Daiki, Part 14
by Geri ([email protected])
My homepage: http://www.geocities.com/geris_petshop_fics/index.html
Rating: R (actually, mostly PG-13, but R for one steamy scene in Part 1, and for
Leon's bad language throughout)
Pairing: Leon/D
Author's note: {} Indicates character's unspoken thoughts
Disclaimer: Characters belong to Matsuri Akino and Yumiko Kawahara. No money is
being made off this story; consider it a little wish fulfillment on my part.
Sequel to: This can be considered a continuation of my earlier series of stories
(Revenge, The Day After, Spirits, Blodeuedd), but it can stand on its own as my
version of what happens after Book 10.
SPOILER WARNING: Contains spoilers for Book 10 and the Shin Petshop of Horrors
series currently running in Japan.
Summary: A crossover between Petshop of Horrors by Matsuri Akino and Dolls by
Yumiko Kawahara. Chris courts the new Count; things get more serious between
Daiki and Raphael; Daiki sells a Plant Doll to a troubled family. This chapter
features a retelling of the "Princess Jewell" story from Book 2 of the Dolls
manga.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________
Chris stopped by the San Francisco petshop frequently, always bringing pastries
or candies for the young Count, who had as strong a sweet-tooth as Leon's D,
whom the young Count referred to as his older "brother". That was as accurate a
description as any, Chris supposed, since the young Count had been born from the
body of D's father, although Leon had given him the impression that the baby D
had been more of a reincarnation than a son.
The Count always thanked Chris for the gifts he brought, but he remained cool
and slightly remote, his smiling face as beautiful and emotionless as a
porcelain mask. However, Chris did not let that discourage him, because he
remembered how long it had taken Leon to win over his Count. Chris was prepared
to be patient, to wait as long as it took to win the heart of his own D. He
supposed it was crazy, falling in love with a guy he barely knew, but he had
already been half in love with the young Count before ever meeting him, growing
increasingly obsessed as he searched for clues to the new petshop's location,
and when they had finally met face-to-face, Chris had instantly been smitten.
Surely it could not be mere coincidence that the new Count had decided to set up
shop in San Francisco where Chris worked--it must be fate.
The first time that Chris had visited the shop, Q-chan had fluttered around him,
squeaking in an agitated manner, as if he did not approve of Chris's presence.
Maybe the babbit was afraid that Chris would tell Leon about the new shop or try
to shut it down himself, or maybe he just didn't like the idea of a human
courting his son. (Chris wondered for a moment if the young D should actually be
considered Sofu D's grandson, but the Count always referred to him as "Father".)
Chris knew, because Leon had told him, that Q-chan was actually Sofu D, but he
kept that knowledge to himself because he wasn't sure whether young D was aware
of it. The Count told everyone that his father was away on business, but that
could be a polite fiction for the sake of the customers.
But whatever the reason for Q-chan's disapproval, Chris did not intend to let
the eldest D drive him away. The babbit seemed to have resigned himself to
Chris's presence, and no longer squeaked in protest. He would even nibble on the
sweets that Chris brought, although he would look a little worried as he watched
Chris and the Count chat, but at least he didn't seem angry. Chris was still
fond of Q-chan even though he knew his true identity, and he didn't want his old
friend to be mad at him.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________
"Why did you set up shop in San Francisco, anyway?" Chris asked the Count over
tea one day. "I'm glad that you did, but I'm surprised that you chose a location
so close to your brother's shop, relatively speaking."
Young D usually avoided answering personal questions, but he was in a mellow
mood today, having been plied with a Chocolate Decadence cake from his favorite
bakery, a confection that consisted of a rich dark chocolate cake topped with
hot fudge and whipped cream. It made Chris's teeth hurt just to look at it, but
the Count always went into raptures over it. D swallowed the last bite of cake
and set aside his empty plate, then leaned back against the couch with a sigh of
satisfaction. His tongue darted out to lick a stray smear of chocolate from his
crimson lips, causing Chris's face to flush hotly. He had dated several women
before meeting the young Count, but none of them had ever provoked such an
intense desire in him. Then again, none of them had been as beautiful as the
Count. Every move he made was graceful and sensual, even if it was something as
simple as walking across the room or lifting a cup of tea to his lips.
The Count smirked, as if he could read Chris's thoughts. "Father wanted to set
up shop in Europe," he replied casually. "Or on the East Coast, if I was
insistent upon opening a shop in the United States. But I admit that I chose
California precisely because my brother lives in this state. I was curious and
wished to learn more about him, I suppose."
"Then why don't you visit him more often?" Chris asked, feeling confused. "Leon
says that your father has visited the shop only a handful of times over the
years, and you've only stopped by once, years ago when you were a child."
The Count smiled, and although his face was serene as always, Chris thought that
he detected a hint of sadness in that smile. "But my presence seems to distress
my brother, and I do not wish to cause him pain," the young D said quietly.
Q-chan flew down from his perch to land on the Count's shoulder, looking worried
and a little guilty.
"Kyu?" he squeaked softly.
The Count reached up to pet him reassuringly and continued, "I remind him of
his...I mean, our father, I think."
"Er...so you know about your father?" Chris asked hesitantly. He wasn't sure how
much Sofu D had told his son/grandson; if he knew that Leon had killed his
predecessor, he might well hold a grudge against the Orcot family, although he
had never displayed any hostility towards Chris.
"I know that he died when I was a baby," the Count replied casually, and Chris
could not tell what he was really thinking or how much he knew. "I was too young
to remember it, of course. My grandfather, the one you refer to as Sofu D, is
the only father I have known. But to answer your question, Agent Orcot, I am
content to watch over my brother from a distance." He gave Chris a charming,
mischievous smile. "Besides, I think that your brother would prefer it that way,
would he not? He does not trust Father, and he probably wouldn't trust me. And I
would prefer to carry out my business without constantly being hounded by the
police."
"I hope you don't mind the presence of the F.B.I., then," Chris chuckled.
"As long as you do not intend to arrest me, Agent Orcot," the Count said coyly.
"I could never turn away a guest who brings me such wonderful sweets."
Chris knew that the young Count's flirtations weren't serious, but he enjoyed
them anyway. Besides, the older Count D used to tease Leon the same way, so that
was a good sign, right?
"Then I must never forget to bring sweets when I visit, so that I will always be
welcome," Chris said lightly.
He never forgot to bring sweets with him, and he was always welcome at the shop.
