JAQUEMART by Alan Harnum Utena and its characters belongs to Be-PaPas, Chiho Saito, Shogakukan, Shokaku Iinkai and TV Tokyo. 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 XV. The Moonlit Garden You could drown in just a few inches of water. He recalled being told that once, but he could not recall who by. Perhaps his mother. Their adoptive parents had been distant, busy people, generous in everything except attention and affection. He had often wondered why they had bothered to adopt children at all. But then, it did not matter. They had both passed on. He was himself, Nanami was Nanami, and that was that. Only a few inches of water, that was all it took. Swim for the light, that was what you were supposed to do. In what direction lay the light? Water slipped through his hand's like a girl's tresses. He remembered swimming off the edge of a long dock during a family vacation, in the twilight; miscalculating, he had tried to surface beneath it, and stunned himself briefly against an aging wooden strut. The water had taken him under for the few brief seconds of his unconsciousness, and he awoke with it burning hungrily in his lungs. They hadn't let him go swimming for a whole day after that. He remembered how angry he had been, and how Nanami, a fussy, chubby toddler, had insisted on holding the ice pack to the bruise on his forehead. Fire in his breath... a girl's tresses, slipping like water through his hands... swim for the light... a sword rising from a red-clad breast, an execution in reverse... the body of a man, outlined by cacti... He touched bottom. It was black as obsidian, and polished as a mirror. He saw his reflection, shadowed in the dark depths. It shook its finger at him and smiled, as though to say: not yet, not here. _Air!_ On the pebbled bank, he took grateful heaving breaths. Behind him, the mouth of the shallow pool roiled beneath the impact of a tiny waterfall. "A few inches of water," he murmured, then rolled over onto his back and stared up at the sunset-sky. His tuxedo was completely ruined. He stripped it off, wrung out the pants, put them back on, and hung the rest on a low-hanging tree branch to dry. He tried to recall what had happened. The last thing he remembered clearly was dancing with Juri. What a moment that had been he; he smiled to think of it. How strange, the things that came about. After that was panic and darkness; Akio's eyes burning into his as they danced, Utena running through the crowd, and then a brightness, a twisting, an unravelling, as though someone had pulled a thread in the middle of the gallery and unspun the world. Perhaps it had not been quite that bad. His setting was, after all, familiar. This was where he and Saionji had come to spar when they were younger. Before things changed, before the girl in the coffin. On the other hand, it appeared to be autumn, not winter, and a warm autumn at that. Though even that was fortunate, as it meant he would not die of hypothermia from his unexpected swim. The acceptance of the abnormal came easily enough to him by now. There was little difference between this situation and that of the castle floating in the sky, the impossible architecture of the arena. If it was an illusion, then it was an illusion he could not distinguish from reality by any means at his disposal; thus, for his purposes, it might as well be reality. Goals were what were important, not the particular details of the path to them. He had to find Utena, find his sister, find everyone else, and decide what to do after that once that was done. As he tried to orient himself and decide which direction to go, he heard hoofbeats in the distance. His priorities rearranged themselves instantly, and he concealed himself in a close-grown stand of trees. Only as the rider entered the clearing near the pool did he recall his clothing, hung upon the branch of a tree. The world, he reflected, occasionally seemed to enjoy reminding him that was not quite as clever as he thought. "Is someone there?" the rider called; a soft voice, but a voice that carried, weaving between branch and leaf like a dog on the hunt to reach him. He knew it instantly; yet he hesitated to reveal himself, uncertain whether or not it was wise to do so. He hated (feared) when he could not predict the outcome of an act; preferred, unless it were urgent, to avoid the act entirely. But this was urgent, he reminded himself; it might well be the most urgent situation he had ever been in, for all the apparent outward calm. "Himemiya-san," he called, stepping out into the open and raising a hand to hail her. Himemiya hailed him in turn with her own raised hand. "Kiryuu-sempai." They stared at each other for a few moments, very awkwardly, like two former lovers meeting, unexpectedly, at a party. Touga studied her unbound hair and the white riding suit she wore (something both like Utena's uniform, and like the uniform of her brother); she, in her turn, examined him, and he wondered if he reminded her of her brother, stripped to the waist, hair hanging loose and damp. "Do you know what's happened?" he asked finally. She nodded, and slid from her mount, plucking her pet from the horn of the saddle as she did. The white horse regarded the two of them for a moment, then began to crop the grass. "I think I have some understanding by now," she said, somewhat hesitantly. "I think he is far behind me now, for I travel faster. Is there a place to sit?" He brought her in silence to an old and fallen log, where he and Saionji had sat when they were boys and eaten the lunches they had packed, or drunk chilled tea from a plastic thermos on a hot summer day. They sat down beside one another; not too close, not to far. He thought suddenly of the one night he had possessed her as his bride, and wondered if she was thinking of the same. "The one who dreams the world is waking. Only precious memories keep it from vanishing entirely," Anthy said quietly. She paused for a moment, and stroked the head of her sleeping pet where he rested in her lap. "At least, this is what the shadows say to me; I do not know that they can be trusted." "Bang," he murmured. "Out, just like a candle." She nodded. "I have," she said slowly, "my own alternate theories as to what has happened. Problematically, all could explain what I have seen so far. For example: the inside world and the outside world have become confused; the division between mental landscape and physical landscape, once so thick that only those with great will could erase it, and then only briefly, has become like gossamer. And now we wander in a landscape of broken dreams, broken hopes, broken fears; a jigsaw world, formed from the psychic detritus of many different minds." "Are you looking for her?" He feared how she might respond. She nodded. "I am." He rested his forearms on his knees and let his hands dangle; back and forth, back and forth, swaying. Watching the motion of them relaxed him. "I understand the two of you lived together for seven years," he said finally. She nodded again. "You were lovers?" She turned her head, and he saw only the side of her sad smile. "I was willing to be to her whatever she wanted me to be," she said quietly, "at least, so I told myself. In the end, though, I could only love her on my own terms. That we never think of Ohtori. That we pretend we were two normal girls. That we pretend I was someone I was not. In the end, I loved her for myself, and not for her; she was the mirror into which I cast my flame, to throw back a reflected light. And I drove her from me because of that." "She was terribly afraid for you," he said. "Terribly afraid. We met the hunter of witches. He said that he had captured you, but that you escaped, and killed his men." She shook her head. "They were already dead." He nodded. "He is a very dangerous man, isn't he?" "In some ways, he is even more dangerous than my brother. The world he has lived in since he fled us has been a brutal one; the torture chamber, the gunshot to the temple, the knife in the dark. And yet once you have been a part of our world, you are never fully without some part of it in you. This gives him power." She shivered. "I fear him," she admitted. "And I do not fear many things." "I think Utena convinced him to leave you alone. To focus his efforts on your brother." She said nothing, but shivered again. Her horse whinnied nearby. Looking up at the sky, he saw the moon-edge, beginning to emerge as the sun continued its plunge. "Are you cold?" he asked her. "Perhaps a little." He smiled, ruefully. "I'd offer you my jacket, but it's rather damp." She laughed, a pleasant sound. Hesitantly, he moved a few inches over on the log and put his arm round her. She did not shrink away or stiffen, but leaned against him with a sigh. "He said that you left with Saionji." She nodded. The silken stroke of her hair against his bare chest and shoulders had the unfortunate effect of making him feel somewhat aroused, far too conscious of her presence as a woman, of all the ways she reminded him of Utena. And of her brother; he could not let himself forget that, that she had been the dark side of Akio's moon, and whatever she might have become now... He realized, in a way that almost made him laugh out loud, that she was undoubtedly thinking something similar of him. "I know," she murmured. He blinked. "Know what?" "About the two of you. Even without my friend to tell me, I could smell her on you." For a moment, he felt the edge of her lips touch his pectoral; perhaps merely another strand of her hair. Perhaps to taste Utena on his skin. "I need not have told you anything at all, then?" he asked, feeling somewhat annoyed, both at her and at the monkey. He remembered what Leo Cano had called it: the basest of demons, bound into the form of an animal, a spy and companion. "It is not as though I see through his eyes," she said. "It doesn't work that way. His mind is not as our minds are. There are impressions, emotions, sensations, such as we have never felt, and ones that I know deeply that he cannot feel; his ways of seeing must be translated into mine, and much is lost. Hearing your own point of view is important. It helps me to understand better." He took his arm off her. She drew a few inches away from him. "Where is Saionji now?" he asked. "I do not know," she replied. "We were separated. We lost two items. A dagger of silver, a mirror of gold. If you come upon them, retain them; they have power." He frowned. "And you looked for him, and could not find him?" "I looked for Utena." His frown deepened. "I know what you are thinking," she said, softly. "You are thinking, how wicked of her; how unfair. To bring him all this way as her defender, only to abandon him to whatever fate awaits him once he has ceased to be of use." She paused. "I will not deny that from some points of view, it may look that way. But I am who I am; when I love something, I can love it so much that all else becomes peripheral. It grants me part of my power, you see, because when you are like that, you can do almost anything." "Is he in danger?" She looked thoughtful. "Not so much as some," she said after a time. "I would guess that among those of us who were attendant at Ohtori, he is among the safest in this place." "What about my sister?" For a moment, he almost thought she was going to smile. "Your sister was always something of an enigma to me. We were really too much alike for me to regard her as I regarded the rest of you. I am not sure whether or not she is safe in this place. She could be in terrible danger. Or she could be the safest of us all." He stared at the floor of the forest for a moment, then picked up a stick and began to draw meaningless patterns in the dirt. "I need to find her," he said eventually. "There are matters between us that I wish to see settled." She nodded. "You're not like me," she said, sounding pleased. "You wanted to say to me, 'I want to come with you'. But then you thought of her, and you thought of your friend; and you realized that your heart was divided. Mine is not, you see." "You say that your brother pursues you?" "He does. He is attended by phantoms. Do not cross his path. Do not try and delay him, in some misplaced act of nobility. I believe he has become twisted. I believe he is mad, more dangerous now than he ever was before." He chuckled softly. "I used to think that if I could seize the power, I could finally be stronger than him," he murmured. "How foolish of me." "Shall I tell you a story?" she said quietly; to his surprise, she reached out and touched his cheek, as though to gather unshed tears. "That once upon a time there was a little prince, his head full of dreams of knights and glory and white horses, until he discovered what it is that princes become in this world, and all his dreams turned to nightmares?" He found himself, indeed, wanting to cry, but could not remember how. "How old was I when I met him?" he asked her, quietly. "Surely, you must know. I can't remember. I just can't remember. The first time I heard his voice. The first time I met him face to face. The first time we--" He covered his mouth with one hand to suffocate the words that threatened. There were places that must not be gone to, must not even be thought of, where the depths (what lived in the depths) were too great. Like a blind woman she stroked his face . "You were just a little boy," she said, "and you wanted to be a prince so very badly." "Was that what happened?" No reply. "Aren't there other ways it could have been?" "Of course there are," she said soothingly. Her fingers touched his brow, his nose, his cheeks, his jaw, the ridges round his eyes, the lobes of his ears, the edge of his lips. "There are many ways it could have been. But that was the way it was." He felt, for the first time since he had remembered everything, a kind of absolution. She took her hands away from his face and stood up, her pet clasped in her hands. He stood as well; his legs shook for a moment, and then he steadied himself. "Listen," she said; she held out her hands, offering him the animal like a gift. "Let him guide you. He can help you to find your sister. After that, you'll be on your own. But at least the two of you will be together." "Such as that together is," he said, with some regret. But he took