Subject: [FFML] [REFUGE] [Ranma] Choices: Complications (complete draft) by Mike Noakes
From: "David A. Tatum" <desaix@sysnet.net>
Date: 7/30/2001, 12:54 AM
To: "FFML" <ffml@anifics.com>

This was posted in two parts under two different titles to the FFML Refuge-
those titles were Complications and Consequences.  Forget which one was the
actual title- you'll have to ask Mike.

To reply, post publically or e-mail the author at <noakes_m@hotmail.com>
Enjoy!

The FFML Refugee List


Hey,

Ranma and company are the property of Rumiko Takahashi.
Characters used without permission.

C&C, as always, is eagerly sought.  Private's good, public's better, let me
know what you think.  No matter how harsh.  Enjoy.  (And sorry if there's
formatting problems, trying to iron those out.)

-Mike Noakes
noakes_m@hotmail.com

***

Choices:
  Complications


  The morning sunlight was bright and the air unusually warm,
  the weather in sharp contrast to the stark dream images that
  fluttered moth-like just beyond the edge of recollection.  He felt
  tired in a way rarely felt before, with a weariness that lay not so
  much within the body as within the mind.  He remembered
  clearly the exhilaration that a decision made had brought only
  one week ago: but now, having again come to the same
  conclusion--though this time for very different reasons--he felt
  only a numbing exhaustion.
        Ranma Saotome sat up in his futon with a barely
  stifled groan.  The anger that had buoyed him last week and
  carried him through most of a weeklong training session was
  entirely lacking, and in its absence lay a painful hollowness.
  The idea of leaving now left him feeling drained and empty;
  and a seed of unwanted emotions weighed heavily in the pit of
  his stomach.
        When did I come to this decision? Ranma wondered.
  He last remembered lying in the dark and staring at his pack
  next to him, the brisk night air descending quickly as the heat
  bled from the room.  His pack was ready; it seemed to him as if
  it had always been ready; reaching back to his earliest
  memories, he could always recollect a heavy backpack bulging
  with his few belongings waiting next to whatever bed he lay
  upon that night.  For a while I forgot, he thought, or at least
  fooled myself into forgetting.  For a year I settled here, and this
  stupid pack sat in the closet, but I never took it apart, and I
  guess somehow I knew this day would finally have to come,
  and now it has, only it hurts a lot more than I ever expected.  I
  guess I never expected to go it alone, without Pop.
        He felt unconcerned about leaving his idiot father
  behind; somewhere inside, Ranma felt a solid certainty that,
  wherever he might go, his father would eventually, inevitably,
  catch up and find him.  Rather, the numb pain came from
  knowing what he was willingly giving up.  The only home he
  had known in a decade; kind Kasumi and her father, even
  Nabiki; his mother as well, no matter how stressful those times
  proved to be.  And--
        With sudden resolve he took to his feet and dressed
  quickly.  After a final check and hasty repacking, he dropped
  his backpack out the window.  Turning his back on the easy
  escape, he left the room by the door.  He wondered if this
  morning would be the last time he would ever see the Tendos.
  A nagging suspicion grew that today was going to be a very
  bad day indeed.
        Whatever, he told himself.  I've made my decision,
  and now it's time to carry it through.


        The scene of absolute normalcy that presented itself
  when he joined the Tendos struck Ranma as both absurd and
  nearly insulting.  Kasumi, impossibly fresh-faced in the
  morning as usual, was serving breakfast to her newspaper-
  reading father and the panda sitting at the table.  Mr. Tendo
  acknowledged the arrival of breakfast with a slight nod,
  absorbed by his reading; Genma tossed the paper aside and
  attacked the food with chopsticks somehow held in his giant
  furry paw.  The TV was playing softly in the background,
  providing morning news in a low-voiced monotone, and
  outside, past the sliding doors kept shut against the February
  winds, the faint chirp of birds could be heard.  The heater,
  wreathed in a faint aura of oil-scented heat, glowed red from its
  place on the tatami next to the low-set heated kotatsu table.
  Ranma, standing at the entrance to the room, watched and made
  of the sight a memory.  This is what I'm turning away from, he
  told himself, feeling a curious ambivalence: surprisingly
  intense pang underscoring muted elation; and it seemed to him
  strange to be confronted with such casual cheerfulness on the
  morning of the day that he chose to change his life in such a
  fundamental way.
        "Good-morning, son," said Mr. Tendo, as Ranma
  came forward with forced nonchalance.  "Feeling better?"
        Ranma stared at him for a moment before nodding in
  reply.  Soun had not even glanced away from his paper.
  Genma continued to devour his food with a decidedly bear-like
  appetite.  Kasumi stepped back into the kitchen for more food.
  Ranma suddenly noticed that both Akane and Nabiki were
  conspicuously absent.  She wouldn't avoid me, would she? he
  wondered, feeling a little hurt.  She knows I was thinking of
  leaving today.
        Unless, he added, she decided last night that she
  really doesn't care after all.  Which is all too possible, Ranma
  thought darkly.  Either that or she thinks that I'm too much of a
  coward to carry such a big decision through.  Well then, won't
  _she_ be surprised when she finds out I'm already gone!
        Feeling childish, he sighed and sat at the table and
  stared blankly at the back of the newspaper Mr. Tendo
  presented to him.  Weather forecast for the week; story of a
  forgotten dog that followed its master's move from Aomori to
  Tottori prefecture; bra advertisement promising superior
  cleavage; talent scout blurb, Yes, you too could be a model or
  music star!  It slowly dawned on him that his decision came
  with massive consequences as yet un-contemplated.  Where
  would he go, what would he do?  He needed a place to live,
  probably a job, and did he really want to give up the little he
  had achieved at school?
        It was while considering this, mechanically eating the
  food Kasumi placed before him--unthinkingly, but still very
  much aware of how delicious her cooking was--that Nabiki
  came rushing downstairs.  She was already dressed for school,
  schoolbag at her side, and as she quickly passed by it seemed to
  Ranma that she avoided looking at him.  What's up with her?
  he wondered, even as Kasumi called out after her younger
  sibling.  The middle sister, already out of sight, replied with a
  yelled "I have to get to school early today," and a moment later
  he heard the door slam shut behind her.  Kasumi, unperturbed,
  dumped the extra food on Genma's plate.  Ranma shrugged and
  turned back to his breakfast.
        To his surprise, his panda father stopped inhaling
  food long enough to dump a cupful of hot water over his own
  head, shifting back to human form.  Pulling a convenient dogi
  over his bulky form, he leveled a glare at his son.
        "I allowed you the luxury of missing morning
  practice this morning," Genma growled, "out of respect for the
  torturous ordeals you underwent last night.  But I will not idly
  sit by and allow the heir to the Anything-Goes school of martial
  arts--"
        Ranma broke into a cold sweat, thinking, He knows!
  He already knows, and I knew this was coming eventually, but
  not this soon, I'm not ready yet!  Did Akane tell him I was
  thinking of leaving?
        "--to go soft on me!" finished Genma, to his son's
  immense relief.  "I effortlessly steal a third of your meal, and
  you don't notice?"  He presented his chopsticks with a flourish,
  displaying a piece of fish captured from his son's plate.
        The younger Saotome forced a scowl to conceal his
  pleasure, and glanced down at his plate.  He noted with surprise
  that his food was, in fact, missing.  Man, I must've been out of
  it, he thought.  Pop's right to call me all that.
        "And then," Genma continued, "to allow Kasumi to
  give me extra food without a struggle?  What's wrong with
  you, boy?"
         "I haven't spoken to you for a week, and that's the
  first thing out of your fat mouth?"  Ranma's tone dripped
  insolence.  "How about, 'How was the training trip, Ranma?' or
  'Good to see you, son!'  Is that too much to ask?"
        "Not at all," said Genma, suddenly all smiles.  "How
  was the trip?"
        "Fine," Ranma answered guardedly.
        "Good to see you, son!"
        "You're weirding me out, Pop."
        "But why?  I'm just trying to be friendly, you know,
  to bond a little and maybe be there for my son--"
        "Um, thanks."
        "--who's acting like some kind of freakin' girl!"
  Genma yelled, and lunged forward, a vase-full of cold water
  hitting Ranma square in the face.  He blinked through the dirty
  water coursing across features suddenly turned softer and
  feminine.
        "What a disgrace!" wailed Genma, red in the face,
  leaping to his feet.  "What did you study for the last week, the
  Saotome Anything-Goes Special Technique of Being Slow?
  The Deadly Art of Being Utterly Useless?"  He stalked back
  and forth, gesticulating wildly, as an unperturbed Soun
  continued to read his paper and Kasumi rescued her flowers
  from death by trampling.  "Ten years of training for nothing!
  Must I restart my disappointment of a son from the beginning?
  Oh, the shame!"
        This, Ranma thought, as his father proceeded to
  decry the flaws of youth in general and of his son in particular,
  is exactly how I want to remember Pop when I'm gone.  He
  smiled broadly and stood up.  "Yo, Pop," he said, cutting
  Genma off in mid-rant.  "How 'bout I show you a little of what
  I've been studyin'?"


