"Why did you stop girl?" Kisame's voice was starting to get annoying, and his presence in this room wasn't helping my concentration either, because he kept flaring his chakra at me. I eye brow twitched. I heard the door open then close, hopping that Kisame gave up and left, but hell was I wrong. "God, girl, just do what your told and get one with it, I also have a wound." He stated again. I felt my eye brow twitch again. Quickly I turned around grabbed him by his pant's, you know the loops for a belt part, and dragged him to the door. Throwing him our, I found the other Akatsuki members there too, even a giant standing plant. Paying no attention to them I threw Kisame on the floor.
"Shut up and stay out here, I don't want to here you or see you till I finished wit Itachi-san. You here me Lard Ass? " I shut the door angrily and made my way back to Itachi. "I'm sorry about that Itachi-san, let's try this again.
-------------
It was about five minutes later and the stupid needle wasn't coming out. Getting frustrated and pissed off, I grabbed the needle and yanked. Earning a yelp and then a steam of courses from Itachi.
"The hell was that for?" he asked. His eyes had narrowed in a dangers glare. I just shrugged. He quickly healed the little wound left. "You need to heal-" Itachi started.
"If he's going to play games with me, then he can suffer." I stated and walked out the door. Kisame was standing there with his hands balled in a fist. "What?" I asked him.
"That…I don't know what to say" Kisame started.
"I figured, with your fish like brain, obtaining information must be hard." Sighed slightly acting like it was a terrible shame.
"Why you little…" he hissed out.
"Me little….ha, you have another thing coming to you lard ass. I am not little, nor am I afraid of you, so shut you tin hole and get a way from here." I didn't get it, but Kisame had made me mad, even though I wasn't even mad at him. Kisame just stared at me, now he really looked like a fish, a fish out of water. He had his mouth opening and closing and his eyes were larger than normal. I hissed at him like a cat and walked off towards my room.
"Sakura…yeah" I heard Diedara yell behind me.
"WHAT?" ok... I was tired and irritated to day. Come one you would be too. First I wake up and find out that I have to join the Akatsuki because they said so. Second I had to heal all those weird people. Thirdly, I missed diner. Just to say it plainly I was tired, hungry and wishing to go home.
"Um….yeah….dinner…yeah" Deidara stuttered out.
"Thanks, but no thanks. Diet" Who knows what they can make, I mean there are a bunch of criminals what do they know about cooking?
--
I don't know what time it was but I felt something on my bed. I had gone to sleep early. Looking around my now lightened room, must be around seven or eight in the morning. I looked down to find Akayama. I had to smile. He was sleeping soundly, but he was sucking his thumb. He had to be younger than nine. I gently picked my self up and stepped out of bed. Walking over to my closed I put my uniform on and started to brush my hair. Sitting down I closed my eyes and enjoyed the brush running across my scalp and my hair.
"Good morning Sakura-san" I heard Akayama voice. I turned to him a smiled.
"Good morning to you too Akayama-san." He was just so cute.
"You don't have to be formal with me… I really don't mined." He shifted him self off the queen size bed and stood on the floor.
"Ok, but if Leader-san tells me otherwise" he nodded understanding.
"Oh, Deidara forgot to give this to you.' He handed me a ring 'this is you Akatsuki ring, Orochimaru used to wear it, but it's yours now." I took the ring and looked on at it. Kūchin it said. It meant Void. How scary, I'll be warring his ring.
"You're thinking aren't you?" Akayama said. "Father said you look weird when you think. He wasn't kidding."
"Funny, real funny." I said. "So what are you doing here?" I had to ask. This was only my second day here and I already had someone in my room.
"Father got angry and chassed us all out, so I came here…you don't care do you?" He was giving me the puppy eye look.
"No, not at all. I don't mind company."
"Good, cause I will probably be staying here for a while. When Father gets angry, he gets angry and stays angry for a while" He smiled at me. "You hungry, because I am and breakfast would be served soon." I nodded. He smiled once more and dragged me out of my room. "so what were you thinking about back when I gave you your ring?" He was way to curious.
"Stuff," I answered slowly. He grunted, "about Voids and Aether (ether)." He looked at me oddly.
"of whaty and what what?" he asked. He was just so cute. He had no clue what I was talking about.
"the ring said void on it, so I was thinking of that, which led to Aether. It's stuff you'll probably wont under stand even if I try to tell you." He smiled and nodded.
"tell me anyway, you got me all interested in it."
