He sat alone on the church steps with only the stars above 
for company.  The day had been warm, but it was nearing nine 
o'clock and the air was finally starting to cool down.  The 
streets were strangely empty; the heavy silence that usually 
accompanied midnight had settled in as soon as the last traces of 
the sun had faded beneath the horizon.
     The stone steps that he sat on led up to the heavy wooden 
doors of an old church.  The doors had been shut in some sort of 
futile attempt to keep the heat out during the day, but the 
windows were open to allow the night air to enter, and the low 
voice of the priest was escaping out onto the silent streets.
     The figure on the steps closed his eyes, letting a cooling 
breeze sweep over him.  The lingering taste of the ocean was in 
the breeze; it had faded as it had traveled in land from the sea 
but still a part remained.   Opening his eyes, the boy looked down 
at his hands.  The blood that stained those hands was invisible to 
everyone but him, all those who might have remembered the acts 
that spilled it were dead.  He alone carried the memory of those 
nights.  He killed as he lived, always at night.  It had been a 
very long time since anything had truly tempted him away from the 
comfort of the darkness and into the soul-searing light of the 
sun.
     He lived as he killed, always alone.

~*~
Darkness: Dreams
One: Always Alone
By: Chandra Rooney
darkness@cloak-and-dagger.co.uk
~*~
Revised: May 24, 2001
~*~

      His own footsteps echoed on the stairs as Professor Alan 
Stone came out of the church.  He continued down the stairs and 
paused on the one above the boy sitting all alone.  The lone 
figure showed no intent on moving, but it wasn't necessary.  Stone 
could have easily stepped around the boy but he didn't.
      "Zellar?" he asked instead.  "What are you doing sitting 
here all alone, my boy?"
      The boy stood, wiping his hands on his pant legs before he 
turned to face Stone.  "I wasn't really doing anything," he 
replied, quietly.  "Just sitting and thinking, I suppose."
     "The church is beautiful inside," Stone said, 
conversationally.  "Have you seen it?"
     "Organized religion and I don't really agree with each 
other."  The boy stood, and pushed his light brown hair away from 
his face.
     Stone smiled, and his wise hazel eyes reflected his good 
humor.  "It seems to be that way with many young people today.  
I'm actually glad I ran into you, Zellar, I meant to ask you a 
question."
     "What is it, Professor?"
     "It's a lovely night isn't it?" he asked, as he made a 
sweeping gesture, encompassing the streets before the two of them.  
"Shall we?"  The boy nodded, and the two continued down the stairs 
and along the walkway.  "My daughter arrived earlier today; she's 
very excited about tomorrow.  I doubt she'll sleep a wink.  She's 
so much like her mother in that sense, so very passionate about 
the past.  Does that seem odd to you, Zellar, a young lady who is 
interested in the past?"
     "That could be a good thing, Professor," the boy replied.  
"If you don't know where you've been you won't be able to tell if 
you're walking in circles."
     "True, very true.  But, Zellar, please call me Alan.  
'Professor' makes me feel older than I'd like to admit I am."
     "If it makes you feel more comfortable-- Alan.  I hear that 
you have something big planned for tomorrow."
     They turned the corner, stepping past the entry gate to the 
small park behind the church.  Stone cleared his throat.  "Yes, I 
wanted to talk to you about that, Zellar.  I have plans to go to 
the Ryuujin Temple.  I thought that perhaps you might like to 
come."
     The wind ruffled the leaves of a nearby cherry tree; the boy 
said nothing in response and the two of them continued to walk in 
silence.  They crossed the street, passing closed up stores and 
darkened houses.
     "Zellar?" Stone prompted.  "Are you all right?  I haven't 
said something to offend you, have I?"
     The other slowly exhaled, his eyes downcast.  He bit his lip, 
and then finally looked up.  "We've come to your hotel, Alan," he 
said. 
     "Ah, yes," Stone looked at the hotel, and then back at the 
boy.  "So... will you be coming to the Temple?  I'm sure my 
daughter would love to have someone else younger than forty 
around."
     The other smiled that smile of his, the one Stone had come to 
think suggested the boy knew far more than the great deal he let 
on.  "I'll consider it," he replied, finally.  "Good night, 
Professor."  The boy tugged up the collar of his jacket and walked 
away, becoming one with the darkness.

*

     Professor Alan Stone watched the boy leave.  One moment he 
was a silhouette against the faint beams cast down from the cloud-
obscured moon, the next gone as if he had never been there.
     Stone knew the boy only as 'Zellar'.  He'd found him staring 
at a fountain in the middle of the town.  The fountain was 
ordinary enough, an angel pouring water from a jar.  The thing 
that made him pause was the way the boy had been looking at it.   
He'd looked almost angry as he'd gazed at the face of the angel.  
Stone had approached him to ask the boy if something was wrong, 
and the strange friendship had progressed from there.
     He sometimes wondered what had drawn him to the boy in the 
first place.  The boy was eighteen at the most, while Stone was 
over fifty.  The generation gap that existed between their ages 
should have been enough to create a rift no normal boy would dare 
to cross.  
     Of course, the boy had never struck him as completely 
_normal_.  Stone saw that more and more as they spoke.  He'd first 
begun to see it after a few moments in the boy's presence on that 
day by the fountain.  Stone had disclosed he was an archeologist, 
and the boy had informed the man that he was quite knowledgeable 
about the history of the town and surrounding area.  They'd 
discussed legends and old stories, and Stone had been delighted to 
see that the boy was by far more well-versed than most of the 
'experts' he'd spoken to.
     However, despite all the discussions and the time that he had 
spent in the company of the other, a part of the boy had remained 
distant.  Stone knew not where the other was from, nor what had 
brought him to this town.  He would not speak of his past; he 
always found some clever way to get around the questions Stone 
tried to ask.
     Alan Stone shook his head, breaking out of his reverie.  It 
was late, and he had a number of preparatory things to attend to 
for tomorrow before he could go to sleep. 