Chu-Chu into his own hands. She looked away from him. "I still love my brother," she whispered eventually, as though that explained everything. "For better or for worse. It's not as though it's just the kind of thing you can stop doing." Her horse raised his head from the grass and trotted over. Touga raised a hand to the animal's muzzle, and felt the heavy breath's heat against his palm. "A beautiful animal." "Yes, he is," she said. He almost offered to help her into the saddle, but then she pulled herself up in one smooth motion and picked up the reins. "He reminds me of your brother's." She looked down at him; for a moment, there was coldness in her gaze, and he wished that he had not said the words, true though they were. Then she laughed softly and said, "He ought to." "Goodbye, Himemiya." "Goodbye, Kiryuu." She flicked the reins, and began to canter away. "Thank you!" he called after her. She looked back over her shoulder and nodded tightly. The sun had fallen while they talked, and overhead, the stars were out in strange constellations. He remembered a night when Akio's mood had been strange, and they had watched the stars together in the planetarium room. Akio, naming the constellations and tracing them out with one slim finger as they turned above; some names he had never heard of, and others were familiar: the Shell, the Chick, the Tree, the Serpent, the Hunter, the Wheel, the Twins, the Warrior, the Cup, the Furnace... He shook his head and looked down at Chu-Chu, cradled against his bare chest. "So, you can lead me to Nanami?" The creature yawned, then sneezed explosively, dampening his chest. "Thank you," he muttered, scowling and heading over to see if his shirt was dry enough to wear, "thank you, that's terribly helpful." * * * Her name was Nanami and she was six thirteen twenty years old, and she had a Touga whose name was brother, and she was afraid to walk home in the dark by herself, but there wasn't anyone to walk beside her. So alone through the nightstreets she went, stars overhead to give no comfort. Her mama mother and papa father were dead, but she had been adopted, and supposed this made her an orphan twice over, unless it had been that her real parents simply hadn't wanted her, which was, of course, perfectly possible, since she found it quite plausible that they had looked at her when she was born and seen how she was going to grow up, and said, "no, we don't want this one, we'll try again." Nature, nurture; nurture, nature. Fate, choice, choice, fate; one day you're a baby with a spike in your foot, next day you're an eyeless king. "Me too." "B" is for Beautiful, Brave, Beloved; also for Bitch, Blamed, Bizarre. Once upon a time were two little princesses; one grew one way, one grew the other. Wailing baby, father-slayer, blinded king; I see myself (she thought, or believed she thought) lay a basket on a river to the sea, but I have never done such a thing. I hear the bells that break the stained-glass mirror and leave only the frame in place. My name is Nanami. I am twenty years old. I have a... There ought to be a word for someone who pretends to be your brother for so long that even after you find out the truth you can't stop thinking of him by any other word but that, no matter how hard you try. There probably is such a word; maybe in Latin, maybe in some other language I don't know. I can't just keep on thinking about him, referring to him, as Touga. It doesn't work like that. What if we found ourselves at some kind of social event together, and I was required to introduce him to important people? "This is Touga." Touga who? What is his relationship to me? If I had to introduce Utena, that would be easy: "This is my friend, Utena." I can admit that to myself; we argue, we fight, she drives me crazy with her naivety, but there's no way she's anything other than a friend to me. Maybe it's because we're both Bs. "Me too." I wish I could have played with the three of them, but I had too much pride. If my life were in a story, that would have been a wonderful symbolic moment: the three of them in their uniforms, all unique, laughing together; me, on the sidelines, back in the same uniform that all the girls wore, making snide comments. I couldn't be one of them, but I couldn't go back to the faceless crowd, and I couldn't be standing with my brother and Kyouichi either. All I could be was me, and that wasn't really enough for anything, was it? I tried to warn her, I really did, but the words wouldn't come out right. If only she'd listened to me. I knew. I'd seen things. Horrible things. I remember the feel of his hands on my shoulders. When we were little, he used to embrace me so gently, but there was nothing gentle in his hands. I remember his tongue against the clenched wall of my teeth. He was so much bigger and so much stronger, but I got my foot up into his stomach and pushed, and he hit the opposite door like a flung doll. Like a puppet with his strings cut. Maybe that's what it was, now that I think about it; maybe he didn't want to do it, any more than his sister wanted to lie there in the darkness, under those hateful stars, and spread her legs for him. She didn't want that, did she? How could she possibly want that? Utena was right, he raped her. For centuries. For thousands of years. Maybe since the beginning of the world. How old are they? How can they possibly be so old? "We are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life is rounded with a sleep." Perhaps that's where they come from, out of our dreams and nightmares; the animus with his sword, the anima with her poison. Between them a poisoned sword, sunk into her breast like a wounding thorn. But if she took the poisoned sword, what was left for him? It couldn't be that way, of course, because if it were that way, then she would be the one with all the power, and if she had all the power, she wouldn't let him do those things to her. I know I'd never let anyone do those kinds of things to me, if I had that kind of power. Unless... oh, how awful, she _liked_ it? How could she possibly like it? Impossible. Ridiculous. Unimaginable. Utena said he raped her and he raped her. I can't remember the last time I had to walk home in the dark like this, by myself. Usually, if I had to stay late at school, Touga would always be there to walk me home. Did anyone walk me home after he graduated, when it was dark and I had to stay late? Did Miki? Perhaps I just didn't stay after dark after that. Or perhaps I just walked on my own. I remember I was nearly hit by a car once, walking home in the dark on my own... why was that? Because I ran. And I ran because I thought someone was following me. And someone was, of course; Mitsuru. But how strange, I recall now that I distinctly saw someone in the shadows... but they were too big to be Mitsuru... "Excuse me." In the shadows of an unlit streetlamp stood a pallid, freckled boy. She stopped and turned to look at him. "Yes?" "I'm looking for someone. Do you know where she is?" "Who are you looking for?" He said a word that meant, at the same time, my mother, my sister, my daughter, my bride. She replied in the negative. He stepped back into the shadows, and was gone, and she heard a creaking of ropes, a tinkling of small bells. My name is Nanami, I am twenty years old, I have a friend named Utena. I have a sempai named Juri. She has a girlfriend named Shiori. I love a boy named Miki. He had a sister. Her name was Kozue. She's dead now. She crossed a bridge that spanned a slow, dark river; passed inside the cast shadow of a tree, and a leaf fell as she walked through it, settling small and crimson on her shoulder. Snuck a shortcut, feeling daring as she did, through a narrow alley, then heard padding steps behind her; turned, terrified, hearing low growls. They were lean-bodied, hollow-ribbed, long-muzzled, red- eyed; starvation in canine form, dream-dogs, ghost-furred and grey like old ash. She fled. They followed. Remembering, as she fled, the trumpeting of elephants, lowing of cattle, egg's shell cracking; the world's shell, cage and chamber of freedom. Surely such things were but dreams? But what if she were such a thing as dreams were made on, and the dreaming was more real than her? All about her, slinking in the shadows, great rats as much as they were dogs: a flash of bone-coloured teeth, a winking crimson gaze. Pacing her, stalking her; a muted growl, a whispered snarl. The autumn moon overhead: gibbous, yellow, an overlooking eye. It reminded her of a cat playing with a mouse. Not that she had ever seen that. Only a kitten, batting at a twig. A little black kitten with a white-masked face. Perhaps that was it. Your sins will find you out. Poetic justice. But there wasn't anything poetic about what paced her; no one would ever write a sonnet, a ballad, a tanka, about them. A haiku? Grey hounds in moonlight Long teeth, lean bodies--and snap! There goes my skirt's edge! The dog retreated back into the shadows with the scrap of fabric clutched in its teeth, and its snarl sounded like snickering human laughter. Piece by piece, she thought, piece by piece, that's how they'll do it; tear off my clothing first, and then, fingers, toes... skin, muscles, organs... right down to the naked bone... Somewhere in the distance, a piano began to play, and, in return, the pack threw back their heads and hurled their baying at the moon--as though it were a hunting horn, telling them that the time for toying with the prey was over. The architecture of the city loomed above her like the curving ridge of some titanic spine, the remnants of a long-dead monster risen from the earth. The hunting howls of the pack bounced from building to building, cavernous echoes. Overhead, the sky hung, curved, a black dome. She ran, without conscious sense of where she was going, or why. Far away, someone ran their fingers over white keys, black keys, and the music cut the night, languid and sad; something beautiful, dying slowly, though without pain. Somehow, she stayed ahead of them. She could not count their numbers, could not even guess at them. Behind her the city seemed consumed by their mass, buildings and cars and sidewalks flowing away into the lean racing legs and the cruel, cruel teeth. She began to cry, with terror and despair. A tree loomed before her, crooked, shadowy; she passed it by, passed by a bed of night-blooming flowers drinking moonlight. A door ahead. The piano stopping. The door opening. "Miki!" His eyes were wide behind his glasses; then, the moonlight, caught in the thin lenses, turned his gaze blank. She rushed inside, sobbing, begging for him to close the door. When he did not move, she turned and slammed it shut herself. There was a heavy impact; something large and solid and fleshy hitting the door, just once. Then nothing. Bewildered, he held her and stroked her hair until she calmed. Then he led her to the kitchen by the hand, still not speaking, and filled her a glass of water at the sink. She drank eagerly, desperately, as though she had crossed a desert to come to him. "What's wrong?" he asked finally, leaning back with his hands behind him on the sink counter. She lowered the empty glass. "What's wrong?" she asked, too sharply. "Didn't you see them? They were everywhere." He shook his head. "I didn't see anything. Just you." "You did!" She paused, took a deep breath, calmed herself. "One of them hit the door, Miki." He shook his head again. "I don't know what you're talking about." She stared into the empty glass, at the few drops of water still clinging defiantly to the bottom. "What is this place?" He looked at her, puzzled. "My house, of course." "No," she murmured. "Yes," he said after a moment. "I stopped thinking about it as my parents' house a few years ago, I mean. I was always expecting them to come home, you know. But they never did. Not even for her funeral. They sent letters. Terribly apologetic. But I knew how business was." "No," she said again, "not your house. I mean, this place. This city. This season. It's supposed to be winter." She hesitated. "Isn't it?" Moonlight was coming through the kitchen windows, making paths across the floor. Miki followed one to the chair across from her and sat down. "I think so," he said uncertainly. "I feel like I've been here, playing my piano, for the longest time. Maybe for forever. And I only stopped when I heard you call my name." She did not remember calling his name, but perhaps she had. She might have called out many things while running. "We were dancing," she said slowly. "Yes. And then..." Darkness and shadows and voices, and the world coming apart. "Oh, Akio-san," Miki whispered, so soft she barely heard him (perhaps he had not intended her to), "Akio-san, what you have you done?" "Miki?" she asked quietly. He started, as though he had not been aware she was still present until she'd spoken. "Yes, Nanami?" "What do you remember about Ohtori?" There was water dropping from the faucet. Miki hadn't quite turned the tap all the way shut. Drip, drip, every few seconds, hitting the metal basin of the sink. The sound filled the silence as Miki clasped his hands and thought. "I remember," he said eventually, and he smiled at her, "playing piano at one of your parties. Everyone clapped for me. I was embarrassed, and I wanted to get out of the room, but you made me stay up there and bow. I sort of resented that, but I was kind of glad, too." He paused briefly, then continued. "I remember fencing with Juri-sempai one afternoon, and losing track of time, not realizing the sun had set until we realized we were fencing by the starlight. I remember tutoring Himemiya- sempai and Tenjou-sempai; and you were there, too. A little study group." "I don't mean those things," she said. "Those are normal things. I mean, do you remember the important things?" "Those were important things for me. They're happy memories." She looked away from him, down at the table. "I'm not saying any of this right," she said with frustation. "But..." Miki stood up. "Nanami... do you mind coming upstairs?" With effort, she managed not to tremble. "N-no." He led her up the stairs, down the hallway, and through the open door, into his bedroom. Inside, she looked at the single bed in the centre, and felt almost guilty. She remembered him telling