S.I.U. - The Sailor Investigation Unit by DARK DAY FOR ANIME Disclaimer - all characters pertaining to the series Bishoujo Senshi Sailormoon are owned by Takeuchi Naoko, Bandai and Kodansya. All other characters were thought up by me. Well, its true, isn't it? Part Two Philosophical Absolutes If there was one sure thing about Sailorpluto, it was that absolutely no-one had even the slightest idea about how to properly psychoanalyse such a woman. Aoi very rapidly came to this conclusion as she read through the various texts by differing police and professional psychiatrists and psychologists, and other such thinkers. For instance, Ikido Hideaki, a psychiatrist with some standing in certain circles, considered Pluto to have something of a martyr complex.... That, according to data collected, she has been more than willing to sacrifice her very existence for what she thought was right, or what she thought may be the best outcome. Aoi skipped the part about where this evidence came from. "Various witnesses", it said. She wished she had been given names. She would have liked to have talked to them herself. Ebutso Kaori, an historian and columnist who has studies the life and activites of the Sailorsenshi described Pluto as, perhaps, their secret leader. Being the oldest, according to evidence collected (which WAS confirmed due to retrospective photographic evidence dating back as far as 1968 - before Aoi had even been born) it was likely that she regarded the other senshi as her proteges. However Mitsuru Kensuke, a sociologist from the Kansai region, disputed this by pointing out the fact the Pluto would often take orders from certain other members of the senshi, and only ever seemed to be laying the foundations for the arrival of the other senshi due to her activities in the distant past. There was even evidence, albeit very suspect, that she was partly responsible for bringing about the closure of the Pacific conflict in 1945.... Aoi sniffed and chuckled at the presumptuousness of some of today's pseudo-intellectuals. Although, considering the powers of time that Pluto was supposed to contain (again, according to the evidence of certain nameless individuals) she was probably very much capable of achieving this momentous feat. Which then begged the question, just how old was she? And how far would she go to achieve her aims, whatever they were? Aoi stretched, clearly feeling that she wasn't getting anywhere. She had chosen to pour over the psych reports in the hope of predicting how the senshi would react to the death of one of their compatriots.... Murdered in a mysterious and bizarre manner, in a motel on the edge of town. Of course, she was probably getting distracted by the manner in which most of the writers had to format their texts. It was complex and often required knowledge of the terminology. Something Aoi WAS familiar with. There had been a stage, during her years at University, when she considered becoming a pyschologist or sociologist herself. Unfortunately she had been sidetracked during her studies and was only able to complete a Psychiatry course as a finishing subject. Still, when it came to joining the police force, this was of benefit to her. It gave her an added step-up to avoid ending up as one of the "uniforms", so to speak. She much preferred the more closed atmosphere of detective work, anyway. But the SIU was not her idea of where to use her talents. And it insulted her intelligence to think that there was somebody out there that thought that that was all it was good for. She shivered for a few moments and took a drag on her cigarette, allowing the fragrant smoke to fill her lungs. She had taken up smoking as a side-effect of her posting, and found it an immensely comforting habit. Damn all those who predicted for her an early death... Everyone was going to get scragged by the toxins in the atmosphere, anyway, so why not hasten the process a little. At least it took with it an element of honesty. She placed the cigarette back in the ashtray and read on. So, according to James Colliers, a psychiatrist from the UK, Pluto showed definite signs of an incipient pschopathy.... That she, at no stage, expressed sympathy or empathy for those who would suffer due to her activities. He was even bold enough to diagnose Asperger Syndrome with a borderline psychotic personality disorder. Aoi didn't know about the Asperger Syndrome, although it would explain the solitude with which Pluto carried herself. Asperger Syndrome was a little known, high-functioning variant of Autism, first discovered by Asperger in Germany shortly before the Second World War. Because of these events, the condition, and its related studies, remained fairly esoteric until the early 1980's when certain authorities began to question the total validity of Kanner's umbrella theory of Autism as being a severe disorder. Naturally, like all disorders of its kind, it had a scale of severity, ranging from the severely disabled (often combined with a group of other disorders) to