'Til I Wake Your Ghost
"If I walk down this hallway tonight, it's too quiet
So I pad through the dark and call you on the phone
Push your old numbers and let your house ring
'til I wake your ghost..."
-Kristin Hersh
'Your Ghost'
The bell over the door tinkles, alerting me to yet another customer
coming in. I smooth my floury hands on the dishtowel, thinking if one
more person comes in, I'll scream.
Keiku looks up from wiping the grill. "If one more person comes in
here..." He growls. "Maybe you should go and put up the CLOSED sign."
"Silly." I glide to him and peck his stubbly cheek. "I was hoping
you would do that." I suppose it's true that if a couple stays
together long enough, they start to think and even look alike. Not
that I would grow stubbly cheeks, of course. At one time, many would
assume I would. But I stopped looking like a man years ago.
Keiku rolls his eyes and lightly slaps me on the rump. "Go chase the
remaining customers out, will ya? I want to go home." The wink he
gives brings a slight warmth to my face. What does he think he's
doing, treating me like a teenage girl?
Speaking of which, the kitchen door swings open and Miyabi, my oldest,
saunters in with a tray of empty plates. She sees the both of us and
groans, "Oh, come on. How are we ever going to close if you keep
playing games in the kitchen?" Such a tongue on her. I should
chastise her for her smart mouth, but what good would it do? She's
entirely too much like me. She even looks like me, except her hair is
shorter, pulled tight in its chestnut ponytail so that it dangles down
the nape of her neck.
But ah, there are other ways putting an insolent girl in her place. I
smile benignly. "How would you know the games we're playing? Not
unless you and Setsuka have been trying to learn them yourselves?
Maybe it's time for you and me to sit down and discussed these
'games'."
"Mother!" My smile deepens as Miyabi flushes and dumps the dishes
down before scuttling back out front. She may get her fire from me,
but her ability to get easily embarrassed comes from her father. Of
course, if I ever caught her and Setsuka doing what I just implied,
I'll knock that boy so hard out of the country, by the time he finds
his way back she'll be out of college and ready for marriage. And
since Setsuka is just like his father, it would take him that long to
find to find his way back. Miyabi's a different matter. She'll be
sixteen in three months, which means she'll be thinking she's
eighteen-old-enough-to-do-anything years old. She's not too old yet
to still taste the back of my spatula, but she's getting to the
point that when we spar, she gives her mother as good as she gets. I
have to do something about that girl.
A muffled snort makes me glance back at my husband, but he has wisely
turned his back and was now cleaning the dishes Miyabi had brought.
One thing he has learned was not to get in the way of the spats
between mother and daughter, especially regarding Setsuka. Keiku is
rather amused by the young man. He feels that any boy that can turn
an ordinary bandanna into a weapon is good enough to protect his
daughter. Hmph. If he knew the boy's father, like I do, he'll think
twice about setting up his daughter with that bullish, idiotic lout.
For now, he gives me a quick grin over his shoulder. I roll my eyes
and push through the still swinging door.
There's not much of the dinner crowd left. A few couples huddle in
their booths, talking in low whispers. A group of youths Miyabi's age
are playing cards in the corner. They're trying to eye Miyabi as she
takes down the order from the newcomer sitting near the cafe's door.
As I enter, they nosily return their attention to their cards, a few
glancing surreptitiously at me. I grace them with one of my pleased
smiles, and at the same time I idly twirl a mini-spatula I usually
carry at my side. Their heads immediately duck down. It feels good to
command respect so easily on these group of louts. My children, on
the other hand...
A quick scan about the room showed neither Daisume nor Kyoto. I allow
myself a quick scowl. Most likely, they were outside, playing with
those bamboo sticks their father cut for them. It's my fault, I
suppose, for marrying a man whose skilled in the School of Flinging
Shish-ka-bob Projectiles, but why did he have to pass the skills on to
Daisume? I grudgingly admit that Daisume's as good at it as Miyabi's
good with spatulas, but once I found Kyoto pinned to a tree, the
skewers piercing through every loose fold of her kimono, my motherly
instincts kicked in. I yelled at Daisume never to throw skewers at
his younger sister again; I don't care if they were playing circus.
