REVAMPED LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Whatever else may have changed in this story of mine, trust me - the Sailor Senshi still belong to Kodansha and Cloverway, and the Samurai Troopers are the legal property of Sunrise and Bandai Entertainment. So are all of their related friends and associates. I am only borrowing them for a few chapters, and I intend no harm. So let's all remind ourselves that it's just a fanfiction and we really should relax... CONTINUITY NOTE: This story takes place roughly between the "SuperS" and "Stars" seasons of Sailor Moon (after the Dead Moon Circus, but before Sailor Galaxia). For the Troopers, this is between the "Gaiden" and "Kikoutei Densetsu" OAVs (after their trip to New York, but before their trip to Africa). RONIN SUMMER: CONVERGENCE A Bishoujou Senshi Sailor Moon / Yoroiden Samurai Troopers cross-over by Morgan Hudson "Convergence (n) - the approach of an infinite series to a finite limit." Chapter 5: The Ghosts That Haunt Me Once, long ago, the entire earth realm had been united under the banner of the great King Hyperion. His people had called him the Golden Emperor, and his dominion had stretched from one horizon to the other. Concerned with the welfare of his people, he marched his armies even into their dreams, and quelled the various beings he found in that strange land. In power and in stature he was second only to the graceful Queen Serenity of the Moon Kingdom, to whom he had grudgingly given his allegiance long ago. A bold and honourable warrior, even in his advanced years, Hyperion had abided by the conditions of his truce with Queen Serenity, and spread his borders in the mortal realm no further than the reaches of his own planet. From the realm of sleep, however, he stumbled upon a world of turbulent nightmares that posed a threat to his people in both the realm of the waking and the lands of the dreaming. This, he had decided, would not do. Leaving the mysterious 'Metallia' and her people alone never crossed his mind. The Golden Emperor decreed, and his three sons moved to make his word law. Queen Metallia and all of the peoples of her land were to become the mortal enemies of mankind. Had he been stronger, King Hyperion would have led the advance himself, but in his weakened state it had fallen to his son Prince Orcus, the regent of the dreamlands, to carry his banner into this twisted Dark Kingdom. The armies of the dreaming had clashed for ages with the evil minions of Metallia and her realm of nightmares, battle heaping on top of battle with no sign of ending. Queen Serenity had listened patiently to Hyperion's request for assistance, but quietly refused to send her Sailor Senshi, or any of the troops of the other planets, to aid Prince Orcus and his forces. Why should they attack Metallia, Serenity had asked, when she had done nothing to provoke it? Surely there had to be a more peaceful way. After all, it had been Orcus and Hyperion who had begun the assault. Metallia could not be blamed for defending herself. Escalating the conflict was out of the question. Hyperion had politely disagreed. At his command, Prince Endymion and the armies of the Earth were dispatched to aid their comrades in the land of dreams. Prince Orcus and Prince Endymion had based their armies in a gleaming ruby palace that they had dubbed the Crimson Nadir, for surely it had seemed to be the lowest point that the armies of Man had ever reached. From that stronghold, the newly strengthened armies had begun a steady advance in all directions against the bulwark of youma that besieged them on all sides. In the west, a brilliant tactician named Kunzite outmanuevered and overwhelmed his monstrous foes despite their numerical advantage. In the north, the deadly and genteel Zoicite faced and defeated a swath of enemy commanders in duel after duel, always victorious no matter what the odds against him. The power of the stars had led Nephrite to victory in the south, with his lightning raids and demoralizing attacks timed to perfectly coincide with his opponents' least auspicious moments. The east had been the domain of Jadeite, the youngest and least experienced of Endymion's centurions. Jadeite remembered the Crimson Nadir very well, which was part of why it sickened him to see that the once glorious fortress had fallen into such disrepair. The crystal walls had been allowed to grow unchecked, turning the once smooth and gleaming corridors twisted and craggy, their once rich luster tarnished and darkened with the countless impurities that now filled each facet of formerly pure ruby. The marbled floor was buried under millenia of filth, making it seem as though there was nothing more than a thick layer of sod to walk on. The trophies and monuments to Endymion and Orcus had been shattered or carted away long ago: good riddance, in his opinion. It still sickened him to remember how he used to faun over those so-called 'nobles' back in the old days. "Can it be?" A female youma stepped into the corridor, her dark almond eyes widening slightly as she stared at him. "Jadeite? Is that really you?" Jadeite raised an eyebrow as he tried to remember who was speaking to him. She was attractive, in an exotic fashion: her skin was coral pink, and she wore her chestnut hair in a thick bob that accentuated the length of her neck. The youma was dressed -if he could call it that- in a red swimsuit that showed off far more of her body than Jadeite was comfortable with, and exaggerated white dress cuffs adorned her wrists. A golden pair of wings fluttered nervously on her forehead as she waited for him to respond. He frowned. Golden wings? Ah, of course! "Quartzie," he said, smiling in recognition. "Long time, no see. Tell me, how are the rest of the Doom and Gloom Girls?" "Ready for a rematch, if you'll be leading us," Quartzie said exuberantly. "Shale's going to be so excited when I tell her that you've returned! You'll see, Jadeite - this time, those Sailor Senshi won't come back from what we do to them!" "I'm glad to hear it," Jadeite replied, his grin growing slightly warmer. "I take it that the rest of the girls are somewhere nearby, then?" Quartzie nodded vigourously, her hands clasped shyly behind her back. "Radanthus sent word to Shale weeks ago that he wanted us to lend him a hand against the Sailor Senshi. Shale was saying that she thought Radanthus was an overblown windbag, but if YOU'RE back, well, I'm just sure she'll change her mind! We'll do anything for you, Jadeite!" "Will you, now?" Jadeite stoked his chin thoughtfully. "Walk with me, Quartzie. I'm on my way to speak to Radanthus, and you are more than welcome to come along. Tell Shale that I would be honoured to have the Doom and Gloom Girls in my entourage." Further up the corridor, the dark priest Badamon turned back to see what the delay was and gestured furiously for Jadeite to follow him. Jadeite scowled in the priest's direction and flicked his fingers imperiously at the tattered old freak. Radanthus and Badamon could both wait, as far as Jadeite was concerned. Vapid and annoying as Quartzie might be, the rest of the Doom and Gloom Girls would be powerful allies. Since Tethys died, he had been looking for someone reliable to do his heavy lifting. "Lord Jadeite," Badamon wheezed, "I must insist-" "Keep insisting, you withered old corpse, and I'll turn you to vapour," Jadeite growled. "The young lady and I are talking. Your master will need to wait until we are done." "But, Lord Jadeite-" "Come to think of it," Jadeite said to Quartzie, ignoring Badamon completely, "why don't I just go with you and speak to Shale myself right now? I'm sure she would appreciate it, and I'm not really doing anything important at the moment. Shall we?" Badamon ground his teeth together with frustration and watched as Jadeite wandered off with the female youma. On the one hand, Radanthus had wanted Jadeite in his ranks for exactly this reason: many youma who would otherwise resist helping him would be swayed when they learned that they would be working with Jadeite again. On the other hand, Badamon was less than happy to see that he had found yet another self-important fool who thought that he could be ordered around like a common servant. It was important that Jadeite learn to play along very quickly. The last thing Badamon wanted was for a third party to start muddying the waters and messing up his own backstabbing. "Nise Suiko," Badamon hissed, his voice rasping through the darkness that enveloped him. Like a wraith, the crimson armoured youma appeared out of the shadows and gave him a questioning look. Badamon pointed in the direction of the retreating Jadeite and his consort. "Follow them, Nise Suiko. We don't want Jadeite getting any of the wrong ideas about who is running things, here. If he wishes to oppose Radanthus, then he is welcome to join us. If he does not wish to join us, well..." Badamon shrugged eloquently. "Accidents do have a way of happening around you, don't they? Make sure one happens to him." Nise Suiko gripped his trident firmly and twisted his wrist. The two heavy outer blades snapped shut like a pair of scissors, then opened again with the sound of metal sliding on metal. Looking down at his master, the monster in the crimson armour nodded his understanding. His ivory facemask was as expressionless as ever, but a gleeful crimson light sparkled behind his visor where his eyes should be. ********** "The problem with Nise Suiko is that he could be anywhere," Shin Mouri clarified, lacing his fingers in front of him and gathering the rest of the small group with his steady gaze. The table in front of him was littered with charts and maps of the nearby waters, covered in his own carefully pencilled notes and measurements. "The problem with Nise Suiko is that you never shut up about him," Ryo Sanada groaned from where he lay on a nearby sofa with his arm draped over his eyes. "We get it, okay? You've got an evil twin. You don't need to go rubbing it in all the time." "What's his problem?" Shin asked Shuu Rei Fuan, who shrugged in response and swallowed the mouthful of sandwich he had been working on. "I'm guessing he's got evil twin envy," Shuu suggested. "You know Ryo's always wanted one. They're like the ultimate sign of heroism. Nobody takes a guy seriously as a hero unless he's got an evil twin." "I don't have evil twin envy!" Ryo objected, sitting up on the couch and glaring spitefully at Shuu. "I'm just saying that we've been doing this for almost two days, now, and we're going in a bunch of damned circles! Forget about Nise Suiko - let's just hit the streets, find some youma, and pound some answers out of them!" "That actually passes for a plan in your head, doesn't it?" Shin asked, shaking his head sadly. Unlike his agitated friend, who was practically crackling with energy as usual, Shin was as calm and serene as a mountain lake at sunset. He had been very patiently and methodically going through every sea chart he could find for the entire coast of Japan for the past day without so much as a nervous twitch. He knew how Nise Suiko worked: deep down inside, his doppelganger would want to be found. All he needed to do was figure out where Nise Suiko would go in order to both avoid detection by people like Ryo, and