Bad Blood - Chapter 4.
A Rurouni Kenshin x Tokyo Babylon fanfiction by Ariane Kovacevic,
AKA Fuu-chan.
"Thank you, Asano-san, for intervening on our behalf."
The man bowed and I did the same, dismissing to the back of my
mind the reluctance I had perceived in the movement. Asano-san. The name
echoed in my ears, and I mastered the amusement mixed with bitterness that
had risen within with difficulty. Even here at the work site where I was
officially known as the chief engineer's son, it was that name that was
used, not my father's. "Better to stand in plain view where nobody will
think twice about you," my father had said, and he had been right. Who
would wonder at the why of my presence in Kyoto now?
As I turned away from the Japanese workers' representative, I
wondered again what had possessed my father. Contrary to what my
interlocutor believed, I hadn't had anything to do with the raise in the
Japanese guildsmen's wages. Oh, I had told Gwenaël O' Sullivan how wrong
the workers' proportions were in terms of nationality. I had explained how
it stirred endless trouble in town and made everyone's lives miserable. Not
only were Kyoto's citizen unhappy, not only did they feel cheated, but the
immigrant workers were rejected from all sides. They were living in their
own unwholesome ghetto, and if they wandered around town at night, things
could rapidly turn ugly. And what had my father done when I had brought him
that piece of news?
"I know," he had snorted, "I didn't wait for you to keep abreast
of the general situation--not to mention that I have eyes to see for myself
and a brain to measure the consequences of my decisions. You forget that I
understand Japanese well enough, Bran. Things suit me just fine as they
are." That had been the end of our conversation, and when I had been
convinced that nothing would change, he had decided to raise the Japanese
workers' pay.
The Japanese worker's, not the foreigners'.
That alone would have been foolish enough, but there was more--and
of course I had to be the bearer of bad news. "Because it's easier if it
doesn't come from a westerner," Gwenaël O' Sullivan had told me, lying
through his teeth. And so I was busy covering the whole work site's grounds
on foot, going from team to team and bringing the men news that they didn't
want to hear. At last, I reached the one I had been looking for all morning.
The group of men was gathered around a thick piece of rock. They
had slipped shovels and other tools below its edges on the right side,
obviously to act as levers. A quick glance at the surroundings confirmed my
thoughts: the big stone was set right in the middle of the future railway
track. As I approached, I heard muffled grunts and saw the rock swing then
fall back to its original position. Two men jumped to safety, narrowly
escaping from having their toes crushed under it. They needed at least
another person to get the work done, but there wasn't anyone in the
immediate vicinity. On impulse, I stepped between them, and grabbed a great
wooden handle, adding my own weight and strength to that of the man already
gripping it. A head turned my way and surprise, then recognition, flashed
in my companion's dark eyes. Other heads turned toward us, questioning, but
the man beside me nodded in silence. Gathering our power, we heaved the
great rock aside.
For a moment, I thought it would again fall back toward us, but we
gave a single, final push and it swung over, rolling aside with a clatter
of stones. I reached up to wipe at my brow, and in the same time the man
next to whom I had stood smiled at me. "Thank you, Asano-san." Then, the
smile faded from his lips and he frowned. "You shouldn't have done this,
though. How would we explain it, if ever something happened to you?"
I looked at the discarded tools lying in the dirt next to us, and
nodded. "You're right, I know." They would be blamed, and it wasn't
something that I wanted to happen. I shook my head, staring absentmindedly
at the work site beyond our group, and eventually I remembered what I had
come here to do.
Steeling myself against the pain and discontent my words would
raise, I told my companion in a quiet voice, "Sima-san, the chief engineers
have decided to switch the work crews. You and yours should concentrate on
cleaning the way ahead. Also," I added, careful not to let any emotion be
heard in my voice, "because of the delay we suffered during the typhoon
season, the work shifts will be lengthened by an hour every day. If you
have workers who are unable or unwilling to comply with that change in
schedule, you can either report it to me, or directly to one of the chief
engineers if you will. Replacements will be hired for those who wish to leave."
But none would. The choice of going away was a lie and everyone
knew it. These people had abandoned family and land to try and win money
they could send back home to sustain their own. They weren't welcome here,
nobody would employ them or accept them. None of them had even enough money
to pay for a passage back to the continent by boat. They were virtual
prisoners here, their choice either to bow their heads and accept
injustice, or to try their luck as beggars in the streets of Kyoto.
A nice, true choice indeed.
"How do they plan to compensate for the extra-load of work?" the
man who was the foreign workers' representative asked, his voice low but
quivering with restrained anger. He knew the answer to that, of course, but
still he had to ask.
"Proportional raise in the day's wages, Sima-san." I shrugged. It
was stupid, but that hadn't been my decision. Misusing tools this way
seemed ludicrous to me, but there was nothing I could do about it. It would
be easy to find replacements: those who financed the work owned enough
money and agreements with trading boats to have more workers brought from
the continent for cheap. In this, I supposed my father's decisions weren't
exactly mistakes. They felt more like insane, ruthless whims.
For a long, awkward moment, Sima's eyes searched my face, as if he
hoped to find help or support there, but he should have known better.
Silently, I confronted the anger and outrage shining in the man's gaze. At
last, he bowed his head, shame twisting the lines of his weathered face. "I
suppose it's better to let the more experienced guildsmen of Kyoto work at
setting up the tracks," he whispered. There was no mistaking the scorn in
his tone. All the teams had exactly the same expertise in that domain, and
the Koreans were as skilled as the Japanese.
"I suppose so," I told him non-committally. Then, just as I was
turning away, I paused. "I'm sorry," I offered, a low whisper that was
taken away by the wind. It was true, I was. As far as I knew, they worked
well and swiftly, and it seemed madness to reward them with this kind of
insult. With a soft sigh, I made my way back to the engineers' offices.
When I reached the small barracks, I found my father's door open,
and went in. Gwenaël O' Sullivan was alone in the room, bent over maps and
plans. "I've told Sima," I said quietly, coming to stand beside him.
"Good. How did he take it?" He hadn't moved an inch. He hadn't
looked up toward me, and the sound of his voice hadn't betrayed anything
but a vague interest. The question had come out as if it had been a
tiresome, tedious one which needed to be asked but didn't have the
slightest importance. I knew better. I had seen the faintest shift in
Gwenaël O' Sullivan's stance, I had noted the almost imperceptible jerking
motion of his right hand on the map. No stranger would have noticed what
was more a feeling hovering in the air than a tangible sign. He was very
much focused on me.