her once that he and Kozue had shared this bedroom up to the day she died. And then he'd looked so sad, so terribly sad, and she had kissed him; and they sat down on the edge of the one bed in the room, and kissed some more, almost desperately. Hands moving; buttons and straps fumbled out of the way, lips so hungry for one another. It had been her first time. He said it had been his, and she'd believed him. Such mixture of sweetness and pain. It hadn't been a mistake; whatever he'd said the morning after, when she woken to find him watching her with so much guilt on his face, it had not been a mistake. "Nanami?" She let the present retake her. He was standing at his desk, under the window, trapped in another road of moonlight as he pulled a black-bound album from one drawer and opened it near the beginning. "As near as I can tell, everything is the same except this one thing," he said softly as she approached. "Just that one detail. Do you see what I mean?" He indicated two photos, each placed on a page by itself. Nanami looked at the left-hand one, not understanding. They were both about six, Miki and Kozue, or perhaps seven; someone had gone round to the other side of the piano, and taken their photo as though catching them in the midst of playing. There was an artificial element, though; too glossy, too controlled. "A promotional shot," Miki said by way of explanation. He sounded bitter. "The two prodigies, playing piano in their sunlit garden. I remember they had to bring movers in to get the piano into the garden in the first place. Because you can't keep a piano in the garden all the time, of course. It's an expensive instrument. You can't let it get rained on, or even exposed to too much sun." "You were a cute little boy," she said quietly, putting her hand on his shoulder and leaning forward in order to get a closer look. Her breasts brushed his back; she felt him tremble slightly, or flinch. "Look at the other one." "Isn't it just the same shot?" He shook his head. She frowned and examined them both more carefully. The same background, the same poses... even the play of light and shadow from the trees on the surface of the piano seemed identical... "Her hair," she said finally, and once she said, it was so obvious that she felt foolish for missing it before. "Your sister's hair is different." He nodded tightly, but said nothing. In the left-hand photo, the child Kozue wore a ribbon, pulling back her hair from her face; at the back, the long hair had been tightly curled. In the left-hand photo, it was short, far too short to have possibly been done up in the other style; just like how Kozue had worn it in junior high, just like how she'd been wearing it the last time Nanami had seen her alive. "I can't remember which one is right." He stabbed his finger at the left-hand photo, the right-hand photo. "It's not possible for it to be both. I remember them setting up the shot. The lights, the cameras, everything just so. Kozue didn't want to sit still, sit like they told her to; Mother and Father, they asked me to get her to pose like they wanted, and I did. God help me, I did, because in those days, Kozue would have done anything for me, and I would have done anything for Mother and Father..." She stared at the left-hand photo. The Rose Bride, she thought, she wore her hair like that. But that photo on the right, that's not how parents make their little girls wear their hair. "A wig, maybe?" she said weakly. "A wig." He laughed softly; for a moment, she thought she'd made him feel better, but then she realized there was no humour in it. "No, no, no wig. I've looked. I've looked at these two photos with a magnifying glass. Every detail is the same. The shadow of the leaves on the top of the piano; the speckles of sun in the grain of the wood. Everything except her hair. And--" "Maybe both of them are true?" "Exactly," he said after a moment. And he turned around, and, to her surprise, embraced her, both arms around her waist. "Exactly, Nanami." She froze for a moment, then embraced him back. He wasn't much taller than she was, which felt a little awkward. Traditionally, the man was supposed to be able to practically engulf the woman in his arms. This was more of a mutal holding. The two of them supporting one another. She wanted to be able to rest her head against his chest, but had to settle for his shoulder. Utena was taller than him. If Utena were a man, she would be able to rest her head against--where had that thought come from? She wasn't like that. Juri and Shiori were like that, and good for them, they seemed very happy that way. But she wasn't. Better not to think about it. He led her over to the bed in his arms. They sat down together. His lips moved to hers, briefly; she fell back, letting the taut white sheets and soft mattress catch her, spreading out her arms at her sides as though floating on water. He remained sitting, looking down at her with a smile, the back of one of his hands lightly touching her hip. "Listen," he said softly. She realized suddenly that the only light in the room was moonlight, that they had not even turned on his desk lamp to look at the photos, and for some reason, that sent a shiver of fear through her. "In answer to your question, Nanami... I remember. I remember everything." In her mind's eyes, she sat bolt upright, with questioning accusations flying from her lips, bewildered, confused, mistrustful. In reality, she lay there on the bed, listening, as he bent down out of her sight and slipped off her shoes. "High heels. These must have been uncomfortable to run in. I'll bet you get a blister or two." He stroked her ankle briefly; such agile fingers. "I hope not," she murmured, staring at the ceiling, at a crack in the plaster like a tree with spreading branches. "So you remember it all, do you? Then tell me why, Miki..." "The problem is that so far, you've only heard one side of the story," Miki said, rising back up into her view. He took his glasses off and put them on the bedside table. "Tenjou-sempai's side. Her story. But..." "Nothing can change the things he did to us," she said quietly. "The things he made us do. The things he did to Utena." "You don't understand," Miki said unhappily. "That's exactly it, Nanami. It's like those two photos. It's impossible for both of them to be true, isn't it? That's what the mind logically says. And yet both photos exist. Why?" He leaned down and kissed her on the lips, just as she began to rise. "Just listen to me," he whispered pleadingly against her mouth. "Even if you don't believe me, just listen to me. Give me that. Please?" She nodded. His eyes were beautiful in the moonlight, staring into hers, water-deep. He lay down beside her and took her hand in his. "Do you know what's always seemed like the most difficult ethical question for me, Nanami?" "No." "This one: is it all right to make an innocent person suffer if it helps other people? To be unjust, I mean, out of compassion for others? You imprison one innocent person, for example, and because of that, a hundred other innocent people are never imprisoned when they would be otherwise." "Punishing innocents is always wrong," she said quietly. "But, then again, that requires the existence of innocents. Everyone has things they would be punished for, if people only knew about them. I don't really believe in innocence any more." "And let's say that someone chooses to allow themselves to be punished to save other people. They choose that path, knowing the whole of the world. They have the right to do that, don't they? And along comes another person who sees them suffering, but doesn't understand why they're suffering, couldn't possibly understand, wouldn't believe it even if it were explained to them? This other person tries to set them free; not because they're a bad person. They're a good person, a compassionate person; they hate to see someone else suffering. But they just don't understand the consequences of what they're doing. Who's in the wrong, that person, or the person who tries to stop them from doing it?" "Are these a bunch of deaf mutes, Miki?" she asked quietly. "Because, if not, then why didn't they just _explain_ what was going on? So that everyone could understand. If it were so wonderful, so great, wouldn't eveyone want to help, if it only they understood?" He squeezed her hand, and turned his head to look at her. "That's just what I said, you know," he whispered, smiling sadly. "But look at it like this: parents don't always explain to their children why some things are all right, and some things aren't. This isn't because they don't want their children to understand, but because their children can't understand. Not yet." "But she didn't choose that path." She pulled her hand away from his and sat up. "He chose it for her. He raped his own sister, Miki. He tried to make Touga do the same to me." A sudden terrible thought occured to her, and she clapped a hand over her mouth. "You and Kozue," she murmured, tasting the salt- sweat of her palm against her tongue. "He made Kozue be your Bride, when you duelled. Oh, my God..." He remained lying on the bed, looking up at her, and asked: "Does it disgust you so even, to think of it? Why is that? If it was what she wanted, and what I wanted, would it have been all right? What was so terrible, Nanami, what Touga did to you, or how he did it? What if he had been gentle? What if--" She almost slapped him, was raising her hand to do so, but stopped herself. "How can you say such things?" she snarled. "Because they need to be said," he said. "Even though it hurts you to hear them; I'm sorry for that. But I want you to understand. You've got to understand the nature of the situation. You say that Akio-san raped her. But that's only because it's what Utena wants you to think." "I _saw_ them," she hissed. "What did you see?" Miki asked quietly. "Isn't what you see a completely different thing from how you see it? What if it was what she wanted? What if it was what she liked?" She did slap him, then, hard enough to turn his head to the side. "You loved her," she said, almost inaudibly, feeling so broken, so _betrayed_. "You loved her, and yet... you can say these things about her. What kind of a person are you now, Miki?" "I loved her," he said, raising a hand to touch the red mark on his cheek as he sat up. "I still love her. And so does Akio- san. You've got to understand what Utena did, you see. The power we were fighting for was supposed to give you the power to revolutionize the world. Did you ever really think about what that means?" She shook her head. "No," she said. "I don't care. I'm done with this, Miki. I'm done with you. We're going to stop him. If you're on his side..." She rose from the bed and stalked to the door, swallowing down her tears and piling rage atop them. At the door, she turned and looked back at him. "I thought I loved you," she said tightly, "but the boy I might have loved died a long time ago, didn't he?" He bowed his head, and she saw then that he was crying. The tears fell, silver in the moonlight, and stained his hands as they clenched tightly round his knees. "Yes," he said. "He died. We all die, constantly. Every day. Like the sun, we die and we return, changed and yet ourselves. _To revolutionize the world_. Think about that, Nanami. 'To see a World in a Grain of Sand'. Your world. And to make it what you want. Not consciously, but with your whole being. That's the Power of Dios, Nanami; the power to remake the world, rewrite the story. Utena seized it, and that's what she did. Because she wanted Anthy not to be responsible for any of it, Anthy wasn't; Utena saw them too, you know. And because she wanted Anthy to be raped by her brother, Anthy was raped by her brother. Because she wanted it all to be a lie, the things that Akio-san was striving for, dreaming of, spending all this time working towards... they were." "Why are you crying, Miki?" "Because I'm full of doubt," he said miserably, burying his face in his hands. "And he said I would be. Ever since you all came. Even since Utena came back. I've spent years working with Akio-san, believing in Akio-san, believing in what he's told me, in the point of view he's made me see my memories with... and now I can feel it being eaten away. Her very presence changes the world to make it be how she wants. She doesn't do it on purpose, but she can't help it. She's the Prince. She stole the light of the world that should have been Akio-san's, because he knows how to use it, like he did in the old days, when the world was young. She's the Prince, and she makes people love her, makes people believe in her..." "If she has so much power, than why is Akio still fighting?" Miki said nothing for a long time, only sobbing quietly into his hands. She fought the urge to move back to the bed and take him in her arms. This all could be--must be--a trick. Crocodile tears. "Because he was once the Prince," Miki said finally. "And once you've been the Prince, a part of you doesn't ever stop being that. Utena is stronger, but she doesn't know how to use her power. He knows how to use his. He's been preparing all this time to fight her. To make the story, the world, the way it ought to be." "And what way is that?" she inquired acidly. "A world where no one's little sister ever has to die. A world where all the stories have happy endings. You know how the world is, Nanami. People are cold and selfish and uncaring towards each other. They do terrible things, monstrous things. What if you could stop it? Stop all the Hiroshimas, the Buchenwalds, the Rwandas? Inside of every human being is a mix of light and darkness, good and evil... what if you could take the evil out of the world? That's what Akio-san wants to do. What price is too high to pay for that? What act is too awful to do?" "How can you hope to take evil out of the world by putting evil into it, Miki?" "But he doesn't do evil. His ends are always good." "So were Utena's," she said quietly, smiling, realizing that she had him, that it wasn't hopeless; he was full of doubt, as he said. "But because she didn't understand, she did something terrible. Isn't that what you said?" "Yes." "And how do you know Akio understands any better than Utena does?" "I don't understand. I believe." "Why?" In