Two Hundred And Twenty-Eight – Reworked Version
“Just what are you doing? Such a strange light...” Miyu-san said, uncomfortable under my intense gaze. As Koga-san was making the tea, she was also alert at the glow, in case it was dangerous, and I could see her feet twitching, as if she wished to rain more needles down on me.
“It’s a skill of mine. A Rank 2 one.” I said, fishing for information. If I’m going to help out, I need payment. Everyone has been really clear on that. And I don’t think they are entirely wrong. I was feeling a little sorry for the sheltered girl, especially after my interactions with Hinata, Motoko and Natsumi, but their situations were very different to the girl in front of me. After all, I’m working with her grandfather, and most of the protection for my family and workplace comes from him. I do have Grulgor, Hyacinth and Shirohebi now, but if I tie them up on protection detail, that wastes a lot of my hard work getting the Thrones to Rank 2. Unless there are some other benefits that make it worthwhile of course. “So, what skill did you get from Ame-no-Uzume? I’m guessing it must be a decent Rank?”
“Rank? I do not understand.” Miyu-san said, taking an offered cup from Koga-san, taking a sip, though my eyes could see the minute rattles of the porcelain, betraying her unease. “As for these skills, the Goddess told me I would dance for the Dawn and dance for the Dusk, but that was all.”
I see. Dance-related skills? I’m guessing buffs and debuffs? I’m curious but that can wait. “I see, so do you have a status screen that details all your statistics, such as your strength, intelligence or anything similar? Like the display in a video game? Also, did she tell you about your Territory?”
At the barrage of questions, Miyu-san frowned, masking her emotions behind another draught of tea. “Video games? I have heard of them, but we are taught to avoid such vulgar things at school, along with television that is not educational.”
At that Hinata giggled, shaking her head. Yeah, Nichibotsu is heavily involved in such vulgar things. No wonder she’s looked down upon, despite the wealth of her family. “I’m afraid she doesn’t understand you, Akio.”
“Who are you to speak...” Koga-san began, annoyed at her interjection, before she caught my glare and backed away, face falling, her skin behind the mask red.
“She’s someone your mistress here asked for help. So it’s only natural to be polite to someone you are begging favours from, right?” I notice I didn’t get a cup of tea, that ninja girl isn’t coming near me. “This is Miyu-san’s house, right?”
At my lack of -sama Koga-san twitched, irritated, but she still nodded.
“Well then, I need some blank paper and some pencils. Ideally coloured ones.”Nnêw n0vel chapters are published at novelhall.com
“I have a sketchbook in my room. Fetch it, Michiru. I shall be fine here.” She declared. “If Oshiro-san wished me harm, you would not be able to stop him, right?”
“I apologise for my worthlessness, mistress. My father will be disappointed in me and no doubt increase my training tenfold!” She shot me another glare, before opening a locked door in the wall of the large room. Not just one lock, there’s three, and they all look fairly industrial. As Koga-san disappeared inside, I caught a glimpse of a room decorated in calming pastel shades, and the corner of a grand piano.
“So, are you doing that?” Hinata asked. “If so, will Miyu need to take off her clothes?”
At that Miyu-san halted, cup held motionless in the air, while Koga-san, returning with a large sketchbook and a case of pencils, suddenly leapt like a frightened rabbit. “Strip the mistress? I knew you were not to be trusted! Mistress, he wishes to despoil you and then you will be forced to marry him to spare your family from disgrace! Such evil, it cannot...”
“Oh please.” Hinata snorted. “Why would he want to do that? He’s already got such wonderful fiancées.” She stuck out her chest proudly. “Besides, I expect Fujiwara-sama already has plans. My cousin... well, never mind that.”
“Hinata, I know you meant to lighten the mood, but these girls don’t get the humour.” I sighed. “No, I won’t be needing you to strip to your underwear, Miyu-san. My Eye has ranked up, and I’m not doing any actual Chirurgery at this stage, so this should suffice. Now stop being annoying and give me the paper.” I demanded, and Koga-san stalked over, gingerly handing paper and pencils to me.
“One thing I don’t get is...” I said, as I quickly wrote out a fake character sheet with some random numbers and made-up skills on. “... why didn’t you decline Ame-no-Uzume’s offer? If you were that unhappy, then...”
“Decline?” Miyu-san shook her head. “How does one deny the divine? I woke one night in a strange place. It was a dream, surely, yet everything was so real, and I was fully aware of myself. Then the goddess appeared, draped a necklace of leaves around my neck, and told me I was to ‘nurture the sacred Sakaki tree to save what I could from the destruction that was coming’.” She shuddered, teacup rattling on the saucer furiously. “Decline? Such a nonsense. Why should I have to do this?”
