"Hello. You've reached Keiko Yukimura. I'm not available right now, so please leave your name and a message, and I'll get back to you as soon as I can!"
From what little I recall of Kuwabara's sister, I'm hardly surprised by that assessment.
...
Keiko, I wonder if I might ask you something, but with the understanding that it stay between the two of us. I'm sorry to have to ask that of you, but. It's — I need to know. Or rather, I need to have the suspicion confirmed.
[But wait. Captain Strategist is doing some math here, because in a best-of-five tournament, a round going to four matches means each side must've suffered at least one loss.]
That's madness. As dangerous as the Toguro brothers are, I can't imagine what would've possessed us to field our lineup that way.
Though I assume Yusuke insisted on his own match. I...would've hoped that Hiei might succeed in taking it away from him.
Watching that fight, helplessly, from the back of the stands...that was the hardest thing I've ever had to do. And I still couldn't even do that. I wasn't strong enough to watch him...get hurt like that without going completely numb.
And even when it was like that, he still...he still won. Yusuke got back up and defeated him, for good.
[She's lying, he thinks at first. It's impulsive, even a touch irrational; he has no reason to think she'd lie, and yet there's something that still isn't adding up in a way that he can't precisely make fit.
Four fights in the finals of the Dark Tournament. Someone had to have lost. Yusuke won, which rules him out, and the younger Toguro would have gone last anyway, so it's only natural that the loss must have preceded him.
(Who was their fifth fighter? Yusuke said it was a girl...strange. She must have been in the fifth slot, then. Risky, but...)
No. If they make it out fine, if Yusuke manages to defeat Toguro, then they must win the tournament. Yet to go to four matches, someone must have lost. And to have never made it to the fifth, then Team Urameshi must have suffered one loss and three wins.
The obvious loss, of course, would be Kuwabara against the elder Toguro. And yet Keiko confirmed that he is alive — and no one who fought a Toguro brother would be able to suffer a loss that didn't also end in a death. Implausible as it is, if Kuwabara is alive, then he must also have won...
So. Hiei, or himself? Who could have lost?
To have made a transformation like that with no apparent catalyst — I suppose it would suggest that I was in some extreme form of danger.
She'd stammered.
He was attacking you. You were having trouble.
There are no draws, no stalemates, no mercy to be had in the finals of the Dark Tournament. So it only follows, logically, that if he were the one being pushed around, if he somehow managed to access Youko's latent abilities, then he must've —
And yet she hadn't looked surprised to see him alive when she'd arrived. Would she have even thought to hide that, so early on? Likely not.
Nngh. Something here isn't adding up. He's missing something, and he's asked too much already; he shouldn't have even pushed her as far as he did. That was his own error. He's going to have to live with that now.
He can tell already that this is going to bother him for a long, long time.]
That's good to hear.
[She wouldn't lie to him about her friends being okay. If nothing else, he's certain of that.]
I appreciate it, Keiko. And if there's something you want to ask me in return, I'll answer it. Please don't hesitate to; after all this, you're certainly entitled to that much.
['Ask him what he became, and why he stole the Forlorn Hope.'
It's not that she's curious--no, that's not true, she is. She's curious, but it's more that this seems to be important to Kurama, not to her, and she wants to know why. Kurama isn't Yusuke, shelving secrets out of view so he can look tough, so no one can even graze his vulnerable points except by accident; and it doesn't seem to be the other kind of secret Yusuke keeps, the ones about present danger, the ones to keep her from worrying.
On the other hand, she has her pride. '...curiosity will get the better of you eventually, I expect.' Whatever, fox man. He doesn't know her, he doesn't know her life.
She rests her chin in her hand and looks out the window for a while until she lands on something she is curious about.]
I hate to answer a question with a question, but I'm afraid it's relevant to your understanding. I assume you're familiar with Yusuke's...work as a detective, let's call it?
More or less. He and Botan tried to sell me some story about an internship at first, but after the tournament, well. You could say I've got a better sense of the whole picture now.
Yes, well. That may not have been entirely his fault; his employer has a fairly strict policy about keeping those activities secret from the human world at large. Presumably what he told you was simply..."the official corporate statement", if you will.
It's good, though, that you're aware of that much. It'll make more sense when I explain that our first meeting was when he was sent to apprehend me for a crime I'd committed.
I'm flattered, believe me. But no, I'm afraid it's the truth — Yusuke is the hero of this particular story, whereas I'm...well. I suppose that would make me the "villain", then.
Rest assured, I was absolutely responsible for the transgression he came after me for. But rather than simply taking me captive and bringing me to justice, Yusuke took the time to listen to my reasons for why I'd done what I'd done. It was more than I deserved, that much is for certain.
It's not often the duty of a law enforcement officer to hear out and even empathize with the criminal he's pursuing.
I do need to be very clear about that — not for the sake of soliciting pity, but because I want to be honest with you. It may not seem that way on the surface, but Yusuke wasn't sent against me mistakenly or in error. I was a criminal; to some degree, I still am, as I've not yet worked off my pardon.
The reason why it's so significant to me to make that clear...is because it means that the ONLY reason Yusuke could have shown me the mercy he did is because of his personal character. There was no outside incentive. And other people in his position certainly wouldn't have, but he did.
Okay. I think I understand why you're saying that, then.
[Keiko has to type for a long time before she sends her message.]
But that's just how he is. Maybe other people wouldn't have, but Yusuke doesn't care about "other people." He always goes his own way no matter what; and it gets him in a lot of trouble, but that's what so admirable about him, too. That he never stops fighting to make sure SOMEONE does the right thing for the little guy.
Can I ask you something else, to clarify what I'm trying to say? It might be a little personal.