answer, he began to shake and sob again. Something broke in her, and she hurried over to him to wrap her arms around him, kiss his forehead, stroke his hair, tell him that everything was going to be all right. He clutched her and sobbed against her chest like a little boy. "I have to choose," he mumbled eventually. "Have to choose one of them. And I choose him. I choose to believe in him." "But why?" "Because he gave Kozue back to me, after she gave up her life to him; because she understood. Because she believed." And she felt two warm feminine hands lasciviously stroke the sides of her breasts, even as she held Miki. She shrieked and thrust Miki from her, leapt up from the bed, ran for the door. It was closed; the handle would not turn. Look at me. Against her will, her body swivelled round to face the bed again. Miki lay upon it, trembling, hiding his face from her, or perhaps from the spectral form that stood at the foot of the bed, smiling in a manner both beatific and wanton. You love me. And she did. She loved the flowing sea-coloured hair, the limpid forest-green eyes, the limbs so pale as to be translucent, the long black dress that flowed like a living thing... despite herself, despite all the screaming she was doing inside, the utter terror, she loved Kozue, or whatever Kozue had become. Die for me, beloved. Yes, oh, yes, how glorious, how blessed she was, to be allowed to serve, to be allowed to die for her... was there an instrument of death nearby? A knife, a noose, a window from which to hurl herself? Or perhaps her heart might simply burst, her breath vanish, at the joyous, overwhelming love she felt. You came to this place, MY place, MY PLACE, and did this to _him_, to my _brother_, you worm, you maggot, you filth, you excrement, you insect, you dog, you whore, you slut, _you tried to take what is mine_, and here, _here_, there is _nothing_ to save you, _nowhere_ to flee, _no one_ to rescue you, I do not need winter to kill you here, here, in the heart of my being, heart of my power, you will-- "Kozue..." Miki's voice was faint, but enough. The glamour broke for a moment; she tore her eyes away from that merciless beauty, and, nearly pulling the door from its hinges as she did, fled down the stairs, through the kitchen, and out the front door. If the dogs were waiting, so be it; better them than what was here. She refused to cry. Refused to weep, to be a fool and turn Miki into some kind of innocent, caught up in this by his sister (his dead sister) and Akio. No one could say the things he did if they were just a slave. And she'd almost believed him... so much of what he'd said... and now she realized that she, too, was having doubts. Utena did have some kind of power, didn't she? The way she moved, the way she talked, the way she... Far from the house, she slumped down on the curb and bowed her head. It was true, wasn't it? She made people love her, made people believe in her. Because the first thing she'd thought when Kozue touched her had been: would Utena's hands feel like that? And she still didn't know where the hell she was, or why it was autumn rather than winter. And she'd left her shoes behind, and hadn't even realized she had done so until now, when she'd sat down and realized how badly they hurt from running on the sidewalk. She was lucky she hadn't cut herself. Maybe it would have been better if she'd been eaten by the dogs. She was likely going to die here anyway. Alone. And cold. "You're shivering, Nanami." He had approached so silently that she hadn't even heard him. When he draped his jacket around her shoulders, she made no move to stop him from doing so. He sat down beside her on the curb, not too close; but not too far, either. "I'm glad I found you," Touga said after a time. She said nothing in response, but hugged her knees to herself and stared up at the moon. "Do you want to talk about whatever happened?" "No," she said quietly. "Not at all, or not to me?" "A while ago," she said quietly, "you said that you were my brother by blood. That when I was only a baby, we were both adopted into the Kiryuu family. But back at Ohtori, you said that we weren't siblings by blood; that I was adopted, and that you'd only treated me as your sister because Mother and Father told you to do so." He nodded quietly. She noticed for the first time that he was holding Chu-Chu in his lap; the animal appeared to be asleep. "Both stories can't be true," she continued. "Which one is true, Touga?" "You're my sister," he said. "That's the real story, Nanami. All those things about you being adopted, about my not being your brother by blood... none of them were true. We were simply manipulating you into duelling again." She nodded. "I believe you." He looked relieved, and she continued, in a dull voice. "Because it doesn't matter. It really doesn't matter which of the stories is true. Whether you're my brother by blood, or my brother my adoption, the memories I have of what you did to me are still the same." "I know," he said, and sighed. "I know. It doesn't really change anything, does it?" She shook her head. "I'm sorry. I'm truly sorry, Nanami." "That's the first time you've said that to me, you know." "It is, isn't it?" But he did not sound surprised. "Do you mean it?" "How can I make you believe I mean it?" "You can't." She was shocked by the tremble in her voice, by the sheer pain she felt. "You can't. I loved you. I trusted you completely. I would have done anything for you. And you..." "I used you. And anyone else whom you give that kind of love and trust to can use you as well. Anyone you give trust to can use you." "So what's the answer? Never love anything? Is that what I'm supposed to learn?" "I don't know," he admitted. "I'm not sure you have to trust someone in order to love them, though. Do you understand what I mean?" She nodded tightly. "Love isn't something you can just turn on and off," she said wearily. "If it was, life would be a lot easier." He stood up. "Are you ready to move on now?" "To where?" "To find the others, of course." Slowly, she stood to join him. "I found Miki already," she said. "But..." "Tell me about it," he said gently, "while we walk. All right?" "I don't have any shoes." He smiled faintly. "Is that said with the expectation of my offering to carry you?" "Hardly. The pavement isn't that rough." He led her on into the cool autumn night, or perhaps it was the other way round, her leading him; she decided that, in the end, it did not matter. * * * The yellow chalk squeaked as Ohtori Hoshimi drew a long swoop of a line with it; she feared it would snap, that in her state of disquiet she was exerting too much pressure, going too fast. It did not snap. She drew another swoop, then a series of characters in old dead or imagined tongues. From the first floor of the library, the clatter of the iron arms of her husband's antiquated drafting compass drifted up the old wrought iron spiral stairs as he consulted old charts, star maps, cartographies of space, land, time, the heavens. He whispered to himself dryly. She hated everything about him, hated the necessity of their marriage, their alliance, hated the memories of their couplings when he was still strong and healthy enough to require them of her. But he was Ohtori by birth, and she merely by marriage; what must be, must be. The thought, mantra that it was, calmed her and gave her focus; that beyond the library red chaos ruled did not concern her, could not be allowed to concern her except as she could use it to finish what she must do here. She completed the magic circle; Trivia paced round the ring of it, hobbling on his wounded paw, sniffling at the chalk and occasionally meowing communicatively. "Yes, my dear one," she said softly, absently kneading between the Siamese's flicking ears with the knuckles of her unbandaged hand. "I understand that you might go out safely within that, with nought to preserve you but yourself, but I require you here, not there." His tongue touched the back of her hand. A flick of hot sandpaper. Then he turned and vanished into the corridors formed by the oaken shelves, tail crooked proudly; the shadowed edges round the towering shelves took him, and he disappeared from her sight. She had changed from the outfit she'd worn to the gallery, into robes of white and black, with gold at her wrists, silver on her fingers, and an iron circlet upon her brow. She had drunk the juice of rare herbs mixed with strong wines, consumed the flesh of fungi that grew in dark places, and carefully tucked her cell phone into the red sash at her waist to keep it close at hand. She answered instantly when it rang. "It's me. Yes. Yes. No? Unfortunate, but if he was the one responsible for giving sanctuary, I do not see how she can complain. Well, of course she can complain, but without much justification. I shall be the one to deal with her, yes; you will not enter into it. Remain as you are until contacted again. Has he returned? He has--what news? Yes, I knew that--no, that is interesting. It will be taken into consideration. I assure you, I will deal with her; it grows cold. She makes her presence known in the most cliched ways, of course; goodbye." She folded the phone and put it away, and turned, smiling. "Black Rose." "She was supposed to die." The Black Rose's voice was the crackle of an autumn bonfire, with a note of childish petulance in it that Hoshimi allowed herself private amusement at. "She was, yes, and would have, but your own brother gave her sanctuary, and thus I wash my hands of the matter." The eyes of the Rose flashed, green fire off driftwood. "I did what was asked of me. Do what was asked of you." "Your brother is a charming young man." Hoshimi smiled, lightly; she wished the library had a wet bar, that she might offer the Black Rose a drink, casually, so politely that it would be insulting. "You presented the matter to me falsely. If he offered sanctuary to her, consciously or unconsciously, then he cares for her; I will have nothing more to do with this." "Miki doesn't know what he wants. I have to look after him. I have to keep him safe from them." "Come now." She laughed quietly. "Be honest with me, and honest with yourself. Let us not mince words. You are jealous. She had him first. She might have him again. I've not seen you making such efforts against any of the others. How sad and human and childish you are." The Rose stared for a moment, green eyes dark like a shadowed forest, and then she moved her lips, showing teeth. "Poor old woman, you hold back time with unguent and potion and spell, but you cannot hold it back all the way. Each day, you become less beautiful, more wrinkled, and one day you will be a withered hag, for all your power. And I will be only more beautiful, so beautiful that men and women alike will die for my beauty--" "Indeed." Hoshimi cut her off, quietly. "You are, after all, a thing without flesh, you are become an incarnation, an Idea of beauty, an eternal phantom existence. And I grow old, despite my power, and my skin withers and wrinkles, and my tits sag, but I may go beyond boundaries within which you are confined, and when I couple with a man, I do it as myself, and not as the memory of another woman's body." The face of the Rose twisted, and she hissed her next words. "Fulfill the bargain." She drew herself up, becoming taller, more magnificent, so beautiful it would break the hearts of men; Hoshimi watched calmly, unaffected, long beyond beauty. "We had an agreement. I have delivered." Before Hoshimi could respond, she was gone, swirled away, an autumn breeze, a burning pile of leaves, a discordant swirl of piano notes under a gibbous moon. Hoshimi drew a hand across her mouth, frowning; there was a bad taste in it. "The agreement was sworn neither by blood or fire," she murmured, troubled all the same. Pointless, she reasoned, to make an enemy over one life, so long as her hand could not be detected in the taking of it. She had agreed so the Rose would give her what she desired; she had what she desired now, the Rose was of no further use. And yet still... Down on the first floor, her husband was shaking, staring at his hands. His drafting compass had fallen aside, the pencil held within one arm leaving a jagged line across white paper filled with circles and equations. "So beautiful," he murmured. "So beautiful..." "Do be quiet," she called to him, heading into the shelves to find Trivia. "I'm trying to work up here." * * * Utena looked from one woman to the other: Shiori, who appeared to have forced her way through a hedge of thorns to arrive here, and Kanae, regarding the new intruder with a hostess's smile and a feral animal's eyes. Beyond the transparent walls of the solarium, the sun slowly sank behind the peak of a hill, and the sky turned crimson in preparation for the night. "Excuse me?" Shiori asked quizzically, staring back at Kanae as though expecting her to vanish into thin air (she was, after all, supposed to be dead) at any moment. "I asked you," Kanae said slowly, "if you're here to hurt the baby." Utena started slightly, seeing that Kanae's hands were clenched at her sides into tight fists. "Are you?" Before Shiori could say anything, Utena turned to Kanae and smilingly, hastily, spoke. "This is my friend Takatsuki Shiori, Kanae-san. She's not here to hurt the baby." Shiori pursed her lips and seemed about to say something, then shook her head and wiped at her tear-damp eyes and cheeks with the back of one hand. Utena hurriedly dug into her breast pocket and found (as she had hoped) the old monogrammed handkerchief she'd always carried at Ohtori. "Here." "Thank you." Shiori took it, and hid her face within the folds, dabbing away as best she could the signs of her recent crying. Kanae, meanwhile, relaxed somewhat. "I want to hear her say it," she said finally, as Utena took back her handkerchief, folded it, and tucked it away. "Huh?" "I want," Kanae repeated, "to hear her say it. Hear her say she's not here to hurt the baby." "I'm not here to hurt the baby," Shiori mumbled. "I--" "Wonderful!" Kanae exclaimed. "Would you like some tea?" Shiori nodded wearily, looking somewhat overwhelmed by it all. Utena touched her arm. "You should sit down," she said gently. Shiori nodded again, and slumped down on the padded