InuYasha Fan Fiction ❯ Angel ❯ Vision ( Chapter 1 )
[ X - Adult: No readers under 18. Contains Graphic Adult Themes/Extreme violence. ]
Chapter One:
Vision
Disclaimer: All publicly
recognizable characters, settings, etc. are the property of their
respective owners. The original characters and plot are the
property of the author. The author is in no way
associated with the owners, creators, or producers of any media
franchise. No copyright infringement is
intended.
The pain began suddenly, robbing her of breath.
She staggered, reaching blindly for the wall, her knees trembling.
Head throbbing, nausea rose hard and overwhelming. She covered her
mouth, a strangled sound of distress escaping her tightly pressed
lips.
Stumbling, she reached out, her shaking hand
found solid stone wall.
She leaned heavily, panting hard, her other
hand moving to her pounding head as the pain increased, feeling as
though jagged edged blades were slowly being driven into her skill
and lava was being poured behind her eyes.
She couldn't scream.
Could barely breathe and the meager strength
left in her trembling legs deserted her.
Collapsing in a painful heap, she brought both
hands to her head, desperate to stop the excruciating pain, knowing
nothing could alleviate the agony.
Her fingers clenched, pulling at silken locks
as her body contorted on the hard floor.
Dizziness washed over her, bringing with it
shaky weakness and torturous muscle spasms.
It hurt.
Everything hurt...
From the top of her head, down to the tips of
her curling toes.
Tears leaked down her feverish cheeks, their
moisture cold and uncomfortable against her burning
skin.
Taking deep breaths, she forced her body to
unfurl from the ball of misery it had become, knowing fighting was
a useless endeavor, that resistance would exacerbate and amplify
the pain. Slowly, she moved her quivering limbs as straight as she
could, letting the spasms rake over her prone body. Her mouth
opened in a silent scream as the pain intensified to a level beyond
endurance, ripping what little air she had from her
lungs.
The room spun...
Darkened.....
And then, silence...
Feeling weightless, she let her body relax, the
pain gone as suddenly as it arrived. She took a moment to bask in
the sweet release from pain, content in that minute to just lie
there without care or worry. At ease in her body, her mind was a
different story. The momentary distraction of bodily comfort began
to drift away, leaving unease in its wake.
Slowly, she opened her eyes.
Nothingness, an endless void of whiteness
greeted her. The vast, overflowing brightness was as familiar as it
was terrifying. Having suffered this cursed blessing more times
than she could count, she waited a few moments more before
moving.
Despite the previous pain being nothing more
than a tortuous memory, she moved carefully, cautiously, pushing
herself up into a sitting position.
Pausing, she took one last inventory of
herself, ensuring all aches, pains and twinges were being kept at
bay, at least for these few moments.
Satisfied her body no longer felt as though it
were being ripped apart from the inside out, she stood.
The silence was deafening, the colorless
landscape stretching as far out as her eyes could see.
The world around her shifted, gravity took over
and the sensation of falling brought a flutter to her belly. A
small gasp of surprise escaped as she descended. Hair rippling
about her face, she let her self go despite the rapid pounding of
her heart. The fall lasted mere seconds before her feet gently
touched solid ground.
She gazed out at the emptiness around her, the
unnatural silence unnerving, bringing with it a distinct feeling of
panic. The lack of color disquieting in a way she couldn't
describe. There was no sense of time, no sense of anything. It
was...suffocating, disturbing, abnormal.
This place, it always left her feeling agitated
and twitchy, as if she couldn't get out of there fast enough, as if
she would be ensnared for an eternity if she stayed too
long.
The thought alone left her cold with
dread.
If ever she ended up trapped in this place she
knew she could quickly and quite easily go insane.
"It would seem fate has once again brought you
before me, "said a deep baritone voice, "how fortunate am I to be
blessed with such a beautiful sight,"
Shimmering into sight, a dark form began to
materialize, breaking the hypnotic effect the void was having on
her psyche. She released a breath she hadn't known she was holding,
thankful to have her fearful thoughts interrupted and forced to the
back of her mind.
There was no time to indulge in her own fear,
not now.
Turning her attention to the tall male standing
a short distance away,
As he floated closer, she took in the familiar
form, studying him silently as she waited for him to
speak.
He was very handsome, painfully so, as his kind
was prone to be more often than not. Long dark hair swept up into a
high ponytail, the dark crimson tear drop on his forehead matched
the crimson stripes that graced his cheeks. His perfect lips pulled
back into a familiar, slightly arrogant smile as her observation
moved to his expensive black kimono, and crimson obi. Although
there was no design or pattern, none could mistake its high
quality, made from the finest silk she had ever seen.
He stood seemingly careless, lean muscles
relaxed, but she could feel the stead hum of the tremendous power
he kept contained.