*

     Yamato Zellar walked on, passing through empty streets and 
desolate alleyways.  He walked through the park and circled back 
towards the middle of town.  The fountain was running; it was 
always running.
     He shook his head.  "Professor Stone is a good man.  He's 
been very kind to me but--" He stopped.  A cold wind blew across 
the square, and he tensed.  "Come out."
     From one of the darkened side streets a shadowy form crept 
forward.  "You..." it hissed in a grating voice, deep and 
rumbling.  
"You are the threat that Yasha speaks of."  It was tall and 
appeared 
to be clothed in a cloak or long coat of some kind.  Its body 
moved 
awkwardly beneath the fabric, as if it was not accustomed to 
wearing 
anything.
     Zellar turned and stared into the black pit that hid its 
face.  "If you intend to kill me then let's get on with it," he 
told it.
     The figure tossed off its cloak to reveal a hellish bat-like 
demon.  Zellar regarded it for a second, then bowed his head.  
"Once again," he began softly, "I walk with darkness."

*

      An invisible wind blew his hair back from his face, as it 
lengthened it changed to a pale blue color.  His skin faded to 
snow white and his ears became long and sharply pointed.  He 
opened his eyes, which were now a silver color, as a black five-
pointed star appeared on his forehead.  He coldly stared at the 
other demon as dark shadows wove around him, fading into the navy 
blue cape that swirled out behind him and over his shoulders, 
covering his black pants and shirt.  A whip wound itself about his 
waist.
      "Ahhh... The Star of Darkness at last," the demon hissed.  
"I have been waiting to see if you are all that your legends 
claims."
      "State your purpose," Darkness replied coldly.  "Waste my 
time, and I'll see to it you regret doing so."
      "Traitor.  Queen Yasha demands your destruction," the bat 
demon hissed.  "Hell Fire!"  It belched black-blue flames that 
flared out towards its opponent.  
      Darkness leapt up into the air to easily avoid them.  Coming 
down from his leap, he yelled:  "Shadow Sword, come forth!"  In 
his hands, from the very night's shadows themselves, a deadly 
sharp black sword appeared.  
      The demon's eyes narrowed, and it dashed aside.  When the 
Star's sword made contact with the ground, the demon was already 
sprinting off into the darkness.
     "Come, Darkness," it taunted.  "Let's see who's the faster 
one."  It disappeared around the corner, heading back towards the 
church.
     "Oh, good," he muttered.  "I like it when they run."  He 
gripped the sword and began to chase after the demon, his 
footsteps pounding soundlessly on the pavement.
     He spotted it once he'd cleared the corner; it was waiting 
for him across the street in a more human form.  Darkness wouldn't 
have given the ordinary enough looking man a second glance, but 
the creature raised a hand and waved to him, before taking off 
again.  The Star ignored the urge to charge after it blindly; the 
chances of there being a trap up ahead were slim but still worth 
considering.  
     The demon didn't seem to be taking him seriously, but that 
could be a ploy to make him overconfident.  If experience had 
taught him anything, it was that night creatures were often more 
dangerous than they seemed.
     He let his awareness spread out, seeking the location of the 
demon.  It was two blocks away and still moving.  Apparently it 
had not looked over its shoulder to see that nothing was following 
it.  The demon was actually rather fast, so attempting to chase it 
down could prove to be exhausting.
     Darkness looked around him and spotted the fire escape ladder 
hanging down from the brick building opposite him.  He smiled and 
grabbed the rung, pulling himself up it, and climbed up onto the 
rooftop.