bench that sat flush with the walls. The sunset turned her hair ruddy. She crossed her arms and bent forward, staring at the ground. "I couldn't find Juri-san," she said softly. "I looked and looked, but it was just so big. And I got lost, and then I found this door..." She looked up for a moment and threw her head around, staring at the false world beyond the solarium. "It's not possible," she whispered. "Not possible. It was just a door in a wall... not a high wall... but..." Helplessly, she made a weak, fluttering gesture with one hand at the vanishing sun. "It was _night_, Utena-san. I was walking under the stars." Utena poured a cup of tea for her, then sat down beside her as she handed it over. "Illusion," she murmured gently. "If you listen very carefully, you can hear the motor." Kanae remained standing, her back to the two of them, humming a lullaby with her hand on her swollen belly. She seemed almost unaware of their continued presence. Occasionally, she moved her hand in a tight circle on the red cloth of her dress. "And she's supposed to be dead," Shiori half-whimpered, hand trembling so much as she brought the teacup to her mouth that Utena feared she would spill it. "Well..." Utena sighed. "She isn't." The first sip of tea, to her relief, seemed to help calm Shiori a little. "So tell me, what happened?" "Juri and I were waiting." She lowered the teacup to her lap, keeping her hands clasped round the ceramic sides as though the warmth comforted her. "We were both so eager to see him. Looking back, I don't understand why. All those things he did... does it make it somehow better that he died? And I know what Juri says, but I'm not sure I believe it like she does..." "Who?" "Excuse me?" "Who were you waiting for?" Shiori did not answer and Utena continued, somewhat apologetically. "I don't understand." "Ruka." Shiori pronounced the name very quietly, as though afraid to draw undue attention to it. "We were waiting for Ruka. And we were so happy to wait for him. We probably would have waited forever, if Mikage hadn't--" "Mikage was there?" Utena asked. Too sharply; Shiori cringed, and she softened her tones. "I mean, how?" "He came and then left. He hardly even looked at me. I don't know how, but I think what he said... it was what made her kill her brother. Again." Her voice was slipping into a blank, almost mechanical recitation of facts that made sense only to her. "But if he was already dead, I guess she couldn't have killed him. Maybe what she did was right, even though it was horrible. Because after that, I was able to leave... but I left Juri behind, and I couldn't find her afterwards. I didn't mean for that to happen." She raised her head and stared into Utena's eyes, pleadingly, as though it were the most important thing to her in the world that Utena understand her, believe her. "I didn't mean for that to happen. I'm not a terrible person. I love her." "I know," Utena said. She squeezed Shiori's shoulder. "And she loves you. You've obviously been through something pretty awful. But you've got to pull yourself together and be strong. Okay?" Shiori nodded and drew her face into a tight, determined expression. Utena smiled at her. "That's the spirit." "You've got to be brave for the people you love," Kanae pronounced, standing with her back to them. She cradled the elbow of her dangling right arm in her tensed left hand. "You've got to be willing to do anything for them." Utena raised a hand, fingers spread, and stretched it out, as though to close with that motion all distance between them. "Kanae-san..." "Akio-san is calling to me," Kanae said quietly. "He called me on the telephone. He said that he was going to be delayed. He needs me." She stepped towards the door, right arm swinging, left hand releasing right elbow and raising towards the knob. "Kanae-san, I thought you said we'd go into the outside world together--" Almost kindly, contemptuously, Kanae's words cut her off. "I don't need you to go into the outside world, Utena-san. And neither does my baby. My husband is waiting. Please understand--I was only humouring you." She opened the door. Sunlight, real sunlight, flooded the solarium, so bright it was blinding; Utena threw up an arm to cover her eyes, heard the door slam, heard Shiori whimper, and then silence. They sat in darkness. "She's gone into the maze," Shiori whispered. Utena said nothing, sat and listened. Out of the silence, in the quiet that came when the last of Shiori's whisper died away, she heard no engine running, no sun-machine (star-machine's twin). "Into the maze," repeated Shiori. "What do you mean?" asked Utena. "There's a hedge maze beyond that door. It's where I ended up after I lost Juri." Sensible, of course, Utena thought, perfectly sensible, for there to be a hedge maze beyond, for there to be the outside world, when before it had led to Kanae's room, her books and her paintings, had led also to the infinite bathroom of marble sinks and chandeliers, Versailles in modern plumbing, the most opulent toilets the world had ever seen. Perfectly sensible, one door leading, looking, into many places, many places drifting by beyond that one door, turning in sequence, into alignment, like the zodiac's wheel. She found Shiori's hand in the darkness. It struck her how small it was compared to hers, how delicate; what a small, crystalline, birdlike creature Shiori was, how magnificently fragile. "We need to go after her," she said quietly. Shiori squeezed her hand to acknowledgement the truth of it; Utena suspected she nodded as well, an automatic motion, though in the darkness none could be aware but Shiori of the act. They stood; Utena guided the two of them around the spot where she assumed the table, with tea, with tea biscuits, still stood. Her foot caught and kicked what must have been _The Tempest_ across the floor; it hit once in the darkness, must have fallen open--pages slapped together as it toppled, fell shut. Their free hands clashed once in the darkness, both seeking the knob, and then Shiori pulled hers back so Utena might find it. Against her palm the rounded knob felt brazen, hot to the touch; she turned it, broke the once-solarium's darkness with a vertical line of light, opened the doorway into the garden-maze, where bees moved fatly from one rosebush to the next, bushes of long thorns, towering, trimmed into labyrinth walls, wild-growing green grass the flooring, sky of painful blue the ceiling. Utena let Shiori's hand go. "This maze?" Shiori shook her head. "Another." She turned a plaintive gaze to Utena. "What's happened to us? What's happened to the world?" "Half the story," Utena murmured. Shiori looked at her blanky. "What?" "I only heard half the story." "Half the story from who?" "Kanae-san's son." "She's already had another child?" Utena shook her head. "No. He talked out of her mouth." "Kanae-san's unborn child talked to you out of her mouth?" "Yeah." Shiori laughed half-hysterically. "All right. That's not so strange. So what story did he tell you, or half a story?" "He told me how the world was made, how Setebos came from the Quiet and made the world, how he made people, killed the people he had made except for a brother and a sister, who hid in a garden guarded by the oldest snake in the world... but that was all." She paced slightly, scuffing grass that had never known the touch of human feet. "If that was supposed to be Akio and Anthy, then what? Where did everyone else come from? Is that why they're different from us? Because they were born from the body of a god, and we were born from dust, or mud? Who breathed life into us?" "Maybe it's just a story," Shiori suggested. "Maybe it doesn't mean anything." "He said that Setebos was the one who was doing all of this," Utena said urgently. "But..." She took a deep breath. "Perhaps he was just saying something different using the words he knew. He says his name is Cali. Caliban. Does that make his mother Sycorax?" "The last time I read _The Tempest_ was in high school," Shiori said apologetically. "I honestly don't remember much." "Augh!" Utena threw her hands up in the air, frustrated. "Forget it. I don't even know where I'm going with this myself. Let's just see if we can find Kanae-san. Or Juri." She sighed. "Or anyone." Shiori nodded. They advanced into the labyrinth of thorns. Once in a while, a bird would pass by, high overhead. Insects were everywhere: suckling bees, hovering clouds of gnats, buoyant, dreamlike butterflies; one landed on the back of Shiori's hand as they paused at an intersection of paths, and she laughed; childish, and close to beautiful. They walked for hours. The thorn bushes grew higher, wilder, more tangled; the roses grew more sparse, until each one was only a pinprick wound on a great green corpse. Utena began to imagine, for some reason, that observed from above, the garden-maze would resemble a body, like the Nazca lines, like the Cardiff Giant; the conviction that she walked within a human form began to press upon her. She wondered if Shiori felt the same oppression, almost mentioned it to her--and then did not, knowing that it was a mad conviction, born of a world given over to madness. "I feel safe now that I'm with you," Shiori said unexpectedly, at one point (for the most part, they had walked in silence, chosen paths without speaking). Utena looked at her curiously. "Hrm?" "Like when I'm with Juri," Shiori said, as though that explained everything. "When I'm with Juri, I'm not afraid." "Oh. Okay." And Utena walked on, almost frowning, trying to decipher the meaning. Eventually, they came to a circular clearing with a ring- shaped marble bench in the centre. The hedges rose impossibly high all around them. Since they had begun to walk, the sun in the sky had not moved. "Where do you think she went?" Shiori asked. Utena blinked. "Who?" "Kanae-san. She said she was going to find Akio." Utena sighed. "I'd guess she went to find him, then." "Isn't that a bad thing?" Utena sighed again. "I don't know. Maybe. But--" "But what?" Shiori sounded almost resentful. "Didn't you draw us all here, pull us from the lives we had, in order to help you defeat him?" "Yeah," Utena said quietly. "Yeah, I did. But I've been thinking, maybe that wasn't the right thing to do." Shiori's eyes grew hard. "What do you mean?" "I told you that Akio used to be Dios. The prince, the world's light. And then something happened, and he stopped being Dios... and he became Akio. But what if..." "You want to save him," Shiori said accusingly. Utena nodded. Remembered Dios, in the bell-tower; hoped she could make Shiori, make everyone understand. "Nothing dies completely," she said slowly, looking into Shiori's eyes. "I hated him for a long time. I didn't even realize how much." She paused. "But I loved him, too. I--" "Was he your first?" Utena started; it was not a question she had expected. It was as if Shiori had cut her; she had not believed it could hurt so much. Then she nodded, closing her eyes. Shiori touched her hand. "Ruka was my first," she said gently. "You were younger than me, then; so I suppose we both lost the same thing at around the same time." "Innocence," Utena murmured. "No. I lost my innocence a long time before that. You don't really understand that. Neither does Juri." Utena opened her eyes. Shiori's smile was sad; there was nothing angry in it or in her eyes. "I don't understand what you mean." Shiori laughed softly. "I know myself pretty well," she said gently. "What I look like on the outside, the impression that I give to people; it doesn't match what's inside, Utena." She glanced at the bench. "I'm tired from all this walking. Could we rest?" Utena nodded. "I'm a little tired too." They sat down, their backs to one another, Shiori on the north-facing side of the ring-shaped bench, Utena on the south. "No, you're not." "Hrm?" "You're not tired," Shiori said, speaking away from Utena, voice drifting over her shoulder as she addressed, apparently, the hedges before her. "You really don't need to pretend you are to make me feel better." Utena glanced back and really noticed for the first time how weary Shiori looked, how the sweat stood out on her face, how her blouse was damp with perspiration, how her every breath came heavy, how her hair was tousled from having sweat raked back through it to keep it from stinging her eyes. And it was true what Shiori said; she herself wasn't tired at all. "You're one of the strong people," Shiori continued quietly, when Utena did not speak. "Like Juri is. Like Nanami is too, I suppose. And Touga, of course. But I'm not; I've sort of learned to live with that by now. It doesn't make me happy, but what can I do?" For a moment her voice was bitter, cold; resentful, as Utena imagined it might have been in Mikage's elevator, dropping down into the dark below Nemuro Hall. "I can't just fade back into the crowd; I've been singled out. By Juri, I mean. Because she loves me. She makes me--" "Now that's enough," Utena said, somewhat (to her surprise) tartly. "Of course you're not strong, if you don't believe you are. But I can't stand listening to people pity themselves rather than doing something to change things." There was silence. Utena heard the buzz of insects, the startled beating of wings (as though a flock of small birds, brown sparrows perhaps, had been driven from their hiding place), imagined for a moment as she sat within some secret space of that great green body's lines (the grassy heart, the thorny breast) that she could hear even the movements of the butterflies, which would be quieter than whispers, softer than the feet of mice. The sunlight was warm on her face, and she wondered whether or not it was real, wondered whether or not it mattered--thought, perhaps, that the definition of the real was so personal, so intimate, that everyone's reality could be different. "You're right, of course," Shiori said eventually, sounding defeated. "These are the same things Juri says, and she's right as well." Utena heard the shuffling of Shiori's feet, the tap of her shoes as their low heels briefly touched the smooth surface of the bench; she was turning inward, to face south, putting her legs within the ring, her eyes upon Utena's back. "It's just... difficult. I don't want to live in someone else's shadow all the