Blood Contract | By : ShadesofNight Category: InuYasha > General Views: 2544 -:- Recommendations : 0 -:- Currently Reading : 0 |
Disclaimer: I do not own InuYasha, nor make money from this story. |
Chapter 3: Seized
Sango unlocked the door and stepped into the darkness of her tiny apartment, kicking her chunky heels into the genkan as she did so. With a sigh, she curled her fingers around the tie in her hair and tugged, pausing to enjoy the freeing sensation as the dark mass fell heavily against her back and shoulders. She tossed her keys onto the nearest flat surface, a side table littered with mail that stood sentry near the entrance, and leaned back against the door. Her eyes swiped idly around the living space: boxy, cluttered-but-neat, and with only a flimsy partition to separate the kitchen/dining area from the living room. A thirteen inch television took up some space on top of the low bookcases lining her walls, while the shelves below held as many odd knickknacks and useful items as she could fit in around the books. Through the open door at the back, she could see the folded futon and used armoire taking up most of the space in her bedroom. It was small, but it was hers. All of it with no help from her parents, and no reliance on the significant money or influence of the Hoshinuma name. All of it the result of years of hard work and effort, a sign and proof of her own worth. Her sanctuary. She had a pleasant, wine-induced buzz humming through her head and the warmth of a years-old friendship soothing her stomach, but the smile that quirked her mouth was bittersweet at best as she tried to swallow the vague wistfulness nipping at the day. It was so nice to spend time in the company of good friends and not have to worry about appearances and expectations, tetchy superiors, or disrespectful co-workers. The afternoon had been an oasis in the stress-filled desert of her recent life, and she’d needed it desperately. It was just such a shame that these get-togethers had become so scarce in recent years. Back in college it had been easy to just pick up and go out for the day, but in the past few years they'd been resigning themselves more and more to phone calls and Internet chats. Rin’s life had been a whirlwind of art shows and exotic trips since even before they’d graduated. Kagome had been consumed with the workings of her job and plagued by a lazy boss, and then Houjou had come onto the scene to take up even more of her time. And Sango herself…. Her smile faded into a grimace. If Kagome worked long hours, then Sango never stopped, and hadn’t really since she’d joined the police force. Because of her specialized knowledge of youkai and youkai combat techniques, she'd managed to become one of the youngest detectives in the entire city, never mind that she was a woman. Everyone expected so much, and yet it was never she, Sango, who was capable. Only the Hoshinuma name. It had been that way her entire life. She'd grown up nurtured and strong within the strong traditions of the clan Hoshinuma, a prized, prickly flower of the house. But as proud as she'd always been of her family's strengths and accomplishments, somewhere in her teens, she'd realized she'd needed to earn something for herself. She'd needed to become an asset to the Hoshinuma, not an asset of them; so she'd deviated from her father's chosen path for her. It had taken her years, but she'd done it – and all without the help or approval of her parents, because they'd never understood what drove her. It had been a source of constant stress for all of them, and one she regretted even as she couldn't change it. But now, after this past week, and especially after what she'd done this afternoon, she wasn’t even sure if she’d be able to keep for herself the things she’d earned on her own. How could she when the Hoshinuma legacy hung so heavily around her neck? The blinking red blip on her answering machine, tucked off to the side of the television, jumped out at her with every pulse. With anther sigh and a mental brace, Sango slung her jacket carelessly over the back of her couch and rummaged through her purse until she found her cell. She pressed the power button to light up the dead phone, and watched with dismay as the display notified her of twelve missed calls. Her fist clenched, so hard that her nails dug into her palm and her arm trembled with the strain. “Can’t you just leave me be for a little longer, Mother?” She tossed her purse and the phone onto the coffee table and stalked over to press the button on the answering machine. It beeped, and the mechanical voice informed her of ten missed messages before it started playing them back, one by one. BEEP. “Sango, this is Okasan. Just calling to remind you about the meeting with Lord Hitomi’s son today. Don't forget we arranged to meet at the house beforehand so I can help you with that kimono we had made. It makes you look so beautiful and graceful.” BEEP. “Sango, where are you? You were supposed to meet me at the house fifteen minutes ago, and you're not answering your cell. Something