Ryuugamine Mikado (Shark) (
digitalemperor) wrote in
streetwalkers2013-09-10 02:51 am
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It'd been over a decade since the epidemic that wiped out a third of the earth's population, and the wars and political struggles that had risen in the following, chaotic years had down in for another half of what remained, if not more if one counted the death toll to disease and crime, the lack of modern medicine, the tainted environment and water in most urban areas and the general set back in civilization.
Mikado had been fifteen when it started. He was twenty-seven now. And like any of the survivors of the years between the end of the world and now... He was changed. One of the lucky ones to survive disease and war, right? Lucky... Survival came at a cost, and when the streets of Ikebukuro, once bustling with commerce and tourists, became a dead zone of gang warfare and violence, Mikado had been right in the middle of it. And powerless.
He'd learned just how powerless, painfully, and often. Until his hatred and anger had warped and tempered him into something cold and precise as a scalpel. He wasn't strong in the way the thugs and the fighters were, but amateurish inexperience could only last so long and Mikado was a fast learner. He rose to power on three things; his wits, his force of personality, and ruthlessness. Ambushing his enemies and using clever traps and guises to get him where brute strength couldn't, and using those connections that were drawn to his innate charisma to get him where only brute strength could. Even after disaster and damage, he had a certain ability to charm people with his personality, and those that followed him now were, by and large, either incredibly loyal or too useful to be rid of. In turn his mind and vision was too useful for even the less loyal followers to risk trying to be rid of, and so a balance was struck somewhere along the line. He'd lost the charming uncertainty and idealism but he'd gained a quiet, iron confidence that others were drawn to.
He had a game, a way to control the territory he'd wrested from lawlessness. Preventing fighting on the streets of the ruined city was impossible, but he could enforce it. Give it incentive. Only registered combatants would be suffered to be found fighting, and they could tear at each other as they wished, when they wished, wherever they wished. The incentive; tags given to everyone who registered, that could be ripped from a defeated opponent. They could be traded in for anything based on their number value. Better accommodations, whores, drugs, weapons, though guns were banned from the fights. The most skilled could, in theory, attempt for the specific poker hand of tags that would allow them to challenge the organization's mysterious and shadow'd leader, though none had ever reached that goal. In turn, anyone unregistered caught fighting would be summarily executed by the enforcers--unless the enforcers decided they were good looking enough to serve another purpose.
In that way, Ikebukuro stabilized a little. Non-combatants still feared the streets at night but thugs feared the enforcers more, and some semblance of life continuing grew a little, under the watchful laws of the lawless Dollars.
For Mikado this wasn't his end ambition but it was a start. But he hadn't expected, months ago, that one of the new combatants to register would have been Kida himself. The registration took place in the mansion the main members of Dollars called home, and with all registrations Mikado had been watching the newcomers put on their masks, his own in place before he revealed himself to meet them, explain the rules, and ask if they wanted to participate.
His heart had near stopped when he'd seen Kida. He almost hadn't recognized him, both their faces and voices had changed with age and trauma, and Mikado was sure Kida hadn't even had a remote moment of recognition when Mikado explained the purpose and perks of fighters. Mikado's own role in the world he'd created was the secretary to the shadowy and terrifying Dollar's boss, with none but the highest ranking aware that the quiet and no-nonsense, rather popular secretary-san was the shadowy Boss himself. That he dealt in everything from drugs to slavery and black market items, well, that was just a means of further acquiring power. Distasteful as it was, it was effective, and he left the more sadistic parts to those that most enjoyed it, usually.
But seeing Kida had shaken him, worried him in a way he wasn't aware he could still worry. Fighters died daily, defeat could mean anything from humiliation and rape to outright murder, anything was allowed in the laws of the game, but only within the game. A victor had complete freedom to deal with a loser as they saw fit, and after seeing Kida's face for the first time in years, Mikado had had his first nightmare in years; that same face dead and staring, lifeless and accusatory. For days afterwards he'd been grumpy and out of sorts, a state he couldn't afford to maintain.
Try as he might to put it from mind, he couldn't help but be drawn to Kida's progress in the fights. And Kida's presence brought with it other trouble. Members of a gang from a territory Mikado didn't control (not yet, but that was an eventual goal, they were strong enough to pose a problem for now though) had started showing up in Dollar's territory. They weren't registered fighters and they mostly respected the game's laws (those who didn't met bad ends, even rival gangs feared the consequences of violating Dollar's law) but they were still a concerning presence, trouble tracking Kida.