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I don't know what I would've thought, actually, but I'm glad you made it through the experience unharmed.
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I think the demons sitting closest to us were scared of Shizuru. So it worked out.
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...
Keiko, I wonder if I might ask you something, but with the understanding that it stay between the two of us. I'm sorry to have to ask that of you, but. It's — I need to know. Or rather, I need to have the suspicion confirmed.
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It won't be Hiei, in the end. It'll be Yusuke pitted against him.
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Yes.
It's you against Karasu, Hiei against... I think his name was Bui. Kuwabara fought the elder Toguro brother.
And Yusuke fought the younger.
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[But wait. Captain Strategist is doing some math here, because in a best-of-five tournament, a round going to four matches means each side must've suffered at least one loss.]
That's madness. As dangerous as the Toguro brothers are, I can't imagine what would've possessed us to field our lineup that way.
Though I assume Yusuke insisted on his own match. I...would've hoped that Hiei might succeed in taking it away from him.
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So yes, I would imagine that any opportunity that arose for him to address that, he would immediately seek to take.
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But it was personal for Yusuke, too. Looking back on it... I'm not sure anyone else could have claimed that fight.
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...I suppose I'm just concerned what a fight like that might do to him, and coming to the grim realization that I honestly don't have an answer.
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I know.
Watching that fight, helplessly, from the back of the stands...that was the hardest thing I've ever had to do. And I still couldn't even do that. I wasn't strong enough to watch him...get hurt like that without going completely numb.
And even when it was like that, he still...he still won. Yusuke got back up and defeated him, for good.
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Is Kuwabara alive?
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You, Hiei, Kuwabara, and Yusuke all make it out okay.
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Four fights in the finals of the Dark Tournament. Someone had to have lost. Yusuke won, which rules him out, and the younger Toguro would have gone last anyway, so it's only natural that the loss must have preceded him.
(Who was their fifth fighter? Yusuke said it was a girl...strange. She must have been in the fifth slot, then. Risky, but...)
No. If they make it out fine, if Yusuke manages to defeat Toguro, then they must win the tournament. Yet to go to four matches, someone must have lost. And to have never made it to the fifth, then Team Urameshi must have suffered one loss and three wins.
The obvious loss, of course, would be Kuwabara against the elder Toguro. And yet Keiko confirmed that he is alive — and no one who fought a Toguro brother would be able to suffer a loss that didn't also end in a death. Implausible as it is, if Kuwabara is alive, then he must also have won...
So. Hiei, or himself? Who could have lost?
To have made a transformation like that with no apparent catalyst — I suppose it would suggest that I was in some extreme form of danger.
She'd stammered.
He was attacking you. You were having trouble.
There are no draws, no stalemates, no mercy to be had in the finals of the Dark Tournament. So it only follows, logically, that if he were the one being pushed around, if he somehow managed to access Youko's latent abilities, then he must've —
And yet she hadn't looked surprised to see him alive when she'd arrived. Would she have even thought to hide that, so early on? Likely not.
Nngh. Something here isn't adding up. He's missing something, and he's asked too much already; he shouldn't have even pushed her as far as he did. That was his own error. He's going to have to live with that now.
He can tell already that this is going to bother him for a long, long time.]
That's good to hear.
[She wouldn't lie to him about her friends being okay. If nothing else, he's certain of that.]
I appreciate it, Keiko. And if there's something you want to ask me in return, I'll answer it. Please don't hesitate to; after all this, you're certainly entitled to that much.
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It's not that she's curious--no, that's not true, she is. She's curious, but it's more that this seems to be important to Kurama, not to her, and she wants to know why. Kurama isn't Yusuke, shelving secrets out of view so he can look tough, so no one can even graze his vulnerable points except by accident; and it doesn't seem to be the other kind of secret Yusuke keeps, the ones about present danger, the ones to keep her from worrying.
On the other hand, she has her pride. '...curiosity will get the better of you eventually, I expect.' Whatever, fox man. He doesn't know her, he doesn't know her life.
She rests her chin in her hand and looks out the window for a while until she lands on something she is curious about.]
How did you and Yusuke meet?
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I hate to answer a question with a question, but I'm afraid it's relevant to your understanding. I assume you're familiar with Yusuke's...work as a detective, let's call it?
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It's good, though, that you're aware of that much. It'll make more sense when I explain that our first meeting was when he was sent to apprehend me for a crime I'd committed.
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I hope you don't take this the wrong way regarding either of you, but it almost makes more sense the other way around.
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Rest assured, I was absolutely responsible for the transgression he came after me for. But rather than simply taking me captive and bringing me to justice, Yusuke took the time to listen to my reasons for why I'd done what I'd done. It was more than I deserved, that much is for certain.
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What makes you say hearing you out was more than what you deserved?
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I do need to be very clear about that — not for the sake of soliciting pity, but because I want to be honest with you. It may not seem that way on the surface, but Yusuke wasn't sent against me mistakenly or in error. I was a criminal; to some degree, I still am, as I've not yet worked off my pardon.
The reason why it's so significant to me to make that clear...is because it means that the ONLY reason Yusuke could have shown me the mercy he did is because of his personal character. There was no outside incentive. And other people in his position certainly wouldn't have, but he did.
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[Keiko has to type for a long time before she sends her message.]
But that's just how he is. Maybe other people wouldn't have, but Yusuke doesn't care about "other people." He always goes his own way no matter what; and it gets him in a lot of trouble, but that's what so admirable about him, too. That he never stops fighting to make sure SOMEONE does the right thing for the little guy.
Can I ask you something else, to clarify what I'm trying to say? It might be a little personal.
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You're welcome to ask me anything you like, Keiko. Personal or not.
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