She shook her head. "Mother, Ranma
isn't going to turn into a girl. I don't think being one particularly
makes him happy. But if his girl form helps him through some
problems..."
Nodoka shook her head. "I don't know why I feel differently in your
world, but I cannot change my opinion on this matter. Ranma must be a
man."
"But he /is/ a man. It's so obvious! So what does it matter if he uses
his curse instead of just suffering from it? I couldn't stand being a
boy any more because I'd been stuck as one for twelve years, but if
Ranma can stomach being a girl sometimes, I say more power to him..."
"It is not appropriate. Men should be manly."
Ranko leaned forward, intent, both hands on her legs. "If he weren't
under so much pressure to be manly, if he didn't feel like he had to
prove himself constantly, he wouldn't feel he needed to be a girl in
order to express his feelings or be friends with his fiancee!"
Ranma tried to make himself as small as possible. He had been right; it
/was/ World War III, and he didn't think there was a fallout shelter
nearby.
Nodoka drew herself up. "It is /not appropriate/. Do I need to keep
repeating myself?" She felt herself losing her temper, something she
hadn't done in years. "Neither is your own behavior."
Ranko flinched as if she'd been struck. She stared at Nodoka, shocked,
and tears started to gather in her eyes. "My... behavior?" Nodoka's
heart tried to tell her to stop, but the heavy weight of her traditional
background overruled it.
"Men and women have different roles in life. You need to understand
that. Even though some women have careers nowadays, you should not be
asking your husband-to-be to perform women's work such as caring for
children or making a home. You are a woman. Your own career should come
behind that of your husband, and your role as a wife and mother."
Ranko's jaw hung open as she stared at this woman who wore her mother's
face. How could this possibly be the same woman who had encouraged her
to explore her talents? Who had praised Ryouga for his modern attitudes
about raising a family (and had told Akane not to settle for less when
she made her own choice)? Who had admired Nabiki for her sharp mind and
business acumen?
She tried to speak, but had trouble finding the words. What could she
possibly say in the face of such a gap in attitudes? She considered just
giving up--she was about to go home, after all--but thought about what
would happen to Ranma if she did. And to Akane. She knew her sister was
deeply passionate about the theater. What would this version of her
mother think of that once Akane was her daughter-in-law? She had to try
one more time.
"Mother... I... I know that is the traditional Japanese view, but... but
I don't think it's fair to either women or men. Why shouldn't women have
careers if they want? And why shouldn't men help raise their own
children or run the household? Why does it have to be women's work and
men's work? Why do we all have to wear straitjackets? Just because it's
traditional? Ranma's straitjacket is strangling him!" Her jaw was set,
and her knuckles were white with frustration.
Nodoka raised her voice. "Young lady, that is quite enough! You are
forgetting yourself!"
Ranko jerked her head away, averting her gaze for what seemed like an
eternity. She didn't speak for a full minute.
When she finally looked back, she seemed to have regained her composure.
"I see." She bowed her head deeply and politely. "I must apologize,
Saotome-sama." Nodoka gasped at the cold form of address and formal
language. "I am afraid I cannot agree with your views, but it was
inexcusably rude of me to have been so outspoken with my own." She rose
smoothly. "If you will excuse me, I should collect my belongings and
return to my own family." She turned to leave.
Ranma looked back and forth between the two women, wanting to do
something to stop this but not having any idea what. Tears started to
spill down his mother's cheeks as they both watched Ranko walk to the
door and put out her hand to open it...
...And pause. She just stood there, her hand on the door, as Ranma and
his mother wondered why. Then she seemed to sag, as if she were growing
old beyond her years in the span of a few seconds. After a moment more
she turned around, and there were tears running down her own face, and
her shoulders were shaking.
Mother and not-quite-daughter gazed at each other for an agonizing
instant before they surged into each other's embrace, both of them
sobbing and whispering "I'm sorry... I'm sorry..." over and over again.
Ranma just sat there with his jaw hanging open. /If I live to be as old
as the mummy, I'm never gonna understand women.../
After a time, they pulled apart, still in each other's arms. Nodoka
dabbed at her eyes. "So this is what it's like to have a daughter, is
it?" She laughed. "Obviously having a son has not prepared me for it."
Ranko shook her head. "I'm sorry, Mother. It isn't my place to tell you
how to run your family. I'm just so worried about Ranma, and... and
Akane."
Nodoka rubbed the back of her finger along Ranko's cheek to dry her
tears. "I know, Dear. I finally realized that. You reminded me--rather
forcefully--that you weren't making these arguments just to be
rebellious."
"I didn't mean to be so cold..."
Nodoka kissed Ranko's forehead and pulled her into another embrace. "I
know." She sighed. "You're very much like I was at your age. As fiery as
our red hair." She sobered. "I assume that in your world, I agree with
your views?" Ranko nodded. "Then I, too, have been presumptious. I must
apologize as well. I must respect your mother's decisions on how to
raise you." She smiled again. "Especially since she is me."
Ranko nodded tentatively. "Mother?"
"Yes?"
"Please... think about what I've said. I know you don't agree with me,
but..."
"But you never give up, do you?" Ranko blushed, and Nodoka looked to
Ranma, who was watching all this with wide eyes. "Just like my son."
Ranma blushed as well.
Ranko opened her mouth to plead again, but was disarmed by the look of
patient amusement on her mother's face, and closed it again. Her mother
was still... her mother.
"And he /is/ my son, Dear. I have his welfare at heart, always. Please
do not go home with this weighing on your mind."
"But..."
Nodoka put a finger to Ranko's lips to shush her. "I know. Dear, I am
only 37, and my ears still work just fine. I have heard everything you
had to say, and I /will/ try to understand what Ranma is going through."
Ranma paled slightly.
Ranko flushed again. "I'm sorry, Mother. Thank you."
Nodoka gently gathered the diminutive redhead into her embrace again.
"Don't be sorry, Dear. If..." her voice broke, "if I had a daughter, I
would want her to be just like you. I'm very proud of you, every bit as
proud as I am of Ranma."
"Mother... I love you."
"I know, Dear. I love you, too."
*****
The family looked up as Ranko and Akane descended the stairs from the
second floor, holding hands tightly. Akane had wanted a proper private
goodbye after Ranma had hijacked her earlier attempt. Both girls' eyes
looked more than a little red.
Ranko sighed. "I guess I'd better collect everything."
Nabiki gestured towards the dining table, where the large envelope Ranko
had received from the Bureau of Mortal Affairs lay. "Don't forget that
stuff. Have you made your wish yet?"
Ranko shook her head. "Not yet." She had been thinking of taking the
coupon home with her, but was starting to worry that it might get lost
or disappear. "I think I'll do that right now. I don't want to take a
chance on losing the coupon on the way." She went to the dining table,
and pulled the coupon out of the envelope, laying it in front of her.
Kasumi ducked into the kitchen, and reappeared with a cup of tea and a
pen, both of which she set in front of Ranko. "The instructions /did/
say to sip a nice cup of tea and think about it carefully."
Ranko and Kasumi shared a smile. "Thank you, Oneechan." Ranko took a big
sip from the cup, and knit her brow.
"Of course you'll cure your family members of their curses, won't you,
child?" asked Genma. Ranma nodded eagerly as well. As useful as the
curse was, he'd gladly be rid of it.
"That's just one of the things I'm thinking about, Father." She resumed
her deliberations. There were so many things she could do with this. She
could wish for happiness for Ranma and Akane, but she had the feeling
that would happen anyway. She could wish to cure the Jusenkyou curses,
both here and at home, and that was definitely worthy of consideration.
She remembered how much she'd disliked hers. Never knowing when you were
going to be hit with water, and transformed against your will...
On the other hand, there were many people around the world who suffered
far more than Jusenkyou victims, who lived in misery, who lost their
lives. Perhaps she should wish for world peace, or a cure for the ills
of Mankind. However, she knew that hers was not the only wish that had
ever been granted, and she knew she was not the only person who would
consider such a wish. Why had none of these worthy goals ever come to
pass?
She knew from painful experience that wishes often had unintended
consequences. Perhaps such wishes had been made before, and not had the
intended effect. Something affecting all of humanity was simply too
dangerous; she did not feel she had the wisdom to make such a wish.