time, and yet I always feel like that's where I really belong, as though without Juri, I wouldn't be anything special at all. And I'm not asking for your sympathy, I mean, I just..." "Then what are you asking for?" Utena did not turn, spoke as though to the roses and thorns of the labyrinth's walls, to the drunken flittings of the red butterfly that moved exactly six feet away from the end of her noses. Shiori's hands touched her shoulders, butterfly-light. "You're beautiful," she said. There was an aching kind of longing in her voice, painful, almost palpable, that pressed down on the middle of Utena's back like a sudden burden. "You make me feel..." Her hands moved down; towards the breasts, towards the throat. A movement that might be the initiation of a caress or a throttling. "You make me feel..." Utena reached up and caught Shiori by the wrists. "What are you doing?" The calm began to leave her; the conviction of of the labyrinth's green body plunged out of sight. She stood up quickly from the bench, pushing Shiori's arms away as she did, turning on her, confused; it struck her how much taller she was than Shiori, how the other woman was like porcelain. She could shatter her with a touch, a word. "What are you doing, Shiori?" Shiori's arms fell at her sides. Her hands dangled as though controlled from a distance by puppet strings rather than by her. "Utena," she said quietly, despairingly. "Utena, Utena..." Utena simply stared. This was too strange, too unexpected. She did not know what to make of it. What was Shiori thinking, feeling? "You couldn't possibly love someone like me, could you?" Utena blinked, then coloured. "I'm not like that," she mumbled. "Not like what?" Shiori asked, almost cruelly; like someone prodding a scar, inquiring where it came from, although it was none of their business. "Like you and Juri. I don't--" "I see." Something went out of Shiori; she sagged, almost sat back down on the bench. "I'm sorry. Let's just forget about it. Let's just pretend none of this happened, and go find Juri." Utena knew perfectly well that was a bad idea, was almost certain that Shiori knew it too. Trying to forget wouldn't work; what happened couldn't be undone just by pretending it hadn't happened. But she found herself (to her shame) nodding slowly. For now, she told herself; later, when there is more time, when the world's woken up, when we're woken up, this is the kind of thing we'll talk about, lay bare, get cleared up, bring into the light. There will be time, time for you and time for me, before (or after) the taking of tea and cantarella... "She can't be far," she said gently, needing to say something. "Juri, I mean." Shiori, who had turned away, looked back for a moment over her shoulder. "She could be a hundred miles away, Utena, in this place." Utena shrugged. "Then we'll walk a hundred miles." The edge of Shiori's smile vanished completely as she turned her head away. "I suppose." She walked away, hands dangling at her sides. "Perhaps we'll find Kanae-san first." After a moment, Utena shook her head. "No," she said quietly. "I think..." She shrugged again, gesturing vaguely with one hand as she moved to keep pace with Shiori. Could she have done something different, something better? Some word, some action, that would have stopped Kanae from walking off at the call, at some communication no one could hear but her? Kanae loves Akio, Utena thought (perhaps merely to justify matters to herself), and when you love someone... "I think she knows where she's going. Someone's called her; perhaps, they're coming to meet her..." "And Juri?" "What about Juri?" "Who called her?" Utena scratched the back one palm thoughtfully. "I'm not sure anyone did, but it could explain why you two got separated." "Ruka." "What about Ruka?" "If he called, Juri would answer. She... feels she owes him for things. There were things between them she's never talked to anyone about." "Not even you?" "No. Juri and I, even before we remembered the truth, we didn't talk much about how things used to be. Ruka taught her a lot, and now that she's remembered..." "But he died." "So did Kanae, yes?" Utena paused and shuddered. "Yes." So, she thought quietly, did Kozue. Yet in the elevator, that hand throwing her back against the wall had felt solid, more solid than solid, stronger than a human hand had any right to be... "What is it, Utena?" "What?" "The look on your face..." They reached a crossroads. Utena thought: within a green body, what we seek must lie in the chamber of the heart. She went north, Shiori beside her. "I met Kozue," she said guardedly, as they threaded their way (she thought of Theseus, unspooling thread behind him as he sought the Minotaur) through the maze. "In the elevator, right before I found Kanae. So if Kozue, in this place, can be alive, then..." Shiori nodded, saying nothing. "Ruka wouldn't hurt her, would he?" "Juri told me he was in love with her." That does not, Utena thought, with a dull ache of pain, preclude his hurting her. "He was very cruel to you." "I set myself up for it." Shiori's tone made it clear she didn't want to talk about it; Utena considered pressing it, but decided against it. Too much else had recently passed between them. She continued to walk in silence; Shiori clearly had no desire for further conversation either. Turning a corner, they came upon a place where the hedges widened into a high marble gateway. Their thorns and roses clutched rapaciously at the sleek pillars as though to tear them down. Beyond, in a clearing, a flagstone pathway bordered by planters full of roses led to a small, slender tower surrounded by a ring of hedges. They were short, but far thicker with thorns than the hedges of the maze's walls. The roof of the tower narrowed sharply into a needle, pointed threateningly at the sky; there were no windows, but there was a small wooden door at the end of the flagstone path. "Juri's there," Shiori whispered. Utena nodded, agreeing, knowing that it was true before she realized why she knew it was true; a moment later, she saw (must have noted, before, without realizing consciously) that the roses in the planters were the colour of a certain kind of sunset. The colour of Juri's hair. By the doorway, on the flagstones, something glinted. Red. Sunsets turned everything red. * * * "So," Touga said when Nanami finished. "She's still alive, is she?" "She's a ghost," Nanami said firmly. "Whatever she is now, 'alive' doesn't cover it." Testily, she strode along the sidewalk in her bare feet, occasionally kicking a leaf-pile. "She isn't human. Not any more." Touga walked a step behind his sister, head tilted back to gaze at the roofs of each building they passed, lost in thought. "And Miki is in thrall to her?" Nanami stopped walking and said, coldly, "Miki chose." Touga, not so convinced, but deciding not to dispute it, leaned back against a streetlight's curving neck and thrust his hands into his pockets. Overhead, white moths battered themselves to death in a futile attempt to reach the wan light behind the glass shield. As he watched, one fell and snagged upon his cuff; he studied the pale, twitching wings with their black spots, and the furry antennae, then brushed it to the ground. It twitched once more, then lay still. "And who do you think sent those dogs after you?" "Kozue," Nanami said firmly. "She wanted to kill me." Her back and shoulders trembled as she shuddered. "She wanted me dead, because..." "Because a part of Miki's heart belongs to you." He smiled slightly. "Just like I remember her." Nanami looked back at him almost hatefully. "Don't start acting superior," she said quietly. "If you start acting all superior, we can just split up and go our own separate ways, understand?" "Understood." He nodded; another moth fell, this time upon the head of the sleeping monkey (Chu-Chu, he thought, the silly thing's name is Chu-Chu) in the crook of his arm, and he flicked it away. "I apologize," he offered after a moment. Nanami began to walk again, and he shoved himself off from the streetlight and fell into step behind her. "So, what do you think of what he said?" "What do you mean?" "Utena or Akio? Who's in the right?" "Utena." Nanami said it without hesitation. "Why?" "Because..." She abruptly threw a suspicious glance back over her shoulder. "I'll kill you if you go back to him, Touga." "You really would, wouldn't you?" His smile turned rueful. He remembered her holding a knife on him not so long ago, so close a sharp turn of the van could have meant his end. "I'll never go back to him, Nanami; I turned away from him as soon as I realized I loved Utena." "Bullshit you did!" Her voice suddenly furious, she spun on her heel and faced him with fists clenched at her side. "You say you loved her? Then why didn't you do more? Why didn't you warn her?" He faced her fury, unmoved, though there was a dull ache within the cage of his heart. "Why didn't any of us do more?" he asked softly. "What do you want from me? Regret? Then take my regrets. There are many things I wish I'd done differently in those days. An apology? I gave you that. Take it again--I'm sorry, Nanami." What you want, he thought silently (he heard the turnings of a key within his heart), is for me to love you again. But I won't just offer it, and you won't just ask for it. "All right," Nanami said tightly. "This doesn't get us anywhere. It's stupid to fight with each other. Let's just..." She looked around, then sighed. "Do you have any ideas what we should do?" "We're close to where Saionji's dorm was. Perhaps he's there." He looked down at Chu-Chu and moved as though to prod the creature with his finger, though he did not complete the motion. "Or perhaps this beast can lead us to him." "Even if he could, why would you want to see Kyouichi again?" Her eyes narrowed. "There's something you're not telling me, isn't there? Something big." Touga shrugged. "Perhaps this entire enterprise has consisted of unwanted and unasked for reunions that, nevertheless, must take place." He paused; Nanami's eyes continued to narrow, and he chuckled, resigned. "All right, all right; you told your story, I'll tell mine. Himemiya Anthy is here." Fear was briefly betrayed by Nanami's expression, and then she hid it. "Here, in this place?" He nodded. "Looking for Utena. She brought Saionji with her, but they were separated when... things changed." He shrugged again. "Do you know what happened?" A third time, he shrugged; he resolved not to do it again, as he saw the repetition of the gesture was beginning to annoy her. "The world has changed. Perhaps it will change back at some point, perhaps it will not; either way, we seem for the moment creatures of it, changed though it may be. So, let us proceed..." He raised Chu-Chu to his eye level and regarded him rather severely. "Excuse me," he said politely. He gave the animal a small shake, and then a sharper one. "I said, excuse me." Nanami rolled her eyes. Chu-Chu yawned, blinked, then squealed in mortal terror and tried to struggle free of Touga's hands. Baffled, Touga tried to keep a grip on the writhing creature; he had not the slightest idea of what could be wrong--the animal had led him placidly and contentedly to within sight of Nanami, scampering along sidewalks, perching atop mailboxes and streetlamps like a sailor in a crow's nest, and then falling asleep in the shadowed awning of an empty cafe as Nanami came into view on the edge of a distant curb. "Nanami, do you have any idea what's wrong with him?" "Do you hear that?" Nanami asked softly. Chu-Chu's cries tore at the stillness of the night. A wind blew across them, cold; Touga smelt something acrid but unplaceable, shivered. "I hear hooves." Thunderous, steel-shod, on pavement, ashphalt, bridge-over- water, city park, moonlit garden--Chu-Chu paused and craned back his head as though to scent the air--a legion riding the night, and Touga seized Nanami's hand--no words--and ran, pulling her along behind him as fast as she could go, not daring to let go of her hand because if he did he might run as fast as he could and leave her behind. The gibbous moon sailed overhead through a grey-silk sea of clouds. Touga's breaths came hard--sharp, short, too fast--the acrid scent on the wind (salt mingled with smoke) scraped against his tongue and palate, he ran clutching Nanami's hand so tightly that he feared--vaguely, distantly--that he might do her some injury. Chu-Chu had ceased making any sounds at all, simply clung tight as a limpet to his shirt. The hoofbeats pursued them, invisible riders. Up a rising of the streets (Houou, built upon the sea, a city of hills, trough and crest overlaid with brick and stone and wood and metal, the works of human hands...) and down the other side, direction and location utterly without meaning, flight the entirety of the world... he knew their pursuer, the only one in existence who might ride through a moonlight in a crash of hooves (it would, he thought, perhaps suit Akio's aesthetics, his sense of how things must be within the story, to ride the night in the company of phantoms), and though he might have foiled him briefly--the waltz before the shadows, Juri in his arms, Shiori in Juri's arms--in the end he was only (curse it, damn it, despise it) a mortal man, and though fallen from where he once sat (if what Utena was to be believed) Akio was something else entirely... and he had to keep Nanami safe, because even if he did not care for her much (and he did, he did, or remembered a time when once he did, and wished he could recapture that feeling as something more than a memory, a lost thing to be studied under glass), the part always reflects the whole, and how he treated his sister was a reflection of how he would treat everyone... I am a part of all that I have done--how would you judge me now, if you could see me, Utena?