(I'm an idiot. I messed up the formatting on the earlier post. It should
be fine this time around. Sorry.)
Hey,
Well, it's been a year, but here's the latest chapter. As always, the
characters are Rumiko Takahashi's, and she owns Ranma 1/2 and all associated
properties. Very special thanks go out to my prereaders, who helped make
this a lot better than it otherwise would have been.
Please enjoy. C&C is always very greatly appreciated: private is good,
public's even better! Let me know what you think. Author's Notes follow at
the end. Previous chapters are available at my webpage.
-Mike Noakes
noakes_m@hotmail.com
www.geocities.com/noakes_m
***
What has gone before:
Ranma came into possession of a strange book. Two men called Karadoku and
Zara challenged him for it. Ranma lost, only to discover Akane had already
stolen it. In using it, she became marked by magic she released. Soon
after, a string of savage murders plagued Nerima: young girls slaughtered by
a beast drawn by Akane's unwitting use of the book. Ranma defeated it, but
realized that more would soon come. In the aftermath of his success, he
helped his fiancee deal with the guilt she felt for having (she felt)
inadvertently caused innocent people's deaths. Allies were called in and
they prepared for the inevitable assault.
***
The heavy hand on her shoulder was both reassuring and frightening.
"Make me proud, my youngest daughter," Father said.
Pride was the furthest thing from her mind. I'm scared, she wanted to say.
The strong presence of Father behind made it unnecessary, made her doubts
irrelevant. He already knew her deepest fears, controlled her secret needs
utterly--and left no possibility of turning back. Already her new brothers
and sisters were changing, releasing the anger that Father had blessed them
with. The scene would have been nightmarish had she not seen it before:
skin peeling back and flesh exploding outward as the inhuman shapes beneath
stood revealed in the soft moonlight. The anxious whispers of a moment ago
became animalistic sibilant hissing, deep-throated wet gurgling, and the
sharp snapping of skeletal jaws. Seen before, maybe, but she still wanted
to squeeze her eyes shut and found herself whispering, "this can't be
happening how did this happen to me can't do this," incessantly, the words
repeating in a litany of panic.
Father's grip on her shoulder tightened. "It is your turn," he said.
Leaning closer, his soft voice was now meant only for her. "My newly
appointed child, my specially chosen daughter, first of my new brood: I know
you will do me proud. Fear neither this night nor the bloody deeds you must
do. Embrace them as you embraced the gift my love drew out of you. Join
your brothers and sisters in their revenge, daughter. Join them as they
make of the mangled corpses of your enemies a gift raised to my glory. Do
you feel your brethren's anger, their hate? Do you feel the same stirring
deep within? Embrace it. Release it!"
The cool night air brushing past tickled her arm, carrying to her the
scents of elsewhere. Stars far above and the moon filled the dark spaces
between her and the house with silvery paleness. Loud sounds of heated
argument drifting to her from within her goal. Nearby, the impossibly still
readiness of her eldest brother standing forward; the lithe serpentine
stretch of her eldest sister next to him; and her two other brothers arrayed
next to Father. She breathed deeply and closed her eyes. Held herself in
perfect peace for a single moment that seemed to stretch forever, and then
opened her mind to the reality of what she had to do.
She would follow her new family into that house and she would kill everyone
inside. For the first time in her life she would grab her own victim--weak,
helpless, ignorant--and feast. Plunge her hand through his belly and clutch
at the slippery lengths inside. Something long and black and chitinous
erupted from what had been her right arm. Plunge her face into that
softness and feed on the meat, long loops of entrails sucked back to feed
the insatiable hunger within. The skin on her face rippled and crawled
away, revealing venomous sharpness beneath. The deserving pain that filled
her was nearly as sweet as the strength she now felt, and she raised her
head to the sky in a wailing cry of tortured pleasure that abruptly twisted
into a series of rapid, high-pitched inhuman clicks.
"Forward!" ordered Father. "Kill them! But leave the girl to me!"
His will surged and filled her utterly. He filled them all and, overcome
with his bloodlust and the resonating urges that echoed within, Ayumi Utada
charged forward alongside her siblings. All doubts gone. The wind blowing
through her long hair as she ran, her spine twisting and innards churning.
It all makes sense now, she thought. Her sight shattered into fragmented
perception, her left eye first bulging out and then splitting into bulbous
clusters. Like this I'm not nothing. Only the momentary wetness in the
other eye kept her vision from being perfectly clear.
Let the Curtain Fall
By
Michael Noakes
(June 26/2001-September 01/2001)
Lo! thy dread Empire, Chaos, is restored;
Light dies before thine uncreating word:
Thy hand, great Anarch, lets the curtain fall;
And universal darkness buries all.
The Dunciad
Act One,
Chapter Four:
The Siege
Numbly and with a terrified scream bubbling up inside, she stumbled back as
the sliding doors were ripped from their track, something massive and wet
and red crashing into the room and tearing down the wall, charging into her
friends, still off-balance from the last attack, confused in the aftermath
of that terrible anger Akane had somehow dispelled, and bumping into the
wall behind Nabiki Tendo felt weak in the knees, thinking, they're not
ready, we're screwed!
The hulking red figure--is it covered in blood? she absently
wondered--smashed its massive fist into the confused huddle of young martial
artists. Reflexes returned instantly and they scattered and then the beast
staggered back as Cologne slammed her stick into its chest, leaped past and
intercepted another figure sliding in, a long tailed lizard-like woman,
scaled and carrying long wavy knives in its many arms, it struck quickly but
was deflected by the lightning-fast blocks of the ancient Amazon, Shit,
Nabiki thought, I've never seen the old woman move so fast, but she's buying
us the time we need. Then a third figure entered, a man, tall, flesh
desiccated and taut, nearly skeletal, wrongly-bent arms a sudden blur and
then Kuno was in front of her, bokken flashing down, something shattering
against the edge of his blade mere centimeters from her neck, and then he
was moving again, knocking her roughly down as he jumped for Mrs. Saotome,
his sword again catching an unseen projectile. Stunned and unable to regain
her feet, Nabiki watched from her sprawled position as Ukyou leapt into the
battle, giant spatula scything down at the lizard woman, only to have the
shaft of her weapon caught between the blades of three knives and twisted,
the okonomiyaki chef sent flying into Mousse, the Chinese boy's flurry of
knives sent astray but deflected by her father as he pushed Kasumi behind
him, his outraged cry answered by something incomprehensible in Chinese as
Shampoo smashed her bonbori into the side of the massive red thing, sending
bloody gunk spattering everywhere but to little effect as it twisted around
and sent her flying with a backhand, the purple-haired warrior nearly
clipping her grandmother as the old woman leapt to-and-fro, shoring up the
sudden gaps left as the younger fighters got knocked around, and through it
all Nabiki noticed Ranma standing unmoving and unresponsive in the middle of
the room, Akane a few hesitant steps behind.
Nabiki's scream tried bursting free but caught in her throat, more a hiccup
of fear than a proper cry, as the huge crimson creature suddenly loomed
before her supine form, and she realized that it
_was_ blood, that a three
meter tall human-shaped mass of bleeding seeping bubbling flesh was about to
crush her with a fist the size of her torso, I don't think I can blackmail
this guy, she thought inanely, hope briefly returning as a flurry of
spatulas imbedded themselves in its chest; but to no effect; and then the
fist came down and with a reverberating howl Ryouga slammed into the
monster, physically picking it up and carrying it away with his charge and
crashing through the wall and out of the house.
A helping hand pulled her up. "Methinks we had best retreat to a safer
position," Kuno said.
He pulled her towards the stairs. She noted that Mr. Saotome was doing the
same with his wife and Dad was covering Kasumi, the four of them already
climbing towards the second floor. Her samurai-wannabe came last, bokken
held low. The top of his hakama fluttered open from a long slash across his
body. Beneath the loose cloth she could see blood trickling along the
length of his well-muscled chest and mixing with the sheen of sweat. His
eyes never left the enemies held in the main room of the house. Nabiki
looked back and saw the skeletal figure, utterly still with arms bent
mantis-like before him, but checked by Ranma and Akane; apparently the
martial artist had finally woken up. The lizard-like creature with the
knives was gone, but so were Shampoo and Mousse and Ukyou. Standing at the
entrance was a new opponent: a tall strongly built man, or so Nabiki thought
but it was hard to tell, he wore no clothes and his skin was entirely black,
mirrored obsidian, and he seemed an extension of the night lurking beyond
the lights of the house. The darkness seemed to roil about him, vacant
wisps and curls flicking across his surface. Cologne stepped in front of
the man, and then Kuno forced her further up the stairs.
A sudden eerie calm descended. Her hurried breathing and the heavy steps
ahead were the only breaks in the silence. Mr. Saotome led the way, moving
quickly and pulling his wife along with a strong grip, taking them away from
the stairs. They gathered near the end of the hallway. Ms. Saotome looked
lost, holding to her empty scabbard with a strong grip. Somehow Kasumi
still managed to look serene despite the attack, though her face was dotted
with perspiration.
Nabiki listened for sounds of pursuit. She thought she could hear muffled
thumps from outside. Faint Chinese cries from the front. Yells from
downstairs--Ranma? All around the sounds of battle, but distant, nearly
overwhelmed by the hammering of her heart. She felt disjointed from the
reality of what was happening. Friends were fighting for their lives, for
_her_ life, even her sister, so near and yet there was nothing that she
could do to help.
"I think we're safe for the moment," Genma said, standing tensely, and
Nabiki couldn't tell whether he was relieved to be away from the battle or
wanted to rush back into the fray. He looked more frightening, somehow,
than the cowardly, stupid fat man she had grown to despise over the last two
years. The eyes behind his glasses were hard and dangerous, and they
watched the staircase attentively.
A sudden hiss from Kasumi's room. The sound of cats, the single hiss taken
up by many, a screech that sent her skin crawling. Then a multitude of
yowls and feline cries, almost humanlike in their pitch. A rapid series of
wet slapping sounds, dull thuds, and heavy silence once again. The new
quiet stretched out and Nabiki realized she was starting to shake. Well,
there goes Ranma's backup plan, she thought. Kasumi gasped, one hand raised
to her lips in mute horror. She must be picturing what happened, Nabiki
thought, trying to avoid doing the same, and then sudden renewed fear: I
thought they were all downstairs!
The three men oriented on the door to Kasumi's room, faces grim. They
crept forward slowly, their steps silent, not even flinching at a sudden
detonation which flashed outside, the window flaring brilliantly and sending
their shadows scuttling across the floor. Kuno held back as Genma nodded
once at her father, and the two took up positions on either side of the
entrance. Her father lifted his fist, raising fingers in a silent count, as
his friend reached for the door.
The door behind them exploded outward. It cracked into the back of Genma's
head and knocked him down. Out of Happosai's guest room leapt a new enemy,
a brief glimpse of long hair and insect legs seen through the flying
fragments of wood. Ms. Saotome, the closest, stumbled back and into Kasumi,
the two falling down in a heap. A small, slender woman stepped past
them--small except for the long, thorny spider-like legs that erupted from
her right side, shoulder, and back; the cluster of eyes that spread across
the left half of her face, glinting above the grotesque mandible that
protruded from her drooping jaw; and the swollen sac that hung off her
distorted belly. Dad turned quickly but that heavy sac flipped up, spraying
something white and viscous that hit him square in the chest. He flew back
and thudded into the wall, dazed. Even as he slumped the liquid solidified,
ensnaring him in thick web-like strands. He cried in impotent rage as the
half-spider woman ignored him. She blocked Kuno's swift strike with the
outside of one arachnid leg and simultaneously smacked him across the face
with another; the third slammed him across the chest in the opposite
direction. The kendoist went sprawling and bounced hard off the wall. He
fell unconscious to the floor. She stepped forward almost delicately,
walking with the fine precision of a dancer or model over his body. Hell,
where she's not all deformed and all spidery she's actually pretty hot,
Nabiki thought, she's even kind of familiar looking and shit, shit, she's
coming this way what the hell am I thinking am I going to do?
She turned and ran. She managed less than three steps before her world
suddenly tilted. Legs ripped out from under, she slammed into the ground,
gasping at the jarring impact. She flipped onto her back and saw webbing
encasing her legs, stretching back to the bulging belly of the woman. Those
horribly long spider-legs blurred as they swiftly spun the strands back.
Nabiki's fingers scrabbled futilely at the grooves in the wooden floor as
she was dragged closer. She saw herself reflected in those clustered eyes,
but nothing else--certainly no pity, and the single human eye looked dead.
An unexpected yell interrupted. Behind the woman, Genma jumped back to his
feet, tossing the door aside. Hope flared in Nabiki. "C'mon, you worthless
panda!" she cried, "Do something already!"
"You should mind your manners, girl," he growled, charging forward.
His entire body jerked savagely before he could take more than a single
step. Blood blossomed from his shoulder, spraying the opposite wall. He
stared down numbly at the pair of thick, whip-like tendrils plunging through
his back and out his front. They curled and twisted sinuously, then swiftly
retracted back through the closed door into Kasumi's room. With a groan of
pain, Genma collapsed to one knee.
The door to Kasumi's room opened and a short, portly man calmly stepped out.
