Subject: [FFML] (R.5) Brutal Truth REAL version.
From: Mad Hamlet
Date: 12/14/2000, 2:17 PM
To: ffml@fanfic.com

Greetings,

     Damn, damn, damn.

I HATE it when I do that. I posted the WRONG version. A rough draft not a

proofread one. Sorry about that. I think I got most of the blatent mistakes

but if anything really bad jumps out at ya and bites, just blame me. C and C

is always welcome, if somewhat painful.

I remain, as always

               Mad-Hamlet







Disclaimer: I disavow, deny, disclaim, disbelieve and dismiss any and all

things pertaining to that ugly phenomenon known as 'reality'.









Drain Bramaged Inc. Proudly Presents,

               A Mad-Hamlet Production...





			                Brutal Truth



	She sat sitting across from me at our regular table. The bar was your

standard one, dark, cozy, and a murmur of collected conversations gathering

into the background to create an ever-present buzz. It wasn't bad enough to

attract the wrong crowd, nor was it good enough to overcharge for watered down

drinks. Add that to the fact it was within walking distance of where we both

lived and it quickly became our little home away from home.

	Right now though, I wanted nothing more than to get her away from our hang

out and back to her actual home. She always got like this around this time of

year. Every spring, just when the grey skies of March gave way to April, she'd

go all to pieces. 

	Her hair hung listlessly, unwashed, unkempt. The black gleam had been covered

by grime, grease and dust. Misplaced locks hung in front of her eyes but they

were so clouded over with the effects of alcohol I doubt she'd have noticed

the second coming, much less stray hair. She huddled over her drink, almost

protectively then with a lurch held it out at arms length and with a loud

exclamation of "Too duty!" downed it.

Just like the five before it, and the ten the night before, and the seven the

night before that. Just like she had, these same three days as long as I had

known her.

And she never, not once, had ever said anything about it.

	I met her six years ago when she arrived in San Francisco from Japan. I

myself had just finished my schooling and was teaching English as a second

language. While her English was passable there was a lot of rough edges to be

refined. I picked up pretty quick that she was different from the majority of

my students. While most did study and concentrate on whatever task I had for

them, she seemed to cling to every lesson with desperation. After a few weeks

of regular lessons, twice a week, she came to me to inquire about the

possibility of private tutoring. Normally my reaction was to politely decline

as I had more then enough on my table already but she seemed quite earnest

and, she was an excellent student. If you ask any teacher worth their salt

they'll tell you what they love most is an eager student. I was no exception

so I agreed.

	For the first few weeks our meetings were quite what you would expect between

a student and a teacher; but as the time passed our lessons began to edge away

from just simple instruction and repetition involving vocabulary and grammar.

We began to have real conversations, talking about ourselves, where we were in

our lives and where we were going. I learned that she was majoring in acting

and hoped to go onto theatre. I told her of my own plans to hopefully open my

own language school one day. We discussed ethics, the latest news and, more

than once, our conversations continued well past the scheduled lesson-time.

She never talked about her past much, except to say that she had family back

in Japan that she didn't talk too very often save her middle sister who she

chatted with over the phone from time to time. I didn't pry much either seeing

no real point.

	Things changed one night after we had had a vigorous discussion regarding the

ethics of group religion versus singular worship. She was gathering her things

to leave and I really didn't want the evening to end. It had been a long time

since I had had a regular social life and I suddenly had the urge to go out

and have a beer. Something I had not done since leaving the university. I

casually asked her if she wanted to 'go and have a drink.' 

	I had no idea what button I'd accidentally pushed but it must have cut pretty

close to something nasty. For a minute she seemed like she was going to bolt

out of my apartment, through the door if she had too. Then her fear turned to

anger and I swear the temperature dropped several degrees in the general area.

My mouth went on auto-pilot and blurted out,

"Platonic..platonic..platonic..only platonic."

	I entertain no delusions about my physical fitness. I have none. I don't

exercise, I eat what I like and smoke. Just by the way she held herself I

could tell she could wipe the floor with me and I did not want that at all.

Pain and I have never really been too close. 

	One of the exercises I drum into all my students is the practice of 'the

eternal homework'. I encourage them that, whenever and wherever, they come

across a word they do not know that they immediately look it up in a

dictionary, write down the definition in their mother-tongue, then the English

definition and write three sentences using the new word. Not many stick with

it very long but she was, as I said, different. The second I said 'platonic'

she whipped out an English-Japanese dictionary automatically and looked it up.

I saw her lips move as she read the Japanese equivalent and the subsequent

English definition. I was quite nervous as I was pretty sure I would either be

having a cold beer in good company soon, or a closed casket service.

	With a snap she closed her dictionary and giving me an apologetic smile

agreed.

I kept my word and we had a nice drink and continued conversation, just

between friends.