        Leaving his grinning father lying half-unconscious in
  the pond with swirling eyes and lumps on his head, Ranma
  headed to the bathroom for some hot water.  Beating the crap
  out of Pop had done wonders to dispel the melancholy of the
  morning, and with renewed vigor he faced the prospect of
  leaving the house.  Only as he went to slide the door open did it
  occur to him that, by leaving, he would be giving up the very
  thing that had just cheered him up; and his mood plummeted
  once again.  Man, he thought, leaving is a hell of a lot harder
  than I expected.  But his determination didn't waver, and he felt
  secure in the knowledge that he was doing the right thing.  He
  was doing what he had to do.  What others had forced him to
  do.  Ranma opened the door.
        Akane was there in her yellow fish-cake pajamas.
  She was brushing her teeth.
        They stared at each other for a moment, and for some
  reason Ranma felt intensely surprised to see her.  He recovered
  and bowed apologetically and wordlessly backed away, and as
  he went to leave she recovered as well, spitting out a mouthful
  of water, the corner of her mouth still flecked with toothpaste
  foam, and reached for the door and kept him from closing it
  behind him.  "Ranma, wait!" she said.
        A brief pause was all Akane needed to grab him by
  the arm.  He allowed her to pull him into the bathroom, and
  watched bemused as she checked to see if anyone was around.
  She closed the door.
         Akane looked tired, her eyes looked tired, more so
  than he could ever remember seeing her, almost as if she hadn't
  slept all night.  She wasn't worried about me, was she? Ranma
  thought, feeling a sudden pang of both guilt and guilty
  pleasure.  But of course she's not, he added, why would she be?
  She's known for awhile now that I'd be leaving, she wants me
  to leave, she's better off with me leaving . . . she doesn't really
  care either way.  Akane's made that abundantly clear.
        He noticed that she was examining him with equal
  intensity, searchingly, and suddenly he felt strangely
  embarrassed by being female in front of her.  A stupid feeling,
  surely, but he nevertheless felt acutely aware of his femininity
  in a way he had rarely felt before: the way his shirt tented and
  draped off his breasts, how his pants hung high and stretched
  across his wider hips; and catching a glimpse of himself in the
  mirror he had a sudden disjointed recollection, similar
  dreamlike snapshot image of disheveled hair wet and framed
  face feminine flashing to mind--but it slid away, ephemeral,
  and with it the shame he felt before Akane.  A subdued anger
  filled its void: where does she get off making me feel like this?
        "Yo, Akane," he said, rather more brusquely than
  intended.  "Something you wanna say?"
        Whereas she had stopped Ranma without hesitation,
  that confidence now seemed to escape her and left her at a loss
  for words.  He stared at her impatiently, and finally Akane
  blurted out, "You're a girl," almost as if unable to think of
  anything else.
        He shrugged.  "Yeah.  Shit happens.  Jusenkyo, bad
  luck, a little water: instant sex-changing freak.  You know how
  it goes."
        Akane frowned.  "That's not what I meant."
        He bit back a retort, feeling bad for snapping at her.
  Ranma turned away and reached for the sink.  "I just came for
  some hot water.  I'll be out of your way in a second."
        A soft touch on his shoulder--surprisingly timorous,
  almost frightened--checked him.  "Ranma, I. . . I don't care,"
  she said.
        "I know," he said, a whisper, a savage hurt seizing
  him, twisting his insides, and his hand trembled on the faucet
  tap.  "That's why I'm leaving."  Ranma hated himself for it, but
  as the words escaped he looked back, had to see the expression
  on her face and confirm the truth of her feelings for him; he did
  this despite knowing that his own features must betray him,
  mirroring the pain he felt inside.  What he saw, so clearly
  written on her face, crystallized the decision within his mind
  and hardened his heart to the pain: mingled disgust and fear
  offset only by stark pity, and he wanted none of either three
  from her.  He turned away quickly, face burning.  Ranma
  composed himself and straightened, momentarily forgetting
  about changing back.
        "That's not what I meant," Akane said softly.
        "Yes, it is," he answered, more bitter than expected.
        She shook her head vehemently.  "Ranma, no, you . .
  . don't understand."
        He laughed.  "Oh, but I do, Akane--finally!  And
  you're right, so absolutely right.  You and your friends and
  everyone.  Well--goodbye."  He went to step past her but she
  refused to move, and he was reminded of the same scene one
  week ago, with he ready to leave and she constantly blocking
  him.  Well, I'm not going to play her game this time, he
  thought.  With sudden speed and a bit of deft footwork, he
  slipped past her and through the door.
        "Where are you going?" she asked.  When he ignored
  her and stepped away, she asked again, louder.  "I'll keep
  asking," she promised, "louder and louder, until I'm screaming
  down the street after you.  I don't know what you're planning
  to do, and somehow I don't think you are, either, but I'm
  guessing you're not quite ready to face up to our fathers just
  yet."
        "What do you care?" he retorted without looking
  back, his voice low enough to not be heard by the adults down
  the hall.  "We're through, remember?  You don't want to have
  anything to do with me.  So what does it matter where I go?"
        He could feel her stare on his back.  "It matters."
        Ranma sighed and turned back.  "Fine.  You know
  what I'm planning to do?  I'm planning on moving away.  Out
  of Nerima."  Even as he spoke he realized he was making a
  choice, and that in the process of answering Akane's question
  he was deciding his own future.  "I'll camp out until I find a job
  or something I can make some money off of."  He shrugged,
  glanced down, and stuck his chest out.  "If this body's been
  good for anything, it's getting work and free food.
        "With some money, I'll find somewhere to live, and
  finish school, I guess."  He was surprised by his own words, but
  then suddenly realized that his education was important to him.
  He had worked his ass off to get into a public school as decent
  as Furinkan, and even if his current grades were crap, he wasn't
  about to waste all that effort.  Everybody thought he was a jock
  moron; well, he'd prove them wrong.  "If Ukyo can do it, then
  so can I."
        If Akane looked at all surprised or dubious of his
  plan, she showed none of it.  "And then?" she asked.
  Something in her tone reminded him of a mother chiding an
  immature boy, and it infuriated him.
        "And then what?  How should I know?  I'm only
  seventeen, Akane!  Do you have any idea what you're going to
  do after high school?  Any of your friends know?"  He stalked
  up to her and confronted her in a restrained, angry whisper.  "I
  don't give a shit about later!  All I want is to leave--to leave
  this shit hole, and all you people screwing with my life . . . I
  want to go away, and start all over, and forget about all of you
  and the last year and a half and find a new home and new
  friends and never have to see either you or your friends or your
  family ever again . . . but that's a lie, Akane, because I _don't_
  want to leave, because I'm happy here and I like your family
  and even your bitchy friends and our stupid school and all these
  jerks who keep bugging the shit out of me; and leaving here is
  the hardest, most painful thing I've ever done . . . and the only
  thing keeping me stuck between the two is you, Akane,
  _you're_ the one tearing me apart, because I've already decided
  to leave, it's the right thing to do and it's what I have to do; but
  you won't let me leave!  Can't you see what you're doing to
  me?  Do you enjoy hurting me?  Let me go!"
        With eyes brimming with tears and so full of pity it
  hurt to see, she answered, "Oh no, Ranma, no, I don't, and I
  hope you'll never understand how much I hope you're okay."
        He believed her.  The words were delivered with
  such heartfelt intention, from such a depth of honesty that it
  was impossible to doubt her sincerity.  Again, however, that
  overwhelming pity in her eyes, and he refused to accept that
  from his former fiancee.  I don't need your pity! he wanted to
  scream, can't you see I'm only leaving because of you?  But
  how to convey the full range of his feelings, when he himself
  didn't fully understand to what depths they reached?  Those
  emotions surged and roiled within just below the surface, and
  for a moment he trembled with the potential of expression,
  unsure of what he might say or do if his honest feelings were
  given free rein; and he swiftly turned away as he sought to
  master himself.  Now was not the time, he refused to expose
  himself so blatantly to her, not when under that emasculating
  sympathetic gaze.
        "Ranma," she said softly, coming up behind him.
  "Can we talk?"
        Still struggling for control, he shook his head in the
  negative.
        "Ranma," she tried again, sounding hurt, "last night,
  you said we would."
        On your terms, he thought, is that it?  I don't think
  so.  "We're talking now, aren't we?" he said, still looking
  away.  He remembered her words from last night: _After
  supper, we'll talk.  I need time to think.  I've been doing a lot
  all week, and now . . . I think I'm ready to make some
  choices._   But she just doesn't get it, he thought.  This
  isn't about her anymore, and it's not her choice to make.
        "No!" she said.  "Not like this.  Not . . . angry.  A real
  talk.  I don't think we've ever had one, not in all the time
  you've been here.  I'd really like to try, Ranma."
        He was tempted, there was so much he wanted to say,
  or thought he wanted to say, even though unsure of what that
  might be.  But he could not allow himself to be swayed from
  his decision, especially not like this; leaving was proving
  difficult enough as it was.  I have to leave, now, or she'll draw
  another promise out of me, and this will keep going on and on,
  and I don't think I could take that.  I won't do that to myself, I
  won't do that to her.  It's time to burn my bridges.
        He hardened himself, and stubbornly answered,
  "Well, that's funny, Akane, really ironic like, because last
  night, _I_ was ready to talk, but you weren't . . . and this
  morning, you know, I really don't feel like it anymore."  He
  turned on her, forcing himself back to anger, the pity
  glimmering in her eyes an easy focus.  "We had our chance for
  a heart-to-heart and you blew it.  I'm leaving.  I'm leaving.  I
  don't need this house, this family, and I certainly don't need
  you, Akane, so you can wipe that pity off your face, because I
  sure don't want it; and you can forget about your stupid little
  talk.
        "We're through, and when our parents come looking
  to place the blame, you can dump it all on me, yeah, just like
  you always do: but you'll know it's all your fault.  This started
  because I took you seriously for once--treated you like the
  martial artist you so want to be but will never become--and you
  couldn't take it."  He hated himself, hated every spiteful word
  he hurled at her and the pain it so clearly caused her.  He
  despised the lie, when he knew that in his drunkenness it had
  been he who had gone too far, and the residual guilt rankled
  worse than ever.  His self-loathing at that moment was so deep
  that he grew furious himself, with the same intensity he felt
  whenever anyone would dare threaten his Akane; and he
  channeled that inward anger outwards into his words, towards
  his fiancee.  "We had one chance to talk about it, and you threw
  me out of your room, you poisoned me, you made a mess of it
  as usual.  You screwed up, and really, I don't think there's
  much more to say, 'cus I sure as hell don't want to live with a
  violent, uncute tomboy like you!"
        Akane stood as if stunned, tears freely flowing,
  looking so hurt--no, even worse, betrayed--that Ranma was
  immediately overwhelmed with guilt.  He wanted to rush
  forward and apologize, he wanted to take it all back and try
  again.  He had to leave, but not like this; it had to end, but not
  like this . . . it couldn't end like this!
        The shock faded and she flushed red with anger, and
  she shook with such a fury of emotion that he flinched back
  against the blow surely to come.  When he opened his eyes, she
  stood trembling with hands clenched at her side, and she
  pierced him with such a look of disgust and hate that he quailed
  inside, his chest becoming unbelievably tight, and he knew
  with absolute certainty that he had lost her forever.
        "Get out of my house," she hissed.
        He reeled back as if physically struck, though her
  words were no less than he both expected and wanted.  His
  every insult and curse and mingled truth and lie had been to
  bring her to this very point, where she would finally release
  him.  So why did it hurt so much?  At that moment, an
  unbidden memory surfaced:
        Raven-haired pale-faced black-skirted friendly girl--
  what was her name?--holding him close.  No, _her_ close,
  female flesh bound tightly in bikini red, shirt hanging open.
  Tears and guilt: release.
        _You-you really love him, don't you?_
        Tight stabbing pain, burgeoning nascent agony of
  awareness come too late.
        _Yes._
        "Yes," Ranma whispered, the blood draining from his
  face.  Remembrance had come too late.  With the same
  absolute certainty with which he knew that he had lost his
  fiancee, he suddenly also realized that he loved her, truly and
  profoundly.  At the very same moment that Ranma Saotome
  finally consciously accepted that he loved Akane Tendo, he
  also had to accept that he had just given her up.  The constant
  emotional buffeting of the last few minutes proved too much;
  everything--anger, fear, love, shame, guilt--flayed him raw
  from within, and he locked up, physically and mentally.
        "Yes, that's it, _yes_?"  Akane stormed forward.
  "Then go!" she spat, and shoved him, hard, and again.  He
  stumbled back, defenseless.  "Go!  Get out!"
        "No, wait!" he stuttered, trying desperately to catch
  his footing, "Akane, no, Akane I lo. . . ."  The words died on
  his lips.  Under that withering hateful gaze, what could he say?
  His shoulders slumped�@in defeat.  He turned away.
  "I'm sorry," he whispered.
        And then, louder, "Goodbye, Akane."
        Those first steps were among the most difficult he
  could ever remember taking, heavier even then when he fled
  from her back in Ryugenzawa.  There had been another man
  that time, a rival, something to drive him with righteous anger
  and send him sprinting across the forest.  This time he had
  driven her away himself, and there was no one else to blame.
  When Happosai had stolen his strength, he had also been
  prepared to give her up.  Somewhere deep inside, however, he
  had hoped--known--that she wouldn't abandon him, and she
  had proven him right.  Though the shame of his weakness had
  been almost too much to bear, her presence had been a very
  real comfort to him, and now he understood why: even then he
  had loved her, but only now did he know to what extent.
        Ranma walked away.  He felt light-headed.
  Thoughts were consumed in a subliminal buzz.  He felt
  somehow disjointed, as if watching from outside his body's
  slow escape.  The immediate was lost in a haze, the periphery
  coming to bear; and from far off he could hear, stunningly
  clear, the trill of a morning bird.  A telephone ring.  Humming
  of a cheerful song.  The loud clack of a shoji stone against
  wooden board.  A stifled, choking sob.
        Hurried footsteps as Kasumi, somehow oblivious to
  what had transpired only a few meters away, came to him.
  "Phone call for you," she said, and smiled.  "It's Doctor Tofu!"


        Ranma picked up the phone.
        "Ranma?"
        "Err, hi Doc.  Listen, now's not-."
        "I'll be brief.  I need you to come to the clinic with
  Akane this morning."
        "What's wrong?"
        "Maybe nothing.  Nabiki set up an appointment this
  morning.  She's very worried."
        "Is it serious?"
        "Maybe.  Maybe it's nothing.  The earlier you come
  the better."
        "Akane won't want to come with me.  We just had a
  big fight"
        "It's very important for you to come with her,
  Ranma."
        "I'll try."
        "Good.  See you soon."
        Doctor Tofu hung up.


        When Ranma returned from the phone call, his head
  a confused jumble of thoughts and impulses, Akane was gone.
  He heard heavy steps from upstairs, and assumed she had gone
  to her room to change for school.  Now what do I do? he
  thought, and wandered in a daze back to the living room.  He
  slumped to the ground, ignored by his father (now recovered)
  and Soun (enjoying a cigarette) as they continued an intense
  game of shogi.  What do I do, he thought again, and
  immediately after: I love her!  "I love her," he whispered,
  feeling the roll of the words off his tongue, how easy it seemed
  to say now.  "I love you, Akane."  His heart soared with the
  newfound knowledge of its desire, and for a moment,
  consumed by the elation that it brought, all the difficulties of
  the day thus far disappeared like the morning's frost.
        _I sure as hell don't want to live with a violent,
  uncute tomboy like you!_
        What have I done? he thought, crashing back to
  earth.  Oh man, what have I done?  He could clearly remember
  now that moment at the party, admitting in his drunkenness his
  feelings for Akane to a complete stranger.  The pain of that
  moment had been so intense!  How much worse it was now,
  without the buffer of alcohol, without the emotional release his
  female form might offer under different company!  The worst,
  however, was realizing that despite the full knowledge of his
  feelings, it changed nothing.  His decision was still made, and
  now more than ever he knew he had to leave.  No matter how
  painful, for the good of Akane he had to leave.  Surely it was
  the least he could do if he truly loved her, and he hoped that
  fact would make his departure easier.
        Nope, Ranma told himself, it doesn't.
        Before he could go, he had one last responsibility: to
  take Akane to Tofu's clinic, and concern momentarily
  displaced his sense of loss.  Talking to Doctor Tofu had been
  intensely strange, in part because of the state of near shock he
  had been in as he picked up the phone.  The doctor himself had
  seemed odd, his voice devoid of its usual cheerfulness, his
  request delivered in a tightly restrained, brusque and clinical
  tone.  It must be pretty damn serious, Ranma thought, if he was
  able to get a coherent message across to Kasumi.  Shit.  I hope
  Akane's all right.
        Nursing this thought and drawing courage from it, he
  went upstairs to Akane's room.  Her room seemed strangely
  quiet.  Oh, man, I hope she's not crying, he thought.  Maybe it
  was a good thing that he was a girl right now.  His female body
  seemed more comforting, somehow, or better suited to such
  emotions.  Not that he would cry.  He was a man, and he had to
  be strong.  Especially if there was something wrong with
  Akane.  Ranma tried a hesitant knock on the door.
        "Come in."
        She looked surprisingly composed as he entered, and
  the look she directed his way was one of cool indifference.  She
  was dressed for school, closing the final tie on her schoolbag.
  "You're still here?"  Her voice, normally so passionate--
  whether with anger or caring--was painfully flat, and sounded,
  if anything, mildly annoyed with the necessity of talking to
  him.  Anything would have been better than that neutral
  hollowness, so alien to her--anger, tears, even hatred directed
  his way would have been better.  But she's already erased me
  from her life, he thought, just when she's become the most
  important thing in mine.
        Ranma nodded in reply and tried to appear casual.
  No point in letting her know how he felt.  It certainly wouldn't
  help anything at this point.  "Yeah," he said.  "But I'll be gone
  in a few minutes."
        "Good," she said, and looked away.  Her face was
  hidden from him.  "What did Doctor Tofu want?" she asked.
  Ranma heard a slight tremor in her voice.
        "He wants us to swing by the clinic," he said, "for a
  check-up.  Sounds pretty normal, I'm sure it's nothing serious."
        "Fine," she said.  "You can walk me to school and
  we'll stop on the way.  It's probably better that way, so our
  fathers won't suspect anything."
        "Good thinking."
        "Then let's go," she said.  She turned around, and
  briefly her face belied a deep anxiety, if not outright fear; and
  then her previous impassiveness slid back into place.  What
  happened, Ranma wondered, deep concern forming a
  tightening knot centered on his stomach, what happened while I
  was away?  I never should have left!
        Akane reached down for her school bag.  "The
  sooner we get this over with," she added, taking a step towards
  him, "the faster we can get you out of here."  As she spoke
  those words, so painful for Ranma to hear, she suddenly
  appeared frozen in time; a statue in his mind; and never before
  had she seemed so beautiful to him.  She stood half crouched,
  one hand grasping the handle of her bag as she picked it up, the
  other holding the hem of her skirt clear from the floor.  Her
  skirt pooled around her feet, blue pleated concealment of legs
  that were, he knew, slim and beautiful and taut with muscle and
  vitality.  The image burned itself into memory.  Hazel eyes
  half-lidded and far from passionless; the slender length of pale
  arm exposed by the white school blouse she wore--how strong
  she was!  Akane, a tomboy?  Sure! he thought, and I'd rather
  have my Tomboy than any of those other small weak girls at
  school.
        But she's not yours anymore, is she? he added a
  moment later, and looked away.