*

      Ether couldn't believe his luck.  He grinned as he turned 
around corner, thinking of how much it would impress his cohorts 
in Yasha's guard once they learned that he'd outran the Star of 
Darkness.
      "He's not so tough," Ether muttered.  "He couldn't even keep 
up to me."
      "Is this what this was?  A race?"  Ether looked up to see 
the Star watching him from the rooftop of the building across the 
alleyway.  In his hands he held a bow and arrow of misty gray 
energy, and the arrow was pointed directly at Ether.  
       Ether wasn't quite sure what to say.  He looked at the bow 
and gulped.
       "If it's a race you wanted," the Star continued, "you 
simply had to ask.  I'd love to race you.  I might even let you 
live if you win."  He leapt down from the rooftop, landing beside 
Ether.  "You know where the park is behind the church?" he asked.  
"I'll race you to there."
       "Really?" Ether asked.  "You're going to let me live?"
       "I said _if_ you win."  The sword appeared in his hand 
again.  "If I catch you, I'm going to kill you."  Darkness smiled; 
it was a cold and slightly unstable expression.  "I think you 
should start running."
       Ether nodded and sprinted across the street.  He looked 
back over his shoulder and saw that the Star was still in the 
alleyway, but another second passed and he'd vanished.
       Something cold cut into Ether's shoulder and he yelped as 
blood trickled from the wound.  He span around to see the Star's 
black sword glistening again as it came towards his head.  Ether 
rolled out of the way and ran down the street.
       How could the Star have caught him? Not even Queen Yasha 
could move *that* fast!  Ether saw the church up ahead.  It was 
two blocks away, and he could see the dark shapes of the cherry 
trees in the park behind it.  He looked back over his shoulder and 
saw nothing.  He looked around at the rooftops and saw nothing.  
Maybe he was safe.
       The park grew closer; the church was only a block away now.  
A sharp pain in his lower back threw him out of step, and he 
nearly fell to the ground.  He reached back and pulled out a 
black arrow.  Ether panicked.  He didn't see the Star anywhere, 
but the arrow proved that the fabled demon slayer had to be close.  
Suddenly, his idea to prove himself to his fellow Palace guards 
was starting to seem like a suicide attempt.
        Desperation, a feeling totally alien to him, crept into 
his mind and he raced forward, staking everything on a final dash 
towards the park.  He passed the church and cleared the gate to 
the park, only stopping once he was deep inside the cherry trees.  
"I won," he gasped, "I'm safe.  I beat him here."
        The sharp sword pressed against his throat.  "How does it 
feel to be the one who's being hunted?" Darkness asked.  "To know 
that something you can't hope to outrun is watching your every 
step?  This is how those humans you've killed felt when you 
stalked them; they felt this fear of never knowing from which 
shadow you were waiting to reach out and grab them."
        "I beat you," Ether protested.
        The Star chuckled.  "I've been waiting here for nearly a 
minute now."  He shoved Ether forward, and the demon spun around.  
The black sword gleamed as it caught the flickering light of the 
moon.
        Ether turned to run...
        Darkness raised his sword and plunged it down into the 
back of the demon, slaying it effortlessly and then pulling the 
sword out.  The thrill of the hunt and kill sang through his veins 
as the demon slumped to the ground.
         "Shadow, disperse," he said, and the sword vanished as 
mysteriously as it had appeared.  As his appearance faded back to 
normal, so did the joy he'd felt over the killing.
         Appearing to be nothing more than human again, Yamato 
stared at the demon that lay on the ground.  He closed his eyes 
against the gasping sounds it made as it slowly died.  He tried to 
walk away from it, thinking perhaps if he couldn't see it, then he 
could act as if it hadn't really happened.
         He was nearly out of the trees when he heard its final 
choking gasps.  He ignored them as best he could, looking down at 
his feet.  His shoes had been splashed with some sort of black 
liquid that had been leaking from the creature's wounds.
        Disgust over what had happened filled him; he bent over 
double and fought the urge to vomit.
        At times like this he wasn't any better.  He retched as 
nausea overtook him.  He wasn't any better than the things he 
killed.

*
         Morning came and brought the sun with it.  The sky was 
blue and cloudless; the August heat had not quite reached the 
sweltering high it would later that day.  Before the hotel, a 
group of people was busy loading up jeeps with supplies.
        "Dad, where do you want the water jugs?" Tenkou Stone 
asked.  She looked behind her, black hair falling into her violet 
eyes.  Her father, Professor Stone, was talking to a local guide 
and didn't seem to hear her.  She sighed and looked up at the sun, 
already high in the sky.  "We'll never get to the Ryuujin Temple 
before nightfall at this rate."
        "Why rush?" a voice asked.  She turned to see a boy about 
her age of seventeen or a little older.  He had a nice face, pale 
blue eyes and light brown hair.  Maybe he was one of the locals 
hired to help navigate the trip.  Great, another money-grubbing 
'expert guide'.
        "There's no where to stay there," Tenkou replied.  "If we 
don't get there early enough we'll be setting up in the dark." 
        "And what's so bad about that?"
        She gave him an odd look.  "Well, I don't know about you, 
but I haven't met anyone in this town that wants to be outside 
after dark.  I _have_ met several people that told me that I 
certainly I don't want to be at that temple after dark."
        "That's probably true," he looked over at her father.  
"Hrm.  Professor Stone seems to be having difficulties.  But he 
can be a difficult man."
        "He can be at times," Tenkou agreed.  "So, you know my 
father?"
       "Your father?" his eyebrow raised slightly.  "I'm sorry, 
you are?"
       "Tenkou Stone."  She held out her hand.
      "I'm pleased to make your acquaintance." He took her 
outstretched hand and shook it.  "You must be the daughter he's 
spoken so fondly of.  Call me 'Zellar', your father does."
      "Really?  The Zellar that my father speaks of so often?" she 
asked.  "You sound like the only person he respects the opinion of 
in this whole town."
      "I didn't realize your father was so fond of me," he said 
softly.
      "You're going to accompany us to the Ryuujin Temple?" she 
asked.
      He nodded.  "I'm looking forward to seeing it.  It's 
supposed to be well preserved."
     "Indeed." Alan Stone walked over.  "The single most well 
preserved temple in this region, yet it's been completely 
abandoned, so there's no problem with digging around.  
It's an archeologist's dream come true."
     "Very true, Professor Stone," Yamato nodded.  "Are we about 
ready to leave?"
     Stone looked pleased.  "For someone not sure they were even 
coming, you're rather eager, Zellar."
      Yamato shrugged.  "I guess I found a reason to be."
      "Oh?" Stone asked, his eyebrow raising.  He chuckled.  
"Well, the more the merrier, I say.  Let's finish up here, kids, 
so we can get going."
      "About time!" Tenkou announced.  Yamato looked at her 
briefly, and she wondered why her cheeks felt so hot all of a 
sudden.