A few weeks later we did it again, then even sooner after that. More months

passed and we occasionally would see a movie, or go to a restaurant. I was

there for her stage debut and gave her a standing ovation. (Even if I was the

only one on my feet.) After that I never missed a performance of hers, even if

the play was beyond my understanding.

	Then the mystery began. The end of March rolled by and we had gone to our

regular bar but, unlike her normal behavior, she proceeded to get blitzed out

her mind. Occasionally she would break down and cry like a babe, clinging to

me and all I could do was hold her, glaring at anyone who stared. The next

night the whole episode repeated itself. Her toasting "To duty." and downing

shots like they were going out of style. I merely sat there making sure she

was, relatively, ok. After the third night I didn't see her for two weeks.

	When she did call on me, she apologized and I asked if there was anything she

wanted to talk about. She shook her head only to reply that, "This time of

year always reminded her of a hard time." Then she invited me out to dinner,

her treat, and we were back on track.

	By then we were the best of friends and I had no intention of risking it by

being nosy. Though I was curious. This happened every year that I knew her, at

the same time. 

	She waved a waiter over and that snapped my thoughts back to the present. She

ordered yet another Johnny Walker, straight up. I sighed and lit a cigarette,

contemplating the coming duties ahead. Me practically carrying her the blocks

to her apartment, dragging her up the steps, running a bath and, while she

attempted to clean up a little I would force a few aspirin down her throat

with four or five glasses of water so the hangover wouldn't be lethal. After

she collapsed onto her bed I'd sit there for a few hours to make sure that, if

she did vomit, she wouldn't choke to death on it.

Ah. Friendship.

	My musing was interrupted when in a slurred voice she began to spoke up. More

often than not she didn't speak at this time of year, being satisifed to only

drown whatever sorrows she held in silence, all save for the repeated "To

Duty." So I was a little surprised.

	"You're my best friend you know that?" Her head was resting in hands, which

were themselves supported by her elbows on the table.

Regrettably on the polished surface her elbows tended to slide outward so her

head would slowly droop then with a jerk she'd correct her position and the

whole thing started all over again.

	"After all this I think I deserve the title 'best friend'." I replied.

	She continued as if I hadn't spoken. "My bestest buddy and I've never even

told you why I put you through this hell."	

	I shrugged. "Not my business. I just want to make sure you're still around so

I can keep being your bestest buddy."

	She giggled but it was a scary giggle. More like a whimper in disguise. 

	"Well..do ya' wanna' know why?"

	"Do you want to tell?"

	Her head sprang up and she looked me right in the eyes. There was a fire

there, dim, shrouded by alcohol but there nonetheless. Maybe..maybe she wasn't

as drunk as I thought. Of course I didn't have her endurance. After six shots

straight up I'd be a puddle.

	"Yeah..yeah I do." She said.

	"Ok^�talk. I'll listen."

	"Heh, you ever were the sweet talker." She sat up a bit straighter. "On this

day, six years ago.."

	"Seven." I corrected.

	She looked confused.

	"You arrived here a little over six years ago." I explained, "So I figure

what happened occurred the year before."

These little nit-picky arguments of ours were sort of a trademark between us.

	She scrunched up her face in seeming concentration. 

	"Six and a half?" She offered.

	"I guess, this did happen before we met."

	She nodded.

	"Six and a half years ago I was to be married."

	Ah. Jilted at the altar. That would leave pleasant scars.

	"It took the longest time for me and my fianc� to admit our feelings to each

other. Death in fact, or the near escape from it."

	I nodded gesturing for her to continue.

	"And then, just when I finally thought I had earned a 'happily ever after' an

enemy revealed that my fianc�'s family had descended from burakumin."

	I shuddered ok I was wrong, this was much worse than having been jilted at

the altar. Having to teach to many Japanese I had picked up a fair amount of

knowledge of their society so I knew what she was talking about. That kind of

mentality that was associated with thinking of others as 'inferior' for one

stupid reason or another has always been a sore spot with me but I held my

tongue.

	"And?" I said.

	"And my father refused to allow the marriage. I loved my fianc� so much but

father threatened to kick me out of the clan. My oldest sister nearly had a

fit when she learned she had been living with burakumin. I think that hurt

most of all, I had never seen her angry before, she acted so hateful toward my

fianc�, practically screaming that she would throw away everything in the

house that had been 'contaminated' by them." 

	By this point tears had started to slide down her face but I made no move to

comfort her. I merely waited for her to continue, lighting another cigarette

in the silence and inspecting my, now quite warm, glass of beer. 

