Shoujo Kakumei Utena CHESS by Alan Harnum Utena and its characters belongs to Be-PaPas, Chiho Saito, Shogakukan, Shokaku Iinkai and TV Tokyo. E-mail : harnums@thekeep.org Transpacific Fanfiction: http://www.thekeep.org/~mike/transp.html The Utena Fanfiction Repository: http://www.thekeep.org/~harnums/UFR Spoilers up until the end of Episode 36. * * * I didn't hesitate before knocking on her door, because I'm not given to hesitation. Not to say I was entirely comfortable with the meeting that was about to take place, but I had made promises. She opened the door almost immediately. "Good evening, Arisugawa Juri-san," I said formally. Whatever her personal feelings for me might be, so long as I were polite to her, her own nature would force her to remain polite to me. "Good evening, President Kiryuu," she replied, matching me down to tone and inflection. "This is unexpected. To what do I owe the visit?" The visit, not the pleasure or the honour, I noted, and almost smiled. In the days before things began to wind down towards the Ends of the World, we had more exchanges like this-- her sharp, subtle, hidden points, aimed as though to--but never succeeding in--bursting the bubble of confident assurance in which I lived. They were just one of a host of small things I missed after I stopped coming to meetings. "I won't take up much of your time," I said, almost but not quite apologetic. "Good," she said shortly. Before I could say anything in reply, she added, "I have a friend coming over to study soon, you see." I knew instantly by the note in her voice who the friend was, and, once again, I had to stop myself from smiling. I had always liked Juri, from the day Ruka introduced me to her--truly, I had. She was beautiful and witty and clever, and, now that her part in the game was at a close, I wished her all the happiness in the world. Of course, at the same time, I found it incomprehensible that Ruka had loved her so much. But then, dear departed friend, you always had that much more of the doomed romantic in you than I did, did you not? "As you undoubtedly know by now, I had a Duel with Tenjou Utena last night..." I began. "Actually," she said crisply, "I did not know." "Yet you do not seem surprised." She shrugged. On her, the motion did not look at all casual, but as calculated as the rippling of a jungle cat's muscles before it springs. "My attentions have been elsewhere these days, but I knew it would happen. It is merely the timing--not the event--that I could not foresee." Now I did laugh. "Sometimes you remind me of myself, Juri-san." She smiled, and it was crisp and etched as killing frost. "Don't insult me, Touga-san. What do you want?" I took the harsh words with grace; I had expected them or their like from the moment I had deigned to draw a comparison between us. "There are to be no more Duels," I said, coming finally round to my point. "I expect you all will soon enough receive letters from Ends of the World to tell you this officially, but part of the condition of my Duel was that I would ensure no one of us would try to take the Rose Bride from her again if I lost." She curved one eyebrow in a shallow, graceful arch. "And do you think you could stop me, if I wished to Duel again?" "Yes," I said simply. Then I added, "But the point is moot, Juri-san, is it not? Your reason for Duelling is shattered, and the chains that bound it to you broken." For a moment, her cover fell away, and she looked much younger, scared and lost, desolate, with a hollow sort of grief like some abandoned ruin in the desert. I thought: she really is little more than a child, for all her strength. Then it occured to me that I was only a year older than her, and suddenly I felt very young as well. I can't remember the last time I felt young. Something of it must have shown on my face, because when she composed herself an instant later and hid her turmoil away again, her expression was softer. "No," she said finally, "you're correct, of course. I have no more reason to Duel." I nodded vaguely. "I'll be going then," I said. I was still standing in the hallway, with Juri on the other side of the open door. I think I nearly bowed, feeling oddly close to her in that moment, and I suppose in hindsight that she felt something of the same. "Take care of yourself, Juri-san." "And you take care of yourself, Touga-san." Her voice was gentle and almost kind; I had never been spoken to by her in that manner before. I turned to leave, and, as I did, my eye caught on the chess board in the corner of the room. Red king, red queen, white pawn. "You play chess?" I asked rhetorically, tilting my head in the direction of the board. "I do many things," she said cooly. "I used to play with Nanami," I said. That had been a long time ago. Centuries ago, as my mind seems to measure things. I remember that I used to keep a very careful mental tally, and, every third