“I would do it in your place in a heartbeat, mistress! Koga ninja are ready for battle, always!”
“I thought this a lot.” Hinata mused, interrupting the heavy atmosphere, and I could tell she was going to make a joke. “From school, we are taught that ninja were supposed to be stealthy, inconspicuous. But you are always standing out and dressing ridiculously. Even your sister isn’t as flashy as you, Michiru. Not very ninja-like, if you ask me!”
I had finished my fake character sheet, as well as a chakra sketch of an ordinary person. I was now moving onto what I remembered of Kana’s, which was pretty much flawless as my memory had reached photographic a while back. Though oddly enough despite that, I still forget things, mostly unimportant matters or things I’d actually wish to forget. It seems Resilience interacts weirdly with a lot of mental states.
“Well, father did leave the family when he was young to marry mother, and was disowned, though grandfather still allows sister and I to visit on occasion.” She shrugged. “So father doesn’t follow the old teachings as written. Father believes that bodyguards must stand out, and clearly warn off any attackers. The true secret of stealth, he believes, is in the attacks themselves.” She raised a fingernail at me, and I could once more see the embedded needles, glittering darkly. Yeah, I think she’d be more likely to hurt herself or Miyu-san with those, rather than an enemy.
“Bodyguards should be flashy.” Hinata agreed. “But why not have a decoy guard to do that, and have you by her side looking like just a friend? Wouldn’t that be more ninja-like?”
“But father says we need to show off our skills in the modern world, or else we’ll be underestimated and looked down on...”
Yeah, this is all nonsense, but at least the mood has improved. I was now sketching a detailed image of Miyu-san and her network. Since my Eye had improved, more minor details were visible, and I could peer beneath her clothes to an extent and still make out the glittering lights of her capillaries and chakras. Enough for an indication, anyway. I still wouldn’t fancy Chirurgery like this. Idly I spoke. “Yeah, well, it seems like you are more the orange jumpsuit type of ninja. I’m pretty disappointed really, I’d like to meet a real ninja one day, I bet I could learn a lot.”
“Orange jumpsuit? I don’t get it.” Koga-san said, before realising I had essentially disparaged her and called her and her father fakes. “My ninjutsu is real! I simply choose not to...”
“Enough.” Miyu-san was rubbing at her temples, eyes squeezed shut. “Please, Michiru. No arguments. We have asked them for aid, we can swallow a little insult if we must.”
“It isn’t really an insult. Just expressing my disappointment.” I said mildly, to a laugh from Hinata. “Anyway, I’m pretty much done for now. There is one thing of note to draw your attention to, but anyway, here.” I approached Miyu-san, who opened her eyes again nervously. As I stretched out my hand and handed her the papers she snatched at them, before retreating a little.
“This is... a status screen?” She said, puzzled. “I do not understand. How can you measure things such as this? It would be like declaring I had Piano Playing Rank 3. How foolish.”
“Anything can be measured, against the right scale. If you knew who was the worst at Piano in the world, and also the best, could you not split the skill levels of musicians between into Ranks? We do it in a way, with competitions and status such as amateur, professional, teacher, and more, right?” So, Kikuchi-san, Suzuki-san, Kondou Kazuo, and now Miyu-san, none of them have status sheets. I’m now certain that the Examination skills were a big part of my own blessing from Tyr. But that can’t be it all. No, looking at Miyu-san now...
“That is true.” she conceded, flipping through the sheets I had torn from her sketchbook. On reaching her own she paused, frowning.
“You see it, right? Around your neck and your forehead?” I was surprised I could see it now, and when I looked down at my own wrist with my Eye I could see a similar occurrence.
“Sakaki leaves.” She nodded. “Like the necklace the goddess gave me.” Her hand went to her forehead. “But here too? And what are these coloured balls and lines?”
“That’s a visual representation of your Astral subtle body. That world in the dream the irresponsible goddess pulled you into is called the Boundary, the junction between the Astral and Material worlds. And yes, it can be dangerous. But Miyu-san, you were chosen. One of around two thousand in Japan. There probably isn’t more than a few hundred thousand worldwide. I get that it is frightening, but this is an opportunity...”
“Opportunity? For what?” she shuddered. “I am already a doll, my future mapped out, the only say I have in it my piano and dance. Even Michiru will be dismissed when I graduate from Hanafubuki and get married, I will not even get to choose my bodyguards. No, everything will be dictated by my husband.”
