Where
Angels
by Apollymi
Site: DarkMagick.net
Word Count: 26,887
Genre: Action, Adventure, Shounen-ai/Yaoi
Pairing: Bakura/Kaiba, implied Malik/Yuugi, implied Jyonouchi/Anzu
Summary: It's been two years since Atemu went into the Afterlife. Now the past is coming back to haunt them... in an unexpected way.
Rating: R
Author's Note: Yuugiou and all its characters are copyright
to Takahashi Kazuki and associated copyright holders, of which I am not
one. I do own the storyline, such that it is, though. So the moral of
this story is: Mine, steal, die.
Journal of Kaiba Mokuba -- Undated Entry:
Niisama tries way too hard, I think. After our trip
to Egypt, I don't see how he can say magic doesn't exist. I saw that
ceremonial duel -- and he saw even more than that in the "Memory
World," getting there so far ahead of me. That duel was more than
enough proof for me that magic does indeed exist: the two Yuugis, the
cards animating themselves as they did, that strange gate opening, the
second Yuugi starting towards it in leather and entering it in what
I've taken to calling "Pharaoh garb"... Yeah, that was all magic. I can
accept it. Not so much, though, for Niisama, I guess.
Niisama's thrown himself into his work big time, so much so that I
hardly even see him anymore except at night and on the weekends. He's
usually home when I get there on Saturdays, and we try to do something,
just the two of us, on Sundays.
It's been over two years since the ceremonial duel and since that
second Yuugi vanished, and I don't think our lives are ever going back
to normal. And I miss Niisama. He should have been home hours ago.

Another long, boring night in a seemingly endless stream of
long, boring nights, he thought sourly to himself. Tonight might have
been a little bit longer and more boring than normal, but at least his
brother would be pleased to see him, provided of course that Mokuba was
still awake when he got home tonight.
He took a glance at the clock and winced. Almost three a.m. -- more
than likely, Mokuba would already be asleep if he left now, and if he
wasn't... Well, he'd be in for an earful and then some. He'd be doing
good to only get a half hour long lecture. It was a pain, but it also
wasn't. After all, it was nice that Mokuba still worried about him so
much, even as a rather busy and terribly popular (given the email he'd
received earlier in the day from one of the maids threatening to quit
if one more girl called for his little brother) teenager.
Still, three a.m. was late, even for him. It was past time he headed
home, he thought to himself as he stood, collecting his suit jacket
that he'd discarded over the back of the chair only after everyone else
had gone home and the briefcase he had stashed beneath his desk that
had once held his world-famous Duel Monsters card collection but now
contained schematics on the next generation of Duel Disks: smaller,
lighter, and more portable, suitable even for duelists smaller than
Mutou Yuugi, the infamous growth spurt-less wonder... if he could ever
get all the kinks out of the systems. It seemed determined to make him
stoop to the level of cursing it like an infantile child throwing a
screaming tantrum.
It certainly wasn't that he didn't duel anymore though, but running his
corporation and thus securing his brother's future was his top
priority. Mokuba deserved better than the best, and there was no way he
wouldn't move heaven, hell, and the entire earth to give it to him.
Besides, he had grown a bit used accustomed to the fate of the world
hanging on the next card drawn from all those times with and against
Yuugi -- the "other Yuugi," as it were -- and without that, there
simply wasn't enough thrill to pull him back in again. He could afford
to rest on his laurels for a while.
Carefully he locked his important work up: what he would take with him
into his briefcase, what he would work with on Monday in his top desk
drawer. The next step of his nightly ritual was to telephone one of his
drivers to meet him downstairs in twenty minutes. Once he'd hung up the
phone, he threw away the empty espresso cups from the extremely
overpriced coffee shop down the street and switched on the security
cameras. He had installed a switch into his desk system to allow him to
cut the room monitoring on and off. He didn't like that creeping
feeling of someone watching him, so he left it powered down till he was
about to leave and cut it off again when he returned in the mornings.
He set his briefcase squarely in the center of his desk to pull on his
overcoat, since extremely late night October air could be very biting.
As he slipped his arms into the sleeves, he heard it: a faint tapping,
almost like a scraping.
He frowned. If there was one thing he absolutely could not tolerate, it
was deviations from his routine. If he had a driver who could defy the
laws of physics, time, and space to get here this quickly, why hadn't
he done so from the very beginning? Of course, that didn't make
terribly much sense, especially on a sleep-deprived mind, so he
discarded that theory. So, what--?
The knock-scraping repeated itself. No, not scraping. It was more like
fingernails on a chalkboard... or glass. That would be even more
impossible though. He was more than fifteen floors above ground, and people did
not fly. There had to be a better explanation for all of this, one that
confined itself to the tenets of science. He would accept nothing less,
not even the voice that slithered into his mind and all around him and
whispered in a voice like a thousand snakes hissing.
This put the invasive feeling of his guards watching him completely and
utterly to shame.
Tap-sssscratch...
He wasn't going to turn around. Mokuba had informed him time
and time again that, in horror movies, the villain never jumped out
till the victim turned around to look.
Tap-sssscratch...
He wasn't going to look. He wasn't going to look, not because something
might be there, but because there might not be anything -- and that
might prove he was losing his mind. And if something was
out there, then he might be losing his mind anyway. It was impossible
for someone to be outside his window, simply and utterly impossible. It
was just a bird, something simple like that.
Tap-ssssscratch...
Against every ounce of self-preservation and trepidation he possessed,
he found himself slowly turning to look behind him.

Kaiba Corp security cameras, as viewed by
Kaiba Mokuba and then the police the next morning
One moment, Kaiba Seto was in his office. The next,
he simply wasn't. There was no evidence of a break-in, nor of tampering
with the images on the security feed, nor that the camera itself might
have been shut off for a few moments.
No, simply in the space of time it took for the camera to roll over
from 02:59:58 to 03:00:00, Kaiba Seto just... vanished, as simple as
that. That, of course, didn't mean Mokuba didn't fire every security
guard on shift that night -- and even some that weren't. The police
were called in and went over the tape but were able to offer no further
clues regarding the disappearance of the wealthiest man in Domino.
Finally, as a last resort, he called a number that had been in his
wallet for over two years but he had never taken out and certainly
never called before: the Kame Game Shop and, more specifically, Mutou
Yuugi's private line.
Kaiba Mokuba believed in magic, after all, but he only knew a few
people who possessed any knowledge of it. Every single one of them had
a tendency to be located around Yuugi.

It had been two years since he'd helped his other to the
Afterlife, two years since he'd heard that voice in his head that was
so like his own but wasn't his, two years since he'd had to start
getting used to those changes left in him and his friends -- and even
the very world around him -- brought about by the other him... and two
years since he'd seen two of his friends anywhere besides on television
and at school -- and then only during tests.
Kaiba-kun was not going to be happy that Mokuba-kun
had called him and probably even less so that they had been allowed
into his inner sanctum. That was surely what his office was, even more
so than his home. Did Kaiba-kun even know Mokuba-kun had called them?
If he walked in during this little conversation, they were all in for
it big time. Well, not Mokuba-kun certainly -- he had a 'Get Out of
Jail Free' card as far as his brother was concerned -- but the rest of
them could go ahead and sign their wills. That was why he'd only told
Anzu, so far, about the phone call he'd received two hours ago, why
only she was sitting next to him watching Mokuba-kun pace back and
forth behind his brother's desk.
"Mokuba-kun?" Of course, the rest of the reason she was the only one
with him had a lot to do with the fact her voice could be like
kryptonite to any straight or straight-leaning male. "What's wrong?
Where is your brother?"
The younger teen sighed and sat down on his brother's desk on the side
closest to them. "Niisama vanished last night."
"Where would Kaiba-kun go?" he had to ask. This wasn't like the
Kaiba-kun he'd known before. The Kaiba-kun he'd known two years ago
would never have made his brother worry like this.
"I don't know. One minute..." Mokuba-kun shook his head and hopped to his feet,
pacing back around the desk and turning the computer monitor to face
them. "You have to promise me you won't tell anyone about what I'm
going to show you." He nodded, and Anzu made a soft sound of agreement;
that seemed to be enough for Mokuba-kun. "This is the security tape
from last night. Just watch it, and tell me what you think." He hit a
couple buttons on the keyboard, and images appeared.
He watched the short clip warily, constantly aware of the worried teen
across the desk from him and the young woman next to him. On the
screen, Kaiba-kun froze and stiffened, and Yuugi frowned. "Is there any
audio on this?"
Mokuba-kun shook his head slightly. "No. Everywhere else in the
building, certainly, but Niisama's never liked anyone spying on him.
He's not overly happy with just this running as he leaves. I had to
bribe him with two months of no horror movies for this much."
Somehow Yuugi had the impression that bribery had not been completely
necessary. The younger Kaiba probably could have just turned watery
eyes on his elder brother and have gotten his way without giving up his
movies. This was far from the time for that discussion though.
The Kaiba-kun on the clip had just started to relax slightly when he
suddenly tensed again -- then even more so. As stiff as a board, he
slowly turned to face the window behind him -- the same window now at
Mokuba-kun's back -- that was just out of the camera's range. An
expression of horror blossomed across his face, and then... he was
gone. The clip showed the empty office, continuing the sweeping back
and forth motion of the camera another moment, before Mokuba-kun cut it
off. Yuugi found himself staring at the black monitor a long moment
before he finally forced out, "What in the world... How is that
possible?"
Mokuba-kun let out a soft sigh. "That's what I was hoping you could
tell me, Yuugi. Both the police and our security have already been over
this clip -- in fact, they still have the original -- and neither of
them could tell me anything useful."
"What am I supposed to tell you that the police can't?"
"The police didn't see what I saw in Egypt."
Mokuba-kun had an absolutely uncanny ability to say exactly the right
thing to strike directly to the heart of the matter. He had to wonder
if it was genetic or something. "Mokuba-kun, that was..."
"Magic. That was magic. And that was magic on that tape, that came in
here and took my Niisama. You're the only one I know who knows about
magic, so you are going to help me get Niisama back."
Wow. Maybe people should be limiting the Kaiba brothers' time together
because if he weren't looking at Mokuba-kun, he would have sworn it was
the elder Kaiba he was speaking to. "Mokuba-kun..." he tried again.
"Mokuba-kun," Anzu cut in, drawing both of their attentions to her.
When had she moved behind the younger teen to the window? No matter;
she had cut through the tension as smoothly as a hot knife through
butter and gotten the pressure neatly off of him. "I don't think whoever --
whatever -- took your brother actually came in here." She lifted a hand
to indicate the scratches on the outside of the
glass.