still ensure that Shin himself would be able to track him down. "Look, I'm sorry if I don't find watching you do geometry to be utterly fascinating," Ryo said, rolling off of the couch and onto his feet, "but if I have to count these ceiling tiles one more time I am going to freak out. I'm getting out of here, okay? If you guys need me, I'll probably be at the Hotel Yokohama Garden." "Ooh," Shuu cooed, "going to go check out the Sailor Senshi?" "I think you meant 'check up on' the Sailor Senshi, Shuu." Ryo grabbed his favorite white shirt and yanked it on over top of the purple undershirt he was already wearing. Ruffling his tousled raven hair with one hand, the boy quickly grabbed a pair of scuffed Converse sneakers with neon green laces out from all of the other shoes lined up by the door and began to pull them on. Shuu blinked and scratched his head. "Nope, I'm pretty sure I got that right the first time, Ryo." "Oh." Ryo thought about for a moment, then shrugged. "Well, either way, that's where I'm going to be. Catch you two losers later. Ja ne!" The door slammed, and Shuu set down his sandwich. Taking a long drink from his juice can, he wiped his lips on the back of his sleeve and looked over at Shin. "So," he said. "Ryo's going to go hang out with the Senshi." "Sounds that way," Shin agreed, picking up a compass and tracing yet another circle on one of the maps in front of him. "Do you suppose he's actually figured out that one of those lovely lasses has the hots for him yet?" "What, our fearless leader?" Shuu snorted derisively. "Not even if she fell on his head, man. You know I love that guy, but when it comes to girls, he is just plain stupid. The only way he's getting anywhere with anybody is by accident. Remember what a dweeb he made out of himself that time in New York?" "Oh, no," Shin said, suddenly bolting to his feet and casting a worried glance at the door. "My God, Shuu - it's today, isn't it? Today is the day that Luna...." "What?" Shuu glanced over at the calender and his mouth fell open in astonishment. "Oh, man! No way we could forget something that important to him! Ryo, he must think.... Why didn't he SAY something?" ********** The Castle of Eternal Regret was a place where hopes and dreams came to die. Toshitada Koma understood it better than most; perhaps even better than those who actually dwelled within its dark and unhallowed lands. He had never walked this particular realm before, as it was not one that anybody came to when they had a choice in the matter. His knowledge was largely second-hand, gleaned from the few tomes and scrolls he had found on the matter and several long and involved conversations with his elders. Being over five hundred and sixty years old himself, Toshitada had an abiding respect for anyone ancient and venerated enough to be considered his elder. If they deigned to speak, he was honoured to listen. It was an attitude which had gotten him a lot of much-needed information on any number of interesting topics. Pausing in his journey, the monk lifted a gourd to his lips and took a sip of the nectar within. Eating or drinking anything within this world was not a good idea: like any spirit realm, it would entrap any who partook too deeply of its bounty. He had been careful to stop by a safer place on his way and pick up some scant supplies for the people he had come to rescue. What he had not counted on was the fact that he would find himself needing sustenance, too. That was strange, as Toshitada Koma was still only just becoming used to the idea of being a ghost. As one of the dead, he should be immune to the weaknesses of the flesh, and yet he found in this place that even he was wilting under the blazing heat of the sun, his stomach growling for food and his throat aching for water. Tilting his wide straw hat back on his head, he drew his sleeve across his brow and squinted up at the giant sun burning in the crimson sky above him. The plain they traversed was barren and lifeless, filled with nothing but craggy boulders layered atop each other and compressed until only a cracked, rugged field of stone remained. A winged lizard circled in the sky above them, croaking and rattling with each flap of its veined wings. Toshitada groaned and removed his hat, his long mane of scarlet hair tumbling freely over his shoulders and stirring limply in the breeze. Returning the gourd to its place at his hip amongst its brethren, the monk looked over his shoulder and checked on Touma Hashiba. The young samurai had seen better days, and they had been far away from this place. Touma had always been slim, but after just a short time in this realm, he was rapidly approaching 'gaunt'. Dark shadows hung beneath his eyes, and his usually pale skin was caked with dust and beginning to burn in the sun. His pale green shirt hung loosely around his frame, the entire left sleeve crusted with dried blood, and he was missing one of his shoes. The shoeless foot was loosely bandaged, and badly swollen. Toshitada sighed and carefully tightened the ropes that were holding the youth onto his back. Stubborn as ever, the boy had refused anything more than the most basic of medical treatment for his injuries and insisted on marching without rest until he had collapsed in mid-step nearly three hours ago. The only thing holding him together had been the mystical armour of Tenku, and even that had eventually given out on him. Toshitada fiddled briefly with the straps on his hat before gingerly reaching back and placing it on top of Touma's blue-haired head. The last thing any of them needed was for their resident genius to come down with sunstroke. If anybody could find a way out of this realm, it would be Touma Hashiba. Toshitada Koma was counting on it: although he had only entered this vile realm to assist his fellow heroes, his own escape now lay in their hands as well. The Castle of Eternal Regret let no soul out of its clutches easily. Touma gasped, and woke with a start. Pulling back from the monk, he looked around in wide-eyed confusion for a moment before understanding slowly filtered its way into his expression. With a frown of consternation the boy tested his bonds experimentally and gave Toshitada a suspicious look. "You tied me up," he said, an accusing tone in his voice. "The Plains of Tearful Lament did not seem like a good place for a nap," Toshitada explained with a slight sneer. "I see your rest has done little to improve your company, Tenku no Touma. No word of thanks for the weary old monk who has carried you for all these many miles?" "You tied me up!" Touma repeated incredulously. "Had I been wiser, I would have included a gag!" Toshitada snapped back in reply, his steely eyes flashing with anger. "Honestly, you Samurai Troopers whine about everything: 'you tied me up', 'they stole my family', 'he wants to destroy the planet'... do us all a favour and grow up! My back is aching from carrying your weight -as usual- but at least I don't irritate the cosmos by complaining about it!" "First of all, nobody asked you to come here. Secondly: how the hell can you carry me, anyway? I thought you were supposed to be a ghost! What's going on, here?" "I don't know! That's why I'm yelling!" Toshitada paused for breath, growling softly with each exhalation. Turning away from the samurai on his back, he began to trudge solemnly towards the horizon. Kaos had not told him that this would happen if he came here. His mentor had told him very little about a lot of what had been happening to him lately. Touma was right; he should not have been able to physically lift the boy any more than he should be hungry, or thirsty, or irritable. Why was his spirit reacting like this? Was it part of the realm's curse, forcing a semblance of mortality upon him so that he could better experience its tortures? Or was the answer something else? Was he becoming real again? The idea was disconcerting, to say the least. What did it mean, when the dead began to take flesh once more? And if it was affecting him, who else might even now be returning from the gates of the underworld? Saranbo? Gashura? Or even worse -Kaos preserve them all- the Demon Lord Emperor himself? Was this the first sign that Arago might once again rise to menace their realm? "I think I've got it," Touma said, interrupting Toshitada's train of thought. "You're a spirit, right?" "So I have been led to believe." "Well, it's nearly the time of O-bon, isn't it? Grandfather always told me that the O-bon was when the spirits of the dead could cross into the realm of the living and reunite with their families. Maybe your being physical here is related to that." "A good theory," Toshitada admitted, nodding to himself, "but the O-Bon is not for several weeks. Also, I shudder to imagine what kind of cruel and sadistic universe would consider *you* to be my family." "Oh, ha-ha. Like you're my favourite ghost in the whole wide world." Touma made a face, then furrowed his brow in thought. "Okay, how's this? The Castle of Eternal Regret is a different realm - we know that things here don't work the same way as they do back home. Maybe you're not as dead here as you are back on Earth, or something. Might be part of the dimension exerting its influence on you, like how it keeps trying to make me depressed." "I had been thinking something similiar," the monk agreed, nodding to himself. It was a relief to hear Touma supporting his own earlier theory. It was much easier to assume that his current condition was being caused by the world they were trapped in, and that it might fade as soon as he left. If it meant even a chance that one or more of their old enemies might escape the afterlife, then Toshitada had no desire to return to the land of the living. It was best for everyone involved if the dead stayed dead, friend and foe alike. "Man, we've been walking forever," Touma said, gazing across the blank and featureless terrain. "I thought you said that we were going to meet up with Makoto if we came this way...." "Patience, young warrior," Toshitada placated him. "Your princess is very close, now. I am certain your tear-filled reunion cannot be delayed much longer." "Princess?" Touma looked confused. "Hey, if that's another one of your little barbs about her, you can just cut it out. As a tutor, it's only natural that I should be concerned for the well-being of my student. After all, her academic success is as much a reflection on me as it is on her - if she fails Physics, I will lose face as an educator!" "You DO realise that you have both been trapped by Fei Lian in a hell dimension from which there is no known escape, right?" "That," Touma replied with a devilish grin, "would only pose an obstacle to inferior tutors. As her senpai, and as a Samurai Trooper, I have a solemn duty to both rescue Mako-chan *and* do it with enough time to finish her make-up Physics report! Anything less would be an insult to my talents as both a super-hero, and a super-genius." "I think I'm going to let you down, now," Toshitada said, raising an eyebrow as he began to loosen the ropes. Part of him understood what the boy was ranting about - Touma wanted to deny Fei Lian even the small victory of knowing that he had inconvenienced the boy. It was an oddly spiteful thing for Touma to do; usually