game I would let her win, because it made her smile so. But I can't remember now why I ever did a thing like that. "With Saionji, too, but he was always so impatient. No head for strategy." I paused; the silence between us was both weighted and barbed. "Sometimes Tsuchiya and I played." She nodded as though she had expected it. Spoken aloud, his name drew no apparent response from her. "He had a portable board. One of those roll-up vinyl ones in a tube, with the cheap plastic pieces. He would always carry it around in his fencing bag. We used to play after we got tired of fencing, up at our spot." "You had a spot?" I asked. I wondered--not, of course, for the first time, but with perhaps more interest than ever before-- just what kind of relationship they'd had before he left the school for the first time. "Yes," she said. I was wondering by then why I was still there, and why she hadn't closed the door on me yet; I suspect she was probably wondering the same. "We had a spot." "I was sorry to hear about his death," I said finally. "We always respected one another, even if we were not always friends." "Thank you." She closed her eyes as she said it, very briefly, and I felt for a moment envious of Ruka: he'd gone down into the darkness, as I had, and, as I had, he had made one last stab at the light for the one he loved. But succeed or fail (I didn't, in truth, know what he'd been trying to do well enough to say for certain), he'd had the fortune to die. It's so much easier to forgive the dead than to forgive the living. I am usually not so melancholic, but it had been a bad week. I had already spoken to Miki and his sister (I did not like the look in dear little Kozue's eyes as she watched Miki quietly and respectfully agree with everthing I said), and, after this was over, I was going to have to somehow think of something to say to my sister. Saionji, I needed no words for; he understood it all better than I did, even--good foolish friend that he is. I'm usually very good at hiding how I really feel, but I suppose that night I wasn't. Something showed through--a tic in my face or a twitch of my eyes, or the curve of my mouth or the angle of my body or the sound of my voice. I don't know exactly what. There are a hundred ways to give yourself away, and I know them all from watching other people. But somehow I did reveal myself, and I knew instantly, because her expression softened again, and I saw her look at me-- it was both humiliating and pleasant, in its way--as I'd sometimes seen her look at Miki during Council meetings. No--not like that. The same look Utena had given me on the night we went to the Arena: sympathy without forgiveness, understanding without forgetting. As with Utena, I got a brief glimpse at the bright world within the walls, with the implicit understanding that a glimpse was all I was going to get; for it was all that I deserved. I suddenly felt myself gripped by a terrible burning anger, a desire as I imagine some rough barbarian might feel gazing upon the gilded towers of a great city. How beautiful, and how smug and righteous in her beauty! I wanted in that moment to take every lovely thing in the world in the hollow of my hand, crush them and make them ugly, drag them down with me. But the feeling passed quickly; it frightened me (and I am not often frightened), and I hoped it would never come upon me again. "Would you like to come and have some coffee before you leave?" Juri asked. Not at all hesitant or nervous or uncertain; I'm still not sure whether or not it was a snap decision on her part, or some culminating act to bring our long, uneasy association to a close. "What about your study date?" I inquired. I put no emphasis at all on the word "date"; all the same, her face twitched reflexively, in such a way that I knew I had scored a hit. "Shiori isn't due to arrive for a while yet," she said coolly. She stepped back, pulling the door a little wider as she did. I came inside, my hands tucked into my pockets, as casually as I would have entered the residence of any other girl who asked me in for coffee. "Have a seat," she said, and gestured towards one of the high-backed chairs at the chessboard. I slipped off my shoes and, not spotting any extra pairs of slippers, gave a mental shrug and went about in my socks. "Thank you." "How do you take it?" "Milk, no sugar." I sat in silence and examined the chessboard, while she moved about beyond my sight in her small kitchenette. I studied the position of the pieces and tried to decide what they meant. If it was supposed to be a problem for study, it was an insoluble one; a single pawn could neither take the king, nor reach the end of the board and become a stronger piece--not while the queen, who could move any distance, any direction, still stood. I heard the rattle of spoons against porcelain; Juri emerged from the kitchenette with mugs in