His first thought upon waking up was, 'Is this what a hangover
feels like?' He winced as he realized that even just thinking in turn
fed the headache he already had, making it that much worse. Well, that
was just wonderful. Typical too. It was simply his usual damn luck. Now
just what had happened to bring him to this point?
It hurt so badly to try to think, but he had to. Besides, pain was
something he was used to. He had learned early on how to deal with it,
how to work around it - and so he would. Jump starting a genius mind
shouldn't be too difficult. He had been in his office, getting ready to
leave. It had been late, so he had called for one of his drivers rather
than risk wrecking himself. He'd been putting on his coat when he heard
a noise... on the window behind him. He'd turned and --
A monster! There had been a monster of some sort behind him! Its hand
had come through the glass without breaking it, wrapped around him
before he could move, then... blackness. He didn't remember anything
else between then and now. But still, the whole monster thing, that
couldn't be right. He couldn't have imagined it, though; his mind
didn't work that way. Some kind of latent image perhaps? Something he'd
viewed before flashing before his eyes? It had
looked vaguely familiar, like a card he'd seen played before but not
frequently, maybe just one time... on the rooftop of Kaiba Corp, only
that had been a small white holographic creature, not the massive
winged beast that had grabbed him. The card Diaboundo Carnel was among
the most rare of cards, though, almost as much so as his own Blue Eyes.
He found it hard to imagine there being another one in Japan, so that
had to mean...
He started to jump up, intent on making certain no one had laid hands
on his little brother again, not like the last time he'd seen that
particular monster, only to find he couldn't move past his knees. His
wrists were encased in metal cuffs which led via a bit of chain to the
stone ground. For a split second, his vision blurred and it was
everything he could do not to pass out or throw up (He'd sworn this
would never happen to him again, not after Kaiba Gouzaburou!), but he
made himself fight it down, in time to hear an unfamiliar voice
speaking above him: "It would be advisable not to attempt to move about
so much, Mister Kaiba. You're still a bit weak from the transfer here,
and I really must insist you stay still, for your own sake."
"Who are you?" He was pleased with how nonchalant his voice sounded,
like he was speaking to one of those idiot tabloid reporters who so
enjoyed
hounding him.
"No one whose name you would know. You do not exactly hobnob in my
circles, Mister Kaiba." Almost definitely American, New England maybe, though it could also be British.
Suddenly he almost regretted not paying closer attention to accents
when his foreign investors were babbling on; he might be able to place
where this person was from by that. He was definitely gaijin,
though.
"Then what exactly is the point of kidnapping me? Money?" He halfway
hoped it was something simple like that. It'd be interesting to see how
many
snipers and mercenaries Mokuba set after this guy. And people called him
ruthless.
"Please, Mister Kaiba, do not insult me. I have no
need for your money." So this guy was money but not a business person.
"I have a service I need provided, and you're the only person who can
currently provide it."
"And what would that be?" Already he was mentally categorizing ways to
stall things out for Mokuba and the police. This person struck him as
utterly overconfident; he could easily work with that. Overconfidence
was something he knew a great deal about, after all.
"You, my dear boy, are going to help me acquire the crowning
achievements of my collection, and all you have to do is sit there
while I put to use all that lovely magical energy you are allowing to
waste."
There weren't many things people could say to confuse him. Off the wall
statements like that were among the group, though. "I don't have any
magic." He didn't vocalize his next thought, that he didn't believe in
magic. The thought of him having magic, though, was utterly laughable,
but he
restrained himself, instead occupying himself with locating the speaker
the
voice was coming from. It was so completely dark in this room, however,
that it
was impossible to tell. It sounded pretty high up on a wall, of that
much he was
certain.
"Come now, Mister Kaiba, there's no point denying it, not to me. I know
better. Even if you deny magic exists, that still leaves the fact that
you are
here at the hand of my pet."
"Diaboundo Carnel." He didn't mean to say the monster's name aloud.
That was another thing Mokuba had impressed upon him from his horror
movies:
saying the name of something like that almost guaranteed it would
appear. Still,
the voice was all wrong to be Bakura, but who else would have it - and
why?
"How?" was the question what he asked however.
"Actually, it's just Diaboundo, unlike the card. As for how, I'm
certain
you will find out soon enough. In the meanwhile, please enjoy your
stay, and do
try not to fight the drain when it starts. I've been assured it will
only make
the process that much more painful."
There was a soft click of the speaker cutting off, and the room plunged
into
silence. The only things he could hear were his own heartbeat and his
own
breathing, and they were suddenly deafeningly loud. Right now, he'd
trade just
about anything to hear Mokuba's voice. He'd settle for anyone, really.
Taking a
deep breath and releasing it slowly, he settled for cataloging what he
could
around him.
The cuffs were about two inches wide, completely covering his wrists
and leaving
him no room to move them. That was going to get painful sooner rather
than
later. He was indeed bound to the floor but not by chains as he'd
originally
thought; instead, it seemed to be cables, thick and heavy, maybe even
the very
same kind he used at Kaiba Corp to conduct large amounts of
electricity. No
panicking, not yet. He stretched his arms around as far as he could,
continuing
to take inventory. Behind him was what felt like a thin pallet,
tempting a new
flood of memories he had to stem back, this time of the orphanage. On
two other
sides of him, he felt nothing, just the bare expanse of grilled floor.
To his
far right, however, he encountered... something. It felt like a hand;
those were
definitely fingers, even if they did feel a bit charred yet at the same
time
clammy. He tried to slide it closer to him, and it moved easily, far
too easily;
there was no extra weight to it, no body attached!
There was no holding this bit of panic down, not with a disembodied
hand next to
him. He scrambled backwards to the spot he'd started at and just
focused on
controlling his breathing. What the hell was that thing doing here? Why
would
someone have just the left hand of a corpse and not the rest of it? A
serial
killer maybe? He'd read somewhere that they took trophies like this.
What was it
about him that made him a target for the crazies?
"It's called a Hand of Glory," a voice cut through
his
thoughts. "People used to think if you took the left hand of a
dead man,
it would open any door." A pause. "Of course, it can
also be
used to summon demons, if you believe in that sort of thing."
Not very reassuring, but then he'd never heard reassuring words uttered
by this
person. Hell, as crazy as this sounded, it might be the sanest thing
he'd ever
heard the other man say. This was not what or who he'd meant when he'd thought he wanted to hear a voice. But it was noise in the silence, and for that
he was
grateful. Even if it was him.

A few times in his eighteen years, Yuugi had wanted to pull
his hair out.
They had included trying to figure out why he kept losing time before
he found
out about mou hitori no boku, that final duel on
Battle Ship against the
darker half of Malik Ishtar, and trying to use his other's Heart of the
Cards
after Atemu-kun departed for the Afterlife, to name a few. He was going
to have
to add now to that list if he didn't start having more, better luck
soon.
Tracking down Jyonouchi-kun had, of course, been easy enough. All Anzu
had to do
was pull out her cell phone; she had him set as speed dial three, after
her
voicemail and her parents. That had been the extent of their luck,
though.
Communication with Honda-kun had been spotty at best since college
started,
Mai-san wasn't answering her phone, no one had heard from Bakura-kun
since he
left for a university in Tokyo, and Mokuba-kun hadn't been able to
reach the
Ishtars since the exhibit was on tour again.
Poor Jyonouchi-kun, though. He looked like he might still be a bit
unnerved by
what Anzu had told him over the phone. Everything that had happened two years ago had
only
reinforced his loathing and increased it to a phobia of all things occult. Kaiba-kun
literally vanishing into thin air certainly fit into the occult
category, but
the blond was hanging in admirably. Anzu hadn't even had to threaten to
whack
him with her purse yet. This was an improvement.
They'd been over the clip a dozen times already. The only reason they
weren't
staring at it right now was because Mokuba-kun had ordered a big screen
TV
brought in and the workmen were still setting it up while Mokuba-kun
worked on
connecting it to Kaiba-kun's computer. He'd also had Chinese food sent
up for an
early lunch. They were waiting till the room was cleared to resume
discussions
of the missing Kaiba brother, so in the meanwhile, he was slurping down
lomein
and trying the last numbers he had for Honda-kun, Mai-san, and
Bakura-kun, to no
avail.
"I just don't get Honda and Bakura taking off," Jyonouchi-kun was
complaining over his food. "And Bakura, you'd think we'd at least get
letters, as much as he likes to write them."
He could practically hear Mokuba-kun frown over behind his brother's
desk.
"Bakura Ryou?" he finally asked. Yuugi nodded and made a soft sound of
affirmation. "He never did anything with the scholarship money Niisama
sent
everyone."
He frowned now in turn. "That's weird. He left to visit his father then
pick out a school in Tokyo about two months ago."
Jyonouchi-kun made a soft snorting noise. "If it was the other Bakura,
I'd
worry that he had something to do with this. This Bakura wouldn't hurt
a fly,
though."
He sat in silence a moment longer, till the room was empty of everyone
but them
and the door was once again shut to speak up again. "We are sure the
other
Bakura is gone, though, Jyonouchi-kun. There's no way he could have
pretended to
be Bakura-kun all this time without giving himself away. So our
Bakura-kun has
just disappeared off the face of the earth along with Kaiba-kun."
Mokuba-kun sat down hard in front of him, not even touching the food
he'd
ordered himself. "Do you think there's a pattern then, Yuugi-kun?"
"It might be. Do they have anything in common?"
"Same school?" Anzu volunteered. "Two of the highest graduating
scores in our class."
"Duelists," came Jyonouchi-kun's offer. "They were both at Battle
City."
He and Mokuba remained silent a few moments longer till he hesitantly
put forth,
"They don't really have any similar physical characters, except that
they're both tall and are... well, bishounen.
Pretty, you know. No
offense, Mokuba-kun."
"None taken. It's something I've teased Niisama about before. But
there's
one more thing they have in common, Yuugi: Egypt." Mokuba-kun paused,
obviously collecting his thoughts. "The other Yuugi said something to
us
during Battle City about being a Pharaoh in Ancient Egypt, and it was
true.
Doesn't it stand to reason, then, that what he said about Niisama being
a priest
back then also stand a good chance of being true too?"
Jyonouchi-kun nodded. "It's certainly true, all right. We saw him in
the
Memory World."
"He looked so much like your brother," added Anzu. "It was
freaky."
"And you just said there was another version of Bakura, like there was
another version of you, Yuugi?"
He shrugged. "Not exactly the same. The other Bakura, I think he might
have
been more insane than Malik-kun ever was." At the curious looks he drew
all
around, he blushed slightly. "I've been thinking about it a lot since
Atemu-kun left."
"I thought he was just evil. I mean, he sold out to that Zork
creature."
"Do we know why, though, Jyonouchi-kun? All I have are tiny tidbits
that
went through what was left of the link between Atemu-kun and me.
Whatever
happened, it wasn't pretty and he blamed Atemu-kun's father for it."
"In a lot of ancient cultures, people could be expected to carry the
guilt
of previous generations," Anzu stated blandly. "It'd be like a version of
our idea of family honor and saving face."
"Did some reading up on the subject, didn't you?" It was phrased as a
question, but it certainly sounded more like a statement when
Jyonouchi-kun said
it like that.
It was her turn to flush slightly now. "I'll admit I wanted to know as
much
about Ancient Egypt as I could before we went there, so I checked a
couple books
out of the library. They were so interesting that I started buying
whatever I
could find."
"So Ancient Egypt and -- if no one minds me saying it -- magic are
another
connection between them?" Mokuba-kun asked, bringing the topic back
around
to its beginning. "Anything else? Anything at all, no matter how small
it
seems?"
"Bakura-kun disappeared at the end of August," he thought out loud.
"It's almost the end of October now. Is that anything?"
Mokuba-kun shook his head, not in denial but in confusion, but it was
Jyonouchi-kun who spoke up next. "He left early because he wanted to
spend his birthday with his family."
And this time, the younger Kaiba paled. "Niisama's birthday is next
week." Determination written all over his features, he shakily said,
"We need to find Bakura Ryou right now. That might
let us know where
Niisama is."