Balding, face stubbly with unshaven patches, naked but for a pair of
startling white, obviously new briefs--he would have been laughable had it
not been for the blood smeared across his face and hands. The newcomer took
an obvious moment to savour the situation. He looked disdainfully at
Nabiki's scattered family and friends. His lips twisted into a
condescending smirk and then he kicked Genma in the face. The fat, older
Saotome rocked back and fell over, and then the man began wordlessly beating
the shit out of the downed martial artist.
The spider-woman stepped in front of her, blocking her view.
Nabiki could only watch in immobile disbelief thinking, how the hell did
this happen? How did this shit doesn't happen to students the worst thing I
should have to worry about is deadlines and perverted professors and shit
shit she's reaching for me where the hell is everyone else has normal
families why'd mine have to be so weird she's opening my fucking shirt and
think Nabiki think get yourself out of this why does she look so familiar,
think dammit! One of the long, overreaching spider legs pulled along the
front of her shirt, popping buttons. Then it carefully peeled the shirt
open. The leading edge of the leg glinted in the light, not razor sharp but
close enough, the chitin forming a narrow edge, and it drew a slow line
across the length of Nabiki's trembling belly.
"I have to do this," the woman unexpectedly said, voice distorted by the
mandible protruding from her mouth but still recognizable, and the leg
lifted until it stood poised above Nabiki's exposed stomach, the point
pressing into the skin, ready to plunge down, and then with a flash of
sudden insight recognition hit the mercenary Tendo: if one of these things
could be a banker, then why not an up-and-coming pop idol?
"Hey, aren't you Ayumi Utada?" she asked conversationally.
Ranma Saotome watched his opponent warily. They were alone: Akane, and the
attacker, and himself. By some unspoken agreement Cologne and the obsidian
man had pulled back to the dojo to continue their fight there. Now he faced
this final opponent: a tall, gangly-limbed man, painfully ugly, emaciated
enough to be nearly skeletal, with dry and leathery skin stretched taut
across jutting bone. Nearly two meters tall but made shorter by a curving
back, the spine clearly outlined, it stood utterly unmoving with both
too-long arms poised mantis-like, the joints unnatural-looking on something
so human, long fingers hanging slim and narrow.
It stood there watching him impassively. Narrow eyes seemed to look right
through him. No,
_past_ him, he realized . . . and right at his fiancee.
"Stay back, Akane," he said.
"Hey, I'm a--"
"You're out of your league," he cut her off abruptly. "We all are."
"Then you'll need my help!" she insisted.
"Dammit, Akane, one of these things almost killed me last night! If it's
even half as tough, you might get--"
Without seeming to move, the desiccated man suddenly appeared directly in
front of Ranma. "You are the one who killed my brother?" it said, voice dry
and raspy, head cocked inquisitively to one side.
With a yelp of surprise, Ranma leapt back, keeping Akane behind him and
thinking, I didn't even see it
_move_!
A blink, and then it was standing behind him, mere centimetres from Akane.
She gasped and he yanked her away. "Father said you were a girl." Suddenly
next to Akane again, it calmly continued. "Doesn't matter, I suppose."
Again next to Ranma, this time on his left. "As eldest, it is my duty to
avenge his death," it said, the skin of its face drawing tighter across
protruding cheekbones. He realized it was smiling.
Both martial artists jumped away. It was already waiting for them where
they landed. "And I think you will find me far more than merely 'half as
tough' as my unfortunate sibling. . . ."
The first attack came, not nearly as fast as it moved yet still blindingly
quick, barely visible to the martial artist's trained eyes, mantis-like arms
snapping out. Ranma blocked the attack, bruising forearm impact, flicked a
kick out, missed, stepping in and leaning to avoid the counter, other leg
lashing up but glancing off his enemy's knee, pulling back, twisting into a
loose stance, backhand whipping out and whistling through air. Open palm
held forward, right fist chambered by his ribs, the first trickle of sweat
dotting his forehead as he shifted his stance to track his opponent's
reappearance a few meters away. Its movements were impossibly quick,
invisible as it zipped across the room. It resumed its earlier immobility.
"Stand still, dammit!" Ranma yelled, leaping forward, punch flashing out,
striking nothing, his foe again on the other side of the hall. Its arms
blurred, flinging something; Ranma barely twisted his head aside from the
first as it zinged past his nose; and he snagged the second from the air.
In the palm of his hand lay a moist razor-sharp ring: a spinal disk.
"Dude, that's gross," he said, and then its limbs were a blur, faster this
time but still visible--barely--to the martial-artist's sight: arm reaching
over the shoulder, tearing another weapon from its own spine, the protruding
ridge healing instantly, the ring then flung shuriken-like his way. He ran
perpendicular to his foe, projectiles cutting into the wall behind, narrowly
missing, trailing shirt edge sliced as he leapt forward. He hit the ground
and rolled, wooden thud as tatami behind ruptured in bamboo shreds, and
twisting as he rose he caught the last two disks in each hand. He snapped
them back as quickly as they reached his fingers.
It wasn't there anymore. It was behind him. Dry strangling fingers
wrapped around his neck. By iron strength he felt himself lifted off the
ground, air completely cut off, his fluttering rear kicks hitting nothing,
and then dizzying lurch as the grapple twisted, flipping Ranma upside
down--and slammed him face-first into the floor. Mats split and wooden
planks cracked and his head imbedded in the cold earthen ground beneath.
So you wanna play rough, huh? he thought.
He pushed off with one hand, popping straight back out of his hole.
Somersaulted in midair and landed in a three-point crouch, senses fully
extended. It was standing in front of Akane, both her wrists wrapped in one
long hand and effortlessly held suspended off the ground. She glared
furiously as it curiously looked her over.
"So you are the Key," it observed.
"Leave her alone!" Ranma screamed.
He rushed forward, a tightly restrained shadow of his earlier anger surging
through him. The idea of this thing touching Akane enraged him. Of his
friends getting hurt. Those girls who died. He still didn't know why. His
own cowardice, the fear he felt at the beginning, reluctance to join the
battle, only the Old Ghoul's quick reflexes blunting the initial charge,
should have been him, but he had been left weak and impotent as that
impossible rage Akane had seen through drained away, terrified at what he
almost did--kill a friend, hit Akane! Nearly as bad, the euphoria that rage
fed, what it seemed to empower him to do, the possibilities unravelling, the
very ideas, his father's lesson, Saffron, to kill. . . . "Don't touch her!"
He reached Akane in a flash but it was already gone, his fiancee dropped.
Ranma caught her in his arms before she hit the ground.
"You okay?" he asked.
She nodded mutely.
He gently put her down. Their opponent stood several meters away, again
unmoving, impassive. Its eyes never left Akane. This infuriated Ranma all
the more.
"You can't have her!" he yelled. "She's mine! She's
_my_ fiancee!"
"No," it answered, "Now she belongs to Father."
It attacked, crossing the distance in an instant but somehow no longer
invisible, Ranma's anger heightening his senses, the faintest hint of
movement as it ran, phantom image instinctively glimpsed. Suddenly close it
unleashed a constant flurry of bruising open-palm strikes, the edge of its
hands glancing painfully off of the martial artist's desperate blocks. A
spear-hand slashed across one shoulder and he felt wetness there, blood; and
then he realized those steel-strong fingers could easily lance straight
through flesh. Damn, he thought, I've got to put this guy down quick, I
can't keep this kind of blocking up all day. As it was, he was already
entirely on the defensive, barely able to match his foe's speed, unable to
slip an attack of his own in, so focused on blocking and redirecting strikes
he was unable to take advantage of its immobility. It just stood there,
arms lashing out without even any real martial skill, without emotions, eyes
never leaving Akane.
"You have no idea how important she is," it said, the exchange of attacks
and blocks stretching out.
Ranma grunted, pain erupting in his side as an attack slipped through. "I
know how much she means to me," he answered. I won't lose, he told himself,
I'll wear him down, he can't keep this up for long. . . .
But his opponent showed no sign of weariness, of even really paying
attention to him, while he began to feel the burn in his muscles, the pain
in his bruised arms spreading, breath becoming hotter. I can't keep this
up, he thought. He looked for a pattern in his opponent's strikes and found
none: or rather, saw a complete lack of skill or technique, and recognized
the attacks for the untrained flailing of a beginner--but released with
strength and speed beyond reason.
Time to show this guy what twelve years of training is worth, Ranma
thought. He started to sneak some advanced technique into his blocking.
Complex redirection meant to set up his opponent for a counterstrike; rapid
weaving blocks intended to slide him inside his foe's reach; and slowly, he
found himself inching closer.
"What do you want with her?" he asked, lead foot sneaking a centimetre
forward.
Without glancing his way, it answered, "Her death means freedom for us
all."
"Not while I'm alive, asshole." With a sudden burst of speed he shifted
his stance and slipped within its reach, absorbing a glancing strike against
his ribs and narrowly sidestepping the other arm. "An opening!" he shouted,
and up close he twisted sharply, rear hand thrusting forward, palm-heel
slamming into its sternum, body humming with desperate strength. His entire
arm shuddered with the impact, brief numbness flashing through his shoulder,
side, leg and heel.
It didn't flinch. It didn't even fall back a step. Both hands slapped
down and grabbed the martial artist by the shoulders and lifted him off the
ground. It looked annoyed.
"You hit me," it said.
"Twice!" Ranma snarled. Grabbing the grasping limbs and bracing himself
against the strength of those arms, he snapped his legs up from the waist,
extended feet thudding into its head with crushing strength. His foot
throbbed with the impact. It was like kicking a wall--no, worse than a
wall: more like Ryouga.
A vertiginous tilting, and it flipped him upside down and slammed him face
first into the ground again. Ranma's head punched another hole in the
floor. Before he could recover he felt those long fingers wrap around his
ankles and suddenly drag him lengthwise. Wood planks and tatami mats
crumpled and splintered against his chest as he ripped a long gouge across
the floor. His arc lifted him free, and then he went flying as it released
him. He smashed through a wall and crashed into the kitchen and impacted
the fridge. He pulled himself from the dented metal and leapt back into the
room.
It stood over Akane's sprawled form, the shattered remains of a table
scattered around it. Blood trickled from the edge of her mouth. Her cheek
was bright red. It reached down to grab her.
"I said don't touch her!" Ranma screamed. He attacked with renewed fury,
the weariness in his limbs forgotten, reaching for more speed, greater
strength, determined to put this bastard down, nobody touches Akane! And
though it still kept its eyes on Akane, its speed did not seem as impossible
as before; Ranma's anger allowed him to squeeze in the occasional attack. I
can beat this guy, Ranma told himself. I can match his speed--no, I can do
better! Again the flurry of exchanged strikes lengthened, but this time his
body thrilled with the surety of victory and kept exhaustion at bay. His
senses seemed to expand, reaching out to encompass the entirety of the
battle: a sudden hole knocked into the ceiling, Kuno's dazed head popping
through; Shampoo unexpectedly running past, sword held high; and. . . .
A sudden loud scream rang out from upstairs. And Akane, having pulled
herself away and hovering anxiously at the edge of Ranma's vision, faced the
noise. "Nabiki," she cried. She turned away. Started to run to her
sister. Leaving herself open. Dry taut skin pulling back in a smirk.
Ranma realized: the bony bastard was keeping him busy--for minutes, as his
friends were being slaughtered elsewhere!
"No!" he cried. "Akane, wait," but in reaching for her he left himself
open. A blow slammed into his chest with sledgehammer power, sending him
reeling. As he stumbled back, gasping for air, that same blurred image
appeared ahead, his enemy suddenly looming over him, again uncaring but
momentarily turning its full attention his way. One hand speared out, fast,
far faster than any previous attack, too quick to see let alone follow, he
hadn't come
_close_ to challenging this thing's speed, and Ranma flung
himself aside to avoid the strike: thunderous eruption of wet pain in his
head, and then everything tilted over. The young martial artist thudded
into the ground. He had a brief glimpse of his enemy turning towards his
fiancee's receding back, and then everything dropped into darkness.
Kasumi Tendo backed away, rising fear threatening to dispel the tenuous
hope she was desperately holding to. She still believed everything would
come out okay, in the end: she had to, otherwise the reality of what was
happening would be too much to handle, too horrible, the spider-girl talking
to Nabiki, that horrible naked man hurting poor Mr. Saotome, Mrs. Saotome
still clutching her empty scabbard, staring numbly as her husband was thrown
against a wall, and her own father straining futilely against the webs that
held him; and then the horrible man was turning towards her, a smirk dancing
faintly across his lips. He stepped over Kuno's prone form, eyes widening
with an anticipation that sent an unpleasant shiver down Kasumi's spine.
She looked away and found little comfort. Mr. Saotome groaned, battered
and bloodied, a heap in the corner, his wife rushing to his side. At least
Nabiki seemed to be doing well, she told herself: She seemed to have made a
new friend.
"You're just, like, my favorite," her younger sister squealed, sounding
more like a teenager than she ever had in youth. "I just bought your new
CD, I love it! Especially that third track, 'Automatic Love Machine
Evolution'? It, like, really spoke to me, you know, touched something deep
inside, right?"
"Really?" the spider woman gurgled, the words coming after a long pause.