The Count seemed to enjoy hearing anecdotes about Chris's childhood and the news
that Chris shared from his letters from home. Chris usually focused on D and
Daiki, though, and didn't mention Leon much, in case the young Count was aware
that Leon had killed his previous incarnation. He hoped that if he and the young
Count got together, he might be able to arrange a family reconciliation someday.
Both Ds were dear to him, and he wanted all the people that he loved to be happy
and get along with each other.
But to his dismay, Chris soon discovered that the Count had many other suitors,
who also came bearing gifts--gifts much more expensive than Chris could afford
on an F.B.I. agent's salary. He silently cursed himself for being so stupid; he
should have expected this from his experience growing up in the L.A. petshop,
where D's clients used to shower him with gifts. Chris felt that he had a slight
advantage in that he was a part of the older Count's family, and could provide
the young D with news about his brother. However, as far as he could tell, the
Count did not favor Chris any more or less than he did any of his other suitors,
and many times Chris found himself grinding his teeth in jealousy and
frustration when the Count gave gushing thanks to some smug-looking rich guy
who'd paid an exorbitant amount to have some fancy chocolates specially flown in
from France, or to some millionaire restaurant owner who'd had a world-renowned
chef create a unique dessert in Count D's honor.
There was no way that Chris could compete with them financially, and he fretted,
wondering what he could possibly do to distinguish himself from those other
suitors...
___________________________________________________________________________________________________
Meanwhile, things were going fairly well for Raphael. The geezer's commission
and the payment for the mural would cover the rent for the next few months, and
he had taken a part-time job as a museum tour guide. It wasn't quite what he had
planned to do with his college degree, but it would help cover expenses until
the next commission came along, and since it was part-time, it still gave him
free time to draw and paint--and to see Daiki, of course. One benefit of his new
job was an employee discount, so he could take Daiki to the museum for
inexpensive dates on his days off, to look at the exhibits and have lunch or
dinner in the museum cafe.
Raphael grinned, delighting in the knowledge that he and Daiki had officially
been dating for a few weeks now. Their dates were mostly casual and
informal--tea at Daiki's shop, lunch at the museum, or a picnic in the park--but
still, they were dates, and usually ended with at least a goodbye kiss. They'd
made out on the couch in the Plant Dolls shop a few times, but so far things had
not gone any further than that. It was a little frustrating, but at the same
time, it was kind of fun, necking and petting like a couple of horny
teenagers--although he wasn't really speaking from experience, because his
lovelife in high school had pretty much sucked. He'd had crushes on a few of his
classmates, but he had never dared to ask any of them out, for fear of not just
being rejected, but also harassed and beaten up if word got out around school
that he was gay. Things had been better in college, and he'd had a few
boyfriends over the years, but none that had lasted very long; they either got
freaked out by his curse, or refused to believe in it and thought he was nuts
for believing that he could kill people just by painting their portraits.
Besides, he had never felt as strongly attracted to any of them as he did to
Daiki, as if what he felt for Daiki was not just desire, but need--a need to be
with him, the same way that one needed to eat or drink or breathe.
Raphael wanted to make love to Daiki, of course, but for now, he was content
just to be with him, and was willing to wait as long as it took until Daiki was
ready to take their relationship to the next level. But he was a little puzzled
as to why Daiki was holding back, because shyness and prudishness didn't seem to
be factors. He was a little shy at first, but he obviously wasn't completely
inexperienced, and he seemed to take sincere pleasure in their encounters
without any shame. And it wasn't as if he was saving himself for marriage, since
same-sex marriage still wasn't legal in the U.S., although Vermont did have
domestic partnerships. Of course, they hadn't known each other long enough to be
talking marriage, and it was logical to assume that Daiki might want to take
things slow and make sure that the relationship was going to work out before
they slept together, but Raphael had the strange feeling that Daiki was waiting
for something...what, Raphael couldn't say, but something more mysterious and
significant than a pledge of commitment.
At least he was getting along with Daiki's parents. He'd had dinner at the
petshop several times, and Count D seemed to approve of him--partially because
Raphael always brought a box of chocolates or pastries as a gift, but he
suspected that it was also because the animals seemed to like him. The cats in
the shop would always wind themselves around his legs, purring happily, and Pon-chan
liked to climb onto his lap, and Daiki would always smile in amusement while
Leon smiled wryly, although Raphael wasn't sure why. Daiki would just laugh when
Raphael asked him about it. The big wolf-dog liked to be scratched behind the
ears, and even the huge lizard seemed to regard him in a friendly manner.
In fact, the only animal in the shop that didn't seem to like Raphael was the
orange goat, Tet-chan, who would always growl at him sullenly whenever they
met--which was frequently, since he would turn up at the Plant Dolls shop from
time to time, even when the Count and Leon weren't around. "Tet-chan just
stopped by for a visit," Daiki explained with a cheerful smile, as if it were
perfectly normal for the goat to visit the shop by himself without his owner.
Then again, maybe it was perfectly normal, at least to Daiki. When Raphael
mentioned the incident to Jason, his friend told him, "Well, if the Count is a
god, doesn't it stand to reason that his pets are more than ordinary dumb
beasts? You know, according to my parents, there was a rumor going around years
ago that Roger T. Stanford bought a Kirin from the petshop back when he was just
a junior Congressman."
"A what?!" Raphael exclaimed.
"A Kirin," Jason replied. "It's the Asian equivalent of a unicorn--"
"I know what it is!" Raphael interrupted. "Well, not exactly, but I know that
it's a mythical beast! I can't believe that the petshop has unicorns for sale!"
"If you can believe in a god, why not a unicorn?" Jason asked matter-of-factly.
Perhaps because he had grown up in Chinatown as Daiki's playmate, he took all
the petshop's oddities in stride. "Anyway, it's just a rumor; I don't know if
it's true or not. But compared to a Kirin, a goat traveling a few blocks by
himself is nothing. We see Tet-chan walking through Chinatown a lot, sometimes
with the Count or Daiki, but sometimes by himself, and it's no big deal. It
doesn't even have to be something magical; if dogs can be trained to sniff out
drugs or rescue people or act as seeing-eye guides, why can't a goat manage to
find his way through Chinatown? He's been living here for years, so he's
certainly familiar enough with the place. The Count acquired him before Daiki
was even born, back when the Detective was still 'investigating' the petshop."