She looked around at the faces of her family; all were looking at her
with anxious anticipation, wondering what her wish would be. All...
except her mother and Akane, who were gazing at her with sad longing, as
if to try to glean every last memory of her that time would allow them.
Suddenly, it came to her what she should do. She opened the pen, set it
to the paper... then hesitated. Following the form's advice, she took
another sip of tea, and tried to think things through one more time. She
tilted her head one way and then the other, then her eyes widened, and
she nodded. She wrote a few brief lines, and signed the coupon. The
moment she lifted her pen from the paper, it vanished in a shower of
sparkling lights.
"Well?" asked Genma. "What did you wish for?"
Ranko stood up, smiling, and shook her head. "It's a surprise." Genma
dashed out the porch and jumped into the pond--and promptly turned into
a panda. It /growfed/ its disappointment, and shuffled into the kitchen
in search of a kettle. Ranma lowered his head, and sighed.
Nodoka asked, "But if you leave without telling us, Dear, how will we
ever know what it is?"
Ranko smiled at her mother. "If it comes true, then... I think you'll
find out." Her mother nodded uncertainly.
Ranko lifted the heavy envelope and headed towards the genkan, the
family following her. As they passed the stairs, Akane's eyes widened.
"Wait just a minute." She dashed upstairs. Ranko's eyes followed her up,
puzzled.
She returned a minute later with the dress Ranko had worn on her
birthday, which she held out. "Here. It will never get worn again if it
stays here. Take it with you, and wear it on your birthdays if nothing
else."
Ranko gasped. "I couldn't! It's so expensive..."
Akane smiled and shook her head. "I bought it for you. I bought it for
you, because... I bought it for a female Ranma, and... and that's who
you are." She held it out again. "Please. I want you to have it."
Ranko nodded, her eyes growing wet again. "Thank you, Sis."
"Here, Ranko-chan, let me give you a bag for that. You'll have too much
to carry otherwise." Kasumi took the dress, folded it neatly, and placed
it in a worn canvas shopping bag from the drawer she kept them in. Akane
took the matching white heels from the shoe rack, and placed them in the
bag as well. Ranko put in the envelope with her forms, and her
portfolio; the bag was pretty full.
Nabiki held out an envelope to Ranko. "I have some photos from your
birthday with Ranma yesterday. Something to remember your visit by."
Ranko reached for the envelope, and Nabiki jerked her hand back. "3000
yen."
Ranko's jaw dropped open. Nabiki laughed, and handed her the envelope.
"You're /so/ gullible." Ranko blushed and put the envelope in her purse.
She stepped out of her house slippers into the genkan, putting on the
loafers she had worn when she arrived. She put on her long navy coat and
her beret. She stood before them, dressed for a journey.
She and Akane looked at each other for a long, painful moment, and Ranko
thought of the expensive dress in her bag. She suddenly set down the bag
and the violin case, and reached to the back of her neck, where her
heart pendant necklace was clasped. She started to undo it...
"No!" commanded Akane. Ranko stopped, confused. "I'm betting that was a
gift from me to you, right?" Ranko nodded wordlessly. "Then I can't take
it."
Ranko bit her lip, then held up the pendant and opened it. She fiddled
with it briefly, and the tiny photograph inside slid out. She held it
out to Akane. "Here. Mother has the negative. I can get another print."
Akane took the tiny heart-shaped photograph of two little girls with
their cheeks pressed together, and tears began to stream down her face.
"Th-thank you. This is worth far more to me than the jewelry."
Ranko nodded, her own face screwed up in pain. How could leaving home
hurt so much when she was leaving home to /go/ home?
Nodoka, ever the mother, asked, "Now, do you have everything?"
"I think so..."
"/Your/ violin?"
"Yes." She picked up the case. "I double-checked; this one's mine." It
certainly wouldn't do to leave her Lott "del Gesu" behind by accident
and take Ranma's rental home instead.
"Let's see... I saw the portfolio go in the bag, and you have your
purse." She peered at the redhead's ears. "You're wearing the same
earrings... I think that's everything."
No one had anything else to add; the moment had arrived. Ranko looked
around once more. "G-goodbye, everyone. Thank you for everything." She
turned to Ranma. "Ranma, please take good care of my sister for me."
Ranma nodded. "I will. I promise." He put an arm around Akane, and for
once she didn't object.
Ranko looked back to Akane, but it was clear that the other girl
couldn't speak any more; neither could Nodoka. She looked around at each
and every face one more time, pausing to exchange a wordless message
with each of them; tears were leaving shiny tracks down her face by the
time she was done.
She clutched her parcels tightly, and took a deep breath. "There's no
place like home." She clicked her heels together three times.
Nothing happened.
Ranko's jaw fell open. "/Now/ what?"
Nabiki frowned. "You did follow the instructions, right?"
"Of course, Oneechan! I /have/ seen the Wizard of Oz, after all..." She
frowned. "Maybe I di" she began, and in mid-syllable, simply vanished.
There was no flash of light, no sound, not even a gentle breeze to mark
her departure. One moment she was there, and the next she was not, as if
someone had pulled a plug. There was a kind of negative afterimage where
she had stood, but within a second that faded away to nothing. Nabiki
shivered; it was a disquieting image.
Nodoka, utterly overcome by the strain of holding them back for so long,
burst into tears. Genma, shocked, went to comfort his wife.
And Akane whispered "Goodbye... Sis," buried her face in Ranma's
shoulder, and began to sob as well.
*****
Ranko felt like she was /in/ the Wizard of Oz. The part where the house
was picked up by a tornado.
This was far rougher than her first ride had been, and she held onto her
belongings with all her formidable strength. /Please let me not lose
Senpai's 6 million yen violin.../
There was nothing to see, just a formless, blinding whiteness. Suddenly,
her left foot struck something solid, and her body pivoted around
violently. She did not have a hand free to brace herself; her head
slammed into something, and the whiteness faded to black.
*****
Akane sat on the porch, staring at nothing in particular. It was another
gorgeous spring day. The koi were getting quite active now, leaping out
of the water from time to time. The birds were in a frenzy of activity,
either building their nests or gathering food for their young; their
tireless chatter filled the air. The fat buds on the lone cherry tree in
the Tendou yard looked ready to burst. An occasional fluffy white cloud
drifted by, a calm accent against the deep blue of the sky.
Akane wished they would all just go to hell.
/She's not dead/, Akane told herself. /Somewhere, in another world I
can't see or touch, she's with her family. With the man she loves. With
*me*, with all of us. She's home, where she belongs, and she's happy.
And I have my own Ranma, and he's her and she's him./
/So why does it hurt so damn much?/
She knew the answer: losing Ranma, /any/ Ranma, was almost more than she
could bear, and she hoped to Kami-sama that it never, ever happened
again. Not till she and he were old... old and gray. And she sure as
hell planned for both of them to give Cologne a run for her money.
Ranma appeared at her side. "Mom's restin' upstairs." Akane nodded
quietly. He sat down beside her. "How're you doin'?"
Akane sighed. "Lousy."
Ranma didn't respond, and after a moment Akane turned to look at him. He
was gazing at her, with a serious expression she rarely saw when he
wasn't in the midst of a battle. "Ranma?"
"You really miss her a lot, don'tcha?"
Akane nodded. "Yes." Ranma looked sad, and a horrible thought occurred
to Akane. "Ranma... you're not /jealous/, are you? I would miss /you/
just as much. That's why this hurts so much; it's like losing /you/."
Ranma blinked in surprise. "Of course I ain't jealous, Akane. I'm just
sorry for ya. I wish there was somethin' I could do."
She stared at him, her eyes scanning his face intently, as if she were
looking for something. After a moment, his eyes widened as he realized
what it was. "Akane?"
She started, and dropped her eyes, embarrassed. "What?"
"Would it help if I went and jumped in the pond?"
She blushed scarlet. "Probably... but I don't want to do that to you, and...
and I don't want to do it to me, either. I don't want to use that as a
crutch if I can avoid it." She looked up at Ranma again, her blush still
tingeing her cheeks pink. "I don't need you to be a girl to see her in you.
The main reason I love her is because she /is/ you."
Ranma blushed himself, and for a while neither of them said anything.