the young samurai was better able to focus on the larger picture. Toshitada guessed that Fei Lian must have succeeded at angering the warrior of Tenku, something which made the youma far braver than he. ********** Ami Mizuno tucked her pencil behind her ear and hummed thoughtfully to herself as she examined the notebook in front of her. She had to give Miss Kikuchi credit; some of these algebraic equations were legitimately challenging. Ever since Ami had finished her test two hours early last month, her math teacher had been giving her increasingly more difficult questions every week. With summer break approaching, Miss Kikuchi had decided to take advatage of the usual summer homework assignments to slip Ami a few really tricky problems on the sly. She was pretty sure a few of these were university level. The blue haired girl tapped her foot idly on the leg of the table, turning slowly through her textbook as she looked for the right approach for reducing this particular matrix. She supposed she could use the Mercury computer to help her, but somehow that always felt like cheating. Besides, math was more fun when she could work through each step by hand. There was something refreshingly exciting about seeing a problem come together at the end of her pencil that Ami had never been able to explain to any of her friends. Usagi and Rei hadn't even brought their homework with them on this trip: they had stared at her like she was growing a second head when she pulled her texts out of her suitcase. There was a knock at the door, and Ami glanced over at it in surprise. Could Rei and Usagi be back from their shopping trip already? It felt like they had barely left. Getting out of her chair, she gave a quick look at one of the alarm clocks as she passed it. It was almost eight in the evening - she guessed if Renga Park hadn't had anything very interesting in it, they might be back this soon. She hoped they were just coming by to drop off their first load of packages: her friends had been so excited about visiting the famous Renga Park shopping district that she would hate to think they had been disappointed. Stepping into her slippers, Ami padded across the carpet and opened the door. To her surprise, Ryo Sanada looked up from where he was carefully removing his sneakers and gave her a smile that could melt the polar ice caps. Almost immediately, Ami could feel the temperature in the room increasing. What in the world was he doing here? Why wasn't he anybody other than him? "Hi," Ryo said cheerfully. "You're... Ami, right? I was just in the neighbourhood, and I thought I'd stop in and see how you girls were doing. Can I come in for a minute?" Wordlessly, Ami forced her head to move up and down in a close approximation of a nod. Clutching her textbook to her chest, she stepped aside and let the boy enter her hotel room. Ryo nodded graciously and wandered over to one of the beds. "Wow, this is a great room," Ryo said with an appreciative whistle. "This window looks right out over the Yokohama Stadium! Man, I'll bet if the BayStars were playing you wouldn't even need tickets. That's so awesome." Ami forced herself to nod again and held her book a little bit tighter. What was going on, here? Why had Ryo come all the way across town just to visit with them? Their hotel was miles away from where he was staying with his friends - there was no way he could have just been 'in the neighbourhood'. Did this have something to do with whoever was trying to take over the Dark Kingdom? Had Ryo found some kind of clue or something that he wanted to share with them? They *had* agreed that if any of them found something they would try to keep in touch with each other. Maybe that was why Ryo Sanada was in her room. Sweet merciful gods, Ryo Sanada was in her room. The realisation hit Ami like a bucket of cold water. There was a boy in her bedroom! Well, her hotel room, technically, but it still had several beds in it. And laundry! Moving quickly, Ami kicked some of Usagi's discarded clothes under one of the beds and grabbed Rei's shirt off of the back of the chair while Ryo was still enjoying the view outside. If she had known that there was going to be a boy over, she would have made the other girls pick up a little. Or at least locked herself in the bathroom until he went away. "So, where is everybody?" Ryo asked, turning away from the window and leaning back against the sill. Ami blinked. What, he expected her to talk, now? Oh, Lord, he didn't realise that they were alone! Maybe if she told him that there was nobody interesting around, he would go away and let her work on her... things. With the books, and the paper, and such. Whatever that was called that she liked to do. God, he was cute. What was it with those eyes of his that turned her brain into mush? "Uh," she managed to get out, "R-Rei and Usagi are... out. Shopping. They're out shopping. And, uh, I'm not. So there you go, I suppose." "Ouch. Stuck you here by yourself, huh? You must be as bored as I am." Ryo crossed his arms and frowned thoughtfully for a moment. "Well," he said, after a pause, "there's no point hanging around this place, then. Sounds like it's as dull here as it is back home." Ami nodded gratefully. There it was, he was just bored, and this was no place for a handsome guy with a short attention span. It was dull as dirt around here. Now he would go away, and she could get back to whatever it had been that she had been working on. Something with numbers, she thought. There had definitely been numbers involved. "I, uh, guess I should just go, then." Ryo gestured towards the open books lying on the nearby desk. "You look like you're pretty busy with homework, and stuff." "Yes," Ami agreed sadly, hugging her book and resting her chin on top of the bound pages. "I really should be working on this. Sorry I couldn't help you, Ryo." The dark-haired youth shrugged expressively as he pushed off of the windowsill and wandered glumly back towards the door. As he brushed past, Ami turned to watch him leave. She caught a barely definable scent as he moved past her - it was a musky, smoky smell, like damp cedar boughs smoldering on hot coals. She thought she detected a bit of sandalwood, too: the scent reminded her of incense, and campfires, and wrapping herself in a warm blanket to sip her tea and watch the softly dying embers. Ami sighed almost imperceptibly. He even smelled fantastic. Ryo froze in the doorway, one hand still braced on the frame. Slowly, he looked back over his shoulder at her, his tousled mop of raven hair falling over his eyes and obscuring his expression. Ami blinked in confusion, looking behind her for a second to see what might have caught his attention. "Uh," she stammered, "Was there s-something you wanted, Ryo?" "I was just thinking... do you want to get out of here and go out, or something?" Ami sat down abruptly on the edge of the bed. ********** The encampment was almost a mile outside the walls of the ruined old castle, little more than a gathering of tents in the shadow of the once proud palace. Quartzie had been all but skipping the entire way, and it had taken every last bit of Jadeite's self-control not to throttle her just for existing. Quartzie was the embodiment of everything that Jadeite loathed about girls - stupid, giggling, and distracted by the first thing that crossed her path. He couldn't believe that he was being forced to rely on women to accomplish his goals yet again. It was almost pathetic. Then again, he supposed getting sealed in a giant block of ice and left to float out in the rings of Saturn for - how long HAD he been gone? With a shrug, he marked the question down as something he might want to look into later. Regardless of how long he had been doing it, he guessed that it was pretty pathetic, too. If the Doom and Gloom Girls were willing to join his banner, then he was far too desperate for allies to deny them the honour based on something as trivial as gender. "I mean, can you imagine what that's done to our reputation?" Quartzie asked, continuing the conversation she had been having with herself for their entire march. "To be known as the ones who *temporarily* killed the Sailor Senshi? Where's the honour in that? If you ask me, I say it's completely unfair that they got to come back from the dead. I mean, we killed them fair and square! At least, the other girls tell me that we did: personally, I don't remember too much after Sailor Ve-" "Halt! Who goes there?" Something that Jadeite had mistaken for a small hill rose from the ground and rumbled over to block their path. Now that it was standing upright, he could see that it was a minotaur. Like all members of its breed, the youma's ponderous head was joined directly to its torso with no discernible neck to interfere with all the muscle and fur. His massive horns glinted in the constant twilight of the Dark Kingdom: they were solid iron, and curved gracefully along the slope of his broad shoulders before curling up into needle-sharp points. Almost as an afterthought, the gigantic creature was wielding what appeared to be a medium-sized tree in one paw as a makeshift club. "Oh for the love of...." Quartzie rolled her eyes expressively for Jadeite's benefit and waved her hand a few inches away from the scowling minotaur's snout. "It's me, Takenoko! Quartzie! I went to the castle today, remember? Get out of the way before you make me late to see Shale!" "Quartzie?" The minotaur snorted and leaned in closer, his blood red eyes squinting suspiciously as Quartzie struck a pose and batted her eyes at him fetchingly. Takenoko curled up his snout, as though trying to work out a particularly difficult math problem, then slowly nodded his massive head. "Oh, okay. That's all right, then. Proceed." "Takenoko is blind as a bat," Quartzie whispered to Jadeite as they passed the guard. "Can't see a damned thing unless it's three inches from his own nose. Why he's on sentry duty, I'll never know." "He obviously has other skills," Jadeite said, raising an eyebrow as he carefully stepped around the hulking brute of a youma. Blind or not, anybody who ran into that fellow on a dark road was going to either have a very good reason for being there or be fleeing in the opposite direction soon afterwards. He was carrying a TREE, for Beryl's sake! Who was going to try to bluff a minotaur that was armed with a PINE TREE? They entered the encampment, and Jadeite felt himself relax slightly. There was something strangely comforting about a camp - no matter how much things changed, there was always the smell of cooking food, the sound of hammer on anvil as the blacksmiths repaired gear, and a thousand other things that felt like home. For nearly one thousand years, Jadeite had prided himself on never sleeping on the same ground twice. He and his legions had constantly scoured their lands for any sign of resistance, and he had learned to love life in the camp. This was the kind of place that he belonged, not that wretched castle. The farrier looked up from his work, still holding a dimly glowing piece of steel between his tongs. He was fair-skinned, with a thick mane of crimson hair and golden eyes. Seeing Jadeite, he smirked and tossed aside the molten ingot in order to perform a mocking salute. As he