He was perfection personified as he approached
her with a leisurely gait, confident and strong.
And then there were his eyes, in complete
contrast to his dark features, they were a blazing ice blue,
piercing and direct. Great wisdom
swirled in those clear wintry
depths.
They studied her as intently as hers did him,
perhaps more so than she.
His slow gaze traveled over her with an
intensity that made her feel exposed and vulnerable, unable to hide
a single thought with the weight of his gaze leveled on
her.
Ignoring her lightly heated cheeks, she smiled
slightly in acknowledgment of his earlier words. Always the
charmer. Having been on the receiving end of his compliments time
and again, she knew it to be nothing more than a friendly,
flattering greeting...sometimes.
"How have you fared?" he questioned softly,
affection coating his words.
"As well as can be expected. What of you?" she
asked.
"I am fine my Lady, as always," he
replied.
Katzunami studied the beautiful young woman
before him and felt his heart warm.
Curly black hair flowed down her back in soft
rippling waves, bright brown eyes filled with warmth and
compassion. Full red lips were drawn into her normal shy smile, and
her clear porcelain skin looked as soft as silken sheets and made
his fingers itch to caress.
Although she was very petite, she lacked
nothing in curves, and he ached to explore each and every part of
her body.
Yet only in his own fantasies could he do the
things he longed to.
She was forbidden to him, as were all mortals
or youkai of her plain.
He was but a messenger for the Gods, to go
against their will was to bring their very wrath upon his
head.
The will of the Gods was something he had never
and would never understand.
For a millennium, he'd been at their beck and
call, carrying out their orders even while questioning their
motives internally. This time was no different. For what purpose
did they continue to show these visions of the future to this one
woman? Why send her to right the wrongs that had yet to happen? If
they were all mighty, all powerful, why did they send others in
their stead?
What could possibly bind the free will of a
God?
His brow furrowed and a pit of unease took root
in his belly.
Feeling a heavy, dark presence in his mind, he
pulled away from those complex thoughts. The Gods, while mysterious
and often elusive, he knew they watched him...closely.
He'd felt that presence more often than not,
even more so when his thoughts contemplated what scheme the Gods
concocted, what threads of intrigue they weaved and what, or who,
could stop the actions of Gods.
They wanted him left in the dark, watched him
intensely to ensure it was so.
He would retire his curiosity.
For now.
As the dark presence slowly retreated from his
mind, he focused his energy upon their white surroundings, letting
it spread like paint on a blank canvas until the bright background
became a dark wasteland.
In seconds, a kaleidoscope of sounds erupted.
High pitched screams of pain, low moans of agony and the
overwhelming symphony of ungodly beasts wailing in triumph. The
horrifying anguish filled the silence, cries that chilled her to
the bone. She could feel the intense heat of raging fires against
her skin, and the putrid smell of blood and death filled the
air.
She gagged, staggering under the intensity of
the smell.
Covering her mouth and nose, she closed her
eyes to the hideous scene and the heavy smoke from the fire that
brought tears to her eyes. For several moments, she stood shaking,
struggling to gather herself enough to open her eyes and make sense
of what was going on.
Inch by inch, her eye lids lifted.
Looking around through stinging eyes, she
easily recognized the wasteland as her once beautiful home in the
Northern lands. Her glorious territory turned into a hellacious
battlefield.
All around her, her people fought…..and
died.
Atrocious, gruesome deaths that turned her
stomach and brought bile to her throat.
Vicious, unknown creatures tore them apart.
Never in her entire life had she ever seen such beings. These
monsters were not youkai, they were something else entirely,
something that not even her worse nightmares could conjure
up.
They were humanoid but deformed, their towering
forms twisted and stooped in painful angles. Their bodies were
ravaged, starved, their bones standing out in sharp contrast
beneath the thin, wrinkled, leathery looking skin.
Her horrified gaze snapped to their
faces.
Two deep gaps where eyes should be were covered
by a thin piece of skin, and below a dark hole where the nose
should be. Their mouth sat vertical beneath the hole, split open to
reveal rows and rows of sharp black teeth. Green acidic saliva
dripped from their cracked lips, eating away at the flesh of humans
unfortunate enough to be below the beasts.
The humans of her land fell easily to the
savage brutes.
It was hard to tell who suffered more, the
humans torn to shreds or the youkai that were continuing to fight.
Strong enough to be put on even footing with the creatures, they
fought and slew many. But as their backs were turned, their
attention on saving those that could be saved, a new monster
emerged.
Ghostly beings cloaked in shredded hoods
latched onto the youkai, seeming to suck the very life from their
very bodies, leaving their flesh to blacken and blister.
