• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Elfen Lied short pieces, Rated T

Gojirob

Rear Admiral
Rear Admiral
Author's note : These two pieces dovetail into and complement each other, though either can be read separately. They occur at roughly the same time, after the series climax of Elfen Lied but before the grand finale. As such, they contain spoilers for the series' ending.



Kouta's Birthday Gift

By Rob Morris

----------------------------------------------

It had been two months since a single gunshot had saved the world, and ended a great and tragic love affair. It had been one month since the hero who fired that gun out of equal measures of love, mercy and clan vengeance had returned from the hospital. On the news, this young man and the young women who lived with him saw horrible reports of powerful young girls tearing whole armies to shreds using nothing but their minds. The people living at the Kaede Inn knew of these girls. One still lived with them. The other was dead. She had been the ultimate threat to the existence of Humans, and she had been the means by which that threat was ended. The girls in the news were leaderless and undriven without her, but they were still exceedingly dangerous.

The fate of Humans was still up in the air, and would be for some time. Those living at the Kaede Inn had done their part, and in fact had no desire to see another such girl ever again, including and perhaps especially the one who was like them. For the one who was dead had literally cut her to pieces, and another had tried to kill the only father she had ever known.

"Nana-what are you doing out here?"

None of these other girls had come anywhere near the Kaede Inn or the towns surrounding it. Scientists who knew of who the dead young girl had speculated that the death of their ‘queen' actually drove these powerful girls away from where it happened, out of some sort of racial fear that, whatever could take her down could easily do the same to them. The surviving horned girl at the Inn---who would one day be the only such survivor anywhere---had to keep out of sight. Only the Inn's true owner, outside of those who lived there, knew who and what she was. In the current climate and the climate that would likely persist all through their lives, the girl legally called Nanette Kurama was best off staying inside the walls of the Inn's compound, and always having a small wool cap at the ready, along with an explanation of a car accident she was in when very young.

"I'm sorry, Yuka. I was just looking for something."

There were no people about on this early Sunday afternoon. Families were together, now more than ever. But talk had come about of locals having relatives stay with them during the crisis, in this area that seemed unaffected. In an event, Yuka like the others feared seeing their young friend outside of their direct protection. A mob could form so easily, and would likely be unmoved by the hardships of Nana's life. Despite her many sins, they had not wished to lose Nyu. They would not lose Nana as well.

"Well, hurry up and get finished. Mayu needs someone to play with Wanta while she's making supper. Kouta and I have to study for classes."

It was really an excuse to get her back inside. Nana's hair had grown in enough to hide her horns, and the wool cap wasn't questioned in an era when ‘young people' had such odd clothing habits anyway. Her control over her limbs was increasing, to the point where her comical drop-offs were becoming rarer and rarer. In any event, these did not mark off a person as a Diclonius. But the fewer people who knew of Nana's existence in any way shape or form, the better these tricks and explanations and even lies (‘Nanette' had a French mother) worked to keep her out of scrutiny's way. Though as Kouta had pointed out to Yuka while in the hospital, the same people, presumably the government, who had put him in the hospital and wrecked their home, still knew where they were and who Nana was.

"Darn! I found it, but it's up in the tree branch."

She was not at all a bitter girl, despite the savagery Nyu (according to Mayu, after they put up a marker for Nyu's passing) had unleashed upon her when she took her original arms and legs. Yuka almost felt that the theorized mob would, given two minutes, love Nana as much as they all did. But them giving her that two minutes was unlikely, so Yuka was still just as anxious to get her inside.

"Is it that important?"

"Yup! And I know how to get it, too. Nyu actually suggested it. Is it weird that I almost miss her?"

"She did live with us. That creates a bond, no matter what else happens."

"Rocket away!"

Deliberately doing what she often did by accident, Nana fired one of her arms and knocked the object loose. Yuka reflected on losing Nyu. She had been a rival for Kouta, no doubt, and possibly quite dangerous. While ascending the stairs to the tower that was Nyu's last stand, Yuka swore she heard Kouta say he would never forgive the death of his family. Given Nyu's powers, and having glimpsed the horrific details of Uncle and Kanae's murders (as a teen, her best friend's father had been a police detective), it seemed possible that it all connected back again, even a decade ago. Of course, she had never had the nerve to ask Kouta about all this. She wondered if she could ever bring herself to. Yet he let her live with them, and rivalry aside, Yuka found that the place a little emptier without her around.

"Got it---now I just have to get my arm back."

Yuka's mother had agreed to keep silent about Nana after helping around the house when repairs were underway. After seeing the poor thing struggle with her own limbs repeatedly, she proclaimed her a danger to nothing but the Inn's budget for bandages and peroxide.

"Okay, Yuka-we can go back now."

"Hmm? What was so important, anyway?"

"Well, yesterday Mayu and I were walking Wanta when this woman came by. She looked mean, and Mayu said that same woman had once tried to steal Wanta from her, so we hid. Mayu had been writing in her journal, and it got blown away by a gust of wind when we stopped hiding. I'm glad I found it. She'll be really happy-except for the moisture from the tree-I guess it's morning dew."

Yuka took the journal, and shook it out.

"No problem. If we put it in front of a fan on low speed, it'll dry out in no time, probably with only a few stains. You're a good friend, to go out and find it for her like this, but don't worry us like that, okay?"

"We're more than friends-she's like my onee-chan-but she asked me not to call her that."

"She did?"

"She said it's enough to just be the best of friends."

Breathing a sigh of relief when they were back inside the Inn's compound, Yuka went in her room and set the fan on the journal while she studied. Mayu had gone grocery shopping, and always insisted on an escort-Kouta in this case--saying that her long-absent mother might, if encountered, wish to ‘scold' her for something she didn't do.

In fact, a lot of Mayu's explanations and assertions seemed evasive, now that Yuka had a chance to think about it. On the other hand, Mayu's mother had seemed as distant and detached a figure as any of them had ever met, signing away effective custody of the girl almost without pausing some months back. A man had entered that cold home as they left, and the leer he had given Yuka left her shaken, very nearly putting Kouta into a fighting rage. This they had never mentioned, especially in light of Mayu's delight in being able to stay at the Inn. So any and all questions had been put well aside, seemingly a pattern in their lives.

*But there's a way to answer all that right in front of me, isn't there?*

She stopped herself immediately. It was a hateful thing to even contemplate. In fact, the light moisture the journal had picked up was surely done with by now, she reasoned, and sought to quickly remove the instance of temptation. Only the inside front cover had any moisture left at all, so Yuka set it to receive some last bit of air. To be fair to her, had a certain set of words not been very visible on another blown page, she would have been content to do the right thing. But those words were like a klaxon alarm right next to her ear.

**I Hope That I'm Not Pregnant**

Questions began to race through Yuka's mind. Had a boy at school seduced her? Had there been one of those wild kids' parties you were always hearing about, and had Mayu done something reckless? Out of care, as much as curiosity, Yuka broke a confidence she had never meant to undertake.

**I Hope That I'm Not Pregnant. The injustice of stepfather's depredations would be complete, then. How could I ask Kouta and Yuka to pay for-for an abortion, on top of everything else my presence here must cost them? They are too kind to throw me out for this, but what would they think? I know my Sex-Ed class says that over a month since he last hurt me was too long to worry, and that his preferred way of hurting me can't really cause pregnancy-but he was such a monster. What if his---stuff---is also different from other people's, along with his absent morals and decency? I think that if Mother found out, she would even attack me, once again absurdly jealous for attention I never wanted, and that I hope she is getting in full force now---no. I can't wish that, even on her. Even on someone like her. Someone who feigned a connection to her only child, when that child obviously meant nothing to her. Then came the day her bar-fly prize came down the aisle with her, his eyes on fresher, unpicked fruit all along. The pretense ended then. The best prayer I can muster for her is that she is now let alone by him. Because if he is still with her, he may still be using her house to stalk more young girls. While she may not care, that could mean prison time for aiding him in his sickness.**

Having crossed the line, Yuka read further entries that showed how Mayu's worries never even remotely panned out. But Yuka' s had only begun.

*Oh, Mayu-Chan-you poor thing. No wonder that woman seemed so very cold. To be jealous of a child who had been abused so? She makes my worst tantrums at poor Kouta seem stable and sane. I should stop-I should never have started. But this explains so much...*

A young woman who was rightfully sick of mysteries in her young life checked her bedroom door and kept on doing something she knew to be wrong.

**Nana amazes me. Her arms and legs taken by some accident, and she somehow manages to remain cheery and manipulate her artificial limbs with that weird talent of hers. Kouta and Yuka are just funny to watch---I wish she wouldn't hit him-I mean, she's just as perverted as him, if not more so. Even Nyu is a joy to deal with. I can talk to her about anything-because she can't really understand, can she? I love this place, and these people. I am safe, I am warm, and I am at peace.**

Even if she had stopped then and there, Yuka felt she still would have had to read that far, simply to see that things got better for Mayu. Just as her feelings for Kouta often made her act in a way she would regret, her concern for Mayu joined with forbidden curiosity to make her read just a bit further.

**When those horrible people came, it all fell apart. Bandou-San is dead, and so is that maniac who meant to molest me again. Nyu is not the person we all thought she was. When I remembered what she had done to Nana's arms and legs, she was going to kill me like I was nothing at all. Kouta has been shot, Nozomi has perhaps had her golden voice taken from her. That one woman---the one who held Nana up like a suit of clothes on a hanger-I hope she dies.**

Since none of those people had returned, it was safe to assume they were all dead-Yuka hoped, and hoped again that Kouta was wrong. At least Nozomi had fully recovered her voice.

*Mayu, forgive me. But I am horrible, and at the same time, you've been through so much that I must be sure you have no plans to harm yourself.*

Mayu indeed had plans listed, but while they were not set to cause harm to herself, they would disturb Yuka nonetheless.

**I still can't believe he did it. I mean, she was a threat, and she was in hideous pain, yet he loved her, right? Everyone knew it. I always felt like something both beautiful and horrible had passed between them and were fighting it out to win. I guess the horrible was too horrible, because it won. We all miss her, I think. Kouta killed Nyu, and this is how Nyu wanted to die. But Kouta is still alive, and he is to come home soon. We joke about his efforts to be our hero, and we chuckle when we call him our prince, but he really is that precious to us. His birthday is coming up, and I have nothing to give him-except one thing, and after my stepfather's betrayals, I don't know that I can ever yield that up. The pain of even trying to think about it can have me bursting into tears. But does he deserve any less?**

Yuka had one answer. Nowhere in the text did Mayu plan to end her life or otherwise do herself injury. But did Mayu have other plans?

**My will is firm, now. This man is nothing like my stepfather. When his hand came upon my shoulder while in the kitchen, I asked him to not do that again, and he never did. When his knock on the door to the baths was met by me saying I was in there, I found him when I emerged well away from the door. He saw that I was skittish when he sat too near, so he gave me space. Add all that in to room, board and upbringing, and I would be a horrible person not to give him this gift. The night before his birthday, I will give him the only thing of any worth I have. I hope I don't shock or offend. It is blatantly intimate, but I think he will like it.**

Yuka saw another partial entry, and realized it had been cut off when Mayu had lost the journal.

"His birthday is tomorrow."

*Mayu, you can't! He's so perverted and confused-and I haven't made it any easier for him. A girl like you making such an offer can only go badly.*

Intent on averting a household apocalypse, Yuka forced herself not to run to Kouta's room. The door was open, and Mayu stood in the doorway.

"Kouta-San-I wanted to give you your birthday gift tonight."

"Mayu, you didn't have to---"

"No, I do! You deserve nothing less. But give me a second to get ready."

Yuka panicked as she saw Mayu's hand seemingly reach for her blouse buttons, but this was only to tap at her heart.

"I have no money, so all I have to give you is my respect, spelled out in the ultimate way, given your position."

The girl smiled.

"I'm not good around guys. I don't think I ever will be. But I can't let that interfere with my respect and affection for one who has given me a home, and a place of safety. So now-"

"Mayu?"

Mayu did not seem upset to see Yuka. She saw what she was carrying.

"Oh, you found my journal?"

"Nana found it. I just used my fan to blow off some moisture. It's dry now. Here."

Yuka wondered. Could Mayu be so brazen as to still make her offer with Yuka right there in the room with them?

"I'm glad Yuka is here. It makes this easier---"

Yuka's efforts at calm were not helped by Mayu dropping to her knees.

"Happy Birthday, Kouta-San----"

Yuka prepared to either faint dead away or stop a blatant seduction.

"Happy Birthday----Kouta Oto-San. Happy Birthday, Father. Your kindness has begun to cleanse that title in my mind. I cannot bring myself to call you that very often, but your birthday from now on will always be one of those days."

A thud was heard, and the light smile between the girl and the young man broke off in concern for the fainted Yuka. For the record, upon awakening, Yuka found that she had never been so very happy to be so very wrong, and asked for a similar present from Mayu when her own birthday came. She also learned anew-always let sleeping journals lie.
 
Horns

By Rob Morris

1992, Kanagawa Prefecture

----------------------

Emiko recalled thinking that her sister was marrying a very striking man. Some years later, she recalled thinking how sturdy he looked as her sister, never the world's healthiest creature, died not long after giving birth to their second child. Just this past summer she recalled feeling his lips pressed against hers. All the children were at a neighbor's, and the forbidden thoughts of two widowed people were given free rein.

"Yes, that's him."

The attendant placed the severed head back into cold storage.

"Ma'am, this next one is even worse. I would prefer not to raise the sheet entirely."

*Will she ever shut up?* is the thought Emiko had when first meeting her niece. *Sister, you couldn't have taken this one with you?* was a later thought. She felt bad about thinking that even as she did. Now, she only felt numb.

"She deserves to be seen off as she is."

The officials who had informed her of the murders emphatically warned her to not eat or drink anything if possible before coming. She was glad for this. The girl had not yet been undressed, nor had her eyes been closed. Those eyes held-and likely always would hold-a look of stunned terror, a look of something awful happening, something awful and unbelievable. That thing, whatever it had been, had split her cleanly in two and exposed her spinal cord in two spots.

"Where's the boy's body?"

The attendant gladly covered the remains and shook his head.

"They didn't tell you?"

---------------------------------------------

She found herself forced to leave the room. Her nephew was physically intact, but would require massive psychiatric care for some time. He had been found tenderly cradling his little sister's upper torso when authorities arrived. He did not recognize his Aunt, though the name of her daughter had bled out, along with other names including his sister's, in-between recitations of a mantra.

*You Have To Stop.*

Police reached the conclusion that this was the boy's plea to his family's killer, a regional spree killer they had come to call Kaze Kaede, for the wind that rustled through the maple trees before evidence of the killer's works were found. Also, the killer left no fingerprints, nor evidence of how they could do things like decapitate a grown man, split a little girl in two, or tear a hole in the roof of a train car. Families had been found torn to pieces all over Kanagawa Prefecture, to say nothing of the fair that this boy and her own daughter had attended. The sadistic monster had apparently begun its spree by killing five innocent little orphans.

"Which is why we're talking to you, ma'am. The boy's survival makes us wonder."

"Why? A small miracle among several tragedies? Why should that make you wonder?"

The police detective shook his head.

"Kaze Kaede does not leave survivors-ever. Well, no survivors that walk on two legs. Your nephew is the first case in which our unknown maniac relented. We even thought he might be our killer, but the ESPer tests were negative."

"How idiotic of you, to suspect a little boy. And what are ESPer tests?"

"We narrow our list of suspects by first suspecting everybody. As for the ESPer tests? They are now standard for determining if a suspect possesses powers and abilities above and beyond the Human norm. Should we ever be lucky enough to take Kaze Kaede in alive, we suspect his high ESPer rating could be the reason he is able to kill so cleanly---pardon my use of the term."

"That's tabloid nonsense."

"Ma'am, we have a pickpocket who, if able to concentrate, can pull what some would call ‘the old Jedi Mind Trick' in order to get released. We have one woman banned from casinos for a minor talent to mentally flip items as small as a coin-or a pair of dice. Yet these folks are like monitor lizards compared to the veritable Gojira that Kaze Kaede must be, if our theory is correct."

Annoyed that they would even allow such inanity to enter the discussion of her family's murder, Emiko offered no more help and was soon dismissed. She peeked in on her nephew, who had finally been sedated. A voice came from behind her.

"Is he all right?"

