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<i><b>Disclaimer:</b> YuGiOh does not belong to me. It is the property of several
Japanese people and corporations. All I want is Joey and Kaiba... *drool* Ahem.
This short is rated PG by the Motion Picture Association of America for
language, implied violence, and implied sexuality. This is a follow-up to
"Ankoku no Osore Nai," and also a bit of an experiment. I don't usually
write in first person, but it bit me this way... Go figure.
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<p align="center"><b>The Only Constant<Br>by: Ellen Brand</b></p>
<p>"Change is inevitable, except from a vending
machine." -- Anonymous</p>
<p><i>"I'm not going to
let you do this, Joey," he says softly, big eyes still locked on mine.
"I won't let you throw away your humanity."</i></p>
<p><i>Humanity?</i><i> I have to laugh. Like I need or want
something so... WEAK. Doesn't he get it? Doesn't he
see how much better, stronger than human I am? What power we can have? We can
be GODS, for Pete's sake! Immortal, eternal, going where we
want, doing what we want...</i></p>
<p><i>The chin's sticking
out again. I've known him long enough to read him like a book. He's not going
to do it. I'm offering him the world with both hands, and he's just gonna throw
it away. For that damn shadow that's done nothing but bring misery to all of us
ever since that puzzle got back together. I should never have pulled that piece
outta the pool. </i></p>
<p><i>Fine,
then, Yugi.</i><i> You want to cling
to your humanity, your mortality? I'll go one step better. Grabbing him, I tilt
his head to one side, exposing that soft neck. You want to be mortal? Then like
all mortals... you DIE. Sinking my fangs in, ignoring the screams of the
nitwits I used to call friends, I get my first taste of his blood.</i></p>
<p><i>And it tastes like
heaven.</i></p>
<p>I don't know how I managed to keep from screaming as I wake
up. Every muscle in my body is tense, and it takes me a second to realize I'm
staring at a white-painted ceiling, lying on my own bed, not sucking Yugi's
life away in that damn warehouse. It's only been a few days since I got back; I
shouldn't be so surprised that I'm having nightmares. I just... hadn't realized
it got to me that deep, y'know? I was home, I was fine, I hadn't really hurt
anybody... Mai said she forgave me, and her eyes said she meant it. She even
kissed me on the cheek before she left Kaiba's.</p>
<p>Yeah, Seto Kaiba actually invited us all over to his mansion
for a welcome home party. I think that had to be the weirdest thing out of the
whole mess. Forget the fact that apparently the Blue Eyes are REAL, forget the fact that I was a blood-sucking undead
fiend... Seto Kaiba threw a party. Not much of a party, mainly just us hanging
out in the backyard, goofing off, but still, a party is a party. </p>
<p>Yugi and Yami weren't that surprised. Come to think of it,
neither was Tristan... I think I missed a lot while I was out, and nobody's had
a chance to sit down and tell me about it yet. I'm not the only one who was
freaked out by the whole thing. Apparently, not only did Kaiba help, and
actually ADMIT he could do magic, but Bakura decided to pitch in, too. Shows
you just how nasty this thing was, I guess. </p>
<p>Of course, my dad was drunk for most of it. Apparently
nobody ever told him I'd left the hospital. I got home from Kaiba's, and he was
already passed out in his chair. When he woke up, he just grumbled a
"welcome home," and told me to make dinner. And last night, he got
plowed and threw a bottle at me. Ah well, nice to see some things are still
kind of normal.</p>
<p>I still can't quite believe Yugi actually offered his throat
to me. Kaiba, sure-- it was a bet, and he knew he could beat me. But Yugi... God, he just stood there, so sure that he knew
me, knew I wouldn't. And he was right. How can anyone have that kind of faith?
And oh God, if he had been wrong...</p>
<p>I can't. I can't lie here thinking about this all day. I'm
gonna go out for a run, soak up the sunshine. I can't get enough of the sun
these days. And maybe... maybe I'll call Serenity. I need to hear from her, to
remember that some things in my life haven't gone to hell. </p>
<p>Maybe I just need a little hope.</p>
<p><hr>
*</p>
<p>Things definitely need to change around here. I haven't
exactly been neglecting my business; I could no more do that than stop
breathing. But with the Duelist Kingdom,
getting trapped in my own computer game, Battle
City, and now the Black Pharaoh, I
haven't had the time to concentrate on it the way I wanted to. We've been
limping along in low gear since I... terminated the Big 5, running mainly on
momentum. That's fine for a while, but if Kaiba Corporation is going to stay
competitive, I need to start doing some real work. This company is my dream, my
lifeblood. There's no way I'm letting it run into the ground.</p>
<p>First major order of business is to rebuild the security
staff. Kimo and his goons were loyal solely to the
Big 5, and when I fired them, I was left with a skeleton crew, but at least
they were loyal. And I haven't had any major projects that would require major
security recently... but dealing with a vampire Wheeler made me realize I need
a better security force, and I need them now. I need somebody who can go toe to
toe with a strategist like the mutt, who I'll admit (if only in my head) is one
of the best I've faced. Actually, I seriously considered offering him the
position, but it wouldn't do me much good to have a head of security who had to go to high school at the same times I did.
Besides, we'd kill each other in five minutes. Still... I'll make a note. If I
didn't have to deal with him all the time, it might work.</p>
<p>But I still need a security head, someone I can delegate
most of the work of rebuilding the staff to. Which is why I'm
sitting here reading profiles and conducting interviews. Most of them,
to date, haven't been a smashing success. Kimo and
the Big 5 had connections. Japan's
security specialists aren't beating down my door to work here.</p>
<p>"Mr. Kaiba?" My secretary.
She looks a bit scared-- guess my temper's getting to the point where it's
oozing out into the waiting room. I try to put a less-annoyed expression on my
face as I nod for her to continue. I don't think it worked.</p>
<p>"The next applicant is here... A Miss
Gaudet."</p>
<p>"Send her in, please, Amano-san." As she leaves, I
grab the appropriate profile. Alixandra Gaudet, American. Age
18-- huh, barely an adult, even by American standards. Louisiana Cajun,
place of birth, New Orleans. Family history of cops, bodyguards, and security specialists.