--and all that I have done is a part of me... there had to be an end to this descent, a levelling of the streets-- He stumbled over some imperfection of the pavement, and nearly pulled Nanami down with him before he could recover his footing. Behind them, the riders reached the apex and came pouring down the slope. A wave of the sea, a tangled whiteness moving as one; horses whose legs galloped out of time--too fast or too slow--who flickered, the colour of the moon, the colour of their pallid riders--one hundred, somehow he knew there were exactly one hundred of them--as they came surging in pursuit, and Akio was in the lead of them, barely keeping ahead, for all appearances pursued by them as well. His hair flowed loose, longer than Touga remembered it; his jacket flapped open, showing a dark bare chest slick with moon-gleaming sweat; white-knuckled hands clutched the reins of his white horse, and unlike all the other riders of the company he carried no naked sword nor bore one at his side. Too fast, too fast, they afoot and their hunters horsed-- "This way!"--down one alley, down another, past a doorway lit by a flickering naked bulb in which a trick of his eye betrayed for a moment a shadowed figure (rope-creak, bell-jangle), through an immaculate garden of snap-dragons placed incongruously at a traffic intersection, speed could not hope to save them, perhaps cunning could... but who knew better these alleys, boulevards, cul-de-sacs, than Akio? The school was his, why not the city that housed it? What came first: the phoenix or the phoenix? (Later on, he might laugh at that.) Was it not sensible that he would know the lines, the body of the city, as well as he might know the lines upon his hands? Perhaps the city merely lay atop the roads that Akio travelled in the night, in the slick red car that gleamed like fire (called also by the title of phoenix--what meaning there, if any?), a mirage, a shared delusion... Who could know better the archways, the pillars, the imperious facade of the banks, the patterns of the yellow lights, the curvature of the bridges? Was not all fleeing futile in this place? As well they might flee along a Moebius. Nanami was sobbing. He found another darkened doorway, shielded by an overhang, and pulled her within. The confines were narrow--he had to hold her too close for either of their comfort. She continued crying; after a moment, hesitantly, he touched her hair, smoothed it, something he'd often done when they were children, whenever she'd skinned a knee or stubbed a toe or bent a finger. "What's wrong?" he asked gently. He could not hear the hooves. "My feet," she gasped. He fliched in sympathetic agony; had not even considered, had not even thought, all that running in bare feet over concrete, pavement, ashphalt... "Did you step on anything? Glass?" She shook her head and took a deep breath. "No... just all that running... I think they're bleeding. Scraped up... I had to run so fast..." Chu-Chu mewled softly and snuggled tight between them. Touga sighed and leaned back against the door. "It was more important that we get away." She nodded and leaned against him, her hands flat against his chest to preserve some little distance. "Akio's own little wild hunt," she murmured savagely. "And perhaps those were his hounds, before, getting the scent..." She closed her eyes. "I hate him so much." Touga said nothing. He touched her hair again, stroked sweaty strands of it away from her forehead. "He took you away," she continued, sighing quietly. It would be pleasant, he thought, for that to be the case-- so once upon a time there was a very little prince, young, led astray by something old and terrible and beautiful, introduced to things he shouldn't have known at such an age, until the only way to escape the prison was to become the master of it... if only it could have been that his path could only have led, inexorably, to that one point, that no action of his was his own responsibility, or even if they were his own responsibility, it was only because he knew no other way... "Anywhere he took me, I went of my own free will," he said eventually. "Let's not pretend it was otherwise." She lowered her eyes from his face and moved out of the doorway, face shadowed. The twist of her mouth and tightening of her jaw revealed her pain--she had never been very good at hiding her feelings. Yet he could not deny the fact that something had changed, that some step--whether in the right or wrong direction, he did not know--had been taken by the both of them (his fingers recalled the texture of her hair, could not help but remember it in contrast to the hair--Utena's, Shiori's, a dozen (or a dozen dozen) nameless faces--of other women they had touched). The moon sent pale shafts of light down into the narrow confines of the alley, staggered in their passage by balconies, overhangs, corbels, the squat silent bulk of an air conditioner protruding out a window... He stepped out after her, absently securing Chu-Chu in the crook of his arm--asleep again, now that danger was passed--and laid his hand upon her shoulder. "It seems for the moment we have escaped," he said softly. He paused and--for effect, perhaps--looked heavenward; he saw the Furnace, the Wheel, the Twins, the Cauldron... "As I see it now, we have two choices: to seek the others, or simply to do our best to evade further pursuit; to hide in alleys, parks, gardens, lonely places..." "You said Himemiya is here?" He nodded. Nanami licked her lips, likely unconscious that she had done so, and tangled a wavy lock of hair around her little finger. "I suppose she thinks we should leave Utena up to her," she said slowly. "That was the impression I received." He thought back to his conversation with the one who had once been Bride of the Rose, and could not decide whether or not she had subtly threatened him. "Do you agree?" "I believe that she believes the matter was best left to her," he said guardedly, and he realized: yes, despite all the gentleness of the moment, despite the vulnerability we both revealed, she threatened me; by her very existence and essence, she threatens me, just as her brother does. Nanami actually smiled. "You're frightened of her." "It would be foolish not to be, given all I've seen, all I know, all I've heard." He waited for a moment; when Nanami said nothing more, he smiled back (carefully, matching the expression, amused and just a little cruel, to her own). "And are you frightened of her?" "What do you think?" Nanami asked, acidly. "I'm terrified of her. I'm probably as afraid of her, of what she may do, as I am of her brother." "Then if we are agreed that we fear both her and her brother, for reasons greatly similar, wherein lies the difference?" "Utena." He nodded. "Utena." Their two smiles lost some of their edge. Nanami looked down at the floor of the alley. "Listen to us," she said softly, sounding amused against her own inclinations. "What we sound like..." Hooves, the jangle of tack--he knew the sound, knew what it meant--that signified the dismounting of a rider, at the closer mouth of the alley. "So it has occured, then." The silk-smooth voice sounded somewhat weary, though whether it was an affected weariness or not Touga could not say. "Another reunion, unasked for, unwanted, undesired; the burgeoning reconciliation, unexpected, undeserved." Touga turned, placed himself more squarely between the fallen prince and Nanami. "Good evening, Chairman," he said politely. Too late now for running. Akio had changed his clothes; he wore the outfit appropriate to the public facade: red shirt with tie, dark slacks, expensive leather shoes. A coat of black wool, too heavy for the warm autumn night (appropriate for winter), and gloves of pale calfskin. His hair was bound back. There was no wildness in him, no sense of a hunter on the chase who led his band in order that he not be pursued by them. "Good evening, President," Akio replied, equally politely. "And good evening, Nanami-kun. How hatefully you regard me, from behind what you suppose--perhaps--to be the safety of your brother's back. Like clockwork dolls upon an automaton of time, we are, inevitably, brought back together; by the movements of the gears we cannot see." "You seem to have lost your hunting party." Touga found himself, despite all he knew, sizing the Chairman up, as he might any other foe. He knew--oh, he knew very well--that whatever Akio was, he presented the appearance of physicality (he remembered, in a sudden flash of images that rattled the cage of his heart with their intensity, white sheets and dark hands and pale hair); perhaps he could be fought, overcome for a little while, even in this place... he was alone... "They are not mine, but another's," Akio said quietly. "He is given to such displays. It has, as you can see--" He gestured round, widely, with one hand, as though compassing the entire city, the whole of the world. "It has been something of a problem." Touga narrowed his eyes, and silently counted the distance between them, calculated how many long steps he would need to close it. "Did you ever tell you, Chairman, that I hated your cryptic statements? I was always certain you did them to present an appearance of great wisdom, to make me feel ignorant and foolish, despite not knowing much better of what you spoke. I remember your great speech about the wanderings of the moon and the labours of the sun, but I got the impression that you did not understand your own meaning, that all you were able to do, perhaps all you were ever able to do, was echo words that you had heard in the past, transform the eloquence of others to your own uses; a twister of words, but not a maker." Behind him, Nanami flexed her hands, oddly calm; perhaps she knew his calculations, was making them herself. He was aware she had a surprising strength in her, for someone built along such slight and slender lines. Akio did not seem fazed. His eyes gathered the moon's light; he angled his head slightly to the side, and for a moment, they glowed like a cat's. "To speak plainly is not my nature," he said eventually. "But I shall try: another me has come into being, a result of my inconvenient death at the hands of Tenjou Utena." Touga stared for a moment; Nanami gave a small gasp. "Do not be so surprised," Akio continued. "I, you see, am the fallen prince: darkly elegant, elegantly dark, calm and collected, layer of plots, spinner of webs. I have stood at the centre of the world, the axis mundi, the omphalos, seen my shadows cast through coloured glass; known too, perhaps, that I am only a shadow, a sliver of a broken mirror. I have spoken with the guardian and prisoner of that place, and understood how in a time passed for him--endlessly passing--but yet to come for me I shall promise him a rose, a reunion for which he longs... and, of late, I had the misfortune to be throttled to death by Tenjou Utena." "You look healthy enough for a man recently throttled," Touga said dryly. "Of course, of course, for though the body decays, the essence endures; I am a creature of essence as much or more as I am a creature of flesh and blood; I was, after all, Essence before I was Form. It was, however, an inconvenience. A story must have an adversary. A child must have a father. A wife must have a husband. Truly a clumsy editing job; no experienced author would compass it. Oh, at first it was perhaps unnoticeable--he had a certain style; the manner in which he danced, for example, was a perfect imitation. Yet when it came down to it, he revealed himself as unable to play the role properly--frustrated, rather than amused, by their shadowy antics--unable to dismiss them any longer as sophomoric, as mere meddlers, he perpetuated the authorial mistake with his own clumsy wieldings of the pen by proxy." Akio winked and tapped the side of his nose. "Thus, you see the results all round you. Clumsy seasonal symbolism. An inability to properly balance the sense of reality and unreality; to plot a path between waking and dreaming. A certain lack of clarity of vision. A lack of apparent necessary connection. Dreams are as tight and ordered in their workings as pocketwatches; it is merely that the gears are considerably harder to gain access to. One who does not understand this, who mistakes the appearance of chaos for the actuality..." Touga listened in silence, occasionally nodding. Three steps; perhaps two, though they would be more leaps than steps. "I speak, of course, in metaphors highly displaced from the truth." Akio smiled; his teeth were a fence of woven pearls. "And, of course, I lie, deceive, obscure, conceal, for such is also my nature." "In other words, some or all of what you have said may be untrue." Touga smiled a hard smile. "But we learned that long ago, didn't we?" "Listen," Akio said, as though Touga had not spoken at all. "Can't you hear it?" Hooves. "I can't, you see. But I know the approach; I hear the silence. The approach of the me whose soul has not given up entirely. Who stills dreams that what is lost forever might be found again. You can hear the sound, can't you? Both of you. Coming from the ends of a world." Touga moved. He could not, in the end, say whether or not Akio did as well, or whether he merely vanished like a ghost, a phantom, a mirage. Whatever the case, Akio was not there for his fist to meet; he stumbled and fell, and Chu-Chu slipped from his arms, hit the alley floor, bounced three times on his belly with a distinctly humourous sound, then rolled onto his back and kicked at the air while making cries of distress. A deformed child having a tantrum. Hooves; a gentle trot. He raised his eyes and saw a cage of white equine legs before him. His right hand was painfully skinned from catching himself, and his left knee, which had cracked against the ground, hurt terribly. The three riders who blocked the alley mouth before him were monochrome figures in the boy's uniform of Ohtori, stark black lines filled in with ghostly white; loose long hair; a ponytail; a braid; but he could not say which rider stood left, which stood centre, and which stood right. Nanami's hand touched his shoulder. "It's all right," she said wearily. "Touga, it's all right; they've caught us. There's nothing more to do." Chu-Chu turned onto his side and began to sob gently. At the farther end of the alley, the curtain of riders parted; a tall, powerful figure in a uniform of white stepped through, long tails fluttering behind him. At his throat a green gem blazed with an eerie witch-light. "There's always something more to do," Touga murmured. Not because he believed it, really, but because he imagined it to be the kind of thing Utena might say. "I found you," the other Akio said. He smiled. * * * "How?" asked