REVAMPED LEGAL DISCLAIMER: the Sailor Senshi belong to Kodansha and Cloverway, and the Samurai Troopers are the legal property of Sunrise and Bandai Entertainment. I am only borrowing them for a few chapters, and I intend no harm. RONIN SUMMER: CONVERGENCE A Bishoujou Senshi Sailor Moon / Yoroiden Samurai Troopers cross-over by Morgan Hudson "Convergence (n) - the approach of an infinite series to a finite limit." Chapter 8: Distraction and Destruction Radanthus the Unconquered did not sit in the throne room of the Crimson Nadir: he *brooded* in it. Brooding had become a second nature to him, recently, and one that he was loathe to give up easily. He had spent years planning his ultimate takeover of the Dark Kingdom; gathering his troops from the farthest corners of the world and consolidating his already considerable power until there was nobody willing to oppose him openly. For months, he had plotted the doom of the Sailor Senshi - not out of any personal malice, but merely because their deaths would prove his natural superiority to the rest of the realm beyond any question. He had been most careful: never revealing himself, always watching them carefully from the shadows as they had busied themselves with their battles against that foolish Queen Neherenia and her pathetic Dead Moon Circus. He had learned about the Sailor Senshi, and he had been taught about the Samurai Troopers by those who knew them. Their destruction should have been easy. It was, instead, proving very difficult, and this was what had his teeth grinding in frustration. Radanthus had been prepared for his first plan to fail: such things were to be expected when encountering an enemy on open ground for the first time. Nise Suiko's assault on Sailor Mars had been meant as a feint; merely a chance to see if the Moon Princess would respond as expected. Shin Mouri was not supposed to have gotten involved. The Samurai Troopers were supposed to be completely unaware that anything was going on at all, not actively trying to help the Senshi make a mess of everything. Now, with Suiko no Shin so fixated on finding his evil double, Radanthus had lost the ability to use Nise Suiko in the Earth Realm at all. There was no telling when those two would get wind of each other and start fighting again - it had already cost him Vepres and his entire operation at Nango Beach. Such things happened. He had recovered as best as possible, and started working on his second plan: Jadeite. If he could not destroy the Sailor Senshi suddenly or unexpectedly, then he would have to make sure that he had a proper scapegoat set up in case they decided to fight back. There was no point in taking on any of those girls in single combat if he could find an old relic like Jadeite to do it on his behalf. If he was especially lucky, they might even manage to kill the former Shittenou, and he would be able to slay them in revenge. There was nothing like righteous fury over the death of a comrade to win over the troops, especially those who had liked the fallen comrade much more than the one who was doing the avenging. In the meantime, Jadeite would serve as a powerful attraction to any youma warriors who might have still been weighing their options before choosing who to support. That plan would have been perfect, if Badamon had just been able to get Jadeite from one room of the castle to another without losing him. The twisted old priest had been making a lot of convenient mistakes like that lately, and Radanthus was beginning to seriously doubt their accidental nature. The more he thought about it, the better an idea it seemed for him to just eat Badamon at the earliest possible opportunity and save himself the headache of dealing with the vile little creature. It wasn't as though Radanthus was stupid enough to think this his head priest was in any way loyal to him, but the fact remained that Badamon and his Ankoku Priests were simply too useful for him to destroy. If the priest was to be believed, they were already working on a way to weaken Sailor Moon's connection to the ginzuisho, and that was a goal too important for him to interfere with. Even if the disgusting little toad really *did* need to be eaten. Radanthus sighed deeply, a sound that caused the entire room to tremble. Speaking of people who ate things, he had rather expected that Xiang Yao would have managed to fit at least one or two of the Senshi down her gullet by now. He just could not understand why so many of his troops were having trouble beating those girls. There were only five of them, after all, unless one counted Tuxedo Kamen. He knew that Xiang Yao had not killed Tuxedo Kamen, despite her own insistence to the contrary. If something were to happen to that man, Radanthus would have felt it reverberating through his bones. As it was, he knew that Tuxedo Kamen lived in the same way that he knew his arms were both attached. Even now, he was sure that the young prince was hurrying to his princess' side, to defend her from whatever evil might be trying to cause her harm. It was the same thing that Tuxedo Kamen -that Prince Endymion- had always done, even back when Radanthus had known him. That meant Radanthus would need to work quickly, if he wanted to strike at the Senshi before their protector could reach them. Rising from his seat, Radanthus waved one shadowy arm and the wall in front of him rippled like a pool of water. The rock and crystal melted and reformed, shimmering slightly as they parted to reveal the swirling blankness of the void. It had not been easy to learn all the tricks of this ancient castle, but Radanthus had been particularly inspired. With a slight twist of his clawed fingers, he began the task of keying the portal to the appropriate realm. Once, Radnathus' father had used this portal to keep in touch with his masters back on Earth - now Radanthus had taken control of it to make sure none of his minions could escape his grasp. "Fei Lian," he said, focusing his will until the portal took on that particular shade of azure that he had always associated with the inside of his loyal servant's head. "Your master speaks, Fei Lian. Allow me to see through your eyes." The twisting and pulsing threads of blue parted, and slowly the face of Xiang Yao came into focus. The purple-haired woman was kneeling over Fei Lian, with a look of bordeom reflected in her crimson eyes as she idly raised a wicked-looking dagger over her head and prepared to slip it into the youma exposed throat. Radanthus gestured, and Fei Lian's hand shot up to grab her wrist before she could strike. "Oh, you've recovered," she said flatly. "I was about to finish you off so you'd stop slowing me down." "Do so," Radanthus said through Fei Lian's mouth, "and I would be most disappointed in you, Xiang Yao. The conditions of your release were very specific. Should you wish to change those conditions, this is not the way to do it." "Yeah, but if I'd gotten away with it, that damned box would be at the bottom of the ocean by now, and you'd have nothing left to threaten me with," Xiang Yao argued with a shrug of her shoulders. "You can't blame a girl for trying." "Putting you back in that box is the least that I could do to you," Radanthus reminded her. "You were ordered to protect Fei Lian until he had recovered!" "He was taking too long," Xiang Yao explained, slithering out of his grasp and retreating to the other side of the small room to nurse her injured wrist. They were in some kind of domicile, Radanthus noted, as he glanced about through his servant's eyes. Aside from the bed that Fei Lian's body was lying on, the only other things in the room were a wooden table with a number of knives and bottles stacked on it and a mirror that was mounted in the ceiling for some reason, reflecting the light of a score of small candles that littered the floor. Red light streamed in through the cracked and dirty window, casting Xiang Yao in a hellish glow as she stared at him petulantly. "Fei Lian may take as long as he wishes," Radanthus decreed, giving the woman a stern glare. "He has earned that right. Do not forget that it was he who freed you, Xiang Yao, and he who trapped both Sailor Jupiter and Touma Hashiba in the Castle of Eternal Regret. You are to leave him as he is, do you understand?" "Yes, of course," Xiang Yao sighed, walking over to the table and fitting a cigarette into her ebony holder. Picking up one of the nearby candles, she held the flamt to it until it lit. The serpentine tattoo that crawled across her face shifted and moved slightly as she drew in a mouthful of smoke and allowed it to trickle from the corner of her lips. "It really is rather boring here, though - I haven't had the chance to kill anyone in at least a day or so. I even had to pay for those medical supplies, instead of just knifing the shopkeeper and taking whatever I wanted. Do you have any idea how degrading that was for me?" "You have been most patient," Radanthus admitted, nodding Fei Lian's head sagely, "and now I think the time has come to reward that patience. I have a mission for you, Xiang Yao: alone." "Keep talking," she said, taking another pull from her cigarette and trying to look uninterested, but Radanthus could tell from the way her eyes had gleamed at the word 'alone' that he had her where he wanted her. Xiang Yao was the sort who would chafe under any kind of supervision, no matter how inobtrusive. Handled properly, her own desire to be unfettered would provide him with a very useful way to keep her firmly under his control. "You know the Sailor Senshi are in Yokohama," he said, and she nodded in silent reply. "I want you to go there, alone, and deal with them." "Okay," Xiang Yao said, after a moment's silence. Leaning back in the window frame, she contemplated the curlicules of smoke rising from her cigarette. "I'll do it. Consider them dead." "I have one condition, though," Radanthus warned her. "Do whatever you like to Sailor Mars and Sailor Mercury, but the Moon Princess is not to be harmed. She is too powerful for us to confront directly at this time." "If you insist," Xiang Yao sighed, carefully examining her nails. The ones on the left hand were laquered a bilous green colour, and seemed to glisten wetly in the throbbing crimson light that filtered through the window. "You will need to move quickly," Radanthus continued, scowling at her demeanour. He was accustomed to at least a little bit of subdued terror in his presence, even if it was filtered through a subordinate. "Sailor Venus is probably already on her way to assist them - as is Tuxedo Kamen." "Found an antidote, did he?" she mused, with a cheerful smile. "Well, good: I was afraid this might be getting too easy." "Do not underestimate those two," Radanthus said. "Sailor Venus is the most experienced of the Sailor Senshi, and Tuxedo Kamen has long been a thorn in the Dark Kingdom's side. They will no doubt seek to confront us again." "I tremble with anticipation," Xiang Yao sighed, as she began to examine the nails on her other hand. "Powerful or not, oh high and mightily concerned, Sailor Venus and Tuxedo Kamen can do nothing if they cannot get to Yokohama. I think I can find a way to slow them down." "What are you going to do, Xiang Yao?" "I'm going to have some fun," Xiang Yao replied, as she gently flicked her thumb against the tip of her right index finger. With a metallic noise, the purple fingernail on that finger suddenly lengthened into a six-inch long spike of gleaming violet crystal. "It's been a while since I've been able to play with any of my pets...." ********** Deep within the bowels of the Crimson Nadir, Badamon smiled to himself. It was a mirthless smile, the kind of grimace that was usually found on bare skulls, and the light in his eyes was cold and hard as he stroked his bony chin thoughtfully. "So," he said to himself, his fingers twisting and forming themselves into the proper