smirked, the glow of his forge glinted off of his long canines. "That's Korran," Quartzie explained, whispering behind her hand. "Don't let the leather apron fool you: he's a master swordsman and a powerful magician. His brother Kirin is probably somewhere around here, reading some kind of book or something. They're only staying with us because they have 'issues' with Radanthus. He's their half-brother, and you know how that always goes." "Korran looks... familiar..." Jadeite commented, scowling at the ivory-skinned youth with the crimson hair. "Yeah, well, he and Kirin take after their mother. The less said about that, the better, believe you me." Quartzie held her hand out and rattled a number of sticks that were standing upright in a large clay pot outside the main tent. There was the sound of motion from within, and a pair of girls dressed similarly to Quartzie emerged. One had pale green skin, with a long mane of greyish black hair and a frown that seemed permanently etched on her face. The other was lilac purple, with the same indecent costume and fluttering forehead wings as the other two. Seeing Jadeite, she quickly lowered her head and stepped aside. "Well, well, Quartzie," the green girl asked with a sneer. "What have you brought us this time? Another lost youma follow you home, and you want to ask Shale if you can keep him?" "I'd watch my tongue if I were you, Verdelith," Quartzie said angrily, standing on her toes to poke the taller youma in the chest. "You might regret talking like that about Jadeite!" "Hello," Jadeite said pleasantly, and wiggled his fingers as Verdelith gulped loudly and turned much paler than she had been a moment ago. The wings on her forehead drooped, and she shot a worried look from the smugly grinning Quartzie to her purple friend, who was already on her knees and genuflecting. After a moment's thought, Verdelith joined her associate on the ground and buried her face in the ground. Jadeite nodded to himself as he gestured for Quartzie to introduce him. Yes, he figured he and these girls would get along just fine. Lifting the tent flap with one arm, he ducked inside after his annoying pink associate and slowly waited for his eyes to adjust to the brightly lit interior of the tent. Most of the area was dominated by a large table covered with maps and charts of various places in both the Dark Kingdom and the Earth Realm. Shale stood at the head of the table, speaking quietly to one of her underlings. Unlike the other Doom and Gloom Girls, Shale was wearing a more respectable one-piece outfit with a large purple cloak concealing most of her body from view. Her blonde hair swept against the floor as she turned, and her skin was the same pale blue as a robin's egg. The candlelight gleamed off of the tiara she wore over her wings as a sign of her rank, and the cracked stone that rested there. Shale looked over at Jadeite, and he was vaguely impressed to see none of her subordinates' fear or adulation there. She was judging him based entirely on what she could see at the moment - reputations be damned. He could respect that. "So," he said calmly, "what do the famous Doom and Gloom Girls want with a washed up has-been like little old me?" "I would hardly call you washed up," Shale replied with a throaty chuckle as she circled the table and began to glide towards him. "After all, you are the greatest of Beryl's generals." "And what would make you say that?" Shale shrugged. "The rest are dead. I would think that makes it obvious. The question is, what would the infamous Jadeite want with little old us? After all, our last encounter with the Senshi was not exactly the stirring victory we had hoped it to be." "I think if anyone can appreciate the value of a second chance, it would be me." Jadeite smirked. "Now that we're done placating each other, can we get down to real business, here? I've been on ice for a very long time, and I haven't eaten in years." "How rude of me." Shale grinned, and turned to face her two associates. "Quartzie, Garnet, fetch Jadeite something to eat. He and I have much to discuss." "Yes, Shale," the red youma said, curtseying obediantly and setting down the scrolls she had been holding before scurrying out of the tent. Quartzie curtseyed as well, and made as if to follow. "Oh, and Quartzie?" Shale said, before the pink girl could leave. "Y-yes, Shale?" "This is work well done, Quartzie. Very well done, indeed." Shale didn't bother to look in the other girl's direction, her gaze still very busy travelling over every inch of Jadeite. Her smile became less friendly than it had been a moment before, and Jadeite began to feel a little bit vulnerable. "Make sure to tell the cook that you'll be recieving some of my special reserve tonight." "Yes, Shale!" Quartzie said, beaming proudly. "Have another bottle sent to my tent," Shale added, almost as an afterthought. "I'm sure that Lord Jadeite will be needing something to drink with his meal." Quartzie giggled, and bowed, and left. Jadeite was surprised to find himself missing her the moment she was gone. Airheaded she might have been, but at least he had known where he stood with her. Shale was another matter entirely. For one thing, she was looking at him like her interests were not completely tactical or military in nature. That made him a little nervous: he was beginning to doubt exactly why he had been led here. Maybe he should have stayed in the castle and met with Radanthus, instead. "Well," Shale drawled, as she glided over to the large screen that blocked off the rear half of the tent and gently moved it out of the way to reveal a nest of pillows and a smaller table, clearly meant for taking meals. "The mighty Jadeite has returned from his banishment to lead us all to glory once again, hmm? I'm sure that by now that pig Radanthus has let the word ring out to all corners of the Dark Kingdom." "I have nothing against Radanthus," Jadeite said sternly, as he crossed his arms and leaned against the edge of the larger table in the main room. "He did free me, after all, and I suppose he would be as good a leader as any other we have ever had. He is of the nobility, at least." "Yes, but he bores me so." Shale draped herself across several of the pillows and propped her head up with one hand. "I can't bear him and his ghastly priest and that vile Fei Lian character who is always lurking around their palace. My girls deserve better than that. So do I, in case you were wondering." "And what do you think you deserve?" Jadeite asked, already sure of the answer. "We deserve to be treated with respect," Shale hissed, her eyes narrowing. "The Doom and Gloom Girls are warriors without peer, the strongest and most lethal members of Beryl's army! When the Dark Kingdom hung in the balance, where were Radanthus and his priest? Nowhere! It was my girls and I who went out into that blizzard and fought the Sailor Senshi; it was my girls and I who killed them! I held Sailor Mars' broken body in my arms - I crushed Sailor Mercury with my own hands! And what do we get for it? Nothing! Radanthus and his *men* treat us like... like scullery maids! They expect us to follow them? When have they ever fought for anything in their lives?" "Strange," Jadeite commented idly, as he toyed with some of the instruments on the table. "Quartzie made it sound as though you would be very eager to serve Radanthus once you knew that I was with him." "Radanthus can hang for all I care," Shale spat. "It's you, Jadeite, don't you see? We remember you - you fought against the Senshi, better than anyone else! You understand the hate that burns within us, how they cheated us of our victory. We want you to lead us, Jadeite - lead us against the Sailor Senshi! We don't care who rules this worthless pile of dirt anymore!" Jadeite pondered Shale's words in silence as he picked up an astrolabe and spun it in his hands. He could feel Shale's eyes on him, but his thoughts were a hundred and thirty-four miles away. One hundred and thirty-four miles: that was how far it was from this place to the edge of his former lands. Vast rolling plains and treacherous steppes as far as the eye could see, stretching off into the horizon and just waiting for him to explore them once more. His armies had swept those plains for years on end, and he had never slept in the same place twice.... They had been harsh times, times of danger and adventure and camraderie. He had spent his days in the saddle, and his nights in camps not unlike this one. Quartzie and Garnet rattled the poles outside and waited discreetly for Shale to respond before entering. Keeping their heads low and their eyes on the ground, the two youma swiftly and efficiently laid out a small banquet on the low table next to Shale's reclined form. Bowing to Jadeite and curtseying to Shale, they hurriedly scampered out of the tent, whispering and giggling between each other. "What do you say, Jadeite?" Shale asked quietly. "My request is not so difficult, is it? I have already gathered dozens of youma here, and they are all pledged to my leadership. Why should you have to bow and scrape to the likes of Radanthus as if you were his servant? Let us serve you, and you can meet with him as an *equal*. You deserve to be his equal, Jadeite. I offer so much, and I ask very little in return. Please, do not make me beg for your consideration." Jadeite thought again about rolling plains and nights at camp. The smell of the food on the table was overwhelming: it was hearty, simple fare, the kind of food that had still been planning its day an hour or two ago and had yet to get over the shock of being dinner. He looked over at Shale, and she smiled at him expectantly. "So," he said, as he stretched out on the pillows next to her and plucked a shred of meat from the meal on the table, "tell me again about how you crushed Sailor Mercury with your bare hands...." ********* Ryo Sanada thrust his hands in his pockets and rocked back on forth on his heels, whistling softly to himself. That was the thing about girls: you had to give them time to make up their minds. A girl wouldn't be happy with any decision unless she knew that it was what she really, truly wanted. The trick was to let them know that there was no pressure, and they could decide for themselves. Case in point: he had been down in the lobby for nearly fifteen minutes, and he wasn't the slightest bit impatient. However long it took Ami to choose a sweater, he was fine with it. The important thing was that she was happy with the decision. Ryo's dad had warned him once that girls liked to drag everything out for as long as possible, and he had taken that warning to heart. Slow and steady, that was Ryo Sanada. Yep. No problems on his end. He could wait down here forever. He checked his watch. Eight-thirty. Criminy! How many sweaters did she HAVE up there, anyway? Shirt, shoes, wallet - he had been ready in thirty SECONDS. Heck, he had jogged here in the time it took her to pick a shirt! At this rate, all of the good places would be closed. What was she trying to do, kill him? The elevator chimed, and the doors slid open with a pneumatic hiss. Ami peered around the edge of the door, stepping almost tentatively out into the lobby. She was wearing a pair of new blue jeans and a garish orange