And Mikado was tracking them. He knew, after a few weeks of his underlings keeping tabs, that the gang was after Kida, and so he kept watch himself or through an underling.
So when Kida found himself being backed into a corner by the thugs of that group Mikado had been watching, Mikado happened to be there. If Mikado were an enforcer he'd have dealt with them ruthlessly, but he was only the Dollar's "secretary" and so he made a note of each face before he darted out of the shadow of one doorway, grabbed Kida's arm with a shouted "This way!" and ran.
No one knew the streets and back alleys like Mikado did, like he'd made a point to, and but still he kept them navigating the maze of abandoned and derelict buildings for twenty minutes to be safe, before coming to a stop in one mostly intact old apartment building, a little winded, letting go of Kida to glance cautiously out a broken window. The streets were empty, there wasn't a sound or feeling of anyone but the two of them.
Mikado had been fifteen when it started. He was twenty-seven now. And like any of the survivors of the years between the end of the world and now... He was changed. One of the lucky ones to survive disease and war, right? Lucky... Survival came at a cost, and when the streets of Ikebukuro, once bustling with commerce and tourists, became a dead zone of gang warfare and violence, Mikado had been right in the middle of it. And powerless.
He'd learned just how powerless, painfully, and often. Until his hatred and anger had warped and tempered him into something cold and precise as a scalpel. He wasn't strong in the way the thugs and the fighters were, but amateurish inexperience could only last so long and Mikado was a fast learner. He rose to power on three things; his wits, his force of personality, and ruthlessness. Ambushing his enemies and using clever traps and guises to get him where brute strength couldn't, and using those connections that were drawn to his innate charisma to get him where only brute strength could. Even after disaster and damage, he had a certain ability to charm people with his personality, and those that followed him now were, by and large, either incredibly loyal or too useful to be rid of. In turn his mind and vision was too useful for even the less loyal followers to risk trying to be rid of, and so a balance was struck somewhere along the line. He'd lost the charming uncertainty and idealism but he'd gained a quiet, iron confidence that others were drawn to.
He had a game, a way to control the territory he'd wrested from lawlessness. Preventing fighting on the streets of the ruined city was impossible, but he could enforce it. Give it incentive. Only registered combatants would be suffered to be found fighting, and they could tear at each other as they wished, when they wished, wherever they wished. The incentive; tags given to everyone who registered, that could be ripped from a defeated opponent. They could be traded in for anything based on their number value. Better accommodations, whores, drugs, weapons, though guns were banned from the fights. The most skilled could, in theory, attempt for the specific poker hand of tags that would allow them to challenge the organization's mysterious and shadow'd leader, though none had ever reached that goal. In turn, anyone unregistered caught fighting would be summarily executed by the enforcers--unless the enforcers decided they were good looking enough to serve another purpose.
In that way, Ikebukuro stabilized a little. Non-combatants still feared the streets at night but thugs feared the enforcers more, and some semblance of life continuing grew a little, under the watchful laws of the lawless Dollars.
For Mikado this wasn't his end ambition but it was a start. But he hadn't expected, months ago, that one of the new combatants to register would have been Kida himself. The registration took place in the mansion the main members of Dollars called home, and with all registrations Mikado had been watching the newcomers put on their masks, his own in place before he revealed himself to meet them, explain the rules, and ask if they wanted to participate.
His heart had near stopped when he'd seen Kida. He almost hadn't recognized him, both their faces and voices had changed with age and trauma, and Mikado was sure Kida hadn't even had a remote moment of recognition when Mikado explained the purpose and perks of fighters. Mikado's own role in the world he'd created was the secretary to the shadowy and terrifying Dollar's boss, with none but the highest ranking aware that the quiet and no-nonsense, rather popular secretary-san was the shadowy Boss himself. That he dealt in everything from drugs to slavery and black market items, well, that was just a means of further acquiring power. Distasteful as it was, it was effective, and he left the more sadistic parts to those that most enjoyed it, usually.