Keiku told me I was too hard on the boy. For his criticism, I nailed
him to the kitchen wall with my spatulas and left him there all night.
You know, it's not easy being a martial artist and a loving mother at
the same time.
Miyabi comes up to hand me the order. She's looks a little miffed.
"One special."
"What's wrong?"
She looks behind her and shudders. "Oh, nothing. It's just that
customer kept looking at me funny while I was taking his order."
"Which one?" I don't wait for her to answer, as I see him slouching
with his back to me. I reach for the large spatula I keep beside the
register for such purposes.
"Motherrrrr..." My daughter groans. "You don't have to be so drastic
about it. I can handle it."
Too late. Motherly instincts, remember? I stomp towards him,
noticing the group in the corner have gone quiet, fearful to alert me
of their presence. How dare this pervert stare at my daughter with
such hentai thoughts! I'll give him something to look at--
He must have some danger sense, for he sits up as I near. There's
something about him, something vaguely familiar, but I can't put my
finger on it. Then, as he sits up straighter and turns towards me, I
see...
Oh, God.
The spatula clatters to the ground as I stare in shock. No way.
And in the back of my mind, a pale wisp stirs, a ghost I thought I had
finally put to rest for--what, fifteen, twenty years ago?
Has it been that long?
He stares at me, his grey-blue eyes nearly filling his face. He
looks...he looks so _old_! Though I don't consider myself as aging
gracefully, still my mind refuses to believe that weary, heavy man was
once so vibrant, so full of life...
I whirl around and snap at Miyabi. "Well, what are you waiting for?
One special!"
My daughter's eyes widen. Then she scampers to the kitchen. Slowly,
I slide into the booth across from him, at a loss for words, for once.
He continues to stare at me, just as shocked as I am...wait, of course
he would be shocked. He wouldn't expect me to be here. This isn't
`Ucchan's'.
Finally, because we can't just sit here gawking at each other all
night, I breathe his name. "Ra...Ranma..."
He blinks and slowly nods. "Ukyo. My God..."
"It's been..."
"How long...?"
"Years..."
"God..."
We stare at each other.
Finally, he laughs, rubbing the back of his neck in a strangely boyish
gesture. "You must've thought I was some kind of madman. Sorry to
get you so worked up."
I muster a smile of my own. "It's okay." I glance up as a spinning
disc flies towards Ranma's head. I jump...and the plate is resting
comfortable in his hand. He didn't even turn around.
For lack of a better word, I can only say, "Wow!" At least his
reflexes never waned.
He chuckles faintly as he slides the dish before him. "Heh, when you
live the kind of life I live, your senses have to be sharp." He says
with a hint of old bravado that is quickly doused as he reaches for
his hip pocket. "How much? I know with the inflation we've been
having..."
Gently, I lay a hand on his muscular arm and the ghost within me stirs
more. "Forget it. It's on the house. For old times sake."
Ranma stares at me, then a smile of pure gratitude slowly slides
across his face. "Thank you."
I study him as he digs into the okonomiyaki with the same ravenousness
of his youth. He has certainly put on a lot more weight. Most of it
is muscle, strengthened, I guess, from years of combat. But there is
a hint of a paunch from where I can see. His hair is still pulled
back in that trademark pigtail of his, but a spattering of grey
peppers his black hair. His face has chiseled to a hardness that I
never saw in his teenage years, and a few wrinkles line his forehead
and crinkles his eyes, eyes that look as though they have seen too
much of the world.
Eyes that are now looking straight at me, I realize.
I signal to Miyabi to send out three more specials as I say to him,
"Pardon my words, Ranma, but you look like hell."