It lifted its long leg away from Nabiki.
"Oh, yeah, you're like totally awesome super cool! Sometimes, I wish I
could be just like you! Like, in that new video you did, you know, with
those, er. . . guys. . . that stup-, er, cool!, yeah, cool boy band, you
know-"
"Ravashi-6?"
"Yeah! That was like, er, wow, you know, just . . .
_wow_!"
Kasumi felt a hand on her chin gently pulling her gaze back, and she saw
the man standing in front of her. He left something wet on her cheek, and
she tentatively touched her fingers to it: they came away spotted with red.
His smile grew and he raised his hand. It was covered in blood and clumps
of fur.
"You--you shouldn't have done that," she said weakly. "They never did
anything to you."
He shrugged wordlessly, eyes dancing with amusement.
"What do you want?" she asked.
He waggled his eyebrows suggestively.
"Please don't hurt my family."
Something in her words suddenly angered the man. His lips twisted into a
scowl, eyes narrowing with disgust. One hand grabbed her shoulder and
shoved her back into the wall and held her there. The other settled softly
around her throat.
"Please," she pleaded. "Don't hurt my sisters."
At that he smiled again, widely, lips parting, and as his mouth opened she
gasped at what she saw within: an absence, an empty space, the fleshy curve
of the inside back of his head clearly seen--but then movement, and rushing
into that void a mass of twisting, writhing tendrils, thin and pale. They
reached from his mouth, twisting obscenely, as his hand on her shoulder
pulled her down and he raised his open lips towards hers . . . Kasumi felt
something expand inside, a bubble of fear pushing at the boundaries of her
serenity as she watched those crawling cilia reach for her . . .then
something popped, and terror flushed through her and a scream she hadn't
known was building inside rose in her throat, and already she was screaming
inside, help me oh God help me somebody, and before her voice tore free
another scream responded, no, not a scream, but a fierce howl of rage:
Father.
The horrible naked bloodied man holding her buckled as something powerful
hit him from behind, and then he was suddenly wrenched away. "Leave my
daughter alone!" Father yelled as he picked the man off the ground. Behind
him the wall lay shattered, spider-webbing scattered, strands still
fluttering from his brown dogi as he lifted the flailing man overhead. "Get
out of my house!" He threw the man hard against the wall, and then rushed
to her side, grabbing her by the arm.
"Father!" she gasped.
He flashed a quick smile, moustache bristling and eyes sharp. "Your old
man isn't finished yet!" He gently pushed her towards Akane's room and
turned back for his other daughter. The spider-girl looked up from her
sister. Nabiki took the opportunity to pull away and started pulling at the
thick strands around her feet with a piece of broken wall.
The fallen man lifted himself onto one knee. His head was flattened on one
side, but he seemed unhurt, eyes blazing with anger. One hand snapped up,
and Kasumi glimpsed something reaching out, before everything tilted as
Father pulled her aside. A long, wetly-gleaming whip-like tentacle hung
momentarily where she had just been before swiftly retracting back into the
man's forearm..
Her sister's voice called out. Kasumi looked up at her father. Hopeless
indecision etched his face as he looked between his two daughters, the
spider-girl standing between him and Nabiki. The naked man regained his
feet and turned towards them, even as the spider-girl took a threatening
step forward.
"Get her out of here!" yelled a voice from behind. "I'll save Nabiki!"
Mr. Saotome, back on his feet, face covered in blood, dogi hanging in
tatters off his large frame. Mr. Saotome, with his wife held protectively
behind him, and a hardness of expression she had never seen before shining
in his eyes.
"Old friend!"
"Go!"
Kasumi found herself carried forward, Father's strong arms keeping her low,
something lashing out overhead and cleaving twin long gouges along the wall,
and then they ducked into her sister's room and into darkness and surprising
quiet.
"Father?" she asked, unsure of what to do.
"The window," he said, pointing.
They ran across the room, reaching the window and pulling it open. The
door behind them was ripped off its hinges. Framed against the hallway's
light stood the girl, her spider-like half a monstrous distortion of the
slim silhouette.
"Quickly!" Father said. His foot hooked and flipped up one of Akane's
stray barbells. He sent it flying towards the girl as he wrapped a strong
arm around Kasumi's waist. "The roof!" Without hesitation he jumped out
the window, something white and sticky spattering against the wall behind.
Twisting in midair, his free arm reached out and grabbed the edge of the
roof. Even as they swung back he twisted his grip, absorbing the impact of
hitting the wall with his legs; and then with a grunt of exertion he pulled
them both onto the roof.
"Are we safe here?" she asked.
"I don't know," he answered. "But I won't let them hurt you."
They heard a crash below: Akane's window shattering. They ran along the
roof to its furthest edge. From this vantage point Kasumi could see the
entirety of the grounds that made up her home. She realized that Ranma's
friends were down below, still fighting. At the back of the house, near the
pond: the one who always came to visit and that other girl, the cook, Ukyou,
rushing in and out against the massive red thing she had seen earlier. In
the front of the house, within the gates: Ranma's two Chinese friends,
leaping swiftly to-and-fro as they fought something lithe and lizard-like.
"Kasumi," her father said. "I'm afraid we may have to jump. . . ."
"Oh my." I don't think even Akane can't jump like that, she thought, not
the way Ranma and the others do. "Did that girl follow us? I can't see
her. . . ." The roof remained empty and silent but for the two of them.
"I don't know," he answered.
From here, the sounds of battle were muted, the winds swirling past
carrying them away. Faintly heard cries, crashes from within, a weak
rumble. Momentary peace lengthening.
Then everything was loud and frightening again, Father grabbing her arm and
rushing back, the spider-like girl swiftly crawling onto the roof directly
in front of them and moving with surprising speed and stealth. Kasumi
stumbled, skinning her knee as she fell. A gasp of pain escaped, calling
her father back.
"Kasumi!" he cried, leaping past her and for the creature.
"Father, no!" she cried.
Father attacked with a desperate fury unlike any Kasumi had ever seen from
him before: he ducked a leg slashing horizontally at his neck, sidestepped
the second and caught the third with the thick of his arm; and braced like
that he slammed a kick into the woman's stomach. She doubled over, face
twisting in pain, and he continued his forward rush, fist pounding into the
side of her head, sinking into the fleshy mass around the clustered eyes.
She staggered back. He rained a flurry of punches into her side,
painful-sounding cracking of fists against chitin, and she fell back
further. Then Father ran forward, shoulder tackle slamming into the girl .
. . and carrying them both over the edge.
"Father!" she cried, her voice ripped away by the wind.
Kasumi stood shivering and alone. The moon hung heavy and bright in the
sky overhead. She listened but heard nothing. Below and to her right she
watched Ukyou swing her spatula at her massive foe. The blade sank deep
into the creature but it twisted and she lost her grip, and then one massive
hand bashed her and sent her flying into a tree. Ranma's other friend,
Ryouga was his name, ran to her side and received a body-sized fist to his
back. He fell and it hammered him again and again, the ground cratering
beneath his body. She turned away at the sight, only to see Ranma's Chinese
friends fall on the other side of the house: the lizard-woman grabbed a
length of chain reaching back to the long-haired boy and, seemingly without
effort, swung him about and straight into the battered-looking
purpled-haired girl. They both collapsed in a silent heap. A loud
bear-like roar echoed from within the house. Kasumi watched as the woman
below turned towards the sound. With a single leap and a shattering of
glass she broke into the second floor, disappearing from view.
Kasumi felt something new and unpleasant rise within. A scrabbling at the
edge of the roof forced her attention. The spider-girl returned, lifting
herself over the edge, and from her heavy sack hung a thick rope of strands.
She pulled it up and hauled her father's body onto the roof.
"Kasumi!" he said, straining against the webs wrapped securely around his
arms and legs. Before she could move, the girl's head dropped down, and
that single barbed mandible sunk into his shoulder. He cried in pain as she
bit deep into the meat of his arm, and then his head lolled to the ground.
"Father?" she asked softly, taking a slow step forward.
The woman stood once again and turned arachnid eyes onto her, and smiled
viciously.
Without hesitation, Kasumi rushed forward, completely ignoring the monster
threatening her. She crouched at her father's side. "Father, are you
alright?"
"I'm sorry," he answered weakly, words thick and slurred. "I'm so sorr. .
. ."
"Shhh," she hushed.
His eyes fluttered shut--into unconsciousness, she noted with relief, expert
fingers finding a weak but definite pulse. Only then did she again become
aware of the thing standing behind her. Kasumi stood and turned and fixed
both the clustered eyes and the single human one with a strong, cross glare.
"Leave him alone!" she demanded.
It stepped forward and right up to her. Kasumi could smell the stench of
its breath, her father's blood still staining those human lips, its breath
rattling with a strange clicking noise within a distended throat. It stared
at her, and Kasumi stared straight back.
"This is my family," she said. "Please. They're my life."
All three arms, long and sharp and black, reached over and pressed into her
from behind, the points forcing her straight up against the slender
creature. It looked up at her, and its human expression was as alien to
Kasumi as the spider's. She stood there in its grasp, trembling slightly
but refusing to look away. From below she could hear increasing sounds of
combat. Its mouth opened as if to speak, but nothing emerged.
Then it roughly pushed her back, and she fell next to her father. When
Kasumi looked up again, they were alone on the roof.
Genma Saotome lay sprawled on the ground, shivering in pain and fright.
His shoulder was numb; his body ached from the beating. He didn't want to
move; he wanted to lie there and play dead and wait for everyone to go away
and only get up when everything was safe and comfortable again. Impossible.
These things weren't going to go away, not without killing everyone in the
house first. Which meant he had to flee. He wanted to. Run away; grab the
boy and just take off. Impossible. No way the kid would abandon his
friends. Or Akane. Ranma loved her, even if the stubborn shit wouldn't
admit it. He would die for her. Way things were going, maybe tonight.
Could already be. No. He'd know, his son, so long on the road, everything
done for the boy but for himself as well. Nodoka could try but couldn't
break the bond: the boy was his. His life. Entirely the boy's.
With surprising ease Genma regained his feet. The pain he felt drained
away, only the coldness in his shoulder persisting. Nabiki's plight cut
through the last of the confusion clouding his mind. Soun stood several
meters away with Kasumi, torn with indecision, trying to protect his eldest
but incapable of leaving the younger behind.
"Get her out of here," Genma called out. "I'll save Nabiki."
Soun turned, and their eyes met.
You understand, don't you, Genma thought. Just like the old days.
"Old friend!" Soun said.
So much to say. Or was there? Nothing more than, "Go!" in the end.
Soun left, taking Kasumi with him and with the half-spider girl in close
pursuit. The other one made one last attempt for his friends then turned to
face him, smiling condescendingly. It passed one hand through thinning hair
before rubbing its palms together with anticipation. Genma felt a
redoubling of fear within, mixed with revulsion at the sight of this alien
little man; but beneath it all a slow burn unfelt for many a year began to
simmer. . . .
"Husband," Nodoka's tremulous voice reached him from behind. "I'm so
ashamed," she said, her hands clutching at his back. "But I'm afraid." He
spared her a glance and she stared up at him with tearful, hopeless eyes.
Genma watched Nabiki as the young Tendo girl tugged at the thick strands
wrapped around her ankles. Their eyes met, and all he saw there was
desperation and fear.
My own wife, he thought, afraid even though I'm standing with her. The
warmth inside grew. This arrogant Tendo girl, convinced that I'll fail her,
convinced I'm nothing more than a useless panda. An almost forgotten
emotion swelled through his body: pride. He started to shake, and the
approaching monster smirked at what he took for fear, and his wife moaned
with fright, and the Tendo girl sawed at her bonds with renewed panicky
vigour; but the only thing rushing through Genma Saotome at that moment was
rage.
He stood tall and strong. With a single jerk he yanked his tattered dogi
top off. He wiped the blood from his face and discarded the garment. He
cursed them: these things attacking his family, his family convinced of his
uselessness, the arrogant presumption of these clueless children; but most
of all he cursed himself for not just running away.
The thing that faced him smiled, eyes widening with mock fear. It raised
both arms. The skin along the inside of its forearms peeled back. Two
thick and serpentine tentacles slid free, hanging loosely. They curved
sinuously for a moment, coiling wetly in the air.
Flick of the wrist. Twin tendrils lashing out. For his face, whip-fast.
With nearly casual ease, Genma grabbed both from the air.
It stared at him in shock. The things in his hand twisted and tried to
retract but could not escape his grip. Now it was his turn to smile.
"I don't think so," he growled. "Come to Papa Bear!" He yanked hard. It
stumbled forward, off balance. Genma charged forward and delivered a
punishing blow to the stomach with his knee, even as he slammed his elbow
into its head with bear-like strength. But where he expected to feel a
meaty thud or the crunching of bone, there was nothing--the head crumpling
like so much paper beneath the strike. He sidestepped away, guard raised,
keeping his opponent in front as it recovered from the attack.
Slowly straightening, it turned and faced him. The side of its head had
been torn open and his knee had punctured a hole in its stomach, but beyond
both gaps he saw nothing but emptiness. Its eyes darkened with cold fury,
but its thin-lipped smile only tightened. In those spaces Genma's attacks
had left in its fleshy shell there was movement: a mass of tiny shivering
tendrils filling the emptiness within.