"Really?" Raphael asked. "That's more than twenty years ago! Do goats live that
long?"
"I don't know," Jason replied with a shrug, unconcerned. "Maybe normal goats
don't, but like I said, the animals at the petshop aren't necessarily normal.
The wolf and the raccoon have been with the Count a long time, too--as long as
Tet-chan, maybe even longer."
That was definitely not normal. Raphael's family had owned a pet dog when he was
a kid, and he knew that a dog that managed to live into its teens was pretty
old. A normal dog would not live for more than twenty years, and even if it did,
it ought to look old and decrepit, but Lupin had the health and energy of a
puppy.
"Look, if you intend to become part of Daiki's family, you're going to have to
get used to all this weird stuff," Jason warned, looking more serious now. "If
you can't handle it, you'd better break things off now before you break Daiki's
heart. The Count and Leon are protective parents, and I've already told you
about the things that happen to people who try to hurt the Count or his family.
I don't want to find you torn to bits in a dark alley one day, or hear that your
bones were found in the belly of a giant fish. And that's not even taking into
account the Detective's bad temper--"
"Okay, okay, I get the idea," Raphael interrupted. Jason's words ought to
terrify him, but instead, they filled him with determination. He was not going
to let anything drive him away from Daiki, not even man-eating beasts...and he
was finally beginning to believe that they might really exist. But he loved
Daiki, and if he had to put up with police detectives and mysterious gods and
mythical creatures to be with him, then so be it. And he should be safe from
being devoured by the Count's pets, because he didn't intend to ever do anything
to hurt Daiki.
A moment later, Raphael's cynical nature asserted itself, reminding him that it
was impossible for two human beings, however well-intentioned, to go through
their entire lives without ever quarreling or hurting each other's feelings.
According to Jason's stories, the Count and the Detective had quarreled quite a
bit during their courtship, and Raphael knew from watching them at dinner that
they still did, although their bickering was more playful than serious. Raphael
silently promised himself that he would never intentionally do anything to hurt
Daiki, and if he should hurt him inadvertently, he would apologize and do his
best to set things right. He was willing to accept the risk of the Count's
vengeance.
"I can handle weirdness," Raphael told Jason firmly. "I'm no stranger to it
myself, after all. My portraits cause people to die. If I can accept that, I can
accept the idea of unicorns and man-eating beasts. And intelligent, long-lived
goats, I guess."
Jason smiled at him in relief. "Yes, I think you're probably better prepared
than anyone else I know to deal with Daiki's family. Maybe that's even why the
Count seems to like you. You may not be a god, Raf, but you've got a bit of
magic in you. I suppose that makes you an appropriate suitor for the son of a
god."
"Hardly," Raphael laughed self-deprecatingly. "Magic or not, I'm still just a
starving artist." But secretly, he was encouraged by Jason's words, and for once
he was grateful for his curse, if it really was responsible for the Count's
approval.
He was invited to dine at the petshop the next evening, and along the way, he
stopped by one of the Count's favorite Chinatown bakeries to buy some almond
cookies as a gift. Apparently, word had gotten around Chinatown that he was
dating Daiki, because the old woman who ran the bakery smiled at him knowingly
and threw in an extra half-dozen cookies at no charge. "Since it's for the
Count," she said with a wink, although he had not told her who he was buying the
cookies for.
The Count was happy with his present, and dinner went smoothly enough, although
Leon's acceptance of him was a bit grudging, as if he still didn't approve of
his son dating a starving artist. He seemed slightly mollified to learn that
Raphael had picked up a steady job at the museum, although he frowned when he
heard that it was only a part-time position.
"But Raphael also works as an artist, Dad," Daiki said tactfully. "So he is, in
essence, holding down two jobs."
"Have you received any portrait commissions recently?" Leon asked skeptically,
and Raphael was forced to reply that he had not.
"Such commissions are by their nature unpredictable," the Count said, coming to
Raphael's defense. Pon-chan nodded her head emphatically, as if in agreement.
"It is the same with the petshop and the Plant Dolls shop," the Count continued.
"We do not always make a sale every day. We might go for several days without a
single sale, and then have a customer make a very expensive purchase."
"That is true, especially with my shop, since the dolls are so expensive," Daiki
agreed. "But I happened to make a sale today--a most profitable one."
He smiled smugly, which caused Raphael to smile in amusement. He knew that Daiki
was kinder than he appeared to most of his customers, who thought of him as a
charming but shrewd merchant who drove a hard bargain, and Raphael knew that
Daiki would lower the price of a doll significantly if the customer truly could
not afford it, but he did seem to take great pleasure and pride in persuading
his wealthy customers to spend as much as possible.
"Please tell us about it, then," the Count said encouragingly, while Leon
grunted, looking slightly annoyed, as if he knew that they were deliberately
changing the subject, but at the same time, he looked intrigued. Daiki had told
Raphael once that his father enjoyed hearing about his customers'
eccentricities.
"A married couple came into my shop; the husband was very friendly and polite,"
Daiki said. "He explained that they had been shopping for antiques in Chinatown,
and the display in my shop window happened to catch their eye. The wife was
pleasant, but a little remote--not in a rude or aloof manner, but as if her mind
was someplace else. Her eyes had an unfocused look, as if she was staring at
something that only she could see."
"You mean she seemed a little loony?" Leon asked, spinning his index finger in
circles beside his temple.
"You are as tactful and sensitive as always, Leon," the Count said
sarcastically.
"I never claimed to be politically correct," Leon shot back. "Let the kid finish
his story."
The Count sniffed disdainfully, and Daiki smiled and continued, "But then her
eyes seemed to light up and come into focus when she spotted a particular Plant
Doll, a very beautiful doll with golden hair. She was asleep at the time, of
course, but when the customer approached, she immediately awakened and opened
her eyes."
"A good sign, right?" Leon asked.
"Yes, there was very good rapport between them," Daiki replied. "The doll seemed
very taken with the customer, and my customer was equally taken with the doll. I
had dressed the doll in a green silk gown and an emerald pendant, and the
customer remarked on how beautifully the green jewel complemented her fair skin.
The gentleman seemed shocked and turned pale when he laid eyes on the doll, but
when his wife insisted on purchasing it, he consented without any argument."
"He probably turned pale at the thought of how much that doll was gonna cost
him," Leon said with a smile.
"He did wince at the price," Daiki said, "but he did not haggle overmuch.