"I might have known you were involved somehow," he bit out
wearily.
The other rolled his eyes. At least he thought that was what he was
doing. It was
disconcerting that the only truly visible thing in the pitch blackness
of
this room was the other man. It wasn't that he glowed or something so
esoteric,
just that there was a light edge around him. His features weren't
always too
clear or always in focus, but it wasn't anything one would notice
unless you
were looking for it or staring for too long. Not that he was or had
been
staring, of course. "Relax, Seto. I had nothing to do with
your
impromptu visit here. It's not like I'm exactly a willing guest myself."
"Yet it was your Diaboundo that brought me here," he countered.
"You can't stand there and, in all honesty, say you had nothing to do
with
this."
"I had nothing to do with this." With each word so
carefully
enunciated, it was a bit harder to disbelieve. "This... Collector, he's
collecting magic: my soul, my Diaboundo, your magic..."
"I don't have any magic," he interrupted, actually drawing a short
laugh from Bakura.
"I was here for the first time you said that, and I still
don't believe
it. You have magic, Seto. It's just not as obvious as my Diaboundo can
be."
"Prove it then."
Another laugh. "The fact you can see me for starters. The Collector's
last guest could only hear me. Your affinity for the Blue Eyes White
Dragon for
another. Your ability to create these technological marvels for
dueling. That's
your real ability this time around."
"What you're implying is that none of my accomplishments are my own
then.
They all belong to this 'magic' of yours."
"Of yours, you mean." He sighed,
lowering himself to sit
an inch or so above the ground. "Think of it this way if it
helps: magic
is like energy. On its own, it's chaotic, but when properly harnessed,
it can
accomplish things you'd never dreamed possible."
Put that way... "So 'magic' is just science."
"Yes, in a way, but also no. It's like science but with
slightly
different rules."
"But rules nonetheless," he persisted. How weird was it for the two of
them to be having this argument? "Rules make it a science."
"Then a different sort of science, since magic can reside in
higher
concentrations in certain people. Most people don't even know they have
it and
focus it towards a single talent: writing, artistry, or in your case,
technology."
"So this," he paused to search for a better word or phrase for it than
the one they'd been using, "extra innate talent you say I have is why
this Collector picked me up?"
Bakura nodded, looking a bit like the teacher whose students finally
grasped a
difficult concept. "Yes, again in part. Did you stall out on a
project?"
How did he know? "A new model of Duel Disk."
"Your magic is built up around you so thick I can almost
see it. With your project on stall, it must be stagnating and
building, and that's why he picked you up."
"So if I could release this excess energy, he'd let me go?"
There was a soft sigh from the otherworldly figure before him. "Maybe,
but probably not. If you found a way to use the excess up, he'd
probably hold you until it built back up again. There's no getting away
from him till he has no more
use for you, dead or alive. Hell, I'm dead, and he apparently still has
a use for me, so I can't get away."
"What kind of use would this Collector have for you? For either of
us?" he corrected himself then frowned. He didn't just express
something
close to concern, not for him, not for the man -
ghost? - in front of
him, the same person who grabbed his little brother two years ago.
"Diaboundo, for starters. That there's no one else who knows
more about
the Sennen Items, for a second, and there's no one else who can control
all of
them to some extent. And..." Bakura trailed off, and he in turn found
himself
leaning forward.
"And?"
"And no one else knows more about the last two pieces he wants
for his
collection than I do."
"What exactly is he collecting?" He was going to regret asking that
question. He knew that already. Bakura's wince only confirmed this.
"Artifacts from the Lost Dynasty, from the reign of the
Nameless
Pharaoh, to be exact. Atemu - Yuugi," he clarified. "It's
quite
the collection he has already: most everything I ever stole from Atemu,
everything that isn't in the Ishtars' care, all of the Sennen Items,
the soul of
his greatest rival, the reincarnation of his high priest and cousin."
He opened his mouth to argue, but really, it would do no good. He
didn't have to
accept this, yet, but it would do little good to try to persuade the
other to
agree. "All that's left is the tablet for the Sennen Items -
and they're
bringing it up out of the ground a piece at the time - and..." Bakura
trailed off again with a sigh. It might have just been his imagination,
if he
had any, but it seemed that the other's form was just a little harder
to see.
"What's the last piece?" he asked after a moment of silence. And
faintly, even in the quiet, was that the sound of something mechanical
cutting
on? That whirr of machinery sounded so familiar.
"The Nameless Pharaoh himself."
"How?" Was it getting warmer in here?
Another waver of the person in front of him. He was just a little
harder to see
clearly, blending in a little better to the darkness than he had been
before.
"That's where your magic comes in, Seto. I doubt he's going to
be
satisfied with Atemu in a form like this, so it's going to take a lot
of energy
to put him in a body of his own."
"In other words, my-" His words were abruptly cut off as a painful
jolt ran through him. It almost felt like one of the many times he'd
gotten
shocked working on a new invention, but instead of the energy running
into him,
it felt like it was running out of him.
Old reflexes, left over
from his time with his 'father,' Gouzaburou, was all that kept him from
screaming.
As it was, it was all he could do to concentrate on not throwing up.
Maybe that was why the floor was grated, he thought inanely to himself.
He did let his body give into the urge to collapse to the floor, and he
wrapped his arms around himself, barely even noticing that his blunt
nails were digging into his arms through the cloth of his shirt. Hadn't
he been wearing his coat also when he was taken? Where had it gone? Oh
God, was this what dying felt like? Every piece of his body was in
pain; even his hair hurt.
The agony just seemed to go on and on forever. Screaming might be
within the
realm of possibility if he weren't biting down on his bottom lip hard
enough to
draw blood. He couldn't tell if his eyes were open or not, but he
suspected they
were tightly clenched closed.
If the physical agony wasn't bad enough, it felt like the world had
expanded
around him. Odd; usually pain did the exact opposite to him. Eyes
closed, his
body huddled on the floor, and he could still detect what was going on
around
him. For lack of a better word, he could sense the
room around him: the
disembodied hand on the floor near him; the Sennen Items in a
hermetically
sealed glass case on the far side of the room; the pieces of the tablet
on a
table in another corner; the cords that bound him to the floor giving
off a
faint blue glow; Bakura still hovering nearby with worry written
plainly on him,
even if it didn't show on his face. That was the bulk of what he could
pick up
on, though. How odd.
And another oddity: to some extent, he'd been halfway thinking of
Bakura as
still looking like his more modern counterpart. To some extent, he did,
but
there were also so many differences. For instance, his hair was a great
deal
shorter. That countered nicely to the fact his skin was several shades
darker,
like everyone else's had been in that odd other world RPG, and his eyes
were
many shades lighter, maybe light blue or even silver. He seemed taller
too,
maybe on an even height with him, and a bit older than he himself was,
perhaps
in his early twenties. How odd indeed.
The whole mess was just too weird for his tastes, but there wasn't
really
anything he could do about it. The pain surging through him from the
wrists
outward was a rather effective demonstration of the futility of that
line of
thinking, and it felt like it was never going to stop, like it would
just keep
going and eating away till there was nothing left in him that was
him. Or had it already passed that point? Was he still Kaiba Seto, or
was he
just this force inside his body that seemed to be steadily waking up
the more it
was chipped away on?
Then, just like that, as suddenly as it started, it stopped, and he
could breathe again. Or at least a facsimile, he thought sourly as he
wheezed trying to get air in his lungs. That was the main concern. Once
he'd gotten that down, he might try working on making his hands release
his arms before he lost circulation. Then the next step after that
would be getting the sweat off him, followed by finding out if he could
still talk because he would really like to let go with a stream of
cursing the likes of which the world had never heard.
"Seto?" That was Bakura's voice. "Are you
still in there?" It was a huge effort, but managed to at
least open his eyes. That would have to do for now because he wasn't
sure he could manage anything more yet. Hopefully Bakura could see
better in this darkness than he could. "Good. I know it hurts
like shit, but I need you to let go of your arms. Otherwise you're
going to hurt yourself. Can you do that for me?"
Dear God, it was an effort, but he forced himself to let go. He'd have
loved to
flip the bastard off, but he was able to manage a passably good glare
and
halfway decent growl, as well as a noise that might been a "Fuck
off."
That drew a laugh from Bakura. "Yeah, you'll be fine. You
never change,
do you? Same prickly bastard. Get some sleep. We can talk more when you
wake up,
if you want."
Sleep sounded really good. He could just pretend it was all his idea
and...
Yeah, right. It was Bakura's idea and he knew it. That didn't make it
less of a
good idea. There was still more he wanted to know, but he needed to be
able to
think in order to get what he wanted to say out properly. He let his
eyes close
once more, and almost immediately, he started drifting off, but not
before he
felt a faint something brushing over his hair, moving it like a light
breeze,
almost like the afterthought of a touch. There was no dealing with that
now,
though, not with sleep creeping up on him.

That was it. He'd decided that it had to be genetic that both
the Kaiba
brothers were certified geniuses. Mokuba-kun had sent someone home for his
laptop, and once he had it, Yuugi could swear he was looking at Kaiba
Seto
instead, especially with the speed he was hearing those keys being
pressed. It
was a steady clicking backdrop and was a good deal more audibly
pleasing than
when the workmen had been taking the windowpane out. He was told there
were
scientists downstairs going over it with a fine-tooth comb; he hoped
Mokuba-kun
hadn't meant that literally. Otherwise, he could only hope they got
plenty of
overtime pay. Jyonouchi-kun and Anzu were out trying to track down
Honda-kun and
Mai-san, to make sure they hadn't vanished as well. The same workmen
had just
finished putting in a new windowpane, this one twice as thick as the
previous
bulletproof one.
And during all this, he was going over the clip for what felt like the
millionth time. Who knew? It might have been. He'd stared at the same
forty seconds of material till he felt certain he was going to see it
in his sleep -- if Mokuba-kun let him go home to give it a try any time
soon. His eyes were blurring, and he felt about half past dead.
Mokuba-kun showed no signs of stopping anytime soon, though, having
even worked through dinner, and somehow he didn't think Jyonouchi-kun
and Anzu were going to be back again before morning. With an exhausted
sigh, he restarted the clip, even if he wasn't entirely certain he
could clearly see it anymore.
Maybe that was why he saw it this time.
It started out at the window, a glaze almost like heat rising off
asphalt, only
he'd never seen this almost sentient kind of behavior from heat. As the
Kaiba-kun on the screen slowly turned to face the window and froze, it
moved
around him on the side furthest from the camera. As it snaked around to
encompass him, he vanished except for his briefcase as it fell to the floor. The camera captured the same heat-like
phenomena
moving back out through the half-inch thick glass.
For a long moment, he wasn't sure he could breathe, much less move or
speak. His
hands shaking, he played the clip again, leaning forward to watch it
more
closely. It was definitely there but so faint that it was no wonder
he'd missed
it till now. No wonder they'd all missed it. "Mokuba-kun?"
The younger teen turned bleary eyes up at him. So much for him being
exactly
like his brother; Kaiba-kun never would have let something like this
show.
"Yeah, Yuugi?" He even sounded ready to drop, the poor kid. He'd had a
very full day, worrying about his brother from just after nine a.m.,
when he'd
overslept because his brother didn't wake him up nearly an hour and a
half
before, till now, when the digital clock on the wall said five till
eleven p.m.
"I think I might have something here." He wasn't too surprised that
Mokuba-kun didn't exactly jump to come look. They were both truly
exhausted; neither of them was moving fast. He queued up the clip once
more and hit the button to make it play -- then reduced the speed by
half and moved up closer to the screen. "See this?" He indicated the
heat wave lines. "It's just barely there. That's why we missed it so
many times."
"It looks like an arm." Mokuba-kun hit a button to pause the clip and
moved forward. "See? Here are the edges, here and here."
He hadn't quite been able to pick out that much detail; maybe stuff
like this was why the Kaibas were considered geniuses. Still, with the
dimensions the other had pointed out... "It's huge."
"So it's gigantic, it's invisible, and it's able to move through glass?
What the hell could that be?"
Only one thing came to mind, but it was another thing he'd picked up
off mou hitori no boku in the Memory World, and
was, quite frankly, impossible. That had been in the Memory World,
after all. Those ka monsters didn't exist in the
real world -- or at least not anymore.