Emiko turned and saw a girl nearly her daughter's age, but with the oddest shade of hair, the top of it covered by a wool cap. Why would her mother let her bleach it like that? A disgrace.

"No. He's badly traumatized by what he saw. Do you know my nephew?"

"He is my very dear friend. I would be sad if he ever came to harm."

Something in Emiko she could not define almost screamed at her to not challenge this child in any way, shape, or form, nor to say anything that could remotely be perceived as a challenge. Looking back on that night ten years later, Emiko stopped dismissing the psychic realm as the stuff of tabloids.

"Please forgive my asking you questions. I'm just concerned for my nephew."

Emiko noted that the backing away on her part seemed to calm the girl considerably.

"Of course you are. He's of your kind---I mean your family."

Emiko raced through her options, and found one that helped her to get away from this very creepy child.

"Uhhh-the police are asking questions about what happened. But the questions they're asking are foolish. Psychic powers, and all that? They suspect everyone, they say. They even suspected him, for a time."

"But he didn't do it!"

"Of course he didn't. But maybe since they're being so foolish, you should leave before they bother you too."

"Thank You. The police don't scare me, but I do want to be away from here. So long as he is alive, there is hope, isn't there?"

"Yes, of course. I hope my daughter sees it that way. Not seeing him for a long while may be more than she can bear."

"Your daughter yells at him, and clings onto him like an octopus."

Emiko actually laughed lightly.

"That's her. Say, do you live around---"

The child was gone, and Emiko was never happier to see such a thing. Other tasks awaited her on this very long day.

"But he'll be coming back next summer. He promised!"

"No, honey. He won't. When I saw him, he didn't even recognize me."

Certain concepts were beyond a child.

"So only Uncle and Kanae will come to visit? Oh, she's so hateful!"

"Darling---"

"Well, she is! I wish someone would tie her to a railroad track, just like in those old cartoons!"

Emiko grabbed her wrist. Her daughter did not deserve to be struck.

"Yuka, you may one day see Kouta again. But Uncle and Kanae are never coming back. We must call for the family members, and prepare for their funerals. They were killed aboard the train that was supposed to take them home, and Kouta saw this happen. That's why he's in such bad shape."

"Was there an accident? Did the train crash?"

"I-I cannot tell you what happened. You would get nightmares from it. But there was no accident. Someone came aboard the train and did this to them."

"Why? Mother, why would they do such a thing?"

Emiko held her little girl, who sometimes shook with fury.

"He'll remember me! He has to remember me-He better remember me. You'll see-he'll come back and then he'll make me his wife."

A martial arts regimen over the following months seemed to direct Yuka's physical energy, even if her near-obsession with her crush seemed never to diminish. Emiko for her part had nightmares of kissing her brother-in-law, only to find he was nothing but a cold head. The relatives and neighbors clucked as they always would, and oddly enough, the Kaze Kaede killings stopped entirely. Emiko moved her daughter away in any event, pain of memory combining with the strain of running an Inn to make her want a fresh start.

On one positive note, the murders at the orphanage brought about the replacement of the staff personnel, who were cited for allowing the children to act without restraint or guidance, falling into gang-like behavior or even behavior reminiscent of wolf-packs. Emiko kept this and other articles related to Kaze Kaede in a scrap-book she gave to Yuka before she left for college. Glimpsing it during a clean-up, a young woman who had once been a creepy child still hoped that the kids in the orphanage did better after this, even if they weren't really ‘people'.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2006, near the Kaede House

The agent placed the small, pearl-handled revolver in Emiko's purse.

"If you make the determination, place it right against her right horn and fire down. You'll only get one chance."

"A bit low-caliber, isn't it?"

"It'll do, if you can get that close. Believe me, caliber does not matter at all when it comes to these situations. If anyone should ask, you were given it for protection by a visiting friend from the US."

"Maybe I should just do it, first chance."

She shook her head.

"Lady, I'm a professional killer, and I can tell you-there's been enough killing. Number Seven is best left alive as a reference for information about her kind. Your little inn is the best control we could hope for---in theory. Pepper her with annoying questions. Push her. Psych profiles show that only your nephew would act in time to stop the execution, and with him still laid up, that's not a problem."

"The...execution."

"That is what it is...if it comes to that."

"And you trust me to make that vital determination?"

"Trust is the wrong word. Your own profile indicates that you are neither a pie in the sky dreamer nor an easy member of a witch-hunting mob. See, because of the former head of the project here in Japan, we've passed the point of no return with these girls. Once upon a time, we could have figured out something short of genocide. Maybe kept the kids from lashing out when their powers emerged at the same age most kids know two words-‘No' and ‘Mine'. But because Kakuzawa wanted Lucy out and about, the attacks moved from whispers to urban legends and finally, cable news. A horned girl could be the nicest thing you ever met, but now she will be greeted by people with weapons. When the all-out war comes, watch out for flying glass, not to mention limbs."

Emiko felt more than a little ill, but Yuka and Kouta's blind naiveté had them dwelling happily with their family's murderer. If this other one, this Nana, was the same, she needed to be dispatched before more missiles were launched.

"You have a cover story?"

"I own the place."

"True. But your questions and demeanor may raise some red flags. There should be an entirely separate reason for you to be there. Something you would never have to explain, even to an American child-my niece is one big bundle of ‘why?'."

Emiko thought it over. There was something completely apart from Nana that had crossed her mind.

"I'll start by visiting my nephew in the hospital."

"You're learning."

"There is no other way to get to her?"

"Not unless the kill-order is definite. Most of their neighbors don't even know Number Seven exists-period. You'll have the means to analyze her, and then take her out if needed."

Emiko got up to leave.

"What do I owe you for this?"

The agent smiled.

"That's to be determined. But I have something in mind. A souvenir from an island excursion."

Leaving her, and somewhat glad to do so, Emiko made her way to the hospital, where the nephew who almost had the face of her one-time (yet very passionate) lover lay watching TV.

"Auntie!"

She was delighted to see him alive. He was kin, and likely to be that once again, if Yuka got her way. But Emiko forced herself to temper this joy with her upset at what recent events had uncovered.
 
"Kouta, I have to ask you a few questions about this Nyu."

Kouta gained a pained look at just the mention of her name.

"Nyu is dead. I killed her."

She almost wished that his tone had been defiant. That she could have reprimanded him for. But it was merely resigned, and very matter of fact.

"Why did you take her in, after what she had done to our family?"

He didn't even ask how she knew this.

"When Yuka and I found her, I had almost no memories of my childhood. Kanae and my father had died in accidents-that's what I told myself. She was helpless then, literally like a baby. Yuka moved in to keep me from having to bathe and change her."

Emiko pressed a bit.

"But you knew her from when you were a boy, right?"

He nodded. It became apparent that the recovery of those old memories had not been an easy one, and nor was it complete.

"She was so lonely, Auntie. She had no friends. She had no one at all. I was nice to her-I even gave her this wool cap to hide her horns. We spent a few days-or was it a few weeks together? Anyway, I told her I was taking my cousin to the fair-and that was the last I saw of her before the train home."

He closed his eyes.

"Sometimes, what she did plays in slow motion in my mind. Other times, it moves like sand kicked up by a storm. A psychiatrist asked me if I blamed myself for knowing her. I don't. I blame her for being so consumed by hatred and jealousy, and I blame whoever twisted her into being that way. My only regret is harsh words I spoke to Kanae."

Emiko struck a balance.

"You were a little boy, making friends with a girl. You couldn't have known how she really was. As a young man, you no longer remembered her, and maybe having her around even made it harder to recall. Kouta, I do have trouble with knowing that our family's murderer slept soundly in my house."

He was tearing up, the drugs making it harder to keep control.

"I loved her. I wanted us to live together. I even offered to let her stay after I remembered, provided she never killed again. I knew she could never keep to such a condition. But I had to try. I had to..."

The painkillers took full effect, and soon Kouta was out again. Emiko kissed her sister's baby on the forehead.

"Your mother was the same way. Stray birds, dogs, cats-always trying to save them."

Blaming Kouta had never been on her mind. But she now had what she wanted. Nyu had been incredibly dangerous without at all seeming it. This Nana could easily be the same. She made for her family's Inn.

-----------------------

Yuka seemed to have taken her mother's last visit to heart. Not only was much of the damage done by the sudden attack on the Inn repaired, but some longer-term fixes also seemed to be underway. The puppy Wanta seemed happy to see Emiko, though its owner was another story.

"Emiko-Dono. Yuka-San didn't tell us to expect you."

Mayu was rare for a child her age, in that she seemed perfectly grateful for every last thing she had, even down to her clothes. When asked by Emiko to account for such a young girl staying in the same house as a young man, Yuka revealed that Mayu had once been homeless, and that her mother, when found, seemed almost disinterested in doing anything except signing over her custody to Yuka and Kouta. In private, Kouta told his aunt of his darker grimmer suspicions regarding Mayu's past treatment, saying that he had read of Mayu's stepfather's arrest for assault on another young girl.

"Mayu-Chan! You hardly need to stiffen up so, just because I'm here."

The girl's lovely smile began to emerge, followed by Emiko patting her on the head, which seemed to bring out a blush.

*It's like the poor thing doesn't trust happiness.*

"Mayu-Chan? Can I talk to you about Nyu and Nana?"

Mayu frowned.

"I don't like to talk about Nyu."

"Because you miss her?"

Mayu shook her head.

"Because she could be a very bad person. She hurt Nana, and she was going to kill me if I told."

Emiko kept silent as Mayu continued.

"When I met Nana, she and Nyu were fighting. Nyu is the one who took away Nana's real arms and legs. I-didn't want to remember seeing this, so I ran off. Just after the Inn was attacked by those horrible people, I was with Nyu on the beach. She-she attacked my friend, Bando-San. He wasn't always nice, but he could be. She also killed a very, very bad man. Seeing this, I recalled what happened to Nana. Bando-San stopped her from killing me for this-but she killed him instead. I'm sorry for Kouta-San, but Nyu could even be evil."

"Mayu-Chan? Can Nana be evil?"

The girl looked horrified, and then almost angry.

"NO! I mean-I don't mean to raise my voice to you, Emiko-Dono, but no-she could never be evil. Nana only even gets upset if people attack people she loves. I don't think she even hated Nyu."


While she felt it was idealized by the sisterly affection the two girls doubtless felt for one another, Emiko chose not to dispute Mayu's account and moved on to her daughter.

Yuka seemed just as thrown off by the question.

"Mother, I told you she is nothing like Nyu-or like Nyu could be."

"Yuka-I have something to say you may not like to hear. But it is Nyu's fault that you and Kouta were separated for so long. She was jealous of your relationship with Kouta, and murdered your uncle and Kanae out of that same jealousy."

Kouta, grieving and drugged, had not questioned his aunt's knowledge of this. Yuka took note of it almost instantly.

"Mother, how do you know that?"

Emiko thought quickly.

"The night it all happened, I spoke to the police, who indicated that the killer had psychic abilities. Also, outside Kouta's hospital room, I saw the girl you later called Nyu, wearing a wool cap he gave her to hide her horns. There's no mistaking that hair. She even described you perfectly."

Yuka looked down.

"Did she kill all those people at the fair, too?"

"Honey, there may be no way to accurately count how many people she killed. The orphanage she apparently came from was a cesspool, even by the standards of such places. It bred utter indifference to life. She may be the only one with horns, but she was not the only killer to emerge from that place."

Yuka's face had an odd look Emiko actually had never seen before.

"I miss her. I know she wanted the same thing I did, and that she had a monster inside her, and now I know that she caused the worst thing that ever happened to our family. But Mother? I would swear on Father and Uncle's graves that she wanted to be different. I don't think she ever knew genuine love before she came here. But if she knew Kouta back then, then maybe she knew love even then. I was so jealous and clingy-I was almost as bad as Kanae. But I wish we all could have met before whatever event placed so much hate in her soul. In another life-we could have been like sisters."

"She was a monster, Yuka."

"No, Mother. She could turn into a monster. And even in that, Nana is nothing like her."

"I have to see that for myself, baby. I can't allow you, Kouta and Mayu-Chan to be in danger because you want these poor girls to be something they're not. Now, where is she?"

As Emiko left, she received something of a shock. She was the owner, but she was not the Mother figure of Kaede House.

"Mother, if you decide against her, what then? Where will she go? Even with her disability, she could be dangerous if cornered-or she could just be raw meat to a predator."

Emiko now found herself in the presence of another very creepy child-her own. The ferocity with which Yuka had always clung to Kouta's memory had always been a bit off-putting, even given the tendency of young girls to do just that. But now Emiko was forced to use a tactic that at least removed her from the target sights of the young Nyu.

"Well-I can't tell you any of that if you won't let me talk to her, silly!"

Yuka smiled, her defenses for now disarmed. But if Emi was forced to end Nana's threat, what then? Would she sacrifice her daughter's love to protect her life? That one was a no-brainer, but in this case the no-brainer involved open-heart self-surgery.

"Emiko-Dono-do you like how we've fixed the place up, for when Kouta comes back? Nana helped too-ummm-after I learned to keep my arms from falling off the roof. Nana learned that she doesn't need her legs up there, so it made it easier to concentrate on just my arms."

She looked so incredibly sweet, and Emiko had to concede, she set off none of the alarm bells Nyu had, all those years ago. Yet hadn't Nyu managed to slip past all their radars, amnesia aside? She recalled what the agent said. Push the girl with questions. That would tell the tale. She started with what she thought would be the most obvious button.

"Your arms and legs make it hard to get around, don't they, Nana? You must hate Nyu for making you like that."

Nana seemed taken aback, but not angered, by the question.

"Nana doesn't hate Nyu anymore, because Nyu is dead. Kouta killed her, to end her pain. Nyu-who Nana also called Lucy, though she hated that name, was always in so much pain. That's why she gave so much pain to others. Before she died, when those people attacked, Nyu asked Nana to protect everyone here, because now she cared about them. Nana is glad that Nyu is dead, but not for Nana---for Nyu. She loved Kouta so much, but Kouta couldn't forgive for his Papa and his little sister. Nana heard them talking about this inside my head. It was weird. My Papa says it was some kind of sympathetic reaction-but Nana's not sure what that means."

Emiko fought back a sigh. Two of the people most directly and personally wronged by Nyu somehow refused to simply hate her.

"Nana, what about the other horned girls in the news? Are they like Nyu was?"

"Nana can almost feel these girls-but it's like they're already dead and don't know it. None of them have Papas. I feel sorry for them, too, but I hope none of them come to live here. They might hurt someone Nana loves, and besides, the place is getting a little crowded."

Emi this time fought back a chuckle.

"Kouta probably would invite them in. Nana, I heard that he scolded you for attacking Nyu when you first came here. Did you hate him for that?"

"Kouta? No! I thought he was mean, but he didn't remember what Nyu was like then, and he just thought I was being mean. Plus, I mistook Nyu for Lucy."

"Nana, Nyu was Lucy."

Nana scrunched her mouth a bit.

"Later on they were the same, but she was still more Nyu then, too. I figured out that she was trying so hard to be Nyu, it crowded Lucy out a lot. Nyu tried hard not to be Lucy. Sometimes, she tried so hard, all our boobies and Kouta's thing were all sore from her jumping on them and squeezing them. Sometimes, she was so Nyu, I kinda wished Lucy would come back a little. Nana knew that was stupid, but oooh---that wild smile right before she jumped on you! Nana dealt with the pain from her arms and legs, but Nyu-grabs made her crazy. One time, she made Yuka so crazy, she went into Kouta's room and closed the door. They argued, but it was all grunts and groans---"

Her daughter's sex or pre-sex life she did not want to know about, so Emi cut her off.

"Nana----suppose for some reason you couldn't stay here?"

Slowly, the eyes of the young girl turned and looked at her with a frightening intensity.

"Did Nana do something wrong again? Nana is very sorry, Emiko-Dono. She will never do it again---but what was it I did?"

Emi had expected to fight off a rising tide of anger. She found herself ill-prepared for this.

"I-just meant if we had to do more renovations, or if Yuka and Kouta needed alone time when finals come. Would you mind if you had to stay with me for a while?"

"NANA WOULD LOVE THAT!!!!"

The girl was bear-hugging her, artificial arms or no, and crying tears of joy.

"Nana thought Emi-Dono didn't like her!"

"Oh, Baka-how could anyone not like you?"

If the girl was a manipulator, Emi reasoned, then she was way out of her league to discern.

"Ohhh-will Mayu stay with you, too? And we have to ask Nana's Papa if it's all right."