Normally I would have let them take the doll home themselves, but he asked me to
come with them and help the little one get settled in, and to give instructions
to the servants on how to care for her."
"Servants?" Leon asked disgustedly. "Another snobby aristocrat, like that
D'Amato guy."
Daiki shook his head. "No, the gentleman was not at all snobbish; in fact, he
seemed like a very kind person. I think that he wanted me to instruct the
servants because he was afraid that his wife...well..."
"That she wasn't up to caring for a child by herself, since she isn't all quite
there?" Leon finished cynically.
"I don't think that she would harm the doll, or I would not have sold the doll
to her," Daiki said. "But she seemed a little dreamy and forgetful. I was
pleased to know that the gentleman wished to ensure that the doll would be cared
for properly, so of course I consented to his request."
"Of course he'd want to take care of such a major investment," Leon pointed out.
"There was more to it than that," Daiki said, smiling. "But I'm getting a little
ahead of myself. I delivered the doll to her new home--a very lovely estate, and
when I commented on how beautiful the garden was, the gentleman gave me
permission to walk through it. So after instructing the servants and seeing that
the doll was happy in her new home, I took a stroll through the garden, and
frightened the couple's child, who had not been informed of my presence and had
not expected to encounter a stranger in the garden. The child appeared to be a
beautiful girl about twelve years old, with long dark hair, and she looked
disturbed when she was introduced to the Plant Doll."
"Wait a minute," Leon said, his eyes narrowing suspiciously. "'Appeared' to be a
beautiful girl?"
"Ah, you are observant, as always, Dad," Daiki said with a grin. "It must be
your detective instincts. The 'girl' was actually a boy, although most people
would not have seen through the disguise. But the gentleman must have noticed
that I realized the truth, because he felt obliged to explain to me why his son
was dressed as a girl. It seems that when their daughter died, the mother went
into a state of shock and came to believe that the boy was actually the older
sister. And the son, in an effort to console his mother, has been acting the
part of the sister, to the extent of growing out his hair and wearing dresses.
But the doll, it seems, resembles the sister greatly, which was why the poor man
was so shocked when he first saw it; it must have been like seeing his
daughter's ghost. His wife was instinctively drawn to the doll, although she
still does not remember her daughter's death. The gentleman hopes that the doll
will help her to remember and recover, so that his son can go back to leading a
normal life."
"That's very sad," Raphael murmured.
"I think that's twisted!" Leon exclaimed. "That family is as messed up as the
D'Amatos were! Pretending that the daughter's death never happened, and letting
the son pretend to be his sister? The mom might be out of her mind, but how
could the dad let his son do such a thing?!"
"I got the impression that the young man insisted upon it over his father's
objections," Daiki replied.
"But still, the dad shouldn't have let the kid do it!" Leon insisted.
"You are probably right," Daiki agreed serenely. "But at least he is trying to
mend things now."
"But are you really going to entrust the doll to such a freaky family?" Leon
demanded.
"The Plant Doll seems happy, and that is what matters as far as I am concerned,"
Daiki replied. "Oddly enough, she seemed to like the young man, and he treated
her kindly even though he was clearly flustered by her resemblance to his
sister. My customer has named the doll 'Princess Jewel,' and she does indeed
treat the doll as if she were a precious treasure. Despite the unusual
circumstances, I feel confident that Princess Jewel will be well cared for in
that household."
"Your shopkeeper's intuition, huh?" Leon asked, smiling wryly. Daiki just smiled
back and winked at him.
After dinner, they had tea and cookies in the lobby of the shop, relaxing on the
couches there and chatting casually. Pon-chan sat next to Raphael and Daiki on
one couch, nibbling on an almond cookie, and Leon and the Count sat on the other
couch, with the Detective's arm comfortably and unselfconsciously draped over
the Count's shoulders. Count D leaned against his lover, smiling contentedly,
and Daiki smiled at his parents fondly. Raphael was suddenly struck by the
thought that he was in the midst of a warm and loving family, even if they were
a bit unconventional.
Despite what Jason had said about becoming part of Daiki's family, Raphael had
been thinking mainly in terms of wooing Daiki. He had been thinking of Daiki's
parents as an obstacle to be overcome, of having to win their approval in order
to win over Daiki. He had come to respect and even like them, but for the first
time it dawned on him that if he and Daiki became a permanent couple, he would
essentially become part of the Orcot family. And for the first time since his
parents had died, Raphael let himself imagine what it might be like to be part
of a loving family once again.
Tears filled his eyes, and Daiki reached out to clasp Raphael's hand with his,
and he asked in a soft, concerned voice, "Raphael, are you all right?"
Raphael blinked back his tears and looked into Daiki's golden eyes, which at the
moment did not look mysterious and godlike at all. Instead they were filled with
concern and affection...and did he dare to hope...possibly even love?
"Yes," Raphael replied with a smile, squeezing Daiki's hand reassuringly. "I was
just thinking about how happy I've been since I met you."
Daiki smiled at Raphael in a way that warmed him to the core of his body--not in
a lustful manner, but more a feeling of belonging and contentment that he had
not felt in years, since before his sister had died. The Count smiled at them
indulgently, and even Leon's stern expression softened a little. And that gave
Raphael hope that they would eventually accept him as Daiki's lover and welcome
him into the family.
At that moment, he was so happy that tears started to well up in his eyes again,
and Daiki reached up to gently touch Raphael's cheek with his free hand. Every
time that Daiki touched him, it felt like a miracle to Raphael, like a dream
come true, and this was no exception. Raphael shivered at that light touch, and
he was so overcome with love and awe that he almost forgot himself and kissed
Daiki right then and there, in front of his two overprotective fathers.
Or rather, he would have kissed Daiki, except that as he leaned in to bring his
face closer to Daiki's, a sharp pain erupted in his ankle, as if it had been
pierced by needles. He shrieked in pain, jerking his leg up off the floor, to
discover the orange goat-thing hanging from his ankle, its teeth firmly embedded
in Raphael's flesh.
"Tet-chan!" Daiki shouted, jumping to his feet. "Let go of him at once!" Through
the haze of pain, it occurred to Raphael that this was the first time he had
ever seen Daiki look so angry--the first time he had ever seen Daiki look angry,
period. He had never seen the serene shopkeeper lose his temper before, not even
when he thought that Raphael's portrait would kill his precious Plant Doll.