sigils to end his scying spells, "our master Radanthus wishes to send Xiang Yao against the Senshi, as I had feared. Clearly, this will not do." The shadows behind him shifted slightly, and the tattered old wizard gave a dry chuckle. Nise Suiko could be surprisingly stealthy, for one so lacking in subtlety, but Badamon could always tell when the youma was near. If nothing else, he could rely on the faint musty aroma of stagnant water, rotting fish, and algae that seemed to follow his servant around as a sure sign of his presence. Nise Suiko carried the scent of death on him: Badamon liked that in a subordinate. "Your timing is impeccable," he said, bobbing his head slightly in recognition. Nise Suiko responded by stepping forward into the feeble light cast by Badamon's crystal ball and staring impassively down at the smaller robed figure. The youma was clad in his distinctive scarlet and ebony yoroi, a leathery carapace of chitin and skin that rasped against itself with every motion. Thin rivulets of crimson slime oozed out from between the cracks between each plate of armour, trickling down his body and pooling on the floor. Somewhere behind his impassive ivory faceplate, twin points of ruby light sparkled as he gripped his trident and held it at the ready. "Yeah, whatever," he said in a sepulchral tone. "What's the big idea, dragging me back up here, old man? I thought we discussed this." "Xiang Yao will soon be interfering with our plans, Nise Suiko," Badamon explained, still staring into the depths of his own crystal ball instead of bothering to face the armoured warrior. "I think it is time that you went to Yokohama." ********** Seiji Date leaned back and rested his head against the cool glass window of the subway car. Luckily for them, the subways were still up and running without any trouble - ever since one of the trains on the Yamanote line crashed a few days ago, JR East had been having a hard time getting anything through. Nearly the entire Minato ward was caught in a vicious snarl; some trains were being re-routed to new tracks, others were being delayed, and still more were just plain not arriving. For a company that prided itself on never being more than six seconds behind schedule, it was proving to be a massive problem for Japan Railways. Seiji made a mental note to contact the family accontant and have him start buying up stock while people's confidence in the company was still low. Concern over a late train or two might cause the price to waver, but in a few weeks all anybody was going to remember was that JR East had managed to have a train jump the rails and skid through downtown Mita without any of the passengers getting anything worse than a sprained wrist. Assuming, of course, that nobody counted the passenger that had never gotten off the train that night at all. Seiji was just guessing, but the more he thought about it the more it seemed like his old partner Touma had been on that train. There was no way that a train with more than eleven cars would just hop off its tracks and do a backflip for no good reason. According to the photos in the newspaper, the front car had actually gone up and over the entire length of the train's body before touching down again. Things that warped and crazy only happened to him and four other people that he knew. Seiji hoped he was wrong. It wasn't like he could be sure: all he had to go on was a cryptic phone call from Ryo about 'trouble' -which, knowing Ryo, could mean anything from a flat tire to an invasion by the armies of the Evil Dynasty- and a few vague reports about a blue streak that had zipped through the train and carted everybody off to safety while it was in mid-air. It wasn't making him any more happy that he had managed to blunder into a battlefield within twenty minutes of coming to Jubaan, but that didn't necessarily mean anything. According to the guy he had patched up, they had random fights with the forces of evil every other week around these parts. He shook his head and sighed. Logic be damned, he could tell that this was going to end up involving him somehow before it was all over. Something about the whole situation was giving him the same 'I am about to be cosmically screwed' feeling he used to get every time Ryo told him that things were "under control". It was like a sixth sense that warned him when explosions were imminent. No, no matter how much he wanted to deny it, Touma Hashiba was gone, and that had Seiji worried for a number of reasons. First of all, Touma was the smartest human being that Seiji knew, and exactly the kind of guy that you wanted to have around in a fight. If someone had targeted him first, that meant they knew the Troopers far better than Seiji wanted them to. With Touma missing, it also meant the rest of them couldn't form the Kikoutei armour, and that left them vulnerable. Seiji just hoped that the Sailor Senshi knew a trick or two that would help them compensate. Opening one eye slightly, Seiji glanced over at the blonde girl sitting six seats down from him. Now that he thought about it, maybe it wouldn't be a bad idea for him to talk to her a little bit and try to get a better idea about what the Sailor Senshi could offer against whoever this new enemy was. Just comparing notes couldn't end too badly, right? It wasn't like he was going to proposition her, or anything. He was just trying to form a plan. Totally professional. He was sure that she would understand. Rising from his seat, Seiji inched across the aisle of the gently rocking subway and squeezed his way past some of the people standing in his way with a muttered apology. Aside from Mamoru Chiba and himself, there were no other men in this section of the train - its windows bore the distinctive pink seals of a 'lady's car', a car normally reserved for women only in order to protect them from perverts. Another bad side effect of the normal trains being down was that the subway was even more crowded than usual, and there had been nowhere else for them to go. The last thing he wanted any of these girls to do was think he might be some kind of deviant. The trick was to keep his hands in sight and above his head at all times, so that they knew he wouldn't be doing anything untowards. Pushed off-balance by a stray elbow to his spine, Seiji deftly caught himself on one of the thick leather straps that dangled from the ceiling for just that purpose and smiled down at the target of his attentions. "Hi," he said, brushing the thick shag of blond hair out of his eyes for a few seconds before his bangs stubbornly tumbled back over his face as usual. "Sorry for the intrusion, but I was just thinking that since we're going to working together for a while, maybe we should get to know each other better." "Well," the girl mused, tapping her finger against her lips in a thoughtful manner, "I don't *usually* go out on dates with random boys when the world is in danger. On the other hand, since you did come all the way over here, it's only fair of me to accept...." "What? NO!" Seiji shook his head frantically, as a chill ran down his spine. Why did this always happen every time he spoke in front of a girl? They always jumped to the wrong conclusion, and then he wound up getting tackled. Panicking, he took a hasty step backwards and bumped into the office lady standing behind him. He was completely surrounded by women! Oh, God, there was nowhere to *run*! "Are you sure?" the girl asked, raising one eyebrow. "I mean, I am willing to make an exception, here. It seems kind of rude to not ask a girl out when she's already accepted. A lesser woman might think you were uninterested." "Minako, stop teasing the poor boy!" a voice whispered from inside her purse. "He looks like he's going to have a stroke!" "Well, if he *hasn't* been completely awestruck by my amazing good looks and impeccable poise yet, then why did he come over here?" Minako argued with her bag. "It's the only logical reason!" "I just thought we could, you know, discuss strategy, and such," Seiji stammered. "Compare powers, find out what our strengths are, that kind of thing! I didn't want to- I mean, you're cute, but I'm not too sure that we should be thinking about that sort of thing...." "That seems very sensible," the purse agreed. "You should try to take things more seriously, too, Minako." "Luna, you should never interrupt a boy when he is talking about how cute he thinks I am!" Minako said sternly. "That is no way to repay me for smuggling you onto this train - at great personal expense to myself, by the way." "You sealed me in your handbag!" the purse objected, hopping a few inches off of the seat. "You'd never do this sort of thing to Artemis!" "Of course not," Minako admitted. "I'd just wear Artemis around my neck and claim he was a scarf. You clashed with my blouse and wouldn't stay still." "I am not a fashion accessory!" the purse shouted, and Minako quickly clapped her hands over the clasp as a few of the nearby women turned and gave her a curious look. Smiling innocently, the blonde girl clutched her large red bag to her chest and batted her eyelashes at them until they went back to minding their own business. "If this is a bad time, I can come back later," Seiji offered. "No!" Minako said quickly, reaching out and grabbing his wrist with surprising strength. "I mean, I like your idea, Seiji. We really should get to know each other better. Why don't you sit next to me for the rest of the trip? We can talk about all sorts of stuff!" "Won't your talking purse object?" he asked, scratching his head. "Not if it knows what's good for it," she answered, shifting over slightly and patting the cushion next to her. "Besides, it's not really a talking purse: that would be crazy. It's actually a talking cat that's hiding INSIDE my purse." "Oh," Seiji said, nodding wisely. "Well, that makes a lot more sense." The disturbing thing was that it kind of did, to him. After all, everybody who was anybody in the Sailor V fan club knew that she had a talking cat who helped her solve all of her crimes. It wasn't too hard to imagine that the other Sailor Senshi like Minako might have talking pets, too.... He was about to sit down when he felt it. Like a sudden jolt that ran through his entire body, the familiar tingle of his armour's power coursed through his veins. In the window, he could see a glowing kanji flare to life on his forehead with an emerald light that flickered briefly in his eyes before fading back into obscurity. There was something evil nearby. He couldn't explain it, but somehow ever fibre of his being was warning him that he was in danger. **Touma was attacked on a train...