Around ten years from that point, Emi would wait in the company of two delighted young women, waiting for Kouta to emerge from a birthing area. Holding the newborn Nyuu while her onee-chans cooed and aww-ed, Emi would realize finally she had held a grandchild before then.

"Of course she can, and of course we will. From now on, Nana is my special friend."


After several intense good-byes, Emi drove back to meet her contact.

"Did this gun even have anything in it?"

The agent smiled.

"This was mainly a test for you. We had to be sure your doubts about Number Seven wouldn't cause you to leak news of her existence. Now, instead, you are one of her control mechanisms. Like I said, we'd already decided her life is crucial to ending this war."

"So---I was being assessed as the threat to her?"

"More or less. We had some incentives ready if you didn't change your mind. Your disappearance would have been harder to explain than some. The gun did have a dandy recording device. So give your nephew a break. The compassion he showed as a child may have been one of the pillars that saved the world from this outbreak."

Emi nodded.

"And your price?"

"We-will be in touch."


TWO MONTHS LATER

Kouta was surprised, but bowed figuratively and literally to his Aunt.

"If Oba-San wishes us to take in another tenant, we will. Yuka?"

"This is your property, Mother. But our budget is tight as it stands."

Emi hated doing this, but at least the new resident was not at all hateful. Indeed, like Mayu, she seemed grateful for what she had.

"A stipend has been sent our way which will take care of many budget concerns, Yuka-including my mortgages. Kids, I have to be honest. This girl was sent by one of the people who wrecked the place. She needs a place to stay, and its best that she is as out of sight as Nana. It's a devil's deal, but they already know where you live, and have agreed to leave us all be in perpetuity if we do this."

Kouta seemed resigned to it in an instant.

"I had wondered when they would make themselves known again. I suppose they can do whatever they want, so this is not so bad. Auntie, was this person a woman who you might mistake for a man?"

"Yes, Kouta-you know her?"

"Yes-she shot me."

Yuka again surprised her mother by turning not to her, but to Kouta.

"How can we accept someone who could be a spy?"

"Yuka, your mother has this right, in any event. Plus, these people have equipment we can't dream of. They don't need a spy. The relief Auntie gets from her home loans and other debts will enable her to aid us, should things get too tight. I did not mean to presume, Auntie, but our budget really is that tight, even with both of us having jobs."

Emiko hugged and held her nephew a moment before releasing him.

"You combine the best traits of both your parents. You know-you two were almost kissing stepsiblings as well. Kouta's father and I had started to talk those matters over."

While the pair stood stunned, Emi continued.

"You will not mention to your neighbors how your utility bills have been taken care of. That should help stretch the food budget. Now, will you meet her?"

Kouta nodded, and Yuka assembled the other girls. Nozomi she would quietly inform next time she came over. Emi brought in the young woman, who bowed and was bowed to.

"This is Anna. Like Kouta, she also lost her family to someone like Nyu could become, and has some trouble remembering as a result. She's also a whiz at math."

The girl blushed a little.

"I'm not as good at it as I used to be. I will try my best to be a positive part of this household, and obey the rules that Kouta-San and Yuka-San direct me to."

The younger girls greeted their new housemate.

"Hi, Anna! I'm Mayu-I sometimes get a little jumpy. Is that okay?"

"I feel like I'm new to the world myself, Mayu-so it's okay with me."

"Nana is very happy to meet you as well. Ummm-is it okay that Nana has horns? Nana is not like those girls in the news who hurt people."

Anna, once Anna Kakuzawa, had been declared sole heir to her family's fortune by a special court, and then gladly signed away every last scrap of funds or property the Kakuzawas had ever held or might hold, and allowed any Kakuzawa owned facility to be raided at will. This had been in an effort to undo her father's agenda, which, despite her love for him, she knew to be vile.

"I don't mind at all, Nana."

This new place was small and cramped, and she would not be waited on. But, she reasoned, this was a small price to pay for unconditional acceptance and not having to become a living computer.

"In fact, where I come from-horns are considered a sign of good breeding."

Lives changed, ended and combined in new shapes at Kaede House. In the room once occupied by a girl who sometimes wished she had no horns now slept a girl who had spent a long time wishing that she did. Outside the peace of this house, a war raged that also had its roots in the bloodlines of these two young women, living and dead. But one day, that war would end, and then, for all who lived to see it, the horns would play.


Author's Note : Yuka's mother, like most parents in Elfen Lied, was never given a name in the series. Emiko was a name I chose for this, after the first heroine of the Godzilla series.
 
Nana and the Lucky Girl

by Rob Morris

The Maple Inn would soon be fixed, and its steadfast would-be protector released from the hospital. The girl called Nana wondered about how fast his heart would heal. Through her link with Lucy-San's dying body, she felt Kouta's emotions as well, as he killed her. There was no hate in his heart at that point. Despite his words about never forgiving her crimes against his family, at the end of it all Kouta still loved the girl known as both Nyu and Lucy.

"You just sit here. I'll grab some food from the stand."

As she and Mayu walked around the small park, taking a break as per Yuka's orders from the push to have the place ready for their 'prince', Nana checked her headdress pieces, sturdily kept in place by a polymer left with her by her beloved 'Papa'. Professor Kurama had promised Nana he would ask Kouta's permission to stay there with her for a time. It seemed likely he would agree--Kouta had a hard time turning anyone down--and this was, after all, Nana's Papa. While Kurama had shot him, Kouta in the hospital seemed to accept his apology even with a little humor. Nana had of course taken Kurama very seriously when he told her she was to obey Kouta as she did him, in order to maintain her safety.

"Silly Papa--Nana knows how to take care of herself."

As Nana awaited Mayu's return with the food, a small ball rolled by her feet.

"Onee-San? Can I have my ball back?"

A girl of no more than five was the one asking this. Nana moved to do as she asked.

"Of course, I've got it right..."

Nana grabbed the ball and looked at the girl. Her hair was dark, she was no older than she seemed, and she had no horns.

"Onee-San? My ball?"

"Sorry. Here."

Mayu returned, and saw Nana staring at the girl. She joined in this stare. For the little girl looked like nothing more than a non-Diclonius version of Nana herself.

"Is my daughter bothering you?"

Nana looked at the woman saying this, though it took all her courage to turn her head to do so.

"Not at all. I was just struck by what a beautiful little girl she is. Sorry--I've been ill for a while, and haven't seen much of the world outside my room."

The woman's face turned sad at these words, and the little girl spoke up.

"Mama is sad because I once had my own Onee-Sama, but she died when she was born, because she was sick. Mama, will you bounce the ball with me?"

Mayu saw very clearly what was going on, and volunteered.

"My name is Mayu. How about I do it? You look tired, and I know Nana is too."

"That's very kind of you. I am tired. Hana, behave for Mayu, okay?"

Hana looked at Nana.

"Doesn't Nana Onee-San like me? I'd like her to play with me."

Nana formed a smile, and patted the girl on the head.

"Of course I like Hana-Chan. But I need to rest right now, okay?"

The girl seemed to perk up at her approval.

"Okay! But why does Onee-San's hand feel funny?"

Nana gulped.

"Please don't be scared."

With that, Nana detached her right arm and just as quickly, put it back on. The girl oohed, while her mother was merely surprised.

"It happened because I was sick. These let me move and walk around on my own."

Hana smiled even more broadly.

"Magic arms and legs? Mama, can I get sick?"

"Baka, you're sick often enough to make Mama crazy in the head as it is. Now play with Mayu-Chan."

Mayu left to play in front of them. The woman looked at Nana.

"My name is Arika. I'm sorry for your illness."

Nana tried to keep her face free of anything but a smile. It was very hard.

"Thank You, Arika-San. I'm sorry for Hana's older sister."

Arika closed her eyes.

"She may not be dead. I've never told Hana the truth."

Nana turned her thoughts to the day Lucy ripped her to pieces. The pain of that time kept her from showing the awkwardness of this meeting-- a meeting she had lately come to realize was very possible, and had in fact now occurred.

"Arika-San, I am a stranger. I don't wish to intrude on your privacy."

"No---I like to tell this. It helps me to rid myself of my guilt. If I let my guilt build--I'm afraid I might take it out on Hana."

Nana found that she would do anything to protect the little girl.

"My apologies. Tell me your story."

Arika gave a grateful look, and for just a moment, seemed to be staring at Nana.

"You are a beautiful young woman--I'm sorry, I just had to say it. Anyway, my first daughter was born with--a slight deformity. A man showed up at the hospital, and told us that she would one day try to kill us because of it. He took her away. My husband was told he carried an infection that had caused her deformity. He wandered the city in a daze, till we learned he died of a sudden heart attack. A lot of people died that way for a while."

Nana's heart broke and she felt pure rage. *Lucy--how many times did your actions destroy my life? My limbs---my real Papa---you even caused me to born like you, so Hana and I never knew each other. Was whatever pain drove you so blinding you couldn't see such things?*

"So he isn't Hana's father?"

"My husband's brother was very kind to me as I grieved. Eventually, we married and Hana came to us. That same man--I think his name was Kurama--came again, but not to take her. He just wanted a few pints of my blood. He said it was for study--but---"

Nana fought to keep herself together on more than one front.

"But--what?"

Arika smiled.

"He was very nervous about the whole thing--and you don't need whole pints in order to do blood-work."

She looked at Nana.

"You might need them, though, to keep someone alive. That's why I think my daughter may still be out there--and even if she never forgives what I did, maybe I can still apologize."

Nana heard welcome words, but felt constrained from saying some very simple things to this dear woman.

"You know, they say there are some girls out there who kill their families. Maybe--maybe if your daughter is still alive, she was kept from becoming like that, and maybe she even later on got a new life, and new friends."

A single tear came from Nana's eye.

"Maybe then, you wouldn't even have to apologize."

Arika stared hard at Nana, and then touched her cheek. An embrace followed, light but welcome.

"Thank you--for those kind words. I---"

"Mama!"

Hana ran up and jumped into her mother's arms.

"Mama, I had a good time playing with Mayu Onee-Chan! Did Mama have a good time talking with Nana Onee-Chan?"

Arika held her child close.

"I did. And I want you and her to be special friends, okay?"

"I'd love that, Mama. Nana Onee-Chan is so pretty! Can I have hair like hers?"

A tender but firm 'No' was followed by an exchange of addresses. Over the years, not all would be sweetness and light, but nor would it truly be bitter. Nana watched Mother and child move away, like the fading of a dream.

"Lucky girl."

"Hana is lucky, Mayu-Chan. Maybe when we come here tomorrow, we can bring Wanta."

"We sure will--but she isn't who I meant by lucky. Do you know what I'd give for the moment you just had?"

Nana looked at the girl who was also her sister.

"No. I don't know. Nana has told Mayu of her life, even the bad times. Mayu hasn't told me anything."

Mayu closed her eyes and nodded.

"Maybe it's time I did. Just let me tell it when I'm ready."

Nana mock-punched her in the arm.

"Mayu-Chan always procrastinates."

Mayu returned the hit.

"It's how I am. I didn't even trust Kouta till just before he was shot. I like to wait."

Nana smiled as they went home. Work awaited them, as well as important medical test results on Nozomi's injured throat. But a dream had come true. And if this one had, maybe she and Papa could still make babies together someday.

"Sometimes, when you wait--the most wonderful things can happen."
 
Summary : The world of Elfen Lied intrudes on other realms...


Other Songs

By Rob Morris

UNIVERSE 1

They were in a world where acceptance by the so-called Normal Humans was fleeting and exceedingly rare.

"Now, the question comes, do we obey the voice that says kill all who are different, and become what we rail against, or accept that people need to be guided to a better path, a path of acceptance?"

She was as different from the others as they were from most 'normals'.

"Acceptance must and will be earned, and the killing voice opposed. That is where you five step in."

At least, reasoned Lucy, this 'Marvel Girl' costume's mask would help hide her horns.

UNIVERSE 2

Beast Boy was enraged, so much so even Raven would be scared.

"You totally sabotaged the security systems in the Tower!"

The lonely girl shook her head.

"He found me before you did-helped me to keep this awful power under control!"

"You betrayed us! You betrayed me! Do you know what it is to an orphan to get close to somebody...to get close...oooohhh NOOOOOOOO!"

He shifted through twenty forms as the horrid memories returned. Memories of their real first meeting. As he flew off, a heavy gloved hand went on her shoulder.

"No-you don't have any friends, Lucy."

UNIVERSE 3

She bowed before their markers.

"But for your love, I would be like the thug who stepped from the shadows and erased you."

She spread leaves from their favorite tea blend over the site.

"I questioned my purpose, to have so much and yet have to hide what I was forever. How could I cower in our great home while killers walked fearlessly and free? How to teach their kind fear?"

She rose and donned her light yet dark armor. Nana was waiting impatiently in the car.

"For you, Mother and Father-Kouta and Yuka-I have become a Bat!"

UNIVERSE 4

Azula had us dead to rights in Ba Sing Se. But Zuko kept his head.

"Bad choice, Zu-Zu!"

"The only choice-because you always lie!"

The battle turned again when Azula tried to fry Aang as he went all State-ly. My Sis's water whip looped her lightning back, and it was over. I stepped forward, because I know what expendable means.

"Look, if she gets up and fries me-nail her hard!"

Great, unless she twists my head off and uses my body as a shield. Her face showed real confusion. Azula's next word would change our lives forever.

"Nyu?"

UNIVERSE 5

Father Mulcahy nodded.

"The monks will take her now."

It was sad, but she faced instant discrimination on the outside. Winchester raised a concern.

"Still like to know where she got-those."

BJ shrugged.

"So long as she's outside this Hell."

Potter thought of his granddaughter back home, and Margaret and Klinger thought of children they might have one day. Pierce kissed her on the cheek as he sent her away.

MAINE, 1972

Doctor Pierce and Colonel Houlihan returned from Vietnam to find a smiling horned girl in front of their home.

"I have been waiting for my special friends."

UNIVERSE 6

Kouta pointed.

"C'mon Gang! We can peel out and split!"

Mariko giggled.

"Now all we need is a banana and some ice cream!"

Nana shook her head and tested the doorway.

"I'll bet this button controls the exit."

It opened a pit beneath them. Mariko giggled again.

"The blood is rushing to my head!"

Yuka, who had gotten them in this mess, sighed.

"That would only be an improvement for you."

They landed, and the master villain pointed.

"You cannot escape-and why are you still wearing those Pussycat ears?"

Lucy, leader of The Pussycats, grinned.

"Who says they're cat-ears?"

UNIVERSE 7

The girl called Lucy looked at her dear childhood friend. There was nothing but hate in his eyes. Hate over wrongs that could now never be undone.

"I never meant to hurt you. You have to know that."

He was impassive, even cold.

"Do you think any of that matters now?"

She fought back tears.

"I didn't understand what I was doing. The pain it could cause."

The dog walked up with the others in the background. They were barely noticed.

"I have something I need to avenge. You can't stop me."

AND SO I FINALLY KICKED THAT STUPID FOOTBALL
 
Note : Most of my EL pieces occur after the end of the manga's main story. Some few like this happen during it.



Cold Shot

by Rob Morris

She didn't know it, but she epitomized Shakespeare's dire estimation of humanity as a set of poor players who strut and fret their short time upon the stage. Know that she will not endure past the telling of this story, and don't mourn for her overmuch.

Her name is not important to us, but the local children in and near her apartment complex gave her nicknames that were roughly equivalent to 'attitude lady', and these were polite compared to the adults forced to deal with her. When asked, the office otaku told the office queen bee that she had made an offer to him, and he had decided instead to spend the money for their date on ice cream and video games. The queen bee did it with him that night, just because the other woman knew nothing of attitude with decorum, and she wanted this to stick in her craw.

So she was not well liked, and she was also not a very attentive person. This came to be a problem the day the landlord's children were playing with their dog and she let it out to an unforgiving road. Closing the gate in question had been listed in her lease, and the landlord made it clear that she must replace the dog without missing the rent.

Attitude Lady was not happy with this, and had no desire to pay for a new puppy of the breed in question--the pounds had only mixed breeds. Growing desperate, she overheard a conversation in passing while grabbing iced coffee.

"Ani who runs the bakery stand? She says the poor thing subsists on bread crumbs--and most of those she feeds to her little puppy."

"Why is she on the streets?"