didn’t happen with your job, did it? I had your father talk to your superiors last week. They promised not to give you any trouble.... You understand the importance of this meeting. Please, Sango.” BEEP. “Sango! Your mother is very upset. You were told about this omiai weeks ago. I even arranged everything with your job and with Lord Hitomi. If you do not appear it will cause us great embarrassment. Where are you?” BEEP. Sango fumbled with the buttons on her shirt and walked into the bathroom, still half-listening as the messages played in the background, continuing to alternate between her mother and her father, each message growing progressively more agitated as they moved from the family estate to the restaurant. She perched on the edge of the tub, started the water, and rolled her head, trying to alleviate some of the tension tightening her neck and shoulders. Her head ached and the heat radiating from the tub called to her. BEEP. “Sango, Sango, why are you ignoring us? We’ve already been waiting for twenty minutes. Lord Hitomi and his son are being very gracious, but this is an insult to them! You must come! Please, Sango.” BEEP. “Sango! This is unacceptable behavior for the only daughter of the Hoshinuma to engage in! You have humiliated me, your mother, and everyone in our family by ignoring this obligation today. This rebelliousness will not go without consequence. We’ll discuss this as soon as I smooth things over with Lord Hitomi.” BEEP. “Ane-ue.” Her younger brother’s voice drifted in through the open doorway as she was in the middle of tugging off her skirt and she froze, staring down at the clear, steaming water. “I know you were against this from the start, and it wasn’t fair of them, but was it really a good idea to ignore it? It’s not like you would have been forced to marry Hitomi. Father is really angry, Sango.” He paused, his silence was a tone-like buzz on the recording. Sango pressed her lips into a tight, thin line. “They didn’t even ask, Kohaku.” Nor had they listened when she'd voiced her objections. “Mother and Father…they’re just worried about you. They’re afraid you’re so caught up in proving yourself to whomever you think you need to prove yourself that you’ll forget about other things. Stuff they think is more important. I know it's hard to believe sometimes, but they only want you to be happy. You know how they are. I don’t like seeing you at odds with them. Think about apologizing, will you?” BEEP. End of messages. Frowning, Sango let her skirt and the rest of her underwear slide down her legs and dropped them into the small crate of dirty clothes near the door. The hot water hissed as she sat on the tiny stool in the cleaning area and soaped down and scrubbed off the exertion of the day. Omiai. A marriage meeting. How could they? Without asking, without even mentioning the possibility first, without even wondering if she’d have the smallest interest in Lord Hitomi’s son. They’d just called her back to the Hoshinuma main house for a fitting for a new kimono. All her objections had been brushed aside. They just wanted her to be happy? What? Was it not good enough? Was everything she’d done with her life so far just not enough for them? She was a detective – not only one of the youngest, but a successful female in a profession only just opening itself up to the female half of the population. Didn't they realize how hard she'd had to work to make it this far? How good she had to be? What had she done to make her parents think she wasn't happy? Except, a little voice niggled at the back of her brain, they're not entirely wrong. She liked her job. No, she loved her job and derived an intense amount of satisfaction from being good at it, from making those in the male idiocracy that dominated the police force cringe at having to give her commendations and approval. But it was...a little lonely. She had little, if any camaraderie with anyone on the force because the guys either resented her for being a woman or for her family name; the few women thought she was either a cold-hearted bitch or an untouchable idol. She frowned. Come to think of it, the only person who'd ever treated her with an attitude anywhere near normal at her job was...that pervert Sakurai. The bastard sexually harassed her every chance he got but at least he respected her skills for what they were. And, as much as she hated the fact that he flirted shamelessly with any girl who looked at him, she respected him as well. He was capable, good at his job when he was serious about it. It was just so irritatingly hard to tell when he was serious. And then there was that tug, that pleasant pull in her tummy and the blood-rush in her veins that kept trying to convince her to give in to his suggestive play every time she got near him – that flush, that excited, tingling flutter that no man had ever before managed to subject her to. The secret thrill that underlined the fury every time his hand massaged over her backside, the seductive, seeping warmth that enticed her to let him keep it there, maybe do