low, medium and high functioning. And then, bewteen high functioning Autism and what could roughly be termed as normality sat the condition known as Asperger Syndrome. Aoi scratched her head. She really didn't know enough about the disorder to make a comment. Her studies only ever brushed lightly on Autism itself, let alone Aspergers. All she knew is that Japan had its own ideas about how to treat children with Autism, and she was not entirely in favour of those ideas. Still, the Psychiatric community was a cabal not to be reckoned with, so she never voiced her opinion on the matter. As for a borderline psychotic personality disorder.... Well, she could believe that, somewhat. After all, anyone who went running around the dark streets of Tokyo at night in a very short sailorfuku, taking on monsters, aliens and various gangsters had to have an element of self-delusion. The Sailorsenshi probably lived, in their own minds, a kind of fantasy existence. Perhaps her ideas about them accepting death as a risk they must take, due to their activities, was wrong. Perhaps they really DID feel they were invincible, capable of thugging on anyone who stood against whatever it was that they stood for. Whatever the case, with one of them now dead, that perception, if it existed, was going to be shattered in a very big way. She tried to imagine what it would be like to be one of them, and she leaned back in her chair, picking up her cigarette and taking another long drag. She rolled the smoke in her mouth, then blew it out into the air, making rings with the smoke. She so MUCH had wanted to be one of those magical girls in her youth, just like on television. Growing up had not been easy under the fairly macho atmosphere of a Japanese coed school. She had always been headstrong, and never allowed herself to be bullied around by the boys. but doing that only gave her an untouchable reputation, and she soon came to regret the ostracism that came with it. Still, she passed all of her subjects, and very rarely caused her teachers any trouble. She wasn't the most brilliant student in the world, but there were a hell of a lot who would sit below her on the marking books. The hard-nosed rote learning style of the Japanese education system had not leant itself kindly to her abilites. But then, it wasn't until she arrived at university that anyone realised what her abilities truly were. As her mother said, she was not one of those destined for a normal life. But still, those fantasies had persisted, running right into her early twenties. She watched all those magic girl anime shows, wishing she had lived that kind of life. An extraordinary diversion from the normal, humdrum existence that she had lead. It wasn't until she reached her mid-twenties, when she became sullied by the acceptance of social will that those dreams began to fade. It was also during this time that the stories of the Sailorsenshi started to appear in the press and tv news bulletins. Perhaps it was because she held an element of jealousy that she felt a certain contempt for them. Every time someone would mention the Sailorsenshi, the BITCH in her would come RIGHT out. "So what about them?" She would say. "They aren't anything special. Just a pack of dumb, ditzy schoolgirls, running around Tokyo, doing silly attacks on silly monsters. What is so good about them?" And then the Sailorsenshi started getting older, and larger in numbers, and more effective in fighting not only silly monsters and a paraphenalia of magical villains, but also the gangs and mobs that had had Japan under its thumb for quite some time. Some of the Sailorsenshi's activities were cutting pretty close to the bone in financial and political circles. Did they really understand the kind of people they were dealing with, here? Perhaps, if her earlier theory about them not really believing they were capable of dying was true, then perhaps they had an idealised concept of what and who their enemies truly were. It is easy to think of things in a very black and white manner if your enemies are uncluttered by such simple concepts as human frailty. She rubbed her head. Now she was beginning to give herself a headache. A combination of her tiredness and staring at a computer screen for too long. She put out her cigarette and stood, stretching as she did so. She stepped from the office into the darkened corridor, and followed it to the last door on the left. Switching on the light, she stepped in what acted as the SIU office's kitchen, and wandered over to the hot water urn. She felt the side to see how warm it was, and shrugged when she felt it to be not quite warm enough. She lifted the lid and looked inside, pleased that she wouldn't have to refill it. She switched it back on and opened the cupboard above, taking out a mug and a large tin of granulated coffee. She placed them on the counter beside the urn and opened up a drawer underneath, pulling out a spoon. She opened the lid of the tin and scooped up a teaspoonful of the noxious brown