"I know the family. Something's always been wrong with the girl's mother. It got worse when that serial killer took her brother's family, a while back. Anyway, she's not on the streets, exactly. She keeps to the beachfront."

"So? If you know the family, take her in."

"Not my headache. Besides, she's probably been selling herself. Who needs pimps and johns coming to my home?"

Attitude Lady smiled a smile she firmly believed to be the cruelest in the world. In fact, it was only the third or fourth cruelest. She now had a plan in mind to spare her funds and shut the landlord and his brats up.

At first the girl was nowhere to be found. The bakery merchant---whose goods were simply never as fresh as she claimed---said that maybe she had found a local home to take her in. But Attitude Lady's desperation made her capable of patience, and soon it paid off. The girl and her prized possession at last put in an appearance. It was showtime.

A name was selected, one that was non-Japanese in order to imply knowledge and ownership of a unique product.

"James! I've been looking for you forever!"

A cruel accusation and insinuation would keep the girl from following.

"Did you steal him? Stay away from our dog!"

She added the 'our' in at the last moment, implying she was not as alone as she seemed. The little wretch made a request that was shot down in flames.

"You're filthy---look at you. Why would I let you touch my dog ever again?"

Without a backward glance, she took the pup from one brat to placate a few others. The little baka was already homeless---why should she herself end up that way? Besides, now she could feed herself more easily. Attitude Lady told herself she had done the girl a favor, and then thought nothing more of her.

With 'James' firmly in hand, she made for the train station, the quickest route back to her part of town. She almost dropped the dog when her rear cheeks were squeezed and caressed.

"Don't scream--you'll only draw attention to yourself. This can all go very smoothly, and I can make you feel very good---"

"MOLESTER! MOOOOLESSTER!!!!!"

An unwillingness to speak up loudly had never and would never be counted among the faults of Attitude Lady. The police were nearby and quick to intervene. The man was almost slick enough to earn her admiration.

"No-no, officers! I was just asking if this kind lady had seen my stepdaughter, who's run away from home. I guess I'm so worried about her, I may have said something improper."

The older of the two officers shook his head.

"Right now, I would be taking you in even if I didn't know on my own that you have a long list of prior arrests."

"Really--I have a wife and a stepdaughter who's a runaway."

"We'll check the missing persons reports--if one has been filed. Your stepdaughter is lucky if she has run off--and any woman who'd marry you has a large piece of their brain if not their soul missing."

The younger officer turned to Attitude Lady.

"Ma'am--we'll need you to file charges against this lowlife. The judge will not be happy to see him again."

Attitude Lady looked around. She had indeed dropped something when she was assaulted.

"My--my dog--I have to locate my dog. He's run off."

The junior officer took over the man's arrest while the elder all but pushed Attitude Lady along. He was not letting the Chikan-and-worse slip through justice again.

"Yeah, yeah. We'll find his stepdaughter along with your dog."

At the station, Attitude Lady was given short shrift on her missing dog. Worse still, she found she was not the only one with an attitude.

"You make wild and insane accusations against my husband?"

A punching and scratching match followed, and then the other woman, sporting a scar on her right hand, broke down in tears demanding of her husband an answer to why he would leave her alone like this. Attitude Lady had to snicker when the molester declared a total disinterest in either her tears or her fate.

That was of course, just before the woman again attacked her, slamming her head into the floor several times.

When she woke up hours later, she saw her bandaged head in a mirror and the whole point of her being at the station rendered moot. An officer from some sort of special unit was ranting.

"She tears two of our own to bloody pieces, and now we can't even have the lead on pursuing that teenaged demon?"

In an uncaring mood, the nearby molester chuckled.

"Talk to me, officer. I know how to handle little girls."

If the man thought being under arrest and on his way to trial was some sort of force field, the five bullets the enraged officer unloaded into him ended that along with his life.

Her worst evening ever at an end, Attitude Lady did not bother seeing her landlord again, instead gathering her things and living as she could. In the weeks that followed, she arrived early and stayed late at the office, trying desperately to keep up appearances.

The only good news she received was that the hateful bitch who attacked her had been forced to sell her home and leave the area, fearing vengeance from families that now knew what her late husband had been. She had quickly cut every possible tie she had to the town. One story had her even selling herself, though Attitude Lady could not imagine a price low enough and a man or woman desperate enough to make that happen.

She now walked the streets at night, hoping to scam a meal or temporary shelter beyond the degrading and vulnerable environment of her storage unit. She swore that if she ever saw that same little girl again, she would shove her and her puppy into the concrete and smile as she was run over.

Never very attentive, she bumped into someone and sneered.

"You mind what you're doing, where you're walking!"

The coldest pair of eyes Attitude Lady had ever seen now regarded her.

"Do you have a headache?"

The girl's hair was some kind of punker shading, and she wore what almost looked like a medieval jester's hat from the European courts of centuries back.

"What kind of a question is that? Are you trying to change the subject on your clumsiness and rudeness? No, I don't have a headache."

Attitude Lady clutched at her forehead, where indeed enormous pressure had built up without warning, and this is the end of her story, except for the words said next by the odd girl who had stared her down and now watched calmly as she fell down.

"My mistake, then."

EPILOGUE ONE - KAEDE INN

The young man with problems of his own had gained a crucial insight into the life of one he had quickly come to care about.

"What are you reading about in that newspaper? You've had your eyes glued on it."

Kouta folded up the paper and threw it into his room.

"You're right, Mayu-Chan--and I should be cleaning while Yuka and Nyu are at the store."

"But Kouta-San---what was so interesting?"

He scrubbed and mopped the bathroom floor where Nyu had 'missed' more than once while he responded.

"Just some lowlife on a train who bothered someone and got what was coming to them. I always think people should enjoy peaceful train rides. I thought I recognized the name of his wife as someone I know--but I think now I was wrong.

Mayu smiled. The man who had given her a home would move up and down in her estimation, but her life now was just so wonderful.

And as always, she had Wanta.

EPILOGUE 2

"Children--I don't think that woman can afford to buy you a new dog, and rents have been hard to collect this year."

The oldest of them spoke for the others.

"It's all right, Father. Maybe it's better this way. Taking care of our old dog was a lot of responsibility--so you can tell her she's off the hook."

The youngest of them looked around.

"Where is she, anyway? I always liked her."

THE END
 
So Shines A Good Deed

by Rob Morris

The plans of a deceased madman had borne fruit, and what would come to be called The War Of The Horns had begun in earnest. Across the world, odd girls of various ages were killing people in numbers to numb the soul. Again, the schemer behind all this was dead, as was the girl who would have led these other girls. Yet some for alienation, some for payback and some just because it was fun, these girls were coming very close to lighting the fuse on the apocalypse.

But not in Kamakura. Partly, this was because for many years, no hospitals received the kind of scrutiny those in Kamakura did. The other reason was one born of superstition and legendry. These girls knew on some level that their queen had been brought down in the Kanagawa prefecture, and rather than declaring vengeance, they wanted nothing to do with it till their numbers were overwhelming. In short, anything that could bring down Lucy was something the Diclonii did not want to mess with. And the tragic part is, the power that brought Lucy down was one that could have saved them all, if given early enough. But the Humans who had scorned them didn't offer it, and they would no longer take it if offered.

There was exactly one of these girls in the entire Kanto region, and her major beef was her best friend's dog waking her up in the morning by way of endless playful licks on the face. Besides, government forces knew all about her and were in fact depending on her existence as a means to figure out strategy. She was safe, and would one day soon be the only one of her kind. One might think this would make her sad, but she and her own kind had never really gotten along.

Now, we join this special girl as she makes a purchase at a boardwalk bakery stand.

"Three of those, please."

The girl handed the merchant a yen-note far larger than the amount needed to pay for the small pastries, and then turned to leave at a good clip. The merchant shook her head.

"Oh no you don't!"

Darting out from behind her counter, the merchant, Ani, cornered the girl by way of a short cut.

"Trying to pass counterfeit bills, young lady?"

The girl gulped and was so nervous, her limbs were in danger of falling off.

"Nana wouldn't pass phony money--that money came from Papa!"

"Yet you paid and ran off---rather suspicious, don't you think?"

A voice came from what had been a hiding place.

"If it were counterfeit, wouldn't she have gotten change from it, or bought a lot more?"

The merchant was ready for this.

"She could just be nervous, or not very good at this."

Nana rolled her eyes and talked to the hiding place.

"I told you this wasn't a good idea."

"You there--come out and join your friend."

The girl in hiding emerged, and was known to the surprised merchant.

"Mayu-Chan?!"

Mayu nodded.

"Ani-San, the money is real. I just didn't know how to get it to you so that you couldn't say no."

The woman ignored the situation at hand and asked a question that had been on her mind for over a year.

"Are you all right, Mayu-chan?"

Mayu smiled.

"The people at Kaede House took me in, and I go to a nearby school. Kouta and Yuka are very nice to me, and I always have plenty to eat."

A small figure walked out from behind Mayu and happily yelped.

"So does Wanta."

If, for reasons of propriety, the woman was hesitant to embrace the once-homeless child, she was much less so with the small dog, who knew her and made his positive opinion of her known.

"Oh, I've missed the two of you! Mayu-chan, why did you try this?"

Mayu took the Ani's hand.

"You have to ask?"

"For bread crumbs? Stuff I would have thrown away?"

Mayu seemed ready as well.

"You could have sold those to ladies who wanted to use them for croutons, or as coatings for meat. On bad days, those sales could have made all the difference. But you gave me that, and then--that beautiful birthday cake. Please accept the money, Ani-San. I can't overlook a debt like this. Not when you kept me and Wanta alive long enough for things to get better."

This time, rules and protocol were not enough to keep them from embracing.

"You don't know how many kids like you I see, wherever I set up shop. You don't know how often I've wanted to do something, anything, but so many of them have been hurt so much, they can't trust enough to even ask for help anymore. You say you're in my debt? No, silly--I'm in yours. Helping you in the small ways I did helped me to sleep at night."

The tears were abundant and flowed freely and loudly. Just not from either Mayu or the woman nicknamed Ani.

"Oh, this is so beautiful! Nana is so moved by this joyous reunion!"

Mayu pointed at the weeper.

"That--is my sister, Nana. She's a little strange, but she's a good egg."

Ani raised a finger in the air.

"Umm--just how many young women live in that place?"

The two 'sisters' responded as one.

"That's really complicated."

Ani took the hint and returned the note.

"The bread crumbs, like the cake, were gifts freely given. As to the pastries you purchased? Business is really good right now, except for now in the mid-afternoon. If you two help me load and unload some supplies, we're all even, alright? Can you handle that?"

Nana's right arm fell off, but was quickly reattached.

"Yeah, we can."

Ani led them over to put them to work. Both had stories of a happier life since entering Kaede House, and she was overjoyed to hear every last word.

"Wait--should you call anyone?"

Nana nodded.

"Don't worry---they usually show up anyway. She gets upset a lot, and he always asks a lot of questions--but mostly we ignore her getting upset and we don't answer the questions."

Ani smiled and pulled out her cell-phone.

"In other words, you have to call your Mom and Dad."

Outside of Kamakura and the surrounding area, a great war continued. Inside it, three people celebrated the simple act of giving a damn about the fate of a fellow Human being. In short, they celebrated caring.
 
The New Papa

by Rob Morris

THE 2000'S, KAMAKURA

It had been three months since Nyu and Nana had returned from a hard night neither would talk about. On that night, a girl named Mariko Kurama had given up being a monster and gave her life to defend Nana and their father Kurama from the vicious being that once dwelt inside of Nyu, and might still be hidden there. It was a time of progress--at least on some fronts.

Mayu heard her bedroom door slide open, and looked over to see that Nana was no longer there. It was pitch-black, yet she could make out the face of the one who had entered.

"Kouta-San?"

His was not the tired, confused face of someone who had heard a noise, and nor was it the reassuring, supportive face of one who always stood ready to help, even if he rarely could.

"You can't just freeload forever, you know."

His face a giant leer, his hand a claw reaching for her pajama top buttons, Mayu saw a light come on.

"Yuka-San!"

Whether he was drunk, insane, or had been hit in the head, Yuka would surely straighten him out with a punch or a kick. But this was not to be.

"So you're the reason he won't pay any attention to me! Well, I'll just watch the two of you before I throw you out on your ear, you little homewrecker!"

"Please, No! I----"

Kouta, still on top of her, started to make strange noises.

"Woof! Woof!"

Slowly, he brought his face close and began to cheerfully lick her nose, all while still making barking sounds. She seized him by the head.

"What kind of sick game are you playing?!"

Waking up from the nightmare, Mayu saw the small figure in her hands look quizzically at her.

"Woof!"

"Wanta-Chan?"

The dog leaned his face forward and licked anew. Nana shook her head.

"Wow, you had some kind of nightmare. What happened in it?"

"Nothing."

"Hmph! Mayu-Chan always gets to hear what Nana dreams about, but her nightmares she keeps to herself. That's hardly fair. Was it about a boy?"

"You could--say that."

"One you like?"

Mayu closed her eyes again.

"I haven't figured that out yet."

When Wanta roused her again, Nana was already dressed.

"Nana-Chan? Do you trust Kouta-San?"

"Well, he can be mean--"

"That's not what I asked."

"--but he always means well. Wait--did he steal one of Nana's roasted peppers at dinner?"

Mayu sighed.

"No--that was Nyu. And I don't mean about stealing stuff. Just--trust. You know?"

"Ummmm--No."

Mayu whispered to Nana, who blushed.

"Kouta wants to make babies with Nana? But--what would Papa and Yuka-San think--or would they make babies, and then each of us makes babies with the other--and all our babies are brothers and sisters, and they play together! How wonderful! Does Mayu want in on this?"

"Baka! I don't want to make babies with Kouta!"

"Why? Don't you like babies? They're cute and cuddly, and they laugh at your jokes even when they're not funny."

"Nana-- I meant--"

"Do you mean trust him with something important?"

Mayu went with the flow.

"Yes---exactly that."

"Oh--sure. He kept a secret for Nana that I'll tell you about right now. See--Kouta-San saw me naked."

Mayu felt her worst suspicions confirmed.

"When?"

Nana looked around.

"Well-- I was in the bath when he saw me."

"He walked in on you? Peeped on you?"

"He had to."

Mayu felt the pressure build in her head, but kept calm.

"What was his excuse for saying he had to?"

"He had to rescue me."

"From what?"

"Drowning."

"And you fell for that?"

Nana seemed as confused as Mayu was beginning to feel enraged.

"But I really was drowning."

Mayu felt herself having a Nana moment, and pulled back.

"Nana-Chan--start at the beginning of how Kouta-San saw you naked."

Nana nodded.

"Well, I was taking a bath all alone, and it was so comfortable, I just sat there forever. Before I knew it, all my muscles were so relaxed, I couldn't make my arms or legs work right, and I began to slip just so the water got in my mouth. I got scared, and more water kept coming in."

"Nana, it's just not that deep."

"When Nana's arms and legs don't work, they really don't work at all! You all were out, and when I called Kouta, he called to you, only like I said, all the ladies were out, even Nozomi, and she's always here. So he came in with a towel, pulled me out, wrapped me up and put me in my futon, after putting a towel on my hair, and closed the door. Later, I went out to him to thank him, and I asked him how I looked, and he blushed a lot, and I blushed a lot, and then I went to bed for the night."

"Did he come into our room?"

"No--but someone did."

"And what did this--someone--do?"

Mayu knew she was taking a leap, but before settling the doubts she had felt about Kouta since finding him in the bath with Nyu, she had to pursue every last possibility. If he ever turned out to be like her stepfather, she would be ready to expose him.

"They snored."

Mayu stared at Nana with narrowing eyes.

"I do not snore!"

Nana got up and shrugged.

"You always say that."

"Doesn't it bother you that Kouta-San saw you naked?"

Nana bit down.

"I guess. But it wasn't like when Mariko---beat me up and took my clothes. He only saw me for a second or two, he covered me up, and he even showed he thought I was pretty that way."

Mayu felt her leap go flat.

"How--did he show that?"

"He bumped himself trying to get out of my room, and so he turned around, and errrr---he showed he thought I was pretty. You know."

"He--he showed it to you?"

"No! His pants did. I think he needed to adjust them after that."

"Did he get naked?"

"No--he wasn't the one taking a bath. Why would he get naked?"

Mayu needed to relax after this bout.

"I'm--going to take a bath."

Nana nodded.

"With Kouta-San?"

"NO! NOT WITH---not with Kouta-San."