"He took it was well as such things can be taken." I smiled at my
father. "It's not as if he had a choice in the matter." The answering smile
on his face had nothing pleasant about it. Taking a quick glance toward the
door to ensure that nobody was eavesdropping, I added, "What I'd like to
know is why you're doing this. You always told me that tools must be used
wisely. I see no gain in your decision."
"Since when do you care for immigrant workers, Bran?" he sniggered.
"I don't give a damn about them, but they are tools which serve
you well and best as they are now. Changing the balance of things in the
work repartition will worsen their efficiency, not better it."
He laughed at that. "You lack perspective, Bran. You should know
better than to question before you have grasped the whole situation."
I didn't reply anything for a while, contemplating the answer I
had been given. It contained precious tidbits of information, that he had
released on purpose, but he wouldn't say more. Focusing on the words, I
added them to the picture of the work site and that of the ancient city
close by, and then stared at the whole. Slowly, reluctantly, I nodded.
There was a pattern, but it was an ugly one. Not that it mattered to me,
but still what I could discern didn't make sense. Yet. There had to be
something behind it.
Something tied to the reason for my being here.
"I've approached the Sumeragi's heir as you wished," I said,
breaking the silence.
"Living in the famous Sumeragi mansion to boot!" he scoffed. It
was true that the turn of events was more than funny.
"Do you wish anything more done?"
It was a reasonable question. Until now I hadn't seen or heard
anything of note in the old mansion. Weird eastern magic and talks of
spirits or kami weren't of any interest for westerners. As far as I could
tell, I was wasting my time there--not that I minded. Strange though it
was, the ancient building had a deep feeling of peace and serenity to it.
The calm soothed my nerves, and Sumeragi Shunsuke was a nice host.
Someone I sometimes felt like reaching out to--mistake though that
would have been. It was enough that I had warned him away once. If my
father had heard about it, he'd have been enraged at my stupidity.
"Watch him," he said suddenly. "Letters should come from Tokyo, a
summons he must answer. I need to know who advises him and in which
direction that advice goes." With that, he turned away from his maps and
exited the small office, walking past me without even sparing me a single
glance. For a moment, I stood still, looking at the plans spread on the
table without seeing them. Then I decided I couldn't make sense of things
yet. I'd have to be patient. In the meantime, there was work to be done,
and that wouldn't wait.
Sighing, I discarded the questions nagging at me and went out.
The sun hadn't yet set beyond the horizon when a familiar figure
stopped on the dojo's threshold and took off its geta before stepping in.
Sumeragi Shunsuke paused briefly to nod at Asano Bran in greeting, but the
other didn't see it. The young man seemed to be absorbed in his own
thoughts, and they sure didn't look like happy ones. Some more wounds to
bottle up and leave in his heart to fester. Shunsuke sighed inwardly. As
his guest drew his bokken and started a slow sequence of basic kata,
Shunsuke went back to his own training.
Kempo was a lot of fun. He had picked it up upon his return to
Kyoto, dragged along by Makimachi Misao, the owner of a restaurant named
the Aoi-ya, and also the leader of the once feared Oniwabanshu, Edo-jo's
shadow guards. At first it had been a good derivative from the black
despair that had overcome him at the news of his mother's exile. Makimachi
Misao had come calling at the main gate of the Sumeragi mansion one
morning, and she hadn't given him a moment of peace until he had finally
relented and accepted to be taught and trained.
The young woman's reason for doing this was a life debt she owed
to Shunsuke's mother, but soon friendship had blossomed between the two of
them. It was impossible not to like Misao: beyond the overflowing energy
and good humor, hers was a generous heart, and she never questioned
Shunsuke's moods or whims. Her hopeless courting of Shinomori Aoshi never
ceased to amuse him. She had even come to him to beg for advice, to gain
the understanding of men's hearts. Of course, he had proposed her to stay
the night with him to find out, which had earned him a good beating in the
dojo. He hadn't minded in the least--he had been asking for it after
all--and besides it had taken a lot of weight off the young woman's heart.
She was truly in love with the stern, silent man, but Shunsuke doubted that
that love could be returned in the way that Misao wished.
A jarring motion abruptly interrupted Shunsuke's train of
thoughts. On his right, Asano Bran had frozen in mid-sequence, and he was
staring at his bokken with a mixture of irritation and disgust. Eventually,
he hissed out a sigh and started his kata all over again, his eyes distant.
His mind wasn't truly on what he was doing, Shunsuke could see it in the
unusual awkwardness of his movements. Bran was good with a bokken--very
good even. He had had true training, and it was obvious he loved kenjutsu,
but sometimes it was as if he couldn't free his mind from whatever was
plaguing it. And that prevented him from fully sinking into the delicate
dance of his kata. Today was even worse. The young man was slow, and the
lines of his face were drawn with weariness.
Gently, Shunsuke reached out and strengthened the shining web of
wards he had woven around his guest. Pain had darkened Bran's aura, a dull
ache that seemed to pull at him and that he looked intent on ignoring.
Stubborn.
Despite himself, Shunsuke smiled. Bran was a strange guest, but it
was true there might be reasons for his weirdness. Since Shunsuke had
welcomed him into his house, nobody had come to the main gate to inquire
about him. Not his father, who lived close enough, being one of the
railroad work site's chief engineers, not his clan. No Asano family member
had bothered to care where Bran lived. It was as if they didn't worry that
he might cast shame on the Asano name if he lived below his station.
Well, perhaps they didn't give a damn for real.
Westerners' designs and clothes might be in fashion in certain
circles, but still nobody wanted westerner blood staining their line.
Shunsuke had nothing but contempt for that attitude. Oh, he understood the
pressure of tradition and family rules. He knew he'd have been most
certainly unable to push them aside himself unless he chose disgrace and
renounced his name. Refocusing on his guest, Shunsuke thought that he was
glad for the other's presence, all things considered. Bran mostly kept to
himself, but still he was a life in the big, empty wing of the mansion that
Shunsuke had claimed. Bran was sounds and movements, and the old seals had
drawn him in. Their song was a happier one, as if the half-blood belonged
in their midst--as if he had always been meant to be theirs to protect. A
small, flickering candle light, Bran was warmth in the house, and Shunsuke
was happy for it.
Carefully released breath.
From the corner of an eye, Shunsuke caught sight of Bran securing
his bokken to his side and then stepping out of the dojo. With a nod to
himself, Shunsuke finished an intricate series of moves, and then left the
dojo as well. The whiff of the sudden, searing pain which had filled the
air just now had left ripples that didn't want to fade.