He woke back up to the sounds of a very bored Bakura. It was a
fairly easy
assessment to make; the other man had taken the time to translate
"Ninety-Nine Bottles of Beer" into Ancient Egyptian and was now on
bottle twelve. And he wasn't going to ask himself how he knew that. He
was
better off without that tidbit of knowledge; it had too much potential
to be
psyche-damaging to him. At least the other stopped at twelve bottles
and didn't
go for the other eleven. Not that he had all that bad a voice, but he
was hardly
an expert on singing. "Are you awake now?" Bakura's
voice was
still soft, something that the headache he continued to have
appreciated.
He actually had to give the matter some thought. His eyes were open,
but his
brain was foggy. A pot or so of coffee would do the trick for waking
him up, but
somehow he didn't think he was going to receive that kind of luxury. In
lieu of
civilization, he sat up, wincing at how stiff his body was. "I am," he
answered once he was sure he wasn't going to tip over. Well, mostly
sure; even
sitting, he was listing a bit to the side. "I think," he qualified. He
shook his head a bit to try and clear, which only made it spin more.
"You should sleep as much as you can while he'll let you."
That was a fair statement. He was still so tired that he was dizzy, and
even if
he couldn't allow himself to admit it, he was hungry and thirsty as
well.
Still... "How long was I out?"
"About four hours, I think, but I'm hardly the best judge of
time these
days."
He groaned in annoyance. "Four hours? Damn... That's four I could have
been-"
"Sleeping," Bakura interrupted, his voice hard. He
looked up
swiftly to see an equally steely look on the other's face. "The Collector's little invention drains off your magic -- and in turn, your
soul,
what makes you you. He's killing you by degrees.
The more energy you let
yourself build up, the longer you'll last."
"You sound awfully certain about all this." He couldn't help the
suspicion bleeding into his voice. It was just all too convenient for
his
tastes, how this was neatly laying itself out.
"I've watched it happen before, to his previous guest."
The response was completely deadpanned, and he had to take a second or
two to
decide if it was serious or not. But when had he known the other to
kid? Had
anyone ever known him to joke? "Did this other person survive?" He
didn't bother to ignore the fact his voice shook slightly; his own life
depended
on the answer. No, not just his: Mokuba's too. Without him, his brother
could be
sent back to that orphanage. Unacceptable. Thoroughly and completely
unacceptable.
"I don't know. He looked close to dead when they took him out
of here."
Bakura's face remained utterly unreadable. For that matter, his voice
was also
completely bland as well -- and that said a great deal. "Of
course, he
didn't have the magical resources you do, Seto, so he didn't last very
long
anyway. And certainly no one would look for him the way they surely are
for you.
So maybe it doesn't matter and it will all be okay."
It was hope, tossed out almost carelessly and waiting for him to seize
it up,
even if it was definitely far from bright or certain, and yet there it
was. Thus
far in his short life, though, he'd found hope to be a treacherous
ally, one
that was quick to desert at the first whiff of trouble. Therefore, it
was with
some hesitation that he stated, "Mokuba's probably whipped the city
into a
frenzy."
Bakura nodded. "Exactly. So no worrying about dying here, and put that
genius brain of yours to work on an escape plan instead."
That was pretty sound thinking in his opinion, so he made himself a bit
more
comfortable and started examining the wrist cuffs as closely as he
could with no
light and only touch to go by. He worked in silence for several
moments, barely
paying attention to the quiet man (ghost?) on the outskirts of his line
of
vision, till curiosity finally conquered him. "How exactly did he
manage to
get a hold of you? I thought you'd be -- that it'd be harder to capture
someone
who's already dead?"
Bakura remained silent another long moment, long enough that he started
to think
he wasn't going to answer, then he sighed softly. "I didn't
receive any
funerary procedures. Anywhere my name was recorded for me to present to
the gods
was destroyed, so I couldn't present myself to be judged. Without
rights or the
proper procedures, Ammut couldn't even eat my soul. I was stuck
waiting. And
then he brought the Ring out of the ground. My soul had been in it so
long that
I guess it got tied to it."
As he continued to fiddle with the cuffs (there was a razorblade thin
slit where
the two edges of each cuff sealed together -- if he could just somehow
pry it
open...), he let his mind ponder over what the other had said.
Mythology had
never been of any major interest to him, but it was definitely pinging
some
half-forgotten information in the back of his mind, barely remembered
images of
a man with a jackal's head proceeding over the judging of a person's
soul,
questions a soul must answer to move forward. The information didn't
come with
any sources, though. Maybe the theory of a collective unconscious held
some
water, after all, as ridiculous as it sounded. "So as long as the Ring
is
here, you're stuck here too," he summarized, trying not to let it sound
like a question.
"There are ways to get out of them, but I don't see myself
trying them
any time soon. In the meantime, though, that's right: I'm trapped here
as much
as you are." And he sounded every bit as happy about it as
well.
"What kind of ways?" Could they be used to help him? He was willing to
work with more... esoteric methods if they would help him achieve what
he
wanted. And damn it, it was starting to warm up in the room again. That
wouldn't
be good. Last time this started, it hadn't been too pleasant.
"Let's see: I could always destroy the Ring. Maybe I could go
with refusing to tell him anything else and see if he'll destroy the
Ring."
"Are there any ways that don't involve death?" he clarified. And now
his hands were starting to tingle. This was just too much.
"I-" He stopped to think, as if considering the
options. "I
don't know. If someone else takes up the Ring again, I might be able to
borrow
their body. Or..." He trailed off, shaking his head. "No,
that's stupid."
"Tell me." It wouldn't be long before the machine cut on again, and he
wanted to know. No, he needed to know, before
Bakura's form got any
blurrier.
"I could always try to do myself what the Collector's trying
to do with
the idiot Pharaoh: siphon energy till I can make my own body."
That didn't really help him, at least not where he could see in the
short term,
and damn it, there was the click and whirring sound, letting him know
to brace
himself. There was really no preparing for it, though, for when the
pain hit, as
sharp and as bright as a knife. Again, the room exploded around him,
only this
time a bit crisper, a bit cleaner, a bit more detailed, much of it
plenty more
information than he strictly needed. For instance, something within him
informed
him that the disembodied hand on the floor was charred slightly on the
fingers,
which meant it had been used recently. The glass sealing the Sennen
Items was
indeed hermetically sealed, but it wasn't very thick, definitely not
bullet-proof -- and probably thinner than the glass on his own office
windows,
so not Diaboundo-proof either, if it was possible to recruit that
monster. If
what he understood was correct, though, the creature was soul-bound to
Bakura;
that had to mean something.
What would he do if he could get in the case anyway? Get the Ring for
Bakura maybe, his mind supplied, and perhaps take the Rod and the
Puzzle. That was odd. He could understand getting the Puzzle, as it
might slow down the Collector's plans since that object which
represented the other Yuugi as much as the Ring did Bakura, but why the
Rod? Why was it calling to him? All he knew about it was what he'd seen
Malik Ishtar do during Battle City -- and what little he'd witnessed in
the Memory World RPG with the other version of himself. Neither was
particularly impressive, so... why?
His attention turned from the case containing the Items to the chains.
The glow
was brighter this time. Did that mean more was being taken out of him
at a
higher volume this time, or was he just seeing it better now? He was
hoping for
the latter, as strange as that seemed to him. Hope was such a foreign
emotion to
him. How did people live with the constant disappointments that came
with
believing in someone or something and being let down?
Belief, whispered some hidden part of his mind, belief and love. He
dismissed both notions out of hand. They were foolish and only served
to cause trouble. What was even stranger was that his mind decided to
counter with, then what about Mokuba. How weird was it, to be arguing
with a voice in his mind that sounded vaguely like his own -- yet
vaguely didn't? Maybe Bakura was right about it killing him by degrees,
but could it also be driving him insane? That would certainly explain
him wanting to snatch the Rod along with the two important Sennen Items.
His eyes were clenched tightly closed, and his hands were drawn into
fists so
tight that they both ached and stung. He certainly wasn't about to let
this Collector bastard make him cry out in pain. He'd withstood far worse
than this
at the hands of his so-called father, Kaiba Gouzaburou, as well as the
other Yuugi, so there was no way in hell some random asshole
off the
street was going to get any acknowledgment of that kind from him.
They'd have
to kill him first.
"Seto." Who was talking to him, especially in that
quiet,
almost worried tone? The only person he knew who cared enough about him
for
that was Mokuba. The Collector hadn't gotten to Mokuba, had he?! No,
that was
ridiculous; it wasn't Mokuba's voice anyway, and only one person was
either
brave enough or crazy enough -- or both -- to use his first name. "Watch
your breathing, Seto. Otherwise you're going to hyperventilate. Slow it
down."
Did Bakura practice at being annoying, or was it a natural talent? If
he was going to be annoying, couldn't he have the common decency to not
have a valid point when he was doing it? His body didn't
really want to listen to more than one of his commands at the time, and
he'd made not screaming a priority. Still, he tried to force his
breathing down slower. Weren't there meditation techniques he'd learned
that taught this? Why the hell had he let himself get out of practice
with them anyway? Oh yeah, he hadn't needed them for a while. Not since
the other Yuugi left at least, so maybe it was fitting that he was
starting to need them again now that there was the threat of the other
Yuugi returning.
A cool wind seemed to brush through his hair. No, not a wind: a hand,
ethereal and a bit chilly (or was he just that hot?), but damn, it felt
so good where it touched skin that felt fevered from the pain. His
hands moved without his prompting to reach up and grab it, holding it
to his face. Odd... It felt like a familiar gesture, one he'd perhaps
done before, but he couldn't remember ever doing it before. The
ghost-like hand he held felt familiar in a way too, and he pried his
eyes open to look at it: a bit on the transparent side, but
dark-skinned and a bit broad, with long fingers, nicks and scars
littering the surface. He followed it up a maroon cloth-covered arm to
Bakura's wary and somewhat confused face.
Strange; he prided himself on being observant, but he hadn't noticed
the scar on the other's face. A single, long line ran from his
forehead, mostly hidden by his hair but clearly visible below his eye,
down his cheek with two shorter lines cutting across it, like the
katakana for 'ki'. Who had done something like that to him? And why
would they? It was definitely a deliberate act; there was no writing a
scar like that off as an accident. All this newfound knowledge bouncing
around his mind contained no information for him on the subject, if it
might have been a ritual punishment or something of that ilk. What use
was all this new information if it couldn't answer the few questions he
did have?
As suddenly as the pain started, it stopped again, and he could breathe
once
more. Had it hurt worse this time than last? It was hard to tell. For
now, it
was all he could do to lay still on the floor, panting softly and
clutching onto
Bakura's hand like it was his last link to sanity. If that was the
case, though,
his grip on reality was in for it; he only held onto the other for a
moment
before his hand went intangible again, dropping his own hand to the
grated floor
before him. It was an effort, but he managed to wrestle his eyes open
and lift
his head slightly to look at the white-haired man.
Bakura... looked mystified, staring at his own hand in shock. Somehow
it made
him recall a vague memory from the last time this had happened:
something
brushing against his hair, something his exhausted mind had processed
as an
'afterthought of a touch'. Weirdly it made a kind of sense; if Bakura
was a
ghost, then Mokuba's horror movies informed him that he shouldn't be
able to
touch things except during moments of extreme duress, so that he had
just been
able to do so in a moment of calm probably meant something, though he
wasn't
sure what.
"What the hell was that?" He knew damn well he
wasn't supposed to know Bakura had said that since the other man had
only whispered the words -- and not the Japanese version of the words.
Finally the other shook his head slightly as if to clear it, and when
he spoke again, it was in his native language. "You
should probably try to rest some more, Seto." He shook his
head in negation. "Why not?"
He had to take a deep breath before he spoke. "... 'm losing time."
Was he slurring his words? How embarrassing. "I don't like it. I don't
want
to lose anymore."
Bakura looked close to either grinning or letting loose with one of
those laughs
that seemed predisposed to terrifying everyone around him, but
thankfully he
apparently managed to rein in the impulse. Not that it had that effect
on him,
of course; that was preposterous. "You really do need to keep
your
strength up if you want to make it through this."
"Don't have to sleep to rest." Yes, he was slurring, almost
as
bad as Gouzaburou on a bender, and he consciously tried to correct his
speech as
he went. "I don't even sleep this much at home."
A small chuckle escaped the white-haired man. "Why do I have
no doubt
about that?" He settled himself to sit, no matter that he was
a few
centimeters above the ground. "So there's no talking you out
of this, is
there?"
It was obviously a rhetorical question, but answering it gave him
something to
concentrate on as he forced his body to sit stiffly upright.
"Absolutely
not." He could and would ignore the twinges and tiny pangs his body was
sending him for trying to do even this much movement. "Why?"
"'Why'?" Bakura sounded puzzled. Who knew if it was
true or
not. "What do you mean: why?"
"Why are you doing this?" Almost immediately, he could tell it was the
wrong thing to say or the wrong way to say what he was trying to, as he
watched Bakura bristle indignantly.
"I said I had nothing to do with you being here, Seto! I meant
it! I
wasn't lying!"
And that's when he noticed it, much to his own bewilderment. How odd.
It wasn't
worth mention aloud yet though, so he kept it to himself, at least for
the
moment. "I didn't say that," he cut back in. "I said, why are you
doing this -- staying here with me, talking to me?"
"Is there a reason why I shouldn't?" He still
sounded incensed.
He might not be contemplating violence on the first handy person,
namely him,
but he was assuredly Not Happy. "And it had better be a damn
good one,
or I'm not accepting it."
Someone in the world might be as stubborn as he was, he thought in
tired
amusement. "Nothing in particular. I was just thinking you might have
been
able to get out of here via the fact you used to share a body with the
other
Bakura, Bakura Ryou. Why stick around here with me?"
"You don't know anything."
Now that caught his full attention and pricked
some spark of his old
angry aloofness. "What did you say?" he hissed back. Anger felt...
good. He felt a bit more like his old self with its shield around him,
wrapping
around him like a living web.
"You don't know a thing about this." If he let the
cocoon down
for a moment, he could see something like despondency on the other's
face, but
he didn't particularly care to let it go long enough to let other
things sink
in.
"About what?"
"The Collector's previous... guest." He took a deep
breath and
released it slowly, obviously an ingrained habit to make sure he was
calm before
he spoke, because it wasn't like he was using the oxygen; his mouth
wasn't even
moving when he spoke! "It was yadonushi...
Ryou..."