a little more. The same sensations assaulting her now. Sango blinked down at the way her soapy hands had slowed against the bare skin of her stomach. Her spine snapped straight, and she tossed her washcloth away in a fit of temper. No. No, no, no, no! She rinsed off with quick, efficient movements and didn't bother with her hair before she slipped into the steaming tub. She gave soft sigh of relief at the hot water closed over her weary muscles, and spent some time staring brooding at the tiny, fogged window high in the wall above her head. Okay. Maybe in the quietest of her most personal moments, she could admit that she found Miroku attractive; she might even grudgingly go so far as to acknowledge that she might even want him. But the temptation was irrelevant. She wasn't about to humiliate herself by becoming some barely remembered notch on a bedpost – not even for a man who made her insides churn with heat and her imagination churn with things she'd never considered doing before. And it didn't matter anyway, because she was likely well on her way to being engaged to a man her parents considered suitable. The Hitomi family was wealthy and influential, the majority of them holding positions high within the government. Sango, for all her rebelliousness, was still a daughter of the Hoshinuma, with a pride that was built into her blood. Already, she felt regret for shaming her parents publicly. And.... And because Kohaku was wrong. A marriage meeting between the old and distinguished families wasn't the same as a normal matchmaker service for the general population. In their world, power and politics were more important than personal feelings and an omiai a formality of an alliance already discussed and agreed upon. She let her head drop back against the edge of her small tub and sighed again. This small defiance of hers wouldn't be the end of it. Their parents had, for whatever reason, decided it was time for her to marry, and they wouldn't stop pressuring, arranging, and interfering until she was safely out of “dried up old fish” territory. The flower of the Hoshinuma could not be allowed to wither without fertilization. Sango had known that this was coming for quite some time. Her mouth twisted into a grimace. Kohaku was lucky. As the male heir, he would have much more time than she'd been given. He might even have enough time to find someone for himself before their parents arranged someone for him. It wasn't as horrible as it sounded. Happiness could, and often did, come from the arranged marriages of the aristocracy – her parents were an example of that. Her father lived and breathed for her mother, and her mother adored her father; and for that Sango would always be grateful, because for all the clashes they'd had in the past few years, she still loved them dearly and would hate to see them unhappy. Unfortunately for her, she'd already met Lord Hitomi's son once, during a totally unrelated work event. He was handsome, but he'd inspired nothing in her but a vague, squirming sense of distaste. Nothing even close to what her irritating lech of a partner did to her. If that's all you have to look forward to, an insidious internal voice whispered, then why not avail yourself of something you truly want while you still can? She had no doubt that Miroku, rakish playboy that he was, would be more than willing to show her whatever sexual ropes she might want to experience. Rin would most vehemently agree with that, even if Sango couldn't quite bring herself to sacrifice her pride to a man who would take it with a carefree smile and move right on to the next woman. A smile lifted her lips. When Rin and Kagome found out, they'd each blow an individual gasket; she'd have to listen to them rail at her about independence and pride and personal fulfillment. Well, she'd have to listen to Rin. Once Kagome got over her initial indignation, she'd be more forgiving. Kagome understood better that the deep ties and obligations that went along with family weren't nearly so simple. Inhaling, shaking herself from her contemplative stupor, she brought her hand up to scrub a film of wet across her face. And stilled. Blinked. Frowned. Sniffed again, more carefully this time. A vague, bitter-herbal smell had crept into her tiny bath; it seemed to mingle with the curls of steam drifting off the water. The smell was out-of-place. Wrong. She looked around, noted she'd left the bathroom door open a crack; her head tilted as she listened. Nothing stirred through the small opening, but the silence from beyond was the suspended, unnatural kind instead of the comfortable one that normally permeated her home. Despite the heat, an adrenaline-laced chill washed through her body. Her blood rushed through her veins, and her gut tensed in an instinctive warning that she'd learned never to ignore. Someone was in her apartment. A burglar? A rapist? A peep? Outrage hit her, and her expression hardened. Not in this lifetime. She drew another deep breath and sat up slowly, so as not to slosh the water too much. Her body slipped out of