As he had thought he would, Shunsuke found Bran sitting at the
edge of the terrace, leaning against one of the pillars supporting the
roof, as was his habit. Looking down on him, Shunsuke made his decision and
sat beside him. The other didn't even stir or turn his head to acknowledge
Shunsuke's presence. "Anything I can do?" he asked quietly.
A cold smile curled up Bran's lips. "No."
Being a courteous host to Asano Bran was a demanding task
sometimes--a very demanding task. "Forgive me for inquiring about a guest
whom I saw leaving the dojo with the slowness and caution of a very old
man, even though he's as young as I am, and usually as quick and brisk as a
foal in his first year, Asano-san."
He had the good grace to wince at that. "Bran," he eventually
whispered, "calling me Bran is enough."
The weariness was in his voice as well, and that last sentence had
felt enough like a peace-offering. A small opening in the high walls
surrounding his heart, Shunsuke thought, and consciously, deliberately
done. Weighing that against his annoyance at the way his sincere inquiry
had been received, he finally decided it wasn't worth it to pursue the
matter and claim a victory from someone who looked in no shape for a verbal
fencing match. Gently, he said, "You're in pain." That wasn't a question,
but the statement of a fact that was obvious to both, and it didn't require
an answer. Nonetheless, the smile on Bran's lips softened, and he gave a
small, almost imperceptible shrug.
"I'm just feeling a bit weak. It's nothing a good night's sleep
won't cure. I'll be all right tomorrow. Don't worry about it."
Don't worry about me, he had meant. The unspoken words hung in the
air between them, louder than if Bran had uttered them. That wouldn't do.
It wasn't Shunsuke's way, and as long as the other would be his guest, he'd
live by Shunsuke's rules. "I can't," he said softly, looking at Bran. "You
live under my roof. You're a life, a presence in my house and I care,
whether you like it or not, Bran." He said the young man's name slowly,
deliberately, curious to taste the sound of it on his tongue and to feel
its echoes in his mouth.
A shadow darkened the weird grey eyes and then was gone. Something
cold cleaved the air, so sharp that it glided through the wards without
disturbing them, but Shunsuke saw it and felt it as it raised the hair on
his neck. Beside him, Bran shivered. Nothing betrayed the reaction, the
expression on his face didn't change, but Shunsuke perceived it in the
sudden disturbance in the other's aura. "Sounds hold power," it had been
the first thing Shunsuke had learnt. Sometimes it applied to names as well,
and the alien name given by a westerner to a bastard son of the Asano clan
had felt like an invocation.
"Bran," he repeated softly, and again a shaft of ice sliced
through the house's old wards, cold and dark. Bran was holding his left
wrist with his right hand, his grip on it so hard that the knuckles were white.
As if the jewels there hurt him--or the sounds of his name.
There was silence for a while, during which Shunsuke had to fight
the impulse to reach out to the very still figure on his left. It would
have been the wrong thing to do. Slowly, the tension in the air ebbed away,
and when it no longer felt as if Bran might bolt like a wild deer, Shunsuke
asked quietly, "A bad day at the work site?" He wouldn't pursue the matter
of his guest's name. It was a private matter, extremely private, and since
it didn't threaten anyone or anything in his house, Shunsuke would let it
rest until such time as Bran saw fit to tell him about it.
"You might say that," the other retorted with a twisted grin
splitting his face.
"I don't understand you," Shunsuke said, his voice reduced to a
whisper. "Why do you go there and obey a man you so obviously dislike? I
can see the shadow your sire casts over you whenever you come back from
there. It's dark, and it weighs on you." It was unseemly to voice such
things to a guest of the house, but doing so was a sign that Shunsuke hoped
this other would understand. If not, he would simply release that thread of
possibilities and adjust. There would be no fault on Bran, and the rudeness
would be remembered as his.
Not that it mattered to him.
"He's my father," Bran answered suddenly. The grey eyes were set n
Shunsuke, and there was the ghost of a painful smile on his lips. "I
thought you of all people would understand that." As the Sumeragi heir and
a member of an old, traditionalist clan, that was what Bran meant.
But his father was a westerner, a complete strange for the Asano
clan, and-- Shunsuke whistled softly as a small piece of the jigsaw puzzle
that was his guest fell into place. "His name is yours as well, despite the
Asano, isn't it?"
A slow nod, and a broken laugh. "Yes." Bran looked away and said,
"He's O' Sullivan, and so am I. There's no denying that heritage." There
was something frightening in the young man's quiet acceptance.
"It matters not." Shunsuke reached out this time, refusing to stop
himself, and gripped the other's shoulder, willing his strength to pour
into him. "You're who you are, and you're free to decide for yourself," he
added in a fierce whisper. "Never let anyone dictate what your path must
be. It can be done," he went on with a feral grin as Bran turned to face
him again, "I have stepped away from the Sumeragi. They call me heir and
try to make me dance to their tune, but I've shut my door to them and I
live my life as I see fit. I'll never allow myself to be the elders' puppet."
"You've forsaken your own clan?!" There was shock in Bran's voice.
He bowed his head. "I shouldn't ask you this, I'm sorry."
"It's all right." Shunsuke smiled reassuringly, pressing Bran's
shoulder before releasing it. "You're a friend in this house, and I started
it by asking painful questions." With a small sigh, Shunsuke nodded. "And
yes, I've stepped aside. They betrayed my mother and abandoned her. I'll
never forgive them--they can rot and the Sumeragi name can die where I'm
concerned," he finished coldly.
Bran looked at him in silence for a moment, the grey eyes distant.
Focused inward.
"It's not that simple," he said at last. "Blood will tell, and at
times it's impossible to deny its call." There was a strong reluctance in
the words, as if they were a hard-learned truth. Bran's voice faded into
silence, then all of a sudden he smiled.
A warm, beautiful smile.
"But anyway, I thank you." It was all he said, but by those words,
Shunsuke knew that his offer of friendship had been accepted.
"Good!" He let a wide grin come to his face. "Then let's party! We
might go to the Aoi-ya, or I could have sake and girls come here."
"The Aoi-ya will do fine," Bran said with traces of laughter in
his voice. The darker hues of pain had faded somewhat from him, and he
looked like a weight had been lifted from his shoulders. "And girls if you
must have fun, but I'll got to sleep. I have to rise early to get to the
work site right after dawn. My father has changed the work shifts," he sighed.
Again.