powder, dropping it into the mug. Ah, caffeine. Another wonderful chemical to which she had become addicted during her time at the SIU. If it wasn't the cigarettes that lay in their multitudes within her ashtray, it was the frequent visits and revisits to the kitchen to keep up the caffeine content of her bloodstream. Although she had to admit she was something of an addictive personality, she had never really taken to any particular pastime or substance to feed that personality. She has the fear of Kami placed into her after what had happened to her mother.... She had been placed into an institution due to an addiction to painkillers.... Very POWERFUL painkillers, including Codeine, Doxylamine Succinate and Morphine. Her mother had been a similarly driven woman, although she reserved her energies for the medical profession.... Not a good thing when you are someone for which the only way to truly cope with life was by artificial means. Her mother had collapsed one day after overdosing. It was only then that anyone discovered just how deeply she had become engaged in satisfying the illness. It took her three times as much for a woman of her age and build to finally bring her down. She had been in that hospital for nigh on five years before Aoi had felt the first itching.... To send herself totally blotto. And that desire frightened her away from all forms of chemicals... Even beneficial ones that doctors would try to prescribe her when she would fall ill. How she laughed at that attitude now. She wondered how the Sailorsenshi dealt with such feelings and desires. The lack of self-esteem and self-worth, the depression and despair. Of course, there were always the high moments... those times that made life all that so much more worthwhile. And yet, she REALLY wanted to know what got the senshi through the darkest of emotional times. Did they live a fantasy existence there, as well? Were they in a constant state of euphoria due to their powers and what they were able to do with them? And how would they react now that one of their number was dead. If they knew she was dead, of course. How would Pluto react? Did Pluto know? If her much-vaunted time powers were not just the creation of some overstretched imagination or some hack journo, then why didn't she do something to save her comrade. And if she did know, was she involved in the girl's death? And if she didn't know, then WHY not? Of course, if she didn't know, that would just support the argument about those powers being a con. One thing was for sure. Pluto was not likely to act in a very appreciative manner if she was NOT involved in the girl's death. Aoi closed her eyes and shook her head. If there was anyone amongst them who truly had the ability to do something about it, then it was her. Of all the senshi, Pluto frightened Aoi the most, simply because nothing about her WAS clear, WAS simple. Aoi liked the clear and the simple. She liked order, both in herself, her surroundings and in others, and someone like Pluto simply didn't fit into any category she could tolerate. A thought occured to her. If Pluto WAS aware of what happened, did she know... About the SIU? About the investigation? About her and what she was doing to try and match her wits? Aoi shivered at the thought as steam began to rise from the urn. She placed her mug beneath the nozzle and turned it on, allowing the water to wash through the granules at the bottom. She watched as the cup filled, she mind and attention being dragged from her musings to the tart smell of the dark brown liquid. She shut it off when the water reached near the top, and turned the urn down to about half heat. She reached up into the cupboard again and dragged down the sugar bowl. Ah, sugar, just the thing she needed to go with the caffeine. Nothing like that combination to het you totally hyper. She gently scooped two teaspoons of sugar into the mug and replaced both it and the coffee tin into the cupboard, shutting the doors behind it. She absent-mindedly stirred the sugar into her brew as her mind began to race again. So.... If Pluto did know, then it was likely that she was going to have to match wits with her. How did one do that with someone who was supposed to know the future? She would have to double-guess and triple-guess everything she did. And even then, she wouldn't know if that was what Pluto was expecting. She sighed. All this theorising was getting her nowhere. Pluto was simply too big a conundrum to work with. She needed someone more predictable than that. Perhaps Sailormoon herself? Ah, Sailormoon, the one that had caused the SIU to exist in the first place... Although it was abvious she was NOT the first to appear... Venus made an appearance long before her, and Kami knows how long Pluto was around before that.... Probably seen several civilisations come and go in her travels for all she knew. Still, Sailormoon was an utterly predicatble beast. her every emotion was as clear as glass. Aoi liked that. Even though she hated the very idea of Sailormoon in