"Good. Yuka-San would probably get upset if you did."

"Nana!"

"But then, she's pretty easy to upset."

Mayu got away from her dearest but easily most infuriating friend. It was a long weekend, and everyone being around each other meant being up against each other as well.

"I want to trust you, Kouta-San--I want to trust anyone again."

In the bath was not Kouta or Yuka, but the other person who had figured in her doubts.

"Hiya, Mayu-Chan! Nyu's taking a bath, just like you! Nyu!"

In three months' time, she had gone from monosyllabic to full sentences; three months more and she would seem an ordinary young girl. For then and there, though, she was still a handful--and still apt to grab a handful.

"Nyu---don't touch me there."

"But Mayu's Hiney is so cute! Pinch the cheeks!"

While this beat the disappointment following her early breast-groping, Mayu was in no mood.

"Do not pinch--anything on me. You take your bath, and I'll take mine."

Which, of course, led to exactly what Mayu didn't want.

"Nyuuuuuuuu!!!"

The splash did nothing for Mayu's sour mood, but did make her more sympathetic to Kouta's predicament some months ago.

"She really doesn't leave you with a choice, does she?"

"Wash Nyu's back?"

Mayu sighed. She was pretty--if exasperating, and soon, hair and back were washed.

"Now Nyu clean Mayu!"

"No, there's really no need for...."

"Hiney-Cheeky!"

"NYU! Stop this right now---"

Yuka burst in, but was unable to drag the friendly molester off Mayu, and reluctantly called for back-up.

"Kouta! I can't stop her!"

"Kouta can't come in here!"

"Mayu--just throw your towel on."

"It'll get wet!"

Yuka threw the towel in the water.

"Just put it on."

With the now-damp towel clinging to her, and Nozomi signaling, Mayu saw Kouta walk in, hauling the naked Nyu out, doing what he had to in order to make it quick, instead of being concerned with modesty and propriety. Yuka showed she was also beyond this.

"Drag her out boob-first if you have to! Just get her off of Mayu!"

As if to prove she was a force of cosmic chaos no matter what name she was called by, Nyu lurched and grabbed Mayu's towel out of the water. This time, Kouta did blush, but used this shock to finally force Nyu out into the hallway. Yuka got out as well, apologizing to Mayu, who had forgotten her sore rear cheeks.

"He--saw me. He saw---everything. OOOooh---I even turned around a few times--and he---his---it got all---he saw me!"

The last person to see her in such a way used it to hurt her as badly as a father could hurt a daughter. As she sat and stewed, an arm--only an arm--reached in and dropped two new fresh towels, just before an argument erupted. Mayu heard it through the walls.

"Nyu, you cannot go in there again!"

"But Mayu Hiney so cute!!!"

"Yuka! Please take this sex fiend out of here!"

"C'mon, Nyu---oh you're worse than he is!"

"How am I bad?"

"Weeeellll--you did show an interesting reaction to poor Mayu-Chan losing her towel."

"Don't tease me about that kind of thing!"

"You're such a guy!"

"Nyu take bath with Kouta now?"

"NO!!"

"NO!!"

When they looked back on this day during much sadder times to come, they would realize this had been the last full-on attack Nyu had ever engaged in, with only minor outbreaks to follow. But for Mayu, it already felt like the last battle at the end of a war.

She emerged after a half an hour, moved for her room like lightning, and had her back to the wall at all times. Only when dressed and secure did she come out. Kouta was resting in the living area.

"I am soooo sorry. Except for Nozomi-Chan, who went to singing practice, they took her to take Wanta for a walk. Figured maybe running with him could wear her out."

Mayu held back a dire thought : Horny Bitch better not try and molest my dog.

"Are you all right?"

"Don't worry about me, Kouta-San. She just took me by surprise."

He had that inquisitive/concerned look on his face. That meant trouble.

"Nana-Chan says you've been upset since yesterday."

It occurred to Mayu that she could cut him off with a partial truth.

"When I was at the market yesterday morning, I thought I saw my mother's husband. I never liked him. He--would scold me for things I hadn't done, and my mother----"

Mayu fought back a choke.

"---she would always defend him and denounce me. So you understand that I didn't want to see him, whether that was him or not. Seeing him--always makes me feel so angry, so betrayed."

It was a lie that contained the truth--which, depending on who you talked with, was likely the worst lie of all. She had been suspicious of this man, yet here she was lying through her teeth. She had in fact seen a man she thought might be her stepfather the prior morning, and it had begun her cycle of upset. But telling the rest was not yet in her.

"Mayu-Chan---it wasn't him. I know it wasn't him."

"Kouta-San, I know you want to calm me, but you can't know that for certain. There is no reason it could not have been him, and the thought of maybe seeing him upsets me."

Kouta breathed in. He had secrets of his own.

"If I could guarantee to you that not only was it not him, but that it could never be him again, will that help you find peace?"

She smiled. He was trying so hard.

"Yes. But you can't do that."

He got up and went to his room.

"Please don't hate me after this."

He walked out with a yellowed newspaper in hand. Gingerly, he gave it to her. Mayu saw the circled article--about how a train molester wanted for suspicion in several attacks on young women had been gunned down in the police station by an angry member of the SAT, upset about something unrelated, pushed too far when the molester made a snide remark. The article also spoke of the shrill reaction of the man's wife--and the names of these two people. Mayu looked at her host of almost a year's time.

"You---you knew?!"

Kouta nodded.

"Yes. That was printed not too long after you moved in. Your mother also moved out of Kamakura, though where I don't know. So you see, the odds of you seeing either of them again..."

Her slap snapped across the empty house like cannon-fire. It was the summation of a girl's fury at her innocence taken and then shattered forever by selfish children wearing the skins of grown-ups.

"You bastard! I was worried about you seeing me naked? Why? This article told you everything you ever needed to know. Forget my body---you stripped down my soul because of your damned curiosity. See the number on this card? I know a very big and powerful man who will beat you to a pulp if I ask him to. I....."

She sat on the ground and began to melt.

"I--never wanted anyone to know. Like maybe if I didn't hear about or think about it, it never really happened. Oh, Kouta-San---can you forgive me? I wanted to hit him, not you."

Kouta rubbed his cheek, but managed a smile as he too sat down.

"You don't hit as hard as Yuka. Mayu-Chan--no one else knows. At least, they don't know through me. Your secret, for however long you keep it, is safe with me. Just as safe as I hope you feel here."

She felt very ashamed.

"I do. Your house is a safe one to me. Our home is kept safe by our Kouta-San."

She leaned over to him, and pursed her lips to kiss the cheek she had struck. But she pulled back.

"I can't! I--just can't do that. Not even for you."

Kouta formed her right hand into a fist, and then made one of his own, and he tapped the two fists together lightly.

"That is for us. Between us only. It is the unique way that Kouta and Mayu-Chan express affection and happiness that the other is alright. We who care about each other need nothing more."

They did this again a few times, and a light brief embrace followed. Kouta got up once more.

"Ummm--I'll be in my room---the radio will be on---I'll need privacy---study materials--Yeah."

Mayu turned on the living area radio as well. She sat and smiled at what she knew was happening inside.

"Pervert. Are you thinking of poor defenseless girls, I wonder?"

A phone call told Mayu that Yuka had stopped at her mother's house on the way back. But now it was okay. She was safe. Curious, she stopped by the door to Kouta's room. But whatever sounds might have come earlier, she now heard very grim ones.

"Please--No---you killed Kanae and father--I trusted you---how could you do such a thing, and tell me it's my own fault? YOU have to stop!!!!! YOU HAVE TO STOP!"

Gathering some food together, Mayu also left the house and her sleeping confidant, heading for the beach. Its steadfast cleaner was doing his work.

"Lemme guess--more soup?"

Mayu was almost used to dealing with the gruff man.

"I could throw it away--but then you'd have to clean it up, right?"

Bando must have been hungry, for he took the food with much less argument that day.

"What are you gonna whine about today? And where's the mutt?"

"He's helping someone work off their--excess energy. As to complaints? None. Just a happy insight."

He sighed.

"So what's the insight?"

Mayu thought it over.

"I once had an enemy who used their place in my life to hurt me very badly. I got a new friend, but I was afraid that my new friend might be just like my old enemy, but with a better disguise."

Bando actually seemed intrigued by this description.

"So were they? Like your old enemy, I mean?"

Mayu shook her head.

"No--it turned out, after months of checking and rechecking, this new friend wasn't like my old enemy at all."

She sighed, not certain she was happy to say what came next, despite the new closeness it indicated. Life with the New Papa still had some growing pains ahead.

"He is---a lot like me."
 
Anna And The Would-Be King

by Robert Morris

THE SUNKEN REMAINS OF A FOILED CONSPIRACY, THE 2000'S, OFF THE COAST OF KAMAKURA, JAPAN

She was a survivor, and when she needed to be, a killer. By that same token, she was only a killer when she chose to be. Ordered by her true superiors in the Japanese government at Saseba to keep all scientists under the thumb of Hideki Kakuzawa alive, she protected the dandy-ish Doctor Nousou from the enraged boy who held him at gunpoint by shooting him. She could have easily killed the boy, but shot instead to be certain the wild card was removed from the fight.

"Anna, what are you doing now?"

But then again, had this been a real operation, she would have done extensive recon on the small Inn and found out the facts first. Like that there were two Diclonii living there. Like that this bunch had turned back and killed Chief Kakuzawa's pedophilic maniac of a cousin, the one who made himself up to look like a Stephen King villain named Randall Flagg. Like that the boy she shot was the great love of Lucy's life, and simply securing him would have likely obtained her surrender without incident. Like that this small household which they thought lifted from an episode of '24' was instead mostly lifted from episodes of 'Three's Company'.

"Unless you're going to bury them, I would leave them under the ice sheets."

But it wasn't a real operation. Kakuzawa was as much showman as he was arch-fiend, and the idea of obtaining Lucy without a struggle worthy of The Book Of Revelations or Nostradamus was next to unthinkable. The clones could have kept the doors shut, and then they could have gassed the place. But Nousou and Kakuzawa wanted soldiers aplenty. Idiots, she thought. Why not just dress the fools in Star Trek redshirts and Star Wars Storm trooper gear? When had soldiers meant anything to Lucy except the makings of red mist?

"Anna---for God's sake, eat some of your monster body and give it a rest."

While wishing to conserve energy and air, the agent finally got up and walked over to Kakuzawa's only surviving heir, pulling her away from the bodiless head of her father and the severed head and body of her little half-brother.

"Let me go! I have to contemplate my vengeance on Lucy! I can't let this pass."

The agent replaced the ice sheets over the corpses, then sat the pouting young woman down.

"Hear that groaning noise? Feel the extra pressure building? Likely, that's the ocean getting ready to reclaim this little hidey-hole of ours. Or maybe it's a group of surviving Diclonius who want to repay your family for the room and board. You know those girls? Born without faces, kept from birth in the cold and dark? Me, they'd just kill. They find out you're the host of this soiree? Tell me, have you seen any women in prison films?"

Anna, who at first had been accepting of the ruins her legacy now stood in, had in the passing days grown more defiant and defensive of her late father and his works.

"My family was targeted by the peoples of this land for generations, till we had to flee here, to this underground hell! All we were trying to do, bad information or no, was get rid of the fools who have made this world a Hell without any aid from us, thank you very much!"

"As one of those fools, may I offer a praise to Heaven that you failed! As a wise man once said, kid, those who try to rule the world usually end up off it."

Anna searched her still-quite good memory for such a quote with no success.

"Who said that? A ruler? A philosopher? A poet?"

The Agent shook her head.

"Nope. It was Fred Flintstone, in A Man Called Flintstone."

"You're mocking me."

"Only partway. Fred Flintstone lives in a fiction about a history no one ever heard of, where the things science teaches us never were, like man living with dinosaurs and primitive science being capable of nearly-modern miracles, all took place. In that, it's a bit like Creationism--or maybe the beliefs of a man who detonates bacilli-carrying missiles in order to create children who will be either killed at birth or kill their families right out of the terrible twos?"

The words seemed to be getting to Anna, and so the Agent pressed on.

"I was raised in Hawaii, but I am Japanese and I get the culture. He is your father, and that's that. But Anna--your father was the bad guy in all this. A very bad guy. You will never be able to live your own life if you fail to accept that harsh but simple fact."

Anna fought back with the only positive information at her disposal.

"Then why am I alive? Hmm? If he was such a bad man, then why did he blunt the sacrifice I was fully prepared to make, so that the thing I became was only a shell for my real body?"

The Agent had heard this argument for days. She had been prepared to blunt it from the first time Anna said it, even as her late brother's tunic was secured to cover her nakedness.

"It could be because he loved you. It could be because it was actually more efficient to have you inside that shell to keep the whole godforsaken process stable. My guess?"

The Agent shrugged.

"He wanted control, even over his Goddess. So long as you had a vulnerable core, he could shut you down, should you ever turn on him, like your older brother did. Your father was about control, Anna. You are alive and you are Human because in this form, you could be stopped or killed, if need be."

Bitterly, the younger woman turned away.

"I will still have Lucy's head, and the heads of those in her hideaway who gave her shelter!"

The hunter inside the Agent now had her target. It would live, but it would not avoid the blow. Honor would no longer permit it.

"Oh really? We invaded a small home, Anna--not a terror cell. Let's go through those residents, huh? I bothered to check their histories, learned their names-talked with associates. One non-resident girl--a music student who knew nothing of Diclonius and who may be Japan's next great operatic Diva--if the assault your Dad ordered lets her keep anything of her voice. Youngest Human girl - a probable runaway due to sexual assault, almost killed by Lucy to shut her up when she learned her secrets. Oldest Human girl - college student who took a lower-grade school to be near her cousin and crush. Diclonius Silpelit Number Seven - do I need to tell you that she does not love Lucy, and likely lived there to keep an eye on her in her dormant state? Four limbs, Anna. Even racial loyalty ends when you lose everything but your head to a taunting psycho. Finally, there's the oldest--and only--male. Human. Named Kouta. Hospitalized for a year in a psychiatric hospital when he was ten. Seems a girlfriend of his got jealous and used her vectors to kill his father and sister in front of him. Report said he had amnesia. Because that jealous girlfriend's name was..."

"I-WILL-STILL-HAVE-LUCY'S HEAD!!! SHE KILLED MY FAMILY WHEN THEY OFFERED HER THE WORLD!!!"

The urge to throttle Anna was kept back, in favor of the coup de grace.

"Fine. Though she's probably dead already, given what your Dad said about her power usage. But let's say she's alive. What would you tell her, given the chance?"

"That--that I have to avenge her killing of my father, and of the boy who was my half-brother--as well as hers. She even killed a member of her own line."

The agent was calm but absolutely savage.

"Tell me--just when did your father marry Lucy's mother?"

The question was stated so matter-of-factly, Anna was taken aback.

"They never married."

"Okay. How long did they go out? How long were they seeing each other before your brother was conceived?"

"They---didn't go out--they didn't know each other."

"So Lucy's Mom was a convert to your Dad's cause? She wanted to be the start of the new world's Master Race?"

"No."

"She worked here, and they made the connection about Lucy?"

"Stop."

"How did Lucy's mother end up here, Anna?"

"Stop, please."

"How did Lucy's mother end up giving birth to your half-brother?"

"You--have to--stop."

"No--because you asked for this. Lucy's mother, who by your father's words never stopped searching for her daughter, was found, kidnapped, held here, raped likely more than once by your father, and dissected after her suicide following what was likely months of being held immobile so that she couldn't stop your brother's birth. Knowing your father, is it likely she was told why all this was happening?"

"It--would--be like him to do so."

Anna was near toppling, but this could no longer be helped.

"I hold no sympathy for Lucy in most things. If she is not dead and I get out of here, I will not rest until she is. I only brought her here at Saseba's orders, so that they could take her and your father out in one stroke, after he told his plans. Yet by that same token, I will not allow you to kill her or any of those people, Anna. Not when she was ending a genocidal delusion and avenging her mother's complete destruction as would you or I or anyone else."

The wall began to burst, and the Agent held and moved the weeping Anna to avoid being struck. The tunneling tube, once used for work on the island when Kakuzawa first built his institute, poked through and men in pressure-adjusting suits emerged. The two women fell unconscious and the grotto was scoured for every last scrap of information and evidence before they allowed the ocean to claim it.

The Agent awoke on the surface, the pressure change leaving her a horrible headache. She and Anna were on a ship.