Fairly long list of references... no pictures. Apparently she really, REALLY
doesn't like being photographed-- several information gatherers lost cameras,
not to mention teeth. This should be interesting.</p>
<p>"You can go right in, Miss Gaudet," I can hear
Amano saying. Putting the folder away, I brace myself. I've only met a few
women in the upper levels of the security business, but they've all been the
same- cold, businesslike, sharks in mid-priced suits. Something tells me this
is going to be different. I'm not sure what; maybe it's that magic sense I've
just embraced. Maybe it's the comments in the folder, which waver between
glowing praise and downright rabid denunciation. Maybe it's just experience of
life in Domino City.</p>
<p>... Or maybe it's the three giant lizards snickering in the
back of my head.</p>
<p>She's TINY-- that's the first thing that hits me as she
enters my office. Taller than Mokuba, but only just-- I'd say about five-three,
tops. She's got the build to match, too-- what Americans call
"petite." At least what I can see of it.</p>
<p>That's the second thing-- her clothing. No
hyper-professional grey suits here. Her hair's red-- bright, coppery red, drawn
back in a braid. And she dresses along with it. The jacket is turquoise,
unstructured linen, masculine cut. Yes, I notice these things, just like I
notice the bulges that indicate she's carrying not one, but TWO guns under it.
Wonder how she got a permit for those in Japan.</p>
<p>The jacket's the most professional thing on her, too. She's
wearing blue jeans, a black t-shirt and-- uh huh, scuffed cowboy boots.
Definitely American, and doesn't care who knows it.</p>
<p>I finally look up and meet her eyes, which are, I notice,
the same color as her jacket. She's amused, too, by my sizing her up. Not
offended, though; of course, I didn't think she would be. Security specialists
know an evaluation when they see it.</p>
<p>"Please, have a seat." This is going to be an
interesting interview, I just know it.</p>
<p>She doesn't so much sit in the facing chair as perch in it.
One of the drawbacks of her size, I suppose. She hardly looks any older than
Mokuba, much less me. Admittedly, only by a year, but still.</p>
<p>"Miss Gaudet? I'm Seto Kaiba. Thank you for coming to
this interview."</p>
<p>"Call me Alix, please. I'm not much for formalities, as
you've probably guessed." Her smirk's a bit too close to the mutt's for my
comfort. And her voice... somehow, I have a feeling a lot of people
underestimate that low Cajun drawl. "This is business dress for me,"
she continues, gesturing at her jacket.</p>
<p>I'm not going to laugh. I'm not. Just because I can't
remember the last time I put on an actual suit for a business meeting... And
whatever sadist decreed that high heels should be business dress for women
ought to be shot. I was getting flowers for a month after I first told the female
employees they could wear flats.</p>
<p>"Alix, then." I pointedly
DON'T offer her the use of my first name. It doesn't seem to bother her.
"I see you're from Louisiana...
quite a distance. Why come to Japan
for a job?"</p>
<p>A careless shrug. "Mah brother's partner on the NOPD is from Tokyo
originally. I started learnin' to speak the language
when I was eight. I was looking for work, heard about your opening. I'm
comfortable here, thought I'd give it a try."</p>
<p>Hmph. It's as if she's read one of those interview preparation
articles and is determined to break every rule they have. Then again, I never
have been much for rules. I flip through the folder again. Her qualifications
are undeniable, and the few negatives in the folder strike me as exaggerated,
or something I can live with. Just one more question.</p>
<p>"So, Alix, why do you want to work for me?"</p>
<p>She's sizing me up now, obviously trying to decide whether
or not to offer me some corporate line of bullshit. "You've got a
reputation," she responds slowly. "You're a son of a bitch in the
corporate world, but you're an honest one. You play hardball, but you play
clean. My daddy taught me that in this business, you never work for a man you
wouldn't take a bullet for. I'm not sure about that, but I won't work for
someone I don't respect. And besides that, you're supposed to be hell on wheels
on your employees, but you're fair about it. And if anyone messes with you OR
your people, there's hell to pay. I like that." She smiles then, a
slightly off-center, wry grin. "Besides... You're one of the few men I've
met who thinks with the head on his shoulders."</p>
<p>That's it. I've never been impulsive, but sometimes you just
KNOW what the right decision is. I've always been a firm believer in hunches,
even before I accepted that magic might have some validity. Besides... she's
entirely wrong for the job. The total opposite of what a security chief should
be.</p>
<p>"You're hired. You start work Monday."</p>
<p>I need to have my head examined.</p>
<p><hr>
**</p>
<p>God, I think I'm the only one in this section younger than
thirty. Of course, this IS the university library, and it is the
religion/mythology section. I'm probably also the only person in here who isn't
working on a thesis. I'm getting some funny looks, but I don't think anyone is
going to bother me. I just have to get in, find what I need, and get out.</p>
<p>I could go to Yugi's grandfather,
of course... he's got that library that we had to pry Kaiba out of to eat. I
don't want to do that yet, though... I guess I don't want Yugi and Yami to know
how spooked I am. Not yet, anyway.</p>
<p>"Just a simple spell, Tea."
Yeah, right. I thought I was comfortable with magic; I mean, I've seen so much
of it, it's normal now. Okay, having Malik rummaging
around in my mind was pretty freaky, but that was one time. Seeing what Kaiba
could pull out of his cards barely fazed me.</p>
<p>Maybe... maybe it was because I was the one doing the magic.
I've always just stood by and watched, lent moral support, or the strength of
my friendship. This was something completely different. It was... like flying.
I could feel this energy inside me, ready to come when I called, to do what I
asked. Is this how Yami feels? How Kaiba feels? No wonder his eyes change every
time he summons a Blue Eyes. </p>
<p>And then... SHE came. I don't know who she was, exactly, but
then again... I've always known her. She was so familiar, like my mother, and
yet not, a reigning queen and a warm pair of arms. I think I used to hear her
singing to me when I was young. She fit into me like she was part of me, but...