Tet-chan let out a muffled growl, his jaws still wrapped around Raphael's ankle.
Daiki opened his mouth to shout again, but the Count said in a quiet but firm
voice, "That is enough, Tet-chan. Please release our guest."
The goat growled again, then reluctantly let go of Raphael's ankle. "Bad goat!"
Daiki scolded, and Tet-chan growled at him sullenly. "I am perfectly capable of
taking care of myself; your interference is completely unnecessary," Daiki said,
and Raphael suddenly got the weird impression that Daiki and the goat were
carrying on a conversation with each other. Raphael frowned, his common sense
rejecting that notion at first, and then he shrugged. Well, Jason claimed that
at least some of the pets in the shop were magical, and that Count D was a god,
so why shouldn't a half-godling like Daiki be able to talk with a magical goat?
It was no more ridiculous than believing that a painting could kill a person.
"Go to your room, Tet-chan," Count D said sternly, although Raphael thought that
he detected a hint of amusement in the Count's eyes. "I will deal with you
later. Pon-chan, please fetch the first-aid kit."
The goat skulked off, looking downright sulky, and the raccoon quickly scampered
out of the room. Meanwhile, Daiki knelt down on the floor to examine Raphael's
wounded ankle. He gently rolled back the cuff of Raphael's trousers, which now
showed several small puncture marks and were stained with blood. "Damn," Raphael
muttered under his breath. "And these were my good pants, too." Or rather, the
least-shabbiest that he owned; he didn't want to show up at the petshop in
clothes that were faded or covered with paint stains. He supposed he would have
to shell out for a new pair of pants now.
"He got you pretty good, huh?" Leon asked sympathetically as he gazed at
Raphael's bite wound. "Don't feel too bad; I've got lots of scars from that
stupid sheep. See?" He pulled up the cuff of his jeans to expose several small
white scars arranged in a half-circle the exact size of Tet-chan's mouth. "And
over here, too."
Leon started to tug at the waistband of his jeans, and the Count snapped, "Stop
that, Leon! I am sure that Raphael has no desire to view your...your derriere."
"True," Leon agreed, leering playfully at the Count. "That's a privilege that
you prefer to keep for yourself, right?"
"Oh!" the Count exclaimed indignantly, stamping his foot on the floor. "I do not
know why I put up with such a crude and vulgar man as yourself!"
"Because I'm the father of your son, for one thing," Leon said cheerfully.
"Yes, I suppose I must bear with you for the sake of our child," the Count said,
heaving a very dramatic and much put-upon sigh.
Despite the pain in his ankle, Raphael chuckled, and Daiki smiled although he
still looked worried. Just then, Pon-chan came running back into the room with a
first-aid kit; she was carrying it in her mouth by a handle set in the top of
the box. She set it down on the floor beside Daiki and Raphael, and Raphael
reached out to pat her head gently in thanks.
"My savior," he said with a smile, and the raccoon seemed to preen, looking very
pleased with herself. "Thank you, little one." He winced slightly as Daiki
cleaned the wound with some herbal-smelling liquid that stung painfully, but
since the Detective was watching him, Raphael was careful not to utter a sound
and bear his pain stoically. Cops tended to be pretty macho (even, apparently, a
gay cop like Leon), and he didn't want to seem unmanly by whining about a little
bite.
"I'm so sorry, Raphael," Daiki apologized. "I have no idea what got into him.
Well, no, actually I do. He's very protective of me, and he's probably a little
jealous of you. He's watched over me ever since I was a child."
"I understand," Raphael assured him. "I've heard that sometimes cats and dogs
get jealous when someone new comes into their owner's life."
"He's not so much a pet as he is a friend," Daiki said, and he seemed to be
watching very carefully for Raphael's response.
"Obviously a very close friend, if he's so protective of you," Raphael said,
trying to sound as matter-of-fact as Jason. After hearing Jason's stories and
seeing the way Daiki and his family interacted with the animals in the shop,
treating them as if they were people, he knew that it would be a mistake to
belittle Daiki's statement or laugh it off as a joke. "I just hope that I can
convince Tet-chan that I'm not his enemy."
Daiki smiled, looking relieved, and the Count smiled approvingly. Leon smiled
wryly and said, "Good luck. Tet-chan still tries to use me as a chew toy, and
I've been living with D for over twenty years. I've got scars here, and here,
and here..."
"Leon!" the Count snapped.
"I'll have a talk with Tet-chan," Daiki said, still looking a little distraught.
"I'll make it clear that this sort of behavior is absolutely unacceptable."
A little sigh of pleasure escaped Raphael's lips before he could stop it, as
Daiki's fingers gently stroked his ankle, applying a cool and soothing ointment
to his wound. Then Daiki bandaged the wound, still making fretful little noises,
and Raphael decided that it had been worth having his best pair of trousers
ruined to have Daiki fuss over him like this. It had even brought him and the
Detective closer together, as Leon now seemed to be treating him with an air of
camaraderie, as if being the objects of Tet-chan's disaffection had given them
something in common. He insisted on giving Raphael a beer ("for the pain") and
drinking one himself, over the Count's objections, as he entertained Raphael and
Daiki with stories about all the times that Tet-chan had attacked him. He drank
a few more beers, and his stories seemed to grow even more entertaining in
proportion to the amount of alcohol he consumed. The Count just sighed and
rolled his eyes, but in an almost affectionate manner.
When Daiki and Raphael were ready to leave, Leon slung an arm over Raphael's
shoulders as he walked them out of the shop. "You've gotta keep an eye on that
little beast all the time," he said sagely, like a grizzled old cop giving
advice to a rookie. "And cover your ass, kid, literally, unless you want a set
of teeth-marks on it."
"Yes, Detective," Raphael said obediently.
"And what's with this 'Detective' shit?" Leon demanded, slapping Raphael on the
back heartily. "I told you to call me 'Leon,' kid. You're practically part of
the family, after all."
"Yes, Leon," Raphael said, grinning widely.
"I'm really sorry about Tet-chan," Daiki apologized again on the drive home.
"Don't be," Raphael laughed. "I think that your orange-furred friend actually
did me a favor! Getting bitten turned out to be a bonding experience for your
dad and me. Although if it's all the same to you, I'd rather not get my ass
bitten."
"No," Daiki agreed, his golden eyes sparkling mischievously. "I think it would
be best if...ah...that portion of your anatomy remains unmarred."