"Heh. Do I? Well, sleeping under a bridge can do that to you. At
least the police have no problems with it. In a sense, I've been
helping them out--a lot of muggers tend not to stay in the area now
that I've taken over their territory."
I frown. "Ranma, what are you doing camping out? You have a
perfectly fine dojo..."
"Akane kicked me out a few weeks ago." Ranma cuts in flatly.
"Actually, I was the one who wanted to leave in the first place, but
by that time she had whipped out that mallet of hers and I realized
that there was no chance I would walk out on my own voluntarily. She
wanted to get the last word."
"Oh." I feel slightly uncomfortable at this, but then again, it
sounds like something Akane would do. It wasn't as if she was all
lovey dovey the last time I saw her. Lamely, I try to encourage him.
"Oh well. Maybe you should let her cool down a bit and then show up
with flowers or something."
"I don't think that will work. She's probably downtown this very
moment, setting the papers through again. I never thought our divorce
would be so complicated as our marriage."
"DIVORCE?!" I yelp, causing a few of the couples to glance our way.
I send them scurrying back to their own conversations with a dark
look, then I learn forward and hiss, "You can't be serious, Ranma.
After all you've been through...after all the false starts and
interrupted weddings...you're breaking up _now_? This is a joke,
right?"
He bitterly laughs and shakes his head. "A joke? I've been asking
myself that for the past few years. Trust me, it's no joke."
I sit back, too stunned to speak. After all this time. The ghost
inside me grows clearer, bringing back memories of all the times a
young, headstrong woman and several other love-torn youths tried to
break Ranma and Akane's engagement, and how the Tendos and the
Saotomes, and even to some extent Ranma and Akane, endeavored to keep
it going, despite all the bombs and kidnappings. They ultimately
eloped, so none of us would find out. After all that...it does sound
like a joke: a very cruel, mean-spirited joke.
"Ranma, what does the rest of the family think about this?"
He shrugs. "Kasumi, of course, is very disappointed; she has offered
me to stay at her place, but with Tofu around all the time, I'm safer
beneath the bridge. Nabiki's off in her own world--I guess being the
richest woman in Tokyo means little problems like this would resolve
itself in the end. Soun's the only one who's been so emotional about
it. All he does is sits around whining that no one will take care of
the dojo now that we're separating, meaning there'll be no one taking
care of him. Mom's the opposite--she says it should've been done a
long time ago. I guess being married to Pop made her sympathetic to
our situation. Then again, ever since we learned that I may not be
the only heir to the Saotome school of Martial Arts, we haven't seen
much of him. And as for her..." He doesn't finish, but looks away
and snorts faintly.
As I puzzle over this, Miyabi comes over and wordlessly lays the three
specials in front of us, glancing at Ranma from the corner of her eye.
I'm faintly amused--Keiku must have made her bring the order
personally so she can give him details on this mysterious `hentai
stranger' her mother is so interested in. And it looks like she's not
going to go away, either.
Politely and firmly, I say, "Thank you, Miyabi. Go help close up."
She pouts and reluctantly obeys. Ranma watches her go with an odd
expression on his face. To my surprise, I'm irritated by his look.
"Hello? Eyes front, Ranma."
"Sorry." He mumbles. "It's just that--well," he chuckles softly.
"You know, when I first came in here and she took my order, for a
moment I had this crazy idea she was you...well, you when you were
younger. The similarity between you two is rather uncanny."
I beam at her retreating back proudly. "Well, she should look like
me. She is my daughter, after all."
Ranma chokes on his second okonomiaki and stares at me with huge eyes.
It takes a second for him to sputter, "Your...your daughter?!"
"Don't act so surprised, Ranma. I _am_ married, you know. Almost
fifteen years now."
It's his turn to sit back, stunned. "Ma...married..."
Unthinkingly, I snap, "Well, what did you expect? Did you think I
would declare myself celibate and battle waves with my spatula for the
rest of my life when I learned of your marriage?"