I think it was the other way around.</p>
<p>I-- She-- WE scared Bakura, I think. That's fair; he scares
me a lot of the time. But when I looked at him in the warehouse, he wasn't
scary. He was just lost, hurting. I wanted to heal him, to take away all his
pain. He knew her, even though he wasn't saying. And she... she knew him in
ways I can't even get my mind around. And she loved him anyway. Which may be what scared him, come to think of it.</p>
<p>This place is huge! I'll never be able to get through it
all. Not that I have much idea of how to find out anything, but... okay, she
was obviously Egyptian. And her color was silver... it had to have something to
do with that pendant. Silver, the moon, goddesses--
Goddesses? Yeah, she was a goddess. No way she could
have been anything else. Yami recognized her too, although I don't think he
knew from where. But our powers fit so perfectly...</p>
<p>Mmm... what's
this? Smaller, white binding, written in- oh great, it's written in English. I
CAN read it, thanks to Joey and Yugi helping me with lessons, but it's slow going, and I'll probably miss something. Still,
the silver lettering is a clue I'm on the right track. Let me see-- "The
Inconstant Moon: A study of Lunar Goddesses and their worshippers from 4000 BC
to present." </p>
<p>... Okay, this is freaky. Finding exactly what I was looking
for on the first try? Well... maybe it's not really what I need. Reaching out,
I pull it off the shelf, flipping it open at random. The left-hand page
(remember, Westerners read backward, Tea,) has a picture of a woman in robes,
hands extended towards a glowing circle that I figure has to be the moon. The
title is "Drawing Down the Moon." On the
facing page, it talks about how moon worshippers believed that they could
invite the goddess of the moon to come into their bodies and share power with
them to perform works of... magic.</p>
<p>That's it; this is going home with me.</p>
<p><hr>
**</p>
<p>He should be sleeping. The time is edging towards midnight, and though there is no school
tomorrow, recent events have been stressful. But I can feel him through our
link, staring out at the world, still awake. Not from fear or nightmares, as
one might expect, but simply... thinking. As am I.</p>
<p>I don't know what it is that keeps Yugi awake tonight, but
as for me, I'm sitting in my soul room, surrounded by what scraps of memories I
can dig up, thinking about something the Black Pharaoh said. To be fair, it is
something I've thought about before, though never have I given it as much
thought as tonight. </p>
<p>I am dead. Five thousand years ago, I gave my life and half
my soul to stop the Shadow Games, to seal them away when they began to threaten
the land. My Shadow was bound to the Puzzle, to seal the gate. What remained of
my soul, my Light... was returned to the Wheel of Time.</p>
<p>To be reborn after five thousand years as Yugi Moto, a boy
of no name and family, no importance as we reckoned such things. Born only as Light, and yet he grew strong. I sometimes marvel that he
has not broken under that which the world has thrown at him before I came to
him.</p>
<p>I am dead. Yugi is alive, and his body is what keeps me
here, in this world. The Puzzle merely keeps me separate, myself, with my mind
and memories intact. Or at least as close as I can get.
</p>
<p>I'd come to terms with that, with knowing I was as dead as
all I had known, that I was only Yugi's Shadow, the part of a soul that had
been lost. I was a spirit, and my duty was to protect and guide my light from
the darkness that we had to face again.</p>
<p>But I'm not a spirit, not truly. I am not a ghost. Both of
those are creatures far more ethereal than I, far closer to moving on into the
West. I am a shade, just as that mockery of Kaiba was. I am still tied to this
world, tied to the living. I am closer to being one of the undead than a true
spirit. A revenant. Something walking that should be
dead and buried. In fact, one might say that I myself disturb Ma'at, the true
order. </p>
<p>It was this that let the Black Pharaoh grasp me, attempt to
draw me from Yugi's body and turn me to his own whims. And it was due to Yugi
that he failed. My light would not let go, despite knowing what I am. And the
power I felt from Tea was ages older and stronger than my own, but it- SHE-
accepted me. Approved of me. </p>
<p>The time will come, may it be far in the future, when Yugi
will finally pass from the Earth, and I shall pass with him. Then, if Ra so
wills, perhaps we may be reborn as one soul once more. In the meantime, we ARE
together. And THAT is right.</p>
<p><hr>
**</p>
<p>The moon's full tonight. And wow, is it gorgeous. The
light's so bright, but it's delicate, not like sunlight. Sun is warm, strong...
this is cool silver, just sort of laying everywhere like water. Grandpa started
teaching me English when I was little, since I was always so interested in
archaeology. I always thought it was funny that "tsukikage," the
Japanese equivalent to English "Moon Light," broke down into two
words that translated to "moon" and "shadow." So the light
of the moon is also its shadow. Halfway between shadow and
light...</p>
<p>Whatever was riding Tea in the warehouse... it had something
to do with the moon. And Grandpa's friend gave her that amulet... in silver,
which is linked to the moon. And she fit in so perfectly with us. Shadow, light... and moonlight. Moonshadow. </p>
<p>Is Tea linked to us? Is that why she got the amulet? I remember
picking up something from Yami's memories about Hathor, and the living queen,
the wife of the pharaoh... he didn't seem surprised that it was Tea, but he
won't tell me why. He just grins when I ask him and says I ought to know the
answer. Well, I DON'T!</p>
<p>Tea's been my best friend for ages. It seems right that she
should be part of us, somehow. I know
she likes Yami... A LOT, and he didn't seem too upset
about the date I set them up on. Once he had time to cool down, anyway. </p>
<p>And the moon's already in the west, which means it's after midnight, and I should probably be SLEEPING. But after everything... I just CAN'T. It's all changed so
much. I know Joey's still jumping at shadows, and I don't blame him. He's also
gone through a lot of mouthwash, trying to forget the taste of blood. Mai's
spent a lot of time with us, too, mainly with Ryou, oddly enough... and Bakura
doesn't seem to have a problem with that. Go figure.</p>
<p>Kaiba doesn't want to see any of us ever again. I give that
a week, tops. He needs us, and he knows it; he just hates admitting it. Mokuba
knows it too, though, and he'll make sure Seto comes to us when he has to. I
was really surprised that he could call his dragons
right out in the open like that, and so easily. Watching him sleep against a
giant basking lizard, though, was priceless. Good thing Tristan brought a
camera.</p>
<p>He won't tell us who he dueled before coming to get between
me and Joey. I know something happened, and it threw him pretty bad. But at the
same time, he seems... calmer, somehow. Like he finally put something to rest
that was bothering him. </p>
<p>I think we're making progress.</p>
<p><hr>
**</p>
<p>Moonbathing. What a concept. Of course, I suppose if you're as
fair-skinned as Ryou Bakura, sunbathing is kind of out, unless you carry a gallon
drum of SPF 100. I wonder if it ever bothers him? He's
so pale, so quiet, so gentle... he fades into the background if you don't
specifically look for him. You might think he was weak-- if you didn't pay
attention. Everybody knows about his dark side, his yami, the homicidal spirit
sharing his head... but that's not the only strength Ryou has. The boy has his
own backbone, and you're only going to get yourself hurt if you underestimate
him.</p>
<p>I know the others wonder why I'm spending so much time with
Ryou, after everything that's happened. It seems kind of crazy to me, even,
but... I just can't face Joey. Not yet, not until I get my head back together. </p>
<p>No, I'm not scared of him-- I know it wasn't his fault, I
know he's himself again. I told him I forgave him, though I really don't think
there was anything TO forgive. It's just... seeing him like that stirred up
feelings I haven't had for anyone, ever. He was so smooth, so gorgeous, so
dangerous... I never was one for bad
boys, but Joey pulled at something I'd never realized I had. </p>
<p>God, I'm only nineteen years old! I may have used my
appearance to help me win duels, but when it comes to REAL relationships, I
don't have a clue. And every time I look at Joey I can't think. I've got to get
these feelings settled out before I see him again. And somehow, I know he feels
the same. </p>
<p>So, I'm on the western roof of a small house in the suburbs
of Domino, at two in the morning, watching as the moon slowly moves towards the
mountains. The air is the temperature of blood, a breeze just keeping the heat
from becoming unbearable. Ryou's lying beside me, staring up at the silver moon
as if looking for answers. The Ring is lying on his chest, glowing almost
contentedly in the moonlight. It's probably the most peaceful scene I've
encountered since the Duelist Kingdom.</p>
<p>They all wonder why Ryou. Maybe it's because he understands
what it's like to have someone else in control of your actions, riding in the
driver's seat behind your eyes. Maybe it's because he knows when to be quiet
and when to talk. Maybe it's because of Bakura-- oddly enough, I feel just as
safe around the yami as I do his host. He won't hurt me unless there's profit
in it, and I know that anything else wanting to hurt me would have to go
through him, simply because Ryou won't let it be otherwise. Bakura may be
homicidal, emotionally unstable, and a bit maniacal, but he's straightforward.