It attacked, twin tendrils lashing out again. Genma dodged, rushing past
and landing solid hits, the body ripping beneath his punches. Again and
again he danced in and away, narrowly avoiding its counterstrikes. But
after several passes he had achieved little if any effect: it stood there
riddled with fist-sized holes from which a multitude of tendrils writhed and
swayed, and it seemed unbothered by the destruction of its outer skin. Its
remaining eye narrowed dangerously.
Uh oh, Genma thought. I think it's angry.
It threw its arms wide, back arching and half-face raised up, and its whole
body shuddered once; a half-dozen more thick tentacles erupted from its
body, stabbing outwards in every direction and puncturing holes in the
surrounding walls. Genma leapt aside, narrowly avoiding being skewered, but
even as he landed all eight reached for him again, whipping out with
stunning speed. He dodged and twisted and slapped those he couldn't avoid
aside and tried to keep his distance. It advanced slowly towards him,
maintaining a constant barrage. He stumbled on the broken door; every
tendril curved up and stabbed straight down; and quickly catching himself he
flipped aside. It imbedded itself in the floor. Genma took to the air. He
bounced off a wall and launched himself at his enemy. His outstretched arm
took it in the neck in a powerful clothesline, and he felt it crumple
against his forearm. When he landed, its empty shell of a head floated
paper-like to the floor, reddish worm-like cilia tumbling free.
"Ha ha!" Genma chortled. "How'd you like--"
Another cilia forest erupted from its exposed neck as it unerringly faced
him.
"You're not going to make this easy, are you?" he grumbled, before jumping
aside as it pressed the attack with renewed vigor. Genma found himself on
the defensive. Hurried glances showed Nabiki was finally free, pulling the
idiot kendo boy away from the action and towards her room. His wife
remained stuck in the corner, eyes wide with fear . . . and pride, he
realized, as she watched him, and he felt an unexpected surge of pleasure.
A lancing pain across his forearm brought him back to reality, and he knew
he was slowing down. The numbness that still gripped his shoulder was
spreading, his arms beginning to lose feeling. Worse, he was starting to
feel tired. Shit, he thought. The boy was right. I've let myself go.
Right then. That's that. Can't fight when I'm tired, now can I? I bought
them some time, now the best thing to do now is pull a strategic retreat.
Instead, he pulled on reserves of stamina long unused and continued the
fight. He ran in circles around his enemy and drew its attention away from
his wife and Nabiki. It scored a few weak blows, mainly wet slaps from its
sinuous limbs when there were too many thrashing about to fully dodge; and
while the pain was negligible, he noticed a gradual enveloping chill
anywhere it touched him. Great, he thought, the bastard's poisoning me,
too.
"This isn't fair, you know," Genma observed, breaking away for a moment.
It paused, and though its lack of a head made it difficult to tell, it
seemed to shrug apologetically. Hundreds of small tendrils squirmed from
the dozens of gaps across its body, and from within their midst reached its
thicker, wetly gleaming limbs.
"I mean, you've got poison and hollow skin and all those arms," he added
conversationally, walking in a slow circle around his foe, keeping a wary
eye for any sudden attacks. "But what do I have?"
There was a moment of intense silence. All he could hear was the sibilant
hiss of a thousand writhing limbs rubbing against each other. He took
another step. Right about here, he thought, and stopped. "You're a big,
ugly monster," Genma said, and shrugged, "and I'm nothing but a fat, lazy--"
It attacked, just as he smashed his foot down through the floor. "Panda
bear!" he finished, as cold water geysered up from a broken water pipe and
engulfed him. It hesitated in its attack, suddenly confronted with the
massive spotted bear squeezed into the hall; but for Genma there was only a
heady rush as he swept forward. One massive paw, claws fully extended,
arced forward and blasted its way through its midsection as he charged past.
There was a gory explosion as papery skin and squirming flesh splattered
back. Without pause, Genma reached down and grabbed the door to Kasumi's
room; and yanking it from its hinges and lifting it overhead with both furry
arms, he turned and released a fierce animalistic roar, and slammed it down
on his staggered foe.
There was a loud squish, and then silence.
Genma's sign read, Who's the Man? He flipped it over: I'm the Man!
"Husband," Nodoka started, rushing to his side, and he prepared to bask in
glory well deserved. I'm the Mack Daddy, he grinned, preparing to whip out
another sign. And I didn't even have to use--
The wall at the end of the hallway exploded inwards amidst a shattering of
glass. Suddenly silhouetted against the darkness behind, he saw a lithe,
serpentine figure slither closer. It was a woman, the bottom half of her
body fading into something long and lizard-like with a half-dozen legs; and
on either side of her doubled breasts reached three pairs of arms. She held
wavy knives that she twirled with expert ease, and she smiled with
cold-blooded cruelty.
Great, Genma thought, just great. Here we go again.
Mousse sat up with a gasp, one hand clutching at his head. Blood seeped
from a long gash along his forehead. The red trickle welled up against the
rim of his glasses and ran in sticky rivulets down his face. Pain throbbed
throughout his body: unhealed injuries of yesterday compounded by the
battering that snake-bitch had just dealt him and . . . Shampoo!
He leapt to his feet, pushing through the exhaustion, and saw her lying
unmoving a few meters away. Mousse rushed over and knelt next to her,
checking for injuries. New injuries: her old ones, worse than his, were
still painfully apparent, and he feared the battle had aggravated his love's
unhealed wounds. Her face was pale, vibrant purple hair matted with blood,
and both her bonbori lay severed in three next to her.
"Shampoo," he said, voice trembling. "My love?" He reached out with one
hand to shake her.
With a sudden scream she sat up, one hand chopping for his throat. He
gulped as it stopped millimetres from his Adam's apple. Her eyes slowly
focused. She spat to one side, spit tainted a frothy pink.
"Stupid Mousse," she growled, struggling to her feet. "Why you let
Snake-girl get away?"
Because I was unconscious, he thought rebelliously, just like you were; but
what he said was, "I'm sorry," his voice whinier than he would have liked.
His love gasped softly as she regained her footing. She staggered toward a
nearby tree, from which her long jagged sword protruded. One hand clutched
at her stomach. There was redness there, the blood from her reopened injury
reaching through both bandages and the silk of her dress. He hovered at her
side. "Shampoo," he said. "Maybe you should take a rest. Your injuries. .
. ."
"Are mine!" she hissed, switching to Chinese. She yanked her blade free.
Her beautiful eyes burned with fury. "Not yours." She took a hesitant step
towards the house, then another, and again, somehow pushing past the
debilitating pain she must feel. Despite the pain of her refusal, he felt a
renewed swell of love for her. So strong, he thought, and so beautiful.
Blood and dirt and sweat did nothing to diminish her charms. They merely
added to it. The contrast: her lovely softness curving beneath the
tightness of her short dress, the luxurious sweep of hair glimmering in the
moonlight; the strong tautness of her arms, the cruel hardness of her gaze.
Even after all these years my love remains undiminished. Perhaps through
this battle I can finally prove myself to her.
"It came this way," Shampoo said, examining the ground. "But the tracks
stop. It jumped." She pointed to the house. "There." Part of the second
floor wall had collapsed inward, and light beamed out of the exposed hallway
into the night. A shadow-puppet display of battle danced at the hall's
edge, and Mousse realized that an intense battle must be taking place at the
other end.
"Um, excuse me?" called a faint voice from above. Surprised, Mousse looked
up and saw Akane's older sister leaning over the edge of the roof,
silhouetted against the stars above. He didn't have time to wonder how she
ended up there. "I'm sorry to bother you, but I think Ranma's friend needs
help. The boy with the bandanna? That thing has him pinned to the ground.
. . ."
Shampoo spoke to him before he could answer. "Go help him."
"What?" he asked incredulously. And leave your side? Let you take on that
thing alone? Injured and weakened? How can I prove myself if I'm helping
that idiot pig-boy? "Shampoo! You can't . . . you can't be serious!"
"Listen to me," she hissed, grabbing a handful of his long hair and yanking
him down. She fixed him with her furious gaze. "Listen to me, you stupid
man." Mousse winced in pain but refrained from pulling free. "I don't need
your concern. I don't need your help. I am a warrior of the Joketsuzoku!
I have been shamed twice in as many days by defeat--I will not fail again,
and I don't need the assistance of some pathetic male tainting my victory."
She pulled again on his hair, hard. "Do I make myself clear, Mousse?"
He stared back at her with pleading eyes but saw no softness there, no
possibility for compromise. Mousse knew then that further begging would
only serve to delay them, placing his--well, comrades, if not friends--at
further risk. He gave a slight nod, the only leeway her tight grip allowed.
"I understand," he said. All too well, he added to himself. The pride of
an Amazon.
A chill passed through him, and he saw Shampoo shiver as she released him.
A moment later, a scintillating column of light exploded upwards in the air.
A faint, agonized cry reached them on the wind. The light reached high
into the air, slowed, flattening into a shimmering ball; and then it
plummeted back down again, disappearing on the other side of the house.
There was a thunderclap explosion and the earth trembled beneath their feet.
"Ryouga," they said, echoing each other.
"Go," she said, and turned away. Mousse watched her as she left, limping
slightly, injuries preventing her from making the leap to the second floor.
He would have gladly helped her had she but asked.
With a sigh, he turned away from his love to rush to the assistance of a
pig.
So cold. So dark. Briefly shining hope illuminated the murky hollowness
of his life, but feeble illusions are so easily shattered. He was alone, so
alone--and cold, and weak. He lay there in numb apathy, awaiting the
inevitable.
"Ryouga," whispered a voice, as if from far away. His head lolled aside,
but the voice was insistent. "Ryouga?"
Akari? He opened his eyes. He wished he hadn't. She stared down at him
with disgust and disappointment. "How could I have been so wrong? I
thought you were strong like a pig, stubborn like a pig, manly like a pig!"
She turned away in disdain. "How could I have said 'I love you'? You're no
pig--you're no better than a . . . than a duck!"
"No, wait!" he called out. "I'm not a duck! I'm a pig--a pig!"
"You're a pig?" said Akane, eyes widening with surprise. "You're--you're
P-Chan, aren't you? You pervert! Why didn't you tell me? I would have
forgiven you if you had told me, but now it's too late! May your lies carry
you down to Hell!"
"Akane, I meant to tell you, I did, Ranma made me-"
"What, Bacon Breath?" asked his friend. "I never made you do nothin'."
Ranma smirked condescendingly as he glanced down at Ryouga. He nudged him
with a toe. "Man, you seem pretty much dead to me." He shrugged. "Oh
well. You never were much of a rival, anyway. See, this is why I always
get to be the hero. While you're busy bleeding to death, I'm back in that
there house kicking all
_kinds_ of ass." He gathered both girls into his
arms and led them away. "Don't worry, dude," he said over one shoulder.
"You just go off and die now . . . I'll keep these lovely ladies safe for
ya." He faded from view, his final words lingering in the darkness: "Say,
Akari, you're pretty hot, how'd you like to be my concubine?"
"Nooooo!" screamed Ryouga.
Darkness shattered. Feeling rushed back into numbed limbs. His body
throbbed with renewed agony. He welcomed it: life was pain; the happiness
of the last few months had almost made him forget that.
The red thing loomed over him. Somewhere off to one side Ukyou lay in an
unconscious heap. One massive paw held him pinned a full half-metre into
the ground. He felt its flesh crawl against his, a thousand tiny pinpricks
piercing his skin--and draining him dry. It was sucking his blood, his
energy, his very will--it was snuffing out the light and sinking him back
into the darkness. Ryouga's clawed feebly at the arm that effortlessly kept
him down. The edge of his vision began to dim once more.
"Yes," he whispered. "I'd almost forgotten. Forever alone." He stared up
at the sunken, puffy eyes of the beast holding him down. "Because of you,"
he said, voice deepening into a growl, suddenly strong fingers sinking into
the ropy flesh at the edge of its hand. Ryouga pushed, his entire body
clenching with the effort. With a sickening slurp, the hand lifted away.
Dozens of vein-like protrusions popped free from his bloodied chest. Its
eyes widened with surprise. It pushed down harder . . . but Ryouga refused
to budge, arms and back and sides burning with the strain of keeping the
massive hand away, those hungry cilia wiggling centimetres from his skin.
"Do you hear me?" he repeated. "You sent me back to the darkness!" Akari.
Akane. Even Ranma--all taken away, again alone, numbing pain, wandering,
family, friends, grey emptiness: never again. Dark emotions surged from
deep within, black rage and darker depression welling up through the layers
of his being; all of it cold, iciness focusing in some abstract point below
his belly; then swelling, filling him even as he continued to strain against
the massive paw crushing him deeper into the earth. A fragile moment, eyes
rolling back and body suddenly absent as the entirety of his consciousness
focused on restraining that bubble swollen to its tenuous maximum;
impossible to hold back: the bubble burst.
Ryouga gasped as the river of his emotions rushed torrentially through his
body, limbs singing with returned sensation; and the words tore themselves
from his lips:
"Shishi Houkou Dan!"
His mind sank even as his depression tore free from his outstretched hands.