Glowing red eyes peered 4; out from the darkened h oods of the
phantasmal figures as they watched the bodies of t he youkai
flail wildly about. They watched with gleeful,
burning crimson eyes as the youkai flesh
cracked, green pus oozing from the tears in their skin,
leaving
behind a horrendous stench from the
seeping wounds and pain a
beyond excruciating before moving
swiftly to create more victims.Â
Brown eyes widened
in terror as the creatures
drifted away, picking up speed as fresh prey
moved into their sights. The glowing red eyes burned, cutting
through the thick dark smoke
as efficiently as beams of light from the
sun.
Trembling, she watched as
they barreled forward, gray-blue skeletal arms stretched
out from the dark cloak, bony hands curved inward like claws. Their
eyes brightened, burning like the fiery pits of the darkest Hell as
they drew near, their arms twitching feverishly as the first
creature reached the unaware youkai.Â
She startled when Katzunami spoke again,
drawing her horror-stricken attention from the scene before the
gruesome attack could commence.Â
“Within hours,
their body will begin to decay from the inside out," Katzunami
explained, his tone filled with regret, "Within days they will
die....a long and painful death."
Shaken, feeling on the verge of passing out,
she stared up at the male, uncomprehending of his word for the few
moments it took her sluggish brain to function once more.
Silent tears flowed unchecked down her cheeks
as she turned back to the scenes. She heard him but could not look
away from the devastation before her, could not speak.
What could she say in the face of this
savagery?
The youkai was screaming now, the wraiths
floating over him in a ghastly cloud. Despite their covered visage,
she could see the gleam of satisfaction in their illuminated red
depths, the merriment in their eyes sickening to her very
core.Â
Sudden weakness brought her to her knees.
Clenching her eyes shut, she tried to will it away, hoping against
hope that when she opened her eyes again it would all be nothing
more than a horrible nightmare, maybe even some cruel trick by the
Gods, anything other than this possible reality.
Shutting away the sight didn't silence the
sounds.
Shutting away the sight didn't cover up the
smell.
It was there, and no amount of wishing it
otherwise would change things.
Change would happen only at her hands, by her
strength, by her determination to ensure this devastating premonition did not
ever come fruition. She had to make sure of that, not only for her
sake but for the sake of everyone.
'Stand up,' she thought angrily, desperately at
herself.
Her legs felt so heavy, her heart even heavier.
Her fists curled, the knuckles turning white. She clenched her
delicate jaw tightly, pain stabbing her temples from the
pressure.
She'd change this destiny or die
trying.Â
'Stand up!' she tried again.
Katzunami waited silently, wanting nothing more
than to lend her his strength, to comfort her, to shelter her in
the embrace of his arms. Rooted to the spot, he waited for her to
compose herself. The Gods would strike him down should he step out
of the bounds of his duties. He could offer her nothing but the
comfort of his presence.
How inadequate it made him feel, how utterly
useless.
Anger pooled low in his gut, anger at his
situation,at having to show her
this, at the very Gods themselves
for putting him in such a
position.
With effort, he curbed his thoughts and
feelings from their dangerous path.
Each day it was getting harder and harder to
stop these emotions. Resentment for his station and the Gods was
blasphemy, he knew that yet the reverence, the respect, the
unquestionable loyalty he had once felt for them had begun to wane
in the face of the atrocities mortals faced everyday while the Gods
sat by seemingly unconcerned and indifferent to their sufferings,
intervening only when they grew bored of an eternity of
inactivity.
"What…can I do?"
The whispered question snapped him back to
reality.
She sat, head bowed, on the floor. Shoulders
slumped forward, hair covering her face like a dark curtain, she
wiped uselessly at the glittering tears that refused to
cease.
"How can I stop this from happening?" she asked
hoarsely.
Cursing mentally, he willed her to stand, to
not break under the strain of this new threat. It was not like her.
It disturbed him greatly
to see her so despondent.
"I was not entrusted with that
information, if there is a way to avoid
this fate it was not made known to me,”
Anger, burning red hot ; in her veins flared, and  he welcomed this showÂ&nb sp;of emotion. Better anger tha n the overwhelming sorrow she 194; had been displaying.
Anger could be channeled, shaped into action, despair
was best suited for those who no longer wished to fight, those that
wished to roll over and die.
Shakily, she stood, tear stained face scowling,
brown eyes spitting fire.
"Then what is the point of showing me this!"
she exploded, "What point is this if you're not here to offer a
solution?!"
Striving for calm, relieved that she had not
decided to allow anguish to take control, he said
softly,
"I am but relaying a message from the Gods. I
can reveal only what I am commanded to reveal, this you know.
Nothing less, nothing more."
The reminder cooled the worst of her ire.
She was angry at the wrong
person, knowing he spoke the truth. He
was bound, his hands tied by the Gods. He could tell no more than
what they allowed him to simply because that was as far as his
knowledge extended. The mysterious deities told him precious
little.