They were both more than a little dazed at how much they had opened up
to each other over the last three days.
"But... Ranma?"
"Yeah?"
"Oh, Kami-sama, I feel so bad asking this. Ranma... if... if you find a
cure soon... could you... could you maybe wait a year or two before you
use it? If that's possible? I'm not ready to say goodbye to that face
f-forever yet. I need a little time to mourn, still." She blushed again.
"I'm sorry, that's a horrible thing to ask of you. I know how much you
hate the curse."
Ranma looked thoughtful for a few moments. "It's OK, Akane. I
understand. Sure."
Akane's mouth fell open. "Wh-what? 'Sure'? No argument? No fight?"
"Akane, I told ya. I don't wanna hurt you anymore. I only used to do it
'cause I didn't understand what I was doin'." He sighed. "And I guess...
I got used to this curse. It ain't horrible anymore, just... a pain." He
grimaced. "'Specially since Mom ain't too fond of it."
"I'm sorry, Ranma..."
"Don't worry 'bout it." He grinned. "I bet you wouldn't cry if I never
got cured, huh?"
Akane snorted, embarrassed. "Maybe not."
"Always knew you liked me better as a girl." She jerked her head up to
look at him, but he was still grinning; he was teasing her. She stuck
out her tongue, and he laughed. "That's better."
They both looked out into the yard. After a minute, Ranma's voice came,
quiet and serious. "I kinda wish I'd been a guy when we met, though. We
sure started off on the wrong foot."
Akane turned to look at him; he had an almost wistful look on his face.
She studied him for a few moments, and an idea came to her. An idea that
should have come to her a long time ago.
She cleared her throat and smiled at him. "Hi, I'm Akane," she said.
"Would you like to be friends?"
Ranma's brow furrowed in confusion; then his jaw dropped. He stared at
her, open-mouthed, until slowly, his surprise changed into a smile.
"Yeah. Yeah, I'd like that." They smiled at each other.
A mischievous element crept into Ranma's smile. "You practice kenpo,
right?"
Akane's eyes widened. "A little."
"Later on, when you're feelin' better, how's about I show you the dojo,
and we can have a little match. I promise I won't hurt ya." His smile
widened. "Much."
They both laughed, and Akane suddenly felt better. She turned her gaze
back to the koi pond, and found she didn't feel quite so much like
filling it in with cement as she had a few minutes ago. Meeting and then
losing Ranko would hurt for a long, long time... but she was glad it had
happened.
*****
Nabiki hesitated a long moment, then slid open the desk drawer where she
filed her photographs. She knew the one she was looking for, but she
didn't particularly want to find it.
She forced herself to leaf through the larger prints, until her finger
came lightly to rest on the edge of one of them. Gently, she lifted it
from the drawer, and held it up. A petite redhead smiled back at her,
cradling a violin.
Last month, Professor Murata had asked Ranko to bring him a professional
portrait, to be used in the programs that were printed up for the Music
department's recitals. Rather than go to a commercial photographer,
Ranko had asked Nabiki to do it, explaining that she was more
comfortable being photographed by her big sister, and besides... she was
used to it. Nabiki held the result in her hand, and smiled at the
memory.
She slid her drawer closed, then gazed at the photograph for a minute
longer, a sober expression on her face. Reluctantly, she rose and headed
downstairs, holding the photograph to her chest with both hands.
Kasumi was waiting for her in the family room, an empty picture frame in
one hand. Nabiki stopped and closed her eyes, clutching the photograph a
little more tightly. "It's too soon, Oneechan." She opened her eyes;
they glistened. "It's only been three days."
"Nabiki," said Kasumi gently, "we're not giving her up for dead. The
police told us cases like this can take months, and they find missing
people alive all the time. We're just saying that she is in our thoughts
and prayers."
"I know," whispered Nabiki. "But... if we put her up there... next to...
to M-mom..."
Kasumi smiled. "Mother will watch over her, wherever she is." She held
out her hand, and Nabiki reluctantly handed over the photograph. Kasumi
slid it into the frame, and turned it over; they both examined the
portrait. "It's a beautiful picture, Nabiki. You really captured her
personality." They both sighed.
Kasumi walked slowly to the butsudan, the family shrine, and reverently
placed the portrait on the shelf, next to one of a smiling young woman
with black hair. She stepped back, and they clapped their hands twice
and bowed their heads. Kasumi whispered "Please, Mother... please bring
her back to us, if you can. And if you can't..." she paused for a long,
long time, and when she resumed, her voice was unsteady and heavy with
emotion, "And if you can't... then please take care of her for us."
They looked up, and Nabiki gazed at the portrait of her mother. She had
been a little girl when her mother had died, and she remembered this
photograph more than its subject; it had been the photograph which had
watched her grow up. /Mom was so young,/ thought Nabiki. /Not that much
older than.../ she didn't want to complete the thought.
Nabiki gazed quietly at both portraits for a while. "Oneechan?"
"Mmm?"
"You know the /police/ aren't going to find her. She's not a missing
person--she /vanished/, into thin air. In front of eyewitnesses."
"I know, Nabiki. That's why doing this was so important."
Nabiki sighed a long, tired sigh; she knew Kasumi was right. She stared
at the floor.
Kasumi eyed her carefully. "Nabiki, Dear, why don't you go out and do
something? The weather is beautiful. It will get your mind off it a
little."
Nabiki nodded slowly. Akane and Auntie Saotome had gone with Ryouga to
the park, just to get out of the house. And the fathers... they'd gone
out the previous night to get drunk, and must have succeeded; they
weren't back yet. She looked up at Kasumi. "How can you be so calm about
this, Oneechan?"
A dark cloud passed over Kasumi's face, hinting at far more. She said
simply, "I can't afford not to be." After a moment, the clouds passed.
"Are you going to go out?"
Nabiki's eyes strayed to the shrine. "In a little while..."
Kasumi followed her gaze. "I understand. I'm going to go start dinner.
If you want company, please come into the kitchen, all right?" Nabiki
nodded.
Kasumi went into the kitchen, and Nabiki sat at the dining table,
planted both elbows on it, and alternated between gazing at the
portraits on the shrine, and looking out the porch towards the koi pond.
She was startled out of her reverie by a loud /thud/ from the direction
of the genkan. Kasumi called from the kitchen, "Oh, that umbrella stand
has fallen over again. I really need to take it to be repaired. Nabiki,
would you mind righting it? You have to fiddle with its feet a bit to
get it to stay up."
Nabiki called, "Sure, Oneechan." She took another look at Ranko's
portrait, then rose and headed down the hall.
Kasumi was peeling vegetables when she heard a loud scream from the
genkan: "/Oneechan!!/"
It had been many, many years since Kasumi had seriously practiced the
Art, but somehow she found herself in the genkan faster than she would
have thought possible. Nabiki was kneeling over a body which lay
sprawled across the floor, items strewn around it. Kasumi caught sight
of a familiar beret and a shock of red hair, and shrieked herself:
"/Ranko?!/" Her heart hammered in her chest. "Is she... is she..."
Nabiki shook her head. "She's just unconscious." She tugged at the prone
form. "Oneechan, help me out here..."
Kasumi sagged in relief, and joined Nabiki on the floor. "Just a moment,
before we try to move her..." She called on her limited medical
knowledge, and ran her hands lightly over Ranko's neck and limbs. Good;
nothing was broken. Her fingers found a large, growing lump on the
redhead's skull. "She must have hit her head. I think she'll be out for
at least an hour. If it were anyone else, I'd have said two."
The two of them easily lifted the diminutive girl. Kasumi looked over
the items scattered around the genkan: one of her own canvas shopping
bags, Ranko's violin case and purse. She'd have to come back and clean
up; right now, her hands were full.
They carried Ranko into the family room, and Kasumi ran off to fetch a
futon. When she returned, she found Nabiki taking the portrait off the
shelf on the butsudan, and she smiled. "You see? We shouldn't have
waited so long to ask Mother for help."
Nabiki laughed, and tears started to leak from the corners of her eyes,
tears of relief. They both paused a moment to turn towards the shrine,
bowing their heads in silent thanks.
They removed Ranko's coat and shoes, and pulled her onto the futon.