He doesn't have the time to bother with lies.</p>
<p>The scars are still on my neck. I don't guess they'll ever
go away, but most of the time, they're not noticeable. Especially
not with my hair so long. Of course, I could wish the area around them
wasn't still so sensitive... but I'm just glad to be alive. </p>
<p>And you know, I think I'm going to stay out here and watch
the sun come up.</p>
<p><hr>
**</p>
<p>She's relaxing-- good. Mai still jumps at sudden movements
and loud sounds, and I can't say I blame her. We're all still a little jumpy,
spending more time in the sun, even my yami. And he usually avoids the light
like a v- like Batman with a hangover. (Yes, that's one of Joey's, but I just
had to borrow it.) </p>
<p>I don't want to become too scared of the night, though. I've
always been a night person, even when my parents were alive. Well, look at me!
My hair is snow white, and has been since I was about five. Runs in my mother's
family, and believe me, it branded me as a freak in more than one circle in my
youth. My skin is pale as any true British Isles native,
since Father's people were from Hokkaido.
Only my brown eyes prove I'm not albino. If I went outside at noon without protection, I'd be a cinder in
minutes. Spontaneous Hikari Combustion.</p>
<p>So I like the night. I always identified with the moon, so
bright and full. Yes, I know, the moon is usually a girl in myths, but everyone
already thought I was feminine anyway. And there are always a few exceptions.
The Japanese myths, for example, speak of Tsuki-Yumi,
the moon god. </p>
<p>Sometimes I think Yugi and I are like the sun and the moon.
We have so much in common, and we're both the light... but he's warm and
cheerfully open, and I tend to be cooler and more retiring. I like the
background, what can I say?</p>
<p>I don't really understand why my yami hates the Pharaoh so
much but... I know now that there must be a strong reason. He may not be right,
but he truly believes he was wronged, and wronged
grievously. I know he has morals, though he has tossed them aside to be able to
follow his vengeance. But I'm part of him, part he threw away to chase the
darkness. I won't let him fall, but... I will be there. Because I know that
sometimes, vengeance is the only justice that we can ever have.</p>
<p>Surprised? I've seen the results of the Shadow Games that
Yami plays. I KNOW he lets them choose their fate. The line between vengeance
and justice isn't as clear cut as people think.</p>
<p>I'll stand by my yami... and hopefully we can find an answer
that won't tear us all apart.</p>
<p><hr>
**</p>
<p>Well, this scene is disgustingly domestic, isn't it? Sitting on the roof, watching the moon set... riding behind my hikari's eyes, just watching, not driving for once.
It's surprisingly comfortable this way. I suppose I just like being nearby,
being with him. And for a woman, Mai's not too bad, I suppose. She knows how to
just be quiet, not needing to fill the silence with chatter. Too bad more females
don't know how to do that.</p>
<p>I know Ryou's thinking about me, though I'm not listening to
his internal monologue. I don't have the time to be bothered by his thoughts,
and his Pollyanna nature tends to give me a headache anyway. But I can feel his
thoughts brushing against me occasionally, cool and reassuring. We have come a
long way since we first met. I didn't realize our connection then-- I only knew
I finally had a body again after what seemed eternity in the darkness. And when
I saw them... I knew my chance for revenge against the Pharaoh had finally
come.</p>
<p>Except. Except that Ryou turned out
to be more than just a convenient body-- he was the reincarnation of my light,
of the half of my soul that was stripped away when the Pharaoh sealed us both
into the Millennium Items. Except that the Pharaoh was in the same boat, with a
host-- a LIGHT-- that was as strong as any warrior or priest in the Black
Land ever was. A light who despite everything has repeatedly extended the hand of
friendship to me, not just Ryou. The Pharaoh doesn't like it... but he goes
along with it, because Yugi asks.</p>
<p>I can't decide if the boy is stupid or just very trusting.
He still believes that he can somehow win me over, dissolve the centuries of
enmity the Pharaoh and I share. And facing off with a vampire who could rip him
apart, he simply bared his throat, that convinced that
he knew what the other would do. And he was right... I hate that.</p>
<p>All right, I'll admit it; I was afraid for him. He's truly PURE, something I'd almost forgotten existed. And with
Ryou's half of our soul reconnected to mine, I find that I can't help but value
it. The compassion I willingly threw away for revenge has come home to roost...
and now it has a mind of its own.</p>
<p>It bothers me, though... Neither the Pharaoh nor the
sorcerer even considered ending the vampire's life, even though it was the most
expedient choice, and probably would have been a mercy. Instead they risked
their own lives, and even souls to rescue him from the Black Pharaoh's power. Not
exactly the actions of men who would condemn an entire village to death for a
few trinkets. Could the centuries have changed them so much? Could the
Pharaoh's light? Or...</p>
<p>This is ridiculous. I know what happened all those years
ago. I swore an oath of vengeance. Not even the gods themselves- not even Lady
Isis through the eyes of the priestess-- can sway me from my course.</p>
<p>So why do I keep feeling She was
trying to point out something I've missed?</p>
<p><hr>
**</p>
<p>I love summer vacation. There are so many things I love
about it that it's hard to pick just one, but if I had to, there's one thing
that would lead the pack. When summer comes, I have a lot more time to work in
my lab.</p>
<p>Yeah, I have a lab-- tech runs in my blood. Seto says that
the things that occasionally come out of my tinkering more than justify the
cost of letting me have a lab here at Kaiba Corp. ~
I~
think he just likes
having me where he can keep an eye on me, but what do I know?</p>
<p>I'm definitely NOT the genius Big Brother is. Computers are
just machines to me-- they don't sit up and beg when I touch them, like Joey
says they do for Seto. But I'm good at electronics, and sometimes I DO have
really good ideas. I did a lot of translating for those God Cards, after all.