"No. No, it's just..." he shakes his head. "I never thought. It's
been so long since I last saw you. I guess--" He looks straight at
me. "I guess I went through all these years with this image of you at
the back of my head, the image of the headstrong okonomiyaki chef
hell-bent on making me hers no matter what. I guess that image of you
never left, even after you did." Was that a slight accusation in his
tone?
"Oh. I see." I sigh. "I suppose I should've kept in touch more. But
you were the last person I wanted to see when I learned that you and
Akane eloped. Once I got over that shock, I vowed never to see you
again. I figured your elopement was your little way of saying you
didn't want me or the others interfering in your life. So I decided
to respect that by leaving Nerima."
"You didn't have to."
"Didn't have to? Ranma, did the Tendos tell you what happened when the
others and I learned that the two of you eloped without telling us
where you went? I believe an `act of God' was used to describe the
damage done to the dojo rather than the acts of several enraged
martial artists."
"No, they told me the truth. But still, Uc-chan," I jerk at the old
nickname. "I would think you would be the most understanding of the
bunch. I mean, you were my best friend!"
The ghost is struggling to surface with memories of old, scorned pain
sketched across its surface. Oh, no. Not after all this time.
"Ranma, what's past is past, okay? I really don't feel like dragging
old emotions into the daylight again. If you want to discuss old
pain, go talk to Ryoga. It would help get his mind off of what's
happening with him nowadays."
Ranma's eyebrows rise. "Ryoga? You mean you've kept in touch with
him?"
"Oh, off and on." That's a vague way of putting it. In fact, Ryoga's
probably the only person I keep in touch with from the old days. After
the Tendo's dojo was, uh, crushed, Ryoga need to go on a long training
trip to get over Akane and I decided to join him to get over Ranma.
One thing led to another, and...
It didn't work, of course. Such things usually don't. Ryoga's a nice
guy, but I needed someone who was less a mooning idiot when it came to
love matters. The 'I-will-protect-you-with-my-entire-life' thing just
didn't work for me. We broke up after a year but still traveled
together as friends. It's funny but we actually grew closer after
that, more like a brother/sister type of thing. And if we hadn't
gotten lost somewhere around the Pacific, I would've never gotten
caught by those marauding shrimp poachers, and Ryoga would have never
have stumbled onto some occultists sacrificing a young woman to
appease some volcano god, and he would have never joined up with a
wandering vigilante who so happened to be looking for that band of
poachers, and they would have never wreaked havoc on that island,
Ryoga doing his usual thing and that vigilante skewering poachers and
occultists right and left, Ryoga would have never saved that young
woman, who so happened to be the daughter of a local chieftain, and I
would have never met that vigilante, who happened to be Keiku.
"You mean Ryoga's now the head of a village?" Ranma shook his head in
disbelief I told him the brief story. "I never thought he had it in
him."
"Don't be so quick to discredit him. He's still the same stubborn
bull he's always been. He just thinks before he acts nowadays. And
his wife is perfectly suited for him. She happened to be the best
tracker of their village, so she always knows where her husband is."
I smile, thinking of how X'iona managed to track Ryoga here once, and
the frantic look on his eyes as she dragged him off. "Ten kids, Ukyo,
and she's ready for another! I don't have that much strength left! I'm
not a rabbit!!"
I shrug and continue, "I see his son more than I see him. Ryoga sends
him here to school to get an outside education. Unfortunately, he's
taken a strong liking towards my Miyabi. Not that I don't like the
kid, but he can be an idiot, just like his dad." I shake my head and
say, half-jokingly. "Hey Ranma, I don't suppose you have a son? Maybe
we should engage them like your folks did. Saves me the trouble of
looking for a good husband for her."
Ranma snorts as he tucks into the last okonomiyaki. "Are you kidding?