the tub as easily as it had slipped into it. Naked, dripping, cautious, she crept toward the door, hugging the wall, her lithe muscles tensed and ready to defend against any attack. A quick scan of the bathroom showed only her plastic stool and a long wooden stick with a sponge on one end to be the only things available in the way of possible weapons. With a determined frown, she scooped up the wooden stick. Anger burned in her stomach that anyone would dare violate her precious haven, but it was the calm, controlled fuel of a fighter preparing for battle. Whoever this intruder was, they were in for one hell of a surprise if they thought any child of the Hoshinuma would be easy prey. She reached the edge of the door, still plastered against the damp tile, and eyed the opening, trying to get a view of the room beyond. Silently, she cursed herself for leaving her phone on the coffee table and mentally scoured her apartment, keeping the layout firmly in her mind. If they were waiting in ambush, the only places strategically feasible were in her tiny bedroom or right outside the bathroom door. Any other spot would give her warning and a chance to fight back. If this intruder had even the smallest amount of sense, he would wait for her to exit the bath. Her options were limited: she could either wait inside for the intruder to make a move; or, she could charge out into the apartment naked and without having a good sense of who her opponent was, and hope that those circumstances gave her the advantage. She chewed on her lip...and a short, thick-fingered hand worked it's way through the opening. She stared in disbelief. The fingers curled around the edge of the door, then tugged to slide the door fully open. A sickening anticipation permeated the croaking voice that spoke at the same time. “I'm telling you, Jak, she should already be –” He was a short, corpulent little man who barely reached her hip. He had huge, bug-round eyes that shifted around with the proficiency of a child predator, and the lower half of his face was covered in some kind of cloth mask. All this she noted with distant disgust as she swung the flimsy wooden stick with as much force as she could muster, batting a thousand against the enormous bulbs of his eyes. She felt the wood in her hands connect, and crack just a bit under the pressure. The strange man let out a keening croak of agony and stumbled backward across the threshold. Sango didn't wait for him to recover but jammed the heel of her foot into his stunted body, sending his stumble into a full-blown careen backwards into her living room. The fact that he'd been talking to someone hadn't escaped her, and she followed him out, going down onto one knee and thrusting her damaged stick in the direction of the stunned yelp that had sounded from behind the smaller intruder. From the corner of her eye, she caught a lovely flower-patterned kimono, a red-painted mouth and dark eyes rounded in shock. Black hair loosely curled and bound, a few messy strands tumbled about a face that somehow managed to be both masculine and feminine at the same time. A sword hilt, sticking out from a sheath against a back. Even with the ridiculous get-up, something about this second intruder had her blood tingling a warning. Dangerous. Then the point of her stick made contact with a gut, and the second man (at least, she though it was a man – no breasts) grunted in outrage. She followed with a surge upward, bringing her knee up to his groin with all the weight of her body. It would have worked if he hadn't twisted at the last moment, taking the blow on his hip with another grunt. His hand whipped out to smack her away like an pesky insect, but she absorbed the blow with her arm and used the momentum to throw out a strong left. Her fist hit his eye, the blow strong enough to reverberate back along her bone. Intruder number two's head snapped back, but he recovered fast – So fast, too fast, she realized. Who are these guys? – and swept his feet under hers, knocking her onto her back. She hit the ground and lost her breath, but managed to roll to the side before his fist slammed with stunning force into the floor where her head had been. Sango staggered to her feet, fear adding a sharp spike to her adrenaline. These were no ordinary criminals. The second guy, at least, was a seasoned fighter, a trained warrior, and obscenely strong given his ridiculous appearance. Whatever they wanted, they might very well get it unless she got out of there. Now. He looked up from his fist, seemed surprised that she'd managed to dodge. “Oh? You're moving pretty well there.” He jerked his head around, his tone complaining. “Hey! Mukotsu! Your poison's not working!” Poison? Sango's eyes darted to the side, where the smaller man had just started to shake himself out in a corner of her tiny apartment. She didn't wait to see what else he would do. She charged the second man while he was distracted, body-slamming him back against the wall, grabbing one of his hands at the same time. She twirled, braced her bare feet, and