Kasumi went into the kitchen and came back with a cold, wet cloth, which
she placed on the lump on Ranko's head.
She rose, and picked up the discarded outdoor clothing. She had been
about to tell Nabiki to stay by Ranko's side, but it was clear she
didn't need to: Nabiki was kneeling next to the futon and hovering over
their younger sister. Kasumi smiled; ever since Ranko had become herself
again, Nabiki had been showing more of her nurturing side.
She went back to the genkan, hung up the coat, and put the shoes back in
the rack. She picked up the beret, dusted it off, and put it up on the
shelf. She took a moment to run her gaze over the items, and smiled.
/There/, she thought, /everything is back... exactly where it belongs./
She stooped to pick up the other things, slinging the purse over her own
shoulder. She hefted the canvas bag. /Oh my, what does she have in here?
It weighs a ton!/ She frowned. /That's odd... I don't remember this bag
being missing./ She went to her bag drawer...
Nabiki was busy dabbing her eyes with a tissue when a quiet voice came.
"Nabiki?"
She looked up; Kasumi was standing there, loaded down. "Do you need a
hand, Oneechan?"
Kasumi shook her head. "Look at this." She put the purse and violin case
in a corner, out of the way, and brought the canvas bag over to the
table. She set it down.
"It's just one of your shopping bags, right? Didn't she take it with her
when she left?"
Kasumi shook her head again. Wordlessly, she reached out her other hand,
and put another canvas bag on the table, this one empty. Nabiki took a
closer look, and her eyes bugged out.
The bags were nearly identical. Every scuff, every stain, every
threadbare spot matched. There were a few minor differences, but it was
obvious that they were the same bag. There were just... two of it.
*****
"Why doesn't that old lady ever watch where she's tossing the water?"
Nodoka and Akane smiled at Ryouga as she squeezed out the soggy parts of
her shirt. The three were on their way home from the park, and Ryouga
had just experienced firsthand the woman's uncanny aim. "Maybe she does
it on purpose!" teased Akane.
Ryouga snorted. "Maybe. I think she has radar for Jusenkyou victims."
She continued to wring out various portions of her clothing.
Nodoka cleared her throat. "Ryouga-kun. Your shirt is sticking to
your... ummm..."
Ryouga looked down. "Oops." She pulled the front of her shirt away from
her chest, and squeezed it out, too. "Thanks, Mom."
Akane laughed. "I think you may be right about the ladle lady. She
always used to nail Ranko when she was Ranma. She never saw it coming,
either." Abruptly the smiles on their faces died, and the jocular mood
evaporated. Nodoka's face was ashen.
"I'm sorry, Auntie," whispered Akane. "I just can't seem to stop
thinking about her."
"It's all right, Dear," sighed Nodoka. "None of us can."
They were silent for several blocks, each lost in thought. At first
they'd thought it was a magical kidnapping of some kind, the sort of
crazy thing that had plagued Ranko before Happousai's spell was
neutralized. But as one day, then another, then a third had passed with
no ransom demands, no ultimatums, no word of any kind, they had tried
hard to edge away from a conclusion none of them wanted to reach: that
something had wanted Ranko dead, and had reached out to swat her like an
insect. Had Ranko gone somewhere, or was she... gone?
Ryouga eyed her two companions, and addressed what was being left
unsaid. "Mom, Akane-san... you have to have faith in her. She's the most
resourceful, adaptable person I know. If anyone can come back from
what's happened to her, she can."
There was a grim look in Nodoka's eyes, as if they were seeing something
truly awful. "I know, Dear. It's that 'if' that concerns me."
No one had a response to that.
They turned in the front gate of the Tendou home. Akane slid the front
door open and they called "Tadaima!"
Kasumi and Nabiki called "O-kaeri!" in return. Kasumi added, "Auntie,
Akane, Ryouga-kun, come quickly!"
Akane blinked at that; her two older sisters sounded... excited? She
went to take off her shoes, and stopped cold.
"Auntie... Ryouga..." She seemed quite agitated.
"What, Dear?"
"Look." whispered Akane, and pointed. They all turned their eyes to the
hat shelf, where a familiar beret sat.
They practically fell over themselves in their hurry to take off their
outdoor clothes. They hurried down the hall to the family room, intent
on questioning the elder Tendou sisters.
They didn't need to. The slight girl who had occupied their thoughts for
the last three days lay on a futon, a light blanket covering her and a
wet cloth on her head.
Nodoka whispered "R-ranko?!" She took a step towards the futon, then
paused, and turned to Kasumi. "Is she... is she all right?" Kasumi, who
was seated with Nabiki at the table, where they appeared to be going
through some documents, smiled warmly and nodded.
Nodoka needed no further permission. "Ranko!" she cried, Akane echoing
her. In the space of a moment, Ranko's head was cradled in Nodoka's lap;
she held the unconscious girl gently, tears running down her cheeks as
she sobbed in relief. "Ranko... my daughter... my baby... thank
Kami-sama!" Akane was on Ranko's other side, grasping her hand tightly,
also crying tears of joy; her gaze did not leave the face of the girl
she thought of as her twin sister.
Ryouga was not surprised to find her face growing wet as well; something
about this body drew forth tears even more readily than her guy form.
She sank slowly to her knees in profound relief, nightmares of a world
without the woman she loved receding into blissful irrelevance. She took
a moment to gaze at Ranko's face, drinking in a sight she had feared she
would never see again.
Between Akane and Ranko's mother, there wasn't a lot of room around the
diminutive redhead, but Ryouga reached out and took her remaining free
hand. She rubbed her thumb along the delicate fingers; even when Ryouga
was in girl form, they were smaller than her own. They were warm with
life, but a little on the cool side, and Ryouga instinctively closed her
hand around Ranko's, trying to warm them up. "Who..." she sniffled,
drawing smiles from the the others, "who found her?"
"No one did," said Nabiki. "She just... dropped in. We heard this loud
noise in the genkan, and found her there, out cold."
Ryouga frowned. "You mean she just came home and passed out?"
Kasumi shook her head. "No, the front door didn't open; I would have
heard that. Maybe she came home... the way she left." She paused for a
moment, considering that. "She must have hit her head hard; she has a
big lump. But she seems all right otherwise. She doesn't have any broken
bones, and her pupils seem normal." Kasumi had gained a lot of
experience examining unconscious people in the last year, though things
had calmed down somewhat recently.
Akane nodded. "I guess we'll have to wait until she wakes up before we
find out anything."
"Not exactly," said Nabiki, waving at what was on the dining room table.
Akane turned her head, while still holding onto Ranko's hand; she didn't
want to let go just yet. There were two canvas bags, both empty, Ranko's
portfolio, a large mailing envelope which had no doubt held the stack of
papers Kasumi and Nabiki were going through, and... a folded white dress
with a matching pair of white heels. It looked relatively new, and on
the expensive side.
Akane's jaw dropped. "If she vanished for three days to go on a shopping
trip, I'm going to kill her."
Nabiki chuckled. "I don't think so." She handed Akane one of the papers
to read.
Akane blinked as she read aloud: "Form 939587284-WWU (Revised 1203
A.D.): Cover letter. Greetings, From the Director of the Bureau of
Mortal Affairs. Congratulations! You have been selected to serve the
multiverse as a mortal auxiliary!" She scanned the rest of it in
silence. When she was done, she handed the form to Ryouga, who held it
so that she and Nodoka could read it together.
"You know," said Nabiki, "I thought Ranko might have been kidnapped by
gods, or demons, or monsters, or some crazed martial arts master or
magician from China... but I never imagined that she'd been abducted by
bureaucrats from the spirit world." She snorted.
Just then there was a call from the genkan. "Gomen kudasai..."
"Oh," said Kasumi, "it's the mailman. I'll be right back." She hurried
down the hall, coming back a few moments later with a handful of
letters. She kneeled at the table, looking through the pieces, and
stopped, looking over a standard letter envelope. She appeared to be
somewhat taken aback.
"What is it, Oneechan?" asked Nabiki.
Kasumi replied, "There's a letter here for 'The Tendou and Saotome
families.' From the Bureau of Mortal Affairs." She peered at the
envelope more closely, and read aloud, "Mail delayed due to incorrect
postal code. Please inform sender of correct information." She opened
the envelope, and read further:
/March 16, 2000/
"That's the day she disappeared!" said Nabiki.