*

       Tenkou spent most of the ride up to the Ryuujin Temple 
sneaking glances at 'Zellar'.  He stared out the window the entire 
time and barely acknowledged anyone.  It seemed a rather different 
mood from the one he'd greeted her with.
      He'd been so cold and detached since her father had spoken 
to them.  She wondered if he felts uncomfortable having the boss's 
daughter along for the ride.
      When they did arrive at the temple, the men immediately 
began to set-up camp.  Tenkou looked up at the building.  It was a 
massive construction of faded, weathered stones.
      "It's huge!" she gasped.
      Yamato looked up at it.  "It's just as I remember it-- from 
the pictures."
      "Do you think it's safe to go inside?" she asked.
      "The team that was up here yesterday say it's very sturdy," 
Stone answered, handing them flashlights and hard hats.  "It would 
take an enormous earthquake to even crack the structure."  He 
clicked on his own flashlight.  "I'm heading in.  You two are 
welcome to follow."
      "C'mon!" Tenkou exclaimed, waving to Yamato.  Now was her 
chance to get to know him better.  So what if he was a little 
moody?  She'd never seen anyone with eyes like his.
      "You want me to go inside there?" he asked, a strange look 
on his face.
      "Well, isn't that why you came?" she asked, confused.  "Come 
on, I bet it's beautiful inside."
      "But--" 
      "Well, I'm going in," she announced, grabbing his hand.  
"And I want you to come with me!"
      "But--" he protested, as she drug him inside.  "You don't 
understand--"
      "I understand that if I left it up to you, you'd probably 
stand outside and look angsty all day," Tenkou joked.  "Besides, I 
doubt my father's paying you to get heatstroke."
      He sighed, throwing his hands in surrender.  "All right, all 
right," he told her, smiling a little.  "You win.  I'll go 
inside."  He paused.  "Your father would never forgive me if I let 
his beautiful daughter get lost."
      Tenkou blushed profusely, looking away so he wouldn't see. 

*

      It was cool and dark inside, almost damp.  Despite the 
strange dampness, the temple wasn't musty.  In fact, it was quite 
the opposite.  A deep layer of dust covered most of the inner 
chambers, but Tenkou had chosen to follow a path that was bushed 
clean.  She assumed it was the way her father had gone.  The stone 
of the floor was worn smooth from the travel over it.
      "Strange," she remarked.  "You think an abandoned temple 
wouldn't have a path that looked like it had been used so 
recently."
      "It's in disuse," Yamato replied, "but it's not abandoned.  
Someone may have been in here recently.  Certain individuals still 
frequent the temple."
      "Look," Tenkou pointed to a wall painting, shining her 
flashlight over it.  "There's the Ryuujin."
      He looked at the picture.  It was a crude rendition of a 
three-headed dragon with a slightly humanoid body shape.  Its 
heads were spitting flames at the small drawings of people behind 
it, as they offered various gifts and sacrifices to it.  Ancient 
writings were painted on the walls, and he frowned at them.
      "These characters don't look like any form of Japanese I've 
ever seen," he remarked.  "Tenkou, come look at this."
      "What is it?" she asked, shining the flashlight into his 
eyes by accident.  Zellar yelped and threw his hand up to his 
face.  "Oh my God!" Tenkou dropped the light and put a hand on his 
shoulder.  "I'm so sorry, Zellar!  Are you all right?"
      He nodded, brushing her off.  "I'm fine.  Just caught off-
guard.  It doesn't happen that often."  He blinked, readjusting to 
the dingy twilight inside the chamber.  "Tenkou, have you ever 
seen a Japanese temple or shrine like this before?"
      "No," she admitted.  "It's rather... Egyptian in style, 
don't you think?"  He nodded.  "Well, I suppose that would support 
one of my Dad's wild theories," she chuckled, leaning against the 
wall.
       "Which theory is that?" he asked.
      She looked surprised.  "I can't believe he's never told you 
about his theories."  She smiled.  "My Dad thinks that the similar 
artistic themes in describing supernatural and mythological 
creatures can be explained by positing that there's only one race 
of what he calls 'night walkers'."
      "Night walkers?" he repeated.  "An interesting name.  But 
what sort of similarities has he found?"
     "That's what all these trips are for," she replied.  
"Research to find similarities."
      "Couldn't he have studied photographs and collections in 
America?"
      "My father likes to travel," she said softly.  "He's never 
stayed at home for more than six or seven months since my Mom 
died."
      Yamato looked uncomfortable.  "I'm sorry," he said after a 
moment of silence.  "It wasn't my place to ask."
       She shook her head.  "Don't apologize."  She looked back at 
the painting.  "Personally, I don't think this roo-thing looks 
very friendly."  She looked around at the other wall paintings 
along the passageway.  "Nope, there's definitely something 
different about this placed-- it's almost like it's not really a 
temple."
       Yamato might have been surprised; it was hard to tell in 
the lack of light.  "You don't think this is a temple?"
      Tenkou shook her head.  "Shrines and temples are supposed to 
be Holy places.  All the ones I've ever been in have this... 
feeling to them.  It's something in the air, in the way that 
people talk about them.  When I walked in the park around the 
Ryozen Kwan-On in Kyoto, I felt that feeling.  I don't feel it 
here."
      "Numinous," Yamato said, softly.
      "Excuse me?" she asked.
      "Numinous," he repeated.  "It's one of the words for that 
feeling that Holy Places have."
      "Oh, okay."  She looked around the darkened chamber.  "Well, 
this place doesn't have it.  This place feels-- empty.  No, it's 
more than empty, it's dead."  She paused.  "This all probably 
sounds a little strange to you."
      He seemed to take a long time to answer.  "The woods around 
this place are empty.  I was watching while we drove up.  There 
aren't any birds or small animals around here.  I don't think I've 
even seen an insect or spider within a mile of here."  He paused, 
and looked back at the picture on the wall.  "Plus, the people 
around here don't come near this place.  They say it's cursed.  I 
don't think this is a temple, Tenkou.  I don't think it ever was.  
This thing they call the 'ryuujin', I don't believe that it's a 
kami."
       "Maybe it's one of those curse god things."
       "Maybe."  He didn't sound convinced.
       Tenkou shivered suddenly.  "Zellar, do you think we could 
go back outside?  I just... I don't really like the dark," she 
muttered, looking at the ground.
       He nodded.  "I'm sure there'll be plenty of time to explore 
later.  Mr. Henko probably needs help unloading the supplies."
       She nodded and started walking out.  Zellar gave the 
painting on the wall a final look and then followed her out into 
the sunlight.