the first place. But then, she hated the Sailorsenshi anyway, so that really shouldn't have come as much of a surprise. She stopped stirring the coffee and considered putting milk in it, eventually deciding that that was too much work for her, she put it to her mouth and sipped it, finding it a tad hot. She blew on the top a couple of times, intellectually realising that it was a futile gesture. No matter how much she tried to cool it this way, it wasn't likely to happen any faster. She hated the Sailorsenshi just SO much, and she really didn't know why. Jealousy wasn't enough. That would mean accepting that there was still a large portion of that silly little schoolgirl within her. The one that wanted to go through all those transformation sequences and wear silly, and occasionally revealing, clothes, thug on bad guys and fall in love with impossibly good-looking bishounen types.... If that kind of person existed within her still, she would most likely die of embarassment. No, she wanted to BRING THEM DOWN! Yes, that was what she wanted to do. As a member of the Police Force, who had been put to shame by their successes. This was a matter of honour for her and her colleagues. And even as she nodded on that point, she knew it was total bullshit. Still, the thought of actually catching them... To cross-examine them, chew them up through the system and spit them out the other end, not even the shell of their former selves, really burnt its way through the tender folds of her brain. As she continued to sip her coffee, she heard the front door of the office open, and stepped out into the corridor. An elderly man, in his late sixties, stood there, looking around the offices, rather disappointed until he saw her. She smiled, recognising him immediately. "Ah, Akizuki-san. So good to see you." She stepped up to Akizuki, holding out her hand. He took it warmly, nodding. "You too, Kikotsuka-san." "What brings you here at this time of the day?" "I heard... From one of your colleagues, about this most unfortunate incident." "Ah. You mean the senshi murder?" "Indeed." Akizuki nodded. "Such a terrible thing to have befallen the child." He sighed, sadly. Aoi understood Akizuki's sadness. He, after all, had been the first man chosen to lead the SIU in the last two years of his career as an officer. After having set up the SIU's framework, he retired, but had never quite gotten over the thrill of chasing the senshi... The possibility of ever catching one of them in the act, or exposing them. In a way, it could be said that he was not that much different to her. But he didn't, could never, hate them as much as she did. He had grown fond of the girls, like they were some form of elusive family. "I was just sitting down to eat dinner, with my wife. I'd had to make it as she is not in the best of health anymore. That's when DCS Konatsu called me. I have to say, it came as quite a shock to me." "Same here. I was getting pretty used to the idea that we would never get one of those girls." She smiled at him. "Would you like a cup of coffee? Or, perhaps, tea?" "Oh yes, indeed. Very kind of you." He shuffled alongside her as they made their way to the kitchen, gesturing to her with a "ladies first" when they reached the doorway. She'd rather liked Akizuki's strange, genteel, old-worldly nature. He had never come across to her as a threatening figure. One of the reasons why he had been such a success at his job. Everyone would underestimate him because of how he acted. "You know..." he said. "I always believed we would catch one of them, one day. Well, not catch so much as have one of them give themselves away to us. Or, perhaps, all of them. I'd always believed they would see that as the best course of action." "Well, its a bit hard to know with them, really." Aoi placed her mug on the counter and pulled another from the cupboard, gesturing to the tea and coffee. "Tea, thankyou." He nodded. "Yes, I suppose you're right. They are a secretive bunch. But really, I never thought them to be doing any harm in their activities. I was quite happy to let them run around, defeating the kinds of criminals we would never, in a million years, be able to catch and incarcerate." "You admire them?" Aoi asked, placing a teabag into the cup and letting water from the urn nozzle run through it. "Oh, I admire their purity of purpose. But then, I understand that life is never so simple. No milk or sugar, thanks." Aoi nodded and switched off the nozzle, placing the cup on the benchtop. She thought for a few moments. "What do you think of Pluto?" She raised an eyebrow. "Ah, Pluto. Very hard for me to judge, that one. I only heard about her around the time I was leaving the unit, so my knowledge is rather limited. But then, isn't everyones'?" Aoi smiled and jiggled the teabag a couple of times, tossing it into the bin and handing him the cup. He took it appreciatively. "Ah, thankyou." He sipped the cup. "You know, I was a much bigger expert in those early senshi.... They were so much easier to work