/Dear Mortals,/
/One of your family members has been selected to serve the multiverse as
a mortal auxiliary. He/she/it is safe and should return within a few
days. This letter has been sent as a courtesy to alleviate any concerns
you may have about your loved one's disappearance./
/Sincerely,/
The signature was a collection of seemingly meaningless squiggly lines.
/Section Chief, Mortal Auxiliary Support Department, Bureau of Mortal
Affairs/
Everyone stared, incredulous. Akane snarled, "They put us through three
days of /hell/, because they didn't get the /postal code/ right?" She
shook her head. "If I could get my hands on those idiots... It's a shame
they're all dead already."
Nabiki grinned. "Feeling violent, kiddo?"
Ryouga cracked her knuckles. "She isn't the only one."
"None of that really matters," said Nodoka gently. "What matters is that
she's home... safe and sound." She smiled as she stroked the redhead's
cheek.
Nabiki turned back to plowing through the forms, looking for more
information. Though most of it looked useless...
Kasumi returned to the kitchen to resume work on dinner. She smiled
contentedly as she pulled a few more ingredients from the refrigerator;
she would have one more to feed tonight.
And Nodoka, Akane, and Ryouga just sat, and quietly enjoyed the slow,
gentle rise and fall of the blanket that covered Ranko.
*****
When Ranko started to shift and moan a little, Nabiki called
"Oneechan!", and Kasumi hurried back in. Everyone watched with anxious
anticipation as the redhead stirred, shaking her head slightly.
Ranko swam slowly back towards consciousness. Her head was throbbing,
and the last thing she remembered was clicking her heels together in the
genkan. Had it worked?
Her head, while it /felt/ like it was in a vise, seemed to be in
someone's lap, and she felt a hand gently caress her cheek. She slowly
opened her eyes, to find her mother smiling down at her. "M-mother?" She
winced; her head /really/ hurt. "Did it... did it not work?"
Nodoka's smile faded into a bewildered expression. "Did what not work,
Dear?"
Ranko lowered her gaze and looked around. She was in the family room,
surrounded by five women, all watching her with great concern: her
mother, her three sisters, and... her boyfriend. She smiled, and winced
again. Seeing Ryouga-chan could mean only one thing. "It did work... I'm
home..." Tears started to trickle down her cheeks, and she grasped her
mother's hand tightly.
Nodoka smiled, and tears left tracks down her cheeks as well. "Yes.
Welcome home, sweetheart." She squeezed back.
After a time, Nodoka helped her daughter sit up, keeping an arm around
her to steady her. Ranko's head swam. "Kasumi-neechan," she rasped,
"could you... ugh... could you get me some aspirin? Extra strength..."
Everyone winced in sympathy as Kasumi got up and hurried into the
kitchen, returning with the painkillers and some water, as well as an
icebag. Ranko showed her gratitude with her eyes, and downed the pills
quickly. The icebag was placed on her head. "Thanks, Oneechan."
Though Ranko still looked a little shaky, Akane couldn't contain herself
any longer; she felt like she was ready to burst. "Sis, where have you
/been/ these past three days?!"
Ranko smiled, and winced again. "I was right here... except I wasn't."
Confused stares abounded. "I was right here in this house, except in a
parallel world. I was sent there to fulfill a wish, by something called
the 'Bureau of Mortal Affairs.'"
"We know about /them/," snorted Nabiki. She waved at the forms on the
table, and handed the letter to Ranko. "This arrived today, three days
late. The postal code was wrong."
Ranko scanned the letter, and sighed. "It figures. They misaddressed my
package of forms, too."
Akane didn't really care about that; she was impatient to know what had
happened to her sister. She leaned forward, intent. "What do you mean, a
parallel world?"
Ranko weakly waved her hand around at her family. "It was exactly
identical to this one--almost. You were all there, and you were all
exactly the same." Kasumi gasped, and held up the two canvas bags, an
unspoken question in her eyes. Ranko nodded. "Yes, the one I brought
home belonged to that other you."
Ryouga asked, "How did you know you were in a parallel world if
everything was the same?"
Ranko smiled at her. "I said it was /almost/ identical. There was one
big difference: in that world, I had been born a boy, and so had Hiromi.
They were Ranma and Hirosuke instead." Jaws dropped around the room.
"Ranma... he looks just like I did, before. And he has a Nyanniichuan
curse, too; his female form looks /exactly/ like me. When I showed up,
he was off visiting Hirosuke in Tama New Town, and all of you thought
/I/ was him, but had flipped out and was acting like a girl. We got it
straightened out eventually, and Ranma came home the next day." She
shook her head, and winced again. "The odd thing was, our lives were
just about the same, up until the point where I became a girl again. He
was on the road with Father for ten years, not twelve, and he fell in
the Nyanniichuan by accident, but everything else was the same: the
multiple fiancees, the craziness, everything..."
Everyone looked around. "This is kind of hard to grasp, Dear," said her
mother.
Ranko nodded. "I'll bet. I have some pictures..." She started to rise,
and fell back heavily into her mother's embrace. "Maybe if someone could
get my purse for me..." Akane fetched it for her, and Ranko pulled out
the envelope which the other Nabiki had given her. She slid the photos
out, and her family crowded around to look at them.
The first one told it all: it was a picture of Ranma and Ranko blowing
out the candles on their birthday cake, the banner wishing them both a
happy birthday hanging behind them. Akane and Nodoka could be seen on
either side of them.
There was stunned silence as everyone took in the bizarre sight of Ranko
sitting next to a male version of herself: the black-haired boy they had
already nearly forgotten, whom Nodoka had barely even known. Akane
stared also at the girl with short black hair who was another person...
but was also herself. She shivered; it was eerie.
She tried to find her voice. "It looks like they made you part of the
family while you were there."
Ranko smiled sadly. "Once they figured out I wasn't Ranma, they did. In
fact, you and Mother got quite attached to me, and you were really sad
when I left." She sighed. "I felt bad, but I couldn't possibly stay
there when all of you were here."
Akane whispered, "I'm glad you came home to us, Sis. The last three days
have been hell. I thought I'd lost you... again." Her eyes grew wet, and
she took Ranko's hand, squeezing and getting a squeeze in return.
Ranko reflected that while she'd gotten close to that other Akane, in
just three days their bond couldn't possibly approach the one she shared
with her twin sister, forged in their childhood years together. They
just looked at each other for a moment; no words were necessary.
Ranko flipped through more photos, and came to one showing her and
Ranma-chan, both holding their violins. Kasumi's eyes widened, and
alternated between the photo and the two canvas bags on her dining
table.
"Wow..." breathed Akane. "You really are... identical." She blinked.
"Does she... I mean, he, play the violin, too?"
Ranko grinned. "He didn't before I got there. He saw me play, and wanted
to try it. It turns out he has the same knack I do. He wants to be a
martial artist, but he's going to take lessons from Kobayakawa-sensei.
You got a violin for him for his birthday, Sis. A rental." She flipped
the photos, and came to one of Ranma and Akane.
Akane stared at the photo; something about the way she and this male
Ranko were sitting together disturbed her. "Sis... what kind of
relationship does this other me have with... Ranma?"
Ranko blushed. "Ummm... they're engaged, like we were."
"That's not what I mean, and you know it."
Ranko hesitated. "They're in love with each other. In a romantic way.
They're going to get married."
Everyone looked around uncomfortably. Akane considered that for a long,
long time, before offering her verdict: "Yuck." Ranko rolled her eyes
and nodded her concurrence, and everyone laughed.
"How about me?" asked Ryouga. "Was I there?"
Ranko's face fell. "Yes, but..."
"But?"
Ranko sighed. "You were in love with this other girl named Akari, and
when you met me you thought I was Ranma and got angry with me, like you
used to."
"Did I attack you?" asked Ryouga, worried.
"No, you just insulted me." Everyone laughed, and Ryouga blushed. "You
got nicer, though. You left pretty quickly, because you told me you were
starting to have feelings for me." She leafed through the photos. "Here
you are." Everyone peered at the photo of Ryouga and Ukyou sitting
together, laughing over something at the birthday party. Ryouga felt a
chill run up her spine.