"Of course, you don't really know if it's unmarred, because you've never seen
it," Raphael said slyly, and to his delight, Daiki--calm, cool, collected
Daiki--turned beet-red. If Jason's words were true, he had managed to make a
demigod blush!
Raphael laughed out loud, and Daiki said, still blushing, "I think you've been
spending too much time around my Dad. Papa has always said that he's a bad
influence."
They made out in the car for a few minutes outside Raphael's apartment building.
(More teenage fantasies come true!) When they finally pulled apart, Raphael
asked breathlessly, "Do you want to come up for..." He was about to say "for
tea," but they both knew that he wasn't really interested in tea right now. "Do
you want to come up for awhile?"
"I'd love to, but I can't," Daiki said regretfully. "Not tonight."
"Listen, Daiki," Raphael said hesitantly, "don't get the wrong idea; I don't
want to pressure you or anything, but...do you just have to get back to your
shop, or is it something more? I get the feeling that you're waiting for
something to happen before we, well..."
Daiki looked startled for a moment, then smiled. "You are very perceptive,
Raphael. Yes, I am waiting."
"For what?" Raphael asked in confusion when Daiki did not explain further.
Daiki reached out and gently laid his hand over Raphael's. "We will be together
when the time is right," he replied serenely.
"And...um...not to rush you, but when might that be?" Raphael asked, still
feeling bewildered.
"When the time is right, you will know it," Daiki said, giving him a smile that
was filled with tenderness and amusement.
Raphael didn't understand the amusement, and had the sneaking suspicion that he
might be the butt of a private joke in the Orcot family. However, the tenderness
in that smile made it impossible for him to be angry with Daiki. When he had met
the beautiful, mysterious shopkeeper on that stormy night when he had first come
to look at Rainy Moon, he had never dared to imagine that Daiki might someday
smile at him that way. So despite the physical frustration that he was feeling
right now, he was willing to wait until "the time is right". He supposed that
Jason would say something like you couldn't rush the gods.
"Until the time is right then," Raphael said, giving Daiki a final kiss
goodnight, although his body thought now would have been just fine. However,
when he was alone in his apartment after Daiki drove off, he suddenly cheered up
when he recalled that Daiki had said "when" the time was right, not "if". That
sounded pretty definite, and Raphael went to bed, grinning and thinking to
himself that maybe the right time was not so far off after all.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________
Meanwhile, Daiki also felt the frustration of thwarted desire as he drove home,
but it was tempered by the sweet thrill of anticipation. He had promised himself
that he would not sleep with Raphael unless and until the young artist could see
the pets in their true forms, because he had already decided that he would keep
no secrets from his lifemate, and he liked Raphael too much to just have a
casual affair with him. It was asking a lot of a human, even a human who
believed in supernatural curses, to accept the existence of near-divine
creatures called kami and animals that could take human form. But he had seen
Raphael looking strangely at the animals in the petshop, rubbing his eyes and
looking confused, as if he had seen glimpses of their human forms. And he seemed
to accept that Daiki and D could converse with the animals in the shop, and he
spoke to the animals politely, as one would address a person, even if he
couldn't understand their responses. Also, Papa's gossip network had reported
that Raphael was friends with Jason Chow, and had been seen visiting him in the
Chinatown art gallery. Jason was one of Daiki's old childhood playmates, and he
and his family were longtime Chinatown residents, so they understood that Count
D was more than human, even if they did not fully comprehend his true nature.
Presumably, Raphael had asked Jason for advice or information, and Jason had
probably explained some of the petshop's history to him. Of course, if he had
told Raphael some of the bloodier stories about the shop, it was something of a
miracle that Raphael had not fled in terror, as anyone with common sense would.
But perhaps Raphael had become inured to the presence of death because of his
"gift". Either that, or his feelings for Daiki were strong enough to overrule
his common sense.
All this gave Daiki hope for the future. He had felt that it would be too much
to try to reveal the entire truth to Raphael at once, and was letting Raphael
gradually come to understand and accept the magical nature of the petshop and
his family, through observation and through the stories of people like Jason.
Daiki was confident that someday soon, Raphael would be able to see the human
forms of the pets.
But no matter how many stories Raphael heard about magical beasts living in the
shop, it was bound to be a shock the first time that he saw the true forms of
Pon-chan, Tet-chan, and the others, and Daiki grinned when he imagined Raphael's
reaction. It would give Raphael and Dad one more thing in common that they could
sympathize over, although the pets had said that Leon had taken the shock
surprisingly well under the circumstances.
So Daiki hummed cheerfully to himself as he made one last round of the Plant
Dolls shop, checking on his charges before closing up for the night. On his way
out, he passed by the large dragon statue in the corner, and paused to pat it
fondly on the nose. "Perhaps soon there will be another person in this household
to keep you company, Ti-Lung. It must get a little lonely when I am gone, since
the dolls sleep most of the time. But then again, maybe you prefer the quiet."
The statue gave no response, and Daiki went up to his apartment, still humming.
When the time was right, he would ask the shop to create a new room, one large
enough to serve as an artist's studio...
___________________________________________________________________________________________________
About a week later, Daiki closed up shop a little early in order to make a
special delivery of new dresses for Princess Jewel. He found her playing in the
garden with her owner, and the doll seemed very healthy and happy. The owner,
too, seemed very happy; she was a pretty woman, but whenever she looked at the
doll, her face lit up with a radiant smile that made her downright beautiful.
On his way out, Daiki overheard some of the servants gossiping. "Things seemed
so hopeless at first, but the mistress is getting stronger and stronger. She
even warms the doll's milk by herself," one of the maids said.
"Perhaps the young master will finally be freed," another maid added.
Daiki smiled; the servants seemed to be genuinely fond of the family, and
pleased that the mistress's health was improving. It confirmed his belief that
the family, while perhaps a little odd, were essentially kind and that the doll
was in a good home.
As he was opening the car door, a pebble struck the ground beside him, and Daiki
looked up to see the son/"daughter" peering down at him from the top of the
high, ornate, iron-barred fence surrounding the estate.
"Aren't you hot, dressed like that?" the child asked, smiling mischievously.
His/her name was Anthony/Antonia, if Daiki recalled correctly. He still looked
like a girl, with his long dark hair braided into plaits, but he was dressed a
little more casually, in a blouse and shorts instead of the lace-trimmed dress
he had been wearing when they first met.
"Good evening," Daiki said politely. "I have just delivered some new dresses."