hand, and offered one to me. As I took it, I noted they were a matched set: heavy white porcelain with the name, address and phone number of the local bowling alley printed on the side in red. I raised an eyebrow at that, and smiled. "I have twenty-eight of them at last count," she said after a moment, sitting down across from me, the chessboard between us. "I keep on winning them in tournaments, and I'm always meaning to throw them out..." She trailed away, scowling slightly at my continued amusement. "They're good mugs," she muttered. I laughed, and it was genuine. "You've many sides, Juri." "I like having lots of things to do," she said dismissively, sipping her coffee. Remarkable how she could even make drinking coffee from a clunky bowling alley mug look elegant. "If I have free time, I start to brood, and I do enough of that already." "Sometimes brooding is better than the alternative," I said. And I thought of my room, my wide empty room, with my chair and my records. "Oh?" she asked archly. She had taken a white knight from the wooden box beside the board, and was slowly turning it between the graceful fingers of her left hand. I wondered how much she knew, how much she had put together. Did she realize that before he could come to any of them, he would have had to come to me? To come and rescue me from the coffin Utena had placed me in, and fit me for a new one? Having nothing to say in reply, I kept my silence, and drank the coffee she had made me. It was good; some specialty blend, with a dark hint of bitter chocolate. "What's eating you, President Kiryuu?" she asked. For a moment, I remained wordless, and then I thought, silently laughing: why? Why bother any longer with secrets, deceptions and hidden things? How, I realized--and such a freedom came with it!--could anything after this be worse, now that she had rejected me, now that I knew that if any force on earth could save her, I did not possess it? Despite all that, the quiet brokenness in my voice surprised me. "Does it become easier, Juri? Does it ever?" She watched me quietly for a moment; then, quite precisely, she asked, "Does what?" "Knowing you won't be loved back?" The white knight dropped from her fingers, bounced once on the chessboard, rolled towards the edge. I stopped it with the flat of my hand before it could roll off the table. "Yes," she said. Other than the dropped knight, she was showing no response to my words. "It does. Surprisingly quickly, if you let it." I righted the knight and placed it on the edge of the board. "I'm not one to cling to things," I said softly. She nodded. "I had wondered why the great playboy had been returning all the letters from his admirers unopened." Suddenly hating the intimacy of the moment, wanting to tear it apart, I smiled enticingly at her and said, "Did you finally get around to sending me one, then?" To my surprise, she tilted her head back slightly--Lord, I thought with an appreciation for the female form born of long experience of it, her neck alone is a work of art--and laughed, almost girlishly. "Rumours spread quickly in this school," she said after her amusement was finished, lowering her head so that her eyes met mine. She paused for a moment, then added, smiling: "You know, Touga, I think that's the first time you've ever made a pass at me." I idly contemplated what it would be like to make love to her. It would probably be quite different from any of my usual play in bed. Her body was lean and muscular from those endless hours of fencing, but still perfectly feminine. She would almost certainly want to be on top, proud head thrown back, tight curls bouncing against her bare shoulders. The thought was in no way arousing; I entertained it merely as an imaginative possibility. I am very detached during sex, as though I am not possessed entirely of my body: at one moment I will be seeing the flushed, moaning face of a partner through my own eyes, and then I will be suddenly a thousand miles away, watching as though through a telescope the ugly, naked, animal thrashings of two alien bodies upon the bed. Utena--I had realized this only a short while--was the only girl who had ever attracted _me_, Kiryuu Touga in his entirety, rather than just some fractured section of him. Every fibre of my being yearned for her--yearns for her still. I would have laughed at the idea scant months ago, but I had never felt it before, never known that love could be something more than a naive delusion in the minds of fools and children, that it could awake like a ghost even in the most selfish and worldy of men. Love is not a delusion, but a reality: it is as real as hunger, as real as thirst, and I have been made a slave to it, just as my body is a slave to those. All of this passed through my mind in seconds, short enough a time that my reply to her did not seem hesitant. "There is a first time for everything, Juri. I