“That can’t be true. I’m not telling Hinata what to do all the time, am I?”
“Well, yes, you are very different to the nobles, Akio.” Hinata sighed. “I think any husband chosen for a granddaughter of Fujiwara-sama is likely to be entitled and overbearing. Before, I’d have said that would be a small price to pay for being seen as true nobles amongst nobles, but these few weeks have changed me. I sympathise, Miyu.”
“I do not need your sympathy, I need this curse gone! I am not giving up what remains of my freedom for this! What have the kami ever done for me?”
Apart from the life of wealth and privilege? Well, who am I to judge. I guess being poor and happy like Eri and my sis is better than being wealthy and miserable, right? “Well, I’m not saying it is impossible.” I can think of two ways, based on what I know and have guessed, but I don’t like either of them... “But you’d need to fully understand the risks and ramifications...”
She brightened at my words, hope springing in her eyes, interrupting me before I could fully explain the dangers. “You can do it? You can free me?”
“Maybe. I’ve ideas but I still think it’s a foolish plan on many levels. There’s a solid chance you could be injured or even die.” I pointed to the paper she was holding, and bade her compare hers with an ordinary person. “See all the differences? The subtle bodies are linked, so if the foreign parts are removed, it might have a serious, potentially life-threatening impact on you. That’s assuming it even works at all.”
Koga-san gasped, and Hinata looked troubled. Miyu-san looked down, gathering her composure.
“I see. I suppose it is too much to hope for the works of a Goddess to be undone so easily, or without price.”
“Yes, Honoka is a better dancer than I. A better everything, despite being younger. Well, she is the heir. I am shocked that Ame-no-Uzume passed over her to choose me. Perhaps the Goddess felt I should be the one to suffer.”
“That’s utter crap.” I denied her, and she was again shocked, unused to being contradicted. “Having seen your dance, I can tell you if I wanted anyone to dance the Dawn and the Dusk, it would be you.”
“Search your feelings, Akio. This is why!” Hinata sniggered, and I remembered our earlier conversation, flushing slightly.
“Well, I stand by it. Perhaps you aren’t as inferior as you believe. Though I’m just an ordinary person, I don't really understand the nobility or how they think. But what I do know...” I declared, watching as Koga-san handed her a towel to wipe the sweat from her flushed and red face. “I doubt Ame-no-Uzume wishes you to suffer either. I have my reservations, but I’ve no doubt the world is in danger, and we have been chosen to save it, or at least protect those we love. So if nothing else, Ame-no-Uzume is a kami of dance, so you should be proud she chose you as her Candidate!”
“Are you always so forward?” she asked, and Hinata giggled again.
“Yes, he definitely is. He usually knows what to say to make us feel better. Still, he’s right. It was a marvellous dance. Like a goddess indeed.”
“Well, I would like to play you a piece on my piano too, but we have little time.” Miyu-san had taken quite a while to get changed and apply the relevant make-up to do her dance properly, with help from Koga-san, so now her parents would likely return in only a few hours.
“You are hardly ordinary.” Koga-san piped up, face tense, as we had explained what was to come. “No ordinary person can sit here and speak to Miyu-sama so casually, make demands and contradict her. None would dare!”
“Maybe that’s why I just don’t get how big a deal it is. To me, Miyu and you are just girls, all right? But first, I’m going to ask you again. Having seen your dance, I’m more sure of this than ever, you were meant for this. I’m not a fool to believe in the gods blindly. The ones I know are just small kami and seem as foolish as the rest of us, and I’ve met Candidates who are petty, evil... but I know this. I’m still grateful.”
“No, my mind is made up.” She shook her head, too stubborn to back down now, perhaps. “This is the only choice that leaves me with any happiness, no matter how fleeting.”
Hinata made a sound of displeasure at that, and I understood why. To be honest, I’m not confident this will even work, let alone safely. And having seen her dance... no, this is foolish. She’s not capable of making a rational decision, and she can’t offer enough to make it worth our while.
“I know you are in a hurry, but first, humour me. After all, it doesn’t have to be today, does it? If you are so set on this, waiting a day or two won’t hurt.”
“But I have already...” she began again, and I shook my head, fed-up.
“No. We’ve only established what you think you want, and what pittance you can offer. Now we are really going to talk about it. What do you want, Miyu-san, no, Miyu. Hinata is right. Forget about your status, just be Miyu. What do you want? No lies.”