with. Less philosophically compromised, if you know what I mean?" Aoi nodded. "If it had just been them... if the others hadn't made an appearance, I honestly would have believed that they would be known by now. I don't think those girls have anywhere near the foresight and understanding of their elder counterparts." "I'm wondering on how they would react. Like Sailormoon, for example..." "Ah yes, Sailormoon..." He gulped down the tea. Aoi wondered if he had any nerves in his throat... that had to be hot. "Now, she would react in an extremely emotional manner.... She would probably take it upon herself to revenge her fallen comrade." "So you think she WOULD do something... dramatic." "Oh, of course she would. Many of them would. Quite a few of them are somewhat... unbalanced, emotionally." "Are you saying they are dangerous?" "Well, of course they are dangerous. Anyone who wields their kind of power without some form of strict control is dangerous. But I don't think they will do anything that will harm people deliberately...." Aoi sighed as he gulped down the last of his tea. He handed her the cup, smiling. "Force of habit. Back in my old days, I found I was never given the time to drink my tea. Something would always distract me." Aoi chuckled, which made him smile. "Ah yes, I'm glad there are young women like you in the force these days. Having nothing but men in my day made it such a starkly morose experience. You won't believe some of the meetings I've had.... All those square jaws and unsmiling, ugly old faces...." He shook his head. "Hard to believe I'm one of those old folks now. Forgive me, just an old man rambling on." Aoi shrugged. "That's fine. I'll prove to you how much better things are with 'young women like me' running things." He nodded, a lopsided smile on his face. "I remember the report I received recommending you. I think the term your old superior used was 'obsessed'. I was about to abuse him for being so presumptuous." "Until you met me, of course." "Of course." He looked at his watch. "Is that the time? I'm sorry, I must be going.... I promised Kikuko I'd be home at least before sunrise this time." "Eh? You out often?" "Hmm... Meeting with some of the oldies. You know, some of them are still within the force.... Take Chief Superintendant Watanabe, for example..." He smiled. "We joined in the same class, you know? Never thought I'd see him heading the political wing of the department. He was such a boofhead in his younger days. Used to be a sumo wrestler.... Pretty mean one, too. But then, you can never judge a person's character on initial experiences." "No, you can't." Aoi blinked a couple of times, yawning and rubbing her eyes. Akizuki chuckled. "These late nights can be murder on you. Especially on your personal life." The pair of them stepped back out into the corridor, walking back towards the front door. "You know, Kikuko is my second wife?" "Really?" "Yes. My first left me, back in the days when divorce was a big no-no. Still is, really, I guess. She said I wasn't providing her with what she required. I can't argue with that. I was very rarely home. So our families anulled the marriage, which went smoothly since we had no children. I eventually met Kikuko and remarried." He chuckled. "I soon learnt to become more involved in my home life. She wouldn't let things go, otherwise." Aoi nodded. In truth, hearing about failed marriages wasn't the first thing that came to mind as topics she wanted to discuss. She'd had enough of that from Kaji to last a lifetime. Still, Akizuki's doddering figure and trembly voice took out some of the sting. "Well, its been nice seeing you again." He held out his hand, and she shook it warmly. "Its been nice to see you, too. Been what, about three years?" "At least, at least. Good luck on finding this unfortunate girl's killer." "I'll give it my best shot, Akizuki-san." He waved to her and was about to step through the door when he paused and turned. "By the way, Kiko-san, what would you do if you were to... Catch the Sailorsenshi, so to speak?" Aoi frowned, not understanding the question. "Pardon?" "What would you do? Would you... stay within the unit, or move on to fields anew?" "If I'd caught them myself, without help from anyone else, I'd probably apply for a position in Major Crime. After having done something of that magnitude, they surely couldn't reject me." Akizuki nodded, smiling, then waved. "Who knows what rewards are coming to those willing to seek them." He stepped through the door and disappeared into the darkness. Aoi ran a hand through her hair. Rewards indeed! I don't have to get into Major Crime as a reward! I'm good enough as it is, now! She shook her head and turned back towards the kitchen. Outside, Akizuki turned to look at the small office building. "A keen one, that one. She may be able to give us the information we require...." He rubbed his chin, thoughtfully, then continued on. END OF PART 2 DDFA ayanami@merlin.net.au Ayanami^Rei on DALnet's #ajas 15th February 1998