        The walk to school that morning was among the most
  uncomfortable he could remember.  It certainly wasn't the first
  walk to school with angry tension between them, the result of
  some previous fight as yet unresolved.  Ranma suspected,
  however, that it would be the last.  Once Tofu reassured him
  that Akane was fine--she had better be fine!--he would have no
  choice but to leave.  His backpack, collected as he left the
  house, was slung over one shoulder. There was no reason to
  return to the Tendos' household, other than the single, all-
  important one following him; and she wanted nothing more to
  do with him.  Her cold refusal to speak as they walked was a
  silent testament to that.  He had tried walking next to Akane,
  but her clear hostility had driven him back to the top of the
  fence; and now, standing above and in front of her, he could
  feel her gaze burning into his back.
        Only a little longer Akane, he vowed, and I'll let you
  move on with your life.
        Again, that feeling of absurdity as he walked, the
  weather so unusually pleasant for this time of year, warm
  enough for Akane remove her winter uniform jacket.  The sun
  shining brightly above complimented the idle, pleasant chatter
  of other students on their way to school.  He hated them.  No,
  not hate, he amended, but their absolute ignorance infuriated
  him: how could they not understand what was happening?  The
  sacrifice he was making, the decision he was being forced into-
  -they didn't know, and worse, they didn't care!  He wanted to
  scream at them, to the world at large, "I love her!" but he was
  afraid, certain that the returning echo would proclaim, "She
  hates you!"
        The trip to Tofu's was thankfully short, and within
  moments they stood in the lobby of the doctor's clinic.  It had
  been a long time since their last visit.  The doctor had been
  absent recently.  According to Kasumi he had been studying
  advanced techniques with a teacher in China, and Ranma
  couldn't recall stopping by since the pressure-point incident
  with Happosai nearly half-a-year ago.
        There were no other patients.  Ranma waited
  nervously, hovering protectively near the girl he loved.  He
  watched her furtively.  She stood unmoving, hands held clasped
  together in front, ignoring him.  Despite her effort to conceal it,
  she clearly became increasingly nervous as they waited, and his
  concern for her grew proportionately.
        Finally, Doctor Tofu Ono greeted them.
        "Ah, my two favorite patients," he said, and smiled.
  To Ranma, it seemed slightly strained.  "Long time no see."
        "Um, yeah, Doc," Ranma said.  "Long time no see."
  Akane bowed and said nothing.
        A brief but intensely uncomfortable silence resulted,
  before Tofu seemed to snap out of deep thought.  "Well," he
  said, "you guys have to hurry along for school, so let's get this
  over with as quickly as possible, shall we?  Akane, if you
  please?"  He took the girl by the hand and led her to a side-
  room, quickly returning.  "And if you'll follow me, Ranma?"
        Moments later the boy was sitting anxiously in
  Doctor Tofu's examination room while the doctor attended to
  Akane.  Charged with bored nervousness, he started to pace the
  room.  Why were they here; what happened to Akane; why
  hadn't anybody told him?  What am I going to do if she's sick;
  what if I'm somehow responsible?  Is this all my fault, again?
  He stopped his idle march and glanced up at the skeleton
  hanging in the corner.  "Yo, Betty," he muttered.  "What's up?"
  Betty grinned at him.  "Yeah, yuck it up, but it ain't funny," he
  insisted.  He slumped down into a chair and continued to stare
  up morosely at Tofu's life-sized toy.  The silence and waiting
  became oppressive, and he suddenly blurted out: "I love her--I
  really do!  But she hates me; and I don't know what I'll do if
  she's sick!  Hanging around ain't doing her no good, but I can't
  leave unless I know she's okay."  Ranma sighed, and his gaze
  dropped, until all he could see were Betty's bony white toes at
  the edge of his vision, and he muttered, "You're lucky.  You're
  just a stupid plastic toy, you ain't got to worry about this shit.
  Man, this sucks!  I thought that when I finally figured all this
  crap out, things would finally get easier.  It's just worst than
  ever!"
        "You shouldn't say stuff like that," said a sudden
  voice from behind him, sending Ranma flying across the room
  in fright, "You'll hurt Betty's feelings."  Tofu, silently closing
  the door behind him, smiled kindly at the younger martial
  artist.
        Ranma climbed sheepishly down from his place on
  the wall next to Betty.  "Where'd you learn to move so quiet,
  Doc?" he asked.
        "I'm the son of an unholy union between a demon of
  the dark realms beyond, and the matriarch of an ancient evil
  ninja clan; and I draw power from the ineffable forces that lie
  gibbering beyond the stars."
        "Wow, really?"
        Doctor Ono Tofu chuckled.  "No.  Actually, I have a
  very sharp-eared mother who loves to meddle.  My room used
  to be down the hall from her.  My childhood would've been
  spent on exactingly menial chores and pointless pre-arranged
  dates, if I hadn't learned how to creep by her room without
  being heard at a very young age."  The doctor took a seat and
  gestured for his patient to sit down opposite him.  He cast a
  quick but searching eye over the boy-turned-girl, pushed his
  glasses back along the bridge of his nose, and his demeanor
  turned professional.  "Well, then, let's get down to business
  then, shall we?"
        Ranma shrugged.  "Sure.  What's up?"
        "I see that you're female this morning."
        "Yeah," Ranma grumbled.  "Pop's fault.  And Akane
  and I had a big fight before I could change back.  Guess I kinda
  forgot."
        "Not a problem.  Convenient, actually, since I want
  to examine your female side as well."
        "Me?"
        "Akane tells me that you're leaving Nerima.  I can't
  let my favorite patient go without a clean bill of health, can I?"
        "I . . . guess not," Ranma answered.
        "Exactly."  Tofu proceeded with a routine check-up,
  and Ranma sat through the initial steps, only slightly
  embarrassed at having his female body examined.  But his
  patience quickly wore thin as his concern for Akane steadily
  grew.  The doctor was cradling one slender wrist in his hand,
  silently counting out Ranma's pulse, when the boy-turned-girl
  snatched his arm away and blurted, "Doc, what about Akane?"
        Tofu blinked, concentration broken, and said,
  "Excuse me?"
        "Akane!  What's wrong with her, you've got to tell
  me!"
        "Ranma," Doctor Tofu said, "if there's anything
  wrong with her, and she hasn't told you, then I'm sure you'll
  understand that I can't break my patient confidentiality with
  her."
        "But-."
        "Ranma, no.  Would you like it if I told Akane how
  you feel about her?"
        "No," he muttered sullenly, blushing a furious red
  and looking away.  He didn't resist as the doctor took up
  counting his pulse once again.  How can I help her, he thought
  darkly, if Doc won't tell me what's wrong?  _She_ sure won't
  tell me.  She wants me gone.  With sudden spite Ranma started
  to mess around with his pulse, speeding it up and slowing it
  down through simple meditation exercises he picked up while
  in China.  After thirty seconds of this Tofu looked up.  He
  locked eyes with his patient, and a steely glint Ranma had
  rarely seen there took him aback.
        "Getting passive-aggressive on me isn't going to
  help."
        Ranma wasn't too sure what that meant, but stopped.
        Tofu sighed.  "Listen, I'll say this.  I suggest you stay
  near Akane, at least for a little longer.  Believe me," and here
  his voice suddenly sounded very tired, "if there's anything
  wrong, you'll know by the end of the day.
        "Now.  Shall we proceed?"


        "I really hate this body sometimes," Ranma muttered,
  as he squatted and shivered and tried to urinate in the cup held
  gingerly beneath his female bottom without getting any on
  himself.  He despised Japanese-style toilets now.  Before the
  curse, he had never noticed just how inconvenient they were--
  for women, anyway, and he avoided whenever possible using
  the washroom in his cursed form.  I hate pissing as a chick, he
  thought, but Tofu wants a urine sample and so here I am.  He
  winced as the splashback sprayed his hand, and he cursed the
  necessity of squatting over the porcelain hole in the ground that
  served as a toilet.  Halfway through he held back, clamping
  down with muscles he'd rather not acknowledge; and carefully
  putting the steaming container aside he reached for a glass of
  hot water.  Trying to not think about what he was doing, he
  splashed himself and reverted to maleness, grabbed a second
  empty cup, shifted his stance, and relaxed once again.  "I really,
  _really_ hate turning into a girl sometimes."
         A few minutes later he silently handed both
  containers over to Doctor Tofu, who labeled them and put them
  aside.  "Thanks, Ranma," he said.  "Hope it wasn't too much of
  a bother."
        "Not at all," the boy answered.  "I mean, I just _love_
  feeling my bladder shift and my testicles drop and everything."
        The doctor shrugged apologetically.  "Sorry."
        "No problem."
        The doctor resumed his check-up of the boy.  He
  worked quickly and efficiently, running through the same series
  of examinations--except where gender difference required a
  change--as he had just performed on Ranma's girl-half.  At first
  he worked silently, Ranma sitting through the process patiently,
  but then he began to speak.
        "About six months ago," he started, startling the boy
  back to attention, "you came here suffering from a pressure
  point strike that Happosai had used against you.  Remember?"
  Though Ranma had learned one of his most powerful
  techniques because of that incident, it had proven one of the
  most difficult ordeals of his life thus far.  The blow to his pride,
  being struck down weak and near defenseless and forced to
  depend on the charity of people like Ryoga, how it had rankled!
  Even the thrill of victory, coming as it had despite his
  weakness, had felt hollow, for he thought the only cure for the
  pressure point curse lost in the battle.  So much nearly given
  up, he had thought, because he had rescued Akane from the
  cyclone he himself had created.
        It's funny, he thought, smiling mirthlessly.  Back
  then, I didn't even question why I was willing to sacrifice my
  cure to save my unwanted tomboy of a fiancee.  Now, it was all
  too painfully obvious.
        "Well," continued Tofu, "I learned a lot from that
  incident.  Actually, I've learned a lot through your injuries in
  general, Ranma, and encountered techniques I only read of in
  the most obscure of textbooks.  After encountering that
  weakness pressure point and not being able to counter it, I
  realized I needed more training."
        "Really?  I dunno, doc, you never seemed stupid or
  nothing to me."
        Tofu smiled.  "Thanks . . . I think.  Now don't
  move."  Ranma felt a tiny prick as the doctor slid a needle into
  his arm, and pulled out a small blood sample.  "So I got in
  contact with my old shiatsu teacher, who put me in touch with
  his master, and without further delay I left for China.  It was . . .
  a very enjoyable, if very difficult time."
        Ranma smiled wistfully.  "I know what you mean."
        "I suppose you do.  For three months, my teacher and
  I settled in this remote farming village, not far from where you
  traveled, if I'm not mistaken.  It was there, a few weeks into my
  training, that I encountered one of the most difficult challenges
  of my life."
        The young martial artist nodded.  "Yeah.  Which was
  it for you?  Amazons, cursed pools, deranged monks, dragon
  princes?"
        "I fell in love," Tofu said, and closing his eyes
  briefly, he released a deep sigh.  "It was love like I've only
  known once before, deep and dark and it lurked at the very
  depth of my being, and it was all I could do to keep myself
  from throwing myself at her feet; from proclaiming my love
  and sweeping her away; from throwing aside everything I've
  ever achieved to please her, if she wished it.  But it was stupid.
  She was the daughter of a local farmer, a young girl already
  betrothed to another man against whom I bore no grudge; and
  more importantly, whether she knew it or not, I saw that she
  cared for this other boy.  Not to mention my own life here in
  Japan, and the pers--people in it, to which I would soon return.
        "But one day, as I was searching the surrounding
  countryside for certain herbs my teacher required for my
  training, we met.  Or rather, I saved her.  A small group of
  brigands were attacking her.  I . . . intervened."  Again, Ranma
  saw that momentary hardness in the doctor's eyes, and was
  suddenly reminded of how little he really knew the doctor.
  There was the kind, slightly goofy man that acted strange when
  Kasumi was around; and now this, a hidden depth only rarely
  glimpsed.  Which was the real Tofu?
        "The temptation was terrible," the doctor continued.
  "She was so very grateful to me, and her interest was obvious,
  and we were alone."  He chuckled.  "Maybe it's presumptuous
  of me, but I rather imagine I appeared the dashing hero
  appearing at the nick of time.  There would never be a better
  chance to declare my love to her.  After all, that's what heroes
  do, right?  But I couldn't.  It wasn't right, I needed control.  So
  I retreated from her in the only way I knew how.
        "I hopped around in circles and made toothpicks out
  of a couple of trees, and ran off laughing like a madman.  And
  from that day on, every time I would see her I would act
  strange, until the villagers eventually learned to keep her away
  from me.  It hurt, and it was hard, being that way; but in the
  long run it was probably best that she saw me like that.  And
  eventually I finished my training there, and moved on, and
  returned to Japan, and her final impression of me will always
  be of the giggling lunatic, the bumbling doctor who passed
  through during her youth and never returned."
        The doctor fell silent.  His gentle ministrations never
  faltered once during his story.  After some time, Ranma
  hesitantly spoke up.  "I . . . think you're wrong, doc.  I dunno,
  but maybe the last thing she'll hold on to is that memory of the
  'dashing hero' that saved her."  He shrugged.  "Seems like a
  better memory than some geek makin' pretzels out'a lumber.
  But I ain't no girl, so who knows?"
        Tofu's answer was a slight smile and tight grip.
  "Turn your head and cough, please."