I doubt Akane will even allow Hiratsu out of the house now after our
little `training trip' turned into a failure."
"Training trip?" I repeat slowly, then I slowly sit back as
realization hits. "Oh, no, Ranma. You didn't."
"The boy's a weakling, Ukyo. I don't know where he gets it from. All
he wants to do is sit around and read books all day. I figured the
only way to get some spunk into him was to do the `I'll make him a
man-among-men even if it kills me' thing. Hey, it worked for me,
right?" He laughs bitterly. "But I forgot that all the springs in
Jusenkyo were mixed up. Remember Pantyhose Taro?"
I nod dumbly.
"Let's just say that after that little fiasco, my son's become a
better martial artist, and luckily, he only got splashed a little bit.
We're still trying to figure out what the hell he turns into. Some
type of eagle-horse-mermaid thing with scales and wings. I told him to
think of it as a weird-looking minotaur. Akane simply told us to get
out. It's a good thing I was wise enough not to have a seppuku
hanging over our heads. It's all moot anyhow. Hiratsu won't even
talk to me, and when he's forced to, it's usually `Oyaji this' or
`Oyaji that'. Funny. As much as I detested him, who would've thought
I would one day turn into my old man?"
I can't answer him. All I can do is sit back and say over and over,
"Oh, Ranma..."
And the ghost in the back of my head is becoming more pronounced, that
image of a young man, so cocky and so sure of himself, smiling as he
mouths the word `Uc-chan'. To see that image overlaying who is
sitting before me now... I can't see him like this. It pains me to
see him this way. I look up and my eyes involuntarily falls on Keiku
at the back of the restaurant, scrubbing down the counter so hard he's
nearly taking the shine off of it. At his hard expression, the youths
wrap up their card game and file out, murmuring their goodbyes to me.
Keiku keeps his eyes fastened on me. If I were in a more playful
mood, I would use this opportunity to make him jealous for the fun of
it. But the man before me is conflicting with the ghost inside me.
I finally ask. "So, what will you do now?"
Ranma shrugs listlessly. "I don't know, Uc-chan." He sees me wince
at that name and he hesitates before continuing. "I guess I'll just
go back to the bridge and wait until it's over, then who knows. I was
thinking of staying with my Mom for a while--we never did get to know
each other that well. Or maybe I'll go on a training trip, just to be
by myself for a while. It's been a while since I've done anything on
my own. Maybe I'll even take a trip to China, see how Cologne and
Shampoo's doing." He lapses into an uneasy silence, staring at his
callused hands lying on the table.
I wait for the old instinct of denial to take over; along with the
ghost, I'm certain, comes the old baggage of emotions, jealousy and
all. To my surprise, it doesn't come.
The last couple is paying and I realize that the restaurant is closed.
I stand to my feet, saying lamely. "I wish I could help you, Ranma. I
don't know how, though."
"It's okay." He says as he pulls himself up. There's so much
bleakness in him. So much bleakness and unhappiness. He looks so
wretched, I want to hold him and tell him everything will be all
right--firmly, I squash that thought down.
It's a beautiful night, balmy with a hint of coolness. As I drink in
the night air, two small forms pounce playfully on my legs, their
voices piping in the still air. "Mother, Dai-chan was teasing me!"
"I was not! Kyo's just being a baby again!"
"Am not!"
"Am too!"
"Enough, you two." Unthinkingly, I rub a smudge of dirt off a
mischievous face. "Daisume, I told you to stop teasing Kyoto. And
what did I tell the both of you about playing in the dirt? Go inside,
the both of you, and help your father close up."
"Aww!" The two chorus, but they charge inside, giggling and swiping
at each other. I smile gently at them until I remember Ranma's
standing beside me. In the darkness, I can't tell if the expression
he wears is bemusement or...envy.
Softly, he says, "Uc-Ukyo, did you ever wonder if, maybe, things
would've been different if you and I...you know..."