	After a minutes she resumed speaking. "Strangely enough my middle sister was

the most upset at the outcome. She always was so cold, so emotionless seeming

to love only money and trouble. Now, she got into a shouting match with

father, about how wrong his decision was, how all that mattered was that I

was, or had been, happy but he ignored her. He simply told me what would

happen if I insisted the marriage continue. He said it would bring dishonor to

our name and family line, how it was my duty to protect the dojo and clan. So,

despite everything inside me screaming not too^�" by now she was almost sobbing

and had to choke down a few tears before continuing. "I did my duty." 

	She held out her newest drink up before her lips. "To duty." she almost

snarled and chugged the drink. It took her a few seconds to recover. She wiped

away the tears with the back of her hand. 

"So," She gave that half-laugh, half-sob like before. "Whaddya think?"

	By now my cigarette had burned out, mostly untouched and I was idly circling

the rim of the beer bottle with my finger. I raised my eyebrows and gave her a

stare. "You fucked up."

	It was blunt. It was supposed to be. If you ask me what I think I tell you.

It's another sore spot with me. She reacted as if I slapped her. I suppose I

did, verbally at least. 

	Her hands scrabbled over the tabletop blindly looking for purchase, maybe

another drink but she hadn't ordered one yet. She shot me a look of pure rage

and through gritted teeth said. "You have no right to say that. I loved him

but I couldn't abandon my family! Father would have kicked me out; the

contamination of being related to a burakumin would have followed everything

we touched from then on. Our neighbors would have shunned us; our friends

would abandon us. Any children I or my sisters had would have almost no

opportunities in life. I couldn't do that, I couldn't be that selfish."

	I met her gaze and hated myself for what I said next.

	"You fucked up."

	She simply held my gaze for another second then looked away. I heard her

mumble. "I wouldn't expect a gaijin to understand."

	"I do understand." I replied, not put off by her statement. "I understand

that you don't even talk to your family, I understand that you're not even in

Japan anymore. That your life is here, in America so there goes your 'gaijin'

crack. I understand that, essentially, everything you were afraid of happening

happened anyway and you didn't even get your love out of it. Sounds like a

shitty deal if you ask me and you did."

	She sat there, like a puppet with its strings cut. Her head was hung so I

couldn't see her face but the shaking of her shoulders told me plenty already.

Finally in a quiet mewling voice that I had to really struggle to hear she

said, "I thought you were my friend."

	I reached across the table and gently held her hands in my own. She didn't

pull away but didn't respond either. 

	"I am your friend. Its because I'm your friend I'm telling you this. I'm

telling you how it is, or at least how I see it. I won't mince words; I won't

try and beguile you with manners and false sympathy. You can trust that if I

say something it's the truth or as close to it as I can get. I do this because

I am your friend."

	Still not looking at me she began to shake her head, "Just like him." She

whispered. "You're just like him, the baka."

	I didn't know whether to feel complimented or insulted.

	"C'mon," I said. "Let me take you home." 

	I stood up and tried to pull her up as well but she shook me off.

	"No. No, I'm fine. I can get home myself. I'm not as bad as last night."

	"You sure?" I asked.

	She nodded. "Yes. I'll be ok. Really." 

	I figured I'd blown it. My attitude toward honesty and opinions had destroyed

friendships before and others it had strengthened to the point I had them

still but then she gave me a large smile that reached even her eyes which was

surprising considering she still had tears running down her face. 

	"I'm ok really." She said squeezing my hand for emphasis. "Can I call you

tomorrow?" 

	"Uh, yeah sure." I was a little off center by this sudden turnaround in her

behavior. "But not before seven ok? I got a hell of a lot of work to do." 

	"Right." She replied. "Thanks. For everything." She squeezed my hand again. I

almost gulped. She was an attractive young woman after all but I didn't want

anything to happen that we would really regret later.

	"You're welcome. What are friends for?"

	When she released my hand I headed for the door of the bar. I turned halfway

around and asked, "Tomorrow right?" 

	She nodded again, "Yeah. I'll call you."

	"But not before seven."

	"Naturally." She replied and then gave a small laugh. A real laugh, an honest

laugh.

	As I walked by the bar I could see her on the other side of the huge window

that looked out on the street. She had sat back down at 'our' table and seemed

to be smiling as if she found something funny, some private joke all her own.

Maybe, just maybe she would be all right.

	The next day she didn't call. 

	A few days later I went to her apartment to check up on her. No one answered

the door and when I checked with the building manager I learned that she had

moved out. She was gone. 

She had shared with me that burning pain that all people carry in one form or

another and I, in my arrogance had now fucked up. It hurt. It hurt far more

than I thought it would. It was only then I realized that I loved her, no not

as lover, as a sister. Like the sister I had never had. She had been the best

friend I had ever had and I had tossed her away out of some sense of

'honesty.' Now it was my turn to go to bars and drink questionable amounts of

alcohol, loudly proclaiming "To honesty." Before downing each one. 