"I know," Anthony replied. Then, as if the idea had just occurred to him, he
added, "Hey, give me a ride in your car."
If Dad were here, he would absolutely forbid such a thing on the grounds that
Daiki would be opening himself up to accusations of kidnapping, child
endangerment, and a host of other charges. But Daiki's kami instincts were
telling him to go along with the child's request, although he wasn't exactly
sure why.
"Where to?" Daiki asked, as Anthony nimbly climbed over the fence.
"I don't care," Anthony replied. "Wherever."
"So you actually are a rebellious young lady," Daiki said with a smile.
"Huh?" Anthony asked, looking startled. "Didn't Father tell you?"
Since Anthony had been playing the role of a girl, Daiki had played along as
well, but all he said was, "Now that you mention it, I was informed."
"You must think we're a weird family," Anthony said as he hopped into Daiki's
car. Dad would probably have a fit about that, too, and lecture the boy about
going on rides with strangers.
"I do not hold an interest in my customers' personal lives, so..." Daiki
replied.
"That's how it is, huh?" Anthony asked.
"As long as the Plant Doll likes the customer, there is no problem," Daiki told
him.
"Hmm," Anthony said thoughtfully. "Hey, I know! Can I go to your store?"
"I do not mind, but is there something in particular you seek?" Daiki asked.
"Nah, not really," Anthony replied, staring out the car window with a pensive
expression on his face. "I'm just really curious about Plant Dolls."
They rode in silence the rest of the way to Chinatown, and Daiki did not press
the boy for more information. When they arrived at the shop, Anthony wandered
through it, looking around wide-eyed. "Wow, what a weird store!" he exclaimed.
"Thank you," Daiki replied serenely. "Would you like some tea?"
"Yes, please," Anthony said distractedly, most of his attention focused on the
dolls. "There sure are a lot of different kinds."
Daiki let the boy browse through the shop while he heated up water for the tea.
He returned with the teapot in time to see a little blonde Plant Doll jump up
and grin at Anthony, squeezing one of his hands in both of her little hands.
This particular doll was a newly-grown Plant Doll, who looked a little younger
and a little less elegant than Princess Jewel, with a round, cheerful face.
"Ah..." Daiki said in surprise.
"This one sure is affectionate," Anthony said as the doll hugged him.
"Excuse me, sir," Daiki said, tugging on the doll gently at first, and then with
more force, but she stubbornly clung to Anthony and would not let go. "Oh dear,
I see now," Daiki sighed. "You are one of those with instant rapport."
"Rapport?" Anthony asked, looking puzzled.
"They do come here on occasion," Daiki replied. "Without fail, these people gain
the affection of a Plant Doll."
"That's unusual?"
"Seldom, if ever, does such strong attachment happen at first sight."
"Let me go meet some other dolls," Anthony said eagerly.
"Please, anything but that!" Daiki cried in alarm. He didn't mind losing one of
the dolls to Anthony, but it would be disastrous for both himself and the boy if
every doll in the shop bonded with him. Even a family as rich as Anthony's was
not prepared to care for that many Plant Dolls, and Daiki would lose his entire
stock in one sweep.
The boy jumped, and Daiki explained in a calmer tone of voice, "They'll require
maintenance. Once awakened, a Plant Doll can no longer be sold as is."
"How about this one?" Anthony asked, indicating the Plant Doll that was still
clinging to him.
"If it were to be purchased, there would be no problem."
"Don't they become attached to you?" Anthony asked curiously.
"I'm just the one that provides the food," Daiki replied.
"I'm sorry, little girl," Anthony said, smiling at the Plant Doll kindly. "But
you're so pretty and cute, I'm sure someone will snap you right up." The doll's
eyes instantly filled with tears, and she stared at Anthony pleadingly. "But..."
Anthony protested weakly. "Plant Dolls don't play fair," he complained to Daiki.
"When they look at you like that, you can't help wanting to give in. I guess all
Plant Dolls are Princess Jewels."
"Is that a slogan from a certain jeweler?" Daiki asked, smiling. "I know a man
who might say those same words."
"No, it's a fairy tale," Anthony replied. "'Jewel' isn't meant literally. It's a
story that all girls are born with 'jewels'. And the more 'jewels' a girl has,
the more she'll be loved and the happier she'll be. Mother always called Sis
that, and now the doll, too." He smiled sadly. "I don't have any, because I'm a
boy. But you know, what's so different? Is it the color of my hair? Is it the
color of my eyes? Even so, Mother believed that I was Sis." His voice was filled
with pain and just a hint of resentment, but he sounded more resigned than
angry. "So why did she have to go and find a doll that looks exactly like Sis?
She used such a kind voice whenever she called my sister's name, but it's not
easy to take. Why am I still a forgotten child? Even my name is like an
afterthought. My sister's real name was Antonia, and my mother named me Anthony,
as if she couldn't be bothered to think up something more original."
The little Plant Doll suddenly yanked on Anthony's cheeks, pulling the corners
of his mouth up. Then she clambered onto his lap and snuggled against him almost
fiercely.
"Wh-what's she doing?" Anthony stammered. "Is she mad at me?"
"She thinks she is consoling you," Daiki replied. "At least, I think that is
what she is doing."
"She's...consoling me?" Anthony asked, looking startled, as the doll hugged him
tightly.
"She really has taken quite a fancy to you," Daiki said, frowning slightly as he
tried to figure out how he was going to persuade Anthony's father to pay for a
second Plant Doll. It wasn't really about money, of course, but it offended his
merchant's pride to give away a doll for free unless the customer was truly
destitute, and more importantly, he didn't want word to get out among his
clients that he was in the habit of giving away dolls. Most humans
subconsciously valued expensive objects more than they did cheap ones, and if
the monetary value of the dolls was lessened, then the dolls would no longer
seem like precious angels and princesses to be treasured and cherished.
Anthony looked down at the doll and gazed into her eyes, and she smiled at him
in the way that Plant Dolls did when they first bonded with their owners--a
smile filled with complete love and trust. There was also a gentle, reassuring
quality to her smile, as if to assure him that everything would be all right.
"Oh," Anthony whispered, more to himself than to Daiki or the doll. "Maybe I
wasn't really consoling my mother. When Sis died, I secretly felt it wasn't
fair. She was going out to see her love, although Mother had forbidden it. She
died trying to sneak out the window. She died on a path of her choosing, and I
bet she was feeling happy when she died. So why does Mother keep blaming
herself? And why does everyone cry 'poor thing' so much?" His eyes filled with
tears, and he cried out in an anguished voice, "Why is she loved so much even
after her death?"