and yellow striped sweatshirt with purple sleeves, and she looked like she might scream and bolt at any moment. "Hey, Ami! Looking good!" Ryo smiled in what he hoped was a friendly manner and waved her over to him. Ami waved back nervously and took another couple of steps in his direction. "I, uh, I didn't pack a lot of sweaters," she stammered, "and none of Usagi's or Rei's seemed to fit right, so I had to make do with what I had on me..." "It's awesome," Ryo reassured her. "I mean, I'm wearing a purple undershirt, and there's some orange on my sweater, so it's kind of like we match!" He grinned widely, and tried not to wince. Kind of like they matched? Where had he pulled a stupid line like that one from? This was going to end badly. "Yes, it kind of is," Ami agreed, and a smile briefly flitted across her features before vanishing again. Ryo took a step closer and tilted his head to one side. There was something different about her. Was she wearing makeup, now? He was pretty sure she might have put on a bit of perfume, too - she smelled different than she had upstairs. "So, uh, what exactly are we d-doing, Ryo?" Ami asked, inching back slightly under his examination. "Oh, I talked to the guy at the front desk, and he said that there's a couple of places still open. No games at the stadium, but if we're willing to walk a bit, we should be able to make it to the Yokohama Daisekai museum back in Chinatown." That seemed like a safe bet. Ryo was guessing that a smart girl like Ami would enjoy going to the museum. Unless she hated museums. Did girls like museums? "Sounds fun," Ami said, smiling bravely. ********** Makoto Kino sighed and tossed a stone across the rocky plain in front of her. It skipped and bounced, clacking loudly off of the other stones before coming to a rest against the side of the small ravine she was stuck in. She wasn't even sure she could call what she was standing in a stream: it barely got the toes of her boots wet, and it was a very nasty shade of flourescent yellow. It had taken her maybe ten seconds to decide that she was not quite thirsty enough to see how it tasted yet. Instead, she had found a nice-sized boulder and made herself comfortable. After all, if she was going to be trapped in another dimension with a bunch of killers and monsters, this was as good a place as any to take a rest. Judging from the terrain she had seen so far, it wasn't like there was anywhere more pleasant to go. It felt like it had been years since she had been dragged into this stupid dimension - she had emerged from the mists in the middle of a vast battlefield littered with corpses. It had not been the warmest welcome she had ever recieved, especially since some of the creatures there had still been lively enough to want her to join in the fun. Typically, whatever they had been fighting about was apparently not important enough to keep them all from ganging up on her. That was just one of the many perks of being a Sailor Senshi: always bringing people together. Makoto had shaken off the last of her pursurers the day before, and had been careful to keep to the shadows and stay in the ravine ever since she had stumbled into it. Some of those things had sharp noses, and the last thing she wanted was for them to find her again: a lot of those corpses on the battlefield had looked well-chewed. They didn't seem able to track her if she stayed in the water, and the ravine narrowed at the top so that it seemed like little more than a crack in the ground from above. She was safe from everything except the voices. Of all the things that had come after her here, the voices were the most insidious. It seemed like every time she stopped for more than a second or two they would come creeping up like a bad odour, whispering their lies into her mind until she wanted to rip out her own hair just to make them stop. They called her worthless, and pathetic, and stupid and ugly and clumsy. They told her that nobody would ever care enough to come for her, and that she would die alone and unloved in this horrible place, and that nobody would even notice she was gone. For most of the first day, she had tried to argue with the voices, but it was pointless to even try. After all, they never got tired, or stopped muttering how hopeless and pathetic she was. After a while, she had realised that her throat was raw, and that one of the voices berating her had somehow turned into her own. Since then, she had valued silence over resistance. Talking back only seemed to make the voices stronger. A spray of gravel rattled down from above, and Makoto slipped behind the boulder as a quintet of demons marched overhead. There were four of the bloated frog things; they were mostly walking mouths with limbs attached, but despite their bulky appearance she had learned the hard way just how fast they could move when food was involved. The fifth of the group was different - he was tall and gaunt, his body seeming to be made from twisted cords of black hawthorne that slid and rasped dryly against each other with his every motion. Unlike the other four, he bore no weapon. Instead, he merely pointed at each of his subordinates and gestured emphatically at the stream below them. Makoto had run into one of those black demons before, and still had a few of the cuts to prove it. They were fast, they were smart, and worst of all they seemed able to sense her no matter how she tried to hide herself. She had been counting herself lucky that she hadn't run into any more than one or two of them over the last few days. They couldn't be smelling her, because she had already avoided all the things that could smell her. How were they able to know where she was? The shadowy creature paused in its silent commands and tilted its head to one side, the long silver quills on its scalp rustling and moving of their own accord. Turning, it extended one clawed hand towards her hiding place below them and a hail of thorns flew from its skin. Each one of the things was nearly two inches long, and as sharp and hard as a steel needle. The foul yellow water spat and hissed as they rattled against the ground and pinged off of the boulder that Makoto was using for cover. Crouching low, she pushed away from the rock and ran towards the far side of the ravine, to a place where the overhanging lip of the canyon would make it impossible for him to get a clear shot at her. Makoto clenched her fists, small bolts of lightning fizzling and crackling as they crawled around her arms. Whatever those black things were, they had proven immune to all of her usual attacks. Those fat froggy friends of his, though - those she could fry real easily, if she got the chance. Another flurry of darts rained down from above, clanging and bouncing off of the rocky floor of the ravine and ricocheting wildly throughout the gully. Makoto flinched back as a chip of broken stone drew a line of blood across her cheek, but only gripped the cliff wall behind her and held her ground. Her opponent was firing blindly: there was no way he could get at her from up there. He just wanted to flush her out into the open so that he could finish her off without needing to get his hands dirty. What *were* those spiky things? Were they from the Dark Kingdom? Had she fought them before, as Sailor Jupiter? If so, it might explain why they were so sensitive to her presence, to say nothing of how upset they seemed at it. She guessed not everybody locked away in this place was undeserving of their punishment. At the moment, they were in a bit of a stalemate. If she went up there, she would be turned into a pincushion before she even got a chance to summon a single lightning bolt. If he came down after her, she gained the tactical advatage - there were a lot of places she could use for cover once he lost his vantage point up there, and if he got inside this box of stones instead of shooting from safely outside of it, his ricochets would be as much a threat to him as to her. Makoto hadn't gotten a chance to try going hand-to-hand with one of those creatures: they might be covered in spines, but she bet it would be easier than fighting them from a distance. Makoto turned and cursed as she heard the sound of approaching feet splashing through the fetid yellow stream. So much for a stalemate: the jerk with the thorns had just been trying to keep her in one place while he sent for reinforcements. That made things different - if she had to fight another group of those frog monsters, they might be able to drive her out into the open where their commander could get a clear shot. She had been penned into a corner, with no way out. Shrinking back against the side of the cliff, she tried to meld with the shadows in the rocks and steeled herself for the inevitable assault. There was a loud crack, and one of the demons staggered blindly around the corner with its eyes pinwheeling in opposite directions. Giving up a final gurgle, it tumbled into the stream and rolled onto its back. Makoto raised an eyebrow in confusion as she heard the distinctive sound of metal clashing against metal and the meaty thud of fists on flesh. Another of the squat creatures rounded the corner, running as quickly as its stubby legs could carry it, and Makoto lashed out with her foot. Her kick caught it squarely between its piggish crimson eyes, which crossed as it fell backwards and landed on the rocks. "Hey! Get back here, you-" Rounding the corner with his fists clenched and his jaw was set in a look of determined fury, Touma Hashiba skidded into view. He was dressed in a strange suit of form-fitting blue and white armour that sheathed him in metal from the neck down, and it was covered in dents and scratches that marred its otherwise glossy finish. It was the same dark shade of regal blue as his hair, which was nearly black in the shadows of the ravine. Noticing Makoto, his eyes widened slightly before he let out a relieved laugh. "Mako-chan!" "Touma-senpai!" Makoto leapt out from her hiding place, throwing her arms around his neck and squeezing as hard as she could, just to make sure that he was actually there. The armoured boy stumbled back slightly under her weight before his leg buckled and both teens collapsed onto the ground. "Ow..." Touma groaned, as Makoto rubbed her cheek against his own and sighed happily. He had come for her! She had known that Touma wouldn't let her down, somehow she had just *known* that he would be coming to save her. After all, he was her senpai - her advisor, her protector, her teacher, her.... "Uh, Makoto? I'm having a little trouble breathing, down here." "What? Oh, right! Sorry!" Blushing furiously, Makoto released the boy and scuttled back to a safe distance as she let him sit up and catch his breath. That had been a little embarassing. She hadn't meant to lunge at him like that, but it was just such a relief to see a friendly face (especially such a smart, cute, handsome face) after so many days that she had acted without thinking. She hoped he hadn't thought it was too forward of her - guys liked girls who were all shy and demure, right? "It's okay," Touma reassured her, gingerly rubbing his shoulder with one hand as he looked over at her and grinned affably. "I'm glad to see that you're all right, Makoto. I was really worried about