** Eyes narrowing, the young man turned and cast his gaze over the crowd of women that filled the car. There were girls in school uniforms, office ladies on their way home from work, mothers with groceries and the usual blend of teens who were taking the 'gothic and lolita bible' way too seriously, but no sign of any demons or Masho. "Are you okay?" Minako asked, giving Seiji a suspicious look. "Yeah," Seiji said cautiously, as he shook his head and tried to ignore the sickening tingle he could feel in the base of his spine. Any minute now, his armour was telling him, the roof was going to give way and it was going to start *raining* Dynasty Soldiers, and they were all going to be screwed. At the end of the car stood a young Chinese woman, dressed in a dazzling red silk dress with golden scale patterns. Her long purple hair stirred slightly in the breeze, and Seiji scowled as he realised that they were both indoors. There was something about that woman that was setting his armour off like a fire alarm, and mysterious breezes from nowhere were not doing anything to make him more comfortable. "Xiang Yao," Mamoru Chiba hissed, emerging from the crowd like a shadow. The dark-haired young man was dressed almost entirely in black, with a dull olive jacket his only concession to colour; a suit that helped him blend into his surroundings much better than the tuxedo and domino mask that Tuxedo Kamen usually wore in battle. Judging from the look on his face, he was probably going to change into his evening wear at any moment. "THAT'S Xiang Yao?" Seiji asked, taking another look at the woman. Their eyes met, and he locked gazes with her boiling crimson irises as she smiled wickedly and bobbed her head in greeting. Seiji had seen eyes like that before, and they had never been on anybody who had wished him well. "I'm honoured you remember me," Xiang Yao replied with a demure smile as she bowed slightly. "Racing to the rescue, are we? How heroically disgusting of you. In case you haven't figured it out, my employer frowns on last minute reinforcements. They cramp his style, and more importantly, mine." "How did you find us?" Mamoru asked, edging forward slightly. Seiji stepped aside to keep a bit of space between them, in case Xiang Yao tried to use some kind of projectile attack, and bumped into one of the other girls on the train. She rocked slightly on their heels, then toppled over sideways like a felled log, completely stiff and immobile. Some kind of hypnosis, possibly - they were the only ones on the train still able to move. "That's not the question you ought to be asking," Xiang Yao replied, as the nails on her right hand flashed purple and extended into long spikes of gleaming crystal. Within each razor-edged claw, a shadowy form moved and swirled like a jungle cat pacing the length of its cage. "The real question here is: what am I going to do with you?" Scowling, Mamoru reached into his jacket and began to step forward, only to stop when Minako reached out and grabbed his wrist. "Train full of innocent people, remember?" she muttered under her breath. After a moment, Mamoru nodded reluctantly and slowly eased his hand back out into plain sight, a long-stemmed rose dangling loosely from his fingers. "Well, since none of you are going to give me an excuse, I guess I'll have to just handle this on my own," Xiang Yao said with a smirk. She gestured emphatically, and one of her purple talons flew down the length of the train. Quickly intercepting himself in front of Mamoru and Minako, Seiji crossed his arms in front of his face and braced himself. Whatever was in that thing, his armour made him the best able to deal with it.... Halfway to them, the crystal shattered into a coruscating ball of energy that grew in size until it was almost filling the cabin. Seiji flinched back slightly as a giant pair of clawed hands burst out of the oncoming wall of purple fire and slammed into his chest. Gasping for breath, the young man was hurled backwards with violet flames trailing after him like the tail of an angry comet. The rear wall of the train gave like tinfoil, and he hurtled into the cool damp air of the subway tunnel head first. A pair of eyes gleamed at him from the depths of the fireball, and he heard a thunderous growl as a shape began to take form from the massive swirl of eldritch flame. Glancing over his shoulder, Seiji saw the cold gleam of the steel rails flashing past beneath them and growing ever closer. He hit the ground in a flurry of sparks, skipping back into the air and slamming back down again with the squealing sound of metal on metal. The two of them skidded back down the tunnel for several feet before the friction of Seiji's body scraping against the tracks finally brought him to a shuddering halt and the crushing weight of his attacker was hurled free of him. The young man lay where he had fallen, smoke curling around his body as it rose from the ground beneath him. After a moment, Seiji coughed and sat up, his cream-coloured shirt falling away from his back in long tatters of silk to reveal the emerald green plates underneath. Looking down at the smoldering and filthy rags that *used* to be one of his nicest outfits, he sighed in disgust and shook his head. Tearing the rest of the suit off with a sharp tug, Seiji tossed it over his shoulder and turned to face his opponent, clad in sleek green and white armour that he had not been wearing a few minutes ago. "Great," he spat, flipping his hair out of the way with a jerk of his head and dropping into a defensive stance. "Now I'm going to have to buy a new shirt. I hope you're happy, you tin-plated...." The youma emerged from the shadows, its tail lashing angrily behind it as its growled. It stood almost twice as tall as Seiji did, with a thick mane of golden hair that swirled about its heavy skull and a large horn of purple crystal jutting from its brow. Despite himself, Seiji recoiled in surprise. He had been expecting some kind of armoured demon, like Saranbou, or a spectral wraith like the Ankoku Priests. This thing looked like some kind of sick blend between a lion and a man, with massive sabre-like fangs in its maw and giant clawed paws instead of hands. It was *drooling*. "Wow," Seiji said, as he struggled to regain his composure, "you're even ugly in the dark, aren't you? Arago must have thrown you out of the Dynasty on general principles." The beast let out a roar that shook loose a rain of dirt from the ceiling and charged, swiping at the smaller boy with a massive paw. Ducking under its extended arm, Seiji darted forward and drove his knee into the monster's stomach. Before it could react, he had already punched it twice in the ribs, circling around it and giving it a parting kick to the spine as he leapt clear and landed in a crouch several feet away. Gasping, the boy staggered and fell to his knees as pain jolted from his heel all the way to his thigh. Looking down, Seiji ran his fingers along the side of his metal greave and watched in surprise as the enchanted steel cracked and crumbled away at his touch. As the youma turned to face him and slowly rose to its full height, he lifted his fists and noticed for the first time that his gauntlets were equally twisted and broken from striking the creature. Blood flowed weakly from between the cracked metal, dripping onto the concrete floor. With a deep chortle, the youma began to advance slowly towards Seiji, closing the distance between them as it casually cracked each one of its knuckles in sequence and rolled its shoulders as if limbering up for a bit of light exercise. Seiji groaned and grabbed onto the pipes that lined the side of the tunnel, painfully dragging himself to his feet as it drew closer. "BUSSO, KORIN!" he called out, raising one hand above his head as the monster neared and feeling the power of his armour surge inside of him as it responded to his cry. The lights in the ceiling burst with a stacatto of loud pops, showering sparks and broken glass upon the two combatants and plunging the tunnel into a darkness broken only by the eerie glow of writhing electricity rising from the rails like a web of blue lightning. The youma roared angrily as the tracks flared into life, their power surging in thick arcs that streaked through the air and met directly in front of him. The air sizzled, and there was a sudden flash of light like burning magnesium, casting the entire tunnel into sharp relief as Seiji Date's body absorbed the surging current. There was a rush of wind as the crackling ball of energy surrounding the boy imploded and left him clad in his full armour. It stood nearly half a foot taller than Seiji had alone, sheated from head to toe in overlapping plates of emerald and black steel that glowed softly in the shadows of the tunnel. A jagged no-dachi jutted from the ground between him and the youma, its shuriken-shaped hilt level to his eyes as he stepped forward and drew it out of the concrete. Despite its immense size, the armoured figure lifted the sword with one hand as though it were a rapier. "Now, let's try that again," Korin no Seiji said quietly, his voice echoing slightly from behind the scuplted silver mask that covered his face. The beast was on top of him before he could blink, driving him to the ground with its immense weight and striking him in the face. Its claws screeched against his mask, and Seiji's head was rocked back by the force of the blow. The youma's fangs closed on Seiji's neck, the metal of his throat guard squealing and buckling under the pressure of its powerful jaws as he drove the spiked pommel of his sword into its stomach and tried to lever it off of him. All he needed was to get enough distance between them to swing his sword, and it would all be over. Seeming to have the same idea, the youma growled menacingly and wrapped its paw around the young samurai's wrist, twisting and wrenching at his arm until his fingers opened of their own accord and the no dachi tumbled to the ground nearby. Gritting his teeth, Seiji brought his knees up to his chest and kicked upwards, planting his feet in the monster's abdomen and launching it off of him. Rolling onto his stomach, he scrambled towards the place where sword lay glistening on the subway rails. Plunging its claws into the side of the tunnel in mid-flight, the youma nimbly pivoted its body and reversed direction, soaring back towards Seiji and bounding off of the opposite wall before catching him by one of the metal spurs that hung from his heels. With a single tug, the beast hauled Seiji into the air and quickly spun him around with both hands before throwing him down the length of the tunnel like a hammer. Flipping head over heels, the armoured boy thrust his hand against the floor, digging a broken trench in the concrete with his fingers as he skidded to a halt and landed in a crouch. More than thirty feet back the way he had come, the youma snorted derisively and made a beckoning gesture. "Don't let it go to your head, fuzzy," Seiji said with a grim smile. "You may be strong, but smell isn't everything!" Racing up the tracks with superhuman speed, the boy vaulted over his enemy's head, wrapping his arms securely around its neck as he landed behind it and drove its head into the ground. There was a crack that echoed through the cavernous tunnel like a gunshot as the concrete broke from the impact, and Seiji took advantage of the opportunity to dive for his sword. Grabbing the Korin Ken, he rolled to his feet and turned to face the monster just as it shook the last of the debris out of its mane and regained its footing. In the distance, a faint light began to filter through the tunnel and the metal rails started to hum softly as they vibrated in their moorings. Seiji's blade erupted in a thick cloud of azure energy, trailing a swirling stream of electricity behind him as he raised the sword above his head and the world seemed to flicker in and out of focus. "THUNDERBOLT CUT!" he yelled, his voice nearly drowned out by the howling of the wind that rushed past them both as he snapped his sword down and sent a wavering arc of energy flying from the edge of the blade towards the youma. The beast staggered back, reeling from the force of the blast, and hurled a piece of broken concrete in return, catching Seiji in the head and knocking him sprawling across the tracks. The howling grew louder as Seiji sat up and tried to get the ringing out of his ears. Spitting out a gobbet of blood, the young samurai retracted his silver facemask into the beak of his helmet and wiped his mouth on the back of his armoured gauntlet. A blinding light flooded the tunnel, and Seiji looked up to see the rumbling mass of an oncoming train. Its brakes screeched hopelessly as it hurtled towards him like a wall of steel, and Seiji braced himself for the inevitable impact. "VENUS LOVE-ME CHAIN!" A loop of glittering hearts fluttered around the armoured boy, gleaming and tightening around his torso even as they changed into links of golden chain. There was a sudden tug, and Seiji found himself flying through the air as the train thundered past beaneath him in a blur of silver and orange. He