"I've had better hangovers."

A man she knew, sporting one less arm than he once did, gave her a small cup of liquid.

"You have some light radiation poisoning. The girl is resistant to it."

She downed the liquid, and then some water.

"Kurama-San. Status of mission?"

Kurama nodded.

"Queen captured and removed. Lucy is dead. For real this time."

She found it hard to focus, but smiled lightly.

"Good. Who made the kill? You?"

He smiled.

"The world still has both poetry and irony, it seems. Kouta, the boy who had every reason to hate her, but never stopped loving her, ended her misery as her body melted. My Nana was there. At my direction, her body was burned in an especially hot oven, well above temperatures used in most crematoriums, and what ashes there were bleached. Same for the boy we found with the two of you, after analysis. My poor Mariko was cloned, but I will spare Lucy and her brother that indignity."

The Agent had recruited Kurama quietly after his defection from Kakuzawa, though more face to face meetings were out of the question, due to Kakuzawa's paranoia after discovering Shirakawa's spying.

"Then the kid got better from my gunshot wound?"

Kurama patted his sidearm.

"And mine. We actually joked about it. I---will be staying in that small home, close to my Nana, very soon. So odd how things end up. I have to make sure that place is listed off limits. Nana has agreed to aid the government, but I will not have her a lab rat again."

The Agent saw the recovered crossbow in a storage box.

"Bando-San?"

"For a man who no longer has much of a diaphragm anymore, he bellowed out deep and hearty laughter when I told him the news about Lucy. We then argued over his demand for a pepperoni pizza and some Hummingbird soup. The man no longer has a digestive tract!"

The Agent smiled at her mentor's consistency.

"But he'll always have balls. What about Anna?"

Kurama looked over at the sleeping girl.

"She refused to leave your side. She's already offered to help us in a large and dramatic way."

"What--way?"

A week later, that way was revealed.

"You dare betray us in this---"

Anna cocked the gun aimed at her grandmother's head.

"This is not Kanto anymore, grandmother. This is Sicily. And by Sicilian rules of negotiation--in one minute either your signature or your brains will be on that document, naming me as sole heir to all family holdings."

"You are---"

"I AM---The daughter of the bad guy. I am Kakuzawa, raised to do what we must in seeking our goals. I have no horns, but old woman? Are you willing to bet your few remaining years against me lacking every other family trait? Ask yourself--would your son hesitate to pull this trigger?"

As the swooning old woman was taken away, Anna did not hesitate to sign a new document.

"The governments of Japan, America, the European Union and the authorities of Interpol now have unrestricted rights to seize any and all assets my family holds, or is suspected of holding, and to dispose of said assets in the ways directed below. My relatives?"

The agent was impressed.

"Those who will listen will be pensioned off. Those who won't--well, you brought up Sicily. Anna--why?"

She looked around at treasured possessions that would soon be sold off to finance a war against girls she once believed to be her sisters.

"My family's power is broken, and most of its fortune would be seized whether I signed anything or not. I can only regain its honor, and to rebuild that means starting fresh with nothing. But I will need a place to live."

"Kid--that's already been arranged."

A trip into Kamakura led to a meeting with a woman the Agent had made those arrangements with.

"Emiko-San is the owner of a small restaurant and inn now lived in by her college-age daughter and nephew. It's out of the way, and another vital asset in this war is also kept there. You will be safe, given a pension, and those there will help tend to your needs--but they're not your servants. These are very accepting folk. Take your time, mourn your losses--and you will mourn--and prep for dealing with the real world. And understand--the things I do in this are not meant to hurt you--but to remind you that you don't have to make him a failed king or thwarted god in your memory--just a father who did love you, and who did some things you'll have to live down and live with."

Anna rushed forward and embraced her only companion since her new life started.

"Will I see you again?"

"You can't get rid of me that easily. Now go and live, young Goddess."

Anna sniffed and wiped her eye.

"Former goddess. I'm just a girl, now. But that's not such a bad thing, is it?"

Once at the residence, Emiko bid Anna wait outside, till she explained things to her family. Emi finally brought in the young woman, who bowed and was bowed to.

"This is Anna. Like Kouta, she also lost her family to the other person Nyu could become, and has some trouble remembering as a result. She's also a whiz at math."

The girl blushed a little.

"I'm not as good at it as I used to be. I will try my best to be a positive part of this household, and obey the rules that Kouta-San and Yuka-San direct me to."

Kouta looked at the new tenant.

"Do you hate her?"

She understood who he meant.

"My father, while he will always have my love, gravely wronged someone Lucy-San loved. He was a great man, but he set the fire that burned our house down. If Lucy is dead, then so is my business with her memory."

The younger girls greeted their new housemate.

"Hi, Anna! I'm Mayu-I sometimes get a little jumpy. Is that okay?"

"I feel like I'm new to the world myself, Mayu-so it's okay with me."

"Nana is very happy to meet you as well. Ummm-is it okay that I have horns? Nana is not like those girls in the news who hurt people."

Anna, once Anna Kakuzawa, smiled.

"I don't mind at all, Nana."

This new place was small and cramped, and she would not be waited on. But, she reasoned, this was a small price to pay for unconditional acceptance and not having to become a living computer.

"In fact, where I come from-horns are considered a sign of good breeding."

While all wondered at that statement, Kouta showed Anna her new room. Her few possessions, including an advanced electronic signature capture device with location ID scrambler, would be fetched later.

"It's--the only room we had all set up. It once belonged to Nyu. Is that all right?"

Anna considered the irony. In a way, the surviving Kakuzawa heir had retaken the realm of the Diclonius Queen. That--and she would be sleeping in the same room as her father's killer.

"Tell me, please, Kouta-San--did you hate her?"

Kouta's face froze, and then he shook his head.

"I don't know. I would like to know, just for certain--whether we two were ever really friends in her mind. Anna-San--you'll eat your meals in here. But you are always welcome to eat at our table--ohhh--"

Kouta nearly tripped, then leaned down and grabbed something small.

"I forgot--you have to meet our official door greeter."

Wanta bounded over to the new resident, assaulting her with licks and face pokes, before Kouta grabbed him up.

"I better get your stuff out of Auntie's car. Wanta--you can play with your new friend later."

Anna lay down to rest, still giggling from the pup's 'attack'. She looked around, and outside her door heard the sounds or argument, agreement, surprise and simply living. In a house whose invasion she had helped plan, in a room once slept in by her mortal enemy, she began to peacefully drift off, with one last thought before sleep took her.

*Father--this small place and the happiness she must have found here--this is why Lucy could not accept your offer. I weep that you were incapable of understanding this. I love and miss you. Goddess or girl, I am always yours.*

A girl who had once desperately wanted horns slept long and hard in the bed of one who had desperately wanted to not have them, and lived to see the world suffer the long-term plans of the man who would be God-King, but in her heart was simply Papa.
 
Note : A sequel to 'Nana And The Lucky Girl'


Sisters Are We

by Rob Morris

THE 2000'S, KAMAKURA

The momentous meeting one month before played out to one logical conclusion inside the Kaede Inn. Doctor Kurama sighed as he responded to the girl that was his heart, wherever that love finally led. Part of loving Nana meant giving her whatever she wanted, even when doing so meant possibly losing her forever.

"Hai. Arika-San is your biological mother."

Kouta felt Yuka hold him close. This was wonderful news, even if it potentially threatened the union of their patchwork family.

"This is wonderful news for you, Nana-Chan. It must be like the answer to a prayer."

Nana looked at Yuka, and smiled lightly.

"It is wonderful---it means Hana-Kun is my little sister--I am an Onee-Chan--and my--my Mama always wanted me. But Papa? Nana is confused."

Kurama had been up all night studying the hospital tests he had insisted the residents undertake after the dreadful final battle with Lucy. What they revealed made finding Nana's mother seem as surprising as finding fried rice in a restaurant. But he kept to the subject at hand.

"Go ahead, Nana-Chan. I will answer everything I can."

Nana looked a bit embarrassed.

"Papa, Nana thought that the girl called Number Three was her older sister--and that maybe Nana had a twin. That's what one of the guards said--back at that awful place, where Papa was always so lonely."

*Of course she thinks of me first*

"The guard had it wrong, Nana-Chan. You and Number Three are only connected through me. You see, she caused me to father Mariko so that she was born like you and Lucy. She was a very sad little girl. When she did that to me, she was actually repaying what she saw as my kindness, because I objected to the way she and the others were treated--not enough for it to help them--or so many others..."

Kurama's memory flashed back to a talk he'd had with the newly-captured Lucy, accusing Diclonius of refusing to co-exist. This was at a time when he was euthanizing infants to protect two girls dear to his heart, and a time before he knew the vile secret depths of the Kakuzawas' insane agenda. He now wondered if that harsh talk, in the direct wake of her friend's death at Kurama's own hands, hadn't cemented and centered Lucy's hate on him, leading to the long list of those she took from him, including almost Nana herself.

"Papa?"

"Kurama-San, may I fetch you some tea?"

"Yes, Kouta-San--that would be great--except you and I are going out for coffee. It's important."

"Ummm-can Yuka come?"

"No, Kouta. I'll have the place to myself, and I could use some rest. You go out and have fun."

Whether it was a feeling of newfound confidence or the loss of her rival for Kouta's hand, Yuka had become more able to be apart from him, even if she still preferred they always be together. Nana rose.

"Mayu-Chan, let's go. Today we meet Arika-San's husband, my birth-Papa's brother. I hope he likes me."

Mayu put Wanta on the leash. Little Hana would be heartbroken if they showed up without the growing pup. But Kouta motioned to the girl, and pulled her aside.

"Mayu-Chan--remember when that Professor took Nyu from us? You were the only one who was smart enough to ask if he was really her uncle, and we know now he wasn't. Do you understand me?"

Mayu patted her cell-phone case.

"I understand, Kouta-San. If these people mean to hurt Nana, I will call you immediately."

Their fists met tenderly, Kouta knowing the secret of Mayu's touchiness about embraces and other contact.

*He respects me so--and yet I have only recently even begun to call him Father. I will prove worthy of your trust, Kouta Oto-San.*

The man could still be pushy, though less so now that the great secrets of their lives were out. He could still be a bit obtuse as to poor Yuka's feelings, though that too was changing. But the nicest thing about Kouta remained unchanged : his standing offer of a place to stay, so long as you needed one and he had room. Even Anna, who came there by way of a deal struck by Yuka's mother and kept mainly to herself thus far showed gratitude for his little efforts.

"Well, we're off--please give Nozomi-Chan our best."

Ever since Nozomi's worries caused by her injury during the attack on their home had proven unfounded, she had spent ever more time at school regaining her edge through practice. Nozomi would probably never be known as a role model confidence and self-esteem, but the change in her to those that knew her was nothing less than seismic. She had stated her goal and dream to be someday helping create or sponsor an opera or musical play about Nyu. Twenty years from then, Three Names And Two Horns would be a genre-busting international hit. The lead would be played by a girl named for the lead protagonist and taught how to sing by Nozomi herself.

As the girls departed, so did the men, leaving a somewhat-relieved Yuka to lie back and read her assignments without the threat of assassins, rivals, and rival assassins. Only Anna, who kept to her room and who was not to be disturbed by terms of the deal that brought her there, was still in the house, but she was not a factor in Yuka's plans.

Ani-San, the bakery merchant once so kind to Mayu during her hard times, handed some croissants and coffee to Doctor Kurama and his new young friend. The spring air near the oceanfront was bracing to two men who had seen far too much.

"But Kurama-San, I haven't even graduated yet."

Kurama cursed himself each time he tried to reach out with an arm that was no longer there.

"Kouta-San, the college was funded largely by the Kakuzawas' fortune, to serve as a legitimate front, and a shelter to move their work to, should they need it. Without that funding and the threats Chief Kakuzawa made against the families of the staff, many will leave before finals this year. It is a chance for you, and it is needed for your fellow students. I can see to it that you draw at least an Assistant Professor's salary immediately, and I can make the same offer to Yuka."

Kouta thought of his dear charges, and of rice bowls that never seemed to stretch far enough, or have enough peppers or meat sprinkled in them. Even with the part of Anna's deal that lifted the burden of utilities bills from them, things were tight.

"I'll do it. But I'll need lesson plans for the remainder of this year, and at least some of next."

"Done. My late, brilliant, but often lazy colleague usually left his work to his assistant Arakawa---are you familiar with her?"

Kouta actively resisted saying just how familiar with her he was.

"I think I met her when we found Professor Kakuzawa's body. Kurama-San, his head had horns. Was he like Nyu and Nana?"

Kurama gulped some coffee.

"No. But he and his father the Chief thought they were, and that misconception is the most tangible source of all the misery we have suffered, and that the world will now suffer."

Stunned by this, Kouta shifted to the topic that had brought them there.

"You said you found things in the results of our tests taken after Nyu---after I---after all that was done with."

Kurama nodded.

"A piece of bone fragment was removed from near your left eye. At first, I assumed it was from Lucy--from Nyu's skull."

"No. I was careful when I fired. My mind was on automatic for the entire time."

Kurama tried to imagine grieving over the woman he had known as Lucy. He still found it impossible to contemplate.

"It wasn't from a Diclonius. It was from a Human, with DNA nearly a match for your own."

Kurama gave him the bone fragment, sealed in clear plastic like a pendant piece.

"It is a piece of spinal column, from a girl not yet mature."

Kouta kissed the piece, and put it in his pocket for safe keeping.

*Kanae. Though it tore my heart to do so, I avenged you. Please try and forgive her when you meet, as you always forgave your foolish onii-chan.*

"Many thanks, Kurama-San."

"You are welcome, Kouta. But we're not done. The hospital records from the night of your family's murder indicated you suffered a mild stroke. But current scans show no signs any blood vessel was ever stressed. There is more. Nozomi-Chan's throat has not only recovered from its rough treatment, but the genetic flaw in her throat has also been corrected. She will no longer need to fear the loss of her singing voice, or at least any more than does any operatic singer. My next question is horribly intimate, but I must ask. Did Mayu-Chan ever suffer sexual abuse?"

Kouta closed his eyes.

"In her original home. Kurama-San, she has told no one. Even I know only by accident. Please--she is not ready to speak of this, even to Nana-Chan, and her confidence is a sacred charge to me."

Kurama nodded.

"Nana-Chan suffered damage to that area of her body when she slipped after an impact at the Institute. Yet these tests show both girls to be virgins beyond dispute. What is more, both have healthy, viable reproductive systems."

Kouta recalled some of what Kurama had told him of Diclonius girls.

"But she's a Silpelit. You said they're supposed to be short-lived and sterile."

The pain of losing Nana earlier than they should was evidently a sore subject for both the man who had given her hope, and the man who had given her a home.

"Yet her aging has stabilized, and she can now become pregnant. All of you healing so dramatically and in so many seemingly impossible ways I can attribute to Lucy's act of healing you with the others nearby. But for Nana to change so leads me to a conclusion I'm not sure I care for."

In the months since they finally met, Kurama had taken the biology student aside and explained to him much about the Diclonii, most especially the two he knew as family. Kouta drank some of his coffee, then nearly choked at the implication of Kurama's words.

"Has Nana-Chan---become the new Queen?"

As two men talked of things intimate and troubling, the girls they had spoken of were on a far happier path, at least for the moment.

"I wish I had known my family's name. Maybe then I could have looked them up earlier."

Mayu was turning street corners, following Nana who knew the address. But the landmarks and the houses were beginning to look horribly familiar.

*Be calm. We're not going there. And if we see them, and they so much as scold me, well, then, my sister is a horned girl.*

"Nana-Chan, their name would not have helped you. It's a very common family name, remember?"

Nana seemed to strain a bit, then recalled what Mayu meant.

"Oh! Mayu-Chan has the same family name as my family. I guess it is pretty common, after all."

"Yes. A teacher of mine once said that it was like Smith is in America. It means---NANA? Why are we here?"

The small house was known to Mayu. It was the house where a good old Papa had been replaced by a very bad new one. It was the house where a girl had her innocence and wide eyes taken from her forever, and where she had been treated as an obstacle by the one who gave her life.

"Hmm? Well, this is where Arika-San and Hana-Kun live with Hana's Papa, my uncle. Mayu-Chan, what's wrong? You look pale!"

"Nana---I can't be here. Please, sis---don't make me go in there. I have to leave."