heaved, thanking her parents, ancestors, and all the gods for years of hard training and muscle memory. With a shocked squeal, the taller one went crashing into her coffee table. Seeing him momentarily stunned, she whirled with the stick in her hand, intending to beat the smaller guy back into submission once more, just enough for her to get out of the apartment, nakedness be damned, and – A plume of purple smoke hit her face, burned her lungs as she choked on it. Her knees hit the floor with a hard crack that she vaguely thought should have hurt more. The stick, to her distant alarm, slid through fingers that didn't seem to have any feeling left in them. Then the rest of her hit the ground, the world dimming as if someone had hit a light switch. She heard voices echoing from a far off place in her head. Ah! That surprised me. The clatter of broken wood. You didn't kill her, did you?Aniki will be mad. Heh, heh, heh. Don't worry, my poisons always work. That first one didn't, did it? Gave the bitch a chance to touch my beautiful face. Another thick, croaking laugh. You always were twisted, to think you're prettier than she. She'd make a lovely plaything. Shall I test her to make sure Renkotsu's information was accurate? An irritated groan. Hey, hey. Why do you think Aniki sent me with you, Mukotsu? You're not supposed to touch the merchandise. She felt hands on her naked flesh, hefting her into the air, and a dull whisper as the last thing in her mind. Merchandise ? Abruptly, the world finished its fade. %%%%%%%% Rin slammed her way into her studio apartment with an enthusiastic, gusty sigh, feeling utterly satisfied. Her stomach was full, her afternoon had been filled with dear old friends, and her evening filled with laughter. What a fantastic way to spend her first day back in the country. Her luggage, two overstuffed bags and one box more than she’d left with, was still piled up by the wall where she’d had them dropped off upon her arrival from the airport. Her lips took on a gentle-wry upward curve. From the airport to home, and from home to her friends, and all without a moment to deal with the jet-lag. At least she had her priorities in order, right? Rin toed off her heels, left them in a messy upside down sprawl somewhere near the door, and puttered barefoot towards the kitchen set up in one far corner of the huge space that made up her living quarters. Even with all her money and fame, she'd been lucky to find a third-floor efficiency like this in Tokyo. It was all one huge, echoing room, with a smaller bathroom off to the side of the entrance, and huge, slanted windows opposite the kitchen corner to let in massive amounts of sunlight. She'd set up her work space over there in the sunlight, so that her drafting desk faced the upward view of the sky and the canvases in various sizes and stages of completion were catching as much of it as possible. Famous artist that she was, consummate professional that she was, Rin needed the sunlight to work properly. She needed the open spaces and the fresh breezes that carried her inspiration to her on those days when she made the effort to heft open those huge, rust-edged windows. On the other side of her apartment was her actual living space: a bed pushed up against the far wall and covered in a messy mass of blankets and pillows. A short couch, a coffee table, and a television all grouped around a woven area rug, and a nice radio sat on a tiny bookcase behind them. Her comforting, colorful, welcoming little mess. Even the huge wardrobe where she kept her clothes was open and in disarray, and somehow she'd left her full-length cheval mirror tilted towards the wall. Rin inhaled and smiled in greeting at her surroundings. “It's good to be back,” she said, softly, to the room at large, then made a face. “In Austria, they made me stay in that tiny little room in a dorm. Can you believe that?” A tiny shudder shook her frame. “How they expected me to work in a box I'll never know.” She was only in her twenties, but she'd had enough of boxes to last her a lifetime, thank you. She padded her way into the small-but-functional kitchenette, plopped her bag down heavily onto a free bit of counter space, and turned a tired eye to the rather large pile of envelopes that was still sitting in the same place she'd left them when she'd absconded for her little teaching holiday a few weeks before. Her brow knit as she studied it. “Is it just me, or did it get bigger?” Oh, that's right. Rin rolled her eyes. Her agent had volunteered to check her mail for her while she was gone. It was his fault her mail pile had once again turned into a living, breathing monster that must be tamed. She sighed again, concluding with reluctance that a late night session of mindless television and catching up on her long neglected mail might be a good way to unwind from a very hectic day. Thus decided, she grabbed a bottle of water from her fridge, tucked the large pile of letters into her arms, and exited towards her overstuffed couch. Humming and content, she dumped the pile of mail onto