But seeing Kida had shaken him, worried him in a way he wasn't aware he could still worry. Fighters died daily, defeat could mean anything from humiliation and rape to outright murder, anything was allowed in the laws of the game, but only within the game. A victor had complete freedom to deal with a loser as they saw fit, and after seeing Kida's face for the first time in years, Mikado had had his first nightmare in years; that same face dead and staring, lifeless and accusatory. For days afterwards he'd been grumpy and out of sorts, a state he couldn't afford to maintain.
Try as he might to put it from mind, he couldn't help but be drawn to Kida's progress in the fights. And Kida's presence brought with it other trouble. Members of a gang from a territory Mikado didn't control (not yet, but that was an eventual goal, they were strong enough to pose a problem for now though) had started showing up in Dollar's territory. They weren't registered fighters and they mostly respected the game's laws (those who didn't met bad ends, even rival gangs feared the consequences of violating Dollar's law) but they were still a concerning presence, trouble tracking Kida.
And Mikado was tracking them. He knew, after a few weeks of his underlings keeping tabs, that the gang was after Kida, and so he kept watch himself or through an underling.
So when Kida found himself being backed into a corner by the thugs of that group Mikado had been watching, Mikado happened to be there. If Mikado were an enforcer he'd have dealt with them ruthlessly, but he was only the Dollar's "secretary" and so he made a note of each face before he darted out of the shadow of one doorway, grabbed Kida's arm with a shouted "This way!" and ran.
No one knew the streets and back alleys like Mikado did, like he'd made a point to, and but still he kept them navigating the maze of abandoned and derelict buildings for twenty minutes to be safe, before coming to a stop in one mostly intact old apartment building, a little winded, letting go of Kida to glance cautiously out a broken window. The streets were empty, there wasn't a sound or feeling of anyone but the two of them.
no subject
He hands Mikado a fresh bottle, still smiling, then sits back with one of his own.]
You might be surprised. It's kind of funny how much you never knew back in high school...
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...So tell me about it.
[They've got nothing but time to kill and for once this sounds... Less like an evasion and almost like Kida offering something, opening up a little. Either way neither of them are going anywhere for a while.]
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...I told you I had a gang in middle school. We were just dumb kids, but it kind of got over my head after awhile. Y'know, I tried to keep it really small time, but things got violent anyway. We had a rival group that was bigger and older than us. That's when I met Izaya, through a girl. It was all his set-up, but... I loved her. And then she got hurt, because of the fighting. Because I failed to protect her. So... Actually, I invited you to Ikebukuro so that I could run away from that whole life. I left the gang, and her, and traded it for you, and then Anri too. But the whole time, I was just pretending. All that playing around, hitting on older women and being loud... I was lying. I wanted to be happy and normal, so I faked it. I just thought I should act like the kid I'd been in Saitama, and if I tried hard enough that life would really become mine.
Really, I've never done anything but bullshit, ever since I came to this city. Being Lucky was just a choice to throw away the parts of me that weren't needed and force the parts that were, because I wanted to help people. I faked it til I made it. So it shouldn't be so surprising that it's fallen apart. The real me has always been... this. Just a failure and a liar.
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[He listens to the whole story the whole way through, quiet, drinking water. By the end he's done with the bottle and his eyes are closed.]
But you you know... I've known you were a liar since we were little kids in Saitama. Ah, remember when we were hunting rhinoceros beetles that one summer? You told me you wanted to sell them but... I never told you I found out the real reason. You just wanted to give them away to some kids so they could beat those bullies. You really did it in a flashy, round about way you know? Even lying to make yourself look like you weren't that cool...
[God that was so long ago.]
It was dumb but that kind of chivalry stood out to me.
I think if you've lost sight of who you are, it's because you're actually buying into your own lies. That you aren't that good a person, that there isn't something worthwhile in you... That you're a failure. All those things I can't really believe. You might fail and you might do things that harm your sense of chivalry but you're still someone who loves good over evil and heroes and knights. You're someone who tried hard to be that. Even if you messed up with other things, even if you were faking it, you were pretty successful.
That you're a liar is true though.
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[That's the heart of things, right now. Everything else is just background fuzz. He doesn't want to argue about his whole life, anyway. That's years and years of trying and faking and slipping and watching people get hurt or die because he couldn't follow through in the end. What's really bothering him -- what's making him start crying again now, is that it's just so unfair for Mikado to say nice things about him, when he's sitting here hurt, scarred, because of Kida's failures.