And I managed to get Mr. Moto's generator running,
even if I did fry it thirty seconds later.</p>
<p>Tristan's pretty cool, you know? I kind of expected him to
ask more about Gozaburo, but he didn't. Never even let on that I'd slipped and
mentioned the old buzzard. (That's the nicest thing I've heard Seto call him--
most of the rest, I'm not allowed to even THINK for another ten years, Seto
says.) I think Tristan's figured out most of what happened back then... He's a
lot smarter than some people think.</p>
<p>I can hear footsteps going down the hall outside. One set is
DEFINITELY Seto's-- nobody else walks quite like that. The other one's much
faster and lighter, but not really hurrying to keep up. It sounds like they
can't be much bigger than me... Yugi?</p>
<p>What would Yugi be doing at Kaiba Corp in the middle of a
Monday morning? Is something wrong with Joey? Did something else get out of the
Shadow Realm? Are we EVER going to get anything to stay put there? Well, I
guess there's only one way to find out. Opening the door, I poke my head out to
see what's going on.</p>
<p>Seto's coming down the hall at his usual pace, only a little
slower than normal. There's a girl beside him, much shorter, but she's keeping
up with him without running. Looks like she's used to walking
with tall people. Her hair is really red, kind of like Serenity, Joey's
little sister. I don't know her, though... she must be new.</p>
<p>They're having some type of argument, I can tell. Pulling my
head back a little, I decide to listen. It's not very often somebody dares to
argue with the Great Seto Kaiba. This should be good.</p>
<p>She's speaking English, and it takes me a second to adjust,
especially since she's got a funny accent. Not like Joey's, or like the ones on
TV. This is soft and really nice to listen to, even if it's a little hard to
understand.</p>
<p>"All I'm sayin', chere, is that you gotta stop glarin'
at your staff like that. Ah don't care what Machiavelli said, it's a hell of a
lot safer to be loved than feared. Scared people jump ship at the first moment.
Ones that like you will go to the wall for you."</p>
<p>"You're not scared of me," he points out, not
looking at her. He sounds a little upset about that-- well, at least to
somebody who knows him.</p>
<p>She just laughs. "Chere, I'm used to teasing gators. I
know exactly how far you can push before you lose a hand."</p>
<p>A sideways glance. "Why are we
speaking English, anyway?"</p>
<p>"Do you REALLY want to hear Japanese with a New
Orleans drawl? It's understandable, but it's not
pretty."</p>
<p>They're close enough now that Seto can see me standing in
the doorway, and he's swerving towards us. That means she's somebody he thinks
I need to know, and vice versa. Oh yeah, this is DEFINITELY interesting.</p>
<p>"Mokuba, I want you to meet Alixandra Gaudet, our new
head of security. Alix, this is Mokuba Kaiba, my younger brother. He works here
occasionally, and has full run of the building."</p>
<p>"Hajimemashita, Kaiba-san."
She bows perfectly, a bit lower than I'm used to people doing for someone my
age. And she's right, it DOES sound funny. I bow back, just as politely.</p>
<p>"Pleased to meet you, Miss Gaudet," I reply. Might as well give my English a workout while I have the
chance."</p>
<p>She grins, straightening up. "Alix,
please. As Ah told your brother, Ah'm not one
for formality."</p>
<p>"Call me Mokuba then." I'm grinning back, and
Seto's got this expression on his face like he just KNOWS something horrible is
about to happen. Oh yeah, this one's gonna be good for him... It's about time I
had some help around here.</p>
<p><hr>
**</p>
<p>Ahh, summer. The most perfect time of the year, in my humble
opinion. The perfect time to get a tan, scope out girls, hang with your buds,
fight off monsters from beyond the boundaries of time and space... never a dull
moment in Domino City, that's for sure.</p>
<p>It's been not quite a week since we got Joey back, and I've
been doing a lot of thinking. (Insert pre-emptive smacking of Joey here.) I've
even come to a few conclusions. First off, I'm damn lucky Joey didn't break my
jaw with that punch of his. Mom and Dad will overlook a few bruises here and
there as "boys will be boys," but having my jaw wired shut would
probably have been pushing it. And being a vampire, of course, he probably
didn't even bruise his knuckles. Jerk.</p>
<p>Second is that I'm glad Bakura doesn't carry a grudge after
the time I cold-cocked him at Duelist
Kingdom. We actually made a pretty
good team against those shadows, and I think he thought so, too. Funny, I think
he actually respects me, which is kind of weird. Bakura doesn't respect
anybody!</p>
<p>Talking to Mokuba cleared up a lot about Kaiba, too. Oh,
Mokuba didn't say that much, but it was enough to figure out that their
adoptive father must have been a real bastard. After that, it's easy enough to
see what he must have done to Kaiba over the years to turn him into the ice
sculpture he pretends to be... and was becoming, before that duel with Yugi. No
wonder he's so scared of Yugi. He's probably never been treated with that much
warmth in his life. </p>
<p>Came to a few conclusions about my place
in this little group, too. And I AM part of it, even though sometimes I
kinda seem like an accessory. With what happened to Tea, it's pretty much
settled now that I'm the only one without any magic. Even Mokuba's got a spark
of it, somewhere. Well, that's not entirely true- Mai doesn't have any real
magic of her own, but since she's a Duelist, she can shape what's leaking if
she has a chance. Me, it just sort of ignores me like I'm not even there.</p>
<p>Maybe that's why I can't Duel. Oh, I can get the strategies,
I can maybe play well enough to keep up with Mokuba for a while... but it's
just a card game to me. I can't feel the spark in it everyone else can. It
doesn't grab me. That's why Joey has all the cards I gathered now. They're a
part of me, sorta, but I know he can get a lot more
out of 'em than I ever could.</p>
<p>I don't Duel. I can't Duel. And you know what? That doesn't
bother me at all. You'd think it would but I'm starting to realize something.