Inwardly, Shunsuke shrugged. It looked like it was impossible to
get Bran to have fun with the girls he knew. Perhaps he feared rejection,
but Shunsuke knew for a fact that more than a few found the half-blood
pleasing enough. Perhaps it was also the rigid discipline and rules of the
Christian religion that forbade such simple pleasures. It was completely
stupid and incomprehensible to Shunsuke. Denying oneself the comfort of a
woman's embrace was just plain masochism. Whatever the reason was, Bran
could really be a spoilsport at times.
Saitou Hajime drew one last time on his cigarette, focusing on the
feeling of the smoke sliding down his throat and invading his lungs before
flicking the tiny object away. He didn't see the wind take it, but he knew
that the great gusts would drop it far away from the boat. Idly, he
wondered if he had left a trail of discarded cigarette bits to be followed
all the way from Hakodate. As always, the disgusting taste of tar remained
in his mouth, clinging to him like a beggar who wouldn't be cowed when
kicked away. He hated tar, it made him feel like he was chewing ashes, but
when he had complained about this in Tokio's hearing, the fool woman had
laughed.
"Why do you keep smoking then, anata?" she had asked, stretching
the emphasis on the stupid form of address in a way she knew irritated him
to no end. He had glared at her, but the wretched female he had been insane
enough to marry hadn't even had the good grace to pretend to be chastened.
She had merely looked at him with that mischievous glint in her eyes before
turning away from him and discarding him like a kid who didn't make sense.
It was the feeling of it, and it couldn't be explained in words--but then
Saitou cared nothing if his wife didn't understand or share that small vice
of his.
A sudden draught brought with it droplets of seawater that wetted
his hard, angular face, and he sighed. It was wiser to get back inside, he
supposed. With the night, a strong northern wind had risen and, while it
helped push the ship toward its destination, it had also brought clouds
heavy with rain and snow. Soon, now, Saitou thought to himself as he closed
the door securely behind him. Very soon.
The boat they had chosen had made its painstakingly slow trip down
from Hokkaido in an endless stream of stops along Japan's eastern coast.
First there had been Hachinoe, then Miyako, Matsushima bay, Imaki, Mito and
Choshi--enough names to put on a string like pearls. At last, they were
nearing Tokyo. From there, the way to Kyoto would be quick. They'd reach
their destination in the heart of winter, around the turning of the year.
Early enough to gauge the situation and take appropriate action.
Or so Saitou Hajime hoped.
While Tokio had gotten everything ready for the trip, he had been
busy reaching out through the old communication channels, hungry for
information. Years of aimless wandering in Hokkaido's wilderness, dodging
the attempts of the master assassin who was his wife's self-proclaimed
nemesis, had cut off the ex-captain of the third Shinsengumi troops from
keeping upraised of how things had evolved in Japan. With each stop, he had
been able to gather precious bits of information, and he was starting to
see a meaning to the whole thing.
A pattern a design in a tapestry grown too big for human hands to
fully enfold, no mater what some in power certainly thought.
Saitou Hajime had no liking at all for the tableau that had been
painted by the discreet intelligence reports he had received. Ito Hirobumi
had somehow managed to solve the old problem of the unfair customs and
trade rights treaties which had plagued Japan's commercial exchanges with
the outside world. That victory had caused people to raise their heads and
again turn their gaze toward the continent. Uprisings in the Korean
population had gotten bad to the point of having the Korean government turn
toward the powers that backed them from the shadows. China had promptly
responded and was busy sending in troops with the perfect justification of
a rebellion to quell. There was a treaty binding China and Japan concerning
Korea, and by rights Japan could now intervene there and gain a legal
footing in the continent. Nobody, not even the westerners, could say
anything about this. To many of the Oligarchs, it was an opportunity too
good to let pass.
A bit too tempting for Saitou's taste.
Besides, there was much more than territorial ambition or national
pride at stake. The choice to send troops in numbers would commit Japan to
a path from which there would be no turning back. They were now standing at
a crossroads, with a decision to be made on which weighed far more than the
terms of a treaty with China. The old imperial advisors had seen it, and
they had wanted to protect the choice from being made too hastily.
Too easily.
And oddly enough, it was fitting that the Sumeragi be requested to
give advice. Saitou had heard enough about her clan from Tokio to know
that, yes, this concerned them. For, no matter what path would be taken,
the balance of Japan would shift. Things would change--things as deep as
the roots of the ancient trees of the Kisa forest. The Sumeragi were an
ultra-conservative lot, but it in no way meant that Tokio's word would be
to choose against gazing outward. The clan head would select the way she
felt was best for Japan, and it would all hang upon how the situation would
be depicted to her. He knew his wife's mind enough to be certain she'd
demand to know all the possible consequences tied to each alternative and,
if she wasn't satisfied, she'd keep asking from other sources, until she
judged she had enough to form an opinion and make a decision. The poor
advisor who'd have to expose the problem to her and stand through the fire
of her questions had better be a shrewd tactician--not that the Wolf
wouldn't tell Tokio all that he had grasped of the matter. Really, he
pitied the unlucky man who'd have to confront the Sumeragi. If he was given
the opportunity, it'd be a spectacle he'd relish watching.
Everything was quiet in the cabin as Saitou carefully closed the
door. Beyond the muffled howls of the wind outside, the only sound in the
small room was that of Tokio's regular breathing. Noiselessly, he stepped
over to the bunks that had been their beds for far too long, and he
stopped as he was about to go up to his own resting space. She was awake,
he could see it in the way her arm was tucked under her. With an almost
inaudible sigh, he sat down beside her and laid the palm of his hand on her
thigh.
Gently.
"It's all right, Hajime," she said in a quiet whisper. "Go to
sleep, you need it."
"As much as you do," he snorted back at her. "Sit up." Her mental
exercises might be enough to calm her breathing and give her the semblance
of sleep, but it wasn't a true rest. She hadn't slept for the last three
nights, and that wasn't a good thing, no matter that she was the Sumeragi
and trained for hardship.
She did as she was told with a sigh of her own, and Saitou grinned
to himself in the night. "Turn to the left." Once she had complied, he
rested both hands over her shoulders and gently, carefully, pressed into
the hard muscles with his thumbs.
Tense, as he had suspected.
Much too tense.
Slowly, he set to work, massaging away the cramps from her stiff
shoulders and neck before allowing his hands to travel down her back. He
had seen her trying to do some exercise on the deck the day before, and he
had been unable not to notice the awkwardness in her every movement.