        They talked very little after that.  The doctor soon
  finished.  "Well, that's it for now, so you're free to go.  Akane
  went off ahead while I finished with you, but you can catch up
  with her at school."  Tofu, maybe catching an indication of
  doubt or indecision in the young boy, added, "I really think you
  should follow her to school, Ranma.  Like I said, just for
  today."
        Ranma nodded, an uncomfortable feeling churning
  inside.
        "Ranma," the doctor asked, "are you okay?"
        "I-," he started, and hesitated.  The boy frowned.
  "I'm . . . scared?"
        His face strangely impassive, Tofu asked, "About
  what?"  He sat down on one of his beds, and patted the seat
  next to him.  Ranma joined him distractedly, eyes clouded.
        "I'm not sure," the boy said.  "For Akane, of course.
  And about what I'm going to do.  I didn't think leaving was
  going to be this difficult.  But now that I've realized that I love
  her . . . ."
        Tofu nodded.
        "But that's not it," he continued after a moment of
  silent thought.  "I mean, all that's part of it, but it's all just so
  big, too big for me to wrap my head around right now.  This is
  something new."  Again, the doctor waited, until Ranma felt
  ready to continue.  "I think . . . it's the idea of going back to
  school.
        "Stupid, isn't it?" he snorted.  "With everything else
  going on, I'm worried about something like that.  It's just that I
  never thought I would be, you know, going back that is.  I
  thought I left all that behind.  I mean, sure, part of me kinda
  _wants_ to go back, try out some of that closure stuff Hinako
  keeps going on about; but mostly, I don't think I want to see
  any of those people ever again.  But like you said, I should stay
  with Akane, she might need me, and even if she hates me, I
  won't leave her when she's hurting."  He glanced aside at Tofu,
  but finding no indication there whether Akane was ill or not,
  continued.  "So I've got to go back, and I wonder what
  people'll say and do, especially after the way I left last week."
        Tofu shrugged.  "That I can't tell you," he said.  "My
  high school days are far behind me now.  Or as far behind as
  they ever get.  Whatever else you might think of Furinkan,
  Ranma, and of everything that's happened recently, believe me
  when I say--you'll never forget."
        "No kidding, " Ranma said.
        "And now," the doctor added, "I'm sorry, but I have
  to get back to work."
        A few minutes later the young martial artist found
  himself alone and reluctant, standing out front of the doctor's
  clinic.  Feeling uncomforted by his stopover, Ranma Saotome
  resumed his slow walk to school.  The weather had taken a
  decided turn for the worse during his checkup, and a strong,
  bitter wind tugged insistently at his clothes, setting the trailing
  end of his shirt to snapping.  Though still bright and sunny,
  dark and heavy-looking clouds loomed on the horizon.  Good,
  he thought, finally the weather's clueing in to my mood.
        He sought determination to carry him the final steps
  back to Furinkan, but discovered resolve lacking within.  He
  wavered between his acknowledged responsibilities to Akane--
  especially if she were sick, which considering Tofu's unusually
  clinical behavior seemed increasingly likely--and his strong
  instinct to avoid the people responsible for his current situation.
  If it hadn't been for that party, he thought, and for the way
  those people treated me, none of this would have happened.  I
  wouldn't have drunk so much, I wouldn't have pissed Akane
  off by fighting, we wouldn't have argued, and everything
  would still be the way it had been.
        And I wouldn't have realized how much I love her,
  he added, and kicked at a stone.  Shit.
        Left to their own devices as his mind wandered
  elsewhere, his feet deviated from the proper path, and he found
  himself halfway to Ucchan's before taking notice.  You have to
  do this, Ranma berated himself, and turned back.  I thought I
  worked this through last week!
        But resolve achieved in an abstract setting proved
  weak, and despite believing that his week alone in the forest
  had brought around a state of mind from which he could
  confront his peers, he found himself hesitant to doing so.  A
  week ago, storming away from his school, anger had made him
  superior; unreachable; and from his lofty perch he had judged
  his fellow students and found them wanting.  They were
  shallow and cruel and false, preoccupied with hollow pursuits
  and wholly consumed with selfish desires . . . .
        And how he yearned for what they had and what they
  were, the acknowledgment of his loneliness and the rightness
  he felt at the Tendos convincing him that despite their
  perceived shortcomings, they possessed something of value that
  he had never known.  Perhaps he had touched upon it during
  his stay at Furinkan--those relaxed moments between classes,
  or waiting his turn during gym, or chatting with Hiroshi or
  Daisuke after school; but how fleeting those times had been!  I
  thought I found it during the party, he added, but look what
  came of that!
        Then he found himself before the closed black gates
  of Furinkan High School, and he dispelled any doubts he still
  had.  Akane was in there, and the doctor had told him to watch
  over her.  Concern overrode any personal fear he held about
  entering.  As for his former friends and persecutors: he realized
  that, compared to the argument of this morning and the
  decision to leave the woman he loved behind, confronting the
  people who had driven him away seemed meaningless; and
  suddenly he was wholly without fear.  I'm only here for Akane,
  he reminded himself, and everyone else can just screw off.
        Newly resolved, he hopped over the school wall and,
  seeing the clock above, noted that he was over an hour late.  It
  struck him as pointless to head to class when it had already
  started, especially since rejoining school wasn't his reason for
  being there.  Ranma could imagine the furor his late and sudden
  arrival would cause, the flurry of note-passing and whispered
  gossip that would take place; and he saw no reason to subject
  himself or Akane to that.  Rather, he decided to check up on his
  former fiancee from outside.  He meandered around to the other
  side of the school, quickly clambered up one of the tall trees
  lining the building, and leapt across the remaining distance.
  Clinging spider-like to the wall, he crept over to his old
  classroom.  Hanging from above the window, he slowly and
  furtively glanced inside.
        Akane sat rigid in her seat, staring forward at
  unrecognizable kanji drawn on the blackboard.  Frequently she
  would turn slightly, eyes glancing up at the clock, before
  returning her attention to the front.  Even at a distance Ranma
  could tell that something was wrong: something nearly
  imperceptible in her appearance conveyed the impression of
  unhealthy tension, like a spring coiled tight and denied release.
  It wasn't restrained anger--he recognized _that_ expression on
  her all too well--but something entirely different.  If people are
  bugging her about my return, he vowed, I'll kick the crap out of
  every last one of them.
        Satisfied that Akane was at school and more-or-less
  okay, the pigtailed martial artist retreated.  Already being near
  the top of the school, he decided to hang out on the roof until
  class was over.  As he approached the chain-link fence that kept
  students from falling off (or, as was the more likely case at
  Furinkan, either being thrown off or attempting dangerous
  aerial martial techniques), he heard student voices talking.
        Clinging to the side of his school, unmindful of the
  growing wind that sought to topple him, Ranma listened to the
  conversation.  It beat listening to his own unhappy thoughts.


        First Boy:  "So, yeah, Goda, how's Kensuke doing?"
        Goda:  "Not so hot.  He's still pretty broken up about
  the whole Ai thing."
        Girl:  "You ask me, the turnip deserves it."
        Goda:  "Yeah, well, nobody did, Maya, so shut it."
        Maya:  "Screw you.  Pass the tea."
        Second Boy: "What're you guys talking about?"
        Goda:  "Shit, Jun, you don't know?  Kensuke and Ai
  broke up."
        Jun:  "No way!  When?"
        Goda:  "Yesterday.  But it started last week.  Um,
  Monday."
        Maya:  "Big fight.  Ai found out Kensuke'd been
  fooling around behind her back with Satomi, and-."
        First:  "Satomi Ito?"
        Goda:  "That stuck up bitch?  Get real, Kitano--
  Satomi Tanaka.  From class 3-1.  You know, the one with the
  huge tits."
        Maya:  "Hey, there's a girl here, you know, watch
  your mouth, jackass!  Right.  Anyway, Kensuke was all pissed
  off about getting his ass kicked by Yuuta, and-."
        Jun:  "What the hell were they fighting about,
  anyway?"
        Goda:  "Kiyoshi's party.  Kensuke tried it on with
  Yuuta's sister, and-."
        Maya:  "Shut up, Goda, you're getting it all wrong!"
        Goda:  "Bite me.  Pass the Pocky."
        Maya:  "You wish.  Anyway, Kensuke was all pissy
  and Ai couldn't give a shit, and that just pissed him off more,
  and they fought and she took off, but that slut Satomi came up
  all, 'Oh, you poor stud of a man, you,' and they took off
  together and-."
        Kitano:  "Bullshit.  I was with Satomi.  She wanted
  help practicing her lines.  With Saotome gone, she figured she
  might have a shot at a better part."
        Jun:  "Saotome Naoki?"
        Kitano:  "Moron.  Saotome Ranma!"
        Jun:  "Hey, that's right, I heard he ran off last week."
        Goda:  "I thought he took off _two_ weeks ago to
  fight some Edo-period bead-chasing sword-wielding half-dog
  demon hiding near Kyoto."
        Kitano:  "I heard it was a transvestite ninja-clan and
  he was undercover as a cabaret dancer."
        Maya:  "Idiots.  He had that big fight with Akane at
  the party, remember?  So Ayumi told me he was so upset over
  the fight he decided to live the rest of his life as a woman."
        Jun:  "Eh, whatever."
        Goda:  "I thought you crashed the party.  Didn't you
  see?"
        Maya:  "Like I give a shit about those two drama
  cases?  Nah, I was taking care of bozo the drunk over there
  while he picked his ball out of his throat."
        Ryuta Uehara:  "Maya. . . ."

***
And here's the second half.

-Mike Noakes
noakes_m@hotmail.com

***

        Ranma, perched a scant meter below the
  conversation, blinked as he recognized Uehara's voice.  He
  stopped listening, remembering the fight at the party and how
  that asshole bully had incited him to violence.  Maybe, he
  thought, and grinned, coming back to school was a good idea
  after all.  I might not be one right now, Uehara--but payback's a
  bitch.
        With a single smooth movement, Ranma lifted
  himself over the edge onto the roof, pushed off from a crouch
  and leapt to the top of the fence; fingers barely brushing the
  edge, he swung over and dropped down, pushing off and
  tumbling out of his fall.  He landed softly in a crouch a few
  meters away from a group of students huddled next to the door
  leading back inside.
        He didn't know most of them, though he more or less
  recognized them.  They were some of the rougher kids in the
  school, always skipping class and getting caught for smoking or
  dyeing their hair or other stupid things like that.  Maya
  slouched against the wall, her skirt indecently short, hair dyed
  blonde and wearing makeup; Goda sat opposite her, smoking,
  uniform undone despite the cold, his short hair gelled up spiky
  and streaked with blue.  Ranma had never really paid them
  much attention before, since they weren't in his class and
  moved in very different circles than him.  They _have_ a circle,
  after all, Ranma thought.  I've got more of a dot.
        But I know you, Uehara, Ranma added.
        Engrossed in their conversation, they didn't
  immediately notice his arrival.  Uehara, sitting slightly outside
  the circle of friends, saw him first.  His eyes widened in
  surprise.  "Well, shit!  Speak of the transvestite, guys, we've
  got company!"
        Everybody looked back.
        "Oh, hey, Saotome," said Goda, and gave a slight
  wave.  "Long time.  Anyway," he continued, turning back to
  Jun, "like I was saying, Yuuta said to Kensuke, 'You touch my
  'lil Pikachu again, you bastard, and I'll kick your _ass_.'"  The
  others gave him a slight nod and returned to their conversation
  and card game.
        Slightly taken aback at being so quickly ignored,
  Ranma walked closer.  Uehara didn't look away and watched
  his approach with curiosity.  He stood up when the pigtailed
  boy came near.  "So, you're back," he said, with apparent
  disinterest.
        "For today," Ranma said.
        Uehara nodded.  "Good.  I got some unfinished
  business with you, Saotome."
        Ranma raised an eyebrow.  "Oh, really?"  The fingers
  of one hand curled closed.  He tried to tell himself he wasn't
  going to enjoy this.  He wasn't restrained by some promise this
  time, and he didn't care what any of these people thought of
  him.  But for the whole series of events Uehara had started . . .
  Ranma didn't consider himself a vengeful man, but he knew
  that venting some of the tension he felt on the individual
  responsible for most of it would somehow feel . . . good.
        "Yeah."  The tall, blond-haired boy slowly raised one
  fist.  "See this?"
        Ranma nodded and tensed himself to spring forward.
        The fist curled open.  "Here."
        The martial artist stared blankly at the open hand.
  "What?"
        "It's my hand, you moron!" said Uehara angrily.
  "Shake it already!"
        "Why would I want to do that?"
        "Because I'm sorry, that's why, you idiot!"
        Ranma blinked.  "You don't sound very sorry."
        "Damn.  Yeah, I always screw that up; I'm not very
  good at this kinda thing.  Listen, I wanna apologize for being
  such a jerk at the party last week.  Like I told those gimpy
  friends of yours, when I drink too much I get a little . . ."
        "Aggro?" said Goda.
        "Horny?" added Maya.
        "Stupid?" offered another boy.
        "Shut up!" he yelled at them, waving his fist, then
  turned back to Ranma.  He stuck his hand out again.  "So, yeah,
  like, I'm really sorry 'bout what happened, 'kay?  Shake on it?"
        Ranma reached out.  As his fingers slid along
  Uehara's hand, a dozen techniques flashed through his mind,
  wrist-locks and grapples and throws, a dozen ways to inflict all
  kinds of pain back onto the boy.  You have no idea how you
  screwed up my life, Ranma thought, and for a moment his grip
  tightened on the bully's hand.  You have no idea what you've
  cost me.
        "Yeah," Uehara continued, "I heard about all that shit
  that went down last week.  Stupid idiots.  Heard you showed
  'em who's boss though, right?"
        "I guess," Ranma said.
        "So why'd you take off after that?"
        "I don't belong here."
        The taller boy laughed.  "I keep forgetting what a
  _wimp_ you are, Saotome!"
        Ranma frowned.  "Watch it, Uehara."
        "Oh, relax," Ryuta said.  "You mean, you actually
  care what those bitches down there said?  Man, you've got a lot
  to learn!  Now, listen, it's like this . . ."
        "Oh, crap, not again" Goda chirped.  "Not the
  wisdom of Uehara Ryuta!"
        "Shut up!" the tall boy yelled, "Or I'll tell Saotome
  how you've got a boner for his girl!"
        "Uh--what?"
        "Forget it.  Now, listen," Uehara said, gesturing for
  the martial artist to sit slightly apart from the other group.
  Shrugging, Ranma did so, thinking, It's not like I've got
  anything better to do until class is over.  The larger boy,
  obviously pleased at having an audience, took a seat opposite
  him.
        "It's like this, see," Ryuta began.  "You're a wimp,
  because you're weak--hey, don't interrupt!"  He raised one
  hand to forestall Ranma's protest.  "I'm not stupid, I know you
  can kick my ass.  You already have twice.  You're strong,
  Saotome . . . but you're not tough.  Not where it counts, up
  here."  The bully tapped the side of his head.  "Oh, sure, you're
  no dummy, and your grades are probably higher than mine, and
  you've got that martial arts discipline thing down . . . but you
  care, man, you actually buy into that shit everybody's been
  shoveling your way.
        "And there's so much of it, it fuckin' stinks so high,
  even up here at the top of the school we're surrounded by it.
  All those losers down there, so obsessed with getting great
  grades, just so they can go to some university their parents
  picked and graduate and get some job with some lame company
  they'll work at until they die.  But, hey, that's cool, but those
  idiots _don't see it_, and that's the sick thing, they're all too
  pathetic to face up to the truth.  So they join clubs and play
  games, they watch TV and write stories and do their homework
  and fill their tiny little brains with pointless crap, so that they
  never have to think about how meaningless their lives are going
  to be, or how they really have no clue what they want to do,
  and how lonely and unhappy they really are.
        "But not me.  Nope.  My life might be as shit as
  everybody else's but at least I know it.  So why should I waste
  my friggin' time tryin' to impress those idiots below, or some
  teacher or my parents, when none of them want to have
  anything to do with me?  Screw that.  I'll scare them instead,
  and steal their lunch money because I can, and I'll make sure
  that no matter how hard they try, they'll never be able to ignore
  me or forget that I'm here.  I'm here to have fun; that's why I
  come to this stupid school, because if anything else, it's a riot--
  especially when you're around.  But I'm not gonna study any
  more than I have to, and I'll just keep picking fights and
  kicking ass until some Yak scout notices and picks me up, and,
  hey, that might be as pointless as everything else, but at least
  I'm having fun, right?
        Ranma's lack of response led Uehara to scowl.
        "An unbeliever, huh?  I don't get you, Saotome.  I
  mean, you're strong.  You're always fighting, hell, more than
  even I do.  And you _crush_ your enemies!  Like that dude with
  the umbrella.  You take him down, hard, and you enjoy it!"
        "Hey!  No I don't!"
        "Not even Kuno?"
        The pigtailed boy smiled wryly.  "Well, maybe
  Kuno."
        "Exactly.  That's why I don't get you, Saotome.
  Yeah, I've watched you around school and stuff, and you're
  downright _mean_ when you wanna be; and then you turn
  around and pussy out for the stupidest reasons."
        "It's called water, Uehara."
        "Whatever.  Like that crap at the party and here at
  school.  You were sad, man!  One second, you're laying the
  smack down on me, and dude, that's the worst ass-kicking I've
  _ever_ had; the next, you're moping around all pathetic-like,
  going, 'oh woe is me, I sure wish I had a friend!'  It's like,
  why?  You're better than those people, stronger than them, so
  who cares what they think?  And then that shit with Tendo,
  dude, I can't believe you were actually beating yourself up over
  that.  It's about time, you ask me, that bitch had it com-."
        "Don't.  Call her that."  Ranma intoned, voice cold
  and eyes hard, his hand suddenly vice-like around Uehara's
  throat.
        "See," the bully croaked.  "See?"
        The martial artist threw him down.  "You're full of it.
  I ain't like you.  I don't care if people forget about me, and I
  don't beat up people because I can, and I don't care if they like
  me or not."
        "Oh, that's right, you're just so much deeper than the
  rest of us."  Ryuta smiled.  "Not.  Now who's full of it?"
        "Shut up."
        "Stop being such a bitch about this, Saotome, and
  face the truth like a man.  You're not like the others, and you're
  not going to change that.  They think I'm strange because . . .
  well, just because, and 'cus I'm violent and rude and do things
  differently than they do.  But think, man--if I'm a weirdo
  because of my parents and the shit I do, then you--you must be
  the freakiest thing this city's ever seen, you change _sexes_
  man, and your glow when you're pissed, and you fight
  monsters in your free time!
        "And don't tell me you don't like being different,
  because you go out of your way any chance you get to make
  damn sure everybody knows it.  It's not like you keep a low
  profile, Saotome, between picking fights with the principal and
  inviting your buddies over to the school field so you can kick
  their ass in front of an audience.  Hell, even I do my ass-
  kicking in private; you make sure everybody damn well
  _knows_ you're a badass.  So face up to the truth, man: you're
  different and you _love_ it, and you're never gonna be like the
  rest of the flock.  So stop chasing after the favor of those shit-
  faced losers below, 'cus it's just pathetic, and you're making
  me sick."
        Ranma never got to further debate the dubious
  wisdoms of Ryuta Uehara, however, for at that moment a deep,
  sultry voice interrupted.  "So what do we have here?" a woman
  asked.  "You wouldn't be . . . delinquents?"