It had always been thus in her
visions, but never
had her people been threaten in such a deadly and terrifying
way.
What game were the Gods playing?
She took a breath.
"I apologize,” she said softly,
“Please, continue."
"I don't know if these events can be avoided. I
was only told to warn you of the possible future and steer you in
the direction you must go to avoid it. You must find the sword Aman
du Rai."
Eyes widening as hope flared she asked, "Where?
Where can I find it? What purpose does it serve?"
"I regret that I must disappoint you once
more," he said gently, "but I am bound, I can tell you no more than
that. You must unlock this mystery for yourself. Fear not for the
Gods has sent help in various ways."
Wanting to know more but knowing nothing more
would be told, she fumed silently. Never had she felt such helpless
fury, it was a feeling she never wanted to experience again. But
she'd be damned if she'd let it continue indefinitely.
Come hell or high water, she would find that
sword.
"Thank you Lord Katzunami,"
He closed his eyes in relief, and slightly
inclined his head, glad to see the fire burning in her eyes. He
dispersed his energy, letting the former brightness of nothingness
to bleed back into their surroundings, finally removing the death
and destruction from their sight and hearing but certainly not from
their minds.
"All will be well. The Gods, your people,
myself included, have faith in you,"
As his body began to disappear, she felt
gravity shift. Tired, and ready for the vision to be over, Kagome
allowed herself to fall once more.
~~~~~~~~
Miroku sat waiting with General Rykotsu inside
Kagome's study.
She was to meet with the two males to go over
the state of the Northern lands as was done once every week, more
often if warranted. They were anxious to go over some very
disturbing reports coming in from all corners of the land.
The Northern lands was far from a utopia,
every place had its share of trouble,
crimes were committed daily, ranging from petty theft all the way up to
high treason, but what was unsettling about the rate of crime over
last few years was the increasing
volume of transgressions that were homicidal in
nature.
Murders in the Northern lands were not scarce,
however the number was normally very low, with the majority being
solved, the perpetrator captured and punished.
Now, the amount of unsolved murders was growing
at an alarming rate. Five years ago, they had not thought anything
of the murders, had chalked it up to changing times where people
solved their problems with violence but now, after extensive
investigation, they were beginning to worry.
The killings were becoming more gruesome, the
bodies were beginning to pile up and no one knew where to point the
finger.
Fear and panic had begun to rear its ugly head
among the people. Angry men unable to protect their families,
grieving women wanting answers, and children feared to play outside
their homes.
At their wits end, the people were becoming
more vocal, pointing fingers at neighbors and suspecting anyone
that looked `suspicious' or different.
The situation had become tense and
uncomfortable, the unrest felt even here beyond the castle
walls.
Perhaps the manner in which the bodies were
left was also a strong factor behind the intense unease. Miroku
himself had seen the bodies, and just the memory of them was enough
to make him break out in a cold sweat.
The bodies were unrecognizable, the murderer
having butchered its victims.
The killings were brutal and inhumane. Arms,
legs, even their genitals were cut from the bodies and thrown about
the room as though the killer had played around with their remains
after, or worse, during the cruel act.
What was worse was that the killer did not seem
to have a preference or discernible modus operandi.
Women, children, the elderly, humans, Youkai,
it mattered not; all were killed in some gruesome way or another.
With such a wide range of victims and locations there was no way to
narrow down suspects, no way to predict who would be next. In light
of this frightening development, a team of soldiers had been
dispatched three weeks ago to uncover any clues, or hopefully,
apprehend any suspects and bring them to the Northern castle for
questioning.
The investigating soldiers were due back any
day now.
They could only pray the reports they brought
would help pinpoint the culprit or culprits; anything to shed some
light on this dark and ominous situation.
"Have the investigating soldiers returned?"
Miroku asked.
"Nay, they have not," Rykotsu answered, "and
there doesn't seem to be any sign of them as of yet,"
Miroku sat back in his chair, placing a finger
to his chin in thought, his brow creased in
consternation.
That was definitely not normal.
Punctuality was something that was programmed
into their heads during training. Each soldier knew the importance
of being on time. Tardiness was only acceptable in three
situations.
Death, injury or capture by the
enemy.
Knowing this, the absence of the soldiers had
him worried.
Speaking of absence, Kagome was still not here;
which could only mean one thing. She was having a vision. Seeming
to have read his mind, Rykotsu volunteered before he
could.
"I'll go," Rykotsu said standing.
Miroku nodded as the male left the
room.
He had mixed emotions regarding the contents of
this recent vision. Her visions revealed something that would occur
in the future, whether it good or bad and he could only hope it
turned out to be the former rather than the latter this
time.
They couldn't take anymore bad news.