The release of that fullness left an emotional wasteland in its wake.
There was a moment absent of time before he could bring himself to even open
his eyes.
He lay at the bottom of a deep, bloodied crater. He struggled to stand:
first one knee, a deep breath, and finally he did it, swaying unsteadily.
His shirt was mere tatters, his torso a crimson expanse of seeping wounds.
For several seconds Ryouga stood there, confused, mind clouded by loss of
blood and the aftermath of his attack.
The gurgling howl of pain snapped him back to attention. Pulling himself
free of the rubble, he quickly found his enemy. It was standing several
meters away, clutching at the stump of its right arm. Head lifted to the
stars, it screamed into the night.
"How'd you like that?" Ryouga snarled.
It dropped its gaze to fix him with pudgy eyes burning with fury. Its cry
echoed a final time across the neighbourhood.
"There's plenty more where that came from!"
The martial artist snapped his arms forward, palms outwards, reaching again
for the dark well lurking deep within. It remained far from empty. It
didn't respond as overwhelmingly as before, but there yet remained a
lifetime of pain to share with his enemy. It charged forward, lumbering
across the distance as it picked up speed, earth trembling beneath its feet.
Ki rushed through Ryouga's body as he again yelled, "Shishi Houkou Dan!"
His projectile splashed against its huge chest--and broke, like waves
against breakers; and it crashed through his attack and crushed its
remaining fist into his chest. It felt like a stone jackhammer, sharp and
jagged, the draining softness of earlier gone, and Ryouga sailed back before
slamming into the ground. Dazed, it took him a moment to recover, and even
as he sat up it found him again with a wide backhand. It might as well have
slapped him with a boulder. The impact sent him flying into a tree, and it
splintered behind him. Stunned and numb, he slumped to the ground.
The ringing in his ears and spots before his eyes made Ryouga only vaguely
aware of his opponent's heavy approach. He knew he had to move, but his
body refused to respond. Just another few seconds, he thought, I just have
to catch my breath. . . . Instinct told him he didn't have the time. Then
the pain ebbed and his vision cleared, and he saw the fist coming, and knew
it was too late. . . .
Something coiled around his chest and arm and yanked him away, the massive
fist narrowly missing and pulverizing the remaining tree stump into
matchsticks. Ryouga hit the ground and finally slid to a stop. Laying on
his back, he stared up at his unexpected saviour.
"You're not very good at this, are you?" Mousse asked, and smirked.
Ryouga shrugged off the Chinese fighter's lasso and struggled to his feet.
"Very funny."
"Need some help?"
"I won't say no."
The creature, after a moment's confusion, turned towards them. Whereas
before it had been a shambling mound of soft, dripping flesh, now it
resembled a lumbering collection of jagged edges, a towering three-meter
giant made of crimson rock. It clenched its remaining fist into a
body-sized boulder and took a step towards them.
Mousse sent a flurry of knives flying its way. With a chorus of sharp
clangs, they bounced off without any effect.
"Great help," Ryouga said, as it took another step towards them.
"You got any better ideas?" Mousse retorted.
"You're asking me? I thought
_you_ were the sneaky one," he answered, but
his mind was racing elsewhere, considering the possibilities. Its skin was
like rock; his ki-blast hit hard, but did nothing. What if he hit it
harder?--that was always a good tactic! He was faster than it--much faster,
thanks to two years of fighting with Ranma. He even had a new technique he
was sure could work. Squinting, he looked closer. He glanced down and
pulled a tiny splinter of its fist from his chest.
"Here we go," Mousse muttered, a giant mace popping into his hand.
"Wait!" Ryouga said, raising his hand. "I've got an idea!"
"Great."
"Trust me. You got anymore of those lassos? The ones with the spikes at
the end?"
"Heh. I'm sure I've got a few kicking around somewhere."
"Get 'em ready! We're gonna pin this bastard down."
Ryouga stepped forward, again reaching for the unhappiness he carried
inside. He squared off his opponent. It stared down at him with a jagged
smile and raised its fist high in the air.
"I really wanted to save this new technique for my next real fight with
Ranma," Ryouga told it. "But I guess you'll have to do! Shishi Hijuuken!"
Its fist crashed down, shattering the earth as Ryouga danced aside and
within its reach. From the wellspring of his depression surged the familiar
heaviness--but instead of concentrating it in a ball, he coalesced it around
his body, wrapping himself in a cloak of air. Heavy air: for a moment,
nearly too heavy, pinning him to the spot. With his entire body straining
against the weight, he punched forward, super-compressed and
emotionally-charged air flowing forward and gathering around his fist . . .
the strain was enormous, knuckles popping and his hands felt as if they were
being crushed . . . and then his air-wrapped ki-heavy punch thudded into its
rocky hide. There was a loud crack--its skin, not his hand--and then
Ryouga's second punch connected and the thin fracture split wide open.
Releasing his depression and suddenly feeling featherlight, Ryouga leapt
back as it twisted and swept its hand through where he had been.
"Now Mousse!"
Blind outside of combat, the Master of Hidden Weapons proved amazingly
accurate when necessary. What looked like a harpoon trailing a metal cable
found Ryouga's opening and imbedded itself in the softness beneath.
"Quick! Before it can yank it out!" Mousse yelled.
"Thanks for the update," Ryouga muttered, and jumped back in.
It was very touch-and-go. The "Lion Hide Heavy Punch' proved far more
tiring than he had expected, quickly draining his endurance and emotional
reserves--oh well, he thought, punching another hole in its side, not bad
for a first combat trial. Good thing I didn't save it for Ranma. I hadn't
expected the attack to momentarily pin me to the ground like that: against
anyone smarter or faster, they would've cleaned the floor with me.
But as Ryouga jumped back one final time, nearly falling over from
exhaustion, he noted with satisfaction that his plan had gone as expected.
Mousse had planted a dozen or more chains, whips, ropes, and giant-sized
yoyos into its body, and tied the other ends down to every solid object
scattered across the Tendo backyard. At the centre of the maze of
crisscrossing line strained the captured beast.
"Great!" Mousse said, tying off a final knot.
"Thanks."
"Now what?"
"Huh?"
Mousse stared at him in disbelief. "
_This_ was your plan?"
"Hey! It worked, didn't it?"
With a loud grunt, the creature yanked one of its bonds free.
"Oh," Ryouga said.
"Tying it down won't do. I'm almost out of lines, anyway. We have to
_kill_ it, not restrain it. And quickly--I have to get back to Shampoo!"
"Before it gets free, you mean," the bandanna'd boy muttered. He absently
pried another piece of its shrapnelled flesh free from his knuckles.
From behind thick glasses, Mousse's eyes widened. "What's that?"
Ryouga shrugged and tossed it over, as their enemy roared and took a heavy
step their way, uprooting a tree. "Its skin. I figured I could crack it
open and pin it down when I saw it wasn't made of rock at all: it just
scabbed over--I guess all that blood makes a pretty hard shell of dead
skin."
Mousse blinked. "Dead? As in, 'not alive'?"
"Yeah. But the inside's still all bloody and soft."
"But the outside isn't?"
"Naw. Just dead skin, dried blood." He eyed the beast nervously. "We
should really-"
"What do you with dead things, Ryouga?"
"Bury them? Listen--"
"No, you idiot! You blow them up!"
"Maybe in China you do, you sicko, but in Japan we . . . blow them up?"
Mousse nodded, and smiled nastily. "Go do your thing, Piggie."
Ryouga bared his fangs in return. "And you do yours, Duck Boy."
With a howl, it finally freed itself of the last of its bonds. Blood
seeped from numerous cracks in its shell, but it seemed otherwise unhurt.
Not for long, Ryouga thought. We're putting you down for good. Running to
meet its charge, he stumbled, exhaustion suddenly catching up to him. If I
don't screw up, he added. I think I've only got one chance at this. . . .
He leapt for its chest, index finger extended, yelling, "Bakusai Te--"
With unexpected speed, its hand swept across and snagged him out of the
air. Iron-strong fingers curled around his body and slammed him into the
ground. Without letting him go, it raised him in the air and held him in
its giant grip. It began to squeeze.
A cry of pain escape Ryouga's lips. He could feel his bones grinding,
creaking, ribs rubbing together, on the edge of snapping . . . it felt like
something popped inside and blood erupted from his mouth, and he sagged
against its grip, nearly unconscious. From far away, it seemed he could
hear the sound of metal clanging ineffectually off of stone.
Pain eased for a second as it brought Ryouga up to head level. Tiny liquid
eyes buried deep inside its head watched him with amusement as he slumped in
its hand. It grinned and opened its mouth wide, and bit forward.
The martial artist reached out one trembling hand and tapped it on the
nose. "--Ten Ketsu," he whispered.
A latticework of hairline fissures spread across its face. Red fluid
geysered from amidst the widening cracks, spraying out in high-pressured
sheets--a moment later, its face exploded. Ryouga saw swirling fibrous
redness sunken deep within shattering flesh, and even further in he glimpsed
a human skull, jaw extended wide in what resembled a voiceless expression of
pain. It staggered and fell backwards, hitting the ground with a loud
crash; suddenly free, Ryouga tumbled through the air like a rag doll. He
landed flat on its chest as it struggled to regain its feet, globs of
crimson flesh spilling from its neck. With the last of his rapidly fading
strength, he tapped it over the solar plexus.
Its chest collapsed with a gory explosion. Ryouga again fell back, sliding
off its gaping torso. As darkness rose to engulf him he had a final sight
of Mousse, hovering high overhead, robes thrown open, glasses glinting in
the moonlight, arms spread wide, as he yelled, "Muusuno Furumonti Totsu,"
and an entire arsenal of sharply gleaming weapons stabbed straight down.
"Tatewaki Kuno fights on!" With these words the mighty kendoist shot to
his feet, wooden blade held at the ready, hawk-like eyes darting about in
search of his enemy. "Wither is that evilly arachnid, yet strangely
compelling, woman?"
"About time you woke up," muttered a voice at his side. He glanced back
and saw his charge, the mercenary Nabiki Tendo, standing next to a door.
Judging by pictures she had shown him previously, he stood in her very
bedroom. Sounds of ongoing combat slowly filtered in through the ringing in
his ears.
He quickly strode to her side. "The battle yet rages?"
Nabiki nodded. "I don't know where the others are. Mr. Saotome is out
there holding two of them off on his own." She toed the door open a crack.
"I had no idea the old sack of lard still had it in him."
Kuno peered into the hallway. The father of the vile sorcerer Saotome
moved with a speed and grace that belied his bulk. He danced between twin
spouts of water spraying from holes in the floor, and slipped past the
attacks of his multiple enemies. The old man laughed as he pushed off a
wall and bounced off the head of the vile spider-woman; he spring-boarded
forward and planted his foot in the face of another woman, this one
resembling a serpentine lizard. The martial artist fought with either a
genius' skill or an idiot's disregard--being the father of the sorcerer
Saotome, he rather suspected the second--but either way, he was successfully
holding his own. For the moment: to Kuno's trained eye it was apparent that
Saotome's father's strength was rapidly flagging.
"How can I sit idly by whilst others risk their lives? Unforgivable!" he
stated, throwing wide the door. "I return to battle!"
"Kuno, no, wait!" Nabiki Tendo exclaimed behind him, "Remember the plan!"
He disregarded her concern. True warriors disregard planning; his place was
in battle! He leapt forward, attacking the nearest foe: the newly
encountered lizard-woman.
"Take this!" he exclaimed, and his blade lashed out, scoring a strong slash
across its back. Scales split and greenish ichors sprayed beneath his
might. "A very palpable hit!"
With blinding speed the creature before him spun around. He had a glimpse
of a woman's face--cold, glassy eyes like a snake's, sharp features, long
fluttering tongue--before sharp metal flashed across his vision. He
stumbled back a step, then glanced down. His bokken held together a moment
before falling into two. The advancing monster smiled cruelly.
Kuno returned an arrogant smile of his own. "Ah ha! You think you are the
first to slice my might bokken in two?" He caught the two fragments and
twirled them expertly in his hands. "The great Tatewaki adapts and battles
on!"
He leapt to the attack once more, noting that it skilfully wielded four
blades between six hands; a daunting advantage, certainly, but he felt no
fear. 'Twas a modern-day samurai's duty to defeat such evils! He parried
the beast's opening thrust and riposted, engaging two other flashing knives
with the broken blade he wielded in his left hand. Another strike, a flurry
of blocks, twisting aside, stabbing down with both half-bokkens: and it
wasn't there, slithering aside with lightning speed. Before he could track
it, pain slashed across his left forearm--a wound delivered in passing.
"Little samurai boy," it hissed, smiling. "I'll enjoy feasting upon your
entrails."
His nose wrinkled with distaste. "I'll not have my innards eaten by one of
such low stock as you," he replied. "The mighty Tatewaki's insides are for
those with a refined palate!" He charged forward once again--or tried to,
suddenly finding his movement arrested. He looked down and found its long
tail wrapped securely about his leg.
"The Great Father should have made me a cat," it said. "For I do so enjoy
playing with my food."