the small coffee table (next to the dirty coffee mug and crumb-littered plate she'd left there in her hurried departure for the airport), and plopped her weary body down onto one of the brilliant violet and crimson cushions flanking the coffee table. She tied her hair back with the multicolored scarf she found peeking out from beneath the carpet edge, rummaged around in the couch until she came up with the remote from under the middle cushion (right where she usually kept it) and flipped the television on. If she wasn't mistaken, she was just in time for.... “Good evening, everyone! Thank you for watching us once again tonight as we bring you the evening edition of 'In The Know', the most popular live show on television! I'm your beautiful hostess Eri --” “And as always, I'm your lovely co-hostess Yuka, and we thank everyone for tuning in tonight as we bring you all the latest scoops on things you didn't know you wanted to know!” Rin grinned as the two perky young women smiled at their cheering, clapping crowd and settled more comfortably onto her knees as she started sorting through the mail: bills in one sort-of pile; fan mail and work related in another; junk mail on the floor in the out-of-sight, out-of-mind pile. “We're getting buzz from China that youkai Prime Minister Taigokomaru and his son arrived at the Split Consulate building to begin arrangements for visits to the human territory, which still seems to be on despite Prime Minister Takeda's cool response when asked about it earlier this week. Taigokomaru's son, Tsukuyomaru, pictured here, is head of security for the negotiation team and is said to be coordinating directly with both mediator and government officials.” “Incidentally, since the images of Tsukuyomaru surfaced this morning, Internet searches on the youkai government's head of security have skyrocketed. Unfortunately, everyone, Eri and Yuka's sources tell us he's married...to a human woman.” “They call them contracts, Eri. She would be his contracted mate.” Rin rolled her eyes and tossed another junk letter onto the floor, then froze as her fingers brushed over the familiar pale blue shade of the envelope beneath it. “Oh? Contracts?” “Yes. According to our excellent research staff, youkai society is built on contracts.” A whiteboard appeared on set, complete with illustrative chart. “Everything they do is covered by them, from business arrangements to personal ones. In fact, contracts are so important to youkai that they even use some kind of magic to ensure that contracts are kept. Depending on the type of contract, breaking one can actually put your life at risk.” “No!” “Yes!” A cheerful grin and a wink followed that mock-horrified affirmation. “So, if anyone out there ever comes into contact with a youkai, be sure to avoid a contract. You never know what it might cost you.” Murmurs and laughter erupted from the live studio audience, but the rest of the television chatter seemed to fade into the background. Barely breathing, Rin flipped the small envelope over and traced a nail over the long, elegant handwriting that scrolled a simple “Rin”, followed by her address, across the front. She blinked, then drew in the breath she'd been holding as she worked a finger into the fold and unceremoniously ripped the top open. It was only a single sheet this time, but her features still softened into an affectionate smile as she unfolded it and read the familiar script.
Rin,
It appears that you have arrived back in the Human Territories safely. Your teaching efforts were well-received by the foreigners, and the press has been positive. You've drawn much attention to your work, and it will no doubt positively affect your next show. You have said many times that your desire is to reach larger audiences with your paintings, and I believe that your trip to Austria will result in that. It seems that, this time, your uncontrollable impulsiveness is well-rewarded.
I trust your next series is going well. Your show is only a few months away, and you will cause your agent as much trouble as your actions have the tendency to cause me if you are not finished in time. I advise you to avoid this. The man is weak enough before the crippling stress you induce. A nervous break-down would be undesirable.
Now, as to the matter of your sudden trip. I understand the circumstances of your childhood have nurtured in you a propensity for wandering and a love of travel. However, as I have written in the past, you must remember to inform me in some manner of a trip before you depart. A simple note will suffice. Understand that it creates extra work for me to find you when you simply disappear. I dislike being uninformed of your safety. Should you get into trouble at such a time, it would be more difficult for me to assist you than when I am fully aware of your circumstances. You have the address to contact me at any time. You will keep me informed, and we will avoid such matters.
Continue your work on your paintings. I look forward to them, as always.
~S
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