watched as it disappeared into the distance, rounding the corner and vanishing into the shadows as he landed heavily on his side and rolled over. On the other end of the chain, Sailor Venus smiled and gave him a jaunty salute with her index and middle fingers before forming them into a 'V' shape and winking. Standing slightly behind her with his back turned, Tuxedo Kamen glanced over his shoulder and tipped the brim of his top hat in greeting. "Venus, check on Seiji and make sure he's alright," the masked man said, striding forwards and drawing his cane like a sword. "I'll keep our furry youma friend busy." "Sorry it took us so long to get here," Venus said apologetically, as she quickly knelt beside Seiji and began to examine him, "but Xiang Yao sicced all her zombies on us. She gave us the slip while we were fighting them off, so we figured we should head over here and see if you needed any help. Good thing we did, huh?" "Very good," Seiji agreed, struggling slightly. "Would you mind untying me?" "A little," Minako admitted with a smile, as she began to loosen the chain wrapped around him. In the distance, Tuxedo Kamen parried the youma's claws with a twirl of his cane and flicked the rose off of his lapel into its face. There was an explosion of crimson light, and when the smoke cleared the beast was completely unharmed. Roaring, it swiped at the masked man, who backpeddaled frantically to avoid its razor-sharp talons. "So, any ideas why Xiang Yao would just toss a youma at us and run?" Minako asked, watching as Tuxedo Kamen ducked under its claws and thrust his cane into its knee, only to have the ornate walking stick splinter harmlessly. "I mean, she could have stayed and fought us herself, after all. Kinda seems like that would be more her style." "I think it's obvious," Seiji groaned, as he clambered back to his feet. "Thanks to her, we just missed our train. She must be up to something in Yokohama, and she didn't want us wrecking her fun. Wherever our friends are right now, they're probably in a lot of trouble." ********** "I'm telling you, man, this is the perfect plan!" Shuu Rei Fuan gushed, draping his arm around his friend's shoulders. The stocky Chinese boy was dressed in a baggy pair of dark brown overalls and a porkpie hat that struggled to cover as much of his shaggy head as possible. A pair of cheap plastic sunglasses that lay rakishly across the bridge of his nose was his one concession to the brilliant sunshine that streamed down upon them as they sauntered down the crowded street. "Isn't that what you said about your plan to make popcorn in the industrial rice cooker?" Shin Mouri asked, with a note of concern in his voice. Unlike his friend, who had refused to allow the weather to cramp his own unique sense of style, Shin had been more than willing to pack away his usual collection of sweaters in favour of a pair of light khaki pants and a short-sleeved silk shirt with swirling patterns of blue and white covering it. He frowned and ran one hand through his auburn hair self-consciously. "I seem to recall spending rather a lot of time picking caramel out of my hair after that incident...." "Hey, that was a total fluke," Shuu argued, waving his hand as if to brush away the other boy's concerns with it. "Touma spent all day trying to overclock that thing, and he was as surprised as we were when it blew. Nobody could have predicted that was going to happen." "I would still feel better if Ryo were with us," Shin argued. Somewhere in the back of his head, he could tell that there was a voice trying to remind him of all the other times he had listened to Shuu Rei Fuan and gotten in trouble. Unfortunately, the cursed thing never seemed to be loud enough to overwhelm Shuu's own natural exuberance. "Ryo is still sleeping off his date with Ami Mizuno," Shuu reminded him with a slight frown. "Besides, that boy has had enough fun to last him for a while. He is on fun rationing until we can catch up." "I don't want to catch up with Ryo," Shin said plaintively. "I want to find Nise Suiko and get to the bottom of all this! Come on, Shuu; can't we just nip back to the house and go over those charts one more time? I'm sure we must be overlooking something-" "NO!" Shuu replied sternly, nudging down his sunglasses and glaring at Shin over the colourful plastic rims. "No more charts, no more tactics, and no more obsessing over Nise Suiko! I'm not going to let my best buddy wreck his whole summer vacation with studying when we could be out having some fun. Look at us, man! There is no reason that two guys as cool, rich, and handsome as us should be forced to spend this much time together. We should have steady girlfriends, or at least a string of meaningless physical relationships! We're standing in the middle of Yokohama, the babe capital of Japan, and all you can think about is your evil twin? That's just sick, dude: sick and wrong." "Well, I suppose it wouldn't hurt to take a *little* break," Shin admitted, shoulders slumping in defeat as Shuu gave him a cheerful slap on the back. "That's more like it! Now, the Yokohama Stadium is just around this corner, and the Baystars game should be starting in a couple of minutes. They're playing the Hanshin Tigers, and you know how crazy Touma is for those guys, so we'll buy some souvenirs and try to get him an autograph. That should make him feel better - last time I talked to him he was still kind of upset about how I sold him to some girl over the internet." Shuu rolled his eyes and made a face. "Some guys, huh? Go figure. Anyway, I figure after we catch the game we can walk around the city and see if we can't find some babes. It'll be great!" "Are you sure about all this?" Shin asked, raising one eyebrow dubiously. "Yeah, why not? Worst case, at least we got out of the house and saw a decent ball game. Ryo can hold down the fort while we're gone, and it's not like we're going to miss anything important." Shuu shrugged and grinned widely, ruffling Shin's hair. "Just relax, man. I'll go get the tickets; you stay here and keep an eye out for any cute girls, okay?" "Will do," Shin promised, giving a mocking salute as his friend disappeared into the crowd. Thrusting his hands into his pockets, the young man rocked back on forth on his heels as he hummed quietly to himself and watched the crowd rushing past him. Back home in Yamaguchi, a chap would be lucky if he saw this many people all day, let alone in one place. How did anyone manage to get anything done in the middle of so much chaos? His slightly bemused smile faded before it even had the chance to fully appear. At least if he was still back home, he would have had the advantage of knowing the terrain. There would have been a lot fewer places to hide, too, if Nise Suiko had tried to attack him in the heart of his clan's territory. In this huge metropolis, Shin was almost literally a fish out of water. Hagi City was hardly a rural little suburb, but Yokohama made him feel like he had just fallen off of a passing turnip truck. It was too big, too noisy, and too fast for his tastes. In a crowd like this, he could walk right past Nise Suiko and not even see the blackguard until it was too late. He was hunting for a monster that wanted him dead, and for all the luck he was having, he might as well be trapped in an alien dimension. ********** "This sucks," Ann groused, as she clambered down a jagged pile of debris that had been left behind in a recent landslide. Her dark maroon jumpsuit was sticking to her skin, and her usually untamed pink hair hung limply around her shoulders as she panted for breath. There were several rips and tears in her clothes, revealing patches of pale green skin, and her entire body was smeared with dust and grime. "It's hot, and muggy, we're probably surrounded by things that want to eat us, and worst of all, everything in this stupid dimension smells like eggs! This is the worst secret mission ever!" "If you're not careful, it's going to be the *shortest* secret mission ever," her partner admonished her, as he nimbly dropped to the ground next to her. Much to Ann's annoyance, her male counterpart was still in pristine condition, with barely even a blue hair out of place. "Elios warned us about this Radanthus guy - he's got spies everywhere. If we want to convince him we're on his side, you might not want to be going on about how we're on a secret mission. Just a suggestion." "Oh, what are you so worried about, Ail?" Ann asked, sitting on a nearby boulder and beginning to massage her sore foot with both hands. "Elios said that Radanthus wasn't watching us, remember? That's the whole reason he sent us out here in the first place." "That was before we walked into his backyard," Ail said, casting a worried glance over his shoulder. "Just because he wasn't watching us before doesn't mean he isn't watching us right now." Ann snorted and made a face. "Ooh, listen to the big, fancy, secret... mission-taking... guy." "Agent," Ail reminded her. "Whatever," she said, with a dismissive gesture. "The point is, I'm hot and tired and I want to go home. This whole thing was a bad idea from the start." "Well, if you thought so, why didn't you say something?" "I DID! I very specifically dragged you off by your pointy little ears and told you that this was the stupidest idea ever and we shouldn't go along with it." "Oh, yeah." Ail rubbed the pointed tip of his left ear, wincing slightly at the memory. "Well, in that case, why did you come?" "Because you're completely hopeless without me, and you know it," Ann explained, as she began to rub her other foot. "You couldn't pick a cardian to save your life." "I could so," Ail argued, placing his hands on his hips and frowning slightly. "I've been working very hard at it, lately. I've practically got one or two of them willing to listen to me." "Right," Ann said, giving her partner a disbelieving look. "So, if we got attacked by an army of youma right now, what cardian would you summon?" "That's easy," Ail scoffed, reaching into his vest and drawing a large white card. "I'd go with Nixeen." "Nixeen?" Ann laughed. "Nixeen can't fight at all! She's a healing cardian! The only thing Nixeen could do after the fight is heal your wounds by kissing-" Stopping in mid-sentence, the girl narrowed her eyes and glared at her partner. "What?" he asked, blinking at her in confusion. "Give me the card, Ail." "I don't think I should," Ail said cautiously, tucking the card back inside his vest and taking a step further away from the girl. "The card, Ail. Right now." Extending her hand, Ann gestured for him to place it in her open palm. With her other hand, she generated a small web of crackling energy to remind him why he should be listening to her. "But it's my favourite," Ail complained, even as he pulled it out and offered it to her. "I noticed," she said sourly, as she snatched the card away from him and tucked it away inside her own vest. "Why don't we leave Little Miss Kiss-and-Tell with me, hmm? I'd hate for you to get distracted." "There you go again," Ail moaned, sitting on the other side of the same boulder and resting his chin on his fist. "Honestly, Ann, how can you be so insecure? You're the only female in our whole species!" "Maybe I'd be more secure," Ann said, smacking her partner on the back of the head, "if you weren't always off trying to flirt with every other girl in the universe!" "That's barely even halfway true!" Ail argued. "I didn't try to flirt with the leaders of that Amazon tribe on Femax, remember? And they were definitely coming on to me." "They were trying to kill you, moron." "In a very sensual manner! Besides, they didn't really want to hurt me. It was clear that their hearts were conflicted." "Really? Because their axes and spears all seemed to agree." Ann scowled and shook her head. "I still can't believe Fiore convinced me to save you that time." "Heh. Yeah." Ail chuckled