It makes his throat hurt and his chest ache, and he has to drop his head into his hands to try and steady himself enough to keep from simply melting down. It's just not right. It's not fair at all.]
You were my most important person and I didn't protect you at all...
no subject
Do you think you're some kind of superhero, that you can do everything? I'm not... I was never a damsel you needed to protect, either. I always thought you were dead and I missed you, but I was glad too that you didn't have to go through some of the things... I guess you did in the end, and I hate that.
But you know you saved me too? Even if you didn't know it or mean to, knowing about Lucky gave me a lot of courage and hope. And I think you know hope's not that easy to come by when you think it's all lost.
It's funny but when I missed you a lot, I was also thinking of you. I just didn't know it.
no subject
[He can't let that go. Maybe he's being stubborn, irrational, but right now all he can feel is miserable. But that's just normal lately, isn't it? He's been drowning in his own guilt and despair for over a year and a half now, and it's ingrained. Everything Mikado says is just a few drops in a huge empty bucket.]
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Rather, isn't it more amazing we met again at all?
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[He can't deny that one, at least. It is pretty stunning, the two of them sitting here, acting like they're close again after all these years. It's almost funny. If he were feeling more hopeful, he would venture that it could be fate.
He sniffs, rubbing at his eyes and glancing at his wristwatch nervously as he does. It's about that time, isn't it? He reaches for his pocket without saying anything. Mikado's used to that routine by now, too. Only... Only his pills weren't in his pants pocket. They were in his jacket pocket. And his jacket pocket is several blocks away on a corpse, assuming it hasn't been stolen or picked up by Fate yet.
Suddenly, he goes white as a sheet.]
...Oh no.
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[Mikado knows the routine, so he's not alarmed until Masaomi is. Then he even struggles to sit up, eyes wide. The attempt to sit up fails miserably but his attention is on Kida all the same.]
--You lost them?
no subject
[He glances from Mikado to the door several times, contemplating going to get them. But there's almost no chance a nice, flashy jacket like his will be left sitting, even with some blood stains. It's been almost an hour. It's got to be gone. And there's no guarantee they're not still being looked for. It would be completely stupid to go back for them, but-- but knowing an episode is coming is almost worse than the experience itself. The anticipation is gut-wrenching, leaving him shaking even though he knows he's got another ten minutes or so before it hits.]
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Don't go out. You'll get yourself killed. I know it's asking a lot but endure it.
If it helps, I've heard some pretty good news about the cure.
no subject
[He'd like to. Really, he would. But there's a very good reason he can't, and why he sets the bottle aside and instead gets up and starts dragging out the futons instead. Just keep busy, he tells himself. Get Mikado into a proper bed, and give himself one as an option.]
If they find us, someone's got to be able to move.
[He doesn't reply to the line about the cure. Pointedly. He's avoided talking about it since Mikado mentioned it, in fact.]
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[Not that he'll stop Kida from preparing the futons, they're both going to need them for rest.]
[And he's not going to stop, not about the cure, even if Kida's ignoring him.]
The last results I heard were unexpectedly good. The treatment plan is amazing, and within a few months he should, at this rate, have a cure ready. Not a countermeasure, an actual cure.
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...You're going to bed. If I take painkillers I'll be woozy for hours. Anyway, I've fought sick before.
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[Yeah we're having this conversation. Drugs are not helping Mikado's judgment calls on what and when to back down or shut up.]
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[He goes quiet again, until he has the futons out. Then he lets out a heavy breath, as he reaches for the blankets.]
Come lie down. Or do I need to carry you?
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Agree. Agree to get he cure, when it's ready. So this won't be an issue again, so your life won't be counting down like a time bomb.
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Lie down, would you? You're too serious for being drugged up.
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Masaomi. I'm serious because it's serious. Agree to it.
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[Looks away. He knows he's going to get chewed out for this, but... Well, that's why he's been avoiding the subject.]
No.
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[Wow petulant. Not even chewing him out (yet) not surprised at all. Just. Sulky tired almost childish and haughty.]
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[Pulls his arm away and tucks him in. Roughly.]
Go to sleep.
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Agree. It's stupid not to want a future. Weren't you just saying you regret running away?
So don't.
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The past and the future aren't the same thing.
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