It had taken a good deal more work than any of them were
willing to admit to, but they had finally tracked down Bakura Ryou. Now
they were wishing they hadn't.
As he'd predicted the previous night, Anzu and Jyonouchi-kun had
rejoined them the next morning. They'd found a record for a train
ticket to Tokyo, where his father currently lived. By all accounts,
Bakura-kun had arrived safely in Tokyo -- then vanished for a week.
After that, he'd reappeared, comatose in a small private hospital far
away from his parent's address, checked in anonymously.
If that was what was in store for his older brother, he had to wish
Mokuba-kun hadn't been the one to turn up the information. Of course,
once they found out, the younger Kaiba had bought them all tickets to
Tokyo, in the hopes they might turn up a lead of some sort.
Jyonouchi-kun and Anzu were still upstairs with Mokuba-kun outside
Bakura-kun's room talking to one of the head nurses about their
friend's strange case, while he'd admitted (to himself at least) a
temporary defeat and was waiting for them on the front step. This had
to be the most upsetting, nerve-wracking, and discouraging thing he'd
experienced in his life.
How had they not known about this? Bakura-kun had been here for so
long, and no one had even guessed anything was wrong. After all they'd
been through with the Sennen Items two years ago, it seemed like he
should have known something was happening to his friend, like he should
have somehow sensed something was wrong. Now Bakura-kun was like this,
and the same thing might happen to Kaiba-kun if they didn't find him
soon. But they had no clues to go on, no ideas about what might have
happened or who might have done this, and in the back of his mind, he
could hear a clock ticking. What were they going to do? And if they
managed to do anything, was it going to be too late?
In his pocket, his cell phone rang shrilly, startling him. His hands
shaking, he fished it out of his coat pocket, flicked it on, and
answered with a quiet "Hello?"
"Yuugi?" Now this was a voice he hadn't heard lately.
"Malik-kun?" he asked in disbelief.
"Are you all right, Yuugi? You don't sound so good."
He sighed softly. Malik-kun always had been too perceptive by far. "Not
really. A lot of bad stuff has been happening around here lately.
Bakura-kun... and Kaiba-kun..."
"I heard. Kaiba's disappearance has been all over the news everywhere.
No sign of him yet?"
"No, nothing." He paused, recalling the heat image on the clip. "We
have about half a lead, and that's the extent of it."
"Is there anything I can do to help?"
"Not from--" He paused, finally really hearing the background noises
from the other end of the phone. There were several voice clamoring for
attention in the din -- and all of them that he could hear were in
Japanese. "Where are you?"
"I flew in Tokyo a few minutes ago. I thought you might need all the
help you can get." The Egyptian paused. "And some other things have
been happening as well. Pieces of the exhibit were stolen... and some
of our people back in Egypt say there's an excavation team at the
Pharaoh's tomb."
He froze. "A-at Atemu's--?"
"They've already gotten the Sennen Items out, Yuugi. Apparently they're
bringing up the slab they were created on a piece at the time; you
remember how it broke, right? The only information my people could find
out is that it's for a private collector."
"Then with what's been going on here," he whispered, dread starting to
fill his voice, "it has to be connected."
"Which means anyone with any connection to the Sennen Items could be in
danger. Where are you, Yuugi?"
"In Tokyo." He rattled off the hospital's address. "Do you want me to
come pick you up?"
He could practically hear the other consider the options before he
spoke again. "Who else is with you?"
"Jyonouchi-kun, Anzu, and Mokuba-kun." He paused a moment, eying the
car parked at the curb before him. "And Mokuba-kun's bodyguards."
"You'll be safest there, so just wait. I'll come to you." He started to
protest but was quickly cut off. "I'm still a lot more dangerous than
anything this collector asshole can throw our direction."
A laugh escaped him. Well, that was certainly true. Now that the other
Bakura was gone, Malik-kun was the most dangerous person he knew.
"Okay. You're right. Be careful, though, okay?"
"Of course. I'll be there in under half an hour. Just stay in some
place where you'll be safe. In fact, stick with the others and those
bodyguards you mentioned. I'll be there as soon as I can." He was
silent for a moment before quietly saying, "It'll be nice to see you
again -- to see all of you again. I've missed you."
He opened his mouth to say... something, he wasn't sure what exactly,
when he heard a quick click and a dial tone; Malik-kun had hung up what
obviously been a pay phone in the airport. Carefully, he shut his own
phone back off and stood to head inside. He wasn't relishing explaining
this to his friends in the hospital, no more than he was looking forward
to seeing the shell that remained of one of his friends.
He hoped Malik-kun made it here okay.
He hoped Kaiba-kun was still all right, wherever he was.