Sometimes she could be impaired in this fashion when she bled, but here he
knew the cause was the weather. The combination of cold and humidity was a
bad one. Even in their cabin, there was a perpetual chill that nothing
could seem to chase away.
Against him, Tokio sighed again, but it was a sigh of contentment
this time. Sometimes she would even purr when he did this, but here she
simply went along with his expert ministrations. Her body gave way,
shifting this way or that to accompany his fingers' pressure, as if she was
a doll. It went on for a good five minutes, then she finally relaxed. Her
shoulders sagged, and she fell back against him. Had he not been sitting
there, she'd have slumped to the floor, but she had known he'd expect her
movement.
Insufferable woman.
As she shifted her body to lay her left cheek against his chest,
he rested his chin on top of her head, breathing in the honeysuckle perfume
of her hair. It's better than cigarette. Far better. The thought faded
quickly to the back of his mind, and he wrapped his arms around her,
helping her to find a comfortable position in his lap while he rested his
back against the cabin's wall.
Saitou Hajime didn't need light to know that his wife was smiling.
It was in the warmth of her body pressed against his, and in the soft
caress of her hair against his throat.
Mine.
He held her close. Hers, he remembered almost at once as she
lifted a hand that she closed around his arms. "Sleep," he bade her, and
incredibly enough, she obeyed. He'd have cramps come morning, but it was
worth it if she could get a few hours of true rest. She'd need her wits
about her and al her strength once they reached their destination.
Thunder rumbles in the distance as she sets foot in the shabby
inn. The sound of it is low, but threatening. The storm comes from the Haku
mountains, and once it wins free of the high peaks of the Japanese Alps
completely, it will glide over lake Biwa, swift and lethal as a snake. The
people she passed by in the streets of Nishijin are aware of this. The
menacing weather was as obvious in their quick, hurried strides as it was
in the darkening sky. Here though, in this small borough that she doesn't
remember ever existing in this place, people are going about their business
as if they hadn't noticed anything.
Foreigners, the whole lot of them. From the continent, and hired
for the work site of the future railroad liaison between Kyoto and Tokyo it
seems. She gives a small bow of thanks to the girl who leads her to a
table, and orders some sake. The drink that she is brought is strong, and
it had nothing to do with the soft, warm cup of sake she's used to. It
figures that these people would have their own alcohol and not the one she
expects. As she sets the cup down, she gives the taproom a quick but
thorough glance. Nobody has paid attention to her, which means that the
small illusion is enough for them to see her as one of their own, not as a
Japanese woman--enough for them to hear her words as belonging to whatever
tongue it is they're speaking. Korean, most likely. She gives them what
they want to see and hear, and they're all too happy to be ensnared by the
gentle spell.
She was appalled when she came in sight of Kyoto. She didn't think
the city would change so much in a mere four years. Now that she's had time
to wander through all the quarters she knew so well, she understand that
the cause of it is the gigantic construction site. It has brought too many
strangers to Kyoto, far too many. She has heard the discontent in the
population, she has felt it in the rolling waves of anger sweeping over the
crowds in various markets. Tempers are short, and disputes have grown
common. It wasn't so before, she thinks with a pang of sadness. And this
whole place, this new quarter that has sprung out of nowhere is a painful
sign of the unbalance that the work site has brought to the ancient city.
It's not as if the people living here had any other choice, she
knows. Rejected everywhere, they built their own place--fake homes in which
they can delude themselves into feeling that they belong. A smile comes to
her lips as she remembers the strange, alien smells that greeted her on the
way to this inn. They've somehow managed to bring the fragrances and
perfumes from their distant homeland with them. The scent of foreign spices
fills the air, making the illusion an almost perfect one.
Estranging these people from the true heart of Kyoto that much more.
Adding to the unbalance that anyone with talent can feel growing
in the city.
The Sumeragi would be enraged if she could see this. She wouldn't
have let it happen unchallenged. The woman known as Sakurazuka Keiko lets
out a soft chuckle at the thought of Sumeragi Tokio walking all the way to
the work site in full ceremonial robes and demanding to know why the chief
engineers have seen fit to go insane and allow the situation to come to
this. Oh it would be a sight, to be sure, but the Sumeragi isn't here, and
nobody has stepped in her shoes to fill the void she has left.
Well, not officially.
She's first heard the rumors in Nishijin, and then in the potters'
markets close to the Kamo-gawa, and everything she has felt confirms it.
The Sumeragi's heir has taken to walking the streets of Kyoto and tending
to the seals of the city. He rids common people of small and not so small
curses, he mends the damage the unbalance born of people's overflowing
emotions causes where he can. He seems to choose whom he'll help on a whim,
and it looks like calling on him through the Sumeragi mansion is useless.
Rich merchants, officials and even nobles have been seen waiting at the
main gate of the centuries-old residence.
All of them have been turned down.
It confirms the last bit of information she gathered right before
leaving Tokyo: Sumeragi Tokio's son has turned away from his clan. The cub
has grown into a wolf like his father, she grins to herself with an
approving nod. That means that if Saigô Tsugumichi's information is
correct, Sumeragi Tokio will indeed be given no choice into coming back
here. Still, she will watch the Sumeragi's heir and try to find out what
his decision on a matter such as the one the admiral depicted to her would
be. It won't be as easy as if he were his mother, but she doesn't mind.
Half-closing her eyes, she listens to the alien music of the
foreign language spoken in the establishment, and focuses on the aura of
the place.
Anger.
An awful lot of it, far worse than in the other parts of the city.
Grief.
Death.
She catches a whiff of it in the air, and her eyes widen a
fraction. The scent is faint, but it lingers in the air.
"Very well, Sima-san, but be quick about it. I don't have much
time." The familiar sounds of the Japanese tongue rouse her from the slight
trance, and she allows herself a small smile as she gets a glimpse of two
men sitting at a nearby table.
After having taken the measure of the unbalance in the city, she's
quickly come to the conclusion that it's been done deliberately. It's no
accident, no bad management of a difficult situation, and once she saw
that, the source of it all wasn't hard to find.
The work site and those who rule over it.
Those who charter ships that sail into Osaka's harbor to unload
their cargo of workers from the continent.
Westerners.
This is all chance, of course, she thinks to herself with no small
amount of sarcasm. Saigô's words still echo in her mind, there's no doubt
in her. But even if there had been, the younger of the two men who just sat
down would have lifted them from her mind. Here is another fascinating
piece of the rumors she's been collecting since her arrival. The
half-blood, bastard son of one of the work site's chief engineers has
somehow managed to befriend the Sumeragi's heir, and is now living in the
Sumeragi's mansion. How amusing, the way people dance around each other.