you." "Ah, it takes more than a place like this to get me down, senpai!" Makoto laughed awkwardly and rubbed the back of her head, shrugging off his concern as best she could. He had been worried about her. Yes! That meant that he liked her! It might not be much, but she had managed to go a lot farther with a lot less before. "I appreciate the rescue, though." "Well," a strange man in a straw hat said as he walked around the corner to join them, "that seems to be the last of... oh! Sorry, didn't mean to interrupt your little tea party, over here. Is it too late for a scone? I'd have stopped by earlier, but I was busy FIGHTING ALL THOSE MONSTERS." "Who's the cranky old guy?" Makoto asked curiously. "Makoto Kino, meet Toshitada Koma. Toshitada Koma, Makoto Kino." Touma shrugged and carefully propped himself up with his good arm. "Toshitada's an old - well, 'friend' isn't really the right word for it..." "Personally, I prefer 'unfortunate acquaintance'," the monk suggested helpfully. "That works," Touma agreed. "Anyway, don't mind him. He's kind of a jerk, but he's also a pretty good guy to have around in a pinch. He's been helping me look for you." "Oh," Makoto nodded in understanding. "Well, thanks for taking the time to come and help us, Koma-sensei..." "Spare me your thanks," Toshitada grumbled, crossing his arms and tilting his hat down over his face. "If the boy weren't so utterly besotted with you, I never would have had to come here in the first place. I only helped the fool because the fate of the universe depends on him not succumbing to his own idiocy." "I'd say he gets better once you know him," Touma apologised, "but really, all it does is give him more things to criticize you about. The scary thing is that of all the Masho, he's actually the MOST pleasant one to be around. He does have a point though: we'd better get moving before that spiky guy comes back with more reinforcements." ********* Ryo was right - it had gotten a bit chilly once evening hit the city of Yokohama. There was an almost autumnal nip in the air, and Ami hugged herself nervously as they wandered in the general direction of Chinatown. The sun had been down for hours, and the entire city had transformed into a shifting panorama of flickering neon lights and massive glowing billboards that constantly moved from one advertisement to another as the headlights of cars whirred by too quickly to make out the vehicles themselves. The moon hung low in a starless sky, hazy and golden as it basked in the glow of the city. The streets of Yokohama at night were a little bit like being inside the world's largest arcade, Ami decided: flashing lights and sounds everywhere. Juuban was nowhere near this lively after dark. Ryo ducked slightly to avoid bumping his head on a paper lantern that bobbed from the corner of a shopkeeper's awning and nimbly leapt out of the way as a boy on a bicycle pedalled past furiously. The lingering aroma of ramen and the jangling of his bell trailed after the boy as the crowd parted to make way for him and he veered around the corner, still pedalling as fast as he could. Ryo whistled softly between his teeth as he watched the crowd merging seamlessly together in the delivery person's wake and smiled in Ami's direction with a rueful shake of his head. Ami smiled back, and shrugged. They had only been walking for a few blocks, and already that was the fourth person who had tried to run Ryo down in the street. As far as she could tell, he was a magnet for the darned things. The fact he was still uninjured was a testament less to their skill and more to his own agility. "You know what I like most about my house?" Ryo mused. "No people." Brushing his shirt with one hand, the dark-haired youth hopped down from the magazine rack he had been forced to take shelter on. From the counter in the rear, the shop's owner began ranting about stupid kids who thought that bookshelves were jungle gyms. "I know what you mean," Ami admitted sadly as they continued walking. She guessed that her house was pretty vacant at the moment - her mother was off at another symposium in Chicago about caring for children with learning disabilities. Before that, it had been the medical convention in Antwerp, and before that it had been an exciting new research lab in Buenos Aires. The whole reason Ami had been able to get away for this vacation was that her mother had no idea she was on it. "My dad's in Africa," Ryo said, as though her were reading her thoughts. "Zimbabwe, I think. At least, the postcard was from Zimbabwe. He's taking photographs of the endangered white rhino, or something. We don't really keep track of each other much." With a chuckle, he ran his fingers through his hair, combing it back from his eyes. "Would you believe that my friends made me come here because they didn't want me to be stuck by myself? One evil twin later, and they've forgotten all about me." "I'm sure they haven't forgotten about you," Ami reassured him. "Nobody could possibly do that." Blushing slightly, she placed her hand over her mouth and turned away. Stupid! What was she going to next, just blurt out how handsome he was? "Ah, I don't mind," Ryo said with a shrug. "I mean, what am I going to do, complain because saving the universe is more important than keeping me entertained? I just wish it felt like we were actually getting somewhere. When we fought Arago, we knew exactly what was going on and exactly what we needed to do. We're just grasping at straws, here." "Sometimes you just have to wait and be patient," Ami said. "Our enemies will make some kind of mistake eventually, and then we'll catch them. I don't know if we mentioned it before, but youma are usually not very smart." "Really? I'd never noticed," Ryo joked, his eyes twinkling. "It's a good idea, Ami, but I don't think it's going to work for me: patience isn't really my thing. Hey... come here! I think I found a short-cut!" "What?" Ami blinked in confusion as the boy grabbed her wrist and ducked between two buildings, pulling her into the alley after him. Ryo's hand was very warm, she noticed, as they raced down the dark and twisting lane. Not uncomfortable, or anything, just noticeably warmer than usual. The skin on his palm was rough and calloused; he had the strong and limber hands of a swordsman. It was fascinating, how his fingers could feel so powerful, and yet hold her hand so gently. She would have liked to take the time to enjoy the sensation, but Ryo was tugging her along as fast as her feet could carry her, and most of her concentration was on keeping her balance as they ran. Ryo skidded to a stop, and Ami stumbled into him, pressing against his arm and burying her face in his shoulder. Instinctively, her other hand flew up and grabbed his shirt for support as she sagged against him. He looked down at her, his face filled with concern, and time seemed to stop as she stared up into his eyes. They were such wide, caring eyes, as blue and sparkling as the ocean itself. He was looking at her the same way he had that first day they met, the same way he had been looking at her every time since. There was something in that stare that quivered in the shadows behind his usual cheerful and easy-going veneer and made Ami's heart flutter. She couldn't decide what it was, but she knew what she thought it might be. The funny thing was, she couldn't decide if the idea made her terrified, or excited. Possibly both. "Are you okay?" he asked, and Ami forced herself to nod and push herself away from him. The cool night air suddenly felt frigid against her body after Ryo's warmth, and she shivered slightly. What was going on, here? Was this a date? Was she on a date? Because it sort of felt like it might be a date, but she wasn't sure if Ryo was thinking of it that way. Ami had spent almost fifteen minutes in her room after he went downstairs just trying to figure out what she had agreed to. The only reason she had gotten on the elevator was because she had convinced herself that Ryo was not, in fact, asking her out. Unless maybe he had, in fact, been asking her out. In which case, that would mean this was, indeed, a date. From which one could reasonably conclude that she and Ryo were, at the moment, 'dating'. But only if you wanted to go by the most technical description of the word, of course. Ami was sure that this was just Ryo trying to be friendly and keep her company for a little while. If that happened to involve the two of them going out (by which she meant merely the fact that they had exited the hotel at the same time and walked in the same direction) and visiting a museum for a few hours, then that did not necessarily mean anything. She had been very careful not to embarass herself by giving away how she felt around him. There was no way that he could possibly know what he was doing to her. She hadn't given him the tiniest sign. ********** The first sign that Nise Suiko had arrived was when the minotaur went flying across the campsite. Bellowing at the top of his lungs, Takenoko was able to clear the flagpole and land just a few feet shy of the treeline on the other side of the tents. He bounced off of the tables that had been set up outside for dinner, knocked all of the plates and chopsticks everywhere, and rolled groggily into the cooking fire. There was a moment of silence as nearly twenty youma stared first at the smoldering minotaur, then down at the kindling that used to be their supper, and then back towards the front gates. The torches cast their wavering light upon a horrific figure in crimson and black armour, his every inch sheathed chitinous plating that shone dully as he lowered his fist and began to stride forward with grim purpose. Being no strangers to horrifying figures, the youma responded as only youma could: they leapt into battle. The Terra Twins were the first to rise from the table, their slim forms blurring as they dove into the earth as if entering a swimming pool. The large sawblades on their shoulders whirred to life, cutting a swath through the ground like metallic shark's fins closing in on the armoured intruder from two directions at once. Kamisori was close behind them, the cybernetic demon lifting into the sky on his billowing cloak as he hurled a torrent of whirring razor blades at their enemy to disorient him. Thornz lifted her arms menacingly, and a thick tangle of writhing vines burst from the earth to grab Nise Suiko's limbs at the geomancer's command. Kirin lunged forward, grinning eagerly as eldritch energy crackled at his fingertips, only to find a firm hand clamping down on his wrist and dragging him back to his seat. Angrily, he glared at his brother, who was standing placidly next to the shattered remains of the table. "What do you think you're doing, brother? That freak just attacked us! Let me go!" "No, Kirin," Korran said firmly, pointing his finger at his younger brother. "You're staying right here. This fight is none of your concern, and none of your business." "The hell it isn't! I *live* here, Korran!" "I'm not playing with you, Kirin," Korran insisted, drawing his shining blade as mystical energy glowed in his eyes. "You're staying here, where it's safe. The rest of us can handle this intruder by ourselves, do you understand me?" Nise Suiko laughed