Kenshin Fic

Resurrections and Rainbows

Chapter 1

An endless sweep of wind passed through the trees, over the grass, across the fields. It brushed aside the leaves that lay scattered on the ground, pushed along the rivers of water that coursed through the land, carried on the scent of flowers undying through the air, and other fragrances far to the opposite. The wind carried on through the small country of Japan, passing across the lives of the men and women within it, observing with silent beauty as creatures died and creatures were born, as lives carried on and lives were ceased. It stopped for no one, for nothing, and continued to blow.

The smallest hint of a flavour very familiar to the wind could be smelt within the city of Tokyo, an aroma provocative to few, but foreign to most. To those who knew its twinge, something long since forgotten in them was awakened, by instinct, by reactions uncontrollable. Fists were clenched, muscles were tightened, and hearts were raced till the odour was carried on in the wind. As it passed, sword hilts were slowly unclasped, eyes reverted to their normal patterns, and the minds of the men affected slowly changed back; all the minds, save one.

Himura Kenshin stood outside Kamiya Kaoru's dojo, his hand trembling at his side. His palm was tightly clamped to his sword, his arm unwilling to release it. He stared forward; into nothing but the air which had only seconds ago stirred something within him he had wished to never feel again. He swallowed, the saliva burning its way down his throat, again prompting his mind to recall the scent, again prompting his hand to clench his sword even tighter.

Memories were not things that one could erase, and not even the most talented and dominant Samurais were immune to the power of memories, nor the emotions they could incur. Though this was proven time and time again, men often attempted to hide from them, to fight them, and even to convince themselves they never occurred; yet time and time again, men were proven wrong, and memories were pushed to the surface, pushed beyond the surface.

The scent dwindled in his mind, returning to the barest form of recollection, till it was nothing in his mind but a memory, which was all too similar to another such remembrance that held itself close to his heart. His head shook, the red bundles of hair catching the wind within its clutches, the tears that had formed in his eyes being rolled off his cheek, and into the wind.

Soft footsteps emanated from behind him, as Sagara Sanosuke slowly approached. He had sensed it too, but unlike Kenshin, he had no concept of its true meaning, no idea of the implications it laid before him, and all those he loved. "What was that, Kenshin?"

The wind continued on its way through the space-filled void called the sky, carrying with it the question of Sanosuke, delivering with it the scent to be carried to everyone else of the country of Japan, and producing to those within its path the very same question that Sanosuke had just asked.

A small bird chirped in the background of the palatial silence that had enveloped Kenshin; his narrow tunnel of concentration suddenly expanded exponentially, to a point that it was all encompassing, almost reaching beyond the flow of time, to a point that memories old even to Kenshin's mind came back to him… a rush of recollections spawning themselves from bowels deep beyond his own recession.

* * *

"This will do more than hurt, this will maim, this will injure." A young boy looked up from his shackles with sullen, hollow, defeated eyes, and dared not utter a word, knowing that what his owner had said was true. "You still do not wish to tell?" And even though the boys mind was numb with pain, exhaustion and fear, he still held onto the barest knowledge that had stuck with him through the entire ordeal.

"No." He said softly, his hard accent showing through, even on the single word. He was suddenly all the more aware of the pile of flames that burned hatefully behind him.

"As I thought, you worthless piece of shit." The man towering over the boy hit swiftly with a kick, catching the head of the red-haired slave with the full power of the strike. The small child crumpled to the ground, only to be brought up again by the sheath of the man's sword upon his chin. "Then I guess you deserve this." The man jerked the boy into the fire behind him with his foot, sending the naked and bloody youngster into the raging mass of flames.

As the youngster burned his screams were drowned out by the crackling of the flames. The man looked down as his eyes reflected the light of the fire into the night sky. His face was expressionless, a rock formation of rigid bone and skin. He slowly wondered why the boy made no move to extract himself out of the fire, instead choosing to just lie there in it; enclosed in unending agony. There came only more screams, more burning, more pain.

Before long, the man's nose was assaulted by a stench unknown to him, a putrid smell much like that of ashes burning. Soon after he realized the source of the aroma, and looked down upon the horribly burned boy with pity. His ears were still deaf to the cries of the tortured child, but even he could not be so inhumane as to avoid the reek of the boy's burning flesh. "She isn't worth this… no one is." He spoke to himself, his heart suddenly beating more rapidly as layers upon layers of skin began to worm their way off the boy. "That's enough."