No deck and no magic equals no attention. Half the
things we go up against don't even seem to really SEE me as anything more than
moving scenery. Oh, I'm still linked with everybody else through the Puzzle,
and I could give my power to Tea in that warehouse, but that seems to have more
to do with... well, I know it sounds kind of goofy, but it sounds psychic,
rather than magical. You'd think after all the fake psychics we've run across
I'd be more skeptical, but... hell, one of my best friends time-shares his body
with a five-thousand-year-old Egyptian spirit. Who am I to rule anything out?</p>
<p>So no, I don't have any real powers. But that's okay,
because I'm the muscle, and believe me, sometimes this group NEEDS muscle. Not that Joey and Kaiba can't fight-- geez,
either of them could probably kick my ass WITHOUT a deck-- but because they're
Duelists, they're usually too busy to be able to get physical. It's like my
uncle's car. There are times when all the tools and parts can't get it to
run... so you have to resort to what he calls "percussive
maintenance."</p>
<p>Yeah, I feel pretty good. My best friend is back from the
undead, we sent the monster packing, Kaiba's growing a personality, I'm at
peace with my place in the group, and we don't have to be back at school for a
month. All is right with the world.</p>
<p>Now, if I could only get a date...</p>
<p><hr>
**</p>
<p>What the hell am I doing? It's eight
AM. By rights, I should be in my office, looking over figures,
charts, and graphs, plotting ways to make my company more profitable, like any
reasonable CEO. Instead, I'm walking through Downtown Domino with a bento box
in one hand, a thermos of coffee in the other, and no laptop in sight. And
there are birds singing. I hate birds.</p>
<p>Let's review. I got to the office at six AM, as usual, accompanied by my
unusually-energetic-for-the-hour younger brother, who quickly moved off to his
own lab. I arrived at my own suite shortly afterwards, to be greeted with
coffee and sticky buns by Amano-san. I should have known something was up, but
she DOES try to be nice on occasion. In return, I try not to bite her head off
more than once a month. And she makes really, REALLY good coffee.</p>
<p>I was happily plowing through spreadsheets, reports, and
various other pieces of information, making decisions and dictating strategies
when the something that was up finally hit me. My in-box was empty. This was
pretty much unprecedented, so I tried again. Still empty.
Another ten minutes of research proved that while I was spending time
researching vampires, Old Ones, and just what the hell Solomon Moto cooks with,
my company was working double-time. We'd just beat our ship date by a month.
And nothing else would be ready for my attention for at least a couple days. In
short, I had NO WORK to do.</p>
<p>A bored CEO is not a good thing. I was on my way to R &
D to... inspire a brainstorming session when the second "It"
happened. To be precise, I was hit with a five-foot red-haired tsunami. In
short order, I was somehow transported to the ground floor and told to take the
day off, with the insinuation that my presence might cause the boys in R &
D to let off a few more of the explosions they were so famous for. Before I
could blink, I found myself standing outside a locked door with a rather
amused-looking guard standing behind it, holding my coffee and a box that, I
discovered, contained onigiri and a peanut butter
sandwich. I'm not entirely sure how it happened, but I have a hunch Mokuba was
involved somehow.</p>
<p>I decided I might as well walk, since my head of security
had threatened to have me sedated if I returned. (One thing I've learned about
Alix Gaudet in the past few days is that she doesn't make idle threats. I'd
fire her, but the staff already thinks she walks on water, and I really don't
want the secretaries spiking my coffee with rat poison. Besides, the woman may
be aggravating, but she's good at her job.)</p>
<p>So here I am, walking on an admittedly gorgeous summer
morning, and somewhat amused by the fact that I may have seen more sunshine in
the past week and a half than in the entire month previous. I could, I suppose,
go back to my house, but the damn woman has probably corrupted my security
staff there, too. I'd never make it to the computer lab. And how the hell did
she get my laptop away without my noticing it?</p>
<p>Okay, Seto, relax. You're ahead of schedule, Kaiba Corp is
beginning its recovery, they CAN get along without you for the day, Mokuba is
in the most secure building in the city, and I pity the kidnapper who tries to
get past Alix. No... I don't actually. I'll probably point and laugh.</p>
<p>Well... hell. I might as well go to the park and see if
they've replaced the concrete. I can sit down, eat the box lunch (and feed the
sandwich to the squirrels) and drink the thermos of coffee. Soak up some sun.
I'll have a chance to get away from crazy redheads, hyperactive brothers,
Millennium Items, arrogant Pharaohs, insane tomb robbers, and nosy, overly opinionated
dragons. Well, okay, not the last part, but I can hope, right?</p>
<p>... Why do I even open my mouth?</p>
<p>The Mutt's sitting on the bench by the slide. Must be a
replacement-- I seem to remember shattering the other one into pieces trying to
reach Mokuba. He's staring off into space, and doesn't even notice my approach.
Not good-- he's usually as alert to his surroundings as I am. He's wearing
running clothes, but he doesn't seem to have done too much exercising this
morning. Instead, he's hunched over, one hand held tight to his side. The
shirt's white, but I can just see a spot of red by his hand.</p>
<p>Oh hell.</p>
<p>"Wheeler." I make certain
to announce my approach, having no desire to be thrown into some of the
playground equipment. Wounded dogs are always more dangerous, after all.</p>
<p>He looks up, and his eyes narrow as he recognizes me. Not
quite the irritation and suspicion he usually focuses on me... this is more
measuring, and harder to read.</p>
<p>"Kaiba. I thought you were
allergic to fresh air." His voice is level, no inflection. I'm almost
impressed.</p>
<p>"I took my shots," I reply, moving closer.
"I'm assuming you've had all of yours?"</p>
<p>The insults seem to relax him somewhat. We're on familiar
ground, I suppose; if we're sparring, we both know how to react.</p>
<p>"So what brings you out and about and away from your
computer? Revisiting memory lane?"</p>
<p>"I could ask you the same thing, mutt. But right now, I
suppose I'm a bit more curious about the fact that you're sitting on a park
bench bleeding."</p>
<p>He jumps, and a look flashes across his face, too fast to
read. I don't have to read it, though... I know it by heart.</p>
<p>"What was it, Wheeler? Scotch or
gin?" It's all I can do to keep the disgust out of my voice. I
don't like the mutt, but no one should have to endure this, especially not from
someone who's supposed to be caring for them. Lucky for me, his surprise gives
me an opening, and I have his hand wrenched away from the wound before he can
react.</p>
<p>"'Ey, what do you think
you're doing?" He's squirming and growling, but between the edge of the
bench and my grip on his wrist, he doesn't have anywhere to go.</p>
<p>Pulling the shirt away from the wound, I take a look at it.