think we have much in common--we are both suffering from the pain of unrequited love." And I winked at her, caught up in the moment; or perhaps more than that. There was a lot of Utena in her, and a lot of her in Utena. "Care to take solace in one another's arms?" She was silent as a statue for a long time, and I knew that I had gone at least one step too far. I will flatter myself by thinking that, perhaps, she even saw some appeal in the suggestion. Tsuchiya and I, after all, were cast from much the same mould. At the same time, she was still just as full of hurt as I was, and probably much more confused. "There is a difference," she said finally, very softly but with utter conviction. "There is a very large difference. I deserve her. You don't." She paused, and her eyes locked with mine; blazed with rage. Against me, against Takatsuki Shiori, against the entire world. "If there were any justice, she would... she would..." The pain in her voice was tremendous. I had never been able to imagine Juri crying before, but now the image came to me easily: quietly, alone in a place where no one could see her, for a long time. I had known for a some time, of course, about her hidden love for her childhood friend, but the sheer agony through which it must have put her, even if so much of it was self- inflicted and almost self-indulgent, struck me suddenly and deeply. Her wounds were revealed to me, and I could not think at all, "What use can I make of this?", as I would have a few months ago, but only, with the terrible simplicity of a child, "Poor Juri." Oh, Utena, my love, my princess, what have you done to me? I rose and moved behind her and put my hand on her shoulder. When she did not draw away or protest, I moved it to the curve of her neck, my fingers to the hollow of her throat beneath her strong, slim jaw. Her pulse beat fast against them. I bent my head down and whispered into her ear, through those glorious curls, "Why have we never gotten to know each other like this before, Juri?" Her hand came up, took my wrist--not without any intent to hurt, but very firmly--and lifted my touch away from her as though it were a clinging vine or a dead tree branch. "Because, Touga," she said quietly, "you're a bastard, and I'm a lesbian." There was not a trace of humour in her voice. "Of course," I agreed. I might have been a student receiving correction on an improper equation or a mistranslated English sentence. "I had forgotten briefly." There are some boundaries that can be crossed, and then there are some to which it is given only that they will, briefly and infrequently, become a little blurred. Ours was the latter. I think in some other configuration of the world, even a slightly different one, we could have been good friends, perhaps even lovers. But here we were as we were and that seemed unlikely to change any time soon. "I suppose you'll be going soon?" she said pointedly. "I don't think I was the first one you've spoken to today, nor am I to be the last, yes?" I nodded. She understood, then, that there was an order to these things, a symmetry. "Go talk to your sister, Touga," Juri said quietly. I cannot say whether it was advice or command. Again, I nodded. I moved to the door and slipped on my shoes. "Take care, Juri," I said, repeating my earlier words, knowing that now I would be leaving, that the moment was gone, that such a moment would likely never come between us again--that by tomorrow, even, it would seem to have faded. It would be as a dream dreamt long ago. I would reflect on some of the things I had thought with contempt, believing that I had them only cynically, as private amusements, as hidden jokes. There are no coincidences in this world--this garden, he called it a garden to me, once--that we inhabit. Terrifyingly, monstrously, there are no coincidences at all. Red king, white pawn, red queen. "Take care, Touga." I left her then, climbed down the three flights of stairs (these days I do not take elevators unless I must), was relieved to see no girls from the school in the lobby to impede me with their chatter. As I opened the door and walked out, I threw a last glance back towards the way from which I had come, as though doing that might prevent the moment escaping me. Thus, not watching where I was going, I collided with a girl as I stepped out into the street. Being much larger, I nearly knocked her flat. As it was, she dropped her bag, and its clasp popped; books, papers, pen, spilled out. "Pardon me, please," I said, as I steadied her. I knelt to help her gather her things; in the evening light, she recognized me before I did her (I have long been in the habit of letting my eyes glide over a girl's face in appreciation of its features without making any attempt to memorize them), and I heard her gasp aloud, fearfully. "President Kiryuu," she said. "Yes," I replied. I tucked the last pen into her