"But it's such a nice house, and this day is so important to Nana, Mayu-Chan. How can you not be here for it?"

"Please, if you love me---"

The debate was cut off by a yelp from Wanta, who ran towards a small figure darting towards them.

"Wanta-Chan! Ohhhhh--WANTA-CHAN!!!! You're so fluuuuuufffyy!!!"

The natural alignment between puppy and small child made Mayu unable to leave, even if her skin seemed to be leaving her body, trying to avoid entering a small, well-kept house she saw as living Hell on Earth.

"Mayu-Chan, what's wrong?"

Arika-San was already standing there, having run after little Hana. Her face was gentle and kind. Mayu knew Hana would never have to face being told of her unimportance from this woman.

"Nana-Chan? Arika-San? I once lived here. In this house. When it belonged to my mother."

Girl and woman both stared in shock at this.

"Nana-Chan? Watch Hana--I'll be right back."

The two younger girls and the dog all watched Mayu shake almost unto convulsion.

"Nana Onee-Chan? Will Mayu Onee-Chan be all right? She can sleep and get better in Hana's room---it's right over there."

Mayu already knew where she was pointing. Hana's safe wonderful place was the same place Mayu's safety and wonder had been spilled across a floor she was forced to clean up after.

"Is that her?"

"Oh, God-In-Heaven---Mayu-Chan?"

The man who emerged drew an instant smile from Hana, and a look of slight anxiety from Nana. But for Mayu, he was the final straw. No, he was not the monster that had hurt her. But apparently, he was the supposedly dead man who permitted that to happen.

"Papa?"

Back at the common eating area by Enoshima Park, Kouta made a wild but not insane guess about Nana's possible new status.

"Perhaps it's like those movies and TV shows with Immortals and swords. Nana-Chan is of Nyu's kind, and was present when she, their most powerful one, died. I..."

Kouta froze, and began to breathe hard. Memories of the gentlest and yet the most unspeakably savage being he had ever met came back without ever having been gone. The touch of her naked back against his at an age when he was just figuring out why he would want to turn his head. The smile on her face at zoo creatures so mundane to him and so trans-cosmic in her wide pretty eyes. The spray of blood from his little sister's innards, with him praying to be kicked in the shins one last time. The spray of blood from her own brain, as the pain of her grotesquely melted body rose to such heights, even the murderous demon inside her pleaded for death, which he at last granted. Now a spray of ice water shook him out of this. Kurama looked concerned but unapologetic.

"I suppose that loving a horned girl is never easy, no matter how you slice it."

"I didn't love her--not after what she did. She---how could she?"

Kurama shook his head.

"I've seen her in too many situations leading to death to ever ask that. My question would be why she almost never killed while she was with you. It paints a picture of Lucy that is very complex, even with knowing about Nyu. A picture vastly more complex than I am sometimes prepared to accept. You lived a miracle, Kouta--you all did. For the love and acceptance you gave so freely, a devil meant to wipe mankind away let herself be killed instead. Maybe it's you who are the mutant, to find a heart I would have sworn wasn't there. Perhaps it was she who was meant to weed out certain folks and make way for an evolution of compassion in our poor stupid species."

"But--will Nana-Chan become like her--like she could become?"

"I can't believe she would. If Nana is part of a new evolution, it is not the Diclonius, but the one I spoke of with you. The horned girls that are out there now may be acting like devils, but they are ones we have bred through contempt and indifference. Nana is like no one else--but Nana."

A third voice was heard, one wholly unfamiliar.

"Are you fellas discussing the horned girls from the news? Because I knew one, once. I went to school with her--sort of."

Kouta was about to gently send the man on his way when Kurama stopped him.

"Please--tell us all about it. We're biologists studying the horned girls, and anything would be a help."

He sat down and nodded.

"It was right before the government cleaned house at the Kamakura Children's Welfare Center--the orphanage. It was rotten in those days. I was only a few years from just walking out the front door the way a lot of us do. I was almost lucky. No one wanted a kid who wasn't their own blood, but when I got picked, I also had no relatives anywhere, so there was no one to object to my being adopted--they were good people, needed an Onii-Chan to ride herd on their little ones, and I obliged. It was a lot like having a good boss, you know?"

Kouta was now listening intently, but stopped the man.

"Wait--you were happy to have no relatives? But if you had, someone would have been able to take you in, right?"

"Kouta-San--Japan has fewer orphans in centers like the one he mentioned than almost any other country. The flipside of that is, those who are in them exist in a Catch-22 limbo. Many people do not wish to adopt a child they have no blood relation to, yet also, not all relatives are willing to take a child related to them by blood into their home. Yet at the same time, they will block efforts to let others adopt the child, feeling it diminishes the family's standing and worth to allow someone of their clan to take another name."

The friendly intruder nodded.

"A load of the kids there were like that. The worst-off was the one we called the Devil. Wealthy aunt with a business, could have afforded a kid and handed them off to servants, no sweat. But yeah, this aunt also refused to let her family's honor be tainted by letting the Devil be adopted. Honor? She was in advertising. I mean, advertising and honor? When called out one day by her angry charge, she slapped the living crap out of the poor kid--and it wasn't even that bad what they said to the Aunt. So the Devil became an unholy terror, young age aside, and kids twice that age steered clear. Way too good at revenge and more."

Kouta hated hearing this.

"You called her the devil because of her horns?"

"Horns? No, Bro---the Devil wasn't our horned girl. She kept to herself. No, in our little town by the River Styx, the Devil went by the name Tomoo."
 
While this man added to a picture of a dead girl, a living one who felt dead inside met with a man who she had thought surely was dead.

"Papa? How can you be alive?"

Arika had taken Hana and Nana to their living area, while the reunited father and daughter stayed in the kitchen.

"She told you I was dead? Why doesn't that surprise me? Mayu-Chan, my tale is a difficult one. You may yet hate me for it, but I ask you to keep an open mind."

Mayu wanted to scream that she had been understanding long enough, but thought of Nana, like her sister, and Hana, who was, apparently, sister to both of them.

"Please tell me your story."

The man saw his child flinch when he tried to pat her on the head.

"I will. I married young, to a woman of pretty looks and a sharp mind, but not a lot of confidence. The only man capable of awakening her self-esteem was her beloved older brother. He was a good man--you always liked him, and he and his family liked you. But they are all gone now. The word was, they were one of several families who were victims of the notorious serial killer, Kaze No Kaede. Your mother went wild at the police station when they asserted that the killer was capable of tearing people to pieces without ever laying a hand on them. They had her in psychiatric lock-up for a month. When she came out, she was no longer the same woman I had known. Her lack of belief in herself had always been an obstacle to our love. But after her brother died, it was like she lacked a soul."

Mayu tried to recall all this, but only some of it came together. To a girl under five years old, life was a simple thing, with remembrance not always following a logical pattern. She knew that Mama was unhappy sometimes, though figuring out exactly why was beyond her.

"Was that when you left?"

"No. I was a husband, and a father. Leaving was something I would have to explain to my parents, and to myself. But your mother rarely left our room, and never left our house. You were an obligation she met, but increasingly only just so. I tried a few times to shake her out of it--each time she would wreck the house in retaliation."

This time, Mayu did remember seeing her mother act like one of her playmates after too much sugar. It had seemed almost funny at the time.

"But you did leave, didn't you?"

The man showed Mayu a finger with a deep scar.

"That scar is from microsurgery. She bit it off and swallowed it after one confrontation. That time, it was my parents who said I should take you away and get a divorce. I should have done it immediately. But I was determined to try one last time to reach her. I made her seeking psychiatric help a condition of our continued marriage. She responded by saying that she would allege to authorities that I was a bad father, a pervert who would harm you. I should have called her bluff---but I became fearful, and so let her keep you all those years."

Mayu fought back a grim thought about a woman she had not liked for some time.

"But I meant nothing to her! She told me as much before I fl---before I left."

The man she was also not incredibly fond of at that moment nodded.

"As yourself, her child, someone she needed to care for when all she cared about anymore was herself? No---you meant no more to her than I did. But as a possession? As a mark that she was still doing what polite society demands of a mother? To say nothing of your value as someone who must pay attention to her? In all those sad respects, she would never have given you up."

As Mayu heard tell of a past both familiar and alien to her, Nana talked with a mother who had always wanted her.

"You call this man Papa?"

It was a tender conversation, but it was not without tension.

"He is Papa. I used to think he was my real Papa. Loving him and being loved by him kept Nana sane through many bad moments."

Arika tried not to be defensive, but her greatest regret now sat in her home and on her couch, accusing not with words, looks or gestures, but with her very existence.

"It just feels like he took you away from us so he could have you for himself. Was what he said about you killing us one day even partly true?"

Nana sighed, and wished she were as good at words as Yuka or Kouta.

"You've seen the news reports."

"I've seen little girls being fired at by armed men and responding. Their powers scare me, but if someone shot at me, and I could do what they--what you do--I don't know what might happen."

Nana recalled her Papa chatting with Kouta over dinner.

"Do you ever have to scold Hana?"

Arika looked over at the little girl asleep with a guardian pup in her lap.

"Of course."

Nana felt almost dizzy. Her real mother, her real sister, her uncle, and now Mayu her own cousin? But a girl who knew intense pain the way most know aching feet quickly found her center.

"Arika-San---Mama---imagine if she decided that she wanted a puppy of her own---"

"She does."

"---and then imagine she just brings a stray home, and you say she can't keep it. How would she respond?"

Arika nodded.

"She would pout--in which case I would either have to scold her more, or wait out her tantrum."

Nana removed her headpieces, revealing her horns, before restoring them. She then gently reached out and tickled Hana's feet, causing her to smile in her sleep, and patted Wanta on the head, all without laying a finger on either of them.

"Now, how would all that go if a small child could do the things I can, and aged twice as quickly as well?"

Arika saw her eldest child with new eyes.

"Your father and I grew up next door to each other. I even called him Onii-Chan. He used to tease me so hard, and I would get so angry, and I swore that if I could make him stop laughing at me, I would...ohhhhh. So it's as simple as all that? These girls like you are doomed because of the timing of their abilities coming to be?"

Nana recalled the voice. The one she had heard on a bare few occasions, the one that Barbara had accused Nana of ignoring, and the one that Nyu tried to tell an angry Kouta drove her to kill his family.

"There may be something else, but Nana isn't qualified to speak of it--it may not even be true. Mama, rest assured Papa Kurama-Dono did the right thing in my case. As time goes by, I will tell you all I know---that I promise. But now I have a question. Mama--if you had kept me, what would you have named me?"

Arika resisted for a moment. This would be tough.

"Hana. I named your little sister after you."

Nana looked over again at the napping child. A small look of resentment came and went, replaced by a growing smile.

"All right then. But for giving away my name, I charge you and Uncle with making certain that every happiness and every joy that was not mine because of my horns also belongs to Hana-Chan."

Arika reached over and touched her daughter right behind her horns, brushing the flesh-ridge. Nana's face blushed purest red.

"What was that about?"

"That was a joy that will always be yours alone. As a baby, you loved it when your father touched you there. Oh, what will we tell Hana? We can't have her blabbing at school about you, but I think she should know. And what of the incredible coincidence with Mayu-Chan?"

Nana pulled her mother close.

"We will handle it all. And don't worry about coincidences--we who live at Kaede House aren't impressed easily by them anymore. Mama, while Mayu and Uncle talk--I will tell you of a girl we called Nyu. I warn that it will be very easy to hate her--but try also to understand her, for she was worth understanding."

As Nana began a much-told tale, a young man spoke to Kurama and Kouta about events they only thought they knew of.

"Now, you'd think that all we older kids had to do was corner Tomoo and his bunch, and that was that. Boy, did we learn otherwise."

The young man again seemed relieved to be unburdening himself.

"He never had all his group around at the same time. One or more of them was always watching and waiting for the workers--us pounding on little ones was about the only thing they couldn't fudge away if it got reported to higher-ups. So we all got pranked, but couldn't do anything. Little creep actually demanded money a few times--till we told him we'd take our chances with breaking some heads in that instance. Wish we'd held our ground."

Kouta was beginning to smell a rat and nearly said so.

"So this little kid with attitude ran a place as rough and tumble as that?"

"Hey! None of us were saints--I wasn't--except once. But he did okay for himself in a place where nobody did okay. One time, I snuck off with my girl--and somehow the creep had pictures. I'dve caught Hell for it, so he made me part of his network. Assigned me to do to someone else what someone had done to me. I knew already. It was this little girl who hung around him--liked to look all innocent but delighted in being 'secretly bad'. So he sends me out to see if 'Horns' has anything that he can use to break her."

Kurama found himself in the odd position of hoping Lucy won.

"She resisted him?"

"In the worst way possible. She shut herself down to the degree that nothing he did short of hitting got any rise out of her. We all started to whisper that, whether she was Human or not, we wished we could piss him off the way she did. So I followed her outside that one day, and caught her playing with a puppy. That was it. This girl we all teased and harassed and did more so to please this little devil found someone to love. So I lied to Tomoo, said she found a corner where she cried--'Oh That Meanie Tomoo!' and he had his victory. I was off the hook, and for a month, everything seemed all right."

Kouta took one of his pastries and handed it off.

"Thanks. My folks do feed me, but things have been tight. Well, I see Tomoo pull one of his stunts, and I see his little girlfriend befriend old Horns. I could have said something, but I was off his radar, and didn't want back on for the sake of a girl who wasn't my friend. I mean, when you're older in those places, they won't hesitate to beat the crap out of you when you misbehave. No reason to, since you're leaving soon. It was soon after that I passed a room and heard Tomoo and his gang laughing. I heard the puppy squeal in pain--till it stopped altogether. I wanted to do something---but I ran. Not an hour had passed, and I got up the nerve to check in on it all--and I screamed. There was no sign of Horns or her puppy--but the Devil and his followers were chopped into pieces."

He smiled.

"When I got my head together, we all cheered. Nobody liked those four kids. Maybe we hadn't been nice to Horns, but the thought that we wouldn't be kowtowing to a miniature Godfather made even that place bearable. When one of the workers--a woman barely seven years older than me--started pounding on me, I let her--and wouldn't you know that was when the state inspectors walked in? I'm sorry that orphans nowadays have to be shipped to Fujisawa--but they have no idea what they would have faced, if the Devil had been able to keep it up and pass it on, in terms of the power they wielded over us."

He got up to leave.

"I have a job, I keep my little sibs in line still, and I survived that place, long enough to see it shut down and the devil staked through. But you know what? I still wonder if Old Horns ever found a better place---and until the day I die, I will hear that puppy as it died. So what have you two found out about horned girls?"

Kouta answered.

"That, their destructive power aside, they often want the same things as the rest of us, and like the rest of us, have the capacity for great good and great evil."

The young man left, and Kurama drank down the rest of his coffee.

"Kouta--we must make a trip to the Kamakura Police Department. An old wrong must be undone."

As this unplanned trek began, the awkward reunion between father and child continued.

"Leaving you behind was the hardest thing I ever had to do."

Mayu was not in an acquiescent mood.

"And yet you did it. You left me with a woman who, by your own words, no longer had a soul."

He did not threaten or remind her of the place of parent to child in their world. He merely nodded.

"Maybe if my brother hadn't died so suddenly after my niece was born, I would have manned up and gotten my head together on your behalf. I arrived to your mother in time to see this 'Kurama' take the baby away, and leave her in shambles. But this was a woman who actively wanted my help, and who accepted my love. And when our love produced a child, all she could talk about was that child's happiness, and a vow to one day find her other child. With each attempt to see you turned away, I became fearful that the false charges she threatened me with could be used to take Hana away. As I became ever more fearful, I thought that you might end up like her. Much later, when I learned that she had remarried, I wondered what sort of man would even want her."

Mayu actually understood everything he was saying, and if it had been about someone else, she might have urged that this person understand his pain and torment as her vicious mother and her vile lies ruined everything.

"I can tell you what sort of man wanted her--I can tell you what he wanted from her--I can tell you why I finally left this house--and they are all the same answer---PAPA!!!"

She only slightly regretted her words, as the pain hit home along with the final realization of the consequences of his departure.

"I'd read that he was arrested for molesting a train-goer, and then shot by an SAT agent he got on the wrong side of. It was right after that your mother left town in a damned hurry, as his victims all came forward. I demanded this house from her for next to nothing as she fled--and I threatened to give her to one of her husband's victims' families if she didn't also surrender you."

He finally managed to look at her.