madly, and swung his trident as though the massive polearm weighed nothing at all. Spinning the weapon in a complex and intricate series of loops, he created a sheild of whirring ebony that not even the direst of Kamisori's razors could penetrate. The blades fell to the ground about his feet like raindrops as the vines summoned by Thornz entangled his legs and bound him in place. His eyes burning gleefully, the armoured youma watched as the whirring saws of the Terra Twins revved with anticipation on either side of him. As they raced forward, he thrust the tines of his trident into the dirt at his feet. "SUPER WAVE SMASHER!" The ground erupted in a geyser of rushing water, carrying the screaming twins into the sky and leaving them to tumble gracelessly onto the damp ground below. They lay where they fell, wet and quivering. "Ooh, nice attack!" Oniwabandana said, appearing behind Nise Suiko without warning. "Would you mind doing that again, for posterity?" "Sure!" Nise Suiko agreed, swinging his trident behind him as the ninja bounded easily out of the way. "Just hold still for a moment, and I'll let you see it up close and personal!" "Can I quote you on that?" the ninja chirped, as she somersaulted over his trident and planted her hand on his shoulder to vault herself to the relative safety of a nearby flagpole. Nise Suiko growled and charged forward, knocking aside Cirkuit even as the technological youma pounded at him with its hammer-like arms. Oniwabandana laughed airily and bounded away again as he neared, skipping merrily across the battlefield as Nise Suiko chased after her. "What kind of tactic do you call this?" Nise Suiko yelled, as he blocked an overhead strike by Kamisori and slid his claws into the other youma's abdomen without breaking stride. "I think the technical term is 'distraction', sweetheart," the ninja replied, as she lifted her hands in front of her masked face, forming a rectangle around her eye with her thumbs and index fingers. "Now, don't forget to say 'cheese'!" The world lit up, and Nise Suiko cursed as he covered his eyes with his arm. Seeing her opportunity, Oniwabandana drew a massive scimitar and dove forward, swinging her blade at his neck as the wounded Kamisori hurled another blast of whirling razors at him from behind. Nise Suiko weaved out of the way of the sword strike, chopping down with his clawed hand to slash the ninja in the face as he gripped her sword arm tightly and forced her in close. Reversing direction, he thrust his claws into her exposed abdomen as Kamisori's blades chipped and scratched at his armour. "Doesn't matter," the ninja mumbled in his ear as she slumped forward onto him. "Still... got my exclusive. Doom and Gloom Girls slaughter intruder... film at eleven..." "What?" Nise Suiko threw the dying youma off of his claws and spun around just in time to see Quartzie hurtling towards him with her arm outstretched. With a fierce cry, she slammed her wrist into his throat and sent him to the ground. He was barely able to get back onto his feet before Garnet pounced on him. Leaping over his head, the red youma wrapped her arms around his waist and used her weight to send him flipping into the ground head-first. The impact was enough to blur his vision, and he blinked his eyes to clear it as he struggled to free himself from the girl's deathgrip on his waist. Looking ahead, he saw Verdelith sliding through the mud towards him as though she were trying to steal second base. He flinched back and threw his hands in front of him as she slammed into his face, boots first. "You know something? I could get to LIKE you girls!" Nise Suiko quickly lashed out with a rabbit punch to Verdelith's kneecap, and followed it up by doubling over and driving his feet into her stomach. As the green girl gasped for breath, Nise Suiko fumbled for the knife in his shoulder sheath and drove it deep into Garnet's thigh. She screamed, and let go of his waist to clutch at the dagger as he twisted it in her leg and rolled to safety. "Now, where were we? Surely you're not ALL worn out!" Scanning the campsite for his next opponent, Nise Suiko extended his hand and called his weapon back to him. The trident flew out of the mud and spun back into his grip as Korran strode into the torchlight, his blade crackling with energy. "I don't know who you are," the youma said, hefting his sword warningly, "but if you do not leave this place, you will be destroyed." "Oh, really?" the armoured warrior chuckled and looked at the youma strewn about the campsite. "I hate to break it to you, but you're going to need a lot more men." "How about a few more girls?" Nise Suiko gagged as a thick burst of writhing tentacles wrapped securely around his throat and torso. He gripped at them, to claw them off, and screamed as a thousand volts of electricity rippled through his body. Falling to his knees, he looked over his shoulder to see a purple girl with feathered wings on her forehead grinning at him maliciously. The tentacles were coming from her arm, he realised groggily, as she waved to him with her free hand and then sent another current through his armour. Quartzie walked up behind her purple partner. "All right! Great job, Anthracite! Let me play, too." Her hands flexed, and split into two thick clusters of wriggling pseudopods that hummed and crackled with electricity. Grinning, she sent her tentacles down to wrap firmly around his arms and, with Anthracite's help, hauled him back onto his feet even as they sent wave after wave of voltage into his body. Nise Suiko screamed, and thrashed, and felt himself beginning to burn. Smoke curling from the edges of his visor, he gripped the steely tentacles in his hands and slowly began to drag himself towards the two girls. "What you don't seem to understand," he grunted, as the two youma frantically increased the voltage and sent what felt like ten lightning bolts through him, "is that *I* am the winner, here! You bunch..." Thrusting his hands out of Quartzie's grasp, he grabbed both girls by their faces and steadily began to tighten his grip. "YOU bunch..." The electricty was alive inside of him now, eagerly chasing down every possible nerve ending and seeing just how much it could take. Nise Suiko growled as the smoke began rising from every joint in his armour. He curled his fingers inward, and felt their bones begin to flex in his hands. "YOU bunch are nothing more than a gang of filthy, pathetic losers! You're just a bloody gaggle of has-beens and never-weres! And you thought you could beat ME? If I weren't so pissed off right now, I might actually find that funny!" Korran held out his hand and gestured for the rest of the youma to fall back as Nise Suiko continued his assault on Quartzie and Anthracite. He wasn't sure what was going to happen next, but the next youma to get this creature's attention was going somewhere a lot less pleasant than the surgeon's tent. There were still ten of them standing, the ones who had held back for fear of harming their own comrades in the confusion of combat. "You know what I will find funny though?" Nise Suiko ranted, as bolts of electricity crawled over his body and his armour glowed from the sheer destructive power that was coursing through it. "I think it's going to be *real* funny if I just squeezing these pretty little skulls of yours until you say 'uncle'. What do you think? You say stop, or your heads go pop. We got a deal?" "What in the nine hells is going on out here?" Jadeite asked, throwing back the tent flap and storming out into the open air. His short blone hair was mussed, and he was dressed only in the grey trousers and purple undershirt of his uniform. Upon seeing Nise Suiko, he snarled and extended one hand in the armoured youma's direction. Nise Suiko gasped as he felt his own armour beginning to buckle inwards on him. Staggering back, he released his grip on the two female youma, who fell to the ground. Korran quickly rushed past the enraged Jadeite and knelt by the girls, trying his best to see to them. "You're some of that withered old freak Badamon's trash, aren't you?" Jadeite asked coldly. "I think it's high time somebody crumpled you up and threw you away." "You... never should have turned... on Radanthus," Nise Suiko choked, as his armour warped and folded as though Jadeite were trying to turn him into some kind of metal origami sculpture. "Worst... mistake... you ever made..." "Radanthus?" Jadeite laughed. "Why in the world would I oppose Radanthus? As a surprisingly perceptive woman just helped me realise, I don't really give a damn who runs this place. If he wants the throne, I will be more than happy to help him get it: Lord knows I don't want the cursed thing. But you have come into MY camp, and you have attacked MY people, and for that you must be destroyed. Good-bye." "No!" Nise Suiko slammed his fist into the ground, and his armour shell vanished in a soundless blast of air. Clad in a thin suit of red and black, the much smaller and more fragile looking young man lunged forward and tackled Jadeite, knocking them both backwards. Grabbing one of Kamisori's razors from the ground, Nise Suiko held it to Jadeite's left eye. "You try that trick again," he vowed, "and I'll carve out your brain like a bloody canteloupe. Do you understand me?" "Perfectly," Jadeite assured him, and a blast of energy filled the camp site. When it cleared, there was no sign left of Nise Suiko. Jadeite snorted and tugged the front of his shirt to smooth out the wrinkles. He had been hoping that attack would have caught the monster off guard, but somehow Nise Suiko had managed to disappear right before it struck. It was annoying, perhaps, but nothing he couldn't deal with later. There were more urgent matters at hand now. "Kirin! Korran!" he ordered, pointing at the fallen youma on the ground. "Let's get these people to the surgeon's tent before we lose any of them! Oniwabandana first, then Garnet and Quartzie and Takenoko. We'll move the rest based on need, but I want those four in that tent now!" ********** Ami had to admit, the Daisekai museum had managed to be both fun and educational. After Ryo had paid for their tickets at the front gate, they had been filed onto a brightly-lit elevator and carried up to the eighth floor of the large and flashy building. Considering how gaudy it looked from the outside, she had not been expecting much authenticity, but the floor had been a perfect recreation of a wealthy merchant's home in China. They had looked behind the folding screens, marvelled at the beautiful antique pottery, and generally poked around until they had found the stairs down. The only really shocking moment had been when Ryo had suddenly disappeared and then leapt out from behind a collection of shipping crates when she was least expecting it. She had almost transformed and blasted him before she realised it wasn't a youma attack. According to Ryo, the look on her face had been very amusing. On the seventh floor Ryo had disappeared again, but this time it had merely been because she had been so involved in examining the silks and masks of the artist's studio that she had not noticed him wandering away. He had come back garbed from head to toe in crimson silk, and bearing the good news that apparently the staff allowed you