Shiori. Utena curled her left hand into a fist. "A tower," she murmured. "The tower of a castle. Where you take the princess, to live happily ever after, to wear dresses and high heels, and walk about quietly, and speak demurely..." She stalked up the flagstone path towards the door, Shiori flitting nervously behind her. "It must be a trap." Utena glanced at her. "Then I'll spring it and get Juri out." By the door they found Juri's sword, broken near the hilt, with only a few inches of jagged blade left on it. Utena stooped and picked it up carefully; she offered it to Shiori, but Shiori shook her head. "It's better that you have it," she said quietly; Utena could not detect any bitterness. She curled her fingers round the handle, ready to strike or stab with it at the sight of any threat. "Stay close," she said to Shiori. She pulled at the handle of the door, which opened without resistance. Within lay a short flight of spiral stairs, wrought iron, the handrail and balustrades adorned with trumpeting cherubs and trefoil leaves. Up the stairs, Shiori at her heels, hand tight round the broken sword (even a broken blade can cut, pierce, kill...), eyes roving... near the top, from the second floor, a rhythmic sound, the chant of a spinning wheel... she smelled, for some reason, apples, had the impression that the apples were of the green body, that some connection as vital as that between the heart and the blood existed between the chant of the wheel and the scent of apples... White, white, white the room above: white draperies, white tablecloth (upon the table sat a wooden bowl of sweet apples), white stool before a white spinning-wheel, a white bed and in it milk-pale Juri with her hair uncurled, prostrate, nude beneath white sheets stretched tight over the definitions of her body, showing rounded shoulders and slim bare feet. Dead for all appearances, and pale, so pale--Shiori flung herself down beside the bed with a wail, pulling the sheets away and scrabbling to clutch Juri's hand, to seek warmth, a pulse in her wrist, screaming (because, Utena thought dully, she's found none) and shrinking back, until Utena grabbed her by the shoulders and steadied her. "She's sleeping," she said forcefully. "Only sleeping." "She's dead! She doesn't have a pulse!" She moved Shiori aside, gently, and drew the covers up over Juri's breasts, exposed when Shiori had pulled them away. She took her wrist carefully--it was true, she could not feel a pulse. But she would not be able to, of course, for the sleep of the sleeping beauty was a sleep akin to death, ended only by the proper kiss... anger choked her, the stupidity, the unfairness, the inappropriateness: Juri wasn't supposed to be Sleeping Beauty or Snow White, smiling beatifically in her death-sleep while she waited for a prince to come along... if she was to sleep, it should be like King Arthur, like Barbarossa, a warrior's sleep, waiting to ride forth with sword in hand, on a horse with hooves of iron, casting back evil... "Is that your end?" she asked softly. "To make us all into princesses again, like that play said we used to be?" Shiori looked at her fearfully, confused, but she went on speaking, not caring. "Come on. I know you can hear me. I know you can hear me, damn it! Come out. Stop hiding, behind all these illusions, these dream-walls..." Her voice dropped to a whisper; she remembered Dios in the bell-tower. "I want to talk to you, Akio." She placed Juri's broken sword between her pale, slender hands, folded them across the hilt at her breast, upon the white sheets. She looked less like a sleeping princess with her sword (shattered though the blade might be) beneath her hands. "Won't you let me talk to you again?" Silence. The spinning-wheel creaked. The skin of the red apples glistened over their white flesh. Overhead the chandelier that lit the room spun, white candles in wrought iron filigree. She remembered her hands around Akio's throat. Had she killed him? She could not have killed him, for he was there again after he vanished. Had he even been there? Leo Cano had not seen him. What of it all had been real, even before the world fell apart? An identical crack in an identical ceiling, a broken child in a bell-tower, the windows opening into all the other worlds... the windows were all broken now, and what had happened to all those other worlds? Did they disappear, had they been but theoretical, mere possibilities, permutations of a familiar story with no existence, or did they struggle now, strive to become real in this place, against the story that she knew and accepted (or did not accept, in parts)? Was that why the world had become what it had? "An interstice of intersections." What did that mean? The tower where the stories met? The crevice between the worlds? How could things be put back together again? Was the world once disassembled like a shattered mirror or like a disordered jigsaw puzzle? "She's not cold," Shiori said quietly. She had slipped by Utena and laid her hand against Juri's cheek. "If she were dead, she'd be cold. Right?" "Right." Utena rubbed her hands together to warm them, to help herself think. "So kiss her and wake her up." "You need to do it." Utena started. "What?" Shiori's voice was carefully controlled, with only a hint of shrillness. "You're the one who wanted to be a prince. Someone like me can't wake her." "Of course you can," Utena said--not because she was convinced, but because it was what had to be said. "You're the one she loves. Only your kiss can wake her." She turned her back, trying not to blush. "Wake her, and let's get out of here." Soft movement; the sound of a kiss, nearly too quiet to be heard. No more. She did not turn back. Shiori said, dully, "I told you it wouldn't work. I'm not the one she's waiting for." Utena waited, hoping without hope that Juri would yawn, stir, wake up and throw off the sheet, ready to fight, to help her. It was not to be. She turned round. Shiori was crouched by the bed, one hand on Juri's pillow, the other against the side of Juri's neck. Her expression was unreadable. Utena wondered if Akio had set it up this way, and, if so, why? To make her hurt Shiori, hurt Juri as well, hurt herself? The prince's kiss end's beauty's death-sleep not just because he's a prince, but because he's destined for beauty; the same thought had to be going through Shiori's head, making those same fears burn again, the fear that Juri would be taken away from her. To awaken Juri with a kiss, to even attempt it, would be to play right into his hands--to play his game, by the rules he defined, the rules that would always let him win. But what other option was there? To not awaken Juri, to let her continue sleeping the sleep akin to death? That's how it works, she thought, almost nauseated; how it had worked from the beginning. You play the game because the consequences of not playing seem worse, and then, slowly, the game ceases to be a game, and becomes the world, drawing you deeper within, until you cease trying to question or understand, until to question the rules or events becomes like trying to question your own reality... until your being, your self, your identity, lies within the game, in the world within a world... until your identity is that of a piece within the game, a player, a puppet... "No," she said calmly. Shiori looked up at her. "No, what?" "I won't play any more." "Then, will you just leave her here?" Shiori sounded almost hateful; her mouth twisted, her eyes narrowed--for a moment, she was ugly. "Of course I'm not going to leave her here." She leaned over and unclasped Juri's unresisting fingers from round the hilt of the broken sword. "Can you carry this? I'm going to need both hands free." Shiori nodded and took what remained of the blade, holding it tight against her chest; Utena carefully wound the bedsheets round Juri (do not consider them, she thought, as cerements, cloth-of-the-grave, she is not dead, merely sleeping; she has bitten (someone has made her bite) the poisoned apple, she has pricked her finger upon the spinning wheel (what hand held the needle?), she sleeps...) for a semblance of modesty, then put one arm under the knees and the other behind her shoulders. Juri was as tall as she was, and more solidly built; it would take a bit of effort, to lift her. She took a deep breath. Once they had her out of here, out of the tower, some other way, some way beyond the game, could be found to wake her... "I don't understand why they would just leave her here," Shiori said faintly. Juri opened her lips, groaned, said something to faint to be heard. Startled, Utena lowered her back to the bed. "She's waking up." Juri spoke again, a motion of the mouth, words lost in the squeak of the spinning-wheel; the chandelier twirled slowly on its chain, throwing mandalas of shadow across the walls and floor. Utena frowned and leaned down to hear. Shiori, nervous and skittish, crept close and stood behind her. "In the dark," Juri murmured. Her breath against Utena's face smelt of attar. "In the dark, it didn't matter, at the ends of the world, the terminus, it didn't matter, because my body did not exist there, because I could feel myself dissolve away, because I closed my eyes and pretended it wasn't happening, and I felt myself melting, it didn't matter, I felt myself flow as the river flows, I felt my flesh become water and join the sea, become one with the great dark sea. In the dark, in the dark, it didn't matter, I wasn't there, all I thought of was Shiori and me on the beach, and my body wasn't there, at the terminus, at the division, at the borderlands, my mouth and breasts and thighs were not there..." "What's she saying?" Shiori asked fearfully. "Juri," Utena said forcefully. "Juri, wake up." Juri opened her eyes. They were blank. The pupils were the size of pinheads. She smiled. "Utena," she whispered. A painted doll's gaze. Utena, sensing danger, tried to pull back; Juri seized her shoulders. Then she kissed her, quite forcefully, on the mouth. Her lips tasted of apples and attar. Shiori screamed as though rent in two. Utena's vision wavered; she felt as though her body were dissolving. Clever, she thought, as she fell, oh, clever, the grand reversal, the poisoned lips of the sleeping princess, and roses burst blackly before her eyes; the veil was drawn away, the curtains were raised, she saw oak shelves and iron stairs, melting, all melting... fight! she thought desperately, fight, wake up, you have power, Dios said you have power... "It will not avail you here," a voice said. A woman, familiar but not known; she struggled to place it, but everything was amorphous, formless, the sounds came as though through turgid waters... "Not here, for this, dear prince, white prince, white queen, is my hut on fowl's legs, my gingerbread castle, my garden where there are no rose-trees, and here I have my mortar and my pestle, my oven; I prepared this long ago, in readiness, and now self-styled Setebos casts his shadow long across the gardens of the world, he has broken the glass that encased the flowers, taken up vessels in each hand, child with a god's power, and mixed together all essences. But the red king comes; his fallen bride draws him, and you, prince, draw his fallen bride. Thus all shall come full circle again, as a serpent chews upon its tail; the mistake of seven years ago shall be undone. Red and white will be united within the vessel I have crafted; the end of one world, and the birth of another. Whoever wants to be born must destroy a world." Utena stretched out a futile, questing hand--she could no longer see, nothing but darkness stood before her vision--and fastened upon what felt like an ankle. "I don't understand." She grunted with the effort of speaking, of holding on; the possessor of the ankle did not attempt to free herself, and Utena knew that was all that kept her grip from breaking. "Tell me... what's happened? What's going on?" "Of course you don't understand," the voice said gently. "Your purpose, like my daughter's purpose, has never been to understand. You are an instinct, a reflex; you respond to the world; the world does not respond to you." Somewhere beneath her heart, Utena felt a muted ache of anger. You stupid old woman, she thought (she heard the iron mouths crying: witch, witch, accursed witch!), standing on the fringes of my tale, upon the rim of the turning wheel, waiting to move towards the axis, as a jackal waits to feed on carrion that true hunters have killed... I am no reflex, I am no instinct... I am the pivot, I have stood in the centre of the worlds... you are _nothing_, you know _nothing_... The rage sank away, the iron mouths shut tight... she thought: can that have been my voice my thoughts? If not, then whose? There was a buzzing flapping sound within her head; a swarm of bees, a cloud of butterflies, a flock of sparrows... "Why..." Attar, thick and cloying; she knew the voice now, did not understand at all the new dimension that had opened up, this other hand, but terrible, oh, how terrible... her own daughter... "Ohtori-san, why?" "Is this the scene where the wicked queen unveils her plans, speaks plainly, provides convenient exposition?" The ankle was pulled away; she heard the creak of hinges. "Please understand, Tenjou-san, that I have no intention of being ruled by the story in such a manner." A thud like the last pounding of a nail. "Rather, I intend to rule it. Sleep now. Soon enough, it will be time for the denouement." Fingernails on a glass lid. Attar everywhere. No air. Can't breathe. Can't breathe! Can't-- * * * a-las a-lack a-gain (Movement of shadows) once more, the captured prince once more, the sealed light once more, the scheming witch (A flutter as of curtains) have we forgotten anything? have we left anyone out? have we missed something ? (The processional) must it end like this? can it end like this? will it end like this? (Silence) Upon her white horse she heard the silence and raised her face towards the lonely sky. Snow began to fall. Her child wept because of the cold and she wished she knew how to comfort him. A snowflake landed on the tip of her nose and made her laugh, and she thought of all the things there were that she hated. "Ah, no," she said quietly. "Ah, love, await me, I come." END OF PART XV