It's not too bad of a gash, and it looks like he tried to use butterfly
bandages to close it. Unfortunately his running reopened it, and now it's going
to need stitches.</p>
<p>"You need to go to the hospital, Wheeler. If this thing
bleeds much longer, you could pass out. And infection is more than
possible."</p>
<p>A violent shake of the head greets that comment. "No way, uh uh. Not a
chance." All I have to do is raise an eyebrow, and the rest comes spilling
out. "They'll call my contact person."</p>
<p>Solomon Moto. Of course. While
Solomon would probably not be surprised by the call, anything told to him would
get back to Yugi. And this is something Yugi should never have to see.
Besides... the last thing JOEY needs is Yami challenging his father to a Shadow
Game. </p>
<p>"I just... I tripped, okay? Ducked one,
fell on another. It's nothin' major, Kaiba." He
sounds tired. And well he should. He's been hiding this for so long, putting up
a mask... Oh, you wouldn't know anything about that, would you, Seto? Nothing
at all...</p>
<p>*He has what you want... he wants what you have. To
receive... you must begin to give.* </p>
<p>Damn dragons, always butting in at the worst times. But...
maybe he's right. I pull out my cell phone.</p>
<p>"Driver? Domino City Park, now.
As fast as you can. Make it in five minutes, and you
get a five percent raise."</p>
<p>Joey's looking at me like I've lost my mind. "What the
hell are you doing?"</p>
<p>"Instant karma," I reply dryly. </p>
<p>I REALLY need my head examined.</p>
<p><hr>
**</p>
<p>I don't think I've ever read a book so fast in my life,
especially not one written in a foreign language. Funny; I should have had a
lot more trouble getting through it than I did. Not only was it written in
English, but it was an academic work-- not usually the easies going for someone
with a limited vocabulary. But it just... made SENSE to me. I didn't have to
reach or strive, and I barely looked at my dictionary. It was like I was meant
to understand it.</p>
<p>Goddess worship, it said, has been around even longer than
the worship of a single god. And for almost as long, the Goddess has been
associated with the moon. I guess it's not that surprising... the whole monthly
cycle thing, and all. The moon isn't always female, but a lot of the time, it
is. </p>
<p>Incarnation, of "drawing down" of a god or
goddess, is often a big part of a lot of the nature goddess religions. That's
definitely what happened to me in the warehouse. Faith, opening myself up to a
higher power, calling on everything I believed... and
then She was there. In me. It wasn't like possession; She didn't take over or wear me like a cloak...we were
together, like Yami and Yugi are when they Duel. It was incredible... and
really only scary when I came back down.</p>
<p>Funny... it felt so RIGHT when I was standing beside Yami,
facing down that monster. I could feel both of them there, with me, beside
me... the strong sunlight and the silent shadow... I felt WHOLE, in a way I never
had before.</p>
<p>That and the Eye pretty much convinced me that whoever She was, She was Egyptian. A little more research,
and I've got it narrowed down to either Isis or Hathor. Logically, I'm leaning
towards Hathor- the headdress, the disk between the horns, was her symbol, and
she was the daughter of Ra, the Eye of Ra. But... my gut says Isis. Which brings up a very worrying question.</p>
<p>If She was Isis, wife of Osiris, mother of the living king... why did I have so much
of Hathor around me? If I wasn't wearing Her symbols,
then what WAS I wearing, and why did I change. Actually, it's not the questions
that bother me as much as the fact that I think I know the answers. I was
wearing Hathor's symbols because I WAS Hathor, for a
while. And Hathor was the living Queen, as Horus was the Pharaoh. I like Yami--
and Yugi-- a LOT, but I don't know that I'm ready for
what this might mean.</p>
<p>But at least it's over for now. I can go back to my regular
life and not think about this... at least until the next crisis. </p>
<p>But I think I'm going to have some INTERESTING dreams...</p>
<p><hr>
**</p>
<p>Seeing Kaiba in the park was weird enough. Having him
suddenly go all Florence Nightingale on me was a step beyond weird, even
considering the last week. I mean, not that I think the guy would let me bleed
to death; he's not heartless, no matter how much he pretends. But it's not like
I'm gushing or anything. Okay, so it hurts. And maybe I do get a bit dizzy when
I stand up...</p>
<p>Oh hell, he's right. Again. I've
made it worse by running, dumbass that I am, and I
really am gonna need stitches. I wasn't expecting him to call for his limo,
though. If he was so worried, I figured he'd call an ambulance and ship me out.