"fine… In astronomy voids are the empty spaces between filaments, the largest-scale structures in the Universe that contain very few, or no, galaxies. Voids typically have a diameter of 11 to 150 Mpc; particularly large voids, defined by the absence of rich superclusters, are sometimes called supervoids. Voids located in high-density environments are smaller than voids situated in low-density spaces of the universe. A census ("The structure of the Universe traced by rich clusters of galaxies.", see References) lists a total of 27 supervoids with a distance of up to 740 Mpc. In nuclear engineering, the void coefficient (more properly called "void coefficient of reactivity") is a number that can be used to estimate how much the thermal output of a nuclear reactor increases (or decreases, if negative) as voids (steam bubbles) form in the reactor moderator or coolant. Reactors in which either the moderator or the coolant is a liquid typically will have a void coefficient value that is either negative (if the reactor is under-moderated) or positive (if the reactor is over-moderated). Reactors in which neither the moderator nor the coolant is a liquid (e.g., a graphite-moderated, gas-cooled reactor) will have a void coefficient value equal to zero. Void ratio, in materials science, is defined as the volume of voids in a mixture divided by the volume of solids, and so is inversely related to the density. This figure is relevant in composites, in mining (particular with regard to the properties of tailings), and in soil science.
Engineering applications of void content property:
- Volume change tendency control. If void ratio is high (loose soils) voids in a soil skeleton tend to minimise uder loading - adjacent particles contract. The opposite situation, i.e. when void ratio is relatively small (dense soils), indicates that the volume of the soil is vulnerable to increase under loading - particles dilate.
- Hydraulic conductivity control (ability of water movement through the soil). Loose soils show high conductivity, while dense soils are not so permeable.
- Particles movement. In a loose soil particles can move quite easily whereas in a dense one finer particles cannot pass through the voids which leads to clogging. We'll that's all I know about voids, but when talking about Aether. Aether (also spelled ether) is a concept used in ancient and medieval science as a substance. The aether was believed to be the substance which filled the region of the universe above the terrestrial sphere. Aristotle included it as a fifth element distinct from the other four, Air, Earth, Fire, and Water. Aether was also called Quintessence (from quinta essentia, "fifth element"). Its Platonic solid was the Dodecahedron. The word aether in Homeric Greek means "pure, fresh air" or "clear sky", imagined in Greek mythology to be the pure essence where the gods lived and which they breathed, analogous to the aer breathed by mortals (also personified as a deity, Aether, the son of Erebus and Nyx). It corresponds to the concept of akasha in Hindu philosophy. It is related to αἴθω "to incinerate", also intransitive "to burn, to shine" (related is the name Aithiopes (Ethiopians), meaning "people with a burnt (black) visage". See also Empyrean. Aristotle added aether to the system of the classical elements of Ionic philosophy as the "fifth element" (the quintessence), on the principle that the four terrestrial elements were subject to change and moved naturally in straight lines while no change had been observed in the celestial regions and the heavenly bodies moved in circles. In Aristotle's system aether had no qualities (was neither hot, cold, wet, nor dry), was incapable of change (with the exception of change of place), and by its nature moved in circles Medieval scholastic philosophers granted aether changes of density, in which the bodies of the planets were considered to be denser than the medium which filled the rest of the universe. Robert Fludd stated that the aether was of the character that it was "subtler than light". Fludd cites the 3rd century view of Plotinus, concerning the aether as penetrative and non-material.
In Wicca, it is the unifying energy inherent in every living creature on the planet, and in all four elements (earth, air, water, and fire) in nature.5 Essentially it is spirit: and soul, the all-encompassing spirit energy of the Goddess and God. On the pentagram, akasha is assigned to the fifth top point, and the "other" element. Modern understanding of electromagnetism, including Einstein's particle theory of light and various scientific experiments of general relativity, has removed the need for a substance like aether to fill the otherwise empty parts of the universe. Newton's and Maxwell's aether model (the latter being a "classic static aether") were both developed from this classical element. However, the null result of the Michelson-Morley experiment led (from 1887 onwards) to the decline of an aether model's wide acceptance. Albert Einstein, in an interpretation he offered for his theory of special relativity, dismissed it, as per Occam's razor; and, though he later reinstated a logical need for an aether in a commentary on his theory of general relativity, modern astrophysical theories do not include this classical element. One might suppose 'dark matter' has supplanted "aether."" He was looking at me with a dumb expression in his face.
"If I wanted a lecture on it, I could have asked my dad." He stated coldly.
"we'll that was just a simplified version of it." I said angeraly.
"SIMPLIFIED? THAT WAS TOTALLY OUT OF THIS WORLD." He yelled back.
"WELL I'M SORRY THAT YOU ASKED ABOUT IT." I Yelled right back.
"ARE WE HAVING A YELLING CONTEST?" we heard Diedara yell out of no where.
"No Diedara, she was explaining voids and aether to me and made me all confused. That's all." Akayama said. Diedara just nodded.
"This kid isn't too bright, yeah." Diedara pointed.
"HAY." Akayama yelled.
"WILL YOU ALL JUST SHUT UP" we heard someone yell.
THats all i have at the moment but i hope the next chapter will be more eventfull.