With almost no warning, the wind suddenly sprang to life… with such vengeance, such vigour and vigilance as to be almost unnatural. It arose from seemingly nowhere, a sudden spark of current that shot across the ground. It hit the man with all the ferocity of a cyclone, almost pushing him onto the ground, and quickly extinguishing the flames the boy was immersed in. The man brought his hand up to shield his eyes from the dirt pushed on by the wind. His other hand instinctively dropped to the sword that lay attached to his belt. He tried to peer through the rushing air, to find the boy, but all he could see was a beacon of light off to his right. He turned to face the light, which came pouring from out over the horizon, as the sun does in the morning, and as he did so, the wind moved with him, turning as he turned so as to remain in his face, pushing into him with all the force of the heavens. "What… the hell?" He exasperated, a tinting of fear singeing upon his voice.

The boy lay whimpering on the ground, the wind cooling his sores, the ground a safe haven from the flames that had enclosed him just moments earlier. His skin rested in puddles all around him, flaked or peeled off from all parts of his body save his face, which he had narrowly managed to keep out of the body of the fire. He began to convulse on the spot, his body refusing to take any more pain for that day. He quickly collapsed in one final spasm of agony; his remaining body sprawled open across the dirt-paved road. The wind continued to blow over him, washing its silent tranquility over the small boy.

The man, meanwhile, pushed forwards against the onslaught of wind, searching for some sort of place where it couldn't reach him. Before he could make any sort of movement towards protection though, it became apparent that he was using all his strength just to hold strong against the wind. The light continually sprung forth from in front of him, growing stronger and stronger with each second. "What can that be?" He shouted aloud, finding it the only way to hear himself over the roaring of the wind. "It's too late for the sun to be rising." Just as he finished speaking to himself, the wind intensified even more, gusting with such gale as to be bone crushing. It was as the struggle between man and air deepened that the man realized just what this wind really was.

He glanced off to his side, towards a patch of trees not twenty metres away. They rested in absolute calmness, nary a branch swaying or a leaf moving. Fear instantly gripped his heart, as he began to understand that this wind was no normal flurry of air; but was something so controlled, so concentrated that it was meant only for him, and for his slave. This, he presumed, was the wind that God held in His hand, the wind that He used only when He deemed necessary, and the wind that He heeded only for those that needed to feel its revenge.

The man suddenly felt the light ahead of him grow weaker, almost as though something were faintly blocking it out. With what little strength remained in his body after beating the boy that day, he craned his head forward, and gazed into the light, to see if any hope could be spared for his life. There, fixated within the sphere of light, was the figure of a man, clothed in samurai garb and holding a sheathed sword in his hand. His snow-white hair blew with the wind, covering his face, and wrapping itself around his clothing.

This beacon of mystery suddenly mystified the trapped man's mind. For several seconds, neither was touched, and the only thought passing through the wind was the utter serenity of the three beings trapped within it. Then, with grace befitting that of a God, the samurai brought his hand down to his side, and took out his sword. A moment of warning shot out in the other man's mind, and fighting through the sudden fear that clasped his heart, made a mad grab for his sword. There was no chance for defence though, not even a split second of an opening in which the man could stop the attacker.

The samurai moved too quickly for the man to track, almost as quickly as the wind, which held the man in place. He struck with poise unequalled by any other samurai in the country, and with one fatal swipe, severed the man's head from the neck. The decapitated skull fell to the ground, rolling gently for a few feet before coming to a stop in the pile of ashes that had once been his fire. Blood shot out into the air, but was quickly carried away by the wind, out into the sky. The body of the man remained standing, every single muscle frozen in place, just waiting for a message from the brain that had just been detached.

The samurai rose up from the ground behind the body of the man, wiped off the small amount of blood that stained his sword on the ground, and then sheathed the blade back in its place. His eyes drifted to the boy who lay at his feet, the gray-white spheres that served him searching their way around the boy, looking for any signs of life. Slowly, tantalizingly, the boy's chest raised up, then fell back down. The white-haired samurai bent down to the boy, and slowly picked him up in his arms. Being careful not to rattle what little of the child remained, the man also walked over to the body of the man he had killed, and removed the sword from his belt, realizing that between adolescent and sword was a connection that had been rudely interrupted by the slave-owner.

He then set off back from the direction he had come, back into the mountains, back into his home. The light that had previously shone from all around him had disappeared, and the wind that had been so strongly concentrated on the other man had vanished, replaced only by the calming breeze like that of the wind upon the shore of an ocean on a late spring day. The onrushing air continued to push itself over the unconscious child, soothing his sores and giving peace to his tortured body.