"This cannot last, Asano-san. I can't hold this situation for
long. You have to tell your father it's madness."
Asano-san.
She blinks, surprised. So, this child is a bastard, but not one
his father got on one of the whores in Gion. A costly bastard son, but
useful if only for his mother's name. That holds power, and she'd bet
anything the man knew it when he got her with child. He's a good dancer,
that engineer, and judging by the mixture of fury and desperation in the
words she just heard, he keeps moving his pawns on the gameboard, advancing
ruthlessly. And here, another nice push in the failing balance of the city.
"I have, Sima-san, and I will, but I fear it's useless." The Asano
bastard's voice is oddly pleasant and quiet, but there's something strange
in it, that she cannot name. It feels a bit...forced, somehow, but then
he's part westerner, and westerners' tongues have always had difficulties
handling the Japanese syllables and sounds. Looking at him, she knows why
she didn't notice his entrance into the inn before he spoke: his features
are almost Japanese. It's only his height and the weird lines of his nose
that give him away.
That and his eyes.
They're grey, a grey as dull as the sullied waters that stream
down the streets of the hide tanners' quarter after a thunderstorm. The
color is wrong.
Too clear.
Too cold.
As she focuses on the man, absentmindedly noting that he must
still be in his late teens, she abruptly freezes.
Power.
Spiritual energy leak from him in small tendrils of ethereal
smoke. Reflexively, she stretched herself, reaching out to the tempting
tidbit, and all of a sudden she recoils.
Wards!
It's all she can do not to snarl. The young man is surrounded with
beautiful, shining wards. The one who drew them doesn't seem to care for
stealth, they're brighter than the starts in the night sky, bristling with
power. Asano isn't the one who did this, he doesn't even look like he's
aware of them. Strange wards that these are, they--they're turned inward! A
soft hiss escapes the Sakurazukamori's lips as the flamboyant spell's
reason for being becomes apparent to her: it's designed to restrain the
young man's aura, so that the power leaking away from him won't contaminate
and unbalance places or people whenever his heart is troubled. This must be
the work of Sumeragi Tokio's son, there can be no doubt about it. Who else
would care if this gaijin's simple presence caused brawls in the more
unsavory quarters of Kyoto? And if she managed to catch the fragrance of
magic from the young man even though he's so strongly shielded, it means
that the power in him is greater. Much greater.
So, this is the tool that has been placed close to the Sumeragi
clan, and a fine tool it is. The move is a master stroke. It's perfect--or
rather it would be, if she weren't here now. Laughter bubbles up inside
her. She came to get a feel of the place, she didn't expect her quarry to
turn up so readily. This must be the gods' will.
Gently, very gently, she reaches out, slipping beneath the shining
wards, careful not to disturb them. They were made to keep power in, not to
prevent someone from tampering with the young man from the outside, which
allows her to win past them unnoticed. She draws a sharp intake of breath
as she touches the aura behind the shields. So much of it. She understands
why the Sumeragi's heir acted. There's so much raw, wild energy coiled up
within, so many dark emotions pent up for too long without a way of release!
Quivering with excitement, she makes her decision. This is an
unhoped for opportunity. Here sits the perfect way of keeping a close watch
on both the Sumeragi clan and the westerners running the work site. The
tool sitting before her is just too tempting not to be claimed and used.
Willing calm to settle over her, she rises from her seat and steps over to
the two men's table.
"Please, excuse us," she says even as she weaves the illusion
around them both. Obediently, the Korean rises and leaves her alone with
her prey. As she peers down upon the young man, she feels her smile widen
to reveal her teeth. This one she won't kill, oh no. This one she will draw
strength from, and use as an extension of her will. She sits down, and
looks into the grey eyes.
Shiver.
Feeling the disturbance in his aura, she calms it at once. The
wards around him can't protect him, can't shield him since they've been
designed to shield his surroundings from him. He's like a lamb led for the
slaughter.
Shiver.
Frowning, she reaches out to steady him once more, and strengthens
the illusion imprisoning him. It's as if a part of him felt her and tried
to win free but, even if his awareness of the spiritual is deep enough, he
has no control over it. Gently, she caresses the wild stream of darkened
light spilling from him, soothing it with unreal songs that have no words.
Songs that cannot be heard.
Once she judges her hold on the young man is secure, she asks,
"Your name?" It's a test, the first, and sometimes the most difficult one.
"Asano Bran." The grey eyes are unfocused, lost in her illusion.
Good.
"Bran," she repeats using the sounds of it like a skilled rider
would reins.
A tremor of his right hand. Something abruptly disturbs Asano
Bran's gaze, like fear or refusal. That won't do. "Hush," she tells him as
she would reassure a horse hurt by the bit in his mouth. On instinct, she
reached out and rests her hand over the young man's left. He's trembling,
almost imperceptibly. "It's all right." She reaches deeper, finding her way
between the wards and through the untamed waves of power. "What is your
father trying to achieve by breaking the city's balance?" This is the most
important question. The rest she can easily guess for herself, but this one
eludes her.
"I don't know." A bitter smile twists Asano Bran's lips, and anger
surges forward, black and violent. "I'm not sure yet." The grey eyes have
lost their distant look. They're focused now, focused on her--but it's not
her that he sees.
She needs to tighten her hold on him, but here isn't the right
place for that. Getting him out shouldn't be too difficult, she just needs
to calm him a bit. She moves the hand she's rested upon his, stroking
softly as she feels for his pulse. A satisfied smile comes to her lips as
she feels him quivering at her touch.
Cold.
Her fingertips have encountered something on his wrist. Curious,
she gives a quick look down. It's just a set of three bracelets that bind
his forearm.
Grey.
The same grey as his eyes.
Silver.
Her eyes widen as the word echoes inside her, summoning emotions
and ghosts she cannot deny.
Silver, cold and ancient.
A gasp cuts through the turmoil of unwanted memories, and all of a
sudden she realizes that the young man's eyes are set on her. He can see
her, and more.
He feels.
She sees it in the shocked horror and refusal that have clouded
his gaze. He can feel her coiled up to him. He can feel her ethereal
fingers clasping his soul.
All that he is.
Reflexively, she pulls at him with all her strength, but in the
same time he shoves her aside, hard, breaking the physical contact. He
starts to stand up, but she calls, "Stay, Bran!" Her voice rings in the
air. It's his name, she understands it on instinct. With it, she can hold
him and bend him to her will. "Bran!" she calls again.