"Do we know about Ryouga's Nyanniichuan curse there?" asked Akane.
Ranko and Ryouga exchanged glances. "Ummm... no. Not yet."
"Did you tell them all about the two of us?" asked Ryouga.
Ranko grinned. "I didn't tell them about you and me at first, but it
came out when you showed up. You and Ranma weren't thrilled about it."
Her feelings from that time floated up again, and she continued to gaze
at the other girl. "Ryouga?" she asked softly.
Something about Ranko's tone made Ryouga sit up straight, alert. "What?"
"You remember how I told you I was... allergic to engagements?" The girl
with the bandanna nodded. "I think I'm... I'm over that. I missed you
terribly. I didn't know if I'd ever see /you/ again, and the whole time,
I... I wished we were..." she trailed off, embarrassed.
Surprised, delighted smiles spread over the faces of Nodoka and the
Tendou sisters. Ryouga grinned. "Really?" Ranko nodded, a frightened
look on her face. "Maybe we ought to test you, just to make sure.
Allergies can be dangerous, you know." She stood up. "Just a minute, I
need to be a guy for this." She went into the kitchen, and returned a
few moments later, damp but male. He went to the genkan and returned
with the small knapsack he always carried with him; he didn't need the
large pack now that he no longer got lost, and he kept his combat
umbrella at home most of the time.
"Let's see..." he said, fishing in one of the pockets. "Ahh." His hand
emerged with a small box, and Ranko gasped. The amused smiles on
everyone's faces made it clear that the redhead was the only one
surprised to see it. Ryouga knelt next to her, and opened the box;
inside was a ring with a modest diamond.
"How long have you had that?" whispered Ranko.
"A couple of months." He glanced briefly at Nabiki, who grinned. "I'm
paying for it... in convenient monthly installments. But I've been
holding on to it; like I said, you never know with allergies, and I
didn't want to take a chance." He cleared his throat. "So, let's run
some tests, shall we?" He pulled the ring out, took her left hand in
his, and gingerly touched the ring to the tip of one of her fingers.
"How do you feel?"
Ranko's eyes were wide. "Fine."
"Any shortness of breath? Itchiness? Hives?" Ranko shook her head. "So
far, so good." He slid the ring onto her ring finger as the rest of the
family beamed. "How about now? Any swelling? Rashes? Breathing
difficulties?"
Ranko shook her head again.
"Sure looks like you're not allergic any more. So... will you marry me,
Saotome Ranko?"
Ranko nodded her head, tears in her eyes, and suddenly they were in a
tight embrace as her mother and sisters applauded enthusiastically. She
whispered "I love you," into his ear, and he squeezed her tight and
whispered "I love you, too," in return.
Tears wet Akane's cheeks as well; to go from thinking Ranko dead to this
in the space of a couple of hours was almost too much--in a good way.
Her mind drifted back to when she and "Ranma" had been engaged, and she
was very glad that that part of their lives was behind them. The two of
them had found the way to love each other that was right for them, and
so Akane felt nothing but joy that echoed her twin sister's. She glanced
at her two older sisters, and found smiles of quiet joy there as
well--even on Nabiki.
The couple separated, and Ryouga turned to Nodoka. "I'm sorry, Mom, I
guess I should have asked you for permission, first."
Nodoka laughed. "There's no need to be so old-fashioned and formal about
it, Dear. It's nearly the 21st century, after all. And Ranko is old
enough to make her own decisions."
In the midst of her happy glow, Ranko thought, /Oh, Mother, you and I
*really* need to have a chat./
*****
Saotome Ranko lay in bed--her own bed--and sighed happily. She looked
around the room, taking it all in: her closet, her desk, her dresser
with the family photos on top, her vanity, her music stand next to which
sat her wonderful new violin, her posters of accomplished women. And the
futon on the floor; her mother would be spending the night with her. She
snuggled her toes, burrowing them deep under her comforter, and turned
to smile at her dolls and stuffed animals, lined up against the wall as
if in review, saluting her return.
Again she felt guilty for having the biggest room of the four young
women living in the Tendou home. She had tried a few months ago to get
one of her sisters to swap with her, but they had all refused.
She lifted her left hand up, and gazed in wonder at her ring, turning
her hand this way and that. She'd been engaged before, of
course--multiple times--but this was the first time she'd been engaged
as a girl, the first time she'd been proposed to, the first time she'd
worn a ring, and most importantly, the first time she'd been a willing
participant. It was simultaneously wonderful and scary. She was glad the
actual wedding was still years away; she needed to take this one, slow
step at a time.
It had made for an interesting moment when her father had finally made
it home. He and Uncle Tendou had staggered in close to dinner time,
looking like hell. When they'd encountered her with everyone else in the
family room, still lying on the futon and taking it slow, Uncle Tendou
had started blubbering as usual, but her father had just gazed at her,
the look in his eyes expressing far more than Uncle Tendou's fountain of
tears. She knew her father loved her--she was reminded of that every
time he came in contact with cold water--but as he'd come into the room
and she'd seen the haunted, hopeless look in his eyes give way to joy,
she'd felt his love in a palpable way.
He'd come to kneel by her side, and taken her hand, which was dwarfed by
his own. When his fingers had found the ring, he'd merely raised an
eyebrow and smiled, his eyes crinkling, and she'd blushed and smiled
back. As with Akane, words were sometimes superfluous. She'd beamed
after him as he and Uncle Tendou stumbled off to the bath to clean up.
It wasn't until they were eating dinner that she retold her story in
detail for everyone.
Over dinner, her family had insisted on going ahead with a belated
birthday celebration, though they had agreed to put it off until the
next day due to the already late hour and Ranko's bruised head. Kasumi
had called all of Ranko's friends and acquaintances, and had been
radiant when she was done; it was always wonderful to be the bearer of
such good news.
Professor Murata was one of those who had been anxiously awaiting a
bulletin, and had insisted on talking to his star pupil directly. He'd
surprised Ranko by not once asking after the violin; instead, he'd been
quite agitated about her well-being. When she'd volunteered that the
instrument was safe, he'd replied that while it would be difficult to
replace, it was nothing compared to her. He'd insisted that she stay
home and rest the next day, and promised to come visit. He'd also
informed her, tongue in cheek as usual, that being spirited off to a
parallel universe was no excuse for not practicing, and she'd laughed
and sworn that she had.
Thoughts of the impending birthday celebration led her to lift her right
hand and examine the charm bracelet given to her by the other Akane.
That other world already seemed like a dream; how could it not, when all
of her loved ones were here under this roof? Its oddness was already
fading from her memory, displaced by the comfortable normalcy of her own
life. She knew now what she had found most disturbing about that world:
here, she saw herself reflected in the eyes of her family. There, she
had been like a ghost, looking into the mirror of their eyes only to see
nothing--or worse, someone else.
And yet, the mistaken kanji for her name was a constant reminder that
the girl who had given this to her was not her Akane, but rather her
counterpart from that other world, now beyond her reach. Ranko closed
her eyes, and hoped that the counterparts of Akane and her mother there
would not hurt for too long. In their eyes alone she had begun to see
her own reflection again.
Just then her mother came in. The older woman smiled fondly as she took
off her robe. "Well, you certainly look comfortable, sweetheart." Ranko
nodded happily, grinning.
Nodoka came over to the bed and sat down; she took Ranko's left hand in
her right, and examined it. She sighed, "I can't believe my little girl
is engaged. If only I'd been able to enjoy more of your childhood years.
Now you're all grown up."
Ranko blushed. "I'm sorry, Mother."
Nodoka shook her head. "Don't be, sweetheart. I'm very happy. I have my
daughter back, and... my daughter has herself back." She smiled.
Ranko's memory was jogged. "Mother... suppose I had decided to stay a
boy? What would you have done?"
Nodoka raised an eyebrow. "Having second thoughts, Dear?"
"No!" replied Ranko forcefully, then a little more calmly, "No. I was
just wondering."
Nodoka tilted her head and thought. "Well, I would have been unhappy, to
be sure, but your happiness comes first with me. If you had needed to do
that, then I would have supported you." She peered at her daughter.
"There's a reason you're asking me this, isn't there?"