        From the door leading back into the school stepped
  the tall, curvaceous form of the adult Hinako Ninomiya, the
  school's vampire-like disciplinarian.  The yellow dress that fit
  her six-year old frame was stretched impossibly tight across her
  full, voluptuous figure, accentuating the exaggerated femininity
  that seemed poised to burst free of their scant restraint.  The
  sheer sexuality she exuded could have been distracting, if it
  didn't have such a painfully terrifying source.  She tossed back
  the long lustrous sweep of her hair with a flick of her head, and
  looked down at the students with a half-lidded look that could
  only be described as hungry.
        "Aw crap," muttered Uehara.
        "So then," Hinako purred, "who do we have here?"
  Fixing Goda with her heavy-lidded gaze, she ticked off one
  finger, drawing it languidly back.  "Mr. Takemoto, how . . .
  good to see you again.  This is your third time this month, isn't
  it?  And smoking, too--my, you are being naughty today, aren't
  you?"  Goda, already quivering, went white.  "And Ms.
  Koyama, still by your man's side, I see."  Maya flushed red,
  glancing aside at Uehara.  "That color suits you, but I believe
  you know how I disapprove of makeup at school."  She
  checked a third and fourth finger.  "Kitano Matsushita, absent
  from class again; Jun Iwato, also absent.
        "And last," she said, lips curving in a dangerous
  smile, last slender finger curling into her small fist, "we have
  Ryuta Uehara.  Not much of a surprise, really.  Uehara and his
  little gang of troublemakers.  I see inappropriate uniforms,
  absenteeism, smoking, snacking, and defacement of school
  property.  I see delinquents!"
        "Yeah, but do you see me?"  Ranma, emerging from
  the shadows he had faded into, stepped in front of the gang of
  students the teacher had been about to discipline.  He wasn't
  too sure why he bothered, and was sorely tempted to just hang
  back hidden and allow her to have her way with them.  He
  didn't care for these students, didn't care much for Uehara, and
  he held no grudge against Hinako--truth be told, he rather liked
  the diminutive English teacher and felt he had more in common
  with her than his peers.
        "Saotome!"
        "Yeah."  Ranma shrugged.  "Guess I'm back."
        "The biggest delinquent of them all," she said, eyes
  narrowing.  "One week of absences!  Violence and destruction
  of school property!  Flagrant disrespect for school authority!
  And you never wear a uniform!"
        "You forgot blatant unrepentant cocky attitude," he
  drawled.
        Hinako frowned and turned her attention back to the
  other students.  "As for you sorry lot," she said, "you're lucky I
  found a bigger fish to fry.  Get back to class immediately and I
  may even forget this happened."
        The students needed little urging.  They cleared out
  quickly and with only the briefest of sympathetic looks back.
  Uehara left last, hands thrust deeply into his pockets as he
  sauntered away.  He glanced back over his shoulder just before
  heading downstairs.  "Thanks for the save, Saotome," he said,
  and grinned.  "Yo."  Ranma wordlessly watched them leave,
  until finally he stood alone on the school roof with the angry
  disciplinarian next to him.
        "Alright, teach, how you wanna do this?" he asked.
  He raised his fists and spread out three fingers of the right
  hand, and two of the left.  "I've got five fingers for you if you
  want 'em."
        "Oh my, Ranma," she cooed, blushing.  "Wherever
  do you plan on sticking those fingers, I wonder?"
        "What?  No!  I just wanna poke your tits, is all!"
        "How very forward of you," she said, hands clasped
  to her chest.  "And a student as well!"
        "That's not what I meant!"
        "Then whatever is it that you want?"
        "Nothing, dammit!"
        "Then why," she asked, "are you here, Mr.
  Saotome?"
        Ranma blinked.  "Huh?"
        "You're not in class," she said, ticking off a finger.
  "And yet, you're not rescuing your fiancee.  I don't see any
  rivals about, nor are you training, nor is the school in any kind
  of danger.  I do believe that covers the usual excuses for your
  truancy, yes?"
        "Uh, yeah?"
        "Very eloquent.  So again I wonder why you are not
  in class, Mr. Saotome?  I have had just about enough of your
  delinquency!"
        "Aw, c'mon teach, I ain't no delinquent!"
        "Or, really," she said, sidling closer.  "Well then,
  Ranma, why don't you share with me what makes you so
  special that you can attend school at your own discretion?"
        "Hey!" he said, raising his hands in protest.  "It ain't
  my fault I miss school so much!"
        "Still blaming others for your problems, I see.  Well,
  Mr. Saotome, your parents may not care if you skip school, and
  the principal might not care, and even that wonderful,
  handsome, stud of a man, that _gorgeous_ Soun Tendo, that--."
        "Ms. Hinako?" he interrupted.
        "Yes, well, none of _them_ may care if you slip into
  irredeemable delinquency--but I do.  I will not tolerate this kind
  of behavior, Ranma.  Seeing you with those other rotten apples
  leads me to believe that you're slipping in with the wrong
  crowd--and considering your usual entourage, that's saying
  something!"
        "That's not fair!  My friends ain't-."
        "Don't interrupt me!" she said angrily.  "You have
  gone too far, Mr. Saotome!  I am tired of your frequent
  absences and violent outbursts; of your insults, bad attitude,
  and disrespect for authority; of the bad elements you bring to
  this school and the destruction of property that follows; of your
  weird behavior, strange clothes, and perverted-."
        "That's it!" he cried.  "I've had enough of this shit.
  Where d'ya think you get off calling me all that, you chi-
  sucking psycho?"  The last of the residual empathy he felt for
  her evaporated under the barrage of insults.  Ever since you've
  come to this stupid school, he thought, you've done nothing but
  try and make an example of me, repeatedly denounced me as
  both a delinquent and a pervert, and gone out of your way to
  make my life difficult.
        Red-faced, she glared back at him.  "How dare you-,"
  she started, but again he cut her off.
        "Don't get me started!" he yelled.  "I've put up with
  a lot from this school, and from you to boot!  Enough's enough.
  Back off!"
        "How dare you?" she repeated, taking a threatening
  step forward, flipping a five-yen coin into her waiting palm.
  "How dare you take up such an insolent tone with me?" she
  added.  "For as long as I'm your teacher, you will treat me with
  the respect I'm due!"  The coin, held between two outstretched
  fingers of her right hand, faced him directly.  He could even see
  one dark, smoldering eye through the square little hole.
        "Yeah, sure," he said, and plugged the hole with his
  index finger even as she began to mouth 'Happo Five-Yen
  Return'.  "But what if I'm not your student anymore?"
  Eyes wide with surprise and the coin falling from
  numb fingers, her anger dissipated instantly. "What?"
        Ranma shrugged.  "I'm through with this place.  With
  this school, this city, hell, with these people.  I'm leaving."
        "When?"
        "Today."  He nodded towards his backpack.
  "Everything I own is in this thing."
        "And so you're just going to drop out of school?"
        "Nah.  I worked too hard to get as far as I have.  I
  guess I'll have to come back or something, or at least call,
  when I find a new home somewhere and a new school.  I ain't
  giving up or nothin', Hinako.  I've just had enough of this
  shithole."
        She shook her head with apparent dismay.  "I'm so
  sorry, Ranma," she said, almost in tears, and the childlike
  appearance of sadness she displayed contrasted strangely with
  features so adult and unconsciously sensuous.  "As a teacher, it
  seems I've failed you."
        This expression of genuine contrition was the last he
  expected of her, and Ranma felt the familiar, though subdued,
  stirring of guilt at making her--at making any girl--sad.  "Aw,
  gee, teach, you ain't failed at nothing," he said, confused that
  she could feel that she was somehow responsible for him
  leaving.  "This really ain't got all that much to do with you."
        "Then why leave?" she asked.
        That she could even ask the question seemed strange
  to him.  How could it not be obvious?  Even Uehara, though
  disagreeing with his motivation, understood why Ranma
  wanted to leave.  He supposed that it was inevitable that
  anyone, upon becoming a teacher, lost touch with the reality of
  students' lives; he just assumed that because Hinako spent so
  much of her time as a child, she would maybe have a better
  understanding.  Then again, didn't people just as easily assume
  the same of him and women?
        "Why leave?" he answered.  "Why stay?  I mean,
  c'mon teach, really, what is there to keep me here?"
        "Akane?" she said, blinking innocently.
        He replied with a frown.  "That's none of your
  business, Ms. Hinako."
        Ninomiya smiled.  "Well then," she said, and
  gestured for him to join her as she started to walk, "why don't
  you tell me what makes this place so terrible."  She took in the
  wide expanse of Furinkan, the gym down below, the stretches
  of sports playing fields, the trees and uncultivated bush near the
  far edge of the school terrain, with a sweep of her hand.
  "Certainly it looks a little run down in places--and you can't
  deny some responsibility for that--but otherwise it's a fine
  establishment.  Believe me, as a disciplinarian, I've worked in
  far uglier schools."
        "Yeah, sure," he admitted, staying by her side.  They
  walked together, along the edge of the roof, looking across the
  district spread out below.  The wind blew stronger now, slightly
  cold and heavy with the promise of rain.  "But it's not the place
  so much as the people who've convinced me to leave."
        "Teachers?" she asked.
        "Nah.  I mean, sure, you guys kind of let me down
  last week, what with the whole gym thing and all, but for the
  most part you're decent enough.  It's not even the Principal.
  He's a complete nutjob, but when he's not tryin' to cut my hair
  or something he can be an okay guy.  Like when he tried to
  teach Akane how to swim."
        "So it's the students."
        "Pretty much," he said, and shrugged.  "You know, I
  don't like the guy but Uehara is right about one thing: I'm
  different.  From my peers, from the students in this school,
  from kids my age.  It was stupid for me to try and fit in with
  them.  Stupid."
        To his surprise, she laughed.  "Really, Mr. Saotome, I
  thought you better than that," she said, and led him to the
  opposite side of the roof.  "Listening to the likes of Uehara?
  Our poor tortured rebel is neither as unique nor as bad as he'd
  like to believe, I'm afraid.  That he's smart enough--remarkably
  bright, in fact--to realize this just embitters him further."  She
  glanced at her watch, and raised a hand to forestall any
  questions.  "Just wait ten seconds . . . five . . . ah, here we go."
        The school bell rang, its musical chime announcing
  the end of second period.  Within moments students poured
  from the front door and side entrances of the school, as they
  eagerly escaped classroom confines for a few minutes of fresh
  air and relaxation.  Hinako turned his attention to the students
  below.  Their voices reached him in a mix of laughter and
  snippets of words.  "Look at them all, Ranma."
        He watched them from his perch high above, watched
  them embrace the brief period of freedom given them.  They
  looked the same, the boys in their tunics, black slacks and black
  jacket and short black hair.  Those who conformed to the rules,
  anyway.  One kid tried dyeing his hair once, and the teachers
  brought him into the teachers' office, covered him in
  newspaper, and spray-painted his hair black again.  Takenori,
  that was his name, had come back to class smiling, unperturbed
  by what had happened.  The rough kids, like Goda and Uehara,
  had mocked him for letting the teachers do that to him.  The
  teachers wouldn't dare try it with any of the young toughs at
  Furinkan, the really 'bad' students.  Takenori hadn't seemed to
  care.  The girls, at a glance, enjoyed a little more variety: they
  all wore the same blue jumper, white blouse set, but their hair
  came in a wider range of lengths and styles; their skirts all
  varied in length, from moody ankle-length to dangerously
  short; they even customized their socks, white of course, but
  some oversized-baggy-ankle-glue-type while others were short
  and decorated.  Many of the girls liked their uniform and wore
  it during after-school hours, even.  Not Akane, though: she
  switched into more comfortable clothes as quickly as possible,
  into her dogi if she could.
  None of this mattered.  It wasn't what he could see
  driving him away.  The surface meant nothing, that's where
  friendship expressed itself, meaningless.  What lurked inside
  sickened him: the meanness and pettiness, the hollow fear and
  cowardliness that expressed itself as spiteful lashing out.
  Ranma looked down at his peers and saw nothing but cliques.
  Leaders and followers.  And outcasts.  Emptiness.
        "I don't suppose you see it," Hinako continued.  "I
  suppose you really are like Uehara in many ways."
        "I'm nothing like that guy," he said.  "But I'm even
  less like the people down there."
        "Do you hate them?"
        A sudden upsweep of wind caught him, strong and
  insistent, pulling at his pigtail, howling in his ears, school
  sounds muted, eyes wet against the dust.  With arms stretched,
  he slowly turned against the embracing swirl, eyes closed, and
  reached out for the school below him.  He felt suddenly
  euphoric, a bubble of laughter forming within.  As his
  awareness touched upon his supposed peers he felt nothing: not
  hate, certainly not love, nor fear.  The very absence of emotion
  felt momentarily liberating, a welcome release from the
  tensions of the day, and as the wind died and he turned back to
  Hinako, busy fighting to keep her skirt down in a vain attempt
  to preserve modesty, the first genuine smile he had known in
  over a week rose.  "No," he answered, though perhaps she
  didn't hear.  "I don't hate anybody."