bag, then handed it to her. "You should get the clasp on this fixed, Takatsuki Shiori-san. I'm sorry for running into you like that." "It's all right," she said. She had, I noted, an unusually sweet voice, very musical, very attractive. Her bag was clutched to her chest like a shield. "We met by the fountain," she said after a long pause, and there was something in her voice that made think she might soon burst into tears. I realized then that she was desperately needy, that I could have taken her and made her mine with ease, just as Tsuchiya did. I wondered whether he had enjoyed her, for I'd known him well enough to know that he would have despised anything that Juri loved other than him, particularly if it did not love her back; had he taken any pleasure at all in that lithe little body, or had it been merely something he'd done because he had to? He undoubtedly would have thought of it as the latter, whatever the reality of it was. That was one of the ways that we had been different; I think he really did believe in his own justifications, most of the time. I could have taken her, as I said. May I buy you dinner tomorrow make my apology proper, Shiori-san? And after that a walk in the park by the moonlight, and after that... But that wasn't who I was any longer, despite my wishes. Sometimes I think I could grow to hate Utena for being who she is, for making me love her despite what I was, and thereby making me what I am. And what is that? Who is Kiryuu Touga now? A bastard, I thought--just as Juri said. By birth, by nature. One does not become a different man through a few loose acts of tarnished goodness after living for so long in the darkness. I am not a snake, to shed my skin its entirety, nor do I wish to be. But neither am I what I was, and I've only you to thank and blame for that, don't I, Utena? You gave me back my heart, and then you tore a piece of it off for yourself; I will always need you, and I will always lack you, in this old world or in some new one. So all I did was look at Takatsuki Shiori, the girl whom Juri loved and would likely never have, and I said, "Yes, by the fountain. But those days are done now." She nodded. The eager desperation for me to notice her and single her out as somehow special vanished from her face. I wonder, perhaps, did I only imagine it there? "Were you talking to Juri-san just now? This is her building." "Yes. You're going to see her?" "We're going to study together," she said. Her smile was bright and happy, but shy. "For English. I've always been pretty good at English--" Then she laughed; she no longer seemed frightened by me at all. "But you don't really care, of course. I'm sorry. Good night." I bid her good night as well, and left for home. It was a long walk, but I looked forward to it. I didn't know what I was going to say to Nanami, who'd been staying home from school, hardly ever leaving her room. When she sees me, she speaks quietly, with almost absurd politeness, and calls me Touga. There are no words for her that I can find, not even the truth--if she would believe it. Thank you, God, for symmetry, for saving her for last. Utena let me hold her under the stars for a brief, sweet while. Juri invited me in for coffee. Small kindnesses, as precious as jewels. Kindness is all the kinder when it is undeserved, unearned. I wish it hadn't taken me so long to understand. I wish that I'd known from the very start that I loved her, because then this change might actually be able to make a difference, rather than simply leaving me utterly hollow. Red king, red queen, white pawn. And no more pieces on the board, all the other chessmen in the box. A coffin is a kind of box, isn't it? All in the same coffin together, clinging--or trying to cling--to one another. The night is coming down. The constellations are surfacing from the black. Streetlight, starlight. It's a long way home. Plenty of time to think. I'll come up with something to say by then, something to fix things. I know I will. END Notes: Another story, like "Sonata For Piano Duo", born of my awkward class schedule at the University of Toronto, begun some weeks back and then finished in time for Valentine's Day when I realized that the themes of it fit. There is, at least for me, something very different about writing a story by hand rather than composing it before the monitor of the computer. It is in some ways both more difficult and much easier to write a story focused upon the relationship between two characters who have as little genuine interaction in the series as Touga and Juri do. There is a greater freedom coupled to a lack of clear guidance, of the definitions of the boundaries and intricacies that a relationship between two complex characters would involve. Written in the lobby of Victoria College, in the Laidlaw Library, in various classes, on the subway, and finished in the Spadina Public Library.