Mourning Becomes Kuonji A Ranma 1/2 Fanfic by Alan Harnum All Ranma characters are the property of Rumiko Takahashi, first published by Shogakukan in Japan and brought over to North America by Viz Communications. This copy of the story is from my centralized fanfiction archive at http://www.thekeep.org/~harnums/fanfic. I can be reached by e-mail at harnums@thekeep.org *** Ukyou Kuonji, lately bereft, well-used to bereavement, stood before a new grave amidst old graves. All the other mourners were gone now; even Ranma and Akane had left at her request. At the moment, the only company she desired was that of solitude. The years had worn her well, and, in turn, she wore them as well she could. Forty-six last autumn, but only a little gray in the hair, a few folds around the corners of the eyes and mouth. Eyes could show age; at least, some people's could. Not hers. Twenty-nine years. A long time. Not long enough. The disease had eaten him from the inside, and near the end, right before he slipped into the coma, he'd been so weak that he could barely speak. After she made the decision to take him off the machines, she held his hand, and listened to his last breaths. Gentle they were, peaceful, with slow-growing spans between, until the span became eternal. Konatsu never woke up; she wished he had, and was somehow glad he hadn't. Twenty-nine years was a long time; in her youth, it might well have seemed forever. But now, twenty-nine years left her middle-aged and alone, albeit comfortable with wealth from years of careful investments and the insurance her husband's death had brought. Comfortable with wealth; the thought made her want to spit. There were flowers on the fresh-turned earth, petals bright. The sun was bright too, and the sky cloudless. That wasn't how it was supposed to be, not on the day you buried your husband; the occasion called for grey clouds, black clouds, and rain falling down as though in mutual mourning. Definitely not the way she'd envisioned the funeral would be; then again, married life hadn't been all she'd envisioned either. Did anything ever turn out as dreamt? They'd all helped scoop the earth onto his coffin, a shovelful each before the gravediggers took over; Ranma holding in his tears like he always held in everything, Akane crying openly, Soun gripping the spade in two age-gnarled hands. Could she talk to Soun, perhaps, and ask him what he'd done to survive after his wife had died? He'd lost his spouse earlier in life than she had; did that make the pain less or more? Less time together meant less time to grow needy for each other. And he'd had his daughters; no children for her and Konatsu. Not that they hadn't wanted any, of course, but after three miscarriages and one stillborn, they'd just kind of given up on the natural way. Oh, they'd tried the adoption route, of course, but it had been decided by the authorities that the seemingly confused state of the gender roles in their marriage wouldn't have made a healthy--yes, that was the word that had been used, as if the two of them were somehow contagious--environment for a young child. Konatsu had tried to change, of course, but by that time, it was too ingrained, too much a habit. No, not a habit, it wasn't like being an alchoholic or a drug addict, it hadn't been something sick, it had just been something different. He liked wearing the clothing of women; pretty kimonos, elegant dresses, underwear, all of it. She'd come to terms with that, and accepted it; loved him all the same for it. And if once in a while she would bind herself up again, and put on a suit so they could go out for a formal dinner with her as man and him as wife, so what? It hadn't been anything kinky, just a game they played. It didn't mean they wouldn't have been excellent parents, if someone had given them a chance; with the childhoods they'd both had, they would have tried extra-hard. It hadn't been anything kinky. But then again, they'd always had their best sex on those nights, after they came home, and stripped out of their clothes, so that it was quite obvious just who was man and who was woman. Against her will, she started laughing at the memory; Konatsu pushing down his dress, taking out the padding that created his bust, slipping out of his high heels, and advancing across the floor to her. And she'd remove the suit jacket and toss it casually on the bed, undo the knot of her tie, and then slowly unbutton her shirt like she was doing a burlesque act. God, they used to laugh so hard, giggling like kids, up until two years ago, when he'd gotten so sick, and it had come so fast, the doctors said it was one of the fastest onsets they'd ever seen; it got into his bones and ate him from the inside. Suddenly, she was on her