        In the few remaining minutes before class resumed,
  Ranma passed swiftly through the school corridors in search of
  Akane.  He had expected upon his return to school a greater
  reaction from both himself and the other students.  A number of
  students noticed his passing--a few nasty glares, the occasional
  waved greeting--but as he wove through the crowds most
  seemed indifferent to his presence.  This suited him fine, for as
  he looked inside he found that same indifference mirrored.
  Something had happened in that moment on the rooftop, the
  school and city and student body spread out before him.  A
  recognition of his own isolation from it all, perhaps, but more
  importantly an understanding of everyone else's similar
  aloneness.  The fragility of the friendships that held that
  knowledge at bay now seemed transparent, and he pulled a
  serene acceptance of his own exile by accepting that Hinako
  was right, he wasn't unique, he was alone, but just like
  everybody else.  The only person in the entire school that
  mattered was Akane.  He had shared something stronger with
  her, something genuine and true; love; and while he no longer
  had any claim to either her or that bond, it was through
  protecting her, ensuring that she was okay, that he could bring
  some momentary relevance to what he was doing.  Once Doctor
  Tofu reassured him she was all right--she had to be, he refused
  to believe something had happened while he was away--then he
  could find something new to fill in that void her absence would
  leave.  Something, anything.  Ranma felt again a confused mix
  of emotions within, a hollow pain of loss mingled with
  effervescent giddiness, as he glided down the stairs to his old
  classroom.
        He slowed to a walk stepping onto the third floor.  A
  few startled glances his way by peers, a teacher, muted hostility
  from some girls, and he ignored them and walked by, wearing a
  quirky half-smile.  A feeling somewhat akin to what he had felt
  upon returning to the Tendos' after a week in the woods slowly
  arose.  There was a familiarity here, to these hallways and rows
  of windows and chipped beige-painted walls.  This sensation
  wasn't entirely comforting, school had always been somewhat
  disconcerting for him, but in retrospect the year and a half he
  had spent at Furinkan had not been all that bad.  Classes were
  dull for the most part, certainly, but between club activities and
  free time and the parade of lunatics that had passed through,
  school had kept life interesting.  He didn't think he would miss
  the school itself, but in being perfectly honest to himself he
  found that there were some people, certain faces, he would be
  saddened to leave behind.  Both Kunos, surprisingly, and
  creepy little Gosunkugi as well.  Ms. Hinako.  He was surprised
  at how many people he knew at Furinkan.  Guys from his club,
  people from Akane's.  Yuka.  How many of them had he once
  considered friends?  Daisuke.  Uehara.  Or had they only been
  acquaintances, a bond even more ephemeral than friendship?
  He'd even miss Sayuri, little bitch that she was, thinking herself
  so tough, trying to get between him and Akane.
        Akane.  His thoughts instinctively shied away against
  images unbidden arising--happy laughing setting sun glinting in
  hair against canal fence looking down as he floundered in
  water, she had pushed him overcome by her cuteness, by his
  heart swelling so confusedly in a chest turned female, even then
  he had known she was special, maybe not love, not yet at that
  point, but the potential, a seed germinating, and now grown to
  something so very painfully real, impossible and lost . . . not
  lost but given away.  His own choice, what had he been
  thinking, chest growing tight, painfully, steps faltering, and he
  braced himself against the wall.  Chipped cement rough and
  solid and cool beneath his palm.  Ranma drew a deep
  shuddering breath, squeezing his eyes shut.  Remember, he told
  himself.  You're doing this for her.  And yourself.  Now find
  her.  And leave.  He took another moment and composed
  himself, but just as he went to step forward an interruption, a
  light touch on his shoulder, nearly timorous and holding him
  back.
  "Ranma?"
        "Hiroshi," he answered, turning to the blond-haired
  boy.  Hiroshi seemed unusually subdued, nervous even, and his
  eyes darted to the side as if unable to look him straight in the
  face.  On his own part, Ranma felt his features slide into forced
  impassivity as he pushed aside the recently reawakened
  emotions that threatened to overwhelm him.  "What's up?" he
  asked, his tone unavoidably cool.
        His friend winced.  "I. . . ."  He took a deep breath
  then shrugged.  "Not much.  Just surprised you're here, I guess.
  It's, ah . . . it's nice to see you again, man."
        Something in Hiroshi's voice sounded artificially
  casual.  A smile seemed to dance hesitantly on his lips, not
  quite able to take hold.  Ranma didn't have time to find out
  why.  He wanted to find Akane before the break ended.
  "Sure," he answered, and shrugged.  "Listen, I've gotta go,
  'kay?"
        Unexpectedly, Hiroshi seemed to collapse inwards a
  little, shoulders slumping, and he looked away.  "Yeah.  I
  understand."
  Puzzled and a little concerned, Ranma added, almost
  apologetically, "I've got to find Akane," to which Hiroshi only
  nodded, and turned away.
        Bemused, Ranma moved on.  He felt worry for his
  friend.  Another person left behind because of circumstances.
  Perhaps life at Furinkan hadn't been so bad after all.  He no
  longer felt like he was taking part in some game, one in which
  everyone but him knew the rules.  All this time, looking for
  something profound in places where it didn't exist, those
  friendships that seemed so much more real than anything he
  could know, the way the girls hung out at lunch by the window
  chatting, freely touching, or the guys swapping punches and
  crude jokes when together, the unconscious sharing of
  something common.  It all seemed so impossible, like he'd
  been somehow excluded, whether intentionally or not--but now
  he saw that the friendships he'd known with people like Hiroshi
  and Daisuke were as real as it got, maybe not all that deep but
  that's all there was, in the end.  Everything else was an illusion,
  crafted with desperation to cover up the fact that, at the end of
  the day, they were alone.
        The idea brought a certain calm with it.  I didn't feel
  alone when I was with her, he told himself, the thought rising
  from beneath the momentary peace he felt, threatening to
  shatter it.  He'd miss Hiroshi.  That night at the party--had it
  only been a week ago?--there had been a chance to know him
  better.  Everything else had gone wrong, but that short time
  while sitting there in drunken self-pity alone with Hiroshi, he
  had momentarily felt himself connect with something deeper
  that lay between the shallow friendships he saw at school and
  what he had given up with Akane.  Something precious, known
  only rarely and maybe briefly glimpsed with Ryoga, of all
  people.  Well, when the idiot isn't trying to kill me, he added,
  thinking of the few occasions when circumstances had forced
  an unlikely alliance and unsteady peace.  Sitting in the steamy
  bath together after their defeat of Herb and return to Nerima,
  his masculinity so narrowly held onto, so nearly lost, something
  others took for granted made impossibly precious.
        "Ranma, wait!"
        A hand grabbed him by the wrist, Hiroshi again
  pulling him back.  An unexpected reminder of the party night,
  memories seeming stronger and more insistent now that he was
  trying to leave them behind: _You're having a good time
  tonight, no matter what_, _We'll make this a night you'll never
  forget._  Yeah, no shit, he thought wryly.
        "Ranma, I know, you've got to find Akane, I know,
  but . . . can we talk?"
        "Yeah, sure, I guess," he answered, somewhat taken
  aback by the eagerness of Hiroshi's request.  "Won't you be
  late for class?"
        "Like I care?"
        They stepped into an unused classroom for privacy.
  The door ought to have been locked, but Furinkan was one of
  the few high schools that did without: locked doors more often
  than not caused the adjoining walls to be knocked down as an
  alternate entrance.  Anyway, between the Principal, Ms.
  Hinako, the local martial artists, and the slightly insane
  chemistry club, theft had all but disappeared from the
  institution's hallowed halls.  It simply wasn't worth the risk.
  Things that weren't yours had a tendency to explode or conjure
  demons or release dangerous gasses.  The room was dim and
  dusty, the air stale from disuse.  Ranma slouched against a wall,
  backpack held between his outstretched feet.  It was getting
  darker outside, overcast, the wind a faint howl setting the glass
  next to his head to vibrate; already the windows were speckled
  wet, though the rain had yet to fall.  Damn, should have
  brought an umbrella, he thought.  Hiroshi grabbed a chair
  opposite him and stared up at him searchingly.
        "So what's up?" Ranma asked.
        Hiroshi opened his mouth to speak but nothing came
  out.  He looked confused and, suddenly frowning, looked away.
  Perplexed, the martial artist watched but, feeling the press of
  time, the incoming rain, the necessity of finding Akane, swiftly
  lost patience as his friend fumbled for words.  He leaned
  forward.  "Yo, Hiroshi, relax, man.  Just spit it out already."
  The boy stood up.  He bowed deeply, from the waist,
  nearly ninety-degree position held for a 1- 2- 3- count, before
  rising again and fixing Ranma with unusually serious eyes.
  "I'm sorry, Ranma.  Please forgive me."
        "Um, okay," he said.  He tugged at his pigtail for a
  moment then added, "For what?"
        "For _what_?" Hiroshi sputtered.  "For everything!"
  He advanced, seeming almost angry in his disbelief, earlier
  confusion dispelled by Ranma's ignorance.  "For making you
  stay at that stupid party!  For being such a shitty friend!  For
  not helping you when you needed it, betraying your trust, being
  such a pathetic weak loser _coward_ and standing by and
  letting everyone tear you apart like that, it wasn't fair, I hated
  the stuff they said, but I didn't _do_ anything because I was, I
  was . . . afraid," he said, last word barely a whisper, vigor
  dropping suddenly from his voice, as he fell back into his chair
  with fists clenched.
        Ranma laughed, surprising himself.  Hiroshi,
  suddenly scowling, insisted, "It's not funny!" which only set
  him to further laughter.  Finally, shoulders trembling with the
  effort of restraint, he managed to swallow back the giddiness
  that threatened to bubble up again.  "I know, I know," Ranma
  agreed, waving him down.  A week ago, maybe even yesterday,
  what had felt like Hiroshi's--like all his friends'--betrayal had
  sat sourly within.  Especially from Hiroshi, with whom he had
  shared in his drunkenness things he would never have
  otherwise spoken about.  But now it somehow seemed so
  pathetically irrelevant that the contrast between the importances
  he placed on it, and Hiroshi did, made his friend's gesture seem
  absurd.
        "But, really," Ranma added, "Don't worry about it.
  There's nothing to forgive."  Because none of it is important,
  he wanted to add, but couldn't imagine a way of conveying
  how he felt, how irrelevant school and friendships and
  everything else now felt to him.
        Hiroshi blinked, unsure.  "Really?"
        "Yup."
        "We're still friends?"
        Ranma thought of friendship and of all that it entailed
  to him, and shrugged.  "Yeah, of course."
        Visible relief.  Hiroshi smiled, for the first time
  resembling the perverted jerk that used to needle him about
  girls.  "Oh, man, I'm really glad to hear that.  I've been so
  worried this last week, thinking you'd hate me, hate all of us,
  and that we'd hurt you really bad."  He let out a deep breath.  "I
  oughta've known better--you're Ranma Saotome!  Nobody
  beats Saotome!"
        Yeah, Ranma thought.  Nobody beats me.
        "It's good to have you back," Hiroshi said.  "I've
  missed you around school.  Though you haven't missed much,
  it's been a quiet week, even Kuno's been quiet 'cus of tests and
  stuff.  Well, not too quiet, of course, this is Furinkan after all,
  and it took a day or two for things to die down after you took
  off, people aren't used to seeing you get violent.  Well, with
  other martial artists, sure, but not like that, I think you scared a
  lot of them, and they deserved it.  Assholes."  But as he
  continued babbling Ranma only paid half an ear, thinking,
  things were quiet while I was away.
        Finally sensing that he was losing his audience,
  Hiroshi stopped talking and, with a final shrug, finished with,
  "I mean it.  I'm glad you're back."  Ranma didn't feel like
  correcting the obvious, that he was back, maybe, but certainly
  not to stay.  "We oughta talk after school or something.  Catch
  up on things, you know?  On what you've been up to for the
  last week."  It dawned on him that his friend was reaching out,
  as he had at the party.  Ranma wondered why Hiroshi bothered.
        "Well, I better get down to the office," Hiroshi
  added.  "Grab a note to get back into class."
        "Later," Ranma said, knowing full well that he would
  probably never see his friend again.