It was ironic, dreading the very thing that had
made the Northern lands so prosperous over the last decade. Just a
year ago, he had thought the visions were a godsend, a gift.
Knowing of danger ahead of time and being able to prepare for that
danger gave them a huge advantage over the other three territories.
But now, he'd come to rethink their benefit.
Having to deal with the bad of the present day
and then to have the problems of the future compounded atop that
was a heavy burden for those charged with protecting the Northern
lands.
Perhaps knowing of future danger wasn't such an
advantage when the warning didn't always come with a
solution.
He sighed, placing his head down on the
gleaming oak table.
He was getting a headache. There was just too
much going on this year; the huge spike in murders, the pressure
from the other Lords to meet the Lord of the Northern lands, the
villagers lynching each other in a desperate attempt to stop the
killer or killers.
Everything was just spinning out of
control.
Gentle hands rubbed his shoulders, followed
instantly by a tender embrace. A soft bosom pressed into his back.
Despite the trouble weighing heavily on his shoulders, Miroku took
comfort in the show of affection.
"What's wrong, Miroku?" Sango asked.
"Everything," he mumbled with a
pout.
He sat up, loathed to end the embrace but
finding comfort in gazing at her beautiful face. Never would he
tire of it. Long black hair pulled into to a high ponytail,
dazzling brown eyes, a perfect figure, tone from years of training
and fighting as a warrior, everything about her made his mouth
water.
Miroku was completely head over heels for the
woman; had been for some time.
Sango, however, was a hard woman to
crack.
Sweet words and a charming smile were not
enough to win her over. But damned if he wasn't making progress,
the hug evidence of that. She was becoming more comfortable with
him, more prone to reaching out and touching him when just six
months ago she'd have slapped his face as red as a cherry had he
even dared to touch her hand…or other things.
"It will be alright," she said softly,
"Whatever is going on, you'll find a solution. You always
do,"
Miroku scowled up at her.
"I'm not sure if I can," he negated, standing
in agitation.
He paced away, unable to stand still as he ran
a frustrated hand through his short black hair.
"There are some serious problems coming to
light, Sango. More may come once Kagome gets here and with the
state of things now, I have a feeling its going to add to this
whole mess,"
Sango sighed and took a seat on the
desk.
"Another vision," she guessed.
Miroku nodded shortly.
"Rykotsu has gone to take care of
her,"
"I hope it's not more bad news," she
said.
"Me neither," Miroku agreed, flopping back in
his chair, staring up at the ceiling, "but with the way things have
been going lately, it's hard not to assume the worse,"
Sango tugged on his small ponytail teasingly,
trying to lighten his mood.
"Whatever it is, we'll deal with. Together.
Don't worry so much, you're not alone in this,"
Seeing the sympathy shining in her lovely eyes,
Miroku pushed back his angst in pursuit of a temporary stress
reliever.
"Ahhh, the stress of it all!" Miroku exclaimed
dramatically as he moved over to Sango, his face inches from her
own.
Sango reared back in surprise.
"Won't you take away my stress, dearest Sango?"
he pleaded, grabbing her hands in his own.
Seeing the sly look in his eyes, Sango raised a
twitching brow.
"And how exactly am I supposed to do that?" she
asked, though she had a pretty good idea what he was going to say
next.
"Why by playing a simple game," he
said.
"A game?"
"Aye, games and sports are a great stress
reliever," he said with feigned seriousness, "It is called, 'Naked
Wrestl-'"
Sango brought her hand back and let it fly,
smacking Miroku right across the face. The stinging blow echoed
through the castle as Miroku fell back in his chair.
"Serves you right," she said as turned and
stomped out of the study, brow twitching, face bright
red.
Miroku closed his eyes; bring his hand up to
his stinging cheek. Touching it softly, he winced and put his hand
down. He sighed.
"It was worth the pain," he said to the empty
room, a small smile making its way to his lips.
~~~~~~~
Having searched the castle for Kagome and
coming up empty, Rykotsu walked down the stairs, heading towards
the gardens. It was noon, and some times Kagome would enjoy a quiet
moment alone in the secret rose garden she kept tucked away just
beyond the other more public gardens.
She was most likely tending to the blue rose
garden she had began to raise a month ago.
Kagome's mother use to grow blue roses before
her death and had had her own secret garden away from the general
public. Though her mother had died before teaching her the secret
to creating the blue roses, Kagome had spent the last year and a
half figuring out how to create them on her own. Last month she had
become successful in recreating her mother's famous blue
roses.
He still remembered that day.
He smiled as the memory entered his mind. It
had been very warm that particular day. He had been out training
the soldiers…..
Rykotsu pushed his sword full force,
knocking the soldier back on his butt. The soldier grunted as he
hit the ground.
"You've got to
stand your ground," Rykotsu informed the soldier.