"She told me you had been lured off by a pimp named Kouta, and that she no longer knew your whereabouts. Not that she cared--that much she made explicit."

Mayu shook with fury, and then dialed her cell-phone. After a brief call, she sat back down with the father who had tried but failed.

"She lied to both of us. I have called Kouta to come and get me. I will be civil to your wife and to you, and I will try and be there for Hana, should she need me. But I cannot forgive you for leaving me when all you had to do was stand up to a bully we both know was full of hot air. Now, if you ever wish to be forgiven--you will sit there and listen to the story of a Pimp."
 
As one true story began, another concluded. Arika shook her head.

"So she was responsible for all those plane crashes, and the waves that cut through town?"

Nana knew that someone who had never known Nyu would never be able to see all the points that she did. Nana had known an uncaring monster, and Nana had known a girl who loved a man she knew could never forgive her childish, if terrible, attack so much that giving her life for him was not even a question. Plus, hadn't she known many of the same depredations? And didn't a bond exist, since Nyu charged her with taking care of the house when she left for the last time? She actually fought off a chuckle that there would be no more breast-groping till Kouta and Yuka resolved their tensions.

"I can't defend her, Mama. I can only say that the loneliness she felt and the hatred it drove her to, once it had a hold on her, was so deeply inside her, the miracle was that she cared about anyone ever. Despite what those awful people did when they invaded our home, she didn't gain her powers back as Nyu until Kouta was shot."

Perhaps realizing that reasoning out the whole mess with the girl known as Lucy and Nyu was not in her at this time, Arika instead focused on two other recurring names.

"What about these people, Yuka and Kouta? Do they treat you well?"

Nana smiled.

"Pretty much. Kouta can be mean at times, and sometimes Yuka is mean to him--but they are really nice, once you get to know them. Kouta slapped me once, and then made me apologize for attacking Nyu. I hated him at first, but then I realized--he didn't know--or didn't remember--who Lucy really was, so all he saw was me attacking his friend. But when I have needed him, he was there--and one time, he didn't even ask any questions. Kouta misses his little sister so much--he wants to protect all the girls he knows, even if one of them was the one who took Kanae away from him. Mostly, he just seems silly, but in a good, loving way. And Yuka is silly over him. Am I making any sense at all?"

Arika grabbed and held a child who should have been only a little bigger than Hana, but was nearly her own size instead.

"Stay here for at least a couple of days. Watch your uncle and me with Hana. You'll see how much sense you make. But Nana? How do you know all the things you do about Nyu? Some of the things you said--like about her puppy being killed--it doesn't sound like she had time or reason to tell you all that."

Nana's eyes went wide.

"Lucy had a puppy? Like Wanta?"

Arika recalled suddenly the trance-like state Nana had been in as she said some of her story, a state Arika had dismissed as narrative fatigue until that moment. Nana shook her head.

"How could Nana know that? Or about the girl--Aiko Takada? Mama? I'm scared!"

The embrace was renewed, as another piece of the puzzle Kurama and Kouta worked on came into clear view. Across town, another old puzzle was laid to rest. The two men who cared for these young women watched a once-young woman squirm and then break under police scrutiny. The Kamakura Chief Of Police, once an SAT agent till he gunned down a suspect in cold blood, thanked the pair for their efforts.

"It never occurred to my predecessors to question whether or not she'd actually seen the young girls in question kill Ino Takada. Her retraction plus the angle of the wound means that the little girl Aiko is now officially cleared of all charges--may it give her spirit some rest. Kurama-San, I am again in your debt. Cases this cold usually never see closure."

The man who owed his continued, if diminished, career in law enforcement to Kurama's intervention with Chief Kakuzawa withdrew. But Kurama was not to be let off of old wrongs that easily. A woman's embrace made his life a very awkward thing.

"I'm sorry--but to hear that she won't be held responsible for killing that thug anymore lightens my heart so much. I may have hurt him--but he took every opportunity to take it out on her instead, so I have no sympathy. I know they can't arrest that little barfly for keeping her silence--so I'll have to just see to it that my daughter hears of this--when I visit her."

Kouta stepped in to save his new mentor.

"Takada-San, you must understand. Kurama-San was part of the force that was there when your daughter was killed. He was overridden by a harsh and inflexible man, focused only on capturing the girl Aiko was with. He tried to save her, but his superior saw only a quarry and not two girls."

Having been both rescued and verbally curb-stomped, Kurama accepted his role in a not-so long ago tragedy.

"That man is dead. The world is well rid of him. He was an inflexible sort, and it cost him his wife and child as well."

The woman known as simply Takada to the art world looked thoughtful, and then pulled something from her valise.

"I've treasured these drawings as all I have left of Aiko. Do either of you know the girl in these pictures? Was this the girl she was killed for?"

Hat or no hat, the two men had no trouble recognizing the dominant figure in their lives for so long. Kurama took point.

"No. This girl's name was Nyu. She was my young associate's cousin, who died recently after a long illness. No--your daughter was taken hostage by one of those vicious horned girls."

"My apologies for your loss, young man. But now she and Aiko are together again."

"It's good to think Nyu had a friend waiting for her, Takada-San. I mourn and praise both our families."

Takada looked at Kurama.

"I hope not all those horned girls are vicious. I would like to paint one someday. I've tried to envision one---"

She pulled out more drawings.

"---but this is all my meditations have netted me."

The scribbles were not a face, or a look, but a number, written in several languages and styles. It was the Number Seven.

A woman who would be content with the rearranged truth given her that day left them, and Kouta waited for a scolding.

"I won't apologize, Kurama-San. Not even if it costs me the position you mentioned."

Kurama waved his hand.

"I do like to think that part of me is dead. And while I do not think this brings peace between Lucy and myself, perhaps her hold on me will diminish now that this old wrong is righted. Besides, your forceful reminder of my role in that tragedy has caused me to think further, Kouta-San. Do you recall what I said about what was recovered from the Chief's underground grotto?"

"Hai. His head, and the head of a young boy who was the product of his raping Nyu's poor mother. A creature like Nyu herself, who the sick bastard intended to be her mate."

Kurama knew a great deal more had been found there, but that was the extent of what he could tell Kouta about at this time.

"Kouta--that boy was not three years old."

"I don't follow you."

Kurama raised a finger.

"The Chief's recorded files as he lectured Lucy said that, once we knew of her existence, we knew of her mother's. But we only learned of her existence three years prior to her escape. I helped the autopsy on that boy. He was over seven years old, with no signs of premature or rapid aging like in most Silpelits. I'm a fool. I had wondered how the Chief and his son had such extensive facilities already in place for a threat supposedly so recently emerged. But I never asked those questions, did I?"

Kouta caught on.

"So Chief Kakuzawa knew of Nyu and horned girls many years before anyone else? What does that mean, Kurama-San?"

"It means that many of our assumptions about his plans may also fly out the window--and that, if we don't wish to be up against the plans of a serial movie villain, we had better ascertain the true timeline of certain events--including who the Chief may have had as allies inside and outside Japan. This war is currently a series of small but brutal battles, Kouta--but it will erupt in full, and Kanagawa's current immunity cannot be guaranteed, especially if Nana has become the new Queen."

Kouta stopped and looked at him.

"Say that you will protect her always."

"I won't. Because to let Nana come to harm is not a part of me. I will not forgive you asking that again, Kouta, no matter how I've wronged you or others."

Kouta nodded.

"For that I do apologize. But if people with enough force came to my home--I would have no way to stop them--and then they would have to kill us all. I don't want that, but these forces tend to decide what they will and justify it unto themselves."

"Then step up and become part of those forces---your phone."

Kouta answered it, and heard an upset young woman.

"Of course I'll come---you're where? Are either of them---good. All right, sit tight and I will get you, Mayu-Chan. I promise."

Kouta sighed as he hung up.

"Of all the places on the map to end up---the map?"

Kouta looked at Kurama.

"If Nana is the new queen or something like it, could we use her instincts to map out Diclonius concentrations?"

Kurama sighed, and showed that he was indeed a Papa at heart.

"If--and only if--she wants to. But would it even be necessary for her to do so? Such concentrations would tend be marked off by blood--or would they? After all, Lucy hid herself for five years before I even realized she existed, and she had no place to hide. But who among Humans would hide these girls--and for what purpose?"

The question hung in the air as the men went to seek the girls who waited for their arrival. One finished her tale in the meantime.

"...and I am ashamed and saddened that it took such a thing for me to finally trust a man who had put himself out on my behalf, but that was how deeply the scars Mother and her new husband left ran in my soul. Kouta-San is no pimp--but I will say that, he is such a man of worth that if he were to ask such a horrid thing of me, I would at least know there must be a very good reason for it."

The eyes of the man called Kenjiro showed signs of fighting back tears.

"It is good---to know that you found such a worthy, and that he cares for you with so little asked in return. Mayu-Chan? I wish to someday be forgiven by you. Can this be?"

There it was, like a pinprick of golden light in the utter solid darkness of the girl's past. Finally, one of the people who had made her life a living hell asked for forgiveness. Granted, it was the least guilty party involved, but it still felt like a string of Olympic Gold victories in the heart of Mayu.

"We are both alive, Papa--and anything is possible. As I said, it took almost losing Kouta to see how I treasure him. Please--give me time."

With this small hope offered, Kenjiro began to smile.

"All you want, and all you need. You can even stay here whenever you want."

The thought alone seemed to put Mayu on the verge of hyperventilation. But a hand grabbed her own.

"I'm here, Mayu-Chan. I'm here."

Mayu meant no insult to Kenjiro as she looked at Kouta, and whispered a single word.

"Pa-Pa!"

Yet for all that lack of intent, it brought forcefully home to a man the price of not standing up to a bully. Seeing his sad look, Mayu chose to introduce the two--as well as putting off telling of and explaining her feelings for Bando-San for another visit. This one had already seen enough twists.

"My Papas are not perfect men--and that is why I treasure them both."

In the living room, Arika sat with a man she had every reason to hate.

"Would she have grown up to kill us?"

Kurama looked down.

"I came to see such things as a given. But I have recently learned even the worst enemy I will ever know was once just a child like Hana who loved a small dog, and that even assumptions about the history and timeline I thought I knew certain may have no validity at all. Yet those changes are also valueless--for the problems with the horned girls persist outside of schemes and lies. If they are not our replacements from God, then I must instead view them as a wake-up call as to how we all treat each other. The question, Arika-San, is not whether Nana-Chan would have become your killer, but whether she would ever have realized the difference in time. Three is a dangerous age to become a demigod, and it sadly makes the burnt and bloody path before me clear."

Kurama then produced a photo of himself holding two horned babies.

"One is Nana-Chan. The other---was my own sweet but dangerous Mariko. I would die now and lead a second life of pure torment gladly if I only knew that they were both alive and whole and loved from cradle to grave."

He looked at Hana, so like that ideal face for Nana, and smiled.

"Now, I believe you have a surprise or two for that sleepy-head."

As the adults assembled in the front room, and Wanta darted between all his favorite Humans, Arika instructed her littlest girl.

"Hana? Do you remember when poor cousin Akio got sick?"

"Yes, Mama. He got sick and he couldn't get well anymore, and so did his friend who lived with him. But if anyone asks--he wanted it said that he only had pneumonia. Hana has kept that promise--but she misses Akio. He dressed nice and cooked so well, and his home was always so neat and clean."

Kenjiro wanted to show to both his daughter and his brother's daughter that he could be a man they could trust. So the unspoken doubts he had about Nana's status were put fully aside for all time.

"This is even more important. What we show you now, even the family can't talk about--only us three in private. It's so important that you understand that, Hana."

"Hana understands."

Nana breathed in.

"Hana-Chan, I have something to show you. No matter what you see on TV, don't yell or bite, okay?"

"Nana Onee-Chan! Hana wouldn't do such things!"

Nana then calmly and carefully removed her headpieces. Hana gasped, but Mayu was quick to bring Wanta near Nana, and the little licking machine's approval of the horned girl was all the little one needed to calm her down.

"Nana Onee-Chan---has horns--like those bad girls? But Nana Onee-Chan isn't bad."

Arika nodded.

"Not only is Nana Onee-Chan not bad--she is your real Onee-Chan. My baby, just like you are."

Kenjiro had allowed caution to triumph over love in the past. He made at least a start in showing he had learned his lesson.

"Just as Mayu Onee-Chan is my baby--and your Onee-Chan as well."

The girl actually looked sad for a minute, and the adults grew afraid until she spoke.

"I have two for-real Onee-Chans---and I can't tell anybody? Ooooohh! Mama? What about---"

Hana whispered to her mother, who chuckled.

"No--Wanta-Chan is only family by adoption."

Hana looked at the growing pup.

"Sorry, Wanta-Chan---but we all still love you! Kouta-San? Can I stay over with my Onee-Chans someday?"

Kouta tousled the girl's hair.

"I'll have to ask your Onee-Chans and Yuka-San, Hana. I'm only the Papa of Maple House---I don't have any real power."

Hana stood up and bowed to Kurama.

"Thank you, Kurama Papa-San--for helping Nana Onee-Chan so much when she was lonely and afraid."

Kurama accepted her tiny embrace, and if he thought briefly of one he would not see again in this life, it was understood.

"If Hana-Chan will say hello to my daughter Mariko when she offers up prayers, that will be thanks enough."

Mayu asked for and got a back-ride from Kouta, while Nana held a new picture of herself and her family, now only a short walk away. Kurama kept his thoughts to himself until they got back to Maple House, and produced an atlas from some used books Yuka had bought.

"Nana--I need you to focus your senses---and tell me if any spot on this map of the Pacific shows signs of Diclonius. Will you?"

"Of course, Papa. Nana is obedient to you."

Over the course of an hour, the simple exercise was repeated five times. Finally, Nana was allowed to go to her and Mayu's room, where Kouta was just closing a book and leaving. Nana chuckled after he left.

"He tucked you in and read you a bedtime story?"

Mayu shrugged.

"I asked him to. It made me feel good. How are you? Is Kurama-San finished with you?"

"I guess. Papa just had me point at a map. I never learned how to read those. Maybe soon. Mayu-Chan? Are you angry with Nana?"

"Why would I be angry?"

She sighed.

"Because Nana made you go back to the place where you knew so much pain and shame. Nana's place like that is beneath the ocean now. But yours we had to go into."

"Nana--whether with you or alone, I had to go back there someday, or live in fear of it forever. We both found our families there again, and we again found out how many hurtful things Nyu did because her pain made her hateful. We have Kenjiro-San, Arika-San and we each have a sister in Hana-Chan, and I know together we will make sure she leads the most wonderful life possible. Kouta-San came at my call, just the way poor Bando-San did before Nyu killed him. I called him Papa without straining this time--and you have Kurama-San in the same house with us now. All is good in my sight."

Nana felt gas build up inside her.

"Mayu?"

"Yes?"

"Did---did---"

Mayu pleaded mentally for Nana not to say it, to no avail.

"Did It Hurt?"

A minute's silence was at last broken.

"Not even with you, Nana-Chan. I will not speak of it. Do Not Ask Me That Again."

Nana wondered what drove her to even ask such a thing.

"I will obey your wish, Cousin Mayu."

Mayu looked over at Nana, and turned her face towards her own.

"Cousin?"

"Our fathers were brothers."

Mayu grabbed her sandal from the floor, and smacked Nana on the forehead lightly, kissing the forehead immediately after.

"Baka! No labels will diminish what we have found together."

Mayu had the last word before sleep took them both.

"Sisters are we."

EPILOGUE

Kurama stepped just outside the gates of Maple House.

"Thank you for coming so quickly."

The female agent looked around.

"You know Kouta and Yuka will flip out if they see me here."

Kurama shook his head.

"They won't. Besides, those two are very forgiving to people that shoot them."

The Agent still checked the perimeter, just to be certain.

"Anna said it was urgent."

Kurama nodded.

"Tell Saseba to get Beijing and Washington on the line. It's that big."

The Agent adjusted her sunglasses.

"They won't like it. You know how they are about outsiders. What's so damned smoking hot in all this?"

"See this map? See this spot? Five times in the past hour--Nana pointed it out as the reddest of red zones for Diclonius' activity--only it's also somehow muted."

The Agent immediately called her superior.

"Arrange a meeting with the PM. Mass existence of horns outside Japan now confirmed. Where? Two words..."

A woman called cold by some found she now felt even colder.

"North Korea."

(To be continued in 'Long Live Nana')
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top