Koga-san growled at me, at the harsh way I was speaking, but I was having none of it. This situation sits badly with me. Even if she somehow talks me into it, I need to experiment first, doing it blind would be idiocy. There is one way I can, though it leaves a really foul taste in my mouth. No, that’s for later... “Koga-san, if you care for her, then shut up and let us talk this out. Do you really want to see her potentially hurt or die for nothing? Do you honestly think this is the only way, risking so much to cling on to a few scraps of happiness, when she could have so much more?”
“Of course I want Miyu-sama to be happy! I love her!” Koga-san declared proudly.
“Then shut your mouth and let me handle this.” I said, and Hinata grinned.
“I think you should both listen to Akio. He hates sacrifices, and this... well, it’s annoying me with how stupid you are being, Miyu. Considering your grades are decent at school, I’m not sure why you are being such a fool.”
“Miyu.” I said, looking her directly in the eyes. She flushed a little, uncomfortable at being so close to me, but was unable to look away. “Tell me, honestly, what do you want out of life?”
“I want to dance, and play, and spend time with Michiru, until...”
“No. That’s not what you want, that’s what you think you can have. Forget your common sense, or what you believe. What do you want, if you can have a dream?”
“A dream? We daughters of nobility don’t have dreams...” she began, and Hinata interrupted again.
“That’s rubbish. I have a dream, don’t I?”
“Yes, but you are...”
“Well, what about Motoko? Her status is only a step below yours. She has a dream, and now it has come true. Well, there’s work to be done, but with Akio supporting her, she can have it all.”
“A step, yes, but a small step is large. Grandfather, he does care for me and Honoka, but he cares for the nobility and Japan more. He will sacrifice anything to keep them safe for future generations. I have a role...”
“I have to agree with Hinata. For a smart girl, you are being rather foolish.” I sighed. “I’m not asking for a list of reasons why you can’t have what you want. Just answer my question honestly.”
“I think... I think you should, Miyu-sama.” Koga-san said then, surprising me. “We have no power in these negotiations, if you wish this man to aid you, you must do as he says.”
“Fine then.” Miyu bowed in defeat, as pale as to match the white embroidery on her charming pink kimono. “If the world was different, I would wish to be free to love as I choose, not be forced into a marriage purely for the continuance of the nobility.” Her gaze went to Koga-san then, who looked down. Oh, so is that how it is? “I would be able to dance as I pleased, play my piano unfettered by worry about the future. I would wish to find my own path to make grandfather proud, and be able to hold my head up high, a match for Honoka. I am tired of always being the perfect flower, an empty doll. I want to be filled with happiness, able to be myself. But such cannot be.”
“Why not?” I asked, genuinely confused. “It all seems quite easy to me. I would say Ame-no-Uzume has smiled on you. What better chance to find some value your cousin doesn’t have?”
“But I have no wish to fight.” She declared once more. “Why do you not understand that?”
“I hope I am not as foolishly sheltered as this.” Hinata sighed. “Even I know you have to fight for what you want out of life. Otherwise you’ll only receive what your parents and the nobility give you, and pay what they ask in return. Nothing is free in life, you can only choose what you want to buy and how you’ll pay.”
Yeah. This isn’t going to get through to her. She’s closed off her heart. The dance was beautiful but it pushed the audience away, just like her heart. So I need someone who can... hmm. I pulled out my phone, surprising everyone, and dialled a number, opting for a video-call. She should be about now, I think.
“Wow, hey bro, what’s up? Finally finished with your business in Shaeula’s home?” My sister answered, surprised. “Are you sure you didn’t mean to call Eri?”
“Nope, definitely you I wanted today sis. I was hoping you could help me out with something.”
“Me, huh? Sure, I don’t mind. So, who’s there with you?”
“I am, Aiko.” Hinata piped up, and I turned the phone so they could speak. “It is good to see you again. Did you get the message I sent you?”
“Sure did. I’m jealous, but it makes sense. We’ll be there. Besides, I have big news myself!” she grinned. “But that can wait. What’s up?”
“Akio is trying to convince a stubborn girl not to do something massively stupid. But alas, she won’t listen.”
“Uh... not another girl for your harem is it, big bro? Eri told me it’s up to what, six now? I’m both proud and ashamed of you, I guess?”
“Definitely not. No, she’s just a sad girl who is letting her fears cage her, and she wants to do a monumentally stupid act of self-harm, but needs my help to do it.”
Miyu made a strangled noise of annoyance at that, and Koga-san was glaring, but keeping her silence. I’m sure she doesn’t want Miyu to suffer, to risk her life for no gain, no not just no gain, but to risk her life purely for a loss.
“I see. Well, you do hate seeing a girl sad, bro. Just try not to be too smooth and win her heart by mistake, all right? So, fill me in...”