*

        It turned out that they didn't need to help unpack 
supplies.  It was all done.  So they just sat around till Stone 
came out of the temple.  But that time the sun was about to set.  
That's when the trouble started.
       It was the local guide, Shou Henko.  He and the other 
village men hired to help by her father refused to stay at the 
temple after dark.  Well, all of them except for Yamato.  He 
hadn't voiced an opinion either way.  Ever since they'd come out 
of the temple, he'd appeared to be lost in thought.  Tenkou was 
starting to get a little tired of his rapid mood changes.
      "If you want to throw your life away, then you go ahead, but 
we will not stay here after dark!" Shou was shouting.
     "Why not?" Yamato asked, looking up.  "Why exactly?"
     "The curse," Shou said.  The other locals nodded and 
murmured.
     "Which curse is that?" Yamato asked.  "What is specifically 
so bad about this place?"
     The men muttered among themselves.  "It is not something you 
talk about," Shou replied, hesitant.  "Simply uttering the words 
can bring the curse down upon you."
     "If you're leaving," Yamato looked at their faces, "and it 
appears that you are, why can't you tell us?  You'll be safely 
away from the temple by nightfall."
      The men seemed to consider this.  
      "This spot is a place where demons live," Shou replied, but 
he sounded like he would have rather kept quiet.  "Many, many have 
lost their lives.  They wander out into the woods after the sun 
has set and never return.  It is said that Yasha, the Demon Queen, 
comes and steals them away to the Nether World."
     Yamato looked doubtful.  "Yasha herself comes here?"
     "Do not mock me, boy," Shou said angrily and turned to Stone.  
"I will not risk these man.  If you know what is good for you, 
you'll come back with us."
     "Nonsense," Stone replied.  "Leave if you insist, but I paid 
you for a week, so you had better be back here tomorrow morning."
      "Oh we'll be back," Shou said as he rounded up his men and 
began back down the trail to the Jeeps.  "But you won't."
      "Dad," Tenkou began.  Curse or no curse, the Jeeps were 
their only means of transportation.  "Can't they leave us a Jeep?"
      But Stone's thoughts were elsewhere.  "Curses," he muttered, 
shaking his head.  "I knew the people were superstitious, but I 
never imagined it was to this degree.  It's a very different world 
out here, isn't it?"
      "Professor," Yamato began, and then corrected himself.  
"Alan, it is true that there have been a lot of disappearances in 
these woods and around this area.  I'm not saying it's the work of 
any demon queen, but it might be best to consider returning to 
town."
      "Nonsense," Stone laughed.  "Shall we start supper?"  He 
looked at Yamato.  "Oh, try to lighten up, Zellar.  It's rather 
disappointing to see you buying into this superstitious rubbish.  
There's nothing to worry about; it's just a few trees and an old 
building.  The dark plays tricks on people's minds and they make 
up crazy stories to explain it.  There is no reason to be afraid.  
There's nothing out in the dark that's going to get us tonight."
      Yamato sighed.  "There are more things in the dark waiting 
to get you than you can imagine," he muttered.  No one paid much 
attention to him.  Stone was already rummaging through the camp 
supplies, and the sounds of the jeeps starting up and driving away 
echoed through the woods.
      "Best to let him have his way," Tenkou said, patting 
Yamato's shoulder.  "Dad can be awfully stubborn."  She shrugged.  
"Still, they could have left us a Jeep.  Just in case."

*

        Darkness fell, turning the temple into a portrait of the 
many shades of night.  Stone had set off to bed, wanting to get an 
early start the next morning, and the deep rumbling of his snores 
echoed through the silence.
        Tenkou had turned off the camp lights, as her father 
complained he couldn't sleep unless it was absolutely dark.
Yamato had built a small campfire, and she was in the process of 
making s'mores.
        "So... you melt the marshmallows and the chocolate by 
putting the other cracker on top and then eat it?" Zellar asked, 
giving the s'more she'd handed him an appraising look.  "Is it any 
good?"
        "You've never had a s'more before?" Tenkou asked.  He 
shook his head.  "Well, you don't know what you're missing.  
Careful, though, they might still be hot."
        He nodded, but still winced a little as the hot 
marshmallow squeezed out the back of the cracker and onto his 
fingers.  "How do you like Gunma?" he asked, after a moment of 
silence.  "It must be very different from Kyoto."
	Tenkou laughed.  "Tell me about it.  For one thing, hardly 
anyone speaks English here.  For another, everything seems to shut 
down at sundown."
	"Gunma is the smallest prefecture on Honshuu," Yamato told 
her.  "This is as close as you can get to living out in the 
country, unless you go to Hokkaido."
	"How do you manage to live here and not go crazy?" Tenkou 
asked him.  "There's nothing to do!"
	"I like it here," Yamato replied.  "It's peaceful, and there 
aren't as many people as in the cities."
	Tenkou shook her head.  "It's all so compact and small," she 
remarked.  "I know this is the 'country', but it's still packed 
with people.  Maybe this curse thing is just some rumour someone 
living up in this area spread to keep some personal space."
	"I think the only 'people' living up around this place would 
be the Tengu," he said, with a wink.
        He seemed so much more relaxed; so much easier to talk to, 
to joke with.  And he really was quite cute.  Tenkou hid a smile 
by looking up at the nighttime sky.  "You can see so many stars 
out here," she remarked.
	"The Big Dipper," Yamato pointed to a constellation.  
"Another thing I like about this place.  You can't see the stars 
in Tokyo."  He leaned back, a small smile on his face.  "I think 
I'd miss it-- not being able to see the sky."
	Tenkou cast a look over at him.  Was it just the dim light 
of the fire or were his eyes a darker more substantial blue?
Shaking her head, she bit her lip.  There was something that her 
father and one of the guides had been arguing about earlier.  
Something she had wanted to ask someone for an explanation of--  
Oh right!  "Zellar," she began.  He shifted, turning his attention 
back to her.  "Do you know anything about this 'hoshi' thing that 
the locals were talking about when we came out of the temple?"
       "I wasn't really paying attention," he admitted.  "Can you 
recall any specifics?  The word 'hoshi' has different meanings, 
after all."
       "It does?"
       "Well, it usually means 'a star', but it's also the word 
for 'service', and if the end vowel sound is extended it becomes 
'hoshii', which is a desire or a wish."
      Tenkou bit her lip in concentration.  "I think they meant it 
as a star.  That's why my father translated it as, anyway.  I was 
just wondering because the some of the men seemed to be afraid of 
it, and the others seemed to be saying it was a good thing."  
Yamato said nothing, but he nodded for her to continue.  "They 
were saying 'kurayamino hoshi'," she continued.  "I checked my 
dictionary, and it gave the translation 'of darkness star'."
      "Customary to say the surname first in Japanese," he 
replied.  "Hoshi Kurayamino.  The Star of Darkness."
      "So what is this thing?"
      He sighed.  "It depends on who you ask.  Some people say 
it's a demon and others say it's some sort of kami.  Some others 
say it doesn't even exist."
      "What do you think it is, Zellar?"
      He regarded her face for a while.  "I think that there's 
more to the Star of Darkness than anyone knows, and I'm waiting 
for the right person to come along to help discover his secrets."  
He smiled at her as he stood and brushed himself off.  "Well, now 
that you've shared your cooking skills with me, and we both smell 
like campfire, I'd say it's time for bed.  Goodnight, Tenkou."
       "Goodnight, Zellar," she called, as he disappeared into 
his tent.  Then she turned and put out the fire.  The flames 
seemed to be particularly resilient and she had to stomp a fire of 
the embers out.  Wasn't that a strange way of answering?  Tenkou 
shook her head as she made her way to her tent.  Something told 
her that he knew a lot more than he was letting on.
	