        Unsure of where to find Akane, he went straight to
  his old classroom.  Classes had started while he was talking to
  Hiroshi, but Ranma wasn't too worried about interrupting.  It
  would only take a minute: check if Akane was okay, tell her he
  was leaving, and wish her the best of luck.   The same tightness
  to his chest returned but he felt an incipient looseness to his
  shoulder balance the pain; it felt like a heavy weight about to
  be lifted away.
        As he passed alongside the room a few classmates
  noticed him, he heard his name whispered and then repeated
  louder, the shift of seats as people looked his way and watched
  him through the sliding frosted windows.  He smiled, cockily,
  loving the attention.  He threw the sliding door open and
  stepped boldly into class.
        "Ranma Saotome, you're late," Mr. Fujimoto, his
  math teacher, said without looking away from the blackboard.
  "You know the drill: buckets, water, hallway."
        Stupid math teacher, Ranma thought, smile slipping.
  "Sorry teach, I'm just here to see Akane," he said, but as he
  scanned the classroom and the faces turned his way--some
  grinning, a few snickering, some annoyed, one angry--he noted
  that Akane's seat was empty.
        "Mr. Saotome," the teacher said, "I don't appreciate
  you disrupting my class like this.  But if you must know--."
        "You've got some nerve barging in like this!"
        Ranma turned to the interruption.  His smile
  tightened.  "Sayuri," he said.
        With an abrupt shove she pushed her desk forward,
  the squeak of the legs against the floor cutting through the
  sudden tension that lay between them.  She stood and tossed
  her long hair back with an angry flick of her head, and flashed a
  sharp, unfriendly smile his way.  "Yeah.  Akane's friend,
  remember?"
        "No matter how much I'd like to forget."
        "Wow, the jock's grown a wit."
        Ranma bit back his retort.  Akane wasn't here and
  Sayuri was wasting his time.  "This crap I don't need," he said.
  "I'm looking for Akane."
        "You just don't get it, do you?" Sayuri said.
        "No, _you_ don't get it, Ms. Yamamoto." interrupted
  Mr. Fujimoto.  "This is my class, and I don't like interruptions.
  You know the drill: bucket, water, hallway."
        "But--."
        "Bucket, water, hallway, Sayuri," the teacher
  insisted.  "Unless you'd like to spend the next forty minutes
  sitting in seiza."  He turned to Ranma.  "As I was saying,
  Akane was called down to the office at the beginning of class.
  You can probably find her there.  Now, if you don't mind, I
  have a class to teach.  Either grab a pair of buckets and go stand
  in the hallway, or disappear to wherever it is you go, Mr.
  Saotome.  I don't much care either way."
        Later, he stood outside the classroom watching as
  Sayuri struggled with the weight of her bucket.  She glared at
  him, arm trembling under the weight.  She switched hands,
  spilling some of the water as it sloshed over the edge.  "This is
  all your fault," she muttered.
        "You want some help with that?" he asked, grinning.
        "Bite me."
        "I'll pass," he said, and turned away from her.  "I've
  got better things to do."
        "Yeah, like what, screw up Akane's life even more?"
        Oh boy, Ranma thought.  Here we go.
        "Asshole.  You're the worst thing that ever happened
  to her, you know that?  Sick thing is, you don't care, do you,
  you sick bastard.  You get some kick out of torturing her, is that
  it?  Just string her along, right, like the rest of your girls, after
  all, we're all just bitches, isn't that it, amusement for the great
  Ranma Saotome.  Arrogant prick.  Well, it stops here!  I'm on
  to you, we all are, and we're _not_ going to let you heap your
  shit on Akane anymore!"
        Surprised at the softness of his own voice, he
  answered over his shoulder.  "So that's it, eh?  Shit from shit?
  Is that all I am?"  Something warm formed at the base of the
  comforting emptiness he had felt since stepping off the school's
  roof.  Is this what I wanted, he wondered, is this why I'm
  giving her her say?
        "Maybe you _are_ finally starting to get it," she said,
  and from the tone of her voice he could picture her smirk.
  "You're scum, Ranma--you're insulting and violent and
  abusive, stupid and arrogant and perverted.  She should've
  dumped you ages ago.  Marry you?  Like she'd marry a freak
  like you!  Do her a favor, do us all a favor: run off.  Run away.
  Do the right thing for once."
        Jagged and hot and almost beautiful in both its
  intensity and suddenness, rage surged through the entirety of
  his being, filling the hollowness within to the brim.  He shook
  with the effort to contain it.  Arms trembling at his side.
  Perfect recollection of why it had been so easy to leave last
  week, the dumb pettiness of these people made so blindingly
  obvious once again.  Eyes squeezing shut.  Trying to
  understand where this anger came from.  Then it came: this
  stupid little bitch was _right_!  But for him to come to the same
  realization this morning and act upon it was infinitely different
  from having the words flung at him from outside, from Sayuri,
  from the very source of Uehara's proclaimed stench.  And then
  knowing that when he left, these ugly small sad little people
  would think that they had won, had driven him away and
  defeated him, defeated _Ranma Saotome_: unbearable!  Yet
  that same realization compounded his own self-disgust, source
  of half his anger's intensity, because that very thought proved
  Sayuri right and betrayed his own arrogance and weakness.
  Had he learnt nothing during his week away?
        He should just walk away and ignore her, but the girl
  just wouldn't shut up.
        "What, cat got your tongue?  The truth hurts, doesn't
  it, Ranma?  Doesn't it?  You're even shaking, how sad, you're
  not _crying_ are you?  I thought real men didn't cry.  Right?
  But you're not a _real_ man, are you?  Real men don't cry, and
  they sure don't hit their fiancee.  And they never, never have a
  period, do they?  Want to grab some water, hide in the girls'
  bathroom, have a good cry?  Feeling a bit bloated?  Want my
  boyfriend to comfort you again?  Pervert."
        And somewhere amidst the spiteful, hurtful words,
  Ranma felt something inside . . . click, like the final piece of a
  puzzle sliding into place.  It was as if his anger in filling him
  completely had tripped some switch and triggered its own
  release.  The anger drained away completely, leaving him
  momentarily exhausted.  In the aftermath of this shift, during
  which Sayuri's words continued to assault him but signified
  nothing, connecting with nothing, he closed his eyes and
  embraced the nearly sublime tranquility that descended upon
  him.  Like a cloud.  Soul of Ice.  Peace.  Ranma sighed,
  thinking, Doctor Tofu was right, I'll never forget.
        The young martial artist turned back to the angry girl
  confronting him.  He looked at her carefully, noting her anger
  at his obvious appraising gaze and not caring in the least.  Half
  her face concealed by the sweep of her hair, having fallen while
  she hurled her poison at him, left one narrowed dark eye to
  glitter sharply at him.    Both hands clutched at the handle of
  the bucket, straining, but in her rage she had yet to realize how
  tired she was.  Her hands were flushed a purpled red, the
  fingers beyond the curve of the handle a startling white.
  Breasts that were slightly larger than Akane's yet smaller than
  his own heaved with the effort of both the weight and the anger
  she carried.  She was, in her own way, rather pretty: no wonder
  Hiroshi was attracted to her.
        "What are you looking at?" she hissed, eyes
  narrowing.
        "Nothing."  He stepped closer.  "At all."
        "Oh, ha ha," she answered, and then, as he came to
  stand before her, forcing Sayuri to look up to match his stare,
  "You think you can intimidate me?"
        "Not at all," he said, with the hint of a smile.
        "I'm not scared of you."
        Ranma leaned in, bringing his face close to hers.  "Of
  course not, Sayuri," he whispered.  This close, he could smell
  the faint sheen of sweat breaking out as she struggled with the
  bucket, an undercurrent to the floral sweetness of her long hair.
  She smelled different from Akane, more . . . girly, he thought,
  more ordinary.  She trembled at his closeness.  But not with
  fear.
        "Get away from me, you asshole," she hissed.  Sayuri
  tried to swing the bucket against him, maybe splash him with
  water, but found the movement checked.  He held the bucket
  firmly in place; she might as well have been trying to move the
  wall.  "Let go!"
        He pulled back a little.  She really wasn't frightened
  of him in the least.  Rather, she shook with revulsion at his
  nearness.  That she could feel such intense hatred nearly
  frightened _him_.  "What," he asked, voice tinted with
  wonderment, "did I ever do to you, Sayuri?  How can you
  possibly hate me so much?"
        "You're a violent pervert, that's how."
        "Bullshit.  I'd never hurt you, and you know it."
        She snorted.  "Yeah, whatever.  Like it matters.  This
  has nothing to do with me."
        "Noth--?  Then why--?"
        "Because of Akane, you moron!"  Sayuri dropped her
  bucket.  She poked him hard in the chest as she spoke,
  emphasizing each statement.  "Because she's my friend--my
  best friend!  You have any idea what that means?  Do you?
  No, of course not, you don't have any friends, you freak?
  Friends are special, Ranma, there isn't much I wouldn't do to
  help a friend in need--whether they realize they need it or not."
        "Like Akane?"
        "Exactly.  Like Akane.  Akane, who tells us how she
  really feels.  Who comes to us after you've screwed around
  with her head and heart--again.  After you've insulted her.
  Broken a promise.  Embarrassed her.  Put her down.  Belittled
  her accomplishments.  Run off with your other girls.  Broken
  her heart.  After you've taken off, who do you think picks up
  the pieces?"  Now it was her turn to tremble with barely
  restrained anger, livid hatred suffusing her gaze.  Now empty of
  his own rage he felt cold and weak before her, taking a step
  back as she advanced on him.  "It's all games to you, right?
  Fun and games.  Yeah, well, while you're having fun, real
  people are getting hurt!  Hurt in a very real way . . . and when
  you hurt Akane, you're hurting me too!  Me, you're hurting me
  too, you jackass, do you get it, _me_."  Her fingers curled into
  a small fist and she pounded him in the chest.  It didn't hurt, of
  course, she couldn't hurt him, but he still fell back a step before
  her.
        Sayuri pulled her fist back and stared up at him, red-
  faced and breathing heavy.  He was surprised to see her eyes
  flecked with tears.  "This has nothing to do with me," she
  repeated.  "It's about Akane: I won't stand by and let you hurt
  her.  I know how she feels.  I'm her friend, she talks to me, I
  wouldn't be her friend if I just stood aside and let you tear her
  apart.  Poison her.  Whatever she thinks.  Whether she realized
  it or not, the week you were away was the happiest I've seen
  her in months.  You understand?  The week you were _away_."
        Ranma held her gaze for a long time.  He nodded
  once.  "I'm sorry," he said, softly.  "I never meant to hurt
  Akane; I never meant to hurt you."  Then he sighed and, after a
  pause of hesitation, leaned in close, bringing his mouth near her
  ear.  She didn't flinch away; it seemed much of her anger had
  drained away as well.  "But can you keep a secret?" he asked,
  whispering.  "I know you'll never tell her.  Akane.  I love her,
  Sayuri."  He smiled sadly.  "I love her."
        With those words Ranma turned and walked away.
  He didn't look back, though he imagined he heard the girl call
  his name.  What he had believed in anger a week ago he now
  reaffirmed in cold apathy: he was finished with Furinkan High
  School.


        When he descended to the school office he
  discovered that he was too late: Akane had already left.  She
  had received a phone call from Doctor Tofu and received
  permission to leave the school.  "She left about ten minutes
  ago," the office clerk told him, "and she wanted me to tell you.
  I told that Hiroshi boy to pass it on to you; I guess you missed
  each other?"
        As Ranma left the school behind him at a hurried
  walk, he felt the earlier worry that had haunted him all morning
  return.  Between Uehara and Hinako, Hiroshi and Sayuri, he
  had managed to momentarily displace his concern for Akane.
  Called back by Tofu?  Something serious had to be wrong.  He
  nearly broke into a run but an uneasiness that bordered on fear
  stayed his legs and held him to a brisk walk.  She couldn't be
  sick.  The doctor just wanted to tell her in person.  Akane was
  fine.  In returning the same way he had come before, the day
  felt strangely disjointed, as if the morning's walk to school
  belonged to a different reality--a different morning, a different
  Nerima, a different Ranma.
        Far too quickly, it seemed, he stood before Doctor
  Tofu's clinic.  He reached for the door but hesitated, feeling
  inexplicable apprehension.  Stepping aside he leaned heavily
  against the wall, drawing strength from its solidity.  He closed
  his eyes and tried to calm his hurried breathing.  This sudden
  nervousness didn't make sense.  When, he asked himself, did
  everything become so complicated?  For a year everything had
  been fine.  Fun and lighthearted and without consequence, it
  seemed, the way things ought to be.  The ways things ought to
  be was: Nabiki's condescending smirk as she drained his
  wallet, a mischievous glint to her eye; the smell of Kasumi's
  fresh baked bread and the delicate song of her whistling as she
  brought vitality to the household.  His idiot father's fumbling
  and Mr. Tendo's tears.  A pervert's stolen panties; a cute piglet
  with a grudge; a two-meter long spatula.  Martial-arts: ice-
  skating, take-out food, tear ceremony.  Rivals.  And fights in
  which nobody got hurt, not _really_, they were all so good and
  he didn't hate anybody, why would he try and hurt somebody
  and force consequences that weren't necessary?  That's the way
  things were.
        Well, maybe not always, he grudgingly admitted.
  Herb had been serious--deadly serious, and dangerous.  Kumon
  Ryuu had meant to kill him in revenge for the very real death of
  his own father.  Losing his strength to Happosai hadn't been
  fun, at least not for him.  Sometimes when his mother visited it
  hurt inside, the idea that she could kill him even more so; how
  could he live in fear of his own mother?  Pantyhose Tarou's
  first visit, that arrogant jerk.  Ryugenzawa.  Sometimes
  everything became painfully real and serious, as if a dark
  undercurrent to his life--one only hinted at in passing and rarely
  seen--reared its head and thrust itself violently into awareness,
  shattering some fragile shell of fun complacency he had
  constructed around himself.  Yet wasn't it in these moments
  that he shone brightest, when he felt the most alive?
        Akane.  That was the way things ought to be.
        Tomboy.  Short hair.  Upturned nose.  Brown eyes.
  Idiot!  Forgiving.  Rarely seen smile.  Do you want to be
  friends?  Pervert!  Fiancee.  Mine.  Cute--she really is cute.  I
  hate boys, I hate you, I wish we'd never been engaged.
  Walking hand in hand.  I don't mind.  Thank you, Ranma.
  Nothing said.  No need.  You think this is easy?  I dare you to.
  If I didn't care.  [More snippets-check manga-check order.]
        Ranma opened his eyes.  The sun of early morning
  was now overcast behind threatening dark clouds.  A wet wind
  blew persistently promising heavy rain and femininity.  Far in
  the distance the sky grumbled, something bright and powerful
  and hidden flashing.  In contrast to the chaotic potential that
  hovered on the horizon, his mind felt at peace.  It was the first
  time in a very long time.  Rather than the empty calm of this
  morning, he felt a relaxed sense of acceptance.  He smiled,
  without bitterness or irony or subtlety.  Nerima was again
  spread out before him, but unlike this morning he viewed it
  from the ground and felt a different empathy for this town he
  was resolved to leave behind.  He felt no hatred towards this
  place he had lived in for the last year and a half; rather a diffuse
  warmth as he wandered his eyes across the houses and fences
  and narrow cobbled walkways filled him.  For the short time in
  which Ranma leaned against the wall and watched without
  contemplation the quiet life of the town before him, he felt
  content.  He regretted none of the choices that had brought him
  to this very point, where he must now check one final time
  upon the woman he loved before turning away and leaving both
  her and this city he had just embraced, behind.
        Without hesitation, he stepped into Doctor Tofu's
  clinic.