Ranko smiled sheepishly. "Yes. Of all the people in that other world,
you were the most different. In some ways, you were even more different
than Ranma and I."
Nodoka tugged on her daughter's arm. "Come here and tell me about it."
Ranko sat up and gladly settled into her mother's embrace. "Well, for
one thing, you were so... forgive me... stuffy. Very formal, very
traditional and old-fashioned. I mean, I know you wear a kimono most
days, but I've seen you in other clothes, even a sweatshirt on that day
we cleaned the house together. I can't imagine that other you ever
wearing a sweatshirt."
Nodoka smiled. "Go on."
"You were so rigid about Japanese traditions and gender roles. Ranma...
he spent more time in his girl form than you were comfortable with. It
was useful to him, because he'd been raised in such a rigid way that it
was the only way he could express his gentler side. It was kind of sad,
actually; I hope he can get better at doing that kind of thing as a guy.
But you didn't approve of it; you told him that men had to be manly, and
you told me that I shouldn't ask Ryouga to take care of the kids, that
my role as a wife and mother should come before my own career. I was
really at a loss; it seemed so unlike you. We had a big fight about it.
And then there was that seppuku promise I told you all about! I couldn't
believe you'd hold Ranma to that!"
Nodoka seemed somewhat shocked herself, and had a faraway look in her
eyes. "It's hard for me to say, Dear. My life has gone very differently
from hers."
Ranko peered up at her mother, puzzled. "Really?"
Her mother smiled. "Of course. Think about it. She knowingly sent her
son and husband on a training mission, when Ranma was... what was it,
six?" Ranko nodded. "I don't know how happy she was about that, but she
agreed to it, and her husband promised to bring Ranma back; the trust
between them was intact." Her face grew grim. "My husband vanished,
taking you with him. You were only four and a half, barely more than a
baby. I felt utterly betrayed." She hung her head.
After a time, she continued. "When I was young I used to be as you
described: stuffy and traditional, very old-fashioned and rigid. When
your father ran off with you, my life was turned upside down. I felt
that I had played the proper role of a Japanese wife, but that tradition
had turned its back on me. I didn't think about much except losing you
for the first couple of years, but once I got back on my feet I was a
much more skeptical person. I decided Japanese tradition was not all it
was cracked up to be. I decided I wanted to think for myself, and as an
abandoned wife I pretty much had to." Ranko nodded slowly, and Nodoka
smiled. "So you could say that your father was the one who made me this
way, and I think I'm a better person for it. Not that I'm planning to
thank him, mind you."
Ranko sighed. "I guess that explains it..."
Nodoka seemed to want to say more, but hesitated. Ranko inquired,
"Mother?"
The older woman blushed. "I thought of one other thing. I wonder if I
should mention this..." She paused for a few moments, then sagged. "I
suppose there's no harm in it." She smiled sheepishly. "Dear, when I
found out I was pregnant, I desperately wanted it to be a girl. I wanted
a daughter in the worst way. Looking back at it now, I feel very
foolish; I should have been happy either way, and if I had it to do over
again I would be." She sighed. "Back then, though, I wanted a girl very
badly. So badly that I was worried that if I had a son, I would do a
poor job raising him. So I promised myself that if I had a boy, I would
try hard to raise him to be a man."
Ranko's jaw was hanging open. "Do you think...?"
Nodoka shrugged. "Perhaps. I got the daughter I wanted, but if you'd
been a boy, perhaps I would have been too anxious about making a man out
of you. Perhaps that other me fell into that trap, instead of letting
her child just be whoever he is." She smiled. "It would be interesting
to talk to her, the way you talked to Ranma."
Ranko's eyes were looking at something in another world. "I wonder... if
that's what happened, maybe my wish will help Ranma, too. I hadn't
planned it that way, but..."
Nodoka's brow furrowed in confusion. "Wish?"
Ranko nodded. "I didn't mention it over dinner, but one of the coupons I
got in my forms package was for a free wish. That other you and that
other Akane were so sad about me leaving, I... I wished for them to have
their own Ranko."
Nodoka gasped. "That's a big change in their lives, Dear! Think about
all the disruptions you caused while you were there, and you weren't
even planning to stay. It might cause more problems than it solves. How
exactly did you word your wish?"
Ranko beamed. "I actually thought about everything you mentioned. At
first I was going to wish for them to have a copy of me, but then I
thought that my copy would be just as miserable getting stuck there as I
would, and might cause some of the problems I had. So what I wrote
instead was, 'I wish that Ranma had a sister Ranko, a version of me who
belongs in his world.'"
Nodoka paled. "And did this other Ranko appear immediately?"
Ranko frowned. "Well... no. Not before I left."
Nodoka closed her eyes. "That's what I was afraid of. Dear, did you
consider what the most straightforward way of fulfilling that wish was?"
Ranko shook her head, confused. "Umm... making a copy of me with
different memories or something?"
Nodoka sighed. "Sweetheart, where do sisters usually come from?"
Ranko furrowed her brow for a moment, then turned ashen. "Oh,
Kami-sama... I..."
Nodoka nodded. "Quite possibly. I suppose we'll never know, though."
Ranko looked miserable. "She'll probably hate me."
Nodoka squeezed her daughter a little tighter, and kissed her on the
head. "I rather doubt that, darling. I'm sure things will work out for
them."
After a time they separated, and Nodoka stroked back Ranko's hair. "It's
time for bed, Dear. You need to rest; tomorrow will be a big day." Ranko
nodded and lay back on her pillow, as the older woman slipped into her
futon after turning the light out.
Ranko was dead tired, and started to fade the moment she hit the pillow.
Her mind turned away from that other world back towards her own. She was
very much looking forward to seeing her friends tomorrow--and having
them know who she was. To seeing herself reflected in their eyes, no
longer a ghost. Her last thought before drifting off was, /Glinda was
right. There really is no place like home/.
*****
Asphalt paths ran all through the large park that was near the center of
Fuurinkan-cho. It was a beautiful late spring day, warm and unusually
dry, and the paths were full of people enjoying the weather.
Heads turned as a young woman roller-bladed down one of these paths. She
had red hair in a loose ponytail, and striking blue eyes, but her
resemblance to the cursed form of a certain martial artist who lived in
the area ended there. This woman appeared to be in her mid twenties, and
was a foreigner: she had freckles to go with her red hair. She was
wearing a tank top, form-fitting bike shorts that left little to the
imagination, and had a portable CD player on her waist with button
earphones in her ears as she zoomed along.
It was unusual to see a gaijin way out in Nerima, but not remarkably so,
and face after face broke into a smile as she passed. Except for the
faces of the wives and girlfriends of certain men who were watching just
a little too closely, and smiling just a little too broadly. The redhead
grinned at the trail of male saliva she was leaving in her wake.
The path wound its way to a less populated part of the park, and the
woman rolled to a stop at the mouth of a gravel walk. She looked
carefully up and down the asphalt path to make sure she was alone, and
then, quite suddenly, she had running shoes on her feet rather than
roller blades. She ran in place for a moment, then set off down the walk
at a steady jog.
A couple of minutes later, in a seldom-visited corner of the park, she
came to a stop beside a large bush. Without hesitation, she reached
under the bush, then stood up again, holding a peculiar-looking black
and red stone. She grinned. "Long time no see, Willie." She paused for a
moment, looking for all the world as if she were listening to someone.
"I'll bet. Just a sec."
She once again looked around to make sure she was alone, then placed the
stone in the middle of a grassy spot. She gazed at it for a moment, and
a flash of something far older than her apparent twenty-five years
passed through her eyes, and seemed to gather strength. Suddenly she
flung out her arms, arched her back, and chanted to the heavens:
"Living soul, locked in stone, return once more to flesh and bone!"
A glowing aura formed around her, then left her and swirled around the
stone. There was a flash of light, and where the stone had lain stood a
man. He too had red hair and freckles, and he wore opulent robes of
deepest black. His fingers were thick with rings.
Prince Wilhelm Friedrich von Dittersdorf spent a moment flexing his
fingers while staring at them, as if he weren't used to it, then turned
his cool gaze to the woman. "So. It's been a long time, Margarethe. I'm
glad you didn't forget how to undo it."