*

     With the fire put out, the shadows around the camp and the 
woods
had deepened from dark indigo to black.  Even with his keen 
eyesight, Yamato was having difficulties moving about in the dark.  
He'd already knocked over a pile of supplies, causing what he 
feared to be an extremely loud crash.  Still, despite his 
clumsiness and frustration he refused to let the power of the Star 
come forth.  It would be too dangerous, if Tenkou saw him or the 
Professor.
      He could do it without the Star's power, after all.  He'd 
lived without Darkness before.  Oh, but that had been such a very 
long time ago, hadn't it?  He sighed, shaking the thought from his 
head.  He needed to focus.
      What Shou Henko had said was starting to seem to be true. 
Yamato could feel it; this place was cursed.  The Temple swarmed 
with a dark aura; the shadows that surrounded it seemed to have a 
completely darker and deeper shade to them.  Maybe this energy was 
what Tenkou had picked up on earlier while they were inside.  It 
wasn't unheard of for humans to be attuned to the aura of a place, 
but it was usually after years of discipline.
      If she could sense it so easily, then the demonic aura must 
be incredibly strong.  He looked at the Temple, contemplated going 
inside, but thought better of it.  Even at night, at full 
strength, it was unwise to wander about in places that reeked of 
death.  Yes, that was it.  The place had an aura of death.  Many 
people had lost their lives within that Temple, the scent of 
centuries old blood wafted out from the ancient doorway, reminding 
him of the previous night's kill.
      Yamato swallowed, wiping his mouth on the back of his hand.  
It wasn't a good idea to start thinking about blood and death 
right now.  Instead, he thought back to the wall painting that 
Tenkou and he had rested by.  The Ryuujin had seemed familiar 
somehow, but he was still unable to place from where.  At least 
the gateway explained how one of Yasha's guards had been in town 
last night.  The Demon Queen probably had two or three watching 
the gateway from the Nether World side.
      If one of them came back out again tonight to see why that 
last one didn't return...  Yamato let the thought trail off, 
looking at the flimsy canvas tents that Tenkou and Alan 
Stone were sleeping in.  A demon could rip through those in 
seconds, have the human inside killed and devoured within minutes.  
Unless they were in one of those moods to just drag the captives 
back to the Nether Realm for more elaborate games.  He sighed 
softly, and then shook his head, grinning a tiny half-smile.  He 
supposed Darkness might be needed tonight after all.
       Yamato turned his head; the sound of footsteps reached his 
ears and indicated that someone was up and walking around outside.  
He considered calling out to see who it was, but reconsidered when 
he realized that he couldn't be certain it was human.  His sense 
perception had failed before to demons who could mask their auras.  
He backed away from the sound and crashed into another pile of 
supplies.  The sound of shattering glass and a metallic 'thud' 
indicated it had most likely been one of the camp lanterns.
       "Zellar?" Tenkou's voice asked.  "Is that you?"
       At least it was dark so she couldn't see him tripping over 
his own feet.  If he was going to call forth the Star powers, now 
would be the best time before she found him.
       "Everything all right?" Tenkou called.  "I heard a crash.  
Is someone out there?"
       Yamato took a deep breath, bowing his head.  That part of 
his being he tried to bury and forget reached up, welcoming him as 
he fell deep into himself.