to try on the clothing there. He had also borne the less appreciated news that he had already spoken to the staff, and they had several outfits waiting for her. Over the next ten minutes, she had been dressed as a fine lady, a martial artist, an actor in a Chinese opera (with authentic mask), and too many other costumes for her to keep track of them. She had also learned that Ryo looked utterly ludicrous with a fake moustache. And only slightly less ludicrous in a fur hat. They were still in negotiations as to what it would take to make the photographs disappear without his friends ever seeing them. After Ryo was done prancing around with every single sword in the entire building, they had been invited to a demonstration of a traditional Chinese tea ceremony. Ami had to agree with Ryo that the free samples had been the highlight of that particular exhibit. Unfortunately the Chinese opera had been cancelled for the night due to issues with the stage, so they had been forced to skip the sixth floor and head down to the fifth. Much to Ami's delight, the fifth floor had been filled with various demonstrations of the arts and crafts of Shanghai in the early twentieth century. The artisans demonstrating the sculpting craft of Tenkoku had been making exceptionally adorable seals, and Ami had been unable to resist buying one to take home with her. It had a carving of a coiled dragon on the top of the stone cylinder, and she had gotten the artisans to cut the stamp on the bottom so that it would read 'Mercury' in Chinese kanji when she used it. She had even gotten a special ceramic ink pad with blue ink instead of the usual red. Everything after that had been a whirlwind of fried won tons, shark fin casseroles, crab dumplings, and Peking duck burgers. Ami had no idea who had come up with the idea for a Peking duck burger, but they were clearly touched with genius. She was still wasn't sure how they had ended up at the park. She had made some vague mention of how she had wanted to get a better look at the city, and the next thing she had known Ryo was scooping her up in his arms, and the world had turned into a rushing blur, as though they were suddenly moving at incredible speed. By the time it was over, they had been in this secluded grove, miles from the rest of the city. She lay back on the hillside, placing her hand on her chest and waiting for her heart to slow back down. It was such a beautiful view from here: she could see the graceful arches of the Yokohama Bay Bridge and the entire city was lit up like a sea of stars on the water. A large tanker chugged slowly past, the water rippling quietly around it as it crept by. After all the lights and noise of the city, the park seemed like the darkest, quietest place on Earth. Smiling softly, she let her eyes close for a moment. She wasn't going to go to sleep, she promised herself, she was just relaxing after that exhilirating journey. It was so peaceful here that she couldn't bring herself to feel nervous or excited about anything. Maybe she had finally reached her limit; maybe she had just spent so much time around Ryo now that whatever it was that melted her brain had just worn off. Or she had finally gotten used to it to the point that she couldn't notice any more. At the moment, she didn't really care which. Ryo stood at the bottom of the hill, leaning against a wisteria tree as he stared out across the harbour. There was a slightly troubled look on his face, as if he was trying to figure something out. That made Ami feel a little sad: Ryo was slightly less adorable when he was worried. The difference was negligible, and the cute little wrinkle on his forehead almost made up for it, but all in all she preferred it when he was cute and happy instead of cute and sad. Wait. She did? Ah, whatever. He was cute. She was willing to admit it - what, was she supposed to be blind, now? Lack taste? Any girl would fall for a guy with those chiseled features and dreamy eyes. Ami frowned prettily. Well, that wasn't exactly true. Haruka and Michiru would need to be excluded for the usual reasons. But, since those reasons did not apply to Ami, then logically she had no reason to pretend she didn't think he was attractive. It was almost a relief to have finally figured that out. She had been really worried about that for a while. First thing tomorrow she was going to tell Usagi that she thought Ryo was cute. Usagi would know what to do from there: Usagi knew everything when it came to this kind of stuff. "Ami?" Ryo asked, turning his head to look at her. "Hmm?" Ami replied, lifting her head to look back. "What is it, Ryo?" "I, uh, just wanted to say thanks. You know, for coming with me tonight. This would have been a real bad night for me without you keeping me company." "How's that?" she asked curiously. What in the world was he talking about now? He had just been bored, so he had invited her out for a little fun, that was all. Sure, it wasn't her usual thing to run off without even leaving a note or anything, but all things considered she had been able to enjoy herself. There was no need to thank her for anything. "Well, it's just that..." Ryo cleared his throat and looked down at the rose he was twirling between his fingers. The entire park was full of rosebushes, but most of them weren't flowering this late in the season. There had only been a few late bloomers for him to pick through. "I, uh, kind of lost someone last year. Someone who was important to me, and it's been hard to get over that. The guys were planning to drag me down here to keep my mind off of it, but with all this Nise Suiko stuff going on they must have lost track of the day, or something. No big deal." "Oh, Ryo," Ami sighed, covering her mouth with her fingers as she stood up shakily and walked down the hill to him. That had been what she seen hiding in those eyes - the poor boy was haunted. How sad, to lose somebody like that. "How did they... was it an accident?" "No," Ryo said huskily, turning away and gripping the safety railing that ran along the edge of the bay. "No, it was on purpose. I promised that I would look after her, and I let her down. Shikaisen just cut her down like she didn't even matter, and I... all I could do was watch. I swore I'd never let anybody down again, no matter what it took." Pausing, he took a deep breath and looked over at her. "Can you keep a secret, Ami? I mean, if I tell you this, you can't tell anybody - not the other Senshi, not the other Troopers, nobody." "Of course, Ryo." "Okay." Ryo scratched behind one ear and looked out over the water as he tried to find the best way to put it. "Have you ever heard of a guy called the Demon Lord Emperor Arago?" Ami nodded. The other Troopers had mentioned him in passing a few times while they had been comparing stories. Some kind of powerful youma, from what she had been able to piece together. He had apparently conquered a large part of Tokyo after Queen Beryl's defeat, while she and the other Senshi had still been stuck without their memories. It had sounded like the Troopers had taken care of him quite handily. "Well, he's been talking to me lately. At least, I think it's him. Mostly it happens while I'm sleeping. He's calling me, Ami: he says it's time for me to join him, and I'm scared. I don't want to let anybody down again, but what if I don't have a choice? I mean, maybe I'm crazy, and maybe it's all in my head, but I can't shake the feeling that he's up to something. If he comes for us, it's going to be bad - really bad." "I'm not sure I'm the one you should be telling all of this," Ami said hesitantly. "If this Arago person still poses any kind of threat, then you really should tell the rest of the Samurai Troopers. Besides, it was just a dream, right? Dreams don't have to mean anything." "Maybe it's just my way of dwelling on the past," Ryo suggested with a smirk as he cast his rose over the side of the railing and took both of her hands in his own. "Not a good time of year to talk about people coming back from the dead, and that's all Shin wants to do these days. Guess it's time I stopped thinking about stuff I can't change and started paying attention to what's going on around me, hmm?" "Ryo," Ami breathed, looking up into those earnest, smoldering eyes of his and feeling slightly dizzy. What was he trying to say? Blinking and shaking her head slightly, she glanced out over the railing. A single pink rose bobbed forlornly on the velvety black waves as they carried it out to sea. "Your flower is floating away," she said, and Ryo turned with her to watch as the tiny spot of colour drifted off into the endless depths. They stood side by side for several minutes, his hand on her shoulder as the rose spun and twirled its lonely salute for the fallen. The flower rose on the crest of a swelling wave, visible for one final moment in the moonlight before it plunged out of sight forever. Ami closed her eyes and bowed her head in silence. After a while, she looked over to see what Ryo was doing. She was a bit startled to realise he was staring at her. Impulsively, he hooked Ami's chin with one finger and lifted her head up as he leaned in and pressed his lips against hers. Ami stiffened, her entire body going rigid, and made a muffled squeaking sound. After a long moment of hesitation, her eyes fluttered shut and she melted into the kiss with a sigh, curling her arms around Ryo's neck and letting herself hang off of him. Their lips parted, and Ami craned her neck to briefly bring them back into contact again; rising on her tiptoes to prolong the experience as much as possible. The summer breeze stirred through the park, filling the air with wisteria blossoms and ruffling their hair like the hands of an old friend. Ami slowly lowered herself back down to the ground, still holding herself close to him and revelling in his warmth and his scent and the wonderfulness of his existence. "I should probably go," she whispered, rubbing her cheek against his shirt as he ran his fingers through her hair. "Usagi and Rei must be back at the hotel by now, and I forgot to leave them a note. They're probably really worried." Ryo nodded as he let her go and backed away, still gazing straight into her eyes in the disturbingly perceptive way he had. "Yeah, you're right - we should really get back to where we started." Ami shyly watched as the handsome young samurai began to work his way back up the hill towards the park entrance. Pausing, he looked back and extended his hand to her with an impish smirk. He was still looking at her with those same eyes that had been daring her to kiss him since the moment they met, but this time she simply reached out confidently and accepted his hand as he pulled her up alongside him. She had come to terms with Ryo Sanada, even if they were both still a bit uncertain as to what those conditions implied. Had this been a date? Were they dating, now? Just friends? In love? What, exactly, *were* they? With a shrug, Ami leaned against Ryo's arm and wandered off into the night. They were comfortable, she decided. That was what they were. Maybe for right now, that was all they needed to be. They were Ami Mizuno and Ryo Sanada. Everything else would work itself out later. She hoped it would be soon. ********** To Be Continued...