The doll stared up at him with concern in her eyes, and he continued in a softer
voice, "I was jealous of Sis. That's why I pretended to be her. The first time
Mother looked at me and called me by my sister's name, I felt a little bit
happy. That voice...it was Mother's kindest voice, the one she used only for
Sis. I thought if I pretended to be Jewel, then I'd be loved. But I was
terrified that if I stopped pretending, I'd become an invisible child to my
mother. But..." Tears welled up in Anthony's eyes, then spilled down his cheeks.
"But the truth is...I was already an invisible child."
The doll reached up and gently wiped away Anthony's tears with her little hand,
and he smiled at her. She smiled back at him, looking relieved, and then hugged
him again. Anthony returned the embrace, weeping on her shoulder, and she patted
him comfortingly on the back.
Daiki's kami intuition told him that the tears were tears of healing, so he
discreetly made himself scarce while the doll comforted Anthony, and he
retreated to the kitchen to reheat the tea, which was by now cold anyway. He
smiled to himself as he made a new pot and also heated up some milk, deciding
that he wouldn't mind giving away the doll, after all. But still, Anthony's
father was wealthy, so perhaps he could convince the man to pay half-price on
the second doll; he would call it a discount for a double purchase. Buying a
Plant Doll to console his son was the least that the man could do to make up for
not seeing how much pain Anthony was in even before his sister's death.
Maybe Princess Jewel would heal Anthony's mother, and perhaps in time, he would
no longer be invisible to her. Daiki hoped so, although he was far from certain
of it. But no matter what else happened, at least Anthony would have one person
who loved him completely and unconditionally--the Plant Doll. He would always be
the center of her world, and he would never be an invisible child to her.
Daiki returned to the main room after Anthony had time to compose himself, and
offered the boy a handkerchief and some tea. Daiki would have served the doll
her milk, but Anthony insisted on doing it himself--a good sign, Daiki thought.
She drank it all down, then beamed at Anthony, and the boy could not help but
smile back at her; there were very few people who could resist the smile of a
Plant Doll.
After Anthony finished his tea, Daiki drove him and the doll back to the estate,
where the boy's anxious father was waiting. Anthony calmly explained that the
Plant Doll had bonded with him and that they needed to purchase her.
The father was very obviously struggling to keep his temper under control,
perhaps not wanting to blow up in front of an outsider like Daiki. A vein
visibly throbbed on his forehead in an angry tic, reminding an amused Daiki of
his own father.
"You suddenly disappear, causing all kinds of worry," the father said through
gritted teeth. "And when you come back, you have this...this..."
"Um, he said that he'd arrange a loan," Anthony said brightly. "And since we're
buying two, he said he'd give us a discount and throw in some free goodies."
"Forty percent off the second doll," Daiki offered, figuring that he'd leave
himself a little room to bargain.
"Who said that we'd buy it?!" the father shouted, finally exploding. "We can't
buy TWO of something this goddamn expensive!"
"Oh, how cute," Anthony's mother said, as she walked into the room and spotted
the little Plant Doll.
"Dear..." the father said nervously, as if sensing impending disaster--at least
to his bank account.
"Oh my, Princess Jewel's little sister, how splendid!" the mother said
cheerfully as the Plant Doll smiled at her.
"Yes, don't you think?" Anthony asked sweetly.
"Oh," the mother said, looking startled to see Anthony. "Who are you again...?"
The anger and nervousness vanished from the father's face, to be replaced by a
look of anxious concern as he glanced from his wife to his son and back again.
"D-Dear..." he stammered.
"Yes?" she replied pleasantly.
"I'm your son, Mother," Anthony said calmly, his hands resting on the shoulders
of the Plant Doll. "Did you forget?"
His mother stared at him in shock, and for a brief moment, there was a flicker
of recognition in her eyes before it faded again. "Is...that right?" she asked,
giving him a warm, if slightly puzzled smile.
"It's okay, take your time," Anthony said kindly. "Maybe slowly you'll
remember." His father, still looking concerned, gently laid a hand on Anthony's
head. "I'm okay, Father," the boy assured him confidently as the doll leaned
back against him, practically glowing with love and happiness. "It's all thanks
to her. So...please?" He gave his father an imploring look, one that rivaled the
look the Plant Doll had given him back in the shop; the boy was a quick learner,
Daiki thought approvingly.
"Please?" Anthony cajoled.
The father's shoulders slumped in defeat. For all his faults, he was a devoted
husband and father, and he couldn't deny the combined wishes of his wife and
son. He drew Daiki aside and said in a resigned voice, "Let's talk price. I'm
pretty well-off, as you can see, but I'm not so rich that I can afford to buy
two Plant Dolls without batting an eye."
"The little one is less expensive than Princess Jewel," Daiki said placatingly.
"And, as the young master said, since you are buying two, I can give you a
discount, so it is quite affordable."
The father gave him a wry smile that seemed to say that they had different
definitions of "affordable," but he gave in with only a token amount of
haggling. They agreed on an installment plan, signed the contract, and shook
hands.
By the time they had finished conducting their business, Anthony was introducing
the new Plant Doll to Princess Jewel. "Look, it's your little sister," he told
the older doll. "Be friends, 'kay?" The two dolls greeted each other
delightedly, as if they really were sisters, so it seemed that they would get
along just fine.
Anthony saw Daiki to the door, the little Plant Doll tagging along at his side.
"I'll cut my hair tomorrow," he told Daiki. "I'm going to go back to living as a
boy."
"I am glad for you," Daiki said, then smiled. "Although you made a very charming
girl."
Anthony laughed, then said, "I know it'll take time, but I feel like everything
will work out okay. Oh, and I've decided on a name for her." He smiled at the
doll and clasped her hand in his. "I'm going to name her 'Hope'."
"A very fitting name," Daiki said, patting the doll on the head. "I will stop by
tomorrow to deliver the 'free goodies' I promised you."
"I could stop by the shop to pick them up," Anthony said, grinning at him
mischievously.
"With all due respect, sir, I think it would be better if you did not--for both
your father's sake and mine," Daiki replied, and the boy laughed. Hope started
giggling, and Daiki laughed along with them.