*

      Tenkou stood outside Zellar's tent, peering into the 
darkness.  Her own inability to sleep had been chased away by her 
newfound concern for his well-being.  She squinted into the 
shadows again, trying to determine where the crash had come from.  
Could it have been an animal?  No one was responding, but Zellar 
had said that he hadn't seen any animals-- Suddenly, she stiffened 
as soft footsteps echoed behind her.
      "Zellar?" she asked.  A small tremble of fear shook her 
voice, and she clenched her fists, reassuring herself.  "Are you 
out here?"
     "Looking for someone?" an unfamiliar voice asked.
     She turned, peering into the shallower shadows created by the 
camp lantern held in her hand.  Standing behind her was a boy that 
she had never seen before.  He had some light colored hair and 
eyes that looked like gray.  He was lean, tall and dressed in a 
black shirt and matching pants.  A navy blue cloak swirled around 
his boot tops, and it looked like there was something on his 
forehead standing out against his pale skin.  The stories she'd 
heard from the villages and Shou began to take on a new sense of 
concrete fear. Was he a ghost, or a monster, or maybe a demon?  
     Then she heard her father's strong and assured voice echoing 
_nonsense_, and she smiled inwardly.  Her father's faith in his 
own convictions had always given her strength.  She unclenched her 
fists, smoothed out her wrinkled clothes and met the boy's eyes 
evenly.
      "Who are you?" She asked.
      At first, he looked surprised then seemed to recall 
something and nodded.  "Of course, we haven't met before," he 
said, softly.  "The people here call me the 'Kurayamino Hoshi'."  
He smiled a little. "However, you may call me 'Darkness' if you 
wish."
      "You're not going to ask who I am?" she asks.  "I guess a 
kami would have ways of telling."
      He smiled a little.  "I know who you are, yes.  Miss Tenkou 
Stone.  Although, I always wondered why you had a Japanese name if 
you were a foreigner."  He stopped, examining her expression.  "My 
apologies.  It was rude of me to say such a thing."
      There was a long moment of silence.  He remained at a 
respectful distance, and she appraised him.  "Your English is very 
good," she said finally.
      This seemed to throw him off guard.  "...Thank you."
      "My Japanese is far from fluent," Tenkou continued.  "So 
it's nice to meet another person from around here that can speak 
English so well."
     He watched her with those silvery eyes.  "Another person?"
     She hesitated.  "Uh, you are some sort of person, aren't 
you?"
     He smiled a little.  "You might say that."
     That smile...  Tenkou raised the lantern a bit.  "You 
wouldn't mind coming a little further into the light, would you?  
I can't really see you."
      "I'd rather not if it's all the same."  He paused.  "I'm 
sorry, Tenkou, I don't often make a point of being seen."
      She paused, her breath caught in her throat, and she forgot 
what she was going to say.  The way he said her name was so soft 
and gentle, like one would whisper a dear friend's.  She composed 
herself, shaking off the feeling.  "Not even if I said 'please'?"
      "You don't seem like the kind of woman who says 'please'."
      Tenkou blinked.  Maybe it was something in his tone or in 
the way his demeanor changed, but she suddenly realized that she 
knew who he was.  She grit her teeth and set the lantern on the 
ground.  "Okay, joke's over, Zellar.  You had me going for a while 
there, but I know it's you now.  Is this to get back at me for 
making you go inside the temple when you didn't want to?"  She 
closed the distance between them and poked her finger into his 
chest.  "Or did you just think it would be funny to try and scare 
me?"
       "Tenkou could you not, maybe, um--"
       "Oh, I'm not going to hit you," she laughed, patting his 
shoulder.  "I mean, it was really clever.  I wouldn't have been 
able to carry it off, but you did."  She giggled again.  "We'll 
have to tell my dad about this tomorrow morning-- or maybe we'd 
better not.  He'd probably get upset and lecture us about using 
local legends as the basis for practical jokes."
       "...How did you know?" he asked finally.
       "Changing your clothes isn't going to make me forget who 
you are, Zellar," she chuckled, then stopped.  "Oh, don't sound so 
hurt.  I really was scared for a second or two."  She snickered.  
"Till you started talking.  But I would like to know how you got 
your voice to sound different."
       He sighed.  "Tenkou, you have to promise that you won't 
tell anyone."
       "Why are you acting like this?" she asked.  "It's no big 
deal, really.  I won't get you in trouble with my dad, I promise.  
And you can stop doing that thing with your voice," she added.
       "It's not your father I'm worried about."
       "Look, Zellar, no one is going to be upset because you have 
a sense of humor--"
       "It's not a joke!" he snapped.
       "What do you--" Tenkou started to ask as the moon broke 
through the patch of clouds that had been obscuring it, and the 
ground was drenched in cool, silvery light.
       His silver-colored eyes were narrowed at her, and his mouth 
was frozen in a half-snarl.  Pale blue hair fell about his 
face; the moonlight glinted off his death-white skin in sharp 
contrast to the dull black star on his forehead.
      She gasped and started to back away, but he sensed it and 
reached out, catching a hold of her arm and adopting a less feral 
expression.  "Tenkou, wait-- please."
       "You're not human," she concluded, her voice shaking.  "You 
were serious."
       He nodded, a pained expression on his face.  "I wasn't 
joking."
      "But..." she stammered.  "But... you're not-- you're 
Zellar... how could you--"
       He raised a hand, and her voice stopped.  "It's 
complicated, Tenkou, and it is something I'll have to force you to 
keep a secret."  He stopped and shifted his eyes to the edge of 
his peripheral vision.  "Perhaps we can talk about it another 
time?  There's something I have to do right now."  He let go of 
her arm.  "Get out of sight and don't follow me, no matter what 
you hear.  It's very important."  He turned with a swirl of his 
cape and approached the temple with a look of determination on his 
face.
       "What are you?" Tenkou asked.
       Darkness looked back at her. She couldn't see any trace of 
Zellar in that hardened expression, even though the creature had 
his regal features and soft, gentle tone of voice.  "Something you 
should have gone through life without ever having known existed.  
I wouldn't hurt you, Tenkou, but there is something else here that 
would."
       She looked around, stepping closer to him while doing it.  
"I don't see anyone."
      "It's still inside the temple," he told her, "but it's 
coming out."  He pointed to the two glints of red in the darkness 
of the Temple's entrance.
      "Eyes," she whispered, and he nodded.
      "I'd prefer it if you stayed behind me," he told her.  "You 
stand less chance of getting hurt."
      Tenkou defiantly stepped up in front of him.  "I can take 
care of myself, Mr. Darkness."
     "It appears you have your hands full, my dear Kurayamino-
san," a feminine voice purred from the temple entrance, in 
Japanese.  "Are you really going to bother protecting such an 
ungrateful wretch?"
     He froze and then smiled coldly.  "Come to do your own dirty 
work?" he asked, also switching to Japanese.  "Well, it must be my 
lucky night."
     The eyes glowed an eerie red.  "So, your vengeful desire 
still burns after all these years, my dear Kurayamino-san."
     Darkness smirked.  "You don't forget the one who first 
teaches you to grieve, Yasha.  So, is it to finally end tonight?"
     "Not tonight, dear Kurayamino-san," Yasha replied.  "Tonight 
will simply be another lesson for you."  A beautiful woman stepped 
out from the shadows.  Long dark green hair framed her face, and 
her heavy-lashed gold-red eyes met his.  Her black gown was 
strapless and long, dragging across the ground.  Darkness and 
shadows seemed to cling to her, sweeping out from her feet as she 
glided forward.
      She inspected Tenkou.  "Welcome to my temple, little girl," 
she laughed.  "A place where many pretty young things have met 
their end." She smiled at him.  "You remember the last darling 
that I stole from you, Kurayamino-san.  Perhaps, I should let the 
blood of this one drip down my black altar..."
      His eyes narrowed.  "Shut up!  You won't lay a finger on 
Tenkou."
      Yasha laughed, enjoying how he clenched his fists and grit 
in teeth in rage.  "I've always thought it was time that you found 
a new love, anyway, Kurayamino-san," she told him.  "I suppose 
she's no Tenshi, but she does resemble the other little girl, 
doesn't she?"
      Tenkou stared at the strange green woman.  "Tenshi?  My name 
is Tenkou Stone and I--"
      "I know who you are." Yasha snapped her fingers, and ropes 
of cold shadows encased Tenkou.  "And I know what I'm going to do 
to you."  She laughed as the shadows began to seep into Tenkou.  
"Think you can save this one, _chiisai hoshi_?"
      The shadow ropes tightened, and Tenkou gasped as the world 
faded away.  