A savage yank and Kuno found himself lifted and thrown across the hall,
crashing painfully into the opposing wall. Another pull, slamming into the
ceiling, then down, shoulder going numb as it cracked the floor open. A
final toss and he went flying into Nabiki's door. It shattered and he
tumbled into her room.
Through blurry eyes he saw Akane's sister screaming at him, lips forming
unheard words; then his vision was filled with the form of his enemy.
Slender feminine arms possessing surprising strength lifted him up.
"You weren't much fun at all," it said. "Perhaps I'll save you for my
sister." Then the world tilted and he felt multiple arms bash him into the
floor. He blacked out.
It has misjudged the mighty Tatewaki Kuno's head, was his first thought
upon regaining consciousness a few moments later. 'Tis made of stronger
stuff than mere wood! He quickly noted his position: he half-dangled into
the room below, wedged between planks of wood, his posterior ingloriously
protruding into Nabiki's bedchamber. He felt something--perhaps its
tail--cruelly slap his rear before leaving.
That fiend shall pay for this ignoble treatment of my backside, he raged.
Yet how can I continue this battle? It destroyed my mighty bokken!
He opened his eyes. "Hullo," he whispered. A mere half-meter away, the
Saotome family katana lay imbedded in the ceiling.
The snake-woman slowly turned about, Akane's borrowed barbell tumbling from
its perch atop the monster's head. Nabiki stared numbly at her own hand.
Did I just throw that? she asked herself. For Kuno? It slowly approached,
half-walking half-slithering, head bobbing from side to side as if trying to
get a better perspective on its prey. A trickle of something green seeped
from its back, beading along the curve of her shoulders and catching along
the inner sweep of the bottom pair of breasts. It didn't seem to care,
smirking disdainfully as Nabiki backed away, trembling.
"Um . . . I'm sorry?" she suggested hopefully. She tried to find some
familiar features, anything recognizable beneath the reptilian sheen, but
this new attacker drew a complete blank. Why couldn't it be an air-headed
bimbo pop-star like the last one? Nabiki couldn't think of any way to
distract this one. Would anyone even come to her rescue if she did? How
much longer could Genma last; where the hell was Ranma anyway; what about
all those other goon friends of his who kept wrecking the house? If only
Kuno hadn't charged off --their backup plan was so tantalizingly close. . .
.
Less than a meter away it halted, and in its reptilian features Nabiki
thought she detected some confusion. Its long, forked tongue flickered
rapidly in the air. That's how snakes smell, isn't it? she thought. Smell:
hadn't Ranma said something about them tracking Akane by the scent she left
on him? And that they wanted to capture her? Maybe if this thing thought
she was Akane. . . .
"Um, hi," Nabiki said, trying a hesitant wave. "I don't think we've met.
My name's Akane Tendo?"
It paused, glassy eyes boring into her. It fingered the edge of one of its
blades, its tongue flicking tentatively. "Is that s-so?" it asked with a
sibilant hiss.
"Yup, you betcha. The all-important youngest Tendo sister, that's me!"
"I'm s-so glad I found you firsst," it said. "Father would betray the
family through his ambition, but I will not s-stand by as he brings ruin
upon uss all." A sinking feeling grew in Nabiki's stomach. "I shall reap
the reward of your death and overthrow Akuji; I shall usurp my elder
brother'ss place and asssume leadership of the family! Through your death I
shall become clan Mother!"
"Death?" Nabiki squeaked.
It smiled. Before she could move it darted forward, grabbing her by the
shoulders with its free hands. It effortlessly picked her up and slammed
her against the wall. "Don't worry," it said. "This will hurt a lot."
Nabiki did the only thing she could think of: she screamed, loud and hard.
Somewhere in the back of her mind she thought: this is embarrassing. Two
years of this shit, and I never screamed once. C'mon Kuno, get your ass out
of the floor and save me!
"Unhand her, vile fiend!"
My hero.
With a loud hiss the snake-woman spun about, tossing Nabiki aside. Kuno
stood by the hole in the floor, the Saotome katana held low and ready.
Bare-chested, his skin gleamed in the faint light, and his dark gaze
smouldered with fury. "Though this blade be unworthy of the honour, it
shall be the vehicle of my vengeance: none may abuse the mighty Tatewaki
Kuno's posterior and live! Feel my fury . . . Strike!"
The kendoist darted forward, metal point stabbing rapidly. His foe parried
and reposted and attacked with her other knives; but Kuno countered every
strike and held the monster at bay amidst a shower of sparks and ringing
metal. Nabiki watched breathlessly as her samurai-sans-shining-armour
struggled for dominance. He really
_has_ gotten better, she thought,
inching away from the fight.
"You shall not s-stand in the way of my ascendancy!" it snarled, and even
as its attacks became more furious its tail lashed out for Nabiki. She
tried to escape but was too slow; she found herself picked up and viciously
thrown against the wall. She bounced off and hit the ground hard and lay
there in pain. An acrid taste filled her mouth--blood. That's it, she
thought. The bitch is going down.
Kuno cried out. With an unexpected burst of speed, a blade slipped through
his defences and stabbed him in the shoulder. He staggered; deep slashes
appeared across his chest as it blurred forward, and a sudden punch sent him
sprawling into the wall. He slumped to the ground, dazed. The snake-woman
slithered towards him, knives poised for a killing blow.
"Yo, She-Witch!" Nabiki called out. She staggered across the room, using
the wall for support. She spat to one side and fingered her swollen,
cracked lip. "Let's go."
It snarled and lunged forward, just as Nabiki called out, "Tendo Special
Attack!" She threw her closet door open and leaped to the side, thinking,
I've always wanted to say that!
The beast screeched to a halt as the trap was triggered, but it was unable
to avoid the avalanche pouring from the closet. It tried backing away,
desperately slashing and blocking with multiple blades, but to no avail. It
found itself overwhelmed. A moment later the deluge abated. Unharmed, it
stood there and blinked amidst a devastation of flowing red, spattered
green, and black seeds. It stared dumbfounded at the chunks of watermelon
clinging to it scales, the pieces speared by her knives, and the whole
melons she held in each hand.
"I have seen the evil," growled a voice from behind, "and it is green!"
Kuno stood once again, and shadows danced across the room as he blazed with
unholy fury. His eyes flared red and he raised the Saotome blade overhead.
"Vile demon fruit! Red infernal juices and black hellspawn seeds! You mock
me! You mock me with your delicious ripeness! Death to you--DEATH!"
Nabiki almost felt sorry for the creature as it charged forward to meet
Kuno's ranting and raving. She sat back and idly dabbed at her swollen lip,
and watched as first one limb, then another, flew across the room. Not
really, she amended. Damn thing gave me a fat lip. She sat back and
watched as Kuno, screaming about the 'dire plumpness of the dark gardens of
the underworld', whittled the creature down to a single arm within a minute.
Only once the ichors and blood had washed the melon away did Kuno lose
interest, and he started attacking the fruit scattered about the room. With
a screech it broke away. It crashed through a wall and disappeared from
sight.
Darn, it got away, Nabiki thought, keeping well clear of Kuno's slashing
disposal of the remaining watermelons. Or not, she added, as a loud
trailing squeal rang out, and was abruptly cut off.
Shampoo stepped through the hole in the wall a moment later. Her long,
jagged blade dripped gore. The Amazon looked disappointed.
"Hey, Shampoo," Nabiki said, waving her in.
"Shampoo sad," the Amazon said, keeping a wary eye on the kendoist. "Silly
Stick-Boy made kill too easy."
Nabiki shrugged and was about to try and calm Kuno down, when a scream
echoed through the house. Loud and pained, it was chilling to hear and she
stood in stunned silence until, reduced to a hoarse croak, the cry died out.
She met Shampoo's alarmed gaze, mirrored it.
"Ranma?"
Pulse pounding, blood soaring, muscles thrumming with triumphant energy,
exhaustion, pain, injuries somehow made irrelevant, a decade of fear lifted
away, overrun, buried by the violent joy coursing through his body: Genma
Saotome felt alive for the first time in years. He laughed as he slid
beneath the spider's scything leg, bounced off a wall, and head-butted the
snake; he balanced there head-to-head for a second, giggled, then thumbed
his nose at his opponents and tumbled away. He would leap into the spout of
cold water and slam an enemy back; hot water and returned nimbleness helped
him dodge away.
He knew he couldn't keep it up forever--he was amazed he had lasted as long
as he had. Alone against two opponents: even the boy had barely survived
last night's fight--hell, he had needed help! You've still got it, Genma,
he told himself, you're still The Man! The last decade spent training
Ranma, spent in flight from his own wife, the constant dodging of
responsibility, gnawing fear, unable to face the same conflict his own son
now faced: all of it somehow irrelevant, his own core rediscovered. The
greatest victories of recent memory had been Ranma's victories: watching his
son master a technique overnight, watching the boy tear a God down from the
skies, and thinking, 'I created that, I trained that'; but always vicarious
thrills once removed, another's accomplishments, his blood but not
_his_ . .
. somewhere in the last twenty years, Genma realized, I forgot myself, I
lost my own path.
Sliding side-thrust, slamming the spider-girl into the wall, twisting
around to meet the snake-girl's attack and finding it gone, distracted by
the Kendo boy's attack. Good, he thought, now I can put this first one
down, make her regret returning, I hope Soun's okay, if this bitch hurt him
I'll rip those legs off . . . but even as Genma turned back to his enemy
there was an eruption from behind, the door he had earlier slammed down
thrown up and hurled his way. The martial-artist met the door with a loud
shout, hand knifing down and slicing the wood in two. Stepping through, he
saw his earlier opponent. Any illusion of humanity was gone, not even a
shell remained: a squirming mass of tendrils and flailing tentacles shambled
his way, and from within the whole he glimpsed a snapping, jagged jaw.
Good, he thought, I wouldn't want this to get
_too_ easy. . . . He stood
alone. By his orders even his wife was gone. His son, elsewhere,
protecting the girl he loved. Tendo, comrade of youth, maybe already
fallen. The torn expanse of hallway, open to the outside, other rooms,
walls shattered, sounds of battle nearby, and on either side these monsters;
and his breathing was laboured, battle euphoria slipping, pain forcing
itself onto him, and a dread awareness that there was no way he could win
this, not without breaking promises made long ago, settled upon him like a
heavy weight.
You've broken enough promises in your lifetime, Genma, he told himself.
But not this one. He still wanted to run: who could blame him? He had
created the Saotome Special Technique for just this occasion. But he knew
the consequences--with heated blood singing in his ears, he could hardly
ignore them as usual. If he didn't keep these two busy, they would turn to
other targets: Tendo's daughters, that useless kendo boy, even those Chinese
kids would be slaughtered before the added onslaught. But where youth
fails, maybe a fat old panda can shoulder the weight, eh, Genma old boy?
With a wide smile he quelled the final urge for flight, and stepped forward.
"Welcome back," he said to the pile of quivering limbs. He gave a short
bow to the spider-girl. "Let's finish this, shall we?"
Genma Saotome charged back into battle: Take 'em quick forward rush the
girl is weaker of the two at a time to show everyone what I'm able of taking
these two on one was almost too much for the boy is finally learning.
Careful now focus and how'd you like that, bitch, woops, too close, how the
hell do I hurt this thing? Technique. Jab jab sidestep cross backstep
twisting uppercut block block block block weave closer cross backhand
hopping back crescent kick--pain, damn it got me, arm numb, not enough, not
enough, technique. No. Lines drawn years ago, I shouldn't have told the
boy, his own choice now. Duck: yeah, that's right, tangle that thing with
your own webs, girl! Heh heh. Ouch--damn, it's strong, already free, no
way I'm not done teaching the boy knows so little time left secrets he'll
never learn my legacy is right now dammit I won't lose to these things are
monsters; I've seen worse. Get the hell over here, girl, think that'll stop
me, take this and this and up you go, yeah, Panda Airways one way flight to
the other thing, that's
_gotta_ hurt! No? No? Then again and again again
again again; go down already! A scream? Nabiki . . . what, do I have to
save everyone myself? Focus--Un. That hurt. Pull it together, Genma.
Just a little longer. Where's the boy? He'd be proud of his old man now.
Wouldn't he? I held three of these things off. Kept the girl's sisters
alive. Kept the wife safe. Nodoka, you see, not a failure. Still the man
you fell in love with. But the kid's mine. You'll know after tonight. I'm
through running.
Genma Saotome stood wearily amidst the carnage of the second floor of the
Tendo residence. He felt distanced from his own body, light-headed and
aloof. Seemingly from afar he viewed himself. I look terrible, he thought.
The barest suggestion of a dogi hung in tatters from his battered frame.
Blood slowly seeped from a dozen wounds across his bodies--bites and
slashes, gouges and punctures--and he was awash in red. Shoulders hunched,
arms hanging limply, curved back: only the hard glitter in his eyes showed
his continued defiance. With some reluctance he forced those heavy legs
into movement; every action seemed removed, unfelt through the pervasive
poisoned numbness gripping his body.
At least they don't look so hot either, he thought. I can still take them.
Yeah. Of course I can. He attacked, sluggishly and with what felt like a
kitten's strength. A long limb coiled around his waist and picked him up.
It slammed him into the ground. He hardly felt it. He broke free; he
didn't know how. Something slammed across his head. He fell to one knee.