It was a fight not to scream. It was just too damn quiet. He
hadn't realized there was that much noise that could be generated by a
spirit who didn't speak outside of one's own head, but it was at least
enough to break this sense-numbing silence. He wasn't quite ready to
admit how worrisome it was, yet, but he wasn't far from it. It was not
going to be long now.
What was especially... bothersome for him was he had no idea why
Bakura had gone so quiet. He had ideas but nothing
definite, and that was... annoying to him. Of course, that wasn't the exact
word he meant, but it was close enough to work. What could have set
Bakura off to make him go so quiet anyway? Telling him about the other
Bakura? He wasn't sure exactly what sharing a body with someone
entailed, but he had to imagine it could make two people feel as close
as family. A shudder cut through him as he tried to imagine having to
watch this happen to Mokuba. He'd have killed himself if there was any
possible way to do so. Only the other Bakura -- Ryou worked better, he
supposed -- wasn't dead, if he followed the logic of all this
correctly; his soul -- his spirit, what made Ryou into Ryou -- was
gone, but his body was presumably still alive somewhere, maybe in a
coma-like state. (Mokuba might make a zombie reference at this point,
but he was going to resist.) He wasn't sure which would be worse: dead
or... He wasn't sure he had a good word for it.
Or had something happened to Bakura? Maybe something he couldn't see?
Something that only spirits could? It was quiet enough and had been
quiet for long enough to make him think Bakura was gone, to make him
wonder if he'd dreamed the other being there. But why would his mind
supply Bakura to implant, someone he hadn't seen in two years instead
of Mokuba, for example, if that were true? Why Bakura indeed? What was
his subconscious trying to tell him? And why didn't he just go ahead and call out
the other's name and see if he really was here or if he had truly gone
over the deep end?
"Bakura?" he called into the utter blackness. It was almost a relief to
hear his voice echo back at him; at least it was noise beyond his own
breathing and heartbeat.
"Yeah?" This time he did breathe a sigh of... was
that relief he was feeling? Yes, he was fairly certain he was. "Seto?
Are you okay?" He could almost laugh, it was so absurd, so he
gave into the urge, which just seemed to alarm the Egyptian more, as he
appeared before him, a worried expression on his face.
"Just making sure you were still here," he explained himself, the
explanation falling weak even on his own ears.
Bakura shook his head in apparent confusion. "Where the hell
am I supposed to go? I'm stuck being where the Ring is, and it's locked
up over there." He nodded in the direction of the sealed case
he'd seen one of the first times his mind had expanded from the pain.
"The Rod is there too," tumbled from his lips without warning, and he
raised a hand to cover them and maybe stem the tide before something
slipped out that he'd rather not escape. "So is Yuugi's Puzzle and the
other Items..." he finished, trying to cover his previous babble. Not
that it did a thing to alleviate the suspicious look on Bakura's face
-- and he couldn't say that he blamed the other: he'd never shown any
interest in the Sennen Items at all before now, yet here he was,
rattling off their location. If the situations were reversed, he would
probably be curious as well. No, scratch the 'probably'; he would be.
"How did you know?"
"I just did." Like that was going to work, especially on someone at
least as stubborn as he was, if not more so.
"Not good enough. How did you know, Seto?"
For a moment, he considered clamping his jaw shut and utterly refusing,
like Mokuba used to do when he was younger, but at his age, it would be
a silly gesture. "I saw them earlier."
"How? It's not like the lights have been on."
He scowled to himself, a trick he'd perfected in any number of board
meetings. "...I don't know. When he started... draining me with this
thing," he lifted his wrists, positive beyond a shadow of a doubt that
Bakura could see them, "I could just see them. I could see a little
more each time. I don't know why or how, but there they are." He paused
a moment, gathering his thoughts. "I don't know why the Rod is what
came to my mind first, but it was." And he didn't know why the hell he
was talking all this -- to Bakura of all people no less! -- but he
suspected it was at least partially to fill the silence and partially
because he couldn't seem to shut himself up.
"It was yours in Egypt." Sooner or later, it always
seemed to come back down to Egypt with this group.
"I never touched it in Egypt."
He had the distinct impression Bakura was rolling his eyes at him
again. "You saw the High Priest in the Memory World, right? Or
do you not believe in that either?" He let out a growl and
didn't answer beyond that. "You were the High Priest of Egypt
and then the Pharaoh."
"That wasn't me."
Bakura actually laughed, dropping down to the floor before him and
stretching out like an overgrown house cat. For an inane half-second, he
pondered petting the other's bare stomach and chest to see if he'd
purr, but he dismissed the notion quickly. First off, he didn't
actually touch just anyone -- and if he did, it probably would not
be Bakura -- and secondly, he was a little pissed from being laughed at
-- not to mention the minor fact that the white-haired man was, for the
most part, a ghost.
"No, you most certainly are not Seth."
Now that got his attention. That sounded like a personal comment, and
not many of those had escaped Bakura so far. He had probably let twice
as many incriminating statements slip. Did that mean he was winning or
losing? Was this even worth competing over? "You act just like
him sometimes, then you're completely different. Seth would do one
thing, and you do another. But it's odd because you could be his twin
if it weren't for skin tone, and then there's the way your magic seems
to mirror his..." He trailed off with a frown of frustration.
"Are you trying to confuse the hell out
of me or something? Because if you are, you're certainly succeeding."
Now it was his turn for an eye roll. "Yes, I got myself kidnapped and
tortured just to confuse you. You figured me out. Now I must change my
diabolical master plan," he deadpanned.
"Gods forbid," an equally bland voice returned. "So
what do you plan to do about it?"
"About what?" Was this some kind of Egyptian spirit weirdness?
"About making it up to me for the confusion."
He raised an eyebrow suspiciously. "What exactly did you have in mind?"
And if it was anything more than he was willing to work with, he was so
going to find a way to kill the spirit.
"Nothing much..."
He had about half a minute to wonder what that meant before Bakura sat
up abruptly. Out of reflex, he started to lean back away from the
other, only to find a surprisingly solid hand on the back of his neck
holding him still... and Bakura leaning forward.
Over movie sessions with Mokuba, he'd had half-formed thoughts of what
a kiss was and what his reaction might be to it. He had clinical
definitions, as dry and as stale as the dictionary he'd gotten them
from, and on some level, he'd known there was supposed to be a deeper
meaning to this act, a demonstration of mutual affection between two
consenting parties... but it wasn't something he'd ever experienced (or
even thought to experience, honestly) for himself. And now he had to
wonder what it would be like if the person kissing him wasn't little
more than a spirit.

On some strange level, he was surprised Malik-kun hadn't
arrived on a speedboat or something equally as flashy again. The image
of him sedately walking into Bakura-kun's hospital room, a small black
wheeled suitcase rolling behind him, as commonplace as it would be for
anyone else, seemed so odd for the Egyptian. The sheepish look was
something he associated more with the "Namu" persona he'd presented
during the first part of Battle City than Malik-kun himself, but
really, there was no mistaking the distinctive person before him for
anyone else: no one else was quite like Malik-kun.
"Sorry I'm late. I forgot how confusing the cities around here can be."
He laughed in embarrassment. "I got so turned
around backwards."
"I was starting to worry," he admitted. "Not that I didn't think you
could handle whatever came up, but..." Behind him, he could hear Anzu
trying to stifle a laugh, and Jyonouchi-kun wasn't even bothering to
try hiding the snickers. He dropped back down in the chair he'd jumped
out of to stand when Malik-kun came in the room, and he wait for it to
swallow him, embarrassment and all. "Guys..." he complained quietly.
"Don't be mean."
"Thank you for worrying about me, Yuugi." Malik-kun sounded as
embarrassed as he felt. "It's good to be back here."
"Do you think you'll be able to help us figure out what's going on
here?" Anzu managed to get serious and ask.
"I'm going to do what I can." He glanced past them to Bakura-kun's
still form and frowned hard. "How long has he been like that?"
"Almost two months, about seven weeks." Even Jyonouchi-kun was serious
now. Something about the way Malik-kun spoke as he stared at the man on
the bed sent chills down his spine. Mokuba-kun was leaning forward,
anxiety and curiosity playing on his face. "Why?"
"He's dead." At what must have been expressions of alarm on their
faces, he continued, "His body is still going out of habit, but his
spirit is completely gone. Bakura is gone, but his
shell still remains."
"Like he was hurt and is brain dead?" inquired Mokuba-kun.
"More like his soul was cut out, and not very neatly at that. Like
someone tried to cut along the dotted line with a dull machete, if that
helps you to imagine it."
"It's not... like the spirits? Like when they took over?" he asked
softly, coloring slightly when that made him the center of attention.
Malik-kun seemed to consider the question a moment longer, glancing
from him to Bakura-kun and back again before shaking his head. "No, not
quite like that. Even..." He paused, apparently changing his mind on
what he was going to say. "There is nothing left of
him. I doubt even the Spirit of the Ring could have done something like
this."
"What about that Zork thing?" was the next question. "Could it be back
again?"
"That's something I'm really hoping doesn't happen, Jyonouchi-kun," he
sourly stated. "If Zork was back, we'd have found out before now, I
think."
"Well, if it's not Zork, then it's someone -- or something -- else,"
Jyonouchi-kun countered. "What if it's a person who's doing all this?"
"That would fit with what's been happening in Egypt." They turned
inquiring eyes to the Egyptian. "There is someone excavating the
Pharaoh's tomb, some kind of private collector." There was no doubt
just which Pharaoh he meant. Of all the Pharaohs in Egypt's history,
there was always only one that any of them meant.
"Who would go after his tomb?" he blurted out -- and immediately felt
stupid, wincing at himself. "Did I just say that out loud?"
"Sorry, yeah, you did." Somehow Malik-kun was avoiding laughing at his
little verbal faux pas. Maybe that was a sign of
just how serious this whole situation was rapidly becoming. "Some of my
people were injured and one was killed trying to keep these people out
of the tomb." He paused and winced slightly. "The one who died, they
desecrated his body. They cut off one of his hands."