For a moment, all I am aware of is the gentle tug of a soft breeze as
it lifts my hair and rustles the treetops, carrying a subtle scent of
rain. Behind me, I can hear my children giggling and Keiku's gruff
voice as they turn closing up the restaurant into a game. Ranma's
face is barely visible in the shadows, but he's watching me intensely
as I strive and strive to match his face with the image of vitality I
had nurtured all those years ago--that ghost, forever smiling softly
at the back of my mind.
And I just can't do it.
"I don't know, Ranma." I turn to stare at the moving branches of the
trees, so I don't have to read his face. "In another time, perhaps.
Or maybe not. I really don't know. But what I do know is that a long
time ago, you made the choice to marry Akane. Not your father, not
the Tendos. You. There had to be some reason why you chose her over
me." I hear him slightly hiss at the words. I'm rather amazed myself;
once upon a time, I wouldn't have said these words to him. At least,
not this calmly. "It took me a long time to get over you, Ranma, but I
did. And now," I glance back at the restaurant. With the lights off,
Keiku, Miyabi, and the kids are mere shadows moving about inside now,
but just seeing that causes a warm feeling to glow inside me. "Now, I
won't ever change what I got. They're so precious to me."
There is a long silence. Out the corner of my eye, I study him as he
stares at the ground. Even now, I realize, he's still handsome. At
this angle, I can almost imagine him taking on the visage of his
younger self, surrounded by warm, fuzzy light, his eyes glinting as
his smile lingers softly upon me. For a brief second, a pang of
regret cuts into my heart.
"Hey, no big deal. I understand." Ranma finally says. He looks up at
me and faintly smiles. "I'm glad your life turned out okay after all,
Ukyo. I -- I was worried when I didn't hear from you. I hope your
life will always be okay. If only Akane was as understanding as you.
Then maybe..." His voice trails off.
There's a question that's been tugging at me all this time ever since
we've been talking, but earlier, I couldn't bring myself to ask it.
Now, as he fumbles awkwardly for something to say, I realize I had to
know, not for my sake, but for his. "Ranma, do you still love her?"
His head jerks up. "What, after all the hell she's put me through?"
he snaps. "Why should I love that uncute tomboy?" His voice fades
and he covers his face with his hands.
Such old words. But after all these years, I recognize that tone.
"But do you love her?" I prompt.
He drops his hands and stares at the pavement for a while. Then he
says, in a voice so soft I can barely hear. "You know, I still do.
Crazy as it sounds, I still do love her. God, it's funny. I'm
miserable when I'm with her. I feel even worse when I'm not with her.
All this year has been one long hell. Is this how love is supposed to
be?"
As I try to think up an answer, he waves it off. "Ah, who am I
kidding anyway? It's over, okay. I just need to go off for a while.
Hey, thanks for listening to me. Maybe one day I'll return the
favor."
He's turning to go. He's walking away. Now wait a minute. Does he
think he can just walk out of my life just as quickly as he came back
in? Who does he think he is anyway? I'm not about to let him walk
off like some wounded martyr.
"Hey, you jackass, come back here! You can't just give up like that!
The Ranma I know wouldn't just walk away without putting up some kind
of fight for someone he loves!"
He suddenly whirls and shouts at me. "You haven't spoken to me for
twenty years, Ukyo! You don't know me anymore! I am not some
headstrong teenager that goes charging about knocking out every little
problem with his fists!"
"No, but you're also not an old man who turns into a panda every time
a problem arises," I counter evenly. "Or decides to go on a sudden
training trip, leaving their loved ones to face the problem on their
own. At least, I hope you're not."
That stops him in his tracks, though he makes no move to come back. I
have to walk over to see his head bowed, his hands tightly clenched to
his side.
"Sometimes," I hear him hiss. "Sometimes, I'm tempted to. God knows
it would be easier for me to just go, forget everything. I don't know
what else to do. How can I love her, Uc-chan?" He looks at me, his
eyes pleading to give him answers.