The spider-girl raised one glinting limb. Their eyes met: amidst the
wreckage of her face, the broken nose and pulped clusters, a single human
eye wept in pain and hopelessness. Yeah, great, thanks, he thought wryly,
as the leg stabbed straight for his chest.
Then the monster stopped. Its eye dimmed and rolled up in unconsciousness.
It rocked to one side. Akane stood there, jaw set with determination,
second fist hammering down into the back of its head. I can't believe it,
he thought. Saved by the girl. She looked down at him in concern. "Are
you okay, Mr. Saotome?"
Do I
_look_ okay? he was going to answer, when he saw the thing approaching
behind her. Time seemed to stop. Akane stood as if frozen. His senses
exploded outwards, and for a moment his body resonated powerfully with
returned awareness, a heady mixture of pain and potentiality that Genma had
only felt rarely before, and not once in over two decades. He could have
cried with pleasure, with joy--I forgot! he wanted to cry. For a
moment--there was nothing but the moment, and he felt terribly alive within
it--it seemed he could grasp the entirety of the battle around him: the
wounded tentacled thing behind him, Kuno and Shampoo and Nabiki nearby, his
best friend alive on the roof, Akane's eyes caught between concern and
surprise, even the boys and that cook outside, surrounding the black man
from earlier; and his son, struggling to his feet . . . too far, and too
late. Too late. Son. His life. Entirely the boy's. Everything stood
immobile outside of that savagely held second, except for himself--and the
thing coming up behind Akane. It walked forward at an insultingly casual
pace, eyes locked on the back of the girl's head. It came to a stop behind
her, both mantis-like arms poised overhead, fingers held together
spear-like. It stabbed down. With a loud roar that came from the very
depths of his being, the martial artist regained his feet and, shoving Akane
aside, he slammed the strongest kick he could muster into the thing's side.
There was a loud crack. He felt bone shatter: its ribs, his own leg. It
staggered but did not fall. Only then did Genma look down and notice the
arm thrust through his chest. Somehow, he felt numb to the pain.
"Fool," the thing whispered to him.
"Not anymore," he answered.
Smiling broadly, Genma Saotome let go of the moment.
Ranma staggered to his feet. He felt dizzy, vision blurred, and with his
first few steps he wobbled into a wall. He touched the side of his head and
found it wet with blood. Burgeoning panic and the impulse to do something,
the instinct that everything had gone terribly wrong, filled him; but his
need slammed against the pain in his head and he held himself trembling
against the wall, fingers digging into the wood, trying to think, think his
way through the pain--what was missing?
Where was Akane? Her absence shattered his confusion. He sprinted up the
stairs, turned the corner. . . .
And saw his father. On his knees, slumped back with his head nearly
touching the floor . . . his chest a bloody ruin. Ranma's enemy from
earlier stood over his father, one hand stained crimson. Akane stumbled
away, eyes wide with disbelief. Mouth open with a silent scream that
wouldn't come. The tall man shoved the bloodied body away, and Genma fell
with a dull thud at Ranma's feet.
"Pop?" he said, voice soft. He kneeled next to his father. "Dad?'
His father's eyes flickered open. "Hey, Son. . . ."
"Shit, Dad, no, oh man no, this can't . . . hold in there, Pop, c'mon-"
"Ranma-"
"Don't talk, Pop, we'll-"
"Shut up, Boy! I'm trying to pass on my wisdom here!"
Ranma nodded.
"Remember the riddle? Yesterday's story?"
"With the stupid tiger and--" Ranma swallowed, and nodded again.
Genma gave a small chuckle, and winced. "I was right. I was right! I ate
the strawberry, Son . . . and it's the most delicious thing I've ever
tasted." His eyes slowly drooped shut, and his head lolled to one side.
"Dad?" Ranma rocked his dad. "Father?" There was no response. He shook
him again. Nothing. He looked at the ruined body before him, bloodied,
broken, empty. Genma Saotome was dead. His father was dead. "C'mon, Pop,"
he tried again, giving the body a final shove. "Get up, you shitty old
man!"
"Ranma?" He turned hopeless eyes to Akane. She looked at him with
empathic grief. He turned from her to the two creatures standing mere
meters away. Watching his pain. Responsible for his father's death. Ranma
slowly rose to his feet. He looked at his father's battered corpse; at his
fiancee; at the ruins of the Tendo household, his home; and then back at his
father.
His father was dead.
He didn't know where it came from; he was hardly aware of doing it. Ranma
screamed, head tilted back, arms thrown wide, frustration and anger tearing
through him, this was impossible, his father was dead, what did these things
_want_, his father was dead, rage mingled with self-loathing infused every
fibre of his being, his father was
_dead_, he should have been here, fought
harder, stronger, his father. . . .
Was dead. It's my fault, he thought, the cry dying in his throat. Pop
even told me. His final lesson. He looked down at his father one last
time. "You were right, Pop."
No more holding back.
"Don't worry," said a harsh voice. The mantis-like man from before. "You
will soon join your father, boy." A blink, and it appeared before him.
Arms poised to strike. Akane's cry reached Ranma from somewhere far away.
An immensely strong hand speared forward with its full, impossible speed.
Ranma caught the hand at the wrist. He stopped it a few centimetres from
his chest. Only then did he look up. Sunken eyes widened in a very human
expression of surprise--and fear. Ranma could feel the arm in his grasp
straining to pull away. It was strong, but at this moment nowhere strong
enough. Ranma searched its face and saw in its sudden terror a fragmented
reflection of what his own visage must resemble. He noted the flailing mass
of tentacles squirming a few meters behind, and thought to himself, It all
ends here.
"My name is Ranma Saotome," he said. "You killed my father. Prepare to
die."
The martial artist flowed forward. He felt colder than ever before, his
own Soul of Ice brought to a new level; and through that chill he reached
for his father's techniques. Pop's a genius, he thought; was a genius, he
amended, and with the faintest hint of a grim smile he opened himself fully
to the power of the Umisen-ken and the Yamasen-ken.
He effortlessly slipped phantom-like within his opponent's reach. Ranma
lunged forward with twin spear-hands of his own. Metal-strong flesh of
before parted like paper. Both hands plunged deep into the creature's
chest.
Geimon Tetsusen Shi, he told himself.
With a fierce kiai he threw his arms wide, as he kicked forward with all
his strength. In an explosion of blood and gore, the body in front of him
ripped asunder, and spraying chunks of torso were thrown in a wide arc
across the hall. He stepped down and through the expanding crimson cloud.
Mouko Kaimon Ha.
The alien mass before him didn't move. Whether frozen with fear or simply
too slow to react, it was irrelevant to Ranma. Arms still thrown wide from
his father's "Fierce Tiger Opening Gate Blow" slammed together in a fierce
embrace. The mass squirmed and flailed and something hard at the centre
snapped and bit, and it thrashed fiercely in an attempt to break free of
Ranma's crushing squeeze. He hugged the creature and tightened his grapple
until he heard something crack. Both his hands rested on either side of
something hard and skeletal found at the core of his enemy. He felt it
split and crumble beneath his father's attack.
Kaichuu Houjiyu Satsu.
He reached past the Soul of Ice for something stronger, angrier--and he
found a seething wellspring of rage at his disposal. It was hot and fierce
and demanded release. How long had he restrained this power, and to what
end? The fullness of it felt briefly in the fight with Saffron, but denied,
frightened at what it suggested. A mere hint of it touched in the fight
last night--the demands of necessity, but still he had been too cowardly to
accept the possibilities.
If he had, his father would still be alive. Ranma immersed himself fully
into his rage. It flowed through him, hot and powerful, bitter. The
potential. That instant last night; the fragment glimpsed just before he
threw Saffron down: the same, fleeting moments in which anything seemed
possible, reaching beyond the frail limitation of human flesh. Standing
within it, the moment no longer seemed so ephemeral.
Ranma let go of the moment. Twin blasts of unbridled energy poured from
his hands. They met in a bright detonation of light and power, and Ranma
threw his arms wide and let the torrent escape in a brilliant swath of
expanding destruction.
Kanseikei Mouko Takabisha.
"I'm sorry, Pop," he whispered, and dropped to one knee. Eyes closed, fists
clenched, he shuddered with both the release and with something else he was
afraid to admit: heady pleasure. For an indefinite period it seemed all he
could do was crouch there and shake, wracked with emotions he could neither
restrain nor fully understand. The tremors finally subsided, and with a
trembling breath he wearily rose to his feet. Ranma opened his eyes.
A corner of the house was gone. His "Complete Fierce Tiger's Dominance'
had ripped Happosai's guest room away. The night air billowing in felt cool
against his feverish skin. The chill of before was gone: now he felt hot.
His rage was far from spent. He turned back towards the house.
His friends were there: Kuno, Shampoo, Nabiki. His mother. And Akane.
They all watched him with wide eyes, and behind the shock he recognized
fear. Perception pulled back, and only then did he become fully aware of
the destruction he had wrought. His ki-blast had reduced the second
creature to a fine paste spread across the floor and walls. Father's
Yamasen-ken techniques had ripped the desiccated 'eldest brother' into four,
and scattered the bleeding portions in different directions. Innards coiled
and spread across the floor. His clothes were soaked in others' blood. A
part of him quailed in horror at what he had just done; but mostly he took
grim pleasure in his father's vengeance.
Ranma knelt by his father's body, only dimly aware of his mother coming to
his side. He wanted to shed tears, but nothing would come. He stayed there
by Genma's side holding one limp hand, head bowed in silence. He sunk
himself deeper into his rage, and grew hotter with every passing moment.
The young man knelt next to his dead father. His mother stood at his side,
and by her expression it was clear she yearned to comfort him. Akane
recognized Ms. Saotome's impulse, for she felt it herself. But there was no
approaching Ranma. Not now. He was lost in his grief--and through his
pain, he had found anger. She had seen it; they all had. The absolute ease
with which he had slaughtered his opponents, and the extreme violence used:
she never would have thought Ranma capable of such brutality.
But then, she had only been dimly aware of his actions atop Mt. Phoenix.
The possibility of her death had driven him to reluctantly kill before; the
sight of Mr. Saotome's torn body pushed him over the edge. Earlier tonight,
under the influence of the initial attack, she had seen a glimmer of the
anger her fiance was capable of. Now he revealed it in full, and Akane felt
frightened.
There was a loud crash from below. Oh no, she thought, it's not over!
There were four accounted for here, but what of Ryouga's opponent and
Cologne's target--were they still alive?
The others rushed for the stairs, cursing as they went. Akane hesitated,
unable to pull her eyes away from Ranma. There was a whispered exchange
between mother and son; and after a final moment of silence, her fianc�
stood up. He looked at her. The surge of emotions expressed by his eyes,
etched into his face, both tugged at and repelled her. Such anger and pain;
bloodlust and fear--he seemed somehow lost, and the grim smile he still wore
creased his features into unfamiliar lines.
"Ranma?" she said, her voice hardly above a whisper.
He shook his head and wordlessly turned away. With slow, measured steps he
walked towards Kasumi's room. Akane remembered: in preparation for the
siege, neighbourhood cats had been rounded up and stored in her sister's
room. A backup plan--an emergency strategy to be used only if something
went terribly wrong.
Everything was terribly wrong. It was only as the martial artist left the
reach of the few remaining hallway lights that she noticed: Ranma was
glowing. In the pool of darkness outside Kasumi's room, he stood revealed
within his own aura; and tiny tongues of flame danced across his body. With
a final glance back, he stepped into her sister's room.
I don't want to see this, she thought, in this state of mind, who knows how
he'll react? She nearly fled down the stairs, and only as she neared the
main hall did she realize that, at that moment, she feared her own fiance
more than whatever final challenge awaited her here. Only as she reached
the first floor did she ask herself why: her confidence that Ranma could
never willingly hurt her remained absolute, so what was she afraid of? She
turned the corner and saw that last remaining opponent.
He stood in the middle of the room, nearly invisible against the looming
night behind him. An obsidian man with flowing darkness wrapped about him
like a cloak. Nearly two meters in height, the suggestion of taut muscles
rolled beneath the glassy smoothness of his skin. The approach of new
defenders seemed merely to amuse him. Akane then noticed her other friends:
Mousse and Ukyou lay in a groaning heap on the far side of the room, slowly
untangling themselves; opposite them, a painfully battered-looking Ryouga
struggled to stand.
"Watch out!" the bandanna'd martial artist called out, as he unsteadily
regained his footing. "He's unbelievably strong!"
Akane watched from the edge of the room as her friends scattered and formed
a semi-circle around their final opponent. Numerous emotions swelled within
as she saw the determination in their eyes, noted how battle-weary and
wounded they all were. This was all her fault-indirectly, she accepted, as
Ranma had convinced her earlier tonight--but her friends were still fighting
to protect her. Fighting, it seemed, to the very end. She swallowed hard
at the thought: Ranma had already lost his father because of her actions.
Blinking against the sudden sting of tears, she took her place in the circle
around their enemy.
He turned toward her as she joined the group, and smiled. "At last," the
man said, his voice deep and mellifluous. "The prize approaches."
"I'm not your prize," she answered. "This isn't a game."