For the first time he could recall in his life, he was
dreaming and he knew it. He knew he had to have dreamed before because
the human body couldn't function without it, which he found... so
inefficient. But he'd never been so keenly aware of the fact he was asleep
and lost in a dream that he didn't want to contemplate the origin of.
He certainly didn't want to be dreaming of Egypt. He heard enough about
it on a day-to-day basis without his subconscious flashing it at him
too.
Regardless of his wishes, he was certainly seeing an Egypt very like
the one in that damn so-called Memory World RPG. Well, similar, but it
wasn't a dead-on match. Maybe, though, it was just that he'd never been
to this part of the palace during the game. And he'd never been this
close to the man who was supposed to have been him three thousand years
ago, not that he really believed that bullshit. Because, really, he
didn't.
But whether or not he wanted to believe, here he was in what seemed to
be a bedroom, which was draped in rich tapestries and lit with torches
that cast flickering contrasts of light and shadows throughout the
room. He was pacing -- or rather he was watching a version of himself
pace impatiently in tight laps across the room. Or maybe 'impatient'
wasn't the word, and 'worried' fit that expression he wore better. He
didn't know that much about this supposed other version of himself, but
he didn't wear a look like unless something was
happening to someone he cared about, namely Mokuba.
He had done a fair bit of observing of the High Priest in the Memory
World Game, as much as he could anyway, enough to realize their
similarities, from the familiar face and body to the expressions and
carriage that could have been his own. He didn't want to believe in
past lives, but the person in the RPG and now his dreams apparently was
pretty compelling evidence for the validity of that idea. Even the room
around him vaguely reminded him of his own in its spartan furnishings
and almost total lack of personalization. From what he'd seen, after
all, this version of him had no Mokuba to add homey touches like
pictures and mementos.
But if this version of him (What had Bakura called him? Seth?) had no
Mokuba, just who was he worrying about and waiting on so impatiently?
A soft noise at the window made the other -- made Seth,
he mentally corrected himself -- jump and turn to look. In response, he
did as well. If he was expecting someone to show up through the
window... Suddenly he had a sinking certainty that he knew just who
Seth was waiting on. It was confirmed not even a moment later when a
familiar white-haired man hoisted himself in the room, a wide smirk on
his face.
"Where have you been?" Now that was a tone he recognized from his own
voice, from when Mokuba had gotten hurt at school last year and hadn't
wanted to tell him, that tone of frustrated worry. "Your note said you
were going to be here just after dark. It's not long till dawn now."
"Just a little trouble with the guards," Bakura stated easily with a
smirk, settling himself to sit in the window frame, just barely hidden
from outside view.
"'A little trouble'?" Seth seemed to just barely be keeping himself
from yelling, not that he could really blame him; he himself had noted
not too long ago that Bakura seemed to have taken lessons on being as
annoying as hell. "A 'little trouble' should only be a few hours' delay
maximum, not half the night!"
"So you want to waste the rest of it fighting?" the thief fired right
back. Well, that was certainly reassuring, that no version of himself
and the so-called Thief King got along perfectly; in fact, if they had,
he being questioning the validity of the dream. As it was, he was
uncertain why he wasn't already. Maybe it was because this wasn't the
first dream -- vision -- whatever -- he'd had with the priest in it.
Between those flashes at Battle City and the Memory World Game, he was
developing an affinity for this Seth person.
"Of course not!" He took a deep breath and released it as a heavy sigh;
he did that himself when he was fighting a losing battle not to be
annoyed. "I didn't say that, Bakura. It's just -- Our time is limited
enough between your reputation, my duties, and the Pharaoh. Do we
really need to add the entire palace guard in there also?"
"I can't help everyone wanting a piece of me."
"Yeah, preferably your head on display outside the palace." He paused
briefly in consideration. "I think the Pharaoh and Lord Akunadin would
prefer to display your entire dead body outside the palace to prove to
the populace you're no more."
"And then some people want my body for more... fun purposes." That
smirk was knowing, like he could see exactly what Seth was thinking.
And if Seth was another version of him, then he might
be thinking something similar to what he himself was. His face felt so
warm and flushed that it was a wonder it hadn't caught fire yet. They
weren't even doing anything, and his mind was already calling all
nature of definitions of what 'fun' could mean, based a good deal on
the way Bakura's voice purred the words out. "People like you perhaps?"
"Only if your mouth isn't attached."
The smirk only grew as Bakura climbed gracefully to his feet, slinking
across the room to the other man, an arm stealing around his waist and
drawing him closer till their bodies were flush against each other. And
how was it that he felt this warm just watching and Seth wasn't even
blushing?! "I think you'd miss everything my mouth can do to you if it
were gone, Seth."
And if their idea of flirting wasn't bad enough, seeing them kiss was
ten times more so. Even to a relatively inexperienced (okay, or maybe
almost completely inexperienced) outside observer such as himself, the
thief was definitely in charge, leading it as he wanted it to go as
they moved back towards the bed in the middle of the room, and Seth
didn't seem to mind -- and it was every bit as demanding as the one
he'd received had been... not tentative but questioning. He doubted
Bakura had a tentative bone in his body, probably a good trait for a
thief, and Seth certainly seemed to benefit from it.
Which begged the question of why Bakura had kissed him. Because he
looked like Seth? He wasn't sure he could even pretend to act like this
other version of himself, if he had it in him to demand the
white-haired man hurry up, to grab both layers of his robes and start
peeling them off, to pull him down on top of him on the bed, to trace
sure fingers and even more certain lips over golden scar-crossed skin.
How had he known the undeniably visible one on his face was far from
the only one?
Maybe he wasn't as bold as the priest, but damn it, he wanted to reach
out and touch him. He wanted to trade places with this other version of
himself moving beneath the other man. Greedy or not, he wanted it more
than he'd wanted anything in a long time. Almost without thought, he
moved closer to the bed they were on, coming closer slowly. Maybe this
was just a dream and he could do as he pleased, or maybe it was a
memory and he wouldn't be able to, but he had to find out. He reached
out to touch the bare, scarred flesh of Bakura's back --
-- and the pain hit, hard. It was definitely stronger this time, almost
enough to overwhelm, strong enough this time to force a scream from his
lips.
Where was he? He'd said twice before that he couldn't leave, he was
stuck here while the Ring was here, so where the hell was he? Ahh,
there. Still close at hand but apparently trying not to hover this
time. He made himself reach out, ignoring how much it hurt to move even
this much; instead, he pushed the pain aside for the moment and tightly
grasped Bakura's hand. He wasn't quite at the end of his restraints'
reach, but it was enough of a reach to hurt right now, so he pulled
lightly and Bakura moved easily back to him, touching him carefully,
like a precious treasure, like something that would break if handled
too roughly. Right now, that assessment might not be too far from the
truth; he felt like he might break apart into a million pieces from the
pain -- and it just kept going and going and going.
Bakura's hand was in his hair, brushing through it lightly. "Breathe,
Seto. Keep breathing." His voice was rather soft this time,
even compared to the previous times this had happened. It was nice, it
gave him something to concentrate on instead of how badly everything
hurt and how the world was expanding around him again... and how he
could feel something, an angry something, waking
up very near them. Against everything it could mean, he hoped it was
the other Yuugi, because the other possibilities were simply too
alarming to be contemplated right now. Right now... Right now, there
was something he needed to say. Just... it was so hard to force the
words outs, in more ways than working them past the pain.
"I-" Fuck, he was stuttering. He had to ignore that and get what he
wanted to say out now, before he lost his nerve or
his ability to make himself semi-coherent. "I'm n-not Seth."
Concentrate on his breathing a moment -- it would do no good to
hyperventilate now -- and finish, "Don't t-treat me like this if you're
pret-pretending I'm him."
Silence reigned for a long moment, till he started to wonder if he was
going to have to repeat himself, before the white-haired man spoke, in
what he was starting to think of as typical Bakura bluntness, "Seto,
don't be an idiot. I thought we'd established that you are very
different from him. Even though I don't know how you know about that--"
"Saw it," he cut in with clenched teeth. He would not scream again. He
would not scream. He wouldn't give that bastard the satisfaction of
hearing him scream again.
He sensed, more than saw, Bakura shake his head. "No way. We
were over by the time the Memory World started." Over? Now
that was intriguing. "There's no way you could have seen it,
unless..." He stared down at him in dawning surprise, the
hand in his hair finally stilling.
"Dreamed it," he confirmed.
Silver eyes narrowed sharply. "Is that so?" It was
quite obviously a rhetorical question, but he nodded faintly anyway. "Just
how much do you remember?"
"Not a- a lot."
"Then you don't know how the story ends;
otherwise, you
wouldn't have asked me that. The Memory World should have been a dead
giveaway, you know, that it was over and Seth would rather I was dead
and rotting. Really, I think I should hit you for that, if I
could."
He tuned out the rest of the rant, something about him having a
tendency to jump to conclusions, as the previous bit began to sink in.
Did Bakura even realize he very nearly was touching
him now? Something the other had said before (Yesterday? Two days ago?
A week ago? Time didn't seem to be making much sense right now.)
slipped back into his mind and helped launch the beginnings of a
half-formed idea: "I could always try to do myself what the Collector's
trying to do with the idiot Pharaoh: siphon energy till I can make my
own body."
How much energy was equal to a human body, though? To create a new one
from scratch, even utilizing the memories presumably stored in the
Sennen Items? Based on the increasing lethargy he felt after each
session thus far and what had happened to the other Bakura, he was
willing to say quite a lot. Something out of nothing went against a few
basic laws of the universe, so the Collector had to be backdooring his
way around that by using the... energy of people connected with the
Nameless Pharaoh in various ways. Grabbing someone as well-known as him
must have been a last ditch effort; maybe he thought he'd need Yuugi as
a template for the other Yuugi, and everyone else who could possibly be
connected was constantly on the move, like the Ishtars, and sadly, he did
have a pattern.
He couldn't figure out how to start from scratch like the Collector
had, but from a template, that was a different story. The big question
now was how. How did he make this work? And more especially, how to
make this happen before every ounce of his energy was pored into the
other Yuugi? He just had to--
Another wave of pain ripped half a scream out of him before he managed
to bite it back once more. Faintly he could feel blood running down his
chin; he must have bitten through his lip again this time in an effort to
keep quite. There was no more time to debate on it. Besides, making it
up later was easier than asking for permission.
At least this extra bout of pain had the pleasant side-effect of
shutting off Bakura's rant rather neatly. Maybe it wasn't the best
method to achieve quiet, but damn, it was effective. In that eerie
silence, broken only by the sound of his own labored breathing, he made
himself give the other half an explanation for what he had in mind: "Got
- got a plan. To get out," he specified.
"Really?" That sounded vaguely condescending and
even more sarcastic, and that was annoying, but this was the best --
the only -- plan he'd come up with so far. He
wasn't letting it go.
He nodded. "And if it works..." Bakura nodded to show his attention.
"If it w -- wor -- works," it was getting so hard
to say what he was trying to, "I'll kill you if -- if you don't come
back right. You have to get me out of here."
The other barely had time to look confused before he, for lack of a
better phrased, pushed at the energy flowing out
of him, directing it from the cords to the hand he held. It was...
surprisingly easier than he'd expected, getting this strange energy to
do what he wanted it to do, and he wasn't even going to let himself
consider why that might be.
Before his eyes, Bakura's form quickly started becoming more opaque,
less transparent and ghost-like and more like the Bakura he'd seen in
that dream-memory. He didn't look too happy either. Well, he wasn't an
idiot like some of the people he knew; he must know what he was doing.
"Let go, Seto." He was speaking out loud now, though not in Japanese.
He was counting that as a partially good sign at least. "Stop it now,
before you hurt yourself." And part of the way through that, the
language shifted, from what something in him said was the language of
Ancient Egypt to modern-day Japanese.
"No," he insisted. Shorter was better than explaining at length right
now; at least it gave him time to recover. "Plan."
"You're out of yo--"
Bakura vanished in midword.

Exhausted eyes blinked open, taking in their owner's new
surroundings warily. Wherever he was, it was nothing at all like where
he last remembered being. He may not have been happy or content where
he had been, but at least it wasn't... Where the hell was he anyway?
He looked around him, almost too tired to wonder why it was such an
effort to move. Surrounding him were Egyptian relics, some of which he
recognized from his reign as Pharaoh, while others were of a similar
time period but not items he recognized. Only about a meter in front of
him hung the Sennen Puzzle.
'Well, shit,' was all he could think for a long moment. Why couldn't he
seem to wake up? 'What in the world happened?'
And that's when he noticed the other person in the room: an older man,
with hair that must have once been black but was now peppered with more
than its fair share of white. He'd never seen him before, not in either
of his lives, but still, there was something strangely familiar about
him, something he couldn't quite manage to place.
"Welcome, Pharaoh Atemu." His Egyptian was, at best, a complete
atrocity, and his tone was smug and extremely self-satisfied. "Welcome
to my little collection. I do hope you'll enjoy your stay. I've gone
through so much to get you even this much here."
Here? This much? In confusion, he glanced down at himself -- and froze.
He'd had some time to get used to be solid again. Suddenly being able
to see through himself again was a bit of an
unpleasant flashback; even if he'd enjoyed his time with the friends
he'd come to make, it hadn't been where he belonged.
"What you done, mortal?" he growled in his native language, moving to
climb to his feet, only to find he couldn't.
"My deepest apologies, Pharaoh. It seem your battery source downstairs
apparently decided he had better plans for the energy that was to
finish your return."
"'Battery source'?" he echoed in confusion.
The man nodded. "Yes. Kaiba Seto."