	Of course this couldn't go on forever. The pain lost some of its edge over

time and I stopped bingeing. I threw myself into my work using it to try and

forget what I considered one of the biggest mistakes of my life. I started to

make some real money and, instead of using it to open a school of my own I

instead went back to school myself. It was a hard life but satisfactory if not

particularly happy.

	Nine months passed and I received a letter in the mail. I didn't recognize

the return address. It was from some business in Southern California called

'NabsCorp Exporting'. I opened it and a card fell out. It read simply:



"You are cordially invited to the wedding of one Akane Tendo formally of Clan

Tendo, to one Ranma Saotome."

 

Also taped onto the inside of the invitation were two additional envelopes.

The contents of the first held a note and an airplane ticket: 



"I owe you. Here's the airplane ticket to the wedding.

						-Nabiki Tendo

	PS. Get a haircut.



The wedding was in Hawaii. 



The second envelope held a short note and an advertisement for a dojo opening

near my neighborhood in a few weeks. 

'The Saotome School of Anything Goes Martial Arts.'

The note itself read:



"You're terribly out of shape, you drink, smoke and are in the habit of

wearing the same shirt for days at a time. You're developing an unsightly gut

and need to spend more time in the sun. Pale skin is such a turn off. At least

you're not going bald. I'm not saying this because I hate you, I'm telling you

this because I'm your friend and it's the truth. 

See you soon and thanks again for being honest with me. I've missed you.

			Love,

			    Akane.



I closed the envelopes wearing a huge grin. I knew the perfect wedding present

for the two of them. I figure her fianc� could benefit from free English

lessons for a year or two. 



				                End







Authors Notes: That^�THAT was fun. I got the idea for this LAST NIGHT can you

believe it? I typed it up at work and am posting it now. A worthwhile labor

over 'real' work I think. 

Of course the inspiration for this was the few fics that used the 'burakumin'

idea. 'Poison' by..er..um..damn..one sec^�ah here we go.

By Susan Doenime was the first one I read. Terrible, awful, gut-wrenching,

vile^�great stuff!

	The rest was inspired by a fic of similar nature by SKJAM (What a great

alias.) and another one that it itself inspired an wonderful story called

'Path of the Wolf' which I am hoping is concluded soon. 

	I sorta borrowed elements from all these stories because in some Kasumi was

the most repulsed by the burakumin and others it was Nabiki and/or Akane. 

	I don't buy Nabiki being like that. Her whole personality is one that rejects

the 'old school' thinking of Japan. Part and Parcel. 

Akane, in my opinion, COULD be pressured into going along but would not lean

that way naturally. Yes, she values honor, yes she follows some traditions but

she could never be the champion of a dojo if she went all the way with

traditional thinking. 

	Kasumi would be a sheep.

	There are stories where I like Kasumi and some where I tolerate her. But the

whole 'Kasumi' thing just..bothers me. Maybe it's the pessimistic cynic in

me.(Not only is the glass half empty but its probably acid rainwater too.) but

she's like a suger cube that gets stuck in my throat. Sweet yes, but the sharp

corners hurt.

	The narrator is, for all intents and purposes me. 

I suppose this could qualify as an insertion fic but not in the same way. I AM

an English teacher(I teach Hungarians though, not Japanese.) I DO smoke, do no

exercise and am..SOMEWHAT pale. (But I have thick, luxurious hair. Ooo^�hello

ladies.)

	Also if you are my friend I will tell you the 'truth' whatever it may be. I

call it like I see it and I can no more stop than I could stop being effect my

gravity. Just like the narrator this has cost me more then one friendship.

However the friends I do have are closer to me then family. I would die for

them and they would do likewise. At least I hope so cause if that situation

ever arises and they don't ..well^�uh..lets move on.

	If anyone gets horribly bent out of shape because this might be a

self-insertion fic look on the bright side, I didn't become 

all-powerful and go around seducing every female anime character in anime

history while single-handedly fighting off the forces of evil, wearing a

blindfold with one hand tied behind my back. 

	If anyone gets horrible bent out of shape for any other reason, email me,

we'll discuss it and I promise to tell you the truth, the whole truth and

nothing but the truth, God help you. 

	This fic was a blast to write because, as mentioned, it just sorta popped up

in my mind last night and practically wrote itself. A wonderful, wonderful

experience. If reading it was even somewhat similar I'd love to hear about

it.

	Oh and for all you nitpickers out there it would be very easy for Akane to go

to Nabiki and have her find Ranma for her. And yes, he'd still be waiting. So

there. 

Bi-Daaahhh..

	My that's shockingly immature behavior for a twenty-six year old English

teacher.

COOL! Let's do it again.

Bi-DAAAAAHH!!!

		I remain, as always,

                                                   Mad-Hamlet









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