at the memory. "Remember how surprised their queen looked when you kicked her in the head? I've never seen somebody that big go down so quickly." "You know, I'm technically still their ruler," Ann reminded him. "I could always take back that pardon I gave you." "Maybe," Ail admitted with a smirk, "but if I wasn't around, you'd be stuck hanging out with Fiore all day, and he'd drive you nuts." "That's the exact same argument he used back on Femax to make me save you in the first place," Ann admitted with a smile of her own. Cautiously she let her hand drape over her partner's, giving his fingers a gentle squeeze of reassurance. It hadn't been easy, after they had left Earth that last time. They had wandered the cosmos for years with their tree, looking for any place that they could belong. It had been a miracle that they had managed to stumble across little Fiore when they had - the poor child had been nearly as lost as they were. "I hope he's all right," Ann sighed. As hot and miserable and uncomfortable as it might be in the Dark Kingdom, she could only imagine how lonely it had to be for Fiore, guarding their tree in the depths of space. He had wanted to come along with them so badly. "He'll be fine," Ail assured her, patting her hand reassuringly. "I keep telling you, Ann, you're too protective of him. Fiore is a lot tougher -and more powerful- than he looks. If anybody tries to hurt the Makaiju, he'll be able to handle them." "He's just a child, Ail! What do you expect him to do, *garden* people to death?" "Something like that, yes," Ail said, looking a bit uncomfortable as he adjusted the embroided gold collar of his dark blue jumpsuit. "Fiore can take care of himself just fine, Ann - we need to focus on what we're doing here and now if we want to get anywhere. The others are depending on us." Ann nodded. Ail was right - that nerdy doctor with the swirly glasses had made it pretty clear to them that his whole plan revolved around them making it into the Crimson Nadir and scouting out the place before Petz and Kaolinite showed up. The problem was, Petz and Kaolinite might have already found a portal in the Arctic, and she and Ail had just spent that last two days climbing first up and then down one of the worst, most treacherous mountains she had ever seen. It felt like they were just as far away from Radanthus and his castle as they had been when they started. A rock clacked loudly, clattering off of its felows as it bounced down the slope of the massive slide behind them and Ann's sensitive ears pricked up noticeably. It wasn't so much the falling rock that was causing her blood to run cold in her veins - rocks shifted and fell all the time in places like this. It was more the fact that under the sound of the rock, she had heard someone hissing under their breath a few dozen feet above them. Ail had been right; they were being followed. A shadowy form billowed up from the ground, its dark cloak swirling around it as it rose into the air in front of them. The youma was garbed in a dark green uniform with gleaming silver armour plates covering its torso and shins that looked for all the world like overlapping razors. Its head was concealed behind a silver helmet, featureless except for the small fans of needles on either side where the ears would be on a human, and an angrily glowing red visor that ran over its eyes. Ann rose to her feet, clenching her fists in anticipation, when she felt Ail's hand on her shoulder. Turning, she looked to see two identical women emerging from the rocks behind them. The two female youma were dressed in pale tan leotards, marked with jagged slashes of chocolate brown fabric and what appeared to be large circular saws rising from their shoulders like epaulets of jagged steel. The only way to tell that they were not clones was that one had her rust-coloured hair hanging over her left eye, and the other preferred to cover her right. "Okay," Ann said, slowly unclenching her fists and forcing herself to relax slightly. "So... what's with all the metal? Is this some kind of strange new fashion thing? Because it's really not working for me." "As if you look any better," one of the twins growled angrily. "Who wears a leotard with a vest, anyway? What are you two, one of those couples who always have to dress alike?" "Like you're one to talk," Ann snapped back. "Seriously, look at the two of you! At least cape boy over here bothered to come up with his own outfit. What, did you two lose a bet?" "I told you these costumes made us look stupid," the shorter of the two twins muttered under her breath, then flinched back slightly as her sister cast her an evil glare. "You have intruded upon our training grounds," the cloaked youma said, hissing menacingly as the cables running from the back of his helm twitched and moved like a nest of snakes. "Worse, you are not known to us. Our master does not approve of spies." "I say we take them out," the older twin suggested, the blades on her shoulders whirring to life for a moment before they slowly returned to a stop. "Let's show the master what we're really capable of!" "Wait," the cloaked youma said warningly. "It was blind ambition that led to our last defeat. First, let me test their power. Hold back until you have seen enough." "Whatever you say, Kamisori," the girls chorused, taking a step back as their leader drifted to the ground to face Ail and Ann. His cape pooled around him, trailing out in all directions and shrouding his entire body in overlapping folds of black leather. "Ann," Ail said cautiously, as he stepped behind his partner and held her in front of him protectively, "I think this nice youma wants to have a few words with you." "Oh, thank you, Ail," Ann muttered, as she rolled her eyes. "My hero. How dashing of you, placing my safety above your own." "Don't mind me," Ail said with a wide smile as he waved at the youma present and wandered over to the boulder that he and Ann had been sitting on. "I can keep myself busy. You all have your own fun - I'll just be over here playing solitaire." "Your mate is quite timid," Kamisori noted coldly. "Oh, he does this all the time," Ann assured her opponent, as she crouched low to the ground and let the eldritch energy of her power start to build around her in a crackling aura of living shadow. "Don't worry about it: I'll keep you entertained." "I certainly hope that you do," Kamisori said. "Our master wishes us to improve for him, and there is always room for more practice." "Practice is over," Ann spat, and lunged towards the youma on all fours like a cat. Her nails flashed, trailing streamers of black lightning as they tore through the air. Bending and folding backwards, the cloaked youma leaned aside as her strike soared past him and shattered against the other side of the canyon in an explosion of dust and rock fragments. Swinging his entire body around at the ankles, Kamisori weaved under Ann and rose, knocking the breath from her as his helmet smashed into her stomach and threw off of her feet. The elfin girl hit the ground hard and rolled to her feet in a single fluid motion, lashing out with a searing whip of living darkness. Kamisori lurched into motion, leaning impossibly far forward and twisting his entire body like a serpent to evade the crakling and popping coil of energy that flicked out at him from her hands. His leather cloak fluttered around him as the youma shot past her and glided in a wide arc that circled back around to face her. Ann smiled. "Nice try, youma, but I think you need a little more training." "I don't," Kamisori replied, and Ann's eyes widened as a sudden torrent of blood sprayed forth from her lips. The world shivered and lost colour as she dropped to one knee, clutching her abdomen. She was bleeding, she noted numbly. He had... cut her? She hadn't even seen a blade. It didn't even hurt. How could he have cut her? Rising to his full height, Kamisori let his cloak fall open slightly as a four-foot long blade as thin as a scapel swung easily into view. With a disdainful flick, he cast her blood off of the slickly glimmering razor. Ann bit her lip and dug her fingers into the ground. The bastard was using his cloak to conceal all of his movements - she had no way of knowing where that cursed blade was going to come from next. She couldn't even tell how many of them he had. Seated comfortably several feet away, Ail looked up from the deck of cards that he was shuffling. The skin tightened slightly around his mouth as his gaze met Ann's, and there was a dangerous light in his eyes as he turned over his first card and laid it down on the boulder in front of him. Ail was not a fighter - he never had been. He could still get angry, though, and Ann knew that he had his own ways of striking out at their enemies. She shook her head slightly, and he relaxed. It wasn't time yet. Besides, if this youma thought that he was going to slow her down with wounds that didn't even hurt he clearly had no idea who he was dealing with. "I am prepared to accept your surrender," Kamisori offered. Ann replied with a feral scream, launching herself at the youma. Her feet left the ground as she hurtled at him, her eyes wide and glowing and her fingers twisting into wicked claws. Kamisori scuttled backwards, bobbing and weaving frantically as Ann's fists flashed past his head and swiped through the air where he had been seconds earlier. He snaked away from one jabbing hand, and there was a thunderous crack as her right cross smashed into his faceplate. Red glass filled the air like crystallised blood as Ann thrust her foot into the centre of his torso and slammed him into the side of the canyon. Leaping back, she deftly avoided his seeking blade and then hurled herself into his stomach, driving him harder against the stone. The blade flashed again, and Ann threw herself out of the way as it flicked past her eyes. Pressing his advantage, Kamisori moved forward and swiped at her face with the razor again. Ann flinched back, and dropped onto all fours, sweeping her leg along the ground in an attempt to trip the youma. Her leg passed through the cloak effortlessly, and Kamisori didn't so much as falter. "What the-?" Ann stammered, looking up at the caped figure as it looked over her. Kamisori chuckled and let his cloak drape open. The youma was not standing at all, but seated in the lotus position as he floated within the safety of his cape. The long razor shone in the afternoon light, and Ann realised that it was attached to one of his toes. There was a soft racheting sound, and another of the blades swung into position on his other foot as well. A matching pair of blades slipped into place on each of his hands, as the youma brandished all four before letting his leather cloak conceal his form once more. Behind the cracked remains of his visor, a trio of thin, glowing red eyes narrowed even further. Kamisori lunged, and Ann threw herself beneath him, passing through his cloak as easily as her trip had earlier. Wind whistled past her ears as she dove under the youma, and thick locks of pink hair drifted lazily through the air between them as she rolled to her feet and he spun to face her again. "You're slowing down," Kamisori noted clinically. "With every breath you take, more precious blood spills from your wound. My cuts are as deep as they are long, young one. Surrender to us now, and there may yet be time to preserve your life." Ann glanced down as something sparkled on the ground. Two small golden hoops, lying in a pool of blood. Shakily, she raised her hand to her ear, where she used to have the most adorable earrings.... Pulling her hand away, she looked at the blood coating her fingers with a sense of disbelief. "You... sliced my ear," she said numbly, as blood began to pour down her cheek, the almost invisible wound that ran the length of her face opening wider as she spoke. "You cut my face." "You cannot