Margarethe nodded, her gaze equally cool. "Are you mocking me--again?"
He shook his head. "Of course not." The two regarded each other for a
moment more...
...before their cold expressions melted. The Prince grinned. "Well, OK,
maybe just a little. How are you, babe?"
She giggled. "Not bad, lover boy. And you?"
He spread his hands. "Me? About the only thing I have to worry about is
erosion." They laughed. He looked her over once again. "I see you've
updated your look." His grin suggested he liked it.
She shrugged. "Medieval is out, Willie. /Waaaay/ out." She eyed him.
"You need a makeover yourself, hon. Let's see... what is royalty wearing
these days?" She closed her eyes, and his robes were replaced by a dark,
expensive Italian suit. She smiled. "Still very dashing--my prince." She
giggled again.
He sighed. "You're not going to stop until you've completely made me
over, are you?"
She came over to take his arm. "But you're my own personal little
fixer-upper! I like to leave my boyfriends better than I find them.
Would I have spent so much time on you over the past five hundred years
if I didn't think you had potential? I could have turned you into a toad
instead of a rock, you know. Besides," she paused, and her cheeks turned
the slightest shade of pink, "I don't have any plans to move out of this
fixer-upper any time soon."
The jocular mood faded, and they simply gazed at each other for a long
moment. "So," he asked, "to what do I owe this honor? It's been over a
hundred years since I've been let out like this." He sounded a bit
sullen.
She smiled. "I have a message for you from the Section Chief: 'well
done.' He really likes the way you handled the Kunou wish. It could have
been a disaster, and you turned it into something positive instead. You
know he fancies billiards; he said it was like a triple bank shot."
The Prince smiled, and bowed as only a prince can. "I am but your humble
servant."
Margarethe snorted. "I'm not so sure about the 'humble' part." She
scrunched up her face. "How /did/ you know the Saotome girl would make
/that/ wish, anyway?"
His face was an enigma. "The Chief is an expert on billiards. I, on the
other hand... am an expert on redheads. A far more fascinating subject."
He flashed her a knowing smile, and she blushed a little more deeply
than before.
It took her a moment to recover her aplomb; she cleared her throat.
"Anyway, that's why I came, to deliver the Chief's message."
He seemed to sag slightly. "I see. So now it's back in the slammer?"
She smiled broadly. "No, Willie." He stared in shock. "You're getting an
early promotion, to Strategic Planning. The Chief said he wanted you to
work on bigger things."
His jaw hung open. "You mean..."
She nodded, grinning. "Yup. Sentence reduced to time served. I'm here to
bust you out of stir, von Dittersdorf." Her smile faded. "Willie...? Are
you all right?"
He shook his head. "I'm... I don't know what to say..."
She smirked. "Try, 'Thank you.'"
He laughed. "I have a better idea." He swept her into his arms, and
kissed her very, very thoroughly.
A minute later, they came up for air. "Oh, God," she sighed, "I /knew/
there was a good reason I didn't turn you into a toad!" They kissed
again.
Eventually they separated, and he asked, "So, when does my new job
start? Right away?"
She rolled her eyes. "Of course not! /That/ would make sense, and we
can't have that. You know the regulations: new jobs always start on a
Monday, and you've already missed Orientation this week." She smiled
suggestively. "You've got a week off to celebrate, my prince."
His heart skipped a beat. "Any chance I could get some help
celebrating?"
She grinned. "I thought you'd never ask..."
He held out his elbow--as only a prince could--and she put her arm
through it. They smiled at each other...
...and vanished.
*****
Epilogue
Akane watched the clock in the family room tick off the seconds, and
sighed. Auntie should be home from the doctor any minute now... and they
would know.
Ranma's mother had been feeling under the weather for weeks now. She
often felt a lack of energy; her appetite waxed and waned. Souun and
Kasumi, haunted by memories of the beginnings of Tendou Kirara's fatal
illness, had begged her to visit a doctor. Nodoka had dismissed their
concerns, saying she just had a bug that wouldn't go away.
That morning, though, she'd been sick to her stomach without warning,
and they'd finally convinced her to see her physician. And so the two
families waited in anxious suspense to hear the verdict.
Akane was afraid; she was still hurting from losing Ranko five months
ago, and she was worried that there was a chance, however slim, that she
might lose Auntie, too. /It's probably nothing,/ she tried to convince
herself. /Don't be such a worrywart./
But the expected time of Nodoka's return came and went. An extra fifteen
minutes dragged by. Then a half hour. Then forty-five minutes. Then an
hour. Then two. Their mood worsened with each tick of the clock; this
couldn't possibly be good news.
Finally, they heard the front door open, and heard a quiet call of
"Tadaima." Several of them called back in reply; all eyes turned to the
hallway. Nodoka appeared, and Akane's heart sank further; the older
woman seemed to be in shock. Akane's gaze went to Ranma, and she saw
something in his eyes that rarely made an appearance: fear. /Please...
Please, let Auntie live. I don't want Ranma to have to go through what I
did... not yet.../
Nodoka sank to her knees at the dining table, laying down her purse and
a small bag. Fear blossomed in Genma's eyes as well, and he came over to
put an arm around her. "N-nodoka...?"
She glanced around at the assembled family, a dazed look in her eyes.
She seemed several times to try to start to speak, but apparently
couldn't find the words.
Finally, Akane could stand it no longer. "Auntie... please... tell us
what the doctor said!" she pleaded. "Are you... are you..." She couldn't
continue.
Nodoka opened her mouth, blushed crimson, then closed it again. She took
a deep breath, seemed to steel herself, then blurted out, "I'm
pregnant."
Aside from Nodoka herself, there was not a vertical body left in the
room.
Genma struggled to right himself. "But... but... Nodoka... That's...
that's..."
"Impossible," finished Nodoka. "Yes, it is."
The Tendou sisters exchanged glances. "Why is that, Auntie?" asked
Kasumi.
Nodoka smiled faintly. "Dear, about a year after Ranma was born, I
became pregnant again. It was an ectopic pregnancy, and when the
surgeons finally went in they found that the other tube was already
damaged as well. They told me that I could never have another child
without extensive artificial assistance, something we could not afford
then, and still can't." She shared a pained look with Genma. "We just
gave up on ever having another child, resigned ourselves to it.
Besides," she looked to her son and smiled more convincingly, "we had
our Ranma." Ranma smiled back, a little embarrassed.
Akane furrowed her brow. "So how could you be pregnant now?"
Nodoka seemed not to hear. "Given my history, the doctor insisted on
doing an ultrasound examination immediately; that's why I was so late.
He said that the pregnancy was normal--even though my tubes are still
missing. He couldn't understand how it was possible, but he couldn't
argue with the test results. He said the baby is due next March."
Suddenly, a small smile appeared on her face. "Mid-March, to be exact.
And he said it's a little too early to be sure, but from the ultrasound
he thinks it's a girl." The smile broadened. "He may not be sure, but I
am."
Nabiki frowned. "How could you /possibly/ be pregnant in that case? It
would take a miracle..." she trailed off, then gasped, her eyes wide.
"Or a wish..." Several other jaws fell open as well.
Nodoka nodded. "Exactly. I knew, as soon as he told me when the baby was
due. I knew why this had happened." Her eyes lost focus. "And I also
know that the baby is going to be a girl, and that she will be born next
March 18th at 7:23 AM." She smiled at Ranma again. "And I know she will
have red hair and blue eyes, and grow up to look exactly like her big
brother--when he's her big sister."
Akane's thoughts went to the tiny, heart-shaped photograph she kept in a
cameo frame on her desk, and the room suddenly blurred as she felt tears
start to drip down her face.
Ranma was slack-jawed. /Big brother... I'm... I'm gonna have a little
sister.../ Slowly, his face creased in a smile.
There were broad smiles all around the room now as Nodoka continued,
smiling herself. "And I know what I must name her, too." She reached
into the small bag by her side, and pulled out a bouquet of beautiful
flowers. "These were right in front when I passed the florist on the way
out of the hospital. They were sitting there all by themselves, and I
knew they were there for me." She closed her eyes and inhaled their
fragrance as everyone nodded.
"Orchids," whispered Akane.
The End
*****
End Chapter 6
Tuesday, January 2, 2001