knees and crying onto the earth of his grave. It was such a cliched image that she wanted to laugh again, but couldn't. How would she ever laugh again? After the crying was done, she got up again, and brushed loose dirt from the knees of her black slacks. You can't stay here forever now, she told herself. But you'll be back eventually to stay forever, right beside him. The thought didn't comfort her much, but taking the long view always helped a little. And this, too, shall pass away. Deep breath; get control back, calm down. She reached down and picked up one boquet of flowers from his grave, pale lilies; one of Kasumi's daughters had brought those. "Goodbye, love." While she was here, she thought she might as well make another visit. Her route took her up and down a hill within the cemetary, to one of the big marble monuments in which dozens of cremated remains were held, with little plaques to indicate just whose ashes were where. She found the monument easily, although she hadn't been here since before Konatsu got sick. Even before then, what she'd vowed would be a monthly visit had become--very quickly, a promise rashly made was a promise easily broken--a yearly one, and finally an occasional one when the thought struck her. She put the flowers down at the base of the monument; the flowers brought back the memory of him standing in the park, waiting for Ranma. Holding flowers. Tsubasa Kurenai, annoying Tsubasa Kurenai, who, like Konatsu, had loved girls, and loved dressing up in their clothing. And, like Konatsu, he'd been so good at it that no one had realized that he wasn't a girl, until the clothing came off. That was how he died, after all. There had always been the undertone that he wasn't entirely innocent, not simply in the wrong place in the wrong time. If he hadn't been posing as a woman, he would probably never have been dragged into an alley by three other men so late at night; had he been a real woman, he would have probably just been raped, instead of being beaten until all his bones broke, left for dead, but not dead, left to die months later when even the machines that his family refused to take him off couldn't make him live that half-life any longer. Just been raped. It made her sick to think of it, even though no newspaper had ever dared to say it out loud, to state it so explicitly. The police had put together a precise picture of what happened. Pretty girl in a bar, talking to the other girls, rejecting the advances of three drunk young men, three friends who their parents said were good boys and everyone who knew them said they couldn't understand it at all. They call her a dyke; she throws her drink in one's face and leaves. They follow; they're brave with drink, or maybe that's just brought out something lurking below the surface. But, in the alley, when they tear her clothes off, when they touch her body, it isn't a her, it's a him, and then they start beating him. He fights back; he's stronger than he looks. But there's a few boards in the alley, and one of them grabs one up to beat him down with it. And when he's down, helpless, they start kicking, stomping. That's how his skull gets fractured, how his legs and arms get broken, how his ribs cave in. Maybe some noise makes them run, or maybe they just start to sober up and realize what they've done; the brutal abnormality of it. But they're caught all the same, all three of them. Ten years; extentuating circumstances, not fully responsible for their actions. Ukyou saw their faces in the paper; she couldn't stand to go to the trial. They didn't look like murderers should look; young, clean-cut. University students, all of them. They would have been out for nearly twenty years now; maybe more, if they got early parole. All these different factors, alchohol, macho rage, the fact that the woman wasn't a woman... all coming together, focusing down into a single incidence. Oh, there was debate, of course. Laws were put forth, but never passed, and it made the news for a while, and then it went away, and Tsubasa was still dead. Twenty when he died. She and Konatsu had been married less than two years. She read about it in the paper, and went to see him at the hospital. Why? She couldn't understand it entirely herself; he'd never been anything but a nuisance to her. The resident drag queen of an all-boy's school, seemingly in love with Ukyou Kuonji, who was supposed to be manly and tough. And they'd all whispered behind her back again, just like after Ranma dumped her. Again, people were laughing at her, and it was Ranma's fault; if not for him, she wouldn't be dressing as a boy, wouldn't be going to an all-boy's school... Tsubasa spoiled everying, made her realize: she hadn't killed the bitterness, but merely