hope to prevail," Kamisori said coldly. "You," she seethed, "cut my FACE!" "I am faster and more skilled than you. Continuing to fight will only lead to your own destruction." "YOU CUT MY FACE!" Scourges of dark energy flew from Ann's hands, unfurling in mid-air and splitting into nine-tailed horrors of searing force. With an inhuman shriek, Ann flew towards the youma, each lash seeming to move of its own accord. The whips cracked and popped all around Kamisori as the youma desperately ducked and dodged the writhing net of energy that undulated around him like the deadly arms of a raging and ravenous squid. "I WANT YOU TO DIE!" Wielding all four of his wicked blades, Kamisori spun and rotated in place, sparks flying as he parried each barbed tail of living shadow and deflected it back the way that it had come. Blades and whips flashed and hummed through the air, moving faster and faster until they were barely more than blurs of motion followed by pops and starbursts of sparks. One of the twin youma whistled softly. "She's good." "You have no idea," Ail said in clipped tones as he drew another card and laid it with its fellows on the boulder. Six of the white rectangles lay in perfect line with each other, splayed out like a giant asterisk. Tucking the rest of the deck away, Ail stood and dusted his hands off on his pants. "Well, that was fun." "What, you're finished?" "Oh, yes," Ail said with a disarming grin. "I never was very good at card games. One must keep in practice, though. Is it alright if I play my flute over here for a while? I promise, I won't try to run away." "Yeah, I guess so," the older of the two girls said with a disgruntled snort. "Too bad you had to be such a wimp, though. I was kind of hoping Kamisori wouldn't be the only one who got some real practice in today." "Sorry," Ail said with a shrug. "That's just never been the way I work. Don't worry, though: I'm sure that you'll find something to keep you busy very soon. Is this too far away? I wouldn't want you to think that I was planning to flee." "Yeah, yeah," the younger sister said with a dismissive wave, not even bothering to look away from the combat long enough to notice just how far from them Ail was actually standing. "Play your heart out." "Thank you," Ail said, all trace of humour gone from his face. Raising the intricately carved flute to his lips, he began to play. Unnoticed by any of the youma, Ail's carefully laid out cards began to glow. As he played on, his haunting tune floating across the canyon, each of the six cards lifting from its place and slowly began to rotate, moving in time with his music. The glow stengthened, and each card started to writhe and bubble, their auras growing and changing into eerie, monstrous forms. On the battlefield below, one of Kamisori's blades caught home and tore open Ann's vest, ripping fabric and flesh alike as it swung back in a deadly arc. Falling backwards, Ann coughed another gout of blood and landed heavily on the ground, tatters of her uniform falling around her like crimson and maroon snowflakes. A glowing card tumbled out from beneath the remnants of her top, landing on the ground next to her. There was an explosion of white light, and a regal figure in flowing robes of pale blue spiralled up from the confines of her card. Her blonde hair flowing around her head like a golden halo, the cardian glanced first at Ail, and then down at the fallen girl. Kneeling beside her, Nixeen gently placed her lips against Ann's own, a sparkling flush of power flowing from their mouths and racing to every inch of the girl's body as her cuts began to shrink and fade. Startled, Kamisori staggered back and then turned to look past the other youma. After a moment, he slowly lowered his head and sank to the ground, genuflecting deeply on the jagged rocks. "What's he doing?" the elder twin asked curiously, scratching her head. "He's still got the edge - he could take both of them, easy!" The other girl gently tugged on her sister's arm, drawing the taller youma's attention. With a single, shivering finger, she pointed in Ail's direction. Standing atop a spire of rock, the slender youth frowned sternly and folded his arms across his chest. Crouched between him and the youma were six more cardians, their fangs glistening and claws itching for the chance to tear into somebody's flesh. "Man, first Nise Suiko kicks our butts and now this," the younger twin sighed dejectedly, her bladed shoulders slumping in defeat. "Is it too late to just admit that Dad was right about us not being cut out for this and go home?" ********** Rei Hino sighed and gazed down at her reflection in the cup of coffee she held cradled in her hands. All things considered, it looked as though this had the makings of a beautiful day - the sun was shining, the birds were chirping, and there was barely a cloud in the sky. Every single person who had come into the small shop where she sat nursing her drink had seemed to have an almost irritating bounce in their step, and all anybody seemed able to discuss was how wonderful the weather was turning out. She was sure that more than one of them had cast a glance in her direction, wondering who the strange girl with the long dark hair and the sullen expression was. Probably wondering what her problem was, that she was the only one so completely unaffected by the nature of the day outside. Why did she even bother arguing with Usagi anymore? It seemed like all it ever ended with these days was her sitting alone in a coffee shop and feeling like an idiot. The fact was, Usagi had been right - Ami had been perfectly fine the entire time that Rei had been worrying herself into a nervous tizzy. The truth was, her friend had just been on a date with Ryo Sanada, and had been perfectly safe. Still, could anybody really blame her for not guessing that? It wasn't like Ami was the sort who got out much. Then, as if that wasn't bad enough, to have Usagi of all people talking about setting her up... as if she needed the help! Rei sighed again and tucked her hair behind one ear. The sad thing was, she was starting to think she might. It wasn't like she had needed her friends to draw attention to the fact she hadn't been getting out that much, either. The number of love letters in her shoe locker at school had slowed to a trickle over the past few months, and even Yuuchirou had been seeming a little more distant lately. She had never wanted to seem like she was encouraging any of the boys who followed her around, but it was a bit of a shock to realise how much she missed some of them now that they had stopped trailing after her. She hadn't had a proper date with anybody since, well... Mamoru. And *that* had been so long ago that she could barely remember it. Maybe Usagi was right; maybe she *was* in danger of becoming a spinster. The boys weren't exactly lining up to spend time with her. "Lord, that line was atrocious!" a boy commented, as he eased through the door and held it open for his friend. "I'm almost glad that we got kicked out, if there was much more of that to look forward to." "I still say that it wasn't my fault!" the other boy replied defensively. "If those players don't want people bugging them, then what are they doing walking past us on their way to the stadium? The classy thing to do would have been for them to sign my balls and get it over with." "Perhaps if you hadn't put it in quite those terms, though...." "Ah, they knew what I meant! If they want to get all weird about it, that's none of my business. Hey, cool! They got those little moon cakes here! I love those things. You want one, man?" "No thanks, Shuu. I think I'll just wander over here for a tick. Be a chap and order me a breakfast set with some American blend, would you? Fresh." A shadow fell over her table, and Rei looked up into the beaming face of Shin Mouri. As usual, the boy had an almost expectant look that filled her with a strange urge to check her purse and find some peppermints for him. His mop of shaggy brown hair was even more tousled than usual, and there were the beginnings of a nasty bruise under one eye. "Hello, Miss Hino!" he said cheerily. "Fancy running into you here. Mind if Shuu and I sit with you? The rest of the shop is dreadfully full." "Sure, I guess," Rei admitted, and took her purse off of the chair across from her. Great - this was exactly what she needed. More of the Samurai Troopers, popping in to ruin her day. It was bad enough that one of them had to be flagrantly dating Ami, now she had to put up with them interrupting her angst. "Much obliged," Shin said thankfully, as he slipped into the seat next to her and rested his chin on his folded hands. "So, what's causing a frown to cross that lovely face of yours on such a wonderful day? Anything that Shuu and I might deliver a solid thrashing to?" "Not unless you feel like beating up your stupid leader," Rei said with a snort as she turned to look out the window. "Who, Ryo? Oh, I'd never do that." "Why? Are you afraid of him?" "No, it just never works. The dear boy takes it as encouragement." Shin laced his fingers behind his head and leaned back in his chair, casting a glance over at her. "Come on, now, what could Ryo have possibly done this time? He didn't blow you up again, did he? Because we've talked to him about that, and he promised to be more careful." "It's not that," Rei said waspishly, glaring at his reflection in the glass as he gave her a curious look. "It's not anything. Leave it alone, okay?" "It's not because he went out with Ami, is it?" Shin asked, raising an eyebrow. "Why would something like that bother you?" "Could you please just leave it alone?" "Sadly, I can't. It's like a sickness with me." Shin shrugged helplessly and began to rock back on the hind legs of his chair. After a short pause, he gave her a sideways glance and cleared his throat slightly. "You're not interested in Ryo, are you?" "What?" Rei turned and stared at Shin in astonishment. "God, no! What would even make you think something like that?" "Nothing!" Shin assured her, with a relieved grin. "It just seemed like the worst possible outcome of this whole affair. I mean, you seemed a little upset about him dating your friend, so I just assumed-" "Well, it's not that, so don't," Rei snapped. "Why would anyone assume that was what's bothering me? I'm not jealous, or anything, it's just... other stuff." "Let me guess," Shin said, sliding his hands into his pockets as he continued rocking back and forth on his chair. "One of your friends is looking like she might have a steady boyfriend, and it's making you realise that you haven't been in a serious relationship in your whole life. You start wondering if maybe you're always going to be alone, and you worry that all of your friends will find love and no longer have any time to spend with you. Even though it's never bothered you until now, you're starting to think that maybe you've somehow missed your chance. At this point in your life, you're thinking that you should definitely have *some* kind of significant other...." "Or at least a string of meaningless physical relationships," Rei admitted glumly. "Tell me about it," Shin agreed with a chuckle. "I wouldn't worry about it, if I were you, Rei. You should be happy for your friend, because you'll feel like a proper twit afterwards if you weren't. Odds are this whole thing will blow over in a few months, and everything will go back to normal. And if it doesn't, then you'll probably have to get used to it eventually. May as well start now, right?" "How can you be so blase about this whole thing?" Rei asked. "Aren't you even a little bit bothered by any of it?" "Not really," Shin said. "But then again, I've got an evil demon twin running around trying to destroy me, so I've been a bit distracted lately. Can I refill that coffee for you?" ********** Xiang Yao strode confidently out of the train station, flipping up the collar of her jacket as though to ward off a chill as she moved past the turnstiles. Nobody really remembered her getting on board, but she had been careful to blend in with the rest of the dazed and confused women filing off of the damaged car at the end of the train. Naturally, none of the concerned officials had been so uncompassionate as to ask any questions of someone so obviously in shock after such a horrible accident. The worst she had gotten was the occasional odd stare at her facial tattoo, and that was something she had long ago come to accept as her due. A few strange looks meant nothing to her - she had people to kill. All she had to do was find a Sailor Senshi in a city that was almost twice the size of anything that had existed during the Moon Kingdom. There was a time that Xiang Yao might have found such a task daunting, but after her last two encounters with them, she was beginning to lose her respect for the Senshi. Maybe her old age was getting to her, but she had distinctly recalled them being tougher opponents the last time she fought them. Perhaps the intervening centuries had made them soft. 