* * *

He walked with a step so light as to be almost weightless, his aura presenting itself in only the most reserved of manner. The air softly pushed itself all around him, swirling around in a path both seemingly random; yet extremely focused. His eyes moved in only one direction, as did the rest of him; straight forward. To an un-acquainted eye, it would seem as if he was a blind man walking down the only path he knew, but to one with senses more acute than an average man's, one would see just how much purpose each step held to this man.

And though his eyes remained fixated on the road ahead, his peripheral vision allowed him to track his position as he waded through the streets of Tokyo. Men, women and children of all likeness strayed away from him, as a man with a sword was feared in this, the peaceful Meiji Era, and one with two was feared even more. A policeman caught sight of him, once, but even he felt the wind that sang at the man's back, and knew that interfering with this man's step could only produce terrible results. So despite any fears or forebodings, the man's progress through the city was unhindered by any.

His clothes were out of style with current trends, but then again, so was he. The tone of his skin said all that needed to be told, but even so, questions arose within the heads of several as he continued his path through the city.

"Look at his eyes."

"How does his hair hold that shape?"

"That smell, where's it coming from?"

"What's he doing with a sword, in Tokyo? Where are the police?"

"The police could do nothing, that much is clear."

The murmurs continued to run rampant through the crowds, till they were the only things that could be heard in his ears. He paid them no heed though, remaining focused on his goal, on his role in the plan that had been lain out, the plan he himself had the only chance of completing.

The scent that had intoxicated the senses of Kenshin and Sanosuke was present as he walked through, almost seeming to carry itself with him. But unlike Kenshin, this man was unaffected by the smell. He had once been the source of such a stench, and after surviving its fiery embrace; he was no longer influenced by it.

A silent gust of wind shot through the street, blowing by his ears with hushed ferocity, an outwardly opaqueness of peace where it seemed there should only be violence. The man stopped. He stood in front of Kamiya Kaoru's dojo, his sky blue eyes fixated on the door before him, and the path he knew he must take.

* * *

He stepped out into the cold night air, then quickly and loudly shut the door behind him. "He almost caught me this time, I'm going to have to be more careful from now on." Okeda said to himself, as he often did, hoping that in hearing the words; he would better follow through on what they said. Really though, he paid no regard to if he was caught or not; in all his naivety, he believed that he could win the battle that would ensue if he were caught.

He pulled his heavy jacket closer to him, hoping to block out the sudden stir of frigid wind. He jogged quickly down the back alley, hoping that he would reach his house before the thieves of the city began to spread out into the neighbourhood. "Next time, I'll have to make sure no one sees me."

With a heavy amount of disgust, he remembered that at his house was his wife; with the children, just waiting for him to come home so they could nag and bother him till all ends of the night. In a pathetic display of fear, he headed out onto the main road, and began to look for some sort of all-night restaurant where he could drink some sake, and delay his return home.

Before long though, he realized that he did not know this part of the city very well, and also noticed that a growing number of dark characters had begun to prance about in the alleyways around him.

His eyes darted from building to building, looking for some sort of shelter until he could find his way home. He suddenly became aware of a pair of darkly clothed, tall men walking with long, quick strides behind him. Okeda's heart began to beat heavily as his hands began to tremble. "Damnit, I knew I should've left earlier tonight," he said, his voice trembling with each word.

The frosty wind raged all about him, roaring into his ears and riveting his heart to an even faster pace. The pair of beings behind him continued to move faster, sweeping their feet at him in a hideous display of unison. A whistle went off to Okeda's left, but he didn't stop to see if it came from friend or foe; he just continued on in a mad rush.

Just as the pair of bandits behind him were about to pounce, he caught sight of a lit torch at the door of a building. He rushed towards it, and his heart was turned aflutter when he saw that the restaurant had positioned a sworded night security guard at the door of the building. The two thieves behind him started to set off in pursuit, but once they saw the blue-coated guard also had a pistol at his waist, they turned away; searching for new pray.

Okeda hurried beside the guard, and asked how much it would cost to stay the night. The guard smiled and said with gap-toothed greed, "As much as you have."

Okeda knew that he would not have enough money to buy drinks for the entire night, but he also knew that heading home at this time of the night would cost him more than just the money he had in his wallet. He agreed to pay for the night, and with a small tip to the guard, headed into the restaurant; and out of the cold blasts of wind that had been encroaching on him with every passing second.

"Earlier next time."