"Yes, General,"
the male said struggling to his feet.
The rookie soldier bowed and stumbled off to
the other group of rookies standing along the wall. The Northern
Army had recruited a large number of new comers this year. Most of
them were young, inexperienced youkai and human alike, while some
of the more mature and experienced males were looking for a way to
make money.
They had all come to the right place.
Joining the Army would surely fatten a man's pockets as well as
give him privileges that normal villagers did not have, if he was
skilled and dedicated enough to survive his first year. Many didn't
make it past basic training.
"Alright, who's
next?" Rykotsu asked.
After brief hesitation, another rookie
stepped forward, sword in hand. He was a human male, of average
height and build, dark hair and eyes, and a handsomely rugged
face.
"What's your
name?"
"Shinjuki," the
man answered.
"Come," Rykotsu
invited, holding up his sword defensively.
The male charged, sword raised. Rykotsu
gripped his sword tightly as the man's sword crashed down on his
own. The sound of clashing metal filled the air.
Pushing the male back, Rykotsu swung his
sword, bringing it down hard onto Shinjuki's.
Shinjuki stumbled back a moment before
plating a foot and standing his ground. Before he could get his
wits about him, Rykotsu was on him again, hammering his sword over
and over, pushing the poor rookie backwards towards the
wall.
With one last thrust, Rykotsu disarmed the
male, pointing the tip of the blade at his jugular.
With his back against the wall and his sword
lying on the ground a few feet away, Shinjuki
surrendered.
Pulling the sword back, Rykotsu patted the
man on the shoulder.
"Good job. You
have excellent technique,"
The man bowed.
"Thank you,
General Rykotsu," he said before rejoining the
others.
"All of you need
a lot more work," Rykotsu informed him, sheathing his sword, "First
we will start on-"
"Rykotsu!" a
voice called.
Rykotsu and the rookies turned as Kagome
came running across the training grounds, her deep brown eyes alive
with excitement. Not wanting her to cause a scene, Rykotsu turned
to the rookies.
"Practice your
form, I want them perfected by the time I return," he commanded
before turning and walking away.
As he soon as he was within reach, Kagome
grabbed his hand and was off.
"Lady Kagome," he
grunted in surprise, running to keep up with her, "What is this
about?"
"You have to see
for yourself! I finally did it!" she exclaimed as she dragged him
inside and through the castle.
"Did what?" he
asked.
"You'll see!"
Kagome said as they continued to run.
Used to her eccentric behavior by now, he
followed silently. Servants dived out of the way as the two went
crashing through the halls and out the rear doors leading to the
gardens. They entered one garden, exited, and entered
another.
Finally, she stopped, pointing to a bush
near a white gazebo. Rykotsu looked at the bush. Seeing nothing he
turned back to Kagome.
"What?" he
asked.
Kagome huffed as she walked over to the bush
and pushed it open. Rykotsu followed her over and, bending down, he
peered into the hole created. Inside, a rose was beginning to
bloom, its petals a light blue.
"Blue roses," he
said softly.
Kagome smiled, nodding her head
vigorously.
He straightened, a smile on his face.
Turning to her, he ruffled her hair as he used to do when she was
young. He was as proud as any father could be with their
child.
" Well done,
Kagome," he congratulated gently.
"You think mother
would be proud?" she asked looking up at him with a smiling face,
black bangs standing on end from his ministrations.
"Aye," he said,
"Indeed she would,"
That had only been a month ago. Now, Kagome was
planting blue roses like crazy. After the death of her mother,
there had been no more blue roses. Now, news of the return of the
blue roses had spread fast, and the request were already rolling in
far and wide, along with a large number of people begging for the
blue rose breeding formula.
Kagome, however, was not willing to share her
mother's secret. Instead, she planned to grow them in abundance and
distribute them to villagers and others for a profit.
Most of her afternoons were spent tending to
the flowers.
He entered the private rose garden and sure
enough, there was Kagome. She was lying face down on the ground
next to a stone wall near one of the rose bushes.
Kneeling at her side, he gently picked her up
and turned her over.
She was unconscious, blood dripping from her
nose and mouth.
Carefully, he stood and made his way back to
the castle. Hurrying up the stairs to her bedroom, he opened the
door and slammed it closed behind him with his foot. Laying her
down on the bed he picked up her arm and felt her wrist, looking
for signs of life.
Only after finding a strong pulse did he turn
and head for her private bathing room.
Having been through this over and over he knew
she would be okay, but when she lay there, looking so pale, so
lifeless, he couldn't stop the panic that clenched his gut at
times. Checking for her pulse had been something he'd been doing
since the first time she'd seized up and fallen unconscious at his
feet and it was something he would continue to do so until the time
the visions stopped.