        With the clouds blocking the natural light from
  outside, the clinic seemed darker than usual, more somber and
  stifling.  The ceramic chime of his entry felt unnaturally loud
  under the smothering quiet that enveloped the room.  Even the
  whistling of the brewing storm's wind had quieted and turned
  deathly still.  There were no other patients, nor any sign of the
  doctor or Akane.  Ranma's every sound and movement seemed
  amplified by the surrounding stillness.
        He stood there confused for a time, taken aback by
  the lack of reception.  It was as if Tofu had left and forgotten to
  lock the door behind him.  And where was Akane?  Ranma
  knew that he couldn't have arrived more than ten or fifteen
  minutes after her.  As he stood there he slowly shook off the
  stupefying numbness the unexpected quiet had caused, and as
  he did he gradually became aware of other sounds within the
  clinic.  Urgent whispered voices.  Subdued sobs and subtle
  movement the next room over.
        "Doctor Tofu?" Ranma called out.  "Akane?"
         There was a brief but abrupt cessation of noise, then
  Tofu's voice called back.  "One moment please.  We'll be right
  out."  His voice had that same hollow ring to as this morning,
  forced clinical professionalism that came so unnaturally to the
  doctor.
        It took a full minute for them to emerge, the measure
  of time kept by the hammering of Ranma's heart.  Tofu walked
  first into the room, and a beat later Akane followed.  Akane,
  cheeks wet with tears that no longer flowed.  Face bloodless
  aside for the redness of her eyes and nose.  Her hands fluttered
  in the folds of her school uniform, twitchy and restless,
  worming their way close to her body before falling limply at
  her side.  He sought her eyes but they slid away, afraid and
  pained, unable to meet his gaze.
        They stood there in a frozen tableau, the martial artist
  facing both the doctor and Akane.  He had no idea for how
  long.  Nobody seemed ready to speak first.  Ranma felt light-
  headed, once again disjointed, almost as if he was watching the
  scene from outside rather than being a part of it.  Watching as
  the young pigtailed man first turned worried eyes onto the
  doctor, then the crying girl, and finally went to speak.
        "Doctor?" Ranma asked, his mouth painfully dry.  He
  never stopped looking at Akane.  No force on earth, he felt,
  could have made him look away.  "Doctor, what's wrong?"
  With Akane, he couldn't bring himself to add.
        "Akane is fine," Tofu answered after a long pause.
  "Akane is . . . fine, Ranma."
        She slowly raised her head, her bloodshot eyes finally
  making contact with him.  The visceral pain and fear and . . .
  pity he saw there was overwhelming, he nearly flinched and
  backed away but suddenly movement became impossible, he
  was rooted to the spot.  His legs felt weak and standing became
  an effort.  He realized he was shaking.
        "Then what's wrong?" Ranma asked, the words
  sounding as if someone else had spoken them.
        "Ranma," the doctor said, taking a step forward, his
  voice at its most professional.  "I don't know how to say this.
  Something happened to you a week and a half ago.  At that
  party you went to."  But then his voice failed, and though
  Ranma could still feel the doctor's eyes upon him no further
  words came.
        He waited and waited and finally when neither Akane
  nor the doctor continued, he demanded, "What?" in a voice
  filled with, Ranma realized, burgeoning panic.  "What is it?
  Was I poisoned?  Robbed of my strength?  Do I have a week to
  live--what?  Is it another curse, magic--"
        "You were raped," Akane whispered.
        Sound seeped back into the room--abrupt ticking of a
  clock; subdued violence of the growing storm outside--
  somehow more real than the doctor and girl confronting him.
  More real, it felt, that Ranma himself.
        "Raped?" he echoed, the word meaning nothing.
        "I found you, Ranma," she continued.  "At the party.
  In the room.  You were naked.  And female.  There was blood.
  Your blood.  On the bed sheets.  On your legs."  She took a
  deep breath.  "And your thighs.  You were nearly unconscious.
  You said it hurt, that you were in pain."
        Tofu continued.  "This morning's tests prove it true.
  There's hCG in your blood and in your urine, Ranma.  Both
  bodies, somehow, even when you're male.  I was very thorough
  with the tests.  Believe me."
        Ranma slowly look away from his former fiancee and
  turned empty eyes onto the doctor.  "I don't understand."
        Only then did Tofu's rigid facade fall away.  With
  sad, carefully measured words, he explained:  "Ranma, you're
  pregnant."
        "Pregnant?"  He didn't understand what they were
  saying.  There was a faint buzzing at the edge of his senses
  distracting him.  Nagging and growing in intensity.  He shook
  his head to clear it but it remained insistent.  Immediate.  He
  felt the need to sit down but still felt unable to move.  Needed
  to take a deep breath but found it caught in his chest.  Couldn't
  move, couldn't breathe.  Stifling, growing hot, painfully so,
  murmur in his ear growing to a roar, loud and consuming as the
  room grew darker and darker.  I don't understand, he wanted to
  say.  Tried to say.  But he couldn't think and the words died
  and he felt himself falling.
        "Ranma," called a voice from far away.  Akane was
  next to him.  Standing so very close even as the room behind
  her seemed to draw back.  He tried to focus on her voice.
  Found it impossible.  His vision refused to settle, slipping
  desperately across the mundane features of the room: chair wall
  painting magazine sofa.  An absurdly loud sound filtered
  through the roar to his ears.  His own.  Air sucked down
  through clenched teeth.
        "Ranma."  Akane's voice reached him again,
  soothing but urgent.  He turned to her.  Met her eyes.
  "Ranma," she said again.  Amidst the turmoil surrounding him
  her eyes provided an unexpected relief, breathing relaxing and
  sound draining away, made insignificant by the brown eyes that
  held him secure, something solid beyond his own unstuck
  center.  "I don't know how but you'll be okay.  We can make it
  through this somehow."  She brushed one hand softly against
  his cheek.
        "Don't touch me," he said in a dull, flat voice, and
  suddenly realized that he _could_ move, flinching violently,
  instinctively slapping the touch away.  A staggering step,
  impossible to find solid footing, the ground swaying wildly
  beneath his feet, vertiginous tilting as he fell back.  He felt
  Doctor Tofu reaching for him, words lost in the surging rush in
  his ears.  "Don't touch me!" he screamed, throwing the man
  aside and stumbling, collapsing onto a wooden bench meant for
  patients, how many people had sat in this very place, how much
  filth and illness and incipient death was he sitting on?  The
  thought made him sick and cold, he leapt to his feet and stood
  there shaking, gasping for breath, the noise redoubling in his
  head as he looked wildly about, wondering where Akane and
  Tofu had gone, knowing then that he was alone, truly and
  fundamentally alone and lost.
        His perception shattered.  Like a sequence of
  snapshots, intermediate moments lost.  Fragments, causality
  gone.  Viewed from outside.  Standing by the couch.
  Trembling.  Eyes wild.  Bent over doubled.  Middle of the
  room.  Clutching his stomach.  Insides churning, pain,
  revulsion.  Numb thud.  Shoulder dull, staggering into the wall.
  Akane, stepping towards him.  Held back.  Doctor Tofu,
  clutching his side.  Eyes steely, glinting bandit-hard, watching
  him warily.
        "Ranma!"  The doctor's voice a whisper nearly
  buried by the pounding in Ranma's head.  "We want to help
  you," he said.  "We can help you."  But again his words meant
  nothing.  None of this meant anything.  There was nothing left.
  Except for those eyes, brown and soft, pained, pitying.  Pity.
        Everything resolved into this single moment when,
  through a supreme effort of will, Ranma Saotome brought
  everything back and momentarily halted the chaotic unwinding
  of his person.  Through recollection of his original purpose, he
  held himself together and turned back to doctor.  "Akane is
  really okay?" he asked.
        The doctor nodded.
        "Then I have to go," Ranma said.
        He left Doctor Tofu's clinic.


        Ranma Saotome stood outside the clinic.  Empty of
  thought, insensate.  He breathed, eyes open, neither trembling
  nor wavering; yet lost within himself he was aware of nothing.
  He remained that way for some time.  Slowly he returned to his
  senses.  The wind whispering over and around him, rushing
  through and tickling his arms, pulling his clothes.  Faintly
  grainy and wet, carrying dirt and coming rain.  Tingling with
  the storms potential.  Then a faint bouquet of cut grass,
  smoldering rubbish, exposed canal filth.  It sat bitter on his
  tongue, acrid and unpleasant.  As the wind faded a medley: the
  far off grumble of thunder, loud voices raised in argument,
  sharp drilling of nearby construction.  Then he saw Nerima
  once again; and between the angry brown skies roiling above
  and the dirty windswept street and the hurried people walking
  face down unaware of anyone but themselves, he felt a deep,
  profound disgust well up within.   He stood, unmoving, unable
  to move, perfectly still, and yet as his disgust boiled over into
  physical revulsion he began to shake.  First one leg, vibrating
  slightly, uncontrollable, growing in strength, spreading,
  reaching up through his thigh, the pit of his stomach, a dull,
  numbing detonation there that quickly consumed the entirety of
  his being and left him trembling to the furthest reach of every
  limb.
        The young man took a single step forward.  Another.
  The disgust he felt as a physical thing subsided with movement,
  but in the absence of pain the inevitability of thinking slowly
  returned:
        Akane.  Saw me.  Naked and female.  Stripped in the
  dark.  Lying passed out and defenseless.  With blood on the bed
  sheets.  Blood my blood my legs my thighs.  Is she okay Akane
  doesn't need me anymore.  She knew all along but couldn't tell
  me why.  Those soft brown eyes always filled with disgust and
  pity.  Pitied me before but at least she hated me as well.  Now
  she can't even hate me 'cus I've lost it, lost everything.  Oh god
  it's gone it's gone with everything I was meant to be.  A man
  among men martial artist heir to the family's Art pride and
  honor.  Who couldn't even protect himself, how could this
  happen, what did I do, why--why?  They all told me, jerk
  Casanova pervert tease babe bitch slut--only a joke, a joke!
  Acting playing around even with Hiroshi I never meant
  anything, I'm a man even with the curse.  Bunny suits bikinis
  bras and panties and strip tease pride didn't mean anything--it
  was just in fun!  How could it be fun, being a man I know what
  others think, what was I really playing at?  Toying with them, is
  that it, knowing I'm always better than they could never hurt
  me even touch me, ever.  Yeah, 'cus I'm Ranma Saotome of the
  Saotome School of Anything Goes, the best ever even when
  I'm a goddamn girl!  Goddamn weak fragile flawed stupid
  stupid _stupid_ cursed girl's body, won't slow me down, I'll
  make damn sure everyone still respects me!  Knowing what
  you sick idiots think you can take Ranma made weak by
  smooth skin soft curving legs ass tits and wet cun--no!  No no
  oh god no I was playing, not that it can't be because I'm a man
  among men don't cry don't cry, _stop_!  Stop that weak girl's
  like crying Ranma be strong and take it like Pop taught you
  with those cats in the pit in the dark.  Dark smell of fur fish
  fangs feline fists reaching for pain, that's it, again and . . .
  again, yeah, that's it, pain kills the thinking ends the tears.
  Tears are for sissy weaklings and I'm strong like Pop raised me
  to be a man among men did this to me Pop I let you down.
  Lost it all Pop every wanted was his son rising high I failed Pop
  I'm sorry I'm sorry Dad oh Dad what am I going to do now?
  Now I've lost Dad and Mom's promise and Akane, Akane how
  can I protect you when I could not even save my Art failed me
  ripped and torn away.  Tore into me, who did, a man, a man's
  hands on me, touching me, a man, feeling me, a man, stripping
  me, a man, inside of me inside of me a man, no no Akane, no,
  Dad Mom, please, there's something inside me a man tore me
  opened me used me spread me screwed me fucked me he . . .
  raped me.  He raped me.  Taint left deep within can't be
  reached for it grab punch claw it out from inside too deep I'm
  too dirty again I'm running away.  Trying to run doesn't matter
  how fast how far I reach inside I'm filthy and weak like a
  stupid girl.  Like everyone said I'm a girls flaunt and flirt with
  boys just like I did.  Always all my fault I'm a dirty useless girl.
  Saw it from the beginning.  Pity's all I deserve.  Can't do this.
  Not alone.  Akane.
        Through this spiral of thoughts he punched through
  into an awareness so sudden and intense that he momentarily
  felt propelled above his foreign surroundings.  Details so
  sharply realized that understanding became painfully
  impossible rushed past as he continued running headless of
  direction or destination.  The pounding of his heart and burning
  of his lungs served as testament to his desperate flight, head
  and arms and chest and stomach dulling aching where he had
  punched and clawed himself.  Tear-streaked bared-teeth
  headlong dash towards exhaustion, utter body-weary soul-
  numbness the only possibility of relief, his mind once again
  empty of thought but for a single repeated word.  The coming
  storm swirled above him and the winds chased him but nothing
  could touch Ranma as he fled Nerima.

  Continues in
  Choices: Decision

  -Michael Noakes
  June 7, 2001

  ***

  AUTHOR'S NOTES:

  Well, after the year and some months it took me to write this
  chapter, I (again) don't think I have much to say.  I was hesitant
  to make this a chapter in itself--where I stopped was originally
  intended to be the halfway point of the fourth chapter, Choices:
  Decision.  Considering the current length (though
  'Complications' stands as the shortest chapter yet by some
  2000 words), it seemed reasonable to post it as is.  This thing
  keeps growing longer than expected (100 000+ words and
  counting!), and I can't help but wonder if I should turn brutal
  and cut away scenes that might otherwise be considered
  gratuitous--the Uehara and Hinako scenes could probably drop
  out without overly effecting the flow of the story, though I'm
  reluctant to do so.
        A very strange feeling came over me as I approached
  the end of the chapter.  Specifically, as I wrote, "'You were
  raped,' Akane whispered," I became all jittery.  I've been
  waiting four years to get to this point, but it remained an
  unpleasant scene to write; at the same time, it was the most I've
  enjoyed writing this story in a long time.  This carried through
  into the final internal monologue which, while unbelievable
  difficult to write and probably ambitious beyond my skills,
  challenged and excited me unlike any other writing has done in
  years.  The ending scenes of this chapter are why I still keep at
  it, even after I've lost a lot of my original interest in fanfiction,
  or even in anime in general.
        What else?  This is the first chapter of Choices
  written entirely in Japan (does it show?).  Actually, aside for a
  few sentences in the final internal monologue, it was written
  entirely at work during free periods and on lunch breaks--which
  means it was written on Japanese computers using a Japanese-
  version English-language character set, so hopefully that won't
  cause too many problems while viewing.  Switching to
  Japanese encoding might help (sorry!).  It may have taken a
  year and some to get written, but I only really started writing in
  the new year.  Beginning to end, I figure it only took me three
  or four months.  I'm hoping the fifth chapter will be done by
  the end of the summer--I'm probably being optimistic.  Then
  again, two months of being chained to a desk with absolutely
  no work to do (teachers in Japan don't get time off during
  summer break)  might just force me to keep writing.  Still, I'm
  planning to take a short break first (study some Japanese or
  something), then tackle a chapter or two of Let the Curtain Fall,
  before returning to Choices.
        This chapter was written entirely from Ranma's point
  of view, which I felt was essential considering what was to
  come.  The idea was that, after Tofu's revelation and Ranma's
  flight, the chapter would switch in it's second half to other
  characters' perspective, giving alternate views on
  (mis)assumptions Ranma has made throughout.  Akane's view,
  of course, was going to be of first importance.  I never made it
  that far, so I guess it will have to wait until the next chapter.
        Finally, very special thanks to Illana, who
  unwittingly took on a sort of prereader's position.  Her
  continued support and suggestions throughout helped me
  actually finish the damn thing--and not simply abandon it long
  ago.  Many thanks.
        Hey.  I guess I did have a lot to say after all.

noakes_m@hotmail.com
http://www.geocities.com/noakes_m
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                     desaix@sysnet.net
Sir Desaix, member # 116 of the Knights of the True Fiancee
              anime  fanfics available at
  http://www.geocities.com/zednik.geo/fanfics.htm


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