For the time of a heartbeat, he stands there frozen, torn between
the awful realization of what's being done to him, and the command she's
given him. Then cold ripples through the air--ice stronger than the wards
around him or her illusion. He recoils, crying out in pain and clutching at
his left wrist. She can almost feel his heartbeats filling the air while
the wards come alive, trying in vain to contain the flood of terror coming
from him. As her illusion shatters, he bolts and runs.
Before her, the sight of the silver would around his wrist lingers.
So horribly cold.
With a snarl of defiance, she draws the feeling of the ancient
Sakura around her and denies her memories. Emotions and thoughts collide
inside her, and the little girl crouches in the shadows of her soul.
Terrified.
She refuses it all, and flings herself in pursuit of her quarry.
Angrily, she casts aside the feeling that it was the jewels of silver that
denied her.
Denied her what belongs to them alone.
Thunder cracked, deafening. For a time, its roar filled the
universe, but I barely heard it. Run! The frantic thought echoed within,
eclipsing every other thing. Run! Faster! Flee! Flee far away! Lightning
zigzagged and splashed the street with blinding, violent light. I missed my
footing and staggered. I can't fall--can't fall! From very far away, I felt
pain as my right shoulder and arm scraped against a wall and as my jacket's
sleeve tore. It was pouring a mixture of rain and snow, and my clothes
clung to me, heavy with icy cold water. The weight kept dragging me down,
but I refused to feel it.
I ran, stalked by the sudden winter storm.
Stalked by the wind and the soft whispers riding it.
There were tears mixed with the rain on my cheeks, but there was
no holding them back. There was no controlling the awful sensations that
were worming their way within, coiling up to me--clinging to me in the way
a lover would. There had been a woman at the inn, sitting right in front of
me where Sima should have been. She had reached out to me.
Cold.
Her fingers, the cold scales of a snake.
She had *touched* me, I knew. I could still feel her. It was here,
her breath and her scent, the whispers of her voice wound around my soul.
Almost, I had completely sunk into the quagmire of her trap. I had felt the
snare when I had met her eyes, but feeling hadn't been enough. She would
have had me, hadn't she made the mistake of using my name. She had reached
out and grasped all that I was--she had taken my self for her own use,
unaware that this was the one thing that would never be allowed.
The ethereal whisper had cut through the threads of the woman's
web, it had parted the thick curtain of terror choking my mind. Ice colder
and harsher than anything in the world, it had closed around my heart,
hurting so bad that I had cried out.
Burning so horribly that I had screamed.
I had held on to the impossible pain, I had sought refuge in it
like a child clinging to an adult for protection.
I had replied, facing the darkness that was my heritage, It had been my choice--a decision made on instinct that
was nothing more than a confirmation of what had been sealed before an
hearth of ancient stones. Laughter, harsh and contemptuous, had severed the
bonds tying me to the woman whose eyes were blacker than the night. Then I
had turned away and ran.
And ran.
A sudden unevenness in the street made me falter, and I crashed in
a wall to my left. For a moment, the pain blinded me and I felt myself
going down. Soft, ethereal whispers enveloped me, gentle, oh so gentle.
"No!" I yelled, and pushed myself away from the obstacle. I ran on, spurred
by the horrible certainty that I was being pursued. A prey fleeing before
the hunter, defenseless. There was no thought in me of turning to confront
what was coming with the storm and the wind--no thought of fighting her. I
couldn't, even if I had had my bokken. Kenjutsu would make her laugh, it
would amuse her and the only thing I might have gained would have been to
push her to make her hunt last a bit longer.
I could only flee, for as long as she'd feel like toying with me.
I knew it as I knew my own name. She was there, in my mind, I could feel
her touch lingering, drawing substance and strength from my fear.
"Hey! Watch it!" Lightning illuminated the street, and all of a
sudden I glimpsed a movement right in front of me. A shape, a shadow in the
split second before the storm engulfed everything again. In a desperate
reflex, I flung myself to the left, and tripped.
Fingers were grasping my right arm, their sure grip on it keeping
me from falling headlong into the mud. On instinct, I gave a violent pull
to free myself,, but the fingers' hold didn't yield. "Oh, stop that, I'm
not going to hurt you." There was annoyance in the voice, and gentleness
hidden behind it. It was a woman's, but not the one I dreaded to hear.
Turning to face her, I found myself staring into a pair of dumbfounded eyes.
"Asano-san?!"
"Misao, did you find anything?" A light came with that deep, quiet
voice. Someone had come to the gate of what might have been an inn, and was
holding a lantern. As its light parted the darkness somewhat, I recognized
the young woman who had stopped me.
Makimachi Misao, Shunsuke's friend.
Shunsuke.
His name echoed inside me, somehow dimming the cold of the woman's
hold on my soul. "Shunsuke," I told Makimachi Misao between chattering
teeth. "Shunsuke!" I repeated, unable to bring order to my thoughts. I was
chaos, a patchwork of raw, violent emotions colliding and threatening to
drown the small bit of sanity I was still clinging to. I needed Shunsuke, I
was sure of that now. As the girl looked at me, uncomprehending, whispers
came again to enfold me, borne by the wind.
"Bring him to the Sumeragi mansion, Misao, quickly!" The tall
figure of the man had turned toward me. His eyes were watching me,
apparently indifferent, but I saw something dark flickering in them.
"Quickly!" he repeated, his voice low and urgent. "There's something coming
with the wind, and it will get him if you don't bring him to safety. Go,
Misao!"
For a fraction of a second, she just stood in the furious storm,
hovering between yes and no, and in the same time something colder than
winter brushed against me. Caressed me. "No!" I screamed, and pulled free.
As I was falling forward, she steadied me and nodded at me, her face set in
a grim mask.
As she led me through the storm, I focused on her strong grip on
my arm. I focused on her warmth, desperately trying to deny the wind's song
filling my mind.
"I hope to the gods he's home," Makimachi Misao hissed beside me,
shaking despite the warm cloak that covered her from head to foot. The
words slipped past me, unheard. I couldn't hear her. I couldn't understand
their meaning. Before us, the Sumeragi mansion's main gate was a looming
shape, threatening. The storm had worsened on our way her and it was only
thank to the girl that we had found our way. Without her, I'd have been
hopelessly lost.
The whispers that stroke my being as if I had been a harp or a
shamisen had retreated for a time and then come back, more enticing and
insidious than ever. Thunder couldn't eclipse them, and neither could the
wind's furious howls. Laughter accompanied the song that had no
words--laughter soft and delicate. Joyful. Happy, even.