He seemed to consider that for a moment. "But it is. Oh, believe me, it
is: one that has dragged on for far, far too long. And tonight I take the
first step toward ending it once and for all."
"People have been hurt!" she yelled at him. "There's a man dead upstairs!"
She was crying, thinking of Ranma, of his loss, the pain and tortured
acceptance of what he had done in order to avenge his father's death.
At that, the man seemed to grow angry. "A man dead? My family is dead!
You have killed my family, my beautiful sons and daughters!" He levelled
one accusing finger at Mousse. "That one slew my son." Turning, he then
pointed at Shampoo. "And that one cut down my beloved eldest daughter."
Turning back to Akane, he fixed her with a baleful glare. "Do not speak to
me of loss! My family lies slaughtered--by children! By small, young,
pathetic children!" He took a single step towards Akane, and her friends
tightened the circle around him at the movement.
He stopped, his smile returning. "But you make it all worthwhile, my
beautiful and elusive Key." With a sweeping gesture he took in the
encircling martial artists and beyond them, the destruction of the house.
"My family can be replaced, but you--oh, you, my wonderful, precious
treasure, are a unique opportunity. Let us put an end to this foolishness.
Come with me, child, and I'll spare these ignorant friends of yours."
Ryouga's growl cut off any answer she could have made. "She's not going
anywhere with the likes of you."
"The likes of me?" he repeated, voice growing in volume. "The likes of
_me_? Idiot child! Do you even know who it is you face?"
"It doesn't matter," Ryouga answered. "I won't let you touch Akane."
"Do you think you can stop me, then?" the obsidian man answered, and his
smile grew. "Will you offer me a greater challenge than that old crone?"
An audible gasp from Shampoo, a sharp intake of breath by Mousse; and Akane
felt her own stomach sink at his words.
"Great Grandmother?" whispered a stunned Shampoo.
"An amusing divertissement," the man answered, "but little more."
"No!" shrieked the purple-haired Amazon, leaping forward with her sword
held high. A beat later her friends joined the charge: Kuno with the
Saotome katana, Mousse wielding two wicked looking jagged axes, Ukyou and
her giant spatula; and finally Ryouga, unleashing a blast from his cupped
hands, his words unheard over everyone's battle roar. Akane hesitated a
moment before attacking, and therefore saw the assault end even as it began:
Ryouga's ki-blast splashed without effect against an unseen barrier a full
metre from his target; with a sweep of his hand, the obsidian figure sent a
wash of energy crashing into Mousse and Ukyou's forward rush--they were
flung back like rag dolls into the wall behind. Kuno's charge was met with
an outstretched hand that slipped within his reach, grabbed him by the neck,
and threw him flailing across the room--Akane had to leap aside to avoid the
tumbling body. Shampoo got through: descending from above and with a fierce
cry in Chinese, her sword sliced down against the man's neck. The blade
shattered like glass. Turning smoothly, he seized her by the throat and
effortlessly lifted her off the ground.
"Let her go!" howled Mousse, charging once again, joined by Ryouga. The
darkness that slid about the man flared up briefly in a full nimbus of inky
hue; it reached out and flashed over the two martial artists. The
long-haired boy was plucked from the ground and held suspended in coils of
darkness, but when the blackness lifted Ryouga stood free, his own aura
glimmering weakly.
"Interesting," the man said.
"You can't have Akane," Ryouga panted. He glanced her way with pained
eyes, and took a shuddering breath. It was amazing that he could even
stand. "I made a promise."
"One you cannot keep," the man said, and quicker than her eye could follow
he placed the palm of one hand against Ryouga's forehead. Her friend went
rigid, and when the man pulled away the martial artist's face was deadened
and grey. A moment later he toppled over.
The obsidian man turned towards Akane. He still held Shampoo by one hand,
her futile struggling growing weaker. Mousse, floating a metre above the
ground and trailing after him, seemed unconscious in the dark bonds gripping
him.
As the man approached, Akane suddenly realized that she was alone. What
could she hope to accomplish, where all her friends had failed? Eyes wide
with anticipation, smiling faintly, her enemy came closer, and she felt
afraid--so very afraid, beyond even shame at her own perceived cowardliness.
We lost, she thought, we actually lost. . . .
"And now," the man said, reaching for her, "there is no one left to save
you."
A haunting yowl reverberated from upstairs.
The pigtailed youth walked down the stairs without making a sound. Not
walked, really: he
_stalked_, moving with a rolling grace that could only be
described as feline. His very bearing conveyed a primal and animalistic
image, something in the arc of his back, the coiled way he held his lightly
clenched fists. But as he trod into the room, it was clear that this time
the Neko-ken had manifested itself in a very different fashion than usual.
Ranma was glowing. Tongues of flame danced across his body; when he
uncurled his hands, the fiery corona reached beyond his fingers and
highlighted invisible long and curving claws. Heat radiated from his body
in palpable waves. His face was smeared with blood and fur, his features
twisted in an expression of plaintive confusion--why were his cat friends
dead? Eyes narrowed to dangerous slits as they fell upon the obsidian man
threatening the woman he loved. Lips curled back, teeth bared, a feral
growl rumbling in his throat: he was deep in the throes of the Neko-ken, but
the dark glimmer in his eyes was entirely human, the desire for revenge, the
need to inflict pain, purely human. He rode the raw instincts of the cat
released inside of him, but somehow the dreadful anger he carried proved a
stronger instinct still; and the hungry set of his jaw was offset by that
same hinted grim smile. Padding past his female, Ranma watched as his enemy
tossed aside his playmates.
"What do we have here?" the man said.
Ranma-the-cat released a fierce hiss and leapt forward. His prey stepped
back, his aura flaring up in a negative halo around him. Dark tendrils
lashed out at the feline martial artist. With casual ease, he bounced
between the reaching attacks and swiftly closed the distance. A final
upsurge swept between him and his opponent. With a screech, Ranma lashed
out with his leading paw. Fiery trails ignited the air behind his strike
like blistering tracers. His claws clove through the darkness and raked
across his target's face.
The obsidian man howled and staggered back, one hand clutching at his face.
Darkness once again surged about him, this time in a spiralling cyclone
that drove the madly springing cat back. Ranma landed and licked at his
paw, keeping one careful eye on his opponent. The violent gout subsided.
The man pulled his hand away from his face. Three long jagged lines,
glowing fiery red, ran across his left cheek. The glow quickly faded, but
the triple flaw in the mirrored perfection of his face remained.
"You wounded me," he said, voice equal parts disbelief and
anger--underscored, the barely rational part of Ranma's mind noted with
pleasure, by grudging respect. "Even the Amazon bitch failed to touch me,
and she was the most amusement I've had in years."
The martial artist crept in a slow, wary semi-circle several metres from
the man. Stepping softly on all fours, he retraced his steps, keeping
himself between the aggressor and his mate. Caught in the primitive,
powerful emotions of the cat, there was no denying the fierce love he felt
for the woman under his protection. Ranma would rather die than lose her.
No, the enraged fragment of his mind insisted, I would rather kill than lose
her.
"I see," the obsidian man continued. "You are the one that killed the last
two of my family, then? My eldest son, even. It would seem that I
underestimated you. I underestimated all of you." The darkness outside
seemed to flow forward, flooding the room, and in the sudden dimness the man
seemed taller, stronger, his eyes flaring a brilliant red. In a voice
turned deeper and harsher he continued: "No longer! I will not be denied
what is mine!"
Ranma-the-cat pounced, swiping with flaming claws at the dark-shrouded man.
His burning aura pushed back the shadows, but his strikes failed to touch
his prey. Fiery arcs sliced through reaching murky swells--and shredded the
house beyond--but the man proved as elusive as dancing shadows. He flowed
aside and beneath the martial artist's attacks, narrowly evading Ranma's
furious barrage of feline swipes. The pigtailed boy bounced like a
hyperkinetic pachinko ball around his target, and yowled in frustration at
his inability to score a hit.
And then, landing in a crouch, his foe blurred before him, and one ebony
arm slammed into his chest. The cat in him screeched in pain; the barely
rational part of Ranma's mind could not remember having ever being hit so
hard. The impact would have hurled him back through the house, but sudden
coils of night snatched him from the air. He hung suspended there, flailing
in frustration. Every inky curl he cut to ribbons reformed behind the
trailing blaze. Ephemeral bonds of darkness somehow tightened around his
body, pinning hands to his side and forcing his legs together. As much as
he twisted and thrashed and howled in feline frustration, he could not break
free.
"All too easy," the man said, and his bonds tightened further. Howls of
frustration turned to screams of pain. Glacial cold cut through the heat of
his fire. Ranma felt his hold on feline instincts slipping, felt his own
frightening slide into unconsciousness--if not something deeper and far more
permanent. Struggling subsided and he slumped in his enemy's grip. His
previously fierce aura faded to a dull glimmer. Pervasive coldness brought
with it an insidious numbness, and sibilant whispers offered the peace and
calm of sleep. The boy felt hollow and chilled to his very core.
An angry flame yet burned at that core.
Ranma remembered: a similar brutal dichotomy of coldness and heat felt once
before.
_primal flame, heat; pervasive chill of death_
His father, and a stupid story about a strawberry.
_glorious suspension between heaven and earth_
Akane.
_love lying dead in his arms, too late, too slow_
Ranma grabbed hold of that tenuous, flickering anger, and shielded it with
his waning will. He stoked the flame with his memories, his fears,
frustrations, loss. He stared deep into his rage and suddenly understood
that beyond it seethed and roiled broad expanses of yet untapped power. It
was a source only fleetingly touched upon once, and the residual fear he
carried from that earlier encounter momentarily threatened his resolve.
Bonds tightened; a girl screamed; a father's words resonated deeply.
With no further hesitation, the martial artist passed through his own fire
and immersed himself fully in what lay on the other side. He didn't
remember much of what happened after that.
Continues in:
Chapter Five: Nature of the Beast
***
Author's Notes:
Well, took me longer than expected to write this chapter. Hope the
wait was worth it. I'm actually fairly disappointed with the way it turned
out. I've learned a lot in writing it, however. I've learned that I'll
never tackle such a long fight scene again. This thing is just way too
long, in my opinion. I've also learned that sometimes, telling
_is_ better
than showing. In a one-on-one fight, intense details might help make a
fight more vivid--but in giant brawl involving a dozen characters, it slows
things down too much. Well, lessons learnt, right? Hope everyone still
enjoyed the read. I think I'll tackle one more chapter (therefore finishing
the first 'Act') and then place Let the Curtain Fall on the backburner
again.
Special attacks used in this chapter:
(Is it just me, or was there a lot of them? Generally, I'm not too big on
the usage of Japanese in an English story, but attack names are a
manga-staple I refuse to translate. Where possible, I try to slip the
English translation into the text soon after, but sometimes I can't quite
manage it. Therefore, a quick glossary.)
Shishi Houkou Dan:
'Lion's Roar Bullet' -- Ryouga's trademark depression-fuelled ki-blast. The
vertical (and generally more powerful) version was initially called the
'Kanseikei Shishi Houkou Dan' -- the complete version.
Shishi Hijuuken:
'Lion Hide Heavy Punch' -- my invention. I figure that raising sumo-pigs
has got to get boring, so he came up with this on a slow day. Helps to keep
the pigs in line, too.
Bakusai Tenketsu:
'Exploding Point' -- well, the literal kanji translation would be 'Explode
Break Point Hole,' but that's just a tad too cumbersome. Another Ryouga
trademark, makes 'not-alive' things explode: rocks and so on. Would it work
on scabbed-over flesh, or am I taking liberties? We'll see. . . .
Muusuno Furumonti Totsu:
Did you get this one? 'Furumonti' is katakana: Full Monty. 'Mousse's Full
Monty Strike.' Well, the narrative did say 'robes thrown wide open.'
Umisen-ken, Yamasen-ken:
'Thousand Sea Fist', 'Thousand Mountain Fist'. These are extremely violent
arts designed, and then hidden by, Genma. The styles parallel the human
body with a house, the practitioner with a thief. True enough, Ranma never
used the Yamasen-ken before (at least that we see in the manga), but if he
can learn the entire Umisen-ken from a single display by his father, then he
must've been able to pick-it up off of Ryuu Kumon.
Geimon Tetsusen Shi
Mouko Kaimon Ha
Kaichuu Houjiyu Satsu:
Moves previously used in the Ryuu Kumon story arc. 'Welcome Gate Iron Fan
Fingers', 'Fierce Tiger Opening Gates Blow', 'Pocket Jewel Death Embrace'.
Though they might be losing something in the translation. Damn kanji
compounds.
Kanseikei Mouko Takabisha:
'Complete Fierce Tiger's Domineering'. The Mouko Takabisha is Ranma's
confidence-fuelled ki-blast. Unlike Ryouga, he never displayed a 'complete'
version in the manga. Leaves you to wonder what the 'ultimate' version
would be--and what could inspire 'ultimate' confidence?
Neko-ken:
'Cat-fist'. The art of fighting with the ferocity of a cat. Apparently
Takahashi has never met
_my_ cat.
***
Hope y'all enjoyed it! Hopefully, the next chapter will be out a lot faster
than this one.
noakes_m@hotmail.com
http://www.geocities.com/noakes_m
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