Inside the room, a large clawed shaped tub
gleamed.
Walking over to a low chest, he opened it up
and grabbed a bathing cloth and a small wooden bucket. He took both
items over to the tub where a pipe made of bamboo dangled over the
tube. Kneeling down by the tub he put the bucket under the pipe and
pulled the chain next to it. Steaming clear water rushed forward.
Once the bucket was full he released the chain.
Taking the water with him back into the
bedroom, he sat the bucket on a bedside table and dipped the cloth.
He rung out it out and gently wiped the blood from her nose and
mouth.
Cleaned up and resting peacefully, Kagome made
not a sound.
Gentle fingers brushed back her
hair.
His daughter was so special to him. Though not
of his blood, she was as much his daughter as any blood father and
daughter. He had been taking care of her since the murder of her
parents, and over the years, they had grown close. The daughter and
father relationship had come naturally.
Even he had not seen this coming, but now that
it had, he embraced it, welcomed it with open arms.
She was his daughter, his fiery, short
tempered, sweet-hearted daughter, and nothing and no one would ever
change that.
Standing, he left her to sleep.
She would be out for a while. A few hours to a
few days, it was hard to tell. These visions occurred randomly, and
Kagome awoke randomly.
Rykotsu returned to the study where Miroku
waited.
Looking at the silent male seated in the chair,
he immediately noticed his right cheek was swollen, a big red hand
print shining brightly on the abused cheek. He did not even have to
detect her scent to know that Sango had been here moments
earlier.
Rykotsu sat down next to the male. The two
worked in silence, reading and signing documents before Miroku
spoke.
"It was worth the pain," he said.
Rykotsu smirked.
Of course it was.
~~~~~~~~
Yuya sat eating his dinner. As usual, his
dinner was nothing special really; stale rice and bad
meat.
He sighed.
He hated eating this every single day for
breakfast, and supper, but it was the only thing the villagers
would give him to eat. It was either this or nothing.
The marked child of a condemned female believed
to be a worshiper of an enemy of the Gods, Yuya had always lived
his life this way. He rarely came out of his hut, fearing ridicule
and possible physical harm to his person, and the few times he did
the villagers treated him as though he were a diseased animal that,
at any moment, would snap and attack.
The older villagers often made up stories about
him to scare naughty children that disobeyed their parents and
elders, or stayed out past curfew. They told the children that if
they continued to be naughty, Yuya the evil spawn of the she-devil
from hell that lived in the old hut on the outskirts of town would
eat their hearts and send their soul to eternal
damnation.
Yuya thought the tales were hurtful and
ridiculous. He had no connection to hell, nor had his
mother.
True he was an atheist as had been his mother,
but that had nothing to do with worshipping the enemy of Gods. The
fears of the villagers were born of pure ignorance and fear. There
was no reasoning with the people here; they would listen to nothing
he said. They were completely convinced that he was a spawn of the
devil. Anything that went wrong in the village was his doing. If it
rained for too long, that was his doing. If there was no rain for
long periods of time, it was his doing. If there were strong winds,
that blew down hut roofs, that was his doing.
If a villager was injured, it was his doing. If
sickness overcame more than a few villagers, that was his doing as
well.
Point being, everything was his
fault.
Usually, when he was blamed for such things, he
did not really care, but now, with brutal murders occurring in the
village, he was actually starting to fear for his life. With a
murderer on the loose, and no one else to blame, the villagers were
convinced that he was the killer and for once, he was
afraid.
Since he had been blamed, things had begun to
happen to him, threats had been made. Twice this week alone, the
villagers had tried to burn down his hut while he slept. Luckily,
he'd heard the mob approaching before the fire could be set to his
hut, however, since then; things had slowly been getting out of
control.
He was afraid they were going to kill him
soon…
He jumped at the sound of banging along the
wood frame of his hut. The curtain covering the open doorway opened
and a young boy rushed inside.
"Yuya!" he exclaimed.
He recognized the boy as Michigo, probably his
only ally in the village.
Michigo was a thirteen year old boy that
brought him the stale food from the village and the only one that
seemed to have any common sense. The boy did not fear him at all.
Whenever he was able to get away without being missed, the two
would sit and talk or craft objects from clay. They both were very
creative and skillful with their hands.
They usually created animals they had seen or
even created different animals; taking parts from one animal and
combining it with another.
Their hardened works lined his
shelves.
"What is it, Michigo?" Yuya asked setting his
bowl of stale rice on the ground.
"The villagers! Their coming, you've got to get
out of here before-"
Michigo stopped as the sound of shouting and
raise voice filled their ears from outside the hut. A rock crashed
through the window, bouncing off the shelf, knocking the clay
animals from the wall, shattering them into pieces.
"Get out here murderer!" someone screamed from
outside.
"Murderer!"