*

      Darkness drove, his hand grasping at the last of the 
shadows, but it was too late.  They slipped through his fingers 
and seeped into the ground.  He spun, getting to his feet and 
glaring at the Demon Queen as he did.  "She was nothing to you," 
he snarled.  "Why did you take her?"
       "True, she was nothing to _me_."  Yasha smiled coldly.  
"But she was something to you, Kurayamino-san."
      "You bitch," he hissed.  "Why do you have to involve 
innocent people in your stupid little games?"
       She frowned.  "Now, now, Kurayamino-san.  You should speak 
to me with a little bit of respect.  I haven't killed your 
precious little girl, only detained her.  She dreams-- for now."  
Yasha crept forward and reached out a hand, caressing his cheek.  
"Come, my dearest, is she really that special?  You barely knew 
this girl, and she discovered your secret.  I think I've done you 
a favor by removing her."
      "Then why haven't you killed her?" he asked, bitterly as he 
reached up and caught her hand, removing it from his face.
      Yasha smiled.  "Why she's bait, of course.  We can't have a 
battle without bait, dear.  You know that."  She looked at him 
seriously.  "You claim you wish to end this little century old 
contest of ours and I have always tried to please you."  She 
slipped her hand from his gasp and stepped back into the shadows 
of the Temple.  "Come to my throne tomorrow night and we'll have 
this battle you so desperately seek.  I'll even let the girl walk 
away with you if you win."
       "I suppose I have to swear myself to you if I lose," he 
remarked.
        She nodded. "I prefer to keep the traditional terms.  
Tomorrow night, my dear, or would you like to have a night to 
mope?"
       Darkness glared at her.  "I'll come to your throne 
tomorrow."
       "Bring me something pretty." Yasha blew him a kiss as she 
vanished inside the temple.

*

      The first pink hues of dawn reached up and chased away the 
twilight blues of night, then minutes later the golden light of 
morning began to flow across the Temple.  The boy with the haunted 
eyes sat on the stairs all alone. A morning zephyr danced across 
the campsite and flickered through his hair.
       No scars showed of what had happened that night; no trace 
of what had become of Tenkou Stone remained to offer condolences 
to those who waited for her in this world.  She had become just 
another disappearance-- another person lost in the period of 
darkness between sunset and sunrise.
       The boy on the steps knew what had happened to her.  He 
alone bore the knowledge and the responsibility.  She had not been 
the first, but there was hope that she might be the last.  The 
battle to decide would take place in a palace of darkness where 
the fine line between dreams and reality was blurred, sometime 
missing completely.
       Victory would mean her freedom and his own.  Chains lifted, 
he might be allowed to move away from this place.  Somewhere else 
he could live as he dreamed, in freedom and peace.  Failure would 
only mean he remained a prisoner, dreaming as he lived-- trapped 
in darkness and always alone.

*

chisaii hoshi means "little star".

*
8:41 pm 03/03/2000
10:03 pm 07/03/2000
5:48 pm 20/05/2000
10.28pm 4/4/2001
10.09 pm 5/24/01
9.16 pm 7/24/02

    Source: geocities.com/tsuki-chan