'Soft' was not a word that anybody would apply to Xiang Yao, no matter what century she was in. At her peak, she had been more than a match for any of the Senshi, and her time in the Castle of Eternal Regret had done very little to dull her reflexes. There was not a single ounce of fat on her whipcord frame, and her glittering crimson eyes were devoid of any trace of mercy or compassion. She had honed her entire being for the sole purpose of bringing death to her master's enemies, and in his absence she would gladly settle for slaying in the name of Radanthus. A girl did need to keep in practice, after all. As soon as she was safely away from any prying eyes, she ducked into a convenient alley and dug her claws into the brick as easily as if she were plunging her fingers into soft butter. Scaling the side of the building with inhuman speed, Xiang Yao gracefully perched atop the chain link fence that ran along the edge of the rooftop and sniffed the air, her tongue flicking in and out instinctively as she moved her head from side to side and scanned the terrain. According to Radanthus, the Senshi were supposed to be staying in that big hotel across the street. With a shrug, the woman slid out of her coat and hung it on the top of a nearby television antenna. Letting out a deep breath, she rolled her shoulders and stretched her arms experimentally. After taking a moment to gauge the distance, she flung herself through the air and caught the overhanging metal spar of a traffic light that dangled over the crowded street. With an expert kick, she carried herself through the full rotation and released the bar, somersaulting across the road and grabbing onto a convenient flagpole before swinging around the corner of the building and landing on a fire escape. Carefully sweeping back her long purple hair and adjusting her sunglasses, Xiang Yao forced open the window and stepped into the room. Her first instinct was to think that someone might have beaten her to the Senshi. The place was a mess, with open luggage littering the floor and clothes strewn haphazardly about the room. There was a scorch mark on the ceiling, and a soot-streaked trash can lay on its side in the vanity sink, water dripping from its lip to splash softly on the tiled floor. Someone had scattered what looked like a small mountain of note paper on one of the tables, and a few pages were drifting idly on the breeze from the open window. Xiang Yao snatched one as it floated past and took a quick glance at it. Math equations, she noted with disgust. No doubt some of Sailor Mercury's work. Frowning, she crumpled it into a ball and tossed it in the general direction of the water-filled trash can. She had missed them. They must have known she was coming - judging from the condition of the room, they had clearly left in a hurry. For a moment, she considered hiding in the closet and waiting for them to come back, but laying in wait had never really been her style. Besides which, there was no way she could be sure that the Sailor Senshi would even bother coming back to this place, or how long it would be until they did. Radanthus was probably going to want results from her soon, and he was not the type to be patient when it came to something like this. Swatting a stuffed rabbit out of the way, Xiang Yao sat on the edge of one of the beds and hummed thoughtfully to herself. There had to be some way of figuring out where the Senshi had gone. Some kind of clue, some tiny scrap of evidence she could use to ferret out their location, if only she could manage to find it in all this mess. "It's just so boring," she sighed, laying back on the bed. "I hate when people try to play hard to get - it's just delaying the inevitable. I wish someone would just tell me where they're going and save me the trouble." Yawning, she stretched out her arms and slipped one hand under the pillow. Something crinkled under her fingers, and Xiang Yao blinked in surprise. Sitting back up, she lifted the pillow and pulled a folded denim jacket out from beneath it. Inside the pocket was a folded piece of paper. Xiang Yao gently eased it out and unfolded it, smoothing it out on the mattress next to her as she examined it. On one side were a bunch of math equations, but on the other was something far more interesting. "Usagi Tsukino's Romantic Master Plan, Day One," Xiang Yao read out loud, raising one eyebrow. "Seven o'clock, breakfast in the dining room. Eight o'clock, clothes shopping with Ami-chan at Renga Park. Note to self, don't let her buy anything nerdy. Twelve o'clock, lunch...." Lowering the paper, Xiang Yao grinned. It was starting to look like it was going to be a good day, after all. ********** "You're going to have to come out of there eventually, Ami," Usagi said, leaning against the changing room door and filing her nails. The blonde girl was standing next to a pile of shopping bags which were stacked nearly as tall as she was, and had a bored expression on her face. "I don't think I can wear this," her friend's voice replied, muffled slightly by the wooden door that seperated them. "It seems a bit indecent." "Oh, come on! What's the big deal? So it shows off your shoulders a little bit." "It's not my shoulders I'm worried about showing off," Ami whispered back. "I'm scared to breathe in this thing, Usagi! And this skirt is much too short for my liking. I've never worn something as short as this before." "What are you talking about? You wear a skirt that short all the time! Heck, you were wearing one when you met him, remember?" "That was different," Ami whimpered. "I was in uniform. That skirt was official. This one's just.... short." Usagi groaned. "You have great legs, Ami. You need him to notice them! How else can he become blind with passion for you? I thought you said you wanted my help with this." There was a long pause, as Usagi calmly slid her file back into the pocket of her denim shorts and polished her nails on the back of her sleeve. It wasn't that she liked being so rough with her friend, but Ami would dress in a burlap sack if she thought she could get away with it. That was the whole reason that they had both agreed to let Usagi pick out all the clothing on this trip, so that Ami could have some outfits that would help make sure a certain Samurai Trooper didn't forget that she existed. The only problem was that Ami could barely bring herself to let Usagi see her in any of the outfits in question, let alone anybody else. It had been a constant uphill battle just to get her to try them on. "Can I at least wear a different shirt?" Ami asked quietly. "One with sleeves? And shoulders?" "Okay," Usagi agreed. "Try the cute black one with the sequins, that one should look totally awesome with that skirt." There was another pause, and the sound of shifting cloth, before Ami spoke again. "Usagi? I think there's something wrong with this shirt." "Really?" Usagi asked, feigning innocence as she crossed her fingers behind her back. "Why would you say that, Ami-chan?" "There, uh, seems to be a... hole... in the front of it..." "It's not a big hole," Usagi said quickly. She had been waiting for this one to come up. "I think it's kind of cute, actually. It's shaped like a heart, see?" "But I don't think-" "Good, glad we agree! Don't think, just put it on. That's the way to do this, Ami! Full speed ahead, and pay no attention to the people screaming in the back!" Usagi grinned and pumped her fist emphatically. "We'll get you a boyfriend if I have to drag you kicking and screaming every inch of the way!" "Thanks, Usagi. I appreciate it." The door swung open, and Ami stepped tentatively out into the store. With a nervous smile, the girl smoothed out the short ice blue skirt and gave Usagi a worried look. She had changed out of her usual sneakers in favour of a pair of high heeled shoes with small bows on the front that laced up her ankles like ballet slippers, and she was wobbling a bit unsteadily on them, but they were doing a good job of adding a few inches to her height. Considering that Ryo was taller than she was, Usagi had decreed that those extra inches were vital for making sure he would be looking at her face, instead of the top of her head. Her black top hugged her curves, and the metallic blue sequins splayed across the front glittered slightly as she moved, drawing attention to the small heart-shaped hole that just barely hinted at her cleavage without being overt. "So, how do I look?" Ami asked, trying to tug the skirt down a little bit and blushing furiously. "Well," Usagi said, tapping her chin, "I think if he doesn't notice you like this, we'll have to declare him legally dead. Give me a little spin, could you? I want to make sure that skirt's not too short, after all." "Do you really think he'll want to ask me out?" Ami asked, turning around and letting Usagi see the back as well as the front. "Are you kidding? In that outfit? I'M starting to want to ask you out," Usagi assured her friend, placing her hands on her hips and smiling broadly. "Mission accomplished, Ami! Now we just need to find about six more things like this, and you'll be ready for phase two." Ami stopped turning so abruptly she almost fell over. "There's a phase TWO, now?" "Oh, there was always a phase two," Usagi said blithely. "I just like to keep that sort of thing on a need-to-know basis. You don't need to know about it, yet. Now get back in there and try on the rest of them!" "All right," Ami agreed hesitantly, "but I'm still opposed to that one top...." "That's okay," Usagi assured her friend, "I only threw that one in to make some of the other stuff look better by comparison. Now, scoot!" With an exasperated sigh, the blue-haired girl stomped back into the changing room and slammed the door behind her as Usagi stifled a gleeful chortle. At the rate they were going, they might actually get Ami a decent dating wardrobe by the end of the day. Luckily, Usagi had seeded a number of blatantly inappropriate things in with the actual good stuff, so her friend could at least maintain the illusion of having a say in some of it. It was all a matter of knowing how to manipulate people - for their own good, of course. And occasionally one's own amusement. Usagi grinned again and went back to picking through some of the clothes that had passed initial inspection. If Ryo Sanada did not sweep Ami off her feet the second he saw her in one of these ensembles, Usagi was going to punch him right in the back of the head. If dealing with Mamoru had taught her one thing, it was that boys were utterly clueless when it came to the hearts of women. You just had to keep chiselling away at the brick until one day you actually managed to get them to realise how they already felt about you. Which reminded her: she might want to pick up some coloured markers, in case Ryo proved especially dense. Phase four involved diagrams. A panicked scream pierced the air, and Usagi felt every muscle in her body tense. Dropping into a crouch, the blonde girl quickly scanned the area to see what all the commotion was about. Maybe somebody just saw a mouse, or something... A police officer hurtled backwards through the front window of the shop, spraying fragments of glass everywhere as he smashed into a rack of designer jeans and fell to the ground. From outside, the screams and yells grew louder, only to be drowned out by a monstrous roar as a furry beast with claws and fangs stepped through the broken window and looked down at the fallen man. Its eyes glowed bright orange as its lips curled back to bare its sabre-like canines in a gruesome snarl. Usagi muttered something nasty under her breath. It was *never* a mouse. Reaching into her pocket, she slid out the heart-shaped compact with its small golden wings and held it in the palm of her hand. The clasp snapped open almost of its own accord, trailing a sparking mist from its glowing interior as she rose to her feet and raised it above her head. "MOON CRISIS, MAKE-UP!" The store filled with a sudden burst of light as a scintillating tower of golden energy beams burst up from the floor and began to spin around Usagi's glowing form. A flurry of crimson ribbons burst from the compact on her chest, tightening around her body and forming a white and blue sailor uniform as feathered pins appeared in her hair and a golden tiara flashed across her forhead. Within seconds, the transformation was over and Super Sailor Moon stood in the centre of a charred circle on the floor, smiling impishly at the startled youma. "What," she joked, "you were expecting Cutey Honey? I don't know what the law is like where you come from, but around here attacking a police officer and destroying private property is a serious offence! The Yokohama Police Department might forgive you, but I won't! I am the pretty sailor-suited warrior Sailor Moon, and in the name of the Moon, I will punish you!" "So, Sailor Moon," the youma growled, its pointed ears lying back flat against its skull, "you finally decide to intervene! We have been waiting for you to be drawn into our trap." "What do you mean 'finally'? I just got here!" Sailor Moon snapped back, shaking her gloved fist at the creature. "Woah... wait a minute. Did you just say something about a trap?" "Indeed," the dog-like monster said, with a dry chuckle. "Have you not heard of the great power of Orthrus? Your doom is even now sealed, foolish Senshi! Our master has waited eons for the chance to destroy you and your kind, and now that day has finally arrived!" "Could we get back to the part about the trap? That sounded kind of important...." "Ah," a second youma said, as it pressed its way past the first, "I see you flushed one out, Orthrus. Good work." "Glad I could assist, Orthrus," the first youma answered with a toothy grin. The pair were completely identical, from their short black fur to their muscular builds and elongated fangs; right down to having an identical scar running over each of their left eyes and a notch missing from one ear. "Shall we have a little fun with her before we finish her off?" "No," the second Orthrus said with a grin. "Let's just kill her quickly and look for another. This one will take us no time at all." "Two against one is hardly fair," a voice called out, as the lights in the store suddenly cut out. As they slowly flickered back to life, a thick fog bank rolled across the floor and filled the store with glimmering rainbows as the bright lights reflected off of the moisture in the air. The door to the change rooms creaked open, and a shadowy form strode forward through the advancing wall of mist, a glowing blue visor the only thing visible until she stepped through the concealing blanket of fog and took up a position next to Sailor Moon. "I trust nobody will mind if I even the odds a little?" she asked, as the turquoise on her tiara flashed briefly and the visor retracted away from her eyes. "I am Sailor Mercury, the warrior of balance, and in the name of the planet Mercury, I shall right wrongs and triumph over evil! At the moment, that appears to be you." "Enough talk!" one of the two Orthrus barked, and the other belched forth a torrent of flame that seared through the air and burned its way through the back wall as both Senshi tumbled out of its path. Darting behind a rack of skirts, Sailor Moon took cover as the first of the monsters sent another jet of flame blasting over her head. The metal racks gave way and toppled over, spilling burning clothes over the floor as she rolled clear and pulled the tiara from her head. "MOON TIARA ACTION!" she cried, and hurled the glowing headpiece towards the advancing youma. Lunging out of the way, the creature threw himself out of the way as the gleaming disc screeched past him and slammed his shoulder into the blonde girl's stomach. Carried backward by the force of his charge, Sailor Moon's feet left the ground as he smashed her against the wall of the shop in a flurry of falling jackets. "That was very stupid of you, girl," he growled, as he gripped her face in one giant paw and began to press her head against the hard concrete. "You just threw away your only useful weapon. What do you have to say for yourself now?" "Moon," the girl said, her voice muffled by the hand crushing her skull, "T-Tiara... BOOMERANG!" "What?" The youma turned and looked behind him, just in time for the rapidly returning tiara to hit him directly on the tip of his chin. His head snapped back and his body went limp, spining head-over-tail in mid-air as Sailor Moon slipped from his grasp and scrambled to freedom beneath him. Pivoting on her heel, the blonde Senshi plucked her tiara from the air and spun it expertly on one finger before donning it again. "Sailor Mercury!" she called out anxiously. "How are you doing over there?" "Well," the blue-haired Senshi said as she vaulted over a display table moments before the other Orthrus smashed it in half with the coatrack he was using like a giant hammer, "he doesn't seem to like the muzzle I put on him...." The youma in question grumbled something indecipherable from beneath the thick casing of ice that covered his mouth and swung the coat rack in a wide circle, swiping it at Mercury's head as if he were trying to score a home run. Yelping, the girl ducked under the steel pole as it whistled past and began running in a new direction. "Fortunately," she added as she bolted past Sailor Moon, "he doesn't seem to corner very well, either!" "Must be the dog legs," Sailor Moon noted wisely, and turned her attention back to the fallen youma lying on the ground in front of her. "Okay," she said in the sternest voice she could manage, "now you're going to start answering my questions, or I'm going to start hitting you with my tiara again! Who are you working for? What do they want with us? Where can we find them?" "Wait, please," the youma wheezed, rubbing his jaw gingerly. "I'll answer your questons, I swear! The person I'm working for is-" Opening his mouth, Orthrus let loose another torrent of flame, blasting the floor at Sailor Moon's feet and melting away part of her boot as she barely leapt out of the way. With a vicious howl, the youma pounced forward on all fours and snapped his fangs mere inches from Sailor Moon's face as she backpedalled frantically. "SAILOR MOON KICK!" she cried out, falling backwards as he foot shot up from the ground and cracked into the youma's face hard enough to knock him back a few steps. Shaking himself like a wet dog, the youma brought its baleful gaze back to bear on Sailor Moon and released another quavering howl before lumbering forward again. Moving quickly, the blonde Senshi leapt onto a counter as the monster's jaws snapped through the shelving below her like kindling. Gathering her legs under her, Sailor Moon leapt over the beast and landed behind it, racing across the store as fast as her legs could carry her. "Hey, Sailor Mercury!" she yelled, as the youma regained its senses and took chase after her. "I don't think I like this one any more! Wanna trade?" "Sure!" Sailor Mercury replied, dodging to the left as the steel coat rack crashed into the ground at her feet hard enough to bend the metal. "That sounds like a great idea to me, Sailor Moon! Just let me know when you're ready!" "Now!" Sailor Moon yelped, hopping off of the ground as her pursuer breathed a wave of fire at the back of her ankles. Responding to her signal, Sailor Mercury reached out and grabbed her leader by the wrist. With a twist of her hips, she pivoted in place and hurled Sailor Moon into the muzzled youma's face as hard as she could. As the monster fell back, Sailor Moon landed beside it and tightened her own grip on Mercury's arm, throwing her partner into the air and swinging her out of the way of the stampeding Orthrus. Sailor Mercury twisted in mid-air, kicking at the rising youma hard enough to shatter the ice covering his snout and send him back to the floor before landing next to Sailor Moon. "SHABON SPRAY!" she cried, and a swirling rush of bubbles flew from her outstretched hands, filling the store with an impermeable fog that engulfed both girls. "Come on," Sailor Moon said, tugging on Mercury's hand. "Those two aren't going to stay down forever. Let's get the heck out of here, while we still can!" "A tactical retreat would seem to be the wisest course of action," Sailor Mercury agreed breathlessly, and the two girls began to make their way towards the shattered window at the front of the store. "Not leaving so soon, are we?" Xiang Yao asked, as she stepped out of the mists and took an indolent drag from her cigarette. "My pets weren't finished playing with you." Twin jets of flame pierced through the fog, boiling away the pearly clouds of mist to reveal a single youma, standing half again as tall as either of the Senshi, and with two snarling heads atop his broad shoulders. Fire dripping from his lips like saliva, Ortrus hunched forward and began to move towards them. The bent and twisted remains of a coat rack dragged on the ground behind him, all but forgotten in his massive fist. "We're done playing with these two," one head snarled, as its ears flattened against its skull. "It's time to finish them!" the other head concluded, snapping its fangs at the air as if trying to catch a passing fly. "Right," Sailor Mercury said, and quickly drew out her communicator. Stepping forward, Orthrus swiped at the blue-haired girl with his fist, catching her in the shoulder with his makeshift club and knocking her sprawling onto the floor. With a snarl, he brought the metal pole around and swung it down towards her head as if he were planning to drive in a tent spike. There was a resounding clang, and Orthrus blinked to notice the jewel-encrusted rod blocking his weapon. Sailor Moon swatted the club aside with a flick of her Kaleido Moon Scope and stood between the youma and her friend, rod held in a low fencing pose that left its tip circling a few inches below the youma's sternum. Hissing in pain, Sailor Mercury slowly crawled back to her feet and glared over her leader's shoulder at the beast, tendrils of mist beginning to leak from between her fingers. "There," Xiang Yao said, as she took a seat next to the cash register and idly snubbed out her cigarette againt the keypad before lighting another one. "See? That's much better. As you were, ladies. Orthrus, make it quick." The youma roared in response and exhaled a gout of fire from both of his mouths, blasting the two girls out of the window and following after them with an eager growl. Unnoticed by any of them, Sailor Mercury's communicator lay where it had fallen. And, softly, it began to chime. ********** To Be Continued...