"Devil worshiper!"
"You've got to get out of here!" Michigo
yelled.
Yuya wasted no time. Standing, he ducked out
the back door.
He stopped in horror.
Villagers stood before him, nooses, pitch forks
and rocks in their hands.
"Ye're gonna pay murderer!" said one of the
villagers.
Yuya ran, taking off for the cover of the
woods. The crowd ran after him, yelling and tossing rocks after
him. Yuya ran fast through the forest, barely feeling the branches
and sticks that cut and smacked at his body, nearly tripping
several times in his haste.
His heart was pounding his ears, his lungs felt
as though they were on fire, his bare feet cut up by rocks and
other sharp debris.
Suddenly he tripped, crashing and landing hard
on the forest floor. The mob was on him in seconds, punching,
kicking, spitting, hurling insults and threats. The beating seemed
to go on forever. Every kick, every punch hurt more than the
last.
Finally, when he was no longer able to move,
the crowd picked him up, carrying him over their heads.
Yuya looked up at the dark sky through swollen
eyes. Tears leaked from his puffy eyes.
He was going to die....
He knew that.
The fear he felt was all consuming.
"Leave him alone!" Michigo yelled, tears
streaming down his face.
The crowd didn't even acknowledge him.
Frustrated, he pulled on the kimono of one male, not caring as he
was dragged along the ground. The villager pushed him away
angrily.
"He is a cold blooded killer, boy! Leave well
enough alone! He's gonna pay for his crimes!" the villager
cried.
"He is not! He never hurt nobody! You have no
proof that he did!" Michigo yelled.
"I will not hear anymore from ye boy!" the man
said as he slapped the boy across the ground, "Ye have let the
devil whisper in yer ear! He has poisoned yer mind! If ye have any
sense ye will leave well enough alone and repent for ye
sins!"
That said, the male turned to rejoin the
crowd.
Yuya began to struggle, angry that the male had
taken his ignorance out on the boy. As he struggled, the crowd lost
its grip on him. The breath left his lungs as he crashed hard to
the ground.
Yuya swung blindly at the villagers as they
came down on him, once more kicking and punching, this time,
however, Yuya knocked a few villagers on their asses.
Breaking away from the crowd momentarily, he
staggered, away from the mob as fast as his battered body could
move.
He did not get very far.
A large villager tackled him to the floor and
began to pummel him with his fists. Over and over he punched his
face. Yuya could do nothing to defend himself. His hands to his
side, he took the angry male's blows. Blood filled his mouth,
leaking down his throat. Something hard and small went down his
throat with the rushing blood. In the back of his mind he realized
it was a tooth from his mouth.
Stars danced before his eyes as another
villager pulled the hefty man off of him. He felt himself being
picked up and moved once more. His mind screamed at him to move, to
fight, to flee, anything, but his body would not move, could not
move. The fear set in again, and more tears filled his
eyes.
"Nay," he whispered through swollen and
bleeding lips.
"NAY!" he screamed at the top of his lungs over
and over.
As they neared a large tree he cursed each and
every villager. Cursed them, and damned them to the lowest pits of
hell, cursed their very souls, cursed their children and their
children's children, and their children's children's
children.
He had never felt such hatred coursing through
his body in his entire life.
Not even when his mother was killed.
He felt it like a living breathing entity. He
wished he had been the killer. He wished he HAD slaughtered the
people of the village and scattered them across his
backyard.
He wanted to kill them.
He wanted to kill them all!
He wanted to see this village and everyone in
it burn to the ground for what they had done to him, for what they
had done to his mother!
The crowd sat him on his feet. He struggled
wildly as they tied his hands behind his back. They held him still
as they tied his hands tightly with a rope. The rope chafed,
digging into his skin, bruising his wrists. He watched as they tied
another rope to a large oak tree, this one with a noose knotted at
its base.
A large wooden box was set beneath it. The
crowd roughly pushed him over to the tree. He struggled as they
pushed the noose over his neck, tightening it.
He spat blood and saliva into their
faces.
A final act of hatred on his part.
The hefty male from before reared back and
smashed a large meaty fist into his face, momentarily stunning him.
As he stood dazed, they hefted his feet up onto the wooden
box.
As his mind cleared, he tried to fight
again.
It was no use.
This was it for him.
The hefty man kicked the box from beneath his
feet.
Michigo wailed while the crowd cheered as the
noose pulled on Yuya's neck and a loud crack echoed through the
land, the hanging male's body convulsing.
Crimson eyes watched from the bushes, white
teeth bared in a savage grin.
~~~~~~~~~~~
This is the rewritten version of the first
chapter. I will slowly but surely be rewriting many of the
chapters. Tell me what you think of this version!
That said, I hope you all enjoy the
story!
Laters!
~Sessakag