I open my mouth and shut it. Might as well tell him what the meaning
of life is. How should I know? I'm only a okonomiaki chef. I hear
childish laughter spilling out into the street. Keiku must be locking
up. It causes me to wonder faintly. Did Ranma and Akane ever feel
pride whenever Hiratsu laughed?
I shrug. "I cannot answer that, Ranma. You'll have to find that out
for yourself."
I can see the hope going out of his eyes. "How? She won't even talk
to me."
"Is there anyone she can talk to? A marriage counselor, perhaps?"
"Are you kidding? We spent all our money completely restoring the
dojo back to its proper shape." I wince at that. Touche, Ranma.
"There's not that many people we are friends with, usually because we
were so busy yelling at each or just being away. No one knows us as
well as..."
He trails off as he stares at me. Uh-oh. I know that look. It's
that look that the ghost wears in the back of my mind, the look that I
would drop whatever I was doing and move mountains with my spatula
for. It's the look that first made me fall for him and do anything,
anything for him. Oh, no, if he thinks he can pull that trick now,
right under Keiku's nose...
Hell, I'm too old for this.
"Okay, okay. Tell you what. Find a place to live other than that
bridge and I'll see if I can pay a long overdue visit to the
Saotome-Tendo dojo. I'll find out what she thinks and let you know." I
waggle a finger in his face. "But don't think I'm some marriage
expert or some go-between. This is just to get the both of you talking
so you can be in the same room without loathing each other. And I
definitely won't guarantee that the both of you will get back together
again. I think you both have a lot of pain to work out before you
consider doing that."
He nods solemnly, but his eyes shine at me with hope. Somehow, that
creates another warm feeling in me. Strange. I never thought I would
be working to get Akane and Ranma together instead of splitting them
apart. I can't help but chuckle at the irony of it.
Before it turns into outright laughter, though, I tell Ranma. "You
know, if I'm going to be speaking to Akane, maybe you should be
finding someone who can relate to you. Why don't you visit
Ryoga...I'm sure he'll be eager to see you after all this time."
"Hmm. Ryoga." Ranma ponders this, then his face lights up. "Yeah.
I guess I can go see what the old pig's up to."
"Pig? Oh yeah. You haven't heard. He got cured years ago from
that."
"Did he?!" Ranma's face lights up more, though I doubt it's from
hearing about his old friend. "Hmm...all the more reason to pay him a
visit then."
Vaguely, I wonder what would happen if I splash cold water on him now.
Did he still maintain his `girlish' figure, or would he turn into a
middle-aged woman with stretch marks, swollen ankles, and increased
girth in the hip area. I'm sorely tempted to find out, but I can feel
Keiku's stare hot upon my back. I've been conversing with this
stranger too long for his comfort. Ranma can feel it, too, because he
glances over my shoulder and says, "Well...I better take off now.
Thanks for all you help, Ukyo." He then lays his hands on my
shoulders and says, sincerely. "You're a true friend."
To my annoyance, I find myself blushing. I brush his hands off and
say, "It's nothing. Go on. Get out of here. I got lots of stuff to
do and I can't have you hovering over me. Makes me nervous."
He gives me a brief hug and walks off, waving. I turn just as Kyoto
plows into me. "Mother, who's that?"
"An old, old friend." I murmur. Then, I raise my voice. "Hey,
Ran-chan!"
Under a lamplight, he stops and turns, eyebrows raised at the old
nickname.
"Before you leave town, stop by. My treat."
He grins and raises a hand. And for a brief moment, past and present,
ghost and man merge, and he is smiling at me, surrounded by light,
saying merrily, "Sure, Uc-chan. I will."
If things have been different...if he and I ever had a chance to get
together...who's to say that the same thing could happen...
As I watch him disappear from sight, a hand drops on my shoulder.