Off his hands and off his conscience. </p>
<p>Then again... he must know what would happen. They'd call
Gramps, and it would get back to Yugi. I guess Kaiba wants to see those
fireworks about as much as I do. Funny, for two guys with so little in common,
we do agree pretty strongly on trying to keep Yugi from seein'
too much of the underside of the world. Must be that big
brother syndrome. </p>
<p>Okay, so I'm sittin' in the back
of a limo, KAIBA'S limo, to boot, trying not to bleed on the upholstery,
and his driver is hauling it back to the mansion like there ain't
a cop for twenty miles. Guess when you've funded half o' Domino
City, you don't worry about traffic tickets. </p>
<p>I worry for a second, as he's helping me in, about what
Mokuba's gonna say. Kaiba's reading my mind as usual, 'cause he just shakes his
head.</p>
<p>"Mokuba's still at Kaiba Corp. He won't be home for a
while, I'm sure."</p>
<p>Well, THERE'S a shocker. I'm still pondering the idea of
Kaiba leaving his younger brother at work WITHOUT him as he hauls me into this
huge bathroom. What this thing is doing on the ground floor, without a bedroom
attached, I have NO idea. But I'm honestly not complaining as Kaiba sits me on
the edge of the huge tub.</p>
<p>"Take off your shirt, mutt." He's already halfway
out the door as he says that, so I don't even bother yelling at him for the dog
crack. Hell, by this point, I'm about ready to consider it a pet name.</p>
<p>... Aw hell, I didn't just say that, did I? Must be the blood loss. I never make puns that bad.</p>
<p>Got a bad moment when the shirt decides it's gonna stick to
the cut in my side, but I get it off and throw it into the tub. I can rinse the
thing out later. One thing I learned early was how to deal with bloodstains in
laundry.</p>
<p>Kaiba comes back in. One hand's got a first aid kit, and I
bet it's got a needle and thread. The other hand has a bottle in it, and I know
only one thing comes in a bottle THAT shape.</p>
<p>"Sake? Where the hell did you
get a bottle of sake?"</p>
<p>He doesn't even look at me, just cracks the seal on the
bottle. "A gift from another CEO who apparently didn't think about the
fact that I have another three years to go before I reach legal age."</p>
<p>"Not to mention the fact you hate bribes," I
smirk. THAT gets him to look at me, those ice-chips narrowed in calculation. I
may not know much about business, but I know people. Kaiba doesn't make
friends, so there's only one other reason another exec would give him a bottle
of something real illegal. And I know Kaiba-- I'm surprised he didn't stick the
bottle down the guy's throat.</p>
<p>He scowls at me, but it's got no force. "Surprisingly
perceptive. He wasn't quite outright with his... request, so I just
accepted the gift and pretended not to realize what it was." </p>
<p>"Bet that drove him nuts."</p>
<p>"Immensely." Now he's
smirking, and I got the feeling we look too damn alike for comfort.</p>
<p>He pours a glass of the rice wine, bigger than a normal
dose, more what they'd call a "shooter" back in the States. Then he hands me the glass, and my eyebrows
practically achieve orbit.</p>
<p>"What the hell?"</p>
<p>The usual sigh and eye roll. "I'm going to have to sew
you up, mutt. Now, I have disinfectant, but I don't have any anesthetics. That
should keep you flying just high enough not to feel the stitches, so that I
won't have to sew you up while you're squirming."</p>
<p>Shrugging, I knock back the glass, trying not to cough as
the rice wine burns its way down my throat. Not that I've never had alcohol
before, but never much, and sake is damn strong. It's also known for causing
hangovers from hell, so I better fill up on water once we're done here.</p>
<p>Kaiba's right about one thing... I'm so light-headed from
the drink that I barely even notice him sewing the gash in my side. He's way
too good at this sorta thing. I wonder who he
practiced on? You don't sew yourself up, and it's obvious Mokuba didn't have to go through... whatever it
was. No way he'll ever talk about it; I'm surprised he
showed me those scars when we were dueling. But... hell, guess he knew I'd
understand. And that's something he probably hasn't had in years.</p>
<p>Oh hell, I AM drunk.</p>
<p>"There." He's packing up the kit... damn, I hadn't even realized he was done. I try to stand up,
and find myself wobbling a bit. Kaiba catches me before I fall, though-- he's
been doing a lot of that recently. 'Course, I've been bleeding on him a lot, so
I guess it evens out.</p>
<p>"Come on, Wheeler, let's get you into a bed," he
sighs, adjusting my arm over his shoulders.</p>
<p>"Without dinner and a movie?"
Yes, I know it's a lame joke, but come on, it's practically automatic. And who
would I be if I let the opening slide?</p>
<p>Kaiba's just rolling his eyes again as he guides me up the
stairs. "You're not my type, believe me."</p>
<p>"Come on, everybody likes blondes."</p>
<p>"Are you really this drunk, or are you trying to
aggravate me?"</p>
<p>"A little of Column A, a little of Column B..."</p>
<p>"Why did I even ask?" He practically drops me in
the middle of a nice, soft, BIG guest bed. "Sleep it off, Wheeler, and
come downstairs when you're less annoying."</p>
<p>I should hit him for that, but I can't find my feet.
Somehow, I manage to kick off my shoes and burrow under the covers. The bed's
warm, and soft, and nicer than anything I've ever slept in. And that's about
all I have time to notice before the lights go out.</p>
<p><hr>
**</p>
<p>Seto's always said curiosity is one of my strongest traits,
and that it's probably gonna get me into trouble
someday. He's probably right. But my brother called from home and actually
asked Alix for something-- she wouldn't say what-- of course I'm gonna hitch a
ride. And apparently it wasn't his laptop he asked for, because I was the one
who remembered to grab it out of his office.</p>
<p>Given that Seto can actually go into withdrawal if he's away
from a computer too long, I was really curious as to what could make him forget
about his laptop for five hours or so. And I admit it, I kind of wanted to see
what Seto was going to say to Alix about the way we maneuvered him this
morning. So I asked her to bring me home when she went.</p>
<p>I expected to find Seto in his study when we got there, but
it's empty. Alix doesn't seem that surprised though, and she says something
about the backyard... This is really getting weird- what would my big brother
be doing in the backyard? By choice?</p>
<p>As soon as we step out there, I can smell the heavy ozone
that means the dragons have been here recently. More and more, Seto seems to be
more comfortable with them out of his head and in the real world. I've got no
problems with that; they're fun. But I don't know how well Alix would take
seeing them just yet.</p>
<p>The second thing I notice is Joey, sitting at the patio
table and looking way too innocent. Obviously he's been doing SOMETHING to
drive Seto nuts... but what is he doing here? And why is he wearing some of
Seto's clothes?</p>
<p>As we come out, Seto stops glaring at Joey long enough to
start glaring at Alix. And me too, I think, but mostly Alix. She just grins
back at him.</p>
<p>"You brought it?" Seto asks, folding his arms.</p>
<p>"Of course, boss," she replies, pulling something
out of a pocket. As she tosses it to him, I see it's a key card, like the ones
we use to get into the house. He catches it easily, and turns back to Joey.</p>
<p>"Wheeler, I want you to meet Alix Gaudet, my head of
security. Alix, Joey Wheeler... an acquaintance of mine."</p>
<p>Her smile gets bigger as she walks over and shakes Joey's
hand. "Nice to meet ya, Joey."</p>
<p>"You too... Alix."
They're smiling at each other. WAY too widely, both of them.
I don't know whether to feel sorry for my brother, or sit back and watch the
show.</p>
<p>Clearing his throat, Seto waits until the two of them look
at him. </p>
<p>"Thank you. As I might have said, Wheeler, I owe you
one for saving Mokuba. Not just once, but twice. So...
I'm paying my debt." He tosses the key card to Joey, who catches it, no
understanding on his face.</p>
<p>"That key card grants you access to the house,"
Seto explains. I see the light dawning in Joey's eyes. "The room you crashed
in today is yours whenever you need it. Just don't empty the refrigerator, and
we'll call it even."</p>
<p>Joey's smile is a lot smaller than I'm used to, and he nods.
"Deal," he replies, pocketing the key. </p>
<p>... I think I missed something here.</p>
<p>Apparently, so does Alix, becaus
The Only Constant By Ellen Brand