Closer.
Closer.
Spurred on by the feeling of the woman's fingers closing around my
heart, I stepped forward, intent on breaking through the ancient door if I
had to.
Inaudible bell chime.
Abruptly, the storm's savagery abated, and silence replaced the
constant roar of thunder. It was as if something over the house had turned
its attention our way and had cast reality aside so that it could examine
me at its leisure. The air around me rippled, as I had once seen it do in
the inner garden.
"There you are! Damn you, where were you? The sun's been set for
almost an hour and--" The gate's door had swung open to let a young man
pass. Anger was bristling around him like wild fire, but it didn't matter.
His voice cut through the silence and restored the storm and the cold, just
as a muted hiss filled my mind and as whatever it was that had reached out
to me recoiled violently. The storm rushed in to claim me, its song once
more enfolding me. Five steps away from me, Shunsuke tensed. The amber eyes
widened in stupefaction, then I saw him lift up his head. Unmoving, he
stared out at the night.
Challenging it.
On instinct, I flung myself toward him, and as I reached his side,
he rested a hand on my shoulder. The grip of his fingers over my skin was
hard, painful even. It would leave a bruise, but that was unimportant.
"Steady," he told me in an eerily quiet voice. "Be still." His voice and
his touch were a claiming, at once identical and different from the
woman's. I heard him, and nodded woodenly. I couldn't obey him, I couldn't
calm the frantic beatings of my heart, but I tried nonetheless. Apparently,
it was enough, for he nodded back and said, without turning away from the
storm, "Go in now. You too, Misao." As he released me, I moved to obey.
The ethereal whisper stilled the world. My name was a song only
she could sing, only she could call. I closed my eyes as she embraced me,
and in the same time, something pushed me, hard. "In, stupid fool!" I lost
my balance and staggered forward, unable to help the reflex. I stepped
forward and crossed the threshold of the Sumeragi mansion.
The wind died in an instant, its song growing distant. I fell more
than I leaned against a wall, and vaguely I heard the deep clang of the
ancient front gate's door being closed shut and locked.
Safe.
As I fought down the sobs rising in my throat, I felt my whole
body shake feverishly. Steps roused me as I was about to close my eyes, and
I realized that Shunsuke had come in as well, and had joined us. "You're
soaked through," he remarked calmly. "Come, don't just stand there." I
followed him through the long corridors to get to the abandoned wing,
barely aware of Makimachi Misao's presence as she tagged along with us. "We
can discuss what happened once you've changed those clothes," he said when
we stopped before the room he had given me. "Misao," he turned toward the
young woman, and added with a gentle smile, "go to Hiroko, I'm sure she can
find something your size. You're as drenched as he is. Get blankets from
her as well, you're not going back to the Aoi-ya tonight."
While the young woman scampered away, I slid the door of my room
open and went in, numb. Clothes are in the far corner, piled up beside a
futon, a distant voice said within. Woodenly, I stepped over to the
designed spot and fell to my knees on the floor. My clothes were too heavy,
I just couldn't stand up anymore. The cold was slowly receding, leaving
nothing but emptiness inside my bones. "Bran, are you done? Do you need
help?" The words hovered in my mind, odd strands of sounds that just
dangled out of my reach. It was only when I heard the door being slid open
that I understood.
"No!" I snarled, biting my lower lip so that I could keep the
hysterical shriek that had risen in my throat locked in. It was Shunsuke,
just Shunsuke, and he meant well. Focusing my will, I took off my clothes,
leaving them in a heap on the floor, and then picked up an old kimono that
I wrapped around me. Once I was done, I tried to get up and rejoin
Shunsuke, but I found that I couldn't move.
I was too cold.
Far too cold.
"Come in!" I called out as loudly as I could. Immediately, I heard
the panel being slid open and then shut. The sound of Shunsuke's steps on
the wooden floor sent weird echoes coursing through my being, and I
realized that even though my back was turned to him, I could feel his
presence next to me with a clarity of perception so sharp that it was
almost painful.
"Here," he said softly as he laid a heavy blanket over my
shoulders. As I hugged it tight around me, he asked in a quiet whisper,
"What happened?"
"I don't know." I heard the mad laughter in my voice and somehow
managed to stifle it. "I sat down with Sima on the way back here, there was
urgent business he wanted to discuss. Then I found myself sitting with a
woman--I think it was a woman." I shivered. "Her features were hazy, except
for her eyes. She called my name." I closed my eyes at the memory. "She
touched me," I said between clenched teeth, trying in vain to control the
tremors in my voice, "here." I hugged myself. "She enfolded me, all that I
am. She...sang to me. She sings to me still," I bowed my head, hating the
terror in my tone. "She's still here, I can feel her, it's better now that
you've closed the main gate's door, but I can feel her reaching out and
taking the life that spills away from me."
For a long time, Shunsuke remained silent. Then, eventually he
asked, "Did she use your name to hold you?" I gave him a slow nod, but
didn't tell him about the darkness that had risen to deny her. I couldn't
tell him, no matter what. "That's a heinous thing to do," he said, disgust
plain in his voice. "I think I can help, but you'll have to trust me." I
looked at him, lifting my head to find his gaze set on me.
Emerald.
He reached out to me and asked, just as his hand brushed against
my left cheek, "Will you let me touch you, Bran?"
He was Fire and Sun.
I could see it in him--in the beautiful, unfathomable green depths
of the eyes he had focused on me. He was Fire and Sun, and he would burn
me. He would burn the cold away, and the woman's presence within would
retreat and give way to him.
If I let him.
I nodded at him, and didn't move when he rested the palm of his
hand against my cheek. I didn't move away when the bright, magnificent
Summer that he was seared my being like white-hot iron. "Bran," he said as
I focused wholly on him, and "Bran," a third time. There was a strange
understanding in his emerald gaze, and gentleness too.
Inhuman.
The sounds of my name resounded within, but it was his voice this
time, and he had asked. I had consented, and I wouldn't move away. I
concentrated on him and nodded again, accepting the claim. No alien voice
rose within to deny him. No laughter dared mock Shunsuke as he wrapped
ethereal arms around me and enveloped me in his warmth. My body shook as I
looked into his eyes--shook as his touch burnt me and hurt, hurt far worse
than the savage bite of Winter ever had. It seemed to last for an eternity,
but at last I was allowed to close my eyes. I slept, then.
Free.
End of chapter 4.
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