"Uc-chan?" Keiku says with as much roughness and jealousy he can
muster.
I grin coyly at him. He can be so thick-headed at times. So stubborn
and mulish--my smile fades a little as I study his features intently.
He's built differently--taller, more muscular, no ponytail binding his
light brown hair, but yes, I can see the faint glimmerings of my first
love in him, his strength, his stubbornness. But I can also see what
attracted me more than the Ranma I first saw in him, his playfulness,
his openness, his willingness to take on responsibility. Those traits
which, I now realize, I had used to paint the ghost at the back of my
mind with, coloring him with the soft tints of characteristics he
never had until he became more of a glorification of a man I loved
rather than the actual man himself.
A ghost of a young man, forever smiling warmly at me, so far away at
the back of my mind.
Before Keiku can growl any more, I reach up to brush my lips against
his, and the soft contact sends the ghost scuttling back to the dusty
domains where it came from. Keiku pulls back a second, surprise
widening his chestnut eyes, then he pulls me close, and I drink in his
warm embrace.
"Excuuuuse me! We're right in the open here. People are watching!"
Miyabi's got her hands on her hips, glaring at the both of us. I turn
to snap at her, and Daisume cuts in, pointing down the street. "Hey,
isn't that Setsuka going into that alley?"
"Ack! He's supposed to be picking me up tonight! Setsuka, you're
going the wrong way, you jackass!" She takes off into the night, long
legs flying. Daisume chases after her, whooping and screeching, his
chestnut hair streaming behind him like a wild colt's mane. Kyoto
merely snuggles against my legs, content to stare after the both of
them with her wide brown eyes.
Keiku shakes his head. "We have to have a talk with that girl."
"It can wait." I slide my hand into Keiku's and whisper in his ear,
"For now, let's go home."
=====================================================================
Author's notes:
I hope this didn't turn out too depressing. I always wondered if Ranma
and Akane would have a happy marriage; in my personal view, they both
had a lot of growing to do, and even then learn how to love each
other. Take out the romance, and well, with all the bickerings and
mallet-poundings, I wonder if they are meant for each other. But that
may also be my bleak look on things.
I've always been able to relate to Ukyo, considering she's in love
with someone who just considers her a friend. I've seen so many
fanfics with her going nuts or killing herself, or forever being in
love with Ranma and staying single, or settling for Konatsu or Tsubasa
(yecch!). I still can't decide about her getting together with Ryoga.
In this fanfic, she somewhat does, but it doesn't work out. She finds
Keiku instead, a guy who's completely not in the Ranmaverse. I guess
she represents my own hope in this area, that somewhere, outside of
where I am now, there's a Keiku. Here's to hoping.
The title comes from 'Your Ghost' sung by Kristin Hersh. Other songs
that somewhat influenced this was 'In Love With Your Ghost' by the
Indigo Girls and 'Living in a Haunted Heart' by Andy Partridge. I
love Valentine's Day--don't you?
To give credit where credit is due: All Ranma 1/2 characters are
creations of Rumiko Takahashi. Keiku, his children, Hiratsu, X'iona
and her son Setsuka are my creations and you can only use them if you
ask me nicely (who knows, maybe I'll write a story on Ukyo and Ryoga's
wanderings, and how Ryoga became chief of his own village. That bears
looking into ^_^)
And finally, this has been a T-Bone Productions Fanfic: In Touch With
Yours Truly...
============================================================================
/===\ LaShawn M. Taylor (shonnie@zeus.anet-chi.com)
|^ ^|\ "Hey! Where's the cream filling?!" -Hostess cupcake commercial
\v/\| "Life is such unutterable hell, solely because it is sometimes
|\ beautiful..." -T.H. White "The Troll"
\| "You come with steam of breath and caligula's head
To me so lonesome and longing and so unsatisfied
Even with all this beauty flooding deep into my eyes."
-Poi Dog Pondering
============================================================================
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geocities.com/tokyo)