buried it to rise again, stronger. She could not live as a man, and her pride wouldn't let her live as a woman. Nothing else to do but go and take revenge. She traced the kanji of Tsubasa's name on the plaque with her fingers. What if, after finding out he'd known all along she was a girl, she'd reached out to him, instead of pushing him away? Or what if, back at the all-boys school, she'd told him her secret; there would have been kinship there, he a boy dressing as a girl, she a girl dressing as a boy. Hadn't he only been another lost one like her, trying to be something he couldn't, craving affection? Like Konatsu; just like Konatsu. Konatsu had stuck with her, though, forced her to realize that she could love him through stubborn perseverance. Tsubasa had been flighty; hadn't he switched from her to Ranma, and switched away from Ranma just as impulsively? Akane had said he'd even shown some interest in her. And the night he died, he'd been trying to pick up women in a bar. No; not like Konatsu. Why hadn't he ever done those kind of things dressed like a man, she wondered; he was handsome, and would have done well. More than well. Was he trying to prove something? If so, what? And so what? Whatever the quirks of his life, they didn't account for or excuse his death. They helped to explain it, but they didn't somehow make his dying less terrible. She'd hated his parents; heartlessly conservative, they'd seen their oldest son as a shameful aberration. Death gave them an affection for him they'd never had in life; once he'd hit eighteen, and it had become clear that it wasn't something he was going to grow out of, they'd thrown him out of the house. Tough love, they'd probably called it. "Goodbye, Tsubasa. I'll come back." She said that every time. Her fingers lingered on the stone plaque and the graven name, as if they did not want to pull away. But, in the end, she made them. The same route that had brought her here led her out, and she passed by Konatsu's new grave again. She didn't linger. There would be plenty of time to visit later. As she approached the tall iron gates through which the dead and living entered, and the living left, she saw a stooped figure waiting patiently, hands upon the cane he needed to get around at his age. "Tendo-san? Why are you still here?" He shuffled awkwardly towards her. "I wanted to talk to you. Didn't get a chance." "Where's Ranma and Akane?" "They went home." "I'll give you a ride back." His thin, papery hand touched her wrist. "Let me talk first. I know what you're thinking right now; you're thinking, how dare this old man intrude on my grief when I said I wanted to be alone. Am I right?" "Well..." "Am I?" She nodded, though unwillingly. He patted her wrist. His hair, which once had been so lustrous and long and black, was now nearly white, and thinning. "It's natural. It's all natural. When my wife died, you know, I spent a lot of time thinking, how can I go on without her? And after Genma died, I thought, how can I go on without my oldest friend? But you go on, you know; somehow, you go on." You had your daughters, Ukyou thought. You had something left to cling to. What do I have? Memories? What are memories. Your wife has been dead nearly forty years; how dare you attempt to liken your old grief with my new one? Soun, oblivious to any discomfort she was displaying, went on. "Though I don't really know how you do go on, now that I think about it." Hope fled his face. "My daughters are your husband's age; couldn't they slip away at any moment? There's nothing worse than having to bury your own children." His lips and thinning white mustache trembled. "What a terrible thought." Then he began to cry, as unashamedly as a hungry toddler. Up in the sky, the sun was still shining merrily; Ukyou scowled at it, then put her arm through Soun's, slowed her pace to match his slow steps; in silence, she led him to her car, put him--still crying--into the back seat, and drove him home. END Author's Notes: I really can't say where this came from. It's the first straight Ranma one-shot I've written in about a year. It's also probably the most revised one-shot I've ever done, and I'm still not entirely happy with it. I'm a lazy bastard about revising, though, and I know that if I leave it, I'll probably never release it at all. Many people were helpful in giving me commentary on the first and second drafts of this; I can't try to name them all for fear of leaving someone out. I hope they know who they are, and that they have my thanks. I will name one name, though: Michael Rhea. Stop laughing. Reading his posts about Konatsu and Tsubasa were what spurred me to actually do the revisions to the first draft. Funny how these things work. Ciao, -Alan Harnum