Exhausted eyes blinked open, taking in their owner's new
surroundings warily. Wherever he was, it was nothing at all like where
he last remembered being. He may not have been happy or content where
he had been, but at least it wasn't... Where the hell was he anyway?
He looked around him, almost too tired to wonder why it was such an
effort to move. And more to the point, what the hell was that infernal beeping sound?!
And why the hell was everything so fucking... white? And why was he so
tired... and feeling like he was wearing something he'd outgrown years
ago?
Well, sitting around wasn't... He knew that voice. "Why would they cut
off his hand, Malik-kun?" Holy fuck, that was the Pharaoh's brat. The
hell?! "Isn't that what the Turks used to do if you were caught
stealing?" Fucking Turks. Still... Hmm, the Pharaoh's midget apparently
had twice the brains of the Pharaoh, not that that
was hard to accomplish or anything.
"It was also used in more European magic, to open locked doors and
such. It's called... I think the term was a 'Hand of Glory' then." And
that was Wants-To-Be Pharaoh. Who was stupid enough to let Malik Ishtar
back out of Egypt? Had the police and military been notified yet?
Where the hell was he anyway? Something about that steady blipping
noise and the too clean smell called the appropriate memory from the
depths of his mind: he was in a hospital. It felt about the same in
that impersonable way all hospitals were, from what yadonushi
had told him. Yadonushi... That was that 'tight'
feeling; he should have recognized it immediately. How many times had
he commandeered this body, after all?
Just what the fuck had Seto done? Better still, how
had he managed to jam him into his former host's apparently nonoccupied
body? When he got a hold of the other man, he was going to have some
answering to do. Which would mean motivating his body to move.

A soft hitch in breathing wasn't much of a clue, not when he
wasn't standing right beside the other, but a low groan was a
completely different story. He shot to his feet, turning to stare at
the figure on the bed as it sat up slowly. One arm, the one with the
I.V. , braced him stiffly, obviously going a long way to holding him
upright; the other held his head as if trying to ward off a headache.
What in the world...? Hadn't Malik-kun just said...?
"Tell me you were just wrong," Jyonouchi-kun demanded, a slight thread
of worry in his voice. "'Cause either you were wrong or we've got a
problem. We don't need another problem right now."
"I- I-" Malik-kun didn't seem to be able to force a coherent thought
out of himself. Not that he really blamed him; he was in much the same
boat. "There wasn't anything there! I know there was nothing left of
him!"
"So what the hell?!" the Japanese blond yelled back. "Is it Night
of the Living Dead or something?" He was already visibly
repressing shudders. Poor Jyonouchi-kun; he'd never seen someone before
with such a phobia of all things occult or supernatural, yet still be
able to handle him and Atemu switching places and all okay. Maybe it
was more Bakura -- or rather, the other Bakura --
that freaked him out so much, he thought, shaking his head slightly.
"Are you all right, Bakura-kun? Do you want me to call a nurse?" he
asked softly, moving closer to the white-haired man. A squeak came out,
instead of actual words, when the hand that had been in the other's
white hair suddenly lashed out to grab him by the front of his shirt
and yank him in closer, up off the ground so that the other's mouth was near his ear.
Out of the corner of his eye, he could see the others rushing forward,
to help, he supposed. He was even vaguely surprised that Malik-kun had
moved closer faster than Jyonouchi-kun, though only barely.
"Get me. The fuck. Out. Of here," Bakura-kun
hissed. That wasn't right. "Now, if you in any way value your miserable
little life, Pharaoh's midget."
"Bakura." Jyonouchi-kun's warning growl was what really cinched it for
him, even more than the nearly choking grip he had on him. This wasn't
their friend, Bakura Ryou. This was the Spirit of the Ring, somehow
back after two years. But how?
"Put him down." That was Malik-kun's voice, and he sounded like he was,
well, pissed. Wow.
Slowly the grip on him loosened, but Bakura didn't completely release
him. He could certainly breathe easier, now that his feet were touching
the floor, but this close to the Spirit of the Ring was about twenty
meters closer than he wanted to be. Even if... Bakura looked utterly
exhausted? This close, he could tell the other was breathing hard,
almost panting, like he'd just run a race. The Spirit of the Ring
didn't do stuff like that, didn't show that much behind a smirk,
though; it- he- it (Which one was it? Was this the thief or the demon?)
was very like Kaiba-kun in that way. And wasn't that odd -- and
convenient; the Spirit of the Ring showing up a few days after
Kaiba-kun was kidnapped -- and in Bakura Ryou's body no less!
"How are you back, Bakura?" he whispered.
Tired eyes lifted to look at him, and they weren't that rich shade of
chocolate brown Bakura Ryou had possessed. No, they were an odd shade
between blue and silver, the same color the thief had had in the Memory
World. He seemed to be holding himself together and conscious by sheer
force of will... and maybe a load of anger that he'd
be happiest not being carried out on him. "Do you want to talk about
that, or do you want to save Seto before it's too late?"

That... hadn't gone as he'd intended. The thief certainly wasn't
supposed to just disappear, at least not the way he'd planned it. This
was the most imprecise science he'd ever had the misfortune to deal
with; there was too much room for human error. Not that was his
fault, not when he was still this new to this... subject matter, but
Bakura was supposed to collate into a more solid, effective form
in this room, not
wherever he'd vanished to, where he'd presumably be able to get him the
hell out of these handcuffs and both of them out of here. He was
supposed to be a thief, right? These should be a snap for him... if he
were here and solid. Where the hell had he vanished to?
What if he'd accidentally killed him -- or at least sent him back to
the Afterlife, instead of bringing him here? There were just too many
possibilities of things that could have gone wrong, but really, what
other choice had he had? He had to
get get out of here. No, they'd both had to get out of here, but only
one had managed so far. Wherever Bakura was, after all, it wasn't here,
and he had the feeling that wherever he actually was, he'd be back. He
wouldn't leave him here, no matter what had happened between the thief
and him -- Seth -- in Ancient Egypt.
Bakura wasn't here, so there was no one to goad him into resting, but
damn, he was tired. Whatever insane escape plan Bakura was no doubt
cooking up, he would need to be rested and well-prepared for it. A
brief catnap could hardly hurt matters at this point, and it might
actually help a bit.
He had no sooner lay back down, curled up on the pallet-covered
grating that he'd been using for a bed these past few days, than he was
asleep... though he couldn't be too surprised by that fact. Even an
idiot would know this was taking a lot out of him. What did
surprise him, though, was that he seemed to be catapulted back into the
Egypt dream. It wasn't the same point in the dream, but that was
certainly Seth. He was leaning against a cliff in the middle of the
desert. The darkness seemed nearly impenetrable to someone used to the
constant glow of city lights at night, and even he could feel how cold
it was.
Seth looked worried. There was no mistaking the anxiety on his
face for anything else. It was written all over him: the way he
held his body tightly, as if ready to spring into motion; the way his
eyes kept darting around furtively, trying to keep a look out for the
thief, he supposed; the way he jumped at every sound. Something had
happened. It must have. It couldn't have been good either, not to create this kind of worry in any version of him.
The priest looked around him, sighed, and muttered, "Where are you, thief?"
"Such love." That was Bakura's voice, but at the same time, not. It
wasn't the almost sane tones he'd gotten used to during his
imprisonment here and from the other dream-memory; this was the Bakura
from Battle City... and that couldn't mean good things. He and Seth
looked up to see Bakura sitting on the edge of the cliff above the
priest. Yes, he recognized the dark look in his eyes. "One might almost
wonder what your feelings are towards me?"
He watched faint traces of emotions move over the face of the other
version of himself: relief, exhaustion, worry, suspicion, to name a
few. "At the moment, annoyance. You've been gone without a trace nearly
a year, Bakura, and now you reappear and--"
Seth cut himself off abruptly as Bakura leapt down easily to land
before him, falling back a step reflexively. He looked surprised now,
and it showed up clearly. "'And' what, Seth?" He stalked forward a
step, and somehow the other held his ground, not that he had a lot of
room to move with the cliff wall behind him and the thief before him.
"Am I different? Acting oddly perhaps?"
"You're not yourself, Bakura. What's happened to you?" He had to say,
he was proud Seth's voice didn't shake. He'd not had much in the way of
close experience with the Bakura from his time, only the duel on the
rooftop of Kaiba Corp to get Mokuba back, but this was more than a bit on the terrifying side. "What happened while you were gone?"
The smirk Bakura wore tightened into a sneer. "Not myself, you say?
Maybe you just didn't know as well as you thought you did." And then
the expression turned truly evil... and entirely too familiar. "Or
maybe I just got tired of playing nice for you. Did that ever occur to
you?"
"That's not it. You're Bakura, but you're not Bakura," Seth insisted
stubbornly, refusing to move again as the thief came a bit closer. "You
will tell me what happened."
Faster than his eyes could follow, a hand shot out, fisting around part
of Seth's cloak worn against the frigid desert night air, and slammed
the priest back against the rock face hard enough to make him drop the
collected expression from his face. "Maybe I died and returned to life out there in the sand
and came to realize there's something in my life that needs to be
finished, something more important than a couple of fucks." The sneer
was back in all its derisive glory. "But it's possible I can squeeze one or two
more in before I start my work."
"You bastard." The other version of him pushed at the thief but was apparently unable to throw him off. "Let go of me!"
"And here I was think you loved me, priest." A smirk and a shrug. "Then a kiss to say goodbye."
He yanked the other close, slamming their lips together brutally. Seth
struggled, trying to get free, finally reaching behind him for the
Sennen Rod, pulling the blade free. Holding it to the thief's throat,
he finally broke away. "Don't you dare touch me like that again, thief."
Bakura didn't seem to care, standing there nonchalantly with a smirk on
his face and blood running down his chin; Seth must have bitten him.
"You're mine, priest, and I'll touch you however I want. You would do
well to remember that."
"I'll kill you if I ever see you again." The hiss was low and deadly.
He had absolutely no doubt this other version of him meant every word
of it. He stepped away from the other, only to be held in check by the
hand still grasping his cloak.
"As long as you have that Sennen Rod, my darling Seth, you will see me again. Maybe not tomorrow or even this year, but you will see me again. Count on it."
"That day will be your end then." He slipped out of the cloak, leaving
it in Bakura's hands, and backed away towards the horse he'd left
tethered nearby.
Bakura remained still till the sounds of hoof beats had faded completely
before the maniacal smile dropped, leaving behind a sad and weary
version of the thief he'd come to know. Every movement aching with
exhaustion, he lifted the cloth to his face, breathing in the other's
smell.
Suddenly the paralysis that had gripped since Bakura dropped into view
broke, and he found himself moving closer to the white-haired man. The
final story must have been the truth, making this just after the demon
Zork had possessed him. Just how long before the RPG was this? What had
changed in the time in between?
He turned and frowned. Seth had to still be watching from somewhere;
otherwise he shouldn't be able to "remember" these events occurring,
most notably after Seth left. It didn't make sense. So where was he at?
"Let him go," a voice whispered behind him. He whirled around, but only Bakura was there. "He has abandoned you, left you to me, forgotten child of Kuru Eruna. And he has one of the Items."
"You will not hurt him." Dear gods, Bakura sounded exhausted. "That was part of our arrangement."
"Revenge for your people and the life of your lover. It will be as I promised."
He turned again angrily to look for the other version of himself (he had
to be hearing this) -- and saw only darkness, an utter and complete
blackness stretching out into forever.. He turned back to where Bakura
had stood only a split second before, but there was nothing
there; even the cliff and the desert had vanished. It felt like he
was falling -- or maybe floating -- in nothingness... and then he woke
up, gasping for each breath. Something... 'felt' different in the room,
something that in